QfUfL.THE CHICAGO MAROONof CiVolume 77, Number 23"Blow, blow thou winter wind,Thy breath is not so unkind." —Shakespeare Chicago, Illinois, Friday, OUOS9r*22, 1968 Fill Outv Questionare on Page Three. . ~Establish—Photo by David Travis By Wendy GlocknerThe divisions and schools of the Univer¬sity are moving slowly, if surely, in re¬sponse to an October 11 memo from Ed¬ward Levi which called for representativestudent committees in each division andschool.President Levi, then the provost statedin his memo that the program was in¬tended “to provide an elected group tomeet with faculty regularly in each area,building upon the basic structure of theuniversity.”He stressed that the program “is not in¬tended to diminish in any way the impor¬tance of other elected student groups.”According to Jerome Frese, assistant tothe president, Levi has requested the crea¬tion of student councils in order “to getrepresentativeness down to the level atwhich it can be most effective,” and at thesame time, to achieve closer contact withthe various divisions and schools.He stated that Levi will meet with thecouncils, but it has not yet been decidedhow these meetings will be arranged.All divisions in the College have studentcouncils at the present time.According to Stuart Tave, master of thehumanities collegiate division, names ofstudents for the humanities student councilwere put forward at luncheons held byeach department in the division this quar¬ter. Tave stated that approximately fiftypercent of the students in the division werepresent at the luncheon. In the social sciences collegiate division,students were elected at meetings thisquarter of individual departments in thedivision. According to Steven Vance, ’69,chairman of the social sciences council,the turnout at the various departmentalmeetings was poor; at several meetings 15students were present out of CO in the de¬partment.Students in the councils in the otherthree collegiate divisions are not elected.Robert, Platzman, master of the physicalsciences collegiate division, said that mem¬bers of the student advisory committee,were chosen by Platzman last winter. A.Kieth Brown, ’69, chairman of the studentadvisory committee, stated that its pur¬pose is to provide an organization throughwhich student problems can be brought tothe attention of the faculty. He said thatthe main contact which the committee haswith faculty is through Platzman.In the biology collegiate division, stu¬dents participate in a council which hasbeen in existence for two years. ArnoldRavin, master of the biology colligiate di¬vision, stated that the division will contin¬ue to function with this group. He statedthat the group is “pretty representa¬tive-students joined out of voluntary inter¬est and effort.”The members of the student advisorycommittee in the new collegiate divisionare more or less “co-opted” according tochairman Don Hidastosky, ’69. GraduatingContinued on Page ThreeNew Psych Head Discusses Student ProtestsBy Chris FroulaIt's a long way from California in moreways than one for the tall, sandy-hairedBrewster Smith, newly-installed head ofthe psychology department. Fresh fromBerkeley — that paradigm of institutions,happy hippie haven, fountainhead of thestudent protest movement — Smith says hefinds the University of Chicago “a veryexciting place, with the obvious advan¬tages of a smaller institution and a moreintellectual atmosphere.”For this psychologist of liberal principlesand conservative termperament, himself aradical student in his college days in the30s, the recent wave of student protest is atroubling phenomenon. During his nineyears at Berkeley, Dr. Smith, an authorityon social psychology and human devel¬opment, conducted research designed tocompare the moral orientations of FSM ac¬tivists at Berkeley with those of collegestudents in general.“Student activists tend to be better thanaverage students, more oriented toward in¬tellectual and humanistic values, and morelikely to display a morality of well-inter¬nalized principles as opposed to con¬ventional ‘law-and-order’ morality,” Dr.Smith said of his findings. “They tend todiffer from other students in their relativerejection of the Protestant Ethic and theiradherence to anti-Puritanical humanisticvalues.”“These results make me respect activ¬ists as people — interesting, individual, PROFILEand admirable — but they don’t lead me toany distinctive conclusion about moralityof consequences. Sometimes good in¬tentions lead to not-so-good results.”Smith feels that what annoys the oldergeneration most about the protest move¬ment is the students’ conviction that an“evil, monolithic Establishment controlseverything,” and that the draft, Vietnam,and racial prejudice strengthens this con¬viction. “I am sad about the destructivetendencies of the protest leaders and hopethat in the long run people will be morereasonable and democratic political mech¬anisms will carry more weight so that wecan depend less on destruction and vio¬lence.”Dr Smith considers that the wave of stu¬dent protest, from Berkeley in ’64 to Co¬lumbia and Paris this spring, does moregood than harm, but also finds it dis¬couraging at times. He gave as examplethe Eldridge Cleaver case, which “seemsto have developed the quality of a Greektragedy with everyone playing his role. It’shard to see a constructive solution.”Ofwhat he has seen of student protest on thiscampus, Dr Smith says that Americaneducational institutions are slow in giving participatory roles to students, and thatChicago is no worse than others. “Adminis¬trations tend toward paternalistic atti¬tudes, which is not good educational strate¬gy. I am hopeful that Mr Levi’s adminis¬tration will find ways of working with thestudents. I think he’s a strong adminis¬trator, and wise in this respect.” Smithadded that the situation here is no parallelto Columbia, whose administration wascompletely indefensible, or to Berkeley,whose inept administration at the time ofits students’ revolutionary outbreak “nosaint or genius could have untangled.”Smith says also that evidence suggeststhat protest is most vigorous at “in¬stitutions of higher quality, which offermore, where things are at their best.”Dr Smith has four children studying atHarvard, Franconia, and the lab school,and his wife is a public health nurse nowworking in the Chicago schools. TheSmiths are living in Kenwood.Here at Chicago, Dr Smith will continueto write up his student activism research,and will next begin research on people’sfeelings of efficacy: whether they feel theyare masters of their fates or at the mercyof “Them.” He will study school programsaimed at increasing children’s feelings of“ability to affect the world in importantways.” Dr. Smith became interested in thisproblem through a study of Peace Corpsvolunteers designed to reveal the extent towhich each saw himself as agent ratherthan patient. BREWSTER SMITHFrom Berkeley to ChicagoBundle up, Melvin...Our six footer will protect you from the icyblasts. Defeat Winter’s dreary cold With ourcolorful (and offbeat) six foot scarf. 8 colorcombinations, knit in your choice of Orion orwool. By Cisco, |6IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday evenings FoodDrinkPeople3H C 23r<J Street2 blocks W ot McCormick PlaceTelephone 225 61 71 "Open 11 am to 9 pm closed SundaysParty facilities to 400 ^timer'sKENNYForI.H. President"Saturday afternoonisn't nearly as toughas Saturday night!'We keep warning you to be careful how you use Hai Karate *After Shave and Cologne. We even put instructionson self-defense in every package. But your varsitysweater and best silk ties can still get torn toshreds. That’s why you’ll want to wear our nearlyindestructible Hai Karate Lounging Jacket whenyou wear Hai Karate Regularor Oriental Lime. Just tellus your size (s,m,l) andsend one empty Hai Karatecarton, with $4 (check ormoney order), for eachHai Karate Lounging Jacketto: Hai Karate, P. O. Box 41 A,Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 10056. That way,if someone gives you someHai Karate, you can be alittle less careful how you use it.Send for your practically rip-proofHai Karate Lounging Jacket.Allow 6 weeks for delivery. Offer expires April 1, 1969. If your favorite store is temporarily out of Hai Karate, keep askingSo fight ice with ice. Bribe them with a bottle of ice-coldCoca-Cola. For Coke has the refreshing taste you never gettired of. That’s why things go better with Coke, after Coke,after Coke.BottUd uod.r th« authority of Th« Coca.Cola Compon, by: Coco*Cola Bottling Company of Chicago - Chicago, Illinois Cohn A Stemutaunt Sc (EamiiusShop"COCA COLA" AND "COKE" ARE REGISTERED TRADE MARKS WHICH IDENTIFY ONLY THE PROOUCT OP THE COCAC OLA COMPANY.That group really givesyou the cold shoulder. Work in EuropeAmerican Student InformationService has arranged jobstours & studying in Europe f„rover a decade. Choose fromthousands of good paying jobsin 15 countries, study at a fa¬mous university, take a GrandTour, transatlantic transporta¬tion, travel independently. Allpermits, etc. arranged thru thislow cost & recommended pr >-gram. On the spot help fromASIS offices while in EuropeFor educational fun-filledprofitable experience of a life¬time send $ 2 for handbook(overseas handling, airmail re¬ply & applications included)listing jobs, tours, study \crammed with other valuableinfo, to: Dept. M, ASIS, 22 avtde la Liber te, LuxembourgCity, Grand Duchy of Lux• Domestic and ForeignAir Reservations• Half-fare Youth Cards• Flight InformationPhilip K. GornyTWARepresentativeCall MI 3-9100 Eve¬ningsGoing Some-where ?SSHGDICIdkrij cu*lCcffe/e6auseH50 E. 57™STREET Hy3e Pork's Oldest andMost DistinguishedCo^ggTiodsc MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25CBS-TV 9-10 p.m. EST“Francis Albert SinatraDoes His Thing”No kidding. That’s whatFrank has titled his newestBudweiser TV special.(Would an Old Scout tellyou a falsehood?)And Sinatra’s thing, as always,is excitement. See him. Hearhim. Tune in . . .(but check your local listing just to be sure.) DIAHANN CARROLLand THE FIFTH DI¬MENSION will also beon hand to do theirthings, which happen tobe some very nice forms of,communication.Meanwhile, back at thebrewery, we’ll be doing ourthing . . . with the King ofBeers®. (But you know that.)ROCK, FOLK, JAZZ GROUPS! Enter the ’69 IntercollegiateMusic Festival, co-spohsored by the brewers of Budweiser.Write: I.M.F., BOX 1275, Leesburg, Florida 32748.Budweiser.ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA . HOUSTON . COLUMBUS2 Chfcogo Matton “•’November 22/1968Council to Advise Faculty on PolicyContinued from Page Oneseniors on the committee chose students inNCD to take their respective places, thuscreating a self-perpetuating body.According to James Redfield, master ofthe new collegiate division, no plans arebeing made for restructuring the council.“Our council might not be as representa¬tive as other councils,” he said. “But Idon’t think that anyone can represent an¬other person. Not here, anyway.”Members of the councils in the collegiatedivisions appear optimistic about the crea¬tion of the councils. Bamaby Feria, 71,stated that “student council should work asan advisory body, a critical body—thenperhaps we can get something done.”A. Kieth Brown, commenting on Levi’sproposal, stated: “It’s the kind of thing Iwould have expected. Mr. Levi is inter¬ested in hearing what responsible studentsthink is necessary for improvements in theUniversity.” Steven Vance commented thatthe councils “will be effective becausemembers of the administration are willingto listen to students’ suggestions. Councilsare very important in opening formal com¬munication channels.”Only three graduate divisions are in theprocess of electing, or have elected, coun¬ cils this quarter. According to RobertStreeter, dean of the humanities division,one person from each degree granting de¬partment was elected by the students inthe department. Streeter stated that “mostof their contact will be with the facultyand administration of their division; how¬ever, it can be arranged to talk with Presi¬dent Levi.”“My judgement is that most people willfind this group systematic and useful. Po¬tentially, the council is an extremely im¬portant channel of communication and Ihope we can eventually broaden and deep¬en it,” he commented.According to D. Gale Johnson, dean ofthe division of social sciences, the councilin his division will have representativesfrom each degree granting department.Since not all departments have electedrepresentatives, the council has not metyet. However, Johnson speculates that thecouncil “will have a greater tie with theadministration and faculty of the divisionthan with the president.”Johnson states that each department willhave a faculty representative on the coun¬cil. “The division is hoping to have moreintercommunication between students with¬in the division. The social science divisionCollege Forum QuestionsLiberal Education“It certainly isn’t here!”So answered an anonymous student tothe question posed at the first College Fo¬rum — “Liberal Education: Where Is It?”.Members of the panel assembled to discussthe question in Quantrell Auditorium'Wednesday afternoon had different an¬swers, however.The forums have been described by Don¬ald Levine, associate professor of sociolo¬gy, as a “permanent floating arts confer¬ence’’ whose aims are “to provide a com-IHC Approves ChangeIn Dormitory HoursInter House Council (IHC) passed ninehouse hours proposals, two containing pro¬visions for 24-hour intervisitation on week¬ends, during a meeting on Tuesday. Theproposals will be sent to Dean O’Connell,who has final authority on hours.The requests were:Woodword Court: noon—12 pm on week¬days, noon—2 am on weekends.Dodd: 11 am—3 am dailyHitchcock: 11 am—3 am dailyTufts: 11 am—3 am dailyHenderson: noon—1 am, Sunday throughThursday, and noon—3 am, Friday andSaturdaySalsbury: 11 am—3 am, Monday throughThursday, and 11 am Friday through 3 amMondayVincent: 11 am—3 am, Monday throughThursday, and 11 am Friday through 3 amMondaySnell submitted a request for house au¬tonomy.The proposals were approved by IHC onthe understanding that they had beenpassed in the houses by a sufficiently largevote, or had been made by some other pro¬vision in the house constitutions.IHC also made a specific proposal forhouse autonomy which will be sent to eachof the houses for approval.ObituaryThe Rev Dr Joseph Haroutunian, 64 pro¬fessor of systematic theology in the divin¬ity school, died Friday, November 15. Hewas stricken with a heart attack whiledriving and was taken to Mercy Hospital,where he was pronounced dead.The Rev. Dr. Haroutunian came to theUniversity as a faculty member in 1962.He had served on study comminsions ofthe World Council of Churches and was amember of the faculty of McCormick Theo¬logical Seminary, Chicago, from 1940 to munal expreience for faculty and stu¬dents” and “to throw light on questions ofcommon concern”.The participants on the panel were Jo¬seph Schwab, James Redfield, RichardFlacks, and Jay Lemke. Roger Black mod¬erated the discussion, which had an au¬dience of some 250 students.Schwab is Harper professor of naturalsciences, while Redfield is master of thenew collegiate division. Flacks is an assis¬tant professor of sociology, Lemke a grad¬uate student in physics, and Black the edi¬tor of the Chicago Maroon.Schwab began formal discussion withsuggestions for improving current short¬comings. He felt that “overarching dis¬ciplines” which connect different fields ofstudy as well as emphasis on the practicalarts are needed in addition to the regulardivisions.Schwab also expressed concern that theconnection between thought and feelingand thought and action is not realized andthat there is not enough interest in commu¬nity affairs.Flacks essentially agreed but wonderedwhether such an education was plausible inthis kind of society. The first problem, hecontended, is that teachers are not trainedto teach the liberal curriculum. Then hespoke on the irrelevance of the liberal cur-iculum to the extenal society.“How can young people take this cur¬riculum seriously; and if they do, whathappens to them?” he asked. Finally hesuggested that the availability of this edu¬cation only to a particular class, up tonow, “reinforces a caste system” in thiscountry.How the University can change the worldso that the liberally educated person canlive well and whether or not one can arriveat competencies by discussion alone werequestions raised by Lemke.Redfield emphasized the role of the uni¬versity in the cultivation of specific virtuesas well as the university as a type of sub¬culture. He said that liberal education is“hollow” unless there is an attempt toshape realities and establish the reason fordoing it.In the question period that followed stu¬dents suggested that in order to help theliberal education process an “interim” pe¬riod should be formed either between highschool and college or during the collegeyears so that the individual can developoutside the university. In addition, they feltthat “importing revolutionaries” into theuniversity to teach about action would beof value. is a pretty amorphous group and I hopethat this will bring the students together.”According to Sol Krassner, dean of stu¬dents in the division of physical sciences,students were elected to the council in thedivision at a division wide meeting in thefourth week of the quarter. Krassner an¬ticipates that the council will report toAdrian Albert, dean of the division of phys¬ical sciences, and that Albert will contactLevi. He regards the council as a “place toexhange ideas on matters of interest to thephysical sciences division.”The division of biological sciences is theonly division in the graduate school whichin not electing a council. According to Jo¬seph Ceithaml, dean of students in the divi¬sion, “graduate students feel they are bet¬ter organized within their own depart¬ments, and don’t see the need for a divi¬sional group. He stated that it wasn’t likely.that a council would be formed, because“there has never been a lack of commu¬nication on an individual or a group basisin our division”.Four of the seven professional schoolsare in the process of electing student coun¬cils. According to Ruth Carnovsky, dean ofstudents in the graduate library school, athree member council was elected in anopen election this quarter. Mrs. Carnovskystated that the council has only met infor¬mally and no plans have been set to meetwith Levi.The school of social services adminis¬tration, according to Dean Alton Linford,has decided to use the previously elected(last year) SSA Association. Linford statedthat the SSA council meets often, thereforecommunication problems do not exist asmuch in his school as in others.Walter D. Fackler, associate dean of thebusiness school, stated that elections in the PRESIDENT LEVIGets His Councilsbusiness school will be held in the nearfuture. Fackler also commented that hedoesn’t feel any kind of communicationproblem exists in the business school; fur¬thermore, he wasn’t aware that Levi wish¬ed to meet with the council.The department of education, accordingto Roald Campbell, dean of the depart¬ment, has elected a student-faculty com¬mittee this quarter. The graduate school ofeducation is in the process of forming astudent faculty committee.The Pritzker school of medicine haselected a council of four students fromeach class. William Docken, a second yearstudent in the medical school and presidentof the council, stated that the council has a“lot of potential for good because, for thefirst time, it gives some sort of chance todirect and organize our thoughts and makeour complaints felt.”On Friday, December 6, the Maroon will be completely given over to a specialreport on 'The Crime in Our Streets'. The quote unquote security problem is onethat fias driven away some faculty and alarmed most students; without a doubtit is a problem that very seriously with affects the quaiity of life in Hyde Park.The report will deal with the nature of crime in our community, the city andcampus police forces and their relation to each other and to students, and withthe ways the community can work to solve the problem. We need student andpublic opinion and would appreciate if you would answer some questions andsend your answers to us by faculty exchange.1. Do you feel safe in Hyde Park?2. Does crime in Hyde Park influence your acti¬vities at all? If so, how?3. What is your attitute toward the police? Whatdo you feel is police attitude toward you andtoward students in general?4. Do you see any difference in attitude or be¬havior between the city police and the cam¬pus police? Is the shoulder patch sufficientidentification?5. Do you think that there is enough police pro¬tection in Hyde Park? Or do you feel oppres¬sed by the presence of the police here?The CrimeinOur Streets Fold into eights and drop into Fac.Ex. Box.The MaroonIda Noyes* HallFaculty Exchange3t , November 22,1968 The Chicago MaroonEDITORIALThe MaroonThe Maroon does not usually make it a practice to wash itsdirty linens in public, but we have, over the past eight weeks, beenexperiencing serious difficulties which have now reached propor¬tions that could threaten the existence of the Maroon. We feel atthis point a responsibility to inform the campus of the current st¬ation and a need to ascertain how the University community feelsabout its newspaper.Many of our problems can be traced back to the root of allevils: money. By September of this year the Maroon had run up asubstantial debt of some few thousand dollars. The financial situa¬tion reached a crisis when, during the last week of October, wereceived an ultimatum from our printer: “Pay or die.” The Maroonreached an emergency agreement with the University whereby wetransferred our indebtedness to them. We still owe the money, butto different people.The Maroon was not originally conceived as a profit-makinginstitution, but as a student service. It receives no permanent fund¬ing from any source, however our CORSO (Committee on Recog¬nized Student Organizations) allotment for which we re-apply everyyear a .ounts to less than 5% of our yearly operating cost. Therest of our income comes from advertisement revenue. Althoughthe efficiency of our business staff has increased tremendouslyover the past year, we are constantly in a precarious financialsituation.However, money is not what makes a newspaper what it is.Much more important to us is the size and quality of our staff.This year, a problem that the Maroon has always faced is particu¬larly acute, a very small number of experienced returning staffmembers. The Maroon presently operates under an editor-in-chief,a managing editor, a news editor, three news board editors and aphotography editor. They, along with two of last year’s editorsfunctioning in an executive capacity, are the only returning staffmembers. These people put in an average of 20-30 hours a weekeach. None receives any salary. Some of us receive Murphy scholar¬ships; some of us were refused; some, because of the conditionsfor allocation, cannot apply. At present a Murphy is based tenfinancial need with little regard for the nature or demands of theextra-curricular position. It is interesting that the Murphy fundwas originally designated to provide a sizeable salary for the Editorof the Maroon and renumeration for major staff members. Notonly has the original full-tuition refund to the editor disappeared,but Maroon staff members must now individually compete withthose of every other organization for a much-reduced stipend.We do not begrudge the time we give to the Maroon. Most ofus do so for two reasons: first, the enjoyment we receive from it,which includes the quality of the newspaper itself, and second, thebelief that the Maroon provides a needed and crucial service forthe campus. But, when we find it exceedingly difficult, if not im¬possible to produce the quality newspaper that we all want andwhen we have cause to doubt whether this campus needs or evenwants the function that the Maroon provides, then we have toquestion seriously the value of the time and energy that we areexpending.All of the above have contributed to the crisis situation we nowface, which is a staff crisis of sufficient gravity to force the Maroonto fold. We do not want this to happen and will do everything inour power to see that it doesn’t, even to the extent of devotingmore time and energy to the Maroon although this would involvea considerably greater personal sacrifice.We are willing to do this, but this alone will not solve theproblem. We want the help of the campus and we need it badly.We need your help in obtaining news. When you know of a storythat should be in the paper let us know—before it happens. Wecan not cover stories unless we know of them. This is no ordinarysales pitch. If there is no change forthcoming in the attitude andespecially in the amount of cooperation of the University com¬munity, we will cease publication. This is not meant as a threat;it is a simple statement of fact. Our office is on the third floor ofIda Noyes Hall. We need your help.THe Chicago Maroon • November 12, 19M-*Wj 1 J.rltioi LETTERS TO THE EDITORBooth SpeaksIt is with sorrow in my heart that I findmyself, for the second time in a long ca¬reer of reading the Maroon forced to askfor a correction. I do so not as adminis¬trator, not as friend or enemy of eitherofficial or unofficial ombudsmen (I’ll betyou don’t know the Scandinavian plural ofobmbudsman either!), but simply as a hy¬persensitive human being whose bloodflows slower when he gets misquoted.Your parody, on page one of the Novem¬ber 5 issue, says that Jerry Lipsch said, “itwould be an act of uncritical priority forthe administration.. .” This is a parody ofsomething that Miss Barbara Hurst, whomI love like a daughter, misquoted from meapropos Mr. Moscow’s appointment. WhatI said was, “It would be an act of uncritic¬al a priorism to assume in advance, etc,etc” When the Maroon, with or withoutMiss Hurst’s connivance, turned “uncritic¬al a priorism” into “uncritical priority,” Iwas not distressed for more than about aweek. Though I knew what the mis¬quotation signified about the rapidly declin¬ing level of literacy in our College, I de¬eded to lick my wounds, lie in wait,meditate revenge, and above all keep mycool. But as Homer says, when collegenewspapers commit illiteracies, societiescollapse.Sadly, sadly, sadly,Wayne C. BoothOpponent of the High Priori RoadBookstore CodeCode numbers like this are printed onthe first page of nearly all the books forsale in the University Bookstore. This onewas found in Gunner Myrdal’s “Asian Di¬lemma,” on sale for $10. We have crackedthe code and we thought it should be made public, because this code gives the whole¬sale price of the book in letters and thengives the retail price in numbers. By knnw-ing the code, you can tell how much thebook cost the bookstore and how muchthe markup is. The code is as follows: Thefirst letter (“G” or “T”) stands for gen¬eral or textbook. The second two num¬bers indicate when the book was priced.The above example was August (the eighthmonth) of 1968. (On occasion, these firsttwo items are omitted.) The next lettersgive the wholesale price, in the followingcode:Code letter: VNAROLHSCTXTranslation: 1234567890.Thus LXTT is $6—the wholesale price ofthe Myrdal book. In this case the markupis $4.00 or a 66 2/3% markup, using thewholesale price as a base.A somewhat random stratified sampleof 40 book prices was taken recently. Thepercent markup was computed using thiscode for 20 textbooks and 20 general books,half of each category being paperbacksand the other half hardbound. The averagemarkup, based on wholesale prices, wasas follows:General TextbookHardbound 45% 32%Paperback 60% 39%These results show that there is a lowermarkup for textbooks and a lower markupfor hardback books. The most commonmarkups are 25 per cent and 66 and two-thirds per cent.It will be interesting to see if the codeis changed by the bookstore after this codebecomes common knowledge.In accordance with academic researchwriting style we can only conclude by say¬ing that further research would be wel¬comed.Duncan NeuhauserCharles PhelpsGraduate School of BdsinessBULLETIN OF EVENTSFriday, November 22LECTURE: "Translation of the Genetic Code," Mr.Paul Berg. Billings P-117, 12:30 pm.LECTURE: "Historiography and the Study of Islam,"Kemal H. Karpat, Professor of Middle EasternStudies, University of Wisconsin. Business East9, 3:30 p.m.LECTURE: "Mechanism of the DNA Helping Effectin Transformation of Streptococci," Arnold W.Ravin. Ricketts 7, 4 pm.FILM: "Georgy Girl," Cobb Hall, 7 and 9 pm.LECTURE: "Facts, Genius and Discovery," HerbertLamm. Downtown Center Room 700, 8 pm.PLAY: "The White Devil," Reynold's Club Theater,8 pm. Tickets $2 and $1.50.LECTURE: "Religious Myth and Symbol," ProfessorTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RochtNews Editor: Barbara HurstPhotographic Editor: DavM TravisNews Board:Academics: Caoline HeckStudent Organizations: Wendy GlocknerThe Movement: Paula SzewczykCommunity: Bruce NortonSports: Mitch KahnSenior Editor: Jeffrey KufaAssistant Editor: Howie SchamestContributing Editor: John MoscowNews Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Marv Bittner, Deb-by Dobish, Chris Froula, Con Hitchcock,C. D. Jaco, Kristi Kuchler, Chris Lyon,Sylvia Piechocka, David Steele, LeslieStrauss, Robert Swift, Leonard Zax.Production Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Sue Loth,David Steele, Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift.Sunshine Girl: Jean WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during the tenthweek of the academicquarter and during exam¬ination periods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi.cago. III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3269. Distributed on campus and in the HydePark neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptionsby mall $7 per year. Non-profit postage paidat Chicago, III. Subscribers to College PressService. Saturday, November 23CROSSCOUNTRY--National AAU Junior 10,000 meterchampionship, Washington Park, 1:30 pm.PLAY: "The White Devil/ Reynold's Club Theater,8 pm.CONCERT: University Symphony Orchestra, Gene Narmour conducting. Mandet Hall, 8:30 pm.Sunday, November 24UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS^ SERVICE: Preacher: Reverend E. Spencer Parsons, "Of Greed andGratitude." Communion immediately after serv¬ice. Rockefeller Chapel, 11 am.CONCERT: University Concert Band. Works by Sousa,Bennett, Perechetti, and Rieger. LexingtonStud o, 3 pm.CHESS CLUB: Meeting to organize four teams forUS Intercollegiate. 3rd floor Ida Noyes, 3 pmSUNDAY EVENING AT BONHOEFFER: "Bill SettlesDoes His Thing," Bill Settles, Divinity School.Supper (75c), 5:50, program, 6:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: International Dancing, Ida NoyesCloister Club, 7:30 pm.MEETING: Jewish Peace Fellowship, organizationalmeeting. Hillel, 8 pm.ThanksgivingMaroonThere will be only one Maroonnext week, on Wednesday. Theadvertising deadline is Mondayafternoon at 4:30. Ken Shermanhas asked everyone to pleaseplace a classified ad, even if youdon't want to.FellowshipsGraduate students in residence inthe divisions and students transfer¬ring from the College to the divi¬sions: applications for fellowshipsand scholarships are due January1. Applications not submitted be¬fore the interim may be mailed.The fellowship office will acceptapplications through the first weekof winter quarter but would preferto receive them before January 1-Application forms are available inthe office of admissions and aid.r; M r. >. i i *j\. i.jv»i)i|yl\ I.w If ,t’i • I,', • • j1., i j> i... ;' iiU l it ( ;i,. i t i (- iV, “ smutnobiui in-,he Vpinched forum??UNDERSTANDING COMESFASTER WITHCLIFF S NOTES'OVER 175 TITLES $1 EACHAT YOUR BOOKSELLERCliffSvNoteiuINCOIN NEBRASKA 68501HOW MUCH YOU MAYSAVE ON YOUR CARINSURANCE WITHSTATE FARMFrank Spinelli1369 E. 53rd. ST.955-3133STATE FARMMutual Automobile Insurance CompanyHorn* Office: Bloemmiton, IllinoisTCARPET CITY6740 STONY ISLAND324-7998Has what you need from a $1(3used 9 x 12 Rug, to a customcarpet. Specializing in Rem¬nants & Mill returns at afraction of the original cost.Decoration Colors and Qual-Iities. Additional 10% Discountwith this Ad.I FREE DELIVERYPizzaHYS-US2.Italian & AmericanDishes SandwichesDelivery ServiceOPEN 7 DAYSCarry-Outs[4S9 E. Hrda Park blvd Dear Mr. Doan:I question whether a businesscareer will allow me to attainwhat I would consider a properbalance among all aspects of mylife. Is business today sodemanding that one would havetime for little else? A job is amajor part of life but not thewhole of it. Raising a family is avery important part of mostpeople's future plans. Therefore,of prime concern would be thepossible adverse effects a careerin business might have on anindividual's family obligations.Are basic family ties weakenedas a result of a preoccupationwith business? With respect tofamily ties. Dr. Feinberg in theJanuary 1968 Dun's Review says,“In the family of the typicalbusiness executive there is verylittle knitting together ofdiverse environments." It wouldappear that an executive cannotadequately fulfill his role as ahusband and father. The familyunit is subordinated to his job.A preoccupation with businesscan mean more than just a lackof time to spend with one'sfamily. In the same article. Dr.Feinberg says, “Many youngstersfeel that their fathers know theprice of everything and the valueof nothing." There appears to bethe tendency to emphasize theeconomic side of life and toignore the equally importantpersonal side.My question is whether being agood husband and father willnecessarily conflict with being agood businessman. Draw onyour own personal experience,Mr. Doan. Can you honestly saythat en route to becoming asuccessful businessman, youwere an equally successfulhusband and father? Need theseroles be contradictory? If not,how did you resolve the conflict?Sincerely,/[j Ou t// yty.David M. ButlerElectrical Engineering,Michigan State David M. Butier, Michigan State Dear Mr. Butler:You ask about conflict betweenthe time demands of a job inindustry and the time we needfor our family life.Well, first of all. I'm not surethere's any real differencebetween this problem as it occursin business and as it occurs inany other occupation ; the sameproblem occurs in education, ingovernment, or in the ministry.In any field—and this is the basicproblem—the more responsibilityyou assume the less time you'llhave for your family.In many cases this factor has abuilt-in balance: the heaviestresponsibility usually comes tous at an age when our childrenhave grown up, so that in anidealized sense there may be noproblem at all.My own view is that you canhave both a satisfying career anda good family life, but Irecognize that for the youngbusiness executive this is a veryreal problem, and one thatrequires some choices to be made— consciously or unconsciously.You are perfectly right that youcannot carry a very largebusiness or educational orgovernmental responsibility andalso have an ideal family Iife —particularly from the standpointof time. Perhaps the savinggrace of this dilemma is thateach of us can make our choiceas to what we want.When Dr. Feinberg says thatmany parents "know the price ofeverything and the value ofnothing" he is right, but I'msure this phenomenon is notexclusive to businessmen. It ismore a condemnation ofindividuals than it is of thebusiness system. There are greatnumbers of businessmen whohave excellent value systems, andin many cases these are based ona self-acquired liberal education.The man who knows the value ofall things (and the price ofnothing) is invariably of morevalue to the business system, justas he is a more valuable man toeducation or to the government. On the personal side, to someextent I am a victim of theproblem you pose. Having raiseda family in an imperfect and, Isuppose, shorthanded (in thesense of lack of time) way, I canreadily agree that there areconflicts. But, having raised afamily. I'm convinced as well thatno one has an idea how thisreally should be done. It may wellbe that more time would nothave solved problems that werepersonal short-comings inthe first place.In any event, the central point isthat we are free people withfree wills. If you want to work a40-hour or a 30-hour week sothat you can spend more timewith your family, that is a noblegoal and one you can probablyachieve -if your goal is not toassume a large amount ofresponsibility in your chosen field.Your question is not relatedsolely to business, but to anyoccupation ; and if you are wiseenough you can figure out yourown best balance in this matter.But I think it should be perfectlyapparent to you that not manypeople are this wise, and thatthis balance —like many of theelements of Utopia —is notreally attainable.To summarize: if you want toachieve the maximum success inany field you had betterbeprepared to work long, hard,dedicated hours. This kind ofadvice admits a heavy imbalancein the way you spend your time,as I am quite aware, but thechoice is yours.Sincerely,H. D. Doan, President,The Dow Chemical CompanyMr. Doan:Is the lop of* the corporate ladderworth the pressure?vVWHO CARES ABOUTSTUDENT OPINION?BUSINESSMEN DO.Three chief executive officers—TheGoodyear Tire & Rubber Company'sChairman, Russell DeYoung, The DowChemical Company's President,H. D. Doan, and Motorola'sChairman, Robert IV. Galvin—are •responding to serious questions andviewpoints posed by students aboutbusiness and its rote in our changingsociety . . . and from their perspective as heads of major corporations areexchanging views through means ofa campus/corporate DialogueProgram on specific issues raised byleading student spokesmen.Here. David M. Butter, completing hisstudies in Electrical Engineering atMichigan State, is questioning Mr.Doan. A member of the Dean'sAdvisory Committee, Mr. Butier alsoparticipates actively in professionalengineering organizations on campus; anticipates graduate studies beforedeveloping his career.in the course of the entire DialogueProgram, Stan Chess, Journalismmajor at Cornell, also will probeissues with Mr. Doan; as will MarkBookspan, a Chemistry major at OhioState, and David G. Clark, ingraduate studies at Stanford, withMr. DeYoung; and similarly, ArthurM. K/ebanoff, in Liberal Arts at Yale,and Arnold Shelby, Latin AmericanStudies at Tulane, with Mr. Galvin. AH of these Dialogues will appear inthis publication, and other campusnewspapers across the country,throughout this academic year.Campus comments are invited, andshould be forwarded to Mr.DeYoung, Goodyear, Akron, Ohio;Mr Doan, Dow Chemical, Midland,Michigan; or Mr. Galvin, Motorola,Franklin Park, Illinois, as appropriate.Wit*U> 3Lu>.r Shop“FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS”1308 EAST 53rd STREET MORGAN S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1514 S. 53ri IT. Same Day 5 Hr. Cleaning No Extra Charge:S scmmCustom Quality Cleaning 10% fcwdant Discount1342 E. 53rd 752-4933Nooombei 22, 1948 The Chicago Maroon*• * ;!,* ) Y4 n - i » ■ • • ■* i *Some decisions are relatively unimportant.Where you put your engineeringtalent to work is not.As you contemplate one of the most important decisions of your life, we invite you to consider acareer at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft. Here, you will find wide-open opportunities for professional growthwith a company that enjoys an enviable record of stability in the dynamic atmosphere of aerospacetechnology.We selecf our engineers and scientists carefully. Motivate them well. Give them the equipment andfacilities only a leader can provide. Offer them company-paid, graduate-education opportunities.Encourage them to push into fields that have not been explored before. Keep them reaching for alittle bit more responsibility than they can manage. Reward them well when they do manage it.And your decision is made easier, thanks to the wide range of talents required. Your degree can be aB.S., M S., or Ph D. in: MECHANICAL • AERONAUTICAL • ELECTRICAL • CHEMICAL • CIVIL •MARINE • INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING • PHYSICS • CHEMISTRY • METALLURGY • MATERIALSSCIENCE • CERAMICS • MATHEMATICS • STATISTICS • COMPUTER SCIENCE • ENGINEERINGSCIENCE • ENGINEERING MECHANICS.Consult your college placement officer—or write Mr. William L. Stoner, Engineering Department,Pratt & Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford, Connecticut 06108.Pratt & Whitney AircraftEAST HARTFORD AND MIDDLETOWN, CONNECTICUT u> AIRCFDIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORPORATIONWEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA An Equ*l Opportunity Employ#?HELP KEEP OURSTREETS BEAUTIFULMAKE YOURimports, inc. NEXT CAR2235 S. MICHIGAN326-2550 mnBClassified ads Bring Results(and Libel Suits) NewWriting J>Prize winning poems, short storiesand novel excerpts bytwenty-two college writers—the best of campus writing today.^WASHINGTON ***>■*ITU SQUARE PRESS, INC.630 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10020 A Subsidiary of Simon & Schuster, Inc. (VOLVQlYolvos last an averageof 11 years in Sweden.They average about aday and a half in our showroom.Till- U'-l |■•.•-■III till I\ ill” .1 Liltn i- In-i .111-1- il l.i-l- -II lull”I- vu tU IlfI" lull” III- llull'l Ull.tl.llllf'f lull Hi' l|u LtlflU ill,it u\.'|•I.Y ul .ill ill, \ul\u. Ii ”i.|i'ii-»l III tin- I mil'll N.ilc* III lilt- |,|.|I I M .11- .11. -fill mi tin- lu.nl.Hi. I..-.11, i-uii lui l.iis iii” .i N.iKu now. i- In', .mu' hi' Ii.im-.1 I'ru III -lu. k. \n.l I i.mklx . \»|- ilun'l . \|M1 11.1 li.ni' I Ill-til.llullllll lull lull”.\\ III! Il III ill” - Il|l .III lllllll'-l III” |Ml.lllu\ ,11 mil I \lll\ll-. fl|||I II -I I III III ~ likilu lull tlirin lui .iii-i I In' l.i-l. \\i liki lu -illtin Ml I..-. an- III. V ilun'l.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE.CHICAGO, ILL. 60649 RE 1-3800You don’t havemore than a minuteto lose.Or gainWe'll give you that guarantee when you buy an Accutron’ timepiece It'tl be accurate to within a minute a month t An average oftwo seconds a day Other watches have their own notions about howlong a day should last Sometimes they shorten it to 23 hours and 56minutes Or make it last longer than the usual 24 hours. Accutrondoesn t believe in making time Or losing it Just keeping itACCUTRON" by BULOVA W It goes hm m m m.1$OT?r~:<2rctJuer.S wtiCacViStudent discount V.1422 E-st 53rd Ei.It might bean identity crisis.But we knowYOU’RE YOU,CHARLIEBROWNTHE NEWPEANUTSCARTOON BOOK!By Charles M. SchulzONLY of your collegebookstoreHolt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. ANDERSON’SBULKOSERVICE STATIONHIGHEST QUALITY GASOLINEAT LOWEST PRICESFEATURING THEBULKO PANTRYA complete Grocery StoreOPEN 24 HOURS57th & COTTAGE GROVETHEBOOKHOOKSpecial OrdersModern LibraryFull Line New DirectionsMost Paperback Lines10% Student Discount1540 E. 55th ST. MI3-751be trapped by Hyde Park'sfirst and finest BoutiquetrapTHE MOUSEjewelry, hip clothing, craftswe custom-make clothes atincredibly reasonable prices1453 E. Hyde Park Blvd.363-92156 . . The Chicago Maroon November 22,1968_, Iletters to the editors of the maroonContinued from Page FourListeningAs a student who has had some of themost rewarding academic experiences ofhis life in Wayne Booth’s courses, I wasdisappointed at the tone of his letter reply¬ing to Richard Flacks’ criticism of theUniversity of Chicago dinner honoring Ed-Ward H. Levi. Since many of Mr. Booth’sassertions have been answered in previousletters to the Maroon, there is no need tobelabor the point here. But the harsh toneof Mr. Booth’s letter (as well as some ofthe answers to it) make me uneasy thatsomething very important is in danger ofbeing lost at this University, as well aselsewhere in the United States. I recallparticularly two statements made by thelate Senator Robert F. Kennedy of NewYork that hold so much hope if we can butact on them:1. “I am impatient. I suppose I wouldhope that everybody would be impatient. .. Somebody wrote on the pyramids, at thetime they were being constructed, the words, ‘And nobody was angry enough tospeak out.’ I think people should be angryenough to speak out. I think there are in¬justices, I think there are unfairnesses inmy own country and around the world, andI think if one feels involved. . .that oneshould try to do something.”2. ‘‘Few men are willing to brave thedisapproval of their fellows, the censure oftheir colleagues, the wrath of their society.Moral courage is a rarer commodity thanbravery in battle or great intelligence. Yetit is the one essential, vital quality forthose who seek to change a world thatyields most painfully to change.”We do not even have to share Dante’sconviction that ‘‘the hottest places in hellare reserved for those who in times ofmoral crisis preserve their neutrality” toconclude that a University should play amajor role in educating and leading thecountry to a higher level, especially intimes such as ours. In recent years wehave seen an overwhelming variety of kill¬ing, brutality, evil and confrontation, andthe result has been an increasing divisionand polarization in many areas of our society. Few of us are satisifed with thecurrent state of the world, the nation orthe University, and many can barely con¬tain their anger. But precisely for this rea¬son we should emember Emerson’sthought that “this time, like all times, is avery good one, if we but know what to dowith it.” In terms of the debate in recentissues of the Maroon, this means that bothsides must change their attitude if we areto have meaningful progress. Perhaps Mr.Levi and some of the other people in powerat the University of Chicago might not bethe ones that some students would prefer,but they are nevertheless the people wemust somehow work with and convince inorder to achieve a constructive change indirection. A real dialogue (not just talkingback and forth) must take place if thosewho are dissatisfied with present policiesare to convince those responsible for thosepolicies to act courageously and not justexpediently. What is needed from studentsis reasoned argument and effective actionrather than the kind of confrontation thatwill only widen the gap between the twosides, however justified that might seem.And from the administration we need the open-mindedness that will make con¬frontations unnecessary. It does not helpthe situation to tell us, as Mr. Booth has,that the better University which we wouldlike to build can exist only in our “imagi¬nation of an improbably future.” A univer¬sity, as well as a society, is man-made andcan therefore be improved by men who actwith vision and principle. Mr. Booth, Mr.Levi and the others in power should beworking toward that better University in¬stead of telling us why it can exist only inan improbable future. Surely they are sin¬cerely working to improve the Universityas they see it. The role of student “dis¬senters” is to influence their view of theUniversity in a constructive direction. Thefreedom from various pressures of runninga University can put thoughtful students ina position where they can contribute valu¬able ideas to an administration in suchareas as what compromises are worthmaking for the practical purposes thatmust be considered in maintaining an in¬stitution such as the University, and whatcompromises defeat the purposes they aredesigned to aid.Ronny W. EskreisStill Up AgainstThe Wall?live at the Hyde Park Y/HCA• inexpensive • clean• maid service • cafeteria• on Campus Bus route$14 Weekly fate AvailaoleImmediately to Studentsregister any day 10 AM - 10 PM1400 E, 53rd Street 324-5300ASAMATTEROF... the financial protection you giveyour family today will have to be pro¬vided b^some other means tomorrow.Sun Life insurance can certainly dothis job for you.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602FR 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAauthorized BMC sales & service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113Chicago, illinois 60615/^foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.Tell Them We Sent You Why didn’t you sayyou always wanteda freechecking account?Unlimited free checking when you open a PASS¬PORT ONE Savings Account. Look what else youget: A free safety deposit box, for your valuables. Apersonal line of credit up to $5000. Plus member¬ship in an international travel plan. All this, withyour PASSPORT ONE Savings Account. The mini¬mum balance is $1000 and we pay you 4% interestcompounded quarterly.Hyde Park Bank and Trust Co., 53rd & Lake ParkPhone 752-4600MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATIONKLH 11 PortableKLH 11 WalnutKLH IS Tiny TunerKLH 20 The little GiantKLH 24 Par ExcellenceAT THE fret shop5210 So. Harperin Harper CourtSyNoinHwfcrtt, J968 r.tJkH Chkatft’MafoonBe Practical!BuyUtility ClothesComplete selection ofboots, overshoes, insu¬lated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear,Corduroys, “ Levis,"etc., etc.UNIVERSAL ARMYSTOREPL 2-47441364 E. 63rd. St. |=====Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientand Around The World1462 E. 53rd St. Hyde ParkBankTHE INFAMOUS MAROON CLASSIFIED ADSLRATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 28 charactersand spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mailwith payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.No ads will be taken over thephone. \DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIEDADS FOR TUESDAY MUST BEIN BY FRIDAY. ALL CLASSI¬FIED ADS FOR FRIDAY MUSTBE IN BY WEDNESDAY. NOEXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO3:30 P.M. DAILY.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.RABIES-RABIES-RABIESWill owner of white dog who bit girl12:30 Friday, 11/15, near MandelHall, PLEASE call X4522 days,955-6391 eves to PREVENT PAIN¬FUL RABIES SHOTS.RIDES & RIDERSRide wanted to Chicago from NewYork City around Dec. 31. Ext.3266.I need a ride to Seattle or there¬abouts after exams. Will shareexp/dr. Bob 643-9514.Ride wanted to CALIF, for Xmasbreak. Will share driving and ex¬penses. Call Ann, 493-3721.Ride wanted over Thanksgiving toAkron Ohio or Exit 11 on OhioTurnpk. Call John, 70 Hitchcock.RIDERS WANTED to Toronto oren route. Leaving sometime afterexams, returning before Jan. 1.Ext. 3266.Wanted: driver-rider to L.A. aboutDec. 12. FA 4-9399.WANTED TO BUYDress form adjustable or size 10.Ext. 3266.AIRLINE YOUTH FARE CARD—want to rent a half-fare card fromsome male student who won't needit over Xmas. Will pay a fair price.955-4982.WANTED TO RENTWould like to rent a room in yourhouse. Leave message at GR 6-3527 Marion Shore.Want to sublet apt. over Thksg.,Tues.-Sun. pref. Call Peter, 738-2998.FOR RENT2 grad. stu. need 3rd, own room,5810 Harper, 752-7689.One male grad student to sharew/3 others 8 rm. house. Own rom.$50/mo. Nr. University. 955-7436.Lar^e Bdrm apt. on Lake ac, heatinc. I.C. bus—parking avail—shop¬ping for 1, or share. $153.00 SO 8-3922.Own room for roommate. $30/mo.6113 Kimbark 493-7698.Need grad for 3 man apt. in hy pk.50/m. 684-3644 5-7 P.M.3V* rm. apt. to June 10 w/optionfor new lease. $115/mo. util. inc.54th & Woodlawn. 955-2936.Rec. by L. Handelman, Stu. Govt.Short-term lease, 2 weeks free.Near-by, economical, newly dec.unfurn. apts. 2 & 3'/2 rm. $75,$89.50. Free gas, elec. Clean, quiet.Williams, 6043 Woodlawn. 2 fern stud, want 3rd. Own room,56th & University. Sue 643-6494.1 or two nlfcles to share Ig. 5 rm.apt. at 69 and So. Sh. during Win.Qtr. 363-6221SUBLET: one man apt. 2612 E.75; Vj block from I.C., 1 block fromUC bus; $68. 288-6222.Attractive room for woman. Kitchenfac. East Hyde Park. 643-4401.HOUSE FOR SALEBY OWNER $14,500 4 bdrm, brick,modern cabinet kitchen, dishwasher,disposal, blt-in oven, range, carpet,drapes, many extras, low taxes,2633 E. 74th Place, 221-7257.CHINESE COOKINGLESSONSAuthentic Chinese cooking taughtin lovely Chinese home. Learn toprepare and serve over 12 dishesin six weeks. Tuition $20. Materials$5. Begin Jan. Limited enrollment.7 per class. Call 324-8070.TRAVELTravel with NSA this Christmas.Jaunts to Canada, Europe, Carib¬bean, call BU 8-6610, X3126 uc/nsaCHARTER FLIGHT. N.Y./London/N.Y. Leaves Dec. 17th, returns Jan.11th. Boeing 707 $189. Write"N.A.S.A." c/of Grad. School ofBusiness Office.PEOPLE WANTEDImaginative Secretary and P-Rdynamo wanted: Part-time, 10-20hours per week. $3.00 or up perhour. New media-education organiz.Call 374-5216 after 4 P.M.Need girl to live in. Blackstonebeginning win. qtr. 363-9044.DESK CLERK (male) 3 nights perweek. 12:00 midnight until 8:00A.M. Do not opply unless you planto stay thruout summer of '69.Apply: The Quadrangle Club, 1155East 57th Street.Part-time work on campus for theElectric Theatre Co. Contact WallyMeyowitz at 784-1724.LOSTYoung, very friendly, orange malecat, last seen Ray School Nov.14th. 667-8693.FOR SALEThe new BEATLES ALBUM or anyother record at the lowest pricesaround. Sanford Rockowifz 288-4204.PORTABLE TYPEWRITER, Smith-Corona 12" carriage pica type likenu. Cost $125.00 bargain $65.00.528-7388.5:20-13 Goodyr. suburb, snowtires.Like new $15. 538-5587 after 6.Roberts tape recorder 4 tracks.Perfect condition. $200. 374-2172.Wooden Tile Top Bar, 2 green vinylstools, $40.00. DO 3-6412.Good used TVs. Reconditioned.$24.95 & up. American Radio. 1300E 53rd. 53 Kimbark Plaza.Used Wood Clarinet. Good condi¬tion. $35. 667-6626.BARGAIN BASEMENT SALE. 8511Cregier. Fine Quality Furniture—clithing—furs—tools. 375-3181.'63 Chev., 4-dr. hdtp., fair cond.but runs well. $300 or best offer.BA 1-1068 after 4.Diamond engagement ring. 50 carat.New. Guaranteed in writing. $300.374-2172. Receive Short-wave on your AMRadio: Voice of America, Havana,maybe London, Moscow. Also hams,ships, and weird noises! BetterAM reception too! Only $6.5§;$5.50 to students. Includes partsand installation. Phone 536-1078eves.; ask for Mike.TYPING SERVICESServices of executive sec'y avail¬able for thesis typing. Reasonablerates—30 day credit extended ifnec'y. Located southwest. 776-2053.May I do your typing? 363-1104.Term papers, theses typed. IBMelec. 40«/page. Mrs. Cohen. 338-5242 eveng.Thesis typing—568-3056 eve.THINGS TO DOGO SEE UT'S PRODUCTION OF"The White Devil"—T.C. Fox'smodem version of Webster's Eliza¬bethan revenge thriller—8:00, Reyn¬olds Club Theatre.WORLD PREMIERES: Mob-YippieChicago film, Tom Palozzolo'sPsst-Fiitt, plus Abbie and Paul.Mandel Hall, Sun. 7:30.INTERESTED IN ISRAEL? Comehear Simcha Dinitz, Nov. 25, 6:45P.M.Help the Women's Radical Group(I'm sure I've got their namewrong) get even with the BusinessOffice for putting all those filthybeautiful women on the classifiedpages. Come up and bomb us some¬time. Ulysses S. Animal, EnergyJobber and part-time freak, willdirect the action.LOOKING FOR A WAY TO BERELEVANT? Volunteer typists bad¬ly needed for a booklet, "GraduateOpportunities for Black Students."Meet to pick up work at 2nd floorIda Noyes, Sat., Nov. 23, 11 A.M.PERSONALSBill Settles Does His Thing. Bon-hoeffer House. 5554 Woodlawn. Sun¬day, 5:30 P.M.Get the new BEATLES ALBUM atHyde Park's lowest price. SanfordRockowitz. 288-4204.RELIGIOUS MYTH AND SYMBOL.A discussion with Prof. MIRCEAELIADE, Divinity School and Com¬mittee on Social Thought, at Hillel,8:30 tonight.YIPPIE, MANDEL 7:30 SUN.Dance-Light Show-Films. Blues byAid and Abet. Blue Gargoyle, Sat.,Nov. 23. Sponsored by HPADU. 50«men, 25? women.Question Newsweek's senior for¬eign correspondent (ARNAUD deBORCHGRAVE) at his lecture onthe European Student Revolution—8 P.M. Monday, Soc. Sci. 122 FREE,uc/nsaPIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried ChickenItalian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 P. 53rd Ml 3*2800WE DELIVERTONIGHT ONLY!The Electric Theatre Co. presents atThe Aragon Ballroom1106 W. LawrenceThe Jefferson Airplane _Credence Clearwafer RevivalBlue CheerShow Starts 7:30 - tickets at the doorNEXT WEEKThe Electric Theatre Co. presents atThe Kinetic Playground 4812 N. ClarkNov. 27-28 Nov. 29-30Grateful Dead Canned HeatProcul Harem Tim BuckleyTickets: Marshall Field’s, Ticket Central,Crawford’s, at the dooror call 7844 700 He's an expert on Vietnam, too(6 tours of duty fom Dienbienphuto Hill 400).Heinlein, Asimov, Clarke, andBradbury will all be at The BookSale, Science Soc. Tues.ABBIE HOFFMAN, Mandel, 7:30Sun.There will De an organizationalmeeting of the Jewish Peace Fel¬lowship at Hillel on Sunday, Novem¬ber 24, at 8:00 P.M.Where is Doris Olson?Hans says the Bratwurst on theCourt House's late evening menuare great (9:30 to closing).Would you believe Charles U.Daley?LATKE-HAMANTASH SYMPOSIUM,Tuesday at 7:30. Ida Noyes Hall.Admission free.Introducing the newest group oncampus—Students for Israel—comemeet us and hear Simcha DinitzMon. Nov. 25, 6:45 P.M."Cold sweets don't spread." S.B.Bach, Beatles, Big Brother, allsound better in stereo. For stereocomponents at bargain prices—MUSICRAFT — Campus rep. BobTabor 324-3005.PAUL KRASSNER, MANDEL SUN7:30.What is the population of the stove?Call for Phillip Morris!Have your chick cook your dinnerat the Court House—order fondue.Doug Mitchell lost his drumsthrough and undersight. We needa drummer like you innocent kid¬dies need a Picassofok. If you (a)Have a set of drums D.M. couldborrow, (b) if you would like to bea reel Male Man or (c) none of theabove, contact us 493-0831. 235-2155,752-8026, etc. U.S.A. & the M.M.'s.YOGA—transcent depression, anxi¬ety, ennui. Sri Nerode— DO 3-0155.Tom "Chicago" Mandel, Sun. 7:30.THE LATKE, THE HAMANTASHAND THE (M)ORAL CRISIS OFTHE UNIVERSITY, is the title ofthis years symposium. Latkes andhot cider afterward.SKI ASPEN. 8 days, 9 meals, alltows, round-trip jet, taxes, Dec.14. $199 . 764-6264.Hear key JFK & RFK advisorKenneth O'Donnell on "The Two-Party System after the Elections."Fri., Nov. 22, Kent 103, 3:30 FREE!UPSA Trip out with MARCO POLO 288-5944.JACK HEWITT says that the CourtHouses hamburgers with potatoesand onions are the finest aroundand promises that if if is everdifferent, his beard will never crossour threshold again.WRITERS' WORKSHOP—PL 2-8377.The Middle Eastern Conflict—howdid it all begin? Find out Mon.,Nov. 25, 6:45 P.M. at Hillel House.Cafe MA PITOM — Israeli food —felafel, chumus, pita—8-12 P.M. Dec.1, Ida Noyes.God is nifter.Latkes, latkes, a whole pot oflatkes!YIPPIE INAUGURATION—Mandel,Sun. 7:30.Something to be Thankful for —free rolls and coffee Friday, 8P.M.And movies too.LIFE IS TOO SHORT FORGAMES. Wld like to meet or corrw warm whlsm yng worn w strngsnse hum vals. Am grad stud, 28.John Erskine, 123 Winspear Ave.Buff. N.Y. 14214.THANKSGIVING DINNER atAhmad's. Turkey dinner and ham.KEMAL KARPAT "Historiography8, Islam" Bus. E. 9, Nov. 22, 3:30.Science Fiction Soc. Book Sale,Meeting, Tues., Ida Noyes.AT LAST (pause for effect) T.C.FOX on the other side of theProscenium! See his production of"The White Devil"—complete withtwo movies, seven murders, andplenty of sex and violence. 8:00P.M. Reynolds Club Theatre.End Thanksgiving weekend with aflight from America to Israel—cafe MA PITOM—Sunday, Dec. 1. The minimal mind is generous too-The B.S.Anyone interested in horsebackriding with a UC Riding Club callJ. Katz 375-2636 after 6.Why is it that a table sold byFORM costs $288 and the sametable at SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTScost $179?Students for Israel presents Simcha Dinitz of the Israeli Embassyspeaking on Origins of the Conflictin the Middle East. Monday, Nov25, 6:45 P.M. Hillel House, 5715 sWoodlawn.Youll be tired of turkey. Tryfelafel. Cafe MA PITOM. Dec. I,Ida Noyt 8-12 P.M.FINIAN'S RAINBOW Theater Party, Dec. 7, 2 P.M. 50 persons, 10%disc. $1.85, Int. Hse. Assoc., 1414E. 59th. Inf. Mon, Wed, Thureves. FA 4-8200.Irving Rabinowitz is alive and liv¬ing under an alias in Trenton, N.j.The PIPE spits: 60th 8, Ellis.Did you hear of the doctor fromWoodlawnWho went to the opera with pantson;By the time he left there,His right thigh was barePity the doctor from Woodlawn.ZAP COMIX—freaky funnies forraunchy randy gronks. Zap featuressuch sterling charcaters as CheesisK. Reist, Mr. Natural, and Angel-food McSpade (she's Sock-A-Delic,,she's all heart, and "th' rest o' meain't bad either."). All luridly Il¬lustrated. Send 50C plus postageto: Crumb, 705 Clayton St., SanFrancisco, Calif. 94117."This is Hyde Park, whites andblacks, shoulder to shoulder againstthe lower classes." — Quotationsfrom Chairman Muriel, P. 18.It's crackers to slip a rozzer thedropski in snide.l,mJUUUuuuuuuu.u.m««lii»JI.UJJULUJQCHthebesImirsrvrmTHE BEST OF SHOW irrrrrTnrrrrvvrrnnf*fI(.l]**!,»A reviewplus improvisations hy the NEW OI.D FASHIONEDBAROQUE COMPASS PLAYERS (after the DanceFestival) Friday 8c Saturday, 10-30 P.M.HARPER THEATER COFFEE HOUSE— 5238 So. Harper—$1- -Also Theater Workshop FRITSaturday Afternoon 1:30-1:00RAVEi/ V8 The Chicago Maroon November 22, 1968 Nt>vTHE GREY CITYJOURNAL Number Nine November 22, 1968On The Steps Of The HiltonBy Michael SorkinTurning left on Balbo, we suddenly found ourselvessurrounded by myriad monster cars stuffed with blackties and redolent women. Rolling down a window securethat our brown suit would not belie our similar intentionswe greeted what we discerned to be the nearest fat cat(although it may well have been a war criminal) ascordially as we could. He nodded, we nodded, his backseat nodded, our back seat nodded, the light changed, weinched forward, they inched forward, the light changed,we stopped, they stopped, and we turned to the right justin time to see a black tie in the next lane strike thechesterfield in front of him whereupon both emergedfrom their instruments of mass murder (the offenderwas significantly a Ford) and initiated a discussion sub¬stantially less cordial than our earlier greeting, but wefinally got to the Hilton.Picking the shorter, we chose the drink line over thereceiving line and, as it stayed shorter, we chose it sev¬eral times more to the detriment of our initial embar¬rassment at being underdressed and to the considerablesupport of our already sociable mood although it must beadmitted that our slight undercurrent feeling of hostility was considerably exacerbated by the rapid and in¬decorous consumption of all the hors d’oeuvres beforeour arrival on the scene. There may well have been warcriminals in the crowd, we thought. But just as we foundanother short line the Stockyards Kilty Band struck up alissome bagpipe tune and we were drawn out of theBaroque splendour of cocktails into the Eisenhower goldof the Grand Ballroom by the sheer necessity of escapingthem. Our table, which despite its deceptively prestigiouslow number was farther from the speakers than the lawsof geometry would seem tc make possible was not with¬out the benefit of clergy nor did it lack Dean Vice repl¬ete with mustache and laced with spirit. And so we ate,chattering about the inevitable topics.And if the conversation was a bit bland, the meal waseven more so. But we suppose that it must be hard tokeep chicken from getting dry if you’re cooking 2000 ofthem. We had had enough to drink by the time dinnerbegan, at any rate.So Kimpton and Stigler spoke amusingly and wereheckled inaudibly and then it was the turn of that run¬ning dog of Yankee Imperialism, McGeorge Bundy. Hadhe not been heckled, the net effect of his ponderousspeech would have been mere and' gheer ennui. , As itturned out, it was slightly ennobled by the muffled com¬ ments of the students who managed to provide somesmall justification for not succumbing to the effects oftoo much food and alcohol. Although we could not hearthese remarks we were reassured by the dramatic regu¬larity with which the rear doors were opened to admit anew hero to the ranks of the roaring righteous. The stu¬dents kept their nerve, the University kept its cool, butKimpton, in wittily comparing his beset position withthat of the late, lamented George Wallace made a com¬ment that by its relevance stood in contrast to the gener¬al courtesy of the evening’s entertainment. The studentswere like Wallace hecklers and the comparison of Bundywith Wallace isn’t altogether (but largely) inept to besure. But the most striking point of similarity lay in theactions of the loyal throngs. Although we did not actuallyobserve the event, the usually reliable MAROON reportsthat an important University personality went so far asto discharge spit in the face of demonstrator. We didhear the most unabashed vituperation emanating fromthe assembled dignitaries. And we did see a number ofgnattily attired gentlemen leap from their seats in orderto perpetrate physical violence on the demonstrators,particularly the females, for some peculiar reason. Itm n f. » Continued on Page Five97 Projects. No Waiting.The name of our company is MITRE. We'reiq the business of designing, developing,verifying large computer-based systemsfor the Government. Under both civiland defense contractsRight now we're in communications,military command and control, air traffic control,transportation, medical information, education,urban planning. We have openings for systemsengineers, electronic engineers, systemsanalysts, mathematicians.INTERVIEWS WILL BE CONDUCTEDON CAMPUS, NOV. 26. 1968SIGN UP NOW AT THE PLACEMENT OFFICEMITRE -4,%An Equal Opportunity EmployerOr write for more information: Mr, L.J. Glinos, College Relations Coordi¬nator, The MITRE Corporation, 4000 Middlesex Turnpike, Bedford. Mass during the Thanksgiving holidayswe invite you to visitOUR UNIVERSITY SHOPYou’ll find a wide choice of suits, tweedsport jackets, topcoats- and warm outer¬wear in sizes 36 to 44 . . . all with ourdistinctive styling and taste. Also fur¬nishings and other items.Our 3-piece Suits, $ 100 to $ 115Tweed Sport Jackets, $60 to $75Topcoats, $105- Polo Coats, $ 14 5Tropical Worsted Tuxedos, $100Outerwear, from $40iSTAaUSH(l) KitOjjficns t-Hoys Furnishings, IHIatsc-Jibocs546 MADISOtV AVE., COR 44TH ST., NEW YORK, N Y. 1001746 NEWBURY, COR BERKELEY, BOSTON, MASS 02116ATLANTA • CHICACO • LOS ANGELFS ■ PITTSBURGH • SAN TRANCISCO • WASHINGTONDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorJUiCurft SPECIAL PURCHASE■ The Great ADC 404Compact Speaker System. SIII Now only *39.95.Here <s an achievement in sound never matched before in aspeaker this size at a price tnat may never be equaled againThe famous ADC- 404 compact that regularly lists for $56 is nowonly $39.95.This is the same speaker system that v.as top rated hv the leading independent consumer study, and is one of the most talkedabout speakers on the market today.The ADC 404 is the perfect bookshelf speaker system. Its ver¬satility is limitless as it provides you with excellence of sound,matching the capabilities of the most up-to-date amplifiers Andmost important, it utilizes the same component features found inthe more expensive ADC systems.Its exclusive high flux mylar dome provides wide dispersion. Anda 6 linear travel piston cone offers excellent sound with extremelylow resonance, the ideal power performance p!ay you want from asneaker system.Take advantage of our sale offer today The ADC 404 at only$39.95. with a five-year warranty on all parts and labor. ■ *’ ‘Afr'J 1•'A|■EBB j /ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak St.-OE 1-4150 AhuiCiaft 2035 W. 95tn St.-779-6500 ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANICA LECTURE SERIESbyMORTIMER J. ADLERFINAL LECTURE- NOVEMBER 7.6IS THIS A GOOD TIME TO BE ALIVE AND ISOURS A GOOD SOCIETY TO BE ALIVE IN?Some of the questions that will be answered:On what basis can we say that one century, one society,or one culture is better or worse than another?In what respects is the 20th century better than earlierperiods of human history?What are the objectives of the 20th-century revolution’Has that revolution been completed or has it only justbegun?In what respects are the United States and other techno¬logically advanced, democratic, welfare states better thanany societies that existed in earlier periods?How are we to answer the critics who say that the UnitedStates is a sick society? Is it sick? Curably or incurably?Are its chief defects political, economic, and social, orare they moral and cultural?Tuesday, 8:00 p.m.Quantrell AuditoriumAdmission FreeAutumn 1968 MONDAY LECTURESLaw Auditorium e 1121 East 60th • 8 P.M.Nov. 25 - VALENTINE TELEGDI (Univ. Chicago)Through the looking Glass: MirroringSpace CHARGE and TimeADMISSION Series tickets S7.50 by mail only (callFI 6-8300). A limited number of complimentary ticketsfor U. of C. students and faculty are available atCentral Info. Desk in Adm. Bldg., or at UniversityExtension, Room 121, Center for ContinuingEducation (Ex. 3137).HYDE PARK THEATREStarts Friday, Nov. 22ndPA10MAR PICTURES INTERNATIONALSSdiiey JfcftSei*laughing and loving in ForisreoffEV4FROM Mi CINERAMA RELEASING CORPORATIONSpecial MatineeTHURSDAY THANKSGIVING DAYOpen 1:30 P.M. IN COLORCINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganEBERT SUN-Titnes****Should win Academy AwardLESNER NEWS“A Treasure”TERRY TRIBUNE"Film is a Smash”MARSTERS AMERICAN"Everyone Should See It”JUDITH CRIST N.B.C.TV TODAY SHOW"I Love This Movie”* ^.THEy*jTw> or4,na>^MonthStudent rate every $ A 50day but Sat. * | AARON DIXONCaptain, Seattle BlackPanthers currently facingcharges of Grand Larcei'.ywill be speaking atIDA NOYES HALLWednesday,November 27th8:00 P.M.Donation: 50$ (to go toAaron Dixon’s DefenseFund)2 The Gfdy City Journal ' November 22, 1*68TheaterUniversity Theatre Raises Webster’s DevilJOHN WEBSTER’S The White Devil present uy uni¬versity Theater is perhaps the only play in English withan evaporating plot: within five minutes after any scenehas ended, it becomes impossible to remember just whathas happened. Actions, sharp-edged when Websterpresents them, seem to lose their decisiveness, and itbecomes difficult even to recall which characters havejust been on stage. As the play unfolds, the involutedschemes of courtiers and villains are gradually divestedof their clarity—and the content of each scene vanishedslowly and tantalizingly as we attempt to recall it. Web¬ster sweeps up his tracks behind him, like the old witchBaba Yaga in the Russian tale; and though we see clear¬ly each track as he makes it, we cannot look back todetermine just which deserts and thickets he has tra¬versed. Although the background material provided byT.C. Fox in the program note to his production of TheWhite Devil is useful in explaining the intricate familialand personal relationships of the major character, itdoes little to illuminate the complexity of the plot; but itis probably wise not to include a plot summary in theprogram, for Webster seems to want us to withdraw ourattention from the plot by making it impssible for us tograsp it intellectually in its entirety. The meaning of theplay, then, is not to be found primarily in “what hap¬pens”: rather, it is something we must infer as wewatch characters careen destructively into one anotherand comment on the dark and surrealistic world inwhich they live. Fox’s brisk and fast-paced staging em¬phasizes both the complexity and confusion of the playadmirably; but what the production lacks is atmos¬phere—the dank, dark, hot, stale air of the sixteenth-century Roman court. The aura of putrefication and evilwhich Fiamineo and other characters often remark intheir surroundings is not consistently communicated: onedid not sense toadstools sprouting behind the tapestry.This failure to project the atmosphere of Webster’stext adequately may be attributed to some unfortunatecutting and to problems in the interpretations of particu¬lar roles. It is the shrewd and observant Fiamineo whotells us most about what it is like to live in the world ofThe White Devil; but fairly drastic cuts seemed to havebeen made in a number of his speeches, with two con¬sequences: first, the delineation of the play’s setting andatmosphere was made less complete, less pungent; andFiamineo, too, was himself diminished in character. Hisverbal exuberance, his sardonic wit, and his curiouscombination of self-awareness and helplessness were lessclearly evident than they should have been. Gerald Fish¬er, as Fiamineo, did a splendid job with the lines whichwere left him, and his characterization was the mostlively and subtly-drawn of the evening. —Photo by David TravisJean Wickler and Garry Houston in one of the less bloodyscenes of THE WHITE DEVIL. Although Jeanne Wickler, as Vittoria, spoke her linesvery well indeed, she seemed to lack the hauteur, thesense of corruption and vindictiveness which must con¬tinually be suggested in Vittoria’s character; withoutthese qualities, her petty cruelty as she kicks the “dy¬ing” Fiamineo and her cry “0 me! this place is hell”seem strangely inconsistent. James Lewin, as Franciscode Medici, also failed to convey a consistent and strongsense of villainy; and his henchmen, Lodovico and Gas-paro, played by Richard Lymn and Anthony Kolenz,came at times dangerously near to comedy. The charac¬ter of Isabella, too, was presented rather perplexingly:Saundra Pierce depicted her as almost piquantly pleasedto be rid of her husband, whereas Webster seems ratherto stress her intense grief at her husband’s rejection ofher.One of Fox’s most arresting ideas was to use filmsinstead of dumb-shows to depict the murders of Isabellaand Camillo; but here again, there were some in¬explicable changes. Isabella is murdered by sniffing apoisoned flower and then using a piece of poisoned klee-nex; Webster has her die by kissing a poisoned pictureof her husband. Fox’s changes here trivialized her char¬acter and her murder—which again contributed to the'problem of maintaining the play’s atmosphere. On theother hand, the movie of Camillo meeting his death on avaulting-horse was admirably done, and almost toobrief; both movies took on an interesting apricot color asthey were projected onto a red wall, giving the charac¬ters’ faces an interesting sallow and bilious look. Isa¬bella’s husband. Brachiano, played by Gary Houston,also lacked the force necessary to project the characterof the willful self-centered man whose capacity for evil isboth casual and intense; he tended to rely on clenchedfists and clenched teeth to give his lines toughness.Despite these interpretative problems, which tendedto make the play less intense, less acerbic than Web¬ster’s text, the quality of the acting as a whole wasgood; fine performances were turned in by James Milleras the Cardinal, Anne Ashcraft as Cornelia, as well asthe character mentioned above.Costuming provided one further note of confusion:where Vittoria wore mini-skirts and palazzo pajamas,Cornelia wore suspiciously seventeenth-century robes;and although Francisco, disguised as Mulinassar, lookedlike BobJ)ylan pretending to be Ibn Saud, his cohortswere dressed as medieval crusaders. These remnants ofperiod costuming in a “modern-dress” performancemade the production seem neither fish nor fowl. Sincethis flaw is not evident in the acting or the direction it isa pity that the costuming suggests it.Juliette McGrathMUSICrdi Requiem Sung to DeathIN MUSIC, THE WHOLE seldom equals the sum of itsparts. Superimposition of differing styles—no matter howvalid each is in itself—can produce only confusion. Eventhe best guest conductor may stumble over a great or¬chestra if their personalities don’t mesh; much less canfour singers be counted on to create a homogenized quar¬tet Ensemble isn’t arithmetic.But concerts require collaboration, so if incongruitiesare to be avoided, one can try either to match tempera¬ments or to squelch them. The latter, being easier, is thepreferred fashion. Concerts are planned like granny’spatch-work quilt. The oddest musicians are lumped to¬gether, and each one asked to be polite enough to curbhis isiosyncrasies in the interest of decorum. Such draw¬ing-room performances tend to be a mite bloodless, butour concerts are so trustily musty anyway these daysfSzell is lauded and Mengelberg forgotten) that we hard¬ly notice.In this respect, the soloists in last week’s ChicagoSymphony reading of the verdi Requiem (no relation tothe campus festivities) were down to par. The mantle ofanonymity, if anything, was more pronounced than usu¬al: two of the singers were named Smith. Special praise,though, is due to soprano Martina Arroyo (one of themost solid voices around), as is a raised eyebrow or twoior tenor Sandor Konya. He may be a first-rate Lohen¬grin, but he apparently forgot to check the water’s depthbefore dismounting from his swan. When not off pitch'the result of a cold?), he was singing the wrong notesentirely, inventing new harmonies so those ripe Verdicucumbers came out as late Schoenbergian pickles.Luckily for him, Requiem represents the transitionbetween Verdi the composer of convivial trivia, and theVerdi who penned the two greatest non-Wagnerian oper-as of his century. True, there is still a lot of GrandpapaGuiseppe lurking in its pages, especially in the Dies Irae, wherein the Last Judgment sounds distressingly likeThumper Rabbit. But even with that naive use of thebass drum, it is more than just a lovable, grumbly oldRequiem. Imperfect, perhaps, but more than half-way toOthello and Falstaff.Equally fortunate, we can already see that crucialshift in musical priorities, as conductor and orchestrabegin to merge into their own. Early Verdi can be han¬dled by a mediocre maestro if the voices are goodenough; but late Verdi, which can get by with merelyadequate vocalists, needs a well-staffed pit. Thus, thesuccess of the enterprise depended less on the quartedthan on ex-Music Director Jean Martinon.History, to be sure, augured no good. Martinon alwayshad a tendency to stress detail above over-all line, andmost of the big choral works he presented in his half¬decade here (especially La Damnadion de Faust, theMissa Solemnis, and Honegger’s Jeanne d’Arc) were dis¬asters.The Requiem' however, is tailor-made for him. First,its logic is so clear that it nearly runs itself; no amountof dabbling with details can obscure the general struc¬ture. Further, Martinon’s obsession with shimmery col¬ors (his strings often sound as if they’ve been shampoo¬ed), often distorted the German repertoire, but is nearlyas appropriate to the Requiem as the to Ravel. And whatother composer’s idiom is better served by Martinon’stendency to treat his brass as a village band—a raucousadjunct to, rather than an integral part of, the orches¬tra?But most important, it was one of those unpredic¬table evenings when Martinon was ablaze—and by nowwe know that, on these rare occasions, he is virtuallybeyond criticism. Konya and the slovenly brass playingpaled beside the intensity of the reading as a whole. Like.November 22, Jft68 a bear, Martinon sleeps a lot, but once he grabs you, hedoesn’t let go, and when you wake up the next morning,you’re not quite sure what hit you.If only the singing had had half the dazzle of theconducting! But even so, you can chalk it up as a stunn¬ing reminder of that handful of real triumphs scatteredthrough a consistently spotty reign.Peter RabinowitzLyrical OedipusBY THE TIME THIS REVIEW goes to press the wordwill already have gone out that the Lyric Opera’sStravinsky evening is a “hit,” and (because of the mod¬ernity of the works) a highly accessible one. Certainly,by any reasonable set of opera house standards, thisproduction of Le Rossignol is a success and the OedipusRex has sone interesting moments. What is lacking.I suppose, is an overall point of view: Stravinsky haswritten two modern parables and although “the lesson”must not be driven home with a sledge-hammer, it couldprovide more of a unifying point for the staging than isthe case here.Le Rossignol, not surprisingly, comes off the bet¬ter—an overly serious approach could ruin it and it farespretty well under Emmanuele Luzzati’s egneralized ex¬oticism. The sets and costumes are all quite attractive,in fact, and they are flexible enough to encompass allthe scene changes without embarrassing pauses. Thestaging of Luciana Novarro stresses ballet and in con¬sequence most of the soloists wind up in the orchestrapit—an advantage as far as I am concerned. With theexception of the first scene, where the traditional ges¬tures of ballet seem oddly out of place, the choreographyContinued on Page SevenJhp Grey City,Jourpal .3Memo:THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORES5802 ELLIS AVENUE • CHICAGO • ILLINOIS 606WTEXTBOOKS • GENERAL BOOKS • SCHOOL SUPPLIES • STATIONERY • ‘TYPEWR ITERS•TAPE RECORDERS • ‘PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES • ‘GIFTS • ‘At nuin store only.November 19, 1968MEMORANDUM TO: DEPARTMENT HEADSSECRETARIES. PROFESSORS, DEPARTMENTALThe University of Chicago Bookstores personnel are makingevery effort to obtain a sufficient number of copies ofall required and recommended texts for every course offeredduring the winter quarter.Information forms (Forms #57) requesting information forWinter Quarter textbooks were delivered to all departmentson September 3rd along with a memorandum requesting thatthe completed forms be returned on October 18th. To datethe Bookstore has received the necessary textbook informa¬tion for about 607o of the courses which will be offered dur¬ing the winter quarter.In order to give students the opportunity to purchase winterquarter textbooks before leaving the campus on December 13th,our textbook department will be set up for the winter quarteron December 9th. In order to do this, we must receive theremaining 407o of the necessary textbook information within thenext several days.The later we receive the required and recommended information,and therefore the later we place our orders, the greater thechance that we will not be able to supply the texts to studentsbefore the holiday vacation, or indeed on the day winter quarterclasses begin.Inis is an appeal to all those deciding upon titles to be used,and those in positions to forward that information to the book¬store to do so just as soon as possible. Thank you.Harlan DavidsonGeneral ManagerThe above is a reprint of an ad which appeared inthe November 19th edition of the Maroon.ABBIE HOFFMAN “A Yippie", Direct from HUAC, PAUL KRASSNER “Realist" editor,another Chicago-convention-in-the-parks-&-the-streets HEAD speaking, and presenting theWORLD PREMIERE (before national TV, but not scheduled for Chicago) of the 1 hour movieMOB-YIPPIE CHICAGO ACTIONMANDEL HALL and more.SUN 7:30 Students $1.00Others $1 .25REYNOLDS CLUBBARBER SHOP5706South University AveOnly shop on campus6 BarbersHours 8-5 Mon. thru Fri.Appts. if desiredExt.3573 The Carpet BamA division of Cortland CarpetWe have an enormous se¬lection of new and usedwall-to-wall carpetings,staircase runners, rem¬nants and rugs (a large se¬lection of genuine andAmerican orientals).We open our warehouse tothe public for retail saleson Saturdays ONLY from9-3.1228 W. Kinzie (at Racine)243-2279 5 NIGHTS ONLYNOV. 27 - DEC. 1SLEEPY JOHN ESTES3 Shows NightlySpecial! 8 pm ShowsOpen To All AgesFRI., SAT., 8c SUN.The Quiet Knight1311 N. WellsOld Town 944-8755 University SymphonyOrchestra ConcertGene Narnour, conductorSaturday November 23,8:30 P.M.I HallAdmission Free YoudontJustin”.WHPK-FM 88.3First on your dialUniversity of Chicago student-operated radioWEEKDAYS AT A GLANCE7:00-10:30 a.m. Happy Wake-UpService (News at 8)3:00 Soul (News at 6)6:05 Rock (News at 8:45)9:00 Community Viewpoint9:45 Campus news and events9:50 Comprehensive Critic10:00 Classical (News at 12)12:05 Jazz (until 2:30 a.m.)THIS WEEK'S SPECIALSFRIDAY 2212:05-2:30 a.m. Contact Distance:Avant-Garde "New Thing"JazzSATURDAY 23Noon-9:45 The Flea Market10:00-2:30 a.m. Listening withRatner: Beethoven - MissaSolemnis; Mozart - Requiem;Brahms - Ein DeutschesRequiem;Verdi - RequiemSUNDAY 24Noon-2:00 Hellhound: Blues200-4:00 The new crazy watercrystal co. music hour: oldtime string band music6:45-8:00 African High Lite andCalypso Music9:50-10:00 Comprehensive Critic:U.C. Sympsony OrchestraConcertMONDAY 257:00-10:30 a.m. Millard Howar'sAmerican Wake-Up Servicefor Americans 3:00-6:00 Stone Thing: Music andRap with The BlackstoneRangers9:00-9:45 Community Viewpoint:S.t.e.p.TUESDAY 263:00-6:00 Feminine side ot soul9:50-10:00 Comprehensive Critic:Chicago Film Festival and"Romeo and Juliet"10:00-12:00 M.o.z.a.r.t: Bach,Mozart, Poulenc, Brahms,RespighiWEDNESDAY 279:00-9:45 Community Viewpoint:Phone-in your viewpoint at324-57589:50-10:00 Comprehensive Critic:Art Institute show and Mid¬way Studios10:00-12:00 Classical Gas:Beethoven-Symphony #9;Berlioz-Symphonie Fantasti-queTHURSDAY 286:05-8:45 Bare Wires: Rock andDylanesque Excursions intopoetry9:00-9:30 Conversations atChicago: "Literature, Ob¬scenity and Pornography,"with Wayne Booth andRobert Streefer9:50-10:00 Comprehensive Critic:Drama: "The Show-Off"12:05-2:30 a.m. Soul Pressing:Soulful and Avant-gardeiazz for ThanksgivingCut out this program guide and paste your radio under ItFOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLY!VWS AUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • CHEVY IIAS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYINCLUDES GAS, OIL, 8c INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-17154 The Grey City Journal November 22, 1968HILTON‘The Students kept their nerve9Continued from Page Onewas, shall we say, an unattractive display, enforcing themoral position of the demonstrators if nothing else. Butthat perverse dialectic soon ended and we left, noticingas we passed through the men’s room that the AugustMobilisation stickers were still up.Arriving at the sidewalk we found a few stragglingstudents engaged in verbal confrontation with the plas¬tics industry. In their midst, a portrait of calm detach¬ment, and pedagogical neutrality, Wayne Booth stoodmasticating a lollipop. The Dean and the last demonstra¬tors soon left, however, and the task of the moral eleva¬tion of the International Plastics Convention fell squarelyand exclusively on our shoulders. The discussion wasspirited, for the sobriety of our antagonists was soonestablished to be absent. A ten gallon hatted denizen ofthe Pecos River quickly intruded his presence on thecircle of disputants and explained with no little gustothat we’d all be safe in Texas because all the trouble¬makers were with alacrity slapped into the hoosegow.We queried him about the safety of the streets of Dallasat which point he left.Into the breech then stepped the Archetypal PlasticInevitable who soon made it clear that individual pre¬rogative was irrelevant particularly in industry. “Man¬agement is a team”, he asserted perhaps ten times.“And the team is always right”, he concluded. Having previously read exactly that in one of our father’s man¬agement magazines we could scarcely take issue withthe first part of his contention. However, the example ofthe Nuremberg Trials seemed to suggest some con¬troversy with regard to the second and we offered it.Despite our beard, taking a stand against fascismworked wonders with the crowd and we thanked themfor the sacrifices they had made in the last World War.All this time, one of the young ladies in our companyhad been engaged in a choreographed discussion of on¬tology and essence with a plastic man from south of theborder. Having established repetition as the principle po¬etic device of the evening, the Mexican suggested to ourfriend ad infinitum that perhaps “you are right. But youdon’t know it.” We had always been told that our prob¬lem was knowing all too well that we were right andwere therefore somewhat taken aback by the contentionsof the worthy Senor despite their glaring inadequacies inthe category of logic. Tnis discomfort, though, proved tobe momentary, when he suggested that our friend, notan unattractive girl in her present condition, might ad¬vance a few steps toward self knowledge by shaving offher bsard. His sanity in our minds, which to be sure hadnever been established absolutely, now vanished like avapour. We did give him some slight benefit of the doubtby removing ourself some twenty feet down the blocklest the gentleman be myopic, cross-eyed, or otherwiseuncertain of his \ision but to no avail. He continuedsweetly, “You may be right, but you don’t know it sowhy don’t you shave off that beard.” “But Sir, I haven’t a beard.”“You may be right.”“About the beard?”“But you don’t know it.”“Oh.”“So why don’t you shave off that beard?”This cordial if circular discourse may have lasied con¬siderably longer were it not for the timely arrival of ataxiload of drunks, who after decabbing in the most key¬stone way, inquired excitedly about a rumor that some¬one had jusjt jumped from an upper story window. Theirfaces lengthened on hearing the disappointing news andthey locked arms and stumbled into the glowing lobby ofthe world’s largest hotel.As discussion wore on and the crowd thinned we hadthe infinitely gratifying experience of attacking a manwho called himself Socrates with the words of Jesus andfinding ourself being defended by two little old ladies ofc’ear Fundamentalist inclinations who, being well beloweye level, had not been previously observed but who hadbeen there all along. We were grateful to them. And wewere also grateful to those who had been picketing forenabling us to speak where we had never spoken andwhere we needed to speak. And we were grateful to anenormous acromegalic drunk who. by quickly offendingthe whole crowd, a crowd which by then wanted to talkhaving tired of telling, enabled us to leave the heat ofthat cold sidewalk.And so we went happily home to work, study, getahead, and kill.MICHAEL SORKINNovemher 22. 1968 The firev Citv JournalTimid,littleatelyGive yourcontact lensesa bathCleaning your contacts with Lensmeretards the buildup of foreign deposits onthe lenses. And soaking your contacts inLensine overnight assures you of properlens hygiene You get a free soaking caseon the bottom of every bottle of LensineIt has been demonstrated that improperstorage between wearings may result inthe growth of bacteria on the lensesThis is a sure cause of eye irritation andin some cases can endanger your visionBacteria cannot grow in Lensine which issterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic.Just a drop or two of Lensine, before youinsert your lens, coats and lubricates itallowing the lens to float more freely inIthe eye's fluids. That's becauseLensine is an "isotonic" solution,which means that it blends withthe natural fluids of the eye.fSBB&B Let your contacts be theconvenience they wereggjgJM meant to be. Getsome Lensine, from theI Murine Company, Inc.tonight In order to keep your contact lenses ascomfortable and convenient as they weremeant to be, you have to take care ofthem. But until now you needed two ormore separate solutions to properlyprepare and maintain your contacts. Notwith Lensine. Lensine is the one lenssolution for complete contact lens care.Won’t youanswer her plea?This lonely little girl echoes the cry ofcountless children around the world. Sheneeds foods, a cozy bed and warm clothes,but most of all she needs the love of a"mommy and daddy.''And there are many more like her. Inno¬cent victims of war and poverty. Hungry,destitute, shivering in their rags. But, mostof all terribly heartbroken and lonely.In COMPASSION Homes in Korea, India,Indonesia and Haiti more than 22,000 ofthese helpless little boys and girls findhope. Here they receive Christian love,food, clothing, shelter, medical care and agood education. This care is provided by sponsoring "parents" in America for only$12 a month (just pennies a day).And, what a blessing sponsorship is! Let¬ters and small gifts are exchanged. Yourchild knows you by name, and prays foryou regularly. You can even choose thechild you wish to sponsor. Oh, it's truly anexperience beyond compare.Won't you follow- your heart? Chooseone of these lovely children for your veryown. Hundreds are without spon¬sors and need help right now-.THIS IS HOW THEY COME TO US.Ragged, dirty, hungry, deserted. No hope.Filled with despair. Lonely and forgottenFor example. #166 Soon Ae, never knew hermother or father. She was found as anabandoned child when only an infantEvery night she prays for a new “mommyor daddy"—someone to care. Won't yoube that someone?THESE NEED HELP NOW YES! Clmpamwant to - /| j Sedi Sitorus ; J R. Sianturi sponsor alonely childtoday. I un¬derstand Imay discon¬tinue at anytime.FREE!| | Soon Ae Q] Un Ok Rev. Henry Harvey, President7774 Irving Park Road TCM 118 aChicago, Illinois 60634(Canadian Residents write Box 880, Blenheim, Ontario)My choice is If this child has been chosen,please select similar child. 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Contributions are tar deductible.»>*•»*♦ITICHTS tl|' •‘■•nYivi'i'i*'*'*. • *3$^ offlnAspen—Aspen Highlands—Lifts— Iselin Ski School—Lessons—Brown Ice Palace—Skating and Hockey—The Red Onion—Meals—The Mountain Shop—Ski RentalVail —Vail Associates—Lifts and Lessons—Gorsuch Ltd —Ski Rental—Red Lion-MealsCoupon booklets available at the TWA counter, Denver airport, upon presentation of TWA 50 50 Club Card »VlCt M»»K CWNCD CXCLUSIVC11BY TRANS WORLO AIRLINES, INC, I I i'l l >'S ,41 I-Mi l l StltH3 PERFORMANCES NIGHTLY THRU DAWN FOLLOWING LAST REGULAR FEATUREDependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW’s encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanicshave joined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & oi1 change done evenings by appt,Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393 JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FQR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870. PL 2-8 190, DO 3-9 I86 1340 E. 53rdCAN’T AFFORD NEW FURNITURE 7TRY THECATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAUTRUCKLOADS ARRIVING DAILY3514 S. MICHIGAN 10 E. 41st STREET Limited EngagementA Wild Western ComedyTBS SEATS AND LIFE OFSNEAKY FITCBstarring Jerry Harperwith Win StrackeGoodman Theatre200 S, Columbus Dr. CE 6-2337 NO WHERE ELSEIN HYDE PARK• QtAm.z+1• c\/t Sfu*\e fliLi• Complete CeilcA• Cla -i Ucd. QuUua NujUibfWHY TRAVEL?THECOURT HOUSERKHTAURANTIn Harper CourtTOYOTA TEST DRIVE ONE - YOU’LL BE SWITCHEDALL MODELS - IMMEDIATE DELIVERYBOB NELSON MOTORS 7722 Stony Island 374-4555The Grey City-Journal whatever is new in hairstyling . . .PERMANENTS* TINTING • CUTTINGWAVINGRANDELLBeauty and Cosmetic SalonAIR CONDITIONED— Open Evenings by Appointment —5700 HARPER AVENUE FAirfax 4-2007v£Mad HatterResta urant & CafeRelaxedAtmosphereConduciveCongen ialGathering10 P.M.Y ouFindTo-ski-or-not-to-ski-weekends.You don’t have to know a schuss from a slalom to love a ski weekend. I here areplenty of other fun things to do like tramping around the mountains... racingtoboggans...riding the lifts...and ganging up for snowball fights.And whether you’ve been knocking’em dead on the slopes all dayor not, there’s alwaysparties...and peopleIf you’re a TWAU.S. We also arrangeplaces like Aspen and Vail.Only TWA can takeEurope, ("all your travel the apres ski stuff...hot buttered things, log fires,who like the things you do.50/50 Club member, you fly half-fare in theother very reduced rates. You can save plenty inSee below.you to the best skiing in both the U.S. andagent, your TWA Campus Rep, or TWA.upupat»daway TWAEnjoy your food listening to classical music — OurMenu is exquisite and reasonable • Steakburgers•French Pancakes • Hoppel Popple • Homecookeddinners • Fabulous Vala’s Ice Cream, Sodas, Pas¬tries and Coffee •FREE PARKING adjacent on lot of East End Park Hotel on 53rd.1656 E. 53rd STREET 955-2229An answer (and more) toDaley, HUAC, Pigs, Fat Cats . . .Abbie and Paul speaking and showing theMob-Yippie Chicago Action FilmMandel Hall 7:30 Sunday“ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE TRACKS’’November 21 <Joanne WoodwardA BIG HAND FORTHE IITTLE LADY THURSDAYNovember 22Howard Hawks John WoynRIO BRAVO November 28Best Pix '66 Village VoiceJohn Ford sSEVEN WOMENFRIDAYNovember 29Fell-m iBV*SATURDAY December 5Cornel WildeNAKED PREYDecember 6Jonathan WintersTHE LOVED ONENovember 23Raquel WelchFANTASTIC VOYAGE November 30 December 7Fellini s Peter O Toole Richard BurtonJULIETTE OF THE SPIRITS BECKETPIUS The Playboy Serial' —Every Night A New ChapterNovember 22, 1$$8CUL VUL NEARING AS WE are the end of the eighthweek, the Vulture (your local scavenger of the arts)suggests that you like he, make your last gluttonousswoop before huddling into your little cages to withstandthe blasts of finals week. Some of the more choice mor¬sels to be found are: DANCEErik Hawkins Dance Company. You do not have to blimber or muscular to watch Erik Hawkins and hisdance company performing this week-end at Harper The¬ater You can slump down in your seat and watch vicari¬ously at the skill and the beauty of their dance. Fridayand Saturday at 8:30 p.m., Sunday at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m.FILMGeorgy Girl is the movie who proves there is hope for alschlumps and frumps (who can get a catch like lech¬erous James Mason). It’s a movie to enjoy Friday inCobb Hall at 7 and 9:00 p.m.Topkapi is a how-to exercise for a big heist. Get yournotebooks out but then again you do not have MelinaMercouri as your accomplist. It is Saturday at Cobb Hallat 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.A Mobilization and Yippie film will be given its worldpremiere on Sunday at 7:30 in Mandel. Abbie Hoffman,renowned Yippie (remember we’re all Yippie leaders)and Paul Krassner of The Realist will be there in theflesh to talk about this great city; that great institution,HI'AC; and the inauguration plans in honor of R. Mil¬hous Nixon. Admission is $1.NEWMOODSCome select from ournew collection of moodsetting incense andincense burners. Manyexciting fragrances.Aromatic, long-lastingand cffluvient.Imported from Africa,Mexico and India.Incense from.99Burners from$2.49StidSs ml slopesA new international arts ami crafts centerJEWELRY • HANDICRAFTS • SCULPTUREHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324*7600Convenient hoirs: Noon to 8 p.m. dai ly; Noon to 5 p.m. SundayJOIN THEINTERNATIONALSOCIALISTYOUTH MOVEMENTATTEND THE NATIONALYOUNG SOCIALISTCONVENTIONCHICAGO(U of I Circle Campus)Nov. 28 - Dec. 1, 1968Special Features:Will the American WorkersMake a Revolutionby George Novack, notedMarxist Scholar‘Haris on the Barricades’ —film of the May-JuneFrench RevoltGI Panel - antiwar & social¬ist GI’s discuss work withantiwar sentiment inthe Army.INTERNATIONAL PANEL -with revolutionary youthleaders from England'TARIQ ALI), France,Germany, Mexico, Canada,and several other countriesI'or further information con¬tact Fred Lovgren, Pierce’ower. Room 1613 (F A4-9500)or call 939-5044. EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372TAKCAM-YMJCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYI I A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders to take outl3l^as^3r^MU4-l062COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTIn the heart ofSouth Chicago7100 So. Yates 363-9842 MUSICCollegium Musicum: Motet Choir along with the University Chamber Orchestra will perform Handel’s ChandosAnthem and Ives’ Unanswered Question will sooth yournerves frazzled by boring lectures, too much studying,(or not enough studying?). They will be at the LutheranSchool of Theology, 1100 E. 55th Street on Friday night at8:30 p.m.Pete Seeger will be at Orchestra Hall Friday and Satur¬day night at 8:30 p.m. Everyone who felt that he did agood execution job on “yer President” with The BigMuddy should rush to see what he does to the perennialused-car salesman.A Power and light show is being presented at Northwestern’s “Orgy of the Arts”. Though I don’t think it ispossible for them to live up to their name it could beinteresting if you like rock, blues or folk music. It will beat the Paten Gym, 2400 N. Sheridan at 8 on Saturday.Admission is $2.50UC’s own Symphony will be performing on Saturday inMandel at 8:30. Here’s your chance to see our home¬grown talent. They will be playing Wagner’s overture toDie Mestersinger (rumored to be Edward Levi’s favoritepiece), Ravel and Brahms.THEATERThe White Devil for all of you who have been wonderingwho the Maroon Sunshine girl — Jeanne Wickler is (yesshe does exist), go see the modern dress version of theplay by John Webster Friday or Saturday night at 8 in Reynolds Club. For those who know who T. C .Fox is,there’s a chance to see him at work lurking around whis¬pering stage directions to the terrified cast members. Italso stars Gerald Fischer (as the most evil villain sinceSnidely Whiplash) and Garry Houston as the hero whohas about a fifteen minute death scene. It’s $1.50 forstudents, $2 for others.One-Act PlaysA Chekhov and Sam Shepard? Synge and Ellen Poss?Brecht and Bob Shapiro? These are six of the eight play¬wrights whose one-act plays are to be presented on Fri¬day and Saturday night in the Cloister Club in IdaNoyes. The other two plays are The Wax Museum byJohn Hawkes and America Hurrah by Jean-Claude vanItallie. All are directed by students, each night will bedifferent so take your pick.A Fine and Private Place by George Dean at the HulHouse Playwrights Center, 222 W. North Avenue takesplace (to quote the press release) “on a riot-torn campusat a small university somewhere in Illinois, where theadministration of a college faces a turning point as itattempts to deal with student demands”. Sound provoca¬tive? A prophecy or a blueprint for SDS?MISC.The Hyde Park Anti-Draft Union presents a conglomerate•evening of dancing, two or three experimental films, anda light show. The Blue Gargoyle will be the showplaceand the band will be the Aid and Abet. It whould be anevening to suit everyone’s taste — even General Hersheyis invited.Newsweek called it "perhaps thebest bargain going in the crowdedliterary market place."Even now, when you getone issue free,* there are better reasonsfor reading NEW AMERICAN REVIEW.The reasons mount with each new issue.Writing in the New York Review of Books,Frank Kermode described NEW AMERI¬CAN REVIEW #1 as “a first-rate blend ofgood ‘creative' writing and spacious, skep¬tical, humane content.” And Geoffrey A.Wolff, in Book Wor/d, called it "a literaryevent of the first importance.”The second issue was praised by RobertKirsch of the L. A. Times as “even moreimposing than the first.” And the thirdwas hailed by Eliot Fremont-Smith in theNew York Times for its "excitements ofquality and currency . . . writing of themost richly imaginative, thoughtful andchallenging sort.” No wonder Newsweek’sSaul Maloff was led to remark: “afterthree numbers and a year’s publicationNAR must be reckoned a thundering suc¬cess."The causes of this success are the realreasons for reading NEW AMERICAN RE¬VIEW: Fiction by authors like Grace Paley,William H. Gass, Robert Coover, and PhilipRoth. (Mr. Roth’s 28,000 word story, “Civ¬ilization and Its Discontents,” in NAR #3was probably the most widely-discussedwork of fiction published anywhere in thefirst six months of 1968.) Essays by crit¬ics like Stanley Kauffmann, Conor CruiseO’Brien, and Richard Gilman. Poetry byAnne Sexton, Gunter Grass and EdwardField. Most exciting of all, fiction, poetry,and essays by “unknowns” who won’tremain unknown for long.NEW AMERICAN REVIEW’S success is alsoattributable to its readers — people whoaren’t part of any literary clique or coterie,but simply appreciate writing of quality and relevance. As for NAR’s ‘'philosophy,"editor Theodore Solotaroff has said:“There’s an old Oriental curse: ‘May youlive in interesting times.’ Well, in thatbleak sense, we certainly live in interest¬ing times. It may be hell for the privatelife, but it’s a challenging time for writers.Thus, there’s a lot of fresh imaginationaround; new and urgent directions of con¬sciousness. It’s a time for new options,and I want to look for some of the moredurable ones.”Join us in that search. As a subscriberto the next four issues of NEW AMERICANREVIEW, for the special price of $4.00,you save $1.00 off regular “bargain”prices. And to make the bargain even bigger, we’ll send you FREE, your choiceof any one of the first three issues, aslong as copies remain.Your subscription begins with NEW AMER¬ICAN REVIEW #4, a special politicalnumber, featuring Robert Coover’s ex¬traordinary fantasy, “The Cat in the Hatfor President,” which conveys the omi¬nous drift of our electoral process towardabsurdity. And, like almost everythingelse in every issue of NAR, it makes our“interesting times” a good deal moremeaningful. Perhaps that’s the most im¬portant reason of all for subscribing toNEW AMERICAN REVIEW right now.i iYES, FREE (NAR #1. #2 or #3is yours free with a Charter Subscription)and you save $1.00 too. The New American ReviewDept. CM-111937 Williamsbridge RoadBronx, New York 10461Send me my FREE copy of NAR —□ #1 / □ #2 / n #3 (choose one) -and start my charter subscriptionwith issue #4. I’m enclosing my checkfor $4.00 and understand I’ll save $1.00off the regular price of the next fourissues.□ Enclosed is my check for $8.00.Send all three published NAR issuesfree, and begin my subscription to thenext eight issues with #4.ADDRESSCITYSTATE ZIP.JNovember 22, 1968 ’* The Grey City’Journal 7MA.-'Nf'VOPERA6What is lacking, I suppose,is an overall point of view9Continued from Page Threeis imaginative and well executed by all, especially byCarla Fracci as the Nightingale herself. The mostly in¬visible singers are excellent across ihe board: again theNightingale, in the marvelously fluent rendition of Chris-tiane Eda-Pierre, emerges with most of the honors;among the others, Ottavio Garaventa strengthens the ex¬cellent impression he made in Falstaff and Arnold Voke-taitis is the last word in French-speacking Buddhistmonks. But the gentleman who mimed the mechanicalnightingale was popularly adjudged the star of the per¬formance—a sobering reminder that this is, after all,Chicago.Oedipus Rex, the evenings’ second offering and byrights its piece-de-resistance, was disappointing. Here,more than in Rossignol, the motivating point of view isbuilt into the very structure of the work. Like its ancientGreek counterpart, Stravinsky’s Oedipus is a rebuke tothe vaunted self-sufficiency of contemporary man. Itsdeliberate use of the conventions of the Age of Reason, aclever idea that could utsmart itself, turns out to fit thecomposer’s requirements exactly: the absurd smugnessof Creon’s aria, the high, florid music for Oedipus, hiswondnerfully paranoid little aria (“Invidia fortunamodit”), Jocasta’s hysterical denials—all are unerringlydelineated, while the richness of musical*detail that il¬luminates the text in very specific ways is astounding.This is one of the most important works in or out of therepertory and it requires caredul handling from every¬one if its fifty minutes are to make their full effect.The Lyric’s production has a number of powerfulelements working for it. Not least of these is GiacomoManzu’s sets and his dressing of the chorus: a hugeconcave mud-brick wall dominates the background, astaircase leading down from the lofty perch where Oed¬ipus and Jocasta first make their appearance. Thechorus, garbed in dull browns, looks about to die; themen, in a beautifully ghoulish touch, have the appear¬ance of living mummies. The costuming of the principals,howecver, is less fortunate. The shepherd, in his casing of white fur and red tassels, looks like a fugitive from apastorale. Regrettably, too, while directors Squarzinaand Calasso have an appropriate idea of the statuesque,their methods of achieving it suggest glib expediency.The beauty of the intervening movements is sacrificedfor the pose. Nor is their blocking of the principals any¬thing to write home about. One gets the skeleton of theformal drama, not the irresistible sense of hubris un¬done.The singers are adequate, with a few strangechoices: Mirto Picchi’s voice has never been noted forbeauty or flexibility; and if he brought to Oedipus anextra reserve of intelligence or musically I did not noticeit. Oralia Dominguez, having sung Death quite impres¬sively in Rossignol, found Jocasta’s music not entirely toher liking but did a conscientious job at that. I knowthat Donald Gramm’s singing of Creon and the Messen¬ger is highly regarded even by the composer.But—here’s the rub—he is a bass, and part is written fora baritone, and the necessary transposing dulls the mu¬sic. He is a fine artist, but I would rather have heard himas Teiresias. The other singers are competent—no more,no less. The chorus, situated in the orchestra pit whileits stage counterparts mime, sings magnificently.The contribution of Jean Fournet, the conductor, isuneven. I find his approach to Rossignol, with its affi¬nities with Rimsky-Korsakov, just right, but his treat¬ment of Oedipus is open to serious objections. Anyonewith the faintest acauaintance with this work realizesthat crisp rhythms are essential. M. Fournet’s handlingthe major choral episodes is clean and brisk—so far sogood—but, unaccountably, lets up during the solo pas¬sages, with the result that the bottom falls out too oftenfor comfort. The orchestra plays quite well for him but the feeling of let-down sticks with one as one leaves thetheatre.The Lyric’s Stravinsky evening will be presentedthree more times in November (22. 25 and 30); in addi¬tion, there will be a student performance on December 3at 7:00 p.m. (an hour earlier than the regular curtaintime.) Tickets should be readily available. In view of theimportance of these works and the overall merit of theirpresentation these productions should be seen.William MurnaneMaroon — DAVID TRAVIS—Photo by Mare PoKemperJodi Mitchell sang a bunch of songs (of her own inven¬tion) in Mandel Hall last Monday evening, and sangthem very well indeed. She is a very sweet, shy person,and her performance, though quiet, excited by its sin¬cerity.Considerably more than entertaining.Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.KEEP INFORMEDRead the ISRAEL and-MIDDLE EAST NEWS'.LETTER. For, info andsample copy send $1 toP.O. Box 2331, Sunnyvale,Calif. 94087LAST TWO PERFORMANCESTONIGHT & SATURDAYTHE WHITE DEVILa play by John Websterdirected by T.C. FoxREYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE 8 pmTickets $2.00/$1.50 Reynolds Club DeskUNIVERSITY THEATRE £0'-' ***** *—im—- -*** -HY3-1933Make your reservations nowfor Christmas Parties.We can accomodate you andfrom 10 to 60 of your guestsTHE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . . .5311 BLACKST0NE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933rr THE 23rd ANNUALLATKE-HAMANTASH SYMPOSIUMTHE LATKE, THE HAMANTASH, AND THE MORALCRISIS OF THE UNIVERSITY"A Faculty Symposium.Tuesday, November 26, 7:30 p.m.Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall.The Grey City Journal Lynn Redgrave & Alan BatesinGEORGYGIRLFri., Nov. 22, Cobb Hall, 7 & 9 P.M. $1, CEFNovember 22, lMt • . - < i • . . ■ i