; Festival of the Arts opensTlie eighth annual Festival0f the Arts (FOTA) openstoday with ceremonies inHutchinson court and a lec¬ture by critic Paul Goodman,of the Saturday Review.The activities will begin at 12:30with a bell changing concert fromMitchell tower, followed by open¬ing remarks by Warner Wick andmusic by a brass ensemble fromHutchinson court. Goodman’s lec¬ture “The art of the novel” willbe at 8:30 in Breasted hall.The three week long event willinclude six lectures, eleven art ex¬hibits, six concerts, several poetryreadings and panel discussions, theIllinois Ballet, the Midwest Film7 Festival and various theatricalproductions.Biggest FOTA opens"This year’s festival will be thelargest ever undertaken and, wehope,, the most exciting,” theFOTA committee announced.“We have tried to give studentsthe opportunity not only to comein contact with established artistsand critics, but also to exhibittheir own artistic endeavors.”"Although the FOTA committeewould have liked to present allevents without admission charge,”stated Roberta Reeder, chairmanof this year’s FOTA, "due tostringent budget limitations thiswas impossible. As the tickets areof nominal price, we feel that it would be better to charge forsome events rather than havepeople of less stature.”"The committee has receivedmuch cooperation in the planningof this year’s events from variousmembers of the administration,the art, English, humanities 'andmusic departments. We are mostappreciative of their help andadvice.”Receptions plonnedSeveral i*eceptions will takeplace during the coming weeks.Sunday one will be given forHarry Rouras’ exhibit “Collegeand construction” in the Newdorm lounge at 3:00. Bouras willbe present. On April 24 at 4:00 a receptionwill be held for Arthur Knight,film critie for Saturday Review,in Ida Noyes. Knight will lectureon "The Art of Bergman” onApril 23.FOTA supplement appearson pages 4 and 5.An awards reception will begiven on April 27 at 3:00 in Wie-boldt commons in honor of thewinners of the various studentcompetitions. Immediately follow¬ing the reception at 4:30 anawards ceremony will take placeat Swift commons. Pulitzer prize¬winning poets Stanley Kunitz andRobert Lowell will judge and pre¬sent prizes to the winner of thepoetry reading competition. Mrs.George Beadle will award thePresident’s prize in graphics de¬picting student life. Bouras will presentwork awBall enEnding the Festival will boBeaux Arts ball. The costume ballwith “Authors and their novels”as its theme, will be Saturday,May 5, at 8:30 in the Cloisters atIda Noyes. Bids ar ? $3.50. As iscustomary prizes will be given forthe best and funniest costumes inseveral categories.Beaux Arts ball and a lectureby David Ross, director of the oflf-Broadway production of Ibsen’s"Ghosts,” will close this year’sfestival. Ross' lecture “Ibsen andthe contemporary theatre” will beon May 4 at 8:30 in Breasted hall.Tickets for the various eventscharging admission may be pur¬chased at the Mandel hall boxoffice which is open daily from11 am until 2 pm or by callingMI 3-0800, ext. 3280.Vol. 70 — No. 80 University of Chicago, Friday April 13, 1962 «Ew 31Dean Levi named provost UC Gets 1.7 millionin NASA programThe University of Chicago begin with ten students in thewill receive 1.7 million dollars program. The $2,000,000 programas one of ten universities to is expected (® expand rapidly’participate in a program . Doctorate students will be given,sponsored by the National Aero- m addlt,on lo ,u,"®n and fees-nautics and Space administration $2,400 for 12 months of studyEdward Levi, dean of UC’s law school, was appointed provost of the University (NASAT to 'train 'scientists*"for and expense allowances UPyesterday. q»<* study. -*1’00?’, inf ®“:year fants ,re-The appointment was approved at yesterdays meeting of the board of trustees. uc will receive $1,500,000 of factory.Announcement was made by Board chairman Glen Lloyd. the grant for a new space science .. . . f p, . etndpnt*Also at the trustees’ meeting, vice president of the University Lowell Coggeshall laboratory. The remainder of the' ...financed Sby NAS: .would workwas named to the board. Coggeshall becomes one of the few faculty members to mo"ey Wl11 be spent to train 10 der the general direction ofserve on the board. predoctoral students at the Uni-ivc i/n urc waiu. .. v -, ohn A. Simpson, cosmic rayLevi is the first provost in UC’s next academic year. No announce- more than a year. Mr. Levi will versity in space science. §t . 4 the Enrico Fermi72 year history. In his new ca- Tnenl of an eventual successor has be able to share in the background James E We5b NASA ad-t’ nstitute o. Nuclear Studies,parity he will work wiWi Presi- ^et been made. . and experience that Mr. Harri- ministrator, explained the pro- . . . .dent George Beadle In administer- As Vice President of the Uni- son has gained over many years gram yesterday in a talk before . ™ other universities involvedh,g academic affairs. Levi will versity, a title he has held since as an academic administrator, the institute of Environmental m thte P™8™™ Wlil Def lTne U.m‘succeed It. Wendell Harrison, UC October, Coggeshall has been re- both as dean of the division of Sciences in Chicago. versity of California at Los An-\ice president and dean of the sponsible for policy, and planning the biological sciences and as a geles, Rensalear Polytechnic infaculty when Harrison retires in f°1’ the growth of the University, member of the central administra- The purpose of the program, he stitute, the UniversityHe will in the future be working tion. Mr. Harrison has a wide said, is to supply the US with Maryland, George Institute ofwith both Lloyd and Beadle in knowledge of the University and sorely needed scientists and en- Technology, University of Michi-“planning for the growth of the its problems; he is one of the most gineers so that man can success- gan, the University of Minnes-University and for the more ef- valued members of the Univer- fully explore the solar system. ota, the State University offective use of its total resources,” sity’s administrative staff.” Each of the ten universities will Iowa, Texas A & M, and Rice,according to yesterday’s announce- ofJune, 1963.Levi’s now appointment willmake him second man in thecentral administration. He willserve as senior officer in the ab¬sence of president Beadle.Levi will continue as dean ofthe Law school throughout the Dorm rates increasedment.Of Levi's appointment as pro¬vost, President Beadle said,s^ndingLerlpuhtation a?n brining Room and board rates in the University housing system will be increased next year,the University of Chicago law announced assistant dean of students James E. Newman yesterday.school to the front rank of the For women the increase, ill both singles and doubles, will be five dollars per quarter fornation’s law schools. His talents room and five dollars per quarter for board. Men’s room rates will go up $7.50 per quar-in providing leadership to a pro- ter, and board will go up five dollars. The difference in the rates for men and women isductive and respected faculty can based on the increasing costs of maid service ill the dormitories.now be placeo at the service ot Npwm^n made the announce-- " U , ~~ r: I « ...the total University community.” m^£ne discussing next year’s . Bee<\he/’ *eUy. and Green WlH for vacancies in Beecher as worn-T„vi cii the fifth dean of [r*enl. wmie discussing nexi yeai s be used for housing for one more nresentlv living in BeecherLe\i, 50, is the mm aean oi housing arrangements at a meet- , b takcn over bv en presently min,, in ueecnei.ing Wlth rePrfsel?tatiyes o£ ,he the psychology department in the Undergraduate women living infields ar” lh. 7hiiosopHy oTlJ s dormitories house coun- Fall quarter of 1963. They will Foster will be given the same— * be used for offices, classrooms priority as the residents of Green“We deeply regret the necessity and laboratory space. an(j Kelly to obtain rooms infor the increase, said Newman, j, will be necessary to start those dormsing- among other works. Levi “b“‘ *» “ necessary in order to eonverting these buildings this m°S<? . ‘ „ „ . ,did undergraduate and graduate ^Kep, evT nslnS cost ot summer, he said. There will be Sign up time for all Universitywork at UC. laboi and iood. some inconvenience to residents Housing will probably be the lastOf the transition from Har- No apartment dorm could’ be 0f C-Group next year, as work- week in April. Students who haverison’s to Levi’s vice presidency, found to satisfy a housing need men will have to start doing work petitioned to be excused from theBeadle said, “We 'are fortunate for some 45 undergraduate worn- to convert the basement of these Residence Requirement will bethat we will be able to make en, he also said. However, the Uni- dorms into laboratories this sum- notified before, of the commit-Edward Levi the transition over the period of versity expects to be able to use mer. tee’s action.one floojuof the Eleanor Club, Graduate women living in Sign up procedure will be theApartment Stipends okayed nexfto%SauZl5Hhou^ee‘’ Foster wiilhave the same Priority same as previously.• f * The rooms consist of mainlyStudents receiving UC room scholarships. The deadline had doubles, however some singlesand board stipends Will no previously been last week. wiI1 also be available. Newmanlonger be required to live in , Students receiving ^r°om ^ ana sta|e(j that the singies would beand the law of competition andmonopoly. The author of “AnIntroduction to Legal Reason-Graham speaks hereOfficial University residences, k°ard j>rant*s and who larger than any doubles else- World famous evangelist Graham’s and the coordinator ofaccording to an announcement leave the residence halls will oe where on campus. The doubles RiHv finliam will deliver an Graham’s Chicago crusade whichyesterday by assistant dean of stu- 553^^“acadeX 5®!*^ fpen Sre”t The University 30 "according to an announcement 7, “. . rnyesterday by assistant dea~ asKea 10 I1Udents James E. Newman. jected expenses ror me nun the livlng rooms in the suites of . . „ .Previouslv all students receiving year If the student experts t° save the residence heads in the New o£ Chicago on Monday. From 2 to 5 pm in Swift hallpreviously all students receiving money by living off campus his D Speaking in Mandel hall, at ... , p . :grants over and above full tuition scholarship will be reduced accord- . ’ . . , , , 12:30 pm. Graham will talk about fherf be a discussion ot Gra-were required to live either in a lngly. lt he expects to spend the »" board contracts has rofev.;nct. of the g„Spel today. !am? lecture and about evangc-Umversity residence hafl or in a sa^ or more money the stipend n®‘, 'U" posit,i,vtly del; dcdtlha He will be introduced by Warner l>f™ in general, which anyone mayfraternity house. Starting next wM not be readjusted. sa'd, however it » possible that students. »»’ 'dr?raha‘- .wlllnotl>',p1?;ycar. these students will be allowed Speaking of the reason for the ^>ard eon tracts will be made op. Graha^.s appearance on cam. se, but Ihe -discussion will beto live in off-campus apartments, change ill policy, dean of atu- J,onal or tlla! .w,n **' I1®**'1;'' pus is being sponsored by the UC !??' by A,bdu1' Jaqq- Stanley M.Newman made his anouncement dent. Warner Wick said. "We are to have partial board contracts. Kapler of the Inter-Varsity Chris- x; Protester-m tie graduateat yesterday’s meeting of the house doing it because we think It la I 101 thfs0 rooms has also ; fellowship (IVCF), a non- '1 °f bdaipesa an<^i: Kl|l,y ad‘rounchs of UCs women’s dormit- more fair- "®‘ b®®" d®t«trm,ned. However, denominaltonarstudent group with v,sc, 01 IVCF’ wlU al<“ pre'ories. He stated that women effect- The average maximum scholar- will probably be no higher cbapters on over 300 campuses. sent’f'd by the University’s four year ship to be awarded next year will t,,an ,n t,ie INew 1Jor,ns’ There will be a reception for Graham will receive the ele-• esidence requirement would be al- be $1900, according to Wick. This Newman also announced the (jra[,am and his associates at ll venth Gutenberg award from thelowed to receive the new cash stip- is a $200 raise over last year, and coming demise of (-group as a anl( jn jda jg0yes hall. ICVF has Chicago Bible society Mondayends if they successfully petitioned is due to the increased tuition and residence hall. invited many faculty members and evening.°wt of the Uoiuut. dormitory' rates. In some cases All of Foster will be converted student leaders.Because of the new ruling, the scholarships in excess of this next year into office space for Graham will be accompanied byl*etition deadline will be extended amount will be given, but these will the South East Asia Studies Com- two associate evangelists, Gradymitil next Wednesday for stu- be extremely rare, according to mittee of the Social Science De- Wilson and Akbar Abdul-Haqq,dents receiving room and board Wick. partment. and by Walter Srnyth, a friend of WUCB will broadcast resultsof this year’s SG electionsfrom 7 to midnight tonight.IN ORIGINALHousing viewpoint good RMH disappointingThe announcement today forthe dean of students office thatstudents receiving room andboard scholarships will be al¬lowed to live in off-campus apart¬ments is indicative of a new andrefreshingly positive viewpointfrom that office.And the reason for the change,according to Dean Warner Wick,is also encouraging. Said Wick,“We think this is fair.”Indeed the change is fair. In thepast students who have receivedstipends over and above full tu¬ition have been required to liveTHE FRET SHOP1-3, 5-10 p.m. Weekdays10-5 Saturday & SundayInstruments, New, Used, AntiqueGuitars, tanjos, Mandolins, etc.Supplies — KepoirsPhone NO 7-10601551 East 57th St.y|W> SeeVT BackPage either in University dormitoriesor in fraternity houses. Studentswho moved off campus immedi¬ately had their scholarships cut.The new arrangement is com¬pletely equitable. Students intend¬ing to move off campus submitan estimate of expenses. If ex¬penses will be lower their schol¬arships are correspondingly les¬sened. If they will be higher, Sub¬sidies will remain unchanged.Thus nobody will be able to makea profit by moving out of thedormtiories, and scholarship stu¬dents will not spend unnecessarilyhigh amounts. Students will be al¬lowed to live where they can af¬ford with the help of the Uni¬versity to live.The logic of subsidizing onlydorm and fraternity residents hasalways escaped us. We are pleasedto see that this logic hasn’t im¬pressed newly appointed deanWick either.Another announcement out ofthe dean’s office today was some¬what less encouraging. This wasthe statement that room andboard rates will be raised approxi¬mately $30 per year next year.We have been carefully condi¬tioned to the dangers of infla¬tion and we realize that the costsSEWING MACHINESERVICERepairs on Americanand ForeignRentals: $6 a monthSpecial Rates for Facultyand StudentsBilly Williams6141 S. GreenwoodBU 8-2083 SUMMER JOBSin EUROPETHE 'new1 WAY TOSEE & 'live' EUROPESpecializing in 'European Safaris'FOR SUMMER JOBS OR TOURSWRITE: — AMERICAN STUDENTINFORMATION SERVICE, 22 Avenuede la Liberte, Luxembourg City,Grand Duchy of LuxembourgCANOE TRIPS9UETICO - SUPERIOR WILDERNESSCamp, swim, fish, cruise and explore in the world’s greatestCanoe Country! For men or women. A few hours from home.Only $6.25 per person per day for Grumman canoe, allnecessary camping equipment, and choice food. Write forfree colored folder, food list and map: BILL ROM CANOECOUNTRY OUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota.WEEK-END SPECIAL!ALL IMPORTED WINES10% OFF WITHTHIS ADFree Customer Parking Rear in City LotHARPER LIQUOR1514 East 53rd StreetETCS-VOUS ASSOCIE DANSUN BUREAU D'AVOCATS?Si tel est voire cas-posez-vous les questions suivanfes:Advenant mon deoes, nion bureau versera-t-il a ma fautille un montant rlaireinentspecific?Advenant le deces d’un de ntes associes, monbureau versera-t-il a sa famille un montantelairenient specific?Aurai-je un revenu de retraite qui me permet-tra de maintenir un train de vie satisfaisant?Si votre reponse a eliacune de ces questions ne voussatisfait pas, vous voudrez certainement connaitre lesdetails relatifs a la protection qu’apporte, aux liommesd’affaires et tie profession, la fonnule d’assurance-viemoderne tie la Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada.Je serais heureux de vous aviser an sujet de toutes lesquestions d’assurance-vie qui ont trait h la protectionde la famille et ties affaires ainsi qu’avos annees de retraite. Pourquoi nepas me telephoner aujourdhui me me?RALPH J. WOOD, JR. ’481 N. La SalleFR 2-2390 Chicago, IllinoisFA 4-6800SUN LIFE DU CANADA of running the residence halls goup periodically. We therefore rea¬lize that the price rise is not al¬together unjustifiable. But at thesaTne time we hope that the in¬creased price will mean an in¬crease in the qua’oty of dormservices.For example, nobody but thedieticians (and they with slvsmiles on their faces) deny thatdorm food is abominable. Stu¬dents, who are ordered by -doctorsto go on planned diets (even suchsimple things as high protein re¬quirements) are compelled to stopeating in the dorms. Facultymembers and other guests aregenerally apalled by their firstcontact with UC’s own brand ofinstitutional food.We understand that cooking forseveral hundred people is neithereasy nor cheap. But it does notseem unreasonable to expect therate increase to yield a more im¬pressive menu.But on balance the news fromthe dean’s office was good today.It is just this kind of constructivethinking that typifies the kind ofstudent personnel administrationwhich we all desire. More than 2000 students gath¬ered in Rockefeller chapel Wed¬nesday night witnessed what manybelieve to the death of a greatimage.Robert Maynard Hutchins, for22 y ears president and chancel¬lor of the University of Chicagoreturned to the Univei’sity for hissecond lecture since his 1951 de¬parture. It was an event to beeagerly anticipated botth by thosewho knew Hutchins’ work first¬hand and by those who had heardword of mquth laudattion of theman.Unfortunately many of thosewho attended came away shakingtheir heads, disillusioned and dis-apointed. The speech which theyheal'd was little more than a re¬hash of what RMH has been say¬ing for several decades. Amusingin some places, stimulating inothers, the lecture produced ashaking of heads, a wondering ifthis is really all the man has to-say.Part of the problem is that Hut¬chins failed to stick to his topic,he touched only briefly on “Thelimits of liberal education.” In¬deed these limits were dismissed with a few brief aphorisms aboutliberal education continuingthrough life and about liberal edu¬cation and vocational educationbeing two entirely distinct quanti¬ties. The extent to which liberaleducation can fullfill the properaims of education was briefly men¬tioned. Nor was there an expli¬cit statement about just what lib¬eral education is.It must be realized by the wouldbe Hutchins critic that the formerpresident was speaking under ex¬tenuating circumstances. UC to¬day is not at all like the UC ofHutchins’ era and educational pro¬tocol forbids any stepping on toes.It would be unreasonable to ex¬pect RMH to discuss any specificsabout UC, to go info detail on is¬sues which might even tangen¬tially conflict with specific Univer¬sity of Chicago policies.But nonetheless it must be notedthat we did not Wednesday havea chance to hear Robert Hutchinsat his best. If he didn’t live up tohis reputation in Rockefeller cha¬pel, we must not forget that theman is still one of the most bril¬liant educational theorists of hiscentury. We hope that the disillu-ionment is not complete.Calendar of EventsFriday, 13 AprilLecture series: "Wie Arab’ Near .Eastin the period of Westernization"(Committee on Research in Africa andNear East), social science 122. 3:30l>m, Mr. Hourani.Sabbath service, 7:45 pm, Hillel founda¬tion.Fireside: "Introduction to Passover;Chants of the Haggadah," OscarKenig, former associate director ofHillel, Hillel foundation, 8:30 pm.Lecture: "What makes Latin Americaexplosive?" 8:30 pm, Internatoinalhouse: Joseph Hansen, editor of theMilitant, a socialist weekly (YoungSocialist alliance)STUDENTSSTOP “EXAMINATIONPANIC”... Master the Secret of Study... Get Better GradesRevolutionary study method taughtby prominent professor and consult¬ing psychologist. It’s as easy as it isrewarding. The professor tutors youfrom a \2"-33y3 L.P.record. You playit at your convenience. This wonder¬ful way of studying can be yourstoday. Record album complete withinstructions, $7.95 prepaid. Sendcheck or money order toCTG RECORDING STUDIOS, INC.3930 LINDELL, ST. LOUIS 8, MO. Saturday, 14 AprilSymposium: The Urban Lower class,Mandcl hall, all day as follows:Morning session, 10 am, “The FutureEducation of children frortm low eco¬nomic levels,” Allison Davis, professor,depaftment of education; "The Cul¬ture of Poverty,”- Oscar Lewis, pro¬fessor, department of anthropology.University of Illinois.Afternoon session, 2 pm: “The UrbanLower - class school.” Robert Having-hurst, professor, committee on humandevelopment and department of edu¬cation; “The Psychopathology of Pov¬erty,” Dr. L Z Freedman, Foundationsfund research professor, department ofpsychiatry; “The Urban Lower Classit* impact on social welfare,” RobertH. MacRae, Associate Executive di¬rector, Chicago community trust.Sunday, 15 AprilTrack meet, 3 pm. Stagg field ; UCtrack club development meet.O-board business meeting, 3 pm, IdaNoyes.O-hoard training session, 3:30 pm, IdaNoyes.Discussion, "South East Asia,’' GilesGunn, divinity student and Frank Rey¬nolds, director of a student center inThailand. Brent house, 5540 Woodlawnavenue. 6:30 pm. Talk, “What's wrong with icons?" "Rich¬ard Luman, of divinity school, Uni¬tarian church parlor, 1174 E. 57th,7 pm.Seminar, “Freud and a Christian viewof man,” Chapel house, 5810 Wood-lawn avenue, 7 pm, sponsored by theMe thodist graduate fellowship.Duplicate bridge club, fractional mn.-t* rpoint game, Ida Noyes hall, 7:15 pm.Monday, 16 AprilLecture, Billy Graham, world-famousevengelist, in Mandel hall, 12:30.Discussion, on evangelism and Christia¬nity, Abdel-Haipi, associate evany. -list of Billy Graham, from 2-5 pm inSwift hall.Lecture, "Science* as extended meta¬phor: The use aud construction ofmodels,” Alfred Stern, from Monteithcollege of Wayne State university,Detroit, social science 122, 4:45 pm.Films, "Gandhi," "Story of Sardar Yal-labhai Patel,” "Bhoodan Yatro," spon¬sored by the Indian civilization course,Rosenwald 2, 7 pm.Film, "Grass is Greener,” Internationalhouse, assembly hall. 8 pm Coffee plusfeaturing Sleepy John Estes, the le¬gendary blues singer from Sf. l.ou.>,Shorey lounge, Pierce towe r, 9-11 pnt.foreign car hospitalsee page 3 FLAMINGOON - THE - LAKEIdeal I to S rm. apt*.HEATED SWIMMING POOLELEGANT GROUNDSPL 2-3800 5S00 South Shore Dr.n Appointment only Ml 3-8032FLORENCE RESNIKOFFCUSTOM JEWELRY DESIGNPrecious Stones Matched Wedding SetsThe only Chicago designer to be included in “Design Quar¬terly's" survey of contemporary jewelry craftsmeo.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNT J Wear Contact XenSe JbyDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372at University Ave.The EPISCOPAL CHURCH at the UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGOHOLY WEEK AND EASTER SERVICESBOND CHAPELPalm Sunday - April 15 Sung Eucharist and Sermon .. 9:30 a.m,Wednesday - April 18 Holy Communion 11:30 a.m.Maundy Thursday - April 19 Holy Communion 7:15 a.m.Good Friday - April 20 Ante-Communion and Litany .. 7:15 a.m.Evening Prayer and Meditation FestivalFestival Eucharist and Sermon*Evening Prayer and Litany'.. 5:05 p.m. Eucharist and Sermon 5:05 p.m.BRENT HOUSE5:30 Supper discussion’ 8 p.m. Evening Prayer2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 13, 1962Graham works for God Bond defeat analyzedby John MarxThe Reverend Dr. WilliamF. Graham has preached, faceto face to over 30 million peo¬ple, probably more than anyprevious spokesman for Christia¬nity. This Monday he will speakat the University of Chicago.At 43, Billy Graham is an in¬ternationally - famous evangelist.Under his ministry, over one mil¬lion people have been con ter tedto Christianity, and according toreports, the majority of them stillremain devout and practicingChristians.What has enabled Graham toreach so many people, to convincethem to make their “decision forChrist”? He is a firm believerin all the teachings of Christ, andfeels that the Lord has chosenhim to spread this word to thepeople of the world.Why Graham and not someoneelse? That is the first thing, Gra¬ham says, that he will ask theI.ord when he get to Heaven. .Most theologists will give widelydiffering definitions of evangelism.Throughout history, it has meantthe spread of the gospel. Today,this is usually expanded to includeconversion (and reconversion) ofpeople to Christianity and living,doing and talking for Christ.There have been evangelists inalmost every age since the deathof Christ. More recent evangelicalleaders include Jonathan Edwards,the colonial clergyman known forhis Hell-and-damnation sermons;John Wesley, founder of Metho¬dism in England; Dwight L. Moodya prominent lay evangelist of thelate 19th century; and Billy Sun¬day, a religious leader during the1920’s and 30's, who convertedgreat numbers of people to Chris¬tianity in large scale revival meet¬ings.When Graham was 17. he at¬tended a meeting of another ofthese evangelist, Mordeeai Ham,in his home town of Charlotte,,North Carolina. He attended se¬veral nights in a row, and finally,when the invitation to rome for¬ Graham evangelistic team.The following summer, after de¬ciding against playing semiprobaseball, he became a Fuller brushman, along with Wilson and hisbrother, T. W. Wilson, who isalso one of Graham’s associatesnow.He was the most productivesalesman in the Carolinas thatsummer because he belived in theproduct and sincerety, he says, isthe biggest part of selling any¬thing.That fall he enrolled in the Flor¬ida Bible seminary, in Tampa,from which he graduated with aThD in 1940. Still undecided upona career, he enrolled as an an¬thropology major in Wheaton col¬lege, in Illinois.It was in 1946, while he wasfirst vice-president of Youth forChrist, International, that Grahambegan his crusades for Christ,which have since taken him tosix continents.His first major crusade was inLos Angeles, in the fall of 1949.Scheduled to run three weeks, itran eight. The tent auditoriumhad a seating capacity of 6,000that had to be expanded to 9,000.Over 2,700 people made “decisionsfor Christ.”This was but a beginning. Therrusades became more frequent,ami drew larger crowds: Port¬land Oregon, 1950; Greensboro,North Caroline, 1961; WashingtonD. C. and Houston, Texas, 1952;Detroit, 1953.In 1954, Graham held a twelveweek crusade in London, England,which was climaxed by a meetingin Wcmbly stadium which drew over 120,000 persons - his largestcrowd to that date. Over 2,000people registered their “decisionfor Christ” on that rainy day.The crusades continued: Glas¬gow, 1955; India and the far East,1956; New York, 1957; San Fran¬cisco, 1958; Australia and NewZealand, 1959; Europe and Africa,1960 and Miami, Manchester, Eng¬land, and Philadelphia, 1951.This year, Graham has recentlyconcluded a tour of South America.This has been followed by speechesat several eastern colleges, simi¬lar to the type that he will deli¬ver here on Mdnday. His next ma¬jor crusade is in Chicago, fromMay 30 to June 15, in McCormickplace.The Billy Graham evangelisticassociation, or team headed byGraham consists of eight associateevangelists, his song leader, GeorgeBeverly Shea his organist, and alarge staff of clerks, secretaries,and other workers that help planthe crusades, answer the hundredsof letters that come to Grahamdaily, and numerous other jobs.Headquarters for the team is inMinneapolis, Minnesota.Graham’s first success in thefield of Christian literature wasin the fall of 1953, with the re¬lease of his book, Peace With God.The book quickly appeared on thebest seller lists; and has now beentranslated into more than 20 for¬eign languages.Apparently never losing his abi¬lity to sell, in 1958 he was named“Salesman of the year,” at theExecutive Sales convention in NewYork, for successfully “selling re¬ligion.” by Faye WellsCity departments are re¬evaluating their financial po¬sition as a result of the defeatof the bond issue Wednesday.With the public mandate against atax rise necessary to float thebond issue, the city must find alt¬ernative sources of revenue.One area certain to be Consideredis that of cash and ncn-cash creditsavailable to the city from urbanrenewal expenditures under thefederal government’s programs.Under one plan, government reim¬burses cities two dollars for everyone spent on public improvements,such as parks, playgrounds, etc.Under Section 112 of the 1961housing act. the federal govern¬ment pays the city three dollarsfor every one spent on re-devel¬opment by a University, hospital,and certain other private groups.One plan which takes an addedimportance is the University of Chi¬cago’s south campus plan accord¬ing to one informed source. Thisplan, with the Woodlawn re-devel¬opment plan of which it is part,now await decision by Chicago’scity council.If this plan is approved as a partof the city’s Woodlawn urban-re¬newal program, the city could net21 million dollars. Under section112 the University’s investments inthe urban renewal areas, HydePark and Woodlawn, (if the latterpasses* would bring the city 27 mil¬lion dollars from the federal gov¬ernment. When the city repays the Uni¬versity its 6.5 million investment, itwould have 21 million dollars touse anywhere in Chicago. And withthe recent expansion of other pri¬vate institutions in Chicago the citycan get an additional 10 milliondollars, accordng to one official.Had the bond issue passed, thesouth campus proposal would havebeen important for relieving closeto a third of the tax burden of thebond issue. Now it is even . oreimportant as a major source of alarge and much needed amount ofmoney.With the defeat of the bond is¬sue, the entire program for textyear could be radically deleted orat least postponed; or the mayorcould resubmit to the voters thesame bond issue this coming No¬vember.The mayor and the city councilcould, however, decide to revi. .*the entire bond issue, postponing itand south campus, Woodlawn, andother programs until a later date.Should this happen the city couldlose the 21 million dollars the Uni¬versity’s expansion would bring.Mayor Richard Daley has not yetdecided whether or not the samebond issue will be submitted thiscoming fall. In either case the cityneeds money and the credits ac¬cumulated under section 112 are amajor source of revenue, and willbe collected if the city council ap!proves south campus as part ofWoodlawn.Jimmy’sand the New University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave. ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti • beef • sausage and meatballsandwichesFree Delivery Over $2.00MU 4-9022, 1014, 1015 1427 East 67th St.ward and accept Christ was giv¬en, Graham and liis friend GradyWilson went forward.It was then that Graham felt“the sweetness and joy of God ofbeing truly horn again.” Wilsonmust have felt this way too, forhe is now one of the eight asso¬ciate evangelists on the BillyvIWn SeeBackPageMODEL CAMERALeiea, Bolex, Nikon,Hasselblad Dealer1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTr ~ KIN ANDSCSI DAYSAT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALERS (where you’ll find thenicest ways to get away!)You won’t find a vacation-brightening varieLy 1 ike this any-where else. 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A small groupsat around a conference tablelast fall and talked of a week¬end yvhere the originality of ourstudents could be demonstrated.Art and music were to be thefocus of the Festival.”So the late Robert M. Strozier,then dean of students, describedthe birth of UC’s Festival of theArts (FOTA) in 1955. This weekwill see the opening of the eighthannual Festival, an event which continues to be based on the plansoutlined above, despite controver¬sy over policy and problems ofexecution.Gerhard Meyer, associate pro¬fessor of economics in the college,had long dreamed of such a week¬end, and it was he who organizedthe first steering committee: “theidea occurred to me and I wentaround and buttonholed a fewpeople.” While admitting that he“had a lot to do with the origin,”Meyer says “I was only a cata-Santha Rama Rau talksAuthor Santha Rama Rauwill lecture in the law schoolauditorium on May 3 at 3:30.She will speak of the newgeneration of artists and writersthroughout Asia, who reflect therapidly changing social scene inIndia, Indonesia, Burma and thePhilippines.FOTA deadlineToday is the final day toenter photographs, art workand graphics in the Festival ofthe Arts student competition.All works must be turned toLexington studios, 5825 Univer¬sity, between 12:00 and 5:00today. Born in Madras, India, Miss Ra¬ma Rau has written six booksHome to India, My Russian Jour¬ney, East of Home, This is India,Remember the House and View tothe Southeast.Her stories and articles have ap¬peared in numerous magazines, in¬cluding The New Yorker.She recently dramatized E M.Forster’s novel Passage to India.It received critical acclaim whenit opened in England last seasonand will soon appear on Broad¬way in New York.The daughter of the former In¬dian diplomat Sir Benegal RamaRau, and Lady Dhanvanthi RamaRau, one of India’s most eminentsocial workers, she has traveledand lived in varied parts of theworld. lyst; I actualized something peo¬ple were all ready io do. The Fes¬tival should stand on its own feel;the umbilical cord was cut longago — there’s no need for it.”According to Meyer, three ideaswent into tiie plans for FOTAfrom the first. “I felt that therewas a real contribution of extra¬curricular groups that oughtto be recognized, especially theextent to which the humanitiescome alive in their work, so thatthey complement the academicwork of the curriculum, in a sortof ‘applied humanities.’“Secondly, a University whichis somewhat formless (and this ispart of its greatness) needs some¬thing like a festival as a meansof creating what you might callbridges, an opportunity for mak¬ing connections on various levels— between art groups which com¬pete with or ignore each other,between the faculty and the stu¬dents, between the University andthe community surrounding it.The effectiveness of each of thesegroups would be increased bytheir cooperation in a joint ef¬fort.”Finally, Meyer emphasizes theimportance of the student in mak¬ing or unmaking the festival.“The main emphasis should befor students and by students’ —with faculty help where needed;I have always thought of the ad¬ministration’s role in FOTA as asupporting, not a controlling,one.”Present at the first FOTA meet¬ing were Joshua Taylor, RichardVikstrom, Harold Haydon, Mar¬vin Phillips, Peter Gram Swingand Meyer, and Strozier. A four-day Festival period was set up,one whieh would coincide with thetraditional Parents’ weekend. Astudent, Arthur Green, assumed the general chairmanship, withHaydon and Taylor as co-chair¬men.“Our original Idea,” explainedIlaydon, “was not bring in anylarge numbers of events, or to‘import’ a festival, but rather tohighlight unnoticed events hereon campus by bringing togetherall exhibits, contests, productionsand so forth into one short period.“In short we wanted to empha¬size our own indigenous cultural ’events, together with a few spe¬cial events. YVe wanted to havesome fun.”By April, (he Festival plans hadexpanded to include Internationalhouse’s Festival of nations; a UTpresentation of Gogol’s “InspectorGeneral;” three concerts; a stu¬dent art exhibit; varsity track,tennis and baseball; aerotheatreand modern dancers. Highlight ofthe Festival were the Beaux Artsball and William Carlos Williams’reading of his poetry in Rockefel¬ler Chapel.By the following year, whenPenny Rich and John Nethertonwere planning the second FOTA,the Festival time had been ex¬panded to a five-day period offer¬ing some 15 events, including alecture by Eudora Welty, the nov¬elist and short story writer; UT’s“The Ghost Sonata;” the worldballet “Suzanna and the Barber;”premiere of Ruth Page’s modernand, of course, the Beaux Artsball.1957 was a rather difficult andharassing year for the plannersof FOTA, according to MaryJeanne Carlson, co-chairman thatyear. “We were on a very lowbudget,” she recalls, “and planswere completely disorganized be¬cause of a lack of continuity inleadership. You got to be chair¬man by a sort of osmosis.”A sports car rally was “a great fiasco,” says Mrs. Carlson; on tiu> i „viother band, Martin Buber spoke hoto standing-room-only at Rocke¬feller chapel, and the revivedBlack friars gave their first full-length production since“The Passing of Pahli Khan.”The 1957 FOTA was widely p^,.lieized as the first entirely stu¬dent-run Festival; as Mrs. Carl¬son put it however, “since oidyStrozier, Price, . O’Connell andHaydon really knew what wasgoing on, we depended rather ex¬tensively on the faculty and ;^l-ministration.”Probably as a result of the*conditions, the Festival of 1^/58saw every committee co-chaiiodby students and faculty members.Rochelle Dubnow and EverettKline (both students) were oo-ehairmen of the Festival as «whole, which has been character¬ized as “esoteric” and “experi¬mental.” There was a discussionand presentation of “Music Con¬crete and Electronic Music"—at¬tended by about five people, saysMiss Dubnow; the sports-earrally was omitted from the pro¬gram, and the annual student art meestcaidisrei’msluunai1lenweth«dif(estlie.liv¬en*be!Iturseran*£>’;(T1atev<Artist BouftThis year’s Festival of theArts will bring1 Harry Bouras,noted artist, to the quad¬rangles during the week bfApril 23.On April 25 at 4:00 artist-in-re¬sidence, Bouras will give a freepublic lecture (with slides) call <1“DeKooning on DeKooning, Tic-buffet on Debuffet, etc.: artistson their own art.”A winner of several major pes, Bouras has had exhibits mthe Museum of Modern Art, theMany poets highlight FOTAThree Pulitzer-prize wan¬ning poets will be on campusduring this year’s Festival ofthe Arts.Robert Lowell, Karl Shap¬iro, and Stanley Kunitz willpresent a combined poetry readingand will participate in a panel dis¬cussion on “The poet and themodern public.”The reading will be at 8 pm on April 26 in the law school audi¬torium, and the discussion at 3,also in the auditorium. ElderOlson, professor of English, willmoderate the discussion.FOTA 'My Life and Yours'Leinsdorf on conducting“Problems of the Americanconductor: the divorce of thesymphony and the opera” willbe the title of a lecture givenby Erich Leinsdorf on Tues¬day, April 17.Leinsdorf, recently appointedmusic director of the Boston sym¬phony and the Berkshire Musicfestival, will speak in Breastedhall at 8:30, both as a lecturerin the “My Life and Yours”series and as a part of the Festi¬val of the Arts.In a letter concerning his plansfor the lecture, he says: “I shouldlike to speak about the fact thatin the United States the con¬ducting of symphony and operais seemingly incompatible, whieh is totally different from the Euro¬pean system. I think I can tella great deal about why this isso and how it has affected mylife and career.”Leinsdorf has asked that apiano be made available to him onthe stage so that he may illus¬trate points in his talk.Leinsdorf has gained worldfame through many guest-conduct¬ing appearances with the world’s foremost orchestras, through hispost as music consfiltant and con¬ductor of the Metropolitan opera,and through his numerous record¬ings.Poetry reading finalTho finals of 'the poetryreading contest which werescheduled for Friday, April 27,in Bond chapel at 3:00 will in¬stead be held at the same timein Swift commons.FOTA art exhibitsDuring the twenty-two day Festival of the Arts the followingart exhibits will be open to the public:Harry Bouras—“Collage and construction,” New' dorm, 5825 S.Woodlawn.Art Institute student exhibit, Pierce tower, 55th and University.Student art exhibit, Lexington studio, 5825 S. University.Faculty amateur art exhibit, Ida Noyes, 59th and Woodkwvn.Faculty and student professional art exhibit, Midway studio, 60thand Ingleside.Student photography exhibit, Ida Noyes, 59th and Woodlawn.Professional photography exhibit, Ida Noyes, 59th and Woodlawn.Gertrude Abercrombie exhibit, Brent house, 5540 S. Woodlawn.Renaissance society exhibit—J. R. Shapiro collection, 59th & Ellis.Hillel art exhibit, 5715 S. Woodlawn.Baptist Graduate student center religious art exhibit, 4901 S. Ellis.FOTA supplement editor .... Richard Gottlieb He has been permanent con¬ductor of the Cleveland orchestraand the Rochester philharmonic.In addition he has played with theBoston symphony, the Philadel¬phia orchestra, the Chicago sym¬phony, the Los Angeles symphony,and the Houston symphony.His work abroad has beenequally extensive: he has con¬ducted the London philharmonic,the Concertgebouw, the Viennaphilharmonic, the Rome Operaorchestra, the Israel philharmonic,and others.His musical career has been anextensive one: at the age of 22he became assistant to the lateBruno Walter at the Salzburg'festival. He filled the same ca¬pacities in connection with ArturoToscanini during 1935-37. Begin¬ning in 1943 he began a three yeartour of iluty as music director ofthe Cleveland orchestra.In 1957 he took on the thennewly created post of music con¬sultant to the Metropolitan opera.He will occupy this post until theFall of 1962 when he begins hispermanent work with the Bostonsymphony. _Leinsdorf has recorded bothopera and symphonic music ex¬tensively: his full-length record¬ing of Pucinni’s opera “Turandot”won a prize for the best operaticrecording for 1960-61. Shapiro, a professor at the Uni¬versity of Nebraska and editor ofthe Prairie Schooner, received thePulitzer prize for poetry in 1945for Y’-Ietter and Other Poems. Heis the author of In Defense' ofIgnorance, Essay of Rime, Trialof a Poet, and Beyond Criticism.Lowell was awarded the Pulitzerprize in 1947. He was at one timepoetry consultant at the Libraryof Congress and is the author ofLand of Unlikeness, Lord Weary’sCastle, Mills of the Kavanaughs,and Life Studies.Kunitz received the Pulitzerprize in 1959 and was awarded theHarriet Monroe award from theUniversity of ^Chicago in 1958. Heis the author of Selected Poems1928-58 and Passport to the War.Both Kunitz and Lowell are nowat the New School for Social Re¬search in New' York. titled “The Situation of Poetry”will take place on May 2 at 3 j-min Breasted hall. John Ix>ga«,Paul Carroll and Hyung WoongPak will bo the participants, andRalph J. Mill, executive secretaryof the committee on social thoughtand instructor at the Universityof Chicago, will moderate. fws• nAnother panel discussion en- Pak is the present editor of t^eChicago Review, and Carroll, hinself a poet, is a past editor of theReview and of Big Table. Carrollis at present an associate editi^Tof the Chicago Perspective.Logan, also a poet, is editorialdirector of the poetry seminar inChicago. His verse and storieshave appeared in Poetry, The NewYorker, The Evergreen Review,and the Kenyon Review. Ho hitepublished two volumes of hispoetry: Ghosts of the Heart andA Cycle of Mother Cabrini. > ^In the evening of the same daythere will be a combined poetryreading by Logan, Carroll, F. tf.Gilman, and William Hunt. BothGilman and Hunt are membersLogan’s poetry seminar.Rock Monas to perlThe Order of Blackfriars ofthe University of Chicago willadd an original musical com¬edy to the calendar of Festivalof the Arts events. This year’sproduction, entitled “Sing OutSweet Rock,” will be presentedin Mandel hall April 27, 28 and29 at 8:30 p.m.Blackfriars is an organizationwhich has its roots in the earlydays of the University. The showspresented during the first thirtyyears of the century were galared carpet affairs including pro¬fessional directors from Holly¬wood and all male casts.The second world war changedthe face of the theatrical organi¬zation whose proud boast has al¬ways been that Blackfriars’ showsare student-written and entirelystudent produced. The war drain¬ed the man-power from the pro¬duction offices and from the Man-del stage; Blackfriars was dis¬banded. In 1952 a brief effort at reor¬ganization was attempted «vi<lfailed. It was not until 1957 thatBlackfriars made a triumphant<*omebaek to the Mandel hall stagethough they had staged a lenglhyseries of skits at the 1956 Beaux’Arts ball.The first revival production was .entitled “Gamma Delta Iota” antf J®*1included an innovation which maywell have shocked and saddenedstaunch Blackfriars’ alumni whoremembered the days when theall-male chorus line had m<uecampus prestige than the Chanc-elor. That innovation: girls.Since 1957 girls have gracedfour Blackfriars' productions, “Al¬pha Centuari,” “Sour Mash,” “.Sil¬ver Bells and Cockle Shells,” andlast year’s “Mad Money.” “Sing sal*Out Sweet Rock” has accepted the > Mainevitable trend and will be fea- ; >70turing females in lead and sup- J7>porting roles. ^7This year’s production coneems^afeitself with the ruthless rise and i,are4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 13, 1962pirit of founders Festival of the Arts music rangesfrom Bach's Brandenberg' to bellsexhibit was held in the Robiehouse.“The question of the experi¬mental approach versus bringingestablished ‘big names’ to thecampus was one of the biggestdisputes at committee meetings”m*alls Miss Dubnow, “but themain point was that we simplyhadn’t the funds to attract the bignames.”Kline added that another prob¬lem was the chairmen of FOTAwere not elected until the end ofth« fall quarter, which made itdifficult to attempt anything but«fee experimental. It was thereforeestablished in the FOTA const ilu-ticn that future heads of the Fes¬tival be elected not later than theend of spring quarter the yearbefore each festival.In 1959, author Saul Bellow lec¬tured, the University choir pre¬sented Handel's “Israel in Egypt,”and an exhibition was held of thegraphic works of Pablo Picasso.(There was also another attemptat a sports-car rally.)•’'The only great change Ievoked was a decision that a*crs to visitlhrilus museum, the San Fran¬cisco museum and liis works areincluded .in .collections .shownthroughout the country.During Jhe Festival, Mr. Bouraswill conduct tours of the art ex¬hibits on campus. The first of histwo tours will begin on Monday,April 23 at 2 pm and the secondwill begin on Friday, April 27 at1 pm. Both tours will originate atfcheNew dorm./Friday’s tour will terminate atSwift commons where Mr. Bourasv ill award the prizes to the win¬ners of the student art and pho¬tography contests. Muriel Beadlewill present the President’si>ri/e in graphics for a picture por-: raying student life. Pulitzer Prize-vinning* poets Robert Lowell andStanley Kunitz will present a-vards to the winners o' the Flor-‘nce Adams Poetry Reading con¬est. sports ear rally ami similarevents were not really germane,”remarked former FOTA chair¬man Alice Schaeffer recently.This year’s FOTA committeehas extended the length of theFestival from the customary twoweeks to three weeks . with thehope that students will be ableto attend more of the events.In the past the Festival hasdrawn a great percentage of itsaudience from off campus ratherthan from among the UC studentbody. By scheduling most of themajor events for the week-ends,study-weary students will have achance to attend more of them.Roberta Reeder, this year’sFOTA chairman, said, “I havetried to involve as many studentsas possible in this year’s Festival.We have also made an effort tohave the visiting artists meetwith as many students as theyare able to during their stay onthe quadrangles.“A number of this year's artistswill stay in student dormitoriesand be available for meetingswith students, both formally andinformally.” Emphasis on musical eventshas characterized the Festivalof the Arts since its beginningin 1955. This yeai’s Festivalwill bring an extensive and'varied program to campus.Nine musical events and a Maydance are scheduled between Fri¬day, April 13 and Tuesday, May 1.Heralding the opening of theEighth Annual Festival of theArts will be a unique concert ofchange ringing today at 12:30 pm.The concert will emanate fromthe Alice Freeman Palmer chimesin Mitchell tower.Daniel Robbins, bell master ofMitchell tower and University ofChicago rariilonneur, along withmembers of the University of Chi¬cago Change ringing society, willpresent the concert.In change ringing, rather thanplaying a tune on a bell, each bellis rung in mathematical patterns;each bell is rung in a differentsequence for each peal. As opposed to the carillon whichwas developed on the continent,change ringing originated in Eng¬land and is currently practicedin all major English universities.Any evening of the year theMitchell tower bells can be heardplaying the familiar Universityof Chicago alma mater. Theseevening concerts were made pos¬sible by a gift of Amos AlonzoStagg who wished to have thebells ring out a 10:30 curfew forfootball players.On the same day, after anopening address by Warner Wick,dean of students, a brass en¬semble will perform in Hutchin¬son court.In a performance marking theirfirst anniversary, the ChicagoStrings, fourteen members of theChicago Symphony orchestra, willappear in a concert at Mandel hallon April 20, at 8:30 pm.The ensemble will perform Cor¬elli’s “Concerto Grosso in GMinor,” Schubert’s “Five Minuteswith Six Trios,” Paul Hinde-muth’s “Five Pieces (-Opus 44),”Weiner's “Divertimento No. 2,”and Stravinsky’s “Concerto in D.”The group will be conducted byFrancis Akos, assistant concert-master of the Chicago Symphonyorchestra. Akoo is the founder ofthe Chicago Strings.Tickets for the concert areavailable at the Mandel hall tick¬et office or by calling MI 3-0800,extension 3280.The Festival will present musicto please both the patriot and thecosmopolitan.On the cosmopolitan side, theUniversity of Chicago Russianchoir will give a concert on Mon¬day, April 23 at 12:30 in Hutchin¬son court. Selections of Russianfolk and church music will be pre¬sented by the choir. The UCRussian choir was formed lastyear and is directed by StojenLazarevic, a member of the Slaviclanguages staff.Jesse Fuller, a native of Georgia and 9 noted folk artists, will playthe kazoo, the harmonica, thetwelve string guitar, the symbals,and the fotdella (an instrumentof his own invention) at his firstC hicago concert in several years.He will appear in the Ida Noyestheatre on April 24 at 8:30 pm.Fuller has worked around thecountry as a shoeshine boy, movieextra, railroad brakeman, andship fitter. His widely variedoccupations have influenced hismusic, most of which he has writ¬ten himself.The concert is sponsored by theUniversity of Chicago Folkloresociety. Tickets can be purchasedat the door of the Ida Noyestheatre for one dollar. »The “Fifth Bach BrandenburgConcerto” will be among theworks performed by Alan Cur¬tiss, harpsichordist, who will ap¬pear with the University of Chi¬cago Symphony orchestra onApril 25 at 8:30 in Mandel hall.Other works to be performedby Curtiss in his Mandel hall ap¬pearance will be Louis Couper¬in’s “Suite in G minor” andFrancis Couperin’s “Ordre in Bminor.” H. Colin Slim will directthe UC Symphony.Tickets for the performance areavailable at the Mandel hall boxoffice or they can be obtainedby calling MI 3-0800, extension3280.On Easter Sunday the Rocke¬feller Chapel choir with membersof the Chicago Symphony willpresent Handel’s “Messiah.” Theperformance will take place inRockefeller chapel at 3:30 in theafternoon, and tickets, which maybe obtained at the Chapel house,are $4 and half price for students.On Saturday, April 21 at 8the Illinois Ballet will presentthree works: “Valse Promenade,”"Thais," and “The Stone Medus-sa.” Tickets ($1.50 and $1 forstudents) are available at theMandel hall box office.And on May 1, at 12:30 p.m.there will indeed by a May dance.Above is o scene from last year's Beaux Arts ball.This year's event, a costume ball, will have as its theme,"Authors and their novels." See FOTA calendar for ticketinformation, time, and location.rformthe furious fall of Rock Monas,rock and roll idol of the Americanpublic. He is opposed by a forceof militant aesthetics who callthemselves the “Back to Bachers.”The book and lyrics have beenwritten by Bob Reiser and Martyjjptbinowitz. The music has beencon]posed by Bob Applebaum andKen Pierce. James O’Reilly, afrequent director in the Univer¬sity’s Court theatre, is directingthe show; Chris Moore of theFirst United church is handlingthe musical direction.Phone orders are now being ac¬cepted for all three performancesat extension 3271. Starting Mon¬day! April 16 tickets will be onsale in the Mandel hall corridor.Mail orders will be accepted at5706 University avenue, Chicago37, and phone orders at extension3271 or 3280. Regular ticket pricesaje $2.50 and $2; student ticketsare $2 and $1.50.During his soujorn at (he Uni-ersity, Bouras will live at Pierceower. He will, however, have hisneqls in various dormitories andvill visit coffee hours held duringI Harry Bouras, Artist-in-I Residence. Doc films inaugurates festivalA part of this year’s Fes¬tival of the Arts will be theFirst Annual Midwest FilmFestival sponsored by theUniversity of Chicago Doc¬umentary film group.All film makers who do not havea film in commercial distributionare invited to enter the compe¬tition.All films will be shown duringthe Festival (April 25-29) amiprizes of $100, $50, and $25 will beawarded to the three best films.Doc films has issued the fol¬lowing statement concerning thepurpose of their Festival: ogain recognition for the indepen¬dent film-maker and to providean interested audience for hiswork, the Documentary film groupbegan last autumn to work on theMidwest Film Festival, the firststrictly 16mm competition in theUnited States.”Among the out-of-competitionfilms entered in this year’s Festi¬val is Jules Feiffer’s Munro.Munro, recipient of wide criticalacclaim, is Feiffer’s first attemptin the cinematic medium.Sidney Meyers, director of TheSavage Eye and The Quiet One,has also entered a film whichstars Pamela Tiffin. Music for thelatter film was collected by AllanLomax, noted American folk musicauthority.Competition films are drawnfrom all over the country. Titlessuch .as Lightning and Armpits,Kali Nihta, Socrates, 40 Causesof Abdominal, and How to Makea Ewe Turn promise to provideinteresting viewing.The Festival has for its judgesa panel of three men “long in¬terested in the cinema as an artform.” The three udll be GeraldTamaner, film editor of New Uni¬versity Thought; Whitney Hal¬stead, director of the school of theArt institute of Chicago; and Ar¬thur Knight, film critic of the Saturday Review of Literature andauthor of The Liveliest Art: ADjinoramic History of the Movies.In this past year, the Doc Filmsgroup has brought to the Univer¬sity of Chicago Stan Vanderbeekand Stan Brakhage, two experi¬mental film-makers and leadingmembers of the “American Un¬derground.”On Monday, April 23, Arthur Knight will lecture on “The artof Ingmar Bergman” at 8:00 inBreasted hall.Beside his column in the Sat¬urday Review, Knight’s criticismhas appeared in Harper’s Bazaar,Esquire, and the New York Times.He is the author of The LiveliestAr(, a critical history of the film.lie has lectured at City Collegeof New York and taught at theNew School for Social Research; he has also served as the Americanjuror at the Venice InternationalFilm Festival.His work in television is alsoextensive. He has been filn. co¬ordinator for “Odyssey”, film con¬sultant on “Omnibus”, and he hasworked on “The Seven LivelyArts.”Tickets for his lecture may bepurchased at the Mandel hall boxoffice or by calling extension 3280.FOTA calendarFriday, 13 AprilOpening of festival: Changers concertof Mitchell Tower Bells, 57th andUniversity. 12 pm.Opening Address: Warner Wick. Hut¬chinson court, 57th & University,12:15 pm.Brass Ensemble Concert: Hutchinsoncourt. 57th & University, 12:20 pm.Paul Goodman, critic: “The art of thenovel,” Breasted hall, 58th & Uni¬versity, 8:30 pm.Tuesday, 17 AprilErich Leinsdorf, conductor: “Problemsof an American conductor: thedivorce of symphony and opera,'’Breasted hall, 58th & University,8:30 pm.Friday, 20 AprilChicago Strings concert: Program in¬cludes works by Corelli, Shubert, andBarber. Mandel hall. 57th & Uni¬versity, 8:30 pm. Tickets $2. stu¬dents $1. and can he purchased at theMandel hall box office.Saturday, 21 AprilIllinois Ballet: “Valse Promenade.’’"Thais.” and “The Stone Medusa,”Mandel hall, 57 th & University, 8pm. Tickets $1.50 and students $1and can be purchased at the Mandelhall box office.Sunday, 22 AprilThe Messiah: Rockefeller chapel. 50th& Wocdlawn, 3:30 pm. Tickets are$4 and students $2.Monday, 23 AprilRussian choir: Hutchinson court, 57th& University, 12:30 pm.Arthur Knight, Film editor, SaturdayReview: “The art of Bergman.”Breasted hall. 58th & University, 8pm. Tickets are $1 and can be pur¬chased at the Mandel hall box office,Tuesday, 24 AprilReception for Arthur Knight: Tda Noyeg58th & Woodlawn, 4 pm.Jesse Fuller folk concert; Ida Noyes,59th & Woodlawn, 8:30 pm. Tick¬ets are $1. Wednesday, 25 AprilHarry Bouras: "DeKooning on De-Kooning, Dubuffet on Dubuffet, etc.:artists on their own work,” a slide-lecture, Ida Noyes, 59th & Woodlawn,4 pm.Alan Curtis, harpsichord, and the Uni¬versity of Chicago's Symphony or¬chestra will include in their programBach’s "Brandenburg concerto no. 5.’’Mandel hall, 57th & University, 8:30pm. Tickets are $1,Thursday, 26 AprilRobert Lowell, Karl Shapiro, StanleyKunitz, Elder Olson: "The poet andthe modern public,” a panel dis¬cussion, Law school auditorium, 1121E. 60th, 3 pm. Tickets are 7 5c. Canbe purchased at Mandel hall boxoffice.Robert Lowell, Karl Shapiro, StanleyKunitz: Combined Poetry Reading.I,aw school auditorium, 1121 E. 60 th,8 pm. Tickets are $1.50 and can bepurchased at the Mandel hall boxoffice.Friday, 27 AprilFlorence Adams poetry reading finals:Bond chapel, 1025 E. 58th, 3 pm.Kwo Da-Wei (David Kwo) : “Lecturedemonstration of Chinese traditionalpainting.” Ida Noyes, 59th & Wood¬lawn, 3:30 pm.Awarding of student art, photographyand literary prizes: Bond chapel, 1025E. 58th, 4:30 pm.Sing Out Sweet Rock: original musicalcomedy performed by Blackfriars.Mandel hall, 57th & University, 8:30pm. Tickets are $2.50 and $2. Stu¬dent prices are $2 and $1.50. Canbe purchased at Mandel hall boxoffice.Saturday, 28 AprilSing Out Sweet Rock: Blackfriars, re¬peat performance, 8:30 pm.Sunday, 29 AprilFestival of Nations Bazaar: Interna¬tional house. 1414 E. 59th, 3 pm.Festival of Nations’ program: Inter- eventsnational house. 1414 E. 59th, 8 pm.First Annual Midwest Film Festival:Law school auditorium, 1121 E. 60th,8 pm. Tickets are $1 and seriestickets are available for the filmseries showings during April 25-April 29. Tickets can be purchasedat Mandel hall box office.Sing Out Sweet Rock: Blackfriars, 1L30pm, repeat performance.Tuesday, 1 MayMay dance: Main quadrangle, 58th andUniversity. 12:30 pm.Harold Haydon: "Marc Chagall and theJerusalem windows". slide lecture,Hillel, 5715 S. Woodlawn, 8 pm.Wednesday, 2 MayJohn Logan, Paul Carroll, HyungWoong Pak, Ralph Mills: "Situationof poetry,” panel discussion. Breastedhall, 58th & University, 3 pm. Tick¬ets 50c, purchased at Mandel hallbox office.John Logan, Paul Carroll, F. D. Gil¬man, Wm. Hunt: Combined PoetryReading. Poets of the new genera¬tion. Breasted hall. 58th & Uni¬versity, 8 pm. Tickets are $1 andcan be purchased at the Mandel hallbox office.Thursday, 3 MaySantha Rama Rau, authoress: Lecture,Law School auditorium, 1121 E. 60th,3.30 pm.“Tonight at 8:30”: WUCB radio per¬formance, Actor's company, Reynoldsclub lounge, 8:30 pm. 25c.Friday, 4 MayDavid Ross, director: ‘‘Ibsen and thecontemporary theatre." Breasted hall,58th & University, 8:30 pr.i. Tick-etc are $1 and can he -purchased atMandel hall box office.Saturday, 5 MayBeaux Arts ball: Costume ball ontheme "Authors and their novels.”Ida Noyes, 58th & Woodlawn, 8:30pm, $3.50. rApril 13, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Doubt Kennedy can control price riseThree University of Chicagoprofessors agree that the Ken¬nedy administration has littlechance of preventing the steelindustry from increasing itsprices.The price raise, anouncedWednesday, drew sharp criticismfrom President Kennedy. He ac¬cused the major steel corpora¬tions of “irresponsible defiance”of public interest and “ruthlessdisregard” of their responsibilityto the nation in rising steel pricesby $6 per ton.Professor of Law Harry Kal-ven Jr. summed up the professor’s opinion when he said that Presi¬dent Kennedy “has done what hecan do already. He could have ananti trust suit (against the steelindustry), but it would be arather thin case.”Edward Levi, dean of the lawschool, said that bringing an anti¬trust suit is “really a question offact.” In order to gain convictionunder the Sherman Anti-trust lawit would be necessary to provethat US Steel, the biggest steelproducer, dominates the industry,Levi said.Professor of law Aaron Direc¬tor noted that the governmentGoBEAUTY SALONExpert-Permanent WavingandHair Cutting -by Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 STRAUS, BLOSSER& McDowellMembersNfw York Stock ExchangeMidwest Stock ExchangeDetroit Stock ExchangeAmerican Stock ExchangeHyde ParkShopping Center55th aiid LAKE PARKCHICAGO 37Phone NOrmal 7-0777 could bring the steel firms tocourt in a few days if they de¬cide to, but it would be difficultto prove there is any price fixinginvolved in the ri$e in steel prices.Director added that the price ofsteel is none of the government’sbusiness unless the structure ofthe steel industry isn’t competi¬tive or prices are being fixed.Director said he believes the in¬dustry is basically competitiveand prices aren’t being fixed.Malcolm Sharp, professor oflaw and a former National Re¬covery Administration attorneywho worked with the steel indus¬tries, said that the industry is“highly competitive” and there¬fore not open to anti trust prose¬cution.JOSEPH H. AARONAll Forms of InsuranceSUITE 825135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 Sharp noted that no price increase would hold unless all thecompanies raised their prices.The fact that all the prices go upwithin a very short time doesn’tmean the price is arbitrarily be¬ing fixed, he explained.The government might exertpressure on the steel industrythrough its procurement processSharp said.Professor Levi explained thatthe price raise and the govern¬ment’s role in it results in a de-lemmia. If the steel industryagrees not to raise prices theywould be guilty of violating theSherman Anti-Trust law, even ifthe government urged them notto raise the prices.Levi noted that confusion re¬sults from conflicting attitudestowards government’s role. On theone hand there is the theory of free enterprise under which theindustry should set its own prices *competitively, on the other hand *their is suspicion of a firm whichcan keep steel prices down by itsown action. Managing pii(os*seems wrong for a firm but rightfor the government under this*logic, Levi added.Other problems arise from thefact that we tolerate industry.T 'wide cooperation among laborunions, but not among the corpor¬ations, he added.Almost 50% of the College hasvoted so far in this year’s stu- *'dent government elections. About1000 students in the College, and *a total of some 1600 studentshave cast their ballots with onemore day of voting left. The to¬tal number of students voting in ~last year’s elections was about1400.kAAAAAAA^AAAAA/^.RECORDS ]All Label*; ListedOthers AvailableService Center,Reynolds Club$2.50TWO WEEKS ONLYNow, you can browse of your leisure for the best inMusic and ArtWe’ve coupled an exciting display ofbrushstroke Art reproductions from fa¬mous European and American collectionswith important classical, musical comedyand folk music for your convenient on-campus shopping. Come on in... meetVan Gogh, Picasso, Matisse, Gauguin and,along with them, Tchaikovsky, Dvorak,Beethoven, Josh White, Pete Seeger,Rodgers ft Hammerstein, Lerner and Loweand many other important artists who willmake your listening and looking morepleasureable than ever. Shop here reg¬ularly for the latest in Music ft ArtHere are but a lew of the highlights of our Fine Arts Festival 1.98 upParliament Records Artia RecordsPI.PI 18 Sibelius: Violin Concerto in d. \\Op, 47-Sitkoverkv : Valsc Triste; • •Swan of Tuonela—Prague Sym./Smetaeek.PLP-129 R<*ethoven: Svimdtony #3 — •rt“Eroiea”—C, P. O./von Mataeie ;<?PLP-151 Borodin: Polovt-ian Dances; Inthe Steppes of Central Asia • fftSimskv-Korsakov : Overture to“The S.-ar's Bride” •Ml1 <udov: Kikimora •if\Mussorgsky: Night on RaidMountainDargoiitijsky: Cossack DancePLP-152 Italian Opera Overtures X)PI,P-153 W agner Overtures mPI.P-155 Respighi: Fountains of Rome:Feste Romane C.P.O./lVdrottiPI. P-156 Beethoven: Symnhonv $2: •0Conscr rat-on «*f the House Over¬ture— C.P.O./Fcrrncsik oo ALP-116 Rumania. RumaniaAI.P-120 Apliro—CypsiaAl.P-189 A Moisevev Spectacular London Records (Con't)London Records ♦MiH• •• o 5522 Puccini: Madam Butterfly—Highlights; Renata TebaldiCarlo Bergonzi5521 Verdi: II Trovatore Highlight:-;Mario del Monaco, RenataTebaldi .I.L-570 Mantovani: Creensleeves (\Selection of Favorite Waltzes)LL-685LL-746 Mantovani: Strauss WaltzesMantovani: The Music ofVictor HerbertPLP-157 k haeh«turian: MasqueradeSuite, t.ayne Suite (excerpts)Prokofiev: Cla'-sical SvmphonvDeluissv: \fternoon of a FaunPLP-138PI,P-159PLP-101PLP-103PIP-134 This i* RussiaChopin FavoritesDvorak: New World SymphonyRimskv-Korsakov : Scheherazade &m I.L-768I.L-877LL-1031LI-1219 Mantovani: An Album ofFavorite TangosMantovani: The Immortal('lassiesMantovani: The Music ofSigmund RombergMantovani: Song Hits fromTheaterlandLL-1331 Mantovani: Operatic AriasLL-1452 Mantovani: Waltzes of Irvin”Berlin •HOj#HOUo-r#r»HI0000.0?m ’>.>19 Iloilo: Mefistofele - Highlights;f'esare Siepe; Mario DelMonaco; Renata Tehaldi5515 Joan Suthcrand Operatic Recital513.7 Mozart: Don Giovanni — High¬lights; Cesare Sicpi, HildeGueden, Lisa Della Casa5188 Operatic Recital —Giuseppe DiStefano5174 Ooeratie Recital hv RenataTehaldi5344 Verdi: La Traviata Highlights;Tehaldi, Poggi5566 (.luck: Alcestt—Highlights;Kirsten FlagstadMantovani: Music From theFilmsRachmaninoff: Piano Concerto#2—Richter, Leningrad LL-1513I.L-1525LI.-l 700 Mantovani: Film Furores 5562 Puccini: La Bolieme— High¬lights; Tehaldi; Carlo Bergonzi5553 Puccini: Turandot Highlights;Tehaldi; Del Monaco; RorkhTR-73001 The Fares Do The TwistMantovani: Music From theBallet 12002 Saw Jazz, Bill Black12003 Solid & Raunchy, Rill Black12001 Thai W onderful Feeling,Ril Black12006 Let’s Twist Her, Rill BlackUNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue foreign car sales. (see page 3vDa SeeBackPage.“I’MFLYING HIGH”in my new Weskins.Women just orbitaround me. It makesme feel so worldly.Thank those luckystars and A-l Weskins,of course. Hold it girls,I need some space.At your favorite campus shopTHE STORE FOR MENIRCatth (SamjiuaIn the New Hyde ParkShopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Aprill3, 1962Culture VultureAH cultural paths lead to the University of Chicago, for the Festival of the Arts (FOTA) opens today. Lectures,Cr!irfr*S' ex . its, an<* manY other fascinating events will take place, right here On campus. So hark unto the call ofFOTA, put aside the books for another week, and plunge into the swirl,trepidation, you can sit back and muse on the wonderful things you saw. Then, as Spring creeps into Chicago withL^insdorf concludes his Theo Bikel comes to Chicagofor one night. He’ll perform in theArie Crown theatre at McCormickOn campus about a Black Massi “The hall this Monday at 8 pm. Admis- ae,. •Pleasure Garden,” a fantasy about sion to the film, which stars Caryr»,mS.a r “vi censorship and censors; and Grant, Deborah Kerr, Robert ErichThe second so o 1 ms lor "Blood of the Beast,” made in the Mitchum, and Jean Simmons is Symphony orchestra this after- place tomorrow night at 8:30.I1"' £°"nCXnr S,‘.U,gh^r ,h0TSL°f Paris- 50 ccnts- ’ hall) and concerts by the Chicago Tickets are going fast, so getlx> presented by Documentary At Burton-Judson cinema this_ n „ , , mio , yours soon to hear this multi-films tonight at 7:lo and 9:15, ad- evening is ‘‘Stalag 17,” the story Festival of the Arts ^n‘ He’ the orchestra , and guest musician sing an<j strum,mission ^0 cents. This weeks of a wartime German prison FOTA begins this week! Three cc**° s°i°>st Antonio Janigro will More ‘‘Music from Denmark”movies include Loxes of Franis- camp. It will be shown at 8 and weeks and a day of events are perform Mozart’s “Symphony No. Sunday, in the Chicago Chamberl.in,” a take-off on the Hollywood 10, and the admission is 50 cents, coming, including a lecture by 39,” Schumann’s “Concerto for orchestra’s spring series. Dieterrpic motion picture; Bells of A recent United States comedy, Paul Goodman tonight on “The Violoncello,” and Brahm’s “Quar- Kober will conduct this free con-^ cert at 3:30 pm in Simpson theatremotion picture; “Bells ofAtlantis,” based on Anais Nin’s “The Grass is Greener,” will be Art of the Novel” (8:30, Breasted tet No. 1” at 2. Student ticketsHouse of Incest; Inauguration of presented by International house haH, and concerts by the Chicago are available if you get to Orches-Ihc Pleasure Dome,” — *---■• •• - — -Sleeping rooms available. Reasonablelent. Convenient to eampus. Kitchenlirivileires. Must be used to children andpets. DO 8-1041.Booms for Kent: 54th and Dorchester.KA 4-0213. Kitch. priv., privacy. $14a ‘Vi ek. which is movies in the Int house assembly strings, the UC Russian choir, a tra hall, 420 S. Michigan, by 1pm.harpsichordist, and the UC choir Soprano Elisabeth Schw'arzkopfdoing the “Messiah.” There are will give an “Evening in Vienna”lots more events (samples: Black- concert tonight, along with 60friars’ “Sing Out Sweet Rock,” a members of the Chicago SymphonyMay dance in the main quad- orchestra conducted by Franzand the International Allers. The concert, in Orchestrahouse Festival of Nations), so see hall, is at 8:15, and tickets areCLASSIFIED ADSFor Rent and For Sale Wanted! Graduate student to assist ,person with statistical work involved Tangles,Call VI 1-0295.a thesis. of the Chicago Natural Historymuseum in Grant park. Featuredthis week is guest soloist HansBjerre, a pianist from Denmark,dents.ArtAn exhibit of ornamental Wedg¬wood and Bentley ware opens to¬day at the Art institute. It willServicesKenwood Radio and XV Service—Werepair JV s, radios, hi-fis, tape re¬corders and all work guaranteed.5508 S. Kimbark — NO 7-0830 the FOTA supplement in today’s available at the box office. The run through the end of May. whenprogram includes works by Josef the Seventh Annual WedgwoodStrauss, Johann Strauss junior, International seminar meets atFranz von Suppe, and Franz the institute. The collection in-Schubert.eludes 350 objects.room home in Mich. dune*. Private Typing: reasonable, rapid. accurate,,h. June 1j to July 14. Call GK Special RUSH service. Call Rona Rosen-blatt or Karen Borchers. NO 7-3609.5-6368.2 furnished apartments: share samekitchen, ideal for 2 friends. Nearcampus. $39 monthly. Male grad,students only. Available April 20.Call BU S-5229 between 7 and 9 pmonly.House For Sale — South ShoreSpacious, attractive, convenient. Fourbedrooms, 2 baths, garage and car port,full basement, remodeled kitchen. 3blocks to excellent public elementaryand high schools. Pleasant familyin chborhood. 515 interest 22 yearloan; 3 air conditioners— o modern PersonalsThe Cap and the GowrWuzzirtit, coming soon.What Do Doctors Recommend 7 Aard-vark! At Woodworth's, The Book Store,and Book Nook.Creative Writing Workshop.—PL 2-8377LOST—Pair of contact lenses in- case.Probably in New dorm area. Contact issue for all the details.Off campusTheatre*The English translation of theFrench musical comedy “La Plumede Ma Tante” opens Monday atthe McVickers theatre for an in-. definite run. Information andstarring I. reservations may be obtained atST 2-8230..'•ill , » vnuii iuim. i n u siiuuri ii * , « > , _appliances included in price. Mid 20’a. John - 34 13MI 3-8032. ~ m 'Wanted Troll: come back. We needPhilosopher.—Thom. foreign ear salessee page 3 UT, Actors company tryoutsToday from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm University theatre is havingauditions lor male actors interested in performing in "The CaineMutiny Court Martial.”. Today from 7 to 10 pm and on Sunday fro m2 to 5 pm Actorscompany is having tryouts in the Reynolds club lounge for thespring “Tonight at 8:30” series.Kul>‘ wanted in JuneMl! 4-2 2 72 betweenam anytime. to Alaska.11 pm and Call8:30FRIDAY NIGHT BLUES13th — Avella Gory20th — Sleepy John EstesSATURDAYFOLK SINGING14th _ Susan Rosenberg . balladsA Joe Klee - protest songsLimelight Theatre1544 E. 57th St. ©epic!Sunday Dinners 4 to 9 p.m.CREOLE CUISINENew Orleans Gumbo + Oyster LeafChicken ^ Deviled Crab + Stuffed ShrimpShrimp CreoleResv. NO 7-96931450 East 57th Street SEE BACK PACEAPRIL 13 - MAY 5k\V£VV\\\V\W\WtPIZZAS “For The Price OfICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780TAl-SAM-YfcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inr \\TO>ESK ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 43rd St. BU 8-9018f I AT DIVISIONRen6Clement’sDEARBORNWas there evera strangerfriend? A moredesigning,iesslent lover?A story morediabolique?See Chicago Daily Papers for Correct FeoRreTimes Hi WChicago's most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign amidomestic films*.STUDENTSTale advantage of thespecial discount avail¬able to you. 90tf any dayexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. card to the cashier. GOLD CITY INNSpecializing in Cantonese FoodOrders to Take Out10% Discount to Students With This Ad5228 Harper HY 3-2559dark theatredark Or modisonfr 2-284550 atall— timesfor college students★ open 7:30 a.u.late show 3 a m.★ different double feature dally★ Sunday Film Guild2 ^rlt€ in tor fre* program guiden litue gal-lery for gals only★ every friday is ladles day411 gals admitted for only 25c★ Clark parking - 1 door south4 hours 95c after 5 p.m.PROGRAM FOR THEWEEKENDfri. 13th — “all in a night’swork” and “shipin the army”*at. 14th —- “desperate jour¬ney” and “passageto marseilles”*“n. 15th — “a face In thecrowd” and “theapartment” Triangle Productions, Frank FriedPresentArie Crown theatre, McCormick pi.SATURDAY, APRIL 14. 8:30THEODORE BIKEL$5.00, $4.00 AvailableFRI., APRIL 27, 8:30StudebakerTheatreTHE GREAT FLAMENCO .'Hi* breathtaking’—NY Times_ hit a dict Most extraordinary purveyor offeUITAKIbT Flamenco today —NY Herald-TribuneSABICASOPERA HOUSESATURDAY, APRIL 28, 8:30DAVE BRUBECK QUARTETwith PAUL DESMOND plus CARMEN McRAEOne Night Only - $5.00, 4.00, 3.00, 2.00MAL orders now! Tickets Aavilable Now!Triangle Productions, Inc. 11 E.Superior St. Chgo. Mail checkor money order with a stampedself-addressed env. For informa¬tion: Caii SU 7-7585. At Hyde Park Co-Op CreditUnion, 55th & Lake Park; MetMusic, 328 E. 58th. LAKEthe //PARK AT SjRD : N07-9071(Ayde park theatreSTARTING FRIDAY. APRIL 13Nominated for 9 and Winner of 2 ACADEMY AWARDSPAUL NEWMAN • PIPER TAURIEin Robert Rossen's\\ 11THE HUSTLERGeorge C. Scott & Jackie GleasonFri. & Weekdays - 6 & 10:15 - Sat. 6:55 & 11:30Sun. Only 3:55 & 8:15AndNominated for 5, and Winner of 2 ACADEMY AWARDS"BREAKFAST ATTIFFANY'S''AUDREY HEPBURNFri. &Weekdays 8:15 - Sat. Only 5 & 9:15Sunday Only 2 - 6:15 - 10:35Special Student Rates WITH Student I.D. CardsFree Weekend Patron Parking at 5230 South Lake Park Ave.April!3, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7-liHansen views Latin America situationby Donna WilsonThe Young Socialist alliancewill present Joseph Hansenspeaking on “What makesLatin America explosive” atInternational house at 8:30tonight. Hansen is the editorof the Militant, a socialist weekly,and has just returned from a four-month tour of Latin America.He visited ail the major SouthAmerican countries, witnessed im¬portant strikes and demonstrationsin key cities and interviewed manyleaders of Latin America’s laborand socialist move aents, includingFrancisco Juliao, leader of thePeasant League of Brazil.Because Hansen learned Spanishin Mexico when he was secretaryto Leon Trotsky, he could speakdirectly with union workers, left¬wingers, and ordinary people. Thefact that he is a North American socialist opened many doors to him.“It was hard for them to believethat there are American socialists,”he commented.According to Hansen, the keyissue in Latin America is agrar¬ian reform. The land is owned of the instability of their go-ernments. There has been a de¬cline in investments tliere in thelast three years, lie said. EvenSouth American concerns are in¬vesting their money outside oftheir own countries.large./ by weal .y families andbig companies, and the com¬panies exist as tenants “in con¬ditions similar to the MiddleAges,” he added.A conservative newspaper inBrazil, for example, reported thatfarmers are restricted even to theextent that they are forbidden toplay cards, to ke;p hunting arms,and to gossip. If they break theserules, they lose their crops and areforced to leave. The Peasantleagues in Brazil were started tofight these regulations and to strivefor a land reform. Hansen believes that the reasonfor the formulation of the plan isthe reason for its present failure.The Alliance for Progress wascreated to establish favorable pub¬licity for the United States, Hansensaid. The purpose of liis trip was toinvestigate the influence of theCuban revolution on the peopleof Latin America. He found thatit “demonstrated to ordinary peo¬ple a practical examjHc rof howto end the problems created bylarge land holdings and govern¬mental oligarchies.”In March, 1960, Eisenhowerstarted preparations for an inva¬sion of Cuba; in July he an¬nounced the Eisenhower plan forLatin American aid. In April, 1961,Kennedy re-named the plan the Al¬liance for Progress and at the sametime gave a secret go-ahead for theinvasion. The Alliance was needed Hansen found that the SouthAmerican reaction to the UnitedStates’ position on the Cuban rev¬olution is that, “they hate theUnited States more. The UnitedStates lost support because it triedto smash Cuba. The Soviet Unionis more popular now because ithelped Cuba.”Dorm at 5400 GreenwoodThe apartment dormitory tobe used for undergraduatemen next year is located at5400 Greenwood avenue, an¬nounced assistant dean of studentsJames E. Newman yesterday.The building consists of 2Vzroom apartments, with kitchens,which will be furnished. Residentswill bt> expected to provide theirown linens, blankets, and dishes,he said.This building will bo “a resi¬dence hall in an apartment build¬ing,” complete with a central desk,desk service, and residence heads,said Newman.About 100 men will be accom¬modated in the new apartment-dormitory. When questioned as to the re¬sponse to the Alliance for Progressplan in the South American coun¬tries, Hansen quoted a La Paznewspaper which complained of its“maddening slowness" and a Cara¬cas paper which condemned thedelay as “unexplainable and ab¬surd”. as a political expedient, Hansensaid. Hausen considers that themost important part of Castro’sspeech anonuncing his Marxist-Leninist views was his advice toSouth American revolutionariesnot to engage in guerilla Ad¬ ventures without some assuranceof being effectual.The method of bringing aboutchanges in Latin America will beby mass movements of the people.Hansen pointed out that reformswill rarely be voted in because mostvoting requirements include liter-aey tests which large portions ofthe people cannot pass. One canconclude, therefore, that the gov-ernments do not truly representthe people.Hansen witnessed demonslra-tions in Quito and in Bogota whichwere led by students and workers.He believes that the success of theOctober general strike in Ecuadorshows that “the government isweaker than the people”.Whether or not other countrieswill follow the example of Cubadepends on the kind of leadershipthey can create.Hansen explained that Ameri¬can investors are reluctant tomove into South America becauseforeign car hospitalse« page 3 EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetof University Ave. ,HYde Park 3 8372Student and Faculty-Discountof the Arts(phoAsmLduTHE CHICAGOSTRINGSAPRIL 20 at 8:30 p. m.THE ILLINOISBALLETAPRIL 21 at 8:00 p. m.COMBINEDPOETRY READINGKARL SHAPIRO - ROBERT LOWELLSTANLEY KUMITZAPRIL 26 at 8:00 p. m.In Law School AuditoriumTICKETS SOLD ATMANDEL HALLMl 3-0800 — Ext. 3280 Jfi \ 8 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 13, 1962 ready «pMggion»"Brush-Sfroke\ m* 9Prints onlyArtist Title PlateSizeRENOIRRINOIRRENOIRSRAQUELAURENCINDERAINCONSTABLEDUFYDIGASMANETMONETSISLEYMODIGLIANIGAUGUINCEZANNEPISSARROVAN GOGHMONETUTRILLOPISSARRORENOIRMONETDEGASVLAMINCKBUFFETDALIUTRILLOUNKNOWNROUAULTVAN GOGHLAUTRECLAUTRECHOPPNERUTRILLOMANET£AUGUINLANDVLAMINCKLAUTRECLANDCANALETTO La Petite IreneWoman SewingOn the TerraceNature Morte 1955DanseusesSur la TamlseCottage in the CornfieldDeauville BasinThe RehearsalLa Villa BellevueBridge at ArgenteullHampton CourtMarie, Fille duPeuplePape Moe /Le Garcon au Gilet RougeMatin, Effet de Solell, EragnyLe SemeurAmsterdamRue a ParisAvenue del 'OperaMoulin de la GaletteParis, Banks of the SeineAbsinthe DrinkersWinter LandscapeStill LifeThe Heights of ParisSnow In MontmartreLascaux Cave — HorsePierrotThe CypressSeated ModelNapoleon a ChevalDie Bowden ChildrenSacre-Coeur In ParisComing Tidelandscape of TahitiAttle WindowStill Life with FruitThe TableEventideAntonio Canal, VeniceArtist in Studio 18x2217x2117x2118x2218x2218x2218x2216x2016x2018x2217x2217x2218x2217x2218x2218x2217x2217x2218x2218x2420x2417x2218x2418x2418x2418x2416x2018x2218x2416x2418x2418x2218x2216x2218x2218x2220x2417x2217x19*0x2416x2615x18 UTRILLO Sacre-Coeur In Paris 18x22LAUTREC Napoleon a Cheval 18x2$FRAMES TO FITIn raw or finished mouldingFrom $2.19 tp $7iMLUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue