Yol. 71 — No. 66 University of Chicago, Tuesday, February 12. 1963 o~>7v£*> 31 Business School getstwo project grantsThe Graduate School of in the workshop, which is designedBusiness lias received a grant for marketing professors, econo-of $125,000 from 'the Ford mists, psychologists, sociologists.v ’ and other specialists engaged infoundation in support oi two marketing. Schweiger added thatsummer programs for business emphasis will be placed on bring-educators. ing research projects by the par-, ticipants to a publishable state.The first program, a six weekseminar on “Mathematical Modelsand .Pig“?’ Comirctets in Bust- yjgg jpgjjjj gl CaUCUSness, will be directed by Alex *,ww hiOrden, director of the Operations Dormitory conditions nowAnalysis Laboratory and professor are much better than when ISome 60 persons listened‘CO east coast in Hartford, Conn., and that he derived pleasure from this in the Graduate School of Business. was jiere ^en vears ao-0; ^utClaes Oldenburg explain what the third on the west coast in Los “Cloacal act.” Orden said that the program there is still much nTom forhappens at a “happening” at i"t,™du^ Oldenburg said that there was wi|' Of" ‘o ‘ improvement. said James Vice,itf t -r 1 vr • uiaenourg at the My Lite and , , , cators, who will meet several times , , , , , ,the M.V Life and Yours series Yours session last night. The chair- nothinS personal in this, since the during the coming year for presen. director of student housing in alast night. Speaking in the Lexing- man of the Humanities 1 sequence, audience represents only two func- tation of research papers by the caucus u ay ni0ton Studio Gallery, Oldenburg dis- Cawelti had participated in this tions to him when they enter the participants. According to Vice it would becussed the happenings which he weekend s happening wearing a door; a group ol objects who will Director of the second program, impossible tor the University to(traduced at the gallery over the steel helmet and swim fins. Olden- hopefully interact with the semi- ‘‘Faculty Research Workshop on exclude the Residence Houses andweekend. burg explained the meaning of a pianned patterns in the happening Marketing” will be Irving Schwei- Commons from running the cafete-The “happenings” were designed “happening” is derived from the and lhat thjng which brings a hap. ger, editor of the Journal of Busi- rias. He explained that the pos-to capture the atmosphere of the action and form of the juxtaposition to hfe, the exposure of a ness and professor in the Graduate sibility of bringing in a privatecity ol Chicago. For example, a of the objects rather than from the happening to a living breathin" School of Business. catering concern was explored lastdroopy painted canvas airplane symbolism and the story. A happen- audience who will derive meaning According to Schweiger, about year- but lound to be impossiblepartially susjtended from the ceil- ing is a composition to the extern and somehow interpret it. twenty educators will participate because it would mean firing peo-._j »«-j » * - 1 pie who have worked with the Uni-SNCC food drive continuesOldenburg displays 'happeninging represented Midway Airport, it is somewhat organized and has aexplained Oldenburg. The sinks at scriptthe east of the gallery represented For example, in a scene in which When asked how the Universitywas going to accommodate all theSome of the food and cloth- Dorfman explained that the food students next year who are re¬welding done in the studio ot artists menu, a battle erupted in which jn<y collected by the Chicago must now be P»ckaged- Ad stu* quired by the residence rule to liveLake Michigan, he continued, the script calls merely for artistBright flashes of light lrom the in residence Bouras to write ain residence Harry Bouras, south Kokenis smeared over Bouras’of where the audience was sitting, menu followed by Bouras doingrepresented the steel mills. Friends of the Student Non¬ dents who can help should meet in dormitories since C-Group willat Ida Noyes hall tonight at 6:30. be converted into administrativethe same to Kokenis’menu. All this violent Coordinating Commit- Transportation to the Packing offices, he replied that the Univer-The passage of the sun lrom east done on a large classroom black- tee (SNCC) was flown yesterday House Center will be provided. siitiy was working on the problem,to west, stated Oldenburg, was board in orange and yellow paint. to Clarksdale, Mississippi, in a The food is for the Southern Whether or not POLIT represen-represented by mud flung at the The happening is a rather new plane chartered by the well known Negroes who were forced off their tatives to the SG assembly can bewestern wall by George Kokenis, a historical concept, said Oldenburg, comedian, Dick Gregory. land because they tried to vote. It bound by the caucus to vote lorcontemporary abstract painter Even the word “happening " does In addition to the 13,591 lbs. of is being collected in the Packing ncn-POLIT persons to sit on thewhose works will lx* exhibited in n°i relate what I produce, he con- food staples which left yesterday, House Workers Center at 49th executive council was discussedLexington Studio Gallery starting tinned. For instance, another art- rnore than 15 tons have been col- Street and Wabash. during the start of a business meet-the end of this week. ist> George Brecht writes a post- lected in Chicago by the Friends As soon as 25 tons have been ing before Vice arrived.A scene in which Norman Dayron, card: The sun will rise at 5:Z6 o£ According to Ron Dorf- collected, the Teamsters Union has After Vice finished speaking, thedirector ot Lexington Gallery, car- tomorrow and the sun rises at man, spokesman for the sponsor- agreed to transport it, gratis, to business meeting was continuedried a typewriter glass, and pitcher 5-38 a.m., on the following day. jng group( food jg still pouring in. Mississippi. but in a closed executive session,of water on stage, and inserted a This to him is a happening, saidpiece of brown paper bagging and Oldenburg.proceeded to type “Now is the Alan Kaprow was probably thetime tor all good men to kill their first person to produce a physical,mothers” was inspired by the visual “happening” in about 1958. Senator Douglas lauds Despreslegend Oldenburg heard as a cub He studied under Hoffman, John by Murray Batt his application for membership had signed by all 20 Woodlawn pastors‘‘Leon Despres is a splendid been denied because of his anees- in the city at the time.reporter on the City News Bureau Cage and Duchambe Bob Whit- a|derman 1Ie has sat in CiVy tors. “I,, this campaign,” said Des- Other speakers included Marshall1ms is the legend ot the return ot man, Read Grooves, and Dyne also “ A «. .. „ U1 ^ ..Clarence Darrow to the bridge be- do this type ot happening, he slat- Council with glcat distinction, pres, a man should not be re- ors a , 1 1 emocra ichind the Museum of Science and ed. Theirs, and mine, is a way of and deserves reelection,” said jected because of his ancestors, but .7^*Industry to retrieve the typewriter reconstructing reality in a real and Senator Paul Douglas at a found should be judged for what he is andthrown into the water by Leopold more than real sense,and Loeb after they hud typed the raising reception for the independ- what he has done<»» Chicago Sanitary District, and sev¬eral of the independent Negro al-dermanic candidates from otherWhen asked at My Life and ent incumbent Alderman held last . t 4l . . w.irds in lhe citv all o[ whomransom note in the Bobby Franks Yours what was the representa- Sunday at the Shoreland Hotel. Despres said that the only other wards in toe cit> an oi w. o... . ^ issue in the campaign was segrega- promiseci io woix wun c»esprt=> ukidnap-murder. tional meaning of falling burlap Despres, who studied underThis was t he first of three geo- sacks on the heads of the audience, Douglas when the latter was an tion. He opposes the “forces of elected.Oldenburg replied that these rep- economics professor at UC, was segregation, exploitation, domina- Several original songs about Al-resented turds. He added. ui)on fur- described by the Senator as “hon- ^on’ anddegia ution. n us a i derman Despres were sung duiingfor full civil rights, Despres said, the rally, many of which were writ-quoting from William Lloyd Gar- ten by Robert Ashenhurst, associ-rison’s Liberator, “I am in earnest; ate professor in the GraduateI will not equivocate; I will not ex- School of Business.graphical atmospheric “happen¬ings” Oldenburg will do this year.The second will be done on the ther questioning, that he supposed est,” “bright,” “a hard worker,”and as having “an incisive wit.”“He is a public defender for theindividual.”Douglas recalled that he had cus.f ’ 1 ,wTlU I??t. r®trea* ,? single Despres and his opponent, attor-been elected 5th Ward Aldermanin 1939 by a coalition of independ¬ent voters and the political organi¬zation of the Democratic Party inch; and I will be heard.” ney Chauncey Eskridge, are goingAlso speaking at the rally was to Washington to attend a Whitethe Reverend Thomas Ellis, Presi- House reception commemoratingdent of the Greater Woodlawn the centennial of the EmancipationNU holds conferenceArnold Toynbee, William Of the self closes off the individualT, , . , important and varied areas oi ex-Barret, exsistentialisi philoso- petdence •>pher and Waldo Beach were Waldo Beach indicated that the This "kind of'an alliance between Pastors' Alliance. He ’asserted that Proclamation. Other Hyde Parkersamong the speakers in North- concern °t •he Bible tor the concept amateurs and professionals was a the Pastors Alliance endorsement who plan to attend are Rabbi JacobTTnIvor-ifv-’c inninl ^ se^ was redected the good thing, “because each group of Despres was a unanimous one, Weinstein and Dick Gregory,western university s second annual £orm ol names. He expressed the learned from the other.” i„ theSymposium - Spectrum of Per- view that “an individual can loose current aldermanic campaign, thisspectives, this weekend. Twelve the sense ol alienation by finding coalition has been resurrected buthundred students assembled in self in the purposes of creation.” Despres has the support of the Re-Cahn auditorium to hear the twenty William Barrett diagnosed the publican organization, which Doug-minute talks by thirteen eminent alienation man feels from his fel- las never had.scholars. lows as a loss of identification with (in 1959, when Despres did notToynbee gave the opening ad- mans’ past. The need tor this ident- have the support of the organiza-dress on the topic of world unity ification he said was indicated in tion of the Fifth Ward Democraticto the student run seminar. As- past by the emergence of the field Party, Douglas did not come outsuming that the world has two of the philosophy of history about for or against Despres.)problems, total war and overpopu- 140 years ago. He went on to Reminiscing, Douglas stated thatlation, he attempted to prove that mention that the idea of man’s for him, after serving in the Chi-the world is slowly coming to a control of history is a recent con- cago City Council, “the Unitedposition where world unity will be cept emerging with the philosophy states Senate is an anti-climax.”required to save the human race, of Nietzche, Kierkegard, Max, and He said that he would not take aTechnology, communication, and Hegel. “The anxiety of the future million dollars for his experiencepeaceful travel were sighted as has become an object of social as alderman though, he added, hefactors which could contribute reality. The accumulation of the would not do it again for a millionsignificantly. When sighting a state- concept of the rate of change pro- dollars.merat of General De Gaulle he duces the social anxiety of our Douglas has resided in the fifthmade the comment “one doesn't day.” ward for 40 years, and he staledalways agree with those things fn the second session on “Per- that “there is not another com-about government that General spectives of Attaining Knowledge,” munity like it in this country.”De Gaulle says” which shook stu- Jerome Bruner, psychologist, six>ke In his remarks, Despres said thatdents with laughter. on the “eitestemic anxiety” felt by the major issue in this campaignTheodore Roethke informed the the student today in the area of was that of sell determination forstudents that he believed that the “how shall I know all there is to the residents of the Fifth Ward. Hetendency for disorder manifest in knows?” He said that the remedy claimed that “the Keane-Campbellthe activities of students today is to this problem can be found in clique is a group of outsidersa sign of psychic health. His talk the enthusiasm felt in the attain- which wishes to squelch the inde-proved to be quite unusual in that ment of a deep and comprehensive pendence of the ward by producinghe sighted from his poetry, and knowledge of a topic rather than a a yes man.” His opponent, tie as-evein 'composed a poem for the surface knowledge of many things serted, is a front for “the Keane-occasion of the symposium. as is the tendency “in the four Campbell clique,” which he ac-Samuel I. Hayakawa gave a talk fortunate years of college." eased of spreading pure racism, re-on the similarities between seman- Monday night speakers on the Ugioue preiudice, and plain lie. in .fcs and the idea of self concept topic ot "The Challenge ol the the Woodlawn precincts.aS the self as formulated by Global Perspective were Carl Referring to his alleged member-George H. Mead and Cart C. Rowan of the State Department ship in the Sou.h Shore Cuun.ryRogers He pointed out that "the Kenneth Boulting economist, and Club Despres denied that Iw was a jrsgidity ol dL negative statement Carleton Coon, anthropologist. •or®*"’ «* flub and added lhal At least 15 hatchet bearing firemen and three largefire engines raced to New Dorms Sunday Afternoon whenseveral pies cought fire in the North house oven. Househead Marilyn McCormick upon seeing the smoke andflames, called the fire department, but several assistantresident heads succeeded in putting out the fire momentsbefore the firemen arrived on the scene. The slightlycharred causes of the fire and subsequent warning signson the North kitchen door are pictured.EDITOR'S COLUMNQualifies previous editorial onWe took advantage of Dean more scholarly because of the ex-Plave's generous offer of his time istence of these curfews and theirlast week to discuss with him the enforcement by faculty members,statements in his letter which is Neither the Maroon editorial norprinted elsewhere on this page. Miss Altman’s letter, on the otherYet, despite the experience of a hand, attempted to “hang men andone hour conversation with the groups of men.” Both went beyondgood Dean, we still stand by our the work of the Dean and his com-editorial of two weeks ago. In mittee, who no doubt are workingaddition we are now convinced that to the best of their ability to justlyDean Plave and his colleagues, in enforce the ridiculous regulationstheir anxiety to construe our edi- they have unfortunately beentorial as a personal attack upon charged with enforcing. The letterthemselves (which, while perhaps and the editorial merely pointedmerited, was not at all intended), to the DC's action as “an excellenthave misunderstood the purpose illustration of the non-essentialand content of our statement. We nonsense the University of Chicagowould also suggest that they have has become involved in as a resultat least in part misinterpreted the of its desire to be the ‘in locofunction of Miss Altman’s accom- parent’ of parents to its students.”panying letter. Neither the letter nor the editorialMiss Altman, who has been put attacked the Disciplinary Commit-on social probation by the Disci- tee's methods; they both merelyplinarv Committee for “spending noted with dismay the circum-a weekend out of town in violation stances which have victimized theof a curfew” wrote to the Maroon Committee into enforcing the fool-to protest the University’s use (not ish and distasteful regulations im-mosuse) of “due process” by ex- posed upon UC students by thetending it beyond its normal sphere administration,of the enforcement of civil law to We assume, and Miss Altmanthe enforcement of social custom, agrees, that “due process” or aBy enforcing social custom, such reasonable semblance thereof isas a curfew system, the University used at DC meetings. The questionprevents its students from fully jS; then, as Miss Altman pointeddeveloping their freedom, she out> whether there need be anywro*e- “process” or any university con-Accompanying Miss Altman’s cern over issues such as curfews,letter, we printed an editorial We quite obviously feel that suchwhich concerned itself with attack- problems are outside the propering the curfew regulations current- sphere of University concerns, andly imposed upon female students would hope to see the Universityunder the age of 21. Since Miss renounce its interest in them.Altman’s experience was prompted As a result of our conversationby her violation of such regula- with Dean Playe. we will acknowl-t.ions, we used her letter as the edge, however, that we were notjumping off point Tor our editorial aware of the entire background toin which we maintained, as we Miss Altman’s “case.” Had wehave so often before, that the Uni- known “the other side of theversity’s imposition of curfews story,” we certainly would haveupon its students in no way leads produced a different reaction,to our (“patently warped”) con- First, said Dean Playe, amongception of mature, responsible, the reasons Miss Altman was dis-soholars: “students who have ciplined was her hitch-hiking fromlearned to act and think inde- 63rd Street to St. Louis. Althoughpendently and responsibly.” We Miss Altman may not have chosensuggested that neither the Univer- the wisest means of travel, it issity community nor Miss Altman quite clearly none of the Univer-would be any better off or any sity’s business and certainly oughtnot enter into disciplinary consid¬erations. (Or perhaps the Univer¬sity might station various deans atthruway rest-stops during vaca¬tion periods and in the middle ofbusy streets during the school yearto catch and punish other studentswho risk their lives and violatehighway or traffic regulations byhitch-hiking or jay-walking.) Thereis no doubt that had we known ofthe committee’s consideration ofMiss Altman’s hitch-hiking, wewould have produced a better edi¬torial; we would have protestedviolently.■■■• •••'“wam&K: The second fact we were un¬aware of was that Miss Altmandid not have her parents’ permis¬sion to spend the weekend out ofthe dorrpitory. And since she didnot have her “in loco” parents’permission either, she committed adoubly despicable deed.Again, rather than protest MissAltman’s punishment for actingwithout permission and therebyflaunting a university regulation,we question the very regulation.It would seem that students whoare “mature” enough to meet thedemanding admissions standardsof a great university such as oursshould be capable of regulatingtheir private lives. It would alsoseem that along wdth fostering in-dependence and responsiblethought, the university should en¬courage independent and responsi¬ble action. However, the universityadministration seems to lack faithin the students it has selected and,consequently, seems quite deter¬mined to deny them the oppor¬tunity of developing the ability tofunction independently. It hastherefore undertaken to provide thesocial and moral guidance thestudents need. The students’ par¬ents don't mind, said Dean Playe;in fact, the parents often expectthe university to take on additionalregulatory activities. Playe blastsTO THE EDITOR:In your editorial in the Maroonissue of Februry 1, the words“maturity,” “responsibility,” and“scholar” appear. On other occa¬sions the Maroon has made elo¬quent pleas to the community, ask¬ing that “due process” be exer¬cised in dealings with students.I should like to assert that your(and Miss Altman’s) concepts ofwhat constitutes a scholar, ma¬turity, responsibility, and due proc¬ess are patently warped.First, Miss Altman has mademisleading statements and has.undestandably, not presented allfacts to the scrutiny of the com¬munity. I am not particularly in¬terested in placing emphasis onMiss Altman’s letter, for it shouldbe obvious to discernin'* readersthat the young lady doth protesttoo much.T am concerned, however, thatthe Maroon editorial writers shouldcontinue to be as irresponsible asthey have been in the nast. I re¬peat to you as I have done manytimes in the pact, to you and yourpredecessors, that it is unscholar-ly, immature, irresponsible, andcontrary to any notion of due proc¬ess. to hang men and groups ofmen in the pages of your news- Maroonpaper without the courtesy of -attempt to learn the other sidethe story. Once more I say to y,my doors are open, my timeyours when you want to seek <facts. You owe it to your readeto your victims—and especiallyyourselves—to strive for the trulwhich you proclaim to be sacr<but which you seem to desecr;with reckless and unwitting ab;don.GEORGE L. PLAYE,Dean of UndergraduateStudents| Today's EventsT.ecture, Humanities 202, “Problcjof the Epic Form.” Charles Witke. ;sistant professor, department of classal languages and literatures, Rostwald 2, 10:30 p.m.United Christian Fellowship semin;‘‘God and Man in the Old TestameniChapel House, 4:30 p.m.Sermon Vespers, Bond Chapel, 5p.m.Christian Science testimony meetitThorndike Hilton Chapel. 7:15 p.m.Foreign policy platform meeting, Leral Party, Ida Noyes East Lour;7:30 p.m.Student Peace Union meeting, plafor peace education conference. SocSciences 302, 7:30 p.m.Sidney A. and Julia Teller lertui‘‘Psychopathology and Social OffenstI>r. Lawrence Z. Freedman. Founttions’ Fund research, professor, depament of psychiatry, Social Science 118 p.m.Chapel music series, Edward Midello. University organist, RockefellMemorial Chapel, 8:30 p.m.We would suggest, however, thatthe university should not tolerateany attitudes which impose upon itthe need to regulate anything butthe intellectual development of itsstudents. We would urge the uni¬versity to throw back upon parentsthe social and moral (and, if nec¬essary, legal) control of students.Students, faculty, and administra¬tion alike should insist upon thisrejection of the in loco parentisconcept.In our conversation with DeanPlaye, he expressed approval of anexcellent first step in this process:The relaxation or abolition of cur¬fews for all women who securetheir parents’ permission to regu¬late their own hours. This stepwould at least demonstrate thatthe university is not adverse to itsstudents assuming a reasonable de¬gree of responsibility in their ac¬tions. This is all our previouseditorial, or Miss Altman’s letterfor that matter, have asked. Un¬fortunately, this will mean that wehave taken a positive step towardsrealizing our warped concept of auniversity as a place where intel¬lectual development is of primeimportance and independence ofthought and action are activelyencouraged.LAURA GODOFSKY | SHARE-A-RIDE CENTRALi Offers A Unique New Service To Our Mobile Society\; Now You Can Find Share Expense Rides or\ Riders to Any City Nationwide.*\ Subscribe NOW! For Your Trip Home For Spring Interim.' For Complete InformationTELEPHONE FI 6-7263RANDELL - HARPER SQUAREBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Mrs. Billie Tregonxa, Prop.DR. A. ZIMBLER, Optometristin the ;>/NEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LFNSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES |STUDENT DISCOUNT ‘ ::t;; jThe one lotion that’s cool, exciting-brisk as an ocean breeze!The one-and-only Old Spice exhilarates...gives you that great-to-be-alive feeling...refreshes after every shave...adds to your assurance.Jand wins feminine approval every time. Old Spice After Shave Lotion,(dM/cface- 1.25 and 2.00 plus tax.the shave lotion men recommend SHU ltonto other men / shore drive motelFACING LAKE MICHIGANSpeciol University of Chicago Rates. Beautiful Rooms,Free TV. Parking, Courtesy Coffee.Closest Motel to Univ. of Chicago and Museum of Science & Industry.FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTELSGtti St. & So. Shore Dr. • Chicago 37, IllinoisSTUDENTTRAVEL...STUDENTSCJUN AFFORD!STUDY-TRAVELPROGRAMSsome scholarshipassistance availableAlso Work Camp& Hosteling42-46 land days... from $300 33 ITINERARIESfeaturing:Western & Central EuropeEastern Europe & USSRScandinavia • SpainTurkey • South AmericaIsrael • Greece36-60 land days... from $510alsoINDIVIDUAL AND GROUPDRIVE-YOURSELF TOURSandBERMUDA SPRING WEEKS$239 all-inclusive by airSERVICES FOR INDEPENDENT STUDENT TRAVELLERSInternational Student ID card ,Handbook on Student Travel (Lodgings and Restaurants) -.Work, Study, Travel Abroad -European charter flights and other transportationU. S. NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATIONEducational Travel, Ino., Dept. CN20 West 38th Street, New York 18. N. YOXford 5-5070"VSNSA is a non-profit organization serving the American student community’2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 12, 1963Don Juan in Hell called uneven DEJA VUUneven is the word for theperformance of the Interna¬tional Players in George Ber¬nard Shaw’s Don Juan in Hell.Don Juan is a hard play to per¬form. Unfortunately actors wereunable to surmount the play’s in¬herent problems.Navin Farekh, as Don Juan, wasdifficult to understand because ofhis poor pronunciation and accen¬tuation of English. More than anyother character, he seemed to begiving a reading rather than aperformance. All his lines weredelivered at roughly the same rate—too slow for the natural paceof his lines, while at the sametime too fast for me to follow his'unpractised diction. He gained nofluency, moreover, in the longerspeeches at the end of the play,which obviously required a smooth¬ er more impassioned delivery.He has, however, an excellentcommand of gesture and facial ex¬pression: his stage laugh is thebest I have ever heard, and his“boredom” and “disgust” are ajoy to watch. As his English can¬not but improve with time, he willcertainly become a better actor,and quite possibly an excellentone.Mary Gae Porter, as Dona Ana,was undistinguished. She missed aportion of dialogue towards the be¬ginning of the play, came out abit flat towards the middle, andmade ridiculous her final cry “afather for the Superman!” afterwhich I fully expected GeorgeReeves, in costume, to enter fromthe right wing. I had an impres¬sion she was merely having a badnight, although this may have beenmy imagination.Dance group excitingMerce Cunningham’s DanceRecital Sunday night showedthe way in which moderndance may go.The excitement which a dancewithout a story line or scenery ora large corps de ballet could gen¬erate was amazing. The interest ofIhe dance lies in the mood whichit creates and the quality of eachindividual step. Cunningham addshis own concepts to the language ofmodern dance. A deliberately awk¬ward passage in which Cunning¬ham’s body gyrated as someonewould while throwing a fit wastruly graceful. Sustained and un¬expected paused added to the ten¬sion the dance drew from the au¬dience. The audience waits eagerlyto see what will happen next. Un¬expected responses and positionsof the body of the dancers createdthe beautiful effect which ends theduet. Cunningham remains in aback-bend position—with his faceupward and has torso taut andoff the ground—while th& femaledancer slithers across the floor on| Classifieds |ROOMS, APTS., ETC.For rent, furnished townhouse, 6039 S.University, 4 bedrooms, Steinway piano,garage. April 1-Sept. 15. FA 4-6796.Graduate student wants room and boardw/German family to improve Germanconversation. C. Dickinson, FA 4-8991.FOR SALET1RKS AND BATTERIES, 10 40 PERCENT DISCOUNT, ALL AMERICANBRANDS, AND MICHELIN X, PIREL¬LI, AND DUNLOP. CALL NO 7-6732anytime.For sale: book case, phonograph stand,and counter stool. Reasonable prices.Call NO 7-3609 after 6.For sale: two London-Paris to NewYork flight tickets. Sept. 13. 196;!. 2 for$250 or 1 for $150. CALL 324-8275.FIRE SALE her back to rest on top of Cunning¬ham.Another fruitful technique wasthe addition of a few props whichare used in the dance itself. Whenthere are few items on stage, theaudience must observe those fewall the more closely. At one time,Cunningham wore an elastic bandaround his waist and the femaledancer wore such a band aroundher arm. Each dancer could grabon the the other’s elastic band toturn the other or pull back andforth from each other. During thissequence, the two dancers onlymet by holding each other’s band;their faces nor bodies never met.This simple addition created awhole new range of possible dancesteps. Cunningham’s genius lies insuch little inventions which changethe dance so.John Cage’s music which ac¬companied the dancing was veryexciting. The music on the mag¬netic tape which included soundsof a train and human voices playedbackwards enhanced the first twodance numbers. The rhythm whichthose sounds created did not clashwith the separate rhythm of thedance. When the music and dancecame together, it was a wonderfuloccurence. I was annoyed by theduet for the two prepared pianoswhich accompanied the last dance.The dance was strong enough tostand by itself and I would havepreferred no music cxr more fre¬quent music. Waiting a few minutesfor each note or group of notes, Ifound extremely tense and felt thisjarring with the dance—perhapsthis was Cage’s and/or Cunning¬ham’s intention.The large and extremely appre¬ciative audience—six curtain callsat the end and real excitementthroughout — suggest that moredance recitals would be welcomed.Any promoters around? Fuad Haddad played the statue,and very well, too, for what I amtold is his first time on any stage.I am looking forward to seeinghim in more important roles.As The Devil, Joseph Ehrenberg,who also directed, delivered hispart quite professionally. I wouldrefer anyone who wishes to ex¬cuse Mr. Parekh’s performance asJuan simply on account of thelength of his lines, to The Devil’sspeech beginning, “And is manany the less destroying himself?. . .” This was easily the longestspeech in the play, and easily thebest done. Ehrenberg’s stage pres¬ence is almost as good as Pa-rekh s, and The Devil comes offas a believable and rather humancharacter, which is more than DonJuan does.With Ehrenber^’s direction Thave only minor fault to find, ashe seems to have done the besthe could with his other actors, whowere on the v^Ie good, thoughunnrofessional. The coctuvniriglighting were excellent. The la^kof the musical episodes called forby Shaw’s scriot gave rise, how¬ever, to the absurdity of havinga character on the stage read astage direction beginning: “At thewave of the statue’s hand thegreat chords roll out again. . . .”Surely recordings of both DonGiovanni and Faust are commonon this campus, and the troubleof synchronizing the music and thedialogue would have been minor.Also, the seating arrangements onstage made Miss Porter’s face analmost unrelieved profile.The Don Juan In Hell sequencefrom Shaw’s Man and Supermanis a difficult play to present, partlybecause the drawing-room comedystyle of acting required by a gooddeal of the play has gone out offashion in most schools (havingbeen replaced by The Method).Mostly, though, it is because Shawpresents, through the conversa¬tion, both an ethos and a meta¬physic, all in fairly abstract terms,and the problem of holding the au¬dience’s attention comes up, dueto the eomolexitv and the lengthof the speeches. That the audiencewas not bored was obvious at aglance around the theatre, andthis happy circumtance can. I be¬lieve, be ascribed to Shaw’s wit,whereby he “gilds the philosophicpill,”—and to the talented Mr.Ehrenberg.Dave RichterM I TZIE 1 SFLOWER SHOPS1225 E. 63rd St.HY 3-53531340 E. 55th St.Ml 3-4020 .English, French films at HP“For happy is the barren womanwho is undefiled, who has not ex¬perienced sinful union. . .”The HYDE PARK is absolutelyout-doing itself in bringing excep¬tional films to the South side. Nextweek they are offering, on thesame bill, Albiccoco’s LA FILLEAUX YEUX D’OR and Richard¬son’s LONELINESS OF THELONG DISTANCE RUNNER. Per¬haps the HP will establish somesort of record by not showing oneBritish comedy during February.LA FILLE is a kind of primiparafor Albiccoco who is known inEurope for his work as a camera¬man. Taken from the long-sup¬pressed Balzac novel. FILLE is aslightly melodramatic recountingof a homo- and heterosexual loveaffair. Most of the elements ofromantic literature are there,clearly visible under the moderndress setting. A fashion photogra¬pher. who gets his ki^ks hv sadis¬tically seducin<* bovine little mod¬els suddenlv falls in love wi’b “thegirl with the golden eves.” Shereciprocates and thev snend a fewidyllic evenings at her nlaee listen¬ing to Corelli. Comolications setin: she is being ker>t and natuarllvhe’s jealous—until he finds out herkeener is another woman. Wh^nhe finds out her patroness is h’sbest friend he flips. Guess how ifends.Foreive us if we eppm overlvhard on the story (whioh. inof what we have said, we likevery much) but wh«n vou see thefilm we think vou’ll discover thateven the maudlin can become hi“hart in masterful hands. Words donot exist to describe Aibi^roco’sbrilliant photography and the ef¬fect it achieves. If is not justnouvelle vague, it is a new schoolunto itself to be studied and imi¬tated. The chiaroscuro An+onnionitouches in L ECT Tc:<>E is displayedhere with magnificence.But Albiccoco is not only a tech¬ nical wizard, he is also a sensitivedirector. FILLE has more of thequality of a myth than a film. Hischaracters move about in a time¬less, impulsive world. Marie La-Foret is undoubtedly the mostbeautiful and sensitive actress tocome out of France since SimoneSignoret. The other roles of hertwo lovers are handled equally aswell. Leo’s soliloquy describingtheir first meeting is classicallybeautiful. One could go on and onbut why don’t you just go andsee it?Tony Richardson is as good adirector as Albiccoco but given aSillitoe story, the British Midlandsand a lower-class juvenile delin¬quent. wh*>t can anybody do? Wegive Mr. Richardson an “E” foreffort and applaud his fine use ofrhythmic montage at the end ofthe film but find no justificationfor 90-odd minutes of angry youngboredom. Tom ConWonav is pLr,to be commenced on his fine act¬ing and h;s ahi1:*v to produce anunderstandable Midland accent.This Friday Doc Films shows ararely seen Luis (VTRTDTA^TMBunuel film — MEXICAN B^SRTDE. It has an interesting politi¬cal background but if you haveseen it you’ll know why it’s rareWshown. All and all it is funnv andhas the usual (since 1927) Bunuelsurreal b'shic scene.John Houston's FPF’TT) opens atthe LOOP THE A'TPE this weekand ROOSEVELT U.’s campus^)newspaper has discount coupons.If mommv lehs me. I’ll 5ne j,t whenI get back from New York.R WTAPE SPECIAL1800' Mylar 3 49Acetate 600' 98cAcetate 1200* 1.79MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNTSCAMERASVou don’t have to pay $170 and up for an 8 mm. movie camfra.We have a new Mansfield 8 mm. Zoom Movie Camera with 1.8 len«and a built in lightmeter at $49.50.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEHELP AVAILABLELight housekeeping, personal laundry,5 day work week, salary open. 684-3790.HELP WANTEDPhysicists seeking lucrative full timeemployment, must have bachelors ormasters degree. For further informa¬tion, call 643-0105.Wanted for taping: 9 Beethoven sym¬phonies. Must be stereos and in excel¬lent condition: will pay nominal fee.Call after 9 p.m., 493-2893.PERSONALSCREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP.(PL 2-8377)Dear friend,Your biretta is getting rusty.MIGHTY MAX IS MIGHTY MIGHTY.First Smyrd; then Clyde and now A1Capone, Bugs Moran and the EastHouse Council invite you to attend aST. VALENTINE’S DAY MASSACREMEMORIAL PARTY. Dancing, singing,and skits. FREE FOOD. In East HouseLounge. Friday, 9-1. 50c men, womenfree.UGLY STICK — wanted for woppdng.Call Lee.Take date to “Good News’’—it’s free,it’s fun, it’s easy.George, we haven’t gone anywhere foryears. Let’s go to the WASH PROM. The National Committee for I.abor IsraelProudly Announces the Sponsorship ofMl 8-WEEK SUMMER PROGRAM for COLLEGE STUDENTS ofWORK AND VACATIONIN ISRAEL AND EUROPE iiIIpsmmm ifillf* '' •• •ACCOUNTING and ADMINISTRATIVEGRADUATESAll-inclusive t $878.00Jet Departures June 22 & July 15,1963PROGRAM FEATURES• 18 days of fruit-picking and other work in kibbutzim• 7-day “Go-Native” sightseeing tour throughout Israel• 14-day vacation at Kfar Maccabia, International YouthHoliday Center in Ramat Gan• 14-day tour of Italy, Switzerland and France* All-inclusive rate is based on the new reduced group fareof $535.00 on economy ]et flights. The new group fareis subject to government approval.For full information and reservations, contact:H1STADRUT STUDENT TOURS220 So. Stale St. 33 East 67th St.Chicago 4, Illinois New York 21, N.Y,HA 7-4086 RE 4-7440Happy birthday, Abe! Sandia Corporation will in¬terview accounting graduatesat all degree levels.We will also interview appli¬cants at the MS level andabove with majors in LiberalArts and Business Admini¬stration.While your specific assign¬ment would be non-technicalin nature, you would be work¬ing with top-flight scientificand engineering personnel ina research and developmentorganization. At Sandia, youwould receive liberal benefits,which in addition to Insur¬ance, retirement and vacationinclude an opportunity for♦The Sandia representative will be on campus Feb. 13,14.continuing your graduatestudies.You would be employed insunny Albuquerque, a south¬western cultural center ofover 250,000.Sandia Corporation recruit¬ers will be on your campus onthe date printed below.* Forappointment for interview,see your College PlacementOfficer now!Equal Opportunity EmployerSAM D\/\CORPORATIONALBUQUERQUE. NFW MEXICOLIVERMORE. CALIFORNIAFri. Sat. Sun15 16 1722 23 ★Mandel Hall A Musical SpoofGood News $1.50 & $2.00AtMan del Hall Box Officetwist... waltzlindy... sambamambo...cha-cha-cha..bendJacobs gives Debussy concert Wheaton wins 54-50Paul Jacobs, who gave apiano recital in Mandel Hallon Saturday evening, takes ananti-romantic view of music.Rattier than emotional involvementand communication, his artstresses clarity, objectivity, andintellect. In the opening Etudes byDebussy, for example, every ele¬ment in the music was clearly de¬fined. Unfortunately, whatever wasgained in lucidity was lost inspontaneity and atmosphere; theresult was too much “etude” andnot enough Debussy.Jacobs’ style was far moresuited to the Second Sonata of Ses¬sions. a stormy, often tense, some¬times morbidly humorous workUC gets three grantsThree grants have been awardedto UC by the Shell Foundation forresearch in chemistry, physics, andstatistics. Each grant totals $7,500.Nien-chu Yang, associate profes¬sor in the department of chemistry,will use the chemistry grant topurchase a vapor phase osmo¬meter, an instrument to determinethe molecular weights of com¬pounds.The physics grant will be usedfor fellowships for graduate stu¬dents in solid state physics, whilethe statistics grant will go for basicresearch in statistical inference ex-perimenal design, and stochasticprocesses. which received a brilliant perform¬ance.The Klavierstuecke V, VII, andXII by Stockhausen were obviouslyintended as the highlight of theevening. Very sitark in character,these works have a noticeable ab¬sence of continuity. The musicnever builds or develops; momentsof genius are left behind as rapidlyas the more frequent post-Weberncliches.The major failing of this music,however, is the overuse of rapidcontrast. The music incessantlychanges abruptly from fast to slow,loud to soft, high to low. The prob¬lem is that there is no contrastto the contrast: since the frequencyand degree of change are neversignificantly varied, the rapid con¬trasts soon assume the role of thenormal state, and the music be¬comes endlessly similar.In fact, one might even level theharsher criticism “innocuous”against most of this music. Nearthe end of the last piece, thepianist plays the piano with hisentire forearm. This technique hasbeen used by other composerswhen necessary to create a certaineffect: even when a logical resultof whatever preceded, however,this device generally evokes around of laughter from the audi¬ence. Here, it seemed completelyunnecessary, illogical, and out ofcharacter with rest the of the work.That barely a giggle was raisedimplies either that the audience was in complete sympathy with thecomposer or that by this time, noone was listening any more.Jacobs seemed to be carefullycontemplating each note beforeplaying it; his engrossment in themusic, however, at times resultedin lack of communication with theaudience. The blame for this maylie more with Stockhausen thanwith Jacobs; one suspects that theworks were conceived more as aca¬demic and technical exercises forcomposer and pianist than as agroup of sounds to be listened to.The final Stockhausen work, bythe way, utilizes chance, and willprobably never be heard exactlythe same way twice. I doubt itmakes too much difference.The program concluded with fiveshort, witty works by Stravinskywhich provided a welcome relieffrom Stockhausen's overintellectualsolemnity. The performance wasjust a bit too serious.Pete Rabinowi+z The varsity track team cameclose in losing to Wheaton College54-50 at the Fieldhouse last Thurs¬day night. Although the Maroonswon only five first places, theypicked up six second places andseven third to remain in contentionto the bitter end. A 1-2 in the highjump would have tied the meet,but Wooley and John Vahle wereheld to first and third.Chicago first places were scoredby Hal Lieberman (mile), GlennWeyhrich (shot put), Steve Mc-Cready (high hurdles), Ed Wooley(high jump), and Ken Richards,Charles Swan. Don Williams, andJim McKenzie (mile relay). Therelay team continued undefeatedin dual meet competition with a3:27.7 clocking.Jim Cottingham, Rill Kluessener,Morrison, John Musgrave, PatPalmer, Steve Sackett, and GregZehner also scored for Chicago.On Saturday the mile relay teamof Richards, Swan, McKenzie, andWilliams ran their fastest time of the season, 3:25.0, placing fourthat the University of Illinois Oi*«Meet at Champaign. Williams rana 49.7 anchor leg as the Maroonsfinished behind Northeast MissouHState, Lincoln University, andIllinois.NSA sponsors confabA conference on problems mhuman relations will be held mChicago March 22 and 23.The conference, to be heldthe LaSalle Hotel, will be s|»on-sored by the Illinois-Wisconsin re¬gion of the National Student A.v*>-ciation, in cooperation with re¬gional Newman Club Federation,the National Foundation of CatholicColleges and Schools and variousHillel foundations.Students interested in attendingshould contact Joseph Furgal. 18t4W. Thomas, Chicago 22. Registra¬tion is $2..The Only Social Event Of The Year!Highlights:Second City on Peace RalliesCatering by Annette'sWash PromIda Noyes HallFeb. 23. 1963$5.00 a bidfox trotdip..hop..stepturn...bump...whew...take a break...things go betterwith CokeBottled under the authority of▼he Coca-Cola Company by:THE COCA-COLA BOTTLINGCOMPANY OF CHICAGO get Lots More from EMmore bodyin the blendmore flavorin the smokecjcd more tastethrough the filter THE MIHACLE TIP&FILTERSLIOOCTT t MYEW TOBACCO CO M3TERS‘ '<«« TOBACCO COIt's the ricli-flavor leaf that does itt Among L&M’s choice tobaccos there’s moreof this longer-aged, extra-cured leaf than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. Andwith L&M’s modern filter—the Miracle Tip—only pure white touches your lips.Get lots more from L&M—the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 12, 1963