rI Striking out at the present occupation wibh course material,I “limiting" disciplines of edu- ^nd to discourage questions whichpation, Edward Rosenheim they °°ns,der “irrelevant.”described Chaos 201 as “the - Rosenheim believes that many ofcL 4a, i Rosenheim describes 'thecourse I'll never give'Course I’ll never give” in a lec¬ture of the 1963 Seminar series atN*e w Dorm.Rosenheim, who is chairman ofthe college Humanities staff, pro- the questions could and should beraised about a course reading eventhough they are not directly perti¬nent to the course topic.He said he was not entirely cer- Vol. 71 — No. S4 University of Chicago, Tuesday, April 2, 1963 31posed Chaos 201 as a cause which taln that the question teachers conWould relieve students of preoccu- Sld?red relevant are the ones a ■ M 9 4 9 Ix maril; 5G considers petition deadlinewith one eye on the world.” often,Rosenheim said, humanistic disci¬plines cause an indifference, evenAs a possible reading list Rosen an mumerence, even Student government assem- appeared on Friday, .’he petition total number of students in thaheun included Homer’s The Iliad callousneS3- th« wide variety of bly will meet tonight at 7:30 forms were «* «vaila*>la until University by 50. The number ofLucien’s True History. Shakes- co"lemporfary He in Business east 107. An ex- Sunday mglht- sl“d!ntf in any division is then di-tv^re’s Measure for Measure extoIled the virtues of a human- 4pn<nnn nf 4.1,„ Hondlin^ According to Don Congdon vided by the first quotient. Tha‘stS-taowU candidacy petitions for <~h * ** ^ ""of - £xir’s e,ection wi"Os (rime and Punishment, Alice _ . . „ . * uc uistusseu.in Wonderland, and the Education M fm offered Chous 201 as The candidacy petitions, accord-j>f Henry Adams. a ne* aPt,roach education which ing to SG by-law, were due yester- „ „Rosenheim pointed out that this wou,‘* co*Jftct the limitations im- day. However, the election and Committee wants to temporarilyreading list is unique because it J*?ed by the presenti disciplines. In rujes committee voted to extend change the by-laws to allow an ar!}?"g.,tion and rules committee, he him¬self did not know of the deadlineuntil Friday because he had diffi¬culty finding a copy of the by-laws.Congdon says Election and Rules nearest integer should be thenumber of representatives for thatunit. ,According to Congdon, The ad¬dition of one seat allows for amore equitable distribution of seatsis not dominated by any singlediscipline, particular period, com¬mon theme or recurrent idea.There Is no selective principlegoverning the readings except thatthey were books which had chal¬lenged and interested him. BecauseOf this, he, as the teacher of Chaos2*11 could best transmit the essenceof these books to his students. ***** TT' tb<\ rpadin5s wou,d be the deadline to noon Thursday be- extension of the deadline in orderregarded as illuminating and In- cau9e students had not been in- not to compound the error madef TJ*®se books, Rosenheim formed 0f the deadline far enough by not announcing the proceduresadded, would not be regarded pure- jn advance. far enough in advance. E & Rly as works In themselves, but as Petitions for oandidarv were wishes to allow all candidates timea means of learning about the sub- ...fj000® *or to filljects with which the writer deals 1 ^ yesterday for 4~ GNOSIS ‘ R .and the events of the age of which candidates. 32 POLIT candidates, According to Congdon. E&R hasthe work is a product. and five candidates from the Law the authority to extend the dead-The necessity of this approach ScivxA P^- The Liberal party line because of a clause in the SGto learning is dictated by Rosen- Lied a petition to run in the elec- by-laws giving the committee theChaos 201 receives its denomina- h : • nhHosonhv a.-* th0 imt>ar. tion. but did not submit a list of power to “decide dispute over elec¬tion from the fact that it is limited tance’o; the ^rontation wTa names of candidates. tion pmcedures, can^ai^ prac-by no guiding principle or theory hook lg not the impact of the work The Liberal party said M was tices, vote counting, eligibility ofOf ‘ultimate wisdom.’ The only itself> but rather the recognition not able to obtain signatures of all candidates, and all otiher questions eaoh No candidates havertr.A 11 nH mtl/\ Rrvi'Jitrt rl 1! J _ A _ _ I A. Cl 1 _ l/\ ma ... _ _ ... . .. ...The College has eighteen seats;the Division of the Social Scienceshas 9. The Law School has 3. TheDivisions of the Physical Sciencesand of bhe Humanities have 4 seatseaoh.The Business School has threeseats. Two seats go to eaoh of thefollowing: bhe Division of the Bi¬ological Sciences, the MedioalSchool, the School of Social Serv¬ice Administration and the DivinitySchool. The School of Educationand bhe Library School have oneground rule Rosenheim droppedfor the course was that discussionalways be centered around a ques¬tion. Such a question, he added,hould not be mere speculation,>ut a legitimate problem raised ness.”of that work as an achievement of to candidates between Sunday eve- pertaining to Che electiona certain period. ning when the forms were first He said, however. Chat the oom-Rosenheim termed this recognl- distributed and Monday noon when mittee would like the assembly totion an ‘‘aesthetic experience of due. They will submit the list by vote to temporarily amend bhe sec-historic Innovation and unique- Thursday, according to Robert tion of the by-laws setting for fii-Axelrod, campaign manager. Ing in order to avoid having to dis-y a work, though not necessarily Rosenheim, whose specialty Is According to the SG by-law, the pute the conflict in the by-laws,lending to an understanding of the eighteenth century English satire, procedure® for filing petitions and The total number of seats in bheWork. received the Quantrell award foiThe fallacy with current teach- excellence in undergraduate teachtechniques, Rosenheim stated, ing in 1953 and became an assocvwas that instructors, in their pre- ate professor in 1956. filed so far in bhe last three divi¬sions listed above.The Gnosis slate in the Collegeincluded: Sherri Bukauskas, GregGogo, Eugene Groves, Tom Heagy,Edward Hertz, Jerry Hyman, BobKahn, Lynn Larsen, Judy Magid-son, Jerry McBeabh, Roger Peters,Broadcasting in a freesociety is subject of talkreceived the Quantrell award for other “pertinent” rules must be Student Government Assembly baa -j,erry peterson jon Roland, Bey“prominently” displayed on cam- tentatively been set at 51 pending Splane John Stephens, Ken’ Tay-pus one week prior to bhe deadline action at a meeting of bhe E & R ^ Linda Thoren and Marc Van-for filing petitions. The by-laws set committee according to Don Cong-the deadline for petitions as Mon- don, ohairman of the committee,day of the second week of Spring This is one more than bhe SG con-quarter. stitution prescribes. The numberNo notice of the deadline was of seats allotted to each academic Division ot- the Humanities,given, however, until the Maroon unit is determined by dividing the In the oivision of the Social Scl-Wormer.Donald T. Brannan, William A.El wood and Henry Plaegestromare bhe Gnosis candidates in thesociety? He askedHe suggested that theirs may ing to Zen Buddhism areofferedcourses inat spring semesterthe Hyde Park“The broadcasting industry try be free to determine what themight achieve greater free- pubbc needs in a mass democraticdom, in the long run, by coOperating with the represent- be an area for the elected repre-a'ives of the American people in sentatives of the people, who areEffecting governmental controls at responsible to them, to make de- , . „ v r„ , rp*these points where it is essential cisions. Should the (broadcaster) 1 ' . J‘T?. ’In the interest of a free society ” have the freedom to present their the Learning for Living extensionThis idea was suggested vester- version of the news . . . their con- of the Central YMCA, informalday bv on^essor PWUd M Hauser ception of culture, or is this an education courses began yesterday,aay by professor Fnillp M. Hauser, £ resDOnslble Dublic offi. French and Italian classes forchairman of the department of ^,a wr responsible puDiic orn f amiiv offeresl onsociology, at a panel discussion cials, acting with the ^dvlce of . . Thnr*On “Broadcasting in a Free So- Qualified experts, with the obliga- Sunday afternoons, and a Thurs-Cietv” at the invention of the tion to present impartial news, a day evening family course will beNational Association of Broadcas- broad ranSe of editorial opinion taught in Spanish. Tuition for theters held in the Conrad Hilton. He and higher as well as mass cul- first member of a family is $18;made his remarks in a short reply ture?” tuition for additional members isto the other speakers.Hauser stated that “Freedomhas meaning only in the contextwith a given social framework.“The key to this problem, he ex¬plained, is that the broadcasting in¬dustry is not accurately describedby the terms “many, diverse, com¬petitive, and free.”“To hold that the broadcastingIndustry, and especially the TVSector of It, with restricted areamonopolies on the one hand orthe choice of three networks ontke other, can be effectively reg¬ulated by the play of marketforces, is absurd. Somebody is try¬ing to kid somebody.”Hauser then brought up the ques¬tion of “freedom for whom?” “Isthe freedom of a handful of broad¬casters greatly Influenced by ad¬vertisers paramount over the in-Do you honestly believe that theterests of 90 million Americans?freedom of 543 TV broadcast unitsCatering to their advertisingSources of revenue . . . will neces¬sarily serve the interest of ourCitizens? I hold that this Is anabsurd proposition , . . The in¬terests of 190 million Americanstnake the interests of 543 broad¬cast units . . . less than second¬ary.”Another question Hauser posedas “freedom of what?” Should Zen course offered at YCourses from method teach- $9 per person.Albert Adams, a high schoolateacher and graduate student atUC will teach a course for teach¬ers in “Tha Method,” which willexplore techniques of stimulatingcreativity and of motivating stu¬dents to plan original work.With Hyde Park theater coopera¬tion, a course will be offered onnew films. Ten visits to films andclass discussion will be led byDaily News film critic Sam Lesner.Tracy Batteast, folk artist con¬cert manager, will teach a coursein “Folk Musie.”W3he industry be “free” to give the>ub!ic “what it wants?’* “TheAnswer may well be yes in terms(>f the entertainment part (of theSrogramming). But what the pub-a wants |s not necessarily what“needs.” Should the TV lndus- CommiMee's demonstration protesting the jailing of voter registration workers in Green¬wood, Mississippi. The demonstrators marched from Roosevelt university through theLoop to the Federal building at Jackson and Dearborn. Over 150 UC students werepresent.At the end of the demonstration, it was announced that earlier in the day thefederal government called for the release of tl^ht SNC6 workers ohorged with dis¬orderly conduct and joiled in Greenwood last week. The federal government also soughta court order to stop interference with negroes registering to voto. ences. Gnosis slated: Don Congdon,Bill Hartman, Norman Lefton,Dan Reber, Bill Richter, JuliusSchlotthauer, T. Bussell Shields,Ted Totman and Walter Weisberg.Frank Grabarits is running in theDivision of the Biological Sciencesand M. Bernstein and Louis Leavittare candidates in the Medicalschool.Jan Finder, Richard Hill, FrankRichards and Richard Sumner arecandidates in the Division of thePhysical Sciences.Gnosis candidates in the BusinessSchool are Harold Bailey, David L.Beal and Fred Pipin; in the Schoolof Service Administration, they areCharles R. Adams and CynthiaChapin.Don Congdon, Eugene Groves,Jerry Hyman, Bev SpLane and KenTaylor are Gnosis candidates forNSA delegates. The alternates areTom Heagy, Jerry McBeath, RogerPeters, Terry Peterson and JoeRoland.The POLIT slate for the Collegeincluded Barbara Caress, SusanGoldberg, Eric Hirschhorn, DickJacobson, Harris Jaffe, Hoda Kap¬lan, Arthur Kaufman, Russel Kay,Jean Mahoney, Marjorie Mazen,Pam Procuniar, Peter Rabinowitz,Bruce Rappaport, Terri Ray,Martin Reisberg, Abbie Sctiirmer,Richard Schmitt, and Alan Suss-man.For the UC delegation to thoNational Studeat AssociationPOLIT slated Sally Cook, PamelaProcuniar, Bruce Rappaport, TerriRay, and Andrew Stein. BarbaraCaress and Jay Flocks, along withDick Jacobson, Richard Schmitt,and Joel Shufro were listed aaalternates.Gary Goldstein and MurraySohacher were slated from thaDivision at Physical Sciences, andDan Klenbort was listed in thaHumanities. Susan Workoff andMorris Richards are the candi¬dates from POLIT for the Schoolfor Social Service Administration.In the Division of Social SciencesPOLIT listed as their candidatesA. Stephan Royan, Alan Berger,Judy Brownstone, Paul Carlstan,John Fritz, Irene Gilbert, Mar¬garet Hayek, Jack Mazelis, andRobert Rich he knee.■OITOHAtNeed to study student-faculty-administration relationsA Notre D»m« student recentlycontacted 116 colleges and univer¬ses to investigate, among otherthings, the relations among theirstudents, faoulty, and administra¬tions. Among the findings of hifinquiry was that in almost allachools characterized by dose co¬operation and communicationamong the three elements, thereexisted tripartite boards, commis¬sioned to discuss and enact uni¬versity policy. “Apparently bybringing these groups . . . into pol¬icy formulation, a bond was estab¬lished which tended to break downthe barriers that made communi¬cation so difficult and superficial,’'commented the Notre Dame Scho¬lastic in discussing the study.To illustrate what is being doneelsewhere in bringing about betterstudent-faculty-administration co¬operation, the Scholastic pointedout that “Cornell University inIthaca, New York, has formed afaculty committee on student af¬fairs composed of 16 representa¬tives elected by and from the fac¬ulty, a number of administrationpersonnel, and two students fromthe executive-board of student gov¬ernment. Wayne State began asimilar committee in 1966, afterthe President authorized a com¬plete study of student life. HowardUniversity includes students asmembers of the most important©ommittees of the University. Stan¬ford students serve on the actualpolicy-making committees of thePresident.” In addition, there are Joint student-faculty-administrationcommittees at many other schoolsin the country. We know of no in¬stance in which they have notserved a useful and beneficialfunction.We believe that the University ofChicago should seriously explorethe potentialities of such coopera¬tion on widespread formal and in¬formal levels. We believe thatJoint consultation and discussion ofproblems as they arise, and notafter university has “solved” them,W’ould help eliminate from UC whatProfessor of Philosophy Alan Ge-wirth in a letter to the Maroonlast December referred to as “anever widening alienation between asizeable group of the students andthe administration ... a cleavagewith regard to the most vital aimsand ideals of the University.”It would seem that members ofthe UC student body, faculty, andadministration ought to be disturbedat the frequent indications of thiscleavage. After all, students fac¬ulty, and administrators are all atthe University for essentially thesame purposes: to contribute to orfacilitate the interchange and de¬velopment of ideas. And yet, inlight of an at least professed com¬mon acceptance of these aims,campus life is marked by manybitter conflicts over topics asvaried as neighborhood policies,the residence requirement, cur¬fews, and the Stagg scholarships.There must be something inher¬ently wrong in operations of a uni-DR. A. 2IMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. JSHi St. DO 1-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPrescriptions filled contact lensesnewest styling in framesSTUDENT DISCOUNTTuesdays OnlyPINED CHICKEN,SPAGHETTI, ROLLAND BUTTERALL YOUCAN EAT $4251 Fridays OnlyFRIED PERCH, FRENCH FRIES,C01E SUW,ROUS AND BIITTIR versify which can attract some ofthe world’s greatest scholars andsome of the nation’s most ablestudents, but which seems so oftento fail to live up to the idealswhich often brought them here.We would like to offer a numberof suggestions for remedying thissituation. None of these ideas is apanacea, but several may con¬tribute to easing what has devel¬oped into a near hostility betweenvarious elements of the university.We are not nearly as concernedwith the particular means used tosolve this problem, as we are withseeing some definite commitmentmade by all parts of the Universitytowards solving it.Our first suggestion is to set upa series of open meetings to dealwith various aspects of Universitypolicies and practices. Student Gov¬ernment is currently trying to setup such a series, but will not beable to succeed without the coop¬eration of other students, facultymembers, and administrators.There are two kinds of meetingsthat could be initiated. The first,similar to the Wednesday NightClubs’ of last spring and this fall,would brirfg^tfcgether a group ofinterested stlxtents and facultymembers to Informally discuss var¬ious aspects of University life. Thesecond, similar to the “My Univer¬sity and Yours’’ series suggested byProfessor Gewirth this fall, wouldfeature one speaker discussinguniversity problems or projects.Neither type of meeting, how¬ever, could be successful unlessthere were a good number of stu¬dents and faculty present. Wewould like to see faculty memberstake it upon themselves to supportsuch meetings, personally attend,and invite several of their studentsto join them. In addition, we wouldlike to see representatives of thevarious student groups, from SGto House Councils to honorary andacademic societies attend and as¬sume responsibility for invitingother students and some of theirinstructors to attend.A third type of meeting, whichwe think should be attended byboth students and faculty members,is the course staff meeting. In thecollege general education coursesespecially, where teaching hasAIL YOUCAN IAT $4001HYDE PARK TMONDAY-SATURDAY: 6:30 AM-7;30 PM1600 EAST 53rd STREET tt-fiAL T aiq. COUOtTIOkJtOOUwS/ttia t. ST.II AM TO 10 PM_ Mia-34 07wt MllVttt. been characterized by a constantsearch for an improved course, wethink faculty members might gainfrom interchange with the studentswho are taking or have taken theircourse. In addition, we think fac¬ulty-student meetings would betteracquaint the students with thegoals, methods, and problems ofthe courses. It might even makethem understand their general edu¬cation and participate in more oftheir required courses with lessof a “Oh. why do I have to takethis” attitude.Another practice we think shouldbe instituted is publishing the min¬utes or reports of the portions offaculty meetings which are devotedto discussion of basic aims andpolicies of the university, particu¬larly those that affect students,should faoulty members fear thattheir freedom of expression or free¬dom to change their minds wouldbe limited by publication of theirviews, no names need be includedwithout consent. For the impor¬tance of the faculty minutes liesin the interchange of ideas thatgoes on at the meetings, regardlessof whose ideas they are. Informingstudents of discussions of issuesthat involve them or the educationthey will'receive can make the Uni¬versity a more dynamic place. Atpresent, far too many of the ex¬periences students are exposed tohave no meaning, because studentsdo not understand the rationalebehind them.W7e would however, like to com¬mend those members of the Col¬lege faculty and administrationwith whom we have worked, fortheir cooperation in telling thecampus about the program of cur¬riculum discussions. By enablingthe Maroon to publish the CollegeCurriculum Bulletin and fairly de¬tailed reports on the proposal formultiple colleges, they have indeedset a most encouraging precedentin showing at least some willing¬ness to allow students, and others,to observe and participate in cur¬ricular discussions. It now remainsfor students to consider the pro¬posals put forth and to take ad¬vantage of opportunity presentedgroups of students to their homes;Quote of the day“A few years ago, after theintegration decision, when Iwould be taking pictures onthe east steps of the Capitolof Southern kids with theirCongressmen, I noticed thatthe teachers had difficultygetting some of them to goalong to the SupremeCourt...”-r-lrom a column In the WashingtonSTAR lo make Iheir views known andperhaps influence the decision*finally reached.Also in line with bringing Mu-denls into the range of discussionon important issues, we would sug¬gest giving them at least speakingprivileges on a number of facultyor administration committees. Theproblem of choosing student repre¬sentatives to these committees maycause some difficulties, but, as inthe curriculum committee cur¬rently under consideration, if ailparties involved are eager to gttunderway, a more or less satis¬factory method can be decidedupon.And finally, we would suggestthat faculty members, make agreater effort to get together withstudents, particularly with studentsin the College, who often are eagerfor the opportunity to meet lacuilymembers but who do not know hewto go about it. Perhaps facultymembers might occasionally inviteor perhaps they might try to workthrough the faltering faculty fellowprogram in the dormitories. Ontheir part, students in the dormi¬tories might invite faculty mem¬bers and administrators to speakto them. They might even considerinitiating a “professor in residenceprogram ' that would use, for briefperiods, the gu^st looms in the dor¬mitories to entertain facultymembers.Again, we emphasize that noneof these suggestions is a cure-all;that none is necessarily the onlymeans to bring about better imra-university relations; but we dothink they represent some positiveideas for conquering one of 1hecampus’ most nagging problems,and we hope we will see someaction soon.Higher Horizonsneed volunteersHigher Horizons, a programto provide opportunities to de¬prived children from the HydePark - Woodlawn area, is inneed of volunteers.Any student interested in work¬ing with a child receiving aid lodependent children will be matchedto a 10 to 14 year old with similarinterests through the Woodlawnoffice of the Cook County Depart¬ment of Public Aid. Through asocial worker from that office, thestudent will be given a case histotyof his charge and will be intro¬duced to him and his family. Thestudent will then be free to makearrangements with the child aboutmeeting times and activities.More details of the project canbe obtained from Penny Gordon,12 Gyeen."eco MU-1 «»t ••*«««•• »■ UMiim iun hiw wh.«m >ei»»r> tw) lut r.ctuoi or M too tcu tO"»««r.date... late... shower...shave nick ■ ■ touch ■ ■ ■... dress... rush .T. rip...change... drive... speedf lat.. .fix.; .arrive.. .wait...wait... pause...take a break...things go better with CokeBottled under the authouty ol The Coca-Cola Company byt ± ^cto Company of C Me ago CIVIC THEATRE NOW THRU APRIL 27THE MOST UNUSUAL PLAY OF THE YEARDIRECT FROM 57 WEEKS IN NEW YORK.JEROME ROBBINS’ PRODUCTIONHERMIONE GINGOLDm"Funny, weird, stageworthy, nonsensical, fanciful, droll,lurid/'—New York TimesSPECIAL STUDENT FACULTYDISCOUNTThis coupon, when presented at the Civic Theatre box-office,entitles you to purchase one ticket at the special price of $2.00for any Monday through Thursday evening performance or anyWednesday or Saturday matinee performance of "Oh Dad,Poor Dad,” or for the special 7 pm performance on Sunday,April 7. Additional coupons may be obtained at the StudentActivities office.a • CHICAGO MAROON • April 2. IM3Treteau de Paris' called 'professional operation'The Chicago visit of the i* assured. The first play, L’Apol- world in order to make iit worth"Treteau de Paris” was a pro- *on ®el*ac explores this theme living In. But then, which one isfessional op 6 ra t i 0 n from with farce and wit unta its validity the real world? When Agnes. ad-JC. V j evident to all—characters and dressing the man from Bellac asbeginning to end. Advance audience alike. Then, a suddennotices, distinctive and ubiquitous change of atmosphere adds an un-advertising, ths interest of groups expectedly serious dimension tofrom out in the provinces all point- theme. The girl, Agnes, theed to an exciting evening at Man- j^an from Bellac, and the bust ofdel Hall on Friday, March 29. sn anonymous mythological heroTexts of the two plays were avail¬able well in advance at the bookMore and, in fact, sold out. Pro¬gram notes with synopses of thetwo plays. L’Apollon de Bellac *ofJean Giraudoux and Orphee ofJean Cocteau were more thanhelpful.But then, happily, the perform¬ances themselves proved to be assmooth as the preparations. With¬out the slightest suggestion of con¬descension towards their predomi¬nantly student audience, the castgave uniformly energetic and con¬vincing performances.Tell a man he is handsome, theman from Bellac advises the inge¬nue, and your place in his world are spotlighted, voices becomegraver, and we learn that wereally didn’t understand the lessonof those first scenes. To imaginebeauty or handsomeness in theworld is not a joke at aW. Theworld of the imagination has to bebrought into contact with the realPhotographersAll students who ore in¬terested in working on theMaroon Photo Staff thisquarter should come to ameeting today, at 4:30 inthe Maroon Office, Room303, Ida Noyes Hall. ‘Beauty,’ begs him to disappear,the lights come up and the farceresumes, drawing quickly to thisa-logical conclusion.Though the play is not extremelydemanding as far as acting is con¬cerned, we appreciated the port¬rait of the homely but self-satisfiedclerk who considers himself a manof parts and a poet, and of theblustering company president whomoves in one world only. GastonVacchia’s voice in this role washarsh, however, as he seemed to horse’s poems to serve Eurydice.He ends by rejecting that poetryin order to rejoin her in death.The audience seemed a little toodetermined and serious to reallyappreciate the comic aspects ofsuch niceties as the poetic horse,the pretentious and hygenic“Death,” and the talking head.The many simultaneous implica¬tions released by the action andstage properties tended to confuserather than amuse. This was nofault of the production nor of theactors, however.Although Eurydice was terriblysweet and Orpheus sometimes tooboyish for the aspiring poet, theyfeel it necessary to shout in order conveyed well the sense of gravityCLASSIFIED ADSAPT., ROOMS, ETC.ROOMMATE wanted: female student.FA 4-7838.FURN. 6 rm. 3 bedroom apt., piano,air cond. Available June 1 to Aug. 31.|160 month. 5549 Dorchester. 643-8325.HELP WANTEDNow Interviewing women: Experiencedpersons in magazine subscription ful¬fillment for national publication. CallDO 3-5225 or ext. 3330 for an appt.Work in Hyde Park full time or parttime position possible. Job to beginend of April.FOR S4LEMUST sell books, all fields In Italian,Latin, Greek, French and German.Open 11 am to 9 pm. 2915 W. CermakRoad. FR 6-6992 or 247-1264. PERSONALSTYPING: Distinctive, accurate, expedi¬tious and extremely reasonable, callAnn Sehuchardt—ext. 3552.HARPSICHORDWill build Zuckermann Harpsichord toyour order. Beautiful hand crafted cab¬inet. Del., |600. Phone GR 7-0940.2 USED late model, medium sized por¬table typewriters. Call HY 3-3256.DO YOU have any shoe boxes clutter¬ing up your closets? The MAROONwill gladly accept any shoe boxes youwish to dispose of. Bring them to theMAROON office, Room 303, Ide NoyesHall. WHAT is spiritual thought? What is Itsorigin? How does man become con¬scious of it? How does it differ fromhuman thought? Does a knowledge ofspiritual thought have practical appli¬cation in the daily life of man?These are some of the questions whichwill be discussed in a lecture entitled:"THE ORIGIN AND POWER OFTHOUGHT.” by Paul Stark Seeley,C.S.B., a well-known practitioner andteacher of Christian Science and amember of the Board of lectureship ofthe Mother Church, The First Churchrt Christ. Scientist in Boston. Mass.,Wednesday, April 3, 1963. at 4:30 pm.in Mandel Hall. All are welcome. Ad¬mission: FREE.TO PLACE a classified ad. call ext.3*65 (MI 3-0800) special student, facultyand University staff rates. to get his character across.The set and costuming were un¬obtrusive as they should have beenfor a play of wit and idea.Unfortunately many of the bestlines failed to penetrate the lan¬guage barrier but any attack onthat barrier is bound to weakenit and so justify the mounting of alinguistically difficult Giraudouxplay.To set the new tone for the sec¬ond play, Orphee himself steps infront of the curtain to invite us tolook on the performance as a cir¬cus audience might watch a high-wire clown act without the nets,that is with mixed feelings of ap¬prehension and delight. Then thecurtain opens and we are given amoment to be absorbed into thebaroque world of mirrors, windowpanes and—a luminous horse.The theme is complex, exploringas it does many facets of the re¬lationship between life and death,poetic integrity and happiness,heaven and hell, and all with ironyand comic affects. Orpheus waswilling to compromise his talentin favor of worldly glory, symbol¬ized by a bust of himself. He getshis with, but the bust turns out tobe his own head. At first Orpheuswanted to use the profits from his and precariousness of existence onthe tightrope of life. We didn't likeHeurtebise’s foggy voice, norEury-dice’s when she was talking to¬wards the back wall from thewings.Sets and lighting for Orpheewere outstanding. The greenishmirror-entrance to Hades, thehorse's lighted niche, the singlered spot lighting Orpheus’ headANCONA SCHOOL TELEPHONE FAirfax 4-9713MONTESSORI SCHOOLla Hyd. Pork BROWN'S BARBER SHOPis now occepting opplico- AIR CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORTtions for HENRY K. BROWN, Prop.SEPT., 1963 1011 EAST 53rd STREETColl PL 2-6359 after 8:00 p.m. CHICAGO 15, ILL.STUDEBAKER CORPORATIONPROUDLY WELCOMES ITS NEWEST DEALERSOUTH SIDE STUDEBAKER, INC.46th & COTTAGE GROVEBO 8-IIIIAetc Soles ond Service Headquarters forthe Vnique new 963 Avanti, Lark, Cruiser, Han k.Come in and see these exciting New Models n ithCombinations of Features Offered by No Other Cars!GRANTURISMOHAWKAVANTILARK WAGONAIRE CRUISERCOLOR DEVELOPINGPREPAID MAILERS8 mm Roll, 3 mm 20 up $1.293!S mm, 36 exp $1.98MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 1-9269NSA DISCOUNTS RANDELL-HARPER SQUAREBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALONOPEN EVENINGS5700 HARPER AVE. PA 4-2007MRS. BILLIE TREGANZA, PROP. SWIFT AND THE SATIRIST'S ARTby Edword W. Rosenheim, Jr.Original, penetrating, and rigorous inits x-holarship. this book is an eloquentcontribution to Swiftian studies. Mr.Rosenheim it professor of English inthe College.The University of ChicogoBookstoreS802 Ellis Ave. and that final transformation ofthe study into a surrealist land¬scape contributed spectacularly tothe total effect of high comicseriousness.Le Treteau de Paris has treatedus to a professional performanceof two well chosen though difficultplays of contemporary interest. Wewish they could come more j>ften.Robert FinkJOBS IN EUROPEGrand Duchy of Lux. Mar. 29, 1903The American Student InformationService, celebrating its 6th Anni¬versary, will award TRAVELGRANTS to first 1500 applicants.ASIS is the only authorized organi¬zation offering approved summerjobs in Europe, on a large scale,to U.S. students.3,000 paying summer jobs (someoffering $190 monthly) are avail¬able. Jobs include working in Swissresorts, on Norwegian farms, inGerman factories, at constructionsites in Spain, and at summercamps in France.Send $1 for a 20-page Prospectus,complete selection of Europeanjobs, Job Application, handling andairmail reply. Write, naming yourschool, to: Dept T., ASIS, 22 Ave.de la Liberte, Luxembourg City,G.D. of Luxembourg. The first8000 inquiries receive a $1 coupontowards the purchase of the newstudent travel book. Earn, Learnand Travel in Europe.14 west randolphchicaao, ill. dearborn 2-1112Fraternities, women's clubs, organizations, plan to haveyour next luncheon, dinner, or party at Chicago's newestand smartest supper club and restaurant.Serving complete banquet lunches from $2.45Serving complete banquet dinners from $3.25DINING — DANCING — ENTERTAINMENTfree lunch or dinner to interestedand accredited group representativeHitt* in iUftittmlMr. ■Ts"DISCOUNT RECORD MARTLISTEN... YOU JAZZ LOVERSIF ... You Haven't Visited Our StoreWe Have Both Lost Money!HUNDREDS OF LP SBy Getz, Mulligan, Cononboll, Taylor, Loteef, Etc.Regular Price — $4.98 & $5.98 $ 1 98(Mono or Stereo) IMr. “TV’ Discount Record Mart(It’s Mr. "TV For Jon LP's)Corner 47th St. & Ingleside Ave. All Phones: 624-4666FREEH! Present This Ad and Receive $1.00 Cloth orBrush with LP Purchase!3 PIZZAS FOR PRICE OF 2 MITZIE'SFLOWER SHOPSFree UC DeliveryTERRY'S PIZZA 1225 E. 63rd St.HY 3-5353Ml 3-4045 1340 E. 55th St.1518 E. 63rd Street Ml 3-4020April 2. 1963 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Matlaw gets a ppointment | Today's events I Blackwood piece performedRalph E. Matlaw, an au- of the Department of Russian atthori’tv on the literary culture the University ofJ1}1™**- TJj® Pfjp T, - , , • • » partment of Slavio Languages and - uoais ot me wioaern urns01 Russia, lias been appointed Literatures is part of the Division n»uras, artist in residence,professor of Russian litera- ©f the Humanities of the Uhiversity. 54th street> 1 pm-ture in the department of Slaviclanguages and literature.He is the author of Ar-Film] "The Many Faces ofgonne,” Ryereon 251, 12:15 pm.Lecture: Chicago Sinai Congregation,"Goals of the Modern Artist, ' Three chamber composi¬tions by Easley Blackwood,i72oarZ Assistant Professor of Music,have been scheduled for per-The formance this year in Mandel Hall.The Music for Flute and HarPsi-_ , , rv « Lecture Series: Law SchoolRobert L. Streeter, Deap, Ulvt- Committee on Southern Asian StudiesSion of the Humanities, said of Mat- and the Committee for the Compara- ... ,,is the author ot numerous iaw’g appointment: "Professor the*sVat °p 12> ^ introduced herearticles on Russian literature and Matiaw ig a distinguished member tatdia: -rife Role of Hindu Law S January; on Saturday eveninghas translated and edited several the nnsf-war veneration of schol- Comparative Legal Research.” J. Dun- the Lenox String Quartet gave usbooks, such as Dostoevsky’s "Notes ars who have done much to deepen S&aJ1 laSTKt SSSf i^TVso earlier Second Strin* Quartet’our understanding of Russian liter- to 5 pm. Op- #•ature. With the addition of Pro- Elementary Hebrew class t Htliel . °PP°»ad to tha ,atar comP°*fessor Matlaw, the University of Foundation, 4:45 pm. sition, which ta an austere, for-Chicago now has a faculty of 12 Lecture: 2ootogy club. -Comparative biddin* Work of .para sound andscholars and critics concerned with Aspects of Reproduction in the Male static yet complex rhythm andfrom Underground" and "Grandinquisitor" along with Grigoryeu’s"My Literary and Moral Wander¬ings." Matlaw has also edited abook on Belinsky, Chernyshevsky,and Dobrolyugbov.Matlaw, who will join the facultyop July 1, 1963, is currently head graduate teaching and research in Animal,” Thaddeus Mann^FJLSL. polyphony, the Quartet ia charac-, . , , director of the A R C. unit of repro-the various Slavic languages and ductlve physiology and biochemistry.University of Cambridge, Zoology 14,4:30 pm.literatures.’Culture Calendarabout the struggle of the fisherman Inthe Gulf of Veira Cruz will be shown atThursday.MusicCabaretGeula Gill and the Oranim IsraelFolk Troupe at the Gate of Horn, thru the Art Inst,tute at 8 pmthe 14th, 1036 N. State, SU 7-2833.DoneeCountry Dancers, oldest dance groupon campus, Wednesday, Id* Noyes, Rockefeller Chapel, Sunday at 3:30 pm,8.30 p.m. Students $1.50, general $3-$4.Ha^ 30apmn8’ Chicago Orchestra Ensemble, pre-Folk' Dancing, Tuesday night. 8-10:30 *e"‘s trl°8 Bach and Beethoven onptn. International House Assembly Hall. 3-£^a?’ ®_-P-rn’ a- t le ^.lrs* UnitarianIsraeli Danring, Htliel. 3 10 pm (be- 3ginning instruction 7:30-8). tickets fl.Frhihlic Golub String Quartet, at Second City„ * . . j . Monday at 8:30 pm, students $1 50-Museum of Science and Industry— de 7-3902Chicago Public School Student Science9:30Fair, Thursday through Saturdayto 4.Paintings of Matta, at GoodspeedHall 10 to 5.Silver and Ceramics of Robert vonNeumann at the Art Institute throughSunday 9-5.UC Center for Continuing Education,la showing the photographs of Williamp Muncke from 9 to 9.filmsBillie Budd, at the Esquire. PeterUstinov's marvelous interpretation ofMelville's classic.David and Lisa, at the Cinema. Chi-pago off Michigan. A Touching, looselybased on psychiatrist T. I. Rubin’#book. Student rate $1.Days of Wine and Roses,” at theicago Theatre with J Lemmon andRemiek. A moving advertisementfor A A."Hello, Elephant,” at InternationalHouse, Monday night at 8, 50c.“The Sword and the Flute,” “ChineseCeramics Through the Ages” and“Chinese Bronze” will be shown bythe Art Department hi Soo. Set. 122,londay at 8 pm.Heemann Hall of the Illinois Institutef Technology at Dearborn and Federaltreets presents "Hiroshima Monmour,” at 8 pm Sunday. 75c."The Wave,” a 1935 Mexican film terized by romantic richness andreflection, slow mournful tension.It is a work of groat beauty andLecture Series: department of history, comparative simplicity, certainly"Personal Contacts between Christians . .. . ,and Moslems In the Middle Ages: East "•<«• immediately appealing andChristians and Moslems governmental communicative than the later work,and Mercantile Contacts." Sir Steven .. , . , 0 . .Runciman, Alexander White, visiting •A*’ tna same time, Uie Vfuartetprofessor, deoartment of history, So- lacks the individuality, the perso-cial Science 12*. 4:30 pm. nality of the Music for Flute and. e, . . Tr/_ Lecture: Porter Foundation and Tn- Harpsichord; in the later®* ^n_^V-uMa“herr_?assi<!nV a? U0 terchurch Committee for International one was alwavs listening to BlackStudents. "The Human Situation and one was Always listening to DiaCKthe Contemoorarv African Novel.” Rob- wood, while the Quartet soundedert A. LeVine. department of Anthro¬pology. International House, room A,7:30 pm.Church, 57th and Woodlawn. Student _ .Lecture: UC Student Peace Unionand B’nai B’rith Hillel Foundation.“Israel and the Under-Developed Na¬tions," Dr. S. N. Eisenstadt, chairman,department of sociology. Hebrew Uni¬versity, visiting professor, M.I.T., Hil¬lel, 7:30 pm. the sadistic, from strident savagescreeching to soothing serenity,from the somber to the sublime.In other words, Schoenbergoverdid it.He attempted to cram just toomuch into his work. There is anexcess of contrast and not enoughdevelopment } often it seems thatthe composer is forcing more onthe limited resources of the triothan it can possibly handle.The work is certainly neverdull, and is more passionate thanSchoenberg is often apt to be. Yeteverything after the awesomeOlympian opening seems a bit un-cohesive and anti-climactic. Theperformance was superb.Tha evening concluded withBeethoven’# Quartet in B-flet Ms-Op. 130, with the Gro##ejor,Erroll Garner,Sunday at 3 pm. at Orchestra Hail,Theatre"Die Deutschen Kletnstaedter,” byAugust von Kotzebue in German atIda Noyes Hall, Thursday. Friday andSaturday at 8 pm. Saturday at 2:30pm. NO 7-5063—1150 and $2. mat. $1."Tobias and the Angel,” closes nextTuesday at the Goodman Theatre. Carillion concert: Michael Schneider,organist. Heilsbronnen Church, Berlin-Schoneberg, German. Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel, 8:30 pm.Baptist Services: Bond chapel, Ser¬mon Vespers. 5:05 pm.Christian Science, Thorndike HiltonChapel, Testimony meeting. 7:15 pm. very much like the music of nu¬merous other composers. Obviously.Blackwood’s music as a whole en¬compasses a variety of styles; itwill be interesting to learn wherethe Violin Sonata (to be per¬formed by Isidore Cohen on May4) fits in.The concert began with the rare¬ly performed String Trio by Ar¬nold Schoenberg. This is not mu¬sic for a chamber; it is rather inall-embracing cataract of an epic,#wee":-’ f-ini the sentimental to a lullaby.Ch.for GetLuckyFlat Crazy Questions”“There IS a bard gem inside Ameri¬cans that refuses to believe theycan't make it, and their brain likea fist closes over that gem, and theyhave faith. It is the same faith thatmoves parents to leave the city inorder that their children mightgrow up where there is air, andgrow up into better people. Atits lowest level, it is terrible andsad; but it is I For tha currant inuaalso capable of I of NATIONAL REVIEWproud gestures." IBBMml York IA N.Y. 50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE’S HOW:First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up witha nutty, surprising question for it, and you've done a‘‘Crazy Question.” It's the easy new way for students tomake loot. Study the examples below; then do your own.Send them, with your name, address, college and class,to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y. Winningentries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries sub¬mitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a$25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now! (Based on the hilarious book "The Question Mon."|RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries on the basis ofhumor (up to Vs), clarity and freshness (up to Vs), and appropriateness (upto Vs), and their decisions will be final. Duplicate prizes will be awardedin the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the entrants andmust be submitted in the entrant's own name. There will be 50 awardsevery month, October through April. Entries received during each monthwill be considered for that month's awards. Any entry received after April30, 1963, will not be eligible, and all become the property of The AmericanTobacco Company. Any college student may enter the contest, except em¬ployees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising agencies andReuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees. Winners will benotified by mail. 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T.cd) Product of <J/w w */mg/uean is our middU namiF • C H I e A 6 O M A fc 6 O N • April 2, 1963 Fugue as the finale, as Beethovenoriginally intended.The opening movements wenKquite well, especially the dancelikawork, presto.But the fuerue! There is no doubtthat this a dissonant work, more"contemporary” than much of themusic being* written today, diffi¬cult for listeners and performersalike.But when the performers teatinto it as these players did, claw*ing into it like a band of jackals,ripping viciously at the audiencewith unrelenting harshness of tone,overpowering volume, and a falfsampling of wrong notes: well, itmade the Schoenberg seem like NPete Rabinowifi