Marynook shows patternfor peaceful integrationSuccessful integration inMarynook, a South Side Chi¬cago neighborhood, “points toa new direction in what hastraditionally been an almost insur¬mountable problem,” according toHenry Hartmann, editor of the UCMagazine and a resident of Mary¬nook, at Calvert House Sundaynight.Marynook is favored with itsdlesant location near the lake be¬tween 83rd and 87th streets, the•ood condition of its homes, whichare mostly single-family houses,and its convenience to public trans¬portation and routes to resort areas,Hartmann said.This would not be enough, hecontinued, if there were not a uni¬fied community organization and adeveloper who was interested inestablishing standards of home main¬tenance. Marynook had both ofthese.Tlie community came together formany activities long before therewas any talk of an influx of Negroes,he said, which tnade the differencebetween a “last ditch, keep-em-out”group and a unifying force.The neighborhood association isalso a member of the South EastChicago Community Organization(SECO), Hartmann pointed out,which works actively in the largerSouth East area in helping home-owners finance improvements, andworking with youth, among otheractivities.“When the first Negro familymoved into Marynook some twoyears ago,” Hartmann said “thecommunity had talked about it open¬ly at meetings for about a year.”The actual presence of a Negrofamily still came as a "shock” hesaid, but. even though there wassome talk of whites moving out,the first Negroes’ neighbors are stillliving in their old homes. When other Negro purchasers fol¬lowed, "among the timid and thefearful and the prejudice there wassome panic.” Hartmann said. “Maythe world be preserved from theself-styled liberal.” he commented,"who is all for liberal causes some¬where else, except when it involvesnext door.”The excuses some people gavefor moving away “would be humor¬ous if they were not so sad,” hecontinued. "But these guilt feel¬ings . . . demonstrate that the per¬son knows he is wrong,” Hartmanncommented.Community committees havesuccessfully fought block-busting, andhas invited estate agents to co-oper¬ate with their listing of propertiesavailable, whih is shown to all pros¬pective purchasers."The last great stumbling block.”Hartmann said, "is the totally un¬realistic policy or lack of policy onthe part of the Public School sys¬tem, with regard to the high school,Hirsch High.”This school, he said, is both inad¬equate educationally, and is 99%Negro in a mixed neighborhood."No matter how truly liberal awhite parent may feel, no matterhow willing he is to live in an inte¬grated community, he objects toreverse integration where his childis the only white member of a class.(I) neither condemn nor condonethis attitude. I speak here of facts,”Hartmann said.“Inflexible, outdated school policy”may force many whites to move, hewarned. The community in thiscase has taken the initiative towardintegration, and the school systemhas not co-operated, Hartmann said.“Today’s concept of the neighbor¬hood school defeats . . . the basicpurpose ... of providing a meltingpot. Let us re-assert and re-estab¬lish the orginal purpose of publicschool education,” he urged.Kent says 'waiting' nowchanged by direct action“The old liberal pattern ofwaiting patiently for the legalredress of grievances for theNegro has been supplementedif not superseded bv mass action.When we are called upon to makeour contribution through new methodsand techniques I hope we will havesufficient courage to not be foundwanting, because so much deimndsuixm our commitment to humandignity.”This was the “plea” which Rev.Jack A. Kent, minister of the FirstUnitarian Church, addressed to “allwhite liberals” in his sermon Sunday, Vol. 72 — No. 27 University of Chicago. Tuesday, Jon. 21, 1964Harding speaks at HilielRights movement now 'groping'to the back when the driver told tierto, became an organized protest led byDr. Marlin Luther King, and re¬sulted in integration by SupremeCourt order in 1956.“Direct mass action (it was dis¬covered), was a shorter and moreeffective road to desegration thanlegal redress,” Kent commented.This, he said, added a new level tothe revolt, when the Student Non-violent Co-ordination Committee(SNCC) was formed. The civil rights movementwill soon cause Americans toask many dangerous ques¬tions about their society andway of life, said Vincent Harding, aMennonite minister and journalistFriday night ait Hiliel House.The movement is now going deep¬er into American politics andeconomics, and is beginning to em¬barrass and pain American society,Harding commented.Harding said the civil rights move¬ment is now in suspended animation.It does not know how to deal withimportant problenvs or which way toturn, he added.Harding indicated that the presentperiod of lethargy may actually be atime of change. “When the move¬ment picks up steam again,” Hard¬ing continued, “it will go deeplyenough to touch the roots of Ameri¬can life, and people will begin toquestion it.” The movement is go¬ing to branch out into other areas,he said.Harding said that the civil rightsmovement is now groping, as it wasa year ago. At that time, PresidentKennedy did not think the battle lorequal right important enough todiscuss in his State of the Unionmessage or stress in his legislativeprogram.Kennedy changed his mind whenthe violence in Birmingham, Cam¬bridge, and Danville started to at¬tract national attention. This demon¬strated the value of popular demon¬stration in the civil rights move¬ment, he said, for without the sit-insand boycotts, the public would neverhave noticed it.“A great battle was going on with¬in President Kennedy, said Harding,between moral issues and politicalexpediency. Harding commentedthat tear motivated Kennedy to takea strong stand on civil rights, andthat Kennedy’s action represented that of many Americans whose mo¬tivation in aiding the civil rightsmovement has been to avoidviolence, not to produce justice.Last August’s Washington Free¬dom March made “the participantsfeel part of history,” said Harding,“but others thought it was just an¬other one of tiie great Americanspectaculars which happened to beinterracial.” Harding explained thatthe march took up a great deal ofenergy which may not have beenworthwhile. “When the march wasover, the movement did not knowwhere to turn,” said Harding. Un¬certainty began to dominate themovement, he said.Further uncertainty was addedwhen President Kennedy was asssas-sinated. Harding continued. “Ken¬nedy was wise enough to see thathe had to act on civil rights, eitherfrom a sense of morality or politicalexpedience.” Harding indicated thatAmerica is unsure, whether PresidentJohnson is as ready to act on civilrights as Kennedy was.Even though the movement isgroping, added Harding, it has cer¬tain clear t ints of reference whichlie at the roots of American life.He said those in the civil rightsmovement are beginning to see that the problem of unemployment is oneall Americans face. There are toomany white as well as Negro un¬employed, and the systems that pro¬duce the unemployment may be re¬sponsible.The civil rights movement demon¬strated that Congress linds it almostimpossible to pass a strong, impor¬tant piece of legislation like thecivil rights bill, he commented andother important acts, such as hous¬ing, educational aid, and employ¬ment legislation. But, lie added, Con¬gress finds it exceedingly easy topass legislation allocating half of thenational budget to defense.Harding pointed out that whenpeople begin to ask, partially as aresult of the civil rights movement,“where is the money we need,”serious doubt in the American politi¬cal system will have arisen.Harding indicated that the free¬dom movement has also produceddoubt in the minds of Americansabout the present two-party system.If Sen. Goldwater remains such astrong force in the RepublicanParty, and Sen. Richard Russell inthe Democratic Party, people willcertainly wonder whether the systemis adequate, because they have no¬where to turn, he added.Hiliel: 3 ways to integrationForeign policy inconsistent SHORE, the group recentlyorganized by Hiliel to helpachieve a stable, integratedsituation in the South Shorearea of Chicago, considered three ap¬proaches toward this goal at its meet¬ing last week.The organization will attempt firstto spread information among SouthShore residents about the education,economy, and crime rate in the neigh¬borhood. Tiie crime rate has notrisen since Negroes began movinginto the area about three or fouryears ago. and is still one of the low¬est in Chicago. Land values and edu¬ cational facilities are also holding athigh levels, according to a representa¬tive from the area who spoke at themeeting.Other methods of meeting the prob¬lem of keeping wliites in the areathe meeting decided, will be to unifypro-integrationists, and to indirectlypoint out the discrepancy, on thepart of many people, between moralbeliefs and actions toward Negroes.Hie Hiliel group will attempt to con¬tact a large number of South Shorefamilies, in interviews using a shortquestionnaire. Persons interested inhelping in this work should contactVivien Clair. 1415x New Dorms, orHiliel House, PL 2-1127.the second of four in a series on"The Negro Revolt.”Kent outlined the history of Negroprotests against injustices in Amer¬ica ever since the slave trade started.African natives often committed sui¬cide rather than allow themselves tobe taken to America as slaves, hesaid.Negroes revolted against oppres¬sion in the early 1800’s in severalslave uprisings, and later led byFrederick Douglass and others in tlieNorth, using direct-action teclmiquesiu use today.Kent said the current pattern ofcivil rights action was for directaction groui>s to move against unjustsituations; for the NAACP and itslegal department to support with de¬fense ot demonstrators and oilier ef¬forts at legal redress, and for theUrban I ,eague to support all activitywith research efforts and economicwork.Kent termed the formation in 1943of the Congress on Racial Equality(CORE) as the arrival of "a newstar on the horizon.” He pointed outthat CORE began in Chicago, andhftd its first sit-ins in Ix>op res¬taurants.“The revolt has moved with un¬precedented s|ieed” in the last twentyyears, Kent said, reaching a highP°int in the 1954 Supreme Courtdecision which decided against theseparate but equal public schools”notion.“Despair” of the Negroes overtheir economic condition, Kent said,showed itself in the Montgomery,Alabama, boycott of segregated pub¬lic bus lines.fhe movement, which started as aspontaneous reaction to the arrest ofa Negro woman who refused to move The major problem inAmerican foreign policy todayis inconsistency, said HerbertKlein, assistant professor ofhistory, wlio spoke on the "Crisis inPanama” at Thompson House Ex¬tempore last Thursday.Klein indicated that Pan aim is avery good example of this incon¬sistency. The US would like to seeevolutionary — rather than revolu¬tionary—social change in Panama.The (JS knows that the main—infact, almost sole — problem capableof inciting a revolution in Panamais the US occupation of the CanalZone. Yet. Klein said, there is al¬most no chance of the US Congresspassing a revision of the 1903 treatyoriginally establishing the CanalZone.Klein began his talk with the USsupported rebellion which freedPanama from Colombia, and fromthere went on throu# a descriptionerf a political, socialogical, and eco¬nomic history of Panama and its re¬lations with the Canal Zone.It was in the question period afterhis talk that Klein made his state¬ments on what should be done withUS foreign policy in Panama.If the US is afraid of pulling outcompletely for fear that Panama isnot ready to control herself and theCanal, she should first see to it thatthe small amount of aid Panama isreceiving from her for economic andtechnological improvement is notmisappropriated. She should saywhere tlie money goes and shouldhave inspectors there to see that itdoes.If the Panamanian officials say they want no money with strings at¬tached, we should stop giving themmoney and watch them diange theirtune, according to Klein.As it is, Klein says Panama wantsthe Canal; and the O.A.S., though itwould rather have an internationalcontrol of the Canal in order to avoidtariffs, is supporting Panama in thisdesire.Klein believes that Panama is nowready to run itself and the canal,and the US has no legitimate ex¬cuse to remain in control and should—and probably will have to—pull outif the present passion against tlieUS for maintaining tlie status quohas not cooled off.If nothing else, Klein advises thatthe US arrange for an equal controlof the Canal by both Panama andherself, making tlie maintenanceand service of the Canal vital toboth.The Thompson House Extemporeis a new series of coffee hours atThompson House. It will be pre¬senting a variety of on-and-off-campus speakers every Thursdayevening from 8 9 PM for the nexttwo quarters. Following tlie speak¬er’s talk there are refreshments anda discussion period and refresh¬ments.Citizens for Scala urgent¬ly need additional pollwatchers and precinctworkers any time today un¬til 5 pm. Those interestedshould go down to head¬quarters at. 1544 W. Roose¬velt. CH 3-1861. Riley says CORE willcontinue education action“CORE believes that, par¬ticularly in the area of publiceducation, the direct actionprojects initiated last summerwill continue to be absolutely neces¬sary,” said Sam Riley last night ata UC CORE meeting in Ida Noyes.He emphasized, however, that themore traditional methods should notbe abandoned nor should CORE dis¬continue its support of older civilrights groups which rely primarily onsuch methods.Riley, head of Chicago CORE,noted that conflicts within the civilrights movement have arisen be¬tween the older, more conservativeorganizations and the new militantnon-professional groups.He stated that in this conflictCORE has been an effective middle¬man. Because it has representativesfrom all neighborhoods and all classstructures and because its organiza¬tion is local and flexible, it has beenable to provide a basis for coopera¬tion between the two movements.He stated that presently one of thetilings the civil rights movement inChicago needs most is a "Black LeonDespres.” “ITiLs,” he said, “wouldcombat the culturalization of segre¬gation and the resulting isolationfrom dominant community groups.”Despres, a white representative ofthe Fifth Ward is known as “the onlyNegro in the city council” because ofhis support of the civil rights move¬ment. Afterwards Bruce Rappaport an¬nounced that the UC CORE will be amajor participant in such things asthe school boycott planned for Feb-bruary 26, but that more emphasiswill be put cm campus projects thisquarter. He concluded that for futureprogress it is necessary to put pres¬sure on the Democratic machine inthe form of votes for civil rightscandidates. In this regard he calledfor poll watchers today in the firstward to insure that Mrs. Scala wouldnot be overwhelmingly defeated byfraudulent voting.Indicted YSA memberto speak FridayOne of three Indiana Universitystudents and members of the YoungSocialist Alliance who were recentlyindicted by the state of Indiana for“sedition” will speak at Ida NoyesFriday night at 7:30.The students were indicted for -their part in organizing a publicmeeting on campus at which a Negrosocialist youth leader spoke on thecivil rights struggle, according toRichard Schmitt, chairman of tlie UCchapter of the Committee to Aid theBloomington Students (CABS), whichis organizing the speech.Schmitt said the students were in¬dicted for allegedly advocating theviolent overthrow of the governmentin violation of the 1951 Indiana Anti-Communism Act.II ,i I |! , I ■ "I II •• ' f •! IIGnosis caucus wants space Gen ed, "remedial but necessary"integration and less space members of the OrientationGNOSIS, in its caucus held bounded by 55th to 53rd and Ellis to Board presented many prob-Sundav evening, recom- Cottage Grove and the alleged dis- lem«, but found few answerscrimination by the University in two concerning the general education pro¬buildings it alledgedly owns. In the gram at UC at an O-Board discussionarea presently all Negro, the Hyde Sunday in Ida Noyes.Park-Kenwood Community Council is David Qrlinsky, assistant professorattempting to interest white families in the social science department, Her.into moving back into the neighbor- man Sinaiko, assistant professor ofhood. It was felt that University stu¬dents might be able to live in thisarea and in this way help the project. Three faculty members and dents “constructively" criticize theirmended that SG "request theadministration to allow stu¬dents to eat in Hutchinson Commonsfor the remaining part of the aca¬demic year.”The resolution resulted from a dis¬cussion of the crowded condition ofthe C-Shop from about 11:30 to 1every day. Especially during the win¬ter quarter, space is almost non¬existent, since few people want toventure outside. The entire problemis due to a lack of eating facilities.At the same time, HutchinsonCommons stands unoccupied andwill continue to remain unoccupieduntil the Music Department takes itover next summer. The area couldbe used to help alleviate the over¬crowding at the C-Shop at leasttemporarily. Some food machines, orat least a coffee dispensor might bemoved into Hutchinson at nominalexpense. In regard to the alleged discrimi¬nation, however, it has been reportedthat a Negro does live in each oneof the two large apartment buildings,one of them being the PlaisanceHotel. This would indicate that thereports of alleged discriminationmust be false.In other action, GNOSIS againmade a call for people interested infilling the three vacancies in StudentGovernment: One in the LibrarySchool, and two in the Medical School.If no qualified people can be foundto fill the seats, the party will haveto seat others. If interested contact humanities and Matthew Nitecki,Curator of the Walker GeologicalMuseum and Resident Head ofShorey House, led the discussion.Students and professors were gen¬erally agreed that most first yearstudents undergo a period of confu¬sion. One student said that this con¬fusion was a result of the generaleducation courses, which he de¬scribed as “hodge-podges of unre¬lated facts and methods.” This stu¬dent suggested that the courses and instructors, and on theseinfrequent ocassions, students seemto lack “certain degrees of tact."Sinaiko defended the general edu¬cation program, in that its functionis to teach the student how to think.Nitecki answered that one will de¬velop intellectual attitudes just aswell in a specialized course as in thegeneral education program. Niteckiwent on to say that general educationis not that important in the develop¬ment of the student, because thestudent receives a great part of his knowledge outside of the classroom,among his friends and through hisextracurricular activities.Sinaiko said the general educationprogram gives impetus to the stu¬dent to continue study in the variousfields, relates basic information aboutthe various fields, and gives a “sam¬pling” of what the student shouldexpect should he wish to specializein a particular field.Orlinsky stated that the generaleducation courses were “remedial,but necessary.’’Calendar of EventsTuesday, Jan. 21Wrestling Meet: UC vs. North Parkcourses College, 3:30 pm. Bartlett Gym.The caucus also discussed commu-nity problems including the current Eugene Groves, party bosproject to reintegrate the area should be more unified and more log¬ically developed.Many at the meeting felt that thegeneral education program was inneed of evaluation. Students saidthat the faculty refuses to criticizemediocre teachers and courses.Sinaiko remarked that rarely do stu-Students graduating this yearare reminded that graduation pic¬tures will be taken this Wednes¬day and Friday from 2 to 7 pm.Call PI. 2-5609 in the afternoon orstop at Reynolds Club for an ap¬pointment.Chicago Maroon Intermediate Hebrew: Hillel, 3:30 pm.Elementary Hebrew: Hillel, 4:30 pm.Lecture: “Is Philosophy Respect¬able?”, Mortimer J. Adler, director.Institute for Philosophical Research,Encyclopedia Brittanica Series;School Auditorium, 8 pm.Israeli Folk Dancing: Hillel, 8-10 pm.Concert: Folk Songs of America: GilTurner, Mandel Hall, Students, $1.25,8 pm.Wednesday, Jan. 22Lecture: “Questions in FinancialPolicy Arising from Foreign Corporateoperations,” J. F. Bennett, assistanttreasurer, Standard Oil Company, Busi¬ness East 103. 1 pm.Carillon Recital: Daniel Robins, Uni¬versity Carillonneur, Rockefeller Chap¬el. 6 pm.Lecture Series: “The Music of In¬dia,” Rajeshwari Datta, visiting lec¬turer, department of Music, Ida Noyes“Organizational Adaptation to Li^i*afy, 8:30 pm,, . o • i c Rush Smoker: Alpha Delta Phi, 5747Stress,” The Changing Social Com- university.Any UC student, graduate or un- position of Bureaucracies,” and “The Twist Party: Ida Noyes, UC Students.tergraduate, registered during the Imt»ct oi Bureaucracies on the Pro- »”»'• **• 10:30 »m'Contest on bureaucracy and changeA prize of $500 is being of- model not exceeding 30 pages, dou-lered for a research paper on spaced.* ■„ Possible topicsBureaucracy and Change, for the researchpaper include “The Innovative Or-aecording to Thomas Whisler, ganization,” “Organizational Adapta-professor in the Graduate School of tions to Environmental Change,”Business and presiding judge. Thursday, Jan. 23Lecture: “SP10—a Generalized Trans¬ducing Phage of B. subtilis,” KennethF. Bott, Jr., Ricketts North 1, 4 pm.Seminar: “An Analysis of MagneticAction on Biological Growth from aCybernetic Viewpoint,” Mr. Valenti-Law nuzzi> 5753 Drexel, room 208, 4 pm.Lecture: “Reconstructing Prehistoryin Africa,” Roland Singer, professor,departments of Anatomy anu Anthro¬pology, Zoology 14, 4:30 pm.Lecture: “Ion Pairs in Solvolysis andExchange,” Saul Winstein, visiting pro¬fessor, department of chemistry, Kent107, 8 pm.Lecture: “The Goodness of Sleep,”Lawrence J. Monroe, Mental HealthResearch Fellow, Thompson House Cof¬fee Hour, 7th floor Pierce Tower, 8 pm.Plays: Students’ Workshop Series To¬night at 8:30; “The Ghost Sonata,” byAugust Strindberg, and “Jack or TheSubmission,” by Eugene Ionesco,Thursday through Sunday at 8;30 pm,Mandel Hall, students $1.Acting Co-Editors. David L„ Aiken,Robert F. LeveyJohn T. Williams fessions.”1963-64 academic year, is eligible to Papers must be submitted tosubmit an empirical analysis or whisler by May 1, and the winnerBusiness'^Manager.*.*.'Harris'1 JaHe original mathematical or qualitative will be announced June 1Culture-Feature EditorSharon GoldmanAssistant to the Editor, Robin KaufmanEditor, Chicago Literary Review'Marc CoganPhoto Coordinator Bill CaffreyEditorial CartoonistGeorge Alexander PopeExecutive SecretaryMarvella AltheimerCirculation Manager.. William BennettEditor Emeritus Laura GodofskyStaff: Ellis Levin, Howard Greenwald,Joan Phillips, Rick Pollack,Paul Aronson, Mike Sliverman,Dick Atlee, Mike Klowden,Diane Friedman, Karen Justin,Maren Greeley, Martha Gross-blatt, Sol Kalian. Pete Rabino-witz, Dave Richter, David Cur¬ley, Bob Sehehr, John Beal. JimSerwer, Tom Heagy, DeirdreHolloway, Steve Ege, ErichZuesse, Sandy Lewy. Library Duplicates and Discards Sale—10*— NONE HIGHER —Tuesday, January 21 throughSaturday, January 25University of Chicago Bookstore5002 Ellis Ave., Chicago 37. III. Automobile RepairsPrompt, low cost service some-dayservice on most jobs.All work guaranteedSPEEDY AUTOMATICTRANSMISSION SPECIALISTS(Transmission andAll Other Repairs)4320 Cottage Grove Ave.KE 6-8564EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1200 East 53rd Street53-Kimbark PlazaHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount Junior YearinNew YorkAn unusual one-yearcollege program.Write forbrochure JY-4Junior Year ProgramWashington SquareCollegeNew York UniversityNew York 3, N.Y.is it me...or Jack Winter !It’s you, piiricess, when you have theJack Winter look. But whoa... takea minute to learn about the subjectof stretch. Because once you putyourself in Jack Winter stretchpants, you are going to get the eyetest. Be darn sure you can pass.Questions. Should you wear stretchpants? What kind of figure does ittake? Most all figures are flatteredby stretch, whether angular, trian¬gular, or a figure eight. Even if youhave an hourglass figure where allthe sand has sunk to the bottom, stretch pants can do quick subtract¬ing. You won’t need a grease job toslip in, but there’s no sag, hag orhind either. Jack Winter cuts ’emjust right...lean and ladylike, .pro¬portioned in your proper leg-length.So it’s you and Jack Winter gettingall those straight-on, slant-eyed,turn-about-face looks. You and JackWinter causing that campus stir.Jack WinterH410 Broadway, New York City 10% discount to students with ID cardsSoles and Serviceon all hi-fi equip¬ment, foreign anddomestic.TAPE RECORDERSPhonographs - AmplifiersPhono Needles and CartridgesTubes - Batteries24 hr. Service CallsTV-HI-FI! «Q0ORADIO *0— Telefunken & Zenith —AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORYest. 19291300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111In the SSrdl-Kimbark PlazaCAGO MAROON • Jap. 2l„ 1964The crackle>'« goneOf cereal and Second City’s showby Shoron GoldmanReturning to Second City-after a year and a half is likegong back to a bowl of cerealafter twenty minutes — it’sIgbt the same general taste but thesnap, crackle and pop is all gone.■•New York City is Missing,” Sec¬ond City’s 14th satirical revue, doesoffer a pleasant evening of entertain¬ment. Though the troupe lacks a lit¬tle of its former “character” nowthat most of its old performers arej£)ne, its members work smoothly to¬gether and establish immediate rap¬port with the audience.However, the skits seem to makeuse of a great many old puns and gags, occasionally drag on and on,and frequently seem completely point¬less.The troupe is best in its very shortskits and in improvisations which ap¬peal to different kinds of audiences.The prodigal son who drags himselfhome, only to be told that his familyhas moved, and the pompous rabbiwho proclaims, “If I forget thee, OJerusalem, Let my right arm forgetits cunning, let my tongue gluk-ugh-ugh . . .” come to a sharp point. Andthe coach who brings big-time footballback to UC in the guise of ballet can¬not fail to find favor with a collegeaudience.However, the skit about a figurepainter who is mentally stuck in pre¬ adolescence tries to stretch one tliinjoke too far. Even the impromptuopera “Hansel and Gretel” (whichunfortunately didn’t seem very im¬promptu) was boring, aside from afew gems like the witch’s comment,“I’ve eaten myself out of house andhome.”The troupe could be a little moreeffective if they stopped slurring theirwords trying to keep from laughing.It’s nice to know that they appreciatetheir colleagues’ fresh humor, butthey occasionaly spoil the tongue-in-cheek effect.In general, however, Second Cityhas done the best it can with somedisappointingly shallow material.Calls for more modern muskI doubt whether anyonewho witnessed the concertgiven by The Group for Con¬temporary Music at ColumbiaUniversity on Friday at Mandel Hallwill disagree with my calling theworks played musically modern. Ifather think the disagreement willcome with my calling that which wasplayed music.The concert consisted of Music forFlute and Oboe by Harvey Sollberg-er, Piano Variations by CharlesWuorinen, Synchronisms for fluteand tape by Mario Davidovsky, allWritten in 1S63, and a comparativelyconservative work by Stefan Wolpe,Sonata for Oboe and Piano, writtenin 1938. Lukas Foss' ECHOI, writtenbetween 1961 and 1963, for piano,clarinet, cello and percussion (anvil,vibraphone, timpani, mobile, gar¬bage can top, piano and chimes) wasfne main work of the evening anddrew the most favorable reception.The Wolpe sonata, despite its ratherconservative nature, was one of theless interesting pieces. Written in amore classical serial manner, thework lacked consistency. The firsttwo movements were more interest-ffig and contained many more in¬triguing moments than the third,which was quite dull. The work’smore traditional nature gave it a _ .. , , , . .,classical lyricism and a recognizable Counseling and Placement during thecoherence. Mr. Mane oboe playing majTbe arranged through January 82 Northwestern Mutual Lifedid not quite match Mr. Wuorinen s ^ D ,, insurance Company, Mii-u” T c r-1”’" 0/1/1 me waukee, Wis. and nation¬wide — graduates in anydiscipline for positions asgeneral trainees, sales, orfinance,was built on simple thematic andrhythmic schemes woven into adialogue, was enjoyable but oppres¬sive in its lack of structural variation.Mr. Sollberger, the flutist, outdid hiscompanion, Mr. Marx, whose oboeulaying lacked refinement of tone andtechnique.Both intriguing and beautiful wereMr. Davidovsky’s Synchronisms forflute and tape. The remarkable flutepart was well integrated with anequally interesting tape. Both com¬bined to make a work of originality,lyricism and technical ingenuity andrefinement. Mr. Sollberger played thework beautifully.Mr. Foss’ was the finest and mostinteresting piece of the evening. Mr.Foss’ admittedly unique use of theserial technique as applied to pitchand duration produced a remarkableeffect. The lyricism of ECHOI IIIand the contrapuntal intricacy ofECHOI II combined with the unique¬ly varied sounds of the outerECHOI produced a truly fine andimpressive work. The use of the pianoand the percussion was, to say thevery least, different. Yet the most striking feature of the work was theorganization of the material and thestyle. The performance was excel¬lent, and Mr. Desroches’ percussion-isms were astounding.The works as a group representthe type of music that has grown outof the extensive development ofserial technique. Friday evening’sperformance displayed a program ofuniquely fine and interesting works.It is time that this style of musicwas more adequately rperesented inthe general concert repertoire. Thetalent of the composers and the excel¬lence of the music which becameevident at Friday’s concert justifythe desire for increased performance.I think it is certainly possible forthe average listener to feel thatworks like those played Friday areas much music as, let us say, Stra¬vinsky or Debussy. Only through in¬creased performance will the musicalpublic be able to understand andidentify with the seemingly uncon¬ventional nature of the works of thisschool of composition.Leon BeMefo CAMPUS CULTUREllllllllimilllllllllllllllllllHIIIHtlllllllllllllllllllllllllHHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllll»lll»MHIHHIUIIIH»imiHmiHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimilHirillllHMHtHIIHHIIIIIII!IIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIHIllW!HHIIIIStrindberg, Ionescoplays shown ThursdayAugust Strindberg’s Ghost Sonataand Eugene Ionesco’s Jack or TheSubmission will be presented by Uni¬versity Theatre in the student-pro¬duced and directed series “Tonightat 8:30.The Ghost Sonata is a tragic oneact play in three scenes concerningthe deceitful nature of man. A finalhope for future salvation is madeparticularly powerful by the juxta¬position of stark realism and fantas¬tical appearances of supernaturalcharacters.Euguene Ionesco, the French play¬wright of the Theatre of the Absurd,has called Jack or The Submissiona ‘‘naturalistic comedy.” It is, infact, a biting satire of bourgeois life,revealing, through seemingly non¬sensical speeched and a grotesqueburlesque of courtship and marriage,the hypocrisy and futility of this life.Although Ionesco uses hearty, andoften ribald humor in his play, it isserious in its savage indictment ofthe unrealistic and inhuman qualitiesof present day middle class morality.Ionesco’s Jack will be directed byMarc Cogan, and the Ghost Sonatawill be directed by Madalyn Shorr,both third year students.Tonight at 8:30 will be presentednext Thursday through Sunday inReynolds Club Theatre. Admission is$1.50, $1 for students.Career appointments this weekHie following recruiting organiza¬tions will visit the Office of Career ministration, Chicago, 111.and nationwide — chem¬ists at all degree levels forpositions as chemists orinspectors.Mr. L. S. Calvin, room 200, ReynoldsClub, exteasion 3284.Services, Inc.,rendition of the piano score.Remarkable were Mr. Wuorinen’swwn piano variations. There was a January 21 Analyticgreat deal of variance in sound whichcame from his unconventional useof the piano. The material of thepiece and the transformation it under,went were intricate and interestingly ,a' s Washington. D C™-S ana- January 24lytical positions for gradu¬ates in economics and bus¬iness administration.mself. Mr. Sollberger’s work which January 2* u. S. Food & Drug Ad-mathematics, physicsstatistics, and physicalchemistry.devised. Yet, the piece was lackingthatMr. Wuorinen somehowe outdidINTER-FRATERNITY COUNCILSMOKER DATESWINTER RUSH 19647:30-10:00 P.M.TUES., JAN. 21 DELTA UPSIL0N5714 S. WoodlawnWED., JAN. 22 ..... PHI DELTA THETA5625 S. UniversityTHURS., JAN. 23 . . ZETA BETA TAU5554 S, WoodlawnFRI., JAN. 24 ......PHI SIGMA DELTA5625 S. Woodlawn PS1 UPSILON5639 S. UniversityALPHA DELTA PHI5747 S. UniversityPHI GAMMA DELTA5615 S. UniversityBETA THETA Pll5737 S. University Folk concertheld tonightStudent Union (SU) will presenta folk concert by Gil Turner in Man-del Hall this Tuesday, at 8 pm.Turner’s songbag straddles the con¬tinent and more than three centuriesof American experience, ranging fromcolonial antiques to the broadsides andbrickbats of today’s rapidly changingworld. The versatile folksinger ac¬companies himself on a variety of in¬struments including banjos, guitars,autoharp, hammered dulcimer, andmouth organ.Admission to the concert is $2 inadvance and $2.50 at the door. Stu¬dents will receive a 50% discount.Members of the Folklore Society mayobtain tickets for 75c advance sale or$1 at the door. Tickets may be or¬dered by mail from Student Union,1212 East 59th St.,- Chicago 37 orpurchased at the Reynolds Club deskand the Noyes desk.Mid-day concertDavid Gross, pianist, will inaugu¬rate the Music Society’s mid-dayconcert series this Friday with aprogram of Beethoven's Diabelli vari¬ations.The free concert will begin at 12:30in Mandel Hall and will last about40 minutes.CLASSIFIEDWashington, D.C. area —fnMm^hema»?e,Cannhv^esS January 23 Uarco, Inc., Chicago, m.in matnomanrs. nnvsics. primarily — graduates inany discipline for sales orgeneral business trainees,Chemical Company, Sko¬kie, Ill. — degree candi¬dates in chemistry, bio¬chemistry, microbiology,and plant physiology, FOR RENT, ROOMS, APTS., ETC.WANTED: sensible indiv. “male”around 30 to share east Hyde Park$185 mo. apt, HY 3-3398,SLEEPING rms. to rent on Harpernear 52nd. Call MU 4-8496,5462 S, CORNELL, 6 lge, unfurn, rms.,natural fireplace, newly decorated, likenew wall to wall carpeting. Suitablefor a group Ji doctors or teachers. CaliMU 4-8222, Avail now. Also ZV2 rm,apt. new. decorated. Tile floor cover¬ing, avail, now.54th & BLACKSTONE. Six room town-house plus finished basement. Nicekitchen with dining area. Priced at$22,500, which includes wall to wallcarpeting and other extras.Mr. WalkerBaird and Warner1348 East 55th Street BU 8-1855FOR SALE - SOUTH SHOREDELUXE 8 rm. co-op apt. Ideal forlarge family. 4 bedims., 3 baths, fam.rm., pvt. garage and drivel This is alow 3rd floor apt. Ideally located. Petsallowed. For appt. and info, call GAk-land 4-4653. Board approval. Occu¬pancy Sept. 1964HELP WANTED FOR SALE2 T.V, sets, bedrm. sets, living rm.furn. $ Elec, heater. Best offer. RE4-1076,STEREO Phonos.—table model, $30;portable, $35. Call ES 5-9532.BLUE GRASS MUSICRECORD collection for sale, 575 singlesand 200 L Ps. and some tapes. Willnot break up collection. Phone BR4-4600, Rm, 503 weekdays 8 am to2 pm.PERSONALSED, majors want practice teachingexper, Hiliel South Shore project. CallJ, Shapiro Hitchcock,WANTED: People to Sell ads for theMaroon. Come to Maroon office or callext. 3265 and ask for Harris, 5%comm, on all sales. 2nd SCHOOL boycott Feb. 25 Interest¬ed heloers call Steve Fortgang: BU8-5121. UC friends of SNCC.TYPING: Rapid, reasonable, accurate.Will edit. Call Ronnie or Karen, eves.NO 7-3609.CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP(PL 2-8377)PLEASE come back Sally; I’ll buy youa capuchino at the Medici. H.M.GIRL to read aloud Tues., Tours. &Sat. and/or eves, in South Shore,salary by the hr. call SA 1-6638 after7 pm.WOULD you put up an out-of-townguest during the folk festival weekend—call the Folkore Society at ext. 3667.Reg.Men's SPORT SHIRTSMen's Dress SLACKSSUITS * t. 30% $388Off Reg. PriceGABES incE. 53rd St. 53rd-Kimbcrk PlenaOpen Monday, Thursday, Friday Evenings “til 9 P.M,f COLLEGE STUDENTSAn Exciting 71/2 WeekSummer AdventureISRIfl & HOPEJET DEPARTURES: June 27 & July 9Program Featuress* 14 days of fruit-picking endether work In Golilee Kibbutjim* 7 doy "Go Native’* sightseeingtour throughout Israel* 14 days of rest ond retreollonel the ASHKELON tillage do toconce*en the Mediterranean* 14 doy lew ol Holy, Switzerland ond *Front#For further Information & reservations contact:HISTADRUT STUDENT TOURS220 So- State St. Chicago 4, III.y HArrison 7-4085Join. 21,, 1964 « CHICAGO MAROON • 3A GUIDE FOR THE GUIDERSOn<* of tli? most interesting Academic theories advanced inmany a long year has recently been advanced by that interest¬ing academic theorist, E. Pluribus Ewbank, I’ll. I), who hold*the chair of Interesting Academic Theories at the St. Txmi*C ollege of Footwear and Educational Philosophy. Dr. Ewbanksaid in the last issue of the learned journal, the Mount Rushmor*Cuide to Scholastic Advancement and Presidents' Heads, that w«might be approaching the whole problem of student guidancefrom the wrong direction.Dr. Ewbank, a highly respected j>edagogue and a lifelongsmoker of Marlboro Cigarettes, (l mention Marl boros for tworeasons: first, to indicate the scope of Dr. Ewbank’s brainpower.Out of all the dozens of brands of cigarettes available today,I)r. Ewbank has had the wit and taste to pick the one with tlwmost flavorful flavor, the most filtracious filter, the most softsoft pack, the most flip top Flip Top box: I refer, of course, toMarlboro. The second reason 1 mention Marlboro is that 1 getpaid to mention Marlboro in this column, and the laborer, youwill agree, is worthy of his hire.)But I digress. To return to Dr. Ewbank’s interesting theory,he contends that most college guidance counselors are inclinedto take the easy way out. That is to say, if a student’s aptitudetests show a talent for, let us say, math, the student is encour¬aged to major in math. If his tests show an aptitude for poetry,he is directed toward poetry. And so forth.All wrong, says Dr. Ewbank. The great breakthroughs, thestartling innovations in, let us sav, math, are likely to be madenot by mathematicians—whose thinking, after all, is constrainedby rigid rules and principles—but by mavericks, by noncon¬formists, by intuitors who refuse to fall into the rut of reason.For instance, set a poet to studying math. He will bring a fresh,unfettered mind to the subject, just as a mathematician willbring the same kind of approach to poetry.By way of evidence, Dr. Ewbank cites the case of CipherBinary, a youth who entered college with brilliant test scores inphysics, chemistry, and the calculus. But Dr. Ewbank forcedyoung Cipher to major in poetry.The results were astonishing. Here, for example, is youngCipher's latest poem, a love lyric of such originality that FordByron springs to mind. I quote:He was her logarithm,She icas his cosine.Taking their dog with 'em.They hastened to go signMarriage vows which they joyfolly shared,And wooed and wed arid pi r squared.Similarly, when a freshman girl named Elizabeth Barrettfcgafoos came to Dr. Ewbank to seek guidance, he ignored thefact that she had won the Pulitzer prize for poetry when sh«was eight, and insisted she major in mathematics. Again theresults were startling. Miss Sigafoos has set the entire mathdepartment agog by flatly refusing to believe that six time*nine is 54. If Miss Higafoos is correct, we will have to re-thinkthe entire science of numbers and—who knows?—possibly openup vistas as yet undreamed of in mathematics.Dr. Ewbank’s unorthodox approach to student guidance ha*so impressed his employers that he was fired last week. He iscurrently selling leaded moccasins at Mount Rushmore.« 1V44 Mac Sbiiioa** * *We. the makers of Marlboro, know only one kind of guid¬ance: the direct route to greater smoking pleasure. Try afine, filtered Marlboro, available wherever cigarettes are soldIn all fifty states of the Union.Count the Changes In the All-Newtier's a start! New styling, new'comfort,new power. Want more? OK go ahead...The MG8's got lots more! Even wind-upwindows.6040 South Cottage Grove Ave. A BMC CA(tCount 'em all atBob Nelson MotorsSOUTH SIDE'S LARGEST rZBTRUSH SMOKERS FOR FIRST-YEAR MENTHURSDAY, JANUARY 23WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 295554 S. WOODLAWN AT 7:30 P.M.;"SCIENCE, HUMANISMAND VALUES"lecture presented by Or. Aaron Learnerand South Side Humanists an Thursday,January 23, S:00 P.M.Fenn House5638 Woodlawn — Freo THE BOOK NOOKSCHOLARLY BOOKS IN EVERY FIELDMl 3-7511 1540 E. 55thDR. A. ZIMBLER. OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNTYouth LeadershipPositions Openapply:Chicago Young Judaea72 East 11th St. WE 9-4168 RENT-A-CAR*PER DAY OFFSET PRINTING ^MM LTILITHINGDISSERTATIONS ^CLASS MATERIALSPOSTERSFLYERSBUSINESS STATIONERYf EVERGREEN OFFSET«1230 EAST 63rd STREETFA 4 6360 • 363 4353TAPE SPECIALS600' ACETATE 981200' ACETATE 1.791800' MYLAR 3.49MODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNT PER MILEATOMIC CARRENTALS. INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155 You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711NICKY’SRESTAURANT AND PIZZA1208 East 53rd Street53-Kimbark PlazaNICKY'S TAKE-OUT t DELIVERY MENUPIZZASlarge2.903.253.253.003.253.503.253.50SPAGHETTI WITH MEAT SAUCE 90SPAGHETTI with Meat Balls or Sausage 1.20MOSTACCIOLI 95MOSTACCIOLI with Meat Balls or Sausage 1.25CHICKEN CACCIATORE - Salad 1.80SHRIMP DINNER,Salad, Potatoes & Buttered Bread 1.50SHRIMP Vi LB 1.25 1 LB 2.25BAKED LASAGNE with Meat Balls or Sausage 1.55RIB TIPS SMALL 1.35 LARGE 2.25Assortments small mediumCHEESE 1.20 1.90SAUSAGE 1.40 2.15ANCHOVIE 1.40 2.15ONION 1.25 1.95PEPPER 1.40 2.15MUSHROOM 1.60 2.40BACON 1.40 2.15HAM 1.60 2.40PHONE: FAirfax 4-5340Open Seven Days a Week — Hours 8:00 A M. to2:00 A.M. Sundays 12:00 Noon to 2:00 A.M. CHICKIE IN THE BOX10 Large Pieces 2.5016 Largo Pieces 3.7520 Large Pieces 4.75SANDWICHESPlain or BAR BQ Beef 60Meat Ball 55SAUSAGE 55Above Served with PeppersHAMBURGER 50CHEESEBURGER 60CORNED BEEF 70BAKED HAM 65Plus Many OthersRIBS1 Slab 2.002 Slabs 3.753 Slabs 5.504 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 21. 1964