Maroon interviews Supt. WilsonWants aid in fighting crime Students will discussparticipation in Extensionby Ellis LevinPolice Superintendent Or¬lando W. Wilson called for areappraisal of the laws andtechniques used against allcriminals as one way of attackingand destroying the power of the syn¬dicate.He renewed his appeal for powerto use “audio surveillance” againstmobsters, and called for the elimina¬tion of the use of procedual tech¬nicalities through which individualsfound guilty of a crime can remainfree on account of a misspelling ormisplaced comma in their indict¬ment.Wilson referred to the amendmenton wiretapping he proposed to theState legislature last summer as“one minor step forward.” Tliemeasure which never cleared tl»ejudiciary committee would have per¬mitted tlie use of certain “electroniceavesdropping” devices by law en¬forcement bodies after an ex partecourt liearing to obtain evidence incrimes of “murder, kidnapping, ag¬gravated kidnapping, soliciting for aprostitute, narcotics, gambling andconspiracy.”“Under the present law, racket¬eers and gangsters are given com¬plete immunity against interceptionof their oral and telephone communi¬cations,” Wilson commented.By hiring small fry to perform theroutine jobs, the higher-ups reap tlieenormous profits of large scalecriminal enterprises without commit¬ting any of the overt acts whichwould implicate them. They merelydirect tlie operations ly telephonewith complete immunity for prosecu¬tion.“It is a sad commentary on the in¬adequacy of our times,” Wilsonadded, “that these higher-ups arerarely prosecuted for their truecrimes and only occasionally are en¬meshed in income tax violations.”In commenting on UC sociologistPhilip M. Hauser's suggested re¬vamping of laws directed at the syn¬dicate, Wilson declared that thiswould lead to “second class citizen¬ship for hoodlums. Wilson did notthink this was what Hauser had inmind. “If laws were to be applied,”he said, “they must be applied uni¬formly against all acts of crimeagainst the community.”Wilson went along with suggestedchanges in court procedure, speci¬fically those through which guiltyverdicts justly arrived at could beoverthrown on the basis of one al¬leged technicality. “The guilty partyshould not have tlie riglit to over¬rule on a technicality,” Wilson said.“I am no lawyer, and am so naiveas to think the object of the adminis¬tration of criminal justice is to de¬tect truth, just that simple and ifthat be the object, society is doingitself a disservice if it permits de¬fense lawyers to conceal truth by any means they have at their dis¬posal,” he continued.The former chairman of thedepartment of Criminology at theUniversity of California felt that thepublic should focus its attention onthe “character of the individualcrime” and not apply themselvesspecifically to the syndicate. “Weshould recognize it as somethingdefinitely wrong in society andshould get about to correct it,”Wilson asserted.He offered an analogy to a personsuffering from a kidney ailment and,as a symptom, having headaches.“Eliminating the headache does notaccomplish anything. What I urge isto stop focusing on tlie headache andto get on to the cause; what leadsto tlie assaults, slayings and rape.The press have been trying to get meinto a conflict with other law enforce¬ment agencies, but I refuse to bedragged in. My quarrel is with thesystem and not with any one in¬dividual,” Wilson said.Wilson pointed to the difficulty inobtaining evidence and having it ac¬cepted in court as one symptom, butwould not spell out any direct solu¬tion to the problem.Pounding his fist on the desk infront of him, he declared that it was“high time society got down to thebasic problems coming from organ¬ized crime. Society must not permitthem to go unchallenged.”Wilson emphasized the importanceof income sources, gambling, nar¬cotics, prostitution, and liquor to thecontinued survival of organizedciime. If these supplies were cut offthey would be forced to go into otherareas, Wilson felt, where the chancesof apprehension and convictionwould be much greater. One of thenations leading criminals, MarshallKafano, was just convicted in two ofthese other areas; extortion and tliejuice racket, Wilson pointed out.The public is basically interestedin protecting itself from those crimeswhich directly affect it; hann toproperty or person, in which thereis a victim-offender relationship in¬volved, Wilson believes. In gambling,prostitution, illegal liquor, and nar¬cotics, this relationship does notexist. The public must cooperatewith the offender in order for theviolation of the law to occur. It isthrough these means that the syndi¬cate makes its money.Only occasionally is the victim-offender relation involved, wiiensomeone loses a wad or is givenknockout drops. The public closesits eyes to these facts, Wilson feels,and allows syndicate operations toflourish. Only through public aware¬ness and action can they be elimi¬nated, he feels.Asked to compare tlie state of theChicago Police Department prior tohis taking over in March of I960 tothat of the present, Wilson proudlypointed to tlie decrease in insurancerates in this period. Physically, hesaid that lie had found a run-downand dilapidated force, entirely in need for rehabilitation. The com¬munication center was not adequatein capacity for a city qf half-a-mil-lion. and it was being used by acity of four million. “We today havethe best police communications inthe world,” Wilson said.Wilson referred to the traffic deathrate, which except for 1963 has beenthe lowest of any year since 1914,and even in 1963 was second only toLos Angeles in deaths per ten thou¬sand registered vehicles, and to thegeneral crime rate which last yeardecreased 16%, while nationally thefigure rose 10%.His personnel, he felt, were also“gaining the respect of the citizensof the community through theiraction and excellent service to thecity of Chicago.” Students willing to partici¬pate in a committee whichwill work with the UniversityExtension Division in its edu¬cation and community activi¬ties have been asked to attenda meeting Thursday after¬noon at 4:30 pm. in the Rey¬nolds Club lounge.Students and several facultymembers will meet with Sol Tax,Dean of the division, to discuss thebest methods of student participa¬tion.According to Tax, there are manyareas in which students could be ef¬fective in the Extension program,which is designed, he said, to “re¬flect the University to the outsideworld.”The activities of University Exten¬ sion are divided into five areas: 1)adult education at the DowntownCenter and on campus; 2) specialconferences at the new Center forContinuing Education; 3) radio andTV programs; 4) the Summer quar¬ter; and 5) community programs,in the University neighborhood andthe Chicago metropolitan area.Students, Tax thinks, can play apart in many areas as “resources”for advice and active participation.Tax explained that the relationshipof such students to Extension wouldbe somewhat analogous to that ofthe Orientation Board and the Deanof Students office, that is, a groupwhose function is to help in certainaspects of the division’s work.The formal structure of such agroup would, of course, be entirelydependent upon what the interestedstudents think best.Vol. 72 — No. 33 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1964 31Was acting chancellor twiceHarrison dies in retirementFuneral services for R. Wendell Harrison, who retired last June as Vice President andDean of Faculties of The University of Chicago, will be held at Foley, Alabama, Tues¬day, February 11th.Mr. Harrison died of a heart attack while driving near his retirement home on RouteThree, Foley, Alabama, Saturday. ~ “ IHe was 66 June 30, 1963, from The UniversityMr. Harrison, known to his aca- of Chicago. He had first become as-demie colleagues as “Pat,” retired sociated with The University of Chi¬cago as a graduate student 42 yearsearlier. He joined the faculty in1937.A nationally known researchscientist and educational administra¬tor, Mr. Harrison was the chiefacademic officer of The Universityof Chicago in the transition fromChancellor Robert M. Hutchins toChancellor Lawrence A. Kimpton in1951. He was acting chancellor inthe six-month interval in 1960-61 be- present president of tlie University,George Wells Beadle.Upon being advised of Mr. Har¬rison’s death, President Beadlesaid:“The entire Univesrity of Chicagocommunity is grieved by this sadnews. Pat Harrison had made manyimportant contributions to thegrowth of this academic institution.The stature of the faculty of thisUniversity speaks for Mr. Harrison’swisdom and discernment. With agraciousness that has almost goneout of style in American life, hejudged men on the basis of thehighest scholarly and scientifictween the resignation of Mr. Kimp- merit and built where greatness inton and the appointment of the a university begins—its faculty.”Wood notes optimism:renewal social evils endR. Wendell Harrisonshown delivering convoca¬tion address as actingchancellor in winter, 1960.Wade attacks Percy's switchby Howard GrcenwaldWhen Charles Fercychanged his public imagefrom progressive Republicanto Goldwater follower, hethrew away his best politi¬cal asset, said Richard C.Wade, professor of history,at a meeting of the YoungDemocrats club Thursdaynight.Percy faces a much more diffi¬cult opjxinent for the Republicangubernatorial nomination in WilliamJ. Scott than he did in Charles F.Carjientier, Wade added.Charles Percy was the most prom¬ising Republican in the Midwestwhen he announced liis plans to runfor Governor last year, Wade said.Percy had been chairman of thePlatform Committee at tlie I960 con¬vention, he explained, and had pre¬sented the image of a cleancut, dy¬namic man before his announcement.He had not disclaimed rumors thathe supported New York GovernorNelson Rockefeller, or was seekingthe Vice-Presidential nomination on» Rockefeller ticket, Wade continued. As soon as Percy announced hiscandidacy, Wade said, he began ashift to the conservative wing of hisparty. Percy made statements op¬posing open occupancy legislation,favoring ceilings on welfare spending,and indicating that he favored no onemore than Sen. Barry Goldwater forthe Presidency. Percy declared thathe would never have run on the 1960Republican platform, Wade said,which Percy himself helped write.“Charles Percy seems uncomforta¬ble in the presence of sophisticateddialogue,” Wade commented. In call¬ing for programs to bring industry toIllinois and decrease unemploymentwhile freezing the state budget, Wadeadded, Percy shows his ignorance ofthe most basic law of economies:“You can’t have your cake and eatit, too,” Wade charged.Wade said that Percy’s residencein a segregated Chicago suburb, Ken-nil worth, has deprived him of knowl¬edge of the problems of civil rightsand the progress of the Negro, Wadecalled Percy’s excuse for opposingopen occupancy legislation a resultof liis ignorance of the newly devel¬oped Negro middle class, Percy’s argument has been that99% of the Negroes would not behelped by open occupancy, since theycan not afford better housing thanthey now have, according to Wade.He has commented “it would takean army of 100,000 to enforce ojienoccupancy legislation in Illinois.”This, said Wade, is the kind of think¬ing that retards Negro progress.Wade recalled a statement byPercy that “as long as the WestSide Bloc (a group of legislatorsfrom Chicago, who have commonlyopposed anti-crime legislation) iscalled part of tlie Republican Party,we cannot call ourselves morally su¬perior to the Democrats.”. Wade commented that althoughmany Republicans consider tlie Mid¬west as the area of Goklwater’sstrongest support, they do not realizethat the nation’s most reliable liberallegislators like Humphry, Young,Symington, and Douglas come fromthis area. He said that apparently thevoters had not followed tlie Republi¬can shift to the right over Hie lasthalf-century. This is the reason whyPercy would have been wiser tohave remained a liberal Republican. ‘‘There is nothing as excit¬ing or as challenging as theUrban Renewal program. Itis a stimulus for the upwardclimb of people — a process by whicha city rebuilds itself,” stated Eliza¬beth Wood, an authority on publichousing Thursday night.Miss Wood, director of UrbanStudies Management, Inc. and formerdirector of the Chicago Housing Au¬thority, spoke on the Urban Re¬newal program in tlie second of aseries of two lectures sponsored bythe School of Social Science on so¬cial planning.Miss Wood centered her discussionon problems of urban renewal in thepast and the situation today. She saidthat, in the past, renewal went alongwith clearance projects without re¬garding where persons living incleared areas were going and withoutregarding supply and demand in thehousing market.Consequently, Miss Wood said,lower income groups became con¬centrated in deteriorating areas, giv¬ing corrupt landlords an opportunityto ignore city housing codes and tocharge exorbitant rents.High income groups fled fromcities, Miss Wood asserted. In someareas, urban renewal was a game ofmusical chairs, and the relocateeswere the losers. “Relocation wasbrutal,” Miss Wood said.Many administrators used the ex¬cuse that the hardship imposed byrelocation was a necessary evil fora greater good. Miss Wood stated,however, that the situation has im¬ proved in the past several years.Planners now realize that the successof the physical plan of a housing proj¬ect depends on social planning. “Thehumanity of social planners has im¬proved. Administrators are seekingbetter data to plan projects,” MissWood said.Several steps must be taken toinsure that relocation is used as atool for social rehabilitation, MissWood declared. Social workers mustbe employed in executive positions inurban renewal projects to insure theeffectiveness of relocation, she feels.Projects must have cooperation withsocial agencies.Miss Wood also discussed the con¬cept of the Conservation Area. Shesaid that there is a tendency for peo¬ple to thing that city dwellers live inisolation. This is incorrect, MissWood believes. “There is a socialstincture, and the strengthening ofthis social structure has become animportant and growing field of socialwork,” she said. The rehabilitationprogram must be able to identify tliesocial structure and capitalize on per¬sonal interests, she feels.“Public Housing,” Miss Woodstated,” has suffered from the publicattitude toward poverty. After tliirtyyears, it is still unpopular with legis¬lators.”One serious problem was the meanstest for PH, according to Miss Wood.“Families with excessive incomesare evicted. This contravenes the be¬lief of upward nobility. Families withaspirations will reject it. PI1 hasbecome the home of the uninspired,”she said.YEAR BOOK PREVIEWSEE REPRESENTATIVE PHOTOS FOR7964 CAP & GOWNBY YEARBOOK PHOTOGRAPHER STAN KARTERTHIS WEEK THROUGH FEB. 28IN NEW DORM'S LOBBYORDERS TAKEN FROM 5:00 TO 7:00PRE-PUBLICATION PRICE $4.00PICTURES OF GRADUATES WILL BETAKEN AGAIN FRIDAY, FEB. 14. INREYNOLDS CLUB — 2:00 - 7:00 Letter to the EditorStudents urged to act2000 WORDS A MINUTEWITH EXCELLENT COMPREHENSION AND RETENTIONYou can be taught to read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCELERATED READING method. You'lllearn to read DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1.000 to 2,000 words a minute with excellent TO THE EDITOR:For the first time in the memoryof any currently registered student,at last we, as students, are beingasked not only to support but to helpconceive and implement policies findjjrograms in a major division of theUniversity. I refer to the extensioncenter and to Mr. Tax’s plan for astudent committee to aid with itsplanning and in executing its pro¬grams.For years, we, as students havebeen paying lip service to a concept,a dream of what an ideal universitycommunity would bo like. A truecommunity of scholars, we said, in¬volves a continuous dialogue betweenall members of the academic com¬munity: this is our idea of a trueuniversity.For years, we have attacked “theadministration” for not including usas vital factors in the decision-mak¬ing process of the University of Chi¬cago. Instead, we said, there is amonolithic structure out of whichacademic and social dictates areannounced to our community; in es¬sence, we have been disenfranchisedfrom our own community.These charges were and are un¬questionably valid. There is no rea¬son why we students cannot andshould not participate in the policydecisions of our University. Now wehave that opportunity. Mr. Tax, asthe Maroon reported, has broadplans lor a new kind of extension of the vast and still untapped re¬sources of Chicago.But these programs are still to beimplemented. They will require thededication, suggestions and criti¬cisms of all members of the aca¬demic community. And as Mr. Taxsees it, that includes students.We are therefore organizing a newgroup of students, a group whosesole purpose would be the improve¬ment and expansion of the Exten¬sion Center. We are meeting withMi-. Tax in the South Lounge of Rey¬nolds Club this Thursday at 4:30 p.m.We hope at that time to organizethis group and begin to discuss plansand projects. I urge all studentswho claim to believe in a communityof scholars and in a dialogue be¬tween all its members to come andimplement this ideal.JERRY HYMAN| Calendar of Events |Tuesday, Feb. 11Intermediate Hebrew: HiJIrl, 3 ;«> pm.Elementary Hebrew: Hillel, 4:30 pm.Movie: •‘Vampyr,” Mack Sennet t'e“Knockout,” and D. W. Griffith's "NewYork Hat”: .sjxMusored by Student Gov¬ernment, Soc. Sci. 122, 7 and 9 pm.Folk Dancing: International House,50c for non-members, 8-10:30 pm.Israeli Folk Dancing: Hillel, 8 pm.Television Series: "Book Beat," dis¬cussion between Rioh..rd M. Dorson,chairman, department of Folklore, In¬diana University, and Kenneth Douglas,host, Channel 11, 9:30 pm.retention. This is not a shimming method; you read every word.Apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual moterial as well as to generalreading. Your accuracy and enjoyment will be increased. No machines or apporotus ore used in teachingthe ACCELERATED READING method.An evening class in ACCELERATED READING wilt be held in the University of Chicago area beginningon March 31. One 2-hour session each week for 10 weeks is all that's necessary for you to be reading 1,000to 2,000 words a minute with good comprehension by the end of May.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstrati on of the ACCELERATED READING method on WED..Feb. 12, of 8:00 P.M. ond see how it works,BRING A BOOK!Demonstration will be held ot the HOTEL SHERRY 153rd St. ot Lake Shore Dr.I Chicago. III.NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING INC.507 Fifth Avenue, New York 17, N. Y.is it me...or Jack Winter!It’s you, princess, when you have theJack Winter look. But whoa... takea minute to learn about the subjectof stretch. Because once you pulyourself in Jack Winter stretchpants, you are going to gel the eyetest. Be darn sure you can pass.Questions. Should you wear stretchpants? What kind of figure does itlake? 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, bag orbind 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 Winter1410 Broadway, New York City• CHIC AGO M A ROON • Feb. 11, 1964 ber of citizens not now being prop¬erly educated—high school students,housewives, business men, etc.As Mr. Tax envisions the programit would take more effective advan¬tage ot the mass media, of studentabilities in teaching and research,57th STREETCHORALEthe new university chorusChristc,3her Moore,ConductorondGatewayString EnsembleBasia Polischak, ConductorCONCERTTwo Byrd MotetsHandel ConcertoGrosso No. 21Mozart Missa Brevisin B Flat K.275Sunday, Feb. 168:30 P.M.FREEUnitarian Church Nave,57th and WoodiawnEYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1200 East 53rd Street53-Kimbark PlazaHYde Park 3 8372Student and FacultyDiscountYou won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.101 I East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711 Wednesday, Feb. 12Colloquium: “Human Geography >>ithe Southwestern Archipelago of Fin¬land.” Stig Jaatinen, professor of G<v>.graphy. Helsinki School of Commerce,Rosenwald 28 . 3:30 pm.Lecture: “The Mafia.” Denis MackSmith. Fellow at All Souls College, Ox¬ford University, sponsored by the Com¬mittee on Social Thought, second of aseries, Soc. Sci. 122. 4 pm.Carillon Recital: Daniel Robins. Uni¬versity Carillonneur, Rockefeller Chap¬el, 5 pm.Lecture Series: ”Thc Music ot In¬dia”: "Time in Relation to the Ragas.”Rajeshwari Datta, visiting lecturer, de¬partment of Music, Ida Noyes Library,7:30 pm.Country Dancers: Please wear gymshoes, no admission charge. Ida NoyesHall, 8 pm.Lecture: “Self-Deception,” Fred A.Siegler, department of Philosophy,Mead House coffee hour, JudsonLounge, 1005 E. t>0 st„ 8 pm.Twist Party: UC students only, ad¬mission 25c, Ida Noyes Hall. 10:30 pm.Thursday, Feb. 13Lecture: Poetry seminar: Perrin HLowrey, Edward W. Rosenheim, Jr.,Herman L. Sinaiko, John R. Cooper,M and el Hall, 10:30 am.Track Meet: Intramural Indoor Trac™Championships, Field House, 7 pm.Attention graduates: Orders forcopies of graduation photographs,will be accepted Wednesday amiFriday of this week from 2-fip.m. in the Reynolds Club lounge.Proof sheets of photos are avail¬able.TWISTWEDNESDAY10:30 VCrown candidates chosenProtest movement afootSeven candidates for theMiss UC crown were nomi¬nated Sunday night at Stu¬dent Union’s nominating tea.The eventual winner will be chosenat the Wash Prom on February 22.The seven girls who were chosenare Rachel Fitch, nominated by PsiUpsilon; Judy Beckner, Quadr an¬glers ; Mary Tsien, Russian Choir;Pat Cutler. ACREN; Linda Laird, 2ndfloor North; Edrene Furman, Uni¬versity Theater; and Marcia Batchel-ler, 2nd floor West. They were chosenfrom among 35 origiruil nominees.Judges at the nominating tea wereJulia Ashenhurst, social sciences ad¬viser in the College, Perrin Lowrey,associate professor of humanities andchairman of the College humanitiesstaff, and Alex Orden, professor in theGraduate School of Business, Pam Smith, last year’s Miss UC, acted ascontest chairman.The three judges chose the candi¬dates on the basis of how they meas¬ured up to three criteria; Appear¬ance, which included grooming andcarriage; poise, or how the applicanthandled the situation; and person-ality, whether the nominee was inter¬ested, interesting, and/or responsible.Immediately after the results wereannounced, a protest movement, bornof discontent over the kick of “goodpeople’’ among the nominees, wasorganized. Its aim Is to agree upona write-in candidate for the com¬petition. But Mike Yesner, StudentUnion President, told the organizersat the time that a write-in candidatemust be a student and that he“wasn’t sure’’ if write-in votes couldbe legitimately considered.Intramural sportsTufts North with a total of 261points and Phd Kappa Psi with 267points won the riflery championshipin iheir respective divisions. Therewere 86 men representing 17 differ¬ent organizations firing in the touma- win in the Handball Tourney.INTRAMURAL MANAGERS arereminded that the entries for IndoorTrack, Basketball Free Throw, andBadminton are due Tuesday, Feb¬ruary 11 by 5:00 pm. Don Juanr promises entertainmentIt seems that the reasonmost cinematic adaptations ofoperas are unsatisfying Jx>thto the general viewer and tothe opera sophisticate is that too oftenthe production is one of the stagedplay; it is immediately an apologyto the viewer.Fortunately Don Juan, a Germanadaptation of Don Giovanni in cele¬bration of Mozart's bicenetennial an¬niversary is an exception to this rule.Though its faults are numerous, itis an entertainment on a grand scale.The viewer is .annoyed, however, bythe potential in the film not realized.Surely the gusto and grace in theperformance of Cesare Danovh asGiovanni and the wit of Josef Mein-rad’s Leporelia could have beenmatched by the remainder of ihecast find by those who sang theleads’ dubbed voices (with Englishsubtitles). Director Kolm-Veltee’s fa¬cility in comedy was enthusiasticallyexercised, as was his entire con¬ception of presentation, though it wastoo light for this viewer’s taste. But editing was often naive, the actingoccasionally atrocious, and condens¬ing the opera to less than half itslength lost too many of Mozart’s bestarias. The film was alive, but itdid not soar; it was content beingunpretensious and unremarkable.Don Juan has little intimation oftragedy before the final scene, which,by the way, lacks the power andprimacy of Don Giovanni’s, at leastin part because of the minimizationof Mozart’s music. In this respect,faliure to achieve an honest climaxis the film’s failure. In abandoningthe operatic stage concept for aspectacle — not the overwhelmingspectacle of the original but the su¬perficial swashbuckling type — DonJuan found its excitment. But thoughthe cliche of the Douglas Fairbanksimage saved the charm of the cen¬tral character (which, by the way,Siepi lacked in an earlier filmedGiovanni production) it lost the powerof the theme.The main fault of the plot of theoriginal libretto, the sermonized moralas Shaw put it, “repent and reform now; for tomorrow it may be tolate,” is too apparent to modernviewers, especially of this film, tobe excused as part of a master¬piece (which indeed it is). Eventhough Don Juan is a hero, one withwhom many of us can identify be¬cause of this defiance and mockeryof society, he is defeated, he kdamned.As for the performance of theVienna Symphony Orchestra and theconductor Bernhard Paumgartner, itis passable. It is a pity but we haveno Leinsdorf here. The “glorious”color is taken advantage of withmagnificent sets and elaborate cos¬tumes. Physically, it is a beautifulpicture, always moving. It is an en¬tertainment—and an interesting oneat that. So ignore the dubious pre¬views (“Now it can be shown!” and. . Danova looks as if he couldexcite females in the thousands!”)and attend tomorrow’s Midwest pre¬mier at the Hyde Park.—Dan BarshayCLASSIFIED ADSment.THE INTRAMURAL TRACKMEET will lx: held Thursday, Feb¬ruary 13th at 7 pm in the FieldHouse. TTids is one of the highlightsof the Indoor Intramural Season. PsiUjxsiJon and Thompson South art' thedefending champions.THE BASKETBALL SEASON iswinding up with most of the league’sfinishing this week. The RobberBarons and Lasers will meet headon in the feature game of the week.Jung and Riley, who have beenchosen as favorites, are continuing to Grad found deadRecent UC graduate WilliamDcshazor was found dead Saturdayin his YMCA room in Kansas City,Missouri. Police dire investigating thecause of the death.Deshazor was attending the TransWorld Airlines flight school in KansasCity. He received an AB in physicshere last June and was a studentat large here last quarter.A former Marine pilot, he wouldhave been TWA’s first Negro flightengineer. FOR RENT, ROOMS, APTS., ETC.FOR RENT, Avail, iinmed., lovelylarge, spacious 4»2 rm. apt., in eastHyde Park. Dedecorated with sandedfloors. Loads of closets. 5457 S. Everett.Reas, low rental. BU 8-1852 or PL2-6284 eves, and late at night.LOSTLOST in bookstore Jan. 25, one brownspiral notebook containing historynotes. Contact Joe Klems, PL 2-9718.HELP WANTEDPART-TIME employment, 2:30 to 5:30pm daily doing light office work. "Lehnhoff School of Music, BU 8 FOR SALENEW-USED BOOKS 10-30% DISCOUNTTYPEWRITERS—new - used electric -manual TO 45% OFF CURRENT MAR¬KET PRICE; used typewriters fullyrebuiit (not just reconditioned) andfully guaranteed. Discounts average25-30%. J. ALLYSON STERN-BOOK-SELLER, PL 2-6284 anytime (even lateat night).GOYA CLASSICAL GUITAR, 1 yearold. Reas. Call 624-0254.2 TELEFUNKEN mikes, almost new.35% off list price. Call ext. 3588 noon,afternoon or eve.Arab to speak onIsrael water disputeThe International Relations Club PERSONALSVALENTINES Day meet Harper SurfGirls.U-HAUL TRAILERSTrucks and trailers.Local or one-way any where.Leo Blinski, BA 1-9052.9057 Stony Island Ave.BRIAN for Miss U of C—SHOP.Too bad, R.K.HARPER Surf Valentine day coffeehour. Thurs. 9-11. 5426 Harper.CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP(PL 2-8377)TYPING: Rapid, reas., accurate. Willedit. Call Ronnie or Karen, eves.,NO 7-3609.COFFEE, cookies, rolls, girls — atHarper Surf.SALE! Giant-Size, Custom Finished, Full ColorBM'Siub ART PRINTS• Mounted on heavy board, covered with protective vamisb«• - save the cost of custom finishing• Eye-Catching additions to any home or office, will add AStunning flair to decorating• Magnificent four-to-six color fine art reproductions, mostlarger than this entire page• Subjects include masterpieces by such famous artists asiPICASSO UTRILLO GASSER MATISSECEZANNE VAN GOGH DEGAS ROUAULTRENOIR BRAGtUE VERMEER GAUGUINChoose from old andmodern masters, landscapes,seascapes, abstracts, portrait*,Japanese panels NOWONLY8ALEI TWO-INCH WIDE NATURAL SOLID OAK FRAMES TO FITThe framing service Is FREE, takes only a few seconds!13% x 15%-lnch size 2.19 18 x 24-inch size 2.9810 x 20-Inch size 2.69 20 x 24-inch size 3.29£4 x 30-incli size 3.95Natural Bamboo Design Frames to fit the Japanese Panels10 x 25-inch size 2.49 10 x 30-inch size 2.49 will hold a meeting on Thursday,February 13. in the main lounge ofIda Noyes. The speaker will be Dr.Sawzi Abu-Diab, a representative ofthe Arab Information League, whowill speak on the Jordan River wa¬ter dispute.The business meeting will begin at7:30, followed by the speaker at 8.Abu-Diab was formerly a memberof the Lebanese delegation to theU.N.Benefit tryouts heldOpen tryouts will be held todayat 8 p.m. for the Hyde Park Neigh¬borhood Club’s annual Spring bene¬fit show for children.The directors have Issued a gen¬eral call for singers, dancers, andactors. Tryouts will be held at theNeighborhood Club. 5480 S. Kenwood.Persons unable to attend are askedto call Mrs. Ernest Haggard at OA-4-6599 in the evenings. KAZOO players, appreciators wantedfor WINGDING. Thurs. night 9 pm inthe Back Room of the 1759 Restaurant,1759 Sedgwick, Old town. FREEKAZOOS! Also accepted—folk enter¬tainers. Non-alcholics are welcome inthis folk club.WATCH for TWA’s brochure. STU¬DENT TOURS OF EUROPE. CampusRep.: Mike Lavinsky, 745 Linn House,MI 3-6000.’TWIST party tomorrow! Registerguests ’til 5:00 Wed. at the activitiesoffice.WASH PROM is only two weeks away?Do you have YOUR date yet?????????ONLY four days left!! Boston and SanFrancisco flights are not filled if 20persons per flight are not signed up byFriday, Feb. 14 flights will be dropped.Call S.G., ext. 3272.SWAP is having a party at U. HighCafeteria. 59th and Kenwood. 7:30-11:30 All present SWAP tutors in¬vited.MODERN DANCE CLASSES NOTSTARTING in near — campus studio.For info. Call BU 8-4347.WASH PROM WASH PROMWASH PROM WASH PROMWASH PROM WASH PROMBOX OFFICE OPEN NOW!OF PA Ri X IS. E ■the lastRESORTin musicalComedyBook and Lyrics by Music bySTEPHEN BROWN ROBERT APPLEBAUMDirected byGERALD MASTFebruary 21. 22, 23, 28, 29MAN DEL HALL57th at University Ml 3-0800, Ex 35818:30 P.M. ($2.25: $1.75; $1.25)4 Tickets on sate at Mandel Halt box office, by phone, or mailFeb. 11, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3§• j BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentreAustinHealeyPeugeotComplete RepairsAnd ServiceFor All Popular ImportsMidway 3*45016040 So. Cottage Grove VALENTINE'S DAYThis Friday. February 14SEE OUR GIFTS AND CARDSTHE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.Albert SchweitzerCollegeChurwelden / Grlsont, SwitzerlandVeer Course on the problems of Westernculture end society,motfveted by theldesltof Albert Schweitzer. Lectures In Gsrmsnand English on philosophy, psychology,history of religion, politics! science, mo*darn literature end art Tutorials. Languagecourses, international community.Possible credit ee Junior Year abroad.For information, write to the aboveaddress er contact:Anthony OrumTel. 424-2227 THE 69 th ANNUALWASH PROM *TuxedoRentalForWash PromFriday12:30-5:00IDA NOYESFULL PRICE $8.00810 is the world's finestwriting instrument-writeson and on-yet it costs only19C, Only BIC is guaran*teed* to write first timeevery time. B!C’s“Dyamite’rBail Point is the hardestmetal made by man. Get a BIC, now atyour campus store. BIC “Crystal” 190.BIC pens available with blue, red, green,and black ink. Made in U.S.A. *For re*placement send pen to:WATERMAN BIC PEN C0RP., MILFORD, C0NW. In February ReJhoottfTalkto CollegeQirls about£ove and£ex"What can I do about sex untilmarriage?"“Whose business is it anyway butmine?"*‘Can I expect adults who ar«responsible for my well being to tellme honestly to ‘go ahead’?"Without invoking ideals, morals orsacred values, a distinguished doc¬tor and marriage counselor present*a practical, candid guide for collegegirls on the subject of modern love,premarital sex and marriage,FEBRUARY IREDBOOKJ'ke Magazine for \oung Adult«NOW ON SALE FOLK SINGERS WANTEDWITH OR WITHOUT EXPERIENCEApply at theART PUBTHURSDAY AT 9:30 P.M.7512 S. Cottage Grove FEB. 22. 1964 8:30 P.M.Featuring The Lane Emery OrchestraBob Hodge Jazz TrioThe Crowning of Miss U.C.University Theatre Will Be ThereRefreshmentsFormal Dress OptionalTickets $3.00 Per CoupleAvailable from S.U. Board Members,OFFSET PRINTINGMULTILITHINGDISSERTATIONSCLASS MATERIALSPOSTERS« FLYERSBUSINESS STATIONERY1230 EAST 63rd STREETFA 4 6360 • 363 4353 Interclub Members, Dorm and FratSocial Chairman(*)Yes, it really IS the 69thOF | PA Rj IS ERENT-A-CARPER DAYPER Ml TYPEWRITER SALE CONTINUESSee flip fine values in our window orat the Photo and Typewriter eounter.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.PER MILEATOMIC CARRENTALS, INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155 .1. Si. WATSON#1 pwolorsFOR THE IDEALVALENTINE DAYS GIFT1517 E. 55th HY 3-0773"55 Years On 55th Street"This is noweak-sisterdeodorant!... it’s new DR. A. ZiMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-4866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNTtoAN-POWftAfclVQSOLdeodorantMAN-POWERNew Man-Power Deodorant has what it takes to do a MAN’3job. Gives you the stepped-up penetration power, the stayingpower a man needs. Covers in seconds...controls perspiration...stops odor. And it’s absolutely non-sticky. Try it...the new deo¬dorant that does a MAN’S job. New Man-Power. 1.00 plus tax.EXTRA Bonus — the clean masculine aroma of OLD SPICE u l. t o n CAFE ENRICO1411 E. 53rd ST.WE ARE NOW SERVINGMICHELOB ON TAPFOR A LIMITED TIME ONLYI0« A GLASSalso LOWENBRAU - 25cCHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 11, 1964