RH&C to cooperateFast for FreedomThe University office of universities. This year, the US. Na-Residence Halls and Com- twinal Student Association (NSA) andtnons has agreed to co-oper- t h e Not'thern Student Movementate with the plan for a Fast ^s^CAare co^lnatf£ ** e'^t-tic Freedom, in which students wdl , ,skep dinner Wednesday, February emment *** paSSedThe NSA committee of Student Gov-a resolution“wholeheartedly supporting” the fast,and urging all students to participate.Money gathered from fasters wiltbe sent to students to buy food whichwill be sent through SNCC to unem-26, and donate the money saved tothe Student Non-violent Co-ordinatingCommittee (SNCC) for distributionto unemployed Negroes m the South.Students eating under board con¬tracts in BJ and Pierce Towers whowish to partciipate must sign pledges Teamsters Unionby tomorrow. Similar pledges will be According to the SG resolution,distributed to students in New Southern Negroes are “denied the un-(Kirms, and International House to employment compensation and wel-heip the cafeteria staff determine fare payments to which their whitehow much food they should cook, neighbors are entitled by law.”The University has agreed bo trans- Bruce Rappaport, president of UCfor 65c to SNCC fee each pledge re- CORE, said Southern counties either Vol. 72 — No. 35 University of Chicago, Tuesday, Feb. 18, 1964 31ployed Southern Negroes, using profeSf former SCflOOf board rofetransportation offered free by theCORE to picket Shriver speechR. Sargent Shriver’s lecture this afternoon will be picketed by the UC Chapter of theCongress of Racial Equality (CORE).The picket, which is described as merely an informational one, was called becauseoeived. This amount is the estimated refuse to accept Federal surplus food, Shriver, while President of the Chicago Board of Education, ‘“turned down NAACP peti-cost of the food bought specifically denying aid to both whites and Nefor one dinner, as opposed u> staples groes, or simply refuse to give foodke[W on hand.Collections for students not ontmard contracts will be made at IntHouse and New Dorms on the eve¬ning of the fast, as well as at CobbHall on tlie 24th through the 20th. to Negroes,Said Rappaport: “The main em¬phasis of this day will be on the‘fast’; it will be a chance for UCstudents to join with college studentsall over the country in a gesture of tions proving de facto segregation, *helped maintain de facto sergrega- information on the issue to chapterstion and aided in the appointment erf o£ CORE and the Student Non-Vio-., , . „ lent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)de facto segregationist Ben Willis, ^ mon other campuses, urging similarTlie fast on campus is sponsored voluntary abstention symbolizing theby UC Congress on Racial Equality force and prolonged deprivation(CORE), UC Friends of SNCC, and which is forced upon Negroes in Mis-Sludent Government. sissippi because of their attempts toTV* idea of a fast was begun last get the rights most Americans takeyear by students at several northern for granted.”Chase urges Federalcorps to teach in slumsFrancis S. Chase, former dean of cy for the more experienced teachersthe UC Graduate School of Education to request and receive transfers to 3:30 pm in Mandel hall. He is speakj>iv»()osed yesterday the creation of schools of their own choosingfederal corps of highly trained teach- “During the term of Board Presi¬dent Shriver, numerous attemptswere made by the Chicago NAACPto persuade Shriver that somethinghad to be done about the increasingracial segregation and inferiority offor maintaining “neutral Negro schools. Mr. Shriver was spe-these areas, according to cifically petitioned to this effect in1957 by the Chicago NAACP whichpickets of Shriver on other campuses.A CORE “fact sheet” criticizesaccording to CORE.Tlie demonstration will be only a“token” picket, involving five per- Shriversons, CORE president Bruce Rappa- areas”;port said, and no effort will be made CORE, were “districting devicesto keep students away from tlie lec- used for racial segregation, under presented him with a report clearlyture. which pupils could attend one or two indicating the seriousness and unust-Tlie new teaching force would be Peace Corps recruitment drive,made up of persons trained in tlie Members of the UC chapter of thenewest developments in teaching, and Young People’s Socialist Leaguewould receive a premium salary. (YPSL) will be present at the talkThe teachers would work in the local to hand out literatureschools either as leaders of teaching Shriver was recently appointed di¬teams or as consultants for the staff. rector of President Johnson s nation-mg personnel to work in slum anddeprived area schools. He made hisprofxisal at a convention of the Amer¬ican Association of School Adminis¬trators, being held in Atlantic City,New Jersey.Chase proposed that the federalgovernment train and subsidize as up such a program, Chase proposed dered a strong possibility hr theDemocratic vice-presidential nomina¬tion.The CORE picket is being heldlargely because CORE leaders feelShriver’s attitudes while on the Chi-Rappaport also said he learned or more schools rather than beinglate last night that Shriver’s wile strictly districted to one school.”had a baby yesterday, but William The abolition of these areas hadSonzki, co-ordinator of the trip in been recommended by a citizen ad-Chicago said this would not result in visory group, according to CORE,a cancellation. Some minor changes Not only was the suggestion ignored,in schedule might be made, he said, but “with the ascension of Shriver,but they were not .known last night, there were no more citizen advisoryShriver’s lecture will be held at groups,” according to the statement.The statement goes on to say that:“Likewise the Supreme Court deci¬sions of 1954 and 1955 received no re¬sponse from Mr. Shriver and Dr. Wil-isl—unless it was a negative response.For the large scale segregation of theraces in school and the deliberatemaintenance of unequal education bymodem advertising and propagandaing as part of a week-long ChicagoBecause of the difficulty in setting al "War on Poverty,” and is consi- de,^ce® ^ganmany as two hundred thousand teach- that individual cities start immedi-ers. These teachers would be assigned ately with their own pilot programs,at tlie request of local school officials, Such programs could be aimed atand would not be given a choice of as- providing “compensatory education”signment. One of tlie greatest prob- for those children who start schoollems of the big city school system, ae- with none of the advantages of chil-cording to Chase, has been the tenden- dren in better neighborhoods.Plan children's hospitalThe Home for Destitute been underway since the Board ofr> • i j /">i m j it'/-’ Directors of the Home and the Uni-( rippled Children and LC an- A fake school population explo¬sion was created ... by letting theNegro children pile up in the schoolboundaries where the Negro parentsfound themselves confined by hous¬ing segregation, the impression was. , , . created that there was a great needcago School Board, if they have not new gchooi buildings. This led tochanged, make Shriver “inappropn- support for igsues<“Once the money was secured itcould be used for anything the SchoolBoard desired. Many millions werenot even used to segregate Negroesin new schools, but for white schools.E'or example, over five millions wereate” as the head of the “War onPoverty.”Sent telegram SundayCORE sent a telegram to Shriverin Washington Sunday asking him toissue a public statement clarifyingversity agreed to join in such anflounced Saturday that plans undertaking m August of 1960. The chicaeoschool"inte° used for a northside teachers’ collegefor a new Children’s Hospital Home has maintained a hospital as hl*> P°sntic«i oti Chlcago SC™X>1 mtf attended by very few Negroesa new c nimien s riospitaia Qf the University medical cen_ gration. CORE would like Shriver to aweaaea ver^ lew Negroester since 1931. ness of tlie situation. Mr. Shriver’sanswer to this report and subsequentrequests by tlie NAACP and othercivil rights groups was either refusalor evasion.“In general, it was during the yearsof Mr. Shriver’s presidency that thereal, consolidated segregation of tlieschools was accomplished.“We, of (he UC Chapter of CORE,feel that if the above stands are stillupheld by Mr. Shriver, then perhapsMr. Shriver is not the appropriateperson to be the head of the “Waron Poverty” and we are particularlydisturbed as Mr. Shriver also seemsto be a front runner in the contest forthe Democratic Vice - Presidentialnomination.“We hope that we are wrong aboutMr. Shriver. We hope that lie nolonger or never did hold these typesof opinions and that our conclusionsabout his appropriateness for certainhigh positions are no longer valid.But, Mr. Shriver has not clarifiedhis position as we have requestedand as we feel is his responsibilityand therefore we have to assume ourconclusions are valid.“Again, we ask Mr. Shriver toclarify his position and to point outthe need for rapid and substantialchanges in the Chicago school sys¬tem.”engaged in a drive to raise $750,000to complete the financing of the build¬ing. Wick to speak tonight onUC images and realitygrationissue a statement urging “rapid andThe Board of the Home is currently substantial changes in the ChicagoSchool system to put an end to defacto segregation.”If such a statement is not forth-The hospital will be built north of coming, and if Shriver does not re-Lying-In Hospital and will connect pudiate his past actions as school Dean of Students Warner Wick’s talk is an indirect responseA. Wick will speak tonight at to ^ football sit-in on the fifty-yardthe Student Government ,ast November. At that time in-meeting on the topic “The “df»<*d .to the Student GovernmentUniversity of Chicago: Images and ** KsU! °f *e re‘Reality.” The meeting will begin at ^ ^ n0‘. as ,unP°r-7:30 pm in Business East and will ?*** ™der,ymg discontent u.be followed by a question period. T , ,by Howard D. Greenwald cut off from tlie society, she ex- Parents are now the least rnte- AU students are invited to attend. „ respon!^ .a Jetter m theplained. grated members of society, Dr. Mead Maroon by Frederic Branfman call-Amencans accept change These two conditions fostering continued. They cannot comprehend Dean Wick will address himself ing attention to changes from themore readily than people of chanee ar<» verv aDDarent in the changes they have seen in their the general issue of changes in “old college” to the “new,” Wickany other society, tlie world American culture Dr. Mead said. The lifetimes, as the grandparent of the the University during the past sev- wrote: “The" issues you mentionhas never known, said an- vast marjority of’Americans are des- last generation. The modern parent ^™lye5f' n'r m^y ^le’s mindsthropologist Marget Mead Sunday cendents of immigrants. This, she is figuatively an immigrant from the ^ ^ Tnight, at International House, in a said, started the tradition of change world into which he was born to the *^ *“*"* ^ if"?*■’>f)eech sponsored by Student Govern- that has become inherent in American present environment. He remembers realities *• . , ,. . ,?an ^ clan*ment. life. She added that since young mar- a time when there were no such thing o£ the reahties- ked ^gii discussion.Dr. Mead is curator of ethnology ried couples in this country tend to as man-made space satellites andat tlie Museum of Natural History in live apart from their parents, the "ucl«ar war’ 30(1 J*New York and professor of anthro- young mother is not subject to the olj the]n 35 Permanent things,pology at Columbia. guidance of the grandmother. This explained.This society’s change is not only separation interferes with the perpet- £)r Mead explained that the prob-more rapid than any ottier in the uad®n of £radlUonal ways of reaI'ing lem of integrating all age-groups intoworld, but a greater number and cly|dren k-om contact of mot ers the hanging society, has arisen fromAnd an enlarged program for re¬search and treatment of children’sdiseases have been completed. Thisprogram will be centered in a newS7.300.000 Children's Hospital whichwill be constructed as a part of theUniversity’s Hospitals and Clinics.Planning for tlie new hospital has with the rest of the medical center, board president, UC CORE will sendAnthopologist Margaret Mead speaks on effects of changeAmericans change most easilysheNew telescope installedat Yerkes Observatorydie parents of the present younger Dr. Mead said social change has ac- standing of the parents Parents, she Consin to chart an invisiblegeneration are the least aware of celerated in the last twenty years, said, take conservative attitudes about .. ,. , , . , ,heir environment, while the children, Twenty years ago, Dr. Mead said, such things as the H-bomb because ag _ pac ’grandparents and great -grandparents the grandparent’s generation was of their recollection of a time when fined by starlight polarized byfunction best in the quickly fluctuating American society’s most conserva- “one could die for freedom and cosmic dust.conditions of American society. tive force, tending to resist the change others would survive to benefit from scientists will use the new 24-Mead defined a society as a group they had seen. Exposure to the the others’ sacrifice.” Hie view that . . , ^ , ,of people containing both sexes and grandparent meant that the child this is impossible and man must inc^ Meeting teescope map s meill ages, including parent, child, and would be influenced to resist society’s change his attitudes toward war is giant magnetic field that coilsgrandparent. She said that a society increasing flexibility. Since then, Dr. held mostly by younger and older around our irregularly-shaped gal-Nianges when the “biological integ- Mead said, the speed of social change people because they have never seen ^ ^ilky Wayrity of its population changed.” This has become so great that the grand- society uninfluenced by the bomb, or y‘ y 'happens when a large segment of parent can no longer remain in so- have seen so much change that they Professor William A. Hiltner, ai-population undergoes migration, ciety without adopting the most mod- are more willing to accept new con- rector of Yerkes, wlio has made a cestor of all the large reflectors inw one of the age or sex groups is era innovations in life. ditkjns than their children* career of studying these magnetic the western world.A new telescope has been fields, designed the new instrument,fromFoundation.The new telescope, with a tubeseven feet long, was designed toohserve extremely small amounts ofpolarization with high precision.The 24-inch reflector replaces anoutmoded 16-inch telescope in theat Yerkes. Threeother major telescopes are in useat the observatory, including theworld's largest refracting telescopewhich has a forty-inch lens and a24-inch reflector which was the an-ers to the editorYPSL writes openletter to ShriverDEAR MR. SHRIVER:When you enter Mandel Hall toattempt to convince the students ofthe U of C to join the Peace Corps,you will have to contend with effortsto convince UC students not to do so.This attempt, which will be carriedout by the Young People’s SocialistLeague (YPSL), will be pursued toprotest the hypocrisy and insincerityof the government which you repre¬sent.In your speech, you will un¬doubtedly explain to your listenersthe great needs of the people of theunderdeveloped nations. You will talkabout their poverty and suffering.We fear, however. Mr. Shriver. thatin your talk this afternoon you willleave out the most important factswhich need to be told to Americancitizens; FACTS WHICH SUGGESTTHAT THE AMERICAN GOVERN¬MENT IS, IN MANY WAYS, DI¬RECTLY RESPONSIBLE FOR THECONTINUED SUFFERING WHICHTHESE NATIONS EXPERIENCE.Mr. Shriver. although nobody de¬nies the importance of social welfareYou 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 agencies like the Peace Corps, neithercan if be denied that the causes ofthe poverty which exists in theseunderdevoleped nations lies in theireconomic and political structure.Building hospitals and improving theliteracy rate is important, but abso¬lutely no real progress will be madeuntil we discuss politics.In Latin America, for example, ifthe governments of these povertystricken nations are governmentswhich represent the interests of thehandful of rich against the poor; ifthey are governments which areoligarchical and dictatorial in nature;if they are governments which main¬tain themselves in power solely byarmed force against the desires ofthe people; then the little amount ofaid which your Peace Coups can giveto the people of these nations is un¬important.Furthermore, Mr. Shriver, IFTHESE GOVERNMENTS AREMAINTAINED IN POWER BY THEMILITARY AND POLITICAL SUP¬PORT GIVEN THEM BY THEUNITED STATES GOVERNMENT,then your Peace Corps is somewhatof a farce.THE UNITED STATES GOVERN¬MENT HAS SUPPORTED, ANDCONTINUES TO SUPPORT, EV¬ERY REACTIONARY, AND ANTI-DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENTWHICH HAS EVER EXISTED INLATIN AMERICA.Mr. Shriver, you will no doubt sayPRINTINGPRAGA PRESS. Inc.4 union shopLow prices — high quality1510 W. 18th StreetMOnroe 6-7722 that America is sincerely interestedin helping the people of these coun¬tries. Then why is it that Americadoes not begin a real aid program?The US should transfer massiveamounts of capital to these countriesto help them industrialize. The USshould end all military aid so thatreactionary governments will beforced to give an accounting to itscitizens. There should be no aid tomilitary juntas and other anti-demo¬cratic governments.If you can not or will not deal withthese issues, Mr. Shriver, we willanswer them for you. The US cannot give genuine aid to the under¬developed nations because thatwould mean an end to capitalist prof¬its in these countries. It would meanthe nationalization of US investments.It would mean that the US wouldhave to give instead of take.What is a young idealistic collegestudent to do, Mr. Shriver? How canhe help the people of the underde¬veloped world when his governmentis doing everything it can to exploitthem? How can he knowingly prosti¬tute his idealism as a cover for yourgovernment’s imperialism?At the present time, the civil rightsmovement is the most militant andthe most active. So Mr. Shriver, thosewho are sincerely interested in eco¬nomic and social justice will not serveas a front for your capitalist system;instead they will oppose k in any waythey can.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO,YOUNG PEOPLE SSOCIALIST LEAGUE EDITORIALIs this picket necessary?UC CORE has put out a call to all good liberals to picket R. SargentShriver, director of the Peace Corps and ol President Johnson’s programto light poverty at home.CORE’S line of reasoning goes something like this: When Shriver waspresident of the Chicago Board of EJucation from 1954 to 1960, the Boardpushed through a public bond issue in order to build new facilities. Inchoosing locations for these facilities, CORE says, the Board deliberatelybuilt new schools in the middle of white and Negro neighborhoods, insteadof in border areas which would have promoted integration.Action was also taken, CORE says, to evade criticisms of the ’’neutralarea” system, which was used to keep schools segregated.For these reasons, CORE feels that Shriver did not favor integration,and indeed actively fought pressure from forces favoring integration.Now, w'hat good does picketing him do now. when he no longer hasanything to do with the Board? Well, says CORE, look at our view of theDemocratic party power structure. If we embarrass Shriver, a leadingpossibility for President Johnson’s choice as vice-president in this year'selections, we can cause pressure to be put on Mayor Daley from the upperechelons of the party. Daley can then pressure the present school board totake steps to increase integration.We do not accept the validity of this analysis of the political situation.Nor do we believe picketing will accomplish anything except (o east doubtupon CORE’s rationality. Nor do we believe that this attempt can succeedwhen in his work with the Peaee Corps and the poverty campaign Shriverhas so well demonstrated his true beliefs.CORE hopes that this demonstration will be followed by others shouldShriver not give publicly what they consider a satisfactory reply to theCORE telegram, (which he might or might not have gotten). The tele¬gram asked him to state his present position on integration in the ChicagoPublic Schools,What will this accomplish? Well, reasons CORE, it might just get himmore and more embarrassed. We do not see the usefulness of such tactics.We see no empirical evidence that the structure of the l>emocraticparty is such that a bunch of college kids pacing the sidewalks in frontof Mandel Hall will result in a miraculous chain of commands from thehierarchy to get sudden integration.dt is certainly evident that Shriver himself no longer has anything todo with the school board. Why doesn't CORE picket them?CORE has often done good things. In marked contrast to this uselesspicketing is the Fast for Freedom campaign, which is sponsored by COREin co-operation with SNCC and Student Government. This will result insome concrete aid to Southern unemployed Negroes. •CAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THE •Y'HY 3-5300 FA 4-5525 |PIZZA <Med. Large iiCHEESE . 1.45 2.00 |SAUSAGE . 1.80 2.35PEPPER & ONION . 1.65 2.20 11BACON & ONION . 2.15 2.70 1COMBINATION . 2.40 2.95 1MUSHROOM . 2.15 2.70 i£SHRIMP . 2.40 2.95 \THIS COUPON WORTH 50cON ANY PIZZA DELIVERYIN FEBRUARYPeace Corps Week on CampusThe Peace Corps: Who, How and Where $2.50Morley: The Necessary Conditions for aFree Society $5.95The United Nations: A Short Historyand many other titles. $1.75- See the window display atThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.IIY AB1SOAIISyracuse UniversitySEMESTERS ABROADGUATEMALA Spanish prerequisiteFRANCE French prerequisiteITALY No language prerequisiteLiberal Arts ProgramApplicants must secure the approval of theirhome college or universityFor information and opplieotion . . *Academic Programs Abroad . . . University College610 E. FAYETTE ST.. SYRACUSE. N. Y. 13202 BEAUTY and the BEARD(YOU'LL LOVE THE BLENDING)When an irresistible force like Ann-Margretmeets an immovable object like A1 Hirt...POW! You know she can sing bat wait 'til youhear him! And with A1 on his horn for extragood measure, "Beauty" and "The Beard"make a most happy "Bill Bailey,""Just Because," "Personality" and manymore. Get this joyous albumtoday. You'll love iL It's the blend.RCA VICTORmost tiusted name in sound Siuta1C. |be2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 18. 1964luarfet ends noontime concert series Friday Music reviewA program of string quartets, the^ in a series of daytime concertsonted this quarter, will takeLce this Friday afternoon at 12:30L jn M and el Hall.'H,e members of the quartet areEllen Karnofsky, cello, who per-bnne<i as soloist with the symphonyyt quarter in the Boccherini Cellofconcert; Barbara Herstein, viola; David Fulton, concert-master of theorchestra; and Tony Gordon, whowas a violin soloist in the BachDouble Concert performed by theOrchestra last year.The program will consist ofHaydn’s 30th quartet and Beetho¬ven’s quartet op. 18. no. 1. The con¬cert will last lor approximately 40minutes, and admission is free. Essence of Budapest indescribable'Innounce times, places for Wash Prom ticketsStudent Union (SU) announced Voting will be held Thursday and-pdeirfay the locations and times of Friday in Mandel Hall, Cobb Hall,lotang to determine this year’s Miss and Soc. Scd. during the day and)C. The winner will be crowned at in New Dorm Pierce Tower, and^ Wash P:om Saturday night by B-J at night. Students may vote'resident Beadle. upon presentation of an ID card.0a Campos withWaxShukan(Aufhttr of “Rally Round the Flay, Roys!”anti 1 ‘Barefoot Roy With Cheek.”)LVOL SPELLED BACKWARDS IS LOVEThey met. His heart leapt. “I love you!” he cried.“Me too, hey!” she cried."Tell me,” lie cried, “are you a girl of expensive tastes?’*“No, hey,” she cried. “I am a girl of simple tastes.”“< lood,” he cried, “for my cruel father sends me an allowancebarely large enough to sup|x>rt life.”“Money does not matter to me,” she cried. “My tastes aresimple; my wants are few. Just take me riding in a long, new,j 11 low convertible and I am content.”“Goodbye,” be cried, and ran away as fast as bis littlestumpy legs would carry him, for he had no yellow convertible,nor the money to buy one, nor the means to get the money—short of picking up Ins stingy father by the ankles and shak¬ing him till his wallet fell out.’ iM dm&tbdiShddm," *k admittedHe knew lie must forget this girl, but lying on his pallet atthe dormitory, whimpering and moaning, he knew he could not.At last an idea .came to him: though he did not have themoney to buy a convertible, perhaps he had enough to rent one!l!o|>e reborn, he rushed on his little stumpy legs (curious totell, he was six feet tall, but all his life he suffered from littlestumpy legs) he rushed, I say, to an automobile rental companyand rented a yello* convertible for $10 down plus ten cents amile. Then, with many a laugh and cheer, he drove away topic k up the girl.“Oh, bully!” she cried when she saw the car. “This suits mysimple tastes to a ‘T.’ Come, let us speed over rolling highroadsand through bosky dells.”Away they drove. All that day and night they drove andfinally, tins! but happy, they parked high on a wind-swept hill.“Marlboro?” he said.“Yum, yum,” she said.They lit their Marlboros. They puffed with deep content¬ment. “You know,” he said, “you are like a Marlboro—cleanand fresh and relaxing.”“Yes, I am clean and fresh and relaxing,” she admitted.“But, all the same, there is a big difference between Marlborosand me, because I do not have an efficacious white Selectratefilter.”They laughed. They kissed. He screamed.VWhat is it, hey?” she asked, her attention aroused.“Look at the Speedometer,” he said. “We have driven 200miles, and this car costs ten cents a mile, and 1 have only$20 left.”VBut that is exactly enough,” she said.f'Yes,” lie said, “but we still have to drive home.”“Oh,” she said. They fell into a profound gloom. He startedthe motor and backed out of the parking place."Hey, look!” she cried. “The sfieedometer doesn’t move whenyou are backing up.”He looked. It was true. “Eureka!” he cried. “That solvesmy problem. I will drive home in reverse. Then no more mileswill register on the speedometer and I will have enough moneyto pay!”"1 think that is a smashing idea,” she said, and she was right.Be cause today our hero is in the county jail where food, cloth¬ing, and lodging are provided free of charge, and his allowanceis piling up so fast that in two or three years he will haveenough money to take his girl riding again. £>1004 m». rnmimM* * *Marlboro Cigarettes, good as they are, should not be smokedbackwards. We, the makers of Marlboro, most earnestlyurge you to light only the tobacco end. Otherwise yoursmoking pleasure will be substantially diminished. An honored member of theMusical Jargon of the day is“objective criticism.” I’m notsure what it means, but Iwould guess that an “objective” re¬view of the concert by the BudapestQuartet would be a gnostic disser¬tation upon their tones, overtones,intonation, and interpretation, possi¬bly concluding that the group arewell past their apex and that weshould all return home to meditateupon their recordings of yesteryear.Hopefully, no one will be able toconfirm my suspicions, for anyonelistening to the concert in those termsmight just as well have missed it.Those who, on the other hand, wentto experience a demonstration ofthe love which these four men bringto music, rather than to hear a col¬lection of sounds per se, were wellrewarded. Devotion is contagious tothose who are receptive.“Very well,” you are thinking,“but by the third paragraph in a re-LEONFLEISHERFeb. 29, at 8:30 pmIllinois Instituteof TechnologyHERMANN UNION AUDITORIUM32nd & DearbornUnion Board Concert SeriesTickets ore $2.50 and areavailable at the box officeand by mail. view, an objective critic would al¬ready be reporting his findings inclear and definite terms, while youare still fumbling around for a way toexpress yourself.” True; but how amI to communicate the essential quali¬ty of the evening, that feelingaroused by the performances?Do I say that in the final mQve-ment of the Bartok Sixth QuartetI felt the full impact of the tragedyfor the first time? That these menwere obviously experiencing duringtheir performance what Bartok hadexperienced while composing in thewar-lacerated world of 1940? Andthat the audience, through this “con¬tagion of devotion,” was able to ex¬perience it also?Do I try to describe that timelesssensation derived from the BeethovenQuartet Op. 135, from which a kindof purified glow radiated into a wintryMandel Hall, bringing with it all thesunlight, breezes, and even the smellsof spring?No, that is not it at all. It soundscorny; you would rightly chuckle ifyou saw such exaggerated sentimen¬talism gushing through the pages ofEYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1200 East 53rd Street53-Kimbark PlazaHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscountWednesday/ February 19th, the Maroon. The only escape for thecritic is to discuss some irrelevantphilosophical point and hope to con¬fuse his readers into thinking thathe has said something profound aboutthe concert.I could say, for example: “Melo¬dy, rhythm, and harmony are notthe ends, but rather the means ofmusic. One with the complete con¬trol over his instrument necessaryto put every note in the proper place,who uses this to reach the true ends,is a skilled artist. But when one canreach these ends even when age hasstolen that complete technical con¬trol . . . that is genius.” (R. J.Reynolds, The Tuba and Modem im¬perialism, p. 345)Pianist too ambitiousNo, that doesn’t work either. Iguess I’ll just forget about trying toreview that concert. Instead, I’llwrite about Friday afternoon, whenthe Musical Society presented thesecond in its series of free lunchtimeconcerts, a recital by pianist EnriqueArias.Unfortunately, Arias picked a fartoo ambitious program. On paper,the combination of the Sonata Op. 26by Beethoven, the Sonata in A Minor,Op. 42, by Schubert, and the Proko-fieff Sixth Sonata seemed impres¬sive. But it soon became painfullyobvious that the artist had not con¬quered the even technical aspects oftlie music.As indicated by the previouspseudo-philosophical discussion, thishandicap can be overcome: in Arias’case, though, it proved to be fatal.The idea of free lunchtime con¬certs, however, is a good one, andhopefully more people will turn out forthe one this Friday, which will fea¬ture quartets by Beethoven andHaydn.Pete RabinowitzRENT-A-CARPER DAYPER MlPER MILE"OQPiL0)•BC3P> on Olivetti UnderwoodRepresentative willbe on campusto talk withgraduate andundergraduate studentsinterested in thefollowing trainingprograms:Manufacturing & ServiceSales & MarketingFinance & AccountingFor an interview,contact thePlacement Director. ATOMIC CARRENTALS, INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155OFFSET PRINTINGMULTILITHINGDISSERTATIONSCLASS MATERIALSPOSTERSFLYERSBUSINESS STATIONERY1230 EAST 63rd STREETFA 4 6360 • 36343532000 WORDS AWITH 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 excellentretention. This is not a skimming method; you definitely read every word.You con effectively apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual material aswell as to general reading. Your accuracy and enjoyment will be increased. No machines or apparatus areused in learning this skill. And the ACCELERATED RE ADING course is guaranteed.An evening course in ACCELERATED READING wi II be held in the University of Chicago area beginninggn March 31.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstr ation of ACCELERATED READING on WEDNESDAY,February 19, at 7:30 P.M. or MONDAY, February 24, at 8 P.M.BRING A BOOK!Demonstration will be held at the HOTEL SHERRY 153rd St. at Lake Shore Dr.) Chicago, III.NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING INC.507 Fifth Avenue. New York 17, N. Y.Feb. 18. 1964 • CHICAGOMAROON • 3Calendar of events Mrs. Scala to speak on campaignsTuesdayDiscussion: “Community Responsi¬bility for the Deprived Child." Mrs.Anita Cos well. Assistant Professor ofSocial Service Administration. Wom¬en's Alliance of First Unitarian Church.57th and Woodlawn: Fenn House, 5638Woodlawn Avenue. 1 pmPicket: R. Sargent Shriver; meet IdaNoyes 2:30 pm.Lecture: “Peace Corps.” R SargentShriver, Director of the Peace Corps;Mandel Hall. 3:30 pmVarsity Wrestling Match: UC vs.Illinois Institute of Technology; Bart¬lett Gymnasium. 4 pm.Lecture: “The University of Chicago:Images and Reality.” Warner A. Wick,Dean of Students, Student GovernmentMeeting: Business East 103 . 7:30 pm.Lecture: “World Court or WorldChaos.” International Relations Club,Donald Frey; Ida Noyes main lounge,8 pm.Radio Broadcast: “Crossroads.” “AnInterview with the Clancy Brothers andTommy Makem”; WUCB. 8 pm.Israeli Folk Dancing: Hillel Founda¬tion. 5715 Woodlawn Avenue. 8-10 pm.Folk Dancing: International House,$ 50 for non-members. 8-10:30 pm.Folk Dancing: Country Dancers, IdaNoyes Hall. 8 pm.Discussion: “The School Boycott:Pro and Con.” (Chicago TheologicalSeminary Student Association Meet-ingi; Davis Hall, 1164 E. -58th street,8 pm.WednesdayLecture: “The Sicilian Mafia.” (Com¬mittee on Social Thought!, Denis MackSmith. Fellow. All Souls College. Ox¬ford University; Social Sciences 122,4 pm. Discussion: "Judaism a^id Christiani¬ty”; Hillel Foundation, 5715 WoodlawnAvenue. 4:30 pm.Carillon Recital: Daniel Robins. Uni¬versity Carillonneur; Rockefeller Memo¬rial Chapel. 5 pm.Lecture Series: “The Music of In¬dia,” (Department of Music; Commit¬tee on Southern Asian Studies),“Rhythm or Tala and the Musical In¬struments of India,” Rajeshwan Datta,Visiting.Lecture: “AFL-CIO and Johnson SWar on Poverty,” Young People's So¬cialist League, Ann Draper; Palters’,5817 Dorchester, 8 pm.Lecture: “Morality and Modem War¬fare,” (International Student Coordi¬nating Committee), Rev. Peter Hen-riot, S.J.; Crossroads Student Center,5621 Blackstone Avenue. 8 pm.Lecture Series: “Polish Social Struc¬ture: Continuity and Change”; Down¬town Center, 64 E. Lake St., 8 pm.Lecture: “Nimrud Dagh,” (ChicagoSocietv of the Archaeological Instituteof America), John H. Young, Professorof Classical Archaeology. John Hop¬kins University; Breasted Halt, 8:30pm.Twist Party: UC students only, ad¬mission $ 25; Ida Noyes, 10:30 pm. Florence Scala, twice candidate foralderman of the frist ward and twicea victim of house bombings, willspeak Wednesday evening at 8 pmin the Thompson House Lounge onher encounters with the syndicateand the motivations which led herinto politics. Her speech is being co¬ sponsored by the UC chapter of theIndependent Voters of Illinois andThompson House Extempor.She will be speaking on Iter at¬tempts to break down the completecontrol of her ward by the West SideBlock, the political organ of the syn¬dicate. To speak on migrants‘ Migrant Workers in Ameri,yHarvest of Shame” will be the top^of a talk by Ann Drajier for theYoung People’s Socialist Leaguethis evening in Soc. Sd. 201,7:30 pm. Mrs. Draper is an interna¬tional representative for the Amal¬gamated Clothing Workers, AFL- JCIO, and a Socialist Party member.1ADSFOR RENT, ROOMS, APTS., ETC.OLD Town garden apts. 3** to 6 rms.$108 & up. DO 3-5718.COLLEGE Girl wants room to share.873-5943. Contact immediately.SECRETARY, free room Sc board forocca. typing. Keep other job. DR3-1133. TYPEWRITERS—new - used - electric-manual TO 45% OFF CURRENT MAR¬KET PRICE, used typewriters fullyfactory rebuilt (not just reconditioned)and fully guaranteed. Discounts aver¬age 25-30%.J. ALLYSON STERN-BOOKSELLER.PL 2 6284. anytime (even late at night)WHYTE DRIVERS to Phila. required foe au.iynew cars.Cheap travel to N.Y.C., etc.Must be 21 or older.Choose your own date.For Quarter's end reserve. NOWWm. Steigman. ext. 360 daily ST t*na>nd 11-12 pm.5 stringHY 3-6120 banjo LAYDIE.STUDIO apt., U* fir.. Jeffery Blvd.Spec. suit, foe 1 or more prot. per¬sons 288-6757. 1062 GHIA convertible. Low mileage.One owner. YO 5-1916 after 8 pm. FLY to Europe July 15-Sept. 16 $275Chicago-Paris/London-Chicago. 188 3072eves.PERSONALSThursday HELP WANTEDVarsity Swimming Meet: UC v».North Central College; Bartlett Gym¬nasium, 2:30 pm.Discussion: Child psychiatry (Pre-med Club), Dr. Harold Bovernian, As¬sistant Professor of Psyciatry amdPediatrics; Billings Hospital NB 29,7:30 pm.Varsity Track Meet: UC vs. NorthCentral College; Bartlett Gymnasium,7:30 pm. COLLEGE student, experienced foun¬tain clerk. Good pay, hours, positionof responsibility. Part time. Interview¬ing Wed. Sc Thurs.. Feb. 19 Sc 20.Reply Box 205, Ida Noyes Hall. STEVE, why were you really in Madi¬son. Wise.*U- HAUL RENTAL “ FLY. to NYC-or Calif Lowest rau*.NYC—1-way $28 25. R.T. 849 25CALIF. 1-way $68 20. R.T. $136 40Make reserv. now for spring breakCall MO 4-4761, 9 am to 3 pm daily.TYPEWRITERSNLW — USED — RENTALSSee our window display or inquire at theI’hoto and Typewriter counter.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE. LOSTLOST brownto S. S. 103. rim glasses. Please returnFOR SALE Trucks and trailers.Local or one-way any where.Leo Blinski, BA 1-9062.9067 Stony Island Ave.TYPING; rapid, reas., accurate. Willedit. Call Ronnie or Karen, eves.,NO 7-3600 CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP(PL 2-8377)INTERESTED IN RADIO? Join WUCBREMEMBER — Picket Shriver 2.46-4pm.SNUB WASH PROMNEW-USED BOOKS 10-30% DISCOUNT Happy Anniversary to you.Happy Anniversary to you.Happy Anniversary Neal ScHappy Anniversary to you. NO BEADLES—Just Beatles at Anti-Wash Prom Entente!Judy WASH PROMWASH PROMWASH PROM WASHWASHWASH PROMPROMPROMSCRU WASH PROMWe are sorryfor last Friday’s ad,but Enrico’s is nolonger running its10c a glass of beerpromotion NEW YORK CHARTERFLIGHT ELECT MISS UC. Voting th,s Thurs& Fri. A.M. Cobb, Mandel and SocSci.; dinner hrs. New Dorm, PieroTower, B J. Winner crowned aWASH PROM.WE want Miss UC Shop!00ROUNDTRIP LEAVE: FRI., MARCH 20RETURN: SUN. MARCH 2VCALL: Ml 3-0800, X3272Mon.-Fri., 3-5 p.m.COME: SG OFFICEIDA NOYES Have you got your WASH PROMticket yet? Advance sale price $3 00.$4 00 at the door.STOP! Charlie Brown is coming tothe Anti-Wash Prom Entente! ' bloiWASH PROM is THIS Saturday.INSTEADENRICO'S at 1411 E. 53rd SI. Mitzie's Flower Shop“For Y our ft ash Prom Flowers'*1340 E. 55th St. 1308 E. 53rd St.MI 3-4020 HY 3-5333 Would you want your daughter to Ukissed bv George Beadle? If not. conto the SNUB SCRU Wash Pronsame day, same time, God only knowwhere.SKI in the SUN spt int.: TAOS. N MEverything incl. lessons: $140 JohnCulp. PL 2 9874 or ext 2381 3594. Mala?deposits soon. Trip filling fast.Is Offering60 Oz. Pitcher$120*********************** **********++******+*+*********** DR. A. ZIMBLER. OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7444 DO 3-686AEYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNT BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentreComplete RepairsAnd ServiceFor AH Popular ImportsMidway 3-45016040 So. Cottage Grove k>do:I’rhevioBr<tnathenotueithej»la“Jerry Mast lias whipped lipj: an exotic laugliapalooza” America’s MostReligious Musical Comedy ‘Rich Mandel shows comic genius as—Jerry Mast, Director he romps through six different rolesand five different costumes” ibeeItocdeibetgretilesuj.he;>"The set design, lighting effects,make up, and costumes are veryi; nice and pretty”—Joshua C. Taylor, Professor of Art —Rich Mandel—Rich Mandel—Rich Mandel—Rich Mandel—Rich Mandel-—Rich Mandel(?)/WA Positive step towards ahealthier peer groupequilibrium uThe music is too exquisite-Thomas O’Keefe, Director of Student Activities |Q j;gten f(> ^itHoilt pain”Grosrenor W. Cooper, Professor of MusicIf you liked Dick and Jane, you'll loveSLICE OF PARADISE %4b,%%ro.i; February 21, 22, 23, 28, 29 Tickets: 52.25, $1.75, 51.25 Mandel Hall, 5706 South University, Ml 3-0800 ExL 35814 f*" Isit \dot1adVninsailltd,gytonUCua>Chispo4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 18. 1964