YoL 72 — Na. 38 University of Chicago, Friday. Feb. 28, 1964 31Hass tells football plansWick answers SG resolutionby Bob LeveyDean of Students WarnerWick responded Wednesday,after a delay of over threemonths, to Student Govern¬ment (SG's) mandate concerning thenature and the extent of football atUC.SG. at a special meeting on No¬vember 12, four days after the dem¬onstration at the 50-yard line thathad brought the football controversyto a head, had asked the ExecutiveCouncil “to take appropriate actionto seek to implement guarantees that, football at the University of Chicagosliould be placed under positive con¬trol.’*Wick’s response, in the form of aletter to SG president Don Congdon.asserted that the administration has“no plans concerning a change in thestatus of football.’’ “We have noplans to joto any existing athleticconference,” Wick wrote, “and wecannot imagine a conference in whichour membership would be both de¬sirable and feasible.”Wick’s letter also promised that,if any change in policy concerningloot ball were ever seriously con¬sidered, “the fact would be madeknown, so that the wisdom of theproposals might be examined by stu¬dents and faculty alike.”Wick summed up his position bystating that “It is my hope that thisdeclaration may lay the issue to■ rest.”Walter Hass, UC athletic director,concurred for the most part withWick’s declaration. Hass stated thatit was “my feeling all the time”liiat the status of UC football shouldremain unchanged, and corroboratedWick’s statement that no plans existat present concerning membership inany athletic conference.“We're in kind of an odd positionathletically,” Hass commented. Hesiiid he was not quite sure where UCbelonged, but added that he hasnever had any trouble schedulinggames.Hass emphatically agreed that both students and faculty should have avoice in determining policy formula¬tion. But, he added, Wick’s declara¬tion did not touch upon anythingreally new in this regard, since “itseems like the students had plentyto say on the 50-yard line!”Hass said that he had had no of¬ficial notification on plans for the“other uses” of Stagg Field, to whichWick referred in his letter. Heguessed, however, that the “otheruses” referred to the construction ofa new library. Hass said, in this con¬nection, that he would “hate to see”Stagg Field used for other purposes,but he noted that if such other usagewould benefit UC to the long run, hewould be all for it.Questioned about plans for nextyear's football team (class?), Hassasserted that, tentatively at least,the classteam will participate on ap¬proximately the same level as theydid this year.According to Hass, next year’sfootballers will play 4 or 5 games.All their competition will be withJunior Varsity teams from aroundthe area. In any case, Hass related,the group will still play as a class.Hass would make no prediction asto the number of players he expectsto come out for next year’s team-class. He noted, however, that CoachSid Stein had overestimated thisyear’s turnout. Said Hass: “Mr.Stein got very optimistic. He hadlisted many more men than actuallyhad any intention of coming out forthe team.” Stein was unavailable forcomment.Hass concluded that money forfootball improvements, such as newuniforms and field upkeep, will comeeither from the general Physical Edu¬cation Department budget or fromwhat Hass termed the “emergencyfund:” a fund composed of admis¬sion fees charged at basketballgames.The text of Wick’s letter to Cong¬don follows in its entirety:DEAR MR. CONGDON,At the Student Government meetingon November 12, 1963, the Seven¬teenth Assembly mandated the Exec¬utive Council “to take appropriate action to seek to implement guaran¬tees that football at the Universityof Chicago should be placed underpositive controls.”Now that things have quieted downso that the problem could be handledwith some objectivity, I have metwith representatives of your Execu¬tive Council and now wish to declaresome policies of die University re¬garding football, which, like othersports, falls within my jurisdiction,subject to the supervision of theProvost, the President, and the Boardof Trustees.1. We have no plans concerning achange in the status of football,but if it were to be made anofficial part of the athletic pro¬gram, it would be for the sameobjectives, and would be handledin the same spirit, as our otherinter-collegiate sports.2. We have no plans to join anyexisting athletic conference, andwe cannot imagine a conferencein which our membership wouldbe both desirable and feasible.3. Should definite proposals abouteither the official recognition offootball or membership in anathletic conference come underserious consideration, the factwould be made known, so thatthe wisdom of the proposalsmight be examined by studentsand faculty alike.It is my hope that this declarationmay lay the issue to rest, especiallyin view of the probability that StaggField may soon be put to other uses.This would require us to find anotherplaying field where it would be bothimpracticable and ruinously expen¬sive to build facilities for large-scalespectator sports.It h>- been decided, further, thatreceipts from the sale of tickets toathletic events at the University willbe paid into a general Universitysundry income account not under thecontrol of the Department of Physi¬cal Education. While this has beendone primarily for our conveniencein budgeting, it will have the inci¬dental effect of removing any incen¬tive for the Department to increaseits income.YOURS SINCERELY,WARNER A. WICKDEAN OF STUDENTS School boycott a success;75 students participateDespite the fervent opposi¬tion from the Democratic ma¬chine and powerful civil rightsgroups, the Chicago SchoolsBoycott Tuesday proved to be almost80 per cent as big as the one last fali.Thirty-five to forty per cent of the480,000 children in the Chicago schoolsystem took part in the protest.Seventy-five UC students conductedclasses and led discussions about thepurpose of the boycott at the Free¬dom Day schools. Among the partici¬pators at the South Shore High Schoolpicket, 25 UC students helped to passout leaflets for the boycott.Calvert House held its own campus Freedom Day school. Under the di¬rection of Mrs. William Van Cleve,wife of the UC registrar, the schoolopened to twenty-seven pupils fromthe Ray and Kozminsky schools inthe neighborhood.Freedom Day started with thePledge of Allegiance and the StarSpangled Banner. After the childrensang freedom songs, a discussionbegan on the meaning of “freedom”and “boycott” in the civil rightsstruggle.The children then divided intogroups according to class grade andstudied Negro history.Oxford competition beginsSummer grants availableThe College staff an-of the English language from thenounced competition thisweek for two full scholar¬ships to the Oxford Univer¬sity Summer School, Oxford, Eng¬land.The Summer School runs from July6 to August 14, and this year willcenter upon “History, Literature andthe Arts in 17th Century England.”The scholarships will be awarded tojuniors or seniors in the College whoare majoring in any of the fields inHumanities.The summer program at Oxfordis designed to give students thesame kind of experience that theywould have were they in one of thecolleges in regular term-time. Theschool will be based in Exeter Col¬lege, where most of the students willlive, and will provide University tu¬tors for the various groups studyingdifferent aspects of the period.A series of lectures, given by Pro¬fessors and Lecturers of the Univer¬sity and by literary critics, authors,and musicians, will cover various as¬pects of history, literature, and thearts in the 17th century. Insofar aspossible, the arrangements for thestudent will be like those in term-time: he will dine in hall, work withEnglish students who are assignedto the program, and will be invited,as Oxford undergraduates are, tovisit socially with his tutors and pro¬fessors.In history and politics, there willbe three groups, concentrating on 1)The early Stuarts and the Great Re¬bellion: 2) From the Great Rebellionto the Revolution; and 3) SeventeenthCentury Political Ideas. In literaturethere will also be three groups; 1)Donne and the metaphysical poets, 2)Milton, and 3) Jacobean and Restora¬tion Drama. There will also be aseparate group on the development time of Chaucer until the presentday.The two scholarships offered bythe College for (his summer are thegift of a donor who wishes to remainanonymous, and will cover transpor¬tation to and from Great Britain,tuition, board, and residence costs.A Committee of University of Chi¬cago faculty members will select thebest applicants and award the fellow¬ships.The deadline for application isMarch 15th. Juniors and seniors inthe Humanities who are interested"”■■■ IThis is the next-fo-las?MAROON of the quarter.There will be no MAROONon Tuesday; the last issuewill appear a week fromtoday. Advertising andcopy deadlines for nexf Fri¬day's issue are Thursday at2 pm. Those interested injoining or rejoining thestaff may do so at the be¬ginning of next quarter.There will be a staff meet¬ing at that time.should submit a letter to PerrinLowrey, associate professor of Eng¬lish and tiie Humanities, and Chair¬man of the Oxford Scholarship Com¬mittee, giving reasons for wanting toattend (he Oxford Summer School.After preliminary selections havebeen made, the Committee will askthe leading candidates to appear be¬fore it for an oral examination.For further information concerningthe Oxford summer program and thetwo fellowships to be awarded, in¬quire at the College Humanities Of¬fice, Gates-Blake 319.McNeill speaks on historical influence of diseasestury, which reduced Europe’s popula¬tion from 25-50% within 3-4 years.Also, after Columbus and DaGammathe seaways became open, resulting¬ Neill, that there were no greatplagues after the 18th century. Hiisend of effective plagues occurredsimultaneously with the reverse inWilliam H. McNeill, chair¬man of the history depart¬ment, spoke Tuesday at aluncheon for the IndustrialSponsors for the Research Instituteat the Quad Club.He spoke on the topic “Diseases inHistory.” “I was drawn to this sub¬ject,” stated McNeill, “when one dayI came across a most interestingfact. I found that when Cortez andhis men first occupied Mexico City,a successful Indian resistance move¬ment was effected, and Cortez andhis men driven out—but the leaderof this movement died within 48 hoursof his success, from smallpox.“Here is one instance where diseaseplayed an obviously significant rolein history,” McNeill said, “and it ledme to investigate further into therole that diseases have played inhistory.”McNeill found three books especial-, ly pertinent to the subject. One, de¬scribed by McNeill as “rather melo¬dramatic,” is entitled The Ranks ofDeath, A Medical History of theConquest of America—by P. M, Ash-bum.The second, by Cook and Stevens,^ entitled The Population of CentralMexico in the 17th Century. Thosejrooks revealed that the Indian popu¬lation at the tame of Cortez’s arrival was 11 million, and within 130 yearswas reduced to 1.5 million.What caused such a tremendousdecrease in the population? It seemsthat the American Indians, livingisolated from all civilizations buttheir own, had developed no immu¬nity to the diseases common toEuropean civilization. Thus, when theSpaniards began to expand all overMexico, they brought with them di¬seases that the American Indianshad never experienced, had conse¬quently never developed any im¬munity for, and the result was theremarkable decimation of the Ameri¬can Indian population.This, of course, made Spanishconquest quite a facile matter. Thisphenomenon, believes McNeill, iscertainly not limited to that one oc¬currence — disease GENERALLYplayed a very significant role to theexpansion of European civilizationand the decay of barbarian, or prim¬itive, civilizations.But if Europeans somehow devel¬oped resistance to these diseases,where and when did they get them inthe first place? The answer seemsto be during the latte Roman Empire.We find descriptions of how diseaseran rampant, how there was amarked decrease in population, even how various emperors died of com¬mon diseases, McNeill related.Just before tliis time, importanttrade routes liad been established fordie first time (for example, trans¬ports across Eurasia). Merchantstraveled back and forth regularly,bringing with them not only goodsbut, very likely, diseases.This exchange of disease (especial¬ly the introduction of certain diseasesto Roman civilization) brought abouta depopulation similar to that of theAmerican Indians during the Spanishconquest. But since the diseaseswere separated by greater space andtime, the effet was not quite the“hammer blow” dealth the AmericanIndians.Still, the effect was great, and maybe considered one of 'the factors inthat historical enigma, the declineand fall of Rome.McNeill added that economic andsocial similarities between fourth-century Rome and 16-century Mexicofurther support this parallel; for ex¬ample, the shift from urban to coun¬try living and the increase of forcedlabor.As for diseases’ effects in othertimes, McNeill mentioned briefly thefamous Black Death of the 14/th-cen- ly affecting both barbarian and civil¬ized populations.Applications for financialassistance for the academicyear 1964-5 may be ob¬tained in the Office ofCollege Aid, Administra¬tion 200, beginning Man-day, March 2. The deadlinefor filing applications isMay 1. Students are urgedto pick up the appropriateforms before the end of theWinter Quarter.The third book that McNeill stu¬died, by Rogement, was a detailedstudy of parish records in 14th-18thcentury France. “What I found quiteamazing,” remarked McNeill, “washow casually the people accepted thefact that their population was reduced40 or 50% in the space of a year or the European population trend—e.g.,from decreasing to increasing (ap¬prox. 1650-1750), so it Is not assumingtoo much to conclude that the plagueswere one of the greatest checks onEuropean population, and when theywere no longer effective, the popula¬tion relatively exploded,” McNeillsaid.The end of the effect of plagueswas probably a result of the increas¬ing mobility of people. The disease ofthe whole world (with the exceptionof such things as Yellow Fever,jwhich required a special mosquito tocarry it) had circulated through new¬ly dense population centers such asLondon and Lisbon. This diffusion ofdisease resulted in the nan-isolatedpeople of the world acquiring generalresistance to the most common di¬seases.McNeill added that the introductionof modem medicine cannot reallyexplain the end of the plagues’ effect.It is obvious why this explanation iserroneous when one considers exact¬so. To them it was simply a ‘plagueyear,’ and they let it go at that.”It is important to note, added Me- ly what “modem medicine” amountedto in the 17th and 18th centuries.Attacks Wick statements;Mourns comp lossTO THE EDITOR:I was appalled at the statementsattributed to Dean Wick in Friday'sMaroon. The remarks about the Uni¬versity of Chicago College in theearly 50’s were so completely falsethat I can only assume Dean Wickwas misquoted.I was an early entrant in the Col¬lege in 1950, and am currently work¬ing on a Ph.D at the University ofChicago. In order to set the recordstraight, let me say that it did nottake “most high school graduates”of the early 50’s three years to geta BA., as Dean Wick is quoted assaying. In my years in the CollegeI did not meet even one high-schoolgraduate who had to take threeyears of courses in order to obtaina Hutchins BA. The vast majorityof high-school graduates took twoyears to get a BA—although amongmy personal acquaintances were fivehigh .school graduates who requiredless than two years.Similarly, I did not know ONEearly entrant whose tests resultedin placement requiring more than3Vfe years to the BA for those en¬tering after the sophomore year ofhigh school or 3 years to the BA forthose entering after their junior year.I would hnagine that there were afew instances of the kind of retar¬dates to which Dean Wick referred,bat for him to put “most” enteringstudents in this category isn't justan exaggeration; it is an untruth.If the College records of the early50’s are made available to a respon¬sible, impartial examiner. I’m suremy observations would be substan¬tiated.As for the statement by DeanWick that “the College was not ahealthy place for students either asstudents or people,” I can only cate¬gorically disagree. In terms of thesparking of intellectual curiosity andgrowth, I consider my years in theCollege as the most valuable of mylife. I am dismayed that a memberof the administration of the Univer¬sity of' Chicago should see fit to malign the efforts of several dozenreputable past-members of the facul¬ty and administration—tliose respon¬sible for the creation of the Collegeprogram as it existed in 1950. Thisis all the more surprising comingfrom one who, to my knowledge,has had no significant contribution tomake to the educational program atthe University of Chicago.Dean Wick is quoted as sayingthat students of the early 50’s feltthey “didn’t need to go to classesor study.” Who. then, were all thoseindividuals in my classes? Why wasit so difficult to find copies of re¬serve books on the library shelves?It would seem that the real sourceof irritation for Dean Wick is thatstudents were not “made” to go toclasses or to study.Contrary to Dean Wick’s view. !consider the loss of the year-endcomprehensive system to be a tra¬gedy for current students. As a Col¬lege student in the early 50’s, I hadan entire year to think over thesubject matter of a course—to pulthe pieces together, so to speak.I had time to THINK. A quarterlycourse system encourages the frag¬menting of subject matter into littlestacks of trivial details neatly pack¬aged for student memorization. Astudent so burdened is not prone totake a broader view of the subjectmatter, to relate it to eurrent worldproblems or to other areas of aca¬demic study. If today’s College stu¬dent is able to integrate his littlepackages into any kind of compre¬hensive view-point it would seem tobe in spite of his classwork, ratherthan because of it.The most valuable lesson taughtthe student by the year-end compre¬hensive was the lesson of self-pacingand self-discipline in study. The re¬sult, as I observed it in myself andamong my friends, was a great dealmore critical thought, interest, andinvolvement in the readings, for wewere reading because we chose todo so. Dean Wick makes much ofthe fact that some students wereunable to learn the necessary self-discipline to profit by the programof the Old College.But do these same students learnTHE STORE IS GONEBUT THE QUALITYREMAINS THE SAMECome in and see our new selectionof hand carvings, Turkish Copper-ware, Standards dating back to 1500B.C., Wooden Jewelry, and of courseMULTIFORM.SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSNO 7-40401538 East 53rd Street#Formerly of Hie Arf Colony12 Noon * 8 P.M. Doily; Sunday 12 Noon - 6 P.M,Also of SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS, INC. BEVERLY HILLS. 1104? S. HALE;When In Evanston visit SCANDINAVIAN DESIGN. 501 CHICAGO AVE. self-discipline by being told whatpages to read each week, when tohand in a paper, when to be readyfor a quiz, etc.? I submit that theydo not, and that the only consequenceof the institution of greater control inmajority of capable students of theopportunity which I enjoyed, andwhich they are perfectly capable ofhandling constructively.The abandoning of the compre¬hensive exam seems to reflect adecision to conduct the College at thelevel of the most immature and in¬capable students. Do current Collegeadministrators really believe thatthis paternalistic approach belterprepares students for graduate andprofessional school, for participationin the world of business or of poli¬tics, or for family responsibilities?As for the “changes” in the Col¬lege, may I say that I see no greatchange in the student body. Thereseems to be the usual small minori¬ty of “neurotic genuises,” “juveniledelinquents,” and “reds,” today asin the early 50s. However, the ma¬jority of current College studentsappear to possess the same twocharacteristics so evident in stu¬dents of the early 50's: intellectualexcellence and an independent mind— a mind skeptical of “givens”whether they be those of science,politics, or the arts.The “change” in the College is tobe found in its organization and ad¬ministration and in its teachers,rather than in the student body.Certainly constructive changes couldhave been made in the college ofthe early 50's. What a sad reflectionon the vision of the post-Hutchinsadministratirs that so few construc¬tive changes were made, and sovery many purely destructive ones.NAME WITHHELDWick defends opinionsfrom ‘Name Withheld’attackTO NAME WITHHELD:Aside from assuring Name With¬held that I too regret the disappear¬ance of most of the year-end com¬prehensive examinations, I will Limitmy comments to matters of factrather than opinion.There were always many highschool graduates whose placementtest results gave them two years orless to go for a general educationB.A., but there were so many whorequired (or who took) longer thatthis fact was one of the principalreasons for the decisoin, made in1953, to “relocate” the B.A.This situation, in which the place¬ment system worked against us de¬spite its advertised opportunities foracceleration, was, however, a func¬tion of placement standards. Therewas a time when high school gradu¬ates were held to lower standardsthan early entrants in order to enablethem to finish the B.A. on schedule.(This was an earlier version of whatwas later called ‘mitigation.’) Butthe faculty was unhappy with stu¬dents assigned to the upper levelswho had never mastered the funda¬mentals; and when placement stand¬ards were made uniform, high schoolgraduates found that they had signi¬ficantly more comps to take.My remark that the College of 1952“was not a good place for young¬sters” was a direct quotation from afamous report to the Policy Commit¬tee of the College Faculty by a com¬mittee headed by the late WilliamBradbury, Associate Professor of theSocial Sciences. This judgment wasnot addressed to all aspects of theCollege, but only to its characteristicsas a student community; and thereport’s title had to do with “TheNon-Intellective Factors in AcademicSuccess.”Had Name Withheld heard myspeech, I think she would have un¬derstood that I thought there weremany wonderful things about theCollege she loved.WARNER WICKBEAN OF STUDENT'SAsk catalog changeover cafeteria statusTO THE EDITOR:Neither snow, nor rain, nor heat,nor dark of night has prevented UCstudents from making long trips toavoid New Dorm Cafeteria. Althoughlocal eating establishments are not famous for fine quality food or lowprices, they have been overwhelm¬ing competition. University officialsare upset. They have not felt it nec¬essary to ask students why theydon’t eat in the cafeteria but areextremely unhappy that they don’t;the cafeteria is losing money.The real test of the opinion of anadministration for its students liesin the respect it gives their views,the action it hikes on their wishes.As the administration so nicely com¬ments on page twenty-six of the Uni¬versity of Chicago College Announce¬ments 1963-64, “The University thusrecognizes its responsibility for main¬taining comfortable and attractiveliving quarters for its students andeven strives for the unattainablegoal of a food service that pleaseseverybody.”Widespread rumors state that resi¬dents of New Dorm will be pul oncontract next year. It is extremelyinteresting that the University shouldplan to “please everybody” by in¬stituting board contracts which itwell knows the vast majority ofstudents do not want. With boardcontracts there is no alternative butto cat whatever quality food is of¬fered at any price.If board contracts are in actualityto be instituted next year in spite ofstudent desires, in the interest ofhonesty we suggest that page 26 ofthe .Announcements be altered to:“The University strives for the un¬attainable goal of large profits withpoor food and services. It has beenfound that this is only possible withboard contracts. Although the admin¬istration pays little attention to stu¬dent desires, tliose unhappy with thesituation are free, if they pay theirbill, to evidence disapprov'd by noteating.”KATHY RYANCARLENE BRYANTYPSL points outsuccess of boycottTO THE EDITOR: .Tuesday’s school boycott broughtout 172,350 absentees, nearly 80% oflast October’s boycott. This is hardly“lack of clearcut support" as youreditorial charged. Negro parents real¬ized. as the Maroon did not, thattheir children, segregated in over¬crowded, understaffed, underequipjiedschools; living in the worst slums;and facing as adults the higliest un¬employment, the lowest pay and theworst jobs; would lose little fromone day out of school.That so many were willing tostage a second protest, despite inten¬sive opposition by the Negro aider-men and the NAACP, plus the citymachine, signifies not “poor organi¬zation but rather Chicago Negros’ re¬jection of the sops tlirown them bytheir supposed representatives. Tlieydemand equal rights now.This boycott is one more step intfie Negro fight for freedom andequality. Negotiations alone haveachieved nothing. The few sham “con¬cessions” the Board has made — asurvey of the racial composition ofthe schools and a statement for in¬tegration so meaningless that eventhe one responsible Board memberpresent refused to endorse it — havecome only after a summer and fallof militant demonstrations.In fact, to achieve their demands,Negroes will have to move beyondboycotts to more forceful projects re¬quiring real mass participation. Nota few leaders but only the organizedNegro community can effectivelyfight for equality and freedom throughsuch action as rent strikes, masscivil disobedience, and independentpolitical candidates. They must getrid of the aldermen who give lipservice to equality wliile supportingthe Democratic machine which keepsschools segregated and refuse to passor enforce open occupancy or FEPClaws.At the same time they must breakwith the Democratic Party altogether.In at least two major northern cities,New York and Philadelpliia, Demo¬cratic Party left-wing “reformers”have formed their own machines,which have failed to fight ghettos,segregated school systems and jobdiscrimination any more than in Chi¬cago. These same left-wing “re¬formers” m the Democratic Partycontinue as well to insist that theAdministration’s civil rights bill is sufficient for the time and refuse tofight for anything better. This bill,inadequate against even the Southernforms of segregation, does not ovendeal with the massive unemploymentproblem and the de facto segregationin the large Northern Negro ghettos.It is clear that the road towardsprogress for the Negro people docsnot lie in co-operation with such phony“reformers.” Only through a totalbreak with established politics a»<[an alliance with sections of the whitecommunity facing the basically simi¬lar economic problems of unemploy¬ment and automation can Negroeswage a successful fight for theirrights.While such developments will hard¬ly be immediate, it is all the more ,important for the Negro movementto continue in this direction. Tlieycannot move a step closer to iliegoal by inaction, and their continuedmilitance demands the support of .,11those who are really for equality andfreedom now. UC students must jointhe fight.EXECUTIVE COMMITTFEYOUNG PEOPLE’S SOCJAI 1STLEAGUEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOMusical automation at UC ?TO THE EDITOR:I feel compelled to protest Mon¬day’s concert sponsored by the Mu¬sic Department in which a “com¬puter” cantata will be performed bylive pel-formers. In our day of tech¬nological unemployment, is it notcontrary to the economic interests ofthe community to use human jier-formers when there are so many un¬employed machines in the Admin¬istration Building?This is. however, a reactionary stepnot only from an economic point ofview, but also from an artistic one.Is the Music Department still so 14thcentury in its outlook that it dot's notyet know that machines are farmore reliable musicians than falli¬ble human artists?At another university, one couldexpect such anachronism. But. thisis particularly outrageous at UC. foryears one of the liberal leaders inthis field, being, according to a it?-cent study, the first American uni¬versity to spend more money on ma¬chines than on students.Is this part of the conspiracy whichincludes the closing of the C shop(also run by machines)? I hope not.But I urge you all to write vigorousletters of protest to the Music De¬partment at once.PETE SICADORectifies Prom errorsTO THE EDITOR:I would like to make two correc¬tions to your Wash Prom story oflast Tuesday.First, the crowd was approximate¬ly 135 couples rather than the 120people you reported.Second, there was an additionalerror in the program book which youmay have overlooked. In the pub¬licity credit, we inadvertently mis¬spelled Mr. Levey’s last name.Please accept our apologies.MIKE YESNERGENERAL CHAIRMANWASH PROMChicago MaroonActing Co-Editor* David L. Aiken,Robert F. LeveyEditor-in-Chicf John T, William*Business Manager Harris S. JaffeCulture-Feature EditorSharon GoldmanAssistant to the Editor, Robin KaufmanEditor, Chicago Literary ReviewMarc CoganPhoto Coordinator Bill CaffreyEditorial CartoonistGeorge Alexander PopeExecutive SecretaryMarveila AlUuinaerCirculation Manager Jan GraysonBusiness Staff Dennis Toniasallo,John Culp, Jan PaynterEditor Emeritus Laura GodofskyStaff: Kills Levin, Howard Greenwald,Joan Phillips, Rick Pollack,Paul Aronson, Mike Silverman,Dick AUee, Mike Klowden,Diane Friedman, Karen Justin,Maren Greeley, Martha Gross-blatt, Sol Kahan, Pete Rablno-wits, Dave Richter, David Cur¬ley, Bob Schehr, John Beal, JimSerwer, Tom Heagy, DeirdreHolloway, Steve Ege, FrlchZoesse, Sandy Lewy, DoneSolinger, Ernie Marraccini.Feb. 28. 1964NMSC studies academic success Alleged discrimination at Northwestern U.>y There is no relation be¬tween academic achievementand achievement in extra¬curricular activities amonghighly able students, according to0,e National Merit Scholarship(joporation (NMSC). Performance inextracurricular science, art. music,dramatic, and “leadership” activi¬ties for Merit Finalists studied since1956 varied independent of aca¬demic performance.There was also a low correlationbetween academic ability measuredbefore college and academic per¬formance in college. The Corjxx-a-tinn's annual report said that meas¬ures of students’ interests, persever¬ance, and drive were better pre¬dictors of achievement.A study of the effects of differenttypes of colleges revealed that at¬tendance at a “relatively selectivecollege” reduces a student’s chanceof high achievement. Students en¬tering technological institutions faroutranked other entering studentsin intellectualism and pragmatism,whereas students entering privatenonsectarian liberal arts collegesranked highest in estheticism. statusand leadership.NMSC also ran an extensive re¬search program on parental and ed¬ucational influences on the develop¬ment of the intellectually able. TheyFast collects over $350Bruce Rappaport, head of UCCORE, announced today that theSNCC-CORE Fast for Freedom lastWednesday collected over $350.108 students in the dormitoriessigned up to forego the Wednesdayevening meal. The University con¬tributed 65c for each meal,Rappaport called the results of thefast very disappointing.The $350 will be used by SNCC tobuy food for distribution amongMississippi and Alabama farmersvw lv> were cut off from relief by stateand county officials.Money collected at a number ofnorthern college campuses will besent to coordinators with the StudentNon-violent Co-ordinating Committee(SNCC) at Brandeis University, whowill buy food and ship it to Mississip¬pi and Alabama primarily. Tlie.Teamsters Union has agreed totransport the food free of charge.This year’s program was co-ordi¬nated by the U.S. National StudentAssociation and the Northern StudentMovement. UC campus sponsorswere Student Government, UC COREand UC Friends of SNCC.Food will be distributed to unem¬ployed Southern Negroes ui areaswhei-e local governments have re¬fused to apply for Federal surplusfood for the needy under a Federalprogram for areas with high unem¬ployment. found, for example, that a studentwhose parents desire him to be in¬dependent and self-reliant tends toachieve at a higher level in creativeareas than a student whose parentsexpect conformity.The characteristics of the fatherand his interacion with the child aremore highly related to later achieve¬ment of the child then are the char¬acteristics of the mother.The Merit Scholarships average$7% this year, which amounts to$3,184 for the four years of collegefor the average student’s grant. Ofthe Merit Scholars named from 1953to 1963 , 4118 are presently enrolledin 425 colleges and universities and2705 have graduated.This year, the Corporation initiateda program for college sponsorshipof the Merit Scholarships the reportsaid. Nine colleges made awards toMerit Scholars, choosing among thealmost 9500 runners-up who werenot awarded regular Merit Scholar¬ships from the Corporation itself.Twenty-five other institutions havemade arrangements to award thesescholarships next April.Commenting on this new develop¬ment, John M. Stalnaker said: “Thequality of an institution is deter¬mined in large part by the qualityof student it enrolls, for students ofhigh ability make important contri¬butions to the total environment ofan institution, not to the classroomalone and help to attract and stimu¬late other students with similar char¬acteristics.”Charles D. O’Connell, UC directorof admissions, said UC is not par¬ticipating in the college sponsoringprogram, since, he said, the type ofstudents which would be helped bythe program are already providedfor by the University Scholarshipprogram.Under the NMSC program, hesaid, the universities simply giveNMSC money, which comes rightback to the universities when thestudents enter. This amount to“a kind of philanthropic shell game,”lie said.He emphasized, however, that theNMSC program as a whole has“raised the standards of high schoolsand students more than any othersingle program” in its ten years ofexistence.Set Collegium ConcertThe Madrigal Singers of the Col¬legium Musicum, under the directionof Frederick Hammond, will give aconcert of Renaissance Music onSaturday evening in Bond Chapel.Included will be the Missa Mi-Miby Ockeghem, the Prophetiae Sibyl-larum by Lassus, and works by Is-sac, Compere, and Pesenti.The concert begins at 8:30; thereis no admission charge.7L 10% discount to students with ID cardsSales and Serviceon all hi-fi equip¬ment, foreign and[domestic.'TAPE RECORDERSPhonographs - AmplifiersPhono Needles and CartridgesTubes - Batteries24 hr. Service Calls$300TV—HI-FIRADIO— Telefunken & Zenith —AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORYest. 19291300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111In the 53rJ-Kimbark Plaza By Steve BookshesterRoosevelt TorchCHICAGO (CPS) — A long-sim¬mering conflict over alleged dis¬criminatory admissions policies atNorthwestern University ha§ eruptedinto a full-scale war. Combatantsare the Daily Northwestern, the Ustudent Human Relations Commit¬tee (HRC), and Northwestern direc¬tor of admissions, C. William Reiley.The Northwestern Student Senatelast Thursday, by a vote of 19-4,passed a resolution which censuredReiley’s sactions towards studentsinvolved in the controversy. TheSenate resolution stated that Reiley’sactions were “totally unbecoming anadmissions officer of a great uni¬versity ... a man committing such alleged behavior has no placein such a position.”Charges of religious discriminationin Northwestern admissions policieswere made public in the Jan. 30issue of the Daily Northwestern. Inthe story, members of the HRC saidfigures indicate that percentages ofstudents of several religious groupsattending the school have notchanged for seven years.Reiley denied the HRC accusa¬tions. He stated that Northwesternhas not asked questions about reli¬gion on its applications since 1956.He told the Daily Northwesternthat the university has no recordsof an applicant’s religion. SaidReily, “You can come over to theoffice and check our records.” “I’m going to have your scholar¬ship investigated to see why a stu¬dent at this university is able tobite the hand that feeds you,”Reiley said. He also blasted theDaily Northwestern, stating, “Allyou people do is tear down theuniversity. I wonder if you have theright to stay here.”Members of the HRC took actionFeb. 12. They filed a complaintwith Vice-President and Dean ofFaculties Payson S. Wild based onthe treatment they received inReiley’s office. Wednesday, Feb. 13,Wild said he was “extremelysorry” and was investigating the in¬cident.R. PIZZAFIVE SIZES OF PIZZAS TO CHOOSE FROMAll Our Pizzas have a Tomato and Cheese BaseCclifornia Vine Ripened TomatoesServes Serves Serves Serves Serves2 3 4 t PartySAUSAGE 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00A Gourmet's DelightDelicately SpicedGREEN PEPPER 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Selected GardenFresh Bell PeppersMUSHROOM 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00French ImportGARLICRich & Pure Cloves 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Finely ground andsprinkled evenly.ONION OR TUNA 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Each an American BeautyANCHOVY 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Imported from PortugalCHEESE 1.25 1.75 2.50 3.50 4.50A pure Mozzarella ( Cheesewith that full creamy flavor.HALF & HALF 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00OLIVE 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Imported from SpainFOR THOSE WHO LIKE SOMETHING DIFFERENTCONEY ISLANDPIZZA Sausa9e-MushroomsGreen Peppers. 2.50 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00PEPPERONIFor those who likethe spicy things in 2.00life. 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00SHRIMP 2.00 2.50The last word—fresh daily 4.00 5.00 6.00BACONCrisp, yet tender 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00HY 3-8282 Platter PleasuresBroasted Chicken Dinner 1.50Shrimp Platter (Jumbo Louisiana Beauties) 1.50Perch Platter (Lake Perch) 1.25ALL OF THE ABOVE INCLUDE FRENCH FRIES.COLE SLAW. BREAD AND SAUCEMr. Pizza*s StandoutsBarbecue Baby Back Ribs 2.25row ARE FRESENTED WITH A SUCCULENT AND MEATTDINNER INCLUDING FRENCH FRIES. COLE SLAW.AND BREAD.Fabulous BroastedChickenBax of Chicken10 pieces 2.4516 pieces 3.7520 pieces 4.75 Box of Shrimp1 Lb. Jumbo ... 2.25Vi Lb. Jumbo ... 1.35Vi Lb. Lake Perch .801 Lb. Lake Perch 1.50Italian Dinner FestivalsSPAGHETTI, homemade meat sauce 75with Meat Balls, Sausage or Mushrooms 1.10RAVIOLI, with meat sauce .90with Meat Balls, Sausage or Mushrooms 1.25M0STACCI0U, with meat sauce 75with Meat Balls or Mushrooms 1.10A U.C. TRADITIONAccessoriesCole Slaw (Pint) .. .50 French Fries ..Peppers (Order) .50Salad (Garlic or French) Pint .50 .25DELIVERY SERVICEDelivered Oven Hotto Your Door HRS. Opaa 7 Day*—4 p.m. ta 2 a.m.Frl. and Sat. 4 p.m. ta 3 a.m.Sunday—2 p.m. ta 2 a.m.1465 HYDE PARK BlVD.Rousing RefreshersSpumoni (per pint) 85Cannoli 25Soft Drinks and CoffeoSAVE OUR CARD COUPON$2.00 PIZZA FREEOm Card is given with everyPina, or one eard give* withOrder ever $1.00 WITHOUT Pina.2000 WORDS A MINUTEWITH EXCELLENT COMPREHENSION AND RETENTIONYOU CAN READ 150-200 PAGES AN HOUR using the ACCELERATED READ-ING technique. You’ll learn to read smoothly DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of1,000 to 2,000 words a minute. And retention is excellent. Many people comprehend at over2,000 words a minute. This is not a skimming method; you definitely read every word.You can effectively apply the ACCELERATED READING technique to textbooks andfactual material, as well as to literature and fiction. The author’s style and the flavor of thereading are not lost or diminished when you read at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy andenjoyment in reading will be increased by this unique method. No machines or apparatus areused in learning the ACCELERATED READING technique. And results are guaranteed.An evening class in ACCELERATED READING will be held at the HOTEL SHERRYin Chicago beginning on March 31 and ending June 2. It’s wonderful to be able to read abook in one sitting, and see it as a whole.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READINGtechnique by college students on WEDNESDAY, March 4 at 7:30 P.M. and TUESDAY,March 17 at 7:39 P.M.BRING A BOOK!Demonstrations will be held at the HOTEL SHERRY(53rd St. and Lake Shore Drive)NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING INC.507 Fifth Avenue, New York 17, N. Y.Feb. 28. 1964 CHICAGO MAROONShortage of advanced degreesWASHINGTON, (GPS)—The na¬tion's increasing demand far acritically short number of advanceddegree holders is becoming a chieftopic of discussion for graduateschool administrators worried aboutacademic standards.The latest outcry came from theUS. Council of Graduate Schoolsduring a recent meeting m Wash¬ington.A Council discussion panel raisedthe question of whether the Master’sdegree is becoming a consolationprize for unsuccessful Ph.d seekers—a stepping stone for teachers toearn more money or an automaticaward for plowing through a fifthyear of college.“The situation continues to worsenwith ever more threatening impli¬cations,” said Robert P. Browder,a Council member and a Universi¬ty of Colorado dean.Distinguished univesrities, Brow¬der said, are increasingly down¬grading the Master’s while smallercolleges are offering it without re¬quired teachers and facilities onlyto meet the demand for more col¬lege teachers.Browder noted that 40 per cent ofcollege teachers held Ph D’s in 1953-54 while only 26 per cent have adoctorate in 1960-61.“This fact, in conjunction withthe present status of the Master’sdegree, offers some frighteningprospects for the future of highereducation,” Browder said.Supporting the Council’s fears isthe increasing drain of Ph D holdersfrom the ivy halls by U S. industry.Even Master degree holders areNATURALLYAVAILABLEatC&SEnglishleather finding it more worthwhile to fore¬sake education careers.The most recent Labor Depart¬ment report on jobs for collegegraduates advised students from allfields to spend a few extra semes¬ters in school to find a better com¬mercial job.While colleges ami universitiesaren’t getting the full benefit, thenumber of U.S. Ph.D holders is in¬creasing. The Research Council ofthe National Academy of Sciencesreported last month that 12,000 wondoctorates in 1962. The report pre¬dicted 24,000 new Ph.D holders be¬ing graduated in 1969 if the currenttrend continues.The report noted that two geogra¬phic regions—East North Centraland Middle Atlantic—produce halfthe annual total of doctorates butemploy only one-third.Chief Ph.D producers of 1962named in the report were Colum¬bia, Illinois, Wisconsin, Harvard,University of California at Berkeley,New York University, Michigan, Ohio State, Cornell, Minnesota,Purdue, Yale, Indiana, Chicago,Stanford, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology, Michigan State, Penn¬sylvania, Penn State, and the Uni¬versity of California at Los Angeles.Add Yale, City College of NewYork, and Brooklyn College to thatlist, the report said, and you havethe leading undergraduate sourcesof Ph.D candidates—each account¬ing for more than 1 per cent ofthe total.While concentrated now, the re¬port said graduate education is sys-stematically spreading wider withless centering in the leading schools.Surprisingly, the proportion ofdoctorates in the physical sciences—about 30 per cent of the 183,000surveyed by the report—has notincreased since 1920. But over ashort-haul period—from 1950 until1962 — the sicientific breakthroughcaused a three fold increase in theproduction of engineering Ph.Dholders. Schneider namedAnthropology headDavid M. Schneider, a social an¬thropologist, has been named chair¬man of the UC department of an¬thropology.Schneider, who is a professor ofanthropology, succeeds Fred Eggan,who will devote full time to research,writing, and teaching.Schneider has been a member ofthe department since May, 1960. Heis director of the Kinship Project atthe University, which seeks to deter¬mine how middle class families mthe United States and Great Britainrespond to their kinship relations.He joined the faculty in 1960 afterserving on the faculty of the Univer¬sity of California at Berkeley since1956. He also has fought at the Lon¬don School of Economics, London,England, and Harvard University. Hereceived his B.S. (1940) and M.A.(1941) degrees from Cornell Univer¬sity, and his Ph.D. (1949) from Har¬vard University.U. of Iowa Student Senate Job opportunitiesapproves tuition increaseThe State University ofIowa’s Student Senate recent¬ly endorsed a tuition increaseproposed by* University Presi¬dent Virgil M. Hancher by a vote of15 to 1.Of a random sample of 20 SUI stu¬dents, however, the majority opposedthe increase, and few students fullyendorsed the proposal.In support of the increase, SenatePresident Mike Carver told of a toplaw professor who left SUI for theUniversity of Illinois and received a50 per cent pay raise. He also re¬ferred to an individual in social workwho left recently to take a job witha 25 per cent pay increase.In addition to maintaining a com¬petitive faculty salary schedule, theSenate resolution cited a need for anew auditorium.Carver pointed out that IndianaUniversity and Purdue UniversityOpen Doily 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.Thursday and Friday 9 a.m.-9 p.m.THE STORE FOR MENftatun anb tilaatpua BijiijrIn the New Hyde ForkShopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St.Phone 752-8100 BESOINS DE BASE —InstructionVoui vou* Fiet peulAue renducompte que l’erprmion "unbonjme parti d« lien’’ n’e«t pluacourante aujourd'hui. I Hi telattribut dixparaftra cnlierementiou« peu. Gr&ce aux octroi* ac-cord4» aux vMrans, grdee auxIcoles du soir, gr&ce k one plusg<Hi£reuse repartition des bour¬ses d’etudes et giAce k la sagessedes pires de famille qui prepa¬rent l’avenir de lenrs enfants,un pourcentage assez eieve denotre jeune peuple peut se per-mettre un plus haul niveau des¬truction. L'assurance-instructionest un des plus import ants ser¬vices qu'offrent les coinpagniesd’asstirance-vie. Elle garantitqu’aucune restriction ne feraobstacle aux ambitions d’unjeune homme, sauf scs proprescapacites naturelles. Penser queses enfants auront toutes leschances possibles k l’avenir, parsuite de sa prevoyance A leurprocurer une police qui parerak toutes les eventualites, consti-tue une source de fiert£ pour lep<te de famille d'aujourd'hui.Penneltez-rooi de causer avecvous de vos besoins d'assurancede base. Je suls assocJ6 k la SunLife Assurance Company ofCanada, la compagnie qui pos-sede la police rlpondant k vosexigences! T616phonez-moiaujourd’huimbnel II n’yaura aucuneobligationde votre part-RALPH J. WOOD. Jr., CLU1 N. LA SALLE, CHICAGO. ILLFR 2-2390 FA 4-6800SUN LIFE DU CANADA have built similar auditoriums withstudent fees, and that present feescontribute to the maintenance of theUnion.It was reported in a study of allBig Ten schools and the Universityof Chicago that Iowa ranks tenth intuition costs for slate residents in theLiberal Arte and Education Colleges.The proposed $50 increase for thesestudents would put Iowa about fouiihor fifth.Iowa now ranks eleventh in tuitionco6ts for out-of-state students in thesecolleges. If the $150 increase forthese students were passed, it wouldrank eighth.In tuition costs for graduate stu¬dents who are state residents, SUInow ranks sixth; the increase wouldraise the rank to about third. A $200increase for out-of-state graduatestudents would not affect Iowa’s cur¬rent ranking at the bottom of the list. The following recruiting organizationswill visit the Office of Career Counsel¬ing and Placement during the re¬mainder of the Winter Quarter. Inter¬view appointments may be arrangedthrough Mr. L. S. Calvin, room 200,Raynolds Club, Extension 3284.March 3—Nava! Ordanee Laboratory,Silver Spring, Md.—S.M. and PhD.candidates in mathematics and phy¬sical chemistry; all degree levels inphysics. Schedule permitting will inter¬view physicists completing a minimumphysics. Schedule permitting will inter¬view physicists completing a minimumof three years of academic work byJune 1064.March 3—Dow Chemical Company,Midland. Mich.—Chemists, physicists,and biochemists at all degree levels.March 5—Agricultural ResearchSeiH’ice. Northern Illinois Research andDevelopment Laboratory, Peoria, Ill.—Chemists and biochemists at all de¬gree levels. Wil linterview chemistsfor summer employment.March 5—Eastman Kodak Company,Rochester, N. Y., Kingsport, Tenn.,Longview. Texas—Physicists and chem¬ists (all specializations) at all degreelevels.March 6—National Aeronautics andSpace Administration, Manned Space¬craft Center, Houston. Tex.—Mathema¬ticians, physicists, and statisticians atS.M. and Ph. D. levels.March 6—Time, Inc., Chicago. Ill—Supervisory trainee program forwoman graduates. Candidates shouldhave an interest in business organiza-Alfred Jospe of Hillel tonight“On Essence and Non-Essence inJudaism: The Optimistic Philosophyof Leo Baeck” will be discussed attonight’s Hillel Fireside by AlfredJospe, author and lecturer. LeoBaeck was the acknowledged leaderof German Jewry in the period im¬mediately before World War II. Hismajor work, “The Essence of Juda¬ism,” was a significant contributionto Jewish-Christian polemics in thisperiod.Jospe, a graduate of the JewishTheological Seminary of Breslau,TRAINEE POSITIONSat THE CHICAGOPUBLIC LIBRARYApplications now being acceptedfrom graduating students who canqualify for program of career devel¬opment offering:• a combination of on-tlie-job ex¬perience and professional educationin librariansbip.• training for a well-paid andpersonally rewarding professionalcareer.APPLICANTS must be:• academically qualified for admis¬sion to accredited graduate libraryschool.• personally qualified for publiclibrary serviee.FOR INFORMATION PLEASECONTACT;Mrs. Charlotte ShahinoPersonnel OfficeThe Chicago Public LibraryChicago 2, Illinois received his doctorate from theUniversity of Breslau. Before com¬ing to the United States he was alecturer in Jewish History andThought at the School for Jewish So¬cial Work in Berlin.Since 1949 Jospe has been Na¬tional Director of Program and Re¬sources for the Hillel Foundations.He is the editor of the Hillel LittleBook series, and the author of anumber of books, including Religionand Myth in Jewish Philosophy,Judaism on the Campus, and Israelas Ide? and Reality.Jospe has published numerousarticles in the fields of philosophy,religion, and edition, in leadingAmerican and European journals. tion and an aptitude for quantitativework.March 13—US Public Health Service,Chicago, ni. and large metropolitanareas nationwide — positions as Pro¬gram Representatives (V.D. control)open to men graduates of any Uni¬versity Department.Intramural sportsAll entrants of the BADMINTONTOURNAMENT are reminded thatthe following are the dates for therespectvie divisions:Monday, March 2—College HouseRedTuesday, March 3—College HouseBlueWednesday, March 4 — Fra4ernafyand DivisionalThursday, March 5—All-UniversityChampionshipAll men must be at Bartlett Gympromptly at 7 pm when the drawschedule is prepared.The All-University Basketbal*Chabpions are the Robber Barons.They defeated Psi Upsilon “A”Wednesday night by 20 points. Thefinal score wras 53-33. Flint III tookthird place honors.The winners of the Handball Tour¬nament. are John Polking, CollegeHouse; Robion Kirby, Fraternity;and Allen Jung, Divisional. The play¬offs for All-University champion willbegin the week of March 2.The team champions in the FreeThrow Tournament are Psi Upsilonfrom the fraternity league and Hen¬derson North from the college housedivision. The All-University cham¬pion has not been decided yet be¬cause of a tie between an independ¬ent and a fraternity man.Illinois chamber concertin Mandel Monday nightThe University of Illinois Contem¬porary Chamber Players will presenta concert of contemporary music atUC Monday night at 8:30 pm inMandel Hall.The concert, conducted by JackMcKenzie, will feature a Cantatawritten by the Dliac computer at theUniversity of Illinois. It will be per¬formed “live” by 18 instrumentalists,a soprano, and a tape recorder. Theprogram for the computer was de¬vised by Lejaien Hiller anil RobertBaker. The text was also synthesizedon tile llliac computer. Tile Cantata,which is 24 'minutes in length, is oneof the most ambitious works everprogrammed for a computer.Parte of the computer programwere based upon a serial orderingderived from a work by the contem¬porary French composer, PierreBoulez. Boulez’s method was “fedinto” the computer, but the computerpicket! and arranged the orderingof the notes in accordance withBoulez’s rules.The remainder of the program willconsist of a piece for piano, percus¬sion and tape recorder by Mr. Hiller;an Octet by Salvatore Martirano;and works by Frederick son, Johnson,Hamm and Brun. The performersand the composers are from the Uni¬versity of Illinois at Urbana.Admission is $1 (UC students 50c).For further information call the De¬partment of Music, 5802 Woodlawn,MI 3-0800, ext. 3885.TRIUMPH: America’s most popularsports car lineFully Equipped $2975. DeliveredNow here! Triumph's exciting new sports car,the TR-4. P.S. Its famous companion, the TR-3,is still available. FOR FREE TEST DRIVES,DROP IN OR PHONE:BOB NELSON MOTORSSouthsides's Largest6040 S. COTTAGE GROVEMidway 3-45014 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 28, 1964Undergraduate exam scheduleThe times and places for examinations not listed below will be announced byinstructors. Evening classes, unless otherwise announced by the instructor,will have examinations at regular class times. Please note that, for coursesmarked with *, the place of examination is not the usual place of class meeting.Anthropology 212 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30 Ro 27i Anthropology 245 Tue Mar 17 4-6 C 110"Art 2.10 Fri Mar 20 10.30-12 30 Cl 10Art 260 Fri Mar 20 8-10 Cl 10"Astronomy 208 Wed Mar 18 8-10 ICR 113♦Biology 112 Wed Mar ia 4 6secs AA. CA. EA, GA K 103, K 110secs BA, DA, FA, GB AB 1014 Ab 420secs AB. BB, CB, DB, F.B. FB K 107Biology 114 Thu Mar 19 1.30-3.30 C 104Biology 202 Fri Mar 20 8-10 B106 4-lab exam 3 17"Biops.vchology 212 Wed Mar 18 10.30-12.30 Ab 101'Chemistry 106 Wed Mar 18 8-10 K 107Chemistry 132 Wed Mar 18 8 10 K 103Chemistry 221 Thu Mar 19 1.30-3 30 K 107Chemistry 262 Fri Mar 20 8-10 K 103Chinese 202 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30 Cl 10♦Economics 202 Fri Mar 20 8-10 SS 305" Education 202 Wed Mar 18 8-10 J 105Education 207 Thu Mar 19 1.30 3.30 J 111Education 216 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30 J 111♦ Education 270 Fri Mar 20 4-6 J 126Education 283 Fri Mar 20 4-6 J 110♦Education 288 Thu Mar 19 1.30-3 30 Cl 10♦ English 102 Mon Mar 16 3 6 C 110. K 107. E 133,Ab 133, B 106♦ English 108 Mon Mar 16 3-6 Ro 2♦ English 204 Thu Mar 19 1.30-3.30 Cl 10♦ English 234 Fri Mar 20 1.30-3 30 Cl 10♦English 237 Fri Mar 20 10.30-12 30 C 406English 240 Tue Mar 17 4-6 Cl 18English 259 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3 30 C 406English 264 Wed Mar 18 4-6 C 104English 272 Fri Mar 20 1.30-3 30 C 102♦ English 275 Fri Mar 20 4-6 Cl 10English 277 Mon Mar 16 4 6 Wb 102♦ English 285 Fri Mar 20 810 Cl 20♦ English 297 Wed Mar 18 10 30-12 30 Wb 103♦English 298 Mon Mar 16 4-6 Cl 10' French 101 Tue Mar 17 10.30 12.30 C 408♦French 102 Tue Mar 17 10.30-12.30 K 107* French 105 Tue Mar 17 10.30-12.30 E 133♦ French 202 Tue Mar 17 10 30-12.30 C 110French 203 Fri Mar 20 1.30-3 30 C 409French 204 Tue Mar 17 4-6 C 416French 20H Fri Mar 20 10 30-12 30 C 140♦ French 211 Thu Mar 19 4-6 Wb 203French 240 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30 C 409French 287 Fri Mar 20 10 30-12.30 Wb 103♦Geography 206 Wed Mar 18 10.30-12.30 Ro 41Geography 257 Thu Mar 19 1.30-3.30 Ro 28♦Geography 282 Fri Mar 20 1.30-3.30 Ro 28♦Geophysical Sciences 268 Fri Mar 20 1.30-3.30 Ro 27German 101 Wed Mar 18 8-10 C 402♦German 102 Tue Mar 17 10 30-12 .30 LMHGerman 105 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30 C 415German 206 Fri Mar 20 10.30-12.30 Wb 202German 231 Wed Mar 18 10 .30-12 30 Wb 2<eGerman 234 Wed Mar 18 8-10 Wb 203German 235 Fri Mar 20 8-10 Wb 202Greek 102 Wed Mar 18 10 30-12 30 C 316Greek 205 Wed Mar 18 10 30-12 30 Cl 26♦ Greek 257 Fri Mar 20 4-6 Cl 20Greek 283 Wed Mar 18 4-6 Cl 34History 131-132 Mon Mar 16 8.30-11.30 LMHHistory 132 Mon Mar 16 9.30-11.30 LMH♦History 232 Mon Mar 16 3-6 S 106♦ History 236 Thu Mar 19 1.30-3.30 SS 306History 246 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30 C 402History 252 Wed Mar 18 10 30-12 .30 SS 107History 262 Fri Mar 20 8-10 Ro 2History 272 Wed Mar 18 t .30-3.30 Ro 2Humanities 112 Thu Mar 19 4-6 LMHHumanities 122 Thu Mar 19 10.30-12 .30 LMH♦ Humanitites 124 Thu Mar 19 10.30-12 30 C 110Humanities 202 Thu Mar 19 10.30-12 30 Ro 2Humanities 245 Fri Mar 20 4-6 Lex 4Humanities 264 Tue Mar 17 4-6 C 101♦Humanities 282 Thu Mar 19 1.30-3 30 Cl-20Ideas & Methods 202 Fri Mar 20 4-6 C 109Italian 102 Fri Mar 20 8-10 C 416Japanese 202 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30 OR 208Latin 102 Mon Mar 16 12 30-2 30 C 316Latin 205 Fri Mar 20 10.30-12 30 Cl 26♦ Latin 237 Wed Mar 18 4-6 Cl-26Latin 259 Fri Mar 20 8-10 Cl-26Linguistics 225 Thu Mar 19 1.30-3.30 Ro 27♦ Mathematics 101 Mon Mar 16 12 30-2 30 E 306♦ Mathematics 102 Thu Mar 19 8-10 LMH♦ Mathematics 151 sec 21 Thu Mar 19 8-10 E 207sec 31 Thu Mar 19 8-10 E 206sec 41 Thu Mar 19 8-10 E 312sec 12 Thu Mar 19 8-10 E 308♦ M them a tics 152 sec 21 Thu Mar 19 810 C 410SS Thu Mar 19 8-10 E 20331 Thu Mar 19 8-10 E 133.32 Thu Mar 19 8-10 E 20241 Thu Mar 19 8-10 C 30551 Thu Mar 1!) 8-10 C 40271 Thu Mar 19 8-10 C 408♦ Mathematics 153 sec 41 Fri Mar 20 10.30-12 30 C 305M uhematics 203 sec 11 Wed Mar 18 8-10 E 207sec 41 Fri Mar 20 10 30-12 30 E 207♦ Mathematics 204 sec 11 Wed Mar 18 8-10 E 133sec 31 Wed Mar 18 10.30-12 30 E 308sec 41 Fri Mar 20 10.30-12.30 S 201sec 42 Fri Mar 20 10.30-12.30 E 308♦Mathematics 205 sec 41 Thu Mar 1ft 1.30-3.30 E 303♦Mathematics 241 sec 31 Wed Mar 18 10.30-12 30 E 207Mathematics 251 soc 21 Fri Mar 20 8-10 E 207♦Mathematics 252 see 11 Wed Mar 18 810 E 308sec 51 Mon Mar 16 12.30-2.30 E 207’Mathematics 253 sec 11 Wed Mar 18 8-10 E 202♦Mathematics 281 sec 71 Fri Mar 20 1.30-3.30 E 207Mathematics 2t*0 Fri Mar 20 4-6 J 110_ Microbiology 222 Thu Mar 19 1.30-3 30 RKS N 1Music 152 Wed Mar 18 10.30-12.30 Mus 201Music 202 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30 Mus 201Music 212 Thu Mar 19 1.30-3.30 Mus 201Mush 222 Fri Mar 20 4-6 Mus 101Music 257 Fri Mar 20 10.30-12.30 Mus 101Philosophy 204 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30 C 411Philosophy 232 Fri Mar 20 8-10 C 110Philosophy 287 Fri Mar 20 10 30-12 30 C 109♦Philisophy 251 Thu Mar 19 8-10 Cl 20Physical Sciences 106 Tue Mar 17 1.30-3.30 K 107-fE 133K 103E 133E 133E 202Ry 251E 133Ry 251Physics 122 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30Physics 132 Fri Mar 20 8-10Physics 217 Fri Mar 20 8-10Physics 222 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30♦Physics 226 Fri Mar 20 10.30-12.30_ Physics 236 Wed Mar 18 10,30-12.30Political Science 201 Fri Mar 20 1.30-3.30 SS 122Psychology 203 Thu Mar 19 1.30-3.30 AB 133Psychology 212 Wed Mar 18 10.30-12 30 AB 101♦Psycliology 251 Thu Mar 19 4-6 AB 133♦Slavic 102 Tue Mar 17 10.30-12.30 Ro 2♦Slavic 202 Tue Mar 17 10.30-12.30 Wb 102♦Slavic 205 Wed Mar 18 10.30-12 30 Cl-18♦Slavic 242 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30 K 110jSlavic 289 Fri Mar 20Social Sciences 112 Tue Mar 17 4-6 LMHSocial Sciences 122 Tue Mar 17 8-10 LMHSocial Sciences 125 Tue Mar 17 8-10 LMHSocial Sciences 126 Tue Mar 17 8-10 LMHSocial Sciences 221 Fri Mar 20 10.30-12 30 Cl 18♦Social Sciences 231 Tue Mar 17 4-6 C 110Social Sciences 241 Mon Mar 16 12 30-2 30 Ro 2Social Sciences 246 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30 C 402Social Sciences 259 Fri Mar 20 4-6 C 308* Social Sciences 275 Wed Mar 18 10.30-12 30 Ro 28^Sociology 203 Fri Mar 20 4-6 Ro 27^Sociolog y 206 Fri Mar 20 1.30-3.30 SS 105Spanish 108 Fri Mar 20 10.30-12 30 C 411Spanish 105 Fri Mar 20 10.30-12.30 C 416Spanish 202 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3 30 C 416Spanish 208 Wed Mar 18 10.30-12 30 C 416‘Spanish 211 Fri Mar 20 8-10 Cl 16.Spanish 250 Wed Mar 18 10.30-12 30 Wb 402.statistics 200 Fri Mar 20 4-6 E 202Zoology 205 Wed Mar 18 1.30-3.30 Z 14Zoology 260 Wed Mar 18 8-10 Z 14 ■ '■ 'CLASSIFIED ADSFOR RENT, ROOMS, APTS., ETC.FURN. apt., near University. Reducedrate. Call 324-0721, eves.SUB LET in Hyde Park. 2 bedrms., 2baths. Air cond. Elev. Bldg. Gas free:garage in Bldg. $185 mo. Avail, on orbefore May 1st. Call PL 2-5200.LGE. comf. bed, sitting rm. for singleman: near IC & UC. Call after 7 pm.324-1870.FACULTY wife seeks room for artstudio 10-15 hrs./week. Please phone643-8325.ATTRACTIVE 4 rm. apt. Universitynear 52nd st. Surprising reas. rent.Avail, around mid-summer but mustarrange now. Will also sell some furn.MI 3-6668.FURNISHED home to rent—7 rms.. 2baths, Ige. yd., garage, June 64, 1 yr.PL 2-1097.CHARM, spac. studio apt. espc. suitedfor 1 or 2 proff. persons. Full kit. &bath, new coppertone stove, beau. firs.1st Fir. Reas. 288-6757.WANTEDRIDERS wanted to Florida Sebringraces during qtr. break. Times andlocations subject to negotation. Call324-5881.SOMEONE to help prepare term pa¬per in Economic Botany, must readbooklets, etc., compose and type pa¬ per according to specifications Mustbe completed 3 weeks after starting.Call Alien Jackson. MI 3-7113 after6 pm. no answer, call later.FOR SALENEW-USED BOOKS 10-30% DISCOUNTTYPEWRITERS — new-used-electnc-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).5 string Banjo WHYTE LAYDIE,HY 3-6120.TYPEWRITER for sale. Rem.stand, good cond. DO 3-0447. andPERSONALSGIRLS: Hitchcock swing again,night. Feb. 29 at 8:30 pm. Sat.SKI TAOS. N.M. Trip includes room,meals, tow's, 7 lessons, transportation,and insurance. Pay $140 and pay nomore. U of C Outing Club. John Culp,PL 2-9874 or ext. 2381.TYPING: Rapid, reas., accurate. Willedit. Call Ronnie or Karen, eves.,NO 7-3609.THE Cloister Club now has a grill.Try sizzling >4 hamburger for just35c. Open Monday thru Thursday, 8:30-11:30 pm. Open Sunday from 5:30-8:30.RUGGERS—all must attend practice Sat. 10:30 am, meet at Woodlawn and59th.SCIENTIFIC Swedish Massage foot andgeneral treatments given in your homeby experienced graduate MASSEUSE.Call for appt. MU 4-7569.WANT ride to Utica, N. Y. about Mar.18. Eric Hirschhorn, PL 2-9477.FLY TO NYC OR CALIF. LOWESTRATESNYC 1-way $28.25. R.T. $49.2SCALIF.—1-way $68.20, R.T. $136 40Make Resrv. now for spring break.Call RE 1-5477 till 10 PM.Tom Hegey for vice-president.PROTEST—The performance of com¬puter music in Mandel Hall on Mondayeve. by the “live” ones. CURE (Con¬ference Upholding Robot Equality).FINAL NOTICE! NEW YORK FLIGHT!There are only TEN SEATS left onthe SG Charter Flight. Call ext. 3272,Ida Noyes for info.FEW places left for SUN, SNOW, SEXat TAOS. N.M. The only western skiarea with reliable snow conditions atEaster time. For latest snow reportscheck Information Desk or call ext.2381.FISH: Won’t you EVER clean the topof the toilet??????? Jake.WANTED: Apartment to sublet overthe interim. Contact Tom Heagy orDave Curley. Room 11006 PierceTower. FA 4-9500.Calendar of EventsFriday, February 28Track Meet: Chicago Frosh-Sophsand Junior College Relays: FieldHouse. 4 pm.Lecture: “The Spanish Riding Schoolof Vienna.” Heinz Kramp, Directorof the Community Riding School: Judd126, 7:30 pm.Discussion: “Christianity and Com¬munism in the Caribbean. (IntervarsttyChristian Fellowship), Ida Noyes. 7:30pm.Motion Picture: Bad Day at BlackRock; Burton-Judson Courts, 8 and 10pm.Ilillel Fireside: “On Essence andNon-Essence in Judaism: The Op¬timistic Philosophy of Leo Baeck,”Dr. Alfred Jospe. Director of Programand Resources. National Hillel Foun¬dations: Hillel Foundation, 5715 Wood-lawn Avenue. 8:30 pm.Musical Comedy: “Slice of Para¬dise,” (University Theatre); MandelHall, 8:30 pm.Saturday, February 29Tour: University Quadrangles andRobie House; Ida Noyes. 10 am.Duplicate Bridge: Fractional Points,(Internationa! House Scholarship Fund):International House, East Lounge, 2pm.Volunteer Work: VISA, students workat Chicago State Mental Hospital; bus leaves Ida Noye6 parking lot 12:30pm.Basketball Games: Chicago “B”Team vs. Lake Forest “B” Team,Chicago Varsity vs. Lake Forest Col¬lege; Field House, 6 and 8 pm.Motion Picture: The 400 Blows, Fran¬cois Truffaut, director, (Doc. Films);Law School Auditorium, 7 and 9 pm.Folk Dancing: Advanced and Inter¬mediate (Folk Lore Society) PaulScott. James Popson, directors, IdaNoyes. 8 pm.Collegium Musicum: Madrigal Sing¬ers, Frederick Hammond, conductor.Ockeghem, Missa Mi-Mi: Orlando diLasso, Prophetical Sibyllarum, Renais¬sance Carnival Songs; Bond Chapel.8:30 pm.Musical Comedy: “Slice of Paradise,”(University Theatre); Mandel Hall,8:30 pm.Sunday, March 1Radio Series: “Faith of our Fathers,”The Reverend W. Barnett Blackemore.Dean. Disciples Divinity House, andAssociate Dean, Rockefeller Chapel;720 kc., 8:30 a.m.Radio Series: “The World of thePaperback,” Betty Friedan discussesher The Feminine Maystique withJames Miller. Professor, epartment ofEnglish, host; WFMF, 10.3mc., 10:15am.Radio Series: “From the Midway,” “The Meaning of Social Planning ina Democracy,” Elizabeth Wood. Direc¬tor of Urban Studies of ManagementServices, New York City; WFMF, 100.3me., 11 am.Lecture: “How To Be a Scientist,”Dr. George W. Beadle, President, Uni¬versity of Chicago; Museum of Scienceand Industry, 3 pm.Carillon Recital: Daniel Robins. Uni¬versity Carillonneur; Rockefeller Memo¬rial Chapel, 4 pm.Radio Series: “The World of thePaperback,” discussion of The Femi¬nine Mystique, Mrs. Friedan and Mr.Miller: WAIT, 820 kc., 5 pm.Radio Series: “From the Midway.”“Dimensions of American English.”Raven I. McDavid, Associate Profes¬sor, Department of English. Editor,The American Language, by H. L.Mencken.Concert: Bach Cantata Group,(Divinity School), Richard E. Vik-strom, Director of Chapel Music, con¬ducting; Bond Chapel, 7:30 pm.Folk Dancing: Folklore Society: IdaNoyes. 7:30 pm.Radio Broadcast: “The Radio Work¬shop,” first broadcast (UniversityTheatre, WUCB); Reynolds Club EastLounge, WUCB, 8 pm.Radio Series: “The Sacred Note,”program of sacred choral music by theRockefeller Memorial choir; WBBM,780 kc.m 11 pm.Find bigotry at American Uby Margaret LoweMichigan DailyTwo of the six sororities at Ameri¬can University in Washington DeltaGamma and Kappa Delta, recentlyadmitted discriminatory practices ina public report to a student senatecommittee investigating such prac¬tices.The student senate asked Ameri¬can University trustees to withdrawrecognition of sororities and fraterni¬ties that continue to practice dis¬crimination in membership selection.Mary Ellen Knake, president of theUniversity of Michigan KD chapter,refused to comment on the Americanchapter statement. Recently she alsorefused to comment on the existenceof a discriminatory ritual found inthe Iowa State KD chapter.She said then that she was notTruffaut film aware that any chapter had recededa waiver from the national sororityto free diem from such a discrimina¬tory clause.Commenting on DG’s statement atAmerican University, Sara Hober-man, president of the University ofMichigan DG chapter, said, “To myknowledge, the national sorority doesnot have such a clause, so this doesnot apply to our chapter.”We have a local by-law that saysno discrimination exists — it is al¬most the same as the Regent by¬law on discrimination,” she said. “Ihave no idea why American Univer¬sity DGs would say such a thing,unless it pertains only to their chap¬ter,” she added, “I can see no rea¬son why the national would allow thisdiscrimination.”to be Monday, March 2Motion Picture:. “The Sword and theFlute,” (Indian Civilization); Rosen-wald 2, 7:30 pm.Motion Picture: “Anastasia”; Inter¬national House, 8 pm.Corona Studio aPouAi port, “ Idanti-fica/ti.on.Photo*13/2. E.53riSt.Study inGuadalajara, MexicoThe Guadalajara Summer School, afully accredited University of Arizonaprogram, conducted in cooperationwith professors from Stanford Uni¬versity, University of California, andGuadalajara, will offer June 29 toAugust 8, art, folklore, geography,history, language and literature course-es. Tuition, board and room is $265.Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.O. Box7227, Stanford, Calif.shown by Doc Films“The 400 Blows,” a Francois Truf¬faut film, will be presented by theDocumentary Film Group on Sat¬urday, Feb. 29, at the Law School.The presentation will complete aninadvertent Francois Truffaut FilmFestival in Hyde Park.Earlier this quarter Doc Filmsscreened the renowned New Wavedirector's first film, the award-win¬ning short “Les Mistons.” The HydePark Theatre followed with a doublefeature showing of Truffaut’s tworecent efforts “Jules and Jim” and“Shoot the Piano Player.”The Saturday showing of Truffaut’smasterwork, “The 400 Blows,” willmark a nearly complete reprise ofhis rich career. Only his episode of“Love at Twenty” has yet to beshown in the area.The film, which will be shown at7 and 9 pm, is a chronicle of ayoung boy’s experiences in Paris. Itis the final film in the Doc Films series: “Suffer Little Children.”Truffaut’s ambitious yet subtlecamera follows the unfortunate boyfrom home to reform school, fromthe edge of innocence to the brinkof spiritual destruction. The final shotin this moving chronicle has becomesomething of a landmark in NewWave cinema. The film itself is oneof the high crests of that wave.Truffaut, originally a film critic,made the film on a dare from hisfather-in-law, a producer. The storyis said to be quite autobiographicalin content; Jean Pierre Leaud, thefilm’s star, was found in a reformschool and coached by Truffaut intoa completely sincere and credibleportrayal.Bosley Crowther, N.Y. Timesfilm critic, has called “The 400Blows” “a film to reslore one’sfaith in films.”Admission to the showing is 75c. PRINTINGPRAGA PRESS, Inc.A union shoplow prices — high qualify1510 W. 18th StreetMOnroe 6-7722■3 linear Contact oLenSeiDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1200 East 53rd St. HY 3-837253-Kimbark Plaintf VFeb. 28. 19*4 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5> rX' % The wolf is at the door: Works aThe Cassandra in us all.EDITOR'S NOTE:These two articles are the secondin a series of articles by graduatestudents appearing In the M4ROON.Pool Cowan and George Mitchell oreboth graduate students at UC.The MAROON will consider for pub¬lication In this series any articles ofunusual Interest and reasonable lengthwhich are written by graduate students.by George Mitchell"I’m sort of glad they've got theAtomic bomb invented. If there'sever another war, I’m going tosit right the hell on top of it.I’ll volunteer for it, I swear toGod I will.Holden Caulfield, circa 1951.The bomb dreams of ourgeneration may be the mostarticulate expression of theconscience of our times; stor¬ies are common about how,in sleep, individual imagina¬tions have portrayed the endof the world by nuclear fire.It is significant that only thedream can produce an ac¬quaintance that is commen¬surate with the overwhelmingreality of such an event. Thedeaths of individuals, even theextermination of large num¬bers of people have parallelswithin our lives . . . but theend of the world has no paral¬lel . . . and only in the imagin¬ation, its dreams and moreenduring products, works ofart, can we explore and tasteof this ultimate in hideous¬ness.Such dreams, along withother things of our age, sug¬gest that in America todaythere is growing in the fab¬ric of peoples lives an ajxica-lyptic vision of the events ofthe world, a kind of mentalbrace against the onrush ofchaos and disintegration thatwe confront daily on radio andtelevision, in newsmagazinesand newspapers. The' newsmedia, anxious for the profit¬able attention of the masses,is feeder to this apocalypticvision, reporting, sensational¬izing, creating innumerableproblems of immense com¬plexity ; and in our nightmar¬ish dreams, bathed in thefinal light of the bomb, wesee the rest.Before 1944 the idea thatall of life could suddenly endby man-made cataclyism didnot seem possible — exceptto a small group of physicistsaware of the power of theatom. Now, twenty yearslater, it is not only a possibili¬ty, it is a probability, withwhich we all live.The advent of interconti¬nental rockets and the sud¬denness and almost casualnesswith which a nuclear warcould be initiated, marks thepoint at which the notion ofan apocalyptic end to the hu¬man community begins toweigh significantly in ourminds.Bomb shelters become thefad of the day, some debatesare carried out by theologiansabout the ethics of shootingsomeone trying to get intoan overcrowded private shel¬ter, high level governmentalofficials talk cooly about civildefense programs which willinsure that at least a core ofpeople survive a nuclear at¬tack, Dr. Teller crusades vig¬ orously and with somber de-termination for a program tomove our nations schools un¬derground.Nuclear war and its resultsare pictured for us with achilling minutiae, with mapslabeled in magadeaths in thenational magazines. Motionpictures such as On the Beach,and Dr. Strangelove, novelssuch as Failsafe and Canticlefor Liebowitz tell the storyin their own ways.There are no parallels inthe history of man for ourplight; there have been yearsof plague and centuries ofwar — certainly the apoca¬lyptic vision has before beenin the minds of men, but prob¬ably never with quite thesame intensity of meaning¬ powerful engines of destruc¬tion point at their cities,aware that, though presidentsand premiers announce effortstowards peace, the smallestof incidents can s wr i f 11 ychange the political complex¬ion of the world, expect thatwithin their lifetimes theworld will undergo a horribleordeal. They may not bethinking that they w ill be des¬troyed, that their children willdie, that their homes will beturned to vapor; but deep in¬side they must be growingpessimistic about the chancesfor stability and normality,not to mention excellence oflife in the future.What are the possible ef¬fects of such a climate?Coupled with the fact that thePerhaps only art will be able to cope with thepossibilities suggested by the apocalyptic notion—as the artist begins to see himself as prophetand only possible historian of the future.A new film, DR. STRANGELOVE, removes itselffrom the realm of constructive social criticism andlaughs a long Juvinalian laugh at the final plight ofman as he unwittingly blows himself to bits. Thereis no suggestion as in ON THE BEACH that thereis any possibility of averting this end. It is as in¬evitable as clockwork, and there is nothing forthe artist to do but chart its course and die laugh¬ing.G. M.lessness. With luck a mancould escape the plague, intime even the most protractedwars came to an end, but thewords THIRD WORLD WARhave a finality about themthat negates hope.Hans Morgenthau. in hisarticle DEATH IN THE NU¬CLEAR AGE points out theuniqueness of our predica¬ment: “nuclear destructiondestroys the meaning ofdeath by depriving it ofits individuality ... it de¬stroys the meaning of im¬mortality by making both so¬ciety and history impossible.”The apocalyptic vision ismore than the possibility ofnuclear destruction; it isnourished and fed by the coldwar, by changing social andpolitical forces which offer norespite from the prospect ofchange, and overwhelm soci¬ety’s dream of order. Withoutthe bomb, of course, subtlepolitical maneuvering^ andnuances of policy wouldn’t as¬sume such sinister impor¬tance; as observers of theseacts we would be no differentfrom men of any age, mostages having their share ofchaos. The Berlin crisis, theblockade of Cuba, the assasi-nation of a president suggestto the people a sudden in¬crease in the probability ofimminent war . . . and in thereal wars of today we haveall been prepared to believethat the rockets will fly.It seems incredible to thinkit, but in a sense this mustbe time: a great part of oursociety, aware that in thiscentury the world has notgone long without a majorwar, aware that incredibly world is entering a period ofdifficulty entirely apart frombomb and the cold war, itcould prove disasterous. In theU. S. in recent years therehas emerged the notion of theinevitability of things; wehave the inevitability of over¬population . . . which doesn’tbother us at the moment butwill, within a century, wehave the inevitability of auto¬mation displacing millionsfrom their jobs ... a problemwhich confounds the experts.Our intellectuals, who oncebelieved they could cope w-ithsocial forces are understand¬ably stunned now by theire n o r m i t y. Overpopulation,massive unemployment, seembeyond our control.Whether these notions ofinevitability are justified ornot, the point is that we arebeginning to assume thatthey are, and the mind ad¬justs to these assumptions byforming an apocalyptic visionof the future, an accomoda¬tion to the threat of the aw¬ful, a way of writing off themanifold problems which weface.The human mind is fasci¬nating for its ability to assimi¬late into the routine of lifethe most extraordinary of cir¬cumstances. But, althoughthis assimilation is to a de¬gree a psychological necessity,it can also prove to be a forcefor the bad; it can put ideasof quality and excellence oflife out of the question by ex¬tending them beyond reach,and herein lies the frighten¬ing possibility of our apoca¬lyptic age. The intellectualswill eventually recover fromtheir initial confrontation• CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 28, T964 As Doomsday rapidly approaches, DR. STRANGLOVE calculagroup of survivors will have to remain at the bottom of deep milactive contamination. His figures say 93 years.with the massive problemsthat face us . . . an encourag¬ing sign of that is the renais¬sance in civic concern that w'esee all about us.But constant tensions, theresult of gnawing confronta¬tions with chaos, may wellundo notions of progress andbettennent of ones lot. For the majority of people it ma.v^Tfraiundo that promise by drawing waimen back to satisfaction with thea kind of subsistence. Why tioreven begin to build a better daiworld when the tomorrow is tooso unsure. The high points of inehuman society have occured^-iRtcit seems when the people were troimpressed with the pains of milBob Dylan obliges: pick"And what will you do now, my blue-eyed son,What will you do now my darling young one?""I’m a-going back out 'fore the rain starts a-falliI'm gonna walk to the depths of the deepest darlWhere the people are many and their hands^j^eWhere the pellets of poison are flooding our wWhere the home in the valley meets the dark, dWhere the executioner's face is always well hid<Where hunger is ugly and souls are forgotten;Where black is the color and none is the numbeAnd I'll tell it and speak it and think it and^ftte#And reflect from tlie mountains where all souls iAnd I'll stand on the ocean until I start sinkin',And I'll know my song well before I start singiiAnd it's a hard rain's a-gonna fall.— Bob Dylan, written during the week of the CubRAIN" is a desperate kind of song," Dylan later^writkactually the start of a whole song. B ut when I wrote ithave enough time alive to write all those songs, so Ithis one."_and days in an apocalyptic agePick a crisis, any crisis — a new card game):ulates how long a selectedmine shafts to avoid radio-frttction and the probable re¬wards of action. The notion ofthe apocalypse, our accomoda¬tion to the chaos which wedaily face, may carry with ittoo strongly the idea of theinevitablity of our destiny■rtiftri thus render human con¬trol of that destiny out ofmind.:ks crisisi.failing,ark forestire all empty,* watersdirty prison,hidden,i;i her.e^the itIs can see it;in',igingtuba blockade; "HARDifL "Every line in it isi it I thought I wouldn'tI put all I could into by Paul CowonLast year at Harvard asmall group of seniors spent aconsiderable amount of timeengaged in what we called“the apocalyptic card game.”The rules were quite simple.We would divide the deck intoten groups of five cards, andthen fan each group out intofive slots. Each slot stood fora different catastrophe:atomic destruction, economiccollapse, racial violence, psy¬chic disorder, and — perhapsworst of all, we joked—nocatastrophe whatsoever. Theslot into which the greatestnuml>er of cards fell becameour catastrophe for the day.The game was a consciousparody not only of the politi¬cal world into which we hadall grown, but also of our pri¬vate difficulties in determin¬ing which part of that worlddemanded our most concen¬trated attention. For as longas any of us could rememberwe had been haunted by asense of impending doom, butthe shape that doom seemedlikely to take had changedfrom year to year.Most of us had been “politi¬cized” (a word one alwaysuses in quotes to indicatescorn for its bureaucraticorigins) by the peace move¬ment at college. The bombrepresented of course themost vivid symbol of our un¬defined fear, and our hatredof its uninterrupted presencewelded us closely together.Yet one remembered that pe¬riod — usually between oneand three years—with faintdissatisfaction, still with aslight hang-over (a cigarette-clogged brain) from those in¬terminable late-night discus¬sions over unmanageableterms and unthinkable possi¬bilities. Was it really truethat to clear a path to ourfutures we had to think interms such as “deterence” and“overkill?” — and what didthese concepts have to dowith a happy marriage or asatisfactory job?/Never again has the heavysense of impending apocalypsebeen so great as during thoseyears. Even during the Cubacrisis it seemed certain thatsome decision, however aw¬ful, would he made soon: one’spanic was sharp at the edges.But in the early years of the peace movement one couldneither locate the enemy norimagine when it would strike—we were engaged, it seemed,in a one-sided war of emo¬tional attrition.In order to combat some¬thing dangerous one mustfirst comprehend it, but tomaster the subject of nuclearpolicy one would have had todelve deeply into such diversi¬fied fields as quantum phys¬ics, comparative economics,advanced international diplo¬macy, and mass psychology—and in the process, thoughgradually, lose that concernwith humanistic questionsthat had initially impelledone towards politics.Short of constructing somematerial idea of nuclear ca¬tastrophe after years of studyone could only visualize theprojected future by graftingthe prospect of annihilationonto each daily event: thatwas the only accessible mentalbridge between the ominousland of negotiations, labora-tories, and military installa¬tions and the familiar land offriends, books and travel. Soone entered Widener Library,for example, and immediatelyimagined it crumbling as theresult of a nuclear attack; or,more typically, one imaginedone’s love affairs and friend¬ships condensed into thosefew dreadful hours betweenthe announcement of war andthe literal fact of annihila¬tion.Out of this attitude theredeveloped a nearly schizo¬phrenic sense of the contrastbetween the relatively securepresent and the abyss thatseemed to lie beyond: thesame feeling on a subter¬ranean level as one bore open¬ly during the tensest hoursof the Cuba crisis when theradio continued to play rockand roll and advertise long¬term life insurance programs.Not only did a number ofgenuinely frightened peoplehasten decisions like marriagethat might better have beenpostponed, but many others,even the boldest, scuttledlong-range projects that re¬lied on a stable future.For those who were con¬cerned with the Peace Move¬ment to the point of makingpolicy the problem was to de¬vise techniques that would render manifest their vaguestfears; and this proved to beimpossible. Though there werepicket lines aplenty, it wasclear that hauling signs backand forth in some public parkwas not the best way of in¬forming other Americans thatsome dreadful danger layahead for them, too.Nor did technical argu¬ments over the amount of in¬spections United States nego¬tiators should agree to serveto express the emotions thathad led most people to thepeace movement. It seemedthat no one was willing tolisten carefully to a fewT thou¬sand young people who (whenall the jargon and the tech¬nicalities had been strippedaway) asked for nothing morecomplex than a chance togrow up.As a matter of fact, thePeace Movement probably didhave some effect in condition¬ing the public to accept laterproposals such as the test-bantreaty. From year to year, re¬actions to various picket linesbecame increasingly tolerant,and even, sometimes, under¬standing. But results so mildand indirect could not possi¬bly appease the forbodingsof disaster that those whowere inside the Peace Move¬ment continued to feel.How, then, could one effec¬tively channel one’s fear ofthe apocalypse? For manypeople the civil rights move¬ment provided an attractivealternative: there at least onecould contend with tangibleproblems, and occasionally en¬joy visible progress. The civilrights movement meant peo¬ple and places; the peacemovement meant books andlaboratories. Moreover, thecivil rights movement provid¬ed a bracing alternative formiddle-class students tobroaden their scope by forc¬ing them to come to termswith country men of vastlydifferent backgrounds and as¬sumptions. The peace move¬ment, on the other hand, grewincreasingly stifling as it be¬came apparent that the con¬verted were spending most oftheir time talking at one an¬other.Now for many studentsthe initial impulse—the vaguefear of apocalypse — was co¬ordinated and disciplined; and not only into the still relative¬ly abstract questions of civilrights—of what is justice andwhat is equality—but also in¬to wholly concrete problemsof school policy, city planning,automation, and unemploy¬ment.And this work, so clearlyessential to the lives of peopleone encountered daily, broad¬ened one’s vision in a waythe peace movement had not,and lent coherence to a greatdeal of what one studied andread.But beneath these imme¬diate political concerns thereremains an intense, if oftenunrealized fear: now of racialviolence, now of widespreadpoverty, now of the increas¬ing isolation of traditionallycivilized countries, now (andpersistently) of the bomb. Itis not a feeling that lasts in¬side one from minute tominute; but it is not, either,a feeling that can ever be ex¬pelled.One reads Hannah Arendt’srecollection (in Eichnian inJerusalem) that among Ger¬man Jews as late as 1934“both Zionists and Assimila-tionists talked in terms of a■great Jewish revival,’ a 'greatconstructive movement of Ger¬man Jewry,’ and quarrelledamong themselves in ideolo¬gical terns about the desir¬ability of Jewish' emigration. . .”; one reads this andwonders whether in replacingprotests of the bomb withother kinds of political pro¬tests one is reflecting a simi¬lar delusion: though it isimpossible to live for long in aswamp filled with devils, itmay still sometimes be nec¬essary.The brief scene from Dr.Strangelove, where SilmPickens (dressed in a cowboyhat and Air Force uniform)rides the bucking H-Bombthrough the gates of theweapons stable down, downto be SQUASHED with theRussian ground, lingers andhaunts one — THE BOMBMIGHT REALLY DROP. Andthe old question — could 20men, working dilligently, startnowr and ward off disaster?— works its way through thetough sediment of other in¬terests, of familiarity wdththe prospect of apocalypse, ofreluctance to do battle withan unknown foe, and beginsto re-emerge towards the sur¬face of action.f * G A D F L Y *General Education and education in generalThe problem, you see is like this—student when they apply here don'tgenerally quite know what they arem for. There are certain courseswhich they will be bored by; courses,moreover whose value to them asindividuals will not go unquestionedunless they have completely bour¬geois intellects (which admittedlymost have).Now7, wrhen the student gets herehe finds that in order to get thatGodalmighty A or B or C or what¬ever the minimum grade acceptableto him is — that depends of courseon his own standards—he will findhimself spending evenings alone inhis room reading materia! which isshoved down his throat by a man orby a committee of men who havedecided that everybody ought to readthis stuff.Of course, an individual can almostnever get from these professors anykind of reason why he as an indi¬vidual ought to be reading this orthat book or learning this or thatfact, although some professors doventure so far as to utter clicheswhich generally involve phrases like‘•cultured man’’ or “well-roundededucation.” but then such a professorgenerally can't tell you what thesecliches mean, why their fulfillmentis desirable for you and worth youreffort, or what any particular read¬ing in question has to do with them.Are these things self-evident? Be¬cause they go unquestioned does notprove that they are self-evident, butin may prove that there are intellec¬tual dilettantes and intellectual fakeson the staffs — people who use bigwords in complex ways to hoodwdnkothers into thinking tliat what theyhave to say is significant when itreally is not. and honestly. This is the minimumwhich should be expected of all of ns— the barest minimum requirement.But what happens when a studentfinds that some of the things he isreading or some of the entire courseshe is taking actually are useless tohim except for the course grade hewill get on the test? Bored by hisreading, he will try to find waysaround “the system.” He will knowthat the grade is actually meaning¬less except insofar as it reflects onhis class standing. That is to say, hewill know that it is a hollow symbol,one without real substance in the wayof a practical referent.He is being cheated by a bureauc¬racy and a “system.” Shall he cheatback? Maybe by doing so a balancewhich is just can be found and main¬tained. Certainly he must find someway around “the system,” while atthe same time lie must make it ap¬pear by his transcript that he is in“the system.”If he has courage, he might go tothe faculty or to the administrationwith his sincere and intelligent ques¬tions. Here he runs into a brick wall.The people he is speaking to are partof the system he is opposing. Theylive and breathe the system. Mostof them cannot any longer see out¬side it. Who can smell his own badbreath?Intelligent studentsshould questionStudents impelledto fit "system"Now. these considerations are ser¬ious ones for each student at thisschool and whoever fails to regardthem seriously and in detail will fitin with “the system,” but his intel¬lectual integrity is very much inquestion—and so too is his intelli¬gence. Whoever fails to analyzethese questions in the context of hisown personality and of his own prac¬tical life objectives is not takingeither himself or the rest of the so¬ciety to which he belongs seriouslythe !<Mcol {BjwdJl coCLEANERS - TAILORS • LAUNDERERSIn a hurry?Don't worryRush Servicewhen neededPHONES: Midway 3-7447 1013-17 EAST 61 ST STREETHYde Park 3-6868 Across From Burton & Judson Ct.THE SAFE WAY to stay alertwithout harmful stimulantsNoDoz keeps you mentallyalert with the same safe re¬fresher found in coffee andtea. Yet NoDoz is faster,handier, more reliable. Abso¬lutely not habit-forming. Next time monotony makesyou feel drowsy while driving,working or studying, do asmillions do . . . perk up withsafe, effective NoDoz tablets.Another fins product of Grove letroretortee.H I C A G O!’• <* v A A MAROON • Feb. 28, 1964 a man named Beadle: “The real andideal goal of the University of Chi¬cago is basic research.” Realizingthe implications and the truth of thatstatement, he will be reminded ofthe power of the system, and hisrebellion will continue to be a quietand a personal one. Maybe it will bea bitter one also.—Eric Zuesse(As a matter of personal inter¬est, I would like to know whetherthere are any students, and if sohow7 many, interested in tacklingthe questions and the issues raisedin the above article or any specificramifications of these questionsand issues as they relate to par¬ticular courses. If the interest isgreat enough this can be the be¬ginning of concerted action in giv¬ing students an effective and aconstructive voice in their owneducation. If you are interested,please phone the Maroon office ormy room at 1403X Pierce soonand leave your address and phonenumber. I shall contact you withina few days if the results appearencouraging. E.Z.)An intelligent student will gothrough this period of questioning,doubt and rebellion. Because he isintelligent he will finally realize thathis rebellion mast be a quiet and apersonal one. There is no SNCC,YPSL, CORE or NAACP, no organi¬zational structure of any kind sup¬porting him, so lie stands alone andmust make his way quietly.lie may think that reform isneeded. He may wish that there wereothers who would have the integrityand the intelligence to feel this re¬bellion as he does and who wouldstand with him and help him to breakthe system. Maybe at night hedreams of students picketing the ad¬ministration building or of professorsfacing empty classrooms with be¬wildered expressions on their faces.But each morning as he wakes uphe will see taped to the ceiling abovehis bed in large letters a remark by are.The first of the above given criteriais obviously dependent upon indi¬vidual value standards and also uponJoseph K. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060HYDE PARK SHOE REPAIR1451 E. 57th ST.HY 3-1247Serving The University Community forwell over 40 TearsCoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 individual career objectives, andsince such standards and objectivesvary from person to person, it isclear that a course which is good forone person need not necessarily begood for another.Certainly this fact has relevance tothe question of the desirability ofrequired courses of any nature, gen.ed. or otherwise, and no number ofacademic cliches will negate thisrelevance.If we realize what even most of theprofessors here very readily admit;that tenure at the University of Chi¬cago, as at almost all other big namePh D. mills, absolutely requires pub¬lication and/or basic research, butnot exceptional teaching ability, welittle wonder that students here occu¬py the role of second-class citizensof the academic community, andthat both the administration and thefaculty frequently demonstrate solittle concern about education thatthey cannot do more than to make a pretense to knowing what it’s allabout.Perfection does not exist anywhere,and to expect it to exist at the Uni¬versity of Chicago, although it is cer¬tainly one of the world’s greatest“educational” institutions, and has,along with Harvard, Yale, Columbia,and Berkeley, one of the five biggestreputations abroad of any Americancollege or university (however, manyChicagoans don’t even know tliat itexists) is the purest folly.If a college education here leavesmuch to be desired, this should notbe a cause for surprise, but it shouldbe a cause for constructive concern,and f the purpose, the “real andideal goal’’ of a great university, isnot properly conducive to such con¬cern on the part of its administrationand faculty, then this concern na¬turally devolves upon the studentbody as its primary collective respon¬sibility.PostscriptIn consideration of a rigorous meth¬odological approach to the questionof the overall significance, value,worthwliileness, goodness, or whatyou will, ol any particular course, Ithink it is advisable to divide themain question into two distinct parts:1) tlie significance ol the materialtaught, and 2) the fairness of thetest or tests and also of any othergrading criteria employed. Tie latterrests solely on whether the markingprocedures used yield true indicationsof the student’s understanding of thematerial taught.Of course, both of these two ques¬tions can. and indeed must, be sub¬divided if the analysis is to be atruly rigorous one, but an individualvery infrequently if ever encountersanything approximating a rigorousanalysis of the value of any course,and all indications seem to point tothe fact that certain course staffs areas sloppy, illogical, and unconcernedabout this matter as their students Typewriter* — Tape Recorders — Adding MachineNew — Used — Rental*Complete service including type changes. Inquire about rental al¬lowances toward the purchase price.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenu*JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY REST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-8190 1340 E. 53rdwfor college undergraduatesOUR "346" DEPARTMENTAND OUR UNIVERSITY SHOPThese two fine departments offer a widechoice of practical, good-looking clothingand furnishings, reflecting our taste, ex¬clusive styling and unmatched experiencein outfitting undergraduates. We inviteyou to visit our stores during Spring vaca¬tion, and make your selections.OUR ”346” DEPARTMENT(sizes 36 to 46)Our Tropical Suits, $90 and $105*Lightweight Sport Jackets, $65Tropical Odd Trousers, from $27.50OUR UNIVERSITY SHOP(sizes 35 to 42)Dacron* Polyester and WorstedTropical Suits, from $65*Washable Suits, from $45Odd Jackets, from $27.50 • Blazers, $50Khaki Cotton Chino Odd Trouserst $11•Price* slight!/ higher west of the Rockies, yISTASUSMIO ISISMow *Doi|8 JWnishingo.Jfals74 F.. MADISON, NR. MICHIGAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL. 60602NfcW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCO. P'AX8Culture CalendarC liihifo program, which will include a largetxniwi'* scale cantata “composed” by a comExhibition by students tn the Fine puter, but performed live, March 2, sponsored by the department of 8 pm, Mandel Hall. Si stnH»n»o « '-.nart Midway Studios, 6010 Ingleside. directed by John Reich, February 21-March 11, nightly 7:30, Friday andSaturday, 8:30, Goodman Theatre, UC granted financesfor science, art study. *—'w " wj «« win- jwmtii u, niguiiy r naav ana^"‘deSrl^nr1^ ^pm’ Manfcl hX VVlutteSTW: Mon^'and^ ColuSbul"*" 90^" CE UC hftS ™ent\y received tracing in art history and Comiods-Midway Studios, 6010 Inglenide. ext. 3885. 6-2337. ’ * ' two grants to finance ffl'adu- S-eurship.CE two grants to finance gradu- seurship.. ate study in the fields of the It is to extend over a live yearI* **l>ruin y k**4 4-Michigan and Adams. v .Paintings bv Rene Magritte. Belgian *• 8 P'». Cahn Auditorium, 600surrealist painter. March 2-April 10. Em«rson. Evanston, Free. UN 4-1900.Renaissance Society. Monday throughFriday, 10-5 pin, Saturday, 1-5 pm. Theatre the State University of Iowa, LtL,* ! ?!- h • and the University of IH™~- ‘° l"?,,de new ,acll“,es ,or *K,lhFebruary 28-29, 8:30 pm, , j t-i j -•Hermann Hail, 4o w. 33rd by the Ford Foundation. of art.___ is Institute of Technology,225 9600, ext. 2781. The amount presented was $150,- The professor and chairman of“West side story.’* directed by °°°. and it will be used to finance the department, Edward A. Maser,arv 28-29 and tho framinit rvf im tunxIifA ixiiidon.t c AYnlaiitWV^ tikof Uirtl, 1 1 1FilmsThe New American Cinema series, “The Connection,” by Jack Gelber,F.<V,«rUary ^6-29, March 1, 6-8, 13-16,Ralph K. La Mantia, exhibit in mixed . Chicago Strings, Stravinsky: Concerto ext. 282media. February 17-March 17. Center ln D, Basel Concerto; Boccherini: Coil- j , w *** j — * » to provide new farilitioc foe K,.thfor Continuing Education lobby, 9 am- certo; Copland: Two Pieces (first Chi- The Doct#r in Spite of Himself,” by and the University of Illinois , . DOtn0 pm. cage performance): David Diamond: Cohere. February 28-29, 8:30 pm, u V P J P j teaching and research in the fieldArt Institute 67th annual exhibition **■«* 3. 8:3° pm. Orchestra £rov"M: Hermann Hall, 40 W. 33rd ^of'American painting and sculpture, Hal1' M-5.00 HA 7-0362. rJ£lnt>U5. Lriflt.ltute u Technology,. Suzann«‘ Bloch, lutanist and singerMnrehrdgrBm °f Shakespearean songs. "west side Story.” directed by «*!, and It WUI De used to linailce me department, Hidward A. MaserEmerson', evan*St,h rAJ* un "4-190S mSX" if *3*5 **5* “m-S^aSS the training of up to twelve students explained that high quality books!J-5, 10-12, 17-19. Friday, ’ 8:30, 'satur- annually, over a three year period, slides, photographs, and other ma-Theatre 1419 N ’ WeZ^*! «3 rS" wh The thre« universities have or- to™* and equipment will be paid4-8414. ’ ' e,Js' ?1 a WH ganized this i„ter-University Com- for by «** funds provided,a m ,M'J March 1. 6-8, 13-16, “W ho’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf,” niittee for Behavioral Science Train- Twelve American universities'and-The Extraordina'ry*''child'”'"by^St a n N. Brmlay!’'* 3S«o' 3212 Kd ^Sheppe^kruSc!?3^^ *"* “ YucaUin to conduct P™*™™ °°lle^ have received similar allot-p.rakhage and ‘'Going Up?.’ by Wii- “The Three sisters,” bv Anton Che- Apnl n. studebaker Theatre, $2.75-6.<K>. in the areas of social psychology, an- meats from the Kress Foundation,Bi'.'cksSieT’li.5?hindents $?.*. 667- day S^turdav^’s^o^ ^6'8‘7^' thropology, and ethnohistory. all designed to create a larger num-2iHt6- The Last Stage, 1506 E Hvde^ Park’ p__u* ... With the money provided by the ber trained art historians, and toY "'tenner'An®’.ileTiu »1<^2 °°v OA <-42(hi. * ‘ rFeV,eW grant, ^ ^ work Expand scholarly communication.> >'l Brjnner, mrecteo Dy Anaioie ui- “New York City is Missine ” Peter. p:...i a..a \i..„ „ ...... . .' k' Pm’ lnternatlonal ^vue. weeknights except MondS 9assembly hall, $ 50. and u pm Saturday 9, 11 and 1 am• The Lost World,” w ith Wallace Second City, 1846 N Weils S2-2 in’Beery (1925), “Nomads of the North.” DE 7-3992. ' * > 9* . .v ith Lon Chancy. March 3. 7 pm and National Renertorv , , . .... ......;; pm.^ocla! Sciences 122. $.85. stu- gJJ. UglUenje, Farley Gra^' Is'^^m/ScieTrJ’HaTSi Robert R«^ld of UC. His workMagnificent Ambersons” (1942), Or- -The s^g gu„ by Chekov FebruarO R<»‘kefeller Chapel Choir, Bach: St. Wlbh b°tJh orient niew students andswi Welles, director. March 5, 7:45, 29, “The Crucible.” by Miller, Feb- 7oltln ,™sslon’ March 15> 3:30 pm. serve as a comparison with the CUT-a 1 institute. $.50. CE 6-,080. ™ary,*> (mat.). -Ring Around the Ex‘: ^ifi7' rent research program A nerma-. Moon by Amouilh, February 28, Haney Brothers and Tommy Makem, \ rriT' , PV7jConcerts, Folk Music, etc. Nightly 8 30. matinee. 2 30, Civic March 16, 8:30 pm, Orchestra Hall, nent Staff With linguistic and relatedn Wacker and Washington, 7-03S2. ethnic knowlcdfiG will JigId to si'dHiicago Symphony, February 28. 2 $2.75-6.00. FI 60270. Jose Greco March 22 2 30 nm fu ^ K™wieage wm neip TO aia, Jean Marti non, conductor Steven *.SUce of ,.aradise ” by Stephen Opera House. FR 2-0666. ^ decisiveness of the project.Pons” Vconcert 'waiter Hendi. con- by Robert Applebaum, Sviatoslav Richter, piano recital, The other of these grants hasdoctor: John Ogdon. Pianist. March 5. S^ifS S haT.v^' 3:30 pm* 0-h-tra Hall« been awarded by the Samuel H.•“ <**■ Mar,,n™' c?nd”U>r- » » student discount. 2?,"’ jSi" violin recital. April 5. Foundation ot New Yoric City“A far Country,” by Henry Denker, 3:30 pm, Orchestra Hall, HA 7-0362. ’ for the advancement of graduatePreviewPeter, Paul and Mary, March 6-7, und studv in Yucatan a state of8:30 pm, McCormick Place, 225-4350. „T . L, a slateThe Don Cossack Chorus and Dane Mexlco- wa« the Site ofers, Serge Jaroff, conductor, March 8, important anthropological research3 pm. Orchestra Hall, ha 7-0362. twenty-five years ago by the lateFrancescatti. violinist. OrchestraHall. 220 S. Michigan, $1-5.00. HA7 0362.Concert of blues and spirituals ofMississippi, Fred McDowell. February2« 8 30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall. $1 50.student admission $1 00, Folklore So¬ciety members $ 75.Miriam Makcha and Oscar BrownJr . February 29 . 8:30 pm, McCormickPlace, $2-5.00. 225 4350.The American Opera Company, Ver¬di's “Un Hallo In Maschera,” con¬ducted by Fedor Kabalin. February?9 8:15 pm. Eleventh St Theatre, 64E 11th St.. $3 00-2:50 HA 7-1733.I’C Collegium Muslcum. programfeaturing Renaissniwe carnival songs,February 29. 8:30 pm. Bond Chapel,admission free, ext. 3885.Marais and Miranda, Internationalhalladeers. March 1. 8 pm. Civic Thea-t •« 20 N Wacker. $2 50-3 50, studenttickets all $1 00 WA 2-3585Hach Cantata Group. Richard Vik-st non, conductor: Golub Quartet;members of the Chicago Symphony,Cantatas Nos. 106, 161. 46 March 1,7:30 pm. Bond Chapel, $3 00, ext. 3387.Robert Joffrey Ballet, March 1. 2 30pm. McCormick Place, $2 50-5.50. 225-4X50.I'C new experimental music concert Woodlawn Tutoring Projectneeds tutors all elementaryschool subjects.Call Pam Procuniarex. 3273Absolutely Desperate!!! 50high school students are ingrave need of tutors. CallSWAP office, ext. 3587.SAMUEL A. BELL’Buy Shell From Bell*SINCE 19244701 So. Dorchester Ave.MEnwood 0-3150A Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALSWe Specialize inDuplicating Paper &Envelopes of All SizesDUNCAN’S1305 E. 53rd St.HY 3-4111Serving the University otChicago Campus Since 1921SAM MALATTBARBER SHOPBUttertield 8-09501011 East 01 st StreetChicago 37, Illinois BETWEENOUTER SPACEAND THE DEEP SEA$ ' - , BP mTHERE’S A WIDE RANGE OF OPPORTUNITYIN THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESa newworld ofdmingpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chickent4ME. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668 To outer space and into the deep sea, we take the sumtotal of our scientific and managerial knowledge. A casein point is Telstar, which represents the first step towarda worldwide communications system. Another example,the new deep-sea amplifier that simultaneously transmitstwo-way messages. Both communications triumphs stemfrom Bell System planning, research and development.Such trailblazing projects command the best ofmanagerial and scientific talent. That’s why you’ll find,throughout the Bell System, men with college training asdiverse as the responsibilities they shoulder. Their back¬grounds run the gamut from liberal arts and businesscourses to science or specialized engineering majors. Admittedly, the work is demanding. It requires thatunusual caliber of man who finds a greater satisfaction inchallenge than in ready solution... who is eager to see hiseducation yield dividends...who wants an immediateopportunity for leadership.Men with this kind of impatience will discover thestimulation, welcome and rewards they seek in the tele¬phone business.BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIESFeb. 28. 1984 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9Plan to renovate Midway Studios; funds neededLong used by Sculptor Lo- for this program which will continue a time to Taft's barn, have in re-rado Taft and his associates the growth of the studios, “like a cent years deteriorated greatly andas their studios, The Midway chambered nautilus,’’ in Taft's words, (be space available has become in-which began when Taft moved his adequate foe (he needs of (he finestudio-barn from its location a few arts students and teachers. “Quar-blocks away and established the art tern are cramped and dark, hardlycenter which he was to use until his ideal conditions for an artist’s work,’’death in 1936. says Harold Hay don, director of theMidway Studios, which grew little Studios and noted art critic.Studios, now the fine artsstudios of the University’s Depart¬ment of Art, is undergoing a re¬newal and renovation program whichwill cost $200,000.The Women’s Board of the Uni¬versity is conducting the fund raising by little with studios added one at The renewal program will takeplace in two stages. Stage one. whichincludes renovation of the existingfacilities, has recently begun and isexpected to be finished by June. Inthe Central Court Gallery, which usedto be lined with replicas of LoradoTaft’s work and where Taft and hisdisciples ate their meals at a longtable, and the sculpture studio, re¬newal work began in 1962 with theinstallation of new lighting and fur¬nishings.This year, several of the studioswill be remodeled or renewed, in¬cluding the studios in Taft’s bam.The contracts for this work havebeen signed and the work began re¬cently.The second phase of the programconsists of the new construction, de¬signed by Edward D. Dart, who inthe past year has won seven majorarchitectural awards. A prominentfeature of the new construction willbe a building containing a projectionlecture hall, which Haydon said willbe used both for art history classesand for film showings of such groupsas Doc Films. It will be the finestsuch auditorium on campus.Directly above the lecture hall willbe a special exhibitions gallery, whoselight source will be a series of uniquesawed-off gables. Haydon hopes toplace statuary or relics from oldHyde Park in the studio gardenwhich will be relandscaped and beplay “Who’s Afraid of Virginia provided with new entrances, oneWoolf?,” now playing at the Stude- through the entrance to the lecture-exhibition part of the studios. The will be a corridor whose parts willbe separated by glass walls. Ironelevator enclosures designed by LouisSullivan will be used to ornament thisentrance and vestibule. Originallyfrom the 209 W. Jackson BoulevardBuilding, they have been donated tothe studios by alumnus Kenneth New-berger. Similar enclosures are in thecollections of the Art Institute and theMuseum of Modern Art in New York.Also to be renewed are the manylofts from which Taft liked to lookdown on his work and which wereused as studios themselves. The renewal and additions to theMidway Studios follow in the tradi¬tions by which they grew up aroundthe nucleus of Taft’s bam, and wiUprovide a memorial to one of thegreat American sculptors, and tf>etradition which he tried to establishof art being created in an area withthe sup>port of the public. In the pro¬vision of a new center for creativefacilities for artists, the renewal pro-gram will be making a contribution,not only towards the preservation ofa landmark, but also to the growthof humanistic study.Tickets available fortlbee’s ‘Virginia Woolfhaving service problems?foreign car hospital and clinic, inc.Entries will be due some time in ....April in Wieboldt 206. Entrant* must 5424 south kimbark avenuebe at least 20 but not yet 26 years ofage at the final date of submission.Competition for the other prizes isopen to all students who were regis¬tered in undergraduate programsduring the Winter and Spring quar¬ters of 1964. Essays must be sub¬mitted by May 1, 1964.Prizes will be awarded by com¬mittees of unnamed judges appointedby the Dean of the College. Detailedrules of the two contests may beobtained from the office of the SocialSciences Section, Gates-Blake 428.Awards in the contests are pre¬ authorized sales and service foraustin, mg, morris, austin healey, triumph 8c jaguarand we fix ail other european cars, tooTHE FRET SHOPGuitars — Banjos — MandolinsFolk Music Books — Records at Discount1547 E. 53rd ST. NO 7-1060THE ART PUBFOLK FEST THURS., Ml. & SAT.Coming SUN., MARCH », 5.00 P.M.FOLK CONCERT — FEATURINGLOWELL SHERMAN7512 COTTAGE GROVE DR. AARON ZIMBLER. OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNTRENT-A-CARPER DAY5c PER MlPER MILEATOMIC CARRENTALS, INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155 COUNTRY CLUBHOTELInvites You ToSUNDAYFAMILY DINNERComplete %250 UpDAILY LUNCH $1.00Entertainment NitetfReservations PL 2-22046930 S. SHORE DRIVEAmple Free fark'mq EveryoneEATSatGORDON’S1321 E. 57thExterior of Midway Studios, headquarters of Art Dept. |Offer many student prizesStudents in the College may sub- sented annually at an awards assemmit entries for prizes of up to $500 bly in May.for essays on social institutions, poli¬tical institutions, and playwriting,storywriting, or musical composition.Tlie Harold E. Goettler PoliticalInstitutions Prizes will be awarded ... . .. Student discount tickets are avail-for the best essays on: ’The case for , , , jut * .able for second balcony seats for the(or against) government regulationof obscenity and pornography.”The Monro Bernhard “social inven- baker Theatre,tion” Essay Prize of $150 wiLl be Friday evening $3.25 seat* will be 8arden is l,sed ■* d,e summer forawarded for an essay which formu- $2.25 with a student ID. Monday, ^ lectures.lates and espouses an original pro- Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday At the northeast corner of theposal in the field of social institu- evening 82.75 tickets will be $1.75, studios, a new painting studio willtions- the nroDosal mav be concerned and Wednesday and Saturday ma- be built. Adjoining the painting stu-, p po y tinee $2.50 tickets will be 51.50. dio will be the new entrance, whicheither with the invention of a newinstitution or with the resourceful ' —— -improvement of an existing one.The Olga and Paul Menn Fundprovides awards “to foster talent inthe fields of playwriting, storywriting,or musical composition.” The contestis judged by a panel of distinguishedartists.mi 3-3113Universityof ChicagoFolkloreSocietyPresentsFRED MCDOWELLBlues and Spirituals of Mississippi j;!l Friday, February 28 Ida Noyes Hall| 8:30 P.M. 1212 E. 59thjj ADMISSION $1.50 UC STUDENTS $1.00JO • CHICAGO MAROON *. Feb. 28. 1964\ * rt .w>lakethe NO 7-9071PARK AT S^RD : NO 7-9071yde park theatre CHICAGO MAROONStarts Friday, Feb. 28EXCLUSIVE ORIGINAL RUSSIAN VERSION!Conn*9 Mi Aetres* TATYANIA SAMOILOVA in MIKHAIL KALATOZOV'S"THE UNSENT LETTER'*VASILI LIVANOV + EUGENY URBANSKY”A Truly Rare Movie!"—N.Y. TIMESandGALINA ULANOVA * MAYA PLISETSKAYAin the Famed Bolshoi Bade* ShortMThe Fountain of BAKHCHISERAI*Free Weekend Patron Parking at 5230 S. Lake ParkSpecial Student Rates WITH Student I.D. Cards WEEKEND GUIDEGOLD CITY INNTREAT YOUR DATE TO THE BEST CANTONESEDINNER IN HYDE PARK THIS WEEKEND70o/o discount to student with this adSpecial: Fried Wonton Free5228 HARPERHY 3-2559Jimmy'sand the University RoomR8SIRVKD EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ava. dark theatre50 alltimetfor college studentswith i.d. carda different doublefeatures daily• open dawn to dawn• little gal-leryfor gals onlyfri. 28 - "onion head"and "claudelle inglish”sat. 29 - "bye-bye birdie"and ' palm springsweekend”sun. 1 - "heavens above"and "winter light"mon. 2 - "anna’s sin”and "bedroom vendet¬ta"tues. 3 - "seven menfrom now" and "thefour horsemen of theapocalypse”wed. 4 - "elephant walk”and "stowaway girl”•burs. S • "alias jessiejames” and "sheriff offractured jaw”fr 2-2843dark & madison TAl-SAM-NfcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing iaCANTONESE ANDANIKIIICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd Sf. MU 4-1062 Cafe KaTiVANDLEW•NORMANPRESENTS THEFOURAYALONSONt Of ISRAU'S . -Of HUUOtfST MOMTOP SONG AND • ONf Of NtW Y0«« SCOMIPT IZOUPiS • If APING STAvi SNOW s ]jAT THETERRACE CASINO, MORRISON HOTEL |SAT. fee. 39th * SICONO SHOW SUN tit*30 P.M, MATHM AUDITOtlUM.. SMS N. Line®!- Ave.TICKftS $3.50 • (Same Sii.wl St soSponjoierf by StUgiaut Zianislt of Chicago^OR TICKETS CALI S88-5868 OR 334-8*92HOBBY HOUSEIS OPEN ALL NIGHTHOBBY HOUSE 1342 E. 53rd ST./MARBOR* TW AT DIVISION \* 1 he weirdest, wooziest, wackiestcomedy of 1963” — Time Magazine"Topsy-Turvy Fun and a zany spoof”— LIFE“Hallelujah The Hills” Chicago’s most unusualtheatre, offering onlythe finest foreign anddomestic films. /STUDENTSTola advantage of thaspecial discount avail¬able fa yei f. ?0£ sny dayexcept Saturday. ShowI.D. card to the cashier. TIKI TOPICSVisit Cirals House of Tiki for aquiet, relaxed evening conducivefor a twosome. Our candlelightBetting ie ideal for an intimateconversation, 6pieed with achoice of Jumho Fried Shrimp,Barbecued Back Ribs, FriedChicken, Lobster Tail, BeefPlatter, etc. Try Cirals House ofTiki where the Hawaiianatmosphere sets the scene for anenjoyable evening with the ladyin your life.For an added treat after dinnertake in the new show at “TheLast Stage.” The production is“Three Sisters” by AntonChelikov. Don’t miss it.“After the Show” hack toCirals House of Tiki for adelightful Hawaiian drink.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51st and Lake Park Ave.1510 HYDE PARK BLVD.LI 8-7585 CAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THE •rHY 3-5300 FA 4-5525PIZZAMed. LargeCHEESE . 1.45 2.00SAUSAGE . 1.80 2.35PEPPER & ONION . 1.65 2.20BACON & ONION . 2.15 2.70COMBINATION . 2.40 2.95MUSHROOM . 2.15 2.70SHRIMP . 2.40 2.95! THIS COUPON WORTH 50c r|1, ON ANY PIZZA DELIVERY 11 IN FEBRUARY 1y Food served from 11 a.m. to 3:00 a.m.Kitchen Closed Wed. shore drive motel*FACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chicago Rates. Beautiful Rooms,Free TV. Parking, Courtesy Coffee.Closest Motel to Univ. of Chicago and Museum of Science & Industry.FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTEL56th St. & So. Shore Dr. • Chicago 37. IllinoisrIT'S THE BIG ONE:“Definitely the biggest show ever tofit in Mandel Hall.”•—J. Lee Jones,C.arnpus Architect “Stupendous and electrifying,A Smash!”— William Van Clcve,University Registrar “Biggest mess ever.*— William Zemans.Custodian, Mandel Hall“Outrageously amusing ... an excessof material!”—Chicago Maroon “The set design, lighting effects, makeup, and costumes are very nice andpretty.’— Joshua C. Taylor, Professor of Art “The music is too exquisite to listen towithout pain.”—Grosvenor W. Cooptr, Profes$*>r of MusicOF PARADISELAST PERFORMANCES, TONIGHT AND SATURDAY AT 8:30 P.M.MANDEL HALL. 57th & UNIVERSITYTickets at the door! by phone (ext. 3581), or at Mandel Hall Box officei Tjlf ■ sit? i \11 mFab. 28, 1944 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ESEis Ave.Another Great Sale of Books - Outstanding Titles In Many SubjectsFormerly published to sell at $2.50 to $25.00 Now 99^ to ^3 ^ While They Lastat 99c each1. THF. CIVIl. WAR CHRISTMASALBUM. Ed. by Philip Van DorenStern. Pub. a.t $4 95. Sale .992. “GEORGE.” By Emlyn Wil¬liams. Frank, funny, story of actor-play-^right’s years of struggle andfirst success in the theatre.Pub. at $5.96. Sale .993. OPIUM WORLD—MAR IB] BON¬NARD. By Alice Ekert-Rotholtz.Dazzling, dramatic novel, set inParis, London and the Orient.Pub. at $4.95. Sale .994. Killy Graham to Reinhold Nie¬buhr—LAND IN SEARCH OF GOD.By S. J. Rowland, Jr. America’scurrent religious revival — roots,manifestations, meaning in all ma¬jor faiths. Pub. at $3.95.... Sale .995. VENUS I)E MILO—THE SPIN¬NER. By Elmer G. Suhr. Brilliantscholarly detection, linking a fa¬mous art mystery with ancient fer¬tility symbols. 28 iUus.Pub. at $4.00. Sale .996. RADIO ASTRONOMY. By J. H.Piddington. Introduction to tech¬niques. applications; fascinatingdata on radar, radio waves fromsun. planets and satellites. Ulus.Pub. at $2.50. Sale .997. “Great Imposter” — THE RAS¬CAL & THE ROAD. Robert Crichtontells how he got Fred Demarra (thefamous imposter himself) to re¬enact his incredible masquerades.Amazing, amusing reading.Pub. at $3.95 Sale .998. THE PEACE RACE. By Prof.Seymour Melman, Columbia Uni¬versity. Pub. at $3.95. Sale .999. THE DIMENSIONAL STRUC¬TURE OF TIME. By Irvin Mor-genstern. An original study of theinterdynamics of action, reality,time and evolution.Pub. at $3.75. Sale .9910. FORM IN CIVU.IZATION: Es¬says on Functionalism and Beauty.C. R. Lethady's classic work onthe aesthetics of architecture, witha foreword by Lewis Mumford.Pub. at $2 75. Sale .9911. Willie Mays Sc Co.—A FLAGFOR SAN FRANCISCO. By CharlesEinstein. Wildly funny history of theinsane first season played by thetransplanted Giants in CandlestickPark Orig. $4.50. Sale .9912. HEADLINES ALL MY LIFE.By Arthur Christiansen. Autobio¬graphy of editor of Lord Beaver-brook’s famed London Daily Ex¬press. ^Pub. at $4 95. Sale .9913. BAYONETS TO LHASA. ByPeter Fleming. Absorbing accountof British invasion of Tibet in 1904.Photos Orig. $4.95. Sale .9914. COMMUNICATION. ORGANI¬ZATION AND SCIENCE. By Je¬rome Rothstein. A study of en¬tropy. organization and cybernetics,based on the principles of commu¬nication and measurement.Pub at $3.50. Sale. 9915. MARRIED TO TOLSTOY. ByCynthia Asquith. The story of SonyaTolstoy's forty-eight tempestuousyears with the great Russian writer.Pub. at $5.00. Sale .9916. MAGNETISM; From Lodestoneto Polar Wandering. By D. S. Pa-rasnis. Concise study of magneticphenomena, beginning with an ele¬mentary account of the quantumtheory to present knowledge of theearth’s magnetism. Hus,Pub. at $2.50. Sale .9917. SOVIET SPACE TECHNOL¬OGY. By A. J. Zaehringer. Intro,by Wernher von Braun. Illus.Pub. at $3.95. Sale .9918. OVERFED BUT UNDER¬NOURISHED. By Curtis Wood, Jr.M.D. Discussed nutritional aspectsof health and disease, relation of vi¬tamin and mineral deficiences t»common aliments.Pub. at $2.50. Sale .9919. Biology and art—DARWIN ANDTHE NAKED LADY. By Alex Com¬fort. Seven tonic and provocativeessays examining the split betweenscience and poetry.Pub. at $4.00. Sale .9920. THE PRODIGAL RAKE:Memoirs of William Hickey. Ed. byPeter Quennell. An 18th centuryroque narrates his experiences andtravels and recreates, in bawdy de¬tail, the social millieu depicted inHogarth’s engravings. “Rivals insheer lust for life Boswell’s LondonJournal.” — Saturday Review.Illus. Pub. at $6.50. Sale .9921. TRUE MORALITY AND ITSCOUNTERFEITS. By Dietrich vonHildebrand, with Alice Jourdain.Attack on existentialism that arguesthat “circumstance ethics are oftena subtle glorification of sin.Pub. at $3.00. Sale .9922. Sherman Adams’ FIRST HANDREPORT. Inside story of the Eisen¬hower administration by the Presi¬dent’s closet confidant and assist¬ant. Pub. at $5.95. Sale .9923. S. N. Behrman’s PORTRAITOF MAX. Brilliant biography ofMax Beerbohm, the great dramacritic and wit. Illustrated with SirMax's inimitable caricatures.Pub. at $6.00. Sale .9924. THE TUNNEL UNDER THECHANNEL. By Thomas Whiteside.Diverting story of the still-raging,150-year battle to connect Englandand the continent with a vehiculartunnel. Illus.Pub. at $3.50. Sale .9925. THE PROFESSOR Sc THEPRIME MINISTER. By the Earl ofBirkenhead. Biography of brilliantOxford physicist Frederick Linden-man (Lord Cherwell), personal ad¬visor to Winston Churchill in W.W.II. Illus. Pub. at $5.95. Sale .9926. THE CONSTITUTIONS O FABRAHAM LINCOLN Sc JEFFER¬SON DAVIS. By Russell HooverQuynn. A Southerner’s controversialand “historical” study in contrasts.Pub. at $3.25. Sale .9927. KIDNAP — The Story of theLindburgh Case. By George Waller.Suspense-filled best-seller about the“crime of the century.” All thedrama and intrigue revealed in fullfor the first time. 597 pages, photos.Pub. at $6.95. Sale .99 at 99c each2S. THE DE GAULE NOBODYKNOWS. By Alden Hatch. Intimate,fascinating biography of Charlesde Gaulle, filled with hitherto un¬known details of his childhood,schooling, military career, years ofobscurity, amazing comeback dur¬ing the Algerian crisis. 40 photo¬graphs. Pub. at $5.00. Sale .9929. THE HEART OF JAPAN. ByAlexander Campbell. A veritable“Japan Confidential” in which theJapanese people themselves exposethe raw reality behind the explod¬ing economy, political riots, Tokyo'scrime and vice, the art of thegeish. Shintoism.Pub. at $4.96. Sale .9930. A CHURCHILL CANVAS. ByJohn Spencer Churchill. Colorfulmemoirs of multi-talented man-about-town nephew of Sir Winston.Intimate portraits of Sir Winston,Aunt Clementine, Cousins Sarah &Randolph. 45 photos.Pub. at $5.75. Sale .9931. INDIA—THE INSIDE STORY.By Frank C. Chookolingo. Compre¬hensive appraisal of India’s past,present and future history—magicand misery; cities and villages; art,religion, polities and many peoples.Pub. at $4.00. Sale .9932. THE OBJECTIVE SOCIETY.By Everett Knight. Stimulatingcritique of intellectuals who areunwilling to take sides in the battlefor human survival. Examines ideasand values from Marx and Dos-toievski to Eliot, Camus and Ries-man. Pub. at $2.75. Sale .9933. The Amazing Mr. Payne —AMERICA’S FIRST HAMLET. ByG. Overton. Scintillating biographyof John Howard Payne, brilliantactor, author of “Home SweetHome,” suitor of Mary Shelley.Pub. at $6.50. Sale .9934. Modern Architecture—ANONY¬MOUS (20th CENTURY). By Leo¬nardo Ricci. Visionary essays chiart. design and civilization, byItaly's brilliant young architect-towrn planner.Pub. at $5.00. Sale .9935. ALBERT SCHWEITZER — HisPhilosophy of Life. By GabrielLangfeldt. The most objective studyof Schweitzer available, analyzinghis background, personality andcontroversial religious views.Pub. at $3.00. -Sale .9936. Thomas Mann: THE STORYOF A NOVEL. A rare treat—notonly the story of how “Dr. Faustus”came to be written but a veritableautobiography of the great novel¬ist’s later years.Pub. at $4.00. Sale .993". Cornielia Otis Skinner’s ELE¬GANT WITS AND GRAND HORI¬ZONTALS. Sparkling panorama ofParis in the “tres gai’’ '90’s. Manyillustration of the period.Pub. at $5.00. Sale .9938. HO l’SEW I FES’ GUIDE TO AN¬TIQUES. By Leslie Gross. Every¬thing you need to know about se¬lecting. buying and using antiquesin the home How to judge values,detect fakes Over 100 illustrations.Pub. at $4.00. Sale .9939. THE BLUE OF CAPRICORN.By Eugene Burdick. Fascinatinghistory, myths, and customs of theMaari, Polynesian, and Microrvesianpeoples of the South Pacific. Illus.Pub. at $4 95. Sale .9940. RED CARPET TO CHINA. ByMichael Croft. Immensely readable,highly critical, yet objective reportof the achievements of the Maoregime. Pub. at $5.00. Sale .9941. THE RISE OF THE MARI-TOCRACY. By Michael Young. Ascathing satire on life in the 21stcentury when status is determinedentirely by I. Q. tests. Funny,frantic, frightening—ranks with theanti-Utopias of Huxley and Orwell.Pub. at 3.50. Sale .9942. ISLAND OF THE LOST. ByP. F. Cooper. Adventurous historyof Canada's King William Island,the courageous 19th century explor¬ers who came to it seeking thefabled Northwest Passage.Pub. at $4.00. Sale .9943. GREAT PROTESTANT FESTI¬VALS. By C. Seidenspinner. ACalendar of worship describing thevarious services from Rally Daythrough Christmas.Orig. *2 50. Sale .9944. THE CATHOLICS IN AMERI¬CA. By A. I. Marino. Fact-filled,name-studded account from the 16thcentury to the present, in fieldsranging from literature to sports.Pub. at $3.75. Sale .9945. RAYMOND CHANDLERSPEAKING. Ed. by D. Gardiner &K. S. Walker. Collected letters andnotebook excerpts of the master ofthe modem mystery novel.Pub. at $4.00. Sale .9946. LITTLE ME — The IntimateMemoirs of Belle Poitrine, as toldto Patrick Dennis. 150 disgracefullyfunny photographs by Cris Alex¬ander. Pub. at $5.95. Sale .9947. EARNEST VICTORIANS. By RA. Rosenbaum. Superb portraits ofCardinal Newman. Elizabeth Bar¬rett Browning, Charles Darwin andothers—and of the fabulous era it¬self. Pub. at $7.50. Sale .9948. CHESS TACTICS FOR BEGIN¬NERS. By R. G. Wade, et al. Ed.by Fred Reinfeld. Simple, fully-di¬agrammed explanations of the mostpowerful strategies of attack andcounter-attack, designed to give youthe basic techniques for becominga winning player.Pub. at $2.50. Sale .9949. RELAX WITH YOGA. ByArthur Leibers. The amazing Yogaway to weight reduction, body¬building, mental and sexual prow¬ess. etc. 29 photographs of Yogapostures.Pub. at $2.50. Sale .9950. MADAME BOVARY. By Gus¬tave Flaubert. Poignant story of aprovincial wife unable to bear thediscrepancy between her romanticdreams and the banality of her“bourgeois” marriage. Translatedby F Steegmuller.Pub. at $6.00. Sale .99 at $1.49 & $1.9855. BURL IVES IRISH SONGS. Adarlin’ collection that includes ' Mol¬ly Malone,” “The Girl I Left BehindMe,” “Those Endearing YoungCharms,” and 47 other belovedIrish songs of love, laughter, andstrife. 8"xl 1Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.4956. GOETHE AS A SCIENTIST, byRudolf Magnus. "AH the scientificside of him is charmingly set forth”—Sir Chas. Sherrington.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $l.4»57. CLAUDE BERNARD and theExperimental Method in Medicine,by J. M. D. Olmsted and E. HarrisOlmsted. Pub. at $4.00. Sale $1.4958. John Gunther: INSIDE EU¬ROPE TODAY. One of America'sgreatest reporters takes a penetrat¬ing look at Europe in the 1900’s.Pub. at $4.95. Sale *1.9859. THE KEY TO HANDWRITINGANALYSIS. Pub. at $3.95. Sale *1.9860. WILLIAM SAROYAN’S AUTO¬BIOGRAPHY — Here Conies ThereGoes You Know Who. 15 pages ofphotos. Pub. at $5.95. Sale $1.9861. James Thnrber — The YEARSWITH ROSS. Turbulent and affec¬tionate account of Harold W. Ross,the “irascible genius” who foundedthe “New Yorker.”Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.9862. PLOUGH AND PASTURE —The Early History of Farming. ByE. Cecil Curwen.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.9863. CARP'S WASHINGTON—Cur¬iosities and Cranks of Capitol Hill.By Frank G. Carpenter. Priceless,jovous Americana.Pub. at $5.75. Sale $1.9864. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF M U R-DER. By Colin Wilders. Over 3.50narrative accounts of unusual mur¬ders, ranging over four centuriesand five continents. 70 illus.Pub. at $3.75. Sale *1.9865. IN THE DAYS OF McKINLEY.By Margaret Leech. Immensely ab-sorbihg history, dramatic biographyof our 25th President. 680 pages, 32pages of photographs.Pub. at $7.50; Sale *1.9866. THE FIRST FIVE LIVES OFANNIE BESANT. By A. H. Nether-cot Freethinker, feminist, occultist,intimate of "Shaw, Gandhi. MineBlavatsky. others.Pub. at $7.50. Sale $1.9867. THE CHANGING NATURE OFMAN: Introduction to a HistoricalPsychology, by J. H. van den Berg.Stimulating and provocative, a ma¬jor critique of Freudian psycho¬analysis.Pub. at $4.50. Sale *1.9868. The Civil War — ROAD TOMANASSAS. By R. H. Beattie. Jr.Absorbing narrative of the strategy,tactics, leading personalities of theUnion forces, from the fall of FortSumter to the end of the Battle ofBull Run. Illus.Orig. $3.95. Sale $1.9869. American Pioneer — ELISHAKANE A N D THE SEAFARINGFRONTIER. By Jeannette Mirsky.From 1830 to 18.57 this naval phy¬sician-turned-explorer thrilled thenation with his incredible exploitsin the uncharted Arctic.Pub. at S3.75. Sale $1.9870. Muller's ENGLISH - GERMANDICTIONARY with German-Englishcross-reference. Over 20,000 entries,including international phoneticpronunciations. 000 pages, clothbinding. Only $1.9871. MODERN COLLEGE PHYSICS,by H, E. White. Introduction toclassical and atomic physics. 824pages, profusely illus.Pub. at $6.00. Sale *1.9872. MEN AND MORALS: TheStory of Ethics. By Wood bridgeRiley. Surveys all the great theoriesand teachers of ethics—Buddha, Pla¬to, St. Augustine. Rousseau, Spino¬za, Nietzsche, William James, et al.Pub. at $6.50. Sale $1.9873. A TREASURY OF COLLEGEHUMOR. Selected from over 100college humor periodicals, 1876 tothe present, by R. F. Koppe, et al.Pub. at $3.00. Sale $1.9874. EDWIN FORREST: First Starof the American Stage. By R.Moody. Colorful life of famous actorwhose eccentricities, romances, andfantastic repertoir. 30 plates.$6.95. Sale $1.9875. Forbidden Rites—SECRETS OFTHE CUNA EARTH MOTHER. ByProf. Clyde E. Keeler. Describesprimitive traditions, sacred prac¬tices and sex rituals of the San BiasCuna Indians — never before re¬vealed to a white man. Illus.$6.00. Sale *1.9876. AN INTRODUCTION TO THESTUDY OF EXPERIMENTALMEDICINE. By Claude Bernard.One of the 100 Great Books in thefamous St. John’s College curricu¬lum. PUb. at $4.00. Sale $1.9877. NEHRU ON W O R L I» HIS¬TORY. Ed. by Saul K. Pqdover,One-volume condensation of themonumental "Glimpses of WorldHistory.” Pub. at $.5.00. Sale $1.9878. AMERICAN MURDER BAL¬LADS and Their Stories. By O. W.Burt. The true, bloody sagas ofJesse James, Lizzy Borden, JohnWilkes Booth, Joe Hill, Hauptmannand all the others whose storieshave fascinated the public and in¬spired the balladeer.Pub. at $5.50. Sale $1.9879. THE THIRD ROSE — GertrudeStein & Her World. By John Mal¬colm Brinnin. A warm and knowl-edgable portrait of Hemingway’smentor, from Radcliffe days to herfinal years in France. Illus.Pub. at $0.00. Sale $1.9880. “The American Titan”: WIL¬LIAM PAGE. By J. C. Taylor.Hailed as one of the outstandingportraitists of his generation. Pagehas been stirring nw admiration inrecent exhibits of 19th centuryAmerican art. 57 reproductions.8Vz"xir. Pub. at $8.50. Sale $1.9881. WINSTON CHURCHILL ANDTHE SECOND FRONT. By T. Hig¬gins. The rupture of British-Ameri-can strategy after the fall of France—and how Ru?sia emerged the onlyreal victor in World War II.Orig. $0.00. Sale $1.98 at $2.77 & $2.9882. SINCLAIR LEWIS: An Ameri¬can Life. By Mark Schorer. Monu¬mental study of the creator of“Babbitt,” the first American nov¬elist to win the Nobel Prize. Hisspectacular successes, the Mencken-Nathan circle, his marriages, al¬coholism, tragic decline. 867 pp.,illus.Pub. at $10,00. Sale $2.7783. THE FORGOTTEN PEOPLE.By Seymour Freidin. Top corres¬pondent's eye-witness account of thefate of 100 million Europeans underSoviet imperialism, from the fall ofBerlin through the Hungarian revoltand “The Wall” of 1961. Country-by¬country analysis, present trends andfuture hopes. Photos.Pub. at $5 95. Sale $2.9884. FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT. ByFinis Farr. First full-length biog¬raphy of the genius who worked arevolution in American and worldarchitecture. Countless anecdotes re¬veal the master’s unique personalityand his philosophy of life and art.49 illustrations.Pub. at $5.95. Sale $2.9885. The Confederate Army — LEE'SMAVERICK GENERAL. By HallBridges. Life-size portrait of DanielHarvey Hill, brilliant and fiery Con¬federate commander who clashedopenly with Lee, Bragg, and Jeffer¬son Davis himself.Pub. at $7.50. Sale $2.9886. NATURE AND MAN’S FATE.By Garrett Hardin. Here, in vivid,dramatic teems, a distinguished bi¬ologist explores the crucial social,political and ethical problems of ourtime in light of what is now knownabout evolution and heredity. Illus.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.9887. THE BEST OF DUMAS — AnAutobiography Sc Anthology. Ed. byGuy Endore. Dumas’ own wordsare arranged to tell the story ofhis incredible life — from his youthto his days as the most famousauthor in France.Pub. at $5.95. Sale $2.9888. Lafayette’s Wife—ADRIENNE.By Andre Maurois. Vividly recre¬ates the life and times of one ofhistory's most appealing and re¬markable heroines.Pub. at $7.95. Sale $2.9889. AMERICAN REPORTERS ONTHE WESTERN FRONT, 1914-1918.By Emmet Crozier. World War Iseen through the eyes of Pegler,Gibbons, Braun, et al. Resourceful¬ness, humor and heroism, the dan¬gers of combat, major events andpersonalities of the period.Pub. at $6 50. Sale $2.9890. PRIMITIVE SONG. By C. M.Bowra. From today’s Pygmies. Es¬kimos. Andamanese and Bushmen,a noted scholar uncovers the originsand development of the earliestforms of poetry known to man.Scores of examples, many unusualphoto-illustrations.Pub. at $6.50. Sale $2.9891. THE MILITARY LEGACY OFTHE CIVIL WAR. By Jay Luvaas.Fascinating account of what Euro¬pean miljtary observers of the CivilWar saw, experienced and learned,and its influence on subsequent war¬fare and European military theory.Illustrated.Pub. at $5 95. Sale $2.9892. THE ULTIMATE DECISION:The President as Commander-in-Chief, ed. by Ernest R. May. Sixoutstanding historians, including theeditor, Marcus Cunliffe, and W. E.Emerson, provide the essential back¬ground on the most potentially dan¬gerous power in the Constitution.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.9893. THE GODS OF PREHISTORICcredibly rich and engrossing pictureof the spiritual life, magic and rit¬ual of Stone Age man. Profuselyillustrated.Pub. at $5.75. Sale $2.9894. PHYSICS IN THE SOVIETUNION. By A. S. Kompanayets. Anexposition of the basic methods oftheoretical physics — electrodynam¬ics, quantum mechanics, statisticalphysics, etc. — as taught to engin¬eer-physicists on the postgraduatelevel in Russia today. 592 ppPub. at $7 50. Sale $2.9895. ROGER CASEMENT — IrishPatriot, English ' Traitor, by ReneMacColl Absorbing biography ofthe most spectacular and controver¬sial figure in the struggle for Irishindependence.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $2.9896. THE VISUAL CRAFT OF Wtt-LIAM GOLDEN. A retrospectivevolume devoted to the brilliant CBS-TV art director who created someof the most original advertising andpromotional material ever seen inAmerica. 137 pages of examples ofhis exciting work, from the famous“eye” trademark of CBS-TV tobooks, ads and brochures. ll”x-8(2”.Pub. at $12.50. Sale $2.9897. THE SATURDAY REVIEWGALLERY. From the pages ofAmerica's leading cultural maga¬zine—the best, the most signifeant,the most enjoyable articles aboutthe century’s notables — Faulkner,Joyce, Churchill, et at—as recalledby such literary lights as Santa¬yana, Thurber, Ford, others.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.9898. THE DESTRUCTION OF LORDRAGLAN. By Christopher Hibbert.Winner of the Heinemann Awardfor Literature in England.Originally $6.50. Sale $2.9899. BRANWELL BRONTE, byWinifred Gerin. A brilliant—pictureof the Bronte household and itsfamous women, and of a man whosefeverish dreams led him only todrink, opium, and despair. Appen¬dix on the disputed authorship of“Wuthering Heights.” 32 plates.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $2.98100. THE EDGE OF THE SWORD.By Netanel Lorch. Dramatic, docu¬mented, monumental political andmilitary history. Illustrated.Pub. at $7.95. Sale $2.98 at $3.98 & up101. A HISTORY OF INDIA. ByMichael Bdwardes. Absorbing, com¬prehensive survey of one of theworld’s great civilizations, spanning5.000 years of grandeur, decadenceand re-blrth. With 127 magnificentphotogravure illustrations of Indianlife and art.Pub. at $7.50. Sale $3.98102. HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHI¬CAL SYSTEMS. Ed. by V. Ferm.Informative and stimulating sum¬maries of all the major philosophiesand schools of thought, classic andmodem, by 41 eminent authorities.662 pp. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $3.98103. Ivar Lissner’s MAN, GOD ScMAGIC. World-renowned scholar,author of “The Living Past,” pre¬sents an exciting account of the cul¬ture, religious beliefs and practicesof prehistoric man—the search forGod as expressed in nature worship,sacrificial ceremonies, shamanismand the like. 117 illustrations.Pub. at $5.95. Sale $3.98104.SCIENCE AND SENSIBILITY.by James R. Newman. Two-volumecollection of essays on science, phi¬losophy and civilization, by the dis¬tinguished American scholar. Illus.2 vols., boxed.Pub. at $10.00. Sale $3.98 the set105. PAUL KI.EE—His Life andWork, by Felix Klee. An intimateportrait, by the artist’s son, draw¬ing upon Klee’s own unpublisheddiaries and letters and including162 excellent reproductions of hispaintings, drawings and documents.Pub. at $7.50. Sale *3.98106. THE DRAWINGS OE JEANDUBUFFET, by Daniel Cordier.100 reproductions in gravure, plus13 drawings and endpapers especial¬ly designed by the artist for thisbook. lSlfc-xlO", printed and boundin France.Pub. at *15.00 Sale $7.95107. THE WORM) OF AMPHIB¬IANS Sc REPTILES. By RobertMertens. Over 150 photographs, 31pages in full color. Spectacular vol¬ume on nature’s most exotic crea¬tures, by an internationally re¬nowned zoologist.Pub. at $15.00. Sale $7.95108. THOSE IN PERIL ON THF.SEA. By Edouard A. Stakepole.The most exciting maritime adven¬tures and sea exploits of twentycenturies—dramatically told in first-person liarratives by seafarers fromMagellan to Cousteau. 207 maps,drawings, photographs, and paint¬ings. Orig. $15.00. Sale $7.95109. LEONARDO I)A VINCI ONTHE HUMAN BODY: The Anatomi¬cal. Physiological and Embryologi-cal Drawings. With emendations anda biographical introduction by C. D.O'Malley 8c J. D. Saunders. Over1.200 of "the finest anatomical draw¬ings ever made.” at once scienti¬fically exact and artistically beauti¬ful, showing the incredible skill, vi¬sion. range, and deep human insightof da Vinci’s genius. 506 pages. 9”x12~. Orig. pub. at $25.00. Only *9.95t 10. OLD ENGLISH POPULARMUSIC. By William Chappell. Twovolumes in one. new edition editedby H. Ellis Wooldridge. Classic workon Old English folk music; contains303 songs, ballads and dance tunes,with music, classified by type andperiod, and with the appropriatehistorical notations. 707 pages, slip-case. Orig. $20.00. Sale $9.95lit. THE HISTORY OF MAGIC.By Kurt Seligmann. A fascinatingand important standard work, il¬lustrated with 255 rare old prints.50-1 large pages 7"xl0’’.Orig. Pub. at $8.50. Sale $5.93112. TRAGIC YEARS 1860-1865:A Documentary History of theAmerican Civil War, by Paul M,Angle and Earl Schenck Miers.Diaries, letters, the recorded wordsof generals and privates, politiciansand housewives vividly recreate thebloody conflict. Compiled by twoof our best historians in 1,097 pagesof text and maps. Two volumes,boxed.Pub. at $15.00. Sale $6.95 the setJ 13. HOLIDAY MAGAZINE BOOKOF THE WORLD’S FINE FOOD.Intro, by Ted Patrick. Most beauti¬ful book of its kind in the world—aguided tour of the magic domainof gastronomy by renowned gour¬mets, illustrated with scores of full-page, full-color photos. Lavish, life¬time treasure—10%''xl3V4"', boxed.Pub. at $15.00. Sale $6.95114. WILLIAM BYRD OF VIR¬GINIA: The London Diary andOther Writings. Ed. by L. B. Wright.Rakish, ribald details of Byrd’sdaily rounds of taverns, gaminghouses and brothels. 1717 to 1721.647 pages. Pub. at $10.00. Sale $3.98115. LORD BURGHLEY ANDQUEEN ELIZABETH. ConyersRead’s great dual biography ofQueen Elizabeth and her chief ad¬visor—William Cecil, Lord Burgh-ley. 603 pp. Illus.Pub. at $10.00. Sale $3.98116. ETRUSCAN MAGIC Sc OC¬CULT REMEDIES, by Charles God¬frey Leland. An amazing study ofthe survival of Etruscan paganismin modern Tuscany—an ethos pre¬served by the north Italian peasant¬ry in all ils ancieni forms andrituals. 60 unusual illustrations.Pub. at $10.00. Sale $1-9*117. GIBBON’S JOURNEY FROMGENEVA TO ROME: His Journalfrom 20 April to 2 October 1764.Edited by Georges A. Bonnard.Pub. at $12.50. Sale $4.98118. TOWARD MODERN SCIENCE.Ed. by R. M. Palter. A two-volumecollection of essays on the forma¬tive stages of the Western scientifictradition.Orig. $9.00. Sale $3.98 the »<*119. EGYPTIAN ART, by Boris deRachewitz. A lucidly-written, hand¬somely illustrated introduction tothe life and ideas that producedEgyptian painting, sculpture andarchitecture. 102 reproductions, 19in full color.Pub. at $6.95. Sale $3 9812 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 28, 1964