New Dorms boycott pickets are 91% effectiveby Bob LeveyApproximately 500 stu¬dents demonstrated in NewDorm cafeteria this weekendin opposition to the 13-mealboard contract that will beinstituted there next fall.The demonstrators pick¬eted. sang songs, and chantedat Friday dinner, Saturdaylunch, Saturday dinner, Sun¬day lunch, and Monday lunchin an effort to convince theadministration that prevail¬ing student opinion favors acompromise 6-meal proposal.As a result of tlie boycott, an esti¬mated 100 people ate at the cafeteriator the five boycotted meals. Aver¬age for the five meals is approxi¬mately 1100. In percentages, thismeans that 91% of the normal cus¬tomers did not cross die picket lines.Of the 100 people who crossed thepicket line, only an estimated 15were students. The majority of thesecrossed the line on Saturday nighteu masse. The others were eitheradministrators, secretaries, or assist¬ant resident heads.Tlie boycott was sponsored andorganized by the Woodward CourtCouncil, Students for Better LivingConditions, Student Government,GNOSIS. POLTT, the Chicago Ma¬roon, and the Standing Committee boRectify Unjustice (SCRU). As a re¬sult of the appajvnt success of the boycott in terms of numbers, demon-tration leaders plan to meet withWarner Wick, dean of students, eithertoday or tomorrow to reopen discus¬sion on the possibility of the com¬promise proposal.Friday evening, the demonstratorsassembled on the parking lot betweenNew Dorm and Ida Noyes to hearpreliminary advice from Judy Magid-son, boycott boss. Demonstratorswere told that they were to sit inunder no circumstances, and that thedemonstration would only be aneconomic boycott and protest picket.While photographers clicked away,Miss Magidson told demonstratorsthat both the board contract and ad¬ministration reluctance to considerstudent opinion beforehand were themajor causes of the demonstration.One of the pictures taken at this timeappeared the next morning on thefront page of the Chicago Sun-Times.Press coverage was also given byseveral Chicago area radio stations,ABC television, NBC television, andthe Chicago Tribune.Once inside, the convivial atmos¬phere that was to prevail throughoutthe demonstration became apparent.Students repeatedly improvised fit¬ting words to familiar tunes, andchanted rhythmically such phrases as“Better dead than contract fed,” and“Georgie-Porgie puddin’ head Playe/brought tlie contract here to stay/But we won't eat here anyway/ youmade it/ you eat it!”Demonstrators also carried signs which bore slogans such as "Birthcontrol, not food control,” “End nu¬tritional prisons,” “Become a New-Man, end Wick - edness, renounceVice,” and “Sid Stein isn’t the onlyone serving pigskin.”After Nicky DeBello, owner ofNicky’s restaurant, put in an appear¬ance, demonstrators decided tomarch on the home of PresidentGeorge W. Beadle to plead theircause.After the cafeteria had closed, thedemonstrators marched on, Beadle’shome at 5855 University. Beadle, hiswife, and his dinner guest, historianJohn Gunther, came out to face thedemonstrators.Standing on his front porch, Beadlefirst apologized for not being ableto invite all the demonstrators in,commenting that “since you are noteating regular food, they brought itover for us to eat.”After the Boycott Theme Song,printed elsewhere, was sung for theBeadles and Gunther, Beadle wasasked by Miss Magidson whether hewould agree to negotiate on the boardcontract matter. “I’m very sorry,”Beadle replied, “but I’m not author¬ized to negotiate: however, I’m gladyou came here to make your positionclear.”While the Balcony Scene was beingplayed, two city police cars, appar¬ently called by neighbors, arrived.One policeman asked Mrs. Beadlewhat wag going on, to which she replied: “Oh. it’s all right. They’rejust having fun.”Meanwhile, Gunther said a fewwords to the demonstrators, whonumbered approximately 150 at thistime. He described his plans for abook on UC, adding that “someonetold me that UC undergraduates werestaid. I’m glad to see that this isfalse.”The .Beadles and Gunther, afterapproximately five minutes, notedthat their dinner was getting cold,and went back inside.Little happened Saturday, whichwas probably the slowest day of theboycott. However, James Vice, di¬rector of Student Housing, was oneof about 10 people to cross the picketline that day. Sunday brought a greater turnoutof demonstrators and their firstmajor problem. Usually, after wor¬shiping in Rockefeller Chapel Sundaymorning, churchgoers come to NewDorm to eat lunch. Boycott leaderscircumvented this problem, however,by pleading with the churchgoers onthe walk leading up to the centralunit to support them. They weresuccessful in all but 8 cases.Monday brought a similar problem.Since Monday was the first regularuniversity day during which the boy¬cott took place, the boycotters hadto contend with secretaries and ad¬ministrators who, as a matter ofcourse, eat at New Dorm on weekdayafternoons.Vol. 72 No. 46 University of Chicago, Tuesday, April 21, 1964Colleges 'discourage action7by Laura Godofsky Upset in electionFriday’s election results brought good newg forPOLIT, a doubtful majority for GNOSIS, and light localballoting for SG assembly seats.It also brought an upset victory for the loneindependent in the election for NSAdelegates. uate population. The other 869 votesIn the College, the largest, most came from the 2200 college students.active delegation to the SG assembly, ... ... .NSA independent winsUniversities are not living the "values that they'ostensibly stand for. a panel agreed WHJI•*, „ ,at the national conference of the Association for Higher Education Monday XXX ^Although universities are supposed to be dealing with tlie most important issues of GNOSIS held on to its overwhelm- the National Student AssociationthA rluv tlmv instead discourage active involvement — and in many cases even discus- ing majority of grad school seats, (NSA), the lone independent, Jamestne aay, } however, winning 22 of them. POLIT Hock, beat coalition member Bernie[X anything and as a result students are the Kiwanis." Furthermore, faculty f sU ^uate G^man by a Iour vot“-releT£>e college TXSd to anlyhing," com- members often view thei, work K °"e of tte" “ a «■'“">* NSA vote wa.“ "* tvianizu] Mo rio.n Wriebt. an alumna a deliberate choice of life of reflec- four of them. Seven write-ins won in doubt until Saturday. The slimgradaute seats. margin was cause for one recountTotal GNOSIS seats are 25, total Friday night immediately after thePOLIT 13, and total independents or original count, and a sizable dis--th Boynton estimated, and no one dis- write-ins^5 toSgto AxelAd'Te^eSS^ELU T* X atf-ecd with him. that one halt ofcount ajreed perfectly with the’original count. The discrepancy onui UIC *VAV wm developing democratic values. mented Marian Wright, an alumnaCollege faculty members and ad- of Fisk and of Yale and currently a tion over a life of action. “We’veministrations as well as society at lawyer for the N.A.A.C.P. Legal opted for impotance,” stated Boyn-large were criticized for failing to Defense and Education Fund. ton.encourage active iuvolvement through ■ • • v —__See box, page 8UHMIIItllU!tHllUil(llli!(UllttlH<illlll!lUitHillllllllliUltl11lilllli(l1tiltUillltUI<lllitl!ililiinilifli the first recount was due to errors intrEjjiscribing figures to the tallysheets, he said.SG leaders commentTbe two campus parties will holdhereto experience in the most im- selves on what we beUeve’ all political scientists are apolitical.cd society. tinued. Umvers^are not^g would ^ the grain of thewmtumColhn.^Va^^ Z t?£d to Tttorida civil rights trip »^observe and analyze current af-with Mrs. ^a° the atration. she said. Frank McCallister, Director of from the Law School Party. (All Lawgovernor of Ma ,The Southern sit-ins were as much Rooseveit University’s Labor Edu- candidates this year ran for GNOSIS.) -session s featured speaker.directed against Negro professors and ^ Division, suggested m 0ne tie „ stiU unbroken in the caucuses SundayStudents find hl § r eduction coUege p^ents who “teach equal- leges ^ “overweighted with the Physical Sciences Division, between night at 7:30 m Ida Noyes to choosemeaningless because educators avo d ^ ^ walk toto movie theaters materialistic values of our society,” the two POLIT candidates. Both Wal- nominees for SG executive oouncilthe key issues of society m t . ^ h ^ back door” as against ^ hence their personnel were af- ter Daum and Murray Schacher won j**?tloas;. to leaders ofane paid to avoid them, he said. ^ ^ system of segregation, ac- fraid to «stick their necks out.” He 19 votes to tie for fourth place. Only **>* interviewed by the Ma-1710 failure of universities to stimu- cording to Miss wright. These Negro ported 0ut that only ten or twelve four seats are allotted to Phy Sci. ”lght’ 1 K evidet* “J3*late involvement to important aotiv- leaders were not setting good enough o{ the over 30,000 members of col- Daum told the Maroon he and Scha- FOLIT will have some representa-ites has led to failures to educating their students, she lege boards of trustees in the US ^j. v^uid decide what to do before tivff 0,1 die Exec“ plus some com'students properly. Only by concrete cbarged. were representatives of labor; and next Tuesday’s Assembly meeting, mitte€ chairmanships,involvement can students develop a ^ panelists noted that teaching that even in Negro colleges the trus- wbere ties are broken. TTiose interviewed agreed, how-sense of values, said Coffin. should not be, but too often is, tees were invariably businessmen. A total of 1179 students voted mi ever, that it is still too early toCoffin criticized campuses for al- separated from real life. The teacher, It was generally agreed that the ^ days 0f balloting last week, speculate on the actual members oflowing extra-curricular activities to * criBa has a moral duty to set problem facing universities is to get According to Bob Axelrod, chairman the Exec.kW fKa values that - - ’ -a-J— 4-J 1 !exist that “promote the values that exampie of courage and concern students interested in current issues. q{ thg ^ Elections and Rules com- Gene Groves, GNOSIS partyuniversities are trying to counter to . ^ s[udents Further, a number Coffin suggested balancing the fac- mittee> voting was very high in “boss,” forecast that there win bethe classrooms.” Fraternities, for ex- 1 discussants felt that the teacher ulty members who are devoted ex- pierce Tower( New Dorm, and B-J, “more lively discussion of issuesample, “for the most part are menu- example of participa- clusively to their laboratories with where «roughly» 60% of the residents next year,” with the large mimberm«vts to irrelevancy in 1964,” he the resolution of the pressing others who are interested to policy voted ^ about 20% 0f students liv- of POLIT members proriding acairl- * “ * * "*said.T_ , , , social problems of the day. questions....... ing elsewhere voted, Axelrod esti- “lively opposition.He urged support for “important h„ He entered a special plea for bring- , ’_ „ ,extracurricular activities—those that ® , h , , ... .t” so tw0 types of people to campuses m3|ed- . . ^°° Congd<Hi, outgoing president,“h*v tn -Hmulaie in interest in noli- 004 ^now w^° bought so controversial nrofessors and ad- He ^ turnout was low, also predicted ‘more knock-down” J manyof the s t^but^ ministrators who are either “really dueto thesmannumber ofcontested drag-out fights” to the Assembly,*More students have to choose ^th^Sllege pros! "’^tionarv or insoirational.” seats the grad schools. High turn- ^ a “more pubtidy active” SG atNow, too many choose attractive, dents< ministrators who are eitherreactionary or inspirational.”. . ^ , . .. .Controversial professors, said Cof- out m .t"e dorms was probably due titude toward the administration infin, will not bring every student over to the intense campaigning there, he negotiations.i'nuw, 100 many mww. _lirnVv,r Pxnlanations were said. These results show the value of Congdon and Groves agreed thatrather than important jobs. This is n, f faculty members’ fail- i ,YfieV^’ , the residential representation system, only “three or four” of the gradpartly a result of universities’ public-^ actively in ^ “to deVdOP which was passed as a constitutional students could be counted upon torelations 1"^^**“*^**™ resolution of contemporary prob- l^actionary administrators will per- amendment in ^‘year’s election, be reaily active in SG affairsmorality rather than vocational morfunction bv “giving and instituted with this election. He Peter Rabinowitz, a leader ofX WhlC>‘ Sh.°U -!7 01 ^ Robert Boynton, associate protes- zest to a Ttodent awakening.” Tl.« Po^. «“* «« * POLIT. said there wiU probably betural concern, he sad, ^ sclencc at Uni. admtaisttatore will force students to dents live m apartments as m New more interest m of-camp^ aLv versity Sf Iowa, suggested that “the unite in action opposing their policies. Dorms, but fewer apartment dwellers fairs with the large bloc of POLITFisk University, charged ty, m V bought the faculty.” Because faculty members are in- voted than New Doim resident. TOe members in the assembly con-college catalogues are fictions, con yrraasinelv concerned with their own figures are 279 New Dorm, 265 other sidering the success of the New> ,inir« ‘‘little to buttress eM^SX ^ald. anT oSy a specif and studies, administra- college.bon that we are Wig to develop civil r@UB. mmi . ». policy Only 310 graduate students voted, will *o be a toughening oi pobeyoommitted to — °"he 5'000 ,oW ** toWarl “rati<>"-”EDITORIALElection’s meaning Letters to it orWoodward meal contract is part of been irrelevant. We always knewa much larger complex of problemsthat come to a focus in a feeling offrustration about student participa¬tion in decision-making. There is afeeling that “nobody around here that a return to a meal contract inWoodward Court would be unpopular.The petition and the boycott we didhave were equally irrelevant be-When wp look to fV>0 n A reiare ail students some ol the issues letting uwi noomiy aiouuu ueie —~ >»c-I discussed with the residents of cares what we think”—not only about cause, unfortunately, some decisionsfood and housing, but about tuition have to be made in spite of whatstudents want.Wick hits MaroonWliat is the meaning of mistic to venture a guess that boycott coveragelast week’s Student Govern- any such change might not T0 THE EDITOR:ment election ? Did the POLIT make any difference at all* i appreciate your invitation to setsweep of ten College h/l * , , ,, , before all students some of the issues.eats decide any issues for Uau d^Won^w. *"£' 1 wi* lhe.rood? JS? *S Ow’ We lee a q“,te Woodward Coun last Tuesday eve-• ulirerenT picture from that rung and which were either ignored and other costs, and about the cur-It seems that two impor- m the College. A great many or distorted in your Friday news riculum and the staffing of under-tatl t factors were at play in of the GNOSIS grad repre- article about, the boycott and the graduate courses (cf. the ill-tempered 3) Students can best take part inthe Polit sweep. The first is sentatives are of a recidedly events preceding it. But first some Maroon editorial of March 6, which decisions when tJiey have also hadthat, in the “at large” Col- conservative frame of mind remarks about that “news” article, was ostensibly about a $5 per quarter a hand in formulating the issues tolege category especially, a at least as far as national poli- It editorialized the news to a degree : 5 J 1 1great many of the POLIT tics go. It should be interest- seldom equaUed by our most opinion-candidates were better known jng to see how many actually T*1 T^Iwlt'a™paper m *«. bey-g?-rt,cre.toin SG and 0 SG a^^irs» an<l how many your reporter abandoned every canontivities^ than most 01 tne actively attempt to oppose of responsible journalism in order toGNOSIS candidates. any proposed resolution by inflame, rather than to inform, his ^ ^ ^This personality factor the more liberal College repre- public. Since I did not notice any of The "possibilities are limited; andshould not be underrated. S<mfatives on community and yo^ regular staff at the Tuesday within the necessary limitations, inMany students are no donht national affairs. meeting. I conclude that you may stitutions and practices making foiinfluenced to a e-rent rWvp** «r ,, have pruited a story by 311 ai^?y" meaningful communication and de-1)V the VniiHoSt?* r 41 , We hope there Will be mous guest agent-provocateur. That liberation might be developed. But• wie lamniarity ol the healthy, constructive debate dishonorable as well as dangerous. they either do not exist.increase in room and boai-d rates but be decided. This requires continuityrehearsed a long list of grievances of participation and hard work, whichconnected with the issue of decision- are most effective when relativelysmall groups work in relatively spe-cific areas. Even when they workmaking)The important question is: Howcan students participate effectivelyand responsibly in making policy,and about what sorts of questions?thenames of well, such group* face a problemwhen they try to communicate theirjudgments to oilier students who areless informed._ _ This can be illustrated by oir his-[nee*jn€’ I conclude that you may solutions and practices making for tory. For half a dozen years now. wehave had a series of Student-Admini¬stration Consultant Boards for variousthe or they existm embryonic form, like the Under¬graduate Curriculum Committee thathas been working all year.Here are some propositions to thinkaboui. Responses will be appreciated.1) It is physically impossible todecide University or even Collegecandidates, of proposals in SG next year. 1 **** three specific comments:However the second factor With the present composi- J> ^ reported «** of a 13-mealtbtivtUT'P^red- This is tion, spirited discussion OOI*rat* at W(XxllTard Court nextthat I OLI1 had a good issue seems inevitable. It is im- ye5 ^sably exaggerated,about the relative inactivity nortant howevpr that th* 2) ^ ^e beginningof this year’s SG in commu- ^>rk of the Assembly wM 2 t5e, casb cafeteria system wasnitv affairs WOrK OI tne ASSemDly Will fraudulent. That system was insti-not be obstructed for the sake tuted as an experiment after Vice- .II is also likely that many of obstruction. SG next year president Brown sought the prefer- {™cies oom-students liked the POLIT must turn in a better recordargument that SG should on community involvement,take a more insistent and It must show realism in itsnoisy position in negotiating dealings with the adminis-with administrators over re- tration — too much noise canlaxing regulations than it has be worse than very little whendone this year. It should be negotiations are in prog ences of the three housing complexes ™itt€e °f the wbole- Moreover, con-having food service, not -'in responseto vigorous and unanimous protests.”No vote was anywhere near unani- fcroversial issues are usually too com¬plex for anything but a superficialopinion about them to come frommous. Pierce and Woodward, but not s'Jcb a2) Referenda and other nose-count¬ing devices are useful only when a areas appointed by Student Govern¬ment. Some have never met. Othershave begun to leam about the prob-lems of the areas assigned to thembut have lost interest after a fewmeetings in which it became evidentthat the problems were com})Heated.A very few, after considerable attri¬tion in membership, have gonethrough tJie whole "training course”and have written reports with obser¬vations and recommendations. Theirmembers learned a lot. and they mayhave slwwed some of their wisdomwith a few friends; but their reportswere apparently never thought bythe Maroon editors of their day to befor none were everRurton-Judson, had clear majoritiesin favor oi trying the cash system.• . . , , T, , , - -i 3) In addition to purveying false- knowledge of broad trends of opinion worth printing,interesting to see w h at ress. It mustbe active enough hoods ]aced with opiftion is lacking. What, for example, would published.changes arc made m SG atti" and meaningful enough to at- an^ invective, your reporter followed ^ point of a vote on a tuition r An \ itudes in this area next year, tract more students to its the maxim, “AH die news is print Crease? Increases in the cost of j have already used un a cood dealand what the actual concrete WO(rk. We urge all members to fit,” by ignoring whatever did not education are inherently undesirable; f ' , ? Z, t h *results of any change will be. — and all students — to de- sfot his purpose. *e number of people in a posi-It might not be overly pessi- vote effort to these ends.Boycott must bring actsThe songs have been sung. The intellectual development. A studentmarching has been done. The New cannot possibly be expected to beDorm cafeteria boycott itself is over ^ productive if he or she ™*tHopefully, however, its effect will , ,live on worry first and foremost about whereThe administration acted irration- next quarter's contract fee is coming dVr'c J"o'dhtiwhhedally and unjustly in proposing and from. I now turn to some of the questions ^on to judge when and why such anI raised at the meeting but which has become necessary is inevita-your reporter did not think were bly limited.newsworthy. A referendum in the present con-The current dispute about the troversy would consequently have raised some questions which can bediscussed with profit if we are toremove some of die causes of ourpresent d:s<x«ntert.WARNER WICKDEAN OF STUDENTSWeekend harmonics and heartburnsinstituting the 13-meal board contract.They would be guilty of much greaterirrationality and guilt, however, ifthey turned their backs or. a demon¬stration which was as effective asthis one. The students, through awell-organized, clearly directed boy¬cott, have made their feelings known.The administration must now act.Underlying the entire board con- Editor’t Note: Due to the participationot our regular music critic, fete Rabin-owiti. In the event reviewed below, theof ob-mentberof the Unlverilty community. Dr. JamesWillard, to contribute this column. Dr.It sfcould also be emphasised thal g5S,.TS. 5*2? .TVh. u.Igo"IN 14th CENTURY COUNTERPOINT andLILAS OF THE FIELD. He has served inBritain as Viceroy of the Royal HeartburnCommission, better known ms RHC or"The Royal."the boycott, although student-organ¬ized and student-run, was not only aprotest against denial of studentrights but also a protest against thesituation that a 13-meal contract willengender. Nan-residents wishing toeat at New Dorm next year, if the^ 13-meal contract is in effect, will betract controversy is the administra- unab^e *° do so. With the six-mealtion's reluctance to consider the co?1?romis€„ 1however thestudents’ position. The administration cafeteria'wlU closed to outsiderswill not listen to the pleas of the an“y ^ £bnner.students, they imply, because the This fact is so clear that we can-Xew Dorm question is only one of not help wondering what was goingeconomics. Students, further, should on in the minds of those who crossednot have a very weighty voice in the picket lines, uttering such ridicu-decisions of this sort, since it is up, lous words as “Well, I won’t eat here in Franz Liszt s Hungaria, and reap-to the admnistration to handle ques- next year,” and “I have the right paring under a revised guise in thetions of money. to eat wherever I want.” These fj0ve °f Three Oranges by the lateTo us, this attitude is both stub- statements may be true (the second Ser§e Prokoficff,bom and unrealistic. The administra- is UNDENIABLY true), but the ac¬tion is absolutely wrong when it companying lack of consideration fordenies that a human element is others, both residents and noo-resi-pre.sent here. Students as people dents, is shocking,must be made as comfortable and . . , , . ,content as possible, because their , To the demonstrators: congratula-academic functions will suffer if con- Tf ^ aJ°! weU ^ T° ^ ^ ^ ^ ■ditions are grossly unfavorable. 1crossed ^ Plcke‘ lmes: can* ^ Brahms’ Tragic Overture), the m-Students cannot and must not be ™ your obstinacy and itial inspiration for tliis work mast beforced to pay high prices for food . 1Lstei\to reason- To ±e viewed * ofJthe “larget; Prob-they may not want UC is a free adminirtrai'om the time to act is lem.” This is found most vividly incommunity whose primary aim is N0W’ the anonymous P°lemics of certain sixteenth century intellectual monks,who were protesting vigorouslyagainst such vices as prostitution(or, in archaic English, “Broad Con¬tracts.”)In his famous essay, Coffee, Tea. orOne Glass Milk, Dr. Korno Brian of quote the carefully consideredwords of one anonymous pillar of tlteUniversity: “They are not amongour greatest singers.” However, onemast recollect that the sizable choruswas laboring under severe acousticaldisadvantages. Fuither, there wereVassar has skimmed over thefluence of these early chants upon interruptions from a sometimes un-From a masicological vantage- the symplionic writings of Brahms, comprehending or merely uninterestedpoint, the cantata, Georgie Porgie especially as perceived in Iris Anemic audience.Puddinghead (a play on the words of Festival Overture. Whilst the same <hie hopes that the musicologicalan old Celtic text), first performed intellectual device is intermittentlySaturday evening by the Woodward present in the Georgie cantata, it isCourt Choral Society, provides one here submerged in an outer facadewith a most intricate statement of of rhythmic propulsion, engagaing intlie reciprocity of heritage and evolu- a continuous dialogue of reversal ofexpectation.About the performance, one mighttion in contemporary art. One wasindeed struck by the thematic rev¬erence to that long tradition of mas-terworks, commencing with Bach'sCoffee Cantata, attaining its zenith arguments nmlrikuted by the can¬tata will be heeded by those inpower, for Uie eandlc of contempo¬rary music is at a moment of crisis:indeed, the wick is burning at boUiends.James WillardIntroductory Offer to All UC StudentsS LESSONS FOR S5 WEEKDAYSIn retrospect, one could hardlyconsider this anonymous novelty asan integrated continuation of ex¬pected temporal tendencies. Except,indeed, for the trite twentieth cen¬tury-isms (as its dependence uponblechgesang, a technique originating Community Riding School, Downer*Grove owned and operated by HydePark eggheads. Instruction by Heinzkramp, exceptionally talented teacher.For information telephone eveningsMrs. Walter Blum, MI 3-8859.CANOE TRIPSCruis* and oplor* the Qu*tica-Superiorwilderness—eucitinq adventure tor ev-eryone—only Si. 50 per person perday) For folder and reservations.write: Bill Rom’sMinnesota. Outfitters. Ely 7.EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist53-Kimbork Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount BlackfriarS! Y*^*^^d*0*4td**^*d****dd*4**********d****d4*******************PHOTO DEPARTMENTEASTMAN KODAK INSTAMATIC CAMERASGIVE YOU BLACK AND WHITE, COLORPRINTS, AND COLOR SLIDES.s.osoOUR PRICE AND UPThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue There’s a Beautiful, New Old-FashionedDelicatessen In Hyde ParkThat tempts your palate with hot pastrami(natch!), Lox and bagel (what else?) Rye bread,pumpernickel, chole-Hot corned beef (the best),Good old-fashioned soups, big gooey sundaes,choc, phosphate (could you want more?)—Andreal good coffee (it goes without saying)UNIQUE1501 E. 53rd Street(corner Harper)Phone: FA 4-0633 . . . Customer Parking• CHICAGO MAROON • April 21, 1964 *L►* UC tO COndliCt pro^rom 2nd talk in series on civil disobediencefor h.s. math students Clor questions Thoreau in talkby SuxyThe University of Chicagowill conduct a program inscience and mathematics thissummer for about 120 highschool students. The program, en¬titled “Preparing Inner City HighSchool Students for Science Study inCollege,” will be sponsored by a$;18.225 grant from the National Sci¬ence Foundation (NSF).According to Richard K. Lashof,associate professor of mathematicsand director of the program, “wehope the program will give the stu¬dents who participate sufficient back¬ground in science to enable them tocompete successfully in college andprepare for scientific careers.”Students will be selected from ninehigh schools, all of which are incommuting distance from UC: Phil-li|)s. DuSable, Englewood. HydePark, Parker, Hirsch, South Shore,Bowen, and Lindblom.“We are not taking the very beststudents,” lashof explained, “butthose who we feel can benefit fromdie program.” In the past, he noted,the NSF established programs pri-marily for superior high school stu¬dents.Students are being recommendedby teachers, school counsellors, andUC tutors in the Student WoodlawnArea Project (SWAP). The appli¬cants must be completing their sopho¬more year and must have passed atleast one full year of liigh schoolalgebra.Participants in the summer pro¬gram will take two courses, mathe¬matics and physical science. “The Goldbergmathematics course,” Lashof said,‘‘is designed to complement the regu¬lar liigh school mathematics pro¬gram. Tlie students will be introducedto the mathematical and logical foun¬dations of arithmetic and algebra soas to broaden understanding of thesesubjects and facilitate their use inphysical problems and other appli¬cations.“Tlie second course is in geophysi¬cal science and is designed to kindleinterest in scientific methods and tliescientific outlook and to illustrate theuse of mathematics in solving physi¬cal problems.”Classes will meet Monday throughFriday, with formal classwork eachmorning and informal laboratory andproblem sessions in the afternoon.Robert Palter, associate professor ofphilosophy. Robert Williams, pre¬sently of Northwestern University’smathematic department and former¬ly of UC, Alan Caines, lecturer inphysical science h the College, anda number of high school teachers andcouncilors will assist with instruc¬tion and administration.Lashof ho|ies that UC’s program canserve as “a model for similar highschools of science run by urban uni¬versities in coofieration with cityschool boards. Every large univer¬sity is interested in such projects. Atmany — Berkeley and Princeton, forexample — faculty committees aresetting up summer programs in sev¬eral fields for nearby high schoolstudents.” These programs, however,will be smaller than the one plannedfor UC. Harry Clor, a lecturer inthe Liberal Arts in the Down¬town Center, began his talk‘‘Thoreau’s Civil Disobedience;An American Precedent,” with achange of its title. His addition of aquestion mark to it set the tone forwhat Ik? himself termed a “Contro¬versial” talk.Clor s lecture was the second in aseries on civil disobedience spon¬sored by Hillel House, and was givenon Sunday night, April 19.Clor's first point was that bothMahatma Ghandi and Martin LutherKing had been influenced by Thoreau,and that both had incorporated someof his ideas into their own beliefs.But he added that he doubted thatany mass movement could claimtotal influence from Thoreau.The original title of Thoreau'sessay on civil disobedience was“Rights and Duties of the Individualin Relation to Government.” Thiswas what Thoreau called his oralpresentation of it in 1948, at whichtime he had announced his withdraw¬al of allegiance to the United States.Clor continued that he “can’tsimply accept or reject” Thoreau.Further, he could not merely dismisshim with indifference.He then presented three basicquestions which he intended to serveas a guide to his discussion. The firstwas “what is the nature and extentof our obligation to obey tlie law?”Thoreau felt that a respect for rightwas more important than a respectfor the law.The second basic question con¬cerned the relation between politicalexpediency and moral principles.This involved a consideration erf tliemeans used versus the ends attained.rv ij • a a a || • Thoreau replied that there are “casesDr. Henrietta t1erDolsneimerwhen^heruleofexpediencvdoesnotapply.” and that one ought to “dojustice, cost what it may.”Tlie last of Clor's basic querieswas about the role of the state inhuman affairs, and the interaction ofthe well-being of each of these.Thoreau’s response here may be seenin his going to the woods to find theessence of life, Gor felt. Solitude,hr him, superseded government in an attempt to achieve human well¬being.After dosing his introduction, Gotwent on to explain and interpretaspects of tlie Thoreauian philosophyas he saw it. He propounded thatThoreau never changed his politicalviews. Only the increased predomi¬nance of an evil (slavery) causedhim to exhibit increased vehemencein combatting it.Gor went on to contrast the atti¬tudes of Lincoln and Thoreau. Whilethey are not in total opposition,Lincoln's balance between ultimateprinciple and immediate expediencyand his reverence for the laws diddiffer from Thoreau’s negation ofcountry and tradition as centralissues, Clor said.“What it means to he a man.”stated Clor, “was central forThoreau.” In Thoreau’s words, peo¬ple ought to be ‘‘men first, andAmericans only at a late and con¬venient hour.” Political consequenceswere unimportant to him.Thoreau derived his standard ofmanhood from universal laws. Clorpointed out that these laws emergeonly for those who will look intothemselves.Clor further explained thatThoreau believed that the individualmust never resign his conscience tothe government, the majority, or thelaw. This opinion was dependent ofhis view of these concepts, accordingto Clor.Government, for example, was, toThoreau, a necessary evil. Majority rule was wily permissible on ques¬tions not of right and wrong — onissues of expediency. He took, inClor's words, “a dim view of menin the masses,” due to the lack ofindividual committment masses oc¬casioned.I .aw was merely a collection ofexpedients promulgated by majoritiesand government, Man had no obliga¬tion to obey law as law. He wasbound only to the right as seenthrough his conscience. In short,Thoreau rejected tlie political proc¬esses as he had no time for them.Clor showed that Tlioreau’s philoso¬phy of life was that men’s naturalduty was not to eradicate socialwrongs, as he has higher things to do.These higher things, Clor declared,w'ere the confrontation of reality innature and in oneself, the followingof one’s own genius, and the leadingof the life of contemplation.To Thoreau, government “squashesout the individual by socially-imposedregulations,” as Clor put it. His pri¬mary concern was tlie slavery ofthe soul. Individuality was the liber¬ation from such bondage.Clor then posed this question: howmay one live in society and survive,while living according to his owngenius? Thoreau’s answer, he said,would be: “Don’t depend on socialinstitutions. Lead your life such thatyou are able to resist them; be self-sufficient. independent, u n c o m-mitted.” This, Clor commented, is“fundamental civil disobedience.”resigns; Foy is new chiefDr. Henrietta Herbolsheimer has signing a fellowship from die USresigned from her position as Direc- Rublic Health Service to serve as antor of Student Health, a position she *nstn‘c‘f- »Ls sPf™l «e« of in-, . , , . terest has been allergy and iminu-has held for the last nine years. She no|ogywill be replaced by Dr. Richard Moy.Dr. Herbolsheimer achieved famerecently from a statement she madewhich was quoted in Newsweek, andwhich al-o served as the Maroon’sQuote of the Day last Tuesday, tothe effect that any female studentdesiring birth control information or■ uraiiiernalia could receive themthrough Student Health. It has notIx-en determined whetter such serv-ices wiLl continue with the change inadministration.Dr. Herbolsheimer is returning fulltime to teaching, research, and pa¬tient care.In accepting Dr. Herbolsheimer’sresignation. Dean of Students WarnerWick .said that her “conception of thescope of the director’s responsibili¬ties, from epidemiology to regularsocial visits with students in theirresidence halls, has set a new stand¬ard for this University.”Mov,. an assistant professor in tliedeiiartment of Medicine, is thorough¬ly familiar with tlie problems of Stu¬dent Health, having served as anundergraduate, medical student,member of the house staff, andmember of the medical faculty attlie University.In accepting the post. Moy is re- NSA confab on FridayTlie NSA Conference on “StudentParticipation in Political Affairs”will be held here this coming week¬end. The conference is being spon¬sored by the Illinois-Wisconsin Re¬gion of the National Student Asso¬ciation and will deal with studentinvolvement in Legislation, Pressureand Activist Groups, and Student in¬volvement in the Electorial Process.On Friday evening Roman C. Pun-cinski, 12th district representive inChicago will give the keynote ad¬dress on “Student Involvement inPolitical Affairs.” Saturday morningRonald Campbell, Dean designate ofthe UC graduate School of Educa¬tion, Cary McWilliams, of tlie Ober- Iin College department of politicalscienoe and Dave Jensen, campaignmanager for the recent first Wardaldermanic Campaign of FlorenceSeala, will participate in a symposi¬um on “Politics of Education,” “Stu¬dent pressure and Activist Groups,”and “Students in Political Cam¬paigns,” respectively.In the afternoon there will bethree seminars featuring the threeareas of emphasis of the conference.In the evening Philip Desmarais,deputy assistant secretary for legis¬lative affairs for the Department ofHealth Education and Welfare, willend the conference with an addresson “The Future of Education Legis¬lation and the Studerrf Role.”NEW BOOKS BY CAMPUS AUTHORSCONTRIBUTIONS TO URBAN SOCIOLOGYby Ernest Burgess and Donald BogueSOCIAL CHANGE AND PREJUDICEby Bruno Bettelheim and Morris Janowil*THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue M200S595RENT-A-CARPER DAY5c PER MlPER MILEWEEKEND SPECIAL RATEFRIDAY 4 P.M.TO MONDAY 10 A M.ATOMIC CARRENTALS, INC.7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155 Rockefeller Chapel 59St. & Woodlawn Ave.ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRmembers ofChicago Symphony OrchestraRichard Vikstrom, Cond.Purcell — ODE FOR ST. CECILIA’S DAYByrd — MASS FOR 4 VOICESHandel — ODE FOR ST. CECILIA’S DAYSUNDAY, APRIL 26. 3:30 P.M.TICKETS: Reserved S4.00; General Admission $3.00; Students $2.00On Sale: Chapel House. 5810 Woodlawn Avenue;and University Bookstore That authentic tailored V-Tapered fitis so-o-o perfect for his physique. Inhis softly rolled Button-Down or hissmart Snap-Tab —I can pick him out,in a crowd every time. Van Heusenpatterns, fabrics and colors makehim every inch the man of action... on his way to the top!VAN HEUSEN*youngtr by tfttigeV-Taper—for the lean trim look.Available atMfcIn the New Hyde Park Shopping CenterApril 21. 1964 o CHICAGO MAROON •Reveal PA million year-old manby Victoria andGeorge Ranney incisors. This dentition indicates he Leakey’s own demonstrations of how that the tooth was found at all, but assistance in coping with an e»-was a carnivore, and the fact that to strike a piece of chert to fashion had it not been for the fruitless weeks crouching civilization,his teeth are in better shape for his a sharp cutting edge, or how to cut spent in excavating the original site(George Ran™* it at the Law School age tjian Zinjanthropus’ confirms that up animal carcasses with a simple neither the path nor the find wouldMd Ms wife It a graduate student in he a,t€ substances, like meat stone tool, have been magnified to have been made.History. They visited Olduval last year , ’ , tsuch an extent that the proofs of aand he was trarvelllnq on Harvard's Shawfellowship. Banner stayed on at Olduvalto work os one of the Leokeys' assistantstor sis weeks.1A new species of man has beenfound. This is what Dr. Lewis Leakey,when she was teaching in Cast Africa __ , _ , , ... ...Habtlts limbs Reader s Digest article which wesaw portrayed Leakey, naked, stalk-similar to ours ing a Thompson’s gazelle for a fullday by slithering through the longHabilis foot and hand bones, also plains grass, finally to jump andrecovered, are remarkably like ours; kin it. Then, the article was to report,, i «■<,* was a^e 10 wa^ easily erect, Leakey pulled the antelope apartthe archaeologist, came to the uni- rather than gamble like the austral- barehanded and devoured it, raw.versity last week to report. opithecines, and to manipulate his (Unfortunately for the leading public,The classification of the new spe- fingers and his well-opposed thumb Mrs. Leakey decided this was notedes, to be called Homo Habilis, was m a predion grip which would have (be man she had married and ob-fj_c* mihlisheH A aril 3rd in Nature 'C)een <*u^e capable of making tools, jected so strenuously to the editorsfirst published 3rd m Nature ^ ^ significant ta rhe size of the ^*toned down.) •the British scientific journal. Habilis Habilis brain. Experts have placed The wi fe didthe digging Leakey bridgescultural gaplived, according to the evidence of (be “cerebral Rubicon,” or theseven separate fossil finds in central volume of cranial capacity a skullTanganyika, for a time span of about have to be human, at aboutone million years, beginning approxi- 70Q cubic centimeters. Zinjanthropusmately one and three-quarter million boasted only 530. When Leakey firstyears ago. Although the earliest date discovered Habilis he claimed theof truly human habitation of the brain case was substantially largerearth has always been a fiercely (bap Zinjanthroi>us' and within man’s Explains "LeakeyLuck” to others Bridging the gap between the worldof the Masai and the world of learnedsocieties in Britain and the UnitedMost of the painstaking work on States is a formidable task. Leakeythe dig itself is supervised by Mary handles it with confidence and skill.Leakey. The Leakeys have been Perhaps this is a partial explanationworking as a team since she, already why the Leakeys have gathered suchan accomplished archaeologist her- a popular following. In the past yearself, came out from England on one they have won the attention of notof the original Olduvai expeditions in only the National Geographic Maga1934. In the early days the Leakeys zine and Harpers but also the Chi-had to W'alk in to the gorge, carrying cago Sun-Times and even Vogue,their water for fifteen miles. Until which featured Leakey for the ladiesthe Zinjanthropus find in 1959 brought as one of the great “adventurers”recognition and sponsorship by the of our age.National Geographic Society, Leakeyserved as curator of the CoryndonMuseum in Nairobi, passing up easierand more remunerative teaching jobs Essential natureof man is questSome less colorful archaeologists,who have toiled for years without ip British and American universitiesunearthing “people,” have been to continue, with his wife, thedebated subject, previously the oldest range, but many physical anthropolo- heard to complain that the Leakeys unheralded work in East Africa. p^"of ‘,be quest for the^ssentkdhommine known was Peking man, gjsts thought too little of the skull have enjoved far more than their , ,us Pen<x a eys nature of man. When in 1960 the firstwho lived in China some 500.000 years * were a b 1 e to mount archaeol- Habilis chjW wa& ^covered with aago. Leakey's discovery puts man ogical expeditions only during hisinto existence a million and a quarter two week vacation each year. “History's First Murder.” Ayears earlier than heretofore be- ln QUf. Kfpyf frriiar [orays w1er® necessarily family af- soda] Darwinist u.act caUed “Africanlieved. ,n ,^ieAT ,55Ue5 h^S’w drehU tMUltimaJkr ^ Genesis,” which tries to prove-thatToday the Serengeti plain covers The following articles, written by graduate students, will appear „' i, ,Yr tbrp^Teakcv cnrui the near man became true man whenthe prehistoric savannahs where during the next few weeks: _S?n6’I.„%C he first used a weapon, actuallyHabilis once ranged. Two hundredmiles west of Mt. Kilimanjaro, tworainy seasons a year make the dirtroads all but impassable. But if therains scare people away from theSerengeti, they attract game. Theplains, bone-dry most of the year,become green and fertile for a fewshort months, and vast migrations ofwildebeeste, carrying their shaggyheads low and looking like smallAmerican buffalo, trek from theshores of Lake Victoria to the suc¬culent young grass of the southernSerengeti. Gazelle and zebra dash infront of any intruding Land Rover.A rhinoceros may stare intently, but 1) South Africa: the Slave Kingdom, by Melvyn Hill2) The Compleat Teagaer, by George Mitchell3) A Foreign Student in Hyde Park, by Michael Deakin4) White on White: Governor Wallace in Indiana, by Paul CowonAnd a three-part series:—rd:j-e\>n Amid Chaos: Tutorial in Cambridge, Md., byRachel Brown—The Birth Poins of a New Order: Tutorial in Harlem, by AndreaCousins—How Much Do High Schools Really Teach?: Tutorial in Chicago,by Ann CookAll contributions to the graduate student page will be welcomed.Articles should be delivered to the MAROON office, third floor Ida Noyes. On another level, the Leakey-search appeals to many peoplewere helpfulyoungest of whom is still only lour- rea^ed ^ best-seller lists. Itsteon' author, Robert Ardrev, a University. l . t of Chicago graduate who has moreAfrican workers■ faith (ban William Graham Sumnerin man's capacity to progress byfighting his fellows, purports to baseA large part of the Leakeys’ efforts his insight into man’s basically preda-depends on their team of .some forty tory nature upon the archaeologcalAfrican workers, many of whom are finds in Africa. One fundamentalisthighly skilled at both the mechanics pilgrim to the gorge told us tha. hrof excavation and the identification sees the Leakeys as modern-dayof bones. Once a site is selected, the martyrs, sacrificing themselves onprocess of clearing away the earth the arid Serengeti wastes in a selflessis largely performed with small quest for truth. In this vision, anthro-chisels, knives, dental picks, and pology will soon replace religion astooth-brushes. Each stone or bone the arena of man’s search for him.se! 1fragment on a living flcor is num- and his place in the universe.Search islarger in scopeTl»e Leakeys would be distressedlion prowling 80 feet away.Living time chartat in 30-mile canyonThrough the middle of the greatplain cuts Olduvai Gorge, a thirty-mile Grand Canyon in miniature,eroded by the flood waters whichrush along its floor during the rains.giraffe break into a slow-motion lope had been recovered ever to prove share of good fortune. Leakey him- bered, plotted on a chart, identifiedif people venture too close. One moon- his contention. Nevertheless by self, with characteristic flair for and carefully packed away in boxeslit night we found ourselves, un- measuring the length and arc of a dramatization, attributes a good bit for shipment to the museum inarmed, spending several hours up a lew fragments of the parietal bones, of his success to what he terms Nairobi. Much of this work is donethorn jree with an inquisitive male one of the world’s leading cranial “Leakey luck.” B u t inextricably by the African staff. All the Leakeysspecialists has reconstructed the coupled with the vagaries of chance, speak fluent Swahili and their rela- to hear that their uiork is aimedskull. Measurement of a plaster cast for the Leakeys, has been a constant tions with Africans are excellent, directly at elucidating the nature ofof the brain reveals a capacity of of dedicated hard work. Last July, Leakey himself, in fact, is a blood- modern man. Prehistory contains farapproximately 680 c.c., to Leakey’s we finished excavating one site after brother of the Kikuyu tribe, and as more than lhe seeds of the present,complete vindication. finding only unrewarding animal one of the few whites with a ieal and Olduvai shows, perhaps abovefossils. In October the Leakeys de- understanding of the complex Kikuyu all, the fecundity of nature. Over 150Adabted vpyx wpII cided to construct a retaining wall culture was instrumental in helping extinct mama! species have beenP y near the site to keep the living floor to resolve the MauMau rebellion, identified there, including a pig theto environment from washing away during the rainy The Leakeys’ camp at Olduvai is size of a hippo and a graffe-lkeseason. One of the African workmen, frequently visited by Masai, the tall creature with enormous horns. AtHabilis apparently made good use instructed to collect stones for the nomad tribesmen who roam the Olduvai alone the Leakeys haveThis erosion makes Olduvai the most Qf hjs cranial capacity in turning his wall, lifted a small rock from the Serengeti, living off a mixture of the marked out 48 separate fossil sitesoutstanding prehistoric site in the environment to his advantage. Nearly path we had been walking all sum- milk, blood and urine of their cattle, they hope to excavate; they haveworld, for the river has cut through fWO million years ago the area was mer, saw what looked like an unusual Their young men, armed only with been able to begin work on only 14.300 feet of deposits laid down on the no- unlike the Serengeti of today, tooth underneath, and reported it to spears, attack lions and rhinos to It may well prove that neither Zin-earth's surface over nearly two mil- eXcept that the savannah was lush the Leakeys. It turned out to be prove their valor. Die Masai refuse janthropus nor Habilis is a truelion years. On either side remain ajj year ancj he plain was ringed by from a juvenile Habilis; in several the Europeanized education the gov- ancester of present-day man. But ifcliff faces with the geological strata acliVe volcanoes. Most of the living days remains of three Habilis skele- emment offers, preferring instead to so, the chances are that Olduvaiplainly visible, a living time chart s}tes have been discovered on the tons were unearthed within a few feet continue in their traditional ways. Gorge, its surface barely scratched,whch allows the fossils taken from it shores Gf an ancient lake-bed. After of the path. It was luck, of course, Often the Masai turn to Leakey for will tell us so.to be dated chronologically. we had discovered one primitive liv-Habilis was twice taken at Olduvai ing floor on what seemed to be a 1 1from the same strata as Zinjanthrop- peninsula stretching into the lake,us, another man-like creature dis- Leakey speculated that ancient mancovered by Mrs. Leakey in 1959. For might have chosen that particular .a time it was theorized that Zinjan- site for his camp because predatorsthropus, who is similar morphologi- could approach from only one direc-eally to the South African australo- tion, or because it might have been FOR RENT, ROOMS, APTS., ETC. Kitchen"1 exhaust(L ADSpithecines or “southern apes,” hadbeen on man’s direct ancestral line. his practice to chase his prey ontothe land spit, there to corner and kill. FREE TENANT referral serviceReas, rents, desir. apts. 2Vi-31/a rms.,Habilis. although Zinjanthropus’ con- At even the lowest geological strata, near trans. $85-$lio.temporary, is so much more ad- primitive stone tools, chipped hardly south shore commision, no 7-<620vanced than his cousins the australo- more than once at first, indicate summer sublet. Lge., airy, coolDithecines that they, like the Nean- Habilis’ brain was advanced enough 5 rm, apt. on lake, bus route, nrderthals, have been relegated to a for hm to conceptualize and provide wjndows. iake view. Part. furn. *45/peripheral branch on man’s family for a future need. One of the Leakeys’ mo. 53rd & Hyde Park. 643-8909.tree. most astounding discoveries, made roomate; wantod for 'theDr and Mrs Leakey who work last year at the very bottom ox the summer Own bedrms., two baths, at-as a team, suspected from the first gorge, was of traces of an artificial tractive 8 rm. apt. Call 752-6681.the significance of their new finds circle of lava lumps, apparently 3'j RM. avail, to sublet mid-June. $111but hesitated to make so momentous piled by early man as a rudimentary unfurn. Call 667-2513 after 2.a claim until specialists in London wind-break,and Johannesburg had completedover two years of painstaking analy- Leakeys well-sis of the Habilis bones. The reports. 7of the past fortnight have only served suited to taskto corroborate with scientific proofwhat Leakey had long believed and These few rocks piled haphazardlyhad in fact told us at Olduvai last upon another would have re-July. rm.. huge cedar closets, built-in book¬cases, new refr., washer & fixtures;fan, desumidifier,drapes, carpeting, alum, storm doors& screens, cyclone fence, gas heat. 2car garage. Beaut, landscaped, pricedto sell. SO 8-6248. HELP WANTEDAIR eond.684-8420. FOR SALEfor sale. Good cond. $35. TEACHERS WANTED. $5,000 up. West.Southwest and Alaska. FREE registration. Southwest Teachers Agency, 1303Central Ave. N. E. Albuquerque, N. M.RABID RAVITZ.ONE glass-topped desk and chair, floorlamp, coffee table: must sell imme¬diately: ail excellent condition: bestprice acoepted. Call 684-4595. MALE counsellors for childrens’ sum¬mer camp. Southwest Michigan. Seekmen skilled in athletics, riflery, waterfront. Salary good. Phone 4112-6266 <>iwrite Camp Conestoga, 621 Count.vLine, Highland Park, Ill.1962 WORLD Book Encyclopedia withyearbook. Hardly used. $100. Phone667-0491, call after 6 m.THE wick is burning at both ends.5 RM. apt., 53rd & Kenwood. Avail.June 15, 3 bedrms. $125/mo. Call MI3-7092 eves.APT. avail. 57th & Blackstone. 2>2 rms.,all furn. for sale. Call PL 2-2064 before9:30 am or after 5 pm.SUMMER SUBLEASE APT. 4 lg. rms.. , . , , , plus sun porch & air conditioner, comp,mained unrecognized as a wind-break furn Avaj) june 15. $90/mo. Call S. “LYLAS of the Field” now showing innew Dorm Cafeteria. PRIVATE Progressive Element.) rvschool requires teachers for Us generalstudies as weM as its Hebrew d-‘piMornings or afternoons or full timtemployment avail. Good salary. Con¬tact AKIBA JEWISH DAY SCHOOL7401 S. Chappel, Chicago, Ill.The teeth of Zinjanthropus and by anyone not possessed of a creative Kamsh^«S7-t6io after 6 pm.Habilis show significant variations in imagination. Tne Leakeys’ capacity 6048 S.structure and wear. The massiveness to put themselves in the place of summer ^ubiet-4 ^eomp. fum.of Zinjanthropus’ grinding molars in- primitive man accounts in laige part Greenwood, no 7-3271 after 6 pm.dicates he was a vegetarian, feeding for their phenomenal success\n hav- WANTED. Summer apt. rmsT.mostly upon coarse roots which wore ing located several nunorea ainereni furri ) ca)1 BU 8-6610; rm. 34i2x ormuch of the dentyne off his teeth archaeological sites throughout East 1425. ______before he was 20 years old. Habilis Africa. It also explains, when cou-o*i the other hand has a smaller jaw pled with Leakey'^. gift as a racon- GRUND1G 3-speed stereo tape record¬er. Excel, cond. $145. Phone: 667-0491,after 6 pm.NEW-USED BOOKS 10-30'i DISCOUNTTYPEWRITERS — new-used-electric-manual TO 45% OFF CURRENT MAR¬KET PRICE. Used typewriters fullyfactory rebuilt (not just reconditioned)and fully guaranteed. Discounts aver¬age 25-30%. J ALLYSON STERN-BOOKSELLER. PL 2-6284. Anytime(even late at night). GNO/IOUS likes Georgie Porgie be¬cause he takes bubble baths.THE Social Psychology Lab. willshortly need 2 full time persons withsecretarial bookkeeping and/or stativtlcat research assistant skills. Pleasecall Mrs. Chapman, ext. 2834.PERSONALSHAPPY B1HTHDAY MAX WEBER100 Years today.MON ONCLE!! May 2nd.HOUSE FOR SALEaVtowethen with elongated molars teur a large batf of the popular BY OWNER—Charming brick * ranch fui bargaining point). Call 684-4595 be-atXOgetiter, VJ lit e ♦. ** . , , near 89th & Constance. 2 bedrms., tile fore I reconsider the madness!!!!and comparatively larger canines and acclaim the pair nave received, ^ath & kitchen, unusual finished rec. —MUST sac. for tuition money—Harrnen-Karden amplifier, Harmen-Karden TYPING- Rapid reas., accurate. Willtuner, two Jensen speakers in finished Cajj Ronnie or Karen, NO 7-3609.eabinets and multiplex stereo con-verter. Ail in superlative cond. Will if you piay bagpipe, you have atearfully part with the entire system great future ahead of you. Call extfor $200 (ready cash would be a power- 3271 between 2 & 4 pm.WESTON OIL ECONOMIZES.4 • CHICAGO MAROON * April 21. 19*4movie reviewDr. Strangelove is preview of future for FerlinghettiON THE GOIn three years the Brothers Fourhave traveled a long way fromthe Phi Gam fraternity housewhere they once sang for kicks.Today they are firmly establishedon the contemporary scene andaudiences cheer them fromTokyo to Tallahassee.But the fresh, zestful spirit oftheir college days remains andcan be heard in all of theirbest selling Columbia albums.In their latest, The Brothers FourSing of Our Times, they tell offreedom in "Dance Me a Jig,”and of captivity in "Take ThisHammer." Of injustice in BobDylan's "Long Ago, Far Away,"and of love in his "Tomorrow Isa Long Time.”It’s an exciting album.., perceptive, poignant and full of life.THEBROTHERS FOURON COLUMBIARECORDS^THE SING[^BROTHERS OFOURFOUR TIMESCL 2128/CS 8928 St ere*.*T am waiting” said Lawr¬ence Ferlinghetti in 1958, inthe poem of that title, “forthe human crowd/ to wanderoff a cliff somewhere/ clutching itsatomic umbrella."As we go to press, mankind hasn’tyet taken that big step. But Mr. Fer¬linghetti has been afforded a previewof the tragicomic event in DR.STRANGELOVE, OR HOW II .EARNED TO STOP WORRYINGAND LOVE THE BOMB.The film is a sort of two-hour,wide-screen Jules Fieffer cartoon thatsatirizes current patterns of thinking,or non-thinking, about nuclear war¬fare and the possibility—here the un-avoidability—of world de.sUuction.While most critics have praised thefilm’s dramatic effectiveness, a fewhave also inadvertently attested toits satirical pertinence with theirpetty patriotic indignation. In theWashington Post, national editorChalmers Roberts has said "No Com¬munist could dream of a more effec¬tive anti-American film to spreadabroad than this one."Mr. Chalmers overlooks the factthat Russians are satirized as wellas Americans in keeping with maintheme of the picture ... the mutual self-interest that now dominates cold warpolitics. He also forgets the case ofthe Russian showing of "The Grapes of Wrath*” screened in hopes of ex¬posing America’s vile treatment ofthe Okies. But Russian audienceswent home amazed that in Americaeven the poor have their own carsto drive. What would a contemporaryRussian audience think of a film likeDR. STRANGELOVE made in theUS without government interferenceor suppression? In a battle of ideolo¬gies, as Daniel Boorstin and GeorgeKennan have tried to tell us, athoughtful example will do more goodthan a whitewashed image.While the events leading into thecrisis of imminent nuclear war leavesomething to be desired in the realmof literal plausibility, the film makesits point in the reactions to the crisisonce it is underway. The satire buildsits humor much in the manner ofold silent comedies — the humanfoibles that initiate the conflict be¬come, with each repeated failing,more and more absurd, for, in thecurrently fashionable terminology, Ab¬surd. )Human incompetence thus becomesa constant which can be commentedupon within this topical and terrifyingcontext. The mundane responses ofshortsighted leadership and the patpronouncements of bureacratic jar¬gon. perpetuated through this grizzlysitutation, add up to a complex clichewhich is our entire attitude towardthe possibility of nuclear war, thethinking in terms of missile gaps and nationalist competition, “modest andacceptable civilian casualties," etc.,that add up to a magnificently mech¬anized death wish.Thus when General Turgidson isasked if the one remaining plane onits way to Russia has a chance toget through, his instantaneuous pa¬triotic paean to good old Americantechnological knowhow is pure reflex.This persistent self-destructive Pavlo-vianism reaches its climax in MajorKong, the cowboy-pilot who literallyrides the fatal bomb to earth, notonly undismayed at the prospect ofdeath but whooping with dutiful gloryfor Democracy, God, Mother, Coun¬try, Victory, Texas, and any othercliche he can think of before he hitsthe ground.The film progresses relentlessly,with laughter both hearty and nerv¬ous, from truth to consequences. Inits final chilling and hilarious scenenuclear scientist Dr. Strangelove be¬comes the spokesman of the new un¬derground race that must withdrawfrom the radiation-covered surface ofthe earth for 93 years. This thinlydisguised caricature of Werner vonBraun becomes the prophet of hydro¬gen-powered non-think that perme¬ates our current attitudes as thor¬oughly as the stench of lust fills thestreets of Vienna in "Measure forMeasure" or the vain folly of scien¬tific superiority rules Jonathan Swift’sLaputa.Thus, Kke "1984," DR. STRANGE¬LOVE looks to the future to commenton the present. At the end of thestory military and political leaderscluster around Dr. Strangelove. Justso, says the film, by apathy, ignor¬ance, and sheer persistent ineptitude,we already prostrate ourselves be¬fore our own private maimed " Angelof Death." 1984 is after all, reallyJ948.The film opens with a vignette which shows how the mass mediacan be and are being used to makesuch folly easy and enjoyable, aprocess indicated by the film’s sub¬title. Two jets refuel in midair viaelaborate tubing while backgroundmusic accompanies the process with"Try a Little Tenderness." The clos¬ing montage—lovely shots of billow¬ing mushroom clouds coupled withJane Morgan’s honeyed vocal “We’llBe Together Again” (“Please sayhello to the folks that I know. . . .They’ll be happy to know that asyou saw me go I was singing . . .")—is nothing less than a singing com¬mercial for world suicide, the triumphof von Braun over brain.For producer, co-writer, and di¬rector Stanley Kubrick, DR.STRANGELOVE marks a high pointin an already volatile career. It ex¬hibits the bold, wry humor of “Loli¬ta," and the effective cinematic au¬dacity of “Paths of Glory." It showsKubrick’s flair for the clean, con¬trolled presentation of suspenseful de¬tail, as seen in “The Killing” andthe competence with large-scale ac¬tion that provided the high points ofthe unwieldy "Spartacus." In otherwords, DR STRANGELOVE is aKubrick film, a personal statementthat the world will end not with abang but with the click of a computer.Kubrick, a Bronx boy, first got holdof a camera at the age of nine. Herefused instructions on the use ofhis Brownie, saying “I want to makemy own kind of pictures." It remainsto be seen exactly how prophetic lit¬tle Stanley was, but for a directorstill in his 30’s Kubrick has rackedup a spectacular record. For thosewho know a good thing when theysee one, his early feature "Fear andDesire” will be on view next monthat the Art Institute.Peter Sellers do*s such a fine jobwith his three roles—President Mer-kin Muffley, RAF Capt. Mandrake, and Dr. Strangelove — that we canonly regret the injury which prevent¬ed him from playing a fourth, thatof Major King Kong. The four facesof Sellers could have divided theworld among them: Capt. Sellerstelephones President Sellers to stopMajor Sellers from destroying theworld; then as the attempt fails Dr.Sellers steps forward m his trium¬phant reign of technological terror. ASellers quartet thus would have em¬phasized more strongly the ludicrousfutility of a situation full of mutualself-interest as well as mutual conflict.George C. Scott, as the brain¬washed yet mindless General BuckTurgidson, plays with great energyand intelligence, mostly to fine comiceffect. The part calls for more overtgesture than he has delivered so far,and if his comic hand is slightlyheavy at times he still displaysenough refined skill to retain hiswell-earned place as one of our bestactors.Sterling Hayden is no great per¬former and here, as the psychoticGeneral Jack D. Ripper, he is notquite up to the level of the rest ofthe cast. But he is more than ade¬quate and good enough to prove ashe did in Huston’s “The AsphaltJungle", and Kubrick’s "The Kill¬ing”; how effective a Hollywoodactor can be when, after countiesmediocre roles, he gets the rightpart and right director.The same point is made by thebrief but perfect appearance ofKeenan Wynn as General "Bat”Guano who prudently invades a Cokemachine in the interests of worldpeace. Slim Pickens, as Major KingKong, is as effectively suited to hisrole as his name is to the cast.DR. STRANGELOVE is an excit¬ing, important — and funny — film.Be sure to see it at your local bombshelter.SKThe franc is local currency in France.So is this.Whether the bill is In francs, or lira, or yen, you can paywith BANK OF AMERICA TRAVELERS CHEQUES— known and accepted wherever you go throughoutthe world. Loss-proof and theft-proof, they’re the kindof money you never have to worry about; money onlyyou can spend. Sold by leading banks everywhere.MM (P AIIMA KATKKAL TPMT API pAYtHt* AIMPAT <H • VIKfl* MtlMl tlMIII 1MVMKCI tCIffWTWi j I'ICiRt'APCAS we MA.TtD (JUS*.April 21, 19*4 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5—MU;iillIf,Mi 1964 Midwest Film Festival opens ThursdayThe 1964 Midwest Film eran director Leonard Buczkowsld. makers from all parts of the world §“• • «i mmmmmFestival will he presented by The film deals probingly with both enter their work into Competition atthe Documentary Film Group the Problems of Hitler’s ideology and the Midwest Film Festival, and each |. T q , , . i.i • those presented by present-day reac- year both the Festival Judges and its §at the Law school -Allot t l tions to it. Cinema Riview, prominent audience receive the chance to choose |from April 23-26. During the Festixal, English magazine of film, has said the best of those shown.three features will be shown and „ essentially the concern Tliis year’s Festival Judging Panel Schedule, Midwest Film FestivalApril 23-26Law School Auditorium, 1121 E. 60 st.over sixty short films, ranging in ^ £^m is witj1 Time and with all will include Joshua Taylor, professor § Thursday, April 23 — 8:00 pm —THE DEVTI. IS A WOMANlength from one to forty-five minutes. Qj- ^ myrjafj tricks which Time of Art and author of Futurism, and jg Friday, April 24 — 8:00 pm — THE PAST and Polish shortsThe keynote of the Festival will might play with us . . .” Learning to Look; and Gerald Tern- i Saturday. April 25 —10:00 am — Film Satire (competition films en-be discovery. Of the three features, the final program on Saturday aner, producer of THE COLLEGE, | tered in “humour and satire’’)two are long-unavailable films by the evening, von Sternberg’s last and and film editor of New University g 3:00 pm — Documentary (competition films en-^great director Josef von Sternberg most unusual film, ANATAHAN, Thought. In addition to these, von § tered in "documentary")and the other is a recent Polish tea- will be presented. ANATAHAN (USA, Sternberg, whose films include THE 8:00 pm — ANATAHAN and SCORPIO RISING Ihire which is making its Chicago i9r,3), deals with the tragedy of SALVATION HUNTERS, UNDER- | Sunday. April 26 —10:00 Film Drama (competition entered indebut at the Festival. In addition, seven Japanese soldiers and one WORLD, and THE BLUE ANGEL g * “drama and narrative")none of the sixty-odd films entered woman trapped on a Pacific island as well as those mentioned above, I 2:00 pm — Abstract Film (competition films *n-1in competition at the Festival have at the close of World War II who re- will serve on the Festival Panel. g tered in “abstract")been unveiled to commercial audi- fuse to believe that (he war is over. The business of the Festival Judges § 8:00 pm —PRIZE WINNER’S SHOWINGcnees before. They managed to hold out for seven js j0 seject a First Prize for the - Tickets for ALL evening showings: $t.75 general, $1.00 student for !The Festival will ojien on Thursday, years. The story is a true one which whole Festival and First Place Win- EACH PROGRAM. (4 programs).April 23 with the screening of THE von Sternberg himself narrates.DEVIL IS A WOMAN, directed byJosef von Sternberg and starringMarlene Dietrich. Von Sternberg,feature guest of this year’s Festival,will introduce the film.Friday evening, the Festival willpresent THE PAST, a film on theNazi occupation of Poland by vet- When an interviewer once asked vonSternberg why he had constructed afull studio set on die island on whichhe shot ANATAHAN, the directorreplied. "Because I am a poet." ners in each of the four categoriesinto which programs have been di¬vided for presentation at the Festi¬val. The audience will have itschance to ballot for “the most popu¬lar film of the Festival” which willThe Festival is. however, devoted be shown at the Prizewinner’s Show-to more than the presentation of ing. which traditionally climaxes theunsung feature films. Each year film Festival.VON STERNBERG CAUSED SENSATIONRare Dietrich feature screenedJosef von Sternberg’s rarely AN AND PUPPET, concerning an been speaking of the films of vonseen 1935 feature TIIE alhiring, mysterious, but utterly Sternberg when he wrote: . .DEVIL IS A WOMAN will deadly frmale sado-masochist, and exoticism, of its own nature, tendsopen the 1964 Midwest FilmFestival. Von Sternberg, long recog¬nized as one of the great stylists ofthe cinema, and perhaps the mostimportant director' of the 1930-s winiintroduce the film at the Law SchoolAuditorium on Thursdayt April 23, at8 p.m.DEVIL is the final collaborativeeffort of von Sternberg and MarleneDeitrich and is considered by boththeir best film together. This cos¬tume drama climaxed the tamouscollaboration that began in 1930 withthe classic BLUE ANGEL.DEV1I. caused notable controversyupon its release. Iks libelous treat¬ment of the Spanish Civil Guardbrought censure from the Spanishgovernment, at whose request thenegative was burned at the SpanishEmbassy in Washington. This Festi¬val showing marks the first (and malic smile, Marlene Dietrich,perhaps the last) time this film hasbeen available to tlie public sinceits initial release. added a greater wealth of incidentto to the latter half of the narrativethan was present in the original. The extent in making itself concrete inending ol the film, devised by vonSternberg, in which the suspense wassustained until the last possible mo¬ment, remains one of the most bril¬liant and sardonic ever put on film.In its total realization, THEDEVIL IS A WOMAN was vonSternberg’s most successful filmaesthetically since his first independ¬ent effort made exactly ten yearsearlier. In this new film he crystal-ized all the tendencies that had beenpresent ever increasingly in his im¬mediately proceeding films: ele¬ments used to create a unique, ex¬otic, visually rich environment inwhich erotic adventures might takeplace, the whole being inspired bythe Fatal Woman with the enig- presenting new films and filmmakerswho have gone on to win intema-to a senaial and artistic external!- tional critical acclaim, taking prizeszation ... it succeeds to such an ** the Cannes, Edinburgh, and SanFrancisco Film Festivals.This year’s entries will be pre-- Tickets for ALL Competition Showings: $2.50 general. $2.00 student forALL FOUR PROGRAMS.$1.00 general. .75 student for single admissions.Reservations and information from: Midwest Film Festival. FacutlyExchange. Phone: extension 2898.ftlMMMHIHMM" • • •• ItHIMHill'NMHW ' ■ . - . u . ...... .s mFestival to featurewinning experimentsThe Midwest Film Festival, father of the “new wave In docu-during the three years since mentaries, has submitted ROSEits inception, has won a lively LANDR\. a him which dealsand respected reputation by Atri£a and aPP,,oaches nation1 1 hood in the new style.Arthur Lipset, whose first filmatmosphere remote in time or space(or both) that it gives the artist Dramatic-Narrative. Documentary - VERY NICE. VERY NICE was undoubt edly the most talked-aboutshort released in the United Statesin 19(12. will be represented in tliisyear's Festival with his vigorousCareful settingVon Sternberg, who did the photo¬graphy as well as other directorial the illusion of an actual former ex¬istence in the atmosphere he loves. . . the exoticist invests remoteperiods and distant countries withthe vibration of his own sense andmaterializes them in his imagina¬tion ... he transfers the fulfillmentof his desires to an ideal, a dreamworld."Peak of careerWith THE DEVIL IS A WOMAN,von Sternberg’s career reached itshigh point. He had begun in 1924with a feeling for cinematic formand a desire to externalize in thework of art inner human conflicts.However, the very nature of film,as a commercial enterprise, subjectto the immediate approval of themajority if it is to succeed, forcedvon Sternberg to compromise hisideals if he expected to continue Educational, and Humor-S a t i r e.From among these, the judges willselect prize winners anti audienceswill ballot for the Most PojmlarFilm of the Festival.Of the seven experimentalistswhose $118,000 grant from the FordFoundation has just made headlines,four were introduced in former Mid¬west Film Festivals. Bruce Conners,whose film COSMIC RAY won "mostpopular film of the Festival" in 1962,and has been shown by the Docu¬mentary film group on campus sev¬eral times since then; CarmenD’Avino, who sent STONE SONATAto the 1963 Festival; Kent Macken¬zie. whose feature - documentary. National Film Board also has fourother films in Competition.The Festival will not be lackingin its usual humour. There is a one-minute film in Competition (WIPES,by Lloyd Williams), which consistsentirely of showing the ways to takescenes off the screen. George Manu-pelli has made a sl»ort film whichhas no visual image at all. BellTelephone has an entry made en¬tirely by a computer. And there isa movie of Hugh Hefner’s 1962 Play¬boy Christmas party. There are twofilms which are not designed forthe prudish (entered in the Satireand the Abstract categories).Robert Williams, Midwest FilmFestival representative at the eur-The settings for THE DEVIL ISA WOMAN were prepared with thework on DEVIL, is famous for his utmost care; every detail oontrib- his directorial carer. When he pro-sensuous pictorialisrn. ear.- utecj to ^ imaginative evocation of ceeded to do this, he found two ele-when asked for a comment on Miss t remaining accessible to himDeitrich, he stated “All I have to Spam at the Unm of the century. ^ ^ eff ele_say about her I have said with a The costumes designed by Travis ments that mteresied lx>th him and,camera. Banton were all of the most extraor- fortunately, when handled properly,dinarv elaborateness. The con- the public.tinuity, narrated for the most part From these elements then, heMuseum piece THE EXILES, received a showcase rent Ann Arbor Film Festival, hasscreening last year; and James Blue, just sent word that he will bringwho sent his USIA production, THE back several important films fromSCHOOL AT RINCON SANTO, to the Ann Arbor Festival. Amongthe Midwest Film Festival for its those wi.'l be SCORPIO RISING, afirst and only public American show- film by Kenneth Anger, maker ofing. A fifth Ford choice, Stan Van- FIREWORKS. These films will bederbeek, was first brought to Chi- screened publicly during the Fes-cago in 1962 in connection with Fes- tival: SCORPIO will proceed vontival activities, and will be repre- Sternberg’s ANATAHAN on Satur-sented in this year’s competition by day evening.his latest film. BREATII-DEATII. In addition to the new faces andThe Festival has also introduced talents on display at the Festival,the highly praised documentaries of some renowned popular favorites a!the National Film Board of Canada so turn up in various roles amongto Chicago audiences, including the this year's competition entries,startling and perennially popular Among these are Stan Getz, HughLONELY BOY in 1962 and Clement Hefner. Vincent Price RaymondCritic-director Curtis Harringtonprovides us with a description oftins cinematic museum piece: Thetheme of the Fatal Woman, as ex¬emplified in the literature of latternine tenth-century romanticism, atheme which had run through almostall of his former films, became ful- by one of the central characters, built the lasting greatness which is Perron’s moving DAY AFTER DAY Massey, Severn Darden, ami Mar-allowed von Sternberg to dispensewith any attempt to tell his storywith dialogue during the central ac¬tion of the film; he developed eachsequence as a purely visual state¬ment. one of the few really success- in THE DEVIL IS A WOMAN. in 1963. This year Jean Rouch, garet Mereier.Phillips discusses Phy Scilv crystalized in von Sternberg's ful attempts at flashback narrative, jfinal film made with Dietrich. THEDEVIL IS A WOMAN (1935).There is a very direct correlationbetween the Dietrich of this (and ofmany of the previous Dietrich-vonSternberg films) and the Fatal Wom¬an as described by Mario Praz inThe Romantic Agony: “a Fatal The integration of the succession ofimages in the formal sense was ex¬tremely accomplished, each se¬quence having its own rhythmic ori¬entation interrelated with the tem;x>of the total film. The visual rhyth¬mic qualities were further inte-Woman . . . {icnetrated with aesthe- grated with the musical score.ticlsm and exoticism, the typewhich arose with Gautier and Flau¬bert, which had its full developmentin Swinburne, and which then passedto Water Pater, to Wilde, to D'An¬nunzio . .And we can further discover inDietrich's manifestly androgynousquality (considerably stressed inmany of von Sternberg’s films)the same erotic ideal that filled theliterary works of the later roman¬tics and decadents.In TIIE DEVIL IS A WOMAN We can discover the sources ofvon Sternberg’s exoticism in theliterary products of the romanticand decadent movements of the lat¬ter half of the ninetenth century.The theme of the Fatal Woman andthe exotic locale go hand in hand.In this sense, von Sternberg’s filmsbelong to the school of nineteentfi-century romanticism, and one canimagine the enthusiasm with whichhis work might have been receivedby this fellow spirits at that time.In speaking of this particular S The following is the second in aseries of evaluations of generalM education courses prepared by the| chairmen of each of them. ThisH evaluation was prepared by Melba| Phillips, chairman of Physical| Sciences 105-6-7.SlIIIIIUWIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIHIIIIIllllllltllllllllN' U' Hi! I'UiWHiiii.lllltHIHtlHDIIIIIIIIHIIIII©The central theme of this courseis the growth of ideas concerning thephysical world, from the abstract ge¬ometrical astronomy of Greece tomodem chemistry, nuclear physics,and stellar astronomy. Its object isto convey to the student wlio doesnot intend to pursue a career in sci¬ence an understanding of what sci¬ence is and how scientific knowledgeand ideas have been acquired. strong enough to hold matter together,i.e., electromagnetic forces.In the third quarter, the modernsynthesis of Physics, chemistry, andastrophysics is developed. There are Miss Pliillijjs and oilier membersof the Physical Sciences staff will bepresent at a discussion to answerquestions about the stated objectivesweekly demonstration lectures for the of the Physical Sciences course, teachclass as a whole, and sections of tlie ing methods, reading list, examinacourse meet two hours a week for tioas, etc. The meeting will takediscusion and two hours for labora- place in the Library of Ida Noyestory. Hall — 7:30 pm, Wednesday.Havighurst at Shorey ThursdayRoliert J. Havighurst, Professor of He will also discuss the Hauser Re-Education and Member of the Com- P01^ its proposed methods formitlee on Human Development at tatearation in the schools.UC, will be speaking at the Thomp- chairn“n ot, amittee created by the Chicago Boamson House Coffee Hour, Seventh Qf Education to survey the quality ofThe first quarter is devoted to the floor, Pierce Tower, Thursday, April education in the public schools. Amotions of bodies,-mainly under the 23 at 8 pm. He will be speaking on primary result of the Board actionaction of gravitational forces, and to “Integration in the Chicago Public establishing the committee was thethe classification of matter which Schools." resignation of Superintendent ofcomposes these bodies. Havighurst will discuss his views schools Benjamin C. Willis, who onlyThe second quarter introduces the on tlie state of segregation in tlie agreed to remain at his post aftervon Sternberg and John dos Passes form ol exoticism Mario Praz, again important concept of energy in its schools, the role of his committee, he was made a member of tlie threeadapted Pierre Louys’s story WOM- in The Romantic Agony, might have variety of forms, and treats forces and the findings, of his investigation, man committee.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 21, 1964 , sented in four categories: Abstract, satire of Alienated Man. “21 87." TheUT offers two spring programs Sc,,wa,, 01 Hil,el Wed-on re,i9ious commitmentrv University Theater, encour¬aged by the success of lastquarter’s TONIGHT AT 8:30productions of THE GHOSTSONATA and JACK, OR THE SUB¬MISSION, will offer two differentg 30 programs this quarter.'Hie new productions will enjoysubstantially higher budgets, theresult of the past efforts and excel¬lence of achievement of student di¬rected presentations.'Hie first TONIGHT AT 8:30 willoffer Jean Genet’s DEATH WATCH,directed by John Lion; live second isMichel de Ghelderode's CHRISTO¬PHER COLUMBUS, directed byKobert Ackerman.The cast of DEATH WATCH num¬bers four: Marty Reisberg, BruceMann, David Rosenthal, and GeneTrabich. The play, Genet’s first, waswritten in 1948, and, in broadestterms, has been described as a vio¬lent and harrowing yet movinglypoetic expression of the venomous,festering infection which rendersbarren contemporary Europe.Two years after the play’s comple¬tion, Genet, a kleptomaniac, wasarrested for the tenth time, and wassaved from prison by the intervention of a distinguished group of Frenchwriters, including Andre Gide andthe late Jean Cocteau.CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS is asatire upon the hypocrisy of traditionand a reflection of Ghelderode’sskeptical distrust of reason andestablished dogma. Cast in the formof a dramatic fairy tale, the largecast is headed by Alan Griffin in thetitle role, and includes HelenHunter, Judy Schaverin, Dan Bar-shay, Roberta Reb, Dick Ganz, BarryPolisky, Larry Slifman, Mike Merritt,and Paul Lazerow.DEATHWATCH and CHRISTO¬PHER COLUMBUS will be presentedon May 1, 2, 3, 8, and 9; tickets are$1.50, $1 for students, and may beordered by phone to UniversityTheater, extensions 3.181 and 3582, orpurchased at the Reynolds Club desk.The program will be presented in theReynolds Club theater.Casting for two of the plays in the next TONIGHT AT 8:30, Albee’sTHE AMERICAN DREAM andSaroyan’s THE MAN WITH HISHEART IN THE HIGHLANDS be¬gins April 21 and continues throughApril 23, from 7-9 in the ReynoldsClub Theater. There are two maleand two female (dancing) roles stillopen in the third play of the second8:30 program, Yeats’ ON BAILE’SSTRAND. Joseph J. Schwab, Professor in theDepartments of Education and Na¬tural Sciences, will discuss “Reli¬gious Commitment and StayingAlive” at the last of the Hillel pro¬grams on “The Problem of God.”Schwab will speak at the Hillel HouseWednesday at 8 pm.Schwab has long been interestedin the philosophy of education andscience. He is Chairman of the Aca¬ demic Board of the Melton Centerfor Research in Education, a projectorganized by the Jewish TheologicalSeminary to formulate a philosophyand methodology of teaching Jewishreligious values.The Hillel series has explored thevarious opportunities for religious be¬lief and expression found within theJewish Biblical and mystical tradi¬tions.- Humanist SeminarMorning Forums, 9:15 to noonAfternoon Forums,1:15 to 3:45McCormick PlaceMay 2, 9, 16Contribution (with this ad)—50c per session$1 for entire seriesFor information,Coll SU 7-4634 or 527-4471 SPECIAL FORAPRIL ONLYAntique VellumPersonalized StationeryDouble the Usual Quantity200 Single Sheets—100 Envelope*or 100 MonarchSheets—100 Envelope*>89 Regularly6.00University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueNEW^JUlrtcarved'A ^6 i n moan—a*>.Breathtaking, beautiful and yoursAll the surging beauty, the exciting mystery of thesea itself seems captured in this newest engage¬ment ring from Artcarved. See the distinctly new,yet timeless, design of Surf Star at your ArtcarvedJeweler. Priced from $180. For more information,plus helpful suggestions on wedding etiquette,send 25C for Wedding Guide to J. R. Wood &Sons, Inc., 216 E. 45th Street, New York 17, NewYork, Department C.j ”See Surf Star only at these Authorized Artcarved Jewelers _ChicagoCOLE & YOUNG9144 Commercial A venaeChicagoFARMER JEWELERS3153 W. 53rd StreetChicagoLOUIS FRIED*007 Irving Pork Blvd. ChicagoROMAN KOSINSKI5754 W. Belmont AvanueChicagoR. L. SEIDELMANN2*15 S. Pulaski RoadOak PorkHAYWARD JEWELERS111 N. Marion StreetZionASHLAND JEWELERS271* Sheridan Road The “Progress Corps”comes to the FairGeneral Electric men and womenhave been gathering at the New YorkWorld’s Fair, bringing the latest de¬velopments from the wonderfulworld of electricity.They’ve made their pavilion —Progressland — entertaining. It’s abright show, enhanced by the mastershowmanship of Walt Disney.But, more than that, it’s yourchance to see, as in no other way, thecareer opportunities offered in theelectrical industry. For here, underone huge dome, is assembled a fullrange of the electrical ideas that arehelping millions of people throughoutthe world progress toward betterlives. Ideas that come from the peopleat General Electric, who form a real“Progress Corps.”There are new electronic ideas formedicine that promise better patient care in our hospitals. Ideas for moreefficient factories, less-congestedtransportation, better communitylighting, increased highway safety,and more comfortable living at home.And there’s the first large-scale pub¬lic demonstration of nuclear fusion—the energy process of the sun.For you, Progressland is a rarechance to see what General Electriccan offer in terms of a meaningfulcareer in engineering, finance, mar¬keting, law, sales and many otherspecialties.If this looks like your career path,talk to your placement director. Hecan help qualified people begin theircareers at General Electric.Progress /s Our Most important ProductGENERAL HI ELECTRICApril 21, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROONSG RESULTS(Winners in boldface)CollegeBurfon-Judson (1)Bemie Grofman (GNOSIS)—47D. Larson (write-in)—19Lloyd A, Greene (Ind.)—14Arthur Kaufman (POLIT)—9New Dorm (4)Judy Magidson (Ind.)—16flRusti Woods (POLIT)—159l,aurie Phillips (POLIT)—155Melvin Firestone (POLIT)—151 Pierce Tower (2)James A. Rock (Ind.)—88EIBs Levin (GNOSIS)—80Randy Ross (POLIT)—119Bev Splane (GNOSIS)—105Jennifer Dohm (GNOSIS)—67Anne Gottlieb (GNOSIS)—58Margo Movshin (GNOSIS—1RFraternitiesStanley Bach (Ind.)—29 Howard P. Greenwald (POLIT)—61E. Blumenthal (write-in)—43Dennis D ingem a ns (GNOSIS)—*4Other College (8)Peter Rabinowitz (POLIT)—188Barbara Caress (POLIT)—165Devorah Cohen (POLIT)—160Dick Schmitt (POLIT)—159Alan Sussman (POLIT)—145R. D. Gilman (POLIT)—125Eugene Groves (GNOSIS)—121Norah Kan (POLIT)—118Stanley Stewart (GNOSIS)—14Sally Cook (Write-in)--2Other write-ins—9 Sarah Murphy (POLIT)—110Bob Bornholz (GNOSIS)—81Linda Thoren (GNOSIS)—79Greg Gogo (GNOSIS)—76Guy S. Mahaffey (GNOSIS)—5«Rick Clewett (GNOSIS)—45Graduate DivisionsBio Sci (2)R. Vlaravolo (write-in)—8R. Gold (write-in)—5Frank Grabarits (GNOSIS—4Robert B. Stocking (GNOSIS)—4R. Sager (write-in)—4Humanities (4)Donald W. Tyree (GNOSIS)—13Kendal] Hane (GNOSIS)—10Daniel Klenbort (POLIT)—9(TIE between six others, eachwith one vote—will be broken,at assembly meeting).Physical Sciences (4)Gene Pysh (GNOSIS)—26Paul R. Sievert (GNOSIS)—25Robert Silbey (GNOSIS)—21Walter Daum and Murray Scha-cher (TIE—both POLIT)—19Social Sciences (9)Don C'ongdon (GNOSIS)—44Karen Orren (GNOSLS)—40William L. Richter (GNOSIS)—35John Weicher (GNOSIS)—35Robert J. Lieber (GNOSIS)—34Norman Lefton (GNOSIS)—31Theodore L. Totman (GNOSIS)—31E. Woody Iniberman (POLIT)—31 Anthony J. Papalas (POLIT)—24Elizabeth Heath (GNOSISwrite-in)—19Law School (3)Scott Hamilton (GNOSIS)—42Nick Bosen (GNOSIS)—41John R. Polk (GNOSIS)—3SFrank Heap (write-in)—26SSA (2)Richard P. Davison—6John Wanner—4Medical School (2)B. Sloan—3Tie among eight others—1Education (1)T. Braden—1Divinity School (2)F. Hartman—18A. Miller—6Grad. Library School (1)Henry D. Grudner—4Business School (3)David C. Klein—18Howard Wolff—16P. Sakol—14Stephen Livernash (7)NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATIONFOR DELEGATEBruce M. Kappa port—592Donald Congdon—562Eugene Groves—519Richard H. Schmitt—504 FOR ALTERNATEPeter Rabinowitz—576Jennifer Dohm—496Greg Gogo—448James A. Rock (Independent)—501 ^ Levin 443. R. D. Gilman—416Bernie Grofman—497 McKeon: new liberal arts DeBerry debates Blackneeded for todayNew problems in subject matter and methods makenecessary new combinations of disciplines in the liberal arts,said Richard P. McKeon, distngushed service professor of phi¬losophy and classics at UC yesterday.McKeon spoke on “The Future of . . .the Liberal Arts" at the 19th National fre* facts. McKeon said. StudentsConference on Higher Education, mu,st combine interpretations of factssponsored by the Association for and interpretations of values, he con-Higher Education, at the Pick-Con- tinued. .gress Hotel. A new structure of metliods ofThe medieval structure of the lib- ***** Proof.,“The students en-eral arts, which emphasized methods, with knowledge is an explora-was charged when a new emphasis *lon universal laws find connec-on subject matter was introduced dur- tion-s McKeon said. Education musting the Renaissance. McKeon said. describe the concrete and gen-In a process of “degradation,” he er^e , ie universal.. • * A nmr ctnif*liirncontinued, subject areas have become A new structure of systems oftoo specialized and narrow. New knowledge and action, the studentstructures of the liberal arts disci- must not be preoccupied with find-plines are needed to help solve the ‘coherent relations of facts, butproblems men face today, and to ™ust, realize ]hat 1116 I™*"*5 ofrelate and advance the new subject knowledge and inquiry depend onareas arising from new' discoveries, ambiguity and contradiction.McKeon continued.He suggested four “new structuresof disciplines”:* A new art to combine “recog¬nition of the familiar with the dis¬covery of the new.” Today’s studentsmust both have a background of factu¬al information and a sense of inven¬tion and originality to enable himto see the interrelations of facts.* A new art for interpreting thestructure of statements and of ex¬periences. Education cannot remain“an idolatry of unadulterated, value- Clifton DeBerry, Socialist WorkersParty candidate for President in1964. and Timuel Black, former aldermanic candidate from the fourthward, will debate the question,“What form for Negro political ac¬tion?” tomorrow' evening at 8 p.m.the debate, to be held in BreastedHall, is sponsored by POLIT.Tile topic for discussion will con¬cern the nature of independent political action most effective for theNegro. DeBerry' contends that it isextremely important that Negroesbreak with both the Democratic andRepublican Parties. He supports in¬dependent Negro political action asexemplified by the formation of aFreedom Now Party and MalcolmX S call for a Black Nationalist Par¬ty. Black, however, contends that in¬dependent political action like hisown candidacy for alderman mayserve one possible function in re¬forming the Democratic Party.Calendar of EventsTuesday, April 21Motion Picture: Passage to Marseille(Doc. Film Group: The Bogey Flicks);Soc. Sci. 122. 7:15 and 9:15 pm.Lecture: “Music as Expression—TheBirth of a New Aesthetic,” Edward ELowinsky. Department of Music. (Festi¬val of Shakespeare and the Renais¬sance;) breasted Hall, 8:30 pm.Folk Dancing: Hillel Foundation, 5715Woodlawn. 8-10 pm. Discussion: “Religious Commitmentand Staying Alive,” Joseph J. Schwab,Department of Education; Hillel Foun¬dation, 5715 Woodlawn, 8 pm.Panel Discussion: “Integration: Chi¬cago's Challenge.” Phiiip Hauser, De¬partment of Sociology, Chairman, Ad¬visory Panel on Integrated Schools inChicago; Anthony Scariaivo, Represen¬tative, Illinois State Legislature; EdwinC. Berry, Executive Director. ChicagoUrban League; K.A.M. Temple, 930 E.50 st , 8:15 pm.BOYCOTTTHEME SONGO tell me have you seen thesetired vegetables before?I have wen them on the tables,I have seen them on the floor.The food is really rotten andthey’re trying to serve us more.And we will not be fed!CHORUS:Cheers to Wick and Vice andNewmanThey da not think we arehumanDecisions are made by just afew men.And we will not be fed!The prices are too high and theportions are too small.And that is why we're picketingthis blasted dining hall,We do not want to see a contractComing here next fall.And we shall not be fed! Wednesday, April 22 Thursday, April 23Lecture: "The Study of Village Poli¬tics in India: The Politics of Caste.”F. G. Bailey, School of African andOriental Studies. University of London,(Committee for the Comparative Studyof New Nations); Business East 103,11 am. Lecture: “Virtuosity and Expressionin Elizabethean KeytK>ard Music,” Ed¬ward E. Lowinsky; Breasted Hall, 8:30pm.Radio Broadcast: “Today’s CityCouncil Meeting.” Alderman LeonDespres; WUCB. 8:30 pm.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6864EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT & FACULTY DISCOUNTcwm^x-v- •: vThe all-newBBeautifulnew gracenew sweepBrawniernew 1800 c.c.power plantBetter comfort...wind-upwindowsDrive the M6B today at—BOB NELSONMOTORSIMPORT CENTREAusflnHealeyPeugeotFull line an display • new & used6040 S. Cottage GroveMidway 3-4501 CAFEENRICOACROSS FROM THE "Y"(pJULdJLniiuLeon BorkowskiFlamenco & Classical GuitaristTuesday Thru Sunday NightFrom 9 P.M. -1 A.M.NO INCREASE IN PRICESMonday Night Is Beer And Pizza Night50c Off On PizzaWith A Pitcher Of BeerFrom 9 P.M. To 1 A.M. Singing goes better refreshed.And Coca-Cola — with that special zingbut never too sweet ^^refreshes best, jthings gObetter,!^withCokeUMKUNUIl)Bottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company bytThe Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Chicago, Inc.8 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 21. 1964