*•1. 73, Na. 21 TW University o4 Chicago Friday, January 15. 1965 31UC aid: a complicated gameby Barbara JarNothing to buy, no jingi* to write, and prizes of over one million dollars going to 75par cent of the entrant* is the sort of contest UC undergraduates enter when they applyfor financial aid this year.rl he rules of the contest are the financial need of the student, that is, how much of the*3.250-plus average College budgetbe and his family is able to supply,and academic qualification. “Forupper class students, a C averagequalifies for financial assistance, butten years ago the Committee onFinancial Aid would run out oimoney after considering A through Cplus students,” Robert J. Charles,Director of Financial Aid. pointedout. To qualify for financial need.Students are requested to have tlieirparents file the Parents ConfidentialStatement of the Princeton Scholar¬ship Service.966 gat aidGift assistance totalling $981 820wo., awarded to 966 undergraduatesfor the 1964-65 academic year, ac-qording to Charles. Aside from giftaid, quarterly awards to 49 students.MNt f ! l-f; '•ItitH’lHWhih'< p . ...tonM'First of a seriesUHm •••■' ! i ■ttii|f|r.-(ii!ii-y».‘:t||ii«H::iil«llHl9ii. ■■ • •••••miMuch would total $23.0(10: recom¬mended loans: and 50 guaranteedjobs helped defray expenses for un¬de* •graduates.TIIR FINANCIAL ASSISTANCEsituation was aided by outside schol¬arships. For instance, 267 IllinoisState Scholarships were awarded thisyear representing a monetary in¬crease of $60,000 over last year.Aooording to Charles. “There werealso 6} National Merit Scholarshipstotalling $81,184: 12 General Motorsawards tallying $20,430; 35 PullmanScholarships representing $35,060 and? Procter ;tnd Gamble awards totally$6,650, to name just a few' of thehuger grants," Charles stated.Undergraduates are also expectedto earn part of their funds throughsummer employment or part-timejobs. "Freshmen are expected toearn about $500 while upi>er classmen should be able to make $650 andwomen $600,” Charles said."Of the 671 undergraduate fresh¬men registered this year. 368 re¬ceived awards averaging $1,224 ingift assistance,” Charles disclosed."But this does not take into accountdie recommended loans, which can¬ not be determined until the end ofthe fiscal ye:**, since records arenot kept on recommended loans,”he related.Increase of 78 studentsTlie number receiving awards thisyear represented an increase of 78students over 1963-64, but the num¬ber of the class increased only 14percent while the number receivingaid increased about 27 percent. Theawards also increased from $1,615to $1,224.THOSE WITH THE STRONGESThigh school credentials received thegreatest amount of gift assistance:96 percent gift and above. "Thisyear, 50 percent ranked in the topcategories versus 44 percent for the1963-61 academic year,” Charles re¬vealed.“This increase was due to therevised student budget coupled withhe tuition increase making morestudents eligible for financial aid.”Charles said. "The average awardwould have had to be more it theCommittee did not assume an Illi¬nois State Scholarship; other schol¬arships also would have raised theaverage,” he continued.After the first year, each studentdesiring financial aid is requestedto fill out application forms forfinancial aid. “Although averageawards decrease for upperclassmen,this is not a policy of the Committeeon Financial Aid, but rather due to increases in parents’ income and anexpected increase in self - help.”Charles emphasized. The freshmanaid situation was complicated by diefact that the rate for freshman ac¬ceptance was unexpectedly high andless was expected to have beenspent, according to Charles. “Thismeans, however, that the Committeeon Financial Aid would go to Presi¬dent Beadle and not cut the aid forother classes,” he explained.Even with the decrease. .589 stu¬dents out of 790 applicants, or 74.6percent, received average awardsof $900 for a total of $530,630 in giftassistance."APPLICATIONS FOR. FINAN¬CIAL aid are turned down for var¬ious reasons: some are judged tohave no need or their need is coveredby outside awards; some lack aca¬demic qualifications, others cite of¬fered recommended loans which arenot counted in the total, and stillothers are turned down for mis¬cellaneous reasons,” Charles ex¬plained.The breakdown for the classes wasas follows:Class of 1967Applications 325Received Aid 243Percent 78.8%Average Awatxl $931Total $225,965Class of 1966Applications 256Received Aid 197Percent 77.0%Average Award $931Total $183,745Class of 1965Applications 2<WReceived Aid 149Percent 71.3%Average Award $812Total $121,620"QUARTERLY AWARDS ARE al¬so offered to students who demon-(Ccnrinued on page three)Willis target of GROW sit-insDemonstrators broke up aBoard of Education meetingat board headquarters Wed¬nesday and were carried offto jail vowing to remain in prison foras long as it takes to motivate (>eo-ple to join in the fight for equality inthe Chicago schools.Die demonstrators also asked forthe removal of present superinten¬dent of schools Benjamin C. Willis.Die demonstration followed ttiemeeting of the Board, which hadearlier passed this year's budget anddecided to scrap eight of ten pro¬posed "clustering” schemes whichhad berm proposed to further inte¬gration.Want pressureJIMMY COLLIER, A spokesmantor the demonstrators, said tliat thestrategy behind the demonstrationand subequent jailings is to bringpressure to bear on civic officials andto arouse potential opposition to Wil¬lieCollier added that liis group's pro¬posal is that the board set up aoornmittee of top level educators toestablish criteria and select candi¬dates • for the job of Superintendent0$ Schools.COLLIER SAID THAT the demon¬strations ai-e a form of direct invita¬ tion to college and high school stu¬dents to join the protest.Interested UC students can reachCollier a HA 7-2533.THE DEMONSTRATION. s|>on-sored by a group called Committee toHelp Chicago Schools GROW (GetThere will be a MAROONstaff meeting Monday inthe MAROON office at 4pm. All staff members arerequired to attend.Rid of Willis), began when a partici¬pant stood up as the last roll-callvote of the day was being taken. Hetried to read the statement the com¬mittee had prepared, but was stoppedby one of the tall, husky Board ofEducation guards. As soon as hestopped talking, a second demons tra-tor started reading, then a third, anda fourth.When the oops came in, the fif¬teen demonstrators slioved theirchairs aside and sat down on thefloor of the hall. Three of them weredragged off, but the rest locked armsto force the police to let them sticktogether. Board personnel and cityIiolioe brusquely ushered out every¬one except reporters and photogra¬ phers from the metropolitan press,radio and TV. A Maroon reporterw'as among those shown the way tothe elevators.Alter they had gotten photographedand interviewed the demonstratorsgot the police to let them walk out,under arrest.Bernard Lafayette, an official ofthe American Friends Service Com¬mittee, and James Wilson, a workerfor the West Side Christian parish,were dragged out before tile grouplocked arms, and Jay Litvin wasripped away from his neighbor’slocked arms. Lafayette and Wilsonare charged with resisting anest.and are now held in Bridewell, thecounty prison. The others are alsocharged with criminal trespass andare now in Cook County jail.First hearing in their oases washeld yesterday, at which time allfifteen pleaded not guilty, and suc¬cessfully requested a delay of oneweek to consult their counsel.GROW will hold a rally to discussfuture moves in the anti-Willis cam¬paign tonight at 8 pm at the FirstCongregational Church, 16 13 W.Washington street (corner ol Ash¬land).All interested persons are urgedto attend the rally. Further informa¬tion is available by calling 427-8240. Hauser: Willis renamingwould be serious mistake'by Barry Salias“I think it would be a serious mistake to reappoint Mr.Willis superintendent of schools,” according to Philip M.Hauser, chairman of the Department of Sociology.Hauser referred to Benjamin C. Willis, head of theChicago public school system, in a Maroon interview thiaweek.*Hauser, as chairman of an advisorypanel on the integration of Chicago’sschools, is an authority on tlie city’seducation system and its de factosegregation. His panel was appointedby the Chicago Board of Educationin August, 1963, and completed areport of its investigations and recom¬mendations in March."DE FACTO segregation is thehistorical product of residential segre¬gation patterns and of the adherenceto the neighborhood school policy,”Hauser stated. “The school board andthe superintendent have inherited theproblem.”Adopt cluster planThe first recommendation of thepanel s report is that the cluster planbe adopted. “The cluster plan pro¬vides freedom of choice of schoolswithin a larger district which wouldinclude two or more elementary andthree or more high schools,” Hauserexplained.Returning to Willis, whose contractexpires in August, Hauser said hewas “convinced that we cannot im¬plement the cluster plan or any otherplan of integration unless the super¬intendent of schooLs is completelycommitted to the progress of edu¬cation, transmits this sense of com¬mittment to this colleagues, and pro¬vides vigorous leadership and astute¬ly administers such a plan.”“I am convinced that Mr. Willisis not committed to the progress ofeducation, has not transmitted thiscommitment to his colleagues, andis impeding integration rather thangiving it vigorous leadership."THERE IS THE problem of im¬proving public school education with¬out making it more difficult by reasonol the controversy surrounding thecharacter of the superintendent ofschools. The man is so controversialthat he has outlived his usefulness.”“Even if he were the best man inthis country and definitely tried to dothe right thing.” Hauser went on.“he would still have trouble convinc¬ing many people that this was thecase. He has become an object ofgreat mistrust for a large part of thepopulation. It would be unfair tothe city of Chicago and to him toreappoint him.”Must bring about changesWhen asked whether de factosegregation has been purposefullyplanned or aided in the Chicagoschool system, Hauser replied: “TlieBoard of Education and the schoolsuperintendent, while they have notcreated the situation, must be heldresponsible from now on if they donot bring about the necessary anddesirable changes.“As a result of new developments—including the Negro revolt and newattitudes as manifested by the newcivil rights bill and by the generalrecognition that the Negro is entitledto his full rights of American citizen¬ship—the situation has become in¬tolerable.”HAUSER POINTED OUT that onan integration continuum, rangingfrom compulsory integration to com¬plete permissiveness, there would beat one end such things as the Prince¬ton Plan and compulsory bussing andat the other end no activity."I am opposed to compulsory in¬tegration,” he said. ‘It would bringabout an admixture, which is differ¬ent from and would hinder true inte¬gration. I am opixised to compulsorybussing. It should be noted that nota single civil rights leader who spokewith tlie committee advocated bus¬sing.”“School integration cannot be ac¬complished until there are integratedneighborhoods. Integrated neighbor¬hoods are prerequisite,” Hauser said.Willis himself is issueLamenting the great amount ofeffort being put into non-educationalgoals, Hauser commented that "atthe present time the major issue iswhether he (Willis) should or shouldnot be superintendent. There arevarious groups standing on each sideof the question, instead of devotingattention to the needs of the child.”However, Hauser emphasized thathe did not mean to discourage aetivi- Hauserties opposing Willis, such as Wed¬nesday’s CORE-led march. "As longas you've got people like the RealProperty Owners Association, espe¬cially in southwest Chicago, cam¬paigning to keep Willis—they evenhave bumper stickers now — thereshould be organized efforts to ousthim. as these are in keeping withthe right to petition.”SPEAKING OK THE members ofsuch pro-Willis groups, he assertedthat “many of these people are con¬firmed segregationists.” Hauser re¬called a radio interview program heappeared on with a lawyer from oneof the groups and repeated with dis¬dain -one of the lawyer’s statements.‘He said. ‘It is the God-given right ofevery family to be free to choosethe race and religion of the childrenwith whom its children associate inthe public schools.’ ”“This is an absurd posture.” Haus¬er feels. "The public schools, sup¬ported by public taxes, cannot tieused for the pleasures of any onegroup. By definition, they are publicinstitutions to which everyone shouldhave clear access as they have tothe public streets.”Trip to S.E. AsiaDespite his many other activities,Hauser undertook a trip to SoutheastAsia, from which he recently re¬turned. His journey had two specificobjectives. The first was to visit theUniversity of the Philippines and tcbe present for the creation of its newPopulation Institute on November 1.The second was to investigate the de¬velopment of demography in othercountries, including Japan, Thailand,and Malaysia.“We have effected a ‘demographicassociation relationship' with theUniversity of Singapore.” Hauser ex¬plained. “In this relationship it Isagreed to keep each other informed ofnew work, to exchange publications,to plan cooperative and comparativeresearch, and to organize joint semi¬nars on population problems. Thisrelationship includes the University ofthe Philippines and was established bya Ford Foundation grant.”THE POPULATION INSTITUTEwas an implementation of one of anumber of recommendations made bya committee of three of which Haus¬er was chairman. The others on thecommittee were Oscar Harkavy, di¬rector of the population program ofthe Ford Foundation, and DudleyKirk of the Demographical Popula¬tion Council of New York.“The Institute was created in f>artby a Ford Foundation grant to theUniversity of the Philippines and toUC to serve as a back stop to tliePopulation Institute,” Hauser stated.The Institute is headed by Dr. Mer¬cedes Concepcion—“a most appro¬priate name,” he added.Will be visiting consultantAs a visiting consultant, Hauserwill be available "at least once ortwice a year to visit the U. of P. tohelp with problems in training andwith research programs,” he said.Hauser concluded by pointing outthat the connection between UC andthe U. of P. can lead to ‘‘possiblecooperative research. UC’s acceptingsome of the Institute’s better studentsfor work 'in tlieir PhD’s, exchangesof personnel, and our helping themto staff tlieir Institute.”NEWS MUSEForeign aid: great debateby Bruce FreedThe annual battle over for¬eign aid opened yesterday atthe Capitol. As usual, thePresident is pitted against hiswily adversaries in the House andSenate who will make every effortthis year as they have in past yearsto whittle down his request.But this time, a change in thescenario is evident. Some of thekey supporters of foreign aid in thepast will be missing from the pro¬aid ranks. Their reasons: dissatis¬faction with the way in which theprogram has been handled and thepaucity of results.TO TRY TO STEM growing criti¬cism on the Hill, President Johnson,in his foreign aid message yesterday,asked for less than 3.5 billion dollarsfor the coming year, a record lowsince the inception of overseas assist¬ance after World War II.The President hopes that his"bare-bones” request will stop someCongressmen from trimming theprogram further and will placateothers who doubt the need forgreater aid appropriations.However, while Congressional de¬bate in the past has been betweenthose opposed to foreign aid andthose favorable to it, the discussionsin the past couple of years havecentered on the overall effectivenessof the program.The increased number of under¬developed nations and their growingcriticism of United States policieshave undoubtedly contributed to thegreater Congressional unrest whichVISA will hold a generalbusiness meeting Saturdayin the East Lounge of IdaNoyes at 5 pm. EugeneGendlin, assistant professorin the departments of psy¬chology and philosophy willspeak about specific prob¬lems with the mentally ill.Sandwiches will also beserved.is manifested by some previousforeign aid proponents now leadingthe forces to cut the funds.THE TIME IS NOW ripe for thesoul-searching Congressional reap¬praisal that has been looming sincethe beginning of the Kennedy Admin¬istration. While there has been noclear debate over the future offoreign aid until now, the increasedrestiveness of pro-aid Congressmenshould lead to this long overdueassessment.Granted that foreign aid needsconstant review to keep it abreastof current developments and needskey question this year should not behow much aid should be given, butwhat type of assistance should beand to increase its efficiency, the allocated and what American long-range goals should be.Most important of all, Congressshould incisively examine the effec¬tiveness of American military aid tounderdeveloped countries and wheth¬er the funds spent on arms could notbe better used to industrialize thesecountries and increase their popu¬lations’ standard of living.In this respect, the criticisms ofSenator Wayne Morse (D., Oregon)merit closer scrutiny because of thefailure of overall military aid suc¬cess.The increase in the power of themilitary in underdeveloped countries,especially in Latin America, and theAmerican agony in Vietnam, wherevast amounts of military aid arebeing funneled into that sinkingcountry, do not sp>eak well of theprofitability of greater military as¬sistance funds.HOWEVER, ECONOMIC assist¬ance is another question. Here, theUnited States has an obligation tohelp the underdeveloped countries.Being the wealthiest country in theworld, the US can afford to appro¬priate more than the 3.5 billion dol¬lars the President asked for.It is in America’s interest to helpthese countries achieve economicstability. With that as a goal, eco¬nomic aid could be an effectiveweapon to curb internal politicalinstability in these volatile statesand, eventually, to lessen tensions inthese emerging parts of the world.The maxim that affluence increasesone’s desire to preserve the statusquo should be one of the motivatingforces behind American aid.On its domestic implications, for¬eign aid cannot be divorced fromPresident Johnson’s vision of theGreat Society. Events in other partsof the globe certainly affect theUnited States, and increased worldinstability would have a detrimentaleffect on the President's domesticprogram.THE PRESIDENT REALIZES thata more stable world would allowthe United States to concentratemore on its crying domestic needs.Foreign aid is one means for achiev¬ing this important lessening of ten¬sion.A great debate in Congress, if itmaterializes, will be an importantfirst step in reshaping a more effec¬tive foreign aid program and in¬directly in bringing the President’sGreat Society close to realization.Anyone who missed get¬ting a Shapiro "Art to LiveWith" picture Thursday canpick one up today from 4to 4:30 p.m. ONLY at theStudent Activities Officewhile they last. Reflections from Miss.(Editor's note: Tho author of thefollowing letter, R. D. Gilman, ison leave from UC to work in Missis¬sippi for COFO. This letter wasaddressed to MAROON ManagingEditor, David L. Aiken.)TO THE EDITOR:Last Wednesday night nine o‘f>erpeople and I were arrested in WestPoint, Miss., and eventually chargedwith disturbing the peace. I wasalso charged with resisting arrest.When they were notified of ourpredicament, the people at UC re¬sponded very generously. Sundaynight I got out of jail, and now Ifeel obligated to try to explain tothe people at UC who contributedjust what tile whole thing was allabout.Some time around noon Wednes¬day, Carl Rice, a Negro teenager,was arrested and eventually chargedwith "inciting a riot.” Witnessessaid that Carl (“Dude”) had beenpart of a crowd watching two Negrogirls scuffling. When the police ar¬rived, they ignored the girls, butsingled out Dude and arrested him.NOW IT IS important that youunderstand why Dude was arrested.While we have been in West Point,Dude has hung around with us agreat deal. During the Freedom Votehe carried some of the materialsonto the high school campus, gotinto an argument with the principal,and was expelled. And Dude hisbecome something of a target. Thepolice are trying to show what hap¬pens to a person when he “messeswith those Freedom Riders.” Dudewas not arrested for “inciting ariot” or for anything except for be¬ing identified with us.The police arrested him. His fa¬ther w’orks for the city. We offeredin the course of this affair to havea COFO lawyer represent Dude. Buthis father would have lost his jobhad a COFO lawyer represented hisson. Therefore, he declined. Butwhatever the lawyer, Dude couldexpect no justice in Mississippi. Dudehad not incited a riot, but he hadcommitted /what in Mississippi is afar worse crime — he had shownan interest in challenging the whitesupremacy system in the state. Andthe state was and is ready to meteout severe punishment.Where in his predicament couldDude look for help. Not to the sup¬posed "just” judicial system of Mis¬sissippi. Not to the Federal govern¬ment, for how could he reach them.Indeed, he had and has only one solidally and it is that ally that we areseeking to bring out. Dude should beable to rely on the support of thelocal Negro community, for his prob¬lem is theirs a’so and in ra'lviogaround him, they protect them¬selves.WHAT WAS THERE for the peo¬ple in the community to do? They couldn’t hire a lawyer, because theyare poor and besides the judiciaryin Mississippi all the way up to theFederal District Courts is an instru¬ment of white supremacy. (Remem¬ber Judge Mize’s decision in thePhiladelphia school children’s easeand Judge Cox’s handling of the Fed¬eral grand jury in the investigationof the Philadelphia slayings.) Theirway of helping was to show theirsolidarity behind Carl Rice.Now the Mississippi white mandreads seeing Negroes get together.He is constantly afraid that if Ne¬groes ever get together he will losehis supremacy (and he is right.)Therefore, to get a group of Negroestogether to show their dissatisfactionwith this arrest was a significantstep.You see, the Mississippi Negro isborn into a rut. He is born to takethe tail end of everything and tosmile when he receives it and say,"Thank you, boss.” What we haveto do in Mississippi is to convincepeople that they are able to standup for themselves. They should nothave to be afraid of the white man,and they should not have to dependon him.ONE OF THE MAJOR methodsof keeping the nigger in his place isthe police and the jail. Therefore, toovercome that fear of the police andof jail, to teach people that theyhave rights in spite of what the po¬lice say and that it is possible tofight for those rights is a majorachievement. To take a group ofyoung men down to the jail to singFreedom Songs is a major achieve¬ment, for it is a clear defiance ofthe Mississippi code which says thatniggers take whatever white peopleput on them and like it.I wish you could have been th'reand seen how the white people driv¬ing by the jail stared to see a bunchof niggers — singing and in frontof the jail too. I. wbh you couldhave been in the jail and watchedas these young men — very muchafraid of the idea of being in jail,a fear which^the system has care¬fully built up — discovered that itwas possible to bear a few daysin jail. I wish you could have heardthem as they talked about whythey were there. (I stuck my twocents in, but they grasped the ideasof the injustice of their arrest andof the necessity for making the pro¬test that led to it with rewardingspeed.)Can you imagine a young Missis¬sippi Negro, explaining to his fatherwho has come down to visit, his sonwho has "gdtten into trouble” .thathe was engaged in a protest andthat he wasn’t doing anything wrong?You probably can’t imagine thatscene because you haven’t been inMississippi as I have, but it is adramatic scene. And father sat inobvious consternation for about halfan hour. When he came back the next day, rt was obvious that he wasproud of his son — although I doubtthat he would admit it yet. Andthe whole community is proud ofthem. By standing up to white su¬premacy, they have added severalnotches to the community’s pride initself, and that is very important.YOURS FOR FREEDOM,KDLBJ: not justcaution, but policyTO THE EDITOR:I have read with interest BruceFreed’s* column on President John¬son’s State of the Union messagedelivered before a joint session ofCongress last Monday. I found MrFreed’s summation to be accurateand informative. I think thoueh thatMr. Freed has not done as well whenit comes to his discussion of thePresident’s motivations and o! jec-tives as expressed in Monday’sspeech.CLEARLY, PRESIDENT Johnsonwas given a mandate by the peoplelast November. At the same time,both the House and the Senate weregreatly liberalized. With the greatpower that the President has builtup over his many years in both theHouse and the Senate, is there anyreal doubt that the President couldnot have proposed a great dealmore legislation to the Congress h idhe wished while at the same tinebeing confident of passage?As things look now, the Pres; lentwill have little or no problem get¬ting his proposed legislation pn-<d.While President Johnson does notlike to use his power on causeswhich he feels are not worthy orhave little chance of success, 1 lindit difficult to believe, as Mr. Freedwould have us believe, that fearover chances of success was themain motivating factor behind ;hePresklent’s "cautiousness.”I believe also that Mr. Freed hasgreatly over simplified the processof Presidential decision making. Isit not passible, for example, that thePresident refrained from askingCongress for more money than hedid to fight the "War on Poverty”because his economic advisorswarned that such action would havean overweighing adverse effect onthe deliceite balance of the USeconomy?Mr. Freed’s political speculationsmight have been applicable baskin I960 when John Kennedy squeezedinto the White House on less thantwo hundred thousand votes, bkI’m afraid that Mr. Freed bus sub¬stituted his conceptions of politicalmaneuvering for what are actuallyvery basic differences in conditionsand philosophies between the Ken¬nedy md Johnson Admdnist rat ions.RICHARD HAHNA Lecture byLESLIE A. FIEDLERauthor of Love and Death in the American Novel, An Endto Innocence, Come Bock to the Raft Ag’inHuck Honey, No! In Thunder, The Eye of Inno¬cence, and other works.Mr. Fiedler has taught at New York University, Princeton,Rome, Columbia and Montana State. He has been aRockefeller Fellow, a Kenyon Review Fellow, anda Fulbright Fellow.MANDEL HALLJanuary 28, 19658:30 p.m.Sponsored by Student GovernmentTickets: 50c student; #1.00 non-student. Available at StudentGovernment Office, Ida Noyes Hall or Mandel HallBox Office. Mail and phone orders accepted: Stu¬dent Government, Ida Noyes Hall, Telephone—Ex¬tension 3272-74 (1-5 p.m.) no jukebox • no Scopitoneno folksinger • no Morning Telegraph(Open soon, as we’ve been saying since mid-October)THE EAGLEa new eating & drinking parlour (but already of somewhat faded elegance)5311 Blackstone(World Headquarters of the ARAK Refining Co.)324-7859Pet* Kofos Jeff Metcalf lot Stack Jerry SaMvan2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jon. 15, 1945UC fund-raisers must meet larger needby Sharon GoldmanChicago’s gift aid this yearwill have to be at least doublein order to meet the needsof the University, accordingto Richard F. O’Brien, UC’snew vice-president for plan¬ning and development.A major fund-raising campaignwill be launched by the office ofdevelopment late this spring, afterthe priority of needs has been de¬cided upon by faculty members,deans, and trustees, O’Brien said.LAST YEAR, UC received$23,000,000 in gifts and pledges,$7,300,000 for endowments, $31,900,000for restricted uses by divisions,schools, and programs, and $1,800,000for unrestricted uses,“Next year, corporation and foun¬dation support to UC must increase,but the real increase will have tocome from individuals. Foundationsgave about $600,000,000 for secondaryand higher education purposes, whichdoesn’t come close to meeting theneeds of higher education,” O’Brien«. said.Donors sophisticatedCommenting on the large amountof restricted aid, O’Brien said, “Thecommon impression is that the Uni¬versity gets many restricted giftsthat are unhelpful. But it’s been along time since a scholarship wasestablished for red-headed girls fromRacine. Donors today are verysophisticated, trying hard to respondto our responsibilities and needs. Asa matter of fact, the Universitydoesn’t accept gifts it can’t use—we speak to the donor candidly. Ninetimes out of ten he will change hismind about a restricted use as hesees what our needs are.’*Of the unrestricted funds receivedby UC last year, $582,000 is beingused for student aid, according toO’Brien. Some endowed funds andabout $3,000,000 in restricted hindscan also be used for specific studentaid and programs. O'Brien also notedthat the University is spending$2,000,000 of its own money this yearfor student aid.Of $28,000,000 budgeted by UC forinstruction and research, 20% isdependent upon gift income. “Butrestricted funds often make researchpossible that the University wouldnot nonnaily be able to undertake,and the establishment of chairs pos-There will be o meetingof the Academic AffairsCommittee of Student Gov¬ernment Sunday, January17 at 8 pm at Ida Noyes toformulate recommendationson the Levi College. Wewill be meeting with DeanBooth the following week.JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAPYou won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Avo.646-4411ETC EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptomutrift53-Kimbark Plaza1200 Cent 53rd StreetHYde Pork 3-8372Stadeat and FacultyDheaaat sfole,” O’Brien pointed out.$6,000,000 IN GIFT funds have beenapplied for general budget purposes,and much of these are restrictedfunds. O’Brien stated that the fre¬quent coincidence of uses donors in¬tend for their contributions withneeds of the University makes thispossible.Also capital drivesBesides fund-raising for currentoperating dollars, O’Brien said thatthe office of development also con¬ducts capital drives. He noted thatlast year “practically nothing1' wasdonated for the physical plant of the University. But with many 75-year-old buildings such as Cobb and Kent,large-scale renovation is a necessity.O’Brien also listed new libraries,new dormitories, a music center, anew psychology building, and a stu¬dent activities center or series ofstudent facilities as pressing physicalneeds.ALTHOUGH O’BRIEN’S office isdirectly responsible for the develop¬ment of gift support for the Univer¬sity, O’Brien said that his office isseldom directly involved in theactual fund-raising. The develop¬ment office works primarily by sup¬ plying faculty members, deans, trus¬tees, and the several hundred mem¬bers of voluntary committees inChicago and elsewhere with materialso that they can explain the needsof the University.PR. alumni help outTwo main aids to the office of de¬velopment are the office of publk;relations and the alumni association.The office of public relations puts outa number of publications such asthe magazine Chicago Today anddivisional reports such as ChicagoReports, which, according to O'Brien,are designed to keep the public well informed as well as to encouragecontributions. “The oetter job wedo of reporting, the more donors feelthat their funds are being used wise¬ly, and the fewer restrictions theyplace on gifts i® the future,” O’Brienfeels.The alumni association is an au¬tonomous organization for which theoffice of development provides somestaffing. “It’s important to keep thealumni informed,” said O'Brien,“so that they will recommend goodstudents, generally speak well ofthe University, and, of course, con¬tribute.’'Versatility key to general humanities programby Dinah EsralContinuing the principles of general education while in¬troducing elements of specialization, General Studies in theHumanities is a program open to students for third andfourth year work. A special committee within the humanitiesdivision of the College conducts the — —program, and attempts to make a UP a. worfhy problem. This is awhole out of undergraduate education, breaking point intellectually,” states. , __ Maclean. “Then, in the writing of theGENERAL STUDIES m the Hu- paper we attempt to get the studentmanities brings out the best in each ready to write for publication. Thestudent by means of a custom made paper is not long so that one point isprogram, states Norman Maclean, made every ten pages. Instead,professor of English and committee something should be ;said all thechairman. Presently in its thirteenth time."year, these studies comprise the old-est general humanities program for MACLEAN CITES graduate work,and AB and/or MA degree in the publishing, editing, teaching, and theUnited States. . foreign service as some of the manyc, , , , . . outlets for the student who has com-btuaent has choice pleted this programEither four-field or three-field workcan be elected by the student. Intro¬ductory courses in six humanistic versified training gives the studenta wider scope. “For example, if astudent concentrating in literaturealso knows art and philosophy, hewill be able to see more problems inliterature.”Versatility desired“Students must obtain mastery indifferent areas,” states Maclean.Therefore, we do not set up a oom-mittee of our own, as it is necessarythat the staff for our courses mustbe experts in their respective fields.Experts are not people who integrateall the time. The work would bebarren if one didn’t know what hewas trying to integrate.”Concerning the reorganization of the College as outlined in the LeviReport, Maclean hopes that studentsfrom both the Humanities and theGeneral Studies colleges will bedrawn to this program. He is, how¬ever, concerned that this new Col¬lege design will prohibit students intheir third or fourth year from chang¬ing their major field of interest.“During the first two years, stu¬dents are trying to discover them¬selves. Some do know their majorfield early in college, but then eventhey sometimes change,” he states.“So I hope, not only for our owncommittee, but for the entire College,that for such a situation a provisionwill be made.”Top students in programTo enter the studies, students gen¬erally have above average grades infields, art, history, language, music, their previous humanities courses,literature, and philosophy which are Outside talents such as musical andoffered by the humanities division are artistic abilities are also considered,incorporated into both designs of gen- Maclean states that “the programeral studies work. has been so successful that we have... insisted on superior students. Thus,In the four-field program, the stu- students now tend to exercise a de¬dent concentrates in one of the six 0f self-selection.” The academicareas, taking both the introductory averages 0f those in the programcourse in that field and five other tend to average 32.eiectives The basic courses for three A ^jor problem in the past eightother fields are required, as well as or years has been to limit thefive electives in those fields, three number 0f students in the program,of which form a sequence. This pro- .*^e attempt to keep the number un¬gram which students tend to follow der fifty-five, so as not to lose thein preparation for graduate work, familiarity involved, and force thereports Maclean. Almost all take this shidents into doing lone-wolf PhDprogram instinctively, or they are work>-. says Maclean. In the Maroonencouraged to do so. Qf Aprd 27, 1962, it was reported that“More comparative,” is how he students themselves set this numberdescribes the three-field work. This “35 the largest number of studentsis more of a study of language and which could be comfortably fitted in¬literature. to Maclean’s living room.” Thirty-A Bachelor’s Paper culminates the five third and fourth year studentstwo years of work in both subdivi- are presently in the program,sions of the general studies. Under ADVANTAGES OF THE work in-the direction of Richard Stem, asso- elude the intimacy of faculty-studentdate professor of English, students and student-student relations whichmeet the standards of professional exist, and the pre-graduate trainingwriting on an approved topic of their in independent work, according toown choice. “It takes a gift to think the chairman. In addition, the di- UC aid is complex(Continued from page one)strate financial need, but are weak.“oademically,” Charles pointed out.Twenty-four went to the class of1967, eleven to the class of 1966.and fourteen to the class of 1965.These awards are so called becausethey are reviewed quarterly an thebasis of academic qualification, ac¬cording to Charles.Nine transfers aidedAlthough transfer students gener¬ally are not offered financial aid,this year nine such students receiveda total of $8,920. The exceptions aremade in the cases of students fromjunior colleges and students whohave exhausted the resources of theircolleges in their field, Charles said.“The source for College aid awardsis from University unendowed funds;each year a quarter million dollars is built into the budget for each aca¬demic year,” Charles concluded.I Chicago MaroonEditor-in-chief Robert F. LeveyBusiness Manager, Michael KaseeraManaging Editor .... David L. AikenAssistant to the EditorSharon GoldmanCampus News Editor ....Joan PhillipsEditor, Chicago Literary ReviewMartin MichaelsonCulture-Feature EditorDavid H. RichterPhoto Co-ordinators .... Bill CaffreySteve WofsyRewrite Editor Eve HochwaldMovie Editor Kenneth KrantzMusic Editor Peter RabinowitzEditor Emeritus John T. WilliamsStaff: Tom Heagy, Barbara Jur. BarryWeitz. Dan Hertzberg. MarianSchwrager, Joan Tapper, Dick Ganz,Dinah Esral. Howard Fishman, SteveFord. Jerry A. Levy, David Satter,Bruce Freed, Matt Joseph, TobeyKlass. Abe Aamidor, Dick Atlee,William Herzog. Allen Adcock. JudyFavia, Cissie Hatch, Dorie Solinger,Ellis Levin. Ken Krieh. Barrv Salins.Suzanne Harris, Hugh Letiche, Rob¬ert Haven. Edward Chickovsky,Charles Dashe, Rhea Rollin. JamieBeth Gale, Mary McMullen, JudithSchavrien, Bob Yaspan.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 00 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty Discouutthe One, the Only - the Original^ ^foreign car hospital and clinicborne of teamauthorized BMC and Triumph sales and service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113shore drive motel■FACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chka«o Rates. Beautiful Reams,Free TV, Parking, Courtesy Coffea.Closest'Metal to Uuiv. of Chicago aad Museum of Science ft Wdustry.FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTEL56tb St. ft So. Shora Dr. # Chicago 37, Illinois TRANSLATED BY DARYL HINEDIRECTED BY MARTHA ROTH$2.00 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY AT 8:30$1.50 SUNDAY AT 7:30JANUARY 15.16.17; 22. 23. 24; 29. 30. 31FEBRUARY 5, 6. 7THE LAST STAGE1506 EAST 51st STREET OA 4-4200Jaa. 15, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Wocte odd Pritchett commentKernertobring progress“Good legislation,** re¬marked Richard C. Wade, pro¬fessor in the department ofhistory, “will be a mark of thenow - commencing Kemer regime.”Henruwi Pritchett, professor ai poli¬tical science, believes that Kemerhas emerged from the election witha strengthened position, and “thebest kind of prestige you can have.’"Wade foresees a great emphasison education, revenue, reform, andmaybe also on reapportionment. Hethinks that Kemer feels more com¬petent now than he has in the past.PRITCHETT ALSO predicts prog¬ress in state aid to education. Hespecified that the revenue legislationwill somehow concern itself withtaxation.Reapportionment firstHe commented, further, that re-..pportionment will probably be thefirst item on the legislature’s agen¬da, in contrast to Wade’s “maybe”on this point.While Pritchett acknowledges thatb compromise will be necessary onreapportionment, he noted that theRepublicans have not been, to date,as antagonistic to the Democraticplan as he had expected they wouldbe He added that both sides see apressing need to produce someaction along these lines within thenext two monthsWADE EXPLAINED THAT therenow exists a map, created by theDemocrats, for each house of thelegislature. These maps, he contends,represent a more equitable distribu¬tion than now exists! He believesthat it is in this field that the “blueribbon” legislators will be most im¬portant.Wade also spoke of the constitu¬tional restraints to which the Repub¬licans are drawing attention Forexample, there are such rules asihese: that boundaries for the housecannot be drawn other than on coun¬ty lines, and that the legislaturemust be one third from Chicago, oneihii'd from Cook County outside ofChicago, and one third from down-state Illinois. He commented, how¬ever that it is possible that theSupreme Court will declare theseconstraints at odds with the principleof reapportionment.No independent .actionConcerning the “blue* ribbon" leg¬islators, Wade added that, sincetliey were in each case chosen bytheir respective parties, it is foolishto think that there will be any totalindependence of action upon theirparts.ON CERTAIN LSSl’EvS, however,Wade believes that the Republicansmay tend to join the DemocratsExamples of these would be educa¬tion, welfare, and civil rights. Onthe other hand, the Democrats maygo over to the policy of the Republi¬cans on such matters as electionreform or crime legislation, Wadepredicted. These deviations, however,will occur, he thinks, probably in about fifteen cases from some onehundred votes each will cast.Pritchett sees these men in a lessdynamic role. He remarked that itwould be difficult to predict thepart they will play, since they repre¬sent such widely differing back¬grounds. He noted that they will allhave some handicaps in terms ofa lack of knowledge of legislativeprocedure, and that it will conse¬quently require a period of timefor them to learn what’s going on.For a while, therefore, they will beguided by the older legislators.WHILE PRITCHETT DOES creditthem with the potentiality of havingsome effect upon the legislature, bedoes not admit it to be of the typeof “new, fresh men, clearing thingsiip”Senate delays foreseenAsked whether the GOP-controlledSenate will be likely to tie things upmuch, Wade answered that he feltthat they would. He believes thatthey will particularly attempt toslow down activity upon reappor¬tionment, as getting over this matterin a hurry will be beneficial for theDemocrats. Also, he remarked, themen purged in the Republican partyare constituting what amounts to athird branch of the legislature as aresult of their lobbying activity.They hope m this way to ensure theirown re-election,Pritchett agrees that the Senatewill counter Democratic action onreapportionment, but he feels thatthis will be in the form of com¬promise. He contends that, since theDemocrats control two thirds of theHouse, people will have to give onboth sides in order to get anythingdone.THE FIN.41. .AREA of commentconcerned the role defeated Repub¬lican gubernatorial candidate CharlesPercy will play in the next few yearsin Illinois politics. Wade sees Per¬cy’s influence as a continuation ofthe policy which he set forth duringhis campaign. His personal power,however, wall not be very great,and, what there is of it, Wade pre¬dicts, will tend to decline as timepasses.Pritchett, on the other hand, re¬marked that, though Percy may nothave any very great specific influ¬ence upon the Republicans in thelegislature, he will remain one ofthe leading Republicans in the state.He afkled that Percy is continuingto be active in party affairs, in fund-raising, and in national politics. UC er Gilman out on bailRobert D. Gilman, a UC student on leave, and ten other young people and civil rightsworkers who were arrested in West Point, Mississippi, were released Sunday after fourdays in jail.Bail for the eleven totalled $3500. It was met by supporters of the Freedom movementm West Point who offered theirhomes as property bend. In severaldays of effort before it was learnedthe workers had been freed, UC stu¬dents, faculty, and others contactedby UC students contributed a totalof $475 for bail. This money willnow be put into the desperatelyempty coffers of COFO. probablyspent mostly in West Point, it isiinderstood.THE ARREST OF the civil rightsworkers came a week ago lastWednesday, following the arrest ofa Negro teenager. When the fourworkers in the COFO project wentdown to the jail to investigate, theywere turned away without informa¬tion, and began singing Freedomsongs upon leaving the jailhouse.They were arrested for disturbingthe peace, which drew a $300 bailfee for ten people; Gilman was alsocharged with resisting arrest, bring¬ing a $500 bail for him.A note from Gilman to explainthe group’s actions is printed else¬where in this issue, on page 2. Selection of Miss UCmore rigorously handledMiss University of Chicago 19<>5 will be chosen by aselection process much more thorough than that of pastyears.This year, there will be three screenings of contestants,each placing an emphasis upon giv¬ing maximum personal attention toindividual entrants.JUDY COHEN, chairman of theMiss UC contest, held as part ofthe 70th Annual Wash Prom, alsostated that this year's faculty judgeswill h* asked to place special em¬phasis upon each candidate’s appealto the male members of the UCcampus.First meeting informalHie firsf opportunity hr queencandidates to meet the judges willbe at a tea ai 7:30 pm on Thursday,January 28. in Ida Noyes Hah. At.that time, a faculty committee ofCafeteria still in redDespite all the attempts at change and compromise inthe board contract hassle last spring, the New Dorm cafe¬teria is still operating in the red.According to Miss Lylas Kay, director of ResidenceHalls and Commons, no figures are “ . ... IT ZtTavailable ai lies time, but the cafe- * bu‘l<‘"* “ ***-v «*■teria is just not making any money, and jtri only operate mne monthsNew Dorm was put on a 14 meal out of the year, there’s nothing tocontract this fall, including break- ^ jf ^ coin me isn’t there, you'rein trouble. That’s true for every-fasts and dinners, after a studentboycott last spring demanded a cashcafeteria policy. °ne! about 15 will chat with the g>rls onan informal, mixer-type basis. Fromtlie group attending they will se¬lect 20 girls to be later interviewedby a faculty panel of three members.The second interview before thepanel of three will be on a slightlymore formal basis, Miss Cohenstated. She also said that the panelhaving to interview only about haltthe number of applicants as it hasm the past, would have more timeto give each candidate It would alsohave more time to deliberate on thefive finalists. -THE THIRD “SCREENING” willbe before the entire student body.About a week before the Prom, stu¬dents will have a chance to votefor Miss UC from among the fivefinalists.Finalists make "debuts'*The five finalists will be pre¬sented at various campus events be¬fore the balloting day. ThU will givemot students a change to have abasis for deciding whom they willvote for, Miss Cohen said.Each recognized student organiza¬tion is eligible to sponsor a candi¬date in the contest. Entries must bem with the Student Activities Officeby January 18th. Anyone wishingfurther information may contactMiss Cohen at 493-7639.There will be o meetingof alt the interested partiesin the Lutheran seminarydispute today at 3 pm inthe administration building.The meeting is dosed, buta report on it will appearin the next MAROON.Opening Soona new folkCOFFEE HOUSEPHASE 11603 E. 53rdfolk - bluesFeb. 5-14BOB GIBSONGinni ClemensDodi KollickTickets Available on Reguest “No changes”HOWEVER, MISS KAY reportedthat no changes are anticipated inthe future. “Those decisions are en¬tirely left up to the Administration,”she said. But she added: “It wouldbe helpful if we had a large summerschool. There isn’t enough year-round business.”Muss Kay estimated that about 450people eat lunch on a cash basis atnew Dorms, each one spending anaverage of $.69. But without • figuresshe would not make any comparisonwith last year.“All cafeteria employees are un¬ion members,” said Miss Kay, “butthere have been no problems withthe union.” The workers belong toa local for University employees, in¬stead of a restaurant union.Volume is the keyPRESENTED WITH the sugges¬tion of leasing out the New Dormcafeteria and its facilities to a res¬taurant concern, Miss Kay an¬swered: “What good wTonld that do?How could they guarantee to makemoney? You need volume business— volume — to make money. When UC students in model UNThis March, for the firsttime in five years, the Univer¬sity of Chicago will be repre¬sented at | he Midwesternmodel UN.According to the VIM UN's Seere-taiw General Fid Salem, of DrakeCollege, “Delegations such as theUniversity of Chicago’s can insurethe conference’s success via con¬structive and informed discussionof the issues concerned, resultingin a deeper understanding of howthese issues are considered andacted upon throughout the processesand machinery of the UnitedNations.”THE UC MODEL UN Club's Pres¬ident, Hugh Letiche. commentedthat he is looking forward to head¬ing up thus inaugural delegation.The group is, in his opinion, priv¬ileged to si art out with a nationlhat is on ’he Security Council,namely the Ivory Coast.Each delegate will have studiedNEW BOOKS BY CAMPUS AUTHORSBlou: Exchange and Power hi Social Lrfe S7.50Slim, ed: Mu sic a Nova SI 5.00Wasiolek; Dostoevsky $7.50The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. the positions held by tlie Ivory Coaston one or more major world issues.Tiie delegates will go prepared todebate these issues. The questionof Chinese representation, raceconflict resulting from ntiartheid inSouth Africa, and the Cambodianissue are typical issues to be dis¬cussed this year.EACH UC DELEGATE will beresponsible for two issues and wiliprepare one or two draft resolutions.Each will have control of the dele¬gation before the General Assemblywhen his specialties are under dis¬cussion.Tlie club will hold iis first publicmeeting Monday night in Ida Noyes.Arrangements will be made for theselection of a delegation at thattime.SAMUEL A. BELL"Buy Shell From BeirSINCE 19264701 So. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150LEHNHOFF STUDIOSAnnounces New Adult Classes in theMODERN DANCEFor Beginners ond Intermediateson Saturdays at 2:30For Information call Bll 8-4347AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY>300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111— Telefunken & Zenith —Soles ond Service on oil hi-fi equipment.74 HR. SERVICE CALLS — $3.00Tape Recorders — Phonographs — AmplifiersPhono Needles ond Cartridges —— Tubes — Batteries>0°'o discount to students with ID cards "BUDGETWISE"AAA Approved: 24 hr.Switchboard.Maid Service: each roomwith own bath.Special student rates:$180.00/qtr.Special daily, weekly Amonthly rates.Broadview Hotel5540 Hyde Pork Blv<LFA 4-88004 ® CHICAGO MAROON • Jon. 15. 1965* G ALutherans show d F *had judgment in evictionie Juxtaposition in the January 3oon of the articles on the protestnst the selection made by thelerans for their new school oflogy and the appointment of achancellor at the University offornia was very appropriate,ie events, which are in no wayed to one another, do, however,; one fundamental element inmon: the central element in bothutes are boards of trustees (re-s) which make decisions com-sly out of harmony with the-es and spirit of their respectivelties, student bodies, and com¬ities.le California case need not bejssed further here, for it has notional bearing on or relevanceie [x>int at issue here: whether orin spite of the wishes of nearlythe parties immediately con¬ed. the Lutheran School of The-<f at Chicago will begin to build»ew seminary on the 5450 Green-1 -University block this autumn atinvitation of the University ofago Board of Trustees.> one that this writer knows ofutes either the right of the Lu-an to locate in Hyde Park or theom of their doing so. The wis-of their choosing to locate hereonly be applauded, for undoubted-lere is much here for the Luther -to learn. For example, theirident, Mr. Herman, sincerely andisely questions the right of stu-s to have a voice in a communityits planning and preservation,feels that any expression by stu-s on this issue is either motivatedy by narrow, selfish self-interestn emotional outburst founded onack of understanding and oridity. If Mr. Herman only learnsthing in this community—thatis not always the case whenire students are involved—thereo doubt that he personally, hislty, their students, and maybeO-Board announced thiseek the first in a seriesmeetings for people whoe interested in joining theganization or finding out>re about it. Entitled "Theimt of O-Board,’* the>etinq will be held Sunday3:30 pm in the Eastunge of Ida Noyes. even their congregations will benefitgreatly. Therefore, we welcome theLutherans to Hyde Park and itsquestioning spirit, but suggest thatthey and the Board of Trustees findanother site.WHY SHOULD THE Lutheransfind another site? They want to beas close as possible to a new HarperLibrary which some day may bebuilt on Stagg Field (the new libraryhas been in the planning stage for atleast ten years now) and the othertheological schools (as part of theBoard of Trustees’ program to makeChicago the leading theology centerin the US). These are strong reasons,but we feel that there are compel¬ling reasons for them to chooseanother site. These reasons arethree in number: 1) the Universityshould attempt to retain its unique(among great urban universities)‘walk-in” character; 2) an integratedblock should not be destroyed: 3)these buildings should not be razed,especially during the current localhousing shortage.A decade ago, an urban renewalprogram was begun in Hyde Park tosave the University of Chicago. This,everyone agrees, has been accom¬plished. The purpose of the programwas to preserve a viable, safe, inter¬esting community in which students,faculty members, and others couldlive and work.Tlie U of C was to remain agreat urban university with activitiesrunning from morning until late atnight. This presupposed being ableto walk to campus, something themajority of U of C faculty and stu¬dents still believe to be a desireabletiling. Mr. Herman believes that it isabsolutely essential for the Lutherantheology students to be ‘‘right nextto the University of Chicago campus,not four or six blocks away.’’ Other¬wise, he feels, students lose much ofthe value of being associated withthe University. But he expresses noconcern over the fact that he is forc¬ing the U of C students themselvesto become commuters— which great¬ly agitates many of them. Ten yearsago, few students lived on Hyde ParkBoulevard, few faculty memberslived in Illinois Central suburbia, theMidway was not overflowing withcars, the campus was not black withasphalt parking lots. Thus, the urbanrenewal program has had as a resultprecisely what its was supposed toprevent: dispersion of the studentbody and faculty. It is time toINIVERSAL ARMY STORELevi* — Turtleneck*Winter Jackets — Raincoat*feacoat* — Parkas59 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5854Free Coffee Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Item* From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Cfcicaae 15, Id.MU 4-6856 brake this process, rather than toaccelerate it — as the Board ofTrustees have done by turning overto the Lutherans three blocks ad¬jacent to the U of C campus for aLutheran seminary, campus, andhousing, blocks within easy walkingdistance of the campus on whichhundreds of U of C students usedto and still are living.THE COMMUNITY, AFTER urbanrenewal, was to be a heterogeneousone, both racially and in terms ofincome. The problem of integrationis the most pressing one in Chicagoat present. The block now chosen asthe site for the Lutheran main cam¬pus is one of the few viable, work-ably integrated, stable blocks in Chi¬cago—a block which the current planswill wipe away. With it will probablygo the integration of Kozminskyschool. Why, on the one hand, docertain U of C faculty members de¬vote time and effort to the study andsolution of the integration problem,and on the other, do the Board ofTrustees decree the elimination ofone of the very few places wherethe solution to a seemingly insolubleproblem is already present and work¬ing? This action was taken withoutconsulting the community leaders orthe permanent residents of the block,who have lived here an average ofseven years.Finally, it is possible to questionthe legality, morality, and the wis¬dom of razing the buildings on the5450 University-Greenwood block. Forone thing, according to the urbanrenewal program, the block nowscheduled for demolition was plannednot as an institutional site, but as ablock for people to live one. It hasnever been explained under what orwhose authority the powers that bein this instance were permitted uni¬laterally to make changes in theover-all plan few the comunity. It isthis type of capricious power playwhich infuriates many people in thecommunity. Furthermore, does theUniversity have the right to sell fordemolition its preesnt married stu¬dent housing and then turn rightaround and ask for federal funds tofinance new student accommodationsperhaps only one block away, at 55thand Ellis?The buildings scheduled for demo¬lition are in excellent condition andhave been well maintained. Well-built, roomy, moderate-cost buildingsare becoming very scarce in HydePark, and there is no justifiable rea¬son for tearii^j them down whenComplete LinoOf Pot AndAquarium Suppliot alternate sites are available (accord¬ing to the admission of the Universi¬ty’s own representatives). Undoubt¬edly the buildings will oome downsome day—so will 5801 Ellis. Butwhen the time comes for their raz¬ing, the integration problem may besolved or at least on the way to solu¬tion. In ten or twenty-five years, thegeneral housing shortage should besolved in the neighborhood so thatsingle and married students will beable to find suitable quarters withgreater ease than at present.' The situation also involves facultymembers, many of whom are in the‘‘moderate income” group. Althoughno faculty members live in the blockto be razed, the razing of the 149units will crowd more people into ashrinking housing market. Accordingto some reports, faculty members areleaving or not coming to U of Cbecause of the housing shortage. Ifthis is so, deans and chairmen tryingto hire or keep faculty membersmight note a neighborhood landlord’sremark about the razing of the 5450Greenwood-University block: “Good. Now I can raise my rents again."WHAT IS THE solution to thisproblem? The responsibility liessquarely with the Board of Trustees,which invited the Lutherans to theneighborhood and has sold them manyUniversity-owned buildings at “bookvalue” (what the U of C paid forthem, not their market value—a formof subsidy). All other University of¬ficials, most of whom seem not toagree with the policy, are only ex¬ecuting the orders of “the men in thegolden chairs.’’ Student Governmentand the Faculty Senate should makerecommendations on the matter tothe Board of Trustees. The Boardof Trustees should then offer theLutherans another site (perhaps onealready cleared, to make up for thetime delay) and suggest to themthat it would be in the best interestof all concerned if the Lutheranswould make the move. Let us nothave the type of conflict—now exist¬ing in California because of unfor¬tunate actions by the Regents—whichcan only harm all concerned parties.ObserverTwo papers and otherchaos at Roosevelt Univ.The Torch is burning againat Roosevelt University, butso is the whole fracas startedlast November which saw theold Torch editor ousted, and thepresident of the University resign.The las test development is theestablishment of the Roosevelt FreePress by the former editorial boardof the Torch.JUDI HALPRIN, who was editorof the Torch until she printed astory last November 16 saying for¬mer president Robert J. Pitchellhad been “unofficially fired,” toldthe Maroon the Free Press will beprinted weekly, and continued forthe rest of the year as a full-fledgednewspaper with full coverage ofcampus affairs. The first issue willcome out this Monday, the day theTorch is also distributed.The Free Press will be edited andwritten by the former Torch edi¬torial board, who were also firedby the Student Activities Board,which has authority over the Torch,as a result of the story of Pitchell’s“firing.” Most of the old Torch staffhas switched allegiance to the newFree Press.DEE MERRICK, executive editor of the “new” Torch, said all thepresent Torch staff members are“very interested” in tbe new paper'sestablishment, but had some ques¬tions about whether it would becontinued permanently.The Torch presently has very fewstaff members, she complained. Theeditor of the Torch, James Holland,was selected by the Student Activi¬ties Board after it had decided tofire Miss Halprin and the otherfive members of the editorial board.A review of this suspension failedto change the SAB’s mind, eventhough the American Civil LibertiesUnion spoke in favor of the oldeditors.MEANWHILE, ROLF WEIL, for¬merly head of the university’s Col¬lege of Business Administration, ha.taken over as interim president,following the resignation December16 of Pitchell. After some difficultieswith the deans of the universityabout his way of running things,Pitchell said he “no longer seesthe possibility of succeeding in car¬rying out his present responsibilitiesas president,” was the way LyleSpencer, president of the Universityboard of trustees, put it.the cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012 HYDE PARK YMCANewly redecorated student rooms available with or without mealplans. Study lounge, private TV room, health, and physical facilitiesall available for student use.Call FA 4-5300JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOOD•l 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdZETA BETA TAURUSH SMOKERTuesday. 19th 7:30-10:00REYNOLDS CLUB SOUTH LOUNGE5706 UniversityALL FIRST TEAR MEN INVITED 1000t«2000 WORDS A MINUTEWITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENTIONYou can read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCELERATED READINGmethod. You’ll learn to read DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1,000 to2,000 words a minute. And retention is excellent. This is NOT a skimming method;you definitely read every word.You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factualmaterial as well as to literature and fiction. The author’s style is not lost when youread at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be in¬creased.Consider what this new reading ability will allow you to accomplish—in yourrequired reading and also in the additional reading you want to do.No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATEDREADING method. In this way the reader avoids developing any dependence uponexternal equipment in reading.A das* in ACCELERATED READING will be taught on Tuesday evenings atthe Hotel Del-Prado.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATEDREADING method and see it applied.BRING A BOOK!Demonstrations will be held at the HOTEL DEL-PRADO, 53rd St. and Hyde Pork Blvd.ON: Monday, January 25 at 7:30 P.M.Monday, February 1 at 7:30 P.M.NATIONAL SCHOOL OFACCELERATED READING, INC.18964 Coyle Street Detroit 35, MichiganJan. 15, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • iStudent board reports on College admissions policy(Editor’s Note: This, is the firstreport of the Student Govern¬ment Consultant Board on Ad¬missions and Aid. It is based ona series of discussions betneen theboard and Charles O’Connell, Di¬rector of Admissions.)The obvious starting place for astudy of the admissions policy ofthe College is the actual mechanicsof the admitting process. However,ir. the course of our meetings withMr. O’Connell, it oecatne obviousthat it was impossible to separatethe mechanics of admissions fromthe criteria behind them entirely.Involved in both w»ere the Col¬lege recruiting practices, since anyaspect of admissions is dependenton the number and kind of peoplewho apply. For the sake of clarityin this report, we will to some ex¬tent revert to these distinctions.Each applicant to the College isjudged on the basis of: a transcriptof his high school academic record,the results of the Scholastic AptitudeTest, a personal evaluation by hishigh school counselor, an applica¬tion form he has filled out. the re¬port of his interview (if he had one!and a “writing sample” (an essayadministered with the SAT).THESE WERE LISTED in thenormal order of their importance:however this order is not that fixed.The importance of an evaluation bya high school counselor or a UCinterviewer is greatly dependent onwho did the evaluation. A counselorwho ha$ written many evaluationsfor UC and whose judgement hasbeen borne out by the students’ per¬formances at UC is obviously goingto be taken much more seriouslythan one who the Committee hasnever heard of or who raves aboutevery student.L:kewise.,an interview by CharlesO'Connell holds more weight thanone by an alumnus who is helpingout in an area too obscure for amember of the admissions staff tovisit. In the instructions to the ad¬missions committee, the more reli¬able interviewers are listed to in¬sure proper differentiation. The im¬portance of the high school aca¬demic record is similarly dependenton how’ familiar the Committee iswith the school.The six parts of the applicationdo not represent an even step bystep decrease in importance. Thefirst three are of an entirely differ¬ent order of importance from thelast three.When the credentials have all beenreceived, they are assembled to¬gether in a folder and given to amember of the “Admissions Read¬ing Committee." The reading com¬mittee is composed of the admis¬sions staff and members of theCollege faculty (last year 29), ap¬pointed by the Dean of the College.Examples of faculty members whoare frequently on the committeewould be Jock Weintraub and Ger¬hart Meyer.EACH APPLICATION is read aridrated at least tw'ice. If there is widedisagreement between the first two(as is frequently the case), the ap¬plication is read a third or even afourth time. Theoretically, each ap¬plication is read a’ternately by afaculty member and staff member.However in practice, there are toomany applications to be read bythe faculty members; last year, onlytwo thirds were. Since the numberof applications increases every yearthis can be expected to be an in¬creasingly difficult problem.Nor is the solution merely to ap¬point more faculty readers. Mr.O'Connell pointed out lhat, the pre¬vious year, considerably fewer fac¬ulty members read more applicationsthan they did in 1964. Rather thanmore faculty readers, he would likefewer readers, each of whom wouldread more applications. Only aftersomeone has read a rather largenumber of them does he developany proficiency at it. Until then, heis essentially working in a vacuum.IN ORDER TO facilitate evalu-tion, the Office of Admissions hasdevised a system of six academicratings and three personal ratings.The academic ratings are defined interms of minimum SAT scores andgrade point averages; the personalratings by descriptive statements.It is important to realize that thecriteria by which the ralings aredefined are not rigidly adhered to,nor are they expected to lie. Their purpose is to serve as guidelines.Without them, a student’s prospectsof being accepted at UC would de¬pend more on his luck in gettinglenient readers than on his qualifi¬cations.According to Mr. O’Connell's in¬structions to the reading committee,“Admissions is not a science butan art. Never be afraid to put acandidate in a category where tech¬nically he does not fit, if you feel(here are sound reasons for doingso.”Rather than attempt to rewordthe criteria for the ratings, we willouote the definitions directly fromthe instructions to the reading com¬mittee.Definition of Terms Employed inFavorable Admission RatingsACADEMIC QUALITIES1. “Top-flight”: school record nolower than A— (3.6 to 4.0) average;or valedictorians, salutatorians, ortop 5% of a large class, and: Boardscores total in the neighborhood of1450 or higher.2. “Superior”: school record nolower than A— to B-f (3.1 to 3.5):top 10% of a large class or top 5-10% of a small class, and: Boardscores total in the neighborhood of1350.3. “Good": school record no lowerthan B (3.0) average; top 15-20%of class, and: Board scores total noless than 1200. usually closer to 1250,4. “Acceptable": school record nolower than B— (2.5) average; in avery limited number of schools, aC T- record would be acceptable.Should rank in top quarter of his,class unless school is exceptionallystrong, and: Board scores total noless than 1100. Tljis category is notmeant to include a candidate, how¬ever, one of whose scores would leadus to believe he is a significant risk.Example: V575, M525: O.K.: V750,M350: No (or. at least, DANGER!).5. “Waiting List.”6. “Reject.”PERSONAL QUALITIES(assigned only to candidates givenan academic rating of 1, 2, or 3)X: significant contribution toschool, not necessarily by the quan¬tity of the candidate’s activities butby their depth, or outstanding con¬tribution in a personal or communityarea. Examples: class officer, mu¬sical ability of note, captain ormember of varsity athletic team,significant out-of-school work record,leading role in school or communitydramatics, varsity debater.The interview report should re¬flect this impression of strong per¬sonal qualities. There is such a can¬didate as the "all-A" student who isunable to discuss ideas, or who isthe professional "grade-grubber”with no interest in anyone or any¬thing beyond himself.It should be emphasized. I think,that we expect more of the “1” aca¬demic candidate in order to makehim a “IX” than we do of the “3”candidate to make him a “3X.”Y: this symbol, appended to thecandidate’s numerical, academicrating, describes the student who isessentially the “follower” ratherthan the leader. He may belong toa host of clubs or activities, but hehas made no significant contributionto his school or his community, asfar as the record shows. He is aperfectly respectable and indeed de¬sirable member of the academiccommunity. We do not want, anymore than does any college, a classof “Mexican generals,” all leadersand no followers.On the other hand, a Y does no(represent marked personal prob¬lems. We assume that, although hemay not inspire others to followhim, a candidate with this ratingwill exert a quietly positive andbeneficial influence upon the per¬sonal values of his College class¬mates.Z: this rating is reserved for thosestudents whose personal strengthsare sufficiently impressive that theytemp* us (successfully) to raise theirover-all rating one level, thus pre¬dicting greater success for them inthe College than their academicqualifications strictly warrant. Stu¬dents will on occasion be describedfor instance, as “exceptionally ma¬ture ... a joy to teach even thoughhis grades are not the very best”or “a lad who makes the school‘tick’ . . . without his help nothinggets done around here.” Such a de¬scription as this, of the candidate with exceptional perseverance, ex¬ceptional maturity, or exceptionalleadership qualities, should be raisedone rating academically and as¬signed a “Z” personal rating.A 3 candidate, for instance, wouldbe made a “2Z” rather than a "3Xa 2 candidate who met this descrip¬tion would be made a ”1Z” ratherthan a “?X.”IT SHOULD BE noted that whilethe academic qualities are definedby both the school record and theSAT, the school record is more im¬portant. A high grade average canmore easily compensate for a lowSAT than the reverse.After all the applications havebeen read, there are considerablymore acceptances than the Collegehas room for; and there is a con¬siderable number of applicantswhose ratings disagree dramatically.To resolve these two problems, theapplications with their ratings (in¬cluding comments by the readers)are sent to a committee for finaldecisions.The decision committee is com¬posed of the admissions staff andanyone on the faculty reading com¬mittee who is willing to spend anentire morning or a entire afternooneach time he attends. Members ofthe committee are discouraged fromattending for- short periods of timebecause the applicants are groupedby their high schools and discussedin that context.IN ORDER TO SPEED the finaldecision process, the committee issplit into two parts, which worksimultaneously and independently ofone another. Each sub-committee isusually composed of one or two fac¬ulty readers and three or four mem¬bers of the admission staff.For each school, a member of theadmissions staff briefs the commit¬tee on relevant information aboutthe school, such as how high itsstandards are, os' how reliable eachol it* counselors are.In making the final rating thecommittee must not only take intoaccount the qualifications of thestudent, but must also guard againstoffending the school from which hecomes. Obviously, it is insulting fora high school to have its valedic¬torian rejected, while at the sametime its thirtieth ranking student isadmitted. The school may decidethat if Chicago doesn’t respect itsacademic standards, then it doesn’trespect the academic standards ofChicago and will henceforth dis¬courage its students from applyinghere. This is especially true inprivate schools, which are bothmore sensitive and have more in¬fluence over their students.TO SAY THAT THE sensitivitiesof the school are taken into accountdoes not imply that they areblindly followed: they are rot. Thestudent thirtieth in his class maywell be admitted and the valedic¬torian rejected. The decision in eachcase will depend on the specificproblems involved.While there is no conscious policyof promoting geographical balanceby favoring students from more re¬mote parts of the country, studentswho are the only applicant fromtheir high school (who form a verysizable part of the applicants) havea small advantage in that they needonly be judged against an absolutestandard, and not also against theother applicants from their school.All applications given 1, 2, or 3’sby the decision committee are sentto the freshman desk. If too manystudents have been accepted, thecommittee takes a second look atthe 4's and moves the necessarynumber dow'n to category 5. If notenough were accepted, the reversetakes place. After this, the 4’s aresent to the freshman desk.The one step left before lettersof acceptance are sent out in Aprilis that Mr. O'Connell personallyreads every application rated 5 or 6.He has absolute power to raise Ihcmto acceptance ratings but rarelydoes.WE ON THE committee had twoparticular objections to all this.First, id seemed to us that no‘enough distinction was made be¬tween grade grubbers and intellectu¬ally motivated students who mighthave lower grades because theyspent much of their time learning things o*t their own. With the greatemphasis on grades, the latter type(in our minds the more desirable)would be unduly handicapped.Mr. O'Connell pointed out, in turn,that the College was not really in aposition to make very fine distinc¬tions of that sort—applicants fittingeither of these descriptions wouldprobably be admitted. Furthermore,there are certain drawbacks to plac¬ing too much emphasis on the SAT(the only real alternative exceptmaking it completely subjective andrelying on interviews and recom¬mendations). Students from smallrural schools and urban slum schoolsthrough no fault of their own areplaced at a major disadvantage bythis type of test. There is also theargument that a three hour testshould not count more .than fouryears of work in high school.While still not completely satisfiedwith the emphasis on grade aver¬ages. we concluded that until thereare significantly more applicants,our first objection is of minor rele¬vance.OUR SECOND OBJECTION waeless specific. We were just a littleapprehensive about the whole ideaof reducing every applicant to oneol six numbers, and wonderedwhether there really was room forflexibility in the ratings.Swearing us to .strictest confi¬dence, Mr. O’Connell, proceeded toread several applications selected at random so that we could comp^eHie academic ratings given to >hestudent with his grade average andSAT scores. Deviations from thedefinitions were very commrn inboth directions—both by the in<b-vidual readers and by the decisioncommittee. Since the faculty readersare generally more lenient than thecommittee, it more often decreasesthe rating given by the readers thanincreases it.One example worth mentioningwas a student in science who ex¬pressed a total disdain for generaleducation and did not wish to studyanything but his own specialty.While technically in an acceptancerating, he was rejected. We on theConsultant Board were completelysatisfied that the system of aca¬demic rankings does not require aStudent Government resolution oreven a sit-in.THE SECOND REPORT of theCosultant Board on Admissions andAid will aptiear !n the Maroon ap¬proximately two weeks from now.It will discuss recruiting, containrecommendations o4 the Board. andwill discuss at greater leng h theproblems involved in the admittingprocess, including the two listedabove.David CurleyJennifer DohrnTom Heagy I chairman IJim RockTB tests start ThursdayThe yearly campus screen¬ing for tuberculosis by theStudent Health Service willbegin Thursday afternoon,January 21 d.Students who are due for re-ex¬amination lor TB will be sent let¬ters in alphabetical order request-wig that they come to StudentHealth on appropriate Thursday af¬ternoons during the winler andspring quarters.The examination, which consistsof a tuberculin skin test and a chestmicrofilm, is required by the Uni¬versity as a public health measure.Orvee a student has been called forre-examination his registration forsubsequent quarters at the Univer¬sity will be held up until test re¬sults have been obtained by theStudent Health Service or some oth¬ er medical facility or privatephysician.ACCORDINGLY, STUDENTS areurged to make every effort to keepthe appointments assigned to them,or if that is impossible, to makespecial arrangements at StudentHealth or elsewhere. Results of testsdone off campus should be forward¬ed to Student Health.Students called in for the TB examwho are in their third year sinceentrance screening will be offeredthe opportunity to have a generalhealth evaluation at the same time.Since the number of students culledin each week is small, StudentHeal'h believes that the test shouldtake relatively little time and wo,Idbe well worth the effort, especiallyfor those who anticipate needinghealth transcripts for various appli¬cations, fellowships, employment,and the like.Calendar of EventsFriday, January 15Kolnoilia: "A New Look ;it Africa”Dr Nathan Scott, Chapel House, 5:15pm.l>oc Films: BLOOD OF THE POET(Cocteau) and CHIEN ANDAl.OU(Buiniel), Sot- Sei 122. 7:15 & !>:15 pmSabbath Services: Hillel, 7::!0 pm.Fireside: "Reconstructionism: AnAmerican Jewish Philosophy," RabbiDaniel Leiier, Hillel, 8:.'!0 pm.Saturday, January 16Filin: "Distant Journey,” C/.eth fulllength feature, admission free, Hillel,7::!() pm.WUl'B: "Folkus" pm; "SaturdayParty” 10 pm.Sunday, January 17Rockefeller Chapel: Rev. W Barnett Blakcmore, 11 am.Concert: Mass (Stravinsky). Mis^aI’apae Mareelli (Palestrina i, Appare¬nt.Repentina Dies: (Hindemith), Rocke¬feller Chapel, :>:J0 pm.Will'll: “The Sunday Program” 'mu¬sic by request) 10 pm.Monday, January 18Noonday Services: Bond Chapel, 12noon.Lecture: "Cognitive Interference andFlexible Control," Dr. Samuel Mossck,Zoology 14, pm.WUCB: ‘'Blues & Ballads” 0 pm.Lecture; Opportunities for the phy¬sician in the Peace Corps, Dmi.dd FGold-done. M.D., P 117 Billings, 7 pm.Tuesday, January 19Wl'CB: "Unusual Recordings" ?), pm.BOOKSBoth Hard Bound and PaperbackWe don t have them all but we do have 21,000 titles in a widerange of interests from which to choose.We also carry many periodicals of academic and culturalinterest.Our titles are arranged by subject and alphabetically by authorfrom left to right on the shelves.With so many titles on hand we cannot arrange them all faceout, so some titles may be difficult to find.If you have trouble locating the title you want, please seeBeatrice Vedel, Susan Irnlach or Ann McGiffin in our Gen¬eral Book Department.They will be happy to serve you.The Universityof Chicago Bookstore5802 EHis Ave.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 15. 1965CLASSIFIED ADSPERSONALats Linda, Les, Annie. What’sning?EE CUP BRAS,” padded, fullor that very special gift or partyI. To be delivered by campusnity $1.85. Send no money withSend order to 3 Cup. P.O. BoxLansing. Michigan. Include phoneW. SATISFACTION GUAR-:ed.Sigma Cider Party. Tues. 7:30Univ. All women undergrads in-THE SPRING INTERIM??? GoJan. 21-8 pm Ida N. Library.Victor the Prune: You yet haveys and nights before my recordken. Noah.Cl for LUNCH. Mon., Tues.in. Fine food, music for cashr.bihties go, sometimes, awry . . .Icestis—The Last Stage.Gr TO EUROPE THIS SUM-77 Faculty, employees and activeers of the Alumni Associationigible for SG European Flights,ghts 1st Class JET—AIR CANA-itiines.*rs) June 14-Sept. 24 under $2!»0I June 28-Sept. 5 under $310i Aug. 10-Sept. «i under $290Flights5 July 8 - Aug 19 under $-115?posit payable at SG Office, 1212h, Rm. 217, MI 3-0800, ext 3272.Pri. 1-5.ER S WORKSHOP i PL 2-8377)ESS TONAL A L T E R A T IONSrly with Bonwit Teller. Leahiberg, 5210 Cornell. 324-2871.TENANT REFERRAL SERVICEaaintained bldgs. Reas, rentals,70: 1 bdrm $90: 2 bdrms. $120;4 bdrms. 7 mins, to UC. exc.s. South Shore Commission.7020.G INTERIM STUDENT GOV-ENT TRANSPORTATION’ork Charter Flight March 19-28Group Flight March 19-28New York Bus March 18-28deposit is required to reserveon any of the carriers. Contactfice 1-5 Mon. thru Fri.TYPING & EDITINGyour papers in English French.Call 324-9218.typing: theses, papers, ms.,cal. After 0. 493-9317.REAS. 943-7320.DIVERSITYATIONAL\HK"a strong bank" TUTORINGFrench lessons by Swiss-French gradstudent. Call 324-9218.Box A, Maroon Office'is the place tocontact if you need to improve yourLatin or Greek.WANT ADSIs there anyone who can donate anold blanket to VISA??? We are work¬ing with the mentally ill to make aquilt. Please contact Heather Tobis1409 New Dorm.Responsible couple wanted to care for2 junior high-school children. Feb. 27-March 13. Board and salary. Goodpublic trans. and car avail, for stu¬dent & household use. VE 5-0993.Skilled secretary wanted for dictationand typing. 2-4 hrs. per week. Goodpay. HY 3-3400.Male roommate. 0 room apt. 3 otherguys, $30-25 month. 084-1100.Male grad, student wishes to sharewith same Call 288-8243 alter 0. (Apt.405 5243 S. Dorchester.)Nice., light room, >4 bathroom. $9per week. MU 4-8493.Pte rm. and bath and board in ex¬change for baby-sitting. If interestedcall HY 3-0303.Someone to type up lecture tapes.PL 2-9717. J. Rosenthal.APARTMENTS TO LET0900 S. Crandon (E. S. Shore) BED¬ROOM APTS. $llo. New prestige ele¬vator bldg. Fully auto. laundry,staffed receiving rm., indoor parkingavail. We have So. Shore Comm.Seal of Approval. 7 mins, by IC toUC. See agent Mrs. Harvey on prem.or call MU 4-7904 or 077-9073.FOR SALEDesk, glass top, large $7 Also assortedbeds, studio couch cheap. 752-0852.AM-Stereo FM-Phono-$05. PortableStereo phono. $25. ES 5-9532.VW 1902 Sedan—low mileage. Topcond., white, $1,100. HY 3-8250.SUBLETStudio apt. avail, after Feb. 10. Leaseexpires Oct. I. Unfurn. Rent $117 permonth—will concession. Hyde ParkBlvd. Dav. MU 4-0100, ext. 5701. Eve.PL 2-4031.Hyde ParkAuto ServiceLOTUS TR-4MG CORVETTEBUICK PEUGEOTALFA ROMEOFIAT MORGANFERRARI VW Prune withers in UC stallDespite attempts to rejectit, UC gained unofficial pos¬session of the Americannonstop showering record Sat¬urday. as freshman Victor Bassspent 4® straight hours in the EastHouse -shower.In a short-lived glare of nationalpublicity. Bass, wearing a red swim¬ming suit, topped the former recordof 44>12 hours, set at the Universityof Illinois, while student demon¬strators protested his action in thelobby ol New Dorm.Grandchild materialIn an exclusive Maroon interview,granted after TV cameras fromCBS. NBC, and ABC and reportersfrom AP, UPI, and the ChicagoAmerican, Tribune, and Sun-Timeshad left the small East House bath¬room, Bass slated that he wassoaking himself so long becausehe believed that it would be “some¬thing to tell my grandchildrenabout.”ASIDE FROM FATIGUE, Basssaid that he felt fine as he nearedthe two-day mark that he had setfor himself. He got only Vz hour of sleep during bis stay under theshower.For recreation during his record-breaking sojourn, Bass listened tothe radio, talked with friends, andread Shakespeare's Othello until thebook got too soggy to read. He couldnot, however, claim any new in¬sights into the play, because he hadnever read it before.Bass’ hands became extremelywrinkled by the water, but he pre¬vented a similar occurrence on therest of his body by coating himselfw'ith vaseline.Hadn't planned publicityBass claimed that he had notplanned any publicity for his feat.Several students in the house, hesaid, called the news services andnewspapers as a joke after he hadentered the shower.HE CHARACTERIZED the University's water system as “prettydarn good,” noting that he neverlacked hot water. The administra¬tion, he said, had been very nicein not interfering with his longshower.During his final day in the shower, ♦Bass was visited by a student dele¬gation protesting his actions.“They said I wa6 debasing UC'sreputation,'’ he stated, “making UCseem like a Big 10 school.” Basssaid, however, that the delegationdidn’t seem to be taking his showerreally seriously.Collected large crowdBass’ shower did manage to col¬lect a large crowd of students atNew Dorms protesting his effect onthe University’s public image. Signsat the anti-Bass rally ranged from“Ban the Bass” and “Tufts HouseStays Dirty” to “IntellectualismFirst — Exhibitionism Last.”A threatened mass attack on Bassby the demonstrators was preventedby James Vice, director of studenthousing, who stood at the door ofthe New Dorms courtyard and toJdthe demonstrators to stop.VICE SAID THAT he felt thatBass’ record-breaking shower was“a silly thing to do in the firstplace, and a silly thing to takenotice of.”Breaking the shower record, Viceadded, “is no different from climb¬ing Mi. Everest, which I think issilly too.”UC gets $105,000 from WilsonersUC received a grant of$105,000 this week from theWoodrow Wilson National Fel¬lowship Foundation to financegraduate fellowships and sup¬port graduate training duringthe academic year 1965-66.The gran; was announced by SirHugh Taylor, President of the Wood-row Wilson National FellowshipFoundation.Three-quarters of the grant to theUniversity of Chicago must be usedto finance fellowships for advancedstudents who have completed atleast one year of graduate training.The remaining 25 per cent may beused any way the University wishesto advance graduate education.NAT10NALLL, THE Foundationawarded a total of $1,947,000 to 85graduate schools tor fellowships andadvanced education during the com¬ing academic year."Great contribution"“If it had no; been for the Wood-row Wilson Foundation, graduatestudy in the humanities and socialsciences w'ouid have suffered severe¬ly in the past 10 years. The Founda¬tion has made a great contribution,” commented Dean of Students War¬ner Wick.Since 1958, the Fundation hasmade graduate education giantstotaling $621,000 to UC. Toe,Founda¬tion grants $2,000 annually for eachWoodrow Wilson Fellow enrolled ata given institution during' the previ¬ous academic year. No institutionreceives more than $150,000 a year,however.Woodrow Wilson Fellows them¬selves are supported during theirfirst yaer of graduate study by di¬rect grants from the Foundation.FIFTY-THREE WOODROW Wil¬son Fellows are now enrolled at UC.Most are humanities or social sci¬ence students.Budget $6 millionThe Woodrow Wilson National Fel¬lowship Foundation operates on anannual budget of about $6 million.It 1) awards 1,000 fellowships an¬nually to first-year graduate stu¬dents, 2) awards as many as 200dissertation fellowships to formerFellows in the Humanities and SocialSciences, 3) makes education grantsto institutions where Woodrow WilsonFellows are enrolled, and 4) operatesa Teaching Internship program. Taylor emphasized that graduateschools are not required to set asideany part of their Foundation grantsto finance fellowships for formerWoodrow' Wilson Fellows who arecontinuing graduate study. “We be¬lieve that our former Fellows arewell able to compete with all otheradvanced graduate students for theassistance made possible throughthese grants,” the Foundation presi¬dent said.Intramural MewsLeague Basketball play began Jan¬uary 11. All managers are remindedto check their schedules and con¬tact their team members.Table tennis matches in the Col¬lege House Blue League are sched¬uled for January 18. College HouseRed Matches will be held on Jan¬uary 19. while the College HouseChampionship will be determined onJanuary 21 at 8:30 pm. Fraternitymatches will be played on January20 with Divisional matches takingplace on January 21. All matchesw'ill be played at Ida Noyes.Reminder to I-M Managers: Ri-flery entries are due January 21.154 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C. Jim Hartman5340 Lake ParkPL 2-0496800 ARRESTEDNEED DEFENSE INFREE SPEECH FIGHT!HELP by buyingFREE SPEECH DEFENSE FUNDWEPT. C»OX 448(erketey, Cattforoiaof on-the-spot recordings ofeeches/satirical songs *] I.50 <><><>jiLPM exf play ofore satirical songs £95 «!::<><><><><K >00 Ji<<>isters, silk screensor subscribing to: .... d ■1 each «>%<<<< TAl-SAM-YfcNCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialixinq inlANTOMSL AMIY>li:ilH\N III.SUESOPEN DAILYIV AM. lo 9:45 P M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT131$ Eost 43rd St. MU 4-1062 TRAVELING?Get Nearly FreeTRANSPORTATIONBy Driving a Car to Calif.,Arizona, Florida, Seattle,Salt Lake, EastALL CITIESMinimum age 21WE 9-2364Auto Driveaway Co.343 S. Dearborn St.THE WORD FROM THE BIRD:QUALITY"Unexcelled Quality Since 1917"Phones: Ml 3-7447 1013-17 East 61st St.HY 3-6868 Across from B-J Ct.Serving the Campus since 1917 HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4=!>"■ ~_ 7699HY 3-6800THFFRET SHOPTS47E-sxrdstr.ChicagoNO 7-106011:30 to 6, 7:30 to 10 Mon.-FtL11:30 to 6, SaturdayCHICAGO MAROONJan. 15, 1965 »UC'cr's translation new Last Stage production ^BOt/T moviesDaryl Hine, poet and gradu-ate student in the Committeeon Comparative Literature atI'C, has completed a newtranslation of Euripides’ of Alcestis,which will be presented at the LastStage beginning this weekend.Alcestis has challenged classicalscholars becaues of its seeminglyirreconcilable elements: tragedy andcomedy, lyric verse and bawdry,{>rimitive symbolism and sophisti¬cated dramaturgy.The production at The Last Stageis a celebration of the play’s com¬plexity, not an attempt to deny it.Both translator Hine and director Martha Roth agree that a properway to treat Alcestis is as a livingceremony.THE COSTUMES and sets forAlcestis have been designed by AnnePippin Burnett, assistant professor ofclassics and the wife of Chicagoartist Virgil Burnett, who designedthe poster.Alcestis will be performed week¬ends through February 7th at theLast Stage, 1506 E. Hyde Park Blvd.Curtain times are 8:30 pm Fridaysand Saturdays, 7:30 on Sundays.Tickets are $2 Fridays and Satur¬days, SI .50 on Sundays. Call OA4-4200 for reservations or informa¬tion. ANYTIME YOU’RE READY, C.B.Chekhov work opens at Harper Theatre“A Chekhov Sketchbook,” made upof three one-act plays based onstories by Anton Chekhov, opensTuesday for a four week engagementat the new' Harper Theatre.Joseph Buloff, who starred in theshow in New York, will also takethe leading roles and direct in theHarper Theatre production.Buloff’s supporting cast in ‘‘ToeVagrant” includes Herbert O’Brien and Durward McDonald. PatriciaUnger and James Stephens will ap¬pear in ‘‘The Witch.” and in ‘‘TheMusic Shop” Felix Shuman will sharethe stage with the star. The adapta¬tions of the Chekhov stories weremade by Luba Kadison and HelenWaren.Performances are nightly at 8:30,Saturdays at 7 and 10:15, and Sun¬days at 2:30 and 7:30.Job OpportunitiesThe following recruiting organiza¬tions will visit the Office of CareerCounseling and Placement duringthe week of January 18 Interviewappointments may be arrangedthrough L. S. Calvin. Room 2r'0,Reynolds Club, extension 3284.JANUARY 18North American Aviation, Las An¬geles, California area — recruiterwill represent all Divisions (Auto-oetics, Roeketdyne, Atomics Inter¬national. Space and InformationSystems) and will interview pros¬pective graduates at all degreelevels in chemistry, mathematics,and physics.JANUARY 19Swift & Company, Chicago, Illi¬nois—will speak with chemists (or¬ganic and bio) at all degree levels;S B. and S.M. candidates in sta¬tistics.JANUARY 19Analytic Services, Inc., Washing¬ton,. D.C. area—will interview S.M.and Ph.D. candidates in maihemat-tics, physics, and statistics,JANUARY 21Inland Steel Company, Chicago,Illinois — interviewing men gradu¬ates of any Department both for training programs and for directjob assignments.JANUARY 2!Argonne National Laboratory. Ar-gonne, Illinois—will speak with S.B.candidates in biological science,S B. and Ph.D. candidates in chem¬istry (analytical, inorganic, physi¬cal). S.M. and Ph D. candidates inmathematics, and S.B. candidates inphysics.JANUARY 22International Business MachinesCorporation, New York State—in¬terviewing S.B., S.M., and Ph D.chemists (inorganic, organic, physi¬cal), S.B. and S.M. candidates inmathematics, physics and statistics.The placement office has also es¬tablished a file of teaching vacan¬cies in the state colleges of Cali¬fornia, Illinois, Wisconsin, andWashington. It is located in the of¬fice's library, Room 202, ReynoldsClub.While most positions require thePhD or PhD candidacy, there aresome that will consider the MA plusfurther graduate hours. Positionsavailable are in almost all aca¬demic disciplines. Interested stu¬dents are invited to browse throughthe file. As this film column is nowunder new management, itseems reasonable to give youwanting. The column willattempt to be instructive rather thanentertaining, and explicit rather thanobscure. There will be no puns.There will be a selection of filmswhich will be available during theweek and comments on them. Thefilms featured will be chosen fortheir value as woiks of art—the artof cinema.Furthermore, these assumptionsare made: that American films areas good as foreign films; and thatjust as other arts are studied interms of artists, so the cinema isstudied in terms of its artists: pri¬marily, directors. It is easily sup¬ported that those directors who cre¬ate film do so in a consistent andmeaningful style which identifiesthem as individuals; and that theydevelop, through the body of theirwork, certain personal themes andapproaches. Certainly, good directorscan make bad pictures; and viceversa, though not often; however,the arguments for seeing the lesseras well as the greater works of adirector parallel those for readingthe lesser novels of a great novelist,or for seeing as many of Rem¬brandt’s paintings as possible.U.C. FLIXWith B-J and International Houseout of business, DocFilms, RusFilm-Fest, and Thompson House are theonly groups showing on campus.Tonight DocFilms will show the twoclassic prototypes of the avant-gardeand experimental film movements;Luis Bunuel (VIRIDIANA) and Sal-vadore Dali’s surrealist personaldrama, CHIEN ANDALOU; andJean Cocteau’s image poem of sym¬bols and fantasy, THE BLOOD OFA POET. Both are results of theLeft Bank artistic ferment of Parisin the twenties, both are silent,though Cocteau narrates his film.Saturday night DocFilms will showMODERN TIMES, wTitten, directed,and starred by Charlie Chaplin.Hailed by nearly all the critics asChaplin’s best, the film satirizes in¬dustrialism, socialism, the johns(i.e., police), and provides Charliewith situations completely suited tohis comic genius.Sunday, Thompson House willshow the Russian spectacular,PETER THE GREAT. PART I. Thefilm is a biographical epic based onEisenstein’s extravaganza, though itlacks his art.Tuesday, DocFilms will show Her¬ bert Marshall’s comic anti-Western,DESTRY RIDES AGAIN. JimmyStewart is appropriately amusing aspacifistic Marshal Destry, but it isMarlene Dietrich singing “See Whatthe Boys in the Backroom WillHave” while dancing on the bar thatmakes the picture a gas.Best Bets In TownThat classic American frameworkfor social themes, the action picture,is represented by three fine exam¬ples playing in the Loop thiS week.Undoubtedly a masteroiece, JohnFord’s CHEYENNE AUTUMN is atonce an Odyssey story, a moralityplay, and a stunning visual tour-de¬force of colors, editing, anti balanced,but opposing, within-the-frame mo¬ tions, which are used lo advancethe dramatic meaning of the scenes.In terms of Ford’s themes, this isan intense and significant synthesisof his humanism told from the In¬dians’ point-of-view.Don Siegel, aa old Warner Bros,action director who did the mon¬tages for Curtiz’ CASABLANCA, hasbeen most noted for his virtuosomanipulation of motion and hisstrong visuals; in THE KILLERShe adds color, which he uses spar¬ingly in gradations of one color setoff by one contrasting color perframe; and he uses the rhythm ofhis shots to control the mood of thefilm with a seldom seen sure ness.Elisha Cook, Jr.Culture CalendarConcertsCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHES¬TRA: Irwin Hoffman, cond. ZinoFrancescatti, v. Hindemith: Suite fromNobilissima V i s i o n e, Tchaikowsky:Cone. Dvorak: Sym. No. 7 (old No.2.) Jan. 14-16. Paul Kletzki. cond.Beethoven: Sym. No. 8. Bruckner:Sym. No. 4. Jan. 21-22 Orchestra Hall.212 S. Michigan Ave. $2-$6.50; studenttickets to gallery on Friday afternoonconcerts, $1. HA 7-0362.ExhibitsEDWARD HOPPER: A Retrospec¬tive Exhibition of work 1908-6:1. ArtInstitute. Free.PIERRE BONNARD: Exhibition.Art. Institute. FreeMIRIAM BROFSKY: Exhibition ofsculpture. John L. Hunt Gallery.Free.BUCK Mil,AM: Recent paintings anddrawings. Ontario Fast Gallery. Free.RUTH DUCKWORTH: Ceramics andPottery at the Renaissance Society,Jan. 18-Feb. 17. FreeEVEI-YN STATSINGER: Monotypes.Lexington Studio Gallery, Jan. 7-Feb. 5. Free.FilmsBLOOD OF THE POET and CHIENANDALOU: dir. Jean Cocteau andLuis Bunuel-Salvator Dali, dir., res¬pectively. Doc Films. Soc Sci 122.Jan. 15 at 7:15 and 9:15. tiOc.DESTRY RIDES AGAIN: GeorgeMarshall, dir. With James Stewart.Marlene Dietrich. Doc Films SocSci 122. Jan. 19 at 7:15 and 9:15. 60c.MODERN TIMES: Chaplin, dir. WithCharlie Chaplin. Doc Films MandelHall. Jan. 16 at 7:15 and 9:15. 75c.ONE POTATO. TWO POTATO: Atthe Hyde Park. Jan. 15-21. 90c.TIIE MALTESE FALCON: WithHumphrey Bogart. NU Film Soc. FiskHall Aud. Jan. 20 at 7:50. Series Adinonly: $2.WILD STRAWBERRIES: IngmarBergman, dir. Woodstock Opera House,Woodstock. Jan 17 at 7:50. 75c.OperaTHE MERRY WIDOW: Richard Rog¬ers, d,r. With patrice Munsel. SigArno. Frank Porretta, and MischaAuer. Music Theatre of Lincoln Cen¬ter. Jan. 4-16. 8:50 pm. Wednesdayand Saturday Matinees. 2:50 p.m.Mon.-Thurs. eve. $2.50-$6; Fri. andSat. $3-$0.75. Matinees $2-$5 OperaHouse, 20 N. Wacker. FI 6-0270.ProfessorLake ParkToday'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN‘1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROYEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL GoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 Silk Screen SuppliesA Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALS,MIMEOGRAPH PAPERAND SUPPLIESI Wholesale Prices in QuantifyOnly IDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd ST.HY 3-4111 CCorona ^StuJtIOSPORTRAITS1312 E. 53rd St.684-7424PassportPhotos TheatreAFTER THE FALL: by Arthur Mil¬ler. Blackstone Theatre. 60 E Balbo.Nightly at 8 pm; Wed and Sat at 2.Nightly, $2.95-$5.95; Fri. and Sat.$2.95-$6:50; Matinees $2-$5.50. CE 6-8240.THE BALLAD OF THE SAD CAFE:by Edward Albee from the novel byCarson McCullers Goodman Theatre.Monroe at Columbus. Jan. 8-30 Sun -Thu. at 7:30 pm; Fri and Sat at 8:30Nightly $3; Fri. and Sat. $3.50. 5©eStudent discount. CE 6-2337,OLIVER: With a slight bow toCharles Dickens. Nightly at 8:30; ma¬tinees Wed. and Sat. at 2 Nightly.$2.50-5.95; Fri. and Sat. $2.50-6.60;matinees $2 20-S5.50. At the ShubertTheatre. 22 E. Monroe. CE 6-8210.SECOND CITY: Their seventeenthreview, entitled "The Wrecking Bair*includes UC personnel David Steinbergand Robert Benedetti. Nightly at 9and 11 pm; Sat at 9 and 11 pm and 1am. Dark Monday Nightly $2.50: Fri.and Sat. $3. at Second City, 1842 N.Wells. DE 7-3992.SIX AGES OF MAN: a comic revuewith music. Allerton Hotel Theatre inthe Clouds. 701 N. M.chigan. 9 and 11pm Tues -Sat.; 4 and 9 pm Sun. Week¬days $2.65; Fri. and Sat $2 95. SU 7-4200.THE BRIG: by Kenneth BrownRobert Sickinger. dir. Weekends thruJan. 31. Hull House Theatre. 3212 N.Broadway. Fri. and Sat at 8:30; Sun.at 7:50. Fri. and Sat. $3.10; Sun, $3.348-8330.THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERNWORLD: by John Synge. Dir. by Ar¬nold Nelson. Encore Theatre. 1419 NWells St Dec. 2. 3. 9. 10. 30. 31. Jan.13. 14. Tickets $1.55 and $2.65. WH 4-8414.OTHELLO: by William Shaxpur.Dir. by Arnold Nelson. Encore Thea¬tre, 1419 N. Wells St Dec. 16, 17. 23.Jan. 6. 7. 20. 21. $155 and $2.65.WH 4-8414.ALCESTIS: by Euripides In a newtranslation by Daryl Hine. Directed bvMartha Roth. The Last Stage. 1506 E51st St. Weekends thru Feb. 7 8:30Fri. Sc Sat. 7:30 Sun. Tickets $2 onFri. & Sat.. $1 50 Sun OA 4-4200THE COUNTRY WIFE: By WilliamWycherly. Directed by Jim O'Reilly.Reynolds Club Theater. Jan 22-21 Sc28-31. All performances at 8:30. Tick¬ets Fri. Sc Sat. $2, Sun. $1.50. MI 3-0800.BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentreAustinHealeyPeugeotComplete Repair.Aid ServiceEar All Popular ImportsMidway 3-45016040 So. Cottage GroveGOLDCITY INNLooking for real Cantonese food, try Gold City InnCompare quality and quantity.10% discount to student with this ad5228 HARPERHY 3-2559Try Our Convenient Take-Out OrdersIEat More For Less) TEXT BOOKSWherever possible we stock all texts required or recommendedby your instructors and in quantities estimated to meet theneeds of registrants for each course.The titles are arranged in labelled sections and on shelvesmarked to identify course requirements.If you should have difficulty in finding the text you need,please see Mel Ahlert, Lionel Holmes, Mike Balias or RichardSmith.they will be happy to serve you.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 15. 1965Hifre Review&lbee not up to par in Southern balladdward Albee’s adaptation'arson McCuller’s novella,ad of the Sad Cafe, cur¬ly playing at the Goodmantre, is billed as produced in theof a series of past "experi-al” piays which include such»as as Pirandello’s Enrico IV,go's The Lesson. De Ghelde-s Christopher C., and Albee’sAmerican Dream. There isig experimental in this instance,ver, about Albee’s employmente naturalistic technique, which; from Strindburg, nor is thereting new about the play’s con-f ion — for at least a century a-ntdonal device for adapting fic-to the stage has been that oflatizing episodic scenes held to-r by a narrator. The only ex-SIC REVIEW periment involved, it seems, isAlbee’s own unfortunate experimentwith the folk idiom.The setting is the typical South¬ern back-water town and the char¬acters are the typical inhabitants,from the vicious gossip to the vil¬lage idiot. The dialogue attempts toCroat a homey sincere simplicityin the characters, but foe effeot, is that for foe most part, theyare so simple that they appear mo¬ronic. Mr. Albee compensates par¬tially by having the main issues ofthe play discussed aixl clarified bythe narrator, but does little morethan replace foe moronic with themaudlin.The theme of the failure «xf loveis a common subject of drama, but*i is hard to take when clothed inaestro moderate successnee our vacation ran outre that of .lean Martim.n,week offered a chanceear guest conductor Wil-Van Otterloo with the- Chicagoihony in a concert which was asssful as it was disappointing,itributing to the former wasperformance of the Mahlerh, the second of three sympho-being presented this year inrecognition of Mahler’s geniusbox office appeal. Since thepst symphony ever written hap-to be whatever Mahler you areing to at the time, nearly anyer performance is likely to havelerits.s was better than most, how-for Van Otterloo has the right«ch to the score. Tempos w'erepd, with time taken to bring outibtleties of harmony and instru¬ction which can so easily bei in rigidity; yet the music■ lost its pulse to fussiness.E ORCHESTRA sounded betterusual. The woodwinds, whichhe soul of the symphony, sangdifficult lines without a trace ofit ion or ostentatious virtuosity.Scherzo crackled with cacklingshness, while at the lightning; which splits the Adagio, thepert Service on All BrandsHil-FI STEREOTee Pick-up. £ Delivery:ree Estimates:®M 521-0460'ANTED-NOW!!Club Leaders in theChicago Area and,Camp Counselors atYoung Judaea'sCAMP YEHUDAHApply to:icogo Zionist Youth Comm.72 E. 11th StreetWE 9-4168Frank Isoocs. DirectorStand Out ValuesIn Our JanuaryClearance Salellohair Sweaters$1195Mgon* Si 4.95 now ■ ■mn JIJ.M M, ^ 1 0^Print Blouses- $300W*5..w $25°annel SleepwearM.»5 «. $250All Sale* FinalThe University ofChicago BookstoreS802 Ellis Ave. orchestra splashed out a dazzlingrainbow capable of illuminating eventhe darkest comers of the hall.The only flaw in the performancewas' the solo of Lois Marshall.Whether her voice was too weak orwhether she was somehow the vic¬tim of Ihe demonic Orchestra Hallacoustics, she was virtually inaudible.The first half of the concert, alongwith a somewhat unextraordinaryreading of Haydn’s Eighty-eighthSymphony, included a Van Otterlooexcursion into Martinon territory: ex¬cerpts from Franck’s .symphonicpoem Psyche. A fascinating work, itseyes are looking forward to la Merwhile under the table its hands areshamelessly filching from Tristan amiIsolde. But it’s always Franck: andalthough many people wiesley com¬mented during intermission, “Well, ofcourse, it’s not the D Minor Sym¬phony,” this work’s tragic flaw is that1VAN OTTERLOO had the orches¬tra playing accurately, but unfor¬tunately it is not always the steadyhand which opens the bedroom door.The triumphant trombones and ter¬rifying trumpets made a magnificentnoise, but the whole tiling sounded alittle less like the Gardens of Erosthan the Bronx Zoo.Pete Robinowiti foe terms of Albee’s narrator Forinstance:"So who but God can be thefinal judge of any love? But oneiking can be .said of these threepeople, . . . all of whom weresubject to foe condition of love.Hie thing that can he said isfobs: No good will come of it.”Besides the failure of his downhome brevity, foe narrator does hisbest to destroy any suspense in¬herent in foe play by announcingthat "something terrible is going tohappen” before each scene in whichsomething "terrible” happen.-.THE PLOT IS almost as unbe¬lievable as foe characters The townrake, Marvin Maey, notorious forruining young girls, falls in love witha Miss Amelia for reasons unknown.After spending two years reforminghimself, he proposes to her, and sheconsents, but after foe marriage,foe remains mysteriously aloof andrefuses to share her bed with himHe tries to placate her with weddinggifts, and finally has his land signedover to her as a sign of his love, butall to no avail. When he threatensto go on a drunk, she forces himout of the house ait gunpoint. Swear¬ing revenge, he leaves town, com¬mits a crime, and is .sentenced tofive yews on the chain gang.In the meantime, a slightly un¬balanced dwarf named Cousin Ly¬man shows up, claiming to be herkin. She takes him in and fills thevoid in her life by pampering himlike a child. She opens a cafe whichfoe towmspeople frequent, The rela¬tionship grows until Cousin Lymanexercises complete control over her.She loves him but cannot admit0.6 ALCUMJfrStOI5U65> Aite cowornow6o1316 £. 53” 6T.II AM TO 10 PMMta-atoTi**' wc OtUVlfl,Fine Quality CleaningJAMES SCHULTZ CleanerRepairs & Alterations 5 hr. Service1363 Eost 53rd n 2-966210% Student Discount with I.D. CardB’NAI B’RITH HILLEL FOUNDATIONpresent* a special showingDISTANT JOURNEY—GHETTO TEREZINA Czechoslovak Film Studios Productionfull length — trqlish subtitlesStory of One Jewish family i» the Theresienstadt ConcentrationCamp where 140.000 people passed undei the barbaric hand of.b. No,!,. SATURDAY NIGHTJanuary 16, 1965Hillet House 7:30 p.m.5715 Woodlawrv Admission free■ -— ■ — ———MR. PIZZAwe Deliver — carry-outsHY 3-8282 *DELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENSandwiches and Ch. Broiled HamburgersFfZZAfor 2 Pm 3 for 4 Per « ttrtySaa*«9« .— 1.5© 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 1.5© 2.0© 3.00 4.00 5.006»m Pepper «... 1.5© 2.0© 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie 1.5© 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00OaioH or Garlic 1.5© 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tunc fish or Olive 1.5© 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50»/i and Vz . 1.5© 2.00 3.00 4.00) 5.00Extra Ingredients .5© .50 1.00 1.00 1.0©Pepper on Pin® .2.0© 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp „ 2.0© 2.50 4.00 5.00 4.00Bacon 2.0© 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Cones Island Pixza ....... , , 2.5© £0© 5.00 6.00 TOO(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers! fe1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Day* a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m, — Fri. to 3 00 a.iSat. ta 3:00 a.m. — Op«« 2 pm. Sunday* it, whale it turns out that his de¬canted idea of love is that of thetogetherness” af the chain gangsituated down foe road just a spell.Everything fe fine until MarvinMaey shows up on parole. CousinLyman, af course, is fascinated byhim because he has been on a chaingang, and so forsakes Miss Ameliato follow ham around town. WithCousin Lyman on has side, Maey pro¬ceeds to farce himself into Amelia’sCafe for dinner every evening Thefinal blow oomes when Cousin Ly¬man decides to move Maey intoAmelia's bedroom and have herdeep by the stove, A wrestlin'match between Amelia and Maeyconstitutes the climax of foe play.Miss Amelia gains the upper hand,but after Cousin Lyman has jumpedon her back and strangled her a bit,Maey uses his advantage to giveher a brutal beating, much to foedelight af the townfolk. Miss Amelia closes her cate and spends the restof her life in her room, while Mar-rim Maey and Cousin Lyman go off.presumably to commit crimes sothey can join foe chain gang and be"together.”DESPITE THE INANITY of forbook, all of the principals displayeda sensitivity lor their parts, aid atlime* even breathed an air of cre¬dulity info Albee’s transparent char¬acters The outstanding performanceof the evening was Richard Brom’sportrayal of Cousin Lyman. Form¬erly a member of Goodman’s chil¬dren's theatre company, Mr. Brorohas proven himself a powerful seri¬ous actor a* well. Charles MoCaw’sdirection was adequate, consideringthe confined area of the stage withwhich he could work, but he wassomewhat hindered in the creationof his effects by Richard Wilcox’*clumsily (smstnicted setJohn LionUNHOOKTHEY HUGTHUS)IWERRIGHTDOWNUFSALEHS ALEWHILE THEY LAST!!!((nationally advertised))Plain front — boh loop modelAH wool, permanently crease-resistantTROUSERSRegular SIS.fS — NOW *12”Available in black, olive, charcoal or brownTHE STORE FOR MENGtottni mb GUmpttAin the New Hyde Fork Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100me.Jm.1B.mS • CHICAGO MABOOM « *fMOVIE REVIEWFord's mastery shines throughout Cheyenne AutumnThe version of CHEYENNEAUTUMN playing at the Mc-Vickers Theatre downtownhas had about one hour cutfrom it—and it shows. The film wascut, the sound variable, the seatsatrocious and the environment of thetheater heinous . . . but yet CHEY¬ENNE AUTUMN was glorious. It isthe most beautiful film ever madeabout the American West and thefinest tribute to the American In¬dian that this reviewer has beenprivileged to experience.The cutting of the film should beperceptible to any intelligent viewerof Ford’s work. If there is a singleformal element that may be said tobe characteristic of the art of JohnFord it must be his sense of pacing.Ford’s films do not have rapid tran¬sitions. Scenes are regulated to flowinto one another with a smoothnessand inevitability that brooks no jar¬ring of the audience. CHEYENNEAUTUMN, however, has many suchstaggering switches in mood and set¬ting, many loose threads of the plotare left unresolved, or appear sud¬denly from nowhere only to vanishagain. The gradual and careful de¬velopment which is the measure ofFord’s mastery of the cinema is attimes evident (the Fort Robinsonsequence, for example) but is no¬where consistent. This is the work ofdistributors, hungry for the dollar andfearful of the charges of tediumlevelled at the film in the nationalpress.AND SUCH ACCUSATIONS couldnot be more ill-founded. CHEYENNEAUTUMN is never dull. It could notbe dull to anyone interested in beau¬ty, in heroism, in action, and ingreatness. If CHEYENNE AUTUMNis dull, then history itself is dull, thenepics are dull, then works of artwhich lead one to speculate are dull.For CHEYENNE AUTUMN is all ofthese, even in its present castratedform. I am afraid that this film willtake many years to find its trueaudience. The plastic people at thepress review were certainly not itstrue audience, nor are the glib deni¬zens of the press, nor the jet-setintellectual fans of Fellini and Ku¬brick. They all find it dull. The trueaudience for CHEYENNE AUTUMNwill come precisely from campusesJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060MODEL CAMERALEICA, BOLEX, NIKON, PENTAXZEISS, MAMIYA, OMEGA, DURSTTAPE RECORDERS1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259TYPEWRITERSTO 55% OFF*Nsw-JJsed-Electric-Office-PortableAll ma.hines (new or used) areguaranteed for 5 years. We arean authorized agency for mostmajor typewriter manufacturers.If any machine we sell canbe purchased elsewhere (within30 cays) for less, we will refundthe Vence in cash.♦Discounts average 37%Ebccunt TypewritersSO E. Chicago Tel. 664-3552YOUTH LOOKS ATTHE PROBLEMSOF TODAYA panel Discussion withStudents and Other Young People.Moderator: Ruth Adamsof The Bulletin ofAtomic ScientistsThursday, Jan. 21 at 8 p.m.Quaker House—5615 Woodlawn like this one, where we have beentaught that a masterpiece worthy ofthe name knows no limitation ofcountry or genre. But they won’tcome this year. It costs too much togo downtown just to see a moviemade in America.Ford has reverted (or gone ahead)to the traditions of the early Eisen-stein, and found his protagonist in themasses. There is no single hero inCHEYENNE AUTUMN, on star-boypart, no haunting love story, no des¬perate daring. The Cheyenne them¬selves are the heroes—all of them—every man and every woman andevery child who walked the 1500 miles to Yellowstone, and every onewho died on the way. And, by givingthe status of hero to the whole Chey¬enne nation, Ford has filmed forthe first time true Herodotan history,using the legends, facts and myster¬ies of the time to create a unifiedwork that transcends the simplerecitation of events and reaches theheights of poetry.Ford’s story is a story of greatness,of perseverance and of nobility. Ineach phase of the film he underlinesthose qualities which must serve asa definition of strength to all men. Hecontrasts these with the weakness thatis beneath contempt, sufficient only for laughter (the Dodge City se¬quence) and with the weakness thatis truly dangerous, and perverse (theFort Robinson sequence). At thesame time he shows us subtly theultimate doom of these virutes, theirinevitable conquest by the forces ofthe “civilization” that is moving intothe West.The climax of the film comes whena full understanding of the greatnessof the Cheyenne has come to thecavalry officer detailed to pursuethem and when he leaves the pursuitin order to gain help from tlie East.The virtues of the Cheyenne then,will not vanish when these men are gone, but will be reverenced andemulated by those of the New Orderwith breadth of vision to see them.TERROR AND PITY are not theemotions of history, so do not expectto be caught up in the magnificencewluch Ford has placed upon thescreen. History is the proper field forsuch emotions as awe and compas¬sion, and those are the feelings whichCHEYENNE AUTUMN evokes. Weare never asked to scream or tocry at the plight of the CheyenneWe are merely told to experience, tolive it as they lived it, and thus toknow the greatness of what they didThe Quiet ManMOVIE REVIEWBond s latest giity, active, but a bit too cruelWhen the villain shot himclean through the heart, kids,it looked as if our old friendJames Bond was a goner. Butno, turns out that the weapon wasjust a tranquilizer gun. Our heroawakens to find our heroine loomingover him. Thrusting out her pistol,lower lip, and bosom, she snaps,“My name is Pussy Galore.” Bond’sreply is lost to posterity amidst theshrieks of the enraptured audience.This will give you an idea of thefun to be had at the RooseveltTheater, where the third of theJames Bond movies, “Goldfinger.”is on display. Slam-bang action, lushsurroundings, and five (count ’em,five) beeeeautjful girls.I should have said, four beautifulgirls and one beautiful adult. For,wonder of wonders! After romanc¬ing the usual fluffy flimsy Flemingfemales through one half of themovie. Bond at last comes in con¬tact with a real, live, 38 year oldwoman! SEAN CONNERY DOES his usualgood job as our sinister and sexyhero, but as in “From Russia,”the loudest applause goes to thebadguys.Like Robert Shaw before him,Gert Frobe as Goldfinger (a mansuffering from a giity complex) actspoor Sean right off the screen. Itis all very well for Connery to beslim and elegant in an impeccablesporting jacket, but how can hehold his own against a redheadedhulk in orange bloomers?I will long cherish the memoryof the torture scene. Bond quavers,“Do you expect me to talk?” Withthat vicious relish which is the hall¬mark of the Fleming villain, Frobereplies, “No, Mr. Bond, I expect youto die!”Her name may be fanciful, butPussy Galore, portrayed with bazzazby British telly star Honor Black¬man is jarringly authentic. It is asthough Lauren Bacall (whom Honorresembles) at her toughest hadstumbled onto a Ziegfeld line.IIPUT ... La protection flnanci&re qua vousdonnez 6 votre famille aujourd’huidevra lui §tre procure d’une autrefa?on domain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certalnement accomplir cettetetche a votre place.En tant que reprgsentant local de la SunLife, puis-ja vous visiter a un moment devotre choix?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, 111.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYPHOTOGRAPHIC ITEMSHolidays Sale Prices ContinueBC FLASH GUNRetail Price 54.95 NOW *3^Eastman Kodak Instamatic CameraRegular Price $17.50 NOW ^12^Films are consistently sold at discounted prices all year roundand are comparable to values elsewhere.24 hour service on Kodachrome processing.Speed Processing in color and Black and White printing.Inquire about our after hours film depository service.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.•: CHICAGO MAROON • Jan. 15, 1965 round of applause, right there inthe movie theater. Like the sweet,old lady who admits Band as a pris¬oner to Goldfinger’s lair, all smilesand curtsies — only to gun downhis car when ho tries to escape.Fleming’s hideous Earth Motherstrikes again!In their laudable desire to givethe audience a jolly good time,the directors seem in places tohave gone too far. The amusingsadism of “From Russia WithLove,” has become real cruelty. year frat man.Bond is in bed with Shirley Eaton,a typical Fleming blond who hasthe synthetic perfection of a Play¬boy Bunny. A business associateculls, demanding an immediate con¬ference. “I can’t make it, sir,”he explains. “Someilhing big hascome up.” Pooh.Fans of Ian Fleming's originalJames Bond thrillers will saydouble pooh. Fleming’s sexualitywas accompanied by a delicacythat made it all the more erotic.BUT BE IT said in Connery’sdefense that a man who is planningto steal all the gold in Fort Knoxis inherently more interesting thana man who is trying to stop him.It is as a critic once said aboutParadise Lost, “In eight out of tenversions of this story, Satan willbe the most compelling figure.”For those who are unimpressedby beautiful girls, lush surroundings,or incredible action, there are bitsof business so humorous and imagin¬ative that they almost demand a JAMES BOND IS no longer con¬tent to strangle op|»nents. Now, liethrows them into bathtubs andthrows electric heaters after tliem.I was supposed to laugh at thesight of the man being electrocutedin the sizzling shocking-pink water,but all that I could manage wasa weak grin. Hie audience’s laugh¬ter, so uproarious in "From Russia,”sounded to me a bit harsh. If thedirectors keep carrying their for¬mula to greater and greater ex¬tremes, James Bond will soon seemless an elegani secret service herothan aui overdressed Black and Tan.Heaven knows that the handling ofsex was heavyJtanded enough in“From Russia.” In “Goldfinger” weare treated to repartee which issupposed to arch, but which soundsas though it were written by a first BIT WHILE THE directors haveseen fit to commit such an un-Fleming atrocity, they have gonefurther here in capturing what Ifeel to be the essence of the artof Ian Fleming than they daredto do in “From Russia.” The fearof castration which is such a re¬current Fleming theme is abundant¬ly present in the torture scene.And when the girl in Bond’s beddies of being painted gold, we sensethe meaninglessness of it all.He now possesses the perfectlybeautiful and precious woman. Sitehas become an object, but isn'tthat what he always wanted? Bondalways sou^it the “I—it” relationship, and now it is a literal factJames Bond is left alone, in arich and empty universe.Jackie Friedmanattention:STUDENTS FROM EUROPE, NORTH AFRICA,LATIN AMERICA, MIDDLE EASTIPROCTER & GAMBLE INTERNATIONALWILL BE ON THIS CAMPUS TO INTERVIEW MENINTERESTED IN BEGINNING TECHNICAL ANDBUSINESS CAREERS IN THEIR HOMELAND ONJanuary 27ire will interview:BS and MS degrees In ChE, ME, IE, and EE for tech*nical positionsMBA’s and BS or MS in any non-technical field forbeginning positions in Marketing, Advertising, Sales,Finance, and Buying.PROCTER A GAMBLE INTERNATIONAL Is madeup of subsidiaries of the Procter A Gamble Company,a U. S. organization which manufactures and sellssoaps, detergents, food, toilet goods, and other con¬sumer products in over 140 countries of the free world.The history of Procter A Gamble's development hasbeen one of substantial growth. In each ten years ofthe Company's history since 1900, sales have approxi¬mately doubled.These openings represent unusual opportunities formen of ability. You will be given early responsibilityand personalized on-the-job training. We promoteonly from within, and only on the basis of merit, andyoung men beginning a career with us have the op¬portunity to advance into top executive positions in aSubsidiary, replacing U. S. Managers temporarily as¬signed. We do not know of any other organizationwhere there is greater opportunity to advance on thebasis of merit alone ISIGN AT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR AN INTERVIEWtf far say reason you cannot Interview now, write directly totMr. John A. Handley,Personnel ManagerInternational Divisions, Dtpf. CM-11SThe Procter & Gamble CompanyP.O. Box 201, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221 EIMOON ® WEEKEND GUIDEOPENS TUES. 4 WEEKS ONLYa ChekhovsketchbookHARPER THEATER5238 S HARPER BU 8-1717 STUDENT COUPONThis coupon acid #2.25may be exchanged at theBox Office no later thanhalf hour before perform¬ance for regular #3.00seat.Good for any performanceexcept Fri. & Sot. nights. atf'en,o newworld ofdiningpleasurecharcbal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken%616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668JEFFERYTHEATRE19P2 E. 71st ST. HY 3-3334beginning FRIDAY, Jan. 15EXPLODESWITHSUSPENSEON THEMOTIONPICTURESCREEN!COLUMBIA PICTURfS p*»«*FAILSAFEA MAX [ YOUNGSTEIN-SIDNEYlUVE7f«i«in»A woman couldfeel him acrossa room.Y0UN6BL00DIHAWKE IAll the blister-heat of the best selling novel that scorched the Jet SetlJAMES ERANCISCUS-SU7ANNE PIESHETTE ■ GENEVIEVE PAGE ssir.ts.-.*. rauurni si nutn uo> K£a PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PK. BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICEKE 6-6606 — KE 6-3891CHICKEN - SANDWICHESPIZZA &ITALIAN FOODSTIKI TOPICSCIRALSHOUSE OF TIKIIn prourl to offer all of ourfriends of Hyde Park and thesurrounding areas a selectionof Polynesian dishes as wellas our choice American menu.This choice of Polynesianfoods is now part of our regu¬lar menu.JUST A SAMPLE OF OURMENU:Shrimp Polynesian; chickentahitian; lobster Polynesian;beef and tomatoes; egg roll;ono ono kaukan; shrimp dejonghe; beef kaboh flambe.Try one of our delightfulHawaiian cocktails.CIRALSHOUSE OF TIKI51st & HARPERFood served 11 A.M. to 3 A.M.Kitchen closed 1f ed.1510 Hyde Park Bled.LI 8-7585 50 alttime*for college studentswith i.d. card• different doublefeatures daily• open dawn to dawn• little gal-leryfor gals only15 —/’lovers of teruel,”la traviata.”sat. 16—"the killers,” "robinand the seven hoods.”sun. 17 — "zazie,” "thesilence.”mo.n* 77- "last of the vik¬ings,” "white slave ship.”tues. 19 — "dunkirk,” "tor¬pedo run.”wejl‘ 20 — "mating game,”teahouse of the augustmoon.”thurs. 21—"constantine andthe cross,” "duet of thetitans.”fr 2-2843dark & madison 6th SMASH MONTH-—Chicago's Longest Running Musical"They blew a gust tt fresh air Into themusical revue business.” —Lesner. News“They keynote Is literacy by University efChicage eoimopolitee.” — Barrel, Amer.Tuee.. WeS . Thurs. 9 p.m.: Frl.. 9 A II;Sat. 8 :30. 10:30. tt:30; Sun. 7:30 A 9:30;Weekdays. $2.65; Fri. A Sat.. $2.95Theater'in the CloudsALLERT0N HOTEL701 N. Michigan Ave.Reservations; SU 7-42002 Colony Room Dinner offer: J♦ Show and 6-Course Dinner, 22$5.50; Fri. and Sot., $5.95. *$.50 STUD. DISC.(Except Saturday)|iim)iHHiiiminuiuiiNiHiH«uHwmiiMHUiimuttuuttitti(HmmiHiiinHnuiHiiimiHHiiiiiiiiHmHiiiiininiHe1 TOrttw a i m rrFiHy Se,M,h * KeBw,K,d |UNUSUAL FOOD IDELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICES5ibiittmiirmmmiimiimitiiHm)miHtHiiiiiitmtmfmmtitmmmintmmniiitiiiiiutiHiHitHnittiuiMiniHiiimtffiLllXatO.Purveyors of Fine Wine, Liquor & Beersince 1933WINE CELLAR FOR GREATER SELECTIONFAMOUS GILL’S BEERDISCOUNT VOLUME SPECIALV2-GAL. - GAL.Gallon$|35Vi Gal.67cALL BEER —NO FOAMWON'T GO FLAT BARRELSVa bbl.SJ95'/j bbl. M$1725DeliveredSTAYS COLDWITHOUTICE 15 HOURS2 DRIVE-IN WINDOWSDiscount prices on all popular brand whisky4,II I *vCO.1238 East 47th St. KEnwood 6-6500NICKY'SRESTAURANT AND PIZZA LAKE tie ARK AT SJ R Dthe (^yde park NO 7 9071NICKY'S TAKE-OUT & DELIVERY MENU(Bask. and(x)insL PIZZASAssortments smollCHEESE 1.25SAUSAGE 1.50ANCHOVIE 1.50ONIONPEPPER ...MUSHROOMBACON ...HAM 1.301.501.601.501.60 medium2.002.252.252.052.252.402.252.40 large2.903.253.253.003.253.503.253.50RIBS SANDWICHES2.251 Slab2 Slabs 4.253 Slabs 6.00CHICKIE IN THE BOX10 Large Pieces 2.5016 Large Pieces 3.7520 Large Pieces 4.75Free Student Delivery Plain or BAR B<? Beef 70Meat Ball 55Sausage 60Above Served with PeppersHAMBURGER 50CHEESEBURGER 60BAKED LASAGNE 1.55SHRIMP—'/z-lb 1.25; 1-lb 2.25FA 4-5340 yde park theatreStarts Friday, Jan. 15Cannes Prix Actress Barbara Barrie in"ONE POTATO, TWO POTATO""One ©f the year'$ 10 best!” — N.Y. Time*andA CHARLIE CHAPLIN Featurette// THE TRAMP //Special Saturday and Sunday Matinees Jan. 16 & 17At 1 P.M. & 3 P.M. only. ALL SEATS 50c"THE MAGIC FOUNTAIN"Plus a Cartoon FestivalSpecial Student Rate WITH I.D. CARDFrea Weekend Patron Parking at 5230 S. Lake Park Ave.Matinees Saturday, Sunday and HolidaysJan. 15. 194S • CHICAGO MAROON • UI1 Fraternity Lifeat ChicagoTO MEMBERS OF THE ENTERING CLASS: TheUniversity Interfraternity Council invites you to becomeacquainted with fraternities as tbev exist on this campus andthen to make a reasoned judgment as to whether or not youwish to become a member.Fraternities here are quite different from those foundon many campuses, and they cannot be judged by impressionsderived from other institutions. Their style of life is, ofcourse, one of several available on this campus, and it is upto each student to decide which is best for him. An open-minded investigation of what they have to offer would be asensible preliminary to the student's making an informedchoice as to how- he wants to live during his undergraduateWarner A. WickDeo* »f Students James E. NewmanAssistant Dean of Students Fraternities are perhaps the most maligned and mostdefended part of American college life. Whether one be¬comes pro-fraternity, anti-fraternity, or indifferent to thewhole matter depends entirely upon the authority one select*for reference. It would be presumptuous of this message toclaim to present a final or complete analysis of fraternity lifeat Chicago. The Inter fraternity Council wishes to suggestto first-year men that they investigate fraternities on ourcampus, find out what they do, and discover how the fraternitysystem at Chicago differs from the system found elsewhere.Steve Briggerman, PresidentInterfraternity CouncilTRADITIONFraternities offer one of the finestand most satisfying sources of cher¬ished friendship available to a Chicagoman. They do provide a considerableamount of social and athletic activityfor their members, but in the finalanalysis, the rewarding experiencegained from living and working witha group of close friends is what givesreal meaning to the word fraternity.The fraternity tradition, then, involvesfar more than a club formed to pro¬vide a good time; rather, a Chicagofraternity is a group of real friendswho have joined together to help them¬selves while helping each other.SCHOLARSHIPThe absolute priority of academicpursuits over the athletic and socialactivities of the fraternity is unquestion,able. Fraternities recognize the im¬portance of a college education indeveloping one’s intellect—his abilityto think keenly, to reason intelligently,and solve the complex problems of life.It is for this reason that the fraternitysystem stresses the value of scholarship.Special study halls and referencelibraries in chapter houses, and rigidlyenforced quiet hours for both activesand pledges are provided. Probablythe greatest single advantage of frater¬nal scholarship is the tutor system, inwhich brothers who are proficient incertain fields give their time to helppledg es and brothers who are havingdifficulty.The Interfraternity Council en¬courages academic achievement through its scholarship trophy, awarded annual¬ly to the chapter which has achievedthe highest scholastic standing. Inaddition, many fraternities present in¬centive awards to scholastically out¬standing members.SOCIAL ACTIVITIESSocial life has always been anintegral part of fraternity life on theChicago campus. Fraternities holdmany imaginative, well-organized socialaffairs. At informal mixer-dances,members have the opportunity to meetwomen from on and off campus; manyfraternities sponsor-all-campus openhouses each year. Fraternity men findthat house social activities round outtheir college life and provide an en¬joyable break from the routine ofstudy.ATHLETICSParticipating in practically everyrecognized sport, athletic-minded fra¬ternity men vie for the coveted All -Sports Trophy each year. Althoughcompetition is intense as each chapterattempts to gain supremacy in flagfootball, soft ball, or track, the spiritof cooperation and cotnraderie isevident. A fraternity member is notexpected to be an expert athlete. Allthat is asked is a willingness to learnand a desire to participate.*BROTHERHOODAlthough the special events andactivities of fraternity life are outstand¬ing and notable, most of the time is spent in every-day living with one**brothers while gaining an education. Itis here in the unspectacular surround¬ings of an occasional ''bull session**or a work party that chapter life mem¬bers to seek grounds for mutualunderstanding of themselves andothers. This is the most meaningfulaspect of fratenity life.PLEDGINGThe most memorable experienceof fraternity life is pledging. Duringthis period, prospective members learnthe history and ideals of their frater.nity and university. Each man i«expected to do a certain amount ofhard work, but such relics as paddlingand other forms of hazing are replacedby constructive projects.RUSH SMOKERSMonday, January 18:Phi Delta Theta, Beta Theta PiTuesday, January 19:Delta Upsilon, Phi Gamma DeltaWednesday, January 20:Phi Sigma Delta, Psi UpsilonThursday, January 21:Phi Kappa Psi, Alpha Delta PhiMonday, January 25:Psi Upsilon, Phi Dela ThetaTuesday, January 26:Phi Sigma Delta, Alpha Delta PhiWednesday, January 27:Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Gamma DeltaThursday, January 28:Delta Upsilon, Beta Theta Pi//■fm(mAljriia OtJt, Mm"STtt Universit y Beta Tfceto PI57J7 U»iv«f5i*T Delta Upsilon5711 Woodlown Phi Gamma Delta5415 University Phi Delta Theta5*25 University Phi Kappa Psi5555 Wood lawn Phi Siqma Delta5*25 Woa.llawa Psi Upsilaa$*19 University I*l *U • CHICAGO MAROON * Jan. 15, 1965