The Southern Work Project Committee (SWPC) will makea final decision as to who will go down to Fayette County,Tennessee tonight.In its fourth meeting, scheduled for 7:30 pm in Ida NoyesHall, the group will choose 35people, the maximum that the ing a cement floor. The communi-village of Sumerville can house, ty center is being used now inVol. 73 — No. 30 The University of Chicago <*£^**->31 Tuesday February 23, 1965 These thirty five will be leaving spite of the fact that it is incom-7# 7 ' for Tennessee at the end of the plete.quarter and will spend the interim Fund-raising and tool-finding re¬rebuilding a partially completed main problems for SWPC, how-community center in Sumerville. ever. Although response to a firstCenter used now mailing to the faculty has been^ 1*4 *di 4 LASTEST WORD from Negro encouraging, cars and funds areWf I ■ 1^ ■ f” C f 1^ I ■ I 1% I I I 01^ r leaders in Sumerville indicates that still desperately needed. All dona-I I I I I II I li I It# U I 11 dl 11 11C? I I li the UC group will be occupied tions and car loans should be madewith painting, finishing, and lay- to Randy Rappaport, 324-4280.Five panelists back Witherspoon Meeting tonight in Ida NoyesSWPC chooses workersby Matt JosephThe planned execution of William Witherspoon by the state of Illinois pn March 19 can¬not serve any purpose. It will, in fact, be the brutal and meaningless murder of an indi¬vidual whom society could put to a meaningful use. The execution is directly contrary tothe policy of rehabilitation which is basic to all modern penology.This was the consensus of thepanelists at the Maroon's “Forumon the Abolition of Capital Pun-ishment,” held at the Law Schoolauditorium Thursday night.As the forum’s moderator, JohnCalloway of WBBM pointed outthat the general topic of capitalpunishment Is a key issue in thatthe Illinois state legislature is nowin the process of examining a billto abolish this institution.HANS MATTICK, former as¬sistant warden of the Cook Coun¬ty Jail and present head of theChicago Youth Development Proj¬ect, was the first speaker at theforum. Mattick presented a ra¬tional and systematic study ofcapital punishment in which hepointed out that only sentamental-ity can be used to defend the“legal murder” of criminals bysociety.No deterrentMattick’s argument was basedon statistics from mid westernstates which proved that capitalpunishment is not a deterrent tocrime. The lack of deterrent valueof capital punishment, he claimed,was the main issue that now con¬fronts the state legislature in thisdebate. Any arguments whichclaim that capital punishment ischeap, prevents lynchings, or re¬moves criminal stock from societyMattick labeled “erroneous andcynical.” He pointed out thatcapital punishment is no bettera deterrent to further crime bythe convicted criminal than is lifeimprisonment.Then, by the systematic use ofstatistics Mattick proved that cap¬ital punishment is not a deterrent SWAP panelists debateSupt. Willis' retentionby Barry WeitxShould Benjamin Willis be kept on as Chicago Superintend¬ent of Schools?This was the topic of discussion of a SWAP meeting heldlast Thursday in Ida Noyes.Howard Fuller, the first speaker and representative of theChicago Urban League, answeredParticipants at capital punishment forum included, leftto right, Hans Mattick, Rev. James Jones, Arthur Weinberg,and Norval Morris. Dick Gregory is at the podium.der” does not defend society. Asan expert on Darrow, Weinbergpointed out that Witherspoonshows promise of being as usefulafter his rehabilitation as is Na¬than Leopold. “The execution ofWitherspoon can only appeal tothe sadistic impulses of men andto nothing else,” Weinberg de¬clared. slayer Witherspoon and others.He felt that the church in Ameri¬ca has failed to stop this andthat it is now time for the civilrights movement to take action.As reported in last Friday’sMaroon, he said that if Wither¬spoon dies on Sunday, March 19th,he and others in the civil rights with a very unequivocal “No!”FULLER CLAIMS that “Willisis one of the few if not only schoolsuperintendents of major North¬ern cities who has not at leastsaid there is a need for a policy toencourage integration.”Sites promote segregationAs a matter of fact, accordingto Fuller, proposed sites forschools often “encourage segrega¬tion, not integration.”Fuller went on to say that Wil¬lis has “subverted the Hauserplan” and that “many school edu¬cators and principals are afraidto do what they want to do” be¬cause of Willis.Bernard Freedman, the nextspeaker and a member of theBoard of Education, gave a muchmore all-inclusive answer: “If any¬thing goes wrong, you mustblame the Board of Education, notnecessarily Mr. Willis.”“WE’RE JUST SIMPLY abunch of amateurs. This is nota job for amateurs — but that’smovement will close the city ofChicago on the following Monday, way Freedman went onVows complete boycott t0 exPlain-Bill Witherspoon, who isscheduled to be executed bythe state of Illinois on March19, needs a typewriter. Heis a writer and, since thetypewriter he has been usingwore out a few weeks ago,he has been seriously handi¬capped. If any student orfaculty member feels thathe can spare a typewriter fora month, he would be doingWitherspoon and the IllinoisCommittee to Abolish Capi¬tal Punishment a greatfavor. If you feel that youcan help, please call MattJoseph, Extension 260. Jones hits practice 'The third speaker, FatherJames Jones of Chicago EpiscopalCharities, attacked the practiceof capital punishment rather thannrimitive” societv there mi^ht be C*Vca2°’s major roads, and the civic groups and Chicago area tegration. Bacon mentioned that- need for this but that it was blocking of all public transporla- universities send in a list of three ^e criticism is often made “thatmeaningless anachromism in tion‘ names for each opening* Mayor the Board is so interested in in¬meaningless anachromism in ^ ^ ^ Daley then chooses one nameaaour modern worldAs a minister, he pointed outthat the doctrine of an “eye foran eye and a tooth for a tooth”is a completely outmoded con¬cept in our society and no longerexists except in its most brutalform — capital punishment. “Howcan prisons which claim to havea basic committment to rehabilita¬tion turn it off on Friday nightand tell the prisoners they are go¬ing to execute someone for retri¬bution?” Jones asked. He calledthis hypocrisy “a schizophreniaof symbols that can serve nopurpose" Tr .. , Freedman then described howHe threatened a complete boy- members of the eleven man Boardcott of the schools, stall-ins on all of Education are selected. Variousijor roads, and thepublic transporla- from the three and that person isappointed to a five year term.Impossible to get bootIt is almost impossible to beremoved once appointed and con¬sequently the members feel vir¬tually no political pressure. Freed¬man said that this gave him avery secure feeling and that hedid not have to be afraid to speakhis own mind.Warren Bacon, the last speakerand also a member of the Boardof Education, said that he agreedthat ‘the blame must be borne bythe Board of Education, as Mr.Freedman said. Remember, ittakes more than a superintendentto run the schools.”Bacon asked the audience to con¬sider the extremely difficult prob¬lems the Board of Education hasto cope with.There is the problem of the ex¬plosion of knowledge. It is almostimpossible to keep courses up todate.THERE IS ALSO the problemof increasing enrollment. In 1953;when Willis took over, there were353,000 students; now there are580,000.Then, Bacon said, there is thevery controversial problem of in¬to crime. He stated, in fact, thatthe crime rate and the murderrate are complex social functionson which capital punishmentseems to have no effect. He said view with John Calloway ofWBBM-CBS, he stated that he hadcommittments from LawrenceLandry, Rev. Milton Galamison,Aaron Henry, and other promin¬ent civil rights leaders to use theirorganizations for the boycott. Hesaid that plans for this boycotthave been worked out over a pe¬riod of months and that the majorleaders of the civil rights move¬ment are committed to such boy¬cotts every time the state of Illi¬nois executes a criminal.He estimated the cost to thecity of Chicago of such a bovcottNorval Morris, professor of law 33 in excess *100 ral“i')n-and the fourth speaker, spokefrom his experience as an in¬vestigator of capital punishmentfor the United Nations and forthe government of Ceylon. Hesaid that almost all responsibleexperts in criminology abhorredthe practice of taking the livesof criminals.He felt that, as an intellectualissue, capital punishment wasdead because of the overwhelm- There will be a non-pub¬lic meeting of invited groupsand organizations concernedwith the Lutheran seminarybuilding plans in Swift Hallat 7:30 pm Thursday. Rep¬resentatives from UC andthe Lutheran school of the¬ology will discuss the archi¬tect's drawing for the sem¬inary site. A report on themeeting will appear in theMAROON next week.Candy Baxter Miss UCSandra (Candy) Baxter, a se¬cond year student in the College,took over as Miss UC at WashProm Saturday night in, as IdaNoyes magnate Walter Jeschkeput it, “the crowning event of theOther Wash Prom eventsevening.ing evidence against it. It onlythat it is similar to the dancing remains, he stated, as an emotion-that savages of the Illinois plains al issue. Morris also said that the included a buffet supper catereddid to produce rain. “The savages institution of capital punishmentare gone from the plains of Illi- had a destructive affect on thesocial, political, and legal struc¬tures of countries where it isused.nois, but capital punishment re¬mains,” Mattick said.THE SECOND SPEAKER. Ar¬thur Weinberg, author of severalbooks on Clarence Darrow, ela¬borated on this theme by callingcapital punishment a “stone age speakers, spoke not about theinstitution.” He said that no one evils of capital punishment butdenied socity’s right to defend about what he was going to doitself but that, clearly, “legal mur- to stop the execution of convicted by the Quadrangle Club, the briefappearance of Judy Bruce, starof the musical “Oliver,” and dancemusic by Al Ford’s orchestra. OverTHE FINAL SPEAKER, come- 300 people attended,dian and civil rights leader DickGregory, in contrast to the otherSandra (Candy) Baxtercrowned as Miss UC 1965at Wash Prom. tegration, that it often neglectsother things.”'Do what is best'In dealing with these problems,Bacon said that “The Board shoulddo what is best, not what is mostpopular.”A difficulty which the Boardfaces is that they often get boggeddown in trivial details, Bacon no¬ted. For example, at each meet¬ing, the Board spends about anhour dealing with such importantmatters as what brand of peachesto buy for lunch room cafeterias.Describing the Willis situation.Bacon said that he felt that therewould have been a vote amongthe Board members for his reten¬tion or expulsion long ago, exceptthat none of the Board* Membersare sure how such a vote wouldturn out. Consequently, they keepputting it off, Bacon said.This uncertainty exists eventhough Bacon believes that allthe board members have made uptheir mind about Willis.BACON SAID THAT, despitethe fact that there is political pres¬sure, ‘Mayor Daley has enoughstrength to control appointmentsand thus assure the retention ofWillis.”Financial powerWillis has absolutely no controlover individual members of theBoard, but he has great power inmaking out the budget, Baconpointed out.‘The Administration is drag¬ging its feet to recruit volunteersin the school system,” Bacon con¬cluded. He also praised SWAPand other similar organizationsfor the ‘fine job they’ve done.”EDITORIALGregory's threat notableDick Gregory’s declaration Thursday night that he wouldlead a block-in of all Chicago transportation if William With¬erspoon is electrocuted as planned seems notable in severalrespects. For one, it is Gregory’s first venture into publicprotest outside of the civil rights movement. For another,alth(jpgh it would not save the life of Witherspoon, the demon¬stration might constitute the pressure that is needed to inducethe (iovernor and the state legislature to abolish capital pun¬ishment. Finally, such a demonstration might show once andfor *11 the extent to which the community abhors capitalpunishment.The only problem with Gregory’s idea, however, is thatthe execution of a mass anti-capital punishment demonstra¬tion might harm the civil rights cause, particularly if such ademonstration is led by Gregory himself. Both northern andsouthern Negroes are confused enough as to where theyshould go now without getting the impression, justified ornot, that one of their leaders is “moonlighting.” What mightgall Negroes even more is that (1) Gregory has stated thatgrasp roots Negro leaders will help him in the block-in and(2) that Witherspoon is w hite.Gregory would make it easier for himself to both keep thefaith of Negroes and enlist helpers if he tied civil rights inwith the Witherspoon capital punishment issue. One obviousway is for Gregory to point out that he is not just protestingthe Witherspoon execution but is objecting to the other elec¬trocutions, the majority of which have been administered toNegroes. Basically, what is needed here is not for one issueto be sacrificed for the sake of the other, but for the Negropopulation to get the idea that they are protesting capitalpunishment and anti-Negro prejudice at once, that they arehaving their cakes and eating them, too.In any case, however, Gregory’s block-in plans must bethought of as a last resort. It would be far better to saveWitherspoon’s life through negotiations, as Gregory himselfindicated, than to protest after the fact. Toward this end, weagain urge that letters be sent to Governor Kerner in Spring-field demanding the commutation of Witherspoon’s sentenceas well as the abolition of capital punishment from the Illinoisbooks. Letters to the editorConstipation plusconsternation is hellTO THE EDITOR:I am a graduate student of thisuniversity in the Department ofGermanic Languages and Litera¬tures, and I have the followingsuggestions, complaints, bitches,or remarks to make:1) Since the revocation of myquarter privileges (I cannot forthe life of me understand why),the Library has become my favor¬ite and only charity. Why have alibrary at ail, if one is requiredto drag a truck-load of books intothe circulation desk every twoweeks? This is a ridiculous re¬quirement for a graduate school.Then, too. the fine of ten centsl>er diem Is an outrage. If thiskeeps up, I and my wife and otherft iends will have to move out ofour apartment and into the Li¬brary, as our housing budget willhave been spent entirely on fines.2) The lighting in the SocialScience Reading Room, as well asin the Modern Language ReadingRoom, is quite inadequate. I real¬ize that the lighting engineers toldyou that it was adequate, and I’llbet they laughed all the way tothe bank. Nevertheless, the blue-green lighting in the SSRR is ade¬quate for exhibiting the merits ofa pseudo-Gothic ceiling, but ithardly does wonders for my eyes.3) Let’s face the facts. 90(,o ofthe graduate students smoke andthere is only one smoking loomin the entire Library with a tenwatt bulb suspended thirty feetabove the floor. Not only is itimpossible to read in there, butyou can hardly see to light yourcigarette. I guess that it’s a chew¬ ing room, but then the paucity ofcuspidors has convinced me thatit cannot be used for that either.4) It seems that the Library isa very Christian place, as it ob¬serves the sabbath for a fulltwenty-four hour period. If youhave an idea on Sunday and needfurther reference material, thenthe best bet is to attend the Churchof your choice, since the circulationdesk is closed-up tight. You .saythat you do not have the adequatestaff? Then get an adequate staff.5) T realize that it is probablya biological failing on my pint,but one does now and again findit necessary to heed the call ofnature when in the Modern Lan¬guage Reading Room. Upon rush¬ing to the mezzanine floor boy’sroom last week. I discovered tomy horror that the toilet had dis¬appeared without a trace. Withcarefully clinched buttocks I beata hasty retreat to the main floor(outside the circulation do.sk>,whereupon I found that the one-holer located there was occupied.11 think my position is clear.)I am sending you this note withthe hope, however faint, that some,if not all, of the above mistakesand or deficiencies will be recti¬fied.Last quarter I dropped in tosee Mr. J Donald Thomas, who,within five seconds, proved to methat he was a highly accomplishedbuck-passer, if nothing more. Hesaid that the forthcoming new Li¬brary Building would take careof ail my problems. This is nodoubt a fine answer for my grand¬children, but by the time the newbuilding is erected in fantasy-land,1 will be both blind and constipated.T. L. MARKEY Gregory tie-up a farceTD THE EDITOR:Dick Gregory’s proposed trans¬portation tie-up on March 22{Maroon, February 39) is a farce.The action would have elementsboth of blackmail and of flailing,pointless revenge, no more becom¬ing to a respected civil rights lead¬er than some recent US actionsin Viet-Nam have been to our na-tional Image.The demonstration cannot p.,ssibly have the salutory effect ofbringing Witherspoon back to life,if in fact he is executed. The per¬petrators of any injustice to With¬erspoon would be, if anything,even less affected by the action.Nor would the demonstration haveany effective relation to the largmcauses of abolition of capital pun¬ishment, civil rights, or injusticein general.RECONSIDERATION OF thisregrettable travesty of sincere,non-violent demonstration is dear¬ly called for. Surely there mustbe more effective ways of express¬ing concern for Witherspoon’s lifeand for the hope that legalize*!state murder be abolished.One might start by holdingpeaceful picketing before March19, around City Hall, or perhapscloser to the source of evil, aroundthe State House in Springfield.In any event, an effort ought tobe made to gain support and sym¬pathy for the cause, and not di¬rect the self-righteous wrath ofthe City of Chicago against someof its citizens from the South Side.PAUL SCHW1ND•‘SUKARNO has activated the south¬ern flank of a gigantic two-prongednutcracker operation now squeezingthe West out of Southeast Asia.This is the objective strategic mean¬ing of what is going on in that theater.The narcotic illusion that a ‘nuclearstalemate’ and Sino Soviet split’have dispelled ‘the main danger’ hasshattered Western unity and Westernresolve at the moment when the Westfaces its greatest <opy cf tH#current iuut of NA-TIONAL REVIEW, writ*to Dept. CP 7, 150 E.35 St., N. Y. 16, N. Y. MUSIC REVIEWMartinon and Lenox 4 play Brahmsdefeat sinceCommunist con¬quest of China,”The Thousandsof Titles We CarryInclude Bestsellersand These Paperbackswhich were just receivedPapers of the ChicagoGroup 1949-1961 : Free-Electron Theory of Con¬jugated Molecules byJ. R. Platt et al. $2.95Papers of the ChicagoGroup 1949-1964: Sys-tematics of the Elec¬tronic Spectra of Con¬jugated Molecules — byJohn R. Plott and Co¬workers at the Labora¬tory of Molecular Struc¬ture and Spectra . $6.95Ourlircal Haslcr$1.00 Prim SaleContinues through ThursdayWaleli lor IheKook SaleStarting Friday, February 26THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave. Even a Brahmsophile wouldhave found last Friday some¬thing of a super-saturatedsolution.The afternoon’s share of thesurfeit was Jean Martinon’s all-Brahms program. First, a light¬weight Academic Festival Over¬ture, with fourth - gear pacing.Since it was, by position, an over¬ture, and, by interpretation,academic, I suppose it would behypercritical to insist that it shouldhave been festive too.Then, the Chicago SymphonyChorus and soloists Maria Staderand Kenneth Smith joined in forthe German Requiem. Tins piecemakes unique demands on perfor¬mers, since Brahms gives themvirtually nothing but a glob of fatto work with, on the principle thatLeoving for New York City LateDuring Spring Vacation? You constill take advantage of the lowerchartered plane fare. Fly to NewYork on Saturday, March 20, re¬turn to Chicago March 28 on pri¬vately run student flight. Fare?Just $64. Interested? Then call869-8968 or 328-5776 soon!CULL DOORSFOR DESKS ANDBENCHES —$6.0022-24” Wide — 80” LongPLYWOODSHELVINGMASONITEMOULDINGSLIBERTY LUMBER GO.6358 S. DORCHESTERTelephone HY 3-1726Closed Saturdays anything ponderous can be palmer!off on the public as profound.Martinon’s tasteful but unimagini-live performance provided littlerelief from Brahms’ spiritual steril¬ity. He tried neither to dispel themurky colors (as one might haveexpected from his blazing perfor¬mance of the Third Symphonyearlier in the year), nor to exag¬gerate them; and with this work,a. faith ful-to-the-composer’s-in ten-tions approach does little for any¬one but insomniacs.THE QUIETEST PASSAGESwere the most successful, for hereMartinon was almost able to con¬jure up the mystery which markshis best performances. But theclimaxes were always forced, thefugues mechanical. The chorus wasgood, but hardly at its best, seeming at times puzzled by what wasgoing on. And Miss Stader’s voice,excellent for Mozart, had to strainloo much 1o fit into the Brahmsiantext ures.The brass, by the way, had a badtime of it; the notes were right,but the tone was curiously fuzzy,sounding almost like inner-groovedistortion.The bad taste left by the faluousRequiem was washed away by theLenox Quartet, who completedtheir evening concert with Brahms’magnificent C Minor Quartet. Theensemble has mellowed since theirappearance here two years ago,and if they still have a majorweakness, it is a monotony of ap¬proach. Their Mozart • K. 590) and their Brahms were very similar:almost too rich and expressive forMozart, at times almost too relaxedfor Brahms. It came across verywell, however, because they werealways deeply involved in whatthey were doing. Only the thirdmovement of the Brahms fell apart . „fot» want of tension and cohesion,THE PEAK OF their program Return of the Woolfwas the Bartok Fourth Qua»let. was how the composer of the *'Minor Quartet could have turn*'*!out the Requiem. But that's tooeasy. A real problem is how thecomposer of the Requiem couldhave written the C Minor Quartet.Peter Rabinowitxwhich, although it lacked the pre¬cision and clarity of a Juiiliardperformance, had intensity, drive,and sardonic wit to spare. Theother work on the program wasPerkins’ Three Miniatures, sim¬pler and more immediately appeal¬ing than his other works whichhave been pei formed here. It wasimpressive even following tile Bar¬tok . . . which is saying quite abit.One possible query of the dayA listing of summer jobopportunities is now avail¬able at the office of careercounseling and placement.Students may obtaincopies by visiting the Office,second floor, Reynolds Club;the Personnel Office, Ingle-side Hall; or the UniversityStudent Employment Serv¬ice, Reynolds Club base¬ment. Individual copies arealso being distributed tocollege advisers and to allgraduate departments. Edward Albee’s Who’sAfraid of Virginia Woolf, citedby the New York DramaCritics as the best play of the1962-3 season, will return to Chi¬cago for a two week engagementat the Studebaker theatre fromMarch 3 to 33.Star ring in the evening companyare Vicki Cummings and KendallClark, in the roles of Martha andGeorge, a disillusioned couplewhose marriage is disintegratingas a result of alcohol and insult.DUE TO THE EXCEPTIONALdemands cf these roles, the mat¬inee performances will be player!by Fayne Blackburn and WilliamGibberson. Bryarly Lee and DonaldBriscoe will play Nick and Honey,at all per formances.Who’s Afraid Of Virgin aWoolf, directed by Alan Schneid¬er and designed by William Hit¬man, will be performed ea<h eve¬ning of its run at 8 pm, withWednesday and Saturday matineesstarting at 2.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 23, 1965 A Trip To EuropeFor Less Than $100Switzerland — The International Travel Establishment will locate jobopportunities in Europe for anyone who likes the idea of a fun-filled,low cost trip to Europe. Jobs are available in ail fields throughoutEurope. Interested students should send $2 to Search Dept., ITE, 68Herrengasse, Vaduz, Liechtenstein (Switzerland) for a complete, do-it-yourself prospectus which includes the key to getting a job in Europe,the largest European job selection available, instructions, money savingtips and conclusive information mating a trip to Europe (includingtransportation) possible for less than $100. KROGER'S STORE5030 S. HARPERISSTILL OPENAND WILL REMAIN SOTO SERVE YOU!Gilman hits FBI in Miss.The main contribution ofthe Mississippi Summer Proj¬ect of last year was to initiatelarge numbers of Northernstudents to the problems of theNegro in that state, according toHubert D. Gilman, a project work¬er who was a UC College student.Gilman spoke Sunday after¬noon at Ida Noyes, during a briefvisit to Chicago.THE SUMMER PROJECT, organized by the Council of Fed¬erated Organizations <COFO),was originally designed to workwith Negroes in the state in sev¬eral ways. "Freedom Schools,"eommunity centers, and voter reg¬istration were parts of the pro¬gram.Concentration on registrationGilman worked in Canton as aFreedom School teacher last sum¬mer, then went to West Point,a town in the northeast coiner ofthe state. The West Point proj¬ect is now concentrating mostly on voter registration, as are mostlocal projects at this time.Gilman pointed out that Ne¬groes in several Missisippi townshad already organized communityprojects before last summer, andthese would no doubt have con¬tinued without an influx of volun¬teers from the North.The presence of many whitestudents as part of a nationally-organized project did focus nation¬wide and worldwide attention onMississippi, however, Gilman com¬mented. Because of the publicityconnected with the project, heremarked, President Johnson feltmore political pressure to investi¬gate vigorously the murder ofthree COFO workers than heotherwise would have.OILMAN WAS CRITICAL ofthe role of federal law enforce¬ment officers, especially the FBI.He said they are empowered byfederal statute to arrest anyonecaught denying a person of his civil rights. He said that he hasnever heard of any arrests ofSouthern deputies who beat andjail Negros trying to register tovote, jCorporations have no troubleThought many persons tend tospeak of Mississippi as some sortof foreign country, cut off fromthe rest of the US, Gilman said,large corporations and militarybases, which bring in greatamounts of money, never haveany problems in dealing withMississippi officials.The fight for civil rights for theSouthern Negro will be a verylong and difficult one, Gilmanfeels. The Negro must continueto persist in his growing demandsfor full legal rights and equallaw enforcement. He must alsocontinue to organize Negro com¬munities to carry on the struggle.While white Northern studentscan help, this is mainly the jobof the local residents, Gilman con¬cluded. Franklin: Black Muslims playsignificant role in movementFive faculty win Inland $$ The Black Muslims, theAmerican Negro black nation¬alist group which is in theheadlines in the light of theassasination Sunday of rival blacknationalist leader Malcolm X, hasplayed "a rather significant role”in the Negro civil rights movement,said professor of history JohnHope Franklin, Sunday.Speaking at Breasted Hall atthe end of a talk on "Two Cen¬turies of the Negro Appeal forJustice,” Franklin stated that theBlack Muslims had done a servicein "goading, annoying, and ex¬pressing the utter despair of manyNegroes” at the slow course ofracial justice in the US.HE NOTED THAT the extremistideas expressed by the Muslimshad frightened many moderatewhites into doing something toadvance Ihe cause of the AmericanNegro. Franklin denounced, how¬ ever, the Black Muslims’ racistviewpoint.Makes no predictionFranklin said that, as yet, hecould make no prediction of theeffect of the murder of MalcolmX on the black nationalist move¬ment. No one at this moment, henoted, knows who killed Malcolm,nor anything about the secret or¬ganization that Malcolm headed.Franklin's lecture was the lastin a series of three talks in the"Challenges to Human Rights”series sponsored by Hillel. Theother two lectures dealt with thesituation in South-West Africa andthe treatment of Je w s in theSoviet Union.In his talk, Franklin called ontoday’s civil rights "activists” toget a historical perspective on thecivil rights movement, seeingthemselves as part of a two-cent¬ury long fight by the AmericanNegro for freedom and equality.Five members of the facultyof the College have been se¬lected to receive Inland SteelFaculty Fellowships for 1965-66. The fellowships will provideihcm with funds for travel and re¬search during a quarter out ofresidence. The recipients repre¬sent the fields of art, English, political science, and sociology. Theyare: William J. Farrell, assistantprofessor of English; Ralph M.Lerner, associate professor of thesocial sciences; Donald N. Levine,assistant professor of sociology;Perrin H. Lowrey, associate pro¬fessor of humanities and English;and Paul B. Moses, assistant pro¬fessor of art.The fellowships were establishedin the Spring of 1964 on the basisof a grant from the Inland SteelFoundation, and are designed topromote the welfare of the College of the University, its faculty andits students. The Inland SteelFaculty Fellowships are designedto provide support for selectedmembers of the College facultyduring their quarter out of resi¬dence, so that they can devotethemselves entirely to their re¬search.Farrell received his PhD fromthe University of Wisconsin in1961 and joined the UC facultythat same year. During the Sum¬mer Quarter of 1 9 6 5, Farrellwill devote his efforts to a criticalanalysis of style in Die eighteenth-century novel, a project begunwith his doctoral dissertation.Lerner is co-editor of Readingsin American Democracy; Readingsin American Foreign Policy; andReadings in World Politics, pub¬lished in 1959 by Oxford Univer¬sity Press, as well as several otherworks in political philosophy andforeign policy. He received h i sGrad students eligible for$10 thousand from NDEABeginning in the autumn of 1965-66, graduate students mayborrow up to $2500 per year, and up to $10,000 altogether,from NDEA funds according to their need.Up to 50 per cent of such loans are subject to forgivenesswhen students accept teaching — — r ,~7~positions in private or public edu- or dauShle,j s amlauls o£ nml foHon at any level. The net effect 8ffdua,e st“den,a fu'lfis to convert half Ihe loans into ““T m.ore hb.elal ,han ,hey a,e'fellowship ” for undergraduates.reilowsMps. Finally, the overall limit ofAs in the past, these loans are j^qqqo per student in loans frominterest free as long as a student funds includes any loansis enrolled and for one year there- tha( he Jias laken as an under¬after. Payments are not required „raduate, so that even if he hasuntil the beginning of the third need he mi„ht not be able to oh-year after the student leaves ta5n ’$2 500 a year for four yearsschool, although if payments are of „)aduate study,reduced to monthly or quarterly °installments they would begin inthe second year after leaving. Theforgiveness feature operates byreducing a student’s total indebt- Kd,tor.,11.(i,1|ef Robert F. Leveyedness by 10 per cent each year .... .„ „for the first five years that he BusinessManaRer Mtchael kasseraleaches, and forgiveness is no k “to iiiton s»«?on cfeiSmaSlonger restricted to those who —Joan Phillipsleach in public elementary and c*mPus Ne«s Editor Dan Hertzbergvn..nn,isn„ . Assistant Campus Newssecondary schools. Editor Dinah EsralEditor, Chicago LiteraryIT IS STILL necessary to es- Review Martin Micha*lsontablish ‘need” in order to obtain CuUnre-Feature Ed,tor. David H. R.chteran NDEA loan, and the amount of co-ordinators.Bill Caffrey, Steve Wofsyloan obtainable varies with the Rewrite Editorneed. However, although the law Music Editor Peter Rabinowitzrequires some evidence of a par- f^55ent s ability to support his son Editor Emeritus John T. WilliamsChicago Maroon PhD in 1953 from UC and joinedthe faculty in 1957 after havingdone post-doctoral work at Cam¬bridge U n i v e r s i t y in 1955-56.Lerner’s research is concernedwith a study of the Founding Fa¬thers’ expectations concerning theplace of the judiciary in the Amer¬ican political system.Levine is chairman of one ofthe two major general educationcourses in the social sciences inthe College. He is the author ofseveral articles dealing with soci¬ological methodology and withproblems of the new nations. Hishook, Wax and Gold: Explorationsin the Ethiopian Soeiety and Cul¬ture, is about to be published bythe UC Press. Levine plans to usethe fellowship to work in the gen¬eral field of the sociology of cul¬ture.Lowrey is the author of TheGreat Speekled Bird ami OtherStories, published in 1964 by Hen¬ry Regnery Press, as well as nu¬merous reviews, articles, and shortstories. Prior to the completion ofhis doctorate in 1956 at UC, Low¬rey was an instructor at VassarCollege, a position which he leftto join the UC faculty in 1957.Since 1962, he has been the headof the humanities section of theCollege. While on leave this pastSummer Quarter, he used the In¬land Steel Fellowship award toaccomplish further work on. anovel concerning jazz musiciansin the 1930’s.Moses joined the UC faculty asan instructor in 1962, after havingcompleted his M.A. in art at Har¬vard University. He put the InlandSteel Fellowship to use this pastSummer Quarter doing researchfor a book on Daumier and politi¬cal caricature in the early nine¬teenth century as well as a studyon the graphic art of Degas forthe Soeiete des Arts at Metiers. ‘White America’ herePeace Corps invades UCThe Peace Corps will invade UC next week.Descending in force, members of the Peace Corps staff andex-volunteers will man information centers in New Dorm,the bookstore, and Mandel Hall corridor from March 1 to 6to answer questions and distribute —literature on specific projects. degrees, 15 have a bachelor’s de-A non-competitive hour-long gree, two are lawyers, one hastest will be administered at 9, 1 an MD, and one has his PhD Tenand 4 ,laily, beginning Wednesdw, o0w uc graduates hav(, al,.ea(,March 3 and continuing through ® JTuesday, March 9. The test Satur- reLimed trom two-year stintsday, March 6, will be at 10 am. abroad.All tests will be given in the IdaNoyes Theatre. Persons who wishto take the test must bring acompleted Peace Corps applica¬tion to the test with them. In White America, the long-1HE PEACE CORPS is still running, prize-winning off-receiving requests for thousands „ ' ,of additional volunteers to serve Bt’oadway play, will be inin a great variety of projects in Mandel Hall for one weekthe fields of education, health, on]y) February 23-28.public works and community de- ~ ,velopment. About 10,000 volun- Wu1ten by Martin Duberman,teers are now serving in 46 coun- professor of history at Princeton,tries. Three thousand volunteers the material consists entirely olwill be returning home this year authentic documents,and need to be replaced. On-the-spot newspaper accountsDo not- need skills give added tension to this seriesApplicants do not necessarily of scenes, which begins with ahave to have highly developed 1788 account of the slave trade,skill. Liberal arts graduates with carries us through the Reconstruothe right personality character- tion to the era of the Ku KIuxistics and emotional maturity can Klan, into the “Letters fromsuccessfully fill many assign- Father Divine,” and reaches amerits. ' climax with a fifteen-year-old girl’sVolunteers serve for two years, reactions to integration in Littleincluding two to three months of Rock.training. They receive a modest Tickets are available by mailliving allowance plus a 'readjust- from UT. Prices are $5 and 3.50,ment allowance” of $75 for each main floor, and $2.50, unreservedmonth of service. balcony. 50c student discount. PerFORTY-TWO volunteers from formances are at 8:30 pm, withUC are now serving overseas. Of matinees Saturday and Sunday atthis number, 18 have Master’s 2:30. Call extension 3581.Leaving tor New York City EarlyDuring Spring Vacation? You canstill take advantage of the lowerchartered plane fare. Fly to NewYork on Thursday, March 18, re¬turn to Chicago March 28 on pri¬vately run student flight. Fare?Just $64. Interested? Then call869-8968 or 328-5776 soon!B’NAI B’RITH HILLEL FOUNDATIONPresentsSHL0M0 CARLEBACNAn Evening of Hasidic Spirituals and FolksongsSaturday Night, February 27 — 8:00 p.m.IDA NOYES HALL —CLOISTER CLUB1212 E. 59th StreetAdmission One DollarTickets Available ofr the Door or ot Hillel House TYPEWRITERSTAPE RECORDERSSLIDE PROJECTORSRent with an option to buy.Three months rental pay¬ments deducted from salesprice.THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave. The University of Chicago TheatreAnnouncesDirect From New YorkWinner of the 1963-64"Best Show Off-Broodway"AWARDIN WHITE AMERICAFeb. 25 to 28 ot 8:30 pm Feb. 27, 28 ot 2:30 pmMANDEL HALL57th and University Ave. $5.00, $3.50, $2.50SlutleiiGl'aciilly Hi scon n I — .»•!#• Off Any TicketTickets On Sale — Mandel Hall Box OfficeFeb. 23, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Undergraduate examination schedule—winter 1965 Schwartz here Wed.» Roniamin T Srhu/art7 an ..The time and place of examinations not listed below will beannounced by instructors. Evening classes (section 91 >, unless other¬wise announced by the instructors will have examinations at regularclass times. Please carefully note room assignments for examinations.Anthropolgy 212 Wed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 RY 251Art 240 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 CL 16Art 260 Fri Mar 19 8-10 CL 10Biology 112 Wed Mar 17 4 6sec AA. CA. EA, GA — AB 133sec BA, DA, FA, GB — B 106, B 105EB, FB — K 107set AB, BC. CB, DB 1Biology 114 W'ed Mar 17 4-6 CL 10Biology 202 Fri Mar 19 8-10 B 106Chemistry 106 Wed Mar 17 8-10 RY 251Chemistry 116 Wed Mar 17 8-10 K 107Chemistry 132 Wed Mar 17 8-10 K 103Chemistry 221 W'ed Mar 17 8-10 E 133Chemistry 262 Fri Mar 19 8-10 K 103Chinese 202 = Wed Mar 17 1:30-3.30 CL 16Soc. Sci 211, OH 251Economics 202 sec 01 Fri Mar 19 8-10 SS 302Economics 240 W'ed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 BE 24Economics 250 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 SS 107Education 202 sec 01 Fri Mar 19 8-10 J 105English 102 Mon Mar 15 10.30-12.30 AB 101, K 107S 106, E 133E 202, RO 2CL 10English 118 Thu Mar 18 10.30-12.30sec BA — BE 24 sec FA — RY 358sec CA — K 110 sec GA — - RY 362English 208 Wed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 Law BEnglish 220 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 CL 20English 232 Wed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 BE 24English 237 sec 01 Mon Mar 15 10.30-12.30 CL 16English 240 Tue Mar 16 1.30-3.30 B 106English 252 Thu Mar 18 1.30-3.30 CL 16English 259 Fri Mar 19 8-10 CL 20English 285 W'ed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 S 106English 288 Thu Mar 18 1.30-3.30 CL 11English 292 sec 91 Tue Mar 16 4-6 CL 16French 101 Mon Mar 15 8-10 CL 16French 102 Mon Mar 15 8-10 K 107French 105 Mon Mar 15 8-10 E 133French 202 Mon Mar 15 8-10 S 106French 203 W'ed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 K 304French 204 Tue Mar 16 10.30-12.30 WB 202French 208 Wed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 WB 202French 211 Wed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 WB 202French 231 Thu Mar 18 10.30-12.30 WB 202Geography 205 W'ed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 RO 28Geography 253 Tue Mar 16 4-6 CL 11Geophysical Sciences 132 Tue Mar 16 1.30-3.30 RO 39Geophysical Sciences 272 Thu Mar 18 4-6 RO 27Geophysical Sciences 282 Wed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 RO 39German 101 Mon Mar 15 8-10 CL 20German 102 Mon Mar 15 8-10 LMHGerman 105 Mon Mar 15 8-10 CL 10German 231 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 WB 202Greek 102 sec 101 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 CL 31Greek 295 Wed Mar .17 4-6 S 200History 132 Mon Mar 15 1.30-3.30 LMHHistory 212 Wed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 SS 107History 222 Fri Mar 19 8-10 CL 16History 229 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 S 106History 232History 241 = Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 RO 27Soc Sci 271History 246 = Fri Mar 19 1.30-3.30 CL 16Soc Sci 246 Wed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 CL 20History 252 Thu Mar 18 4-6 SS 108History 262 Fri Mar 19 8-10 RO 2History 272 sec 01 W'ed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 RO 2History 290 Tue Mar 16 1.30-3.30 SS 305Humanities 112 Thu Mar 18 1,30-3.30 LMHHumanities 122 Thu Mar 18 10.30-12.30 LMHHumanities 202 Thu Mar 18 1.30-3.30 RO 2Humanities 284 Tue Mar 16 4-6 CL 20Ideas and Methods 202 Wed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 W'B 102Ideas and Methods 212 Fri Mar 19 1.30-3.30 CL 20Ideas and Methods 252 Thu Mar 18 4-6 S 200Italian 102Japanese 202 =» Mon Mar 15 8-10 CL 11Soc Sci 216, OH 254 W'ed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 OR 208Latin 102Linguistics 225 = Mon Mar 15 10.30-12.30 RO 26Antliro 371 Tue Mar 16 8-10 SS 107Mathematics 101 Tue Mar 16 8-10 E 203Mathematics 102 Tue Mar 16 8-10 LMHMathematics 151 Tue Mar 16 8-10sec 12 —CL 16 sec 23 — S 200sec 21 and sec 31 — RO 2Mathematics 152 Tue Mar 16 8-10sec 11 —SS 108 sec 41 — WB 203sec 12 — SS 106 sec 42 —CL 20sec 21 — CL 10 sec 51 — E 305sec 31 — S 106 sec 71 — RY 358Mathematics 153 sec 51 Tue Mar 16 8-10 E 207Matin'matics 153 sec 53 Tue Mar 16 8-10 RY 362Mathematics 203 sec 12 Tue Mar 16 8-10 E 3123Iathematies 203 sec 32 Thu Mar 18 4-B E 305Mathematics 204 sec 21 Fri Mar 19 8-10 E 207Mathematics 204 sec 41 W'ed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 E 3053Iathematics 204 sec 51 Tue Mar 16 8-10 E 308Mathematics 205 Tue Mar 16 10.30-12.30 E 305Mathematics 241 W'ed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 E 308Mathematics 251 Fri Mar 19 8-10 E 203Mathematics 252 sec 31 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 E 30 5Mathematics 252 sec 41 Wed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 E 207Mathematics 253 W'ed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 E 207Mathematics 261 Tue Mar 16 1.30-3.30 E 312Mathematics 274 W'ed Mar 17 8-10 E 305Mathematics 281 Thu Mar 18 1.30-3.30 E 308Music 205 Fri Mar 19 8-10 MUS 101Music 222 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 MUS 101Music 246 Fri Mar 19 8-10 MUS 101Philosophy 204 Thu Mar 18 1.30-3.30 Law BPhilosophy 232 Tue Mar 16 8-10 K 110 Philosophy 249 Thu Mar 18 4-6 WB 102Philosophy 251 see 91 Tue Mar 16 4-6 K 110Philosophy 258 Wed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 RO 27Physical Sciences 106 Thu Mar 18 8-10students A - M — K 107students N - Z — RO 2Physics 112 Thu Mar 18 8-10 E 133Physics 122 W'ed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 E 133Physics 132 Fri Mar 19 8-10 E 133Physics 201 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 E 133Physics 217 Fri Mar 19 8-10 E 202Physics 222 Wed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 E 312Physics 226 Wed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 E 202Physics 236 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 RY 251Political Science 200 Tue Mar 16 4-6 B 106Political Science 230 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 E 202Psychology 203 Thu Mar 18 4-6 B 106Psychology 204 Thu Mar 18 1.30 3.30 LX 4Psychology 212 =Biopsych 212 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 AB 101Russian 102 Mon Mar 15 8-10 RO 2Russian 202 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 W'B 103Russian 205 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 W'B 203Russian 276 W'ed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 S 200Social Sciences 112sec BA, BB, BC, 91—RO 2all other sections—LMH Tue Mar 16 1.30-3.30Social Sciences 122 Tue Mar 16 10.30-12.30 LMHSocial Sciences 221 =OH 261 Tue Mar 16 10.30-12.30 LX 6Social Sciences 231 =OH 271, Anthro 345 Fri Mar 19 1.30-3.30 RO 2Social Sciences 241 Fri Mar 19 1.30-3.30 E 133Social Sciences 246 =History 246 Wed 1 Mar 17 1.30-3.30 CL 20Social Sciences 261 see 91 Tue Mar 16 4-6 RO 27Social Sciences 262 Fri Mar 19 8-10 Law BSocial Sciences 271 =History 211 Fri Mar 19 1.30-3.30 CL 16Social Sciences 275 Fri Mar 19 10.30-12.30 RO 28Sociology 203 Fri Mar 19 8-10 SS 105Sociology 206 =Sociology 320 Thu Mar 18 1.30-3.30 SS 305Spanish 102 sec 01 Wed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 BE 10Spanish 105 W'ed Mar 17 10.30-12.30 K 304Spanish 202 Mon i Mar 15 1.30-3.30 K 304Statistics 200 sec 01 W'ed Mar 17 1.30-3.30 E 202Zoology 205 Wed Mar 17 1.30 3.30 Z 14Zoology 260 Wed Mar 17 8-10 Z 14 Benjamin I. Schwartz, an au¬thority on Chinese Communism,will deliver a free public lectureon Wednesday, on "Chinese Com¬munism in the Light of ChineseHistory.”The lecture will be given at 4:30pm in Breasted Hall. No admis¬sion ticket will be required.Schwartz is a professor of his¬tory and government in the EastAsian Research Center of HarvardUniversity. His lecture will besponsored by the Committee onFar Eastern Civilizations.HE IS THE author of a highly-regarded analysis, Chinese Com¬munism and the Rise of Mao(Harvard University Press, 1951*.Concerning Schwartz’s book,Chinese Communism and the Riseof Mao, Hugh Seton-Watson, Professor of Russian History in theUniversity of London, writes thatit "is the first really serious an¬alysis of the Chinese communistmovement that is free from pro-Chinese or anti-Chinese bias, Mar¬xist or ex-Marxis or anti-Marxistblinkers.”SE Asia talk setAn ad hoc committee whichhopes to promote discussion of thecurrent crisis In Southeast Asiawill hold its first meeting this Fri¬day at 2:30 in the Reynolds Clubsouth lounge.The purpose of the group istwofold: first, it hopes to spreadinformation about the Vietnam si-uation. Second, It hopes to stir upstudent-faculty discussion on p<>litical matters generally.Friday’s meeting will be concerned specifically with US in¬volvement in South Vietnam. Thespeakers will be announced in theFriday Maroon.CLASSIFIED A-DSPERSONALExperienced, responsible & literate youngsecretary-typist seeks Job 20-30 hrs. aweek, on/near campus at $2-plus per hr.Now or at beginning of spring quarteras desired. Extensive and diverse experi¬ence and responsibilities within Univer¬sity last 4 years. References. Ext. 4268-9;after 6 pm, 288-8432.Pasadena College student would liketo start correspondence with UC studentswho don’t like popular music. Write:George Frederick, JR. 281 Crescent Drive,Pasadena, California.WASHED OUT?? REVITALIZEWITH A CLASSIFIED AD! Anyone having Information abou<THEODORE RUSSEL ROTH,believed to have been an engineer adthe University of Chicago in the past20 years, please contact Eve Hochw&ld,MI 3-9386 or the Maroon office.HELP WANTEDJUNIOR SECRETARYRapidly growing business needs a young ra„secretary-stenographer full time. Excel- French, Italian, call 363-4289.•40 00. See H. Juris, HaakeU ID or call348-5817 after 7^ p.m.WALTZ Electronic Flashgun, battery orAC operated, battery AC cord Included.•25.00. See H. Juris, Haskell ID or oali348-5817 after 7 pm.TUTORINGFor courteous, personal tutoring In Ger-APOLOGIES to Nancy Chase, finestentertainment chairman ever, for omis¬sion from WASH PROM program.BLACKSTONE HALL COFFEE HOURTonight, 9-11. 5748 Blackstone.FREE COFFEE lent skills, pleasant personality andsome contact with public necessary. Forprivate Interview call Mrs. Sutton, HydePark Federal Savings and Loan Asso-ciation, MU 4-6000.TYPING & EDITING SWAP YOURS x 3587!APTS TO RENTNEAR CAMPUS—324-2089FOR SALEWANTED: One pair of balls. ContactRich Freer. (Y.O.) Dining rom. set; living rm. pieces; rugs;lamps. Must sell. Call 643-2630.KNIGHT tape recorder, Tnono recordstereo playback w/mike, takeup spool, STUDENTS Si UNIVERSITY EMPLOYESONLY! 4-rm. apts., $90.00; 5-rm. apt.,•95.00. 6104-10 Ellis. To see call RE 4-4141.Unlv. of Chicago 15 min. away! Lg. bdrmapt. 2nd fir., sep. dining rm., $110. New¬ly decorated - refinished floors - 2 biles,shops - beach - IC trans.Draper Si Kramer 324-86004-ROOM summer sublease for marriedcouple, $86 mo. May 22-Sept. 2. CallExt. 2913, HY 3-4113.Calendar of Events(Editor’s note: With this calendar,the MAROON begins a new policy.From now on, Tuesday calendars willcontain a listing of Friday and Satur¬day events, to the extent that theyare known, in order that weekendplans may be made in advance. TheFriday calendar will remain the same.Friday and Saturday listings will bereprinted on Friday and updated.There is no change in calendar dead¬lines.)Tuesday, February 23VARSITY WRESTLING MEET: UC vs.Illinois Technical College, Bartlett Gym,4 pm.SEMINAR: “Some Neurological ProblemsApproached Through Tissue Culture,”Margaret Murray, professor of anatomy,Columbia University, Anatomy 101,4:30 pm. FOLK DANCING: International House,7:30 pm.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Hillel, 7:30pm.Wednesday, February 24LECTURE SERIES: “Timing of Tran¬scription and Translation in EmbryonicDifferentiations,” Fred H. Wilt, dept, ofbiology, University of California, Zoolo¬gy 14, 4 pm.LECTURE: “Chinese Communism inthe Light of Chinese History.” Benja¬min I. Schwartz, professor of history, LECTURE: “Maobiavelli and the Cri¬tique of Humanist Historiography.”Hanna H. Gray, associate professor ofhistory, Ida Noyes Library, 8 pm.Friday, February 26LECTURE: “Metabolic Aspect* of IonTransport,” John B. Hanson, Univer¬sity of Illinois. Botany 106. 4 pm.VARSITY TRACK MEET: Field House,4 pm.LECTURE SERIES: "Cancer,” “Studieson the Mechanism of the Action of theTerephthalanilides In Leukemia.” Jos-Harvard University, Breasted Hall, 4:30 eph H. Burchenal, Sloan-Kettering In-pm.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins.University Carillonneur, RockefellerChapel, 5 pm.FOLK DANCING: Country dancers, IdaNoyes, 8 pm.LECTURE SERIES: “Dante's SeventhCentenary," “The Structure of theDivina Commedla,” Bernard Weinberg,professor of romance languages andliterature, Soc Scl 122, 8:30 pm.Thursday, February 25Joanna de Keyser, cellist, ac- lecture: “On the Nature of inoom-, , . . plete Anti-Rh Antibodies,” William J.compained by pianist Jeanne Bam- Mandy, dept, of medicine. University, ... . of California. Ricketts North 1, 4 pm.berger, will give a recital on Fn- theatre: ”in White America,” MandeiFebruary 26, in the Law Hal1, 8:30 pm’Cello concert Fri. stltute, Billings P-117, 5 pm.MOVIE: “Father Brown” and “TheGreat Chase,” Billings P-117, 7:30 pm.CONCERT: Joanna De Keyser, cellist.Law School Auditorium, 8:30 pm.THEATRE: "In White America,” MandeiHall, #:30 pm.LECTURE: “The Experience of God Inthe Classical Kabbalah,” Otto Leh¬mann, visiting lecturer In Bible, Col-leve of Jewish Studies, Hillel, 8:30 pm.Saturday, February 27VARSITY FENCING MEET: UC vs. OhioState and Iowa, Bartlett Gym, 12:30pm.FOLK MUSIC: Hasidic spirituals andfolk songs, led by Shlomo Carle bach.Ida Noyes, 8 pm.day, February 26,School Auditorium.The program includes La Foiia Neqro History Club in fund-raisinq driver TV /T «-% TTnnlolfi ATa OCHICAGO MAROON by Marais, Bach’s Suite No. 2,Bartok’s First Rhapsody, theBeethoven Sonat No. 3, and thePanipana No. 2 of Ginastera.»nss DE KEYSER is presentlya Fellow in the UC ContemporaryChamber Players; Mrs, Bamber¬ger is a faculty member.The concert begins at 8:30.Tickets are $1; 50c for students,two hundred free tickets for UCstudents are available on a first-come-first-served basis at the mu- andFeb. 23, 1965 sic department, 5802 Woodlawn. A Chicago Negro history group Hauser, Robert Havighurst,is currently sponsoring a city-wide Robert McKersie.drive to raise funds in onier that CLE“driVe Z,„ , „ , be highlighted by a dinner andMississippi Freedom Schools may cultural display on March 13. War-be equipped with libraries of Negro ren Bacon of the Chicago Board ofhistory. Education will speak at the dinThe Frank London Brown Ne- n.er ^ Winrow Moore willgro History Club has been engaged S'n£cket3 lor the dinner are $5in the drive now for approximately and may ^ obtained at the Chatwo weeks. The drive has the sup- tham YMCA, 1021 E. 83rd st., orport of several leading Chicago by mailing a check to the Frankcitizens, including UC faculty mem- London Brown Negro Historybers John Hope Franklin, Philip Club, 9240 S. Emerald st.