Vol. 73 — No. 31 The University of Chicago - 31 Friday, February 26, 1965Wonts 'heterogeoneous community"SG makes statement on LTS Sen. Morse here Tues.to speak on VietnamWayne Morse, Democraticsenator from Oregon, willspeak at Mandel Hall Tuesdayafternoon on the question ofUS disengagement from the war inVietnam.Morse, a former professor anddean at the University or Oregonlaw school, has recently been out¬spokenly critical of current Ameri¬can policy in Vietnam.Student Government is sponsor¬ing the talk, which will take placeat 8:30 pm, following a small re¬ception for the Senator. Last week, Morse issued a state¬ment calling the current involve¬ment in Vietnam “a black pagein American history.”“We should have called uponthe nations who signed the GenevaAccords in 1954 and all the nations■who signed the United NationsCharter to join with us in takingjoint action under one of thosetreaties to enforce the peace andnegotiate an international settle¬ment of this threat to worldpeace,” the statement suggested.The Student Government (SG*Assembly last night called on theUniversity to urge the officialsof the Lutheran Theological Semi¬nar.\ to pick a location for theircampus which would not utilizecentrally located residential landsurrounding UC.At the same time SG voted toappropriate $300 for use in UC’sstudent and faculty SouthernWork Project.The assembly also approved aresolution calling on the board oftrustees to approve reappoint¬ment of emeritus professor of hislory Christian W. Mackauer, thusenabling him to teach past theregular mandatory retirement ageof 05.SG passed a special resolutionurging the Chicago Board of Edu¬cation to renew the contractof Chicago superintendent ofschools Benjamin C. Willis. Theresolution accused Willis of ignor¬ing the major problems facingthe Chicago school system, refus¬ing to consider the school systemas an Integral part of Chicago, andjxM sonally losing the public’s con¬fidence.The main sections of (lie SGAssemblv resolution on the Lu¬theran Theological Seminary fol¬lows:DKULARATION: In accord withthe ideal of an economically heter¬ogeneous and racially integratedcommunity, the 18th Assembly urges that the University admin¬istration and Board of Trustees:1. accept the challenge of creat¬ing an economically heterogene¬ous community in Hyde Park nowthat stable racial integration hasbeen partially achieved in realityand legitimated as an ideal,2. work for the construction ofdesirable public housing withinthe Hyde Park community, includ¬ing dispen sed low-rise public hous¬ing,3. work to see that the renewalof Woodlawn becomes neither aneffort to replace a low class Ne¬gro community with a middleclass white community nor simplyan exercise in power to extendthe University’s boundaries; butrather becomes an effort to dealwith urban problems rather thanan effort to avoid them.In accord with the ideal of aUniversity community which bal¬ances the various uses of land, in¬stitutional and residential, the 18thAssembly also urges the Univer¬sity Administration and Board ofTrustees:1. To urge the officials of theLutheran Theological Seminaryto use a location which dot's notutilize present centrally locatedresidential land and to cooperatewith them in finding such a loca¬tion which is suitable to theirneeds,2. To cooperate with all otherinstitutions which hope to locatein this area in finding suitable lo¬cations which do not further de-Chief economic advisorsees rosy tinge to 1965 prospectsDuring: the past five or sixyears, price stability in the USlias been the best of any in¬dustrial nation in the world,and there is nothing in the generaleconomic picture to indicate infla¬tion tills year, according to Gard-nei Ackley, chairman of Presi¬dent Johnson’s Council of Eco¬nomic Advisors.Aeklbv spoke yesterday after¬noon In Breasted Hall, in a talksponsored by the economics de¬partment.Ackley, considered a specialistin macro-economics, quipped atth<‘ lieglnning of his talk that “ittakes great audacity for spokes¬man for President Johnson’sGreat Society to invade the Chi¬cago school of economics.”SINCE WORLD WAR II. theeconomy has performed very well,Ackley said, even though growthhas been slower and unemploy¬ment higher since 1957 than inthe immediate postwar period.I Hiring the past two years, hesaid, the gross national producthas increaseo ten per cent, whichindicates substantial over all prog¬ress.Between the end of the war andUC won'tThe UC football “class” willdefinitely not play a gameagainst its New York Univer¬sity (NYU) counterpart nextyear, dean of students Warner A.Wick fold the Maroon yesterday.The game, which was suggestedby NYU atliletic director Vic(►heck, was vetoed by Wick afterconsultation with Hass.Wick attributed his decision todie publicity given to the possibiiity Of a UC-NYU game. ‘The news siojis, he noted. The last onescame closer together than the pre¬vious ones and the unemploymentlevel after each was higher titanit had been after the previousone. This trend was broken in1900, however, and there havebeen no recessions since, he ob¬served.Tax cut dominated '64The tax cut dominated lastyear’s economic picture, and waslargely responsible for the growththat year. The auto strike in 19(54has spurred the auto industry toboost production in the first halfof 1965. he said, which meansthey will let production slackenin the second half of this year.The steel industry, too, is pro¬ducing at high capacity, in antici¬pation of a possible strike, andlower production in the secondhalf of the year.AS A CONSEQUENCE of thoseplans, the President’s budget isdesigned to be restrictive duringthe present period, and expansivethe second half. As examples,Ackley noted that the forthcom¬ing cut in excise taxes and therise in Social Security benefits areboth scheduled to otart in July ofthis vear.meet NYUpapers have tried to make a bigthing of this from the start.” hestated, “We don’t want to make acircus out of it.”UC does not, however, object tothe idea of games with like-minedclubs, Wick said, ho noted the UCrugby club’s “happy but unpub¬licized” intercollegiate playingschedule last year.No changes, Wick added areplanned for the UC football “class”at this time. Tennessee project choosesmembers, decides detailsThe Southern Work Project Committee (SWPC) chose 34students and one faculty member as its contingent for itsplanned trip to Fayette County, Tennessee, at their meetingTuesday night.crease residential land use in theimmediate campus area or com¬munity,3. To consider all land uses infuture planning and to balancethese uses of land in a way com¬mensurate with the creation of aviable and lasting economicallyheterogeneous and racially inte¬grated neighborhood,4. To make all university plansfor institutional land use publicto the community and studentbody before finalized so that theycan be discussed and changed, and5. To work to establish a com¬mittee of community interestsfrom both Hyde Park-Kenwoodand Woodlawn, students, faculty,and University planning officalsto discuss continuing universitydevelopment and to attempt tobalance institutional and residen-tital land use.In accord with the ideal of acollege which presents to individu¬al students the alternative of liv¬ing either within or outside of auniversity-controlled and insitu-tional system, the 18th Assemblyfurther urges that the UniversityAdministrtaion and Board ofTrustees:1. Not plan “in the student’sinterest” without thorough con¬sideration of student opinions,2. Not proceed on planning forstudent dormitories with the as¬sumption that the student bodyshould live entirely or predom¬inately in such dormitories eitherby official restriction or lack ofsuitable alternative, and3. Provide for apartment-typestudent housing adjacent to thecampus in any contemplated de¬velopment of increased institu¬tional housing in order to replacerecent and future loses in thehousing market and to supple¬ment that market.Quist- moves — again The group, which will completea community center in Sumervilie,the county seat of Fayett County,will send 17 women, 17 studentmen, and Donald Tucker, assistantprofessor of economies.SWPC’S GROUP IS equallydivided as to graduate studentsand undergraduates. The 34 stu¬dents represent a wide geographi¬cal range. Approximately half ofthem are from the east; one fourthfrom the midwest; and one fourthfrom the west coast.In addition, there is one Germanstudent and one Negro girl fromthe south.Final info on centerInformation as to what definite¬ly needs to be done on the community center was finally receivedin time for the meeting. SWPC.during its week in Tennessee, willbusy itself with laying a cementfloor, finishing off the roof, andpainting and finishing both the in¬side and the outside of the build¬ing.Because their task will costmore than they originally thought.SWPC announced at the meetingthat it has raised its fund-rasinggoal. The new goal is now set at$2500. The original goal was $1500.AS OF NOW, SWPC collectedonly $300. Leaders of SWPC toldthe Maroon that they cannot pos¬ sibly do any substantial work onthe community center with lessthan $1800. They are wiling to askthe 35 members of the group topay their own way but this wouldcost upwards of $45 per person.Thus, the more money raised, thethe better, the leaders said.Ask larger contributionsContributions so far have comeonly from private donors. SWPChopes to get money from churchesand organizations to supplementindividual gifts. Student Govern¬ment last night also alloted $300to SWPC.Furthermore, private cars wouldbe helpful for transportation,SWPC leaders said.All those interested in helpingthe project in any way shouldcontact Mrs. Randy Rappaport,324-4280.The registrar's office an¬nounced this week that ad¬vance registration for springquarter in the divisions willtake place as follows: forphysical and biological set-ences, March 8-12; for hu¬manities and social sciences,March 15-19.DUR project moves businessmanby Dan HertzbergBusinessman Egil Quist wants very badly to stay in the Hyde Park area, but the ChicagoDepartment of Urban Renewal (DUR) seems to be doing its best to assure that he won’t.Quist, owner of Scandinavian Imports, has had his store at various locations in Hyde Parkfor 35 years. In past years, urban renewal projects have forced him to move the site of hisNow the DUR has given Quistlegal notice that he must vacateHis present store at 53rd street andLake Park ave. by March 31 toallow the city to go ahead with itsplans to widen Lake Park.QUIST WILL have no place tomove his business until Octoberat the earliest, when he may lieable to move into a warehousethat he owns, which he is nowrenting to others.“I am being cut out of my live¬lihood,” Quist lamented to aMaroon reporter. He stated thathe was willing to cooperate wtihthe city “within reason,” but thatthe DUR was showing no concernat all for his interests in relocat¬ing himself within Hyde Park.'No consideration'“There should be some consid¬eration for the human being,”Quist said. “It isn’t just sticksand stones involved.”Quist immigrated to the USfrom Norway, and has worked inHyde Park continuously since1930. “I love Hyde Park,” he stat¬ed, noting his service in manyHyde Park business and civicorganizations, including a term aspresident of the Hyde Park Ki-wanis Club,Quist is in favor of urban renewal for Hyde Park. He believes that it has been “wonderful” forthe community. But he believesthat the project to widen LakePark from 57 st. to 47 st., con¬ceived in 1958, is no longer neces¬sary.THE OPENING of the DanRyan Expressway, winch occurredafter the Lake Park project wasapproved, has reduced the LakePark ave. traffic by 50 per cent,Quist claims. “There is never ajam here,” he stated, “even duringrush hour.”Building owned by DURThe building Quist now occupiesis owned by the DUR, whichleased him a temporary place init after he was evicted from hisprevious business site on 57th street as part of another HydePark urban renewal project.The March 31 eviction dategiven to Quist and the other 53rdstreet tenants effected by theLake Park project is fifteen daysearlier than the April 15 date orig¬inally set for them by DUR HydePark-Kenwood supervisor DeloresPrice, as reported in the Febru¬ary 5 issue of the Maroon.The official eviction notices,bearing t ho new March 31 dead¬line date, were signed by MissPrice.Other tenants of the buildingto Ik* demolished include a booK-store, an art gallery, and theHyde Park office of Fifth wardalderman Leon M, Despres.Don’t smash togetherexecution, civil rightsThe editorial of Tuesday, Feb¬ruary 23, stated that “the com¬munity” might “induce” the stategovernment to abandon capitalpunishment by a “block-in” of allChicago transportation if Wither¬spoon is electrocuted. The “onlyproblem” is that a mass anti¬capital punishment demonstrationmight harm the civil rights causeby leading the “confused” Negroesto the impression that the propon¬ent of this “notable” idea, com¬edian Dick Gregory, was “moon¬lighting.”Therefore, "Gregory would makeit easier for himself to both keepthe faith of Negroes and enlisthelpers if he tied civil rights inwith the Witherspoon capitalpunishment issue.” This might bedone by pointing out that the ma¬jority of capital punishmentvictims have been Negroes.WE ARE NOT disputing the as¬sumption that the goads entailed,the abolition of capital punishmentand the full accomplishment ofcivil rights for all victims of dis¬crimination, are eminently desir¬able upon both moral and intellect¬ual grounds. The means suggested,however, seem to hinder the attain¬ment of either one or both of them.The implication in the Marooneditorial that slurring together thecapital punishment and civil rightsmovements would not harm, ormight even help, both causes isbased upon the fallacious assump¬tion that there generally exists asingle, “liberal” frame of mind orpoint of view.Anyone who supports civilrights, the assumption runs, nec¬essarily supports the abolition ofcapital punishment, necessarilysupports the banning of nuclearTake a closer lookat one of thebest made carsin the worldfPEUGECT(Say Pooj' oh)403: Judged one of the 7 bestmade cars in the world by John. Bond, Publisher of Road & Track.404: Designed to beeven better than the 403.tejssgsssgsssfi&jjssssssjsajS404 Station Wagon:Roomy, comfortable, durable.BOB NELSGNMOTORSIMPORT CENTREFull line on display • new & used6052 S. COTTAGE GROVEMidway 3-4501 weapons, necessarily supports the the question of political strategyimmediate withdrawal of U.S. which you consider,troops from South Viet Nam, Of primary importance is theet cetera. question, “What would such aHowever desirable or rational stall-in accomplish?” Looked at insuch an assumption might be, the ideological as well as practicalfact of the matter is that different terms it must be admitted thatindividuals, as well as different more deaths are likely to bestates, take different or “contra- caused by such an action thandictory” stands on these various lives could possibly be saved. Thisissues. conclusion assumes that the stall-By the merger of the civil rights in would be effective — so effec-and capital punishment causes tive, that is, as to frustrate noteach would be weakened, each merely the average driver butwould cut some of the ground out also blockade the ambulance driv-from under its own feet, for the er, the fire-engine driver and theboundaries of the two groups are policeman en route to an emer-not co extensive. A portion of the gency.weaker civil rights advocates -The lives lost resulting fromwould become disenchanted with the failure of these public serv-, x . . ants to perform their much-need-that cause because o ei ed functions cannot, I suggest, hetively stronger ties to the main- lightly dismissed as the pricetenance of capital punishment, and which society must pay for hav-a portion of the less committed ing employed a penalty whichopponents of capital punishment acme, including myself, think isrr f excessive, pointless and inhuman,would become disenchanted with pQr though jt may ^ true thatthat cause because of their rela- every prisoner dying in the elec-tively stronger ties to discrimina- trict chair represents another vic-tion and prejudice. tim of an indefensible notion ofcriminal justice, it cannot be gain-Granted, they would both also sajd that every innocent citizengain some support through the whose death resulted from thecomplimentary process, but this stall-in is any less the victim ofsupport would be more peripheral a perverted concept of what isand less dedicated, its first loyal- justice and how it is to beties lying elsewhere. For the achieved.NOT ONLY DOES THE stall inraise this dilemma of the inno-quickest and most effective pos¬sible accomplishment of thesegoals, the abolition of capital pun- ™ v'i71Im‘-“however,“''it"al^oishment and the attainment of ints t0 the more alcivil rights, the issues must be tjon of acceptable tactics in civilseparated and judged each upon disobedience j should think thatits own merits. perhaps 100 ears strategicallyOUR OTHER disagreements stalled at choice locations at thewith the editorial are over its right time would be sufficientpaternalistic condescension toward to blonk traffic rather extensively,the Negroes and their leaders and And I would be hard pressed tothe proven ineffectiveness of this think of any cause that could nottype of demonstration (a la New recruit 100 car-owning believersYork World’s Fair). Not only are sufficiently convinced of the right-there great problems in co-ordinat- eousness of their purpose,ing such affairs, but they seem to Does not this suggest the eliaot-have little effect, and that mostly ie situation of attacks and coun¬negative, on the vast majority of ter-attacks by warring causes orthe citizenry and their political factions, all fervently convincedrepresentatives at this time. of their particular point, and allWe maintain that larger ag- endangering the public safety?gregates of votes are more “vocal” Is this a tolerable situation in aand have a greater impact upon society which has, it ought notpoliticians in the end than smaller he forgotten, a governmentalaggregates ol votes, usually un- machinery for resolving conflictsable to reach the polls anyway anf^ making changes?because of traffic conditions. I think it is hard to avoid theOpposition to capital punish- conclusion, on the basis of thesement already has wide support in points, that the proposed stall-the country; witness the progress |n *s morally .wrong, irresponsibleof a bill ending capital punishment *n lprms of victimized individuals,in such states as Tennessee and oppressive of a basic lack ofIndiana. This support would not fa,th in the governmental process,be Increased by uniting the civil a process whirh can only work ifrights and capital punishment a . RecTnf'.nt.s of so<^ety detor-causes or by utilizing unpopular, ™inf> ,ha* h. rather than turbu¬lence and force, is the methodexhibitionist tactics while there , .remains open a surer and quicker /!r ™nf_ If.fl a* leastavenue to the same goal. The in a community where the ma-struggle to end capital punishment ^mery is reasonably representa-can now be won on Its own merits ,lve and w?rkable'by rationally convincing the voters PETER R. KOLKERof this state of its worth, as was i , .attempted by the Maroon Forum * * r'■ahmson capital punishment. TO THE MUSIC EDITORWe believe that if the situation When a person becomes tooneeds dramatization, it can be done sophisticated to appreciate theconstructively and would, there- Brahms Requiem, he might as wellfore, join with the Maroon editor- turn in his wand, whether it beial in urging that letters be sent baton, bow, or pencil. Prudenceto Governor Kerner in Springfield dictates that a fellow who has re¬requesting the commutation of gressed to the stage in which heWitherspoon’s sentence as well as calls the Requiem "... a globthe abolition of capital punishment, of fat . . . ” might well lend anWILLIAM E. HERZOG car 1o the musicians who still rel-DAVID L. AIKEN ish it (Martinon and Fischer- Dies-kau among them). Another ideaStall-in morally wrongTO THE EDITOR: might be for the Maroon to takeup a collection around campus in—4 ■CHICAGO MAROONI was both surprised and dis- or<^er to buy back those globs ofmayed to read in today’s Maroon .V°u have been selling to theyour support of Dick Gregory’s Goat-looted Garbage-men on Tues-planned stall-in. While I am per- ^av anft Fridays,sonally in agreement with the To make my point unmistakable:abolition of capital punishment, I perhaps at feasts far beyond thecannot help wondering if a stall- Styx, compressed wafers of jourin is the proper way to attack the 0^a'-s are delicately dissolving onproblem. Though you seem to palates of the presumptuous, whothink the only difficulty with the agonizingly twist their mould-proposed action is that it would encrusted faces toward theundermine other causes Gregory splendid offertory above — vvh’chchampions, I submit that there is transpiring to the tune of theare at least two other fundamental Requiem,problems which greatly transcend BOB SWANRA BINOW ITZ REPLIES:Doesc , i n/r the Brahms Requiemreb. Zo, IVob have any tunes? Just doing his jobTO THE EDITOR:After reading the several arti¬cles on the ease of Bill Wither¬spoon, I wrote to Gov. Kernerasking that the death sentence becommuted.I wish to comment, however, onsomething that is quite beside thepoint, but important. The followingsentence in Gadfly’s article readsmore like a Feiffer cartoon thana serious piece of journailsni.“It will be the sad duty of areluctant executioner to pull theswitch as 4 reluctant guards press4 black buttons in the dynamoroom to send 2c of electricitythrough Witherspoon’s body.”THIS RELUCTANT executioner,says Gadfly, “is vigorously againstcapital punishment.” Furthermore,the poor warden will be pullingthe switch on a “close friend.”After all, he just works there,and is doing his job.ANITA MOKOWITZDisputes Kalian onJews in RussiaTO THE EDITOR:Why am I a Jew? Because peo¬ple .say I’m Jewish. (I’d just assoon be nicesh, but that’s notkosher). After I read a summeryof Prof. Kahan’s talk on "TheStatus of Soviet Jewry” at theHillel House I felt moved to re¬spond by a deep prejudiced con¬viction that Soviet antisemitismtoday is more of a myth that areality — but that it is a conveni¬ent tastey to keep in the fryingpan as an antidote for AmericanNegro uppitiness (i.e. their per¬secution cancels ours).Self-isolation isn’t a conditionnaturally desired, rather it is adefensive mechanism historicallycultivated in an environment ofhostility. And so if I were to im¬agine myself a Soviet Jew in asociety which truly desired myassimilation, I would jump at thechance.But Prof. Kahan intimated that,in fact assimilation is impassibledue to the multiple discriminatorypractices of the Soviet governmentagainst the Jews. I wish to ques¬tion the numerous accusationsProf. Kahan has presented as proofof such alleged discrimination.IT WAS ASSERTED that Jewsare deprived of a higher educationbecause of a quota system. If so,it is a self-defeating system sinceJews, though ranking only eleventhin terms of nationality population within the USSR, stood third inthe number of students attendinghigher institutions of learning.It might also be noted that al¬though Jews consitute 1.1% cfthe Soviet population, they con¬stitute 14.7% of all doctors, 8.5%of all writers and journalists,10.4% of all jurists and 7%. of allthose employed in the creativearts.It was further asserted thatJews are excluded from the powerstructure of the Party. And yetVeniamin Dymshitz (chief econom¬ic planner), and Jacob Kreizer «amilitary head) are both Jewishmembers of the Central Commit¬tee.FA'EN MORE disconcerting isthe fact that there are 400,000Jewish members of the Commun¬ist Party of the Soviet Union.Prof. Kahan further chargesthat the government requires Jewsto list their nationality as Jewishon their passport Instead of thenormal territorial designation. Sey¬mour Topping, however, reportingin the New York ’Times, April 2,1902, contradicts this accusation.He reports that a Jew has the op¬tion, upon getting his passport ofgiving his nationality as eitherJewish or that of the Republic inwhich he resides.The rest of the summary ofProf. Kahan’s lecture discusseshis conclusions based upon pre¬mises whase validity I feel are indoubt I am hopeful that questionswill begin to be raised concerningthis oft-parroted jingle of Sovietantisemitism.DANNY I.AZAARChicago MaroonEditor-in-chief.. Robert F. LeveyBusiness Manager ..Michael KasseraManaging Editor David L AikenAssistants to the Editor, Sharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsCampus News Editor Dan Hertz.be; gAssistant Campus NewsEditor Dinah EsralEditor, Chicago LiteraryReview Martin MlchaelsonCulture-Feature Editor. .David H. RichterPhotoCo-ordinators.Bill Calfrey, Steve WofsyRewrite Editor Eve HoehwaldMovie Editor Kenneth KranizMusic Editor Peter RabinowitzScience Editor Ed SternPoiiUral Editor Bruce FreedEditor Emeritus John T. WilliamsCalendar of EventsFriday, February 26LECTURE: "Metabolic Aspects ol IonTransport,” John B. Hanson, Universityof Illinois, Botany It'd, 4 pm.VARSITY TRACK MEET: Fieldhouse, 4pm.LECTURE SERIES: "Cancer,” “Studieson the Mechanism of Action of theTerephthanalilides in Leukemia,” JosephH. Burchenal, Sloan-Kettering Institute,Billings P-117, 5 pm.MOVIE: Father Brown or The Detectiveand The Great Chase, Billings P-117,7:30 pm.CONCERT: Joanna De Keyser, cellist.Law School Auditorium, 8:30 pm.THEATRE: “In White America,” MandelHall, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: “The Experience of God inthe Classical Kabbalah,” Otto Lehmann,visiting lecturer in Bible, College ofJewish Studies, Hillel, 8:30 pm.Saturday, February 27VARSITY FENCING MEET: UC vs. OhioState and Iowa, Bartlett gym, 12:30 pm.THEATRE: "In White America,” MandelHall, 2:30 and 8:30 pm.FOLK MUSIC: An evening of Hasidicspirituals and folk songs with ShlomoCarlebach, Ida Noyes Hall, 8:30 pm.Sunday, February 28RADIO SERIES: "From the Midway,""Culture in a Mass Society: Music andDrama,” Leonard Meyer, professor ofmusic, and Robert Benedetti, director ofUniversity Theatre, WFMF, 7 am.RADIO SERIES: “The World of the Pa¬perback,” "Review of Memoirs by HairyS. Truman,” Robert C. Albrecht, assist¬ant professor of English and WalteTJohnson, professor of history. WFMF,8:15 am.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins,University Carillonneur, RockefellerChapel. 12:15 pm.THEATRE: “In White America,” MandelHall, 2:30 and 8:30 pm. LECTURE: "The Human Aura,” BeatricePeiman, room 802, 218 S. Wabash, 3 30pm.KOINONIA: Jazz mass presented byFrank Tirro, Lab teacher, 7:15: dinner,6 pm; Chapel House, 5810 S. Woodlawn.RADIO SERIES: "Chicago Dialogue,”professor of sociology Philip Hauser dis¬cusses various aspects of state govern¬ment with Representative Abner Mikva,WIND, 7:05 pm.BRIDGE: Club master point game, IdaNoyes Hall, 7:15 pm.DISCUSSION: "The Radical Right” giv¬en by tbe Rev. Spencer Parsons, 7:30r>m; Brent House, 5540 S. Woodlawn.RADIO SERIES: "The Sacred Note.”choral music by Rockefeller ChapelChoir, directed by Richard Vikstrom,WBBM, 7:45 pm.radio SERIES: “Nlghtline,” public fo¬rum, WBBM, 10 pm.Monday, March 1EXHIBIT: Israeli art, part of Hillers“Israeli Evening,” Ida Noyes Hall, 2 pm.SEMINAR: "The Structure of the MastCell Granule,” D. Lagunoff, assistantprofessor of pathology. University ofWashington. Anatomy 101, 4:30 pm.LECTURE: "Chicago’s Record on Inte¬gration: What Is It Leading To?" LeonI> spree, fifth ward alderman. ShortyHouse Oth floor, Pierce Tower. 9 pm.Tuesday, March 2LECTURE: "The Origins of Segregation.John Hope Franklin, professor of Amer¬ican History, Henderson House, 5th floor.Pierce Tower, 7 pm.OPEN SING: Vivaldi Gloria and BrahmsNanie, conducted toy Margaret Hillis.Chicago Symphony chorus, ReynoldsClub. #1, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: "The Disposable Man — Part7." John P Nordhaus, room 802, 218 S.Wabash. 7:30 nm.ISRAELI EVENING: Israel! folk dancesand sores led bv Trio Aliz, two movies"Off the Beaten Track in Israel.”"Wilderness of Zin.” Moshe Eres, moderatar, Ida Noyes Hall, 8 pm.News museStudents, brass, to discusscommon problems Saturday The lesson of BerkeleyThe student should know thathis professor is interested in teach-Students and administrators session will include Warner Awill meet this weekend at the Wick, dean of students, Wayne C. by Bruce Freed most critical problem is to redressCenter for Continuing Educa- E00#*. dean of the College, George Q 1 v.3* a*,0n at Berkeley last fall sparked by the Free the balance between teaching andtion for an intensive examina- Playe’ dean of undergraduate stu- Speech Movement has turned the glaring spotlight on the research."tion and re-evaluation of Orienta- dents> James Newman, assistant growing problem of student feeling of discontent and aliena¬tion week, the placement program, dean °* students, Albert M. Hayes, tion.the role of the orientation board, examiner, three members With the abortive attempt ofand the advisory system. members^Student Savio and Co* to export. Castro- Peter Rossi of NORC differed and SPcndin^ time wrth him1:30nto 3,:30 there3wmTan o£n °"e ot Maroo'n Key. one s*'e- lheir lustrations to other in his interpretation from bothsession, where all those interested merr‘bcr of Freshman Council, five colleges and universities, the prob- Booth and Rosenheim. In Rossi’s aDOUt ine neca 10 ao researen anain the matters slated for discus- numbers chosen at random from lem, which some thought confined opinion, “the Berkeley riots can be Pubbsh, Eossi says.sion can come and express their the s]udent body, and eight or to the California multiversity sys- correlated with toe meanness of Rossi saw three causes thatviews. nuie faculty members chosen by tParticipants In the two-day work Eocdli.Reveal site plansfor Lutheran Seminary% &•<(«» oo» *»tN\IIff AVIShown above is the basic site plan for the new Lutheran seminary,to be built between University and Greenwood avenues, from 54thplaca to 55th street. The building shown in the middle is the co¬operatively owned apartment building which has so far refused tosell to the seminary. The school's buildings, os shown will be on threesides of the site, leaving the apartment building in the middle.According to Frank Zimmerman, business manager of the semi¬nary, preliminary plans call for one of the three units of the buildingto house the library, which will have room for 300 thousand volumes.Another unit will be an ouditorium seating 600, the approximatesize planned for the student body. Faculty offices will also be withinthis unit, around the sides of the ouditorium.The third unit will house a commons room on the ground floor,with clossrooms on the two floors above.Zimmerman said that detailed architect's plans for the buildingswill not be ready for ot least two or three months. The drawing aboveis simply the basic plan of where the units will be placed.These plans will be explained to representatives of communityorganizations and interested groups by the seminary's architectsnext Thursday. According to Zimmerman, however, it will be onlylor invited guests. He complained that o leader of one of the blockclubs had passed out handbills inviting everybody to come, and thato neighborhood newspaper had reported it os an open meeting.CAN YOU READ THIS?THEN READ THIS!I need a few more musicians who can sing pitches andrhythms accurately to fill out the Bond Chapel Choir fora special performance of my music during the FOTA. Wewill be singing my American Jazz Mass and AmericanJazz Te Deum, and our small group will need a littleaugmentation to balance the instruments. If you can cutthe part and are willing to work, leave your name andnumber at Ext. 2521. I'll call back and arrange an audi¬tion time. If you are a musician I think you'll enjoy theexperience. Frank TirroAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111—-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH —Sales and Servlff •« all hi-fi enulpmewt.24 HR. SERVICE CALLS — $3.00Tape Recorders — Phonographs — AmplifiersPhono Needles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cords was brought home to other toe registration process at many make alienation inevitable unlesscampuses. state universities. Standing in lines they are reversed soon. “FirstBECAUSE OF QUESTIONS now for as long as three days, that stu- teaching is less prestigious in toebeing asked about what has hap- dent begins to feel like a piece of e>es of the faculty and thus, th«*ypened to this college generation. Plastic in an assembly line." are less inclined to put as muchone that has grown up in toe ROSSI ALSO NOTED that “Ber- 1010 11 ”affluent, tensely peaceful fifties, keley is always revolting, proba- “Second, as universities becomeand is coming of age in the fer- bly due to permissible weather larger," he continued “the prob-menting sixties, I talked with three conditions. You couldn't find kids lem "'HI be compounded. AndUC faculty members to elicit the rioting at UC or Harvard in win- thirdly, in the absence of any or-opinions of those who view stu- ter weather." ganizational device to cut theX dents from the other side of the Turning to whether this feeling above factors down, alienation willdesk, whether it be in toe office of student alienation is inevitable set bi.”or the classroom. as universities expand and student- “However, one solution is in theCommenting on the cause of faculty pressures grow, Booth and residential college system whichthe Berkeley disturbances, Dean of Rossi agreed that as universities may break the mass character ofthe college Wayne Booth pointed become larger, the feeling will be- a university and make a place forout: “I don't think the Berkeley comp more likely unless drastic students.”students were alienated from the steP-s are taken. THE COMMENTS OF THESEadministration particularly, but Booth saw the solution in '•'build- three men, all faculty membersfrom toe day-to-day classroom, big small groups within the uni- but concerned with students, pointThey didn’t find the rewards that vwsby in order that students can ou^ the growing need to begin themade studying meaningful and bave a sense of belonging and find serious exploration of ways to copethus, the real protest was over a mebe for themselves." with problems arising from in-toat.” “If students experience a fed- creasing university size and in-On the other hand, Edward big of amorphousness, then rebd- creasing student aloneness.Rosenheim of the English Depart- Iion inevitable. But if they can I^argeness per se is not bad.ment saw the roots of Berkeley’s find local identification, perhaps . , .. 'problems in “the sheer size o< the ln a college within the university, b with the”lv!rai,j;: T.he.lncrea?inf this is very important in dispelling ““ W"hhe added.sures on the faculty to devote lessand less time to students and more tIiatto research and publisliing is also TAKING A SLIGHTLY differ-a contributing factor." ent approach, Rossi felt that “the stall further such occurrences.tity can be destructive. With theproblem made clear by Berkeley,action can now be taken to fore-SENATOR WAYNEMORSEDemocrat’ of Oregonwill speak atMANDEL HALLonTUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1965 at 8:30 P.M.on the topicU.S. POLICY INVIETNAMAdmission: Students 75Others $100Tickets Available ot Mandel HallSax Office or Student Government Office) It' : l Nl’OVMHtUD BY STUDENT GOVERNMENTFeb. 26, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Levi Booth discuss future of revamped College,The future of the College was the topic of a program Monday afternoon, featuring deanof the College Wayne C. Booth, and University Provost Edward H. Levi.Thev spoke in Mandel Hall before a little over 200 listeneis. .. TA GOOD REORGANIZATION creates more problems than it solves^ according to Levi.tc/reorganize^he college, Levi ex- education is primarily intellectual, From our point of view, in fact,pressed the hope that it will lead to and that the business of the col- the very definition of first-classa better confrontation of the Col- liege is to educate our minds as depends on what the faculty andlege’s problems, although it will men rather than aswhat he cae curricuium do, not on what theynot itself solve them all. mere specialists. Though I think abstract senseOne of the problems to be con- he sometimes drew unnecessarily are in any abstract ser e.fronted is that the graduate parts narrow consequences from this BENEATH THE current clichesof the University seem to be formulation, defining “intellec- about * depersonalized educationgenuinely concerned with under- tual” more narrowly than I would tfiere jjes this hard truth: unlessgraduate education, but are un- do, the emphasis was right. My colI e manages somehow toclear about how to show this con- own way of putting it can be * .cern The University has tremen- found in various forms from an- make its educational offering sorious reservoirs of strength which cient Greece to the present. real, so unphony, that it “takes”—could, but are not presently, util- It is our business to discover un]ess somehow the motives andized by the College, Levi said. and transmit those intclkctua meth0ds Qf free inquiry are trans-WHEN LOOKING at our prob disciplines that will enable us tolems said Levi, we must take live genuinely human lives m our ferred fiom the mind, or tneinto’account the uniqueness of own time. We are trying to liber- ulty and the structure of the eur-this institution. We do have many ate minds by educating them to riculum to the minds and heartsproblems but they are not neces- think their own thoughts and not of the stu(jents — the college willsarily the same ones that other parrot the thoughts of other men. faj] our test.Universities have, and when they The test of a college in this Thig does not mean as someare the same their solution is view cannot be the number of would sevm to suggest, that col-probably not the same. Merit Scholars it admits or the je„os must arrange more picnicsLevi mentioned that while serv- number of Scholarship candidates and teajg g0 that students caning as acting dean of the College it graduates; the test is, rather, jearn ^eir teachers are regu-he was very impressed by the how much difference it has made ]ar . But it does mean (hatextent to which the College in-, to the lives of how many students, defining and recruiting a first-vokes strong feelings, mostly posi- how many students have been dags facult and in defining andtive. There is an enormous amount freed from ignorance or slavish instructing a first-rate currieu-of good will among the College opinion b> a seiies of lively en- jum one cannot, in 1965, allow one-students for their school, he said, counters, in each of the disciplines, say as j heard a professorBooth remarks WV^ ^le ,<a^’ <V,r ' 1 a*in^ say last week, that all you needBooth prepared his remarks, thing. t0 do js fjrst-class minds ofand released the following text to NOW I KNOW as well as you an ages together on one campusthe Maroon. that any such formulation raises and education will follow.IT IS NOT EASY to get agree- more questions than it answers. Education will not follow, unlessment about what the central busi- What do I mean by “thought,” by one ftas included in his definitionnrss of a college is. My own “fully human,” by “liberating,” 0f “first-class minds” some notiontemptation is to be pluralistic, On another occasion I’ll be glad of a mind abje and eager to sharethough I hope not wishy-washy. I to discuss such matters at length j^s products not only in writingwould be willing to accept, for —if you students really want me but in personal confrontations,example, the formulation by Rich- to ame to your dormitory house, ^nd even then it will not followter and Dashe in last Friday’s just promise me a discussion of unless such personal confronta-Maroon, or Hutchins’ oft-repeated such matters. But our business tions are built into meaningfulclaim that the business of higher here today is practical. curricular and extra curricularpatterns that engage the student,from the beginning, in his owneducation. I am most interested to¬day in what all this means forour curriculum. But I would liketo say a word or two about whatit means concerning the care and Leviwfor college undergraduatesOUR "346" DEPARTMENTAND OUR UNIVERSITY SHOPThese two fine departments offer a widechoice of practical, good-looking clothingand furnishings, reflecting our taste, ex¬clusive styling and unmatched experiencein outfitting undergraduates. We inviteyou to visit our stores during Spring vaca¬tion, and make your selections.OUR ”346” DEPARTMENT(sizes 36 to 46)Our Tropical Suits, $90 and $105*Lightweight Sport Jackets, $65Tropical Odd Trousers, jrom $27.50OUR UNIVERSITY SHOP(sizes 35 to 42)Dacron9 Polyester and WorstedTopical Suits, from $65*Washable Suits, jrom $45Odd Jackets, jrom $27.50 • Blazers, $50Khaki Cotton Chino Odd Trousers, $9.50‘Prices slightly higher west of the Rockies.ISTAitlSHID MMGJLOTHIHQ:Urns ir Soys furnishings.flats fr^hors74 E. MADISON,NR. MICHIGAN AVE, CHICAGO, ILL. 60602NEW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCO feeding of faculty.IT SEEMS TO me that our ef¬fort ought to be twofold: toseek out, at home and abroad,the very best minds in each fieldand then to choose from amongthem those who have the breadth of view, then energy, and the de¬sire to teach undergraduates.If the present trend toward pre¬mature specialization in Americawere not so strong, this first stepwould be enough: if every first-rate specialist could be countedon to have received a really goodgeneral education when he comesto us, then perhaps we could sim¬ply hire the best men and turnthem loose. But the facts are,in 1965, that many splendid mindsare half educated or ignorant inall but their narrow speciality.The general improvements inhigh school education have almostall been in the direction of earlypreparation for a specialty. Wecan expect in the next decadesthat the supply of broadly edu¬cated men, men of the kind neededfor courses like Hum. I and Hum.II, Soc. I and Soc. II — if theyare to be taught properly — thissupply will diminish. I’m afraid.What we must do, then, as a sec¬ond step, is provide post-doctoralfellowships for those young menwho have discovered — at aboutthe time they complete the Ph.D.—that they are woefully ignorantand who would like to spend ayear or two preparing themselvesto teach such courses to under¬graduates. The complaint is fre¬quently made these days that toomany of our faculty are teachingJAMES SCHULTZ CUEANERSSIIIIUS — LINENSRepairs Or Alterations 5 Hr. Service1363 East 53rd PL 2-966210% Student Discount with l.D. Card courses they are not prepared 1oteach; the faculty themselves fre¬quently complain that they arerequired to teach courses they donot believe in. We can surely dofar more than has been done —and I am convinced that we canget outside money to help usin rewarding those young menwho would like to come here inorder to repair, in their own per¬sons, the ravages of Aemricaneducational system.SUCH YOUNG MEN are, ofcourse, only one addition to ourpresent resources.A second device, one that is bynow habitual among departmentslooking for graduate replace¬ments, is that of the Visiting Pro¬fessorship. We are going to scourthe country for the best under¬graduate teachers; when we findthem, we will try to hire them.When we find that we can’t hirethem, we’ll offer them VisitingProfessorships—I haven't a nameyet — that will bring them herefor a year. At the end of a year,you will have convinced them thatthis is the most exciting place inthe country for anyone who caresabout undergraduate education,and they will stay on. Simple, isn'tit?THE THIRD RESOURCE, farmore important than either ofthese, is that portion of the Chi¬cago faculty who have never seri¬ously engaged themselves withthe problems of undergraduateeducation. I find that there issome confusion among the facultyabout what such a statementmeans. It does not mean, it willnot mean, in the future, what itmight have meant in the past. Adecade ago If one talked of en¬gaging a faculty member In col¬legiate education it really meantonly the general education pro¬gram. Some of us still think inthis way. On the other hand, totalk of engaging oneself in thecollegiate program cannot meansimply that one Is willing to teachan occasional 200-level course.We are always glad to havesuch gifts, of course, and theycan be terribly important. But tooffer one of them does not reallygo very far in helping the Col¬lege to solve its current problems.The main meaning of the Levi(Continued on page 5)JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53r<s SAVE!On this special close-out saleof well-known brand watchbands.$9.95 now $5.25$7.95 now $5.00$6.95 now $4.35$5.95 now $4.00$4.95 now $3.40Be Fashion Conscious — WearA High Styled Watch BandTHE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.BARNEYS ONE STOP836 East 63 rd StreetBig LP sale is on. One whole wall of top selling LPsat $1.88 while they last. Also, The Impressions LP, PeopleGet Ready only $2.79 plus tax, also The ImpressionsGreatest Hits LP only $2.79 plus tax. The $1.88 LPs area great value, and should not be passed up. They have alsoa few old dusty discs on sale for 5c. PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhoir stylists at5242 Hyde Pork Btvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710 % Student Discount4 • CHICAGO MAROON Feb. 26, 1965 the One, the Onfy-the Originalforeign car hospital t clinichome of team winkauthorized BMC and Triumph sales and service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113 EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscountBooth(Continued from page 4)constitutional revision seems tome to he that we now have an op¬portunity, Indeed, we have givenourselves a mandate, to think notjust of our own courses and not-—if we have been "primadlycollege” as the phrase goes—justof the general courses. Thoughthere will be many graduate pro¬fessors, T assume, who will notwant to be involved at all in ourfate, those who do should beclear from the beginning that todo so means thinking about allfour years.MANY OF THE best mindsamong us have refused, for someyears, to get Involved In suchthinking, because the path fromidea to practice has become sohopelessly Involved, so miserablytime consuming, that only theheroic or the quotic would under¬take systematic reforms. But thenew five-division structure createsa vacuum into which ideas mustbe fed.If we cannot find good" ideas,we'll have to be content with bad,but the point here is that we arenot able to offer a meaningfulinvitation to everyone: send usyour ideas, bring us your energies,help us develop not just an evenbetter faculty, but a series ofprograms in which a brilliant fac¬ulty can work their magical ef¬fects.What might be the standardsby which to judge whether, inyour area, such four-year pro¬grams already exist, or to judgewhether anything you plan willdo what we want it to do? I re¬cently asked the chairman incharge of one of the most success¬ful four-year programs in the col¬lege to describe his recipe forhis undoubted success. "Your stu¬dents don’t feel that the last twoyears are an anti-climax aftertheir required courses. Your stu¬dents don’t come to me complain¬ing about being bored. Your stu¬dents don’t find themselves un¬able, In their fourth year, to findany professor to recommend themfor jobs or scholarships. What’sthe recipe?”HIS ANSWER might be takento heart by every department inthe college, and by the new adminlstrative council when itcomes to the task of reviewingproposed new programs. I giveyou his points in the order inwhich he gave them.1.‘‘Maybe most important isthat we have always thoughtabout the whole four years. Wehaven’t thought about the firsttwo years as an unfortunate sub¬traction from the total time wemight make use of, but ratheras an Important part of our pro¬gram. Many of us have taught inthe required courses, and all ofus have studied them enough toknow what they are about. Then,too, our requirements are gearedin with what the student has whenlie comes to our special courses."BUDGETWISE"AAA Approved: 24-hourSwitchboard.Maid Service: each roomwith own bath.Special student rates:$180.00/qtr.Special daily, weekly andmonthly rates.BROADVIEW HOTEL5540 Hyde Park Blvd.FA 4-8800 gives details on thoughts for CollegeBoothTn this way, we avoid duplication,let-down, and psychological ten¬sions that come about when theupper division instructor scoffs ateverything the student has learnedso far.2. ‘‘We have honored the col¬lege as something fully separateand valuable, not simply a glori¬fied prep school for our graduateprogram. In fact, we originallythought of the four-year programas terminal, and everything weplanned was planned with theidea that if the student were toget no more, this would still bethe best possible terminal experi¬ence. As it turned out, this wayof thinking led to programs thatwere the best possible preparationfor garduate school, too, and mostof our students now go on.3. Our four-year planning wasnot just intellectual, but what youmight call psychological or rhe¬torical as well. These kids — hecalled you these kids — thinkthey’re tough minded, and insome ways they are, but theyare human beings and they re¬spond to human treatment betterthan to inhuman treatment. Theadvising of the program, for ex¬ample, has been highly personal,with long conferences and withlattitude for highly individualvariations. We have not assumedthat every major should beidentical.A second psychological gimmick,if it is that, has been our carefuleffort to make the final year aclimactic one. It is as a collegestudent reaching a culminationthat our students write their proj¬ect papers in their fourth year,and take their comprehensiveexams. They never can feel thatthey are second-class citizens, be¬cause they are not second-classcitizens. How can anyone claimto have an undergraduate pro¬gram without providing fourth-R)ErriESH°P11:30 to 6. 7:30 to 10 Mon.-Frt11:30 to 6, Saturday year comprehensive exams and‘honors’ papers for everyone?‘‘A third psychological or per¬sonal matter is our size. We haverefused to grow beyond the sizethan can be entertained in a pro¬fessor’s home at one time. And wegive parties, quite unashamedlywe give parties. The parties arenot billed as intellectual affairs,but to me they have tremendousintellectual significance. The stu¬dents somehow build up an espritde corps that helps to providethem with the additional motiva¬tion that few of them can pro¬vide entirely by themselves.4.Finally, there really is agrowth in independence built in¬to the program. The main finalevent is the project paper, rigor¬ously policed but essentially inde¬pendent. Instead of a collection ofcourses, more or less haphazardlyordered by student preference andthe accident of who’s in residence,the student moves through a se¬quence of methodical introduc¬tions to the knowledge and skillsthat form his field.”As I look over these four cri¬teria, I can only hope that we canfind a score or so of programplanners and supervisors who willthink as hard about both theintellectual and psychological im¬plications of what they are doing.If we are to have a collegemade up of four-year programsin this sense, a genuine four-yearcollege and not just an assemblageof majors tacked onto a badlytrimmed pattern of general cours¬es, we must abandon one andfor all the battle-lines inheritedfrom the past. The problem is totransform students’ lives by trans¬forming their minds; if there isanything that is clear, in our pres¬ent situation, it is that we willnot solve this problem by defend¬ing or attacking this or thatcourse or sequence or method ofthe past. From this point of view,the student who automatically as¬sumes that any change is for theworse, since there was a gloriousmoment in the past when all edu¬cational truth was incmated here,is as far beside the point as theworst enemy of liberal education.We must raise our sights fromthe categories, and especially thelanguage, of the previous debates,and try once again to think what practices will indeed liberate-stu¬dents. This morning in my officethe chairman of a graduate de¬partment said, in passing, that hewas opposed to general education.One possible response might havebeen horror — how could a pro¬fessor at the University of Chi¬cago, the home of the most ex¬citing general education in thiscentury, be against general edu¬cation? I chose a defense that Ithink is equally defensible andsomewhat more in accord withthe aims of this place: I askedhim what he meant by “generaleducation?” It turned out, as Isuspected, that what he opposesis what most of us would oppose:education based on a survey ofloose generalities and hence in¬evitably lacking in rigor and dis¬cipline.BUT I CITE this not because Iintend to deal at length with theproblem of general education, butbecause it illustrates how diffi¬cult it is going to be for us tothink rather than simply react toslogans. One of the most bindingof all categories, here as else¬where, is that of the “course.”Most of the plans that have comeacross my desk so far, to be filedin the folder labelled "ideas,”have consisted of a rejuggling ofcourses. There’s nothing wrongwith this, in itself; indeed wemust do some of it. But if myoriginal test of our success isjustified, it means that we suc¬ceed precisely to the degree thatwe produce graduates for whomcourse work is unnecessary, su¬perfluous. The good teacher, inmy view, is the one who makeshimself superfluous as quickly aspossible. The good course is onethat will rqake another course inthat subject unneeded. The goodundergraduate program is theone that will free every graduatefrom the need of further externalcontrols; the best 18th centuryliterature teacher I have knownnever had a course in 18th-centuryliterature; but he knew, when hewas first asked to teach thecourse, how to “get it up.”JUST WHAT VARIATIONSfrom the present course routinewill prove good or bad it is tooearly to predict. I rather suspectthat for many reasons we willfind ourselves using more andmore of the small-group tutorialsthat are, apparently, proving suc¬ cessful in the Engish-Hum. II ex¬periment. Surely we should workto ensure that in each year a stu¬dent experiences more freedomfrom imposed routine. Coursesare not necessary evils: they arenecessary, and when properlymanaged they should be goods inthemselves. But both in the re¬quired general years and in thedepartmental majors, the studentwho has had only courses oughtto be entitled to ask for his moneyback.My self-alloted .time is up. MayI simply conclude with an appealto all of you, regardless of whichside of which issue you may nowthink yourself on, to look to yourcategories, your solgans, and torecognize that you, too, are sub¬ject to weaknesses of mankind,that you too, may very well besloganizing rather than thinking.One mark of the educated man isthat he doesn't go to the barri¬cades for the sake of going tothe barricades but for the sakeof some end for which he is will¬ing to die. Nobody is going to die,perhaps, for this or that idea ofa college education, but lives areat stake, and since lives are atstake it is no wonder that weoften dash to the barricades tofight the presumed enemy. It isthe glory of Chicago that we havebeen willing to take educationalideas seriously in this sense.But it would be pathetic if wedestroyed good ideas, new or old,because they happen to carry alabel we dislike. In practice thismay mean no more than the oldjournalistic maxim: get yourstraight before anything else.Don’t attack a course idea onrumor; don’t attack a presentcourse without finding out whatit is about; don’t assume thatyour worst suspicions and worstfears are justified. Sometimes, itis true, even one’s worst fears arenot bad enough; reality outdoesthem. This is not one of thosetimes. The College is good and itis going to get better, perhapsquickly, perhaps slowly, but themore quickly the more we bringourselves to face its real prob¬lems rather than the inheritedbattles over slogans from the past.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATREANNOUNCESDIRECT FROM NEW YORKWinner of the 1963-64"BEST SHOW OFF-BROADWAY"AWARDIN WHITE AMERICAFEB. 25 to 28 at 8:30 P.M. FEB. 27, 28 at 2:30 PM.MANDEL HALL57th and University Ave. $5.00, $3.50, $2.50Student-Faculty Discount — 50c Off Any TicketTICKETS ON SALE —MANDEL HALL BOX-OFFICEFeb. 26, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5SNCC reorganizes, plans congressional challengeATLANTA, Ga.—As manyas 2,900 college students maycome to Washington, D.C.,this summer to demand freeelections in Mississippi, the Stu-dent Nonviolent Coordinating Com¬mittee i SNCC' announced thisweek.This decision, and others, werereached at a sc©f SNCC’s Coordinating Commit¬tee. The February 12-19 meeting,which began on Lincoln’s Birth¬day, at Gam m o n TheologicalSeminary here, also decided: ent direct action to gain support only age and residence as a quali-for the challenge. . fieation to register, and to dram-• To encourage "‘People’s Con- gtize the need tor home rule inferences” in Mississippi, Alabama, Washington, D. C. Hence the mo-Arkansas and Georgia. Local poo- bilization of these students willpie assembled at these conferences have three objectives:would decide on programs they at to lobby and engage in directwanted implemented in their areas, action in behalf of the challengeThe four state conferences would to j0^y and engage in directlead to a larger meeting bringing aetion on behalf of a voting bill lights and political informationabout areas in which SNCC wasoperating, and filing the clips ful¬fill une reference. SNCC researchpresently reads and clips 16 dailynewspapers for a wide variety <>f«even-day meeting togetfier people from across theSouth in a “Let the People Speak”conference.SNCC is celebrating its fifthanniversary this year. The groupgrew out of the 1960 sit-in dem-• To use the 2,000 students as onstrations and was organized ata “Washington Lobby” in the an Easter Weekend conference innation's capital. Members of the April, 1960, in Raleigh, North Car-•‘Lobby’ ’ may engage in non-viol- olina.Complete SNCC plans(Editor's note: the followingis a detailed report from SNCCon its plans for the comingsummer. Because of the inter¬est UC students have shown inthe Freedom Project, includingvolunteering their services, iveare printing most of the report.)Since December of 1963, therehas been a debate within SNCCover the structure of the Coordi¬nating Committee, which is theultimate decision-making body.The staff felt that it should betotally represented within the Co¬ordinating Committee. Prior tothis time the Coordinating Com¬mittee was composed of represen¬tatives of local protest groups.The staff was entitled to voicebut not vote at all CoordinatingCommittee and Executive Com¬mittee meetings.At the spring conference of 1964a constitutional amendment waspassed which gave the staff sixvotes on the Executive Committee.In June of 1964 we recognized thatthis procedure was inadequate be¬cause the student protest groups based on age and residence.c) to lobby ami engage in directaction for home rule in Washing¬ton.We know that all people in thisnation are seriously affected bythe Congressmen from Mississippi.They must be unseated and wemust have Free Elections in Miss¬issippi.We have also decided to holdpeople's conferences in the statesof Arkansas, Mississippi, Georgia,pate more in making decisions and Alabama. At these conferencesaffecting their lives. We have also we expect pe0ple from local com-*** »„ «,<.«» P«, tary; and Cleveland Sellers, Pro¬gram Secretary.Continue other activitiesNotwithstanding these changesin the organization, many past pro¬grams are still going forward, butwith greater accent on education political and economic Informal innfor organization and agitation. For which is used to service field re¬in.stance, we maintain our belief quests for information. In the pastin the validity for Freedom year and a half a considerableSchools, Community Centers, F«*d- reference library has been built,eral Programs and non-violent di- and the staff has increased to six.rect action against segregation and SNCC research does not undertakediscrimination. The Freedom Dem¬ocratic Party, organized by mem¬bers of our staff and local people,Is organizing in new Mississippicounties. Other communities out¬side Mississippi have expressed aninterest in this kind of politicalorganization. projects which are not, directly *>rindirectly related to field requests,©r staff training and education.Northern supportWe have consistently expand* ♦!our support operation in the northbecause the people in the southwith whom we work are withoutof our organization with the spiritof giving more visibility and re- grams, and we will help them tosponsibility to lesser-known staff implement these programs.people. Conference of all black beltSumm«Mn°b«Udrng “he'Freedom w* ?re sh00,in® for * confere"“ the- Southern Christian LeadershipDemocratic Party, the resulting sometime in July, perhaps, when Conference since January, 1965. W echallenge at the convention in At- people from across the South, es- began organizing in Marion, At¬lantic City, the Congressional Chal- pecially from the Black Belt coun¬ted on January 4, 1965, and the Hes of Georgia> Aiabama, Missis-Statutory Challenge have led us . . , . fto believe that the Mississippi Chal- slPPi and Arkansas will meet in alenge — the unseating of the five Southwide People's Conference. SPECIAL SITUATIONS such as v0)f, aM(j unable to exert ba¬the Moultrie, Georgia, school boy- ^md of political pressure necessaryeott and direct action against the ^ bring basic changes In the polideal and economic system in thiscountry. Our fund raising ©!*•>*Mon has also been ba*od In thenot tli but plans are now underwayIndianola, Mississippi, public li¬brary will continue to demandour focus.In Selma, Alabama, our twoyears of work since February,1963, has been supplemented bybama, and hope to spread into Wil¬cox, Lowdnes and surroundingBlack Belt counties.We have accelleiated our Cam- to expand southern fund effortsas well.At present there are full timeSNCC staff people working m10 not them offices as well as some60 community-based Friends ofSNCC groups manned by volun¬teers. Nearly 100 college groupsar*1 also active on fund raising andCongressmen for Mississippi — is Future programs will emerge from pus Traveler’s program. We now .... , _the most important political event ^js conference. have seven full-time campus trav- political support. In the next fewof 1965, notwithstanding efforts to . , , ... . ... ’ .. , . , The internal composition of theget new voting legislation. HConsequently, we have decided Student Nonviolent Coordinatingon several things. Committee has been radically al-We will try to recruit upwards tered. The entire staff is now aof 2,000 students who will cometo Washington, D.C., around June15, 1965, and spend from two to part of the Coordinating Commit¬tee. We have established a Call elers going to Negro and whitecampuses trying to develop stu¬dent movements. Our greatest suc¬cess has been in Virginia, wherea SNCC sponsored December 3-5statewide conference motivatedVirginia students to organize asummer project in that state’s 4thwere not really functioning and the United States, but especiallythree weeks constantly lobbying Committee which invites as vot- Congressional Districtfor the unseating of the Mississi- ing delegates members of studentppi delegation. We will try to re- and community groups across theeruit these students from all over south, including representatives ofour staff was becoming larger. Wepostponed any decision on revisionof structure until after the summerbecause of the impending summerproject.SINCE OCTOBER we have beengrappling with many problems inour organization and within thesociety at large. We have beenstruggling to find better ways toeffect our concept of allowing peo¬ple in the communities to partiei- from northern areas where theCongressmen will bo politically re¬sponsive to pressure.Direct action tor unseatingWe will ask these students toengage in nonviolent direct actionin order to dramatize the need for the Friends of the Student Non¬violent Coordinating Committee.The election of a new ExecutiveCommittee is based on the spirit Campus travelersIn Alabama, Campus Travelershave encouraged as many as 20students from Tuskeegee Instituteto work on weekends and for long¬er periods in Selma and Marion.that people who have less visibility We expect to hold a student con-in the organization must be given fotence there in March.more responsibility.To assist in the day-to-day run-the unseating of the Mississippi ning of the organization, the con-delegation, to dramatize the need cept of the secretariat was intro-for the enactment of legislation duced. The SNCC secretariat con-based on the concept of one man, sists of John Lewis, Chairman; months these groups will spend agood portion of their time workingon political support for the Con¬gressional Challenge.ONE OF SNCC’S programs isto bring resources Into loral com¬munities and to experiment withnew programs. For example, theFree Southern Theater was dovel-o|M-d through this concept In aSNCC worker and was financedat first by SNCC. Groups like theCouncil of Federated Organiza¬tions, ihe Albany Movement, andeven the Freedom DemocraticParty arc aided and develop'd bySNCC. SNCC people worked close¬ly last summer with the emer;CommitteeBuilding on three years workdone by two white Southerners,Robert Zell nor and Sam Shirah, jy jast summer with the emergingEd Hamlet, a white Southerner, MP(jical Committee for Humanhas worked almost exclusively with Rights which is becoming a nation-white Southern college students, al organization.one vote, requiring one to give James Forman, Executive Secre- and helped to organize the South- Security is one of the main eon-S(udent Organizing Committee m.nS of the student Nonviolent(SSOC). He is an integral member Coordinating Committee. The erca-Fredric M. OkunYour On-CampusRepresentative SAVEMONEY!Create A Small lAie Insurance Estate Ante1.2.3. Three Reasons To Buy NOW!You lose hundreds of dollars in savings every year you wait.You and your family are not protected otherwise.You may lose your insurability by waiting.I|‘ «f«u prefer. pagment of premiums mag he deferrediiulit three mouths utter gou graduate.NATIONAL LIFE OF VERMONTHere to Staff—Established 1850—Over $ 1,000,000,000 in Assetsj FREDRIC M. OKUN| SUITE 1120, 120 S. LA SALLE ST.CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60603I CE 6-2500IJ I would like more informotion about your insurance program.AddressPhoneCHJ.CAGO MAROON Feb. 26, 1965 of this Southwide, interracial stu- |jon 0f Sojourner Motor Fleetdent group which started its work _ a corporation possessing now°n white campuses and is now more than 60 cars - and the esta-working with “moderate” white blishment of SNCC Radio, a stale-and Negio college students. wide Citizen’s Band radio systemThe educational program of 1he in Mississippi, has aided our workStudent Nonviolent Coordinating and made field workers moreCommittee consists of efforts to secure. Field workers have saidobtain scholarships for people who that such a radio system at thehave been in the movement and beginning of the summer mightwish to return to college for furth- have prevented the murder of theer academic training. Also, there three workers killed In Pliila-have been series of workshops in delphia.local communities designed to en- THE MEETING at Gammoncourage people to formulate pro- Theological Seminary closed withgrams on which they want to the singing of “We Shall Over¬work. come” and the dedication of theMoreover, the work-study pro- SNCC people there assembled thatgram started at Tougaloo and (lie resources of the organizationMiles Colleges has provided op- and the skills of its field secretar-portunities for southern Negroes ies must bo put to a constantin college to work in the movp- struggle in behalf of poor people,ment while pursuing their academ- For despite the gains that the siu-ic careers. dent movement has assisted inTHE SNCC RESEARCH Depart- making, people are still poor, vote-ment was begun about a year and less, without jobs, suffering froma half ago. It began with one per- police brutality, inadequate hous-son clipping newspapers for civil ing and a denial of dignity.Intramural sportsThe basketball league champions have been resolved in playoffsas follows:Divisional—Doormats over Robbia- Barons 42 -38College House Henedrson S. over Mead 28-27“B” 5400 Grads “B” over Chamberin “B”....forfeitFraternity - P.si UpsilonTrack MeetSalisbury in the College House league, and PsiUpsilon of the fra¬ternities won their respective sections in the IM track meet. Onerecord was broken: Mavajas of Chamberlin ran the 440 in 56.3 tobreak a record established in 1948.BadmintonMon. March 1 College House Red GroupsTues. March 2 College House Blue GroupsWed. March 3 DivisionalThurs. March 4 All University Play downsSuggestion from students — port frhreeHum I reorganization, one-year Soc course urged(Editor's note: The followingis the third in a series ofproposals for specific coursestructures that might he con¬sidered for inclusion in the re¬organized. College. The authorsare members of the AcademicAffairs committee of StudentGovernment, but these articlesare in no wag official reportsof the committee itself. It ishoped that faculty membersand students will consider theseproposals, and perhaps reply tothem. The MAROON encour¬ages letters to the editor con¬cerning the structure of theCollege programs.HumanitiesThe main change which wewould propose in the Humanities1 course as it stands today is theinstitution of separate quarters ofart, music, and literature.The benefits of the present meth¬od of leaching the basic humanitiesare questionable. Teaching art,music, and literature all in onequarter might be useful if therewere any attempt whatever to in¬tegrate the study of the three dis¬ciplines, or even if it could Ik*shown that a solid quarter of oneof tlte subjects were injurious tothe brains of first-year students.Hut art, music, and literature areinstead treated in separate, two- week-long doses at present, andwe may draw two conclusions: thatthere is no inter-disciplinary in¬tegration, and that if two straightweeks of literature will not damagea freshmen, it is unlikely that tenweeks will do so either.We feel that students will bene¬fit from the separation of thequarters of Humanities I throughbetter instruction. This will occurin two ways. First, those humani¬ties instructors who arc at presentteaching all three disciplines, butwho fee 1 that they cannot (to anequally good job of them may de¬cide to teach only one or two ofthe quarters. More important,though, those instructors who donot teach the introductory humani¬ties course because they do notfeel competent to teach outsidetheir discipline might feel inclinedto teach at least one quarter ofthe course. Thus the student’s com¬plaint that Professor X is good atmusic, but bad at art would nolonger be heard or if it is, itwould be because of a teacher’svanity, rather than because of theexigencies of the structure of thecourse.AN ADDITIONAL BENEFIT tothe student would be a more effici¬ent use of time. At present, place¬ment out of humanities is basedon the scores to all three tests inart, music, and literature. Whenthe quarters are split up, however,Bond's girl Pussycreates Miss, conflictCLEVELAND, Miss —The editor of the student news¬paper at Delta State College has been removed from his posi¬tion by school president James M. Ewing.Jack Steele, editor of the weekly Miss Delta, was filed foruse of a "sordid” head line In theJanuary edition of the newspaper, headline in question "definitely isIn an official statement, Ewing not legally obscene.” He alsoreferred to the headline as “un- stated that the headline had notcalled for, sordid, and beneath the been found objectionable by thedignity of college or professional Postal authorities when the paperjournalism.” was prepared for mailing. there would seem to be no reasonto make humanities placement anall-or-nothing matter. The studentwould not only gain valuable elec¬tives, but also would not be forcedto sit through classes which hedoes not need and which bore him.The instructors’ time would alsobe more efficiently used. Since thequarter-course are essentially sep¬arate, they might be staggeredthroughout the year, and one in¬structor might teach two or threeclasses in the same subject.It might HSr* objected that a manmight quickly become bored teach¬ing the same material quarter afterquarter. To this it may be an¬swered that, in the first place, itmight be boring to teach the samething to several classes a day, asis done at present were it not forthe fact that the interest in teach¬ing lies not only in the presenta¬tion of material, but also in thegive and take of the process ofimparting knowledge.In the second place, there is noreason why the same works ofart need be studied quarter afterquarter. Indeed, since studentslearn from each other as well asfrom an instructor, there mighteven be direct benefits to the stu¬dent, for the student who takes,say, literature in the first quarterwould be in a position to impartextra knowledge to the studenttaking it in the second quarter.It might be objected that split¬ting the humanities course intothree quarter-courses would leadto over-specialization in one ormore of the quarters. This may beprevented easily, simply by mak¬ing the course the responsibility ofthe entire staff, rather than givingihe staff of each of the quarter-courses carte blanche to do what¬ever they like in it.Splitting the humanities courseinto three quarters, therefore,would, without a single disadvan¬tage, improve the level of instruc¬tion and use the time of bothstudent and faculty more efficient¬ly-Social SciencesTh“ present two-year course inthe social sciences seems concerned with the teaching of five disci¬plines: political science, economics,sociology, anthropology, and psych¬ology. The first two of these are“integrated” into a one-year coursecalled American Democracy. Theremaining three are “integrated”into another course called Cultureand Freedom.In Soc I there is some duplica¬tion of readings: Locke and Rous¬seau are read in History of Wes¬tern Civilization. There are alsoreadings whose utility might wellbe questioned to read the wholeof the Federalist papers seems asnonsensical for an initial socialscience course at it would be foran initial humanities course tolead the whole of the Spectatorpapers. It seems apparent thatSoc I needs some tightening up.SOC II IS equally mutable. Thereadings are not focussed to astudy of Culture and Freedompei' se: rather, they appear to be asurvey of the greatest modernthinkers in the disciplines studied.Consequently Soc I and II can bereorganized without changing thebasic course methods.It is with these considerationsin mind that we propose in theplace of the two-year social sciencecourse offered at present, a one-year course in social science to beentitled Modern America. Such po¬litical scientists as Morgenthau andKahn, such economists as Fried¬man and Keynes, such psycholog¬ists as Freud and Erikson, suchsociologists as Riesman, such cul¬tural anthropologists as Ruth Ben¬edict might be studied, not onlyfor their findings as such, butalso for the implications of theirideas on contemporary America.Students and faculty as wellmight show more interest in thecourse, as the ideas will have per¬tinence to their own lives. Discus¬sion might be more fertile, as thestudents would be able to contri¬bute relevent observations from their own experience, relatingthese to the readings.An objection to this proposalmight be that the student wouldobviously not be able to read asmuch material in one year of so¬cial science; but the student willlearn the methodologies and thethought patterns of the disciplines,which is surely more importantfor the purpose of general edu¬cation than his 'ahsorption of so-and-so many books.IT MAY BE FURTHER objectedthat the additional content, if ad¬mittedly less important than themethodology, is still of some im¬portance to the student’s grasp ofthe subjects presented. This is true,but one must consider the alterna¬tives. Because the Student hasroom for only eight gen-ed coursesin his program, the other alterna¬tives are either cutting a differentcourse from the general educationprogram, or retaining mitigation,either of which is a betrayal of thepurpose of general education, aseither cuts whole fields from thestudent’s program, both in regal'dto both content and methodology.Which serves the purpose of gener¬al education better: to combineSoc I and Soc II in one course, orto eliminate some other subjectarea entirely?The proposed social sciencecourse has still other advantages;* The course is very likely to hemore interesting to the studentsthan the present courses, as itwould be more closely related totheir present experience.The course would enable the stu¬dent to make an intelligent choiceas to whether he would like tomake his career in the social sci¬ences, and it would do this in oneyear, not two. Under the Levi planin which the student is asked toname his area college after thefirst year, this could be a veryimportant advantage over the pres¬ent system.Charles Dashe andDavid RichterA SPECIAL TREAT!EXPERIENCE THE THRILL OF ELECTRIC TYPING ON THIS NEW SMITH-CORONA® ELECTRIC PORTABLE!the headline appearedabove a movie review written bya .staff member and read: ‘Pussy< adore’ Typical of James Bond’sGirls. Most of the 16-inch storywas concerned with the movieversion of "My Fair Lady.” Athree-inch paragraph about themovie "Goldfinger” came near theend of the story. Miss Galore wasmentioned once.Maroon head ’nicer'The headline of the Maroon re¬view of ‘Goldfinger,’ which ap¬peared on January 26, read:■Bond’s latest gilty, active, hut ahit too cruel.” Miss Galore wasmentioned In the review numer¬ous times.According to Ewing’s state¬ment, Steele "assumed completeresponsibility” for the headline.•Steele, a senior, said "The Deltais presumed to be the most liberalsection of the state, save maybethe coast. But at Delta State anys>gn of liberalism which springs• oi th is either killed or stifled" Idle in Its embryonic stage.”ON RECOMMENDATION of•he faculty advisor to the paperar>d the Student Publications Com¬mittee, Barnes Carr was appoint-♦“d to replace Steele. Carr, a sopho¬more, said: "I feel that I amethically bound to share the blame"ith Jack, because I believe thedismissal was brought on withdeeper and more complex aspects.”Carr went on to argue that the TRY each of five electric repeatactions. See how fast you canspace, underscore, crossout ortype dots and dashes!C o r o n ENJOY the ease of typing withelectric power! You're always incomplete control of your electrickeyboard! SEE the results you get with elec¬tric typing — print-perfect letters,perfect spacing, razor-sharp im¬pressions — every time!JTMe tELECTRIC PORTABLE by SMITH-CORONAHere’s all the speed, ease and wonder of electric typing. Full 88 char¬acter keyboard ... the same as on office electrics. Personal touch selectorlets you set the touch that pleases you — electricity does the rest. Copyset™ adjustment gives you up to ten clear carbons. See these and otherexciting new Smith-Corona features, today!Take it from the Quick Brown Fox...ELECTRIC TYPING IS THE EASIEST TYPING! WITH ASMITH-CORONA EVERY KEY REACTS EXACTLY THESAME REGARDLESS OF YOUR SPEED OR TOUCH.“QUICK BROWN FOX”T»l Hr .• Good MoustkHping •V mimtiii VGUARANTEE: Any Smith-Corona branch office will replace with¬out charge (except for labor ants shipping) any part that provesdefective within 5 years of purchase date. No labor chargewithin 90 days of purchase. Warranty covers ail parts exceptmotor, rubber parts, energy cell or charger after 90 days. Doesnot cover damage from accident or misuse and extends only tooriginal owner.SPECIAL SALE NEXT WEEKNEVER IN CHICAGO AT THIS PRICEONLY $12795 Mu* TaxAT DISCOUNT TYPEWRITERS DISCOUNT TYPEWRITERS50 E. CHICAGO AVE. DE 7-4400Feb. 26, 1965 CHICAGO MAROONUS students attack Vietnam warThe above is a meeting of several of the notables whowere present at a Washington area UC alumni dinner, heldtwo weeks ago. The happy celebrants are, left to right,George Reedy, White House press secretary. Gale McGee,Democratic senator from Wyoming, Paul Todd, Democraticcongressman from Michigan, and Charles U. Daly, UC's vice-president for public affairs.In his talk, McGee said one ofCongress “mandates” is to “putour purse where our slogans havebeen for so long. Are we willingto pay the price of an educatedsociety? Until now there is reasonto doubt that many of our peoplereally believe in the power of theeducated man. Many of our breth¬ren are not sure that they trusteducation or educators. Whatstrides we have been able to takeoften have been not in the nameof education but in the name ofnational defense. It is time we cor¬rect this ‘gimmickry’ and put oureducational priorities in the rightorder.DACRON/WOOL—* socksinthe“Traditional”fashionBYEsquire SocksBulky but remarkably soft totouch, these 55% dacron*/45% wool socks are a delightto wear ... a pleasure towash. In the Traditional Ivyrib so right for sports ordress. Available in 9 newBritish Heather col- $|50ours. Sizes 10^-13. • vr.•DuPont’s TM for its polyester fiberTHE STORE FOR MEMINCQlnttttt attb (Eampua 0t|«tprIn the 1%'eiv Hyde Park.Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St.Phone 752-8100 “We are not going to get far bycreating a nation of little scientists.The liberal arts and philosophyoffer far richer sources of ideasfor the future than do the labora¬tories of our scientists. It is moreimportant that we aim our sightsat a liberally educated populationbefore we permit them to be nar¬rowed by the demands of profes¬sional training. We have altogethertoo many politically, socially, andeconomically illiterate doctors,lawyers, teachers, and clergymenalready without aiding and abet¬ting this condition. What we neednow is a new generation of menand women who are educated firstand trained second in that order.The world will go to the educatedman even in a more lasting waythan it will go to the best armed.We know that the best educatedare going to win the world ratherthan the best armed because thebest armed only get the tacticalopportunity to win it College students were on the march all over the countryin the past week, as demonstrations to protest American in¬volvement in South Vietnam were staged on many campuses.Chicago’s counterpart of this movement took place lastSaturday, February 20, as a picket ~parade in front of the Federal pcaee Committee. Posters andBuilding at Dearborn, between leaflets adorned the scene here.Jackson and Adams, in the early THE PRINCIPAL targets ofafternoon._ attack were the “increased use ofABOUT 30 to 35 men, women, yj0ien^ methods in the implemen-and children walked around in ^a^jon us foreign policy, andsmall circles, carrying signs with press coverage of recentsuch legends as “Send Troops to casua]tjes in Vietnam,” accordingSelma, Not Saigon. to the Swarthmore Phoenix.The demonstration was initiatedby the Student for a Democratic ... and the Commons . . .Society (SDS). Its co-sponsor in- The Yale Daily News reportseluded the Fellowship of Recon- two rallies in New Haven, oneciliation, the DuBois Clubs of Chi- for, the other against, the war incago, the American Socialist Or- Vietnam. The Young Americansganizing Committee, the Women for Freedom, backed by three Yalefor Peace, the Wobblies, and the professors, proclaimed itself inWomen’s International League for favor of continued military action.Peace and Freedom, South Side This contingent termed the liber-Branch. als w^° oppose the war “neo-isola-At Independence Hall . . . tionists.’ They advocated the “ful-The same afternoon, Havenford. fillment of commitments.” TheBryn Mawr, and University of rally this group held was conduct-Pennsylvania students joined ed on the New Haven Green.Swarthmore activists, in a sim- The same Saturday afternoon,ilar demonstration. The group a march through the campus andmarched from Independence Hall downtown New Haven, coupledto City Hall, where it heard with a rally, protested Americanspeeches by the president of SDS policy in Vietnam. Their demon-and by a member of the Friends stration was held in front of Com¬ mons, and was sponsored by anad hoc committee to protest thewar. Several faculty membersparticipated on this side of thefence also.AT THE UNIVERSITY of Wis¬consin, twenty-one DuBois Clubmembers convened from five cit¬ies for their Mid West Conference.Their action consisted of passingresolutions condemning US policyin Vietnam.They pledged "support of all organizations which advocate a withdrawal from Vietnam of US sunplies and troops, and-support selfdeter for the Vietnamese,” aocording to the UW Daily CardinalViet talk FridayA forum on the situation inVietnam will be held Friday at2:30 pm in the Reynolds Club southlounge.Speakers at the meeting will beLloyd Rudolph and his wife Susan-ne, both associate professors ofpolitical science. A general discus¬sion will follow their talks.Among the topics that will beconsidered will be the backgroundof the war, the current situation,and prospects for the future. Allinterested students and faculty areinvited to attend.SWAP will hold an openhouse Sunday at- 7 pm for allthose connected with SWAPactivities. The open housewill be held in Ida Noyes,and tutors are especiallyurged to attend.MODEL CAMERALEICA, BOLEX, NIKON, PENTAXZEISS, MAMIYA, OMEGA, DURSTTAPE RECORDERS1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259 Job opportunitiesThe following recruiting organizationswill visit the Office of Career Counsel¬ing and Placement during the week ofMarch 1. Interview appointments maybe arranged through Mr. L. S. Calvin,room 200, Reynolds Club. Extension 3284.March 2 —Gulf Research and Develop¬ment Company. Pittsburgh, Pa. — willinterview chemists, mathematics, phys¬icists, and statisticians at ail degreelevels.March 4 —Donald D. Palmer. ForeignAffairs Officer, Bureau of Educationaland Cultural Affairs, Department ofState, will meet with students to discusscurrent information concerning careersin the Foreign Service.Foreign Service Officers are diplomatsspecially selected and trained to assistthe Secretary of State in preparing pol¬icy recommendations carrying out for¬eign policy decisions.The next annual Foreign ServiceOfficer examination will be held May 1,1965. Candidates for the one-day exami¬nation must be at least 21 and under 31years of age at the time of the examina¬tion. Those 20 years of age may apply ifthey have completed their Junior year.All candidates must have been citizensof the U.S. for at east 7*2 years at th^time of the examination.The Foreign Service requires officerswith training in pubic and business ad¬ministration, executive management,economics and related subjects as wellas those whose major courses of studyinclude political science, history, lan¬guage and area studies, geography andinternational affairs.March 4 and 5 — Division of HigherEducation for the Methodist Church —to interview candidates for teachingpositions in several Methodist collegesand universities; openings in manyfields.March 5 — Time, Inc., Chicago, Illi¬nois — will Interview women for Super¬visory Training Program. Supervisorshave responsibility for the direction,counseling, and training of a section of8 to 15 girls. Culture CalendarConcertsCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA:Feb. 25-26. Jean Martinon, cond. Chris¬tian Ferras, v.: Wagner: TannhaeuserOvert.; Berg: Cone.; Beethoven: Sym.No. 6; Feb. 27. Martinon, cond. Ferras,v. Beethoven: Sym. No. 6. Lalo: Span¬ish Sym. for violin and orchestra. (3rdMovement omitted.) Thu. at 8:15, Frl.at 2, Sat. at 8:30. Tickets $2-6.50. Frl.gallery seats for students $1 (availableuntil 1 pm only.) Orchestra Hall, 220S. Michigan, HA 7-0362.HOUSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA:Sir John Barbirolli, cond. Feb. 28 at3:30. Tickets $2.50-6.50. Orchestra Hall,220 S. Michigan, HA 7-0362.ExhibitsCHICAGO SCHOOL—1960 TO PRESENT:at Hyde Park Art Center, 5236 S. Black-stone. Thru Maroh 13.DANIEL LANG: Paintings, drawings andprints. At Lexington Gallery. Daily. 10-4thru March 8. Free. Closed Sat. and Sun.RUTH DUCKWORTH: Pottery and cer¬amics. At the Renaissance Society.Daily 10-5, Sat. 1-5. Free.LecturesGEORGE N. LEIGHTON: Chicago law¬yer and past president of NAACP,speaking on "The Future is Now." Feb.28 at 8 pm. Tickets $2. students $1.Unitarian Church, 1330 Ridge, Evanston.UN 4-1330.OperaNORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY OPERAWORKSHOP: Anthony Donato's WalkThrough Walls and Vaughan Williams'Riders to the Sea. Dir. Robert Gay;cond. Anthony Donato. Feb. 26 at 8pm and Feb. 28 at 3 pm. Tickets $1.50-2.50. Cahn Auditorium. Emerson andSheridan, Evanston. 492-3741.You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 MILLIE'SSportswear HeadquartersTURTLENECKJERSEYS1375 E. 53rd St. HT 3-592210% Student Discount Complete LineOf Pet AndAquarium Supplie*the cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012 RecitalsJOOANNE DE KEYSER AND JEANNKBAMBERGER: Cellist and pianist.Marias: La Folia. Bach: Suite No. 2Bartok: First Rhapsody Beethoven:Sonata in D. Ginastera: Pampeana No2. Feb. 26 at 8:30. $1. students 50cAt the Music Dept., 5802 S. Woodlawn.Law School And.TheatreOLIVER: With a slight bow to CharlesDickens. Nightly at 8:30; matinees Wed.and Sat. at 2. Nightly, $2 50-$5.95; Frl.and Sat. $2 50-$6 60; matinees $2 20-$5.50.At the Shubert Theatre, 22 E. Monroe.CE 6-8240.SIX AGES OF MAN: a comic revuewith music. Allerton Hotel Theatre inthe Clouds, 701 N. Michigan 9 and lipm Tues.-Sat.; 4 and 9 pm Sun. Week¬days $2.65; Frl. and Sat. $2.95. SU 7-4200.RASHOMON: by Ryonosuke Akutagawa.Dir. by Fay and Michael Kanin. PatrickHenry, dir. ^Goodman Theatre. Monroeand Columbus. Feb. 19-Mar. 13. Sun -Thurs. at 7:30; Fri.-Sat. at 8:30. Nightiy$3; Fri.-Sat. $3.50. 50c student discount.CE 6-2337.THE BRIG: by Kenneth Brown. RobertSickinger. dir. Weekends thru Feb. 28.Hull House Theatre, 3212 N. Broadway.Frl. and Sat. at 8:30; Sun. at 7:30; Frl.and Sat. $3.40; Sun. $3 . 348-8330.IN WHITE AMERICA: Winner of the1963 Best Show Off Broadway award. Feb.25-28 at 8:30 pm. Matinees Feb. 27-28 at2:30 pm. Tickets $2 50-3 50. Mandel Hall.OXFORD CAMBRIDGE REVIEW: TheOxford Review plus The CambridgeCircus has come to Chicago In exchangefor Second City. Nightly 9 & 11, Sat.9, 11, 1. Tickets $3 Sat.; $2.50 othernights; closed Mondays. Phone reserva¬tions accepted. The Second City, 1846N. Wells. De 7-3992.NATIONAL REPERTORY THEATRE:Goldsmith’s She Stoops to Conquer, Mar.1-2 at 8:30; Mar. 3. at 2. Ibsen’s HeddaGabler, Mar. 3 at 8:30. Molnar’s Liliom,Mar. 4 at 8:30. Tickets $6-3. BlackstoneTheatre, 60 E. Balbo.WHO’S AFRAID OF VIRGINIAWOOLF?: By Edward Albee. With VickiCummings and Kendall Clark. Mar 1-14.Evenings at 8 and Wed. & Sat. Mati¬nees at 2. Prompt curtains all per¬formances. Studebaker Theatre, 418 S.Michigan.UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“a strong bnnhNEW CAR LOANS$A00per hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C. TRAVELING?Get Nearly FreeTRANSPORTATIONBy Driving a Car to California,Arizona, Florida, Seattle,Salt Lake, EastALL CITIESMinimum age 21WE 9-2364AUTO DRIVEAWAY CO.343 S. DEARBORN ST. A Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESPICTURE FRAMINGMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111 Expert Service on All Brand.HI-FreeFreeColl FI STEREOPick-up, & DeliveryEstimates>21-0460CHICAGO MAROON Feb. 26, 1965 HYDE PARKAUTO SERVICEMGOPEL MORRISFORDCHEVROLETCOOPERALVISJIM HARTMAN534Q LAKE PARK,4PL 2-0496 Tape RecordersSlide ProjectorsWeekend Rentalsstart at $4.00$17.50 EastmanKodak InstamaticNow $12.50$24.50 ElectronicFlash GunsNow $14.95The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE. UNIVERSALARMY STORE(iThe universe In studentwear for campus andcamping.'*Levis - Tennis ShoesAN OUTFIT FROMTOP TO TOE1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856CfOBEAUTY SALONS ExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 • l<.MOVIE COLUMN Special symphony concertComing attractions previewed at Mandel Hall March 7, 8Everybody on campus Is allthrough lor this quarter as far asfilm showings go. The only HydePark attraction of any merit isJoseph (Hollywood Ten) Losey’sEVA with Jeanne Moreau andStanley Baker, which I recom¬mended to you earlier when itplayed the Clark. It is still anoutstanding film. It is also an irrit¬ating example of the confusionresulting from producers cuttingand assembling films without thedirector. Losey has disclaimed thefilm, but it is still worthwhile; andyou get to hear all that BillieHoliday.Downtown looks grim.At the Clark, Huston’s NIGHTOF THE IGUANA (can he savethe film and his recent career inspite of Richard Burton?) a bonafide American Art Film, thoughnot necessarily an example of filmart; Pietro Germi’s crisp SEDUC¬ED AND ABANDONED, notablemore for its visuals and construc¬tion than for its plot. Saturday,Raoul Walsh’s last action epic, ADISTANT TRUMPET, a sure testof your dedication to art: willyou tolerate Troy Donahue tosavor Walsh’s great direction?Thursday: At the. art institutean essential, Max Ophuls’ EAR¬RINGS OF MADAME DE. . . .If you dig the New Wave, GIRLWITH THE GOLDEN EYES, and experiential art with a strongEuropean influence, this is it. Themaster, Ophuls is one of the twoor three basic styles from whichall modem styles come.IN THE SPRING, DocFilms willshow a Friday series studying fan¬tasy in various cinematic applica¬tions. The series will include W.C. Fields and Mae West in MYLITTLE CHICKADEE; Halas andBatchelor’s full length animatedversion of Orwell’s ANIMALFARM; Marcel (CHILDREN OFPARADISE) Carne’s BIZARRE-BIZARRE; two evenings of ex¬perimental and avant garde films,including works by Bruce Connors;Alain Resnais; Maya Deren; Ed¬win S. Porter; Weber and Watson;James Broughton; George Franju;and Robert Breer.first program of the serieswill be announced the first weekof April: it will be a recent NewYork fantasy of feature lengthand considerable fame. A specialshowing of Fields’ NEVER GIVEA SUCKER AN EVEN BREAKwill be held.On Tuesdays, DocFilms will onceagain unleash the Bogey Flicks.Two repeats from last year’s ser¬ies, TO HAVE AND HAVE NOTwith Bacall, and CASABLANCA,with Bergman, will open and closethe series; sandwiched between willbe Raoul Walsh’s brilliant gang¬ster film, HIGH SIERRA; DARK PASSAGE, with Bacall, directed byDelmer Daves; and two Hustonpictures: ACROSS THE PACIFIC,with Loree and Greenstreet. madeas a sequel to MALTESE FAL¬CON; and TREASURE OF SIER¬RA MADRE, the classic greed al¬legory. DocFilms has announcedthat they will make Bogart sweat¬shirts available to their public.THE RUSSIANS WILL showtwo outstanding movies in thespring: Dovzhenko’s masterpiece,ZVENIGORA, a surrealistic mythcomplex'very reminiscent of Joycehad he been bom in the Ukraine;not an easy picture, but a reward¬ing one for those who know howto approach film.RFF will also show Cocteau’sORPHEE. Great for Cocteau fans,worthless for people Cocteau leavescold, the film is very similar toBLOOD OF A POET, the filmfrom which all his later cinematicworks spring, both in method andin symbol.In closing, I call your attentionto a new and valuable book forcinema students, FUN IN A CHI¬NESE LAUNDRY, the autobiog¬raphy of Josef von Sternberg. JvS,one of the few native geniuses ofAmerican cinema, made MarleneDietrich’s best films, from BLUEANGEL to DEVIL IS A WOMAN.The book is great.Elisha Cook, Jr. On Sunday and Monday even¬ings, March 7 and 8, the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra, under thedirection of Jean Martinon, willpresent a concert of contemporarymusic in Mandel Hall.The program will include theworld premier of the SymphonyNo. 3 for chamber orchestra byAssociate Professor of MusicEasley Blackwood. Also to be per¬formed, for the first time inAmerica, is the Three Movementsfor Orchestra by George Perle.The third work on the concertwill be the first Chicago per¬ formance of Edgar Varese’s Ar¬cana. First pei formed in 1927 byLeopold Stokowski and the Phila¬delphia Orchestra, Arcana is amammoth work calling for anorchestra of well over a hundred.The Mandel Hall stage is beingextended in order to accommodatethe performers.Admission to the concerts are$2.50, $2 for faculty, and $1 forstudents. Tickets are availableonly at the Music Department,5802 Woodlawn, or at the box of¬fice on the evening of the con¬certs.Repertory company comingCLASSIFIED ADSPERSONALHEAR sen. Wayne Morse blast U.S.Policy in Viet Nam. Tuesday, March 2,8:30 pm. Mandel Hall. 90.Happy Birthday and Beat W teheeto theHONORABLEALEXANDER LOUIS BROUDEFeb. 26 PISCESFor Present, see Bernard B—.5:15 pmSO LOANS — NOW THREE WEEKS INDURATION. $5-$25. AVAILABLE IN SOOFFICE Mon.-Frj. 1-5."You will come and you will goLike the rain and like the snow,But you’ll never taste true JoysUntil you lind SWAP In Ida Noyes."With many thanks to William W. whocalled in this verse for SWAP, x 3587.SO INTERIM FLIGHTS! FULL PAY¬MENT DEADLINE TODAY. If paymentL not completed by today a $2 late feewill be charged.'1TRED of libraries and dorms? Studyat Hillel House. Open M-Th eves., 7:30-11:30 pm.80 SPRINO VACATIONTRANSPORTATIONNew York Bus March 18-28 $35Philadelphia Bus March 18-28 $35N. Y. Charter March 19-28 $64*N. Y. JET Grp March 18-28 $80*Boston JET Grp March 19-28 $92*(•including airport bus)A $15 deposit Is required to reserve spaceon any of the carriers. Contact SG Office1-5 pm. Mon.-Frl. X3272.WRITER’S WORKSHOP (PL 2-8377)TO ALL WOULD-BE TRAVELERS:SO Charter Flights are 94% booked up.if YOU Intend to fry with us, callext. 3272, M-F 1-5 pm. soon!SUMMER Jobe in Germany. All fields.Contact immediately, Toby Hachem, 176W Adams. AN 3-6726.PROFESSIONAL ALTEJtA TION S, Formerly with Bonwit Teller.Leah Rothenberg, 5216 Cornell, 324-2871 HAS DR. YANG been distributing cyclo-pentadecanone to unsuspecting students?Informants contact ROACH.POT —Forget your maternal instincts;run for king — JAMES.HELP WANTEDJUNIOR SECRETARYRapidly growing business needs a youngsecretary-stenographer full time. Excel¬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 Unlv. of Chicago 15 min. away! Lg. bdrm.apt. 2nd fir., sep. dining rm., $110. New¬ly decorated - refinished floors - 2 blks.shops - beach - IC trans.Draper & Kramer 324-8600WANTEDRide to New York after exams. ContactCynthia Spindel, 752-7161.Math Tutors urgently for SWAP. X3587.ROOMMATE far lge. 2 bdrm. 5-rm. apt.\'a blk. off campus. Call 667-0475.FEMALE RMTB. 2 bedrm. PI 2-0968“Used amplifier for electric guitar.363-7997LOST The National RepertoryTheatre, America’s leadingtouring repertory company,will play at the BlackstoneTheatre for a six-week period,March 1 through April 10, withthree famous plays alternatingnightly. Farley Granger and SigneHasso head this year’s companyand the plays are Oliver Gold¬smith’s She Stoops to Conquer,Henrik Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler andFerenc Molnar’s Liliom.Mr. Granger, who starred in thethree NRT plays here last season,and Miss Hasso, who was MaryStuart the year before, have beendirected by the “first lady of re¬pertory,” Eva Le Gallienne, in twoof the three works, Hedda Gablerand Liliom. Jack Sydow has di¬rected She Stoops to Conquer. Theproductions have been designed byPeter Larkin (scenery), Alvin Colt(costumes) and Tharon Musser(lighting).She Stoops to Conquer, lusty andTom Jonesian, has Mr. Granger as young Marlowe, who gets alongbetter with wenches than ladies ofquality, and who is brought to heelby a lady posing as a barmaid —"stooping to conquer.” It opensthe engagement, playing Monday,Tuesday and Wednesday matinees,March 1-2-3.Hedda Gabler, with Miss Hassostarring in the vicious title role,will open on Wednesday March 3,and Liliom, starring both Mr.Granger and Miss Hasso, will pre¬miere on Thursday, March 4.Thereafter the shows play in alter¬nating repretory with perform¬ances nightly except Sunday at8:30 and matinees on Wednesdaysand Saturdays at 2:00 PM. Pricesrange from $6 to $3.NEAR CAMPUS—324-2089ELITE — Electric. Reas.Call Mrs. Watson, CE 6-9700 Ken Cohen’s Sociol 202 & Soc Sci 275notebks, please call FI 2-9704. Leavemessage.TUTORING Sopranos Neva Pilgrim andRosemary Bock and contralto Lo-rene Richardson will be soloists inthe Open Sing, Tuesday, March 2.Chicago Symphony Chorus Direc¬tor Margaret HilHs will direct allinterested singers in the Vivaldi“Gloria" and Brahms' "Nanie."The one dollar admission includesthe use of scores. The Sing tokesplace in the North Lounge ofReynolds Club at 7:30 pm, spon¬sored by the 57th Street Chorale.FOR SALE Far courteous, personal tutoring in Ger¬man, French, Italian, call 363-4289.1959 MGA Coupe. $300 — 643-6156WALTZ Electronic Flashgun, battery orAC operated, battery AC cord Included,$25.00. See H. Juris, Haskell IO or call348-5817 after 7 pm.KNIGHT tape recorder, mono recordstereo playback w/mike, takeup spool,$40.00. See H. Juris, Haskell IO or call348-5817 after 7 p.m.GIBSON Guitar, SJN (country-westernmodel), 9 mo. old. H. Fishman, X1915Pierce.___FOR RENT1 pair of second-hand balls. ContactYuri Orecbwa (R.F.).STUDENTS & UNIVERSITY EMPLOYESONLY! 4-rm. apts., $90.00; 5-rm. apt.,$95.00. 6104-10 Ellis. To see call RE 4-4141. RENT A TRUCK$200 Per HourDO-IT-YOURSELFTRUCK RENTALSO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hour Coin-Op Dry Cleaners8 Lbs. Cleaned in 45 MinutesSpecial $1.75Sweaters - KnitsNo Sag - No Block1611 E. 53rd, Near CornellAlso Open Evenings, Sunday There will be a noon concertsponsored by the Musical Societyin Mandel Hall at 12:30. Thethird concert sponsored by theMusical Society, will feature a per¬formance by the University WindEnsemble of Antonin Dvorak's“Serenade for Winds, Violoncelloand Double Bass."The work is scored for twooboes, two clarinets, three Frenchhorns and one cello and one dou¬ble boss. The work will be con¬ducted by H. Colin Slim, conductorof the University Orchestra.The second concert in a seriesfor wind and brass instrumentswill be held next Friday, March 5,ot 12:30 in Mandel Hall. Themain work at that concert will bea particularly odd version of theJ. S. Bach double violin concerto,Slim announces.JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAPGOLDCITY INNLooking for real Cantonese foodf Try Gold City Inn.Compare quality and quantity.10% discount to student with this od5228 HARPERHY 3-2559Try Our Convenient Toke-Out Orders(Eat More For Less) Study inGuadalajara, MexicoThe Guadalajara Summer School,a fully accredited University ofArizona program, conducted incooperation with professors fromStanford University, University ofCalifornia, ond Guadalajara, willoffer June 28 to August 7, art,folklore, geography, history, lan¬guage and literature courses. Tui¬tion, board ond room is $265.Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P.O.Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. CAR EUROPE THIS SUMMER??Would you like to wander through Europe"By Car" for TWO exciting and educationalMONTHS?ALL THIS FOR UNDER $950.00This includes round trip air fare, English Chan¬nel crossing, complete hotel accommodationsincluding breakfasts, plus all transportationcosts while in Europe.Travel with congenial students, teachers, andprofessors with similar interests from variousschools and colleges.Enjoy the fun and freedom of independent travelwhen you and three others drive a car under thisunique program.For details write to:Mr. A. J. Dellea30 WILLETT STREET, ALBANY, NEW YORKFeb. 26, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9i* G A D F L¥ *Bill Witherspoon writes:A view from 'maximum isolation' jail cellCopyright, 1965, Chicago MaroonThere is no “Death Row” inChicago’s Cook County Jail. Thereis only a grim area in the deepestend of the basement called “Maxi¬mum Isolation.” It is the deathhouse.At this writing, seven doomedmen are scattered throughout thejail In various stages of our ap¬peals. Unless something is doneabout that death house, we shallbe taken into Maximum Isolationone by one and killed.While waiting here for the ap¬peals to mountain goat thru thehigh courts, I have often thoughtabout the date that is now writtenso vividly on the calendar for me:March 19th . . .Of course, this execution datecan again be changed by thecourts, or even cancelled by theGovernor.“THK I .AST MILE* is a eu¬phemism. It is the longest walkin the world, a journey whichtakes years.' The case must bewritten up. presented, argued, andreviewed by the high courts. Eachtime that there is a denial of yourwrit, the case moves to a newt •vel where a stay of death, usual¬ly during the final week of yourscheduled life, is granted.So far there have been 11 staystor me. Once, when I was slatedto be executed at midnight, theorder to stay the execution wasmisplaced by a clerk of the court.Only after a series of franticriione calls to the judge by theWarden did the elusive paper turnup at tire jail. No one informedJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection3 35 S. LaSalle St,Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 me of the stay, and I sat thru thenight of death with the feeling of“THIS IS IT!”Midnight came and went. I wasstill alive and didn’t know why.A week later I learned of themisplaced court order whichgranted me another 90 days oflife.When this happens enoughtimes, a man grows immune tothe feeling of death standing byhis side; sharing his cell, hismeals and his very bed with himat night; staring back from theeyes of the curious and from thesaddened faces of those who cometo inform you there has been an¬other set-back in the courts andthat a new date has been set foryour death.THIS IS LIKE playing Russianroulette with a new twist. Eachtime you fail to die, you must addone more bullet to the chamberuntil the chances of survival arenil, for all of the chambers havebeen filled. This is how my casenow stands; it is laying on full,with only the faint hope that thereis no shell under the falling ham¬mer. Perhaps, if Governor Kemerdecides to extend executive clem¬ency, I can throw away this gunand look at the calendar withoutcounting the days I have left tolive.Better yet, if the state legisla¬tors follow through with the votecast in the House of Representa¬tives, all seven of the doomed whowait here for death can look to¬ward tomorrow with hope.“The Ghost Patrol” is the nameaffixed to the men with the deathsentence. It is a fraternity intowhich you are initiated by thecourts, and excused by death.You are made aware of this asToday'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN$ 1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - FartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 you march numbly back fromyour sentencing by the CriminalCourt’s Judge. Usually you aretransferred directly in MaximumIsolation so you can be observedby the guards. You lay in thequiet death house and listen tothe heavy silence all around you.There is the feeling that you al¬ready lie stretched on a morgueslab in this warm tomb of a place.Every 15 minutes the guard whosits before the three big cells getsup to make a punch on his timeclock. Thoughts focus on him. Thepassage of time is magnified.A screened and barred windowfills the back wall of the cell, butyou cannot open it for a breathof fresh air. The air here is stag¬nant; filled with acrid smell ofthe executions that have takenplace. You begin to wonder howmany people have risen from thevery bed upon which you lie, towalk those last few steps intothe execution chamber in the com¬er of this L-shaped room.IT IS NEVER DARK here.Huge lights bum just outside thebig cells, stippling the walls witha web of cold cage shadows. Morelights bum in the walled yardoutside and reflect the dirt on thewindows. It is hard to realizethat a whole world exists beyondthose gun-towered walls; a worldof neoned laughter where only afew know that they have told youthat you must die at a given timeand in a horribly described fash¬ion.No matter how hard the newly-condemned tries, he cannot pullhis thoughts away from death.Here the dead members of thismacabre fraternity roam. Theirpresence does not soothe the manwho lies in sullen thought, wait¬ing to join them.Actually, they died in vain iftheir execution was meant to deterHYDE PARK YMCANevty re decorated student rooms ovoiloble with or without meal plans.Study lounge, private TV room, health, and physical facilities allavailable for student use.Call FA 4-5300 killing. They didn’t stop him, forhe probably didn't even knowabout them, no more than heknew about this mausoleum andthe anguished tightening of thenerves that takes place here. Per¬haps he read somewhere of theshaved head routine and the shortmarch to enterity, but he neverthought it would happen to him.No man looks at his own life sopessimistically. If he did, pedestri¬ans would refuse to cross streetswhere others had been run downby cars; the divorce rate woulddiscourage marriage. A soldier,seeing his comrades die all aroundhim, would not try to make itacross a battlefield. Man wouldsoon become the most cautious,the most frightened animal inexistence.TTiere is no “example." no “les¬son" in the execution of someoneelse. Threat of the death penaltywill not stop the hand of a manwho wants to kill or who panicshimself into committing a capitaloffense. All it can do is inspirefurther killing by a man who killsonce and knows if he is capturedhe will be executed. Chances arehe would kill again and again toavoid that.WHEN IT IS FEI.T that youdon’t intend to cheat the State bytaking your own life, you aremoved back out into the jail prop¬er. It sems now, though, thatguards, fellow inmates, and evenyour family when they visit, lookat you differently. The doomedthus becomes a specimen pinnedto a board where furtive looksconstantly search for cracks inhis facade.Many times while waiting hereto die I have been approached bypeople who confided, “I amAGAINST the death penalty!"“Good . . . What have you doneabout it?" is a question that us¬ ually draws a shrug and “whatcan I do" look.Unless opinions are voiced,merely being against somethingis not enough. If we are to putdown the death penalty in Illinois,and perhaps in so doing set anexample of compassion for theother States, we must raise ourcollective voice loud and strong.Enough whispers will grow intoa shout that lawmakers cannotand will not ignore. If everyonereading this article will write tothe Illinois Senators, to the Rep¬resentatives, and to the Governor,perhaps the death penalty will beabolished. Only then can the crimeof capital punishment — killing inthe name of the people — end.We have blindfolded our goddess of Justice; so we must actas her eyes. Our voice can protect her integrity, and can insureher promise of equality under thelaw. No longer will she lash outblindly with her two-edged sword,cutting down only the poor, theignorant, the politically defense¬less. Hers was never designed tobe a blind rage."An Eye For An Eye" is aphilosophy of revenge, a childof hate and fear. It is as wrongfor society to kill the killer asit would be for us to bum downthe home of an arsonist, or toravish the family of a rapist. Itmakes an intelligent society moreof an animal than the convicted.IF I MUST DIE on March 19th,raise your voice In protest. Letthe death penalty die with me.Change death row Into a storagearea and put this black altar ofdeath that has drunk the boilingsweat of its victims Into Its prop¬er place in antiquity. I can diethen with the knowledge that mybeing here and going throughthis two minutes of high-tensiondrama has made people aware ofthe death penalty.Bill WitherspoonDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th Sr.OO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES* Student & Faculty DiscountREMEMBERJhsL VnacfitooLCo.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERSRUSH SERVICEavailable when neededPhones: Ml 3-7447 1013-17 East 61st St.HY 3-6868 Across from B-J Ct.Serving the Camput since 1917 C’BSTUSFAIT ... La protection financfAra que vousdonnez A votra famlllo aujourd’huidevra lul 6tre procure d’une autrefa$on domain. L’aesurance Sun Lifepeut certalnement accomplir cetlettche A votra place.• CHICAGO MAROON Feb. 26, 1965 En tan! qua raprdsantant local de la SunLHa, puls-Ja vout vltitor A un moment davotra choli?Ralph J. Weed. Jr., CLUHyda Park Book Building. Chicago 15. Ml.FAIrfax 4-MOO — PR 2-23*0Office Heart f te S Monday! ft Friday*SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYIMAROONiiiiiiiiimi[3imiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiimiiuaiiiimuiii[}iimimmniiiiiumunimmiiiii(]iMiiiimiK]iiiiiiiitiii[]iiiiimiiii[]mii<^WEEKEND GUIDEHARPERLiQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4='»!■ ^ — 7699HY 3-6800FMy-Seventh at KenwoodUNUSUAL FOODDEU6NTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICES for college studentswith i.d. card• different doublefeatures dailyo open dawn to dawn• little gal-leryfor gals onlyfri. 26—“word by night,"“the french line”sat. 27—“cool of the day,"“night of the iguana”sun. 28—“seduced andabandoned,” “senechalthe magnificent”mon. 1—“fury of thepagans,” “gold for theceasars"tues. 2—“man from god’scountry,” “legions of thenile”wed. 3—“a summer place,""toys in the attic”thurs. 4—“long days Jour¬ney into night,” “periodof adjustment”dork & madisonfr 2-2843 B’NAI B’RITH HILLEL FOUNDATIONPresentsSHL0M0 GARLEBACHAn Evening of Hasidic Spirituals and FolksongsSaturday Night, February 27 — 8:00 p.m.IDA NOYES HALL —CLOISTER CLUB1212 E. 59th StreetAdmission One DollarTickets Available at the Door or at Hillel HousePIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PARK BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICEIs proud to offer all of ourfriends of Hyde Park andthe surrounding areas a se¬lection of Polynesian dishesas well as our choice Ameri¬can menu. This choice ofPolynesian foods is now partof our regular menu.JUST A SAMPLE OF OURMENU:Shrimp Polynesian; chickenTahitian; lobster Polynesian;'beef and tomatoes; egg roll;ono ono kaukau; shrimp dejonghe; beef kabob flambe.Try one of our delightfulHawaiian cocktails. KE 6-6606 — KE 6-3891Chicken - SandwichesPizza &Italian FoodsCIRALSHOUSE OF TIKI51st & HARPERFood served 11 A.M. to 3 A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.1510 Hyde Park Blvd. .**» v\-\ *t„v\THE THINKING MAN’S BISTRO. . . you can drink while you think,you can eat, too . . . Luncheon, Dinner, Late SnacksOPEN NOON TIL . . . !THE EAGLE5311 BLACKSTONE 324-7859TAhSAM-AWNworld ofdiningpleasureLI 8-7585 charcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668 CHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63 rd St. MU 4-1062 Jeffery Theatre1952 E. 71st ST. HY 3-33343rd RECORD BREAKING WEEK!Nominated for13 ACADEMY AWARDSIncluding: Best PictureBest Actress — JULIE ANDREWS♦ * • «*rMR. PIZZAw o'* WE DELIVER —CARRY OUTSHY 3-8282FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENAlso Ch. Broiled Hamburgers ACCLAIMED3JSWalt Disney’s .greatest achievement!PIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 6 PartySausage . . . 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Gorlic 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Oliva . . . 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.5014 and 14 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients . . . . .. . .50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pizza 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacon 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pizza 2.50(Sausage, Mushrooms ond Peppers) 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00 Box of Broosted Chicken10, 16, 20 PiecesSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCIOLIRAVIOLISondwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGEMEAT BALL1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Doys o Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 o.m. -—Fri. to 3:00 o.m.Sot. to 3:00 o.m. — Open 2 p.m. Sundoys Now FeaturingST. LOUISSPARE RIBS 111iliGIGANTIC SALE! BOOK BARGAINS!Values To $20°° — Mow $1°° and Up!Dozens of titles never before available at these prices.SALE STARTS FEBRUARY 26th, ONE WEEK ONLY!SPIRITS REBELLIOUS. By Khalil Gibran.Pub. at $2.75. Sale $1.00THE PROCESSION. By Khalil Gibran. An inti¬mate portrait ot the world-famous author ofThe Prophet. Includes his poetry, drawings, fac¬simile and biographioal sketchesPub. at $2.75. Sale $1.00WHO’S WHO IN THE BIBLE. Ed by A Sims «fcG. Dent. Invaluable compendium of Biblical in¬formation designed as much for home referenceas for use by students. Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1.00THE THREE SIREN. By Irving Wallace. A novel.Pub. at $5.95. Sale $1.00Jl'STINE: Or the Misfortunes of Virtue. By Mar¬quis de Sade. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.00sALETHE MADISON AVENUE COOKBOOK. By AlanKoehler. Delightful, succulent recipes that willprove you can cook (when you really can’t), in¬cluding dishes such as "Baked Beans Durstin fcOsborn" and ‘‘Sole of Deception FTC.” Illus¬trated. Pub. at $2.95. Sale $1.00THESE ARE MY PEOPLE. By Harry Gersh. Atreasury of 47 biographies of heroes of theJewish spirit. A book to cherish for young andTHE HAPPY LAGOONS: Adventures of aSouth Sea Wanderer. By Jorgen AndersonRosendal. Pub at $5.00. Sale $1.00EXISTENTIALISM AND HUMAN EMOTIONS.By Sartre. Here's the heart of Sartre's philos¬ophy — that man is personally responsible forwhat he does — that there are no values ex¬ternal to man — that man may choose differentvalues. Pub. at $2.75. Sale $1.00THE KAMA SUTRA OE VATSVAYANA: Theelassir Hindu Treatise on I.ove and Social Con-duel. Translated by Sir Richard Burton.Pub. at $5.00. Sale SI.00THE OSCAR. By Richard Sale. A dramatic ex¬plosive novel revealing the definitive, behind-the-scenes Hollywood and its inhabitants.Pub. at $5.95. Sale $1.00350 BOATING QUESTIONS ANSWERED BY EX¬PERTS. Ed. by Tom Bottomley. 17 experts aidthe editors of Popular Boating in answeringquestions about boat selection, engines, main¬tenance. sails, etc. Illustrated.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1 00THE RISING GORGE. By S. J. Perelman. Ourmaster humorist, with wild laughter, defendsthe embattled Sane, while zigzagging throughflying cliches and Niagaras of fun — 34 pieces,never before in book form.Pub at $4.50. Sale SI .00PRIVATE EVE’S ROMANTIC ENGLAND: TheLast Days of Macniiliait. By Chris. Booker. Rich¬ard Ingrams & Wm. Rushton. Hilarious reporton the affairs of the Emperor Macmillan; Lon-dinium, the heart of empire; Sextus Profano,Chief of the Praetorian Guard and his "friend”Christina, et al. — complete with a unique LI¬BEL APPLICATION COUPON, in case YOUhaven’t been offended, injured or otherwise li¬beled in this book. Profusely illustrated.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1.00ANIMAL POPULATIONS. By T O Browning. Asimple study of animal populations for thosewith little knowledge of animal ecology.Pub. at $2.50. Sale $1.00THE GREAT DECEPTION: The Inside Story ofHow the Kremlin Took Over Cuba. By JamesMonahan and K. O. Gilmore.Pub. at $3.95. Sale $1.00THE WILL TO DOUBT. By Bertrand Russell. Aseries of new essays by the foremost philosopherof our time, examining man's universal, pas¬sionate curiosity and doubts about himself andiris world. Pub. at $2.75. Sale SI.00THE FOX IN THE ATTIC. Bv RichardHughes. A stirring novel.Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1.00THE LIGHT WITHIN US. By Albert Schweitzer.Published at $2.75. Sale $1.00UNDERST ANDING HISTORY. By Bertrand Rus¬sell. A world-renowned iconoclastic philosophercontributes a biting analysis of current miscon¬ceptions of historical events. Hardbound.Pub. at $2.75. Sale $1.00DAMNED IF YOU DO — DAMNED IE YOUDON'T. Novel. Bv Marjorie Osterman. 397 pages.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $1.00THE KEY TO GOLF. By Dai Rees. The Brit¬ish Ryder Cup captain discusses all aspectsof golf, pinpointing common mistakes. 30photos. Pub. at $3.95. Sale $1.00SEAMANSHIP SIMPLIFIED. By Elbert Robber-son. The boatman’s “Bible" and guide to theelements of seamanship and to more fun afloat.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $1.00BUDDHISM AND ZEN. Bd and trails, by N.Senzaki and R. S. MoCandless. Questions, an¬swers, glossary and notes on the ancient philos¬ophy-religion that is sweeping the Westernworld. Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1.60THE ORDKAI. OE POWER: A Political Memoirof the Eisenhower Years. By Em meet JohnHughes. An exciting political portrait of Ike,the men around him and the major eventsfrom Little Rock to Suez, from the Geneva Con¬ference to Sputnik and the U-2 incident.Pub. at $5.95. Sale SI.041 ART OE THE WESTERN WORLDAn inexpensive but definitive collection ofart books, tracing the course of Europeanpainting from the Lascaux caves to the 20thcentury. Each volume is an independentunit, surveying the art of a particular periodand containing an interesting, informativetext by an expert in each period, as well as24 full-color plates: extensively annotated;each volume 56 pages: 10'V' x 14a.4”.Pub. at $5.00. Each Volume $1.98EARLY CHRISTI AN TO A1EDIF.VAL PAINT¬ING. By Carlo Volte. The lordly color andecstatic spirituality of Christian paintingfrom 350 A.D. to Cimabue. Giotto and Loren-zetti.FLORENTINE PAINTING. By Snzo Carli.Impressive study of the greatest Florentinepainters and paintings, from Masaccio andFra Angelico to Ghirlandaio, Leonardo andMichelangelo.ITALIAN PAINTING. By Andrea Emiliani.The wonder and beauty of Italian paintingfrom the high Renaissance to the revolu¬tionary innovations of Caravaggio.PREHISTORIC TO CLASSICAL PAINTING.By Gian Guido Belloni. The awesome majes¬ty and compelling beauty of Lascaux, Alta-mira, Thebes, Chiusi, Tarquinia, Pompeii.SPANISH PAINTING. By Ugo Bicchi. Theglorious and magnificent sensibilities of thegreatest Spanish artists from Pedro Serraand Martorell to El Greco and Goya.VFN iVENETIAN PAINTING. By Marco Valsecch'i.Stupendous, dramatic study distilling sixcenturies of Venetian artistic talent andgenius — such masters as Pisanello, Man¬tegna. Bellini, Tintoretto and Veronese.DUTCH PAINTING. By Peter Mitchell. Anexhaustive view of the immortals of Dutchpainting: Rembrandt. Hals. Vermeer, Cuyp,Seghers, Ruisdael, et al., and many of thelesser masters.ENGLISH PAINTING. By Michael Kitson ArAlexandra Wedgwood. The drama of Eng¬lish painting from its earliest prominenceand eventual decline and its briliant re-emergence with Hogarth. Reynolds, Gains¬borough. Blake, Turner and Constable.HE WHO FLEES THE I.HON. By J Klein-Hapa-rash. Giant 650-page historical novel — a Eu¬ropean “Gone With the Wind" — set just beforeWW II. 650 pages. Pub. at $7.95. Sale $1.00PILGRIMAGE TO HUMANITY. By Dr. AlbertSchweitzer. Here, in a clear, concise autobi¬ography. is the essence of the philosophy andhumanity of Albeit Schweitzer.Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1.00VISIONS OE GERARD. By Jack Kerouac.Pub. at $3.95. Sale $1.00FROM COPERNICUS TO EINSTEIN. By HansRelchenbach. A simple and scientific history ofthe ideas and discoveries- of the past five hun¬dred years leading to the formulation of thetheory of relativity. Pub. at $2.75. Sale $1.00DICTIONARY OF ASTRONOMY AND ASTRO¬NAUTICS. Bv Armand Spitz A: Frank Ga.vnor.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $1.00TIIE REAL JAZZ. By Hugues Panassie. A newrevised edition of this exciting book.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $1.00THE LIGHT INFANTRY BALL. By HamiltonBas3o. An extraordinarily attractive novel ofdivided loyalties on the brink of the Civil War-suspense and humor written with quiet distinc¬tion -- bv the author of Pompev’s Head.Sale $1.00DE PROEUNDIS. Bv Oscar Wilde. Ed * Introby Vyvyan Holland. Pub. at $4.00. Sale $1.00PICTORIAL HISTORY OF MORALS. Ed. bv Har¬ry E. Wedeck. Pub. at $12.50. Sale $5.98Tlie Complete Book of MODERN HANDGUN¬NING. By Jeff Cooper & The Ed’s of “Gunsand Ammo.” A profusely illustrated, up-to-dateand authentic guide to everything you want toknow about the basic, technical, practical andlegal aspects of small firearms. The ideal giftfor collectors, hunters, sportsmen, etc.Pub. at $7.50. Sale $’.49COMPLETE BRIDGE COURSE. By Alfred Shein-wold. 640 pages. Index. Pub. at $5.95. Sale $7.98GARDENING IN COLOUR: An all-year-roundPicture Encyclopedia. By Frances Perry. Sub¬jects too numerous to list range from design¬ing your garden through control of pests anddiseases to flower arranging. 450 illustrations,250 in full color: index of common and scien¬tific names 301 pp. Special Import $4.98 FELIX FRANKFURTER REMINISCES. Ed byDr. Harlan B. Phillips. This is a rare, intimatework — transcriptions of "off-the-cuff” conver¬sations with Felix Frankfurter, Supreme Courtjustice since 1939. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.98DICTIONARY' OF EXISTENTIALISM. Edited byRalph B W'inn. A frank and sparkling examina¬tion of this unique 2Cth century philosophy andits application to a variety of topics by its chiefspokesman. Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1.0**ACT OF ANGER. By Bart Spicer. A homosexualattack, a murder, a trial of a young Mexicanboy In the Southwest — all the courtroom ex¬citement of Anatomy of a Murder. 505 pagesPub. at $5.95. Sale $10**TO FREEDOM CONDEMNED: Guide to «liePhilosophy of Jean-Paul Sari re. Bv Justus Strel-ler. Pub. at $3.00. Sale Sl.iwCALORIES DON’T COUNT. By Herman Taller.M.D. "If you want to grow thin you need toeat fat." This is the astonishing proclamationof Dr. Taller, eminent gynecologist and obstet¬rician. Here are all the facts behind a new un¬derstanding of the body's chemistry; the kev toa slim, trim figure on three full, high-caloriemeals a dav in the safest way possible.Pub. at $3.95. Sale $1.0«MELISANDK. By Margery Sharp. A pictorialmemoir — with superb cartoons — of one ofthe most remarkable operatic sopranos andmeteoric careers of our time: Melisande GrandDiva, author of "I’ll Bark Tomorrow" and privi¬leged member of the International Kennel ClubCartoons by Roy McKie. Pub at $2.50. Sale $l.*lltMATHEMATICS REFRESHER. By Kurt Wolter.A clear and easy resume of general mathemat¬ical study for anyone who wants to brush upright from the beginning in quick, decisivesteps. Many charts and tables.Pub. at $2.75. Sale $1.0**WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE: The Complete Works.All that Shakespeare ever wrote — a fine, com¬plete edition following the arrangement of theFirst Folio of 1623. 1.100 pgs.. with ribbon bookmark. Special Import $7.49KLEE. Bv Norbert L.vnton. A fine representationof Paul Klee's vast talent — 50 paintin 'S in fullcolor plus 12 drawings and sketches. Klee’s lifeand work. Special Import $7.98KINGS. COURTS \N!> MONARCHY: A Historyof Rovaltv. By Harold Nicholson. 335 pages.Pub. at $12.50. Sale $5.98LOVE IN THE SOUTH SE AS. By Bengt Danlels-son. Complete, accurate account of the familyand sex life of the Polynesians, from the 18tlicentury to the present. Pub. at $4.00. Sale $1.98LITERARY GUIDE TO SEDUCTION. Ed beRobert Meistpr. The great seduction scenes ofWestern literature by such authors as Abelard.Laclos. Restif de la Bretonne, Stendhal andThomas Mann. 424 pages. Pub. at $7.50. Sale $1.98FROM MANASSAS TO APPOMATTOX. Bv Gen¬eral James Longstreet; Ed. with an Intro bvJames I. Robertson. Jr. One of the most sought-after literary memoirs of the Civil WarPub. at $8.95. sale $3.98IN SEARCH OF A A’OGI. By Duni Denys Rut¬ledge; Preface by Thomas Merton. Stirring ac¬count of a journey by the author, a Benedictinemonk, in search of holy men in India.Pub. at $4 95. sale $1.98PICASSO. By Keith Sutton A magnificent vol¬ume of 48 full color reproductions of Picasso'srepresentative paintings, with an introduction,biographioal notes, and comments on the plates.Special $7.98r.OY A. By Bernard Myers. A royal road of ex¬cellent text and brilliant, full color art repro¬ductions — the heroic Goya and his passionatesearch for artistic truth, that moved from light¬hearted tapestry cartoons to the horrific Disas¬ters of War and the savage Black Pictures. 49plates in full color, 9 monochrome. Special $7.98sALETHE PERFUMED GARDEN OF THE SIIAYKIINICFZAWI: The Arabian Manual of Love. Trans¬lated by Sir Richard F. Burton.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.*WTHE GRAND PRIX YEAR. By Louis T. Stan¬ley. Grand Prix races from South Americathrough Europe and the U. S.Pub. at $8.50. Sale $1.98THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO GARDEN FLOW¬ERS : .An Encyclopedia of Garden Planning. Edby Herbert Askwith. More than 1,000 full-colorphotos! A superb, gigantic &'■/' x 11” volume,covering over 2,000 subjects in easy-to-under-stand language. Describes, illustrates and an¬swers every question about every desirable flow¬er and ornamental plant in every region ofNorth America. It is the how-to-(io-it gardenbook that replaces every other book on the sub¬ject! Pub. at $12.50. Sale $5.98THE BETRAYERS: The Rosenberg Case. ByJonathan Root. The first dispassionate, objec¬tive assessment of the Spy Case of the Century—detailed portraits of the Rosenoergs, the oper¬ations of the Justice Department — a lively, en¬thralling account that asks and answers suchquestions as “Did the Rosenberg A-bomb secretsreally start the Korean War?"Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.49 RUBENS—With 49 Color Plates. Text by EdwardLucie-Smith. A superb volume on one of thegreatest names in European painting.Sjiecial $7.98THE COMPLETE BOOK OF NATURE PHOTOG¬RAPH A'. By Russ Kine. Introduction by RogerTory Peterson. The special techniques andequipment required in photographing everyclass of natural history subject. Illustrated withmore than 140 photographs. For photographersand nature lovers. Pub. at $7.50. Sale $3.98PROSTITUTION AND SOCIETY: Primitive, Clas¬sical and Oriental. By Fernando Henriques. Acareful history and cogent social analysis ofprostitution in all its roles: temple prostitutewife-prostitute, courtesan, cocotte, streetwalker— its prevalence In Greece. Rome. India. ChinaJapan, the Near East, Africa and the Pacific62 illus. Pub. at $7.95. Sale $7.98HECK THOMAS: Frontier Marshal. By GlennShirley. The story of a real gunfighter. an au¬thentic hero and lawman of the Old West, whonever took a bribe, never backed down, lived toa magnificent old age. Illustrated.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $1.98KINGS OF JAZZ. For the true Jazz lover. Elevenbooks about the individual masters of tradi¬tional and modern jazz, each written by anexpert on his subject—Intelligent authoritative,and above all. Interesting. Titles: Duke Elling¬ton. Dizzie Gillespie. Bessie Smith. Rix Beider¬becke. Louis Armstrong. Charles Parker. FatsWaller, King Oliver. Jelly Roll Morton. JohnnvDodds and Miles Davis. Boxed set: 11 titles;softbound Pub at $10.45 the boxed set. Sale $5.98LIBRARY OF TIIF. CIVIL WARA boxed set of Perpet.ua pajierbaek booksEach written by an authority In his fieldEach a definitive study.CONSCIENTIOUS O RJKf TO R S IN THECIVIL AVAR. By Edward Needles Wright.TIIF GREAT SECESSION WINTER OF 1X60-61 AND THIRTEEN OTHER ESSAYS. BvHenrv Adams. Edited by George Hochfield.LETTERS FROM LEE’S ARMY. Compiled bySusan Leigh Blackford. Edited bv CharlesMinor Blackford III.A REBEL AVAR CLERK’S DIARY. By JohnB. Jones. Edited bv Ear! Schenck Miens.SEA DOGS OF THE SIXTIES Bv Jim DanHill.WALT WHITMAN AND THE CIVIL WAR.Edited bv Charles I. Glicksberg.Pub at $13.50. Sale (6 vols. boxed) $6.98ON LANGUAGE. By George Bernard Shaw. Edand annotated by Abraham Tauber. Ph.D. Theincomparable G.B.8. on the subject of language,about which he has had a great deal to »a.vPub. at $4.75. Sale $7.98THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORELAUTREC. By Denys Sutton. 48 full-color platesMagnificent reproduction of his most significantwork with an informative biography and fullnotes on the paintings. Special $7.98QUEEN OF CAPRICE: A Biography of Kristinaof Sweden. By Paul Lewis. Her Majesty Kris¬tina of Sweden defied comparison with anvqueen of history or myth, so beautiful thatmen fell In love wifh her at first sightPub. at $4.95. Sale $1.98THE OLD NORTHWEST: Pioneer Period 181.5-1840. By Carlyle Buley. A magnificent, hugetwo-volume work presenting a history of theOld Northwest from the beginning of the"Great Migration” to the end of the pioneerperiod. Illustrated with photos and from worksof artists of the period.Pub. at *17.50. Rale (both vols.) $9.98FORT PHIL KEARNY: An American Saga. ByDee Brown. How the West was won and some¬times lost — the story of ill-fated Fort Piil!Kearny in Wyoming, the Sioux-Chevenne-Arap-aho 3,000-warrior uprising under Red Cloud andthe bloody Fetterman massacre. Illus.Pub. at $4.95. Sale *1.98THE SECRET OF BOWLING STRIKES. By Daw¬son Taylor. An exciting new approach — step-by-step instructions and photographs — thatteaches how to make splits, spares, strikes, etcA “must” for all bowlers. Pub. at $3.95 Sale $1.98UNDER THE MOUNTAIN WALL: A Chronicleof Two Seasons in the Stone Age. Bv Peter Mat-tliiessen. As studied by The 1961 Harvard-Pea-body E.x|>edition. with Peter Matthiessen. EliotElisofon and Michael Rockefeller. 88 photos dIiisdrawings. Pub at $7.50. Rale $7 98DRAWING THE HUMAN FIGURE. Bv ArthurZaidenberg. Profusely illustrated chapters on thebest techniques to use in drawing the differentportions of the female and male figure In vary¬ing natural poses. An Invaluable reference workfor student and professional.Pub. at $6.95. saie $3,98THE MASTERS: The Story of Golf's GreatestTournament. By Tom Flaherty The incredibletension and excitement of professional golf’sgreatest event, captured here In thrilling textand superb photographs, many in full colorPub. at $7.50. sale $1.98THE MAKING OE THE POPE. Text by DawsonTaylor. Photographs by Tony Spina. A mag¬nificent volume, illustrated with over 100 colorand monochrome photographs. D1-,” x 12' insize. Pub. at $12.50. " Sale $5.985802 ELLIS AVENUE12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Feb. 26, 1965