Another seminory squobble?Catholics promised land? UC officials deny itThree scholarly Catholic re¬ligious orders are consideringmoving their Midwest theol¬ogy seminaries to the UC area,and they believe that the UC ad¬ministration has promised themth it land near the University willhe available for their use. TheUniversity has denied that it madeany such guarantee.In an exclusive telephone inter¬view with the Maroon, the Rev¬erend Mario Shaw, a professor ofIlerbrew and Old Testament liter¬al me at the St. Maur’s Priory ofHie Order of St. Renedict in SouthUnion, Kentucky, revealed that the Congregation of the Passion(Passionists) of the Sacred HeartRetreat, Louisville, Kentucky, theOrder of Servants of Mary (Ser-vites) of Lake Bluff, Illinois, theOrder of St. Benedict (Benedic¬tines) of St. Meinard Archabbey,St. Meinrad, Indiana, and the orderof Preachers (Dominicans) ofRiver Forest, Illinois, have negoti¬ated with the UC administration tomove their theology schools nearUC. Rev. Shaw Ls also residentdirector of the National Institutefor Race and Religion in SouthUnion, Kentucky.“TIIE ADMINISTRATION has promised that land would be avail¬able,” Rev. Shaw said. The ordersdo not, however, know whetherthe land will be in Hyde Park oracross the Midway in Woodlawn,he explained. The Lutheran Theo¬logical Seminary recently acquiredland in Hyde Park for their newschool.No promises made“No promise, assurance, encour¬agement, etc., has been made atall," declared Warner A. Wick,dean of students, to the Maroon.He refused, however, to revealwhether or not the University had negotiated with the three religiousorders.Winston E. Kennedy, managerof the UC community and realestate office, said that his officehad not met with the orders. “I’vehad no contact with any theologi¬cal schools other than the Luther¬ans,” Kennedy declared.According to Rev. Shaw, theBenedictine theology school whichwould be moved to Chicago num¬bers 300-500 students, plus a sup¬porting faculty.The Passionists, he said, wouldcooixlinate their school with thatof the Benedictines. The Passion¬ ists possess one of the best the*logical libraries in the US.Will be delayedANY PISANS FOR MOVINGthe schools to Chicago, Rev. Shawsaid, will face a long delay, due tothe very poor health of Chicago’sCardinal Albert Meyer.The Cardinal, who must approveany such move to Chicago, wasstricken before he had made anyfinal decision on the proposedmove. If the Cardinal dies, nodecision can be made until a newCardinal has been choosen.Thus, the proposed move by thefour schools is “impossible forthe immediate future,” Rev. Shawdeclared.Vol. 73— No. 36 The University of Chicago 1 Friday, April 9, 1965Debates, new party highlight preparationsSG elections five days awayNext week’s student Government (SG) elections promise to be an unexpected contest,as a renamed POLIT goes against the curren t majority party, GNOSIS.Throughout this week, slating and behind-the-scenes politicking have been underway.Highlights have been the formation of a new party, the Student Political Action Com-mitte (SPAC) and the abandon¬ment of last year’s National Stu¬dent Association (NSA) coalitionslate.si*AC, WHICH picks up wherethe now-defunct POLIT left off.is eh aired bv Rusti Woods, a sec¬ond year student in the Collegeand a current POLIT assmblymember.SPAC goes off-campusTin* new party expects to be abroad-based vehicle for liberal po-litieal action. They hope to devoteat least some of their energies tooff-campus issues, which GNOSIShas deliberately not done.POLIT had boon the majorityparts in SG for four consecutiveyears until the fall of 1962, whenthey condemned the late PresidentKennedy’s blockade of Cuba bytelegram. This action was objec¬tionable enough in the minds ofstudents to bring about a recallreferendum in the spring. The re¬sult was the ouster of the entirePOLIT membership except for onemember, Pam Procuniar.With POLIT in general disre¬pute, the election campaign whichfollowed soon thereafter pro¬duced two protest parties, GNO¬SIS and the Liberal Party.GNOSIS won a strong majority°f the assembly, with POLIT adistant second.LAST YEAR, POLIT rebound¬ed strongly in the College, win¬ning approximately 60 per cent ofthe vote, but their failure to filefull slates in the graduate schoolshanded control of the assembly toGNOSIS for a second year.Separate NSA slatesGNOIS and SPAC are runningseparate slates for NSA. Therewas considerable opposition tothe idea when it was firstbrought up last year, and many°f the idea’s opponents hadthought of a coalition as a “fix”rather than as a positive step. Therationale for the coalition last yearwas that the best talent availablefrom both parties was needed tospearhead a reform movement atthe NSA Congress. The proposedreforms lost.Debate on the coalition issuecentered around the various dis¬putants’ conception of the role ofNSA. It was argued on the onehand that, if there was such agreat difference between the twoParties, separate slates reflectingseparate ideologies should be run.Dn the other hand, many felt not°hly that the differences between.(Continued on page 5) Candidates for SG and NSAGrad Schools:Bio Sci (2)Phy Sci (4)Humanities (5 >SSA (2)Soc Sci <8) GNOSISNick CharneyTom GreenEducation (1 1Library Sci 11)Business (31Medical (2)Law (3)Divinity (2) Irv WladawskyLeon GlassBill LakinAaron BlochSi AronsonBrian HoganDonald TyreeAI CookRich LesserJerry HymanJim GrantWil BlairLarry CarsonJohn GwinnSusan ButtTom CottleGene CaffreyJohn McConnellMary CuddySteve LivernashGeorge TraversLloyd GiordanoAlan FeingoldEichelman SPACMike FaumandMike ZigmondFred Mueller IndependentsPaul NielsenPeter Nagourney Edgar NewmanPhilip Russell Robert KreiserJohn HandRobt. HamburgerPhilip O'MearaAyrie MoorePeter Livingston (Grad StudentPete McGregor Party)Joan Goldsmith Burton GrayDon Goldhcmer P. J. HillBob MajorBob RossMarilyn SalzmonArthur MoreyJudy WalzerBurr Benjamin SeigelSaul WassermanForrest HartmanAlan Miller Frank ZimringSherwin KaplanPhilip MooreEileen HansonJames Overbeck Howard AbramsJohn P. AhernMarty HochmanCollege:Burton- Guy Mahaffey Alan RubyJudson (2) Walter Saveland Steve CrystalNew Dorm (4)PierceTower (3) John Bremner Deirdre Holloway Alan BloomMarilyn Kanner Heather Tcbis David CitronE. Kippley Sarah BurnsM _ .Daly Hinrichsen Paul LevinMike Klowden D. StameshkinDave Rosenberg Jim BlairEric Neisser M. AckermanFraternities (1) Stan BachAt-Large (7) Joan TapperLelde KalmiteMark JosephDave LezakJohn ShaferKen SheltonBob Haven Tom Smucker Thomas HeaqyDave Aiken Rusti Woods David CurleyEvan Galen Bob Levey James PowellEllis Levin H. Greenwald Bill HerzogBernie Grofman Steve Goldsmith Eugene SargentHelen Selwvn Alan Sussman Karen EvansTom HowardGary MidkiffNational Student Association:Delegates (5) Dove Aiken Sarah Murphy Ruth Bukauskos(IndependentParty)Alternates (5) Bernie GrofmanEllis LevinJerry HymanJohn GwinnStan BachMike Klowden Sally CookRusti WoodsHeather TobisH. GreenwaldPaul LevinPhil FertikDave Rosenberg Bob LeveyMarty Hochman Dave StameshkinHelen Selwyn Alan Sussman Faculty, students joinfor 'teach-in' on VietUC faculty and students have organized an all-night teach-in on the Vietnam crisis. It willin Mandel Hall.In a letter to all membersStudent Committee on Vietnamstated:“There is increasing concernthat our government is driftingtoward a more and more danger¬ous course of action in Vietnam.There are legit imate fearsthroughout the world that con¬tinuing escalation may lead to afull-scale war in Asia.”The letter was signed by Rob¬ert Adams, director of the Orien¬tal Institute: Howard Brofsky, as¬sistant professor of music andhumanities; Richard Flacks, as¬sistant professor of sociology;Paul Friedrich, associate profes¬sor of anthropology; EugeneGroves, president of Student Gov¬ernment; Hans Lenneberg, assist¬ant professor of music; Hans Mor-genthau, professor of political sci¬ence; David Schneider, chairmanof the anthropology department;Melford Spiro, professor of an¬thropology; Howard Schomer,president, Chicago TheologicalSeminary; Herman Sinaiko, as¬sistant professor of humanities;Gilbert White, chairman of thegeography department, and PaulCowan of Students for a Demo-rat ie Society.“THE VIETNAM teach-in isbeing held late at night in orderto stress, by breaking normal rou¬tines, that this is not just anotherprotest meeting, nor a series oflectures to inform a passive audi¬ence,” said Flacks.Hope for involvementFlacks, who is faculty chairmanpro-tem of the committee, said:“We hope to involve the faculty,students, and all who attend inparticipating in and understand¬ing the processes which shape for¬eign policy.”Speakers at the meeting willinclude Tran Van Thinh, secretaryof the foreign office of the Com¬mon Market, a former Vietnamesecitizen: White, who has been work¬ing on a plan for development ofthe Mekong river delta in SouthVietnam; and Schomer, chairmanof the Chicago SANE group, whohas been helping to organizeSANE’s campaign against ourpresent policy of strategic bomb- begin at 9:30 pm, Wednesdayof the faculty, the Faculty-ings in North Vietnam.These and other speakers willdiscuss causes of the present cri¬sis, strategies and goals of Amer¬ican policies in Southeast Asia,and possibilities for a negotiatedsettlement in Vietnam.Following this, the audiencewill meet with the speakers andother faculty members in smallinformal groups, to discuss theSoutheast Asia situation and planfuture action.“WE FEEL THAT informedopinion, offering constructive al¬ternatives to government policies,can be of great value, and withmore chance of effect, than ex¬pressions of protest or oppositionalone,” Flacks told the Maroon.“Critical consideration of thefacts, and of many points of viewAll candidates for SGand NSA are requested to 1come to the Maroon office i|| for interviews at one of |the following times:Today, 3:30-5:30 pmSaturday, 12 noon-4 pm |Sunday, 3-5 pmon methods of accomplishing de¬sired goals, and security of thegoals themselves, can help to de¬fine directions for change,” headded.Michigan set the exampleAt the University of Michigan,Ann Arbor, where teach-ins orig¬inated, some 200 of the faculty,who organized and arranged thefirst one, day more than 2,500 stu¬dents to an all-night session onVietnam.William Gamson, associate pro¬fessor of sociology at Michiganand faculty chairman of the groupfelt the teach-ins were a success¬ful way of interesting and involv¬ing “the concerned and curious,”a group the Michigan Daily’s edi¬tor called “the students who havepreviously stuck to their booksand private lives as faithfully asthe professors stick to their class¬rooms and laboratories.”Buses get ready for SDSMarch on WashingtonUC is the site of intensiveactivity this week in prepara¬tion for the SDS March onWashington to End the Warin Vietnam.In preparation for the March ameeting was held last Sunday,which was attended by approxi¬mately 150 people in the IdaNoyes Lounge.In addition, forums have beenheld every Friday afternoon at3:30 in the Reynolds Club loungefor the past few weeks. Theforums have for their stated pur¬poses the discussion of the crisisin Vietnam. The forum is putting out a newsletter, The Hawk or theDove.In final efforts to recruitmarchers and raise money for theWashington trip, SDS organizersare canvassing dorms for inter¬ested people. Over a hundred dol¬lars has been raised to help paythe expenses of the marchers atthe 53rd and Kimbark shoppingplaza. Ads are being prepared forthe Hyde Park Herald and theWoodlawn Booster, and HydePark peace groups, including theWomen’s International League(Continued on page six)*News MuseNegative issues in SGby Bruce FreedIn national politics, the old adage was “As Maine goes,so goes the nation.” In campus politics, the new aphorismseems to be “As the nation goes, so goes UC.”With SG elections next week, the pervasive spirit oncampus of general apathy andlack of first-hand student ac- jack the parties will follow inquaintance with the activities of election fray.SG fqrebodes a campaign based THJ<: rks|TRKF(TION of the EDITORIALViet war still illegal, even afterLBJ’s efforts to make it sweetermore on negative issues than on old POLIT group under the newa debate on positive alternatives. n spAC prol„ise t o en-As I.BJ stepped into the renter Hven cam algn wltll heatnn hp hppamp President. - .. • •. .. _ •soon after he became President,denying to the beleagured Repub¬licans any major campaign issue,so GNOSIS, in its two-year in¬cumbency, has taken over themiddle ground, considerably quiet¬ing campus politics, from the left and the injectionof national and international is¬sues.Following to a great extent theviews of SDS (Students for aDemocratic Society) . SPAC is1,T„Drr,Ti.v,i /,vrv , planning to enter a full slate inTHIS A NEST II ESI 7.1 NC. o ^ wha, ,, wfn dorampus poll can betraced gl.aduate divisions has yet toback to the heated 1962 SC» elec- , *tions where the main issue wasPOLIT’s protest to Kennedy over Even before the issuance ofhis handling of the Cuban missile dieir statement of principles, it iscrisk ° clear that GNOSIS will be ac-GNOSIS argued for a more re- f>used of inaction on campus prob-sponsible and moderate tenor in and appeasement to the adstudent government, paintingPOLIT with the brush of irrespon- ministration. SPAC seems de¬termined to revive the old POLITsibility political radicalism. And practice of twisting the adnums-when the votes were finally tal- trations tail,lied, POLIT paid the price of its However, the key questionsanti-Kennedy telegram. which will define the election are:Don Congdon, UC’s answer to does the campus want to rekindleLBJ, took over the presidency of the old battles with the adminis-SG, beginning the period of low- tration, and is the campus goingkeyed and quietly effective SG ac- to vote on the basis of bread-and-tivity which Gene Groves has butter or off-campus issues?continued. THE 1962 ELECTION showedAlthough we have so far seen that national issues can play aonly the GNOSIS platfonn, it is negative part, especially when stu-clear that the campaign fire this dent opinion is enflamed by a non¬year will center on GNOSIS’s re- representative SG. Three yearscord. They are running on their later, there does not seem to bepast performance and are promis- a great change in campus atti-ing to continue programs started tudes.such as the Social Rules Commit- Certainly, many people are dis-tee and etendingx the role of stu- turbed over Vietnam, but campusdents in University decision-mak- par<y positions on that question Li his speech Wednesday night,President Johnson did not backdown in his insistence on continu¬ing military action against NorthVietnam, hut proposed a vast ex¬pansion of the effort to “save"Southeast Asia with a program ofeconomic action. In regard to con¬tinuation of the war, Johnson saidthat if the Communists wanted tonegotiate, he would be willing tochat things over without priorconditions.The old, familiar theme of “sav¬ing the brave people of SouthVietnam” by bombing the evilpeople of North Vietnam is notchanged. Two things are added,however, which are of some value.First, the rest of Southeast Asia,which has long been uneasy aboutthe progress of the war in Viet¬nam, will be lured with a programof aid and development. This stepwill serve to insure the support of any wavering allies or neutrals,while at the same time putting theemphasis on economic action,where it should have been allalong. It is an astute maneuver.Second, in offering unconditionaldiscussions Johnson has thrownthe ball into the Communists’camp, even though he keepslobbing bombs in their direction atthe same time. It is clear he can¬not expect the North Vietnameseand Communist Chinese to rushto the conference table while thelighting is still going on.Roth these moves are construc¬tive, even if the offer of discus¬sions may be just a public rela¬tions maneuver. They do not,however, affect the demand of anincreasing number of people inmany countries, including the U.S.,for a cessation of fighting. Theargument that American forcesare being used to prop up an un¬ democratic regime in South Viet¬nam is still valid. The fart stillstands that both the Viet Com"and the U.S. have grossly violai<m|the Geneva “agreement” by send¬ing in outside troops. The Vietwar is no more “just” simplybecause Johnson has thrown insome economic and political sweet-oners.For these reasons, the Maroonurges students and faeuliy to at¬tend next week’s “teach-in” on theVietnam question, and todays'.*?discussion sitonsored by “’riteHawk and the Dove.” If you agreewith us that the Viet War is anillegal operation, never declaredby the U.S. Congress, and mustbe stopped before the economicprograms which arc so vitally no-cessary can have any effect, thenyou should consider joining theSDS March on Washington. Weurge your consideration.Two 'Free Presses' in one city?Only the publication of the oth¬er parties’ platform, however, will are not going to be crucial.The generally moderate studentdelineate the major’issues end the MiUcal opinion manifested in re-cent SG elections and the ltn-NEW BOOKS BYCAMPUS AUTHORSThe Negroand the First Amendmentby Harry Kalven, Jr., $4.75Under the Flag of the Nationedited by Otto F. Bond,$5.00Whitehead on Educationby Harold B. Dunkel, $5.00The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. portance of such on-campus issuessuch as women’s hours, the ad¬ministration’s housing policies,and SG’s relationship with theUniversity bureaucracy most like¬ly will be important in decidingthe outcome.GNOSIS has a strong record ofachievements and has kept SG in¬volved in important communityaction and civil rights work inChicago and in the South. Thiswill be hard for SPAC to attack.But the temper of SPACcriticism of GNOSIS and, moreimportant, its platform, will helpclarify the issues and the tone ofthe campaign. The questions ofwhether campus or off-campustopics and the ideological slateof a campus party are the key tovictory will be answered onlywhen the ballots are cast. Rebel newspapers on other Chicago campuses are havingtheir problems.The Free Press at Roosevelt University has folded, due tolack of advertising revenue. At ihe Chicago Circle Campusof the University of Illinois, anoth- —er effort to form a second campus vertising in the past few issuespaper seemed to Ire bogged down, has not been bxj heavy.The Roosevelt Free Pr«*ss had , ,_ . Torch editor quitsits start about two months and _ , . .. : .. .On the other side of the fence,seven issues ago after the former the Twch issue of Maroh 30 an-editorial board of the original nounced that editor James Hoi-campus paper, the Torch, had land was resigning, and that any-been fired by the official Student brnly who wanted to take over his.. .x. „ . job should please apply. An edi-Activities Boaid. torial in that issue also suggestedThe SAB didn’t like the old jj- rjj jia(j some journalismTorch board’s handling of a “bul- courses the Torch wouldn’t l>e inletin,” which the Torch printed such bad shape,last fall, announcing that Robert a Free Press staff member toldJ. Pitchell, who was then ItU the Marinin that the Free Presspresident, had been “unofficially staff “has applied for the Torch,”fired.” Pitchell has since resigned, evoking the image of a massevidently as a partial result of movement of the prodigal staffdisputes with the faculty over his back to the Torch office,style of administration. ON THE CHICAGO CIRCLEAll of the editors, and most of (.anipUS( the situation began lastthe staff, of the old Torch, went month when a group of dissidentover to the Free Press, leaving a studontK decided that the Chicagodepleted staff and a brand new mjn| was too biased in favor ofeditor on the Torch. one Qf the campus political par-NEITHER PAPER, it seems, ties. Ed Saksenhaus, a memberhas gotten along too well. The of the editorial board, told theload — and only — news story in Maroon the lllini had given plentyApril 5’s issue of the Free Press of publicity to the other parties,announced that was the last issue, but that the incumbent party,An editorial explained, “Communi- which the lllini supported, hadty interest can’t pay bills.” Ad- just done more that was worthy of coverage. The lllini has prom¬ised to give full coverage to illthree parties in the campaign lorthe April 28 election.Much of the dissidents’ com¬plaint, he said, was that therewere not enough features In thepajicr. Everybody seems happiernow that the lllini has addedsuch plums as movie reviews anda “Campus Co-ed of the week’’pin-up photo.Another 'Free Press' •The dissident paper, Saksen-haus said, was supposed to comeout last Friday, but didn’t. Thenit was supposed to come out IasiTuesday, and didn’t. Saksenhausseemed skeptical about 1 liechances that it would ever comeout.He said the current name forthe rebel pajter was the FreePress, but that the name keepschanging and the staff keepschanging. Tie Maroon tiled to getin touch with the current editorof the rebel sheet, but nobodyknew who it was.UNIVERSITY THEATRETryouts forANTIGONESophocles AnonilhMON. APRIL 128 pm - 10 pmWED. APRIL 143:30 pm - 5:00 pm7:30 pm - 9:00 pmREYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE HYDE PARK YMCANewly redecorated student rooms available with or without meal plons.Study lounge, private TV room, heolth, and physicol facilities allovailable for student use.Call FA 4-5300 Chicago MaroonEditor-in i liief Robert F. LeveyBusiness Manager . Michael Kassci aManaging editor David L AikenAssistants to the Editor, Sharon GoldmanJoan Phillip*Campus News Editor Dan Hertr.beigAssistant Campus NewsEditor Dinah Ek»!Editor, Chicago LiteraryReview' Martin MlchaclsonCulture-Feature Editor. .David H. RichterPhotoCo-ordinators.Bill Caffrey, Steve VVotsyRewrite Editor Eve HochwaldMovie Editor Kenneth Kraut*Music Editor Peter Rabinowit*Science Editor Ed SternPolitical Editor Bruce FreedEditor Emeritus John T. William*DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty Discount DO 3-6866CONTACT LENSES Expert Service on All BrandsHi-Fi STEREOFree Pick-up, & DeliveryFree EstimatesColl 521-0460CHICAGO MAROON April 9, 1965 AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111— TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH —ShIon and Sorvico on all lii-fi tM|nipment.24 HR. SERVICE CALLS — $3.00Tape Recorders — Phonographs — AmplifiersPhono Needles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cords UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“a strong bunk'19IVEW CAR LOANSSAOOper hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C.■.* Berkeley: Naturalrevolters or squids?“What have we learnedfrom the Berkeley demonstra¬tions?” was the problem dis¬cussed last Tuesday night inI lie Reynolds Club lounge by apanel consisting of Wayne Booth,dean of the College, Peter H.Rossi, professor of sociology anddirector of the National OpinionResearch Center, and Herman L.Sinaiko, assistant professor ofCollege humanities.Roth Booth and Rossi wereskeptical about the real value ofthe Berkeley riots. Booth felt thatthe Berkeley demonstrators weremanifesting their activistic drivein an unrealistic and abortive man¬ner. He said that he admired theidealism of the student protestors,hni felt many of their ideas weretoo impractical to be implemented.New idea of protestsBOOTH MAINTAINED thatsocial consciousness did not neces¬sarily have to result in demon¬strating and protest movements,i loel like and activist when Ttear myself away from my memosand come down and conduct adiscussion like this,” ho said.In his comments, Rossi dividedAmerican students into the happy,secure majority, or “little neckdams,” and the dissident, activist“squid” minority. The Berkeleytrouble, he said, was the work ofa relatively small group of“squids.” Rossi saw the Berkeley demonstrators as a phenomenon analo¬gous to the CCNY riot of 1938, inwhich he said he participated.Both student protests, he said, re¬sulted from a combination of ad¬ministrative incompetence andyouthful idealism. Rossi saw themain difference between studentactivism in the thirties and thatof the present generation as a lackof development in today’s studentsof a group ideology.OF THE THREE panelists,Sinaiko was the only one who sawsome positive value in the Berke¬ley events. He saw the demonstra¬tions as a sign that students wantto have a say in the decisions thatmust be made in any university.Sinaiko emphasized that such agive and take arrangement couldwork at US colleges, since theyare not what he called “bananarepublic Universities.” “Studentsshould be involved in the func¬tions of their university whereverpossible,” he said.Sinaiko views students as “anatural and permanent revolu¬tionary group,” but does not thinkof them as irresponsible or wild.Because of this, and because oftheir keen feeling for intellectual¬ity during their “limited and tem¬porary” time in college, Sinaikoproposed that students be allowedto formulate policy in whateverareas they were knowledgable. Present- leaders 'culturally conservative'Old-time revolutionaries rule China“China is controlled and ruled by an incredibly small group of dedicated men,” said How¬ard L. Boorman, director of the Men and Politics in Modern China Project at ColumbiaUniversity Monday at Swift Hall in a lecture entitled “The Chinese Communist Leadership:changes and Succession.”“The veterans of the revolutiongoyem“n|1Sn?om“y“dr°probn ro<"ialism of the Chinese leadersably will continue to do so forsome years,” Boorman said. Thetriumph of the Communist Partyand the progress of modern Chinarepresent a triumph of politicalSNCC leader at rallyCivil rights leader JohnLou is, whose skull was frac¬tured by Alabama state troop¬ers while leading the originalmarch to Montgomery, will appearin Chicago to announce plans forintense voter registration activi¬ties in the deep South this sum¬mer.Lewis, national chairman of theStudent Nonviolent CoordinatingCommittee (SNCC) will address arally sponsored by his organiza¬tion Sunday, April 11, 1965, 2 p.m.,at the Dunbar High School audi¬torium, 3000 South Parkway, Chi¬cago.THIS SUMMER’S “Black BeltProject,” an expansion of tin* 1964Mississippi Summer Project, willmobilize six deep-South states:Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Mis¬sissippi, North Carolina, and SouthCarolina.Lewis will call for 2,000 North¬ ern volunteers to build upon exist¬ing political education, communityorganization, and direct actionprojects.In addition, Lewis will introducethe newest Southern civil rightsprogram: the “People’s Confer¬ence.” The plan calls for re¬gional conferences of disenfran¬chised Negroes that will send dele¬gates to interstate meetings for theworking-out of mutual political,economic and civil rights problems.Lewis, 24, has been chairman ofSNCC for two years and has beena civil rights activist in the Southfor five years.Appearing with him this Sun¬day will be radio commentatorStuds Terkel and SNCC’s Chicagoaction director Monroe Sharp. Ter¬kel will report on the Selma-to-Montgomery march, and S li a r pwill outline current and projectedSNCC activities in the North. were could have potentially dangerous“never, I think, actually alienated consequences, Boorman believes,from their culture. The Communist Party of China“Even the most radical of the has changed content greatly but_r _ ^ Chinese radicals” never rejected smoothly in the last fifteen years,action by “the 800,” the top Com- ad society- They criticized, said Boorman, and it “is obvious-munists who survived the period hut ord-v selectively. “Many of the ly concerned with the next gener-of the Killings in 1927 and the men at dle toP °* Communist ation.” No sudden or violentLong March, and are still in pow- Party are aware of their great changes are -foreseen. “It is myer today, he added cultural heritage,” Boorman em- own personal opinion,” Boorman“COHESION” AMONG the men phBi“d,-- • .-I-.- . *He Party will be**at the lop of the Communist Par- Revolutionaries traditional ble for the next ten to fifteenty hierarchy “has been a major THIS “BIZARRE situation,” in years.factor in the implementation of social revolutionaries are Boorman acknowledged the pos-the social revolution,” Boorman “profoundly attached” to tradi- sibility that the Chinese Commu-said. There Is “a central unity of tions- is a “cultural aspect to the nist leaders would tend to becomepurpose” within the elite, whose revolution which cannot bo ig- conservative, much as the Rus-members have worked together n°red,” Boorman said. Chinese sians have, but he said that it isfor many years, often since the leaders are often parochial and “my guess that even in the 1990s1920s. ' * “wedded to outdated Ideas,” but the communist leaders will haveR A rk’ . ii they are pragmatic when their ex- basically the same revolutionarye v- mese stable istence is endangered. The pa- style they do now.”“Mao’s position as top in theParty has boon secure for twenty g* • tyears or so;” rifts within the lead- WOTnegie grOlltS $100/000ership have been the exceptionrather than the rule. Boorman The Carnegie Corporation and other rural residents; and gen-said. This cohesion is tire product has granted UC $100,000 for eral extension, compi'ising corre-of a unique set of historical cir- fellowships to enable voung sP«udence study, credit and non-cumstances, Boorman noted, so leaders in aduit education to credit courses on and off campus,the Chinese model of revolution work toward the doctor’s decree and a11 other non rural adult Pr°-cannot bo practically used as a Under the Carnegie grant one- grams-guide for other nations. year fellowships will be offered THERE NOW appears to be aBoorman stated that “Chinese each year for four years to out- bend toward merging the twosociety consists of two levels standing candidates who will take services into one extension servicewhere change takes place at dif- leave from their present jobs to anfi developing a comprehensiveforent speeds and in different prepare for larger responsibilities. a(lult education program for resi-ways.” The two levels are the ed- An earlier erant from the Cnrnnra dents in urban as well as non-urbanheated elite and the peasant mass- Uo„ pmviS 4 areas,es. No government of China can persons, of whom 20 have alreadyexist for long without active sup- earned the PhD degree or are ex¬port by the elite and acceptance peCted to do so shortly,by the masses. Although it is the University adult education hasCommunist Party which now until recently been organized intorules China, the composition of separate services: cooperative ex-the leadership is remarkably sim- tension for farmers, their wives,ilar to that of the Nationalist gov¬ernment of Taiwan, Boorman con¬tended.The leadership of China repre¬sents an “essential paradox.” Boor¬man stated. A radical social revo¬lution is being led by a group ofold men who are culturally con¬servative. The generation of Chi¬nese reaching maturity in the1920s (the group comprising to- Coin-Op Dry Cleaners8 Lbs. Cleaned in 45 MinutesSpecial $1.75Sweaters - KnitsNo Sag - No Block1611 E. 53rd, Near CornellAlso Open Evenings, Sunday JillXTAI-SAM-YNNCHINESE . 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Cottage GroveDISTINCTIVE LAMPS AND SHADESFINE FURNITURE — DRAPERIESQelman’sFURNITURE AND INTERIORS20% Discount for Faculty, Staff and Students2201 EAST 71st STREET CHICAGO 49, ILLINOISBUtterfield 8-8200-1-2 TRAINEE POSITIONSat THE CHICAGOPUBLIC LIBRARYApplications now being ac¬cepted from graduating stu¬dents who can qualify forprogram of career develop¬ment offering:• a combination of on-the-jobexperience and professionaleducation in librarianship.• training for a well-paid andpersonally rewarding profes¬sional career.APPLICANTS must be• academically qualified foradmission to accreditedgraduate library school.• personally qualified for pub¬lic library service.For InformationPlease Contact:Mrs. Charlotte ShabinoPersonnel OfficeThe Chicago Public LibraryChicago 2, Illinois “Once upon a time peoplehad something to do.Families stayed together'...and sometimes prayedtogether. In those daysa couch was used for sleepingalone or with a good friend or withyour wife, who wasn’t alwaysa good friend (or wasn't alwaysyour wife).”INTB0DDCTI0H TOSIGMUND FREUD, h.dmPSYCHOANALYSISWritten & illustrated by PAUL FREEMANPictures to tickle the Id, captions to massage the ego-ite price to placate the superego. Softbound, with three-colordrawings on every page, $1.50At your bookstoreor order from Dept. 300PRENTICE-HALL, INC.Englewood Cliffs, N. J.April 9, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROONBerkeley—style unrest threatens status quo across USby Laura GodofskyCollegiate Press ServiceCampuses all over the coun¬try have felt the impact ofevents at Berkeley this year.With an eye toward theircolleagues on the West Coast, stu¬dents, faculty, and administratorshave undertaken a wide range ofprotests — sometimes with suc¬cess, sometimes without— in holiesof overturning, soothing, or re¬evaluating relations and policieson their campuses.RECENT STUDENT protests atYale, St. Johns, Brooklyn, andKansas, coinciding with the sub¬mission and withdrawal of resig-nations by the University of Cali¬>ft A >IIIX fornia’s President Clark Kerr andBerkeley’s Chancellor Martin Mey-erson, are but the better known,more publicized examples of thecampus reaction to Berkeley.'Vulgar' reviewsThere have also been studentpro tests at New Mexico State Uni¬versity, Florida State University,Wake Forest College, Trinity Col¬lege and several Oregon campuses.New Mexico State’s student pro¬test came about a month ago, wasdirected against some dormitoryregulations, and stemmed largelyfrom a misunderstanding betweenadministration and students. Flor¬ida State’s protest came duringstudent demonstrations at Ber¬keley and was aimed at adminis¬tration action against participantsin a “vulgar” homecoming review.In Oregon, the issue was modernpoetry. At Wake Forest it was aquestion of allowing non-Baptistson the Board of Trustees; and at Trinity, alcohol regulationssparked the students.In addition, student groups havebeen formed recently at the Uni¬versities of Illinois and Michigan,Michigan State University, Far-leigh Dickinson, and several WestVirginia institutions for the pur¬pose of effecting “university re¬form.”MODEL CAMERALEICA, BOLEX, NIKON, PENTAXZEISS, MAMIYA, OMEGA, DURSTTAPE RECORDERS1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259CampusMen* everywhereselectillby FREEMANLike a fine briar pipe ... cordovan takesand holds a high lustrous polish. Thisprized leather is crafted to perfection inthis wonderful feeling Freeman shoe.Ideal for men who demand exceptionalgood looks and long hours of rugged wear.available atTHE FOR MENMC(Win* Stat"Qfmott mb dampunin the Vcir Hi/ifc Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100CHICAGO MAROON Administrators worriedA major result of both the Ber¬keley demonstrations and theother evidences of unrest onAmerican campuses is that ad¬ministrators all over the countryhave shown new interest in im¬proving their relations with thestudents.At the University of Utah, acommittee on faculty-student re¬lations has recently been estab¬lished. Its overall purpose will be“to expand and strengthen therapport between students, faculty,and administration.” At MidlandCollege, a small institution in Ne¬braska, because of student discon¬tent that arose last spring, agroup of seniors has been meetingwith Vice President William Zim¬merman in his home. The estab¬lishment of a student-faculty-ad¬ministration appeals committee isa key provision of a student billof rights that has been developedat Florida State as a result of dis¬turbances this fall. oently formalized at the Univer¬sity of Vermont to prevent thekinds of misunderstandings thatcaused some of this fall's disturb¬ances at Berkeley. In a neighbor¬ing state, the president, trustees,faculty, and students at the Uni¬versity of New’ Hampshire unitedto successfully fight off an at¬tempt by the state legislators toimpose a ban on subversive speak¬ers appearing on campus. And atPurdue, a new speaker policyw'hich would allow candidates forPresident, V i c e President, Gov¬ernor, and Senator to api>ear oncampus will be presented to thetrustees later this spring.Presidents' effortsThe Presidents of the Univer¬sity of Rochester, PennsylvaniaState University, the University ofCalifornia at Riverside, the Uni¬versity of Michigan, and the StateUniversity College at Buffalo haveall gone out of their way recentlyto demonstrate their concern overtheir relations with students. Latein February, t h e President ofRochester spoke to about 1,000 un¬dergraduates and answered ques¬tions at a meeting billed as “an at¬tempt at better communications.”In mid-March, the President ofMichigan appeared at a similar,smaller meeting, and late in April,the President of Buffalo will dothe same thing. appointed a Student Committee onUndergraduate Education to rec¬ommend ways in which undergi ;niuate programs can be enriched.He has also established a weeklyoffice hour when any student maycome to talk to him without an ap¬pointment and has written a week¬ly column for the student new spaper, The Highlander.The President of Penn State, inhis state of the university addressthis winter, made some remarkson the general question of national student unrest and expressedthe hope that channels of com¬munication could be improved onhis campus. Penn State has alsojust reversed a regulation prohib¬iting on-campus “solicitation" foroff-campus activities — a key is¬sue in the Berkeley uprising. Athird rerent event at Penn Statewas the appearance of studentgovernment leaders at a facultySenate meeting and the publica¬tion of their remarks in the fa. nlty bulletin.Even in CanadaOfficial representationAnd, as the President of Spring-field College in Massachusetts con¬tinues his efforts to get his stu¬dent body president on the boardof trustees at his institution, thedean of students at the State Uni¬versity College at Buffalo, NewYork, is trying to get students onthe administrative and facultycouncils at his college. Studentsalready serve on health, housing,and food committees at Buffalo.SPEAKER POLICIES were re- Sfudcnt CommitteesThe Chancellor at Riverside has And even in Canada the eventsat Berkeley have had a noticeableimpact. Student representation isbeing established on faculty com¬mittees at the University of Vic¬toria. A system of colleges, eachwith 2,500-3,000 students, may alsohe instituted “before the institu¬tions get too large,” a facultymember reported.Hours and Locations for SG Election9:00 1:30:1:30-4:30:4:30 - 0:30: WednesdoyMandel, Ryerson, Eckhart, Soc SciMandel, Business, Botany, JuddPierce, 5400 Greenwood, New Dorm, Int Hou-Department of MusicFRIDAY, APRIL 9AEOLIAN CHAMBER PLAYERSAssisting: Alice Howlond, EosleyBlackwood, ond Frank MillerAdm.: $3; UC students, $1TUESDAY, APRIL 13MAX NEUHAUS, PercussionistAdm.: $1; students, 50c(UC students free withspecial ticket)MANDEL HALL * 8:30 PMTickets at Music Dept.; or Mondelbox office on evening of concert. 9:30 1:30:1:30 4:30:4:30 - 6:30: ThursdayMandel, Business East, Soc Scl, LawMandel, Ryerson, Soc Sci, SSAPierce, Hitchcock, New Dorm, BJFridayBusiness East, Swift, Med School, WieboldtRyerson, Rosenwald, Kent, ClassicsAll those interested in manning ballot boxes to meet a desperate weekare asked to contact the Student Government office or John weicher,RE 1-6741.9:30-1:30:1:30-4:30:April 9, 1965 TheMonterey Instituteof Foreign Studies10 Week Summer SessionJUNE 21 to AUGUST 287 Week SessionFor Graduates OnlyJULY 12 to AUGUST 28LANGUAGES AND CIVILIZA¬TIONS of Chino, France, Germany,Italy, Japan, Russia and Spain(native instructors).Elementary and intermediatecourses, 16 units. Intermediateand advanced courses, 12 units.Upper division courses, 12 units.Graduate courses, 8 units.POLITICAL ARTS. Comprehensiveprograms combining fundamentalcourses with area studies on West¬ern Europe, Russia and EasternEurope, Far East, Near East, andLatin America.Bachelor of Arts ond Master ofArts in longuoges ond civilizationsond in political orts.1965-66 Academic YeorFoil Semester September 25, 1965,to Jon. 29, 1966. Spring SemesterFeb. 5, 1966, to May 28, 1966.Accredited by the Western Asso¬ciation of Schools ond Colleges osa Liberal Arts Institution.For information write to:Office of AdmissionsTHE MONTEREY INSTITUTEOF FOREIGN STUDIESPost Office Box 710Monterey, California, 93942Telephone 373-4779Area Code 408 Time to Shopfor EasterTextured Hoseby Hanes$1.00 to $2.50Chiffon Scarves$1.00 - $2.00New Purses—$3.00 - $6.00Delicate Fragrancesin Colognes$2.00 to $5.00Shell Blouses inPastel Colors$4.95Easter Cards andGift WrappingsUniversity ofChicogo Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue BEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302TRAVELING?Get Nearly FreeTRANSPORTATIONBy Driving a Cor to Californio,Salt Lake, EastArizona, Seattle,ALL CITIESYlininium age 21WE 9-2364AUTO DRIVEAWAY CO.343 S. DEARBORN ST.Il-FINANCE MANAGERwanted forSmall Business Investment CorporationFirst Wisconsin Investment Corporation of Mwaukee is seeking an M.B.A. to train for positionas Finance Manager. Strong analytical and busi¬ness development potential required for this out¬standing opening.Explore further details in Placement Office ondsend o complete resume to:PERSONNEL DIRECTORFIRST WISCONSIN735 North Water StreetMilwaukee, Wisconsin 53202Summaries of party platforms(Editors note: the followingare summaries of the platformsof the two major parties vanningin next week's Student Govern¬ment elections as prepared byihc parties themselves. Full plat¬forms will appear in the TuesdayMAROON.)SPA C:re-orientStudent Political Action Com¬mit Ice is a now, broad-based, pro¬gressive political party, bom inopposition to a government whichhas demonstrated itself to beincreasingly out of touch bothwith the campus and with thenow spirit sweeping the nation.This past year was a year inwhich students everywhere beganto re-evaluate their role in theuniversities and in society. It wasthe year of the Free Speech Move¬ment at Berkeley, as troubledstudents served notice to admin¬istrators that they were tilt'd ofbureaucracies and mass-producededucation. It was the year whenAndy Goodman and a ihousandothers went down to Mississippito work for an end to injustice. Itwas the year that it was the schol¬ars who told America of the futili¬ty and wastefulness of war inSoutheast Asia. It was a yearwhen involvement began to re¬place detachment as the mark ofthe American intellectual.In this year of activity and up¬heaval, the Student Governmentof the University of Chicago hadas its major activity the organ¬ization of charter flights. SPACis running in this election be¬cause It is eonvine«*d that in theyear 1965, at an Institution with the traditions of the University ofChicago, that students can run agovernment with a more trans¬cendental purpose than that ofmaking the planes run on time.We believe that this high schoolstudent council type of govern¬ment is out mock'd and obsolete,and that students on this campusare too sophisticated to supportit. In sum, we are tired and boredwith a Student Government lhatnobody ever hears from, a Stu¬dent Government that is the pri¬vate debating club of a few in¬dividuals who want to dabble inpolitics.SPAC calls for a major re-ori¬entation of Student Governmenton the Chicago Campus. It callsof an end to sprawling SG bu¬reaucracies “signifying nothing,”and a new attention to the seriousissues that face us as studentsand as citizens.GNOSIS:deedsTn the past year, GNOSIS-runSG has:<1) saved students and faculty$125,000 this year, via SG’s Char¬ter Flight Program, tripling thesize of the program.<2) appointed jointly with DeanBooth a student-faculty committeeto review social regulations in theCollege. The committee, whosereport will appear this quarter, isexpected to secure major changesin social rules.<3> appointed jointly with DoanBooth a student-faculty committeeto plan student orientation in theCollege. This committee and theSocial Rules Committee representthe first time that students havebeen more successful in involvingstudents in University decision making than any previous SG.(4) negotiated successfully withthe Administration for an in¬crease in the number of hoursthat the C-shop is open, and foran extension of library hours andstack privileges.<5) negotiated successfully withthe Administration for an open(cafeteria) lunch contract at NewDorms.(6) brought to campus Sena¬tors Dirksen and Morse, Congress¬man Bolling and noted literarycritic Leslie Fiedler, in addition tosponsoring or co-sponsoring overa dozen other discussions or sym¬posia, including the upcomingVietnam teach-in.(7) enlisted over 80 Chicagoarea merchants in a program tooffer discounts to college stu¬dents. All discounts are at least10 per cent.(8) secured from StudentHealth the first official statementof its policy in regard to the dis¬pensation of birth control in¬formation and devices to femalestudents.<9) prepared a 2-part report onCollege Admissions policy whichappeared in the Maroon.(10) Obtained student observerson the boards of the Hyde Park-Kenwood Community Conferenceand the South East Chicago Com¬mission.< 11) raised over $2,000 for theMississippi Summer Project anddonated $300 to UC students whoworked on community projectsin Sumerville, Tennessee, duringthe Spring break.(12)collected several thousand books from faculty and studentsand distributed them to severalNegro colleges in the South.(13) hosted over a dozen for¬eign student delegations fromJapan, Chile, Poland, etc.(14) held weekly meetingsabout the College with DeanBooth and prepared over a dozenreports on various aspects of theCollege. SG also met with facultyand students on each of the tengen-ed courses; one such meetinghelped stimulate the complete re¬organization of Math 101-2-3.(15) sent telegrams of supportfor Berkeley students; protestedviolations of academic freedom atRoosevelt University, University of Indiana, Wright Jr. College,and elsewhere.(16) increased the amount andduration of student loans; insti¬tuted the ride exchange board.(17) assumed the responsibili¬ty for the efficient operation ofthe off-campus housing file on anondiscriminatory basis.(18) sponsored the most exten¬sive film series in SG’s history,including two quarters of “Bogie-flics.”(19) initiated the constitutionalamendment which instituted rep¬resentation in the College by resi¬dence unit.(20) met regulary with Admin¬istration officials to discuss stu¬dent concerns and grievances.SG election scramble on(Continued! from page one)the parties were not at all consid¬erable but also that personal poli¬tics would not play a very signifi¬cant role at an NSA Congress.NSA delegates attend an an¬nual conference at some mid west¬ern university during August.NSA represents some 600 collegesand universities. At the Congress,the plenary generally declares itsposition on various issues andpressing student problems. Lastsummer, the Congress concentrat¬ed on civil rights, condemningSouthern resistance to the law andpraising student involvement inthe movement.BESIDES THE NSA issue, thecampaign is considered by leadersof both parties to lack any cen¬tral, burning Issue. GNOSIS is ex¬ pected to emphasize its success innegotiating with the administra¬tion and providing improved stu¬dent services. SPAC has indicatedthat they will stress that GNOSISin the past year has been a “do-nothing” group. Full platforms ofboth parties appear elsewhere intoday’s Maroon.All those interested in manningballot boxes during the electionare asked to contact the SG Elec¬tion and Rules Committee at theSG office, second floor, Ida Noyes.JAMS SCHULTZ CLEANERSS HUM'S — LINENSRepairs fir Alterations 5 Hr. Service1363 East 53rd PL 2-966210% Student Discount with l.D. Card CLfM A tcw u• Can YOU bring a fresh approach to ancient problems? Can you creatively adapt to theday-to-day challenges of a developing society? . . .• YOUR background is needed to influence an evolving society. HOW CAN YOU HELP? Byjoining others who are sharing their education, training, and ability for a year of service¬living and working in Israel. SHERUT LA'AM—the program for American and Canadianvolunteers between the ages of eighteen and twenty-eight is attracting those who ore chal¬lenged by the concept of the Peace Corps.• WHERE DO YOU FIT IN? You can be placed in one of the following categories:1. Program for undergraduates—If you are a college undergraduate or graduatewithout specific technical skills, you can apply your knowledge in positions related toyour academic field.2. Program for skilled graduates—If you are a college graduate, graduate student orhave specialized training, you can practice your skills in the areas for which you arespecifically qualified.3. The Kibbutz program—An imaginative social experiment in communal living,agriculture and industry. You will live and work as a participant in a pioneeringsettlement.• WHAT DOES IT COST? Your cost is $555.00. This includes round-trip transportation andall living and travel expenses for the year.• WHEN DO YOU LEAVE? Your departure is either at the end of June, the beginning ofSeptember, or the end of January, depending upon your needs ond abilities.• WHERE DO YOU APPLY? Send for applications to:SIIERDT LA’AM220 South State Street — Suite 1704Chicago, Illinois 60604April 9, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Blackwood, CCP win rave reviews from NY critics“We knocked New York on its ass!”So said Leonard Meyer, chairman of the music department,last Saturday in referring to the three triumphs of the Con¬temporary Chamber Players in Carnegie Hall last Tuesday,and Thursday eve-Wednesday,nings.The CCP. with the help of theCarnegie Hall Corporation andthe UC music department, performed three concerts of con¬temporary music last week inCarnegie Hall, in addition to per¬formances in Philadelphia, at Rutorers University, and at the Uni¬versity of Illinois Festival of theArts, and they received nothinghut critical acclaim from the NewYork press.THE FIRST CONCERT was apiano recital given by Easley “The performances of allfour works (Ortandre. In-tegrales, Poeme Electron-Ique. and Deserts.) were ab¬solutely magnificent. Mr.Shapey (Ralph Shapey,CCP’s conductor^ . . . hasbuilt in his new home (UC)a splendid ensemble ofyoungsters who respondwith sympathy and virtuosi¬ty to the demands of someof the hardest music around.. . . They were cheered tothe skies.”One of the few reservations thatBlackwood on Tuesday evening. Xew York Times’ critic, Theo-and. as I mentioned last Friday. Strongin. had was that hehe really impressed the New Y m k wag no^ surrounded by 400 speak-music critics, most of all because erg poeme Electronique. Ibe played both works, the second refrajn from commenting onsonatas of Boulez and Ives, fiom obvious idiocy of Mr. Strong- and solidity.- Of the soprano.Neva Pilgrim, Schonberg saidthat she “appears to be one ofthe new breed of singers withflawless pitch (and) immensemusicianship.”Meyer, while gratified withwhat he called the CCP’s “showing New York how this type ofmusic should be played,” feels that the ensemble should remainin the Midwest to tour variouscities and universities. Undoubtedly, if we are to judge by NewYork’s reaction to them, the CCPwill win adherents to contempo¬rary music by, if nothing else,the top-level quality of their petformances.Ed ChikofskyTo hear Senators,SNCC representativesmemory.Wednesday night’s concert was in’s statement.LAST THURSDAY'S program.an all-Varese program celebrating rjie qnaj concert of the CCP tour,the composer’s 80th year. The con- wag much more typical of thecert was attended by the com- [{jn(j programs that they haveposer who, incidentally, received performing on campus. Thea standing ovation. The critics concert included works of We-were no less effusive in their pern> Martino, Ghent, Weinberg,praise. The World-Telegram called anfj pjnjph Shapey.it: ”... a great night for the review, Hart) Id Sehon-avant-garde,” while the music edi¬tor of the Herald-Tibune. AlanRich, went further: berg of the Times called Shapey’aIncantations For Soprano and 10Instruments "by far the most au¬thoritative and professional pieceon the program . . . Shapey (hascreated i a work that has strengthand tonal imagination. (He) wasthe most experienced composer ofthose heard . . . and ... he con¬ducted (the program with skilloceLUgw O Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 CANOE TRIPSExplore the Quetico-Superior Wil¬derness for only $7.00 per personper day. Complete camping gear,Grumman canoe and food included.For details write BILL ROM, CanoeOutfitter, Ely, Minnesota.,2-0-a-CH><5HC<HJCHP-C^CHJ<H3<H>0-C!-CH2-<3-d-0-CH>0-Q-CKHP^>0-CH3-CH3-0-C>0-0-CH3-0-Q-Cl-0-0-a Sublimate Your Vernal UrgesAt THe c■2aaa--qaqc5«60-0 I Continued from page one>for Peace and Freedom, are beingsolicited for aid.AS OF LAST Tuesday, twobuses were already signed upand one or two more are expected.The price for the round trip toWashington is $18, which SDSis trying to lower through out¬side fund raising.Buses will leave UC at 3 pmFriday, and will return sometimeSunday afternoon. Contacts forthe March are: Jessica Tovrov,2214 New Dorms: Paul Bluestone,43f> Burton-Judson; Peter Slocum.I917x Pierce; and Alan Ruby, 819Burton-Judson. who is the off-campus representative. Studentsfrom Roosevelt University andthe Chicago Circle campus of theUniversity of Illinois, as well assome Hyde Parkers will go toWashington with the UC group.Plan various protestsPlans for the March itself in¬clude a picket of the White House,speeches by Senator ErnestGruening (D.-AIa.) and I.F. Stoneand a speech by Bob Moses of SNCC relating the situation inViet Nam to the crisis in Ala¬bama. Following the speeches,the marchers will converge on theCapitol, where they will presenta petition of grievances to Con¬gress.It was originally estimated thatthe March would draw 10,000 peo¬ple, but this has been revised up¬ward and more than 30,000marchers are now expected. Someof the colleges where activity hasbeen particularly heavy are Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, CCNY. Eo>ton, Columbia. Swarthmore, amiCornell.The object of the March Ls " .to interest, to educate, and toactivate” and only secondarily toaffect policy, according to SDSIn the words of organizer PaulBluestone, “it’s the aparhv thathas to be cured: apathy is adestructive force m a situationlike this.”CROCUS BAMwith A|Tomorrow Night!International House$1.00r Peters Orchestra X9:00 p.m. |Semi-Jovial gGoodies Gratis £^0-<K3-CKKH>a-<K:-C -C-aO<K3-O-O-C<3-O-0-CKKKH3- Complete LineOf Pet I ndAquarium Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012 The MAROON is lookingfor students in the divisionswho wish to write articleson the scientific researchbeing done by their col¬leagues, and professors.Those interested should con¬tact Ed Stern, science editor,at the MAROON office, 3rdfloor, Ida Noyes Hall.JIMMYSand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAPToday'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDANs1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL .1. La ofoficflon flnarci&ra qua vousdonnez a votre famille aujourdhuidevra lul 4tr» procure d'une autre(agon demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certalnement accomplir cettetftche a /otra place.fn tant gue I’eorfiertant local do la SunLife, puis-je vou* visiter a un moment i*votre ehoix?Ralph J. Wood, Jr.. CLUHyda Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, IIIFAirfax 4-4800 — F« 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays ft FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL companyThe WISE OWL has often been askedwhat to do with winter clothing oncespring has come.HE REPLIES: Store them safely. 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PIERRE ANDREface HalteringParisian chicten skilledhair stylists at5242 Hyde Park Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.00 3-072710 °o Student DiscountI SpringtimeA Good TimeTo Take Pictures24 hour service oncolor slides and movie film.$24 9 5 ELECTRONICFLASH GUNSNows14”The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenuethe One, the Only-the Original• CHICAGO MAROON • April 9, 1965 foreign car hospital A diwrichome of team winkauthorized BMC and Triumph sales and service5424 s. kimbork are. mi 3-3113liB’nai Brith Hillel FoundationpresentsISAAC BASHEVIS SINGER"My Philosophy as o Jewish Writer"Sunday, April 11, 8:00 P.M.Breasted Hall 1155 E. 58th St.Admission: $1.00 Hillel Affiliates$1.50 OthersGOLD CITY INN"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% STUDENT DISCOUNT1IYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-25592 for 1 STUDENT SPECIAL!For the Oncc-Only Performance ofJubilee ’65 ALL-STAR REVIEWHEADLININGSHELLEY BERMANwithBen Blue, Cliaim* Dancer*Hanna Ahroni and Herb LyonCIVIC OPERA HOUSESunday, April 11 th at 7:30 P.M.Tl<‘k«*(is Available at Civle Opera House Box OffieePresent Your I.D. Card and Get 2When You Buy One at $5 — $7.50 — $10MR. BIGG S“The Friendly Restaurant -—An Edventure in Good Fating."’1440 East 57th St.AH dinners include super juice, chef's salad, potatoes,french bread and butterVi SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN, served with honey andyou better believe it's finger licking good $Lv5VEAL CUTLET, smothered in spaghetti withdelicious Itoiian meat sauce $Lo5N.Y. CUT STRIP STEAK, broiled to perfection, aged to peak oftenderness, served with slice of sauted Bermuda onion $1.95BROILED CHOPPED BEEFSTEAK, freshly ground,smothered with sauted Bermuda onions.If It's Mr Bigg's, if# good.Try Delicious Vernor's BeveragesMR. PIZZAWE DELIVER —CARRY OUTSHY 3-8282DELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENSandwiches and Ch. Broiled HamburgersPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 6 PartySausage .1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper .1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie .1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Olive 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese .1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vi and Vi .1.50 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 ....(Sausage, Mushrooms and .2.50Peppers) 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.001465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — Fri. to 3:00 a.m.Sot. to 3:00 o.m. — Open 2 p.m. Sundays LTDCVIOsliCOOs| CINEMAChicogo Ave. at Michigon"One of the great Americanmovies."New York Herald TribuneSun Times FOUR STARS"Reminiscent of David & Lisoand Marty." Chicago TribuneIVAN DICKSONABBEY LINCOLNNothing But A ManStudents $1.00 every dayBut Saturday with I.D. Card Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856entera newworld ofdiningpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*•616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668dark rt5j,re50 8 *•for college studentswith i.d. cardo different doublefeatures dailyO open dawn to dawn• little gal-leryfor gals onlyfrl. 9—“the trouble withharry,” “to oatch a thief”sat. 10—“fail-safe,”"secret invasion”sun. 11—"birth of anation,” “big paradeof comedy”mon. 12—“jacktown,”“police nurse”tues. 13—“cry tough,”“slaughter on tenthavenue”wed. 14—“heller in pinktights,” “wild wildwomen”thur. 15—“sea chase,”“3 violent people”dork & madisonfr 2-2843 ; TIKI TOPICSCIRALSHOUSE OF TIKIIs 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.CIRALSHOUSE OF TIKI51st & HARPERFood served 11 A.M. to 3 A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.lb 10 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-7585 HARPERUQIOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line ot imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONE— 1318— 1233— 7699HY 3-6800FA 4SAMUEL A. BELL“Bug SheII From Bell**SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PARK BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICEKK G-6G0G — KE li-.lHUlChicken - SandwichesPixza &Italian FoodsJESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 £. 53rdROCKEFELLER CHAPEL 59th & WOODLAWNPASSOVEREPIC OF DELIVERANCEHandel'sISRAEL IN EGYPTSunday April 11 3:30Richard Vikstrom, cond Rockefeller Chapel Choir, 30 membersof the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, with Peggy Smith, soprano;Charlotte Brent, mezzo-soprano; and Walter Corringer, tenor.Tickets: $4.00 Reserved; $3.00 GeneralAdmission; $2.00 Student/Staff; on soleat University Bookstore, Woodworth's BookstoreFor all of Hyde Park's babes,from 8 months to 80.THE EAGLEOPEN NOON TIL . . . !5311 BLACKSTONE 324-7859Blackwood, CCP win rave reviews from NY critics“We knocked New York on its ass!”So said Leonard Meyer, chairman of the music department,last Saturday in referring to the three triumphs of the Con¬temporary Chamber Players in Carnegie Hall last Tuesday,Wednesday, and Thursday eve-rungs.The CCP, with the help of theCarnegie Hall Corporation andthe UC music department, per¬formed three concerts of con¬temporary music last week inCarnegie Hall, in addition to per¬formances in Philadelphia, at Rut¬gers University, and at the Uni¬versity of Illinois Festival of theAils, and they received nothingbut critical acclaim from the NewYork press.THE FIRST CONCERT was apiano recital given by EasleyBlackwood on Tuesday evening,and, as I mentioned last Friday,he really impressed the New Yorkmusic critics, most of all because “The performances of allfour works (Ortandre, In-tegrales, Poeme Electron-ique, and Deserts,) were ab¬solutely magnificent. Mr.Shapey (Ralph Shapey,CCP’s conductor) . . . hasbuilt in his new home (UC)a splendid ensemble ofyoungsters who respondwith sympathy and virtuosi¬ty to the demands of someof the hardest music around.. . . They were cheered tothe skies.”One of the few reservations thatthe New York Times’ critic, Theo¬dore Strongin, had was that hewas not surrounded by 400 speak¬ers in the Poeme Electronique. Itie played both works, the second wqj refrain from commenting onsonatas of Boulez and Ives, frommemory.Wednesday night’s concert wasan all-Varese program celebratingthe composer’s 80th year. The con¬cert was attended by the eom- the obvious idiocy of Mr. Strong-in’s statement.LAST THURSDAY’S program,the final concert of the CCP tour,was much more typical of thekind of programs that they haveposer who, incidentally, ^received been performing on campus. Theconcert included works of We¬bern, Martino, Ghent, Weinberg,and Ralph Shapey.In his review, Harold Schon-a standing ovation. The criticswere no less effusive in theirpraise. The World-Telegram calledit: “. . . a great night for theavant-garde,” while the music edi¬tor of the Herald-Tilmne, AlanRich, went further: Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 CANOE TRIPSExplore the Quetico-Superior Wil¬derness for only $7.00 per personper day. Complete comping gear,Grumman canoe and food included.For detoils write BILL ROM, CanoeOutfitter, Ely, Minnesota.CISTmFToday'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN$ 1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL r.. La protection financier® qua vou*donnez A votre famille aujourd’huidevra lul fit re procurfi® d’une autrefa^on domain. L’assuranc® Sun Lifepeut certalnement accomplir cettetfiche A vote® place.Sn tant qu® reprfisentant local d« la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter A un moment d®votre cholx?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago IS, III.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYThe WISE OWL Juts often been askedwhat to do with winter clothing oncespring has come.HE REPLIES: Store them safely. Havefurs and woolens mothproofed, protectedand stored byJhsL TTlwc (Biwok, Qo.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERSRUSH SERVICEavailable when neededPhones: Ml 3-7447 1013-17 East 61s* S*.HY 3-6868 Across from B-J Ct.Serving the Campus since 1917• CHICAGO MAROON • April 9, 1965 and solidity.” Of the soprano,Neva Pilgrim, Schonberg saidthat she “appears to be one ofthe new breed of singers withflawless pitch (and) immensemusicianship.”Meyer, while gratified -vithwhat he called the CCP’s “show¬ing New York how thus type ofmusic should be played,” feels that the ensemble should remainin the Midwest to tour variouscities and universities. Undoubtedly, if we are to judge by NewYork’s reaction to them, the CCPwill win adherents to conlemporary music by, if nothing else,the top-level quality of their performances.Ed ChikofskyTo hear Senators,SNCC representativesberg of the Times called Shapey’sIncantations For Soprano and 10Instruments “by far the most au¬thoritative and professional pieceon the program . . . Shapey (hascreated) a work that has strengthand tonal imagination. (He) wasthe most experienced composer ofthose heard . . . and ... he con¬ducted (the) program with skilloo ch>o o-ck> o <kh> <kXh>Sublimate Your Vernal UrgesAt Thentori’s it a li.with Al Peters OrchestraTomorrow Nigh*! 9:00 p.m.International House Semi-Jovial$1.00 Goodies Gratisi>b-dHCK><K><y£H><><)a-0OO 0 000-00-00-000000 00000-00 OOOOHOO-CKKH*• m (Continued from page one)for Peace and Freedom, are beingsolicited for aid.AS OF LAST Tuesday, twobuses were already signed upand one or two more are expected.The price for the round trip toWashington is $18, which SDSis trying to lower through out¬side fund raising.Buses will leave UC at 3 pmFriday, and will return sometimeSunday afternoon. Contacts forthe March arc: Jessica Tovrov,2214 New Dorms; Paul Bluestone,43G Burton-Judson; Peter Slocum.1917x Pierce; and Alan Ruby, 819Builon-Judson, who is the off-campus representative. Studentsfrom Roosevelt University andthe Chicago Circle campus of theUniversity of Illinois, as well assome Hyde Parkers will go toWashington with the LTC group.Plan various protestsPlans for the March itself in¬clude a picket of the White House,speeches by Senator ErnestGruening (D.-Ala.) and I.F. Stoneand a speech by Bob Moses ofComplete LineOf Pet AndAquarium Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAPSTUDENTGROUPSEUROPE• CRIMSON SeriesGrand Tour ★ Continental TourFavorite Tour A Fiesta TourComprehensive TourIsrael Adventure TourHoliday Tour * Panorama TourBY STEAMER OR AIR £77 A*35 TO 75 DAYS from II V• DISCOVERY SeriesDiscovery Tour * Explorer TourPrep & High School Swiss CampBY STEAMER OR AIR SjlQC*42 TO 68 DAYS from 403• excluding trane-Atlanllc transportation-or Form your Own GroupAsk for Plans and ProfitableOrganizer ArrangementsSPECIALISTS INSTUDENT TRAVELSINCE 1920for folders and detailsSEE YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENTor writs UNIVERSITY travel company |Cambridge 38. Mass. | SNCC relating the situation inViet Nam to the crisis in Alabama. Following the speeches,the marchers will converge on theCapitol, where they will presenta petition of grievances to Con¬gress.It was originally estimated thatthe March would draw 10,(XX) poopie, but this has been revised upward and more than 30,(Xhimarchers are now expected. Someof the colleges where activity hasbeen particularly heavy arc Wis¬consin, Pennsylvania, CCNY, Bos♦ on, Columbia, Swarthrnore, andCornell.The object of the March is "...to interest, to educate, and toactivate” and only secondarily toaffect policy, according to SDS.In the words of organizer PaulBluestone, “it’s the apathy thathas to be cured; apathy is adestructive force in a situationlike this.”The MAROON is lookingfor students in the divisionswho wish to write articleson the scientific researchbeing done by their col¬leagues, and professors.Those interested should con¬tact Ed Stern, science editor,at the MAROON office, 3rdfloor, Ida Noyes Hall.PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhair stylists at5242 Hyde Park Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710% Student DiscountSpringtimeA Good TimeTo Take Pictures24 hour service oncolor slides and movie film.$24.95 ELECTRONICFLASH GUNSNow*14”The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenuethe One, the Only-the Originalforeign car hospital A clinichome of team winkauthorized BMC and Triumph sales and service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113B’nai Brith Hillel FoundationpresentsISAAC BASHEVIS SINGER"My Philosophy as a Jewish Writer"Sunday, April 11, 8:00 P.M.Breasted Hall 1155 E. 58th St.Admission: $1.00 Hillel Affiliates$1.50 OthersGOLD CITY INN"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-25592 for 1 STUDENT SPECIAL!For the Once-Only Performance ofJubilee '65 ALL-STAR REVIEWHEADLININGSHELLEY BERMANwithBon Blue, Chainc llaneersHanna Ahruni and Herb LyonCIVIC OPERA HOUSESunday, April 11th at 7:30 P.M.lirltrlN Available at Civle Opera House Box OflirePresent Your I.D. Card and Get 2When You Buy One at $5 — $7.50 — $10MR. BIGG S“The Friendly Restaurant -—An Fdvenlure iu Good Fating.**1440 East 57th St.AM dinners include super juice, chef's salad, potatoes,french bread and butterVi SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN, served with honey andyou better believe it's finger licking good $1.65VEAL CUTLET, smothered in spaghetti withdelicious Itoiion meat sauceN.Y. CUT STRIP STEAK, broiled to perfection, aged to peak oftenderness, served with slice of sauted Bermuda onion $1.95BROILED CHOPPED BEEFSTEAK, freshly ground,smothered with sauted Bermuda onions.If if# Mr Bigg's, if# good.Try Delicious Vernor's BeveragesMR. PIZZAWE DELIVER —CARRY OUTSHY 3-8282DELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENSandwiches and Ch. Broiled HamburgersPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 6 PartySausoge ....1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie ,,, 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Olive . . . ... .1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vi and Vi 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients . . . . ... .50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pixxa 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bocon 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pixxa 2.50(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers) 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.001465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — Fri. to 3:00 a.m.Sot. to 3:00 o.m. — Open 2 p.m. Sundays CINEMAChicogo Ave. at Michigan"One of the great Americanmovies."New York Herald TribuneSun Times FOUR STARS"Reminiscent of David & Lisaand Marty." Chicago TribuneIVAN DICKSONABBEY LINCOLNNothing But A ManStudents $1.00 every dayBut Saturday with I.D. Card Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-68561 entera newworld ofdining-)j$- pleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chjcken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668dark *M,r*50for college studentswith i.<(. cardO different doublefeatures dailyO open dawn to dawn• little gal leryfor gals onlyfrl. 9—“the trouble withharry,” "to catch a thief” TIKI TOPICSCIRALSHOUSE OF TIKIIs 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.CIRALSHOUSE OF TIKI51st & HARPERFood served 11 A.M. to S A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.lb 10 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-7585 HARPERI1QZOR STORE1514 E. 53 rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONE— 1318— 1233— 7699HY 3-6800FA 4SAMUEL A. BELL“Bn;/ Shell From Bell'SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150■i sat. 10—“fail-safe,” ■m “secret invasion” ■isun. 11—"birth of anation,” “big parade- of comedy”mon. 12—“Jack, town,”“police nurse”tues. 13—“cry tough,”“slaughter on tenthavenue” ;. wed. 14—“heller in pinktights,” "wild wild■ women”thur. 15—“sea, chase,” PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PARK BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICEkk u-uumi — ke fi-;i8fnChicken - SandwichesPizza &Italian Foods”3 violent people”dark & madisonfr 2-2843 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. 53rdROCKEFELLER CHAPEL 59th & WOODLAWNPASSOVEREPIC OF DELIVERANCEHandersISRAEL IN EGYPTSunday April 11 3:30Richard Vikstrom, cond Rockefeller Chapel Choir, 30 membersof the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, with Peggy Smith, soprano;Charlotte Brent, mezzo-soprano; and Walter Corringer, tenor.Tickets: $4.00 Reserved; $3.00 GeneralAdmission; $2.00 Student/Staff; on saleat University Bookstore, Woodworth's BookstoreFor all of Hyde Park's babes,from 8 months to 80.THE EAGLEOPEN NOON TIL . . . !S311 BLACKSTONE 324-7859C ii Itii re CalendarConcertsCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA:April 9. Martinon, oond. Henryk Szery-ing v. Franck: Le Chans.senr Maudit;Roussel: Sym No. 3. Brahms: Cone.Apr. 10. Martinon, cond. Szeryng. v.Rossini: Journey to Reims Overt.Tohaikowsky: Cone. Franck: Le Chaus-heur Maudit. Debussy: Le Mer. April15-16. Martinon, Cond. Mary Saver, p.Adolph Herseth, trx Weber: Den Frei-schutz Overt. Beethoven: Sym. No. 1.Jolivet: Trumpet and piano Cone. Va¬rese: Arcana.ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIR. Rich¬ard Vikstrom. cond. Handel: Israel inEgypt. April 11 at 3:30. Tickets: $3-4,students $2. Rockefeller Chapel.AEOLIAN CHAMBER PLAYERS: Shapey:Discouz-se for 4 Instruments. Blackwood:Quartet. Schoenberg: Pierrot Lunaire.(w Alice Howland, s. and Frank Miller,vc.) April 9 at 8:30. Tickets $3. At Man-del Hall.ExhibitsMAX BECKMAN: First comprehensiveexhibit of his work since 1948. Art In¬stitute of Chicago, Michigan and Adams.Thru April 11.THE KASURI OF JAPAN: At the Renais¬sance Society thru April 17.HANNAH WEBER-SACHS: Paintings. Atthe UC Center for Continuing Educationthru May 1.HOHENBERG AND HAYDON: non-ob-jectlve abstract paintings. At MargueriteGallery, 1C2 E. Oak St. Chicago.FilmsANIMAL FARM: Animated color car¬toon from the novel by George Orwell.Docfilms. April 9 at 7:15 and 9:15.Soc Sci 122 . 60c.THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY and TOCATCH A THIEF: both by Hitchcock.Clark Theatre. April 9. 50c.BIRTH OF A NATION: D. W. Griffith’sclassic American film. Clark Theatre.April 11, 50c.HIGH SIERRA: dir. Raoul Walsh. WithHumphrey Bogart. Docfilms. April 13 at7:15 and 9:15. Soc Sci 122. 60c.SALOME: The silent production, star¬ring Nazimova. Art Institute. April 15at 7:30 75c.BECKETT: dir. Peter Glenville. WithPeter O’Toole, Sir John Gielgud, andRichard Burton. The Hyde Park, $???April 9-15.HIGH NOON: With Gary Cooper.Thompson House, (7th floor of Pierce i,April 11 at 8 pm, 50c. Folk MusicWING DING: Informal Hootenannywith Ozark Ballad Singer Bill Chipman.April 9 at 8:30, 3rd floor, Ida Noyes,free.RecitalsMAX NEUHAS: Percussionist with theContemporary Chamber Players. Worksby Stockhausen, Cage, and others. April13 at 8:30. Mandel Hall. Tickets $1, stu¬dents 50c.ALEXANDER TCHERKPNIN. composer-pianist in a recital of his own works.April 12 at 8:30. Chicago Arts Club,109 E. Ontario. Tickets $3.50.TheatreOLIVER: With a slight how to CharlesDickens. Nightly at 8:30; matinees Wed.and Sat. at 2. Nightly. $2.50-$5.95; Fri.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 11pm Tues.-Sat.; 4 and 9 pm Sun. Week¬days $2.65; Fri. and Sat. $2.95. SU 7-4200.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.THE BARRETTS OF WIMPOLESTREET: by Besier, Brenda Forbes, dir.With Leora Dana and Maurice Cope¬land. Mar. 26 - Apr. 17. Sun. - Thurs.,7:30; Fri. and Sat., 8:30. Nightly, $3.Fri. and Sat., $3.50. Students andgroups, 50c discount. Goodman Theatre,Monroe and Columbus. CE 6-2337.THE GAME THEATRE: Paul Sills (ofSecond City), dir. You can either ob¬serve or participate in this new, improvi-sational theatre. $2 for either observersor participants. Saturdays, from 8:30 on.1935 N. Sedgwick. 642-4198.THE LOVER AND THE CONNECTION:both bv Harold Pinter. Weekends thruMay 2 Nightly at 8:30. Sun. at 7:30.Apr. 4. Nightly at 8:30, Sun. at 7:30.Fri. and Sat., $3.40. Sun, $3 At HullHouse Theatre, 3212 N Broadway. 348-8330THE KNACK: Ami Jellico’s play in theoriginal New York Production. OpensApril 7 at the Harper Theater, 5238 S.Harper. Nightly at 8:30, Sat. 7 and 10:15,Sun. 2:30 and 7:30. Closed Mon. Nightly$3, Fri. and Sat. $3 90,VISTA to recruit povertyfighters for domestic warVlSTA’s vista will includeUC next week, the office ofcareer counseling and place¬ment has announced.Next Friday, two officials ofthe organization, which is theright arm of the Office of Econom¬ic Opportunity, will meet withstudents and faculty throughoutthe day in the career counselingoffice, second floor, ReynoldsClub. They will provide informa¬tion and answer questions aboutopportunities for employment,VISTA WORKERS receive fromfour to six weeks of special train¬ing, and then spend the rest ofa year liv ing and working amongpoor people throughout the coun¬try.Work sites variousVolunteers work in urban slums.Job Corps camps, migrant work¬er communities, Indian reserva¬tions, schools, hospitals, and in¬stitutions for the mentally ill andthe mentally retarded. VISTAprojects are currently under wayin nine states. More than 14,000 volunteershave already applied for service.Those interested in obtaining de¬tailed information about VISTAand the entire War on Povertyprogram may write directly to theOffice of Economic Opportunity,Washington, D.C.Percussionist givesconcert on TuesdayPercussionist Max Neuhaus willgive a solo recital in Mandel Hallthis Tuesday at 8:30.Neuhaus, presently a post-grad¬uate fellow with the Contempora¬ry Chamber Players, is wellknown as a performer of avant-garde music, and has toured withKarlheinz Stockhausen and DavidTudor, among others.The program will include musicby Byrd, Haubenstock - Ramati,Stockhausen, and Cage. Ticketsare $1; 50c for students. UC stu¬dents can obtain free tickets fromthe music department, 5802 Wood-lawn, before 4 pm Tuesday.UNIVERSITY THEATREpresentsTONIGHT AT 8:30Genet The Maids"andYeats' At The Hawk's Well"April 23, 24, 25, 30 and May 1, 2REYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE$1.50 General Admission$1.00 Students8 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 9, 1965 CLASSIFIED Shorey offersart, lit. awardsPERSON AI.Have you been on the wrong end ofa bureaucratic bungle at UC? If so,contact 224 BJ.Have a ball at the Crocus tomorroweve at Int. House, 9 pm.PROFESSIONAL ALTERATIONSFormerly with Bonwit TellerLeah Rothenberg. 5216 Cornell, 324-2871Reservations for Passover Seders andMeals. Deadline April 9. Hillel House,5715 Woodlawn, PL 2-1127.WRITER S WORKSHOP (PL 2-8377)WANTED1 4-car garage with electricity in HydePark or Kenwood: BU 8-5140, after6:00 pm.175 gals. Mazola oil. Will swap surrealis¬tic stereopticon slides. Contact Green¬wood Party Committee.FURN. 1-2Ii rm. apt. near U.C. forsummer sublet. FA 4-8200. x 464 or 717.APT. to share for May and June. CallMarcia Buchman. 288-0213 eves.M.D. seeks house or apt. June ’65-Julv’66. 2 bedrms., yard, near U.C. CallMU 4-4369.FOR RENT-SUBLET. One or two bdrinmodest apt., turn. For professor, wife,and year old child. App. June 15- Aug.31. Contact Professor Victor Greene,Dept, of History. Kensas State Univer¬sity, Manhattan. Kansas.Married cple. needs 4-rm. apt. in H. P.for next yr. Can take over lease any¬time betw. June and Oct. MU 4-1715.HELP WANTED FOR SAFE;>8 FORD; new trails.; clutch; tires.684-7992^ ’1954 CHEV. Good motor, 65,000 miles.$100 or best off. 667-2735. morn <fc nlte.BOGEN AM-FM tuner. Perfect condi¬tion. $145. 521-0460.MED-LOW FI Syst. Grooms Mono Ampl.Unlv. Spkr. cab. Reko-Kut, T-table andbase; audax tone arm; G.E. cartridge,$25. x 5131 5:30-8:30 pm. or 363-2016.RUGS, drapes, furn., bedroom set.643-2630.COOP APT. 6-rm.. 2 bill. apt. 13th fir.overlooking lake: carpeting, util. Sacri¬fice. MI 3-4796.MOTORBIKE—3 horsepower, uip speedaround 45 mph. Will sell for $50 (may¬be less), or trade for bicycle In goodcondition plus cash money. ContactK. K. x 2898 days; 493-1129 nights.FOR RENTRM. with pvt. bath and roof garden,$12 or exchange babysitting. KE 8-1324.SMALL office space avail at 55th &Blackstone. Reas. rent. Call W. R.Moddoek. BU 8-1855.SPACIOUS l-bedrm. apt. 2nd fir. Form¬er mansion. Many closets, grand stylebath, exc. trails.. 10 min. to U.C.Couples or prof, woman only. ChildrenO.K. 288-6757.APT. starting summer quarter. 3 bdrms.living rm.. k,it., 2 tiled baths (withshower stall). Perf. for students. 53rd &Dorchester. 324-4325 after 6 p.m.Calendar The Shorey House Council antithe Shorey House Prize Commit¬tee announced this week that twoprizes of $50 each will be award¬ed for an original work of art andan original piece of creative writ-ing.All registered undergraduatestudents in the College are eligi¬ble for the prize. The art categoryincludes Ink, pencil, rhalk, andcharcoal drawings, oil paintings,and water colors.All types of fictional writing, in¬cluding poems, short stories, andessays are eligible for the literature competition. Literary manu¬scripts must he unsigned, typedin duplicate, and double spaced.All manuscripts and the winningart work will become the propertyof Shorey House.All entries must he deliveredIn person to Matthew Nitocki, res¬ident head of Shorey, on or beforeMay 10 at Room 1924, Pierce Tow¬er, 5514 S. University ave. Prizeswill be awarded at Shorey Houseon May 24.of EventsPart-time waitresses, grill men. dish¬washers. Mr. Biggs, 1440 E. 57fch St.684-9398.DAY CAMP CNSLRS.—Males only, towork with Elem. school-age children Inoutdoor setting. Salary range, $350 andup for summer. Call Mel Brownsteinor Carol Finkelsteln, RE 1-0444.Wanted: students from Near and MiddleEastern countries, from Egypt throughthe Indian sub-continent, to act asresearch assistants working on researchprojects concerning the Near and Mid¬dle East. Both part and full time possi¬bilities. Send complete biographicalresume to Professor Bhagwati P. KPoddar, Department of Social Sciences,Illinois State University, Normal, Illi¬nois.CAMP CNSLRS. to work at CAMP KEN-NILO IN CONN. BERSHIRES. 6 male,min. age 20. Specialists—Rflry., Archry.,Fencing, Photog., Golf. Wrtie S. Green-baum, 852 E. 57th st. for infor. andappl. or call 752-5868, 10-11 pmNite admitting clerk: busy hosp. deskneeds neat app. male to handle nitedesk. Th., 12 pm-8 am. Sun.. 12 pm-8am and some holidays. Typing essen¬tial, permanent. Ml 3-0800, x 4444SUBLETS4 RMS., 54th & Kimb. Air-Cond. July25-Sept. 15. Reas. rent. Call x 3993 orafter 6 752-4413.4*2 RMS., 1 bedrm. near Point, I.C. &buses. Lge. spacious. Avail. June 15 orJuly 1. Call Miss Armstrong, PI, 2-6632after 6 or Miss Charzarra, 348-8330during day. Friday, April 9MEETING: Organization of a Hillel so¬cial action committee on Vietnam.Hillel. 2:30 pm.SABBATH SERVICES: Hillel. 7:30 pm.LECTURE: “The Blood of Jesus Christ.”U. Adenburg, sponsored by Intervarsi¬ty Christian Fellowship, Ida Noyes, 7:30pm.LECTURE: “My Way to Maimouides.”Leo Strauss, professor of political sci¬ence, Hillel, 8:30 pm.TWIST PARTY: The Appomattox Nighttwist party, to celebrate the 100t.ltanniversary of the confederate surren¬der, music by the Gorillas, Men 50c.women free. Judson lounge. B-J, 8:30pm.HOOTENANNY: UC Folklore Society’s"Wingding,” third floor Ida Noyes. 8:30pm.Saturday, April 10LECTURE: “The Mind. The Eye. andModern Art: Some Aspects of RecentPainting.” Joshua C. Taylor, professorof art, one of the high school Saturdayseminars. Breasted Hall, 10:30 am.MOVIE: ‘ The Dybbuk,’’ Hillel. 8:30 pm.DANCE: The Crocus Ball, A1 Peters Or¬chestra. semi-formal, $1 per person,refreshments served, InternationalHouse, 9 pm.Sunday, April 11RADIO: “The World of the Paperback.”John Hope Franklin, professor of his¬tory, discusses Three Negro Classicswith Robert C. Albrecht, assistant pro¬fessor of English. WFMF, 8:15 am. CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins.University Carlllonneur, RockefellerChapel. 12:30 pm.FREEDOM RALLY: sponsored by SNCCfor the Black Belt Project, speakers in¬clude John Lewis, head of SNCC. StudsTerkel. Dunbar High School auditori¬um. 30th and South Park. 2 pm.LECTURE: “Joanh and Deep Psycholo¬gy.” Michael Bertiaux, 218 S. Wabash,3:30 pm.CONCERT: Handel’s “Israel In Egypt.”Rockefeller Chapel Choir with mem¬bers from the Chicago Symphony. Ed¬ward Mondello, organist, RockefellerChapel, 3:30 pm.RADIO: “Chicago Dialogue.” professorof sociology Philip M. Hauser discussesChicago’s technological future, WIND.7:05 pm.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes, 7:30 pmDISCUSSION: ‘The New Professor:Teaching -Research - Publishing.” FredSiegler. assistant professor of philoso¬phy, Brent House. 5540 Woodlawn. 7:30pm.LECTURE: “My Philosophy as a JewishWriter,” Issac Bashevis Singer, Hillel.8 pm.MOVIE: “High Noon.” Thompson House,50c, 8 pm.RADIO: ’’Nlghtline,” public discussionforum, WBBM, 10 pm.Monday, April 12LECTURE SERIES: “The Monday Lec¬tures," “Man’s Place in the PhysicalUniverse,” Willard F. Libby, professoiof chemistry and director of the Insti¬tute of Geophysics, UCLA, Law Schoolauditorium, 8 pm."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 EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount TYPEWRITERSTO 55% OIF*New-Used-Electric-Office-PortableAll machines (new or used) oreguaranteed for 5 years. We arean authorized agency for mostmajor typewriter manufacturers.If any machine we sell can bepurchased elsewhere (within 30days) for less, we will refund thedifference in cash."Discounts average 37%Discount Typewriters50 E. Chicago Tel. 664-3552TR-4-NEWEST IN A GREAT LINETriumph makes the most popular sports cars in America. Drive the new TR-4 and you’ll see why. The topspeed is 110. Torque is high at all speeds. It has disc brakes. Wider track. Synchromesh on all 4 gears.Roll up windows. Rain proof top. Luxury finish. Come in today. FREE TEST DRIVES: Drop in or phone“Southeast Chicago's OnlyAuthorized Triumph Dealer'9BOB NELSON MOTORS6052 S. Cottage Grove Midway 3-4501