16,000, 300 UC ers, march in massive Viet protestr.. r.nWii nf ar nnr*rw~»r»Arnti\'o V»no ®In spile of an uncooperative bus and an even more uncooperative contingent of police, theStudents for a Democratic Society s (SDS) March on Washington to End the War in Vietnamturned out to be a success.Some 16,000 students, more than 300 of whom were from UC, spent Saturday marching'through Washington, presenting a — —-— ^nriition to congress, and sitting-in . . , , ^ ,L front of the White House in &Pe^es were scheduled to be giv- the brink of a world war. Now iseffort to demonstrate their en‘ " on£ *-he w^y» they were met the time to find a decent way out,”— on Vietnam, which was w*lh counter-pickets from Young Gruening said.Americans for Freedom and some “Continue your efforts forlocal high school students, who E?ace ~ redouble your efforts,”jeered at the marchers and carriedsuch signs as ‘‘Go Take a Bath”and “This Is A Communist Dem¬onstration.” The marchers reactedwith cheers and hoots.inanposition;1 demand for an imediate end tothe war.mi: STUDENTS began their,l;iy with a general picket in frontda\ with a general picket aroundihe White House, waving signsthe War Now” and “War onPoverty — Not on Peace.”Police overly helpfulBut six of the eight buses whichoarried the UC group had beendelayed for three hours en route,and to make matters worse, theimpatient UC’ers were given thescenic tour through Washingtonhv a squadron of Washington po¬lice. As a result, they missed theinitial portion of the demoastra-tion.After finally joining forces withthe other students, the UC con¬tingent marched to the Washing¬ton Monument, the site where Gruening told the assembledgroup. “Let us demonstrate thatAmerican public opinion can final¬ly determine the nation’s course.”At the Washington Monument,the marchers heard first from BobMoses, a Student Non-Violent Co¬ordinating Committee field sec¬retary, who drew parallels bp-tween the war in Vietnam and thesituation in the south.Other speakers included jour¬nalist I.F. Stone, who told themarchers that the war in Vietnamwas primarily a civil one and thatNorth Vietnamese resistance didnot justify bombing, and SenatorErnest Gruening (D.-Alaska),-whocalled for immediate cessation ofbombing and negotiation with theVietcong. ‘‘We stand today on PAUL POTTER, national presi¬dent of SDS, then told the groupthat the US must stop wagingwhat he called “cultural genocide.”He drew the biggest hand of theday when he said: “I wouldrather see Vietnam communizedthan see it continue to be sub¬jected to the ruin that Americandomination has brought.”More intellectual commitmentStaughton Lind, a professor ofhistory at Yale, added that “it istime for the intellectual communi¬ty to lend more support to end¬ing the war.”Then to the strains of songsled by folksingers Joan Beaz and Judy Collins, the marchers pro¬ceeded to the steps of the capitol,where an SDS spokesman told thegroup that a petition had beentacked onto the door at the en¬trance to congress. The petition,the spokesman told the group,informed congress that the march¬ers asked an immediate end tothe war, and suggested the recon¬vention of the Geneva conference,and UN-supervised elections.The petition stated that themarchers “may disagree onmeans” but that they were “un¬animous in their belief that thewar must be halted” and that thewar “is inflicting untold harm.” their buses, disorganization wasrife. Several members of the UCgroup were left stranded, and itwas reported that several had de¬cided to go home by way of NewYork. Typical of the confusionwas a sign tacked to a tree infront of the White House. It read:“CCNY — people — we left —call SDS people in Washington —hope you get home OK — sorry.”In addition, traffic was jammedas several thousand tourists de¬cided to visit the cherry blossoms,which are just beginning to bloomnear the Jefferson MemorialWith the march then officiallyover, the UC contingent organ¬ized the previously planned sit-inin front of the White House.The idea was to emphasize to agreater extent the necessity forimmediate withdrawal of Ameri¬can troops.The sit-in, which was staged byapproximately 300 people, lastedabout two hours without incident.A sit-in was also being staged atthe state department building.When the marchers returned to VISA will hold an intro¬duction to volunteer workwith the mentally ill tomor¬row at 8 pm in the EastLounge of Ida Noyes. Eu¬gene Gendlin, assistant pro¬fessor of psychology andphilosophy, will speak on"Experiencing and Listen¬ing." Anyone interested involunteer work or curiousabout mental illness is wel¬come. Refreshments will beserved.Vol. 73 — No. 39 The University of Chicago <^’*!7*s*31 Tuesday, April 20, 1965SPAC, GNOSIS each win 23 seatsSG assembly an even splitThe 1965-6 Student Government (SG) assembly is split evenly among SPAC and GNOSISmembers, 23 seats to 23.The two constitutional amendments, one to set up SG as the dispensary for student activi¬ties funds and the other to require dorm representatives to live in dorms, both passed bybetter than two to one.AM) THE UC National StudentAssociation Delegation is as splitwith regard to party affiliation asthe assembly.Record turnoutThese were the major results ofthe annual SG elections, whichwound up Friday and which saw' arecord vote turnout.The 1964 students who cast bal¬lots favored SPAC In the Collegeby ten seats to four for GNOSIS,with independents Ken Shelton offraternities, Mark Joseph of PierceTower, and Alan Bloom of New’Dorm also winning seats.But GNOSIS outdid SPAC inthe graduate schools 19 to 13, toproduce the unprecedented splitassembly.Tiie turning point, and the oneresult w'hich produced the tie morethan anything else according toleaders of both parties, was theresult in the Social Sciences divi¬sion. SPAC had expected all eightseals in this division, but it re¬ceived only five.OTHER THAN THIS, the elec¬tion w’ent pretty much the wayparty leaders expected. GNOSISshowed strongly in the law schooland business school, while SPACW'alked off with six of the sevenCollege at large seats. GNOSISswept the physical sciences seats,while SPAC took three out of fiveseats in humanities.Complete results of the electionappear elsewhere in today’s Ma¬roon.NSA recountThe NSA results are incompletebecause a recount will be necessa¬ry for the fifth delegate position.David Aiken of GNOSIS edged outHusti Woods of SPAC by threevotes for the post. But, if Aiken’svictory stands up, it will giveGNOSIS three delegate positionsand two alternates, and SPAC twodelegates and three alternates. Students tally SG resultsThe recount is expected to takeplace within the next few days.Beside a Friday night recount insocial sciences which SPAC hadcalled for, the NSA recount willbe, strangely, the only one in anextremely tight election.This year’s NSA results are afar cry from last year’s, whenthree recounts were necessary toestablish independent JamesRock’s victory over Bemie Grof-man, the low vote-getter on a five-man coalition slate. Grofman ledthis year’s delegate candidates,however, and there was, by mu¬tual agreement among the twomajor parties, no coalition.IN ANOTHER CHANGE fromlast year, only four Independentsinstead of last year’s nine wonseats in the assembly. In addi¬tion, none of the independentswho won seats were affiliatedwith either the Independent Partyor the New Dorm Party. The voting on the constitutionalamendments came as a surpriseto leaders of both parties. Forone thing, they were wary ofthe CORSO amendment’s chancesof success in view of a reportedwave of votes against the measurein the law school. For another,practically no one expected theoverwhelming passage of the“residence” amendment, sinceneither major party had supportedthe measure in platforms andcampaign literature.Things to come in the nearfuture include, beside the NSArecount, back-stage politicking onvarious issues, including the com¬position of SG’s executive council,and the comparative emphasisthat SG will place on various as¬pects of its role. The new assem¬bly will probably meet first aweek from today, and the execu¬tive council will be chosen atthat time. Winners of SG and NSA seatsGRAD SCHOOLS:Bio Sei Nick ( barney (GNOSIS) 36Tom Green (GNOSIS) 31Phy Sei Irv Wladawsky (GNOSIS) 63• Leon Glass (GNOSIS) 62Aaron Bloch (GNOSIS) 61Bill Lakin (GNOSIS) 45Humanities Si Aronson (GNOSIS) 38Bob Hamburger (SPAC) 37Robert Kreiser (Ind.) 32Philip O’Mara (SPAC) 31Peter Nagoumey (SPAC) 29SSA Rich Lesser (GNOSIS) 11A1 Cook (GNOSIS) 8Soc Sci Pete McGregor (SPAC) 86Marilyn Salzman (SPAC) 85Bob Ross (SPAC) 84Joan Goldsmith (SPAC) 79Jerry Hyman (GNOSIS) 77Peter Livingston (SPAC) 76Frank Corson (GNOSIS) all 75John Gwinn (GNOSIS) all 75Tom Cottle (GNOSIS)Education Judy Walzer (SPAC) 3library Set Mary Cuddy (GNOSIS) 6Business George Travers (GNOSIS) 60Steve Livernash (GNOSIS) 50Lloyd Giordano (GNOSIS) 48Medical Benjamin Seigel (SPAC) 23Saul VVasserman (SPAC) 18I-aw Howard Abrams (Law School Party) 128John Ahern (Law School Party) 95Marty Hochman (Law School Party) 71Divinity Eileen Hanson (SPAC) 16James Overbeek (SPAC) 13COLLEGE:Burton Judson Walter Saveland (GNOSJS) 108Guy Maliaffey (GNOSIS) 99New Dorm Paul Levin (SPAC) 209Alan Bloom (Ind.) 190Heather Tobis (SPAC) 166John Bremner (GNOSIS) 150Pierce Tower Dave Stameshkin (SPAC) 143Mark Joseph (Ind.) 120Jim Blair (SPAC) 97Fraternitte* Ken Shelton (Ind.) 31At-I-arge Bemie Grofman (GNOSIS) 194Rusti Woods (SPAC) 177Alan Sussman (SPAC) 171Steve Goldsmith (SPAC) 159Bob Levey (SPAC) 158Tom Snrmcker (SPAC) 156Tom Howard (SPAC) 144NSA:Delegate Bernie Grofman (GNOSIS) 955Heather Tobis (SPAC) 860Sally Cook (SPAC) 774Jerry Hyman (GNOSIS) 737David Aiken (GNOSIS) 707Alternate Dave Stameshkin (SPAC) 692Alan Sussman (SPAC) 692Dave Rosenberg (GNOSIS) 667Bob I>vey (SPAC) 665Mike Klowden (GNOSIS) 655CLASSIFIED ADSPERSONALCongratulations to Rabbit and Katieon the happy announcement!WRITER'S? WORKSHOP i PL~ 2-8377)If not Rabbit, then who?Sandals, custom-made: 40 styles tochoose from. Ad Lib. Studio, 1422 E.53rd St. DO 3-3819.What did the Easter Rabbit bringKatie?WANT TO BE DISCOV ERED? Win bigmoney? FOTA Art and Photo Show—enter this week.European Travelers: There are some seatsavailable on the SG charter June 23-Sept. 16. Only $250 from NY to Londonand return. (Prom Chicago $315).Will Rabbit ask a second time?No age limit, no entry fees for UC•tudents. Bring entries for FOTAArt and Photography Show to Lex¬ington Hall next Friday, Sat.. Sun.No entries accepted after Sunday.-EXTRAVAGANZA” Friday. April” 23”9:00 pm. 5400 S. Greenwood. GREEN-WOOD PARTY COMMITTEE.Married cple. needs 4-rm. apt. InH. P. for next yr. Can take overlease anytime betw. June and Oct.MU 4-1715.Blacks tone Discotheque: 5748 Black-•tone, tonight 9-11, admission 25c, re¬freshments.FOR SALE MAGNITONE M-14 dual channelamp. (guitar) unused: *39 Plymouth,engine, body very good, sac. '63 Cor-vair, isky cam kit, oversize MickeyThompson cylinders and pistons, comp,clutch, bal. 196 cu. in. 752-6852 after9 p.m.FOR RENT100 YR. OLD, modernized, furnished,2 bdrm. farmhouse. Middle of 15 woodedacres. 1 mile from Tremont SouthShore Station and 3,000 acre IndianaDunes State Park. 45 mins, from UC viaToll Road or train. May 1 to Sept. 30.$200 per month including all utilitiesand (local) phone. Whitehall 4-2779 ordial 219-929-0058. TEACHERS — Southwest, entire westand Alaska. Salaries $5400 up—FREEregistration—Southwest Teachers Agen¬cy, 1303 Cebtral Av. N.E. Albuquerque,N.M.Camp Cnslrs. to work at CAMP KENICOin Conn. Berkshires. 6 male min. age 20."ALSO” Spclsts. — Riflry., Archery,Fencing, Photog., Golf. Write S.Greenbaum, 852 E. 57th St. for info.& appl. or rail 752-5868. 10-11.SUBLETRemodeled 7-rm. 54th & S. Univ.Furn. Reas. June 1st. After 6 pm,288-1706.3</2 '/jRM.by May 1. apt. unfurn.324-4457.HELP WANTEDStudent who enjoys gardening, 2-5hrs. per wk. $1.75 per hr. Call x 4331.Sitter for 3 school age children, l hr.6 mornings. Salary fas room andcooking privileges. WA 4-5672. 6 RMS., well furn. 54th & Harper.Let or sublet June thru Aug. 752-6477.Oonv., well furn. fac. home. Avail.sublease July 1-Aug. 31, sit. on cam¬pus rent by negotiation, exc. part-time domestic help available. NorvalMorris, Law School, x 2435.2‘i ROOMS, South Shore, close tostores, trans. Avail. June 15-Sept. 1.MI 3-6501 after 6.Intramural News1961 Borgward Isabella 2-dr. sedan.$350. 571 International House. FA 4-8200House, 52nd & Kenwood, 11-rm. framehse.; 3 open fireplaces, new gas furnace:humidifiers, fenced in yard, $3,000down; 643-2957.Modernized Townhouse — 4 bdrms., V/2bths.. oil heat, all appliances, low taxes,nr. UC. BU 8-1276. singles Champion.snlp. The fol¬lowing schedule is in effect withall matches at Ida Noyes:College House Blue— Monday.College House Red—Tuesday.Fraternity—Wednesday.Divisional*and All-University —Thursday.Golf entries are due today.Chicago MaroonSenior Medics won the all Uni¬versity Championship VolleyballTournament, defeating the Cham¬berlin College House Team, whowere the undergraduate cham¬pions.On Monday, April 26, 49 Soft-ball teams will open play withgames being played in 6 leagues.The league champions will thenplay off for the All-University ti¬tle.Monday will also see the start of Editor-in-Chief Robert F. Leveythe All-University Table Tennis Business Manager Michael KasseraManaging Editor David L. AikenAssistants to the Editor, Sharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsCampus News Editor Dan HertzbergAssistant Campus NewsEditor Dinah EsralEditor, Chicago LiteraryReview Martin MlchaelsonCulture-Feature Editor. .David H. RichterPhoto 'Co-ordinators.Bill Caffrey, Steve WofsyRewrite Editor Eve HochwaldMovie Editor Kenneth KrantzMusic Editor Peter RabinowitzScience Editor Ed Stem* Political Editor Bruce FreedEditor Emeritus John T WilliamsThe Maroon is published Tuesday andFriday mornings by students at theUniversity of Chicago. Its editorials andletters to the editor do not indicateUniversity policy. Offices are in IdaNoyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th st., Chicago60637. Phones: MI 3-0800; extensions3265, 3266, 3269. Second class postagepaid at Chicago, 111. EDITORIALNeed SG compromiseThe results of the Student Government (SG) elections seemto have created more problems than they have solved. Forthe first time in SG history, there is an equally divided as¬sembly. As a result, this year might also mark the first timethat SG spends all its time worrying about such comparativelyunimportant things as majorities at the right times and whatthe hated opposition is going to do. All this can be avoided,however, with prior discussion and especially with compromise!so that the more important and more substantive issuescan quickly and effectively be tackled.With an equally split assembly, it is no secret that the bailiefor seats on the executive council will be bitter. GNOSIS iswilling to propose and accept a 5 GNOSIS — 5 SPAC — ] in.dependent council, and SPAC shows signs of agreeing. Onecan only hope they do, for it would seem that any activitythat Ihey can oversee and help to perpetuate under a com¬promise would be better than the far smaller amount thatthey would get done as the minority on the exec.But this is not to say that GNOSIS has delusions of abso¬lute control over the assembly, the exec, and SPAC to thedegree that they would argue that SPAC should be forced toaccept the 5-5-1 proposal or be completely subjugated. For¬tunately, GNOSIS leaders want to tackle the more importantand more substantive issues almost as much as SPAC lead¬ers. Furthermore, they realize that their control is not astotal as it was this past year. Thus, they are willing to com¬promise for the general good of all, not for the sake of seem¬ing like political philanthropists or being able to say, if SPACturns down the offer, that SPAC then deserves to be bootedentirely. Very simply, SPAC needs GNOSIS and GNOSISneeds SPAC.To try to assess the reasons for t he election results, SPAC’smuch better showing than that of POLIT last year indicatesgrowing sympathy with the attitude of “activism.” Evidentlyenough people thought this attitude is relevant to SG to giveSPAC candidates a boost.The more telling reason, we feel, was simply that manyof the GNOSIS candidates were much less well known thanmany of the SPAC candidates, though the latter have almostall become known through non-SG activities. The fact thatthe NSA delegation is almost evenly divided between the twoparties indicates that voters were selective according to ex¬perience.The even division in both the assembly and NSA delega¬tion prevents any talk of “clear mandates” to anybody. Itwill take a spirit of accommodation between the parties toget anything accomplished in SG next year.I love a man in Van Heusen u417”I’m real keen on his lean swingy.physique and the spare, pared-downifattery that “V-Taper” fit adds toit. Can’t get my eyes off thegreat way he looks, either in atraditional Button-Down or spiffySnap-Tab. And in those Van Heusenspring weaves and colors ... thoseshort-cut sleeves, my man’sgot it made!VAN HEUSEN*V-Taper—for the lean trim look.Traditional “Van Heusen”-Shirts are, of course,available atTHE STORE FOR MEN21 mutt ant (Campus g-ijup*»« the Netc tty tie Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 Packer corrects errorsIn Friday’s article on VVUCB,the paragraph... Wick said that trustee ac¬tion has been delayed for tworeasons: first, because WUCBmust still revise its constitu¬tion, and second, because arealistic budget has yet to besubmitted. The FM proposalwas scheduled to go before thetrustees at their meeting Mon¬ day, Wick said, but was notconsidered for the above rea¬sons.is a grass distortion of the situa¬tion and should be corrected.First, WUCB had rewritten itsconstitution in March, and onlyhad to clarify some technicalpoints. Wick told me that tillswould not hamper the progress ofthe proposal as long as we did itreasonably soon.BONANZA BOOK SALE CONTINUES THRUTHURSDAY, APRIL 22THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.2 • CHICAGO MAROON April 20, 1965 UNIVERSITY THEATREpresentsTONIGHT AT 8:30”Genet 'The Maids”andYeatsAt The Hawk's Well'April 23, 24, 25, 30 and May 1, 2REYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE$1.50 General Admission$1.00 Students Second, I submitted a budget inJanuary. Nobody told me that iiwas unrealistic.Third, the Trustees didn’t meetlast Monday anyway, to niy knowl-•*dge. They only meet once amonth, and their last meeting wason April 8. The President’s Board,however, an entirely different en¬tity, does meet on the secondTuesday of each month.But, has the Maroon, in fact,“done it again”? I don’t think so.1 think the Administration, pain¬fully and chronically, has ‘done itagain,” by not clarifying its ownstatements and by letting the Ma¬roon interpret them as they will.I would like to advance the hy¬pothesis that a significant propor¬tion of the inaccuracies in thispaj)er, which we laugh (or cry)at, result from this kind of seman¬tic mess, which I have conn1 toknow only too well in the pastyear or so.CHARLES PACKERSpring Weather IsJust One Step AwayEmbark with DenimThe Casual Look of BlueDenim Accented withContrasting Red StitchingKnee-skimmer ''CobblerShift $9.95Striped Shell—100% Orion$4.95Laced Pants — Straight Leg$7.95Straight or Flared Skirt$6.95 - $7.95Jamaica Shorts $6.95University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.. 11 11 ——Job service goes co-opRe-organization is in storefor the student-run UniversityStudent Employment Service(USES), to keep the statefrom revoking the whole Univer¬sity’s tax-exempt status.Stephen J. Kennedy, a second-year student and manager of theservice, announced this week thatUSES, which he formed last quar¬ter and has personally managedsince then, must be reformed intoa co-operative organization.A meeting to formally organizethe co-op will be held Thursday at4 pm in Ida Noyes, Kennedy said.I SES WAS FORMED last quar¬ter to help find off campus parttime jobs and full time summerjobs for students. The Universityagreed to subsidize part of theorganization if a way could befound to pay for the balance ofthe expenses. It was thought thatthe students would be willing topay a small fee based on theamount of money they earned, ifthe employment service could getthem a job; and this assumptiondid indeed prove to be correct, ac¬cording to a statement from Ken¬nedy.But legal problems a rase withthe State Department of Labor—problems which could put the Uni¬versity’s tax status in jeopardy.The task has now become one ofhow to finance the organizationwithout being considered a privateemployment agency by the De¬partment of Labor; and the solu¬tion seems to be in the formationo! a coojjerative, Kennedy .said."We have the opportunity toform a co-op as a recognized stu¬dent activity of the University,”Kennedy continued “The signifi¬cance of this Ls very important,for it is a step forward towardthe goal of having more studentparticipation in the running ofthe University.” for students — which has beenneglected in the past. But to makethis co-op work we need studentinterest and student: participation.It Ls up to you, the student, todecide whether you want to worktogether to get more and betteroff campus and summer jobs, orwhether you wish to revert backto the old system which washandled by the administration Inthe past.” Kennedy’s statementdeclared.KENNEDY TOLD the Maroonthat, in almost three monthssince its beginning, the service hasregistered about 190 studentsseeking part-time or summer em¬ployment, and has placed 27 intemporary or part-time positions.An effort to round up pasts fromChicago area employers and HydePark businesses has been delayedduring the current legal uncer¬tainty.The legal problem was dis¬covered in February, Kennedysaid, when Fred D. Bjorling, theUniversity’s director of personnel,wrote a note to the state depart¬ment of labor, asking if it was allright with them for USES tooperate as originally organized.The bureau said no, it wasn’t.In a meeting with Kennedy andRussel O. Anderson, assistant per¬sonnel director, the labor depart¬ment said the University wouldhave to make a statement accept¬ing legal responsibility for USES.UC’s legal department, accordingto Kennedy, nixed this idea.The solution of a co-op organ¬ization, as a recognized studentactivity, was decided upon in ameeting with members of the per¬sonnel department, legal depart¬ment, and dean of students officelast Thursday, Kennedy said. Election Night: UC/s FranciscoIt might not have been aSan Francisco or an AtlanticCity and certainly not a CBSElection Central, but UC’s ver¬sion of the Great American Cus¬tom known as Election Night isremarkable nonetheless.The similarities to the big timeare numerous. There is the pro¬fusion of cigar smoke, the quick¬ly closed behind-the-scenes deals,and, of course, the nailbiting andother furious activity.In one corner, one might findthe traditional debate over ideolo¬gy. In another, there are thepragmatic, hard-headed strate¬gists, who are plotting yearsahead to insure their party’s suc¬cess. Most of all, though, thereare diligent vote counters andwide-eyed spectators for whomthe evening is one of both dramaand duty.IF THERE IS any particularregularity to the evening, one phe¬nomenon takes place exactly sev¬enteen times at frequent intervals.As the devoted slaves of the Elec¬tion and Rules Committee postthe results for each of the divi¬sion, the professional schoolsand the College voting principali¬ties, everyone furiously dropswhat they might have been doing(even if it was nothing) andcrowds claustrophobically aroundthe blackboard, which has beenstrategically placed so as to af¬ford the fewest number of peoplethe worst possible view.Just as regularly, seventeen fiveminute speculation sessions beginimmediately afterwards. What dothese results mean to the generaloutlook? Are the people electedany good? Where do they standor Vietnam? and, forgotten in thebackground, the previously an¬ticipatory, rosy cheeked faceslinks away to bed to ponderwhether he might have won with a couple more coffee breaks inSwift.As the night wears on, thefaithful keep up the vigil, run¬ning around, comparing notes,checking figures, and most ofteninforming recent arrivals of thetrend. A common sight is an ob¬vious neophyte, who has beentold to ask for the very busy look¬ing fellow wearing the E and Rbadge, imploring: “Pardon me,sir, but can you tell me what theresults will be?” The harried bu¬reaucrat might respond: (in abouthalf a second flat and in clippedtones-: "can’t tell yet. Looks likea dead split. Soc Sci splits in halfand the write-in in the College atlarge didn’t draw as well as ex¬pected. Final results in about 15minutes.”A PARTICULARLY curious so¬cial, if not also political state ex¬ists as well. For some reason,which has yet to be fathomed, everybody is everybody else’sfriend. Wisecracks fly, pseudo-au¬thoritative insights and facts("GNOSIS can’t miss six seats inthe College”.) literally guish, anda curious fraternity arises be¬tween vote counters who have notknown each other in the slightestpreviously ("Well, Steve, old boy,looks like more of those amend¬ments to count. Sure wish wecould go have a drink somewhereinstead”).But, as always, The Night doesend. Weary workers, euphoricmembers of the audience, and thetraditionally disgruntled politi-ans who will wait until the morn¬ing to become really disgruntledall retire to the equally tradition¬al parties. And the alacrity withwhich they party leads one to won¬der if this, the crowning event ofthe evening, isn’t' the evening’sraison d’etre after ail.Nikodim Fomitchdominion..overtheMan will never really conquer the atom until he conquershis fear of the atom — his fear of annihilation, He needsa spiritual understanding of himself, of the universe, andof God. You’re invited to hear a one-hour public lectureon this subject by Jules Cern of The Christian ScienceBoard of Lectureship. The title is "Christian Science:Dominion Over the Atom." Everyone is welcome.'Step forward'"We will be working togetherfor each other’s benefit, and wewill be providing an importantservice getting off campus johs•SfUCKRHUV/ORDVfOKDlOKmWESANDTHESAWlThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.IN MEMORIAMWE IS SADDENED TOANNOUNCE THAT OURBELOVED BROTHERLOUIS CANTATA WASRUBBED OUT LATELAST NITE.MEMORIAL SERVICESIS SCHEDULED FORAPRIL 23, 24 AND 25AT 8:30 P.M. IN THEEVENING AT MANDELHALL. DRESS OPTION¬AL.R.S.V.P.This advertisement paid foranonymously by an associate ofthe organization who shall re¬main nameless. DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.00 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES Tuesday, April 20 — 4:30 P.M.BREASTED HALEORIENTAL INSTITUTEStudent & Faculty DiscountTHE FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS 1965April 25-May 9THE THEATRE ARTSThe Medieval Strolling Players of University Theatre willperforin in the out of doors Robin Hode and hisMerrie Menne and Saynte George and ye Drag-onne in the afternoon at 1 P.M. in the Quad¬rangles on Monday, April 26 and at RockefellerChapel at 1 on Thursday, April 29.Sir Tyrone Guthrie9 the famed English director will speakon the problems of founding a new theatre com¬pany on Thursday, April 29 at 8:30 at MandelHall. Sir Tyrone is guest of the Wilfred N. Hal-perin Fund. Admission is free.Morris Carnovsky9 noted Shakespearean actor will speak on“Performing the Unperformable: King Lear"' atIda Noyes Hall, Monday. April 26 at 8:30. Ad¬mission is free.i f «The Hull House Chamber Theatre will present a perform¬ance of Jack Richardson’s Gallows Humor at theHyde Park Baptist Church at 56th and Wood-lawn. The performance is at 8 P.M. Admission:Students $1.00 and general $1.25«•*-* If- April 20, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON •• » , t 3THEATRE REVIEWPinter plays grace Hull House Calendar of EventsHull House TheaterThe Collection bv Harold PinterHarry Don MarstonJames Mike NussbaumStella Jennifer HaifeleBill Basliad KamalThe Lover by Harold PinterHusband Mike NussbaumWife Pat Terrydirected by Bob Sickinger ly married. The note of unreality er true or false; it can be both. Tuesday, April 20 Friday, April 23, . ., , .. , . .. . . DISCUSSION: on unwed pregnancies, AUCTION: paintings, sculpture, clothe*and incongruity comes when the Thus, the fact that we never know led by Mattie K Wright, project serv- and feus, sponsored by Lab School prlhusband, before leaving for work, what the truth is in The CoUee- tSST- l*Bg'»T°^i!*5fg;E^',S®.inquires whether the wifes lover tion does not matter; maybe it is cent. ssa building. 12:30 pm.is coming that afternoon; he all the truth, maybe none. RFHKARSAL: 57th Street Hillel, 7:3o nmEXTRAVAGANZA: 5400 Greenwood e„Chorale, ^^’T-ment by Terry Applebaum, 8 p,/„ r im’rrTWT.' • ctki.. ». , ’ ” nmdoesn’t want to come home early Wool man Hail, 1174 E. 57th st , 7:30 pm. LEifTVI*E: Ethics of Mainionide#“ ~ — - - - HU.The Hull House performance Israeli folk dancing: Hiiiei, 7:30 and of Aristotle,” Raymond Weisslel, 8:30 pm.Saturday, April 24, . , , ness with one another injects a did justice to Pinter’s wildlv fun- chestra. First, Unitarian church spon- »»!A?? DAY aUTho eternal trianele crpto a . 1 , . ... ... , ‘ . sored by 57th street Chorale, 8:30 pm. jne pancakes you can eat. sponsored brine eternal mangle gets a 0f confusion, to say the ny dialogue, with its burlesque of ^ Hyde Park Neighborhood ram. Jileveryday speech, its repetition of Wednesday, April 21now twist in the two one act ]oast among the audience,plays by Harold Pinter cur- Hyde Park Neighborhood * Club “’UmKenwood. 9 am. 1CONCERT: Manoe Lipscomb and Buellrent 1 y playing at Hull House. ,. .The Collection and The Lover ,In reality — if there is such a . F^nooiollv not Sense of Competence,” Robert W. torium. tickets $2, 8:15 pm'Pintnr nlav—the hus- 10k1C OF Krammar- specially HOI- chairman, dept, of social rela- C111IJ<,„ A-.-JI1 inter play—me MILS able were pat Terry and Mike tlons/ Harvard University. Breasted bUllday, April 25ie lover are the same isT,,ocK~|lrn nf TI,. I/iver TIipv Hall. 1:30 pm. SERMON: "The Relationship of T- 11., INUSSOaum OI ine lAner. iney i,ErTl;Rr: “neli.rht and Commodity” ev and the Arts.” Paul -riniiuwords and lack, at times, of any LECTURE: “Efficacy and the Child's Kawe, blues singers, law school audi-... band and the wvei aic Uic acuuc Kriioohniim of The Inver Thov Mau- 1:JV Pm- sbkmuw: rne Relationship or Tlieol.vboth explore the nature of the re- ^ emotionally sterile {NussDau™ the L*»\er. ine-v lecture: “Delight and Commodity,” gy and the Arts.- Paul Tiiiich j^nlations between husband wife. 1 . * J 7 . have worked together before, ap- John Nef, chairman, Center for Human Nuveen professor of theology TWklla lions ot ivveeii m^uauu, wue, marnage becomes a passionate • v ® ,n rn... T ’Understanding, Soc Scl 122. 4 pm. Teller Chapel. 11 am. *y'and lover. . affair during the afternoons ^ lr. u\. , ,e , s coffee hour: wit* associate profee- lecture: “How Nature create*Tbr Collection b concerned not 'whcn the husband is ostensibly at ^^0“* TJ W « K"‘ J' H“'"’ SVWEb.'Si ST*“* "only with relations between peo- vvork Thp schizODhrenic nature of , 1 , , . \ 7 LECTURE: “Absolute* In Human BRIDGE: Ida Noyes. 7:15 pmni; i-i,t Olcn with the nmrmita II i [• u- u i j lariOUS parody of passionate love; Knowledge and the Idea of Truth,” FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes. 7:30 pm£Kbft a J?lthtolv JboTTnlri ^ relationship breaks down when the laughter which they evoke is PaulTIUlch.John Nuwen professor of I.ECTI RE: “Kafka's Anguish," Nathantions of a single story when told husband reveals in answer to Ion . nfcome from a loss sensitive per-, , , B ' ... . theology, law school auditorium, 8:30 A. Scott, Jr., professor of theohurirby different people. The play is the wife’s questions that he has ^.Ught<T “f ™U.er Pm hum. s p m.* ‘ 11, vvll«6> quttsiiuns uiai na than of baudiness which mightset m two living rooms, one be- a lover too—and that she is mere- comp fro,longing to Harry and Bill, and jv a common whore. During the fthe other to a married couple, ensuing discussion, the couple r>^fh jJames and Stella. The conflict gradually revert to their other— • Hull House veteranarises between Bill and James, lover-relationship, and the bus- Cl,", ' TBoth plays are well worth see-:H°H S^LP^eS S,!"df.,nbJ,:S'iing hiS WifP WS ("SS. tile ih^^ouSwith his wife. Bill first deniesthen confirms the story, addingmore details to it. darling whore.’Pinter seems to be exploring a, „ ,, , ,, relationship similar to that of Al-As the play unfolds further, more boe-s Who.s Afraid of Virginiacomplications arise. Stella’s ver- vv<M>if? ^ characters have asion of the story is the complete duaj relationship in which the fic-antithesis of Bills; she claims that jjona] makes up for what is lack-her husband made the story up, in_ jn tbe “reality.”that she doesn’t know Bill at all. ... find out.Jamie Beth GaleChorale sings todayThe 57th Street Chorale willpresent a free public concert to-'1‘" ‘'-““‘j* night, at 8:30 pm in the nave ofBill then says that Stella is right. ... .e w0 P a>r''n'-1 ® „ the Unitarian Church at 57th andthat ho only agreed with .Tames Ulusutn eventually must be reeog. Woodlawnbecause it pleased him to do so. but of the two, Pmtei s is A group of motets that includeThen he denies even this, saying more optimistic answer. Al- settings of “O Magnam Myster-that he knows Stella and they bpes couple agree to end the fic- ium” by both Vittoria and Poulenconly talked about what they would thpir non-existent son, wjjj be followed by the singing ofdo if they went to bed. while Pinters people incorporate Brahms’ “Nanie.” The SchubertThe situation at the end of the their passionate aftaii into their “Mass in G” will be performedplay is one of complete incompre- marnage. with Joyce Heinrikson, soprano,hensibility; of the three versions MANY OF PINTER’S plays ex- Robert Low, tenor, and Davidof the story, not one of them is plore the situation of two people Grove, baritone. The pianist isthe truth for sure; the audience in a room; their interaction and Janet Underhill.is left to draw its own conclusions, their reactions to the world out- ^What we do find out is something side the room make up the action,about the characters; Pinter re- in The Collection, there are sel-veals them as self-motivated in- dom more than two people in adividuals who fear the truth be- room at the same time, and incause it might represent some- The lover there are only twothing outside their familiar mode characters. Of reality and fantasyof existance. Pinter himself says: “There areThe second play, The lover, is no hard distinctions between re-less complex; there are only two ality and unreality, nor betweencharacters, a man and wife, who wliat is true and what is false,seem to be happily if unemotional- The thing is not necessarily eith- DUE TO THE SUDDEN DEPARTURE OFOUR DEARLY BELOVED LOUIS CANTATATHE BOX OFFICE WILL REMAIN CLOSEDUNTIL NOON TODAY.BLACKFRIARS '65present'sCASINO IN THE SKYA New MusicalDirected byJames O'ReillyAPRIL 23 -24-25Tickets: $2.50 Cr $1.75ON SALE NOWSTUDENT DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE‘'Rest damn funeral Vre seen in years!"Dorr mzTypewriter and TapeRecorderSALESee the finevalues in ourdisplay windowo.v>iw-i.V.The UNIVERSITY of CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 20# 1965 iz/idiotljb HONDA S^aAMtA. SurtljO !YOU CAN WIN AHONDAHONDAS WILL BEGIVEN AWAY...ABSOLUTELY FREE INOTHING TO BUYIaJ (tfi (L+xy L> (LatlJL -faJUur.Chicago1229 W. RandolphChicago8424 S. 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