J Algren to debate deathpenalty at Maroon forumNelson Algren, noted Chicago author, will debate the issueof capital punishment with Frank McGarr, former first assist¬ant to the US attorney, in the second Maroon forum nextFriday, May 7.WBBM’s John Callaway will■wxWale lh5 debate which will lo ca„ an ..cxtraoldinary sossio„..IH- hrnaiicast on a 42-stale CBS of ,he Parole (o consider Vol. 73 — No. 42 The University of ChicagoI,ookhi, the following Sunday. The hi, case Witherspoon's lawyersdeiiale will be held in .he Law , that by recommendation ofSchool auditorium at 8 pm.In the first Maroon forum oncapital punishment on FebruaryIS, comedian Dick Gregory and :’>45w"3 1 Friday, April 30, 1965Coalition approved at first meetingGrofman new SG presidentWitherspoon, who was scheduled capital punishment for "all Bernie Grofman of GNOSIS was elected President and Rusti Woods of SPAC was chosent.» die Manh 19 Since then, some crimes but treason, murder of vice-president at the first meeting of the 19th Student Government (SG) held Tuesdaynrofifrpss hns nc'on msnp to whig _ • 4 , , , *• s' prison guards, and murder com- nit?htthe Parole Board Gov. Kernel- willpardon him.IN THE meantime, the Illinoislegislature is considering a bill topartially abolish capital punish-r . „ on merit. The House passed a bill bypiievo for convicted slayer^ Bill 97 to 69 on March 2 which aboi-oilier demanded an end to theIllinois death penalty, and a ro¬ll iese goalWITHERSPOON IS still alive.lie i.s living on his thirteenth stayof execution which has been set mill 1 wl il night.of felony. Of rmfr^thisThui' ran- In thc votinK for the other positions on the executive council, the previously agreed uponnot legally be made retroactive coalition was passed unanimouslyto affect Witherspoon or the other with the exception of Peter Na-hy the Illinois Supreme Court in sjx mon on rleath row but it would gourney, who was SPAC’s candi-allegedly affect a few men await- date for one half of the split ('hair¬ing trail. Right now the bill is manship of the academic affairsbottled up in the Senate Judiciary committee.Committee and it will probably wnot be reported out to the Senate Vote a surprisefloor for a couple of weeks. Oh- Nagourney provided the majorservers are not optimistic about surprise of the evening during theorder to allow several appeals tof»o through federal and statecourts. This stay of execution canbe revoked at any time and a newexecution date set.If and when Witherspoon hasexhausted all avenues of legal re¬dress, Gov. Kernel' has promised its chances.National teach-in inWashington plannedby Phil SutinCollegiate Press ServiceANN ARBOR, Mich. — With 75 leading American scholarsendorsing it, a student-faculty committee has announced plansfor a national teach-in May 15 to protest U.S. policy in VietNam. The 12- to 15-hour protest demonstration will be held inWashington a n d pijied by tele- *phone lines and loudspeakers to single policy on the war. Rather,local meetings all over the eoun- its members generally agreebomb-tiV ings in North Viet Nam shouldThe teach-in will consist of three slop and negotiations begin to endphases. The first will feature the civil war in which they feelspeakers discussing the Viet Nam *be United Slates is trapped. They *”j vjtnv()0jnt. He*said that he waswar causes, the problems of cur- fear that the Viet Nam conflict is <<nol fraitt to take both the creditvoting for president when hevoted for Grofman instead of MissWoods, his party’s candidate. In ahastily called five minute recess,SPAC debated removing him fromtheir slate for the academic af¬fairs post. Nagourney was re¬tained by a large majority ofSPAC, but a number of SPACrepresentatives abstained when theactual voting came up.THK VOTING FOR the presi¬dency was the closest battle ofthe evening, with Grofman pre¬vailing over Miss Woods by 27-21.Miss Woods subsequently movedto make Grofman’s victory unani¬mous, however, and the motionwas passed.In his speech before the votingon the presidency, Grofman em¬phasized that he opposed the useof SG as a medium for the ex¬pression of one particular politi-it'til policy and possible alternalives. They will also view the roleof (he intellectual in opposing thewar.The second phase will include a growing into a major war -sibly with China. SG EXECUTIVEOFFICERSPresident:Bernie Grofman(GNOSIS)Vice-President:Rusti Woods (SPAC)Treasurer:Steve Livernash(GNOSIS)Secretary:Marilyn Salzman (SPAC)CORSO:Howard Abrams (LawSchool Party)NSA: Tom Howard (SPAC)Academic Affairs:Peter Nagourney (SPAC)Mark Joseph (Ind.)Campus Action:John Bremner (GNOSIS)Community Relations:Heather Tobis (SPAC)Election and Rules:Bill Lakin (GNOSIS)Student Services:Dave Stameshkin :spao two and a half hours to resolve,the selection of the remainingnine members of the exec tookonly forty minutes.Elected in keeping with the co¬alition arrangement were SteveLivernash (GNOSIS) as treasur¬er; Marilyn Salzman (SPAC) assecretary; Howard Abrams (LawSchool Party) as chairman of therevised committee on recognizedstudent organizations; Tom How¬ard (SPAC) as National StudentAssociation coordinator; PeterNagourney (SPAC) and Mark Jo¬seph (Ind.) as co-chairmen of theacademic affairs committee; JohnBremner (GNOSIS) as head ofthe ram pus action committee;Heather Tobis (SPAC) as chair¬man of the community relationscommittee; Bill Lakin (GNOSIS)as head of the election and rulescommittee; and Dave Stameshkin(SPAC) as student services di¬rector.Abrams was chosen as head ofCORSO from among the fivemembers of the committee, whohad been chosen previously. Theother members are Paul Levin(SPACi, Alan Sussman (SPAC),Jerry H y man (GNOSIS >. andJohn Ahern (Law School Party).CORSO spreads wealthThe five members of the com¬mittee, the revision of which wasapproved as a constitutionalamendment during the electionwill be responsible for the dis-_ chicken bone instead ofc "critics. The" last one Is to del Hall into the national circuit Sues relatedsoleljTtoStudent life gavel) but that his accomplish- bursement of the $40,000 a yearire seminars in which all the for the teach-in. on campus. As president, she said, ments were notable nonetheless, student activities budget. Theythe W1 review the requests of eachI,os‘ and the blame” for GNOSIS’ recoid of serving students and rep¬resenting their interests to theUC plans admini st rat ion.VC MEMBERS of Students for ]viiss Woods emphasized in herconfrontation of a major U.S.-Viet a Democratic Society reported that speech that she and her party op-Nam policy maker and his aea- plans are in progress to plug Man- posed the GNOSIS concern fordemicfeature seminars in wmen an uie lor me ieacn-in. on campus. As prmeetings can participate. It was also reported that teach- she would work to interest stu- MISS COOK OFFERED .LED BY NOBEL Prize winner in sponsors hope to arrange for a dents and SG in both campus and hope that Oxford, where Groves *s*udont organization and will al-Alhert Szent-Gyorgyl, a Woods debate between UC professor Hans community matters. will be next year onHole Institute physiologist, the Morgenthau and McGeorgeBundy, scholarship, “would not be sillysponsors include many of the na- special assistant on foreign affairs Groves honored enough to have a student govern-tion’s leading political scientists, to President Johnson. It was not After Grofman assumed the ment for him to run.”sociologists, psychologists and sci- learned whether either man has chair, Sally Cook, a SPAC Nation-entists. The political scientists in- accepted. al Student Association delegate,dude Harold Lasswcll of Harvard, Adams, one of the sponsors, also presented an honrary gavel to happiest night of my life.” He wasHans J. Morgenthau of UC, Sam- told the Maroon that specific plans Gene Groves, the outgoing presi- quick to add, though, that he wasiu*l J. Eldersveld, chairman of the for speakers are being worked out dent. In her brief remarks, Miss indeed sorry to leave the chair.University of Michigan political by a three-man faculty committee Cook noted that Groves had not In the discussion of the vice-scienoe department, and W. H. in Ann Arbor. had curious and/or endearing presidential candidates that fol-I’*»rry of the Center for the Study Flacks did mention that there traits such as his predecessors had lowed immediately afterwards,of Democratic Institutions. An- are hopes to get Chicago radio and had (last year’s president Don considerable bitterness againstother UC sponsor is Robert Ad- TV’ coverage of part of the pro- Congdon smoked a pipe; 1962-3 Nick Charney, the GNOSIS candi-ams, professor of anthropology gram. president Arthur MacEwan used date, came out. A SPAC delegateand director of the Oriental Insti¬tute.Talcott Parsons and David Reis-man of Harvard head the list ofsociologists. Also sponsoring areRobert Merton and Robert S. Lvndof Columbia and Robert Angell ofl he Stanford and Daniel Katz ofthe University of Michigan arealso among the sponsors.The national teach-in is the thirdfoajor step of a growing faculty-student protest of the war in VietNam. The first W'as the local teach-ins, started at the University ofMichigan, and spread around the Chicago profs ask Willisouster as aid to schools a Rhodes w^ia^ they deem to be a suf¬ficient and equitable amount.Among their duties i.s a decisionon the SG budget.In his acceptance speech, In ot he r business (GrofmanGroves called Tuesday night “the noted that the Tuesday meetingwas the first in history at whichthe “Other” category on the agen¬da had been reached), the assem¬bly voted to refer to the campusaction committee, with the coop¬eration of the student seivieescommittee, a proposal to soundout opinion on the recent strifeal the Art Institute.THE ART Institute studentgovernment has been protestingalleged maltreatment of teachersasked Charney how he could haveanswered a previous question bysaying that he “could work well” . , .. ,. .with Grofman if Charney had pre- ... Jc ,° sa ane^* mngprac-viously attempted to mass SPAC #nJ l*- ’ •»*«support behind him for llw presi- ™n.".nl“dJ?!<la'1"y lhrouShouldential position. Charney denied last few days.The assembly also mandatedUC professors joined this week in an open letter demanding thaJ he *iad asked for such sup- Abrams who is a member of the.that Chicago superintendent of school Benjamin C. Willis for Grofmam buTwas defeated°in ?aJional SUfMM'vis0l-v board ofbe kicked out. the end by 27-12.At a press conference Wednesday, representatives of over qw|1 party defeats CharneyCharney’s defeat came not onlvWalter Johnson, professor of as a result of the votes of the in¬history, said any normal organiza- dependents, two out of four ofSo many people aie so dissatis- would get rid of a director whom backed Miss Woods, buti —e is virtually nothing . . . , ...... . also from split voting within hissuperintendent could who treated people w,th as mud. ^ *of lhf "twenty-two £“•*«**• such as the Baldwina constructive direr- arrogance and Contempt” as GNOSIS ‘members present" onlv JP?.k contraver-Sy at Wright Jr.*— ■ College and the journalistic dis¬putes at Roosevelt University.125 professors from Chicago-areauniversities and seminaries ro-elased the statement. NSA, to find out if the Art Insti¬tute situation might be somethingfor the American Civil LibertiesUnion or the NSA hoard of direc¬tors to consider for passible ac¬tion.The national supervisory boardh also from split voUng within hLs had !aken_ a„stand «!.'oth*r. Sam*~■ ■ ' t wocountry, including UC on April 14.The April 17 Students for a Demo- fied u,at there is virtually nothingpratic Society march in Washing- hie presentton marked the second step. The do even in amarch drew an estimated 15.000 bon which would not be suspect,” Willis. ten voted for Charney. Six ab-students and some faculty, includ- the letter. BESIDES Pitcher and Johnson, stained and five voted for Missing 300 UCers. ACCORDING TO Alvin Pitcher, some of the faculty from UC who Woods. The other GNOSIS mem-PLANS FOR a national teach in associate professor in the divini- signed the letter were Robert J. her was Grofman, who could notwere formulated by Michigan fac- tv school, “Wo want to make it Havighurst, professor of educa- vole as president,ulty after the successful one celar that a group of white people tion, who wrote the report on the Unlike Miss Woods in the presi-March 24 in Ann Arbor. The group vitally concerned with education school system which has been the dential fight, Charney did nothas held several meetings with in- feels there is a crisis in the Chi- basis of demands for many move to make the vice-presidentialterested faculty from universities eago school system and it centers changes; Sol Tax, professor of an- decision unanimous. This wasacross the country and are work- around the superintendent. Inte- thropology and dean of University pointed out by a SPAC delegate,big regionally to set up local hook- gration is only one of the issues. Extension; Hans Morgenthau. dis- but was ruled out of order,kps to the national teach-in tele- It is a matter of quality education tinguished service professor of IN CONTRAST TO the presi-phone line. and of unifying the community so political science; and Wayne C. dential and vice-presidential con-The movement does not have a we can move forward.” Booth dean of the College. tests, which had taken a total of Elections for next year'sMAROON editor-in-chiefwiH take place at 4 pm todayin the MAROON office,third floor Ida Noyes. Allstaff members are requiredto attend.NEWS MUSEas possible by an editorial boardconcerned with giving each opin¬ion a part of the voice. Copieswould be made available at cost.SUCH A MANUAL would beuseful in several ways; it woulddefinitely help students in their organizing this program. For thetime being, work is being con¬centrated on General Educationcourses, in the expectation thatthe evaluation system will be ex¬tended later to all undergraduateSeeks course blacklistTO THE EDITOR:In the recent Student Gov¬ernment election a clear con¬sensus was reached to theeffect that University of Chi¬cago College students should be¬gin at once a system of instructorand course evaluation. GNOSISofficially supported such a pro¬gram in its platform. A numberof SPAC candidates ran on indi¬vidual platforms endorsing sucha system. (Dean Booth has toldthe Academic Affairs Committeethat he would not be averse to itsinstitution.)Students would be asked to con¬tribute considered evaluations ofthe teaching of their instructors,and of the potential value and realsuccess of their courses. Thesewould be compiled as objectively choice of courses and instructors.More importantly, it would hope¬fully have some influence on thecontent and qaulity of coursesand teaching in the long run.A good deal of intelligent stu¬dent opinion goes to waste: suc¬cessful students are intent onmastering the problems of theircourses, and those having diffi¬culty feel themselves in no posi¬tion to criticize openly. Their opin¬ions are needed, to make academiccommunity a place where realdialogue occurs.The Academic Affairs Commit¬tee is now in the first stages of courses.ACTIVE SUPPORT is neededfrom the student body. All possi¬ble information about similar sys¬tems at other schools must be col¬lected. A great deal of work isneeded now on the basic organ¬izational level. All students whocan contribute either time or in¬formation to the development ofthis program, please contact KerryBorland, 1312X Tufts, or JackCatlin, 1604 X Henderson.JACK CATLINmember, Acad Affairs Comm.Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief Robert F. LeveyBusiness Manager ..Michael KasseraManaging Editor David L. AikenAssistants to the Editor, Sharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsCampus News Editor Dan HertzbergAssistant Campus NewsEditor Dinah EsralEditor, Chicago LiteraryReview Martin MichaelsonCulture-Feature Editor. .David H. RichterPhotoCo-ordinators. Bill Caffrey, Steve WofsyRewrite Editor Eve HochwaldMovie Editor Kenneth KrantzMusic Editor Peter RablnowitzScience Editor Ed SternPolitical Editor Bruce FreedEditor Emeritus John T. WilliamsSUMMERWORKMen register now for agreat summer job. Carnecessary.$120 to startPart-time also avail¬able. Order taking orlight delivery.372-7766Miss BJESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd^mTrTTTTVVTTTVVTTVVTTTfTVVTTTTtyTTTVTTTTyTVTytlSee OurMOTHER’S DAY WINDOWAttractive cards and Gift WrappingsPen and Pencil Sets — $2.95 - $22.50High Intensity reading lamps — $9.95 - $14.95Slips, Half Slips, Sleepwear — $3.00 - $5.95Berkshire and Hanes Hosiery — $1.00-$1.65Purses — $3.00 - $6.00Blouses —$2.95-$5.95UNIVERSITY ofCHICAGO BOOKSTORE| 5802 Ellis Ave.►THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATREANNOUNCESBROUGHT BACK BY POPULAR DEMANDWinner of the 1963-64"BEST SHOW OFF-BROADWAY''AWARDIN WHITE AMERICAMAY 4-9 AT 8:30 — ALSO MAY 8, 9 AT 2:30MANDEL HALL57th and University Ave. $5.00, $3.50, $2.50 ExecCom election exposedby Bruce FreedLike the runner who has just broken the ribbon after agruelling, tight race, the new Student Government assemblyfinally chose its new executive committee Tuesday night.Capping a solid week of bargaining, compromising, reject¬ing, pleading and occasionallyme meeting u- ied<>by Henry Cabot Lodge andk an+* Ohio Gang under Harryit both parties Daugherty, picture Bernie Grof-riginal 5/2-5.2 man and husU Woods and theirSitting tiPbt the leading eharac- Presidency was rebuffed with lesssitting tight, the leading charac than half of his party VQling forters of the miniature drama, Ber- him.nie Grofman and Rusti Woods, . . . . „ ,WITH ALL the tough talkingat last agreed on the piogiam and political jockeqing that pre-and part of the script of SG ceded the SG meeting, it Ls un¬meeting while injecting just fortunate that the budding politicosenough suspense to enliven the did partake 0f all the facilitiesnight s perfoi mance. Chicago has to offer, especiallyFOUR AND A HALF hours of the notorious smoke-filled room onvoting and debating can be a the fourth floor of the Blackstonetorturously boring experience. But Hotel where Harding was lappedBernie and Rusti were kind jn 1920.enough to leave the two top posts _ . . . ,open for a free wheeling battle. ,J.ust *>?•* •"*«•»<■,. .. of imagining the Senatorial cabalHowever, while the meeting it- led by H Cabo< Lod andself went according — **was surprising thatheld to their oriagreement on the exec and did ]|eutenants consummating the SGnot renege at the eleventh hour. exec peace pact in thp ear]y morn.Certain of last week s develop- jng gray alter tedious hours ofments made that situation quite jia2g]inCTprobable.But now that Bernie and Rusti , whi,° ls sll*hlI,y l"’fair 10have their presidencies and other f'aw s.uch an, »"al°P' bocauscparty members have their com- ,he m0,lves, °f, ,he <wo f°“fsmittee chairmanships, the losers 'vorc completely different, theshould not be forgotten. 'W? of back-room maneuvering_ . , and the blood, sweat, tears andThough there is an unfortunate time that wont into hammeringtendency in many histories to by- out Tuesday’s SG results before¬pass the vanquished, their experi- band Were similar,ences usually shed interestingsidelights on the remembered THE MAIN question now isevent. whether the inflamed passionsNick Charnev, GNOSIS’ repre- can be cooled in time to allow thesentative from' Bio Sci, took the coalition SG to fulfill the pledgesmain beating Tuesday night. Ori- both parties made. After such aginally promised any post on the bruising battle with so manySG exec except the presidency, hopes clashed, it might be hardthe worm turned on him when he f°r the two sides to cooperatetried to cash his political check, without trying to make politicalRealizing that his political base hay.out of, everything; the oldwas crumbling, Charney quickly maxim - always prepare for thescented a ruse and set off to chart "ext e!ectl,on after recuperatinghis own destiny. But as in a [ro™ the last campaign - por-Greek tragedy, the gods had fated tend? a ™"mng f,ght unUl nextagainst him and the final action ^eai s balloting,of the drama only verified the do- While it is easy to mock thecisions and bargains already eon- events that occurred, this shouldeluded. Charney’s bid for the vice not obscure the important contri¬butions SG makes on campus andin the community in bread-and-butter services, representing thestudents before the administrationand providing a liaison betweenthe students and the outsideworld.Complete LineOf Pet AndAquarium Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty DiscountUNIVERSALARMY STORE“The univerxe in atudentwear for campus andcamping.**Levis - Tennis ShoesAN OUTFIT FROMTOP TO TOE1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856 TAl-SAM-'YMNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062the One, the Only-the OriginalStudent-Faculty Discount — 50c Off Any TicketTICKETS ON SALE —MANDEL HALL BOX OFFICE foreign car hospital & clinichome of team winkauthorized BMC sales and service5424 s. kimbark are. mi 3-3113l2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 30, 1965I VS recruitsfor summerInternational VoluntaryService, the American groupof Service Civil International,is now recruiting volunteersfor five projects this summer.One poject will be a workcampat the Catholic Worker Farm inTivoli, New York, where the vol¬unteers will do simple construc¬tion work and farming from thelast week in July to the last weekin August. The Catholic WorkerFarm provides a place for peoplefrom the cities and people fromthe Bowery section of New YorkCity to experience a new type oflife.From June 13 to Sept. 1 therewill be a work camp in Chicago.The volunteers will work with de¬prived children in a neighborhoodInf. House fofeature festivalInternational House will hold its18th annual Festival of Nations,Sunday, featuring an exhibition,two film series, and a bazaar.The festival is being directedby Fred Schlipf, with the coopera¬tion of International House Direc¬tor Jack Kerridge and the Inter¬national House staff, but all of theevents have boon prepared by theresidents of the house themselves.From 2 to 6 pm an exhibition,consisting of displays from Itcountries, will take place in theInternational House lounge. Thetwo film series, including 13 filmsaveraging 30 minutes apiece, willalso emphasise the touristic at¬tractions of the countries shown.Perhaps the most popular ofthe afternoon events will be thefood bazaar. Here students fromten countries will make their na¬tion’s culinary specialties avail¬able at cost.The evening variety show willinclude a dozen acts with studentsfrom every continent. Admissionwill be $i. and tickets will beavailable at the door. The showbeings at 8 pm.Hold tennis tourneyThe Women’s Athletic Associa¬tion has announced a campus-w'ide tennis tournament to be heldtomorrow at 1 pm in KenwoodCourts, 59th and Kenwood. Thetournament is open to all womenaffiliated with the University,graduate and undergraduate stu¬dents and employees. Play - offswill be set up that afternoon atthe courts—one for beginners andone for advanced.Today'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN*1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL volunteerswork campscenter. They will tutor in reading,lead games, teach crafts and takethe children on trips. Some ofthese trips may be two weekslong and to such places as Mon¬tana and Wisconsin. The maintask of the volunteers will be togive affection and encouragementto the children. There will be awork break for the volunteersfrom July 21-July 25.FROM JULY 25 to Sept. 1, therewill be a work camp in Maryville,Tennessee. The minimum age forthis camp is 21 and only men andmarried couples will be accepted.Mature volunteers are sought forthis project, rebuilding a commu¬nity center burned by segrega¬tionists.In Cleveland, Ohio from June13-July 22, volunteers will be do¬ing social work with children andadults. The volunteers will leadthe children in games and crafts,and will also work with the adultsin recreation. The work will be di¬rected by a staff member fromBell Community Center.Another project will be run for3 two-week periods at Camp Rein-berg, Palatine, Illinois. The periodsW'ill be: June 27-July 23; July 25-August 13; and August 15-Sep-tember 1. The workcamp will bemade up of IVS volunteers andcity teenagers. A group of teen¬agers will join the IVS volunteersevery week. The building of rela¬tionships among the workeampersis considered more important thanthe construction work being done.For more information, write toJoyce Klein, National Secretary,1116 East 54th Place, Chicago 15,Illinois.A Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESPICTURE FRAMINGMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111Festivalof the Arts1965EMILIOVEDOVAnoted Italian painterwill give alecture-demonstrationTuesday eveningMay 4that 8 pmMIDWAY STUDIOS6016 IngelsideSTEPHENSPENDERin a poetry readingThursday eveningMay 6th8 pmIDA NOYES HALL1212 E. 59th St.-— Greene, Griffin, and RooseveltEducation subcommittee on campusA Congressional subcommit¬tee will hold hearings on twobills today and tomorrow atthe UC law school.The special subcommittee oneducation of the House committeeon education and labor will con¬duct the hearings in the Wey¬mouth Kirkland court room in theLaw School, 1121 East 60th Street.The subcommittee will heartestimony Friday and Saturdaymornings on the Higher Educa¬tion act of 1965 and Friday after¬noon on the Vocational Rehabili¬tation act amendments of 1965.Following brief hearings Fridayafternoon, the subcommittee mem¬bers will tour vocational rehabili¬tation facilities in the Chicagoarea.FIVE MEMBERS of the nine-man subcommittee, four Demo¬crats and a Republican, are ex¬pected to come to Chicago. Theyare Reps. Edith Green, D-Oregon,the subcommittee chairman; Carl¬ton R. Sickles, D-Maryland; SamM. Gibbons, D-Florida; JamesRoosevelt, D-California, and Rob¬ert P. Griffin, R-Michigan.UC president George W. Beadle,will welcome the subcommitteeas the first witness at Fridaymorning’s hearings.The morning hearings both daysare scheduled to begin at 9:30 am;the Friday afternoon session isto start at 1:30 pm.The Higher Education act of1965 (H.R. 3220, 3221) is designedto strengthen the educational re¬sources of colleges and universi¬ties and to provide financial as¬sistance for students in post-sec¬ondary and higher education.THE VOCATIONAL Rehabili-THEmSHOPinstruments — New, Used, AntiqueCUITARS, BANJOS, MANDOLINSBooks and Folk Music Magazine*DISCOUNT ON FOLK RECORDS1.547 e.Sir ASX.C^icajoNO 7-1060ll:30 to 6, 7:30 to 10 Mon.-Fri.11:30 to 6, Saturday tatlon act amendments of 1965(H.R. 6476) would amend theexisting act to help provide moreflexibility in the financing andadministration of state rehabilita¬tion programs. They would alsoassist in the expansion and im¬provement of services and facili¬ties provided under such pro¬grams, particularly for the men¬tally retarded and other groupspresenting special problems.A partial list of witnesses, forthe hearings follows:Friday, 9:30 a.m., public hear¬ings on the Higher Education actof 1965. George W. Beadle, UCpresident. John M. Stalnaker,president, National Merit Scholar¬ship Corporation, on Title IV,Student Assistance, Part A, Un¬dergraduate Scholarships.Panel on Title II — Library As¬sistance: Robert A. Goiter, librari¬an, Wheaton College; Mrs. Mar¬jorie Keenleyside, librarian, Roose¬velt University; Herbert Goldhor,associate director, graduate schoolof library sciences, University ofIllinois.Friday, 1:30 pm, public hear¬ings on Vocational Rehabilitationact amendments of 1965 will fea¬ture Alfred Slicer, Illinois State Director of Vocation Rehabilita¬tion; William Gellman, ExecutiveDirector, Jewish Vocational Serv¬ice.Saturday, 9:30 am, on the High¬er Education act of 1965, thecommittee will hear Stanley J.Wenberg, vice-president, educa¬tion relationship and development,University of Minnesota; RobertJ. Havighurst, UC professor, de¬partment of education and com¬mittee on human development,and Stanley F. Salwak, executivedirector, the committee on Insti¬tutional Cooperation of Big 10Universities and UC, on Title III,Strengthening Developing Insti¬tutions. Salwak will testify on be¬half of the 11 presidents of themember universities. He will dis¬cuss cooperative agreements tostrengthen developing institutions.On Saturday afternoon, from1:30 pm to 4 pm, the Congress¬men will tour the Joint Youth De¬velopment Committee, CorrectionsComponent, 800 North Clarkstreet, Chicago.This project Is financed througha two-year federal grant of $250,-000 and Ls designed to coordinatevarious needed services to youth.JAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSSHIRTS — LINENSRepairs & Alterations 5 Hr. Service1363 East 53rd PL 2-966210% Student Discount with I.D. CardEven when you hear it,You won’t believe it.KLH Model Eleven Portable Stereophonic Phonograph ...SuggestedJust 28 pounds of breathtaking performance! Re,a''This is the famous KLH Model Eleven Stereo $199.95Portable — the most copied phonograph inAmerica today. A true component system, de¬signed and built by a leader in componenthigh fidelity. Here, for the first time, is soundthat only the most expensive consoles canequal — within the size and cost of a portable!Carries a unique 5-year guarantee.KLH — Exceptional (Never just acceptable)'Musicraft120 E. Oak DE 7-4150Mon. & Thurs. 10-9; Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10-4Closed SundayCall or Visit for Further InformationMID-AMERICA RUGBYFOOTBALL TOURNAMENTWASHINGTON PARKMoy 13:00 P.M. — University of Chicago Rugby Club (A Team)vs. Indiana University (A Team)12:00 P.M. — University of Chicago Rugby Club (B Team)vs. Chicago R.F.C. (B Team)May 212:00 P.M. — University of Chicago Rugby Club (A Team)vs. University of Minnesota (A Team)3:00 P.M. — University of Chicago Rugby Club (B Team)vs. University of Michigan (B Team)Twenty-two rugby Teams from an eight-state area will be rep¬resented at the tournament.Admission FreeApril 30, 1965 • CHICAGO-MAROONT5? f 1 • 3LBJ's huge school oid billCampbell: 1965 a turning point Calendar of Eventsby David L. Aiken“The year 1965 will go down in history as the turning pointon the whole question of Federal aid to education,” accordingto Roald Campbell, dean of UC’s graduate school of educationand chairman of the department of education.The magnitude of P r e s i d e n t —Johnson’s recently-passed aid to greatest proportion of culturallyeducation bill Is especially impres- deprived families,sive, Campbell said in a Maroon in- ILLINOIS HAS been allottedterview last week. about $50 million, or one-twentieth“THE BILL’S price tag — $1 bit- of the total appropriation, Camp-lion 300 million — is something we hell estimated. He guessed thathadn’t even been talking about in Chicago would as a matter ofterms of federal support for ele- course he appropriated the lion smentary and secondary educa- share of this fund, perhaps evention,” he remarked.Campbell attributed this phe¬nomenon in part to the atmos¬phere created by the civil rightsmovement. "Johnson capitalized on money is carefully allocated to thethe popular appeal of the issue of school districts in the city wherehelping the victims of cultural it is most needed, and if the citydeprivation, which was a side ef- co-ordinates giants under the waras much as half.Even this much isn’t going tosolve all the city schools’ problems,he remarked. If, however, thefeet of the civil rights movement,”he observed.Throughout history, Congresshas refused to support general aidto education, he pointed out, but, or. poverty program with theschool system’s grants, "it wouldbe quite possible to change someprograms markedly.”According to Campbell, superin¬in a sense, the president’s program tendent of schools Benjamin Willisbecomes a general aid program, is already planning measures toIhough most of the money will go take advantage of the federal aidto the big cities which have the program. Campbell said his ownGOLD CITY INN"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% STUDENT DISCOUNTHIDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3 2559GANX-.SHIRTMAKERSMadrasImported-from-lndla bleeding madras.All hand-picked by Gant. Bold, bright,distinctive—they keep adding characterWith each washing. $8.95available atTHE STORE FOR MENme.Ufanttt anil ©amptta &I}upin the l\etv Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 department at UC is currently alsodeveloping plans to benefit fromthe section of the program whichallocates $100 million for researchby universities and other non-profitagencies. W'ork just recently be¬gan on the proposal, Campbellsaid, so no details can be madeavailable at this time.UNDER TITLE IV of the bill,the US commissioner of educationcan make grants for "research,demonstrations, surveys, and dis¬semination” of knowledge abouteducational techniques and con¬cepts.Tins title aims to alleviate thesituation in which less than one-fifth of one per cent of the moneyspent on public education goes tobasic educational research.Of the other sections of the bill,Title I is the biggest and most im¬portant. It allocates $i.06 billionto aid local projects for educa¬tionally deprived children. Themoney would lie channeledthrough state education offices;the amount of money any districtcan receive is pegged to the levelof state aid and the number of"deprived” children in the district.Title II would help schools buytextbooks and library material,$100 million worth. Title V willinvest $25 million in strengthen¬ing state education agencies.SAMUEL A. BELL‘‘Huy Shell From Bell”SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150PIERRE ANDREface flatteringPorisian chicten skilledhair stylists ot5242 Hyde Park Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710% Student Discountf, CHICAGO MAROON April 30, 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, Germony,Italy, Japan, Russia and Spain(native instructors).Elementary and intermediatecourses, 16 units. Intermediateand advonced 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, Neor East, ondLatin America.Bachelor of Arts and Moster ofArts in languages and civilizationsond in political arts.1965-66 Academic YearFall Semester September 25, 1965,to Jan. 29, 1966. Spring SemesterFeb. 5, 1966, to May 28, 1966.Accredited by the Western Asso¬ciation of Schools and Colleges oso Liberal Arts Institution.For information write to:Office of AdmissionsTHE MONTEREY INSTITUTEOF FOREIGN STUDIESPost Office Box 710Monterey, California, 93942Telephone 373-4779Area Code 408 Friday, April 30FOLK DANCES WORKSHOP: Ida NoyesHall. 7:30 pm.H1B1.E STUDY: "In the Holy Spirit'*Power,” sponsored by Intervarsity Chris¬tian Fellowship, Ida Noyes Hall. 7:30 pm.SABBATH SERVICES: Hillel, 7:30 pm.1111.LEI, FIRESIDE: "The Nature and De¬velopment of Jewish Law,” Rabbi MosheLitoff. Hillel, 8:30 pm,Saturday, May 1LECTURE SERIES: "Heme Proteins""Cytochrome C-Structure, Evolution, andCationic Behavior.” Emanuel Margoliash,professional lecturer, department of bio¬chemistry, Abbott 101, 10 am.LECTURE: “The Doctrine of States’Rights: Threat to Civil Liberties?,” RalphLevitt, one of three Indiana Universitystudents who faces Jail under an Indiana".sedition” statute, Ida Noyes library,3 pm.THEATRE: "Gallows Humor,” by JackRichardson, Hyde Park Baptist Church,56th and Woodlawn, 8 pm.Sunday, May 2RADIO: “From the Midway.” EdmundoFlores, visiting professor of the socialsciences, discusses “The Alliance TorProgress and Other Failures" WFMF.7 amRADIO: "The World of the Paperback,”Phillip B. Kurland, professor of law. re¬views The Publir and Its Government, bythe late supreme court justice FelixFrankfurter, WFMF, 8:15 am.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins.University Carillonneur, RockefellerChapel, 12:15 pm.FESTIVAL OF NATIONS: exhibits. locals,movies, International House. 2 pm.RADIO: Phillip M. Hauser, professor ofsociology, discusses Chicago's technolog¬ical future. WIND. 7:05 pm.BRIDGE: Ida Noyes, 7:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes, 7 30 pm.LECTURE: “Seven Ways of Looking at aJew: The Problem of Shyloek," MarkAshin, professor of English, Hillel, 8 pm.Monday, May 3LECTURE: "The People, the Land andthe Automobile — Or. What. Price AD2000'’’’. Desmond Heap, legal advisor toLord Mayor of London, Soc- Sol 122, 4pm. MONDAY LECTURE: "Mind. Brain andHumanist Values," Roger W. Sperry > pHixon. professor of psychobiology ’call'fonria Institute of Technology lawschool auditorium, 8 pm.# •. W8&8&FOTA 1965Fri., Apr. 30: Florence James Arinin.Poetry Reading Contest at 3 pm m BondChapel. Kroll String Quartet in a specialconcert sponsored by the UC ChamberMusic Series ($3).Sat.. May 1: Jack Robinson’s “GallowsHumor,” presented by the Hull HouseChamber Theatre. ($1). Poetry Readmewith Donald Hall and Robert Ma/.y.i ht8 pm In Jimmie’s University Room,Sun., May 2: Opening of RenaissanceSociety Show of sculpture and drawingsby Richard Lippold in Goodspeed HallJazz Concert by Frank Tirro at 3 30 inBond Chapel. Shirley Jackson, Emily Tal¬bot and Fund Lecturer in Maude! Haltat 8 30.Mon . May 3: Richard Lippold MoodyLecturer at 8:30 in Mandel Hall.Tuee. May 4: Rajeshwarl Datta onIndian music “Raga and Rasa" at 7 soin Ida Noyes Library.Wed . May 5: Theodore Stlverstein onThe Art of the Divina Cnmmedia” at8 30. Soc Sei 122.Thurs., May 6: Stephen Spender, poet,in a reading. Ida Noyes Hall, 8:30.Fri., May 7: Musical Society Concert,with an all-Schubert program H ColniSlim, director. 8 pm at Ida Noyes.Sat., May 8: Martha Sehlamme. foik-eunger, at Hillel House, 5715 S Wood-lawn.Sun., May 9: ”An American Jaw, Mass''conducted by Frank Tirro. RockefellerChapel. 3:30 pm. Carillonneur DanielRobins in a special recitl at 2 pm Open¬ing of the FOTA Art Show at 3 pm inLexington Hall.All events free unless otherwise noted.%The campus Students fora Democratic Society chap¬ter will meet Sunday at Spm in Ida Noyes. A film onERAP will be shown, andthis year's summer projectswill be discussed.HYDE PARK YMCANewly redecorated student roams available with or without mcol plons.Study lounge, private TV room, health, ond physical facilities oilavailable for student use.Call FA 4-5300MODEL CAMERALEICA, BOLEX, NIKON, PENTAXZEISS, MAMIYA, OMEGA, DURSTTAPE RECORDERS1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“« strong hunk"19MEW CAR I OWSSAOOper hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C. Mr. BIGG S'"■the friendly restaurant'*1440 E. 57th St.STARTS FRIDAYDirect from the East CoastMr. Bigg's brings to you the"Hoagie," "Zep," "Hero,""Submarine," served oncrusty Gonnella's FrenchBread filled with loads ofBologna and Salami, Swisscheese, American cheese,lettuce, tomatoes, onions,oil, oregano, etc., etc. Hotpeppers optional, and it'sPILED A MILE HIGH$.89The WISE OWL has often been ashedwhat to do with winter clothing oncespring has come.HE REPLIES: Store them safely. Havefurs and woolens moth-proofed, protectedand stored byJhsL TYIcdl (BjwdIl Qo.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERSRUSH SERVICEavailable when neededPhones: Ml 3-7447 1013-17 East 61st St.HY 3-6868 Across from B-J Ct.Serving the Campus since 1917Savio quits as FSM headMario Savio has quit as head of the Free Speech Move¬ment at the University of California at Berkeley, and students;11e worried about a new set of restrictions on their politicalactivity that the University Board of Regents is considering.Those are the notable develop-meiits on the bubbling Berkeley politieal activity on or off campuscampus, where protests continue must be tried only in city courts,;)hout the disciplining of four stu- an{* must not lead to Universitywho were involved in display discipline,cf four-letter words on campus As to P SM demands that the Re-last month. gents lift the suspension of four|\ ITS MEETING last Friday, students who were arrested forfbc Board of Regents of the state displaying posters bearing theuniversity system reacted favor- four-letter synonym for “forni-rh!v to a proposal for new regula- . „ ,lions on student conduct which Ca,e> ,hp Re^nts d,d not takeinn counter to everythin? the Free demands at all seriously,” asSnoech Movement <FSM * has de- board chairman Edward Carterm,Tided since the controversy put it.■tvn<o last fall over the right of n ...indents to organize and advocate Dramatic resignationc ritical activity on the University Monday, at a noon rally be-camnus. fore a thousand persons on cam-The proposed rules give the pus, Mario Savio unexpectedly<•' ■ ncelloi'S of all campuses the stepped down as a leader of thepower ^ inte^ret whleh aeUons Free Sppe(.h Movement.He said he left because of theFSM’s “excessively undemocraticudents aie subject to discinline <hmactor,” and will “definitely notcome back to the movement.Savio dropped out of school forthis semester to devote time to Culture Calendar11 not be permitted in the areascf free speech and political action.The proposed rules state thati » violation of University-wide orcampus regulations, whether orrot such violations occur on cam- , .PUS. whether or not such viola- !he mov?™nt' *nd sa,d 1dld notknow whether he would be a stu¬dent next semester.He made his dramatic statementat the end of an attack on the re-linns are also violations of law,and whether or not proceedingsa e or have been pending in thecourts involving the same acts.”FSM HAS consistently demand- strictive proposals before the Re¬ed that charges connected with gents. ConcertsCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA:Jean Martinon, cond. Beethoven: Sym.no. 2; Sym. no. 3. Apr. 29 at 8:15.KKOi.L STRING QUARTET: Haydn:Quartet, Op. 77, No. 1. Hindemith: Quar¬tet, Op. 22, No. 3. Beethoven: Quartet,Op. 59, No. 1 (“Rasoumovski"). Mandelhall. Apr. 30 at 8:30. $3. Tickets availableat the Music Department.FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH CHAMBERCHORAL CONCERT: Includes works byHindemith, Bach, Copland, Brahms. Di¬rected by Hans Wurman. May 2, at3:30 pm. Tickets $2. At 1st Unitarian,57th and Woodlaw’n.DanceMOISEYEV DANCE COMPANY: Apr. 29,30, May 1 at 8:30, May and 2 at 2:30.Nightly. $3-10; Matinees $3-7. ArieCrown Theater, McCormick Place. FR 2-0566.ILLINOIS BALLET: Richard Ellis andChristine Du Boulay. Dirs. with BirutiBarodicaite, Pamela Johnson, and DomOrejudos. Three ballets by Chicagochoreographers — Orejudos: “The StoneMaidens” and "Thais”; Montalgn: "ConGioeo.” May 9 at 2:30 pm. Francis ParkerAuditorium, 330 Webster. Adm. charge.ExhibitsHANNAH WEBER-SACHS: Paintings. Atthe UC Center of Continuing Educationthru May 1.liOIIENBKRG AND HAYDON: non-ob¬jective abstract paintings. At MargueriteGallery, 102 E. Oak S. Chicago.CAROLE GREENBERG NELSON: Paint¬ings and prints at Midway studios thruMay 1.68TH ANNUAL EXHIBITION OF CHI¬CAGO & VICINITY FESTIVAL: At theArt Institute thru May 23.RICHARD LIPPOLD: Exhibition of sculp¬ture and drawing. Sponsored by the UCRenaissance Society. May 4-June 12.Daily, 10-5; Sat., 1-5. 108 Goodspeed Hall.MARC CHAGALL: Original lithographsand etchings. La Fontaine, Chagall Bible,large signed Hthos in small editions andsome inexpensive posters. Sat. 11-6. Ben¬jamin Galleries. 900 N. Michigan.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E, 53rd Ml 3-9111— TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH —and Spr%ipp on ail hi-fi equipment.24 HR. SERVICE CALLS — $3.00Tape Recorders — Phonographs — AmplifiersPhono Needles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cords BOOKSPAPERBACKSWATCH REPAIRING14K PIERCEDEARRINGSOChChChKKHKKi-THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75001540 E. 55 St.10% Student DiscountAS A.MATTEROF...the man who has a planned SunLife program is in an enviable position.No one is better prepared to face thefuture than the man who has providedfor his retirement years and hisfamily’s security through life insurance.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood. Jr.. CLUHyde Park Bask Building, Chicago 15. ftLFAIrfas 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Heart 9 to 5 Mondays k Friday*SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY "BUDGETWISE"AAA Approved: 24-hourSwitchboard.Maid Service: each roomwith own bath.Special student rates:$1 80.00/qtr.Special daily, weekly andmonthly rates.BROADVIEW HOTEL5540 Hyde Park Blvd.FA 4-8800(Corona Studios• • |o| Mi-PORTRAITSjjA 1312 E. 53rdU\ 684-7424j} \ Passport■ PhotosCAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THE *\9HY 3-5300 FA 4-5525PIZZAMed. LargeCHEESE 1.45 2.00SAUSAGE 1.80 2.35PEPPER & ONION . .. . 1.65 2.20BACON & ONION ... 2.15 2.70COMBINATION 2.40 2.95MUSHROOM 2.15 2.70SHRIMP . . . .2.40 2.95THIS COUPON WORTH 35cON ONE PIZZA DELIVERYIN MAY EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscountYou won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 RUTH DUCKWORTH and NANCY BER¬RYMAN: Recent work. At CraftsmansGallery. Daily 1-6; Sat. & Sun., 2-5. 1763N. Sedgwick.JazzAMERICAN JAZZ MASS: Frank Tirro,composer and conductor; Wyatt Insko,organ; Chorus; Jazz Combo: A demon¬stration of a Jazz Mass sponsored by theEcumenical Church Counsel of UC. Also,premieres of a “Sonata da Chiesa” anda Jazz Te Deum. May 9 at 3:30. Rocke¬feller Chapel. Free.AL HIRT: May 8 at 8:30. $3. GroverHermann Hall, IIT.LecturesEUGENIE LEONTOVICH: On '•Theatre”Apr. 30 at 10 am. Woodstock OperaHouse, Woodstock, Ill.HARRY BOURAS: Noted painter, sculp¬tor and critic, on "American Art from1960.” May 4 at 8 pm. $1.50. DistelheimGalleries. 113 E. Oak. 642-5570.RICHARD LIPPOLD: On “The Positionof the Artist.” May 3 at 8:30. Free. Man-del Hall.EDWARD WASIOLEK: Works of themind Lecture Series. “Moral Dialectic InDoestoyevski's Crime and Punishment.”May 7 at 8 pm. $1.50, students $1. UCDowntown Center, Rrn 201, 64 E. Lake.FI 6-8300.TheatreSIX 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: TheOx fold 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 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 by Harold Pinter. Weekends thru May 2. Nightly at 8:30, Sun. at 7:30.Fri. and Sat., $3.40. Sun., $3, Hull HouseTheatre, 3212 N. Broadway. 348-8330.THE KNACK: Ann 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.TONIGHT AT EIGHT-THIRTY: At theHawk's Well, by William Butler Yeats,directed by Richard Eno. The Maids, byJean Genet, directed by John Lion. Apr.30, May 1, 2, at 8:30. Reynold’s ClubTheatre. $1.50, students $1.ANNA KARENINA: The Leo Tolstoynovel dramatized and adapted to thestage by Eugenie Leontovich and JamesGoodwin, in a production by the Good¬man Theatre. Directed by Miss Leonto¬vich and Joseph Slowik, with DoloresSutton in the title role. May 7-29. Sun.-Thurs. 7:30; Fri. & Sat. 8:30. Nightly, $3;Fri. & Sat., $3.50. Student discount of50c. Goodman Theatre, Monroe and Co¬lumbus. CE 6-2337.THE LOWER DEPTHS by Maxim Gorky,at the Last Stage, 1506 E. 51st street; Fri.,Sat., Sun., April 30, and May 1, 2, 7. 8,9; Fri. & Sat, 8:30, $2; Sun. 7:30, $1.50;call OA 4-4200.International VoluntaryService (the American Groupof Service Civil Internation¬al) is having a workcamptomorrow on the banks ofthe Mississippi River in theFulton-Moline-Rock Islandarea. Work will be heavyphysical labor (sandbagging,etc.). Volunteers shouldwear rugged work clothesand bring boots and gloves.Call Jerry Gordon at Ml 3-7663 for more informationand to sign up.RANDELLBEAUTY AMD COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open Evenings — Billie Tregonza, ManageressEMBARRASSED BYSemes w your Bookshelf?BOOK SALE(Buy A FEW FEET)Big Pre-inventory sole. Mork-downs from stock. Up to 50% and morereduction on shelf-worn books. Poper bocks and hard bound in oilfields. Mostly ones ond twos of o title; new stock added daily. Don’tmiss this opportunity to odd to your library. The titles below ore onlyo sampling of hundreds of bargains!The Andaman IslandersSeversky — America:Too Young to DieAllen: Navahos Have Five FingerPurdom — A Guide to thePlays of Bernard ShawShaldach —Paths to EnchantmentMusgrave — Regency FurnitureThrom — The Boy EngineerErnst — Touch WoodLetters of CortesSullivan —The Night The Old NostalgiaBurned DownLillebridge —Beacon of FreedomHunger and Workin a Savage TribeMANY MOREThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Was $4.75 now $2.28Was $4.50 now $2.665 Was $4.95 now $2.37Was $4.95 now $2.37Was $10.00 now $1.98Was $7.95 . now $4.50Was $3.95 now $1.98Was $4.95 now $1.69Was $1.95 now $1.17Was $1.25 now $ .49Was $1.45 now $ .59Was $2.75 now $1.32A|*il 30, 1965 CHICAGO M'AR O ON • $MUSIC REVIEWPops night at the CCPTuesday evening’s concertby the Contemporary Cham¬ber Players, given in conjunc¬tion with FOTA, was perhapsnot quite what the contemporary-music purist would have approved.Instead of highlighting the worksof unknown and unsung musi¬cians, the CCP chose to performcompositions by well-known andestablished modern composers. De¬spite this, the program providedinsight into both the origins andprobable future of contemporarymusic.It was singularly appropriatethat the concert should begin withmusic by Anton Webern, becausehe was one of the pioneers ofatonalitv. One could see the influ¬ ence he has had on modem com¬posers in his Quartet for Clarinet,Saxophone, Violin and Piano,Op. 22.The work is a striking amalgamof both classical structure and mel¬odic design: it presents a firstmovement in sonata form with anever-present rhythmic pattern thatpervades the entire work — hereplayed by one instrument, thereby another. The interplay is fabu¬lous, and the Quartet stands as anexample of why Webern’s music isstudied today as holy writ by con¬temporary composers.MUSIC FOR SOLO clarinet wasfeatured in works by two of themost established modern compos¬ers: Ernst Krenek and Igor Stra¬vinsky. The Krenek Monologue forJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 Expert Service on All BrandsHI-FI STEREOFree Pick-up, & DeliveryFree EstimatesCall 521-0460TRAVELING?Get Nearly FreeTRANSPORTATIONBy Driving a Car to California,Salt Lake, EastArizona, Seattle,ALL CITIESMinimum age 21WE 9-2364AUTO DRIVEAWAY CO.343 S. DEARBORN ST. GoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 Clarinet is an affecting little workof five short movements rangingin character from a march to alight pastorale. It is not a veryprobing or powerful work, butrather a pleasant and enjoyable“divertissement.” It totally ex¬ploded the myth that twelve-tonemusic must be distant and ab¬struse.Featured also was Stravinsky’sThree Pieces for Clarinet Solo,written some thirty-seven yearsbefore the Krenek, in 1919, a worktotally different in stylistic con¬tent.The final work of the evening,Easley Blackwood’s Pastorale amiVaritaions for Wind Quintet, pro¬vided a most enjoyable conclusion.Conducted by the composer, itproved to be among his more ac¬cessible scores.As for the performances, onecan only praise the members ofthe CCP. Never was any musi¬cian’s playing of less than profes¬sional quality, and each soloist didcredit both to himself and to theCCP as a whole. It certainly mustbo reassuring for today’s compos¬ers that not only will their musicbe given a hearing through theCCP, but that it will be performedso well by an ensemble made upof such excellent and thoroughmusicians.Ed ChikofskyACCION . . .a private non-profit organization for community actionand economic development in Latin America is seekingrecruits for its June and September programs. No Spanishnecessary — All expenses paid—15 month program.Suite 1400, 116 S. Michigan Ave.CE 6-8232 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856NOW...A FULL SIZETRIUMPHTHE NEW 1965 EUROPE• CRIMSON SeriesGrand Tour A Continental TourFavorite Tour A Fiesta TourComprehensive TourIsrael Adventure TourHoliday Tour * Panorama TourBY STEAMER OR AIR STTA*35 TO 75 DAYS from / / U• DISCOVERY SeriesDiscovery Tour ★ Explorer TourPrep & High School Swiss Camp CLASSIFIED ADSPERSONALEurope this summer? Fly TWA DAILYnon-stop Jets to London. Campus rep.:M. Laviiisky, MI 3-6000.ANTEDILUVIANS: Botany” Pond at 5pm.“The Doctrine of States’ Rights: Threatto Civil Liberties?” May 1 at 3 pm.Sat., Ida Noyes Library. Speaker: RalphLevitt who faces jail for his socialistideas. Completely turn. 4 bdrm. house withlarge yard. For rent June 15-Aug 31Dishwasher, washer, dryer, piano ga¬rage. 3 hrs. from campus. Children net*OK. Call 667-5651. ’ ^ ’Summer sublet 4 large rms. nr7 campusOption to renew. Call 684-5917.Conv.. well furnished fac. home. Availsublease July 1 - Aug. 31. Sit. on cam¬pus. Rent by negotiation; exc. part-time domestic help avail. Norval Morrislaw school, ext. 2435.European Travelers: There are someseats available on the SG charter June23 - Sept. 16. Only $250 from New Yorkto London and return. (From Chicago,$315.)Sandals custom-made. 40 styles to chosefrom. Ad Lib Studio, 1422 E. 53rd St.DO JJ-3819.Dear M.: God is love and light. Con¬gratulations for the last electric bill.Writers7' Workshop—PL 2~-8377Don't hurry. Tortoise! (You win.)LOSTA ring of keys. If found please returnto 2404 Woodward Court. FOR RENTSummer rms. Call Phi Kappa Psi 55 S5S. Woodlawn. PL 2-9704.4'i rm. 2 sunporches, air oond., closeto campus. $110. MI 3-8262, after 6Cool 3Vi rm. bsmt. apt. from June"Ideal for 2 students; 643-0221, 288-6757!100 YR. OLD, modernized, furnished2 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 I to Sept. 30$200 per month including all utilitiesand (local) phone. Whitehall 4-2779 ordial 219-929-0058.License plate, Oregon T42. Cotton onback. See Thumper Bumper. FOR SALETUTORINGFor courteous, personal tutoring in Ger¬man, French, Italian: Call 363-4298.WANTEDApt. — 6 or more rooms — Sept. on.Will take summer. Call B. J., MI 3-6000,814, 446, 834.BONUS for: 3 bedrm. apt. Starting any¬time July-Oct. Call: FA 4-9500, Rm.1909 or lv. message.2 roommates, male, for summer qtr.Fully furn., ner. campus; $40 mo. MI 3-1014.Riders wanted to Baltimore area. LeaveJune 4 or 5, return approx. June 13.Call Jerry Klein, 721-7823.One male roommate to share 4-rm. apt.for summer, possibly next vr. 54th &Ellis. Call 684-3588.2 reliable girls would like an air-condi¬tioned apt. for summer. Call HY 3-8319.SUBLET1. Summer Quarter—1 bedrm., L-R,kitchen; 2. Din. area, bath, carpeted,furnished. 3. Light, airy, new. Call324-1315 after 4 pm.Summer sublet — fern., 58th & Kemwood, furn., own bdrm., $44 mo. Call288-5742.Summer sublet June 15-Sept. 1. 7-rm!apt. across from Pierce. Call NewDorms 3288, 3221, or 3317.3Vi rm. newly furn. apt. In Hyde Park?air conditioned bedrm. $115 mo. plusphone & elec. July 1 - Sept. 6. Call752-0329 after 5 pm.Large 2 bedrm., study, dining rm.,living rm.. kitchen. Furn. apt Moderateprice, available June 16-Aug. 20. 324-5547. Mortorcycle — 1955 Harley 125cc, $145Call Brad. KE 6-9047 after 6.MOTORBIKE—3 horsepower, top speedaround 45 mph. Will sell for $50 (maybe less). Contact K. K. x 2829 days-493-1129 nights.Spacious Hl-Rise 6-room, 2 bath apt!Lake & Park view. Carpeting and util¬ities, other extras. MI 3-4796.Modernized town house — 4 bedrrns.,l*i baths, oil heat, all appliances, lowtaxes, near UC. BU 8-1276.1957 Volkswagen sedan, excellent condi¬tion. $500. 363-6253.House, 52nd & Kenwood; 11-rm. framehouse, 3 open fireplaces, new gasfurnace, humidifier, fenced In yard,$3,000 down, 643-2957.HELP WANTEDTEACHERS WANTED. $5,400 up. West,Southwest and Alaska. FREE registra¬tion, Southwest Teachers Agency, 1303Central Ave. N E. Albuquerque, N. MPersons interested in teaching over¬seas in Protestant institutions are in¬vited to talk with Miss Virginia Her¬mann, a representative of the UnitedChurch Board of World Ministries. In¬terviews are being scheduled for Satur¬day, Sunday and Monday, May 1-3, bythe Porter Foundation at Chapel HouseCall Campus Ext. 3393.TYPING AND EDITINGRussian, Old Church-Slavonlc; after7:00. 869-2807.“Found my apartment through MaroonPeople-Grabber Classifieds.” says Mrs.Murray Schacher. "Maroon ads dowork.” You too can meet your needs,your wildest dreams, merely by callingMI 3-0800, ext. 3265 or 3266 BEFORENOON of the day before publication.All interested persons ore invitedto an informal meeting withArlo Tatum, Executive Secretary of theCentral Committee for Conscientious Objectorsto discussCONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTIONTO MILITARY SERVICESunday, May 2nd — 4:00 p.m.Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn AvenueTomorrow night at 8!! FOTA '65Triumph’s greatest, newest achievement—theTriumph Spitfire IV, the car that gives you topsports car performance, economy and comfort.See the complete Triumph line today—TRIUMPH TR-4TRIUMPH SPITFIRE IVTRIUMPH 1200 SedanTRIUMPH 1200 ConvertibleYour Triumph dealer is ready lo giveyou a test ride ... and the deal of yourlife on any new Triumph—nowl“Southeast Chicago’s OnlyAuthorised Triumph Dealer”BOS NELSON6052 S. Cottage Grove MOTORSMidway 3-45016 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 30, 1965it BY STEAMER OR AIR SJIQC*42 TO 68 DAYS from 403* excluding trans-Atlantic transportationx>r Form your Own GroupAsk for Plans and ProfitableOrganizer Arrangements*SPECIALISTS INSTUDENT TRAVELSINCE 1926for folders and detailsSEE YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENTor write university travel companyCambridge 38, Mass.stable Ints IKtrajI See "GALLOWS HUMOR''an avant garde drama8 p.m., Saturday, May 1Hyde Park Baptist Church, 5600 S. WoodlawnPresented Reader's Theatre style by Hull House ChamberTheatre actors. Free coffee, rolls following.Tickets: $1 students, $1.25 General Admissionat 5810 S. Woodlawn, or at the doorin Hyde ParkTHE ESTABLISHMENTis called The Eagle.cocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . .THE EAGLEBass ale and Schlitz beer on tap5311 BLACKSTONE 324-7859MAROON WEEKEND GUIDEPatronize Our AdvertisersJimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty-Fifth and Woodlown Are.PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PARK BLVD.DELIVERY CrTABLE SERVICEKR 6-6606 — KR 6-3891Chicken - SandwichesPizza &Italian Foods &a newworld ofdiningpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668CHAMBER CHORAL CONCERTat theFirst Unitarian Church57th and WoodlawnPROGRAMHindemith — 'Frau Musica"Bach — Cantata 1 58 'Der friede sei mit dir"Arwin Schweig, bassBach — Brandenburg Concerto No. 5Hans Wurman, clavierCopland — "In the Beginning"Brahms — Liebeslieder WalzerThe Adult Choir of the First Unitarian ChurchandMembers of the Chicago Symphony Orchestraunder the direction ofHANS WURMANSunday, May 2# 1965 — 3:30 P.M.Tickets $2 — Available at the Church5650 South Woodlawn FA 4-4100UNIVERSITY THEATREpresents'TONIGHT AT 8:30"Genet '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 Students 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.See The Last Stage's newGorky play, "THE LOWERDEPTHS." Drop by beforeor after the show.CIRALSHOUSE OF TIKI51st & HARPERFood served 11 AM. to 3 A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-7585Maroon ElectionParty Tonight1435 E. 60th Place(Vi block South of 60thon Blockstone)EVERYONEWELCOMEHARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4 — 1318— 1233— 7699HY 3-6800 BRINGTHISCOUPON SPECIAL STUDENT RATEThis coupon and $2.25 may be exchanged atthe Box Office no lafer than half hour beforeperformance for regular $3.00 seat.Not Good on Friday or Saturday Night*"IT IS THE CITY'S BEST SHOW"Dettmer, Chi American1HEKWCKthe London and New York hit by Ann Jellicoestaged for the Harper by Brian Bedford. Asoriginally directed by MIKE NICHOLS.REGULAR PRICES & SCHEDULETues., Wed., Thurs. ot 8:30, $3.00Fri. ot 8:30; Sot. ot 7 & 10, $3.90Sun. ot 2:30 & 7:30, $3.00HARPER THEATERBU 8-1717 5238 S. HARPER AVE.5 3Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood 1UNUSUAL FOODDELIfi HTF U LATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICES[ dark theatr« n■ A C atm mm limn mm for college students mm with i.d. card m,m • different double tnm features daily• open dawn to daumm • little gal-lery um for gals only2 fri. 30—"blue denim,” ■m “beach party”Sat. 1—“women of straw,” -“fate is the hunter” msun. 2—“the good earth,” m“pride and prejudice”M mon. 3—“i bombed pearl mm harbor,” “bullet for abadman” ■■ tues. 4—“victors,”"thunder island”wed. 5—“great caruso,”M "naughty mariette”m thurs. 8—“barabbas,”“showdown”dork & modisonfr 2-2843 MR. BIGG'S“llie friendly restaurant**1440 E. 57th St.Grand OpeningBRUNCH SPECIALWITH THIS AD!as* • • ^ •ALL YOU CAN EAT:1. Juice2. Scrambled in cream eggs3. English muffins withbutter and jelly4. Pork sausage or bacon5. Corn meal mush withmaple syrup6. Coffee (bottomless cup)$1.25 per personDON JUAN IRLANDES, GUITARISTOPENED APRIL 27• no cover • no minimum • no increase in pricesCafe EnricoHY 3-5300RACE AND HOUSING IN CHICAGO-A STATEMENT FOR LAW DAYIN SEPTEMBER, 1964, a director of the undersigned corporation bought property at 3309 S. Lowe Avenue, with the intention of makingapartments there available on a non-discriminatory basis to students at the Illinois Institute of Technology. To find decent housing these stu¬dents had to go seven or eight miles south, whereas the property at 3309, in the Bridgeport area, is less than a mile due west of the NT campus.A FINE NT NEGRO COUPLE from St. Louis originally planned to live at 3309. Mayor Daley, Edward Marciniak (Executive Director of theMayor's Commission on Human Relations!, and other public figures were notified of this plan. However, a prominent Chicago "Uncle Tom"dissuaded the newly married couple from what promised to be a considerable ordeal. Soon afterwards a young Negro student at Loyola Uni¬versity, Paul Jones, asked to share the vacant apartment with a fellow student, Ovaldo Buntin. The Chicago Commission on Human Relationswas informed they would occupy the apartment about Oct. 1.THE DISORDERS THAT ENSUED the next several nights were very "discreetly" reported in the Chicago press There was a small crowd aboutthe building Oct. 2, the first night Mr. Jones spent there. The second night a threatening crowd of several hundred whites was allowed togather. One arrest was made. The third night a still larger white mob surrounded the building. (The Chicago police justified all this as free¬dom of assembly.) A window was broken and violence used against several officers. Two arrests were made The fourth and final night, theriotous white mob approached 1,000 Twelve arrests were made. Mayor Daley continued to blame the tumult two blocks north of his LoweAvenue residence on "outsiders." (1 3 of the total of 15 men arrested gave addresses in the Bridgeport area.)THE TERROR had its desired effect in inducing Mr. Buntin to leave the building, but Mr. Jones chose to remain. The realtor who had soldthe building, Kamenjarin, then solved Mayor Daley's remaining problem by simply removing Jones' clothes, books and belongings while hewas at work, on the pretext that he had "abandoned" his apartment. With no one's authorization, they executed a purported "lease" of oneyear to a couple of white men, Griswig and Tormey. (Almost everyone rents by the month in Bridgeport.) This strategem was later upheld incourt by Judge Edith Sampson.IN APRIL, 1965, The Chicago Commission on Human Relations printed its official "Report on 3309 South Lowe Avenue " Prepared with anair of objectivity and factual specificity — some truth and much semblance — this report is such a shameless misrepresentation and "white¬wash" that a public refutation and exposure is required. The paid advertising columns of the Chicago Maroon are about the only remnantsof a free press in Chicago in matters closely touching "His Honor." A correction of the grosser misstatements and omissions in the CCHRReport follows:THE CCHR REPORT BEGINS by stating that it "outlines the events . . . and relates the activities of the Commission to assure the maintenanceof law and order." (The latter would seem a more appropriate primary object for the Police Department.) Saturday, Sept. 19, the PoliceDepartment informed the Commission a fire had occurred at 3309. Sunday someone concerned about the incident alleged arson. A directorof the undersigned corporation who helped remove the badly burned couch from the building observed two or three burned areas on it Ques¬tioning a girl living directly across the street, he was told she saw two brilliant flashes about 1 1 pm She added, "I think it was kerosene."(The apartment had been locked and unoccupied.) Yet the Commission Report states, in parentheses: "Subsequent investigation by the Fireand Police Departments revealed that a couch in the first floor flat was found smoldering, presumably started by a cigarette, and that therewas no evidence of arson."THE CCHR REPORT EXPLOITS the testimony of a Mr. Claude Wdson, a Negro resident of Maywood Mr. Wilson apparently told CCHRhe wos offered $600 to move into the apartment. The truth is he was financially encouraged to attend NT providing he was qualified, hi isoverdue phone bill was paid for him to enable a phone to be installed at 3309 in his name Because of lack of confidence in his character,however, Mr. Wilson was never offered the opportunity to live at 3309. Possibly resentful, but in any case seeing a chance to ingratiatehimself with the Daley machine, he lent himself to a story in The New Crusader, "explaining" the 3309 incident for the benefit of ChicagoNegro voters in view of the then approaching election. The page three item was discreetly headed: See Politics, Racism Behind Housing Tiffin Daley's Ward. "A politically tinged racist plot to discredit Mayor Richard J. Daley," it began, "was revealed by a Maywood Negro." Sixhundred dollars, it stated, was offered to Wilson to move in. He described a "politically tinged (plot) to embarrass . . . our great Mayor."THE CCHR REPORT CITES its own "Fact Sheet" completed Sept. 16, describing the property, area and purchasers. This states that some onehundred "non-whites" were living in Bridgeport according to the 1960 census. McClellan School, at 35th and Wallace, it states, has five Negrostudents. Several Mexican families, it notes, live in the area. But "the predominant nationalities," according to the "Fact Sheet," "have beenPoles, Lithuanians, Italians and Germans since 1930 " Curiously, the Irish are not even mentioned Yet the area was originally Irish, andstill is largely Irish. Indeed, eight of the 15 rioters arrested had Irish names (four of the names were Italian).MR. JOHN WALSH, owner of the property at the time, asked the realtor who had sold it, Kamenjarin, to help him manage the property. Awhite tenant was installed accordingly in the second floor flat vacated when Paul Jones moved into the first floor apartment. He obtaineda year's lease, apparently by misrepresenting to Mr. Walsh both his place of work and marital status. Paul Jones left his apartment Tuesdaymorning, Oct. 6, stating that he would return Thursday or Friday, as correctly acknowledged in the Commission Report. Nevertheless, whilehe was at work Tuesday, Kamenjarin "leased" the first floor apartment to the white men who were installed that afternoon. Neither Jones,the tenant, nor Walsh, the owner, were even consulted before "execution" of the "lease" and eviction of Jones. Nevertheless, Judge Samp¬son dismissed their complaint. A specious settlement was arranged of Jones' complaint to the CCHR.THE 3309 STORY illustrates and typifies the almost city-wide Chicago experience in the matter of Negro housing. White terrorism is adaily occurrence here, wherever white "boundaries" are threatened by a "leap" rather than the slow block by block "change" that is con¬sidered inevitable White terrorism is a — largely unpublicized — main factor in maintaining the ghetto. It is not surprising that such terror¬ism has the blessing of the powerful Chicago real estate interests, for they profit immensely from the ghetto system. The real scandal isthat it enjoys the complaisance of Mayor Daley, the Chicago police, and the Chicago Commission on Human Relations, despite their piouspublic protestations.THE MAYOR'S much-publicized "Fair Housing Ordinance" entrusts enforcement to the CCHR, with ultimate sanction lying in the Mayor'spower to revoke a license. It has simply put one more club in his hands — realtors "undocile" to the machine can be forced to "takeniggers" (the mere threat may suffice) or even have their licenses revoked It is never seriously used in the case of the Mayor's friends, suchas the realtors of Bridgeport, e g A. Kamenjarin and Morgan Finley.(Signed)TECH STUDENT APTS., INC,8 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 30, 1965