1Algren, McGarr Debatedeath penalty tonightVoI. 73— No. 42 The University of Chicago 31 Friday, May 7, 1965Wanf UC aid in site for pre-school centerSWAP parents present HS plan Chicago author Nelson Algren will debate the issue ofcapital punishment with attorney Frank McGarr tonight inthe second Maroon forum on the issue.The forum, scheduled for 8 pm in the law school auditorium,is a follow-up to one held in March,at which time comedian DickGregory and others demanded anend to capital punishment andasked for a reprieve for BillWitherspoon, a convicted police¬man-slayer who had been scheduledto die on March 19.WITHERSPOON WAS latergiven an indefinite stay of execu¬tion, and the Illinois state senatepassed a statute restricting theThe parents of SWAP tutees have entered the fray in the controversy over what to do employment of the death penaltyabout the problems facing Hyde Park High School ^ankiUing! prison gua.tf.Mmng,‘orIn the past several months, a number of proposals have been put forth to alleviate the kiijing jn connection with treasonproblems of overcrowding and inadequate facilities and materials. The parents of Hyde Park are involved.HS students who are being tu- - Of course this bill cannot legallytored by UC students in the education, and insisted that stress ray branch. This would result in ho made retroactive to affect Algren McGarrSWAP program got together todiscuss the problems themselves,and released a new proposalWednesday.INNOVATIONS in the parentscommittee’s plan include a sug¬gestion that Chicago follow New at Hyde Park high must continue transformation of Hyde Park into Witherspoon or the other six mento be put on academic subjects, a totally-Negro school, critics sug- on death row but it would alleged-instead of adding a vocational gest. It is now 88 per cent Negro, ly affect a few men awaiting trail,wing to the present building, as with most of the white students Right now the bill is bottled up ina so-called “campus plan’’ sug- in the upper tracks. the Senate Judiciary Committeegests. The parents also object to a and it will probably not be report-The parents said they “agree plan being pushed by schools ed out to the Senate floor for aYork City’s recent lead in doing with the plan proposed by (school superintendent Benjamin C. Wil- couple of weeks. Observers are notaway with junior high schools board members) Bacon, Friedman, lis, which would bring only optimistic about its chances,(equivalent to Chicago’s “upper and Clement and the letter signed sventh, eighth, and ninth graders If and when Witherspoon hasgrade centers”) by setting up a by over 160 Hyde Park High from Woodlawn into the present exhausted all avenues of legal re¬ capital punishment, while McGarr,a former first assistant to thestate’s attorney, will defend it.John Callaway, public affairs di«rector of WBBM, will moderatethe debate.On Sunday, Callaway has saidthat the CBS network will broad¬cast a tape of the debate over a42-state hookup.The public is invited to attendthe debate. There will be no ad¬mission charge.division withfor gades 1-4, separate5-8. and“44 4”schools9 12.The SWAP parents also:• Want the present Hyde ParkHS to be expanded to accomodateall the children from the distiict,which takes in both Hyde Park-Kenwood and most of Woodlawn;and• Want a new building to houseone year of pre-school and oneyear of kindergarten for all thechildren in the district. They hopethe UC administration will co-op¬erate in finding a site, preferablyin the South Campus area along teachers, requesting the acquisi¬tion of the land south of HydePark High School to 63rd streetto provide the needed classrooms.”THIS PLAN REJECTS otherproposals that have been putforth recently. One of them wouldset up a branch high school inthe present Murray elementaryschool at 53rd and Kenwood, withadmission standards for the Mur- Hyde Park High building, andshift all tenth, eleventh, andtwelfth graders from both Wood¬lawn and Hyde Park to the Mur¬ray school. Woodlawn students dress, Gov. Kerner has promisedto call an “extraordinary session”of the Parole Boaid to considerhis case. Witherspoon’s lawyershope that by recommendation ofwho drop out in the ninth grade the Parole Board Gov. Kerner willwould never get any idea of what pardon him.high school is like if they went In tonight’s debate, Algren,to a segregated school through author of such works as Man Withthat grade, the SWAP parents The Golden Ann and Walk Onthink. The Wild Side, will argue against The MAROON will hold astaff meeting a week fromtoday at 4 pm in the MA¬ROON office, third floor,Ida Noyes Hall, to vote on aconstitutional amendmentand to elect an editor-in-chief for the coming year.All staff members are re¬quired to attend.Triple number of Negro applicants60th street, and that UC educa¬tion professors who have investi¬gated pre-school education willhelp in developing and operatingthe program.Problems outlinedSome of Hyde Park High’sproblems that the report men¬tioned are that two-thirds of thestudents stay below grade levelin leading and math achievement;and many in the remedial tracksmore than half drop out of school;leave school without really get¬ting a high school education.The facilities of the school, at62nd street and Stony Island, areovercrowded, services such ascounselling arc limited, the cur¬riculum isn’t planned to help stu¬dents with deficiencies in particu¬lar areas, and the track system,which sets course programs sup¬posedly according to ability, re¬sults in too much division accord¬ing to race and class, the parentscharge.PART OF their proposal dealswith demands for expanding serv¬ices and adding new types of spe¬cial personnel. They suggest thatgraduate students from the UCschool of social service adminis¬tration could work as psycholo¬gists in an effort to reduce the“discipline problem,” and “fostera healthy school atmosphere.”They also want remedial readingand math experts, volunteers tohelp teachers with clerical tasks,a person to work with communityagencies who might have out-of¬school programs for students, and“drop-out recruiters.”IN THE FIELD of curriculum,proposals include creation of acurriculum development commit¬tee with high school faculty andspecial service personnel plus UCprofessors, to develop special cur¬riculum to meet the needs of“disadvantaged youth.” Innova¬tions to “stimulate heterogeneousgroupings,” using more studentsto tutor other students, and re¬duced class size, are other re¬quests.Building expansionThe SWAP parents dealt atlength with curriculum becausethey felt previous proposals hadconcentrated attention too muchon what the building should betike. As to expansion of facilities,the report emphasized the import¬ance of planning for integrated Class of 1969 sets records in size, varietyby David L. Aiken missions officers from severalAlmost complete returns coming into the admissions office’s other Chicago-area colleges, such“election central” indicate another bumper crop of entering JJ the University of Illinois,. , , o * .. Northwestern, and Valparaiso,students come September. held informational programs inMonday was the deadline fot pi ospective College enti ants p^-p^ominantly-Negro high schoolswho had been accepted to tell a jn Chicago.harried director of admissions, gro entrants has held steady at #in an admittedly unusual step,Charles D. O Connell, whethei six or seven, or only one per cent. the admissions office sent lettersthey were really going to show This year, uc reCeived over 125 to all the approximately 1,200 Ne-up this tall. applications from Negro candi- gr0 students who had been namedBy Wednesday morning, O’Con- dates, compared to around thirty finaiists in the new Nationalnell’s office crew had counted 671 or forty in previous years. Of Achievement Scholarship (NAS)answers accepting UC’s offer. An these, 53 were admitted new requirements of college study,O'Connell said.abnormally high number of peo- O’CONNELL POINTED topie who accepted had not been ^at ^is office tabulates the num-heard from — ninety. O’Connell program, encouraging themout think about applying to UC.The National Achievement pro¬gram was started this year by the*u u f on *** of accePted students accord lt 0 ^ —expects no more than about 20 ing to such categories as race, sex, National Merit Scholarship Cor¬ot these to answer affirmatively and geographical distribution only poration, which awards thousandswhen they do get around to an- after all the decisions are made by of dol]ars of scholarships on theswering. the committee of faculty mem- basis of nationally - administeredON THE BASIS of this expec- bers responsible for accepting or examinations. The new NAS pro-tation, O’Connell forecasts an en- rejecting applications. The com- gram was instituted to alleviatetering class of about 690 fust-year mittee does not have any “quotas” tbe problem faced by many in¬students. of any sort, he stressed. The facts herently able Negroes who stum-A total of 2,280 high school sen- that boys always outnumber girls bjed jn taking this test becauseiors made applications, including 2-1, and that the number of New of differences in preparation andthe 125 who applied under the Yorkers is second only to that of backgroundBlau 1 qql tv\Aof fVm Hmo nonIllinoisans most of the time, can O’CONNELL EXPLAINED thatand 2146 at the normal time in bo attributed only to chance and/ only invited' these NASTomtnrv am rt/vuftn >-«t nottnyme nf ormli^a. *January.Less than half acceptedOf these, about 1,050 were ac or constant patterns ol applies- flnalists ,0 'apply> and not onlyttons, O Connell said. waived the normal deadline andThe rise in Negro applications application fee, but also guaran-cepted, or 46 per cent. Half of was not due to chance, however. t^j whatever financial aid thethe early decision applicants A good many Negro students ap- student might need if he was —were accepted -68. The regular plied who might not have done so cepted. No guarantees of aceioanlS W0T0 SCCCUtod in slisht* rwmnAiio imorc ei'mnlu KacqiiCP • • j l ac-applicants were accepted in slight- fn previous years simply because ance 'were” givenTrhnplted^how-ly smaller proportions — about tbe public is concerned about rais- ever985 out of the 2,146, or a little ing tbe jevei 0f Negro education, Tbe response f0 thisunder 46 per cent. The response to this effort,„ .. . , - „ . and Negroes are less hesitant to O’Connell said, was gratifying. Be-O Connell said he had expect- apply to the more competitive tween 70 and 80 NAS finalists re¬ed’ about 650 to accept, but was scboois 35 a result, O’Connell re- turned aoDlicationsTly * iiiAle SUrpriS!d at gTngr marked. < While Stressing that normalalmost 700, an ecceptance rate of Sought Negro applicants standards of admission were notabout two-tlnrds. TT^ x ,, ^ the greaterT vpar’s entrants into the UC did take tvvo new steP® in lowered to accePt„1qcc tntallpd 674 nut of the direction of seeking out quali- number of Negroes, some of those?9M aDDikants anf Hm o/fere 1W Negro students and encour- who begin their studies here will1,954 applicant, ana 1,102 01 e —,— +v,— 1„ find a wjde bap between theirof admission, an acceptance rate agj”£ Uiem to applyof 60 percent. This, too, was ahigher acceptance rate than hadbeen expected. The usual rate be¬fore last year was between 50 and55 per cent.As in years past, about 53 percent of the class will receive some • Last fall, O’Connell and ad- educational background and thePhoenix rises—this time for realThe new Phoenix is really ris- tography—all contributed by stu-sort of financial aid, and about 50 ing from its ashes, and will be on dents of the University. It will bewill come from the “Small School sale during the week of May 17th. sold for thirty-five cents in Man-Talent Search" program. The campus literary magazine, del corridor, Swift lobby, the NewNegro applications last published in the winter quar- Dorm central unit, and the book-Negro students applied for en- ter of 1964, has since been re- store,trance in greater numbers than styled and reorganized. Every- Contrary to the Phoenix image,ever before, O’Connell pointed out, thing’s been changed but the this year’s Phoenix promises per-and consequently at least a dozen name. manence; plans are well underwill register in fall. In the past THE MAGAZINE contains fic- way for three issues to be pub-several years, the number of Ne- tion, poetry, graphics, and pho- lished in the coming year. To help tnose entrants who facethis problem, O’Connell hopessome sort of program will bedeveloped to let upperclassmentutor them in their weak areas.There will be no question of “mak¬ing their studies easier for them,”O’Connell emphasized.More Small SchoolersAs far as other characteristicsof the class of 1969 are concerned,there will be a few more entrantsfrom the Small School TalentSearch (SSTS) than in any previ¬ous year since the program wasstarted with the class which en¬tered in 1960. Fifty students willenter under the program next fall,compared to 42 last year and 45the year before.The SSTS seeks to encouragehigh schools in rural areas tonominate a few of their best stu¬dents who would meet regular UCstandards, but may not even haveconsidered applying for admission.ACCORDING TO Margaret E.Perry, associate director of admis¬sions in charge of SSTS, therewere 104 applications under theprogram. The College accepted 79of these, and about 50 of themhave sent word that they arecoming.In geographical distribution, thethree top states are still Montana(ten this year), Wisconsin (nine),and Minnesota (seven). Mx-s. Per¬ry pointed out that thiee newstates joined the roster this year—students are coming from Ber¬lin, New York; Stayton and GoldBeach, Oregon; and Castle Rockand Oak Harbor, Washington.Half get aid moneyRobert J. Charles, director ofCollege aid, reported that, as us¬ual, about 53 per cent of the appli¬cants requested financial aid, andabout half the entering studentswill get some.He pointed out that this levelof students receiving aid is muchhigher than that in most otheruniversities in the country,matched by only a few others suchas MIT and Harvard. Otherschools offer aid to only about 30per cent of their students.More than $600 thousand wasoffered to entrants this year,Charles said, compared to about$522,000 last year. jiEDITORIALFirst year frat men look before you leapThe recent resurgence of interest inVC fraternities as revealed in directorof student activities Thomas O’Keefe’srecent report on the subject is prob¬ably something more than a mere in¬terest in the kind of life that fraterni¬ties offer. There is just not that muchdifference in this year’s crop of firstyear men as compared to those ofyears past, and this would rule outany notions of a class with a prevail¬ing “Big Ten” attitude toward cam¬pus life of the “fun first, work sec¬ond” variety. The mass migration tothe frat houses is, we feel, motivatedby more practical considerations.For one thing, fraternities are goodplaces to live. In many ways, theyare better than apartments, sincemeals are provided and cooked byhired help at almost all the housesand each member of the house has only to take pains in most cases toassure that his own debris, and notthat of his housemates, is cleaned up.And frat houses are better than thecinder block prisons that are thedorms by a long shot. The frats main¬tain the best aspects of the dorms(sharing meals, maintaining friend¬ships), while guarding against theworst of them (conformity to pettyrules, restricted social life, crampedquarters).For another thing, fraternities arequite cheap. There is less of a cut inscholarships for those who move outof dorms into frat houses than thereis for those who desert the dorms forapartments. There are few if any ofthe fringe expenses, such as furnitureand kitchen utensils, and the cost offraternity food is the same if not low¬er than that of apartment cooking. But, much as it may be clear thatthose who have joined fraternitieshave done so because of the materialbenefits, we question whether the off¬setting negative aspects of fraternitymembership will justify their deci¬sions. These negative aspects are alloffshoots of the prevailing foundationof fraternity life: social inclusion byexclusion. This in-group kind of think¬ing, which stifles the individuality offraternity members and obligatesthem to a ridiculous degree to associ¬ate only with fraternity members andto a much smaller extent with otherstudents, is probably a mere expres¬sion of insecurity more than it is agenuinely constructive system aimedat profitable social (to say nothing ofacademic) life.Furthermore, the cliques that are the fraternities promote and perpetu¬ate such petty and unnecessary inci¬dents as inter-house garbage fightstrophy-raiding expeditions at 4 am’and physical attacks on non-fraternitymembers who aren’t “the good guys ”as happened last spring.Certainly, there are other sides tofraternity life than these. But, as aresult of the ridiculous and all too fre¬quent practices noted above, theseother sides are just that much harderto find. We therefore ask those firstyear men who are planning to live infraternities to look before they leap.If they insist on leaping, we ask t hemto strive to make fraternities genu¬inely worthwhile, not just by main¬taining their desirability as cheapand comfortable housing, but byworking to establish them as trulyconstructive, seriously oriented bodies.Letters to theE&R committee asksto clarify its positionTO THE EDITOR:During the recent SG election, aseries of handbills appeared whichmisrepresented the position thatthe Election and Rules Committee(E&R) took regarding a proposedSNCC “voluntary poll tax” fund¬raising project. We would like toclarify our position.The handbills claimed that E&R“refused, absolutely refused, topermit or give any help to theSNCC project. . . .” and that“They (E&R) denied UC Friendsof SNCC the right to place volun¬tary poll tax boxes near the SGballot boxes.”ALL WE DECIDED was that we did not want our already burdenedpollwatchers to have to be respon¬sible for boxes full of money inaddition to ballot boxes, stacks ofunused ballots, registration books,etc. We also felt that no grouphas a “right” to use an SG electionas its collection agency. Our deci¬sion was not based on any person¬al feeling about SNCC; ourresponse would have been thesame to the Girl Scouts, the Uni-vei’sity Theatre, or the K.K.K.However, we did tell SNCC thatthey could collect funds on tablesor chairs adjacent to the ballotingtables. We said the boxes could beleft there even if no SNCC personwas attending them, just that wewould not assume responsibilityfor them. One of the handbills contained the insinuation that wemight remove collection boxeswhich were set up. This is simplynot true.The fact that not one collationbox ever materialized is the re¬sponsibility of SNCC, not of theElection and Rules Committee.JOHN WEICIIER, CHAIRMANJONATHAN STILLRICHARD GOLDmembers of the Election and RulesCommittee of Student Government7 can save you almost $700 on a$25,000 Ordinary Life insurance pol¬icy, if you purchase now rather thanwait until you graduate or marry.This may be an important savings,phis protection right away. Includedis an option to protect your futureinsurability guaranteed to be atstandard rates up to $60,000, regard¬less of future health or occupation.Defer premium payments, if you wish!Under this arrangement, my insuranceprogrom permits you to postpone thepremium payments until three months after you graduate.FREDRIC M. OKUNCAMPUS MANACERNational Life Insurance Company120 South LaSalle Street, ChicagoCall me at; CEntral 6-2500$ V01K»W>«I* or AMfftiC*, IM4.Get the bug in Europe.fick up your Volkswogen In Europe and save a bundle on import eost*and European travel expenses. As your local authorized VW dealer wehandle everything-, purchase, delivery, insurance, licensing, the works. Justtell us where you want it delivered: France, Italy, Great Britain, Ireland^Germany, Denmark, Belgium, Switzerland or The Netherlands.For Information send coupon toBox 101, Maroon, 1212 E. 59 St. 1Authorized |Dealer JNome—Address-City— -Zone- -State- Chicctgo 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 RabinowitzScience Editor Ed StemPolitical Editor Bruce FreedEditor Emeritus John T WilliamsSTAFF: David Satter, Dorie Solinger,Barry Salins, Ellis Levin, Barbara Jur,Barry Weitz, Joan Tapper. HowardFishman, Matt Joseph, Paul Burstein,Jack Catlin, Hugh Letiche, JamieBeth Gale, Edward Chikofsky. CharlesDashe, Dick Ganz, Steve Ford, Wil¬liam Herzog.The 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: Ml 3-0800; extensions3265, 3266, 3269. Second class postagepaid at Chicago, Ill.Charter member of Collegiate PressService. News MuseMarines lo llie rescue ,by Bruce FreedThe State Department alarm bell jangles! Another fairdamsel threatened with seduction by Castro Communism. Atthe fire house, the US Marines and Army paratroopers girdthemselves for the rescue mission.That’s the way events last week “ —seemed to unfold after word of they otherwise would have alert<><1the worsening of the Dominican these two top diplomats,fighting reached Washington. At Because of the intelligence gap,first, nobody paid much attention Washington officials could notto the coup. It was coasidered just head off in advance any danger-another Latin American military- ous developments and could notpolitical power struggle. But after control the revolt once it oc-watehing the developments close- currcd. Thus, when the fightingly, the Johnson Administration began to get out of hand and thefelt that the continued conflict leadership of rebel forces beganwas a prelude to more serious to move farther left, the Presi-happenings. dent was in a position where heSo, as the newspapers report, had to take the drastic action ofafter consulting with ambassador sending in Marines.Bennett in Santo Domingo and There is no doubt about theassessing the crisis with his ad- large Communist, especially Cas-visors, the President made the troite, influence in the prolongedfateful decision sometime last fighting. That this poses a dilem-Wednesday to order in the Ma- rna to Washington is beyond ques-rines. tion because of the need to checkReactions from throughout the ( as.lro while not interfering inworld and the nation were swift ^atAmerican internal affairs,in coming. Congressmen praised ma*n criticisms of LSthe US action; mast foreigners, moves^are the manner and hasteespecially Latin Americans, con- *ri which they were made. Diedemned it.These responses indicate thetwo levels on which one mustevaluate the American move. ToLatin America, US Marines on(Advertisement)• CHICAGO MAROON • May 7, 1965 Why DoYou ReadSo Slowly?A noted publisher in Chicagoreports there is a simple tech¬nique of rapid reading whichshould enable you to doubleyour reading speed and yet re¬tain much more. Most peopledo not realize how much theycould increase their pleasure,success and income by readingfaster and more accurately.According to this publisher,anyone, regardless of his pres¬ent reading skill, can use thissimple technique to improvehis reading ability to a remark¬able degree. Whether readingstories, books, technical matter,it becomes possible to read sen¬tences at a glance and entirepages in seconds with thismethod.To acquaint th'e readers ofthis newspaper with the easy-to-follow rules for developingrapid reading skill, the com¬pany has printed full detailsof its interesting self-trainingmethod in a new book, “Ad¬ventures in Heading Improve¬ment” mailed free to anyonewho requests it. No obligation.Simply send your request to aReading, 835 Diversey Park¬way, Dept. C125, Chicago, Ill.60614. A postcard will do.Please include your Zip Code. Organization of American Stalesshould have been consulted be-forehand and should have playeda large role in determining policyand controlling the fighting.tr- „ u • . , . ,, . Domestically, the President wasHispaniola bring back shuddering ,eft wlth linieChoiCe but to semimemories ol the Roosevelt Corel- |n troops ^ ot congress’and most Americans’ phobia overThe sudden appearance of US the spread of Communism inforces in a Caribbean slate im- Latin America. If Castroites hadmediately destroyed the good re- gained a toehold in the Domini-lations that had taken three dec- Can Republic, Lyndon Johnsonades to build under the Good would have been seriously jeep-Neighbor Policy. ardized politically.THIS LEADS INTO another as- The tragedy of errors has beenpect of the crisis. Why did the acted out already. It is very un-US have to send in troops? Didn’t fortunate that things havethe State Department and the CIA emerged in the current mannerknow there was going to be a because of the bitter taste thatcoup attempt in Santo Domingo? will be left in everyone’s mouth.Most likely not. The evidence; as- But when foreign policy Is notsistant secretary of state Vaughn prepared and executed with a deftand ambassador Bennett were hand, these are some of the ie-away from their posts at the suits. Now that the seeds of suspl-time of the uprising. This leads don have been sown, Irreparableone to believe that the CIA had harm has been done to US Latinno information about it, since American policy.HYDE PARK YMCANewly redecorated student rooms available with or without mcol plans.Study lounge, private TV room, health, and physical focilities oilavailable for student use.Call FA 4-5300FREE SPORT CAR RLAZERWITH EMBLEM FROM COHN & STERNIN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERWhen you buy anAUSTIN HEALEY-MG-PEUGEOT-TRIUMPHfrom either storeM. G.SpriteTriumphComplete Repairs And Service For AN Popular Imports6052 or 6136 South Cottage Grove AvenueMidway 3-4500(Limited Time Only)Wove of the future?Invites award plebiscite;lounge opened to students UC fraternities seen filling upDean of the College WayneC. Booth made an unprece¬dented appeal for studentopinion yesterday in order tohelp him choose the recipients ofthis year’s Quantrell awaids.The Quantrells, given yearly bya faculty committee to under¬graduate instructors for “excel¬lence in undergraduate teaching,”had previously been given to facul¬ty which onlythecommitteecho.se.‘IN A STATEMENT, Booth saidthat he “should like to invite sug¬gestions for the Quantrell prize,signed by from one to five stu¬dents—no more. These should notlx* in the form of petitions butrather of reasoned recommenda¬tions.”Reasons consideredThe suggested form for the stu¬dent recommendations is as fol¬lows: “In my opinion, one of thebest teachers at Chicago is(blank), because . . Close atten¬tion will given to the kind ofreasons cited, Booth said.In his statement, Booth lament¬ed the lack of “a really good sys¬tem of sampling student opinion,”but said that “while we wait forsomeone to invent” one, he wouldlike to invite student opinion.All student statements on the Quantrells must be delivered toBooth’s office, Gates-Blake 132, bynoon Monday.Sinaiko opens loungeThe faculty lounge on thethird floor of Gates-Blake willbe open daily to students,starting this Monday, from3:30 to 5 in the afternoon, deanof the College Wayne C. Boothhas announced.The lounge has been made avail¬able to students during thesehours, Booth said, through theefforts of Herman L. Sinaiko,assistant professor of humanities.“THERE’S OBVIOUSLY a needfor it,” Sinaiko told the Maroon.The College, he said, needs a placecorresponding to the present grad¬uate divinity school coffee shopand the social science tea, wherestudents and faculty may meetinformally.The open-ounge policy will becontinued for the rest of thisquarter, Sinaiko said, with theexpectation that the lounge will beopen to students at the beginningof the autumn quarter.Coffee will cost 10c a cup, andcookies and other goodies will beavailable. take over campus power in anyrespect. “Each fraternity is highlyindividualized,” O’Keefe said, andthe interests of fraternity mem-1. by Robert F. Levey system’s gains in membership andLC s interest in fraternities seems to be on the upswing, interest, O’Keefe does not foreseeaccoiding to a recently issued report by Thomas O’Keefe, anything like a great conspiracy todirector of student activities.During the traditional winter quarter rush period, 96 firstyear men pledged fraternities, anincrease of 80 over the previous established fraternities could weak-iiw mniTiAv , en considerably within a year.”IN ADDITION, the total num- » . . . intprnret the finHine* bers generally lie in such activitiesber of active members at the end , , . “ 10 mterPret me findingsof winter quarter had increased of hls roP°rt> °’Koefe said that as the thealer and tutormg pro'to 242, an increase of 82 actives the maj°r reason for the increase jects, not in politics. “After all,”over autumn quarter. *n fraternity interest was the he noted, “the fraternities havePierce breeds them publicity job that the fraternities only one seat in the (StudentO’Keefe’s survey indicated that did during((ti!e .?.ld ™"ter Government) assembly.”p mn«i twtiin hmndinc quarters. The fraternities did a Tlie final part of O’Keefe's re¬good selling job, although I hate port dealt with the house averagesthat term, O Keefe said. of the various fraternities for theLOOKING DEEPER, O’Keefe past academic year. Beta Theta Pigreatest number of fraternity- saw resurgence of the fratemi- showed the way. followed in orderphiles, followed in order by Thomp- ty system as a direct result of the by Alpha Delta Phi, Zeta Betason house, East house (of New redoubled Interest that was shown Tau, Phi Delta Theta, Phi SigmaDorm), and Henderson house. in three or four houses that had Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Delta Upsi-The survey also indicated that keen d°inS badly. These houses in Ion, Psi Upsilon, and Phi Gammaoriginal positions on fraternities Particular, but the others as well, Delta, in that order. The ali-fra*were not maintained by last year’s managed also to keep their people, ternity scholastic average, the re-first year men. Of those who aetu- °’Keefe said. De-pledging, he port says, was 2.30 for last year,ally joined fraternities last spring, noted* b wa>’ down this year 35 That figure is just slightly below2/3 had indicated at registration compared to other years. the all-CoIlege men’s average ofthat they were not interested in ®ut *n sPhe of the fi’atemity 2.36.the most fertile breeding groundstor prospective fraternity mem¬bers were the houses of PierceTower. Tufts house had theRobie House contributionCommissioner, of City Plan¬ning Ira J. Bach announcedWednesday that the UnitedStates Steel Corporation hasdonated $1,000 to the FrankLloyd Wright Robie Houserestoration fund.The gift from US Steel was thefirm’s second to maintain RobieHouse, one of Wright’s originalcreations which is situated at thecorner of 58th and Woodlawn.Last year, US Steel also gave$1,000.BACH, WHO DOUBLES as thehead of the Robie House restora¬tion committee, said that “thegenerosity of the United StatesStool Foundation gives the com¬ mittee an approximate $55,000 athand which will be used to re¬build the roof, install a heatingplant, and weatherproof thehouse.”UC will still use it'This will enable the Universityof Chicago,” Bach said, “to usethe house on a temporary basisuntil the total sum (for completereconstruction) of $110,000 isrealized.”With the partial reconstructionof the house, Bach is hopeful thatmore people will come to visitit and will be moved to contributetoward the eventual complete res¬toration. The house is currentlyopen Sundays from 2 pm to 5 pm.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty Discount DO 3-6866CONTACT LENSESAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111— TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH —Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.24 HR. SERVICE CALLS — $3.00Tape Recorders — Phonographs — AmplifiersPhono Needles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cards joining. On the other hand, 2/3of those who had said that theywere interested did not followthrough.The total actives figure of 242represents the highest fraternitymembership total since springquarter of 1963, when there were255 students in the houses. Mem¬bership had declined quite steadilysince then, hitting a low of 160members during autumn quarterof this year.SIMILARLY, THIS year’spledge figure of 96 is the highestin recent memory. It easily sur¬passes the 71 pledges who signedup in spring quarter of 1963.After spring quarter initiationhas been completed, the chancesare that the combined fraternitymembership will go even higher.An exact count of spring initiatesis impossible at this time, sinceeach fraternity initiates at differ¬ent times and even those thathave already initiated are in somecases uncertain about final totals.Easy come, easy goO’Keefe’s report warns againstcomplacency in view of the en¬couraging figures, however. “Itwas notable,” the report reads,“that several fraternities hadrisen even in a single rush fromgreat weakness to strength andstability. It was evident also thatTheMonterey Instituteof Foreign Studies10 Week Summer SessionJUNE 21 to AUGUST 287 Week SessionFor Graduates OnlyJULY 12 to AUGUST 28LANGUAGES AND CIVILIZA¬TIONS of Chino, France, Germany,Italy, Japan, Russia and Spain(native instructors).Elementary and intermediatecourses, 16 units. Intermediateand advanced courses, 12 units.Upper division courses, 12 units.Graduate courses, 8 units.POLITICAL ARTS. Comprehensiveprograms combining fundamentalcourses with area studies on West¬ern Europe, Russia and EasternEurope, Far East, Near East, andLatin America.Bachelor of Arts and Master ofArts in languages and civilizationsand 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 asa Liberal Arts Institution.For information write to:Office of AdmissionsTHE MONTEREY INSTITUTEOF FOREIGN STUDIESPost Office Box 710Monterey, California, 93942Telephone 373-4779Area Code 408 m REVIEWfrx...4 publishers surveyof lit Hit's new iu the wayof unrequit ed readingIf you are planning a trip to Europe this June, by nowyou probably have your luggage plans calculated downto the last half-pound of wash-and-wear. We’re awareof the problem, but still want to make a special pleafor one small paperback (total weight: 8.937 ounces).The Dolphin Guide To Paris (Dolphin, $1.45) isn’tan absolutely necessary travel companion. But, espe¬cially if this is your first trip, we urge you to buy itanyway. Even if you plan to tour a great many cities,you should make it a point to know at least one ofthem really well. And Paris — well, it may not beSenator Fulbright’s favorite and we understand the“in” people are going to Oslo this year — but Parisis still more things to more men than any place elseon earth. William Davenport’s pocket-sized guide¬book will take you to see practically everything worthseeing and will show you where you can do practicallyeverything worth doing. It includes an astonishingamount of off-beat information on such things aslaundry and drug stores, and still manages to be asdelightfully sophisticated as the city it celebrates.# * *For some with less escapist plans for June, TheChecklist For A Perfect Wedding (Dolphin, 95tf) isrecommended as a cure for frayed nerves, as a mediatorbetween emotional brides-to-be and their, emotionalmothers, and as an accurate, sanity-saving guide to theinnumerable details that go into planning a wedding.Mrs. Follett’s book is correct, complete, and in chrono¬logical order, and neither the future bride nor hermother should have to struggle along without it. Forfuture bridegrooms, we advance two suggestions.First, if you get a copy, you’ll at least know why younever get to see the girl you are about to marry.Second, despite all evidence to the contrary, you willplay a fairly important supporting role at your wed¬ding, and you will find the checklists helpful too.# # #Our final choice for pre-graduation reading is arecognized classic. In fact, the title of William H.Whyte’s book, The Organization Man (Anchor, $1.45),has so firm a place in our language that it may comeas a surprise to be reminded that it was first publishedless than 10 years ago. In the intervening years, theway of life Mr. Whyte describes has become the wayof life for most middle-class Americans. Going tograduate school instead of directly into industry?“Blood brother to the business trainee off to joinDu Pont,” Mr. Whyte writes, “is the seminary studentwho will end up in the church hierarchy, the doctorheaded for the corporate clinic, the physics Ph.D. ina government laboratory, the intellectual on the foun¬dation-sponsored team project, the engineering gradu¬ate in the huge drafting room at Lockheed, the youngapprentice in a Wall Street law factory.”Whether or not The Organization Man describesthe kind of life you want to lead, it is absorbing, im¬portant reading for anyone interested in Americansociety as it is today.r puof this column. Doubleday Anchor Books, S77 Park Avenue,New York City and Doubleday & Company, Inc., Garden City.New York. You’ll find them all at one of the beet equippedbooksellers in the country — your own college store.May 7, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • *wAlums planning annual bash SDS pldtlS fl©W VlGt proteststhe alumni office calls a “fittingdose” to a “memorable reunion.”PERSONALRide needed to Madison, Wisconsin,anytime with in 10 days. Call DebbieCohen, x3773.Plans are currently underway for UC’s annual alumni re¬union, a long weekend of dinners, drinks, get-togethers, andpanel discussions.This year’s reunion, which will get under way on Thursday,June 10 and wind up on Saturday, Ranlet Lincoln, director o fJune 12 will feature, among other alumni affairs, will moderate.. „... Following the interfraternitythings, a panel discussion a sing on Saturday night, the alumnifour UC professors will forecas w-jj procee(j to the Quadrangleproblems forthcoming in the nex £jub where a band and a bar willdecade, the annual interfraternity h5 h]ight the <.1965 Fling,” whichsing, and the annual alumni tho n]nmn; nffu.p rails; a “fittingawards, citations to UC’s most ex¬emplary alumni which will bebestowed by president George W.Beadle.PARTICIPANTS IN the paneldiscussion, scheduled for 10 am inthe law school auditorium onSaturday, are Frank P. Hixon dis¬tinguished service professor ofphysics Samuel K. Allison; profes-sor of education, psychology, Round Trip to N.Y. by chartered buspsychiatry, and human develop- }£j St EPtSS’iffiSment Bruno Bettelheim; professor nite if desired. Inquire Int House Assoc.,of sociology Philip M. Hauser; and FA 4-8200 -A/ib.bolcrm HwtinouUhrd Chartered bus to Shakespeare FestivalAlbert Michelson Ctistinguisnea Stratford, Ont. July 9-ll, $15 roundservice professor of history and trip. Tickets reserved for JULIUS CAE-political science Hans Morgenthau. |ar ^0, g^RYjv £25. beetoo-Friday, 6 pm, return Sunday evening.Call Int House Assoc., FA 4-8200, eve¬ning^Europe this summer? FLY TWA DAILYnon-top jets to London. Campus rep.:M. Lavinsky, MI 3-6000.European Travelers: There are someseats available on the SG charter June23 - Sept. 16. Only $250 from New Yorkto London and return. (From Chicago,$315.)SPRING IS HERE. ALL-PURPOSE RIOT,FRI. NOON, CENTER OF MAIN QUAD.B.Y.O,Enjoy gracious summer living at AlphaDelt. Singles and doubles at low rates.Call House Manager at PL 2-9718.Going to Europe this summer? Lookingfor a traveling companion? Call Rik Bro¬dy, New Dorms, 3225x.WRITERS’ WORKSHOP. PL 2-8377."MAROON people-grabber classifiedswork too damn well,” says I. RayTapartmentseller. "I got 17 calls between7:30 and 8 am." You too can be awak¬ened by hordes of desperate apartmentseekers. Just call MI 3-0600. ext. 3265.If you’re a student, please drop up tothird floor Ida Noyes and pay in ad¬vance BEFORE NOON the day beforepublication. The recently founded UC chap¬ter of Students for a DemocraticSociety (SDS) anounced this weekthat it is planning a Chicagodemonstration during the last halfon May, to protest the war inVietnam.Peter Slocum, a spokesman forthe group, said that the demon¬stration will entail a marchthrough the Loop, a picket around the Federal Building, a rally, and“some form of civil disobedience.”UC SDS’ PLANS follow a marchon Washington, which was stagedover the Easter weekend in pro¬test to the administration’s policiesin Southeast Asia. During theWashington march, it was the UCcontingent, a group of 300 out ofthe total of 20,000 that partici¬pated, that suggested and earned out a sit-in in front of the WhileHouse to protest more fully Uiepolicy of the US.Nevertheless, Slocum said that“UC SDS does not regard theWashington march as the culmina¬tion of its activities, but the be¬ginning.” He added that all thoseinterested in helping UC SDSto organize the late-May marchare asked to call Slocum at 1017Pierce Tower, FA 4-9500.CLASSI l» ADSWANTEDThe SUMMER ACTIVITIES bul¬letin is currently being compiledby the office of student octivities.Announcements of octivities opento the University community shouldbe sent to Activities bulletin, officeof student activities, Ida Noyeshall, by next Thursday.Organizations or departmentsplanning activities but still unsureof the details should notify studentactivities to that effect, so thaton extension of deadlines can bearranged.Complete LineOf Pet AndAquarium Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012You won’t believe itUntil you hear it.You may not believe itWhen you do hear it.The KLH Model Eleven,The phonographOf tomorrow, today.Just 28 pounds of breathtaking performance!This is the famous KLH Model Eleven StereoPortable — the most copied phonograph inAmerica today. Designed and built by a leader inhigh fidelity to bring you incredibly clean per¬formance of your favorite music. Here, for thefirst time, is tone quality that only the mostexpensive consoles can equal — within the sizeand cost of a portable! Take your favorite musicwith you, wherever you go, with the KLH ModelEleven — the phonograph of tomorrow, today.KLH Model Eleven Portable Stereophonic Phonograph ...Suggested Retail■ 2 revolutionary full-range KLH speaker systems necan be separated up to 40 ft., deliver performanceyou have never heard before in a system of this size.■ 20 watt music power, solid state amplifierspecially created by KLH to drive the new speakers.■ Special KLH 4-speed automatic turntable (by Garrard)plays all records — Stereo and Mono.■ Pickering V-15 magnetic pickup with diamond stylus.■ Inputs for a tuner or tape recorder. (■ Separate bass and treble gain controls.■ Luggage-styled case of rugged vinyl-dad ‘Contourlite*.■ Unique 5 year guarantee, including parts and labor.KLH — Exceptional (Never just acceptable)- 7 Day Free Home TrialUntil you actually hear the KLH Model 11, you won’t believe that anyinstrument so small can have such spectacular sound quality. Sowe've arranged a Special Home Trial Offer. Listen to the Model 11In your own home for 7 days. There’s no risk, no obligation. Just7 days of beautiful music. If you aren’t convinced that the 11 iseverything we say it is, just tell us so and we’ll take it back withno questions asked. For further information, just give us a call.M usicraft120 E. Oak DE 7-4150Mon. fir Thurs. 10-9; Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10-4Closed SundayCall or Visit for Further information Reserved parking space nr. ad. bldg,sum. qtr. (or now-Aug. 20). Will subletspace while you’re on leave or vacation.X3298.Wanted: room for summer in exchangefor babysitting. DO 3-9293, rm. 209.2 female roomates for summer. Wellfurn. apt., very close to campus. $53 mo.Call 363-7147.Apt. — $60 bonus for 5 bedim, apt. or2 3-bedrm. apts. for June or Sept. Call1221 or 1303 New Dorm.One male roommate to share 4-rm. apt.for summer, possibly next yr. 54th & El-lis. Call 684-3588.Apt. — 6 or more rooms — Sept. on.Will take summer. Call B. J., MI 3-6000,814, 446, 834.Female roommate for beautiful 6-rm.summer sublet; available now. Own room.BU 8-0675. Summer sublet — 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms,furn. 752-1335.Cool, 6 rm.. 2 baths, fully furn. Black-stone nr. 55th. Avail. June 9 thru Sept.1. 667-2683.SAMUEL A. BELL“But# Shell From HeirSINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-SI 50"BUDGETWISE"AAA Approved: 24-hourSwitchboard.Maid Service: each roomwith own bath.Special student rates:$180.00/qtr.Special daily, weekly andmonthly rates.BROADVIEW HOTEL5540 Hyde Park Blvd.FA 4-8800You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411CHICAGO MAROON • May 7, 1965 PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PARK BLVD.DELIVERY Crtable serviceKE C-OfiOfi — KE 6-3891Chicken - SandwichesPizza CrItalian Foods Furn. 4-room apt. June 10-Sept. 15,near campus. Call 363-4344.4-rm. furn. apt. Avail, late Jxme. 51st &Dorchester. 684-4189 aft. 4.Student family only — June 1 to Oct. 1.3 bedrms., 2 baths, can accommodate 7,crib, fully equipped, near lake, nice bldg,with playground. $135 plus util, permonth. PH 493-4972.Large 2 bedrm., study, dining rm.,living rm., kitchen. Furn. apt. Moderateprice, available June 16-Aug. 20. 324-5547.6 RMS., well furn., 54th & Harper,June thru Aug. 752-6477. Partly furn. apt. large rms„ 2 masterbedrooms, natural wood burning fire¬place, suitable for professional or busi¬ness people. Also 3>i rms. Call between8-10 am., 6-9 pm, MU 4-8222,Need a place to live for the summer?We've got rooms for 2 guys, private bed¬rooms, near Untv. & Lake. $40 mo Call684-8120 after 6 pm.100 YR. OLD, modernized, furnished,2 bdrm. farmhouse. Middle of 15 woodedacres, l 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.FOR SALETwo females seek one or two others forsummer apt. with option for fall. 288-0714.SUBLETLarge 3>2 rm. furn. apt — June 13-Sept. .1 Paid utilities. Call 684-6978 after4 pm.Apt. to sublet. Option for next year, 4large rooms, $115. 54th & Greenwood.643-6881.1 male, completely furnished, across Uni¬versity Ave. from Pierce. June 15 - Sept.15. New Dorms 3228, 3221. or 3317.Apartment, 54th & University, 5 rooms,furnished, $115 mo., available June 15-Sept. 15. call X3774, Chris or Vicki.SUMMER SUBLET — 5428 S. Wood lawnAve. (Apt. 3C) 4*2 furn. rooms — CHEAP.Call 667-2740.YOU WON’T BELIEVE THIS:6 rm. apt. incl. 2 bath, walk-in closets.3 dbl. beds, sun porch; nr. shopping cen¬ter, breezy, sexy. $115 mo. June-Oct.NO 7-1824 In eve.MAMA WOULD PLOTZ 4 rooms, near campus. 2 sunporches, aircond., Furn. $130. MI 3-8262 aft. 6HELP WANTEDRestaurant help wanted: waitresses, dish¬washers, fountain men. grill men. Eve¬ning and afternoon work. Mr. Biggs. 1440E. 57th St.. 684-9398.Camp Cnslrs. to work at CAMP KENICOin Conn. Berkshires. 6 male min. age 20."ALSO" Spelsts. — Riflry., Archery,Fencing. Photog., Golf. Write S. Green-baum, 852 E. 57th St. for infor. & appl.or call 752-5868. 10-11.TYPING A\1) EDITINGRussian. Old7:00. 869-2807. Church-Slavonic; afterFOR RENTCool 3*2 rm bsmt. apt. from June. Idealfor 2 sudents; 643-0221. 288-6757.Unfurn. apt. 6 large rooms, naturalwood burning fireplace, 3 large bedrooms,4 big clothes closets, bookcases, linenclosets, pantry. Suitable for business orprofessional people. Garage $10 extra.Call between 8-10 am., 6-9 pm. MU 4- MOTORBIKE — 3 horsepower, top speedaround 45 mph. Will sell for $50 (maybeless). Conr.aot K K. X2898 days; 493 • ’ 129nights.PHONOGRAPH Newcomb Portable $12.50.Call Lefton, rm. 565, FA 4-8200.NO LUCK HOUSE HUNTING IN HYDEPARK? Ideal homes available for facultyand new Ph D’s at sensible prices. Liveamid cherry blossoms, robins, and acresof green space only 15 minutes from theU. of C. A few high quality homes willbe for sale this spring and summer: allless than 10 years old. Progressive neigh¬borhood. active in community affairs,school problems, etc. For further dataphone SA 1-9064.LOUDSPEAKER: Janszen 300. $80 MU4-1357.House, 52nd & Kenwood; 11-rm framehouse, 3 open fireplaces, new gasfurnace, humidifier, fenced in yard.$3,000 down, 643-2957.a*% Mirrors, chairs, tables, drapes, and rugs.Must sell. Call 643-2630.MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259I ^ enter’ a newworld ofdiningpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chjcken£616 E. 71s t ST.PHONE 483-1668 EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscountSPECIAL PHOTO SALEWhile they lastSlide Boxes—List $2.98, now $1.98B. C. Flash Guns—List $4.95, now $3.95Electronic Flash Guns—List $24.95, now $14.95Also remember we develop color slides in 24 hoursThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.MOLIERE/S UNIVERSITY THEATREpresentsTARTUFFEMAJOR SPRING PRODUCTIONdirected by KENNETH NORTHCOTTFRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAYMay 14, 15, 16 — 8:30 pmHutchinson Commons$2.50 — Students $2.00MUSIC REVIEWNot with a bang, butAn effective way to con¬clude an orchestral seasonmight be with an unusualwork or with a shattering per-formance. Had the Chicago Sym¬phony season been cut one weekshort, Jean Martinon would haveattained both, for his deft per-formance of Haydn’s rarelymounted oratorio The Seasonsproved to be his most consistentlyexciting afternoon of the season.Unfortunately, he hopped on thepodium once too often.It is fun to muse on how hemight have chosen the programfor his farewell. Perhaps he notedthat the first two years of hisreign had seen performances ofthe last three Tchaikovsky sym¬phonies and all of those byBrahms (plus the four concerti,the Haydn Variations, and theRequiem), but only seven of theBeethoven cycle. How could he re¬sist filling in the hole of the do¬nut, especially when at the samelime he could protect himselffrom the charge of neglecting hiscliches?Even in mid-season, these de¬cent performances of the Bee¬thoven Second and Third wouldhave been slightly irritating. Butwhat is mildly annoying at teatime can be disastrous at the rail¬road station. Performances suchas these are not the stuff fromwhence tearful partings spring.AT TIMES (notably the begin¬ ning of the Allegro eon brio ofthe Second) the performance hasthe tightness and vigor of his bestMozart. And when confrontedwith that symphony’s Adagioopening, he was able to blend thestrands of colors in just the rightway.But in many other passages, hehad the insight of a metronome.In general, his dynamics fell intotwo distinct levels, piano andforte, both of which were too loud.As a result, in order to build toa climax at the end of the firstmovement of the Second, he hadto add a deerescendo before hecould get louder.Furthermore, the first twomovements of the Eroica wereemotionally expurgated. He re¬jected the music’s savageness:whenever he came to one of Bee¬thoven’s massive dissonances, hesoftened it, as if hoping to sneakit past the border guards. Thefuneral march lacked weight, and,in fact, the second section sound¬ed downright jolly.The last two movements weremuch better, although convention¬al. One keeps wondering: shoulda conductor repeat these over¬played masterpieces if he hasnothing new to say?THIS SEASON, like last year’s,permits only one major general¬ization about the maestro: he isunpredictable. His repertoireranges from Mozart to Martinu,UC'ers open new musical“Hands Around in Love,” amusical version of ArthurSchnitzler’s Reigen, opens nextThursday at the AllertonI Iotel.Like “Six Ages of Man,” whichclosed two weeks ago, “HandsAround in Love” is the productof the talents of five former UCpersonnel.STEPHEN BROWN, WHOwr ote the book and the lyrics, isa graduate student in the UC de¬partment of English. In addition to“Hands Around” and “Six Ages,”Brown has written “Slice of Para¬dise,” which was presented by UTlast year.Robert Applebaum, the compos¬er of the show, is in the UC MATprogram. His credits include theUC productions of “Sing Out,Sweet Rock,” “Aside From AllThat,” and “Slice of Paradise.”Mast: long experienceGerald Mast, the director, beganacting in UC productions in 1957.He has since directed the UC shows“The Billy Barnes Revue,” “PalJoey,” and “Good News.” He cur¬rently teaches English at NYU.Ken Pierce, the musical director, is in the UC committee on gener¬al studies in the humanities. Inaddition to acting as music di¬rector for “Pal Joey,” “GoodNews,” and “Slice of Paradise,”Pierce was editor-in-chief of theMaroon in 1960-61.Franklyn Broude, the executiveproducer, has taught at UC. In1957 he initiated an 18-monthseries of jazz concerts on campus,and he produced, with Pierce, the1960 Court Theatre Concert Series.A dirty play“Hands Around in Love” is themost recent metamorphosis ofSchnitzler’s Reigen. In ten scenes,the play presents successive af¬fairs between a whore and asoldier, the soldier and a maid, themand and a young gentleman, andso on, until the circle is complete.BROWN’S MUSICAL versionparallels this circular plot, but itadds twelve songs, changes thecharacters from 1890 Viennese tocontemporary Americans, and addscomedy to Schnitzler’s studies ofcharacter.“Hands Around in Love” will bepresented at the Allerton Hotel,701 N. Michigan, starting May 13.Deporment of MusicSaturday, May 8 — Law School Auditorium — 8:30 P.M.CHESTER MILOSOVICH, ClarinetistTuesday, May 11 —Mandel Hall — 8:30 P.M.CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERS GROUPMusic of Edgard Varese — to honor his 80th yearAdm.: $1; students, 50c (UC students free with special ticket)Tickets at Music Dept.UNIVERSALARMY STORE“The universe in studentwear for campus andcamping.*9Levis - Tennis ShoesAN OUTFIT FROMTOP TO TOE1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856 A Complete Source ofARTISTS* MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESPICTURE FRAMINGMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111the One, the Only-the Originalforeign car hospital & clinichome of team winkauthorized BMC sales and service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113 with only infrequent excursionsinto the more extreme realms ofBach, Berg, Varese, and Vivaldi.Yet his wine and vingar are aptto turn up anywhere in this vastterrain. He can toss off a divert¬ing reading of Mozart’s Serenadefor Thirteen Winds and bore usto jeers with a pedestrian Haff-ner Symphony.He gives nearly devotional per¬formances of his compositionteacher Roussel, yet his renditionof his own Concerto Lyrique wascuriously indifferent. Expectationsaroused by his nose-thumbinglyunconventional Brahms Thirdwere reversed by his middle-of-the-road liberal approach to theRequiem.What is puzzling is that Mar¬tinon himself seems unaware ofhis strengths and weaknesses. Inhis first two years, he has per¬formed only two works each byBartok, Debussy, and Ravel, andonly one by Honegger — and theyhave all been superb. Yet he hasthrust upon us versions of nineworks (two of them twice) byBrahms, a compaser for whom hehas negligible sympathy. If hewould only realize that a good per¬formance of Honegger’s Joan ofAre would be more rewardingthan a draggy one of the Ger¬man Requiem!Like last year, the performanceof works previously ignored bythe orchestra increased; in fact,there were four American pre¬mieres (not counting the world pre¬mieres and the American premiereat his special UC concerts). Forthis, Martinon deserves credit.BUT HE SIMULTANEOUSLYdecreased the number of compos¬ers represented, not to give usdeeper insight into the less fa¬miliar, but rather to maintain orincrease the dosage of Beethoven,Brahms, and Tchaikovsky. Per¬haps he felt guilty about servingtoo much caviar and added somemore roast beef to keep everyonehealthy.And maybe he’s right: maybeyou can’t live without the proteinof roast beef. But when it’s servedsort of grey with congealed gravy,I’d rather take my chances withthe cavier.Peter RabinowitzHARPERLiQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported ond domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4=!i’fHY 3-6800CoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302May 7 to May 17Annual SaleBeauty MistSeamless HosieryNationally AdvertisedFlawless FitRegularly $1.00 per pairNow only 79C6 pairs only $4.50University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. Edgar Varese visits;American composer EdgarVarese will speak with stu¬dents in the Ida Noyes LibraryMonday at 2 pm, in connec¬tion with the celebration of his80th birthday.Varese has been a leading musi¬cal radical since before the twen¬ties, and even now is consideredby many to be the “grandfatherof avant-gard music.” His Arcana,which was given its first Chicagoperformance by the Chicago Sym¬phony in their special concert atMendal Hall in March, proved tobe such a success that it was lateradded to the orchestra’s regularsubscription concerts.Varese will be on campus toattend the sepical birthday concertgiven by the Contemporary Cham¬ber Players (CCP), under the di¬rection of Ralph Shapey. Theconcert, to be given on Tuesday,May 11, in Mandel Hall, will in¬clude the same works performedby the CCP in their recent Carne¬gie Hall concert: Octamlre, Inte- CCP, clarinetist playgrides, Poe me Electr onique, andDeserts.On Saturday, May 8, clarinetistChester Milosovich, a member ofthe CCP, will give a recital inthe Law School Auditorium. In¬cluded on the program will beBr ahms Sonata in F Minor, Kre-nek’s Monologue, Berg’s FourPieces, Debussy’s Rhapsody, andWeber’s Grand Duo Concertant.Both concerts begin at 8:30.Tickets are $1; 50c for students.Free tickets are available to UCstudents at the music department,5802 Woodlawn, until 4 pm theday of the concert. There will beno char ge for the discussion withVarese.JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAP/./The HENLEYbykeeps you in good shape!Jayson’s casual-styling clicks with thishandsome knit shirt. Made of 100% finecombed cotton mesh for built-in comfort.Newest collarless neck keeps you cooler,too. Wear the Henley in or over yourslacks. In a wide variety of smart,solid tones with contrasting trim.THE STORE FOR MENM6Mr'S**©mutt atth ©atttpu* &ljmtin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100May 7, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Crazy flic dayMOVIE COLUMNToday is crazy flic day. At theClark, Hitchcock’s THE BIRDSis come: Hitch’s most explicit andextreme statement of man’s gen¬eral guilt, and his reductio adabsui-dimi of the higher logic ofapparently irrational events.At DocFilms another night of(shall I tell?) Underground Ex-peri mentals, 6 of them. Head¬liners: Bruce (COSMIC RAY •Conners’ A MOVIE, which is notsuitable for visiting parents:James (THE PLEASURE GAR¬DEN ) Broughton’s MOTHER’SDAY, made while he was marriedto Pauline Kael, and rumored tocontain an appearance by Ameri¬ca’s most outrageously over ratedmovie reviewer, Miss K; and Ed¬win S. (THE GREAT TRAINROBBERY) Porter’s 1903 eroticfantasy. THE DREAM OF AWELSH RAREBIT FIEND; withthree other minor delights, noneessential, all enjoyable. Have abeer before you come.AT DOCFILMS Saturday: UCpremier of Sir Carol Reed’s onlymasterpiece, THE THIRD MAN,screenplay by Graham Greene,with Orson Welles are HarryLime, Joseph Cotten, Trevor How¬ard, zither music, et al. Corrupt,moody, romantic, a visual tourde force and one for Welles too,the film has all the unforgettablequalities of great cinema. In ad¬dition, it provides a challengingallegorical story — worth seeingon a big screen without commer¬cials.Dovvnton: Frankenheimer triesagain, with THE TRAIN; com¬bination of greats (Preminger,Duke Wayne, World War II > inHARM’S WAY, should be bossJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 flic; ZORBA DE GRIKK stillavailable, still a gas; John Ford’slatest Irish conception, YOUNGCASSIDY, has 18 minutes of Fordfootage; THAT MAN FROM RIOsomewhere on 1he Near Northcircuit.Sunday is Classics day, as myaunt in Cleveland used to say,very peculiar woman, too . . .W. C. Fields in George Cukor'sDAVID COPPERFIELD, with—gasp—Freddy Bartholomew, nice¬ly upstaged by the old master.At the Clark.Tuesday is Corny Movie Nite.DocFilms will show the corniestmovie ever made: CASABLANCA,by Curtiz. Flic has HumphreyBogart, Ingrid Bergman, sneakyPeter Lorre, Sydney Greenstreetand his fly swatter, lecherousClaude Rains, Dooley Wilson andhis Mad Swing Band, and everyWarner Bros, bit player on thelot. What more is there to say?Thursday: Foreign Art Movieday. Manual Oti’s 1956 Spanishintellectual movie, FEDRA, at theArt Institute. It’s the only timeand place you’ll get to see it. No¬body knows yet how good it is, sotake your chances.NOTICE: TO EVERYONEWHO OBJECTS TO THE HYDEPARK’S high prices and crummyprogramming (but then, nobodyprograms as well as DocFilms):the only thing to do is write let¬ters of complaint and protest tothe theatre owners, KohlburgTheatres, 1322 S. Wabash; tell’em your grievances . . . maybethey’ll close the place. Good luck.Next best thing: boycott the place,not too difficult in view of themoovees they’ve been showinglately.Elisha Cook, Jr,Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856mTESTu;HIT TT. La prMettlo’ft flnahclks quiToiJ*donnez 6 votre famille aujourd’huidevra lui 6tre procure d’una autrefagon demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certalnement accompli* cettet&che * votra plage,,£n !anT3ue reprfiaWint local de la SunLife, puis-je voua i un momenj devotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood, Jr„ CLUHyde Park Bank Buildieg, Chicago 15, HI.FAIrfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY *The WISE OWL has often been askedwhat to do ivith winter clothing oncespring Juts come.HE REPLIES: Store them safely. Havefurs and woolens moth-proofed, protectedand stored byJhsL TTLcvc £aooIl 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 1917 Culture CalendarConcertsCONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERSENSEMBLE OF UC: Ralph Shapey,oond. An all-Varese program featuringOctandre, Integrates, Poeme. Eleetron-ique, and Deserts. May U at 8:30. $1,students 50c. Mandel Hall.MUSICAL SOCIETY: May 7 at 8 30 inIda Noyes Library. Free.DanceILLINOIS BALLET: Richard Ellis andChristine Du Boulay, Dirs. with BirutlBarodicaite, Pamela Johnson, and DomOrejudos. Three ballets by Chicagochoreographers — Orejudos: “The StoneMaidens" and “Thais”; Montaign: “ConGioco.” May 9 at 2:30 pm. Francis ParkerAuditorium, 330 Webster. Adm. charge.ExhibitsHOHENBERG ANI» IIAYDON: non-ob-Jective abstract paintings. At MargueriteGallery, 102 E. Oak S. Chicago.68TII ANNUAL EXHIBITION OF CHI¬CAGO & VICINITY FESTIVAL: At theArt Institute thru May 23.RICHARD LIPPOI.D: 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 lithos In small editions andsome inexpensive posters. Sat. 11-6. Ben¬jamin Galleries, 900 N. Michigan.RUTH DUCKWORTH and NANCY BER¬RYMAN: Recent work. At CraftsmansGallery. Daily 1-6; Sat. & Sun., 2-5. 1763N. Sedgwick.Folk MusicNEW LOST CITY RAMBLERS andMAY'BELLE CARTER: A concert spon¬sored by the UC Folklore Society. May14 at 8:15. Mandel Hall. $2.EARL ROBINSON: composer and folk¬lorist in an informal concert. May 7 at8:15. Old Town School of Folk Music,333 W. North Ave. Admission free.MARTHA SCHLAMME: at Hillel House,sponsored by FOTA. May 8 at 8:30.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 Chlesa” anda Jazz Te Deum. May 9 at 3:30. Rocke¬feller Chapel. Free.AL HIRT: May 8 at 8:30 *3 GroveTHermann Hall, I1T.RecitalsSVIATOSLAV RICHTER: Pianist Mav15 at 8:30, May 23 at 2:30. $3.50-6.50.Orchestra Hall. 216 S. Michigan.TheatreHANDS AROUND IN LOVE The musi¬cal version of La Ronde. Allerton HotelTheatre In the Clouds, 701 N. Michigan,Expert Service on All BrandsHI-FI STEREOFree Pick-up, & DeliveryFree EstimatesCall 521-0460PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhoir stylists at5242 Hyde Park Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710% Student. DiscountToday'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDANM995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL 9 and 1 pm Tues. - Sat.; 4 and 9 pm.Sun. Weekdays $2.65; Fri. and Sat. $2.95.SU 7-4200.THE WRECKING BALL: Second Cityreturns with the same review, but anew New York-ish cast. Nightly 9 and11; Sat., 9, 11, and 1. Tickets $2; Fri.and Sat. $2.50. Closed Mondays. Tele¬phone reservations accepted. At 1846N. Wells. DE 7-3992.DUTCHMAN (LeRoi Jones); HOMEFREE (Lanford Wilson); PICNIC ONTHE BATTLEFIELD (Fernando Arra-bal): Three one-act plays by contempo¬rary authors, directed by Selma (Mrs.Robert) Sickinger. Hull House Theatre.3212 N. Broadway. Weekends thru July10. Fri. and Sat. at 8:30; Sun. at 7:30.Tickets Fri. and Sat. are $3.40, $3 onSun. Ticket information 348-8330.THE LOWER DEPTHS: by Maxim Gorki.At the Last Stage. 1506 E. 51st St. May7. 8. 9. 14. 15, 16. Fri. and Sat. at 8:30,Sun. at 7:30. Tickets Fri. and Sat. $2,Sun. $1.50. OA 4-4200.THE GAME THEATRE: Paul Sills (ofSecond City), dir. You can either ob¬ serve or participate in this new. imnrovisational theatre. $2 for either observersor participants. Saturdays, from 8 30 an1935 N. Sedgwick. 642-4198.original New York Production. OpensApril 7 at the Harper Theater. 5238 sHarper. Nightly at 8:30, Sat. 7 and 10 is'Sun. 2:30 and 7:30. Closed Mon. Niirhtiv$3. Fri. and Sat. $3.90.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 Slowlk, with DoloresSutton in the title role. May 7-29. Sun -Thurs. 7:30; Fri. & Sat. 8:30. Nlghtlv, $3Fri. & Sat., $3.50. Student discount of50c. Goodman Theatre, Monroe and Co¬lumbus. CE 6-2337.THEATER: Nathan de Welse. a Germanplay, presented by the Graduate Ger¬manics Club at Reynolds Chib Theater8 pm, $1.50. Also on Saturday, 2 pm, andSunday, 8 pm.Calendar of EventsFriday, May 7CONFERENCE: “Problems of Urban Re¬newal," various experts participating,law school auditorium, 11:30 am.VARSITY TENNIS MATCH: Chicago In¬tercollegiate Championships, varsitycourts, 1:30 pm.SEMINAR: “The Control of Protein Syn¬thesis at the Ribosomal Level,” HansNoll, professor of biology, NorthwesternUniversity, Research Institute 480, 4 pm.LECTURE AND DISCUSSION: “TheGreatest Sermon for the Smallest Crowd."John J. Klwiet, associate professor ofchurch history, Northern Baptist Theo¬logical Seminary, sponsored by Intervar¬sity Christian Fellowship, Ida Noyes,7:30 pm.SABBATH SERVICES: Hillel. 7:30 pm.LECTURE: “Moral Dialectic in Dostoyev¬sky's Crime and Punishment.” EdwardWasiolek. professor of English and Slaviclanguages and literature, Downtown Cen¬ter, 64 E. Lake, 8 pm.CONCERT: Musical Society. Ida Noyes,8 pm.HILLEL FIRESIDE: “The Problem ofContinuity of Jewish History," Haim Hil¬lel Ban-Sasson. Hebrew University, Jeru¬salem, Hillel, 8:30 pm.Saturday, May 8VARSITY TENNIS MATCH: ChicagoIntercollegiate Championship, varsitycourts, 9 am and 5 pm.LECTURE SERIES: “Heme Proteins.”“Cytochrome C-Structure, Evolution, andCationic Behavior," Emanuel Margollash,professorial lecturer, dept, of biochemis¬try. Abbott 101, 10 am. VARSITY BASEBALL GAMES: UC vsChicago Teachers College, two gamesStagg Field, 1 pm.JAZZ CONCERT: Ad Hoc Jazz Society ofChicago, admission free, BJ lounge, 2pm.CONCERT: Martha Schlamme sings folksongs, most of them Yiddish and Hebrewwith selections from Kurt Weill, Hlllcil8:30 pm.Sunday, May 9RADIO: “From the Midway," “Two Cen¬turies of Negro Appeal for Justice," JohnHope Franklin, professor of history,WFMF, 7 am.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins.University Carillonneur, RockefellerChapel, 12:15 pm.CONCERT: Ame:lcan Jazz Mass, Rocke¬feller Chapel, 3:30 pm.RADIO SERIES: “Chicago Dialogue"Philip M. Hauser, professor of sociology,discusses Chicago's technological future,WIND. 7:05 pm.BRIDGE: Ida Noyes, 7:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes. 7:30 pmMEETING: SDS, Ida Noyes, 8 pmRADIO: WUCB “Soulstream” Jazz pro¬gram; 10 pm to midnight.Monday, May 10LECTURE: “Machiavellian Aspects ofPost-Renaissance Ideology,” John G. A.Poooek, department of political science,University of Canterbury, New Zealand,Classics 10, 3:30 pm.MONDAY LECTURE: “The Impact ofthe Concept of Culture on the Conceptof Man,” Clifford Geertz, professor ofanthropology, law school auditorium,8 pm.TRAVELING?Get Nearly FreeTRANSPORTATIONBy Driving a Car to California,Salt Lake, EastArizona, Seattle,ALL CITIESMinimum age 2 (HE 9-2364AUTO DRIVEAWAY CO.343 S. DEARBORN ST.FREE BOOKLET"HELPFUL EMPLOYMENT INFORMATION"A marvelous free booklet giving college girls professional advice andcountless job-hunting tips to make your career search easier andmore successful. To receive this booklet absolutely free, without ob¬ligation, just clip and moil this coupon to College Division, StarEmployment Service, Inc., 116 S. Michigan, Chicago 3, III.Please send me, FREE, the booklet "Helpful Employment Information."Nome .StreetCity Phone • •TAhSAM-AfcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062Inter Club & I, F. CouncilsALL CAMPUSPARTYFriday, May 79 pm - 1 amband and barPsi U House5639 University dark tfieatr«50 0 »«•IIlima*tor college studentswith i.d. card• different doublefeatures daily• open dau it to da o n• little gal-leryfor gals only3 fri. 7—“the birds,” “thevisit”sat. 8—“baby the rain mustfall,” “love has manyfaces”sun. 9—"david copperfield”“great expectations”mon. 10—“the execution¬ers,” “It takes a thief”tues. 11—"soldier in therain,” “the thin redline”wed. 12—“brigadoon,”“student prince”thurs. 12—“frightenedcity,” “13 west street” ;dork & modisonfr 2-2843B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATIONand FOTApresentMARTHASCHLAMMEin a program of Yiddish and Hebrew songs, selectionsfrom Kurt Weill and folk music from many landsSaturday, May 8 — 8:30 pmCloister Club, Ida Noyes, 1212 E. 59th St.Admission Hillel Affiliates $1.50 — $2.00 all othersTickets on .sale now at Hillel House, 5715 HoudlannMR. BIGG'S“The Friendly Restaurant991440 E. 57th St.We would like to thank the Students and Faculty of the University ofChicago for making our Grand Opening Week o real success. We hopeMR. BIGG'S hos pleased you and CONTINUED PATRONAGE isGREATLY APPRECIATED.Featuring:Mr. Bigg's Burger — Vz lb. choice Beef served on Rosen's Ryewith French Fries ond our own Chef's Salad $1.35with cheese — 10c additionalPoor Boy's Sandwich — served on Torpedo Roll with Beef, Hamond Cheese with all the trimmings. If you ore hungry you'llenjoy this $1.25"Hoagie," "Zep," "Hero," "Submarine" — served on crustyFrench Bread filled with loads of Bologna, Salami, Swiss Cheese,American Cheese, Lettuce, Tomatoes, Onions, Oil, Oregano, etc.Hot Peppers optional, and it's PILED A MILE HIGH 89We Feature Complete, Full Course Dinners From$1.65 to $1.95BRUNCH SPECIAL(Saturday and Sunday from 1 1 am to 2 pm)1. Juice2. 2 eggs scrambled in cream3. Corn mush smothered in maple syrup4. Toast5. 3 sausages, bacon or ham6. Coffee, "bottomless cup"*1.25 per personMR. PIZZAWE DELIVER —CARRY OUTSHY 3-8282DELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENSandwiches and Ch. Broiled HamburgersPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 6 PartySausoge 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper . .. .1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic ...... 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Olive ... 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vz ond Vz 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients . . . . .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pizza 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacon 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pizza 2.50(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers) 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.001465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — Fri. to 3:00 a.Sat. to 3:00 a.m. — Open 2 p.m. Sundays Patronize Our Advertisers MAROON WEEKEND GOIDETIKI TOPICSCIRALSHOUSE OF TIKIIs proud to offer all of ourfrierds 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 A.M. to 3 A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-7585 BRINGTHISCOUPON SPECIAL STUDENT RATEThis coupon ond $2.25 may be exchanged atthe Box Office no later than half hour beforeperformance for regular $3.00 seat.Not Good on Friday or Saturday Nights"IT IS THE CITY'S BEST SHOW"Dettmer, Chi AmericonTHEKWGKthe London and New York hit by Ann Jellicoestaged for the Harper by Brian Bedford. Asoriginally directed by MIKE NICHOLS.REGULAR PRICES & SCHEDULETues., Wed., Thurs. at 8:30, $3.00Fri. at 8:30; Sat. at 7 & 10, $3.90Sun. at 2:30 & 7:30, $3.00HARPER THEATERBU 8-1717 5238 S. HARPER AVE.JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2 2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdThe Eagle's Adam chair has especial importance for young sitters. It is a high chair whichbelongs to the Adam Smith himself.Adam is son of economist Winfield Smith. The Smiths bring Adam with them whenthey dine at the Eagle — they also brought Adam's chair. So the real Adam Smith, 4 yearsold, sits in a real Adam high chair ... at the Eagle for the young set.COCKTAILS . . . LUNCHEON . . . DINNER . . . LATE SNACKSTHE EAGLEBass ale and Schlitz beer on tap5311 BLACKSTONE 324-7859THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATREANNOUNCESBROUGHT BACK BY POPULAR DEMANDWinner of the 1963-64"BEST SHOW OFF-BROADWAY''AWARDIN WHITE AMERICAMay 7-9 AT 8:30 —ALSO MAY 8, 9 AT 2:30MANDEL HALL57th and University Ave. $5.00, $3.50, $2.50Student-Faculty Discount — 50c Off Any TicketTICKETS ON SALE —MANDEL HALL BOX-OFFICEMay 7, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7wBOOK SALE STARTING TODAY!Publisher's Clearance, Hundreds of Clothbound Books at Little More than Paperbound Prices.Save from 30 to 80% off Publisher's Retail.Travel, Art, Science, History, Humor, Fiction, Biography, Drama, Religion.Quantities Limited. Sale ends May 13.FRANCIS BACON. By Catherine DrinkerBowen. Intimate portrait of the career andlifelong conflict between Bacon’s grand in¬tellectual visions and his wily schemes forpolitical self-advancement, set against the pompand glitter of Queen Elizabeth’s court, Illus.Pub. at $6.00 Sale .99THE CONGO STORY — TO KATANGA ANDBACK. By C. C. O'Brien. Irish diplomat’sexciting, eye-witness account of the UN'saction after the Katanga secession. Illus.Pub. at $5.95. Sale .99WHERE LOVE HAS GONE. By Harold Robbins.Blistering novel about a divorced couple caughtin the plight of their teen-age daughter—whoconfesses to a murder she did not commit.T>uVt at W Sale Q4MY WAR WITH COMMUNISM. By MiguelYdigoras Puentes, Intro, by Adolf A. Berle.Guatamala's President-in-exile describes meth¬ods used by Castro in his first attempt atLatin-American conquest.Orig. $5.00 Sale .99LUCAN’S PHARSALIA — DRAMATIC EPI¬SODES OF THE CIVIL WARS. Trans, by RobertGraves. Brings to life, in sensational detail, thehistoric struggle between Pompey and Caesar,and the riotous reign of Nero.Pub. at $4.00 Sale .99THE LONG REACH — HARVARD TODAY. ByPeter French. Penetrating look at a famousAmerican Institution — its competitive environ¬ment, the role it plays in our national affairs.1962 pub., with ten J.F.K. references in theindex.Pub. at $4.00 Sale .99TURGENEV’S LETTERS — A selection, byEkigar H. Lehrman. An inspiring self-portraitof one of Russia’s greatest writers, taken fromhis letters to the great figures of his time. Illus.Pub. at $5 00 Sale .99PRIMITIVE SONG. By C. M Bowra. Bycollecting and analyzing the songs of today'sPygmies, Eskimos, Andamanese and Bushmen,a noted scholar has produced a masterfulstudy of the origins and development of theearliest forms of poetry known to man. Scoresof translated examples, many unusual photo¬illustrations.Pub. at $6.50 Sale .99PLOUGH AND PASTURE — The Early Historyof Farming, by E. Cecil Ctirwen and GudmundHatt.Pub. at $5.00 Sale .99Higher l*rirr«i (look*WISDOM FOR OUR TIME. Edited by JamesNelson. Some of the world's greatest men andwomen, including Somerset Maugham, EdithHamilton, Margaret Mead, Andres Segovia.Norman Thomas and 17 others, comment withcandor and insight in informal conversationson their life’s work. IUus.Pub. at $4.50 Sale S1.49COURTROOM WARRIOR — The CombativeCareer Of William Travers Jerome. By RichardO’Conner. The dynamic life and times of NewYork’s first “fighting DA,” A man as fascinat¬ing as his era (1859-1934). Illus.Pub. at $5.95. Sale $1.98INDIAN SCULPTURE. Over 260 large photo-illustrations by W. and B. Forman, text byM. M. Deneck. A beautiful volume on master¬pieces of Indian, Khmer and Cham sculpture,10"xl3”.$9 95 Sale $5 88THE GREAT IRON TRAIL: The Story of theFirst Transcontinental Railroad. By Robert W.Howard. Vivid account of the blood, sweat,tears and money that joined the Union Pacificand the Central Pacific in 1809. Illus.Pub. at $6.50 Sale $3.98THE AMERICAN YEAR. Ed. by Henry HillCollins, Jr. Magnificent collection of writ¬ings on nature across America through thefour seasons, by Audubon, Thoreau, Bur¬roughs, Muir, Mark Twain, John WesleyPowell, Joseph Wood Krutch, E. B. White,Rachel Carson and others 48 pages ofillustrations from Currier & Ives prints.Pub. at $10.00 Sale 4.98GREEK BRONZES. By Jean Charbonneaux,Chief Curator of the Louvre. Fascinating sur¬vey of the role of bronze art in the life ofancinent Greece. Sections on collecting, forger¬ies. conservation and display. 32 plates.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.98THE WINES AND VINEYARDS OF FRANCE.By L. Jacquelin & R. Poulain, with 76 photosand 17 maps. Hailed in France as “a trueencyclopedia of everthlng one needs to knowabout French wines.” this handsome and volu¬minous work lists over five thousand individualvineyards, details of site, soil and climate,grape varieties, yields, official classifications ofquality, etc.Pub. at $9.95 Sale $5.95SIXTY DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WEST —The Fall of France: 1940. By Jacques Benoist-Mecbin. Monumental study of the Wehr-macht’s blitzkrieg across the low countries andFrance. 600 pages of high drama, living history,and profiles of the major diplomatic and mili¬tary figures. Maps.Pub. at $7.95 Sale $3.98GREEK MYTHOLOGY. By Felix Guirand. Gor¬geously-illustrated volume with over 220 re¬productions of Greek vase paintings, classicalsculpture, etc., 24 In rich color. Not only ex¬plains the myths but dynamically relates themto the spirit and aspirations of Greek civiliza¬tion. 8V2''xll". Special $2.98THE ROCK PAINTINGS OF TASSILI. By Jean-Dominique Lajoux. Over 130 reproductions, 23in full color. A magnificent picture and textstudy of this strange Saharan civilization whichexisted several thousand years before Christ.9" x ll>/2".Pub. at $15.00 Sale $7.95THE WHITE HOUSE AND ITS THIRTY-THREEFAMILIES. By Amy La Follette. A magnificent150-year cavalcade of high political and per¬sonal drama in the most famous house in thenation. 9"xl2".Pub. at $12.50. Sale $5.95Mystery of the Alps — CAMONICA VALLEY.By Emmanuel Anati. Remarkable study of 2,000years of prehistory in northern Europe and ofthe myths and cults of its inscrutable forestpeople, who have fascinated civilized men from Julius Caesar to Robert Graves. 71 photographs,131 drawings.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $1.77SAVE $9.12GOD’S WILDERNESS: Discoveries in Sinai. ByBeno Rathenberg. With 90 superb photogravureillustrations, 16 maps and plans. A magnificentvolume for anyone interested in the romanceof antiquity — the complete story of the 1956-57archaeological exploration of the Sinai Peninsu¬la by Israeli scholars.Pub. at $15.00 Sale $5.88ABRACADABRA AND MODERN ART. By Fred¬eric Taubes, A provocative critique of ModernArt from today’s Avant-Garde back to thedays of Delacroix.Pub. at $4.50 Sale SI.98DIARY OF A UNION LADY 1861-1865. Ed. byHarold Earl Hammond. Penetrating notes ofa leading Civil War hostess who numberedGenerals Dix, Shields. Scott and McClellan inher inner circle. Absorbing comments onLincoln, the apathy of Congress, the Aboli¬tionists and other aspects of the war as seenby a Northern Democrat. Fwd. by Allan Nevins..Pub. at $6.00 Sales $1.98SAVE $4.07PREHISTORIC MAN. By Prof. J. Augusta. Mil¬lion-year record of evolutionary development,based on the most authoritative anthropologicalresearch and told with enormous narrative skill.52 paintings, 27 reproduced in full color, ofhuman types from Australopithecus to HomoSapiens. A portrait gallery unmatched in vividrealism and scientific accuracy. 10"xl4".Orig. $7.95 Sale $3.88THE ORDEAL OF CAPTAIN ROEDER — Napo¬leon’s Retreat from Moscow. Ed. by HelenRoeder. A Hessian officer’s eye-witness, day-by-day record of the almost unparalleled horrorthat accompanied Napoleon's troops duringtheir nightmare retreat during the winter of1812. Illus.$5.00 Sale $1.77LIFE AMONG THE SURREALISTS. By MatthewJosephson. The intellectual ferment of Paris.1920's, recaptured: the myth of the “lost gener¬ation” exploded. Photos.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.98THE GOLDEN AGE OF BURGUNDY. By JosephCalmette. A revealing account of the goldenage in French history, from 1364 to 1477, asseen through the lives of the four men re¬sponsible for its fame: Philip the Bold, Johnthe Fearless. Philip the Good, and Charlesthe Rash. Illus.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $2.98TREASURY OF NOTRE DAME FOOTBALL.Ed. by Gene Schoor. A sparkling panorama ofthe most successful and colorful college foot¬ball team in America. Exciting action photos.Pub. at $6.50 Sale $1.98SAVE $8.23SINCLAIR LEWIS: An American Life. By MarkSchorer. Monumental study of the creator of“Babbitt,” the first American novelist to winthe Nobel Prize. His spectacular successes, theMencken-Nathan circle, his marriages, alcohol¬ism, tragic decline. 867 pp., illus.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $1.77DEADLINES AND MONKEYSHINES: The FabledWorld of Chicago Journalism. By John J. Me-Phaul. All the zany antics, outrageous audacity,jesters and geniuses of the world’s most wideopen newspaper town, from Lincoln’s nomina¬tion to the Capone era and after. Photos.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $1.98The Confederate Army — LEE’S MAVERICKGENERAL. By Hall Bridges. Life-size portrait ofDaniel Harvey Hill, brilliant and fiery Confed¬erate commander. Sheds new light on manyaspects of the conflict that have puzzled CivilWar historians for years.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $1.77AFRICAN SCULPTURE. By Denise Paulme.Definitive study of the bold Negro art formsof West and Equatorial Africa, hailed bymany as the most vital new influence availa¬ble to the modern artist. 31 plates.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.98The Letters of T. E. LAWRENCE of Arabia.Ed. by David Garnett, with a foreword by Capt.B. H. Liddell Hart. His own words — fromschoolboy, through the dramatic years inthe Middle East, and his service with theR.A.F., up to a week before his tragic accident— close to 600 brilliant, self-revealing letters,unpublished documents and official reports.Illus. Special Import — Only $4.98Ivar Lissner's MAN, GOD & MAGIC. World-renowned scholar, author of “The Living Past,”presents and exciting account of the culture,religious beliefs and practices of prehistoricman — the search for God as expressed innature worship, sacrificial ceremonies, shaman¬ism and the like. 117 illustrations.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $2.98THE NATURAL HISTORY OF LOVE. By MortonM. Hunt. Sparkling survey based on sourcesranging from Plato and Ovid to Margaret Meadand Erich Fromm. Traces the role of love inwestern man’s social and psychological evolu¬tion, from Roman orgies to sex mores today.“An admirable piece of work” — Sir JulianHuxley.$5.00.. Sale $1.77BAUDELAIRE. By Enid Starkie. A new, re¬written version of this famous and classic studyof the great French poet.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $2.98PRE-COLUMBIAN CERAMICS. By Henri Len-man. Explores the creative genius of the Incas,Aztecs, Pueblos and over 60 other pre- Colum¬bian civilizations whose pottery, masks, andstatuettes have captured the imagination ofWestern man since the 16th century. 33 plates.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.98ENCOUNTERS: The Life of Jacques Lipchitz.By Irene Patal. Definitive biography of oneof the greatest masters of modern sculpture,probing the motivations behind such master¬pieces as Prometheus, The Virgin and TheCouple. 32 pp. of photographs.Pub at $6.50 Sale $2.98IMPRESSIONS OF LATIN AMERICA. Ed. byFrank MacShane. Five centuries of travel andadventure in Mexico. Central America, and inthe jungles and mountains of South America— with Drake, Raleigh, Byron, Stevenson, Dar¬win, Melville, Kipling, Huxley, Moriey, Isher-wood — and 16 more.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $1.98THE TEMPLES OF ANGKOR: Monuments toa Vanished Empire. By M. Krasa. A lavishly-illustrated study of the incomparable arttreasures of the ruined cities of the CambodianJungle. 176 sensitive photographs capture theunearthly beauty of age-worn temples, carvingsand statues renowned throughout the world for their unique perfection, grace and enchant¬ment. 9Va"XlO^”.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $5.88RAPHAEL. By Oskar Fischel. Monumentalstudy of the Renaissance genius, lavishly illus¬trated with over 300 beautifully reproduceddrawings and paintings. Every phase of Raph¬ael’s brief, but incredibly productive life —his apprenticeship with Perugina, the Florentineperiod, and the final Roman period.Special Import — Only $6.95THE WORK OF GRAHAM SUTHERLAND. ByDouglas Cooper, with 200 reproductions, 15in full color. Superb biographical-critical studyand illustrated retrospective of the most origin¬al English painter of the mid-20th century. Thesubtlety of his imagery, the sureness of histechnique — vividy displayed in a handsome,9>V'xll>2" volume.$15.00 • Sale $4.98Andre Gide’s Last Work — SO BE IT. Trans,by Justin O’Brien. The renowned stylist andthinker candidly examines his own emotionalproblems and the difficulties in his marriageas well as the state of the French theater, lifein Italy and Russia, and the achievements ofwriters ranging from Horace to Peguy.Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.49America’s Midwest — LAND OF THE LONGHORIZON. Ed. by Walter Havighurst, withover 100 hisoric Illustrations. Stirring panoramaseen through personal accounts ranging fromIndian captivities to “M’ddletown in Transi¬tion.” Bancroft, Howells, Masters, Sandburg theLynds. Audubon, Clark, Jolliet and Marquette,scores of others. 8"xll".Pub. at $12.50 Sale $2.88CHRIST’S IMAGE. By Marcelle Auclair. Thelife of Jesus as portrayed by the great artists.36 color plates and 100 stirring gravure repro¬ductions of paintings, drawings, tapestries,sculpture and other images from the mastersof all periods and all times, from the Byzan¬tine iconographers to such moderns as Matisseand Rouault. Printed in France.Pub. at $6.95. Sale $3 98THE WOK! D OF AMPHIBIANS A REPTILES.By Robert Mertens. Over 150 photographs. 31pages in full color. Spectacular pictures, excel¬lent text on nature’s most exotic creatures.Many curious facts about alligators, frogs,various snakes, etc. 9”xll<;". “Recommended"—Dr. James A. Olivier. Director, American Muse¬um of Natural History-Pub. at $15 00 Rale $5 88THE FRENCH ARMY: A Military-Political His¬tory. By Paul-Marie de la Gorce A definitivehistory of the French Army over the past 90years— from the debacle at Sedan in 1870to the end of the Algerian War. 558 pp.Pub. at $10 00 Sale $2.98Aubrey Menen’s ROME FOR OURSELVES. Themost comprehensive and unusual portrait ofRome that have ever been published. 151 stun¬ning photographs and art renroductlons. 41in radiant color, ranging over the breadth anddepth of the citv’s 2.000-vear legacy, from theglorious Sistine Chapel to the exoensive saualorof the Via Veneto. Magnificently printed andbound. 10"xl2".Pub. at $15.00 Sale $7.95CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI. By Carola Giedion-Welcker. Stunningly-illustrated art biography-critique, with 157 plates picturing Brancusi’ssupreme achievements from his early “Prayer”to the great masterworks in stone, wood orpolished metal that gave the 20th century anentirely new conception ol the beauty of form.9/,xll >/■>"•Pub. at $15 00 Sale $7.95LARGELY LINCOLN. By David ChambersMearns. Drawing on a lifetime of study, Mearnsexplores little-known byways in the life ofLincoln and presents some astonishing “first”with rare wit and gusto. Intro, by Earl SchenckMiens.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2 98BONJOUR PARIS. By Francois Brlgneau. 92exquisite full color photographs by Europe’sleading photographers. An enchanting portraitof the city of Light, its bustling boulevards,nostalgic haunts and wprld-famous landmarks—the Eiffel Tower, Notre Dame the Tuileries,Pont Neuf. etc—blended in unforgettable textand pictures.Spectacular Value at $3.88THE AGE OF WELLINGTON: The Life andTimes of the Duke of Wellington 1769-1852. ByLeonard Cooper. The stirring, dramatic Chronicleof a great era, revolving around the figure ofthe man who typified it.Pub. at $6.75 Sale $2.98IMPRESSIONISM: GOLDEN DECADE 1872-1882. By Lawrence and Elizabeth Hanson. Dra¬matic blend of biography and history, here isthe full account of Manet, Deggas Pissarro,Monet and Renoir, their lives and unprece¬dented ideas.$5.00 Sale $2.98THE JENGIHZ KHAN MINIATURES. A lovelyvolume reproducing 56 exquisite Mughal minia¬ture paintings from the Court of Akbar theGreat, one of the most delightful series everexecuted. All reproductions are in full color,and portray dazzling scenes of the Great Khansand their conquests in 16th century India. In¬troduction and notes by J. J. Marek. &"xlOV-".Pub. at $6.00 Sale $3.95MAN AND THE CONQUEST OF THE POLES.By Paul-Emile Victor. A record of great Heroismand stark tragedy and of man’s unrelentingsearch for the mysteries of the unknown, fromthe great Greek explorer Pytheas to theAmerican submarines. Profusely illustrated.Pub. at $6.95 Sale $2.98THE SOCIAL HISTORY OF BOURBON. By Ger¬ald Carson. From the earliest backwoods dis¬tilleries of Kentucky to the lush bars of turn-of-the-century New York. Guaranteed to warmthe heart of every lover of good whiskey orAmericana. IUus.Pub. at $6.95 Sale $2.98THE APPEASERS. By Martin Gilbert & RichartGott. From Hitler’s rise to Chamberlain’s down¬fall, the full story of the appeasement policyand its supporters, assembled from the recordsof the British and German Foreign Offices.$6.50 Sale $1.77A HISTORY OF WOOD ENGRAVING. ByDouglas Percy Bliss. Rare and engrossing study,by a practicing artist, of the development andrevival of a time-honored craft, featuring 120exquisitely detailed masterpieces by the world’smost talented engravers — Holbein, Durer.Burgkmair, Bewick. Blake, Morris. Gill, andmany others. Special sections on such land¬marks as the Book of Hours, Danse Macabre,the Herbals. etc. A welcome re-issue of a worklong recognized as a classic in its field.Special $3.98 LIMOGES ENAMELS. Photographs by w. #ndB. Forman; text by M. Gauthier and M. March-eix. An incomparable treasury of the enchant¬ing, exquisitely detailed “painted” enamels per¬fected at Limoges at the height of the Renais¬sance. 57 plates. 27 in full color.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $3.98The International Guide to STAMPS & STAMPCOLLECTING. By Douglas <fe Mary Patrick. Over400 pages crammed with information aboutstamps of the U.S.. Great Britain, the Com¬monwealth. and other countries of the worldkinds of paper, cancellations, stamp term¬inology, postmarks, etc; the celebrated raritiescuriosities, errors. Illus.Pub. at $6.75 Sale $2.98Gerard's HERBALL. Edited by Marcvis Wood¬ward. A treasury of the delightful prose andhumour of one of the most famous 16th-century herballs with over 180 of the originalwoodcuts. Cherished for centuries by gardeners,botanists and collectors.Special Import—Only $3.98Rimbaud — MY POOR ARTHUR. By ElisabethHanson. Outstanding, completely frank biog¬raphy of the enfant terrible of French poetryand pioneer of the symbolist movement. Fullytreats his relationship with Verlaine, whichcaused a national scandal, and his strangecareer in Africa.Pub. at $5.75 Sale $1.98CHINESE ART. By R. L. Hobson. Spans 2,000years of Chinese creative genius in pottery,porcelain, jades, painting, lacquer, bronzes andfurniture. 100 pages of strikingly beautiful, fullcolor reproductions.Special Import — Only $4.98A BOOK OF MILITARY UNIFORMS ANDWEAPONS. By Karel Toman. Hundreds of illu¬strations trace the changes and developmentof military costumes from ancient Egyptian.Greek, Roman soldiery to Turkish Janizaries,Russian Cossacks, and the Prussian Infantry ofthe late 19th century — the first modernsoldiers. Huge, colorful 9i2"xl3" volume.Special $4.98THE ART OF ANCIENT KOREA. Text by J.Barinka. photographs by W. Forman. A mag¬nificent revelation of an incredibly rich tradi¬tion or oriental art. Describes and depicts cela¬dons. bronzes, porcelains, metalwork, wood carv¬ing, inlay, and paintings in both wash andcolor, ranging from prehistoric times to the19th century. 132 full-page plates, 38 in full,shimmering color. Notes on each plate.Pub. at $10 00. Sale $5.88SUN, STONES AND SILENCE. By Dorothy HGary and Robert Payne. The history andcivilization of Egypt In terms of its fabulousartistic legacy, revealingly portrayed in 120stunning full page photographs. Sumptuouslyprinted in gravure, 12,,a"x8*a".Pub. at $12.50. Sale $3.98Theodore Reik: THE TEMPTATION. Greatpsychoanalyst’s extraordinary interpretation ofthe Blbical story of Abraham and Isaac. Fascin¬ating insights into both primitive and ancientHebrew myths centering around human sacri¬fice. initiation rites, and death and resurrectionceremonies.Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1.77SAVE $11.02TREASURY OF PHILOSOPHY. Ed by D DRunes. Naerly 1,300 pages covering the wholespan of recorded philosophical though andwriting. Works of Plato. Thomas Acquinas.Decartes. Spinoza. Schopenhauer, Dewey.Schweitzer and nearly 400 others, includingmany Oriental and Western thinkers not ac¬cessible in any other collection.$15.00 Sale $3.98RAVE $5.12THE MOON AND THE PLANETS. By J. Sadiland L. Pesek. With 40 huge, double-page andthree-panel plates, 27 in full color. An imagina¬tion-staggering journey through the solar sys¬tem. Accompanying the paintings is afascinating text on how our knowledge of thesolar system gradually developed over centuriesfrom the first telescopes to the most receutspace probes. 9,/2"xl3'2w.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $4.88GREEK SCULPTURE. By Pierre Decambez.curator of the Louvre Museum. Photographs byRobert Deschames. 150 reproductions in gravure,12 in plates in full color. Includes full Informa¬tion on materials, origin, date and presentlocation of each work.Pub. at $5.95. Sale $3.98FROM SHYLOCK TO SVENGALI; JewishStereotypes In English Fiction. By Edgar Rosen¬berg A brilliant and original treatment of thistheme bringing to life some of the most vividcharacters in the English novel — Isaac andRebecca, Fagln, Melmotte, Deronda.Pub. at $6 50. Sale $3.98PICASSO AS BOOK ARTIST. By A. Horodisch.Comprehensive study of the great artist’s workIn book illustration and design. 70 magnificentetchings, line-blocks, woodcuts, lithographs anddrawings from the rare Picasso-illustratedlimited editions. 7,/a"xl0”.Pub. at $6.50 Sale $2.98INSULL. By Forest Me Donald. An absorbingstudy of the most spectacular business failureIn history — the collapse of Samuel Insull’sChicago based utilities empire in 1932, amidsome of the most shocking frauds ever exposed.Ulus. Pub. at $5.95 Sale $2.98LYOF TOLSTOY: An Anthology. Ed. with In¬troduction by Charles R. Joy. Gold nuggetsfrom the entire corpus of Tolstoy’6 writings in¬cluding “War and Peace,” “Anna Karenina,”shorter works, diaries, notes, articles, etc.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $1.98AN ANTHROPOLOGIST AT WORK: Writings ofRuth Benedict. By Margaret Mead. To thehighly articulate and heretofore unpublishedworkbooks and Journals of his century’s mostoriginal anthropologist. Miss Mead has addedher own thoughts and recollections.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $3.98HUNDREDS OF OTHERBOOK BARGAINSBRAND-NEW, ORIGINAL EDITIONSAr< to Zoology——Values to $20huge variety — rush in99c-nowTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE8 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 7, 1965