— -• ■ -Vol. 73— No. 45 The University of Chicago a^*s&«.>31 Tuesday, May 18, 1965Profs teach own disciplinesHum I teaching test plannedAn experimental teaching system will be introduced into the Humanities 111-12-13 gen¬eral education sequence next year.Some of the Hum I students will have three different instructors, each teaching in his ownsubject area, assigned to their sections. This is in contrast to the present course plan in whichone teacher instructs a section in ———all three of the arts.The new plan Will involve ap¬proximately six sections. Mrs.Alice Benston, Mrs. Jeanne Bam¬berger, Paul Moses, and HowardBrofsky, all Hum I staff mem¬bers, have been organizing thenew system. The remainder of thestudents will participate in acourse very similar in design tothat of this year. Two sub-staffswill l>e formed from the presentHum I staff, one for each plan.CHAIRMAN OF THE Hum Istaff John G. Cawelti explainedthat each staff will be planningits own course work. Therefore, the two divisions may not begiven common exams.Now is the time“Such a plan has often beensuggested by students, faculty,and others,” Cawelti stated. ‘Thetime to try it is now when thenew College is being formed. Theargument involved is that if wesplit up the teaching of the coursewe may lose the continuity of theinstruction. Whether this is actual¬ly the case or not has never beendemonstrated.” If the experimentis judged successful, it may becontinued on a permanent basis,Cawelti said.Until this year, the Hum I staffhad given a comprehensive exam at the end of the year. Caweltiviews this past year as “fairlysuccessful.” He said that he hasbeen pleased with his own stu¬dents’ progress. “There have beensome shortcomings—such as anoveremphasis on technical mat¬ters in music,” though, he said.Next year, in both Hum I di¬visions, different methods of ap¬proaching the subject matter willbe introduced, according to Mrs.Benston. “We will be amplifyingthe course with different materi¬als.” she told the Maroon. Shesees the overall changes as simi¬lar to the large change which oc¬curred two years ago in the teach¬ing of music. Keyfitz replaces Hauseras sociology chairmanNathan Keyfitz, professor of sociology and an internation¬ally renowned demographer, was named chairman of UC’sdepartment of sociology last week.Keyfitz, 51, succeeds Philip M. Hauser, who had been chair¬man of the department since 1956.Hauser will remain on the facultyas professor of sociology and di¬rector of the Population and Re¬search Training Center. Keyfitz isco-director of the center.KEYFITZ JOINED the UC facul¬ty after four years as professorof sociology at the University ofToronto. He is a Canadian by birth,and earned his BS degree at Mc¬Gill University in Montreal. Hereceived his PhD at UC in 1952.Worked for governmentFrom 1936 to 1959, Keyfitz wasstatistician and senior statisticianin the Canadian Dominion Bureauof Statistics in Ottawa. In 1958, hewas awarded the medal of theProfessional Institute of the CivilService of Canada.On several occasions, Keyfitzserved as advisor and alternate tothe Canadian Delegate to the statis¬tical Population Commissions ofthe United Nations. In 1956-7, hewas director of the Colombo PlanBureau, coordinating technical as¬sistance in the 12 member nationsin South and Southeast Asia.Keyfitz is the author of numer¬ous articles on demography, whichis the statistical study of the char-actersitics of human populationsas they relate to social and econom-SCLC's Abernathy at conventionTWO blasts poverty funds distributionOne down, but several moreto go.That is the score for TheWood lawn Organization(TWO), as its president, Rev.Lynward Stevenson, assessed the‘state of the community” atTWO’s fourth annual conventionFriday night.Stevenson said he was “happyto hear the school board has got¬ten some kind of guts” In votinglast Thursday to get rid ofschools superintendent BenjaminC. Willis, whom TWO has beenattacking for “segregationist” pol¬ities ever since the organizationbegan.BIT THE MORE recent insur¬gent campaign against the gen¬erals and staff commanders ofthe “war against poverty” will beescalated. Stevenson promised.Stevenson and other represent¬atives of TWO went to Washing¬ton recently to testify that ad¬ministrators of the Chicago anti-povertv program had kept repre¬sentatives of affected communi¬ties out of the planning for Chi¬cago’s program. The federal “Eco¬nomic Opportunity” act Instructsthat local community residentsl>e involved in planning. TWOcharges that the Chicago admin¬istrators have blocked approval byWashington headquarters of aprogram that TWO wants to runand administer by itself in theWoodlawn community.TWO is an organization ofblock clubs, businessmen’s associ¬ations, religious and civic groupsin the greater Woodlawn area.Residents of the area lead battlesfor more jobs, better schools,physical rehabilitation, and “self-determination.”“We will speak for ourselves,train ourselves, and lift ourselvesinto the mainstream of Americanlife,” Stevenson promised.STEVENSON SPECIFICALLYdenounced two of TWO’s ene¬mies:”• Raymond M. Hilliard, direc¬tor of the Cook County publicaid department, who had, Steven*son said, called him "a power-hungry leader of a small SouthSide organiaztion”; and• “That noble Roman”—RomanC- Pucinski, US representativef,-om a North Side district. Stev¬enson promised TWO will remem-ter a statement he said Pucinski made, that “it would be a coldday in hell before TWO gets apenny” of federal anti-povertymoney.Without naming him, Steven¬son called Deton C. Brooks, ad¬ministrator of Chicago’s anti-pov¬erty program, “a green Negro—washing dishes on the top floorfor greenbacks, while other Ne¬groes are In the fourth basement,Wcishing dishes for pennies.”Resolutions on schoolsIn the TWO convention’s reso¬lutions, the section on schoolscalled for “a high-quality compre¬hensive Hyde Park High School:Immediate, massive developmentof pre-school and compensatoryeducation: additional high schoolsIn the Southeast area; and theabandonment of all so-called up¬per grade centers, and their re¬placement with either well-equipped and staffed junior highschools, or the 4-4-4 schools plan.”Re-organization of the schoolsystem on the “4-4-4” plan wasproposed in a report released twoweeks ago by a parents commit¬tee of the Student WoodlawnArea Project (SWAP), a tutoringproject sponsored by UC students.The parents want Chicago to fol¬low New York City’s lead inadopting this plan for separateschools for grades 1-4, grades 5-8,and grades 9-12.WHEN SOME questions aboutthe plan were brought up at theconvention, Rev. Arthur M. Bra-izer, former TWO president, ex¬plained that small children wouldgo to school near their homes forthe first four grades, but mightthen be bussed or walk to middlegrade schools which would, hope¬fully be located to maximize inte¬gration.He said the TWO schools com¬mittee also “looks favorably” onthe SWAP proposals for expansionof Hyde Park High School, andits transformation into a “com¬prehensive” high school whichwould continue to emphasize theacademic programs.Abernathy keynoterRev. Ralph Abernathy, treasur¬er of Dr. Martin Luther King’sSouthern Christian LeadershipConference (SCLC), called in hiskeynote address to the conventionfor an attack by TWO and simi¬lar “grass-roots” organiaztions on an attack by TWO and similar“grass - roots” organiaztions onthe “three great evils of today:war, poverty, and racial discrimi¬nation.”He proposed that Red Chinashould be admitted to the UN,and that the Vietnamese and Do¬minican conflicts be settled bynegotiations, rather than by risk¬ing war. Observers noted that thiswas the first time Abernathy hasintroduced the peace issue aspart of the SCLC outlook.SCLC now has a staff workerattached to the TWO office, Aber¬nathy said, and the two groupsare seeking the best ways of co¬operating in large-scale programs this summer in Chicago.“We’re coming north this sum¬mer,” Abernathy said in hisspeech, since the problems arethe same in both North and South—“we live down South but youjust live up South.”“The greatest need In this coun¬try is for an alliance between thereligious, labor, and civil rightsforces,” Abernathy said. . Philip M. Hauser, who re¬tired last week as chairmanof the sociology department.Hauser will stay on as pro¬fessor of sociology.ic conditions. He has also writtenarticles in several other areas ofsociology.Johnson lauds HauserIN ASSESSING HAUSER’Sreign as chairman of the sociologydepartment, D. Gale Johnson, deanof the social sciences division,said:“In 1956, after a series of deathsand retirements in the dapart-ment’s faculty, professor Hauserassumed the chairmanship of thedepartment of sociology. His dyna¬mism and stress on research oncemore focused international atten¬tion on this important departmentin the division of social sciences.The present eminence of he de¬partment of sociology is in consi¬derable measure a tribute to theleadership of professor Hauser.”Neither Hauser nor Keyfitzwere available for commentThis is the last TuesdayMAROON of the springquarter. There will be twomore issues after today: onethis Friday and one the nextFriday. Calendar and classi¬fied deadlines are noon theday before publication. Hertzberg Maroon editorThe Maroon staff elected campus news editor Daniel Hertz¬berg as next year’s editor-in-chief at a staff meeting Friday.Also approved at the election meeting was a special con¬stitutional amendment which waived for the academic year1965-6 a provision x „ . . _ Tyear student Robert F. Levey.Hertzberg has, not yet appointedthe full editorial board of theMaroon for next year, but he didannounce the appointment ofDinah Esral as managing editorand David Satter as news editor.While no plans have as yet beendetailed for next year’s Maroon,Hertzberg stated: “We would liketo expand our campus and HydePark coverage.”To facilitate this effort, theMaroon will increase the numberof reporters on its staff, he said.in the Maroonconstitutionwhich requires aminimum of fivequarters of mem¬bership on theMaroon for theeditor-in-chief.Ratification ofthis amendmentenabled the staffto elect Hertzberg, currently afirst-year student, as editor-in-chief. Hertzberg succeeds thirdSeveral hundred at teach-inSeveral hundred students were strewn all over the firstfloor of Ida Noyes Hall Saturday afternoon, listening to theNational Teach-in on Vietnam over radio.UC’s Student-Faculty Committee on Vietnam had arrangedfor an elaborate system of power-ful loudspeakers to broadcast the frontation with Bundy would beproceedings from a special closed- a breakthrough in public opinion scircuit radio network, but when effects on administration policy,the sponsors found that Chicago .but was extremely disappointestation WFMT would carry the that Bundy did not speak,program they just tuned in their SINCE THE message that theFM radios. teach-in moderator read fromUpon learning that McGeorge Bundy did not say why he wasBundy, special assistant for nation- unable to appear, the listeners hadal security affairs to President no way of knowing until SundayJohnson, had asked to be excused that Bundy had been sent withfrom debating with an academic other top administration men oncritic, many students were both a “secret” mission to the Domini-disappointed and somewhat bitter, can Republic.Richard Flacks, assistant professor / # .of sociology and a sponsor of Morgenthau s criticismsthe program, said at a discussion In his portion of the program,program in Ida Noyes following UC professor Hans J. Morgenthau,the broadcast teach-in that he had distinguished service professor ofbeen lioDine that the planned “con- political science and history, spoke of the “inner contradictions” ofUS policy in Vietnam.“I submit again, as I have donethis morning, and have done be¬fore in lectures many times, thatif you really want to achieve inAsia what the spokesmen for ourgovernment say they want toachieve, you must be ready to goto war with China, and all thatimplies,” Morgenthau said.IN THE “LIVE” discussion afterthe radio portion, the UC audienceheard a discussion with GilbertWhite, professor of geography;Edmundo Flores, visiting profes¬sor from the National Universityof Mexico; Manning Nash, profes¬sor in the business school; SidLens,' manager of United ServiceEmployees Local 329 who hastoured Vietnam; and Paul Cowan,a graduate student in the Com¬mittee on Social Thought.WHITE SAID that the absence(Continued on page two)THEATRE REVIEWdrugs' best friendsthinks it will soon have evidenceto'prosecute.At-another midwestern campus;a co-ed lold her laboratory in¬structor about wild benny andamphetamine parties she hadbeen attending. It turned out thata student on campus vsas pushingthe tablets and was getting themlll< V. (1 i \ I -I'M a <■< •< l«.! The !•'! >Aha- < . . ■ < < < > 1 " "‘I-to prosecute, Hansen said.Alvin Gottlieb, a food and drugcounsel in the Department of>!.,•■ f (<M -.CM , W < H.tMexplained that the federal govern¬ment does not act against studentsusing pep pills, but rather that itsnormal practice Is to gcN to thesource of illegal distribution.ON ( I fill oOVrifVMlvVF l.’M'Ml,rl *' 1,1 1 ,lr * lldw cs .t| j i k I- mu «i f>« • 11 * «h* IN <•! d ,!••> Hull House, i ><•<•;..|v,. In I- ;|S-.. • a u, i 11- '1 n.i- io- «*w i a- < i iv llM ,j , v , 11< -i ,t aT l in ,u,<l -t ci lini;t:i; l-c pjii i-t'CScv. t .<.•*' I . , ,. ■, , a< li ,t- ■ >', . . ■ < t ■ .i < ,i ’ .1 ' * 1 : aud • of som< | lay on g soph*A 't' A t ' ' ' ! ' !vsome exampli of thi - ne oldrugs on the campus. A substan¬tial number oi the more I han fourand one half million tablets and, | .ui<- i1' <ling t'-.i..illicit tii-affi. each yeai i*m b gtu?dents, .ti cm (iii,«- ic 1 1;mi.s« nDoctor prosecutedAt a m d \ - stci > ca t pus a comi >a he passed out dm u a p'1 • «=leal education clam was ftiund toh<- i.-.c of .ib.uit 1.000 . iHimiHsto whom a doctor had illegallysold a total of 600,000 pep pills inune > ok : Mo.-,t , < llll . Her U W®H-t ud.-i l- a! by colli ! Ianvon v;( ,| \o"( of t1 ( V U(!oi;lSwere prosecuted, but the doctoru..v sentei era so iw yesirs* probat ion and a $1,500 fine.At a West Coast campus, thebehavior of a ■‘brilliant" studenisuddenly changed drastically andhe flunked out of roll* go ! 1<‘ hadIxcn > ci ting amnheta iin< aneither popular stimulant f oma chemical supply house and wasOld t r o l! Ipl ; • .h o ■ '., , • ■ ,v '■ , . ■ Oh>; - ■ ' -.. ■ - ' h/Editor | N* U ■ IW ■end m a m ■ fa a of tl rt« <> i (fa fa ani ■ ltd ;v < • i) rajs I m §<>•" ’ of, iiruason ooUogt cGmpofioo, Tm fvrotJXIrt, which appeared in Tues¬days MAKouX, mat: with the, ! >,, is . .. - u . hi s utwbn* bit in <m s 'by Laura Godofsky- • I> f IVt A SHIM ;T< >N From the.lx jh Ives to the ski ((‘sorts andon the campus, “benny push¬es v" on the lookoul lori iocenl and- not /so innocentc<>!li :■* v) uuc-.t- lo \ h . >1 I/O theFno.i and I ' Up \o > '•■s-..lioi;repolls< 'Pioi Hkily spots t« find peoplesi I ng benzedi Ine, a popular stim¬ulant, j in< Jude bow ling alleys,amusci i t. • v i . -\;icparties, according to FDA offi¬cials i hntgi are triso bee< i •>.. . easingly si rious problems atlarge urban campuses, they said.MO »,t \- li WM N. deputy<t - 1 *field operations, reeenlly discussed <' rn ' ntei lain, it .. ,,show that the) o is not )• .that cannot be made dull by sheerrepetition _ or that . . ,,nothing wliicli bon-v <t, , ,, ,ly a.s constant noveliy A i,a heavy-handed moralist and a• o' i\ ci t tonal (I \( -,i(,,ul]|ycoit\ cut ional i di Kinat st . n,] thet"<> ttu tois add up. to un,je.lighted yawn.Ihitcbma.il won t it.,,for the 1963-64 season and l tansympathize if notthe decision. The play111 I i llol Si I III MHE• in no I > <« 'ho I .uivford W (Ivon• -o fl.awrence ... Stuart EckluusJoanna Kulh StotkarSIMm . o li It' llol) Mi t- i 11 K' rI'ii mi on I hr It.11 I il l li-ldIm 1ii n.mill Irt.i h.ilI .,■(M l i |. ,i. Il.i r> t‘v 14 iibmMm. I . i- ... N' U.i t l».)l-l*. U/.. i. 111. I*.i \ id rarki-r/,. . |.n l> old 4 is. nnowconcur uiihis cenain-'4 . rV.’r.. ' l"..r'o ' It- I. - I. ,Inr.-i nil to lt„b M.kmcci n« ■ • II I i. KI ,<>! I o I . ! h( h .»: geoisie, an assimilation whipII IIIIN lx- comfiit ling to a u:. whi,-h pla\ws ' : i^eHoiJonefl would undoubted j onsidera sapping from within.Dutihnian portrays such a middie class; attache-case cai r\ mg N«>git) on a subway in Now Yoik,«no i- <111* i natinch flattered andinsulted by-a white gii], until helashes out fuiiouslv against thewhite oppression he feels e\en. « , I lk ’ .s w 1'it. w ,1, . - * ■ - ' Kill ini!'.- o'.lo hi , I I oil .ini! . ;i ’< I - Iho IV pot ■ . .,1 1 !,(>... bla« k man hates tin t<* and■ . 1 oil lo I- l!, . , . . ' ' ',r "l-".' '111 •. ,1 i" I v . ! . ‘, a o .• *o the1. • o \ ! ' 1 ; 1 ' 1 ' ■, • ■ ' ‘- , 1 ,tl‘" U "tkt ! V \ ill I l i.i M I -■. •, . . < ■ ' ' , • ;:' . 'less, althou-’h i.ois .mil Ihiti hiu.m ■ point... Iloim I 11 < 1 1 'lini. hm hi ; 1 ■ -'• ' 1 ' -TV program sometime “in theimmediate future.”At the IH’ program, it wasannounced that WFMT had re¬ceded some pressure from someof its sponsors to cancel the br oad¬cast. Norman Pellegrini, stationmanager , Id tin Maroon thatnothing of the sort had happened,and that he had been somewhatsurprised to receive scores of post¬cards on the matter. Postcardshad been distributed at UC forstudents to write the station,thanking them for the broadcast.(Continued from page 1): ’ . ’ 1,1as a calculated insult or a tempor¬ary paralysis of decision” by theadministration. “They should atleast have sent the reason” hecould not come, White said., seeingthe incident as “a demonstration ofan alarming aspect of the situa¬tion — the lack information oncertain very basic facts.”Flacks agreed with White’s com¬ments. He said it served to con¬firm his “suspicion” that the John¬son administration’s policy is“hardening,” viewing the US as a“policeman which can enforce itswill anywhere, anytime.” That theadmii i i ■< not seem to beinleiested in a diologue strength-• • ■ ■ ;^i’ ” !- ■Flacks said.It has been r< polled Dial 1hcprofessors who sponsored the Na¬tional Teach-in have decided tokeep their organization on a per¬manent ba-K a i mo- m p*sc\eral other programs of asimilar nature. They were, reported• i . ■ -i - 1 . i < i • <ciiti(*al professors on a national ' . I : i f i « i- 1 g M , . - I ■■I ■ I was..i’- - -1 • i ■ -ii.il .1 In r. i,- l ' •i '■■ V : . I I I, 'I11' ' • - I ll ll I III- I I I: M -I IIImv sold.1 ' '(. ' ' I '■■ ' I. . . I ■ ‘-HOOKS It > «\HIHS \tlllOKSAmorite Personal Names in the Mori, Textsby Herbert B. Hullmon . . . ... , . , . . . . » ... .... * .... . , . * .The Economics of the Soviet Btocby Stanislow Wellisz ......... . . , .THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.camerasBINOCULARSBUY OR RENTInquire at pur photo counterThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.I std-picked. - , , ■ i. ,■. ■ . ' , I ■ • - i [ Si 1 ‘ - t ( - . ■ '' . ‘'• - *» <■<■ (tur f '■ ;<• si'i I-... m nas Elaine Revell Roses—very special AmericanBeauties who are hand-pu ked for their assignments.Would you like to work on your own terms—close to h<in.- < H i hours, highestpay, finest firms? Women of all ages, with .all office skills, are eligible. To see if you qualify,' zjust fill out and mail the coupon. The Flam-Revell office nearest you will supply details. 1 MU JISITY Till-, Vi lli-:presentsElaine Sevets Inc , Deni WD-1230 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Illinois 60S01i ;-nV ,oii - ii c ... . . i...(1. ‘. 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Miss /; / - .Name Mrs;. 1 / -- -■■■ •Address , . i Sophocles AnouilhMAY 21, 22, 23. 28, 29, 30REYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE8:30 P.M. $1.50 —$1.00 Studentsrit'kW.s on Salc^ al Kei oniils Club DoshZone Phone No.5 CONVENIFNT LOCATIONS THROUGHOUT CKICAGOLI..'- ..... :* ' fX'.-.II rnPI,,,.t ' "wX-,- Marrled Single Other No. Children Agea.Spec laity Apr lied ter : . .Lab school teaches poor MUSIC REVIEWA special program for ca¬pable but underachieving dis¬advantaged high school stu¬dents will be conducted at theliC lab school this summer, accord¬ing to lab school principal WillardCongreve.The program, financed througha $25,000 grant from the SternFamily Foundation, will providedselected male high school freshmenand sophomores, most of themfrom Hyde Park high school, with‘•bolh learning experiences andSDS in prep rallyIJC Students for a DemocraticSociety (SDS) will conduct a pro¬les) demonstration against thewar in Vietnam tonight at 8pm in the center of the mainquadrangle.'Hie demonstration is designedtn he a preparatory rally forSDS’ city wide demonstration thisFriday. At the city-wide rally,SDS plans to lead a picket of thefederal building, a rally in theadjacent plaza, and “some formof civil disobedience,” accordingto SDS secretary Jerald Lipsch.Tonight’s demonstration will in¬clude performances by local folksingers, talks by Peter Slocumand Paul Cowan of SDS, and abrief talk by Edmundo Flores, vis¬iting professor of the social sci¬ences, in which the current situa¬tion in the Dominican RepublicwilJ be outlined. contacts with excited and excitingpersons,” Congreve said.HE CREDITED UC professor ofsociology Monis Janowitz withobtaining the grant for the pro¬gram.Congreve characterized the boyswho will study in the special sum¬mer school as students “who havehigh learning potential, but seemto be stymied at school.”No idea divergence“We hope to make Ihem realize,”he said, “that what the schoolwants to do and what they wantto do are not divergent ideas.”The summer program will beearned out by five experienced sec¬ondary school teachers, assistedby eight undergraduate teachingaides from the UC student body.The lab school is currently ac¬cepting applications from UC stu¬dents for teaching aide positionsin the program.UC students interested in serv¬ing as teaching aides in theprogram, Congreve said, shouldenjoy working with high schoolyoungsters and be willing 1o devoteeight weeks, starting June 26, totheir work.THE I.AB SCHOOL prefers stu¬dents who are currently freshmenor sophomores as aides, he said.Teaching aides will be paid a"subsistence allowance” of $50 aweek during the program.UC undergraduates who are in¬terested in applying for teachingaide positions should call Congreveat extern ion 2514 for an appoint¬ment. Richter: one of the big onesChina movie starts Fri.An on-the-spot film and eyewit¬ness report on Red China by aformer senior official of the BBCwill be piesented this weekend.Felix Greene, who was the firstwestern correspondent to havel < on granted a filmed interviewv ilh Chou En-lai, will lecture Fri¬day on his experiences in RedChina while obtaining film cov¬erage of conditions in that coun-1 rv for the British commercialt* levision company.The film itself, called “CHINA!”,will he shown on three days thisweekend. The lecture Friday will be in the law school auditoriumat 8, followed by one showing ofthe film. On Saturday, the hour-long color and sound film will hepresented at 8. 9. and 10 pm inJudd 111, and on Sunday at 7, 8,9, and 10 pm in SoeSci 122.The showing of the film is spon¬sored by an ad hoc student group.They say the film will he releasedfor commercial showings nextyear, but Greene has allowed itto be presented on US campusesimmediately. It has already beenshown to large erow'ds at Stan¬ford and Berkeley. It’s been a long time sinceI’ve been really excited aboutthe prospect of attending amusical event, but Saturdaynight was something special:Sviatoslav Richter. The Sovietpianist’s recital in Orchestra Hallwas part of his first tour sincehis historic American debut fiveyears ago, and in his own intro¬spective w'ay, he provided someof the stuff of which legends aremade.A program of Beethoven,Brahms, Debussy, Ravel, and Pro-kifiev is not an easy one to per¬form. Contrasts abound in everyselection, and a pianist who can¬not bridge the slylistic gap be¬tween searingly romantic lateBrahms to delicately crystallineDebussy to boyishly exuberantand athletic Prokofiev is likely tohave all his pianistic faults showup at once. Indeed, to do justiceto such a program is almost animpossible task, but leave it toRichter. He showed in no uncer¬tain terms that he is one of thebig ones.POETRY AND LYRICISM arethe hallmarks of Richter’s indi¬vidual art. This was not the kindof program on which he could lethis Slavic temperament run ram¬pant, but, rather, it was one whichrequired strength and restraintto bring off fully. Always, though,there seemed to be a subtle ten¬sion lurking. The Beethoven Son¬ata, op. 31, no. 3, was pure poetry.Under Richter’s hands the musicflowed beautifully, and yet hewould lash out every so often ina Blundering sforzando, as if tolet everyone know that here wasa pianistic lion at bay.The Brahms Rhapsodies andIntermezzi, however, were wherehe really opened up. Here wereperformances of the grandestscale imaginable. Never have Iheard Brahms played with suchimmense scope, such giant propor¬ tions. But he never let his emo¬tions run away with him. Therewas logic behind his interpreta¬tion and, also, a great deal ofheart.Debussy’s Suite Bergamasqueand Ravel’s Jeux d’eau were per¬haps the most difficult works onthe program from a pianisticstandpoint; not because the notesare difficult, but because theworks require the utmost deli¬cacy and control to fully bringout their nuances. Rarely playingabouve a mezzo-forte, Richter ranthrough the intricate chords andruns with unbelievable articula¬tion — his pedaling was fabulous,never obsecuring, always coloring.THOSE WHO EXPECTED himto explode through the ProkofievSe<*>nd Sonata were in for ashock. While it was written at thesame time as the composer’s wild¬ly dissonant Second Piano Con¬ cert© and Toccata, the Set-ondSonata is an extremely romanticand lyrical work, and it was thesequalities that Richter chose toemphasize. Even where he hadthe opportunity to let fly, hisreading remained remarkably un¬derstated. Richter’s way with Pro¬kofiev is deeidedly unconventionaland yet, listeing to him playingthe Russian master, one is wonover immediately by the obviousvalidity of his conception. It isProkofiev as he is rearely played.All told, it was quite an eve¬ning. Anyone who came with theexpress pur pose of hearing Rich¬ter turn the piano upside downmust have been disappointed, forhe is not a pianist who indulgesin cheap pyrotechnics. But this iscertain: the pianists in the audi¬ence when home talking to them¬selves.Ed Chikofsky2 farewell concerts setOn Friday evening, harpsi¬chordist Frederick Hammondwill give his farewell recitalin Bond Chapel. Included onthe program will be the Cappriccioon the Departure of a BelovedBrother and the Chromatic Fan¬tasy and Fugue by Bach and Fr an¬cois Couperin’s Vingt-Ordre.Also to be performed are sixsonatas and the Salve Regina byScarlatti.ON SATURDAY evening, inMandel Hall, H. Colin Slim willlead his farewell concert as con¬ductor of the UC Symphony or¬chestra. Slim has been conductorof the orchestra since 1959 andhas generally been credited withbuilding that organization from ahandful of players to its presentstatute. He is leaving UC to be¬come chairman and associate pro¬ fessor of music at a new campusof the University of California atIrvine.Saturday’s program will openwith three minuets by ThomasAttwood, a student of Mozart from1785-87. Then concertmaster How¬ard Kaplan will conduct three ex¬cerpts from Prokofieff’s ballet,Romeo and Juliet. The programwill dose with the Symphony No.9 in C Major (“Tire Great”) byFr anz Schubert.Both concerts begin at 8:30, andboth are free of charge.Hillel Town Meeting—Open to oil.We need your criticisms, reactions,suggestions to evaluate this year'sHillel Program, discuss goals ondpurposes, plan next yeor's program.Wednesday Evening, May 19th7-9 p.m., Hillel House,5715 Woodlown AvenueNOW IN CHICAGODATSUNjnnk\I;• - - >™THIS FAR EASTERN BEAUTYDOESN'T LOOK LIKE POVERTY(No Extra Charge For Charm)Datsun check listAlternator - 4-Door Unit Body60 HP OHV Engine - Bucket Seats"4 on the Floor" TransmissionWindshield Washer - Wool CarpetsLarge Trunk-Deluxe Interior12,000-mile - 12-month WarrantyHeoter - DefrosterWhitewalls - Wheel CoversElectric Wipers - Padded DashUndercooting - SAE Nuts ond BoltsDual Horns - Dual HeadlampsPlus Much MORE VALUEPrice: $1696 (3-speed), $1745 (4-speed)Fully Equipped — No Extras To BuyBonk Terms — Up To 36 Mos.Chicagoland DATSUNSALES - SERVICE - PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AVE. in Beverly HillsChicago, Illinois 60620 Phone 239-3770 SUMMER JOBSFOR STUDENTSApplications Now Being Accepted For SummerJobs With Major National CorporationStudents 18 years of age or older wonted to leorn market¬ing, sales promotion, ond brand identification techniquesduring summer.High Level Executive Management Courses Given toQualified ApplicantsSalary: $85 per week for first 3 weeks$125 per week plus bonuses starting fourth weekSCHOLARSHIPS — win one of fifteen $1,000 scholarshipsHIGH PAY — eorn at least $1,500 for the summer. Many studentsmake $3,00 or more.TRAVEL — work anywhere in U.S. or Canada. Qualified students maywork overseas.SEE TOKYO — win all expense paid holiday in JAPAN for an entireweek.BEST POSITIONS GOING FAST! CALL TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT.Oak Park, III.Evanston, III.Chicago Loop — NorthChicago Loop — SouthHammond, IndianaMilwaukee, ond all of Wise.Grand Rapids, and all of Mich.FROM 9 A.M. - 1 386-5464475-2543ST 2-4363346-6108931-4311BR 6-4119459-5079P.M.May 18, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3CLASSIFIED ADSFOR THOSE WHO WISH TO PLACECLASSIFIED ADS IN THE MAROON.THE BUSINESS OFFICE (3RD FLOOR.IDA NOYES HALL) WILL BE OPENMONDAY 9-12, TUESDAY 9-3, WEDNES¬DAY 9-3. THURSDAY 9-12. FRIDAY10:30-12:30. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANC¬ES WILL CLASSIFIEDS BE ACCEPTEDAT OTHER TIMES. STUDENTS MUSTPLACE THEIR ADS IN PERSON ANDMUST PAY IN ADVANCE. THE DEAD¬LINE FOR PLACING AND/OR CANCEL¬ING AN AD IS 12 PM THE DAY BEFOREPUBLICATION.PERSONALFREE: 1-way Jet trip to N.Y.C. for friendly, responsible traveling companionto 3 children, age 9, 7, 6. Lv. May 29,9 am. Phone 494-4972.Rooms for the summer. Phi Delta Theta,5625 University. FA 4-9723.Piano lessons by Mrs. R. Thilenlus, fac¬ulty member formerly of the LongySchool of Music. Cambridge, Mass. Nowreturned to Chicago after 2 years ofteaching Harvard <fc Radcliffe students.Further details: Phone 363-0321.An Exhibit, of Prints by Jack Levineand Leonard Baskin Hillel House. 5715Woodlawn, May 16-31. Monday-Friday,9:00 am.-5:00 m.; Sundays 1:00-5:00pm. All works for sale.Calendar of EventsTuesday, May 18LECTURE: “The Regulation of Growthin Children," James M. Tanner, visitingprofessor, committee on human develop¬ment, Billings M-137, 4 pm.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Hillel, 7:30pm.REHEARSAL: 57th Street Chorale, Wool-man Hall. 7:30 pm.LECTURE SERIES: “Tire Music of In¬dia." "Tagore's Contribution to Music,”Rajeshwari Datta. lecturer, departmentof music, Ida Noyes library. 7:30 pm.LECTURE: “Image of the City and CivicIdeology," Scot Greer, Northwestern Uni¬versity. Soc Sci 122, 7:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: International House,8 pm.Wednesday, May 19CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins,University Carillonneur, RockefellerChapel. 5 pm.MEETING: Evaluation and planning ofHillel programming, Hillel, 7 pm.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes Hall. 8 pm.LECTURE: "Recovery of the Royal Acro¬polis in the Hittite Capital,” Hans G.Guerbock, professor of hittitology, Ori¬ental Institute, 8:30 pm.Thursday, May 20LECTURE: "The Federal Government asan Agent of Change.” Harris Wofford, as¬sociate director of the Peace Corps, Man-del Hall, 11:30 am,LECTURE: “The Development of theRepresentation of Time," Bernard Kap¬lan. professor of psychology, Clark Uni¬versity. Soc Sci 122, 3:30 pm.NINTH ANNUAL HONORS ASSEMBLY:Ida Noyes Hall, 4 pm.LECTURE: “Nucleic Acid Metabolism inL Cells Infected With a Member of thePsittacosis Group,” Esther Schechter,graduate student, department of micro¬biology, Ricketts North 1, 4 pm.SEMINAR: "Ordinary Water: A source ofEnergy for Active Transport?,” Paul Gor¬don, assistant professor, department ofpharmacology. 5753 Drexel, rm. 208, 4 pm.COLLOQUIUM: Professor of history EricCochrane discusses the “Academia delCimento” of 17th century Florence withhisory of science club, all invited, Fosterlounge. 8 pm.LECTURE: “Religious Symbolism.**Charles H. Long, assistant professor ofhistory of religions, Thompson House, 7thfloor Pierce Tower, 8:30 pun.Friday, May 21DEMONSTRATION: to end the war InVietnam, sponsored by Students for aDemocratic Society, starts at Congressand Michigan. 2 pm.LECTURE: "Machiavellian Aspects ofPost-Renaissance Ideology,” John G. A.Pooock. department of political science, University of Canterbury, Christchurch,New Zealand, rm. 2, law school, 3:30 pm.SEMINAR: "The Effect of Polycyclic Aro¬matic Hydrocarbons on Virus Replica¬tion,” Samuel B. Weiss, professor of bio¬chemistry, Research Institutes 480, 4 pm.FOLK DANCE WORKSHOP: With AndorCzompo, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.LECTURE SERIES: "The Greatest Ser¬mon for the Smallest Crowd,” John J.Klwiet, associate professor of churchhisory. Northern Baptist Theological sem¬inary, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.SABBATH SERVICES: Hillel. 8 pm.HASIDIC SHABBAT: "Encounter WithHabad.” Hillel, 9 pm.MOVIE: Felix Greene's “China!,** stu¬dents 50c, law school, 8 pm.Saturday, May 22LECTURE: "Experimental Studies in Hyp¬notic Age Regression." Herbert Spiegel,assistant professor of psychiarv. Colum¬bia University, Billings P-117, 9:30 am.LECTURE SERIES: "Heme Proteins, **"Oxygen-Carrying Heme Proteins,” Ema¬nuel Margoliash professorial lecturer, de¬partment of biochemistry, Abbott 101,10 am.CONFERENCE: Illinois conference onfree elections, sponsored by MississippiFreedom Democratic Party. Good Shep¬herd Congregational Church, 3700 S.Prairie. 10 am.VARSITY TRACK MEET: UC vs. Brad¬ley University, Stagg Field. 1 pm.MOVIE: Felix Greene’s “China!,** stu¬dents 50, Judd Hall, 8, 9. 10 pm.Sunday, May 23RADIO: "From the Midway.” A. P Thorn¬ton, professor of history at the Univer¬sity of Toronto, speaks on “The Indict¬ments of Imperialism,” WFMF, 7 am.RADIO: "The World of the Paperback,Herman L. Slnaiko. assistant professor ofhumanities, and Robert C. Albrecht, as¬sistant professor of English, discuss Da¬vid Riesman’s Constrain and Variety inAmerican Education. WFMF, 8:15 am.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins,University Carillonneur, RockefellerChanel, 12:15 pm.OPEN HOUSE: Tours of Hyde Park-Ken¬wood houses and descriptions of theneighborhood, Baptist Students’ Center,4901 Ellis, donation $1. 1 pm.MOVIE: Felix Greene’s “China!.’* stu¬dent 50c. Soc Sci 122, 7. 8. 9, 10 pm.DISCUSSION: “Religion in the CollegeCurriculum,” with Wayne C. Booth, deanof the College, Ida Noyes library, 7 pm.RADIO: “Chicago Dialogue,” Philip M.Hauser, professor of sociology, discussesChicago’s technological future, WIND,7.05 Dm.BRIDGE: Ida Noves Hall. 7:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30Dm.RADIO: “Nl^htline,** public discussion fo¬rum, WBBM. 10 pm.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.00 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty Discount$2 and ImmortalityThere are reasons enough why one should be curious toread this novel. For one thing, S. W. Edwards, its author, hadenough faith in it to publish it himself on non-existent resourcesafter being shunned by the Establishment, and enough faith incollegiate readers to personally introduce his novel and himselfto campuses like this one. Furthermore, there must be a reasonwhy Edwards’ readings of his own writing have earned notorietyin Chicago. And finally there must be a reason why LoyolaUniversity unofficially banned Go Now In Darkness.What will you get for two dollars spent on this book? A minormasterpiece with the following austere plot. A sick student novel¬ist part Negro, falls shakily in love with an equally sick divorceewho loves nothing but her ’cello. They live together in Old Townand move apart to tragedy after a measure of joy and muchanguish. But the novel is no routine variation on themes byJoyce or Baldwin. It was written in blood; among other things,the horrors of the twice-rejected lover are recalled in prose thatis better than we deserve. Edwards didn’t write himself outon the plot either; there are many fine but not-so-crucial thingslike his unclassable way of capturing the dingy vitality ofChicago while avoiding the pitfall of local color for its ownsake. Also, the occasional comedy is genuinely funny—thisbeing no mean trick.The verdict must stand: Go Now In Darkness may well bea candidate for immortality. But that can come late or soondepnding on when the literati of this campus — to whom thisnovel speaks so directly — troop off en masse to Hyde Parkbookstores, two dollars in hand.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 18, 1965 WRITERS’ WORKSHOP. PL 2-8377Round Trip to N.Y. by chartered bus(air cond., spring ride) June 12-19, $35,bus leaves lnt. House Hotel rms. $3-$4nite if desired. Inquire lnt House Aseoc.,FA 4-8200 evenings.Chartered bus to Shakespeare Festivalat Stratford. Ont. July 9-11, $15 roundtrip. Tickets reserved lor JULIUS CAE-SAR $2.50, HENRY IV $4.25, BEETHO¬VEN TRIO $2.50. Leave from lnt HouseFriday, 6 pm, return Sunday evening.Call lnt House Assoc., FA 4-8200, eve¬nings.European Travelers: There are someseats available on the SO charter June23 - Sept. 16. Only $250 from New Yorkto London and return. (From Chicago,$315.)Today is the 54th anniversary of thedeath of Gustav Mahler. Remember thenext time you listen to Das Lied VonDer Erde.WANTEDWanted: Apartment — 6 rooms or more.Call B. J. MI 3-6000,^436, 445.Grad student wants 1 bdrm. apt. fromJune nr. UC. Call Diana, HY 3-8346 eves.Girl to share fully furnished apt. Sum¬mer, option for year. Celling, walls, floors& windows included for $28.75 mo. Call324-1970 evenings.UC sec’y wants fern, roommate to find& share apt. in Prairie Shores, LakeMeadows, or Hyde Park beginning inJune. Call Nancy x2316 or X2928 days,326-6480 eves.Young man age 24 to 30 to share largebeautifully furnished 8 room apt. withother young men. Each man has ownbedroom. $55 monthly. 5509 Hyde ParkBlvd. Call Bob, Jerim, or Roger at 288-3150.Wanted: single room with cooking fa¬cility for summer and next yr., nr. cam¬pus. Call between 7-11 pm. x4180 Lau.Female roommate for 6 rm. summer sub¬let. Available now. BU 8-0675.Ride to Philadelphia wanted aroundJune 18. Call 642-2363 evenings.Wanted: 2-3 rm. apt. fight, under $100.Now to June 1966. 493-9166.Leaving for sabbatical? 2 very respons.young women want house to rent toJune 1966 of longer. Miss Liveright, 493-9166. price, available June 16-Aug. 20. 324-5547._Summer Quarter: attractive 1 bdrm.,furn., air-conditioner, one block fromcampus. $125 mo. Call 752-7045.Sexy apt. for rent June-Sept., 2VX rms.,nr. campus, partly furn. DO 3-3863.Apt. 3 ',2 rms. furn. Paid utilities, 6900 S.Crandon Ave. (Apt. 303). Avail. June 15-Oct. 1. Lease extension optional afterOct. L $115 mo. Call 493-6474 after 6 pm.Summer subletw. option to rent. 2V2-rm.apt., fully furn. $77.50. 5647 Blacks tone.Call 288-6642 after 7.FOR RENTLovely 5 rm. townhouse, 2 bdrms , Chat¬ham Village Co-op (83rd-Langly) sub¬lease for 1 yr. starting Aug. 1. Furn. orunfurn. ST 3-0975._3 rm. apt. on 1st fl. of former mansion,beaut, beamed ceiling. Ideal for marriedcouple or prof, woman. 0757 S. Jeffrey.288-6757.FOR SALEComplete set of Encyclopaedia Brlttanicawith yearbooks, desk with a leather topand chair, both In excellent condition.BU 1-2602 or RO 1-4275.SEXY SPORTS CAR FOR SALE! 1957MGA ccnv. Call DO 3-3863, after 6.MOTORBIKE — 3 horsepower, top speedaround 45 mph. Will sell for $50 (maybeleas). Contact K.K. x2898 days; 493-1129nights.63 VW, sunroof, seat belts. Hardly used.Mileage under 8,000. $1,200. HY 3-9753.Be the first on your block to own a livef. long indigo snake. This blue-blackbeastle makes a delightful, well-man¬nered pet. Can be used as a necktie,baby-sitter, pool cue, etc. Possibilitiesunlimited. Comes with own cage. All thisgoodness for only $25 cash money. CallK.K. at ext. 2898 days: 493-1129 eves.HELP WANTEDCounselors, male, for social agency'ssummer day camps. Minimum 1 yr. col¬lege completed. Expr. desirable but notnecessary. Full time and 3 day per weekschedules avail. Call Paul Ephroas, RE 1-6969.Young woman to care for 3 children, 20hrs./wk. In exchange for rm., bd . andsalary, from the end of June thru Au¬gust. BU 8-3983. DAY CAMP CN8LRS. — Males only towork with Elem. school-age children inoutdoor setting. Salary range, $350 andup for summer. Call Mel Brownstein »Carol Flnkelstein, RE 1-0444.AUTO DRIVERSYOU CAN EARN $106OR MORE A WEEKDRIVINa AYELLOW CABThe taxi the public prefersFULL OR PART TIMESTUDENTS21 years or overCAN APPLY IN ADVANCEFOR SUMMER WORKGood Pay — Many BenefitsCall CA 5-0692OR APPLY IN PERSON120 E. 18th St.Work from garage near homeLOST AND FOUNDMissing 2 orange cats, ex-males, familybereft. Please call Kleiner, FA 4-2634.TEDDY COME HOME! $5 reward for mygreen parakeet, 1101 New Dorms.W1H the person who accidentally pickedup my Chem 222 notes and text from thebookstore Saturday please call Phil at667-3166 — Immediately.BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIESEXCLUSIVE FRANCHISEAmazing new liquid plastic coating usedon all types of surfaces interior or ex¬terior. Eliminates waxing when appliedon Asphalt Tile, Vinyl, Linoleum, VinylAsbestos. Hard Wood, and Furniture.Completely eliminates painting when ap¬plied to Wood, Metal, or Concrete sur¬faces. This finish is also recommendedfor boats and automobilesNO COMPETITIONAs these are exclusive formulas In de¬mand by all businesses. Industry andhomes. No franchise fee. Minimum in¬vestment—$300. Maximum investment—$7,000. Investment is secured by inven¬tory. Factory trained personnel will helpset up your business. For complete de¬tails and descriptive literature write:Ohem-Plastics & Paint Corp., 1628 Lo¬cust. 9t. Louis 3, Mo.SUBLET3'i rooms, completely furnished, newlyremodeled bldg. Off-street parking. Topfloor front. 288-3555 evenings and wknda.$10©/mt.SUMMER SUBLET: Near campus: 3 bed¬rooms; 324-1395 early morning, late eve¬ning. $120/month.Summer sublet 6 rms Blacks tone St55th. Avail. June 9. 667-2683.Large 2 bedrm., study, dining rmZliving rm., kitchen. Furn. apt. ModerateCANOE TRIPSExplore the Quetico-Superior Wil¬derness for only $7.00 per personper day. Complete camping gear,Grumman canoe and food included.For details write BILL ROM, CanoeOutfitter, Ely, Minnesota.TAKE TWATake The Easy Way:1 Airline — 1 TicketService To Major Citiesof Europe TOWNE HOUSESA CO-OP forBetter LivingforMarriedStudentsand FacultyWithin easy distance of the Campus. Excellent city¬wide transportation via bus, 1C, and Expressway.TWA Campus Rep.:Mike Lavinsky, Ml 3-6000Or See Travel AgentLEVI'SSta-Prest SportswearNever Needs IroningWash 'Em - Dry 'Em - Wear 'EmGreen, Tan, Black Slacks$6.98Clay and Tan Shorts$4.98University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.SUMMERWORKMen register now for agreat summer job. Carnecessary.$120 to startPart-time also avail¬able. Order taking orlight delivery.372-7766Miss B 1, 2, 3, AND 4-SPACIOUS BEDROOMSSEVEN MODELS TO CHOOSE FROMNO MONEY DOWNTOTAL MONTHLYPAYMENT INCLUDESPRINCIPAL, INTEREST,TAXES, INSURANCEAND ALLMAINTENANCE.Your co-op has: Hotpoint Range, Refrigerator and Disposall •Lovely Custom Kitchen Cabinets • Storms and Screens • FullBasements • Lavishly Designed Baths • Beautiful Sliding GlassPatio Doors • Ceramic Tile • Extra Large Wardrobe Closets •Full Insulation • Genuine Oak Floors • Lifetime Face Brick •Aluminum Siding • Convenient Gutters and Dov/nspouts • Sound¬proofed for Privacy • Private Rear Yard Areas.Plumbing, Heating, Electrical Repair Bills . . . Complete Care ofLawns and Shrubs . . . Everything is Taken Care of For You asLong as You Live in Beautiful London Towne Houses.101st and Cottage Grove