The national office of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) was the scene of freneticactivity late into the night Wednesday as preparations continued for a major anti-Adminis-Vol. 74-No. 27 Friday, January 14, 1966The University of Chicago HP Hi?h deadlock still on;lab school separate issueyby Bob HertzUnless the Hyde Park Herald and the Hyde Park-KenwoodCommunity Conference (HPKCC) choose to compromise intheir demands for a separate school, there will be no newhigh school facilities for the Hyde Park-Woodlawn area, ac¬cording to George Benston, profes- ——sor in the graduate school of busi¬ness and a supporter of the UnityPlan for Hyde Park High School.The lengthy school controversyhas hinged on two basic plans foralleviating overcrowded conditions Kenwood site. “It would not takelong to clear,” he admitted, “but itis the last area remaining forneighborhood public housing and itwould take years to get it ap¬proved. We would have to find newtration demonstration in conjunction with the visit of Vice-President Hubert H. Humphrey at the Present Hyde Park Highto Chicago Friday.Spirits were dampened earlyThursday when Tom Hayden, justi "turned from an unsanctionedj irney to North Vietnam, calledt ■ cancel his scheduled appearance..l the rally which will follow theHumphrey address. Hayden, afounder of SDS, faces federal pros¬ecution for his violation of StateDepartment travel bans.DURING the day Wednesday,SDS staff workers prepared 15.000leaflets for distribution at North¬western, Roosevelt, Chicago Circlecampus of the University of Illi¬nois, and Lake Forest college.Some of the leaflets were given tothe Chicago Peace Council, a con¬federation of several Chicagopeace groups, for distribution inthe Loop.Steve Kindred of SDS spent theafternoon in negotiations with as¬sistant dean of students JamesNewman, Student GovernmentPresident Bernie Grofman, SGVice-President Rusti Woods, andrepresentatives of the Secret Serv¬ice and the Chicago police force.Kindred reported that Universityave. will be closed to traffic for theentire time that Humphrey is oncampus.THE DEMONSTRATION will be¬gin at 3:00 pm. Protesters will beencouraged by SDS to carry signsof their own design.Lines will form on the north sideof 57th across from the entrance to PROCEDURES FOR SEATING AUDINCE FORTHE ADDRESS OF ViCE-DSESIDfHT HUMPHREY1) Vice-President Humphrey will speak at 3:30 pm,NOT at 3:00 pm, as was originally announced.2) Those holding reserved-seat tickets for Mandel Hallmust occupy their seats before 3:20 pm or risk losingthem.3) At 3:20 pm, a number of people without ticketssufficient to fill Mandel Hall will be admitted.4) NO ONE will be admitted to Mandel Hall without aUniversity of Chicago identification card. The speech isopen only to UC students, faculty, and staff.5) Those who are not admitted to Mandel Hall mayhear the speech over speakers which will be set up inboth lounges of Reynolds Club. The speech will also bebroadcast on WUCB.that it would be better for protest¬ers to try to listen to the Hum¬phrey speech, instead of carryingsigns outside the hall during theaddress. UC SDS then decided to continueplans for demonstrating outside thehall during the speech. School site at 62nd and Stony Is¬land ave. Supporters of a UnityPlan have proposed an “education¬al park” on the site of the presentschool, while supporters of a sep¬arate school plan, who include theHyde Park Herald and HPKCC,have favored new facilities at thesite of the Kenwood elementaryschool, at 50th and Lake Park ave.HANDLING THE controversy forthe board of education has been aspecial board committee, chairedby Thomas Murray. According toboard member James Clement,however, administrative personnelhave been “so busy working on thebudget” that nothing has been for¬mally accomplished on the HydePark problem in recent weeks.$5,000 for plan“The new budget,” Clement ex¬plained, “appropriates §5,000 forthe preparation of a preliminary-architect’s plan for an additionalhigh school facility in District 14,without designating a specific site.The official policy of Dr. CurtisMelnick, superintendent of District14, favors a new facility at 50thand Lake Park in Kenwood,” Clem¬ent said.UC professor Benston, an advo¬cate of the Unity plan, cited sever¬al disadvantages of the proposed Madalyn Murray-America's jmost famous atheist. What idoes she think about US col- jleges and the students theyproduce? See page four for an Iexclusive Maroon interviewwith Mrs. Murray on this and \other subjects.• |space for the elementary studentspresently enrolled, and besides, the(Continued on page eight)LEE WEBB of the Committeefor Independent Political Actionpointed out that several hundred°**■ V protesters from other areas of theMandel Hall, and on the west side : .. . , .of University ave. north of 57th.The lines will not enclose MandelHall in order that orderly access toand departure from the area canbe achieved.At the Wednesday evening meet¬ing of the UC chapter of SDS,some of the SDS students argued city would not be allowed entry toMandel Hall since they would nothave UC identification cards.SDS national secretary, PaulBooth commented that it was un¬likely that Humphrey would devi¬ate in his speech from opinions hehas previously expressed publicly. Southern college desegregation — part ISouth's race bars fallingby Rita DershowitzCollegiate Press ServiceAnthony Lee is a 19-year-old sophomore at Auburn University in Alabama. Auburn, likemost other state institutions feeling the pressures of growing enrollment, is trying hard tofind ways to accommodate and teach its growing student population. But Anthony Lee livesalone in a double room on campus, with a private bath for his exclusive use. The room toSet $1200 goalLowrey Fund drive startsby David EThe campaign to endow theLowrey literary prize, whileoff to a fair start, still has along way to go if it is going toreach its goal of $1,200, accordingto Jack Kolb, president of ShoreyHouse.The prize was established inmemory of Perrin Lowrey, asso¬ciate professor of English and Col¬lege Humanities, who was killedlast summer in an automobile ac¬cident. It takes the form of a $50prize for an outstanding work inliterature in the College.Thus far close to $200 has beenreceived for the prize, with abouthalf of it coming from facultymembers and half from students.Letters making appeals arebeing sent out to all members ofthe University community, andfairly soon room to room personalappeals will be made in the dorms."It is expected that most of themoney will be received from thesepersonal appeals,” said Kolb.“Part of the problem,” Kolbnoted, “is that we cannot make per¬sonal appeals to students not livingin dorms, who knew Lowrey best.“Any sort of tragic death likeLowrey’s causes one to want to es¬tablish a memorial,” Kolb said,“but in his case it is especially jus¬tified. He had a particular interestin undergraduate writing and wasalways willing to take time to helpstudents, besides being an excel- . Gumpertlent teacher which is all unusualfor an administrator.”Kolb also pointed out that theprize reflects on Lowrey’s dual in¬terest in education and in writing.“He was a respected writer who, inall his administrative duties, neverPerrin Lowreyforgot the individual student. Hewas a real friend of the Collegewho carried the cause of the Col¬lege and the College student to therest of the University,” Kolb said.Conditions for the Lowrey liter¬ary prize will be announced short¬ly. Anyone interested in assistingin the fund raising campaignshould contact Chuck sher, 11016XShorey. the right of his is empty; on theother side is the bath for the dormfloor.Lee is the only Negro at Auburn.Last year, he and a friend inte¬grated the formerly all-white un¬dergraduate division of the univer¬sity. His friend dropped out—“Ithink the academic and socialpressures were just too much forhim”—and now Lee faces alone theindecisive, still-ambiguous atti¬tudes of his fellow students.“I expected it to be much worsethan it was,” the soft-spoken youngman said of his first year at Au¬burn. “There were some catcallsand sneers, but attitudes arechanging. I didn’t expect any over¬night changes. I plan on being herefour years; they will see that I’mnot going to leave, that other Ne¬groes will be coming, and they aregoing to have to get used to it. Ifyou take your time, things willsmooth over.”LEE TALKS with quiet assur¬ance. A veteran of a successfulattempt to integrate the white highschool in his home town of Tuske-gee and a leader in the AuburnFreedom League, a local group ofNegro teenagers that integratedseven restaurants in Auburn lastyear, he nevertheless expressesfaith in the gradual process ofdesegregation. “You can’t forcethings,” he says.Lee’s confidence in the ability ofhis fellow students to adapt to anintegrated society is not withoutsome basis in fact. For the firsttime in their lives many youngwhites in the South are finding sit¬uations in which Negroes occupythe same status as they do—stu¬dents within a common university.This new experience has stimulat¬ed some soul-searching, a gropingfor a new system of values. Mostof the white students who are speaking out in defense of integra¬tion are not the flaming radicalsand militant demonstrators. Theymay not even be fully convertedyet. But they are painfully awareof the chasm between their parentsand themselves, between the wholecourse of Southern history and itspresent turn. They are aware, too,of the conscious effort it will taketo overcome the well-taught atti¬tudes of the past.“My generation has beenbrought up to regard Negroes asinferior,” said Tommy Ryder, edi¬tor of the Louisiana State Universi¬ ty newspaper, the Daily Reveille.“We can look back now and seethat we’ve been taught to hate anentire race. Although a great ma¬jority of us would like to accept in¬tegration, there still remains thefeeling that Negroes are somehowdifferent. A lot of us are realizing,though, that if Negroes are inferiormade them inferior, because ofwhat the white man has done tothe Negro.”Ryder related an incident inwhich a group of students whowere attending a Southern student(Continued on page three)Extension division must find new home;board of education cancels present leaseThe University has been faced for some time with the lossof the building which houses its downtown extension center,and as yet it has not found aThe extension center, 64 E.in a 16-story building owned byChicago’s board of education andused mainly to house the city’sLoop Junior College. Approximate¬ly 1800 part-time students are en¬rolled in classes at the UC center.Only this week was it revealed tothe public that Chicago superin¬tendent of schools Benjamin C.Willis proposed to the board thatthe lease not be renewed.As Sol Tax, dean of the Uni¬versity extension, explained the di¬lemma, “The board of educationtold us two years ago that wecouldn’t haventhe space any more.We pleaded a little, and theycouldn’t have the space any more,the lease.“Actually,” said Tax, “we’vebeen looking for a better down- replacement.Lake st., occupies three floorstown location for three or fouryears.” He added that the board’sdecision on the lease promptedthe center in its efforts to find anew place.However, according to James J.Ritterskamp, Jr., UC’s vice-presi¬dent for administration, the Uni¬versity has been negotiating onlysince this summer on possible lo¬cations for the new center. Hesaid that the new accommodaiionswill be about the same size, butdeclined to name any of thosebeing considered.Tax agreed, “We now have sev¬eral possibilities in mmu and trustwe’ll have better space in theLoop.”(Editor's note: letters to the editorshould be typed double-spaced andsubmitted with the author's signatureand a statement of his connection, ifany, with the University.)Asserts placards sameas verbal harassmenlsTO THE EDITOR:I am somewhat relieved toread that an original plan to ha¬rass Vice-President Humphrey IN¬SIDE Mandel Hall was given up.This does not. however, precludeharassments without the audi¬torium. I hope that no such occur¬rence is justifiably inferred.If the original plan was re¬linquished as an infringement ofHumphrey’s civil liberties, the lat¬ter implication, if effected, wouldcertainly be an assault upon theVice-President's due respect. Is itnot enough that American digni¬taries are scoffed at, spat upon,etc. in foreign lands that they mustat home too be treated as aliensinstead of respected as holders ofhigh office?Furthermore, the current¬ly mentioned alternative of picketdemonstrations during the Vice-President’s speech should, in myopinion, be foregone as well. Arenot placards merely replacing ver¬bal harassments with printed oneswhich speak as loudly and disor¬derly to the literate speaker? Arethey not offering to his view a fixedand impenetrable facade insteadof a sea of intelligent and respon¬sive faces? Are they not, in effect,rendering a monotonous interfer¬ence pitched high like tones broad¬cast to block communication?Let us not forget that Mr. Humphery has been invited tospeak, not to compete; and that hedeserves and should expect fromus an assembly of interested listen¬ers, not intimidators. Let us show’our Vice-President that as respon¬sible students we are mindful andconstructively critical of the gov¬ernment we determine and share.Let us, in all civility, demon¬strate that we can sit and hearhim out and then stand and beheard with the mutual respectmerited by intelligent citizens, notby a pack of protesting “ ‘Paper’Tigers.”MICHAEL H. DORANUrge students to march;will nol block entranceTO THE EDITOR:Today, at 2:30, there will be ademonstration at Mandel Hall, ex¬pressing our conviction that thestated goal of the Great Society isfundamentally inconsistent with thewaging of the war in Vietnam. Thepurpose of this demonstration isnot to prevent entrance to Mr.Humphrey’s speech. But rather itis to publicly express this convic¬tion. But, realizing that slogans onplacards are not enough, there hasbeen a meeting scheduled in Man-del Hall after the Vice President’sspeech to undertake a deeper anal¬ysis into the real state of the Un¬ion. We urge students who shareour conviction to join us in thedemonstration. We invite all stu¬dents to attend the meeting afterMr. Humphrey’s speech.STAN TEPLICKSTEVE KINDREDJESSE LEMMISHCoBEAUTY SALON^J ExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ay*.646-4411 Bloom presents his sideof HHH fickef controversyTO THE EDITOR:In Tuesday’s Maroon there wasan article entitled “HHH ticketssquandered” which seemed to hintthat I somehow' acted improperlyin the distribution of tickets forthe Humphrey lecture. For thebenefit of all concerned, here ismy side of the story:During the last week of lastQuarter, I and everyone in Wood¬ward Court received a letter (mim-eoed) from Bernie Grofman tell¬ing us tickets for Humphrey wouldbe available beginning Monday,Jan. 3 in the S.G. office. I natural¬ly assumed that every student hadeither gotten a letter or some othernotification since it is not part ofMr. Grofman’s nature to giveany one part of the University(here the dormitories) an advan¬tage over the other parts. There¬fore, on that Monday afternoon Iwent to the S. G. office to pick2 tickets, not sure that there wouldbe even this scant number stillavailable. Imagine my surprisewhen I was told only 90 had beengiven out all day!! This meant tome that there were still 800 or900 left, and the image came to meof the same situation that existedwhen James Farmer spoke on)Campus last Quarter—less than 300people came, and many of themwere non-students. I immediatelyasked for, and received, a fist-fullof tickets (about 70) to see if Icouldn’t get things moving, al¬though a pessimistic staff advisedme to return any extras the follow¬ing morning—they felt I could nev¬er get rid of all 70.I posted notices, and I washappily surprised to be greeted byalmost 200 students in the CentralUnit who desired tickets. I passedout the 70, and had the others signlists with their names and roomnumbers. I returned to th S.G. of¬fice to fill orders for 152 tickets,and although there was no onearound, there was a large pile of(Continued on page four)James Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS - LINENS - TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. Card BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentreComplete Rep*imAnd ServiceFor All Popular Import*Midway 3-45016052 So. Cottage Grove Johnson's dilemmaby Bruc* F. FreedVietnamania. That’s the briefest description of the mainissue of American politics between now and the upcomingNovember congressional elections.Try to talk about the War on Poverty, aid to education, orany program touched by Federalappropriations, and inevitably, President continue to play bothVietnam is intejected. sides without jeopardizing serious.But even more unnerving, Viet- ly his jerry-built consensus? Hasnam is an explosive issue that has he convinced the electorate thatthe potential to poison American his middle course is the most ef-politics. Like an iceberg, only its fective? Will frustration over thejagged peaks can be seen, while stagnation of fighting show at thethe unkown remainder is hidden in polls?the murky depths of fickle public Before examining these ques-opinion. tions, one point must be consideredSINCE the campaign has not —the credibility gap from whichcommenced in earnest yet, and the the President suffers. His old im-electorate’s fears and wishes have age as the manipulator par excel-not been inflamed by impassioned lence haunts many people who fearoratory, the effect of the Southeast that the latest peace offensive isAsian conflict on the elections is only an extravaganza staged tostill a matter of conjecture. prove that peace is impossible andNevertheless, the Republicans to prepare the public for furtherpossess a tailor-made issue. The escalation. While the validity ofPresident can be damned for not this image can be debated, the factprosecuting the war vigorously that the President has his image isenough, and for not seeking that important, and can be sued effec-elusive end—‘‘total victory.” In the tively by the Republicans,same breathe, he can be blamed THE POSSIBILITY of war wea-for the alarming rise in American riness and frustration is an im-deaths. “Bomb more and bomb ponderable factor. Continued inde-harder”, the Republicans can cry. cisive ground action, rising Ameri-This campaign tactic traps the can casualties, and no discerniblePresident in the middle, and he results from the present level ofrealizes that. But since Lydon B. bombings in the North may stretchJohnson is the master politician, the President's tenuous consensushe has designed his strategy to past the breaking point,minimize his risks. The Democrats are now begin-As his actions have demonstrat- ning the last session of the historiced. he is attempting to neutralize 89th Congress with an albatrossboth the right and the left by giv- hanging heavily around theiring something to each. Thus, he is necks. Without the Vietnam con-increasing American troop flict, the election results would bestrength in the South while he es- most likely a foregone conclusion,calates US peace probes. But Vietnam has introduced a go-THE PRESIDENT remembers ry sense of drama to the election,well Harry Truman's predicament With the Republicans, especiallyin 1952, when the loyal opposition right-wingers like Ilickenlooperlabeled the Korean conflict as Mr. and Laird, beating the war drums,Truman’s war and used that the Democrats face an unpleasantcharge as an effective political campaign. Foreign policy is theweapon. President Johnson is weakest plate in the Democraticstriving hard to prevent that fate armor. The President’s domesticfrom befalling him this year. coalition and consensus could beHowever, this delicate maneuver dented seriously by that issue,leads to the question: can the The Republicans know this andwill do their utmost to exploit it.And their strategy may be success-ful. With the Republicans takingthe offensive from an oppositionstance, they cannot be held ac¬countable for their actions, as theDemocrats will be this November.HARPER THEATRETEA and COFFEEHOUSEPROVIDING EXCELLENT FOOD& THOUGHTFUL SERVICEOPEN DAILYFRIDAYSATURDAYSUNDAY 6:00 pm • 12 pm6:00 pm • 1 am12 noon-2 am10 am-12 pm5238 SOUTH HARPERRANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Ope* Evenings — Billie Tregonzo, Manageress THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111Our age is one in which we are confronted with conflicting codes, cultures, morals, and religions. These contradictionsmake it difficult for us to decide what our attitudes and behavior should be. Can we establish guide lines for personalsexual behavior in today's world? If so, what are they? These basic questions will be discussed in the series of sermonsonFRONTIERS OF MORALITYSunday Mornings — 11:00 amJack A. Kent, MinisterSEX IN ACHANGING WORLDJanuary 16PRE-MARITAL SEXJanuary 23 ADULTERYJanuary 30ABORTIONFebruary 6HOMOSEXUALITYFebruary 13THE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH OF CHICAGO5650 South Woodlawn Avenue Chicago, Illinois 60637FAirfax 4-4100 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856Hyde ParkAuto ServiceLOTUS TR-4MG CORVETTEBUICK PEUGEOTALFA ROMEOFIAT MORGANFERRARI VWJim Hartman7646 S. Stony IslandRE 4 63932 * CHICAGO MAROON • January 14, 1966Public posture at AuburnSome convictions still off the record Calendar of EventsFriday, January 14(Continued from page one)conference at the University ofFlorida gathered in someone’sroom one night after the formalsessions had ended. The group in¬cluded some Negroes. “My firstreaction was to hesitate, to thinktwice about it, but then I immedi¬ately thought, ‘Well, but it’s allright now, there’s nothing wrongwith it.’ It’s a refreshing process,this breaking off the bounds ofrace.”STUDENTS like Ryder feel aresponsibility to translate theirpersonal experience into somethingmeaningful socially. “We’ve hurtthe South,” he said quietly, “butnow we’re making great strides tohelp the South.”This does not mean that in allareas of university life once-segre¬gated activities are now fully inte¬grated, nor that all members ofthe campus think they should be.At Louisiana State, which has about50 Negro undergraduates amongits 22.000 students, a Negro studentwas barred from the campusswimming pool last summer be¬cause, the story is told, the Alas¬kan earthquake cracked the bot¬tom of the pool and it had to beclosed for repairs. The explanationwhich was supposedly given for theclosing of the pool may be just amyth, but it indicates what manystudents think is their adminstra-tions’ attempt to avoid controver¬sy and an unequivocal stand.A petition demanding the reopen¬ing of the pool on an integrated ba¬sis got 3,000 signatures during thesummer session, and another peti¬tion received widespread supportduring the fall term.The LSU swimming pool is nowopen on a fully integrated basis.WHY ARE administrators slowto move in the desegragating ontheir campuses? The answer is al¬most unanimous in every state col¬lege or university—the state leg¬islature. “The administration herewants to be liberal,” Tommy Ry¬der said, “but they are afraid ofthe state legislature and of thethreat of appropriations cut if theygo too fast.”Nor are all of the students will-PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledholr stylists ot5242 Hyde Park Blvd.2231 I. 71st St.DO 3-072710% Student DiscountMARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBlood Typing & Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICEComplete Lab. EKG A BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM - 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3-2000UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK"« strong bank99NEW CAR LOANS400-. hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200F.D.I.G ing to give up long-held ideas. Jer¬ry Brown, a student at AuburnUniversity, declared that he couldnot become an integration^. “It’sa question of values; segregationis what I’ve been taught all my lifeand I don’t want to change.”One student summed up the atti¬tudes of his fellow white studentstoward the Negroes on campus:“They ignore and accept (the Ne¬groes) at the same time.”Anthony Lee is a student in goodstanding at Auburn University; heattends classes and has access tothe library, laboratories and allother educational facilities on thecampus. Often, some classmateswill sit with him at the same tablefor lunch. But Lee is not apt tooverestimate this evidence of ac¬ceptance. In bis dormitory, no onehas ever told him not to use thepublic bath, but “I choose not to.”AT THE same time and in thesame school, Auburn attempts to domore than just comply with thelaws as it tries to extend the op¬portunities that exist within theschool to the Negro population. Butthe entrenched obstacles are in¬credibly strong.Auburn, one of the more progres¬sive of the Southern state institu¬tions, is conducting a positive pro¬gram to aid integration at the uni¬versity and to deal with the prob¬lems of the educationally disadvan¬taged. Truman Pierce, dean of theschool of education at Auburn, de¬scribed the two-week summer insti¬tutes which Auburn holds in coop¬eration with the US Office ofEducation for teachers and admin¬istrators of elementary and second¬ary schools.These institutions are attemptingto deal with the problems thatwere identified when desegregationbecame unavoidable in the South:inadequate instruction for teachersof the educationally disadvan¬taged; the lack of communicationbetween middle-class teachers and Negro students; and the problemsprompted by prejudice and socialclass structure.Dean Fierce admitted, however,that there were no white teachersin Negro schools. He was asked;if there are so few Negroes goingto college in white institutionswhere they would get a better edu¬cation, and none of the white stu¬dents are going to teach in the Ne¬gro elementary and secondaryschools, how are the benefits of allthis work filtering down to the Ne¬gro population?“SOME of the teachers at theinstitutes are Negroes, and theywill go back into the Negroschools,” he said. Then you areputting back into the Negro schoolsystem the same teachers whothemselves are products of thatdisadvantaged system?“Well, we hope we changethem,” Pierce said. “The worstthing we could do would be toemerge some Monday morning witha policy. . .,” and there hestopped, refusing to continue un¬less it were off the record.The blanks are not difficult to fillin. Auburn can’t urge white teach¬ers to go into Negro schools be¬cause that would be suicidal interms of state appropriations andsupport. A necessary gap existsbetween private convictions andprofessional judgments on the onehand and public posture on the oth¬er of these administrators.Yet, Dean Pierce believes thatthe circumstances which give riseto that conflict also provides thesetting for gradual change.“We will render such services aswe can within our culture. We’re ina better position to judge whatthose services are because we arepart of that culture.”(The conclusion of this two-partCPS story on Southern college de¬segregation will appear in Tues¬day’s Maroon.)Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity invites allFreshmen to its Rush Smoker Thurs¬day Evening, January 20# ReynoldsClub Lounge South 7:30 pm SPEECH: Vice-President Hubert HHumphrey, presented in Student Gov¬ernment’s William B. Ogden memoriallecture series as part of UC’s 75th an¬niversary celebration, Mandel Hall, 3:30pm.WUCB: A live broadcast of Vice-Presi¬dent Humphrey’s speech, followed bythe SDS counter-meeting, will begin at 3pm.MEETING: Carl Oglesby, president ofSDS. Charlie Cobb, SNCC field secre¬tary, Rennie Davis, JOIN communityunion, will speak in a counter-meetingimmediately following Vice-PresidentHumphrey’s speech, sponsored by SDS,Mandel Hall, 4:30 pm.DISCUSSION: “Talk Back on the Hum¬phrey Lecture,” Chapel House, 5810Woodlawn, supper at 6 pm, discussionat 7:15 pm.FILM: “A Propos de Nice,” Vige. “TwoTars,” Laurel and Hardy, “Balloona-tics,” Keaton, Social Science 122, 7:15and 9:15 pm.PARTY: St. Vincent’s Day party, fea¬turing The Noblemen band, men 50c,women free, Judson lounge, 8 pm.LECTURE: ‘‘Mosaic Law and theProphets,” Rabbi David Shapiro, de¬partment of Hebrew studies. Universityof Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Hillel House,5715 Woodlawn.Saturday, January 15YVORKCAMP: Wall-washing and paint¬ing rooms in the study center used bythe children and tutors in STEP, bringlunch and work clothes, volunteersneeded, call Bill Klein, MU 4-4830, ifyou can come. STEP study center, 1208E. 64 st. 9 am to 5 pm.SEMINAR: “The Negro High SchoolStudent: Is He College Bound?” spon¬sored by the college advisory programof SWAP, John Hope Franklin, UC pro¬fessor of history, will speak at 10:30am; A1 Raby, Convener of CCCO, andDave Dudley, director of admissions atIIT, will speak at 12:30 pm; a buffetlunch will be served. Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E. 59 st.FILM: “Monsieur Verdoux,” CharlieChaplin. Mandel Hall, general admis¬sion $1, students 75c, 7:30 and 9:30 pm.Sunday, January 16RELIGIOUS SERVICE: ‘ Christ and theCity of Captivity,” (Luke 4:18-19), theReverend £. Spencer Parsons, dean ofthe Chapel, preacher, RockefellerMemorial Chapel, 11 am.BRUNCH: Informal conversation withfaculty guest, affiliates 25c, non-affili¬ates 50c, Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn,11:30 am.LECTURE: “The Hasidic Communityand the Individual,” Rabbi ZalmanSchachter, professor of Judaic studies,University of Manitoba, Hillel House,5715 Woodlawn, 2 pm.MEETING: SDS steering committee,interested people welcome, Ida NoyesHall, 3 pm.CONCERT: “Choral Voices on a WinterAfternoon,” Rockefeller Chapel choir,Church of the Ascension choir, andmembers of the Chicago Symphony Or¬chestra, Richard Vikstrom, conducting,Edward Mondello, organist, works byBach, Hindemith, Holst and Williams,reserved $4.50, general admission $3.50, UC staff, faculty, and students $2.50,tickets on sale at the UC bookstore,Woodworth’s bookstore, Cooley’s Can¬dles, Chapel House, Rockefeller Memo¬rial Chapel, 3:30 pm.SEMINAR: “What Knowledge is WorthHaving?”, Chapel House, 5810 Wood¬lawn, United Christian Fellowship, 5:30lor. 1174 E. 57 st., 7:30 pm.DISCUSSION: "Sex in a ChangingWorld,” Jack Kent, leader, Student Re¬ligious Liberals, Unitarian Church par¬lor, 1174 E. 57 st. 7:30 pm.Monday, Januray 17SEMINAR: “Vatican II: Renewal inRome,” Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn,4:30 pm.LECTURE: “The Distribution withinthe Brain of Ferritin Injected into theCerebrospinal Fluid,” Dr. Milton W.Brightman, laboratory of neuroanatomi-cal sciences. National Institutes ofHealth, sponsored by the UC depart¬ment of anatomy, Anatomy 101, 4:30pm.WUCB: Triangular Table will featurean interview with Joan Baez, her songsand her politics, 8 pm.SEMINAR: "Paul Tillich’s Theology:An Introduction,” special session forstudents in the College, Calvert Houes,5735 University, 10 pm.STEP OPEN HOUSE: All those inter¬ested in working at STEP’S afterschoolstudy center in Woodlawn meet at 4:30pm in East Lounge, Ida Noyes. Visitorsare invited to join STEP tutors for din¬ner after daily program.IVS (International VoluntaryService) needs volunteers for aworkcamp Saturday, January15, at the STEP study center,1208 E. 64th, 9 am-5 pm. Workwill consist of washing andpainting rooms in the study cen¬ter used by the children andtheir tutors. Interested volun¬teers should call Bill Klein,MU 4-4830.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the resty^ foreign car hospitalMR. BIGGS 1440 E. 57th StreetMr. Biggs brings to you the “Hoagie," "Zep,“ “Hero," “Sub¬marine," A favorite of the East Coast, served on crustyGonnella's French Bread filled with loads of Bologna andSalami, Swiss cheese, American cheese, lettuce, tomatoes,onions, oil, oregano, etc., etc.,^fot peppers optional, and it'sPILED A MILE HIGH 89cAll the spaghetti you can eat 99cEgg Cream 30cAND MANY OTHER EASTERN FAVORITES WINTER CLEARENCEWITH REDUCTIONS FROM Vs toLovely wool and corduroy skirts to wear nowand right through spring.Wool and mohair sweaters in cardiganand pull-over styles.Soft and warm brushed nylon robes.Large assortment of bras and girdles.(mostly white)WOMENS' DEPT.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. ELLIS AVE. VxFREE DELIVERY3 FREE PEPSIS with each PIZZA(confirm phone: with take out orders only)CAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THE THY 3-5300 FA 4-5525PIZZACHEESE *«•»»•»•••»«••••••••••••••• 1.45SAUSAGE 1-80PEPPER & ONIONBACON & ONIONCOMBINATIONMUSHROOM ..SHRIMP 99990999099999999999999999999999009999990999999999990999999999999999009009990999 Med. Large1.45 2.001.80 2.351.65 2.202.15 2.702.40 2.952.15 2.702.40 2.95 THU MUST PINTniLE TRIP TN CAMEVER MAKE IS T« YftNIt MATSMH MEALERHere’s an economy compact with built-in luxury. It saves youmoney when you buy it; saves more when you drive itiONLYDATSUN "Four Ten” 4-dr. SedanDATSUNNow 67 h.p. for 1966(hicagoland DATSUNSALES - SERVICE — PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AVE. m B.v.ny himCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60020 PHONE 539 3770January 14, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • I<T* Madalyn Murray Interview(Continued from page two)tickets. I carefully counted out 152tickets, wrote their numbers on asheet of paper which I signed andleft on the secretary’s desk, andwent back to the dorm where I leftthe tickets in the appropriate mail¬boxes.Then, on Tuesday, the Ma¬roon carried the above-mentionedarticle without first asking mewhat really happened. My eventualreaction was, “get a larger hall.” Icalled Bernie Grofman in the after-PIZZA PLATTER1508 Hyde Park Blvd.KE 6-6606 KE 6-3891Delivery .25TABLE SERVICEPIZZA AND ITALIAN FOODSANDWICHES1/2 FRIED CHICKENFRENCH FRIES COLE SLAWROLL & BUTTER$1.50 noon and told him RockefellerChapel, which holds over 2,000could be used. Mr. Grofman, whoin his years as a “student leader”had not as yet learned Rockefellercould be used for lectures, l'epliedthat he had just spent IV2 hoursclearing Mandel Hall with the Se¬cret Service and it was too late todo anything. I had managed, ear¬lier, to get the Humphrey lecturepumped into areas adjoining Man-del for any overflow crowd.Many people who read thiswill think I was foolish in the firstplace for supposing that there waslittle interest in Mr. Humphrey.For some three years I have beendeeply involved in cultural affairs(I was the first and only CulturalChairman for all Pierce Tower, Iran the Morgenthau-Sieverts Viet-Nam debate, etc.), and during thistime I have come to learn thatwhat-seems-to-be thrilling pro¬grams are very often poorly at¬tended. I was motivated purely with the idea that this lectureshould be a success and that thestudents should take full opportuni¬ty of the program that SG waspresenting.ALAN BLOOMINDEPENDENT SGREPRESENTATIVEWOODWARD COURT Atheist rebukes collegesBremner’s view of USpeace offensive mistakenTO THE EDITOR:HARPER THEATER CHAMBER MUSIC SERIESThree Monday Evenings at 8:30 pmPerformed by thsSYMPHONY STRING QUARTETof theCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAPROGRAMMonday, January 17, 8:30 pmString Quartet #11 in F Minor Piano Quintet in A Major,Op. 81 DvorakOp. 95 ("Serioso") BeethovenString Quartet #1 ShostakovichMonday, March 21, 8:30 pmString Quartet in C Major S,rin9 Quartet,Op. 76 #3 (“Emperor") Haydn hString Quartet in F MajorMonday, May 16, 8:30 pmPiano Quartet in Eb Major, Piano Quartet in A Major,K. 493 Mozart Op. 26 Brahm*String Trio Dohnanyi Samuel BarberRavelPRICES:Individual ConcertsReaular "7 cO Regular $3.50Students $5.00 Students $2.00All Three ConcertsCall BU 8-1717C^OOOSCCOSCCCCCOSCOOCCOOCOOCCOCOOSOSOCCCCOSOCCCC^IMID-WINTERMADNESSSat., Jan. 15CIDER AND COOKIES AND'S^o off$12.00 French designerwool $9.00$9.98 designer wool $7.48$6.98 English wool . .$5.23$8.00 wool $6.00YARN — just enough forshells, scarves, hats, vests,mittens, children's sweaters IIi John Bremner’s analysis ofthe Johnson’ Administration’snegotiating position with regard toVietnam cannot be allowed tostand uncorrected. His fundamen¬tal mistake is in assuming that therecent American peace “offensive”has any political substance; fromthat assumption he draws the erro¬neous conclusion that the President“thinks that compromise in Viet¬nam is possible”. Because he“overestimates the stability of theSouth to resist aggression and sub¬version and the honesty of theNorth to abide by agreements.”Nothing could be furtherfrom the truth, of course. Thepeace offensive on closer analysiscomprises (a) a halt in the bomb¬ing of North Vietnam and (b) theconspicuous dispatch of US offi¬cials around the globe to “explain”the US position. No one questionsthe sincerity of President Johnsoninsofar as his hope for peace isconcerned, but he knows with bru¬tal clarity that he is about to en¬large the war and that he will haveno way of putting any limit onthe violence from now on. It isnecessary, in order to give the USdiplomatic show its full effect, todeny what everyone knows—all inthe name of “bringing it to theconference table”.“The Conference Table” has be¬come the pervasive symbol of theultimately pacific nature of Ameri¬can policy, which allows the Amer¬ican public to feel that it is onlyHanoi and Peking who really de¬sire war. The cost of this sym¬bolism is, however, the sort of con¬fusion found in Mr. Bremner’s arti¬cle. The President has not, ofcourse, mentioned any “compro¬mise”, nor has the Secretary ofState.Assuming the belligerents wereto sit down at the conferencetable tomorrow, the US negotiatingposition would be that the Com¬munist military opposition to theSaigon government must be dis¬banded so that it demonstrably canoffer no resistance to that govern¬ment—or so little that even so en¬feebled a regime as that of Gen.Ky could handle it without UShelp.Those are the terms, bad¬ly stated, under which the USwould be ready to withdraw itstroops from Vietnam. No one withany responsibility expects to get(Continued on page five) Atheist, free-thinker, cynic, crack pot;those are just a few of the expletivesthrown at Madalyn Murray over thelast few years.Advertised as “the most hated wom¬an in America,” Mrs. Murray became,nationally known in 1963, when theSupreme Court upheld her contentionthat prayers should not be allowed inthe ptiblic schools. Presently the di¬rector of the Frcetlionght Society ofAmerica, Inc., Mrs. Murray is current¬ly involved with a suit aiming at re¬moving churches’ property from taxexemption.Maroon: Mrs. Murray, do youthink college students are gettingmore radical?Mrs. Murray: Why, not at all!College kids are getting less radi¬cal all the time. I have spoken tocolleges all over the country and inHawaii as well, and I am appalledby the conformity of opinion, theconformity of thought, and the lackof understanding that I find. Ap¬parently you’re not getting a goodliberal arts education at many col¬leges today.For example, I am shocked thatmany kids do not know what So¬crates stands for, or wrhat the ba¬sic theories of government are.You have no historical background,no socio-economic background, andno cultural background in the phi¬losophic writings. You have noth¬ing!Another thing that throws me isthat it’s no lie when they say that85 to 90 per cent of the kids sup¬port the war in Vietnam. This isHitlerian, just like our rationaliza¬tions for moving into the countryitself.And as for those who are againstthe war, I am infuriated by the ra¬gamuffins among them. I don’t seewhy dirt should be equated withradicalism.Maroon: What do you think,then, is really going on in collegestoday?Mrs. Murray: I say that thefurther you go to college, the moreyou are lost to humanity. By thetime you get your Ph.d., you havesold out completely to the Estab¬lishment. Sometimes I think thatthe dropouts from high school arethe most fortunate people in ourculture, if only because they’re notconstantly being brainwashed bythe system.And you know, the seniors aremore gone than the freshman. Sooften you've got to write what theywant to hear and not what youthink, and every time you do thatyou debase yourself in a sort of in¬tellectual prostitution. I know, be¬cause I did the same thing when Iwas in school. Come on now, youmust have a sense of guilt whenev¬er you have to parrot back some ofthe ideas being dished out in class¬rooms.Maroon: Can you suggest a rem¬edy?Mrs. Murray: Perhaps the bestplace for education would be asmall local library somewhere,reading indiscriminately and at thesame time embroiling yourself inthe problems of the community.Maroon: Is education compatiblewith religion?Mrs. Murray: Yes! Do you knowwhat group of people attendschurch most regularly? Collegegraduates, that’s who. Maybe it’shypocrisy, maybe it’s status seek¬ ing, but in any case the workingclass is beginning to stay awayfrom church en masse, and thewhite-collar college graduate isflocking into the churches.Oh, it’s true that a good liberalarts education is incompatible withreligion, but how many places areleft where you can get one? Ourpresent education is leading us to¬ward a national god of some sort;what it is I can’t define exactly.Maroon: Where do you think so¬ciety is going?Mrs. Murray: I think we’re mov¬ing into neo-fascism, into a sort ofnational socialism. We have themilitary fanaticism, the wedding ofthe military with business and gov¬ernment-all the while fighting forchurches’ rather vague God.You know, one of the most frus¬trating things in everyday life is torun into some stupid young man orwoman who keeps telling you,“I’m sorry, but you can’t do that.It’s against the rules.” You kidsare trained like that at home byyour mother, at school by women,at college by men. and finally some¬body rams a gun in your hand andsays, “Go out and kill.”There’s one thing that everyoneshould say constantly—“Why?”And if they can’t show you why,then sav “Go to hell.”Maroon: I take it that you arenot >n favor of military conscrip¬tion?Mrs. Murray: I’m absolutelyagainst military conscription ofany kind. I am against war; I’mspecifically against the war inVietnam. The very idea of one per¬son going out to deliberately killanother is foreign to my mind.On the other hand, if you havean ideal that you believe in andyou need a goddamn gun to defendit, then OK. If we’re going to havefascism in this country, for exam¬ple, then let’s arm the studentsand fight the fascists.Maroon: What do you think ofyour fellow American women”Mrs. Murray: I think that gener¬ally the American women are abunch of stupid cows in the pas¬ture. feeding indiscriminately onthe pablum dished out in the massmedia. They have the leisure timefor reading and social action, butusually they don’t do a damnthing.In fact. I can’t think of a termlow enough to describe the accultu¬ration of obedience to authoritythat the mothers are perpetuatingon their children.Maroon: To change the subject,what is your opinion on the con¬sciousness-expanding drugs, as faras their social or religious implica¬tion is concerned?Mrs. Murray: I used to thinkthat everyone had a right to ex¬periment with himself on any lev¬el, but last summer’s experienceat Mexico’s Blake College hasmade me change my mind. I saw(Continued on page six)MOREfabyar5225 harper • 363*2349hours: 10-5:30 daily7:30-9 -Tues. & Wed.10-9 -Thurs. II1 FEST11FAIT ... La protection flnancl&re que vouadonnez 6 votre famille aujourd’huidevra lul fitre procure d’une autrefa?on demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certainement accomplir cettetdche A votre place. EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSEN3AUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty DiscountEn tant que reprSsentant local de la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter A un moment devotre cholx?^seooecc: , .zzzzzzzzzococccocoogoosoooooogoooooc^ Ralph J. Wood. Jr.. CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, IB.FAirfox 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 fa 5 Mondays & Fridays8UN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete Selection ofhooded coats, long underwear,sweatshirts, corduroy "Levisetc. etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Student discount with adA_ 4 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 14, 1966.. :.v vy.-v • v .**• • •; : • • • • • • • • • ;• • • •v • • • • • • V V . V WMjy . . • V •... • • ... . • • ... ...... ....... ^Culture Calendarf lllCAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRASeventeenth Week—Thu-Fri, Jan 13-14—Andre Previn, cond: Arturo BenedettiMichelangeli, p. Ravel; Cone; Liszt:Totentanz for Piano & Oroh. Otherworks to be announced.Eighteenth Week—Thu Fri. & Sat.jan 20-22—Gunther Schuller, cond;Fdith Peinenmann, v. Schuller; A spe¬cial commissioned work. Dvorak: Cone.Other works to be announced.Nineteenth Week—Thu-Fri, Jan 27-28—Hans Schmidtlsserstedt. cond; DonaldPeck, f. Brahms: Sym No. 3. Gesens-way: Cone. Other works to be an-Twentieth Week—Thu-Fri, Feb 3-4—Hans Schmidtsserstedt, cond; HansRichter-Haaser, p. Beethoven: EgmontOvert. Beethoven: Cone No. 4 Reger:Variations and Fugue on a theme of^Thu-Sat Concerts: Thu. 8:15, Fri. 2;Sat, 8:30. $2.50-$6.50. Fri gallery seatsfor students, $1.00 (available until 1 pm"orchestra Hall Box Office: Daily,9 30-6; later on concert nights. Sun, 1-4Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michigan. HA 7-0362: Sun & Hoi after 5; HA 7-0499.CONTEMPORARY CHAMBERPLAYERS OF THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO —Ralph Shapey, musical dir.Webern. Five Pieces for Orch, Op. 10.Dallapiccola: Cinque Canti for Baritoneand Chamber Group (Charles van Tas¬sel. br). Blackwood: Piece for Piano.Berio: Chamber Music for Soprano,Clarinet, Harp and Cello (Neva Pil¬grim's). Wyner: Serenade. Fri, Jan 21at 8:30 Free Mandel Hall. 57th & Uni¬versity. MI 3-0800, ext 3885.CHICAGO CHAMBER ORCHESTRA—Dieter Kober, cond; Harriet PeacockLeJeune, Marie Moulton, f's. Blow:Prelude and Canzona. Galuppi: Cone ine for 2 Flutes & Orch. Hovhaness: SymNo. 16. Mozart: Sum No. 20 This con¬cert will be performed 4 times. ChicagoHistorical Society, North & Clark, MI 2-4600: Jan 9. Museum of Science & In¬dustry, 57th & South Shore. MU 4-1414: Jan 16. National Design Center,Marina City, 222-1154; : Jan 23 Cathe¬dral of St. James 666 N. Wabash: Jan.30. All performances are free and beginat 3:30 (except Jan 30, 7:30). For com¬plete details on the orchestra writethem at 332 S. Michigan.CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAPOPULAR CONCERTS -Andre Previn,cond; Hans Richter-Haaser, p: Feb 5.Jan 15. Morton Gould, cond; S'amuelMagad. v: Jan. 29. Irwin Hoffmancond; Hans Richter-Haaser, p: Feb 5,Sat. 8:30. $2.50-$4 50. Orchestra Hall, 220S. Michigan. HA 7-0362.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM — Howard M.Brown cond Music by Heinrich Isaacwith an introduction by prof LouiseCuyler, Univ. of Michigan. Mon, Jan. 17at 8:30. Free. Bond Chapel, Universityof Chicago, 1025 E. 58th, MI 3-0800, ext3885. Jan 22 at 8:30. $2.00. Univ of Illinois atChicago Circle, 750 S. Halsted. 663-2645.TheatreExhibitsART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO —Painting and Sculpture of Nicholas deStael: Jan 7—Feb 13. Prints and Draw¬ings Dept: Master Drawings: Thru Jan16 Illustrated Books and Watercolors:Continuing. Photography Dept: Worksby Lyle Bonge: Thru Jan 23 OrientalDept: Japanese prints by Utamaro:Thru Jan 9 Daily. 10-5: Thu. 10-9:30;Sun, 12-5. Michigan & Adams.Folk music, blues, jazzSONNY TERRY & BROWNIE Mr-GHEE —Concert sponsored by ChicagoCircle Center Music Committee. Sat, BAREFOOT IN THE PARK —NeilSimon’s comedy starring Myrna Loyand S'andor Szabo; Mike Nichols, dir.Nightly, 8:30; Matinees, Wed & Sat at 2.Closed Sun. Nightly, $2.50-$4.95; Fri &Sat, $2.75-$5.50. Matinees, $2.50-$4.50.Blackstone Theatre, Balbo & Michigan.CE 6-8240.THE HAPPY MEDIUM —A musicalrevue titled “Hip Happening’’ starringBill Gerber, Rita Lerner, Barbara Ru-benstein, Dick Sasso, Judi Sheppardand John Spina. Nightly, 9; Fn, 9,11:30; Sat, 9, 11:30 & 1. Closed Mon.Nightly, $2.50 & $2.95; Fri, $3.00 &$3.50; Sat. $3 50 8. $3.95. 901 N. Rush,DE 7-1000.HITS OF BROADWAY — A show ofmusical comedy hits, changing month¬ly; Robert Simpson, prod. Tue-Thu,7:30. 9 & 10;30; Fri & Sat. 8. 10, &11:30; Sun, 4:30, 7:30 & 9. Closed Mon.Nightly, $7.45-$8.45 (Price includes din¬ner and show). Imperial Room, DelPrado Hotel, 5307 S. Hyde Park. HY 3-9600.THE PEDESTRIAN IN THE AIR —The American premiere of Tonesco’snew play starring Alvin Epstein in aproduction bv the Goodman Theatre.Jan 7-30. Nighlly, 7:30; Fri & Sat 8:30.Closed Mon. Nightly, $3.00; Fri & Sat,$3.50. There will also be two Matinees;Jan 13 & 20 at 2. Goodman TheatreMonroe & Columbus-CE 6-2337.SECOND CITY—“New Wine, Old Bot¬tles,” is Second City's sixth anniversaryrevue starring Sandra Caron, JudyGraubart, Bob Klein, David Steinbergand Fred Willard. Sheldon Patinkin,dir; Bill Mathieu, composer-p. Nightly,9; Fri & Sat 9, 11 & 1. Closed Mon.Nightly. $2.00: Fri. $2.50: Sat $3.00. 1846N. Wells. DE 7-3992.THE SUBJECT WAS ROSES —Pulit¬zer Prize-winning drama starring JackAlbertson, Martha Scott and MartinSheen of the New York cast. Thru Jan22. Nightly, 8:30; Wed & Sat matineesat 2. Closed Sun. Nightly, $3.00-$5.50;Fri & Sat, $3.50-$6.00; Matinees, $2.50-$4.50. Studebaker Theatre, 418 S. Michi¬gan, 922-2973.TINY ALICE —Hull House at theJane Addams Center. Fri and Sat 8:30,$3.90. Sun. night, 7:30, tickets $3.40.CALI. ME BY MY RIGHTFULNAME —Hull House at Parkway Com¬munity House. Opened Dec. 10 for tenweekends. Fri and Sat, 8:30, $2.50 fortickets. Sun. at 7:30 p.m., $2.00.UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN —Weekends through Feb. 6. Fri., 8:30,Sat. 8:00, Sun. 7:00 p.m. Tickets $2-3.Encore Theatre, 1419 N. Wells, WH 4-8414. (Continued from page four)those terms without bringing Hanoito its knees militarily and thensuppressing over several years theViet Cong themselves. No one ex¬pects, in short, that the UnitedStates is going to leave South Viet¬nam in the forseeable future.This position which does notcountenance any compromise inthe purity of the South Vietnamesegovernment—which does not infact recognize the National Libera¬tion Front as deserving of any rep¬resentation in that government—has been stated often and ratherforcefully by Secretary Rusk. It isa tribute to the wishful thinking ofAmericans that many can discerna desire to end the war in the cur¬rent diplomatic spectacle.D. GARETH PORTERThings were "left out”in impeachment storyTO THE EDITOR:I read with interest the Maroon'sarticle on SG President Grofman’simpeachment; however, as onewho was at the meeting and playeda part in the proceedings, it seemsto me that there are a few thingsthe Maroon left out. The article didnot mention that, when the motionto impeach was first made, the As¬sembly, by a vote of 22-4, refusedto consider, discuss, or even hearthe charges against Grofman. Theopen-mindedness of the Assemblydid not come as a surprise. Indeed,anticipating that Grofman’s co¬ horts would “object to the consid¬eration” of the impeachment, Mr.Mahaffey and I had prepared a let¬ter to the Maroon explaining thatthe Assembly had refused to hearthe charges because they realizedthat Grofman would have no legiti¬mate defense to them and that theAssembly preferred the withhold¬ing of information to free publicdiscussion. It was because of thisletter that the impeachment finallyreached the floor. The moment theAssembly voted not to hear thecharges, we gave the letter to theMaroon reporter who was standingby. She immediately showed theletter to Grofman’s floor leaders,who soon realized that if the As¬sembly did not make a pretense ofhearing and voting down thecharges, the letter would be mostdamaging to the cause of Grof-manism.We must now recall that 22members of the Assembly had re¬fused to hear the charges againstGrofman until the appearance ofthe letter made some sort of white¬wash mandatory. It is fairly ob¬vious that these 22 members wouldnot have voted to remove Grofmanregardless of the charges againsthim. They heard the charges, notseriously to consider Grofman’simpeachment, but to clear him.For instance, representative BobRoss said in open assembly, “Weall know Bernie’s a thief, sowhat!” While not all the membersfelt this way, Ross’s statement gives some indication of the atmos¬phere which pervaded the Assem¬bly.During the discussion of the im¬peachment, Grofman admittedhaving misused parliamentary pro¬cedure and having withdrawn a to¬tal of $300 in SG funds for his per¬sonal use. He said that he was “in¬deed guilty of certain misde¬meanors.” He continued by admit¬ting that his actions were “im-proprietuous (sic). I am indeedguilty if impropriety, but I am nota thief.”Mr. Grofman had indeed actedwith impropriety. The Assemblypreviously had limited the amountstudents might borrow from the SGloan service to $25. The SG by-lawslimit the amount the presidentmay spend without authorization to$10 and the amount the executivecouncil may spend to $50. As Mr.Grofman had about $100 withdrawnfrom the SG treasury for a periodof six months, he does not appearto consider himself bound by therules of the Assembly or the SGby-laws.The charge that Grofman haddeliberately miscounted a quorumhas been admitted by the Assem¬bly. The alleged quorum of Octo¬ber 28th vanished on November11th when the Assembly voted to“correct” the minutes of the earliermeeting. The words “chairupheld” have been replaced by“there was not a quorum present.”KENNETH SHELTONSAMUEL A. BELL“Bay Shell From Bell**SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Av®.KEnwood 8-3150 MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGIXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 L 55th HY 3-9259 Ml 3-4045TERRY'S PIZZAFREE STUDENT DELIVERY1518 EAST 63rd STREETMEDIUM 1.45LARGE 1.95EXTRA LARGE 2.95GIANT 3.95ONIONS 10c EXTRA - GREEN PEPPERS or ANCHOVIES 15c EXTRAMUSHROOMS 20c EXTRA PEPPERONI 25c EXTRAAlso complete line of other foods25c OFFFifty-Seventh at KenwoodUNUSUAL FOODDELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICES Triangle Theatrical Productions, Franklin Fried, Executive DirectorPresentsCARLOSMONTOYAJanuary 21—Orchestra HallTickets $5.00, $4.00, $3.00, $2.00At Box Office and all Sears Storesi f- s &' fj sIN BOOKS2Gfo - 50% OFFShelf-worn and Soiled Books,Marked Down from SiockGreat Savings on desirable titles.Sals StartsFriday, January 14at 8:00 amONE WEEK ONLYNew Titles added every dayThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. ELLIS AVE. JOSHWHITEFebruary 4—Orchestra Hal!Tickets $5.00, $4.00, $3.00, $2.00By Mail Order OnlyPETESEECERMarch 4 & 5—Orchestra HallTickets $5.00, $4.00, $3.00, $2.00By Mail Order OnlyMail orders for all attractions to Triangle Productions, Inc., Box C, 156 East Superior, Chicago,Illinois, 60611. Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope. Add 25c per order to cover the cost ofhandling and mailing. Your co-operation in sending separate checks when ordering for more thanone show is appreciated.Groups, organizations, fraternities, sororities call Miss Strong, 787-7585.January 14, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3toy*;-- \Theater reviewHarper professional community theaterdirected by ex-Northwestern professors New play vital — blit imperfectby Renee SchwartzA new repertory theater is opening within walking distanceof the University. The repertory company, Eagles Mere As¬sociates, is a professional company, and was incorporated,say its founders, “to promote, provide, and produce a reper¬tory theater for the production and —performance of classical, contem- Tickets are three dollars for allporary, and experimental plays.” shows except Friday and SaturdayThe group is under the joint di- evenings, when they are four di¬rection of Alvina Krause and John ]ars. However, students with prop-Van Meter, former professors at er identification may buy a ticketNorthwestern University. Both at half the regular price if they goMiss Krause and Van Meter have to the box office ten minutes be-been associated with repertory fore curtain time. Call Ma by My Rightful Nameby Michael ShurtleffDirected by Michael Miller atthe Hull House ParkwayTheatre (500 East 67 Street)Cast:Doug . Robert LehmanPaulChris .... Jerrilou JohnsonElliot ... Robert WeissMother ...Father ...Production20. closes FebruaryStudent seats are guaranteed bythe management. The HarperTheater will continue its policy ofadmitting students to the perform-theaters in the past as producersand directors.According to Miss Krause, anyrepertory company forms for thepurpose of producing drama for acommunity of people. The size of ances ^ree °f charge if they servethe community permits the play- as ushers,wright, through the actors, toapeak directly to the audience.Therefore, she says, it is impor¬tant that the plays be performedby professionals who recognize theneed for continuous productivity,creativity, and training.Following the presentation of Pi¬randello’s Six Characters, insearch of an author, which will beperformed from January 11-23, isDurrenmatt’s The Physicists, Jan¬uary 25-30. Six Characters is then ... . . „r , ,scheduled for production February ratlonal soc,ety- We "eedMurray hits schools(Continued from page four)kids take these drugs and becomecomplete automatons, not doing adamn thing. Well, I’m sorry. Thisis a complete waste of humanbeing, a withdrawal of persons ofhigh intellect from the fight for a16.The schedule after that date isflexible, and will be determined bycommunity response.The Eagles Mere Associates aretemporarily housed at Harper who are vitally involved with life.Maroon: You’re involved withlife that way, aren’t you?Mrs. Murray: You’re damn rightI am! It’s so exciting to be yourown person—to have your ownTheater, 5238 S. Harper ave. Per- likes and dislikes, your loves, and,formances are at 8:30 pm, Tues- especially, your hates. My life isday through Saturday, and 7:30 always stimulating, and everyone’spm, Sunday. Matinees are Satur- can be if they can keep their self¬day at 2 pm and Sunday at 3. love and self-respect.JESSELSOircSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd Call Me By My RightfulName is Michael Shurtleffsfirst play, and it has a plot asold as geometry: Act One,degenerate student fights family,gains friend, and wins girl; ActTwo, student discovers friend andgirl were once lovers, fights friendand rejects girl; Act Three, stu¬dent attempts grand reconciliation,and all concerned conclude thatlife is not as simple as it seems;curtain.Shurtleff fleshes out this bareskeleton with living characters,and colors one corner of the trian¬gle black. The resulting drama ofracial love and hate is sharpenough to draw occasional blood.This gimmick brings out new lifebest displayed in the friendshipbetween Doug and Paul.DOUG IS the hip and degener¬ate student, sincere, infectiouslyhappy, and utterly blind. Shurtleffhas drawn a touching portrait ofan arrogant, romantic adolescentwho learns of the unpayable debtwe incur in hurting those we love.His education is none too gentle.Doug must come down from hiscloud, down off the ladder onwhich he perches to escape theworld below, and away from thegaudy Christmas star that is thesymbol of his delusion. Robert Lehman plays the role with a fac¬ile volubility that slowly revealsthe sad truth that words are notenough to erase the pain thatwords can cause.Paul, Doug’s Negro friend, is aquiet man who knows that wordsare not enough, who holds his trou¬bles like others hold their peace.He speaks like he walks, with adisciplined grace. Paul generalizesfrom experience, not principles.Because of this his is the finestrole in the play; because of FeltonPerry’s restrained acting Paul’ssecond act monologue is emotional¬ly racking.SHURTLEFF FALTERS with hiswomen characters. Neither Doug’smother nor his girl Chris are fullyviable dramatic characters. Jerri-lou Johnson makes an impressivestage debut with her portrayal ofChris. She runs into serious troubleonly with awkward scenes of quietemotion, and in arranging the far¬fetched blocking that Shurtleff re¬quires in the last act. Mary Dalymakes the best of the author’s badjob by playing the mother as astraight comic figure.The rest of the family acquitthemselves well, although perhapsElliot (Robert Weiss) and the fa¬ther (Don Alport) are a bit lesscomplex than the playwright in¬tended. Shurtleff carefully avoidsstacking the cards against any oneposition in the play’s text, but theinterpretations in this productionseem a bit harsh towards maleside of the family.Shurtleff tells us that race rela¬tions are difficult in a particularlyskillful way. He carefully buildssympathy for Doug, then flips thetables to trap Doug and the specta¬tor in the failings of Doug’s roman¬tic outlook. This drives home hispoint forcefully, but when Shurtlefftries to move from here he wal¬lows amid contrivances.But dramatic device only be¬ comes dramatic idea when it liveson stage, growing within the play.Shurtleff’s final act is gimmickybecause It fails to do just that.While some of his lines are collo¬quially true (no small achieve¬ment), the author strains for ef¬fects like a water buffalo after ripegrapes. The grapes are nice tohave, but the process of gettingthem is ungainly.MILLER'S direction takes fulladvantage of the theater’s physicalresources. The actors utilize everycorner of the authentically decrepitset—an environment that itselfhelps the play over some of themore heavy-handed moralizing ofthe final act. Although the minorset changes could be handled fast¬er, the drums played by “King”George Harris in the darknesstighten the belly muscles in prep¬aration for the next scene.If the production is not perfect, itis most emphatically vital, honest,and unpretentiously competent. Be¬cause this group is only six monthsold, these qualities are all themore exciting. Perfection is rarelypossible for an infant theater, butif it does not have vigor, honesty,and talent, it will surely flounder.The Parkway Theatre has therequisite material advantages: aclean and accessible location withno parking problem, a comfortableopen stage, and the encouragingsupport of the Hull House Jane Ad-dams Center. But their less tangi¬ble assets insure survival in thecurrent flurry of theatrical activityon the Southside. These people arehere to stay.Edward HearneTYPEWRITERSandTAPE RECORDERSFOR SALE or RENTALType changes in accord with your needs.Record your daily lectures for re play.PHOTO & TYPEWRITER DEPT.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. ELLIS AVE. DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS PILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH-- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsSERVICE CALLS - $3 JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAPJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060HeKnowsThe Max Brook Co.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERSHas served the Campus with Unexcelled Qualityand Service Since 19171013-17 East 61st StreetAcross from Burton-Judson Ct. Phones: Ml 3-7447HY 3-6868 Individuals and-or Groups interestedin Revitalizing a Prominent NationalSocial Fraternity (on campus 45 yrs.)with new housing being purchasedthis spring; please contactMartin HalpernNational Field Representative643-0239 ALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.After dinner don’t miss the newplays at the Last Stage. Join usfor cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST& HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 8-75856 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 14, 1966| Maroon Weokend Guidetoocoooooooeccooooeooooococcccoocooocoooooocococ^*‘ GOLD CITY INN"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559 ART CLASSES FOR CHILDRENage 6 thru 12special classes for kindergarten childrenSECOND TERM BEGINS JANUARY 10thINDIVIDUALATTENTIONbyexperiencedteachers • painting• ceramics• sculpture• print makingCall Jackie Zevin Sarah IngerPL 2-4787 FA 4-1260 TAKCAM-A&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTf,. , ■ t, M , , wOPwCHIIHIIIg HICANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYfl A.M. to ft4S PMORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 Eoo» 63 rd St. MU 4-1062ON HARPEROPEN FOR LUNCH12 NOONFEATURINGTHE MAROONSTEAKBURGER & BEER$i 00ZheMOCIONPICTUREWITH SOMKWMC10 OFFENDEVERYONE!Metro Goldwyn Mayerand FilmwiysprwmMartin Ransohoffs ProductionThe MR. PIZZAST cc WE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTSHY 3-8282FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKEN A'c*>*Also Ch. Broiled HamburgersPIZZAFer 2 Fer > For 4 Per 4 PartySaneoga ...1.5# 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Groan Popper ....... 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovia ...1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic .... 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Olive 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheaea 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vi and V« 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients ... 50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pina .... 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 Pina 2.50 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00(Sausage, Mnehroomi nnd Peppers) Bex of Brutltd Chicken20 Pieces, Golden BrownIB Pieces, Golden Brown10 Pieces, Golden BrownBAR B-Q RIBSSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF. SAUSAGE,MEAT BALL1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Weok — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — FrL to 3:00 a.iSat. ta 3:00 a.m. — Opaa 2 p.m. Sunday*PUINfROBERT/JONATHANMORSE / WINTERSANJANETTE COMERruMCmlSunDina Andrews • Milton Berio* Janes Col jrn ■ John Gielgudfab Hunter • Margaret Leighton • Liberate • Roddy McDowallnobert Morley • Barbara Nicbols-Leone) SlanderiROD STEIGER .*•Stnmjiij bf Terry Southern ud Christopher Isherwood /Tony RichardsonIW«d k, John CaUey ui HaikeH WeilerM NOW! THE SALE OF THE SEASONIS NOW IN PROGRESSGIANT SAVINGSREDUCTIONS ONSuits - Sportcoats - TrousersAll Winter Outerwear-Overcoats & Top CoatsSport Shirts-Knit ShirtsFlorsheim & Freeman ShoesTHE STORE FOR MENNM»Qtatott atth (gatttpuft &!fcpIn At Blew Hyde Perk Shopping Center15024)6 L 55th St. Phone 752-8100January 14, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7■...vlvE.. .-wc-Kv:.v• ", hriiD ridiiry improvement money caiieuexcuse for not expanding present schoolPERSONALSWAA Intramural Basketball Tourna-.ment begins Jan. 18, Tues. & Thurs. at6:30 & 7:30 PM, Ida Noyes Gym. Opento all women studenis & employees, seeyour WAA represents.ive or Lynn Junk¬er, 1330-s. aev. jJornia.Student desires pussycat to retire bisb.id. Kitten acceptable. Call weekdaysa. .rr i i*M, uiiy inng weekends: .L4-5ti,jWu . . . ; . : 1 - as Si I ■■ ataa.1 lor i-.-i to a sewi g macn.aefro.n a e... . .. -*■ <ra. i_. cag > aaowi. gCnapnn’sv u..uOLX“I i die. e mat Mm3. V t rooux i$ mym ■ c.te»ei uaa ingenious Film.C.CaapiiaManaeii Kailfca.urday, Jan. lain 7:30-9:30o.audits <jC, Ut.ier $i.uo R.F.S.Have you la tea a good look at your teetlaieij —Arueoee—c eo. 11. i2, lo.DRAMAWe have just received a large crate ofexcellent mays a. icss tn.ai 2 3 listj i.. e.. . Ionesco, ius, Beckett,sdi, etc., ttc. i-oetry too. Don t missOUt.H33a EXCHANGElnu r'tiUu.itiA needs literature! Poet¬ry, tiurt-stones, o.ie ae- piays, crulcalL^oaj'i.. t .taist ncip. -,enu ij PnoenixMagazine ic.J E. asm iaa Noyes Bail.Hn.el Brunch tais Sunday 11:30 AM. In-l..,ndj discussion v.it.i .acuity, zjc at-fi.ia.es, doc non-a.filiates.Pal Kappa Psi 5j55 Woodlawn RushSmoker ton.gnt 7:30 - 11:30.Wui..e???yP.io.jgrap.i ExmoilTne nasidic Community of WilliamsLu.g. isxmnit oi pnotograp.is by IrvingI. Kerzberg Jan. 5-24, Hillel, 5715 Wood-la Vvil.Em. & bath available w/out cnarge lor;very rebiable fern. grad, student; break- Wanted: Delivery boy for Maroon; ex¬cellent pay; roughly 6 hrs. wk; contactMaroon business Manager E. Glasgow,University ext. 3265. You must havela ge car in good working order.COLLEGE STUDENTSUndergraduate, graduate, part-timeReprest.ii lime Inc. on campus. SellT.ME, l;FE and SPORTS ILLUSTRAT¬ED at s ...... student rates. Earn liber¬al commissions; no paperwork on bill-i..g. i.i.cresieu.J Write today: lime Inc.College Bureau, TIME & LIFE Bldg.,..c. ....ei.er center, New lorn, N. Y.1U0LK. .. iwe... (.-.per. preferred. SI.75 hr. See orcr.l Mr. Quinn, Ext. 5142, Biliings Rrn..Vi-5.ROOMMATE WANTEDK .a. gradua.e needs 1 or 2 roommatewi.h apt. or to seek apt. call ait. 5Hi 3-1434.2 graduate men wish to share ampleapt. with 3rd. 667-7086.Fern, roommate needed-own bedroom,S4t>.2o. Ellis & Hyde Park, call 324-3819or 493-6905.Male roommate needed-own bedroom,$46 25, Ellis 6c Hyde Park, call 324-3819.Male roommate wanted §50.00 mo. rent.call MU 4-1309.Male roommate wanted to share apt.with UC student $50 mo. Peter Gran363-2743.FOR SALE1S61 Simca, low mileage, snow tires,best offer. Call Larry 684-1785 between5-7 pm.DuKane 35-MM. sound projector $100.00752-4828.Cnildcraft absolutely new $75.00 752-4828.Opel record “61” 2 dr. Sedan 40,000 mi.t. cond. 6 almost new level tires. All acc. incl. Auto. Trans. & oversize 4-cyl.motor. $300.00 684-3290.This is a Humber English, when new 5,-000. 4-door, automatic transmission,power steering, leather & wood in.erior,radio- tires, rear cables $800.00 285-3017.Sunbeam Alpine “63” Tree Top, overdrive, Red. Large enough lor 2 adults &2 children. 17,000. 285-3017.FOR SALEFor sale 1961 VW 2-door, excellent con-ctuion. z2^-oo40.Dobro guitar in excellent condition. CallMU 4-13J9 ait. 6PM.APIS. & RMS. FOR RENT6900 South Crandon Ave. Deluxe High-rise 1 bdrm. apis, from $120; parquetfloor, see Mrs. Haley receiving rm. orsecurity guard. MU 4-<964.Furn. room with private bath $12.50 wk.925-7302.1 bdrm. apts. to sublet good location$110 omc.uu alt. 5 PM. HY 3-1484.6 LARGE ROOMSNatural fireplace. 4 Dig closets andbookcases, linen closets, pantry. Mod¬ern Kitchen, porch, newiy decorated &tioors sanuea. Sunable tor business 6cprotessional people. Garage $10. extra,near i.C. C.i.A. flopping center, Park& Lake. $180.00.MU 4-422Z MU 4-8222FREETENANT REFERRAL SERVICEReasonao.e Rema.s. wesir. Apts. 8 min.to U of C by IC. Eif. $80.00 1 Bdrm.$90.00 & up. Also ia. ge Deluxe apts.turn. & uniurn. NO 7-76z0.RIDES WANTEDRide wanted to Tex. or New Orleans,Jan. 27-30, share driving and expenses,call S. May, 1917 Pierce Tower, FA4-9500.WANTEDWanted: FM AM transistor radio. CallMI 3-9386. (Continued from page one)school would be closed to the near¬by slum kids north of 47th street.”Bcnston claimed that such a sep¬arate school was politically unfea¬sible as well. “Mayor Daley hasspoken favorably on the Unityplan, the Woodlawn community fa¬vors it strongly, and the aldermenof the fourth, fifth, and sixth wardshave all endorsed it,” Bcnstonsaid.AMONG ALTERNATIVE plansrecently introduced is a proposalby District 14 superintendent Mel-nick that a new school in HydePark be set up to concentrate onscience and math, while the pres¬ent school be used to concentrateon the humanities.“I want to find some way forwhat I call ‘middle-class modelstudents’ to be drawn both to HydePark and to Woodlawn,” explainedMelnick.Bcnston has deplored the Mel¬nick plan asking, “Why create inhigh school the very overspeciali-zation we are trying to combat onthe college level?”Another plan has been intro¬duced by Julian Levi, director ofthe South East Chicago committee.Favoring an expansion of presentfacilities, the plan advocates theconstruction of an adjacent, limit¬ed-enrollment laboratory schoolthat will “explore the pressingproblems of education for the dis¬advantaged.” Lab School separate question“It must be emphasized,” Levisaid, “that whether or not there isa laboratory school is an independ-ent question from whether thereshould be a new public school.”Board member Clement told theMaroon that whatever is decidedon, the new school budget will in¬clude $500,000 for the “rehabilita¬tion of Hyde Park High School.”While the money is allegedly to bespent for improved laboratoriesand similar refurbishings, Benstonhas charged that the money’s pur¬pose was to give SuperintendentBenjamin C. Willis’s office an ex¬cuse for not expanding the presentschool.“They will tell us of all the mon¬ey they have put into the place,and then ask how we can expectthem to spend any more for expan¬sion,” Benston predicted. “This ad¬ministration would rather makepolitical hay than administer forpeople,” he said.The Reverend Martin LutherKing will give a lecture inMandel Hall at 8.30 pm,Thursday, January 27. Ticketsfor the lecture will go on salein the Student Governmentoffice in Ida Noyes Hall be¬ginning Monday, January 17.Prices range from $1.25 to$1.50, with students receivinga 50c discount.F : • . ................. .■:*}fast & kitchen privileges; 51st rear Cor-ne.i, DO 3-8012,Ine Enapiro Collection will be post¬poned until Friday January 18, 21.Nude models - Lexington Tues. sketchC ass, PI 2-1166 for inlorm.Interested in taking off for a weekdoing the Liberal Arts Conference. CallE-.w. raylor American Air Line campusrep. for reservation. Special surprise,fc.g saving lor those who call early. Callnow DO 3-2293.JOBS OFFEREDStudent wile will care for children inmy home. Exper. 493-1368.Baoysitter: Student part-time care of2 j year old girl Knowledge of r rtnenh-npiul but not necessary, in neignbor-l.-jod MU 4-4oo2.Typist exper. cad hf 3-2-kjd.Waiters boys Quadrangle Cluo luncn &oroer dinner. Call Dora Ext. 3696.Room avail, for student in exenange lorbaoysiuing hrs. flexible. FA 4-139o. Ford MotorCompany is:Belfer ReadingLower CoslCualiSy PaperbacksCOME IN ANDSELECT YOUR FAVORITESAlso remember us for yourSchool Supplies, Type¬writers—Attache and BriefCases and Sporting goods.Woodworth's Bookstore1311 EAST 57th ST.OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK encouragement Opportunity comes early at Ford Motor Company.Graduates who join us are often surprised at howquickly they receive personal assignments involv¬ing major responsibilities. This chance to dem¬onstrate individual skills contrasts sharply withthe experience of many young people entering thebusiness world for the first time. At Ford MotorCompany, for example, a graduate may initiate aproject and carry it through to its final develop¬ment. One who knows is David Tenniswood, ofour research staff.Dave joined Ford Motor Company in July, 1961.Assigned to our steering and controls section, he helped develop a revolu¬tionary steering system that will facilitate driving in future Ford-built cars.Currently a design engineer working on suspension design and analysis,Dave has been impressed by the extent to which management encouragespersonal initiative among recent graduates like himself. Here, managementlooks immediately to young engineers, like Dave, for fresh concepts thatreflect their academic training and special abilities. Moreover, when theidea is accepted for development, the initiator is frequently given theopportunity to see the job through—from drawing board to production line!The experience of Dave Tenniswood is not unusual. Ford Motor Companybelieves that early incentive is fundamental to individual growth and asuccessful career. If you are interested in a job that challenges your abilitiesand rewards enterprise, we urge you to contact our representative whenhe visits your campus.Dm Amiwm Road, Dearborn, MichiganAn equal opportunity employ*8 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 14, 1966