The University of Chicago Tuesday, January 18, 1966 400 meet to form peaceoriented political groupby Ellis LevinSome 400 persons met over the weekend at McCormickPlace to form a new political organization composed of peaceand civil rights groups, and reflective of the “New Left”movement. —Mondale delivers Humphrey's textHHH lauds GreatGiving the speech that Vice President Humphrey wassupposed to have delivered, Senator Walter F. Mondale iD-Minn.), extolled the virtues of the Great Society and defendedthe rights of protestors at Mandel Hall, Friday afternoon.Mondale, speaking to a nearcapacity audience, read a speechdescribing the Great Society as,.. the opportunity state, seekingto give every citizen the means torealize his full potentialities andthus to advance and enliven thecommunity generally.”POINTING OUT Washington’sconcern with preserving individualrights in the face of increasinggovernment programs, Mondaleread, “Government at every levelmust be big enough to do its job,and not one bit bigger. And gov¬ernment at every level must befully responsive to the wishes ofthe people, and must not infringeupon their essential freedom to ex¬ercise their own initiative, andtheir creative energies and abili¬ties to the full.”Editting by MondaleMondale departed briefly fromHumphrey’s prepared text to referto the war in Vietnam and anti-wardemonstrators, some 300 of whom Vietnam while pursuing our goalsSenator Walter F. Mondale(D-Minn.) speaking for VicePresident Humphrey at MandelHall Friday.were marching outside MandelHall.“We intend to keep our pledge in here,” he said. “We are not facedwith a guns or butter situation.“I WELCOME the restlessness ofour young people. What gives meconfidence is the determination ofyoung people to act. Our society isopen to all.”“If there is dissatisfaction withthe status quo, good. If there isferment, so much the better. Ifthere is restlessness, I ampleased.”Daniel Boone left outMondale made one more depar¬ture from the prepared text. In anapparent attempt to prevent occa¬sional audience titters from turn¬ing into uproarious laughter, Mon¬dale deleted a section of the speechdealing with the vision and cour¬age of Daniel Boone.FOR MONDALE the meetingwas beset with problems from be¬ginning to end. He winced noticea¬bly as SG President Bernie Grof-man introduced a Senator “Mond-lane” and after apologizing fornot being the Vice President strug¬gled with an audience, which heonly won over at the very end ofthe speech by pointing out that thiswas an historic occasion, since itwas the shortest speech HubertHumphrey ever gave. The purpose of the new group,the Committee of Independent Po¬litical Action (CIPA), according toits sponsors, is to re-orient the so¬cial protest movement towards po¬litical involvement, and to offermeaningful alternatives to the pre¬sent political programs of the twomajor parties.SIDNEY LENS, author andpeace marcher, told the assemblythat 10 years of social protest hashad little affect on the pubile offi¬cial. “We walked with our feet,shouted with our voices but wehave had no real impact on thepeople we have helped elect to of¬fice. We’re going to coalesce thepower we got through the streetsand with our voices on the elector¬al front.”No political compromiseLens indicated that CIPA wouldbuild a constituency from the pro¬test movement and support candi¬dates favorable to peace and civilrights even if they could not winrather than have to choose be¬tween the lesser of two evils. “Weare here to rescue the nation fromthe contradictions” between politi¬cal oratory and action, he de¬clared.Co-chairmen of the meeting wereRobert J. Havighurst, UC profes¬sor of education and Dick Gregory,who has announced as a candidatefor mayor of Chicago.GREGORY TOLD the meetingthat there was a need to organizethe “little man,” to get him out from under the thumb of the DaleyMachine. The source of the ma¬chine's power, he declared, wasthe ghetto Negro. When that manmigrated to Chicago from ruralMississippi, ignorant and fright¬ened, he was met at the Grey¬hound bus station by the machinepolitican who helped him find aplace to live, read to him lettersfrom home, and generally helpedmake him feel welcome. It is notsurprising that this man after¬wards is loyal to the Democraticmachine.Speaking of Watts, he warnedthat unless something was done toalleviate the plight of the slum Ne¬gro, we “would have more ofWatts in 1966. The sleepy bear wasnow waking up.” The Negro want¬ed to be heard, and so “he threwthe brick at the white man to gainhis attention.”Gregory said he did not want thebacking of the group in his 1967race against Mayor Daley, “so(Continued on page four)•tA new supplement to the ;MAROON, THE CHICAGO 1MAROON MAGAZINE, willbe published experimentally ithis quarter. Anyone interest- Ied in contributing articles or jart work should contact David \Satter or Peter Rabinowitz at jthe Maroon office, in Ida INoyes Hall, ext. 3265.SDS greets Mondale with pickets and speechesby Joe Lubenow card burners. The legislators con-Almost 300 demonstrators protested what isn’t great in the Great Society during Sena- sidered this an “improper atti-tor Walter Mondale’s presentation of Vice President Humphrey’s speech Friday. tude” and asked that he “apolog-The demonstrators, carrying hand lettered legends ranging from “End Colonialism and ize ’• When Bond refused they va-War” to “Free Morton Sobell”, broke up quickly when Senator Mondale finished reading the Jated hls seat by a vote of 184 t0Humphrey address and the protest¬ers trooped into Mandel Hall toaugment the audience to nearcapacity for an anti-Administrationrally.Demonstrators protestside of Great Society. seamyA HIGHLIGHT of the rally wasthe reading of a telegram fromTom Hayden, a founder of SDS,which included previously unpub¬lished portions of the text of an in¬terview with North VietnamesePremier Phong Van Dong.North Viet InterviewThe interview had been grantedHayden during his illegal visit toNorth Vietnam last month withYale professor Staughton Lynd andMarxist theoretician Herbert Ap-theker. The released portion of theinterview contained no substantivediscussion of the issues whichblock peaceful settlement of thewar but it did include the followingdefense of North Vietnamese inten¬tions: “It is not true that we do notdesire peace; we desire it morethan anybody. The w'ar is happen¬ing in our country and killing ourPeople. . . Surely we desire peacen»or« than President Johnson. But peace at what cost? All the prob¬lems lie here. We must have inde¬pendence. We would rather diethan be slaves.”Hayden, in his telegram, said“As seen from Hanoi, there is adeep inconsistency between apeaceful posture looking toward anegotiated settlement, and an in¬terventionist posture which has onview the permanent partition ofVietnam and an expanded war.“TO THOSE WITH whom wespoke in Vietnam it appears thatthe United States knocks on alldoors in search of peace except thedoors of those whom it is fighting,particularly the door of the Nation¬al Liberation Front of South Viet¬nam. They wonder if the UnitedStates is searching for peace ormainly attempting to soften its im¬age before negative public opinionabroad anefat home.”Diamonds in dangerThe first speaker at the SDS ral¬ly was Edward Lameka, alsoknown as “Free Africa Eddie”,who took the floor spontaneouslywhile microphones were being ad¬justed to argue that the colonialpowers will never leave Africasince they cannot afford the loss ofthe output of the diamond mines.The first scheduled speaker wasRennie Davis of JOIN a commu¬nity project in the Uptown districtof Chicago. Davis argued thatsufficient political force exists inChicago to “break the Demo¬cratic machine” provided that cur¬rently unorganized opposition canbe unified. He called for a “city¬wide movement newspaper” andradio stations to publicize radicalefforts to defeat Mayor Daley andasked the audience to undertake legislature by a four-to-one marginin an overwhelmingly Negro dis- Cobb drew the conclusion that“the problem is not getting ‘x’ per¬son into ‘x’ structure but in over-Speakers at Friday's counter-meeting (I. to r.) Charlie Cobb, CarlOglesby, and Rennie Davis.trict. He had severely criticizedthe conduct of the war in Vietnamand had stated at one time that he“admired the courage” of draft haulingnouncedobstructvening” the structure.” He an-that SNCC would try tothe legislature by “con-the membership of theConclusion of the two part series district Bond was elected to rep¬resent inside its chambers. He an¬ticipated that this tactic wouldmeet with opposition from North¬ern liberals who also disapprove ofthe action of the legislature in re¬fusing to seat Bond but insistedthat “concrete changes” in South¬ern institutions could sometimes beachieved only by “stepping out ofthe orderly process”.Bond to refileIt has also been planned forBond to file candidacy for the spe¬cial election which will designatehis successor. Cobb does not be¬lieve the legislature will voluntarilyseat Bond even if he is elected asecond time.In a Maroon interview before hisspeech, Cobb confessed a “basicunsureness as to how to translate”the anti-war campaign to SouthernNegroes. For many southern work¬ers, according to Cobb, the peacemovement “seems to be a campusthing”. But he added “It’s goodthat the thing happened to Julian’*— since the statements which costEond his seat had to do with thewar rather than with civil rights.THE FINAL SPEAKER at therally was current SDS PresidentCarl Oglesby. Oglesby accusedSenator Mondale of implying that“history has come to a close” andthat “the perfect society has beenachieved”. He told the audience(Continued on page four)Negro colleges perpetuate status quo(Editor’s note: This is the conclusion of the Collegiate Press Service series on Southern college desegre¬gation. The first part appeared in last Friday’s Maroon.)by Rita DershowitzThe Collegiate Press ServiceDesegregation of higher education began in the South long before the 1954 SupremeCourt decision, although it received its major impetus at that time. As of the 1964-65 schoolresearch to find out “where the year> however, only about 17 per cent of Negro college students in the 11 Southern stateshuoUie svndicate”!'^1'6 11 1S tied were going to school in previously all-white colleges and universities. Negro colleges con¬tinued to provide the only opportu-CHARLIE COBB, a field secre¬tary for the Student Non-ViolentCoordinating Committee (SNCC),discussed the recent refusal of theGeorgia state legislature to seatSNCC publicity director JulianBond. Bond had been elected to the nity for higher education for the self. Maintaining a tenuous balancegreat majority of Negro students. between the predominately whiteNegroes are not entering deseg- world of state-supported higherregated white colleges for several education and the Negro communi-reasons, but one of the major rea- ty they serve, Negro college ad-sons lies in the Negro college it- ministrators have been primarily a conservative force within the civilrights movement.LAST APRIL Alabama State Col¬lege, an all-Negro school in Mont¬gomery, had ll students arrested^Continued on page threo). V:-Raby, John Hope Franklin, speak at SWAP symposiumCity's schools leave out the deprived - RabyThe Chicago board of education has not alleviated theproblem of the vast cultural gap between Negro and middle-class white high school students, a civil rights leader andformer high school teacher charged Saturday.A1 Raby, convener of the Co-or¬dinating Council of Community Or- west side as a “concentrationganizations (CCCO), spoke at a fo- camp>” Raby said Negro studentsrum sponsored by SWAP on “The may get their elementary schoolNegro high school student: is he education in their own apartmentcollege bound?’’ buildings, leaving only when theyJohn Hope Franklin, UC profes- g0 to junior high school,sor of history, and David Dudley, The white-dominated educationaldirector of admissions of Illinois establishment must readjust its ba-Institute of Technology, also spoke sjc attitudes, Raby said, to elimi-at the all-day symposium. nate hs “basic lack of concern forEFFORTS BY the board of edu- the human being.”cation to work with Negroes from The school system’s after-schooldeprived backgrounds are “token remedial reading program cannotand ineffective” because of the gap jn one hour make up for five hoursin understanding between the Ne- 0f frustration during the schoolgro and white communities, Raby (jay( Raby commented,said. RABY'S OWN background pro-In Chicago’s west side ghetto, he vided him with the experience toexplained, a Negro child might urderstand the problems of the Ne-reach the age of thirteen before he p.o yc ’ h since, he explained, heever left the immediate premises dropped out of high school at theof the building he lived in.'Concentration camp' Cg 3 OftwentyReferring without humor to the school >urt«cn. Not until he wasjur did he enroll in a nightogram to gain an educa¬ tion. From there he advanced tohis present position as a represen¬tative of the Negro student in Chi¬cago education politics.Criticizes SWAP programRaby was critical of the SWAPprogram of tutoring Negro highschool students, although he said itis one of the primary instrumentstoward understanding betweenwhites and Negroes.He stressed, however, that “forevery tutee there are ten thousandstudents who go without.” He de¬plored the concern of the tutor forhaving a “gra.ifying personal rela¬tion” with his tutee. and urgedboth tutor and tutee to addressthemselves to “the larger revolu¬tion” of the Negro's struggle for aplace in society.He asked why such work is deneentirely outside the auspices o 1 theChicago board of education?MOST MIDDLE-CLASS Ameri¬cans are unaware of the work ofsuch tutoring programs, Fr'jysaid, and do ret realize what Hiereal prob’ems cf ci y schools rre.For example, he sa d, in responseto a recent Chicago Daily Hews ex¬ pose of conditions at Crane H.S.,readers volunteered to work as li¬brarians and donate books for theschool. This would not solve theproblem, he commented.Franklin raps collegesIn relation to the “cultural depri¬vation” of Negro youth, John HopeFranklin, the program’s secondspeaker criticized the nation's topuniversities for their lack of “ima¬gination, skill, creativity, and talentin measuring ability” among thosestudents who don’t show highachievements on nationally stand¬ardized exams.Like Raby, he believed that cne must look at the “total exper-ience” of the Negro youth beforeevaluating his ability by any stan¬dard exam. He did not, however,see any practical substitute for thecollege boards that would be validfor both Negro and middle-classwhite.DAVID DUDLEY SPOKE fromthe point of view of the admissionsofficer who is sympathic to theplight of the Negro student but whomust operate cn a strict budget andwho has the academic reputation ofthe institution more or less in hishands.Reasons for new radicalism subject ofopening seminar in Chapel House seriesHyde Park High controversy continuesby Bob Hertz“I don’t know what was the matter,with me when I tookover the chairmanship of this committee,” lamented ThomasJ. Murray, chairman of the Murray committee, at last Wednes¬day’s board of education meeting.Murray, whose committee hasbeen charged by the school boardwith handling the Hyde Park HighSchool controversy, was given asample of the conflict now raging new school in Woodlawn within amile of the southwest corner ofWashington Park.”“We must be concerned with theover the question, as the Wednes- south campus of the University ofday meeting became a soundingboard for the interest groups in¬volved.EMOTIONALLY SPEAKING, themeeting’s climax was reached in atearful appeal by Alameda Woodsof the Woodlawn Community Serv¬ices agency to “consider that Wood¬lawn has more than a school tothink about; it has a total commu¬nity to rebuild.”Statement by Willis Chicago,” Willis added. “The uni¬versity community has been im¬portant in bringing educated peo¬ple into the area.”WILLIS WENT ON to cite var¬ious school cost figures. Theywere:• for a new Hyde Park-Kenwoodschool of 2,000 pupils ... .$6 million• for a complete modernization ofthe present school $3 million• for an educational park of 6,000 school plans h d the strong sup¬port of thj people of Woodlawn,and that a most ro cne contactedwanted a school of more than 4,0C0pupils.Telephone pole discountedTh? pol\ which was taken byrandom teleohono sample, was dis¬counted on that basis as a “quickiesurvey” Y 7 Bernice Bi.'d of the Un¬ity committee. The Unity group fa¬vors enlargement of Hyde ParkHigh School at its present site.Argumentatively speaking, themeeting’s best exchange was be¬tween Mrs. Mildred Crawford ofthe Committee on Integratedschools and Mrs. Rosie Stanley ofSWAP. Why has the “new left” ap¬peared? 'That was the question ex¬amined at the opening seminarin a series of discussions cn thenew radicrl political movemem,held last Wednesday at ChapelHouse.The movement is “anti-estab¬lishment,” according to Rev.Phillip Dribbs, who opened thes'minor, introducing himself as an“anti-leader.”It is, he continued, a “moral de¬velopment which has arisen not outof a sense of abstract injustice, butAttention steff of the Chi-ea o Literary Review: Copyfor the issue of January 28should be submitted by 1pm Friday, January 21, Onlya limited amount of copycan be accepted after thatdate.Strategically speaking, perhaps pupils $24 millionthe meeting’s high point was an The meeting had earlier featuredaddress by schools superintendent, the introduction of an opinion poll After coming out in favor of aseparate school for Hyde Park-Kenwood, Mrs. Crawford addedthat she would “go down to Wood¬lawn” to investigate schooling forunderprivileged children in thatarea. Cliirajjo MaroonEDITOR-IN-CHIEF Daniel HertzbergBUSINESS MANAGER Edward GlasgowMANAGING EDITOR Dinsn EsralNEWS EDITOR David SalterASSISTANT NEWS EDITORDavid E. GumpertASSISTANTS TO THE FDITORDavid t AikenBenjamin C. Willis.Willis came out flatly for a sep¬arate school in Hyde Park-Ken¬wood. “As well,” he said, “weshould modernize the present HydePark High School, and construct a by Theodore W. Hurst of the Com¬mittee on Integrated Schools.“We wanted to find out just whospeaks for whom on this issue,”claimed Hurst. His poll stated thatneither of the two major highTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PROFESSIONALTHEATRE PROGRAM AND THE GOODMAN THEATREPRESENTMoliere's THE MISANTHROPETranslated by Richard WilburSTARRINGGEORGE GRiZZARD BARBARA BAXLEYBRENDA FORBES LEE RICHARDSONProducted and Directed by John ReichFEBRUARY 4-27The University of Chicago Law School AuditoriumTicket Reservations at Information Desk, Administration Building, or ext. 4400Prices: Tues. - Sat. Eves. (8 P.M.) $4.00; Sat. & Sun. Mats. (2 P.M.) $3.00;Students: Eves., $2.00; Mat., $1.50 “WE IN WOODLAWN want nomissionaries,” Mrs. Stanley an¬swered. “Why does the whole com¬munity assume that good educationis impossible in a predominantlyNegro school?”Summarily speaking, the com¬mittee came to no decisions on theschool problem. Sharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsEve HochwaldMark RosinCOPY EDITORCULTURE EDITOREDITOR, CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWDavid RichterASSOCIATE EDITOR, CHICAGOLITERARY REVIEW Rick PollackMUSIC EDITOR Peter RabinowitzASSOCIATE MUSIC EDITOR Ed ChikofskyPOLITICAL EDITOR Bruce FreedEDITOR EMERITUS Robert F. LeveyCharter member of US Student PressAssociation, publishers of CollegiatePress Service. merely as a moral reaction againstsomething in American society. Itmov?s toward such goals as “frea-den” and “social justice.”Further, Dribbs said, it is “anti-idee’egy.” since its ideology pro¬ceeds from action, rather thanstimulating action. In contrast tothe “old lift” of the thirties, it isnon-exclusive, open, and free.In discussing why the movementhas arisen. Dribbs stressed t’'efactor of alienation, related to themovement’s “father figures,” PculGoodman and Albert Camus. As¬pects of factual situation, he matained, have actually improved nthe past ten years, sue’.i as civilrights and unemployment.A member cf the seminar coun¬tered this point by saying that suchprogress serves only ti indicc ethe possibility of more change. In¬justice is never recognized until itbegins to be cured, another pointedon .Who participates in the move¬ment? In one participant’s view, itis the discontented who protect.Another viewpoint was that ismembers are not threatened by pov¬erty, who are able to look at thesystem and question its values, thuscondemning the system as a who e.In line with the “new left’s” in¬terest in particioatory democrait does not specify its actual goals,but leaves these to individual.Any idology which may exist is oneof means, the discussion broughtout.Eight more seminars on t *“new left” are scheduled at Chapelhouse. 581') Wood, awe, eac.iWednesday afternoon at 4:20.rDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSES* ' NEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES Savegen edTHE MEDICIGALLERY and COFFEE HOUSENOW SERVES• SHISH-KABOB« LULA-KABOBNATIVE DISHES OF AHMAD, OUR PERSIAN MANAGERHOURS: Weekdays 6-10 P.M., Friday Till 1 A.M.No Persian Food on WednesdaySaturday 12 A.M.-2 A M, Sunday 10 A.M.-12 P.M.1450 E. 57thBehind The GREEN DOOR BOOK SHOP HARPER THEATER CHAMBER MUSIC SERIESThree Monday Evenings at 8:30 pmPerformed by tfnSYMPHONY STRING QUARTETof theCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAPROGRAMMonday, January 17, 8:30 pruString Quartet #11 in F Minor Piano Quintet in A Major,Op. 95 (“Serioso") Beethoven Op. 81 DvorakString Quartet #1 ShostakovichMonday, March 21, 8:30 pmString Quartet in C Major Str!n9 Quartet,Op. 76 #3 (“Emperor") Haydn °P- n Samuel BarberString Quartet in F Major RavelMonday, /.lay 16, 8:3) pmPiano Quartet In Eb Major, Piano Quartet in A Major,K. 493 Mozart Op. 26 BrahmsString Trio DonnanyiPRICES:Individual ConcertsReaular . Regular $3.50Students $5.00 Students +Z.00All Three ConcertsCa l BU 8-1/1/ Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the resty^ foreign cor hospitolWEEK OF PRAYERforCHRISTIAN liNl:YJanuary 18-25NOONDAY SERVICESBOND CHAPELCoffee - Discussion:TODAY, 4 PMwith Brother JacquesfromTaize Swift CommonsCHICAGO MAROON * January 18, 1966Music ReviewNegro colleges fear student protests(Continued from page one)for sitting in at the office of thepresident. The students were at-tempting to present President LeviWatkins with a list of grievances,which included the charge that stu¬dents were being disciplined fortheir participation in civil rightsactivities. It was reported that ninestudents had been suspended by afaculty-administration disciplinaryboard for “willful disobedience”and “insubordination” in connec¬tion with civil rights activities.Demonstrators, "malcontents"Just recently, about 230 studentsat Southern University in BatonRouge, which with 6,700 students isthe second largest Negro universi¬ty in the country, kept up a weekof sit-ins, rallies and demonstra¬tions on the campus. The presidentof Southern, Felton Clark, dis¬missed the demonstrators as mal¬contents.“We couldn’t understand whatthey wanted,” Clark said, “Theyhad a vague set of unrealistic de¬mands, ranging from keeping thelibrary open all night to loweringthe student fees.”Clark attempted to discredit themotives of the demonstrators.“One of the leaders was fromBerkeley’s crowd—you know, theyspend summers in Berkeley andg t indoctrinated.” The studentClark apparently referred to wasI! Tina i Carpi’, who had acted asthe campus host durirg a visit bya renresentative c* Berkeley’sFree Speech Movement last year.Perhaps philosophically close tothe aims of the FSM, Carter hadnever been actually connected to“the Berkeley crowd.”i.J FACT, the demonstrators atSouthern had a very long and spe¬cific set of grievance; and de¬mands, the first of which was that“President Clark take a Siand onsegregation.” The other demandsranged from academic reforms—“the personal views of professorsshould have no bearing on themaintenance of his position at theUniversity”— o disciplinary proce¬dures—“decisions in this areasiiou’d not be left to the sole dis¬cretion of the deans.”At Arkansas A.M, & N, with 2,-270 students, President LawrenceDavis maintains a strong handover his students. “Prexy,” Davisseems to be universally respectedas well as submitted to. “Thesemig :t be some hot heads on cam-pu:, but once Prexy talks to them,they do what he wants,” one stu-i er.t said affectionately of theI vesiden .Theatre First, Inc.Prj;ev.,'s Pa.er Ustinov-i : .C7E CF FOU.’.CLCKFLSWee onas Jaiwsry 21 thru heoruary t>Certain 8:33 p.m. Fri. & Sat.7:31 p.m. on Sun.Gen. Adm. $1.75 Students 1.10The ATHENAEUM THEATRE2935 M. SOUTHPORT AVc.IA 5-9761UWiV ER5ITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorUNIVERSITY THEATREcastingfor reading ofThe Libct/zn B ari sAdapted by Juliana Gerantryouts will take placein Reynolds Club TheatreJanuary 13, 19, 20- 7:30-9 P.M. At various times in the past Ar¬kansas A,M, & N has been urged toprotest by civil rights leaders fromoutside the college. Two years ago,Dick Gregory and some StudentNonviolent Coordinating Commit¬tee (SNCC) workers came to PineBluff and called students to marchon a local restaurant where Ne¬groes had been beaten for trying toenter. President Davis called ameeting of the entire student body,warning them of the possible “con¬sequences” if any of them didmarch on the town.“He told us, ‘We don’t need thatsort of thing, we don’t need thelegislature on us,” said KennethJohnson, a senior pre-med studentwhose parents both teach at thecollege.Davis also reportedly told thestudents that if all of them were tomarch it might mean something,but since it would be only a smallgroup it would accomplish nothing.In the end, only a small handful ofstudents marched.THE THREAT from state leg¬islature seems to be a real one. Atone point in Arkansas A,M, & N’shistory the legislature did cut theschool's appropriations, allegedlyfor the activist speakers on cam¬pus, though no one agrees on justhow much was cut. In at least onestate, Louisiana, the legislature istaking an active role in extendingsegregated higher education by ac¬tually appropriating more fundsfor expansion of the state’s Negrocolleges. As a result of state ap¬propriations, both Louisiana StateUniversity and Southern Universityare planning to open branch cam¬puses in the same cities.Asked if this would not perpe¬tuate the dual and unequal educa¬tion of the past, Southern’s Presi¬dent Clark answered that the statelegislature is simply responding tothe communities it represents. “Iwant to see Negroes get as good aneducation as they can, and if they can only get it in a segregatedschool, then yes, I support expan¬sion of this school in the same cit¬ies as LSU.”Integration in reverseClark insists that failure to de¬mand integration of higher educa¬tion rather than a parallel Negrosystem does not mean that in thefuture higher education in Louisi¬ana will remain segregated. Heforsees a time when the Negro in¬stitution will be so good that it willcompete with white universities forwhite students, thereby integratingfrom the direction. Citing HowardUniversity as an example of aschool that “becomes so good itputs itself out of business as a Ne¬gro college,” Clark predicted thesame role for Southern University.Southern now has 3 white students.Both Clark and Davis seem tosee the function of the Negro col¬lege as a kind of rescue operation—performing the remedial workthat will correct the deficiencies ofthe Negro high school and perhapsprepare the student for a real, thatis, an essentially white, highereducation."THE NEGRO STUDENT comesfrom a disadvantaged back¬ground,” President Davis said,“and the college has to introducehim to the cultural milieu of West¬ern society to allow him to com¬municate with people from that so¬ciety. Certainly we want to developa critical mind, and the ability toevaluate established society, but heneeds to be able to spell, and to beable to read a book first.”Not only do the Negro collegesstart with academically deficientstudents, but their facilities andfaculty are also generally of lowerquality than comparable whiteschools. President Davis estimatedthat Negro colleges were about 25years behind other collegesthroughout the country, but “wecall it a college whatever its quali¬ty.” Vikstrom's mysticismSunday’s performance by the Rockefeller Chapel Choirand members of the Chicago Symphony under Richard Viks-trom, included four short religious compositions. It beganwith Bach’s 50th Cantata—a short five-minute piece which,for my taste, was about six min-utes too long. the fervent optimism of the finalThis was followed by Holst’s lines of the poem.Hymn of Jesus. Tc one whose only THE ROCKEFELLER CHAPELacquaintance with Holst’s music is Choir afid members of the ChicagoThe Planets, it was interesting tosee various resemblances betweenthat popular work and the Hymn ofJesus : the beautiful use of mystictone colors and women’s voices,particularly the phrases sung onone syllable.Ho'st’s use of plain song added tothe ethereal qualities of parts ofthe work, while his use of spokenwords and irregular rhythms suchas 5 4, 7/4, and 5/2 contributed tothe sweep and drive of the morelively sections. Many beautiful ef¬fects were produced by the inter¬play among the two choirs and thesemi-choir. Holst’s genius and no¬vel techniques have produced a re¬ligious work of unusual beauty andvariety.FOLLOWING THIS Hindemith’sMass for A Capelia Voices seemedrather dull. A work of harmonicand contrapuntal variety, it candoutless be appreciated onlythrough repeated hearings. Itseemed to suffer from the lack ofsupport that would have been pro¬vided if it had been written withorchestral accompaniment.Toward the Unknown Region, byVaughan Williams, begins with aslow, almost gloomy section thatsuccessfully reflects Whitman’spessimistic text. This leads into abroad, powerful closing, matching Symphony Orchestra displayedtheir usual high standards underRichard Vikstrom, a conductorwith a particularly clear, precisebaton technique that is extremelyrarely encountered. The only ser¬ious imperfection I noticed was inthe Bach—the orchestra was prac¬tically inaudible. Only the chorusand bass line (supported by the or¬gan) could be clearly heard. Theperformance of the Holst was in¬finitely better; the orchestral play¬ing was fine, and the dynamicsgenerally very well handled.The concert was considerablyshorter than those previously givenin this series of concerts. The inter¬esting variety of the programmakes me wonder why we couldnot have been given one or twomore short pieces. This was not aconcert I was glad to reach theend of.Mahonri M. YoungThe faculty sponsored Talk¬ing Newspaper vill hold itsfirst session of the winterquarter Friday at 3:30 in theReynolds Club.Dr. Howard Schomer, Pres¬ident of the Chicago Theologi¬cal Seminary, is scheduled asthe main speaker..' .vi ."BATTERED BOOK" SALEContinues through Thursday, Jan. 20New titles added every dayPaperbacks and hardbound booksShe!f-worn stock in all categoriesAt 20% to 50% ReductionThe University of Chicago Bookstore5S02 S. Ellis Avenue UNIVERSITY THEATREPresentsTONIGHT AT 8:30ILEby Eugene O'NeillRIDERS TO THE SEAby John Millington SyngeTHE BEARby Anton Pavlovitch ChekovTICKETS $1.50STUDENTS $1.00January 28-29-30 - February 4-5-6Reynolds Club Theatre57th and UniversityTickets on sale at Reynolds Club or by mail.ATTENTIONIf you believe that the concept of a liberal education involves not onlyscholastic achievement but also social development, then you will beinterested in this OPEN invitation to change the concept of fraternity atthis university. Zeta Beta Tau invites those men and groups of meninterested to its Rush Smoker, Thursday, January 20th, Reynolds Club,South Lounge, 7:30 pm or contact Martin Halpern, National Field Rep¬resentative Z.B.T. Fraternity, 643-0239.January 18, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • *Pickets greet Mondale Cobb at IPAC meeting(Continued from page one)that he had listened to Mondalelisting instances of “idealistic stu-him to mention the Thanksgivingmarch on Washington. In quicksuccession he argued that the Waron Poverty amounts to “paternalis¬tic indifference’’ to the conditionsunder which the poor are requiredto live, that the presence of nomore than fifty federal registrarsin Southern counties was a “dis¬grace”, that “if the gold outflowcontinues at its present rate therewon't be any gold in Fort Knox ineighteen months’’. He asked.“What are we going to do then-state capitalism?’’ He drew ap¬plause by quipping, “We have anAlliance for Progress that’s mak¬ing progress—with alliances”.OGLESBY CLEARLY felt thatthere was hardly an issue, eitherlomestic or foreign, on which theAdministration “line” correspond¬ed with the truth. At one point heleaned forward to express an apoc¬alyptic vision: “We ought tomake of these times . . . whatmight be a last effort to piercethrough the mask to the reality.”3a a Maroon interview before hisjpeech, Oglesby declined to en¬dorse a suggestion that Vice-Presi¬dent Humphrey had cancelled hisaddress because of the size of thedemonstration expected againsthim. He took the opportunity towonder, “Who can tell what fin¬gers manipulate the lives of thesehigh statesmen?”SDS not related to LIDIn response to a question aboutthe relation between SDS and itsparent organization, the League forIndustrial Democracy (LID),Oglesby stated, “It is not at allclear that SDS and LID have thesame ideas about socialism”. Heexplained that LID is composed ofdemocratic socialists who favor po¬litical and economic centralization,while SDS is more concerned with the need “to involve people in thelife of society”. The original linkbetween SDS and-LID was severedin 1965. Oglesby said that SDS re¬ceives no financial support at allany more from LID.The Maroon then asked whetherthe SDS emphasis on “participato¬ry democracy” might not requirepolitical decentralization. Oglesbycommented that there is a stronganarchical undercurrent in SDSbut that SDS anarchists do not“borrow the older connotations” ofthe term but rather derive from“Summerhill and Jean-PaulSartre”.Counterpickets fall shortAn unexpected development Fri¬day was the presence of counter¬pickets representing the ChicagoIntercollegiate Students Council(CISC). There were six of these.They carried signs reading “Giveus joy: bomb Hanoi” and“S.C.R.E.W. the Viet Cong”,which, when the acronym was ex¬panded, became “Student Commit¬tee for Flexible Response to Esca¬lation of the war against TheViet Cong.” Peter Richmond, aCISC coordinator, told the Maroonthat he had expected “two to fourhundred” counterdemonstrators.He attributed the discrepancy be¬tween his expectations and theirfulfillment to Humphrey’s cancel¬lation. When asked his opinion ofthe anti-war demonstrators, hewould say only, “They don’t knowwhat they’re doing.”It was announced at the rallythat Vice-President Humphreywould speak in the evening at the$100-a-plate dinner for SenatorPaul Douglas at the Hilton hotel.Fifty representatives of SDS andWomen Strike for Peace appearedat the hotel to picket Humphrey.They did not catch a glimpse ofthe Vice-President; and, as mighthave been expected, he was notaware of them.Fifty-Seventh at KenwoodUNUSUAL FOODDELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICESZeta Beta Tau Fraternity invites allFreshmen to its Rush Smoker Thurs¬day Evening, January 20, ReynoldsClub Lounge South 7:30 pmFREE DELIVERY3 FREE PEPSIS with each PIZZA(confirm phone: with take out orders only)CAFE ENRICO4CR0SS FROM THE THY 3-5300 FA 4-5525PIZZAMed. LargeCHEESE .. 1.45 2.00SAU SAOE •••MlltoSSMSSSMIMSSHMiaNMI 1.80 2.35PEPPER & ONION 1.65 2.20BACON & ONION 2.15 2.70COMBINATION ...» 2.40 2.95MUSHROOM .........a..... 2.15 2.705HRIMIP •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••#•••• 2.40 2.95 (Continued from page one)that no one can say this was thereason for the organization.”Cobb on BondAlso speaking to the conferencewas Cobb, SNCC worker and cam¬paign manager for State Represen¬tative-elect Julian Bond, who wasbarred by the Georgia legislaturefrom taking his seat because ofstatements he had made on thedraft and the war in Vietnam.Cobb declared that it was the reap¬portionment order of the Fifth Cir¬cuit Court which opened the wayfor the election of Bond and sevenother Negroes to the State Assem¬bly. Previously the City of Atlanta,which makes up a significant partof the population of Georgia, hasbeen represented by three assem¬blymen. Under the apportionmentscheme the city’s representationincreased to 24.COBB SUGGESTED that Bondwas thrown out of the legislaturefor his “attitude.” This “attitude” was not so much concerned withVietnam or the draft as with hisindependence from the powerstructure of the state. Bond hadrun as a Democrat, and mostDemocrats as well as Republicansin Georgia put responsibility to thepolitical structure above responsi¬bility to their constituency. Bondhad, in contrast set out to artic¬ulate the needs and desires ofthose he represented: “the Negroin his district and the Negro in therest of Georgia.”Cobb declared that a constituentpetition to the court seeking toforce the seating of Bor.d had beenaccepted by the court for hearing.He believed that the court wouldultimately rule on Bond’s favor,because “there is no legal basis fordenying him the seat.” Such a vic¬tory would mean little, Cobb wenton to point out. Bond’s physicalpresence in the legislature wouldof itself have little affect. “Eachrepresentative has a microphone. The speaker has a switch thatturns on the microphone. Thespeaker has the prerogative whoseswitch is turned on.”Negroes lack powerThis is a manifestation of thebroader problem of Negro rcu.resentation in Georgia, accordingto Cobb. For the power to bringabout change in the state res.swith people who are not going tovoluntarily give up power. And theNegro, uneducated and poor, lackssufficient power to really force himto make significant concessionsand hand over the reigns of power.Many Negroes, he added, outsideof Atlanta don’t vote. “Some can't,others don't because it is irrevelentto their needs.”Others who spoke at the all dayconference included LawrenceLandry, National chairman. ofACT, Paul Lauter of AmericanFriends Service Committee andBob Ross, UC graduate studentand a member of the SDS nationalClassified AdsPersonalsSEXand Science Fiction, two hundred favor¬ite sitting on our shelves.BOOK EXCHANGEAir-bus-ship-hotels-world-wide or local.Do it yourself or escorted quick tours.See us now. Marco Polo. BU 8-5944.Photograph ExhibitThe Hasidic Community of Williams¬burg. Exhibit of photographs by IrvingI. Herzberg Jan. 5-24, Hillel, 5715 Wood-lawn.DRAMAWe have just received a large crate ofexcellent plays at less than 2/3 listprice . . . Ionesco, Camus, Beckett, Id-sen, etc. Poetry too. Don't miss out.BOOK EXCHANGEWAA rntramural Basketball Tourna¬ment begins Jan. 18, Tues. & Thurs. at6:30 & 7:30 PM. Ida Noyes Gym. Opento all women students & employees. Seeyour WAA representative or Lynn Junk-er, 1325X New Dorms.THE PHOENIX needs literature! Poe¬try, short-stories, one act plays, criticalEssays. Please help. Send to PhoenixMagazine, 1212 E. 59th Ida Noyes Hall.Student desires pussycat to retire his bird. Kitten acceptable. Call weekdaysafter 7 PM, anytime weekends: 324-5964.O U kid I saw you yesterday WeedweirdOh where. Oh where, has my little wuf-fle gone?savFgen'f.d?Liberal Arts Conference. Jan. 31-Feb. 4.Tryouts Reynolds Club Theatre Tues.,Wed.. Thurs. 7:30-9 PMThe Noblemen-The campus band withthe big sound. Jim Pearle, 433 Vincent,call MI 3-6000.tonight at 8:30 tonight at 8:30tonight at 8:30 tonight at 8:30tonight at 8:30 tonight at 8:30Are you here for anything beside avoid¬ing the draft? Jan. 31-Feb.4.So you say you’re interested in whatgoes on in the college? PROVE IT. Jan.31-Feb 4.Toe the line-See Amedee Feb. 11. 12. 13.For flight information & reservation,call Edw Taylor. Be sure to ask aboutAA'S youth club. Double the fun for halfthe fare. DO 3-2293. Hurry, first come,first serve.TAl-SAM-WfCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising IsCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYfl A.M. to 9:45 P-M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 Eaat 63r<l St MU 4-1062 BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroPeugeotComplete RopobiAnd ServicePer All Popular importsMidway 3-45016052 So. Cottage GroveJUST RECEIVED:NEW BOOKS IN BUSINESS AND ECONOMICSJUDGMENT IN ADMINISTRAMONBy Ray E. Brown $5.95LABOURING MENBy E. J. Hobsbawn $7.50THE VITAL FEWBy E. J. Hobsbawm $7.50The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis AvenueEUROPE ANYONE?Student Government is offering the following EuropeanCharter Flights to students and employees of the Universityof Chicago:66 AJune 15 - Sept. 25New York - LondonLondon - New York 66 BJune 25 - Sept. 4New York - LondonLondon - New York 66 CAug. 8 - Sept. 5Chicago - FterisLondon - Chicago Jobs OfferedRm. avail, for student in exchange furbabysitting. Hrs. flexible. FA 4-1396.NEED MORE MONEY?Or a more interesting job? Find both . sReceptionist-girl Friday in attractiveofes. of top-rated CPA firm: no fig apt.nec. $85-$100 wkly. Contact Miss Hey*degger at STate 2-3270.Wanted: Offset operator 12-15 hrs. perweek exper. preferred. $1.75 hr. See ercall Mr. Quinn. Ext. 5142, Billings Rm.M-5.Apts. & Rms. For RentAvailable for sublet: l>2 room apt. Twomiles from Univ. on direct bus line. Ide¬al for single student or couple. Reason.,,ble rent. 745 W. Garfield Blvd. apt. 224any evening between 7-10 PM.KREgTENANT REFERRAL SERVICEReasonable Rentals, Desir. Apts 8 min.to U of C by IC. Eff. $80 00 1 Bdrm.$90.00 & up. Also large Deluxe apts.furn. & unfurn. NO 7-76202'a rm. apt. to sublet. Call 684-2162evenings.Roommate WantedMale roommate wanted to share apt.with UC student $50 mo. Peter Gran363-2748.For SaleSandals mid winter discount sale 10-2< „saving to students with ID card. Allsandals made to order. Adlib Studw,1422 E. 53rd St.1961 Simca, low mileage, snow tires,best offer. Call Larry 684-1785 between5-7 pm.Dobro guitar in excelelnt condition. CallMU 4-1309 aft. 6 PM.Furn for cojnpletp apt. $50 kitchen set,bed & desk. 667-5670 late eveningsApt. For SaleEXCELLENT-BUYLight, large. 6 rooms 2 bath apartmentmortgage FREE; must see to app.’t-ciate; call FA 4-6783.SALEstill inprogressatCOHN&STERN, <Irish Airlines Jet TWA Jet Air Canada Jet$250 Round-Trip $295 Round-Trip $320 Round-Trip Town and Campus Shopin theNew Hyde Park Shopping CenterDeposits ($50 per seat) now being accepted In the StudentGovernment Office, Ida Noyes Hall, Mon. • Fri. 11 —* S pm. 1502-06 E. 55th St.Phone 752-81004 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 18, 1966