1 Folk festival to featureblues, ballads, spiritualso. 29 The University of Chicago Friday, January 21, 1966US, foreign experts to conferUC to host China meetingSeveral US and foreign experts on mainland China will assemble at US in early Feb¬ruary in a four-day closed meeting on significant facets of life in the world’s largest nation.This gathering will be the first part of a three-phase conference sponsored by the Uni¬versity, Northwestern University, the Chicago council of Foreign Relations, the Bulletin ofAtomic Scientists, and the —theAmerican Friends Service Com¬mittee. Other meetings open to thepublic will be held in downtownChicago and in other Midwesterncities.AN ESTIMATED 50 scholars, in¬cluding 20 from overseas, will at¬tend the sessions at the center forcontinuing education, 1307 E. 60 st.The sessions, to be held February8 through 11, will be a part of UC’s75th anniversary observance.Robert Dernberger, assistantprofessor of economics at the Uni--versity and a participant in theconference, said, “We are quitesure there will be differences ofopinion on the position of Commu¬nist China and on US foreign policyaffecting it, but this was not thecriterion for selecting panelists;they were selected for their scho¬lastic abilities.”Hans J. Morganthau, Albert A.Michelson d i s-tinguished serv¬ice professor ofpolitical scienceand history, willalso participate in Cleveland, Detroit, Minneapolis-in the February St. Paul, St. Louis, Milwaukee, andmeetings. He Madison (Wise.), also addressedwill serve as by experts on mainland China,chairman of an PLANNERS behind the confer-UC professor Hans J. Morgan¬thau, a critic of US foreign poli¬cy in Southeast Asia, will par¬ticipate in the conference onmainland China to be held atUC in February.Big Bad Mao open US foreignpolicy session ence hope that the sessions willprovide an understanding of theeconomic, political, and militarytrends of Communist China as wellas clarify policy alternatives whichface the US in dealing with theAsian giant.They also expect policy-guidanceofficials from the Department ofState and from the executive andlegislative branches of the govern¬ment to attend sessions of the con¬ference.Financial support for the meet¬ings was granted by the JohnsonFoundations of Racine (Wise.) andthe Christopher Reynolds Founda¬tion of New York.Peace Corps WeekJanuary 23-29§ nMonday thru Friday re¬turned Peace Corps volun¬teers will man booths at 3i locations:Woodward Court: 8:30 am-7 pm.Mandel Corridor: 8:30 am-4 pm.Social Science: 8:30 am-4 pm.UC Karate club Folk music from blues and bluegrass to ballads and spirit¬uals, is planned for the Sixth Annual UC Folk Festival, com¬ing Feb. 4-6. The program will include amateurs and profess¬ionals offering a range of styles within these traditions.The Folk Festival, in addition tothree evening concerts, will pre¬sent a special Saturday afternoonconcert of religious music high¬lighting the diverse yet related tra¬ditions of that idiom. Performersand folklorists will also conductlectures and workshops Saturdayand Sunday, February 5 and 6 aspart of the festival.THE FESTIVAL performerswill be: Muddy Waters and hisBlues Band, Jim and Jesse Mc-Reynolds and the Virginia Boys,Sam and Kirk McGhee, DillardChandler, Estil Ball, Roscoe Hol¬comb, the Old Baptist Singers,Fred and Annie McDowel, the Rev.Gary Davis, and the MeditationSingers.Waters to appearMuddy Waters is a professionalof long-standing reknown in thearea of urban blues. Though hismusic is “commercial” ratherthan purely home grown, it retainsthe essential character of the Mis¬sissippi delta blues tradition.Singing rural blues of the Missis¬sippi delta, Fred McDowel, hiswife Annie, and other members ofFred’s family present a thoroughlyuncommercialized contrast to Wa¬ters and his band.The bluegrass music of the Jimand Jesse McReynolds groupadapts the basic spirit of its Ap¬palachian origins to relatively so¬phisticated techniques of harmonyand arrangements. The festivalwill bring this well-known group toChicago for the first time.SAM AND KIRK McGHEE, theonly remaining performers of theirkind, represent the old-time stringbands which had their heyday inthe 20’s and 30’s. During that era,the pair appeared on the “Grand01’ Oprey,” an old radio programdealing with possible alternativesfor US foreign policy.Among the academic disciplinesrepresented will be history, anthrp-pology, engineering, the sciences,business, and the humanities. Ses- Learn safe Karate blows?“Karate is a completely safe sport,” states Michael Kauf-sions at the University are limited man, who recently started the UC Karate club,to a specially-invited audience of At a typical club meeting, the club’s ten members lined8 ^IT ’ ^anticipated, however, that UP in front of their instructor and proceeded to do formalabout 2,000 persons will attend exercises, called a Kata match.phase two of the conference, four Barefoot, they dress in loose white “No, it doesn’t bother me,” onesessions at the Conrad Hilton hotel, suits with a white beginner’s belt. member said about the blows his720 S. Michigan av., on Friday The movements in Kata are pow- . u. , . ,night, February 11, and all day Sat- erful and swift, invoking a smooth pp s a t ng only inchesurday, February 12. Most of the flow from one technique to anoth- bom his face. “We are practicedscholars who took part in the er. Each technique is part of a set enough so we won’t hit the otherclosed meetings at UC will attend, which resembles shadow boxing, person.”Topics to be discussed at the ten- except that in Kata, four or eight Mr. Sukiyama, a Japanese blacktatively scheduled downtown meet- imaginary foes are killed. belt instructor who teaches theings include “Report from Inside Contact is never made, even in ciasS) keeps repeating, “JudgeChina.’’ “Reshaping of Chinese So- the free-style sparring of Karate. y0ur blows by other person’s open-ciety,” “Economy and Foreign The two opponents must attack, ingS,” and he demonstrates thisTrade of China,” and “Alternatives defend themselves, and put in a maxim by having various studentsfor United States Foreign Policy.” “killing” blow, with all blows in- spar wjtb him.Phase three of the conference volved stopping just short of the Each Qf Sukiyama-s dem0nstra-will consist of follow-up meetings target. tion subject students suddeniyfinds himself being lightly tappedon his knees, kidneys, and face.The light tap lets the pupil knowwhere he had left himself unpro¬ tected.The theory behind Karate is find¬ing the shortest possible route tothe “object” that is to be hit whileconcentrating the maximum amountof speed and force over the small¬est possible area.The Karate blow emphasizes awhip action which can reachspeeds exceeding 200 mph. Theforce of a hand blow is exertedfrom a one-inch area between twocalloused knuckles.The last instant before impactthe muscles are tensed, the fullforce of the body is exerted, andthe body provides a solid line ofcontact from the hand through thearm and down through the legs.The UC club strives to achievethe aims which are outlined in theKarate Association’s motto—“Theultimate aim of Karate lies neitherin victory nor defeat, but in theperfection of the character of theindividual.”Open commons, College alumni meetingsupplement liberal arts conference weekIn addition to formal lectures and informal seminars, sev- jjIgLeral special events will be included before and during theweek of the liberal arts conference, January 31-Februarv 4.Hutchinson Commons will be open the entire week as . Ljgathering place . J . $where informal discussions can be A pre-conference debate-discusheld. Refreshments will also be sion on discipline-oriented vs. in- f. i-% 9HBL' *^J^B9K*jSj9flEBBavailable. terdisciplinary-general education, JgAn alumni conference featuring conducted by professor of Zoology, *„JhM^a selected group of 40 to 50 alumni Richard C. Lewontin, master of the \and 12 members of the College "Fifth” college, James Redfield, ^^HPfaculty will be held January 28-30 and graduate students Peter Na- 1at the center for continuing educa- gourney and Peter Rabinowitz, will / .take place in Hutchinson Commons ^Bl| - ^JuS**** ! jjtor HDuring this conference, attending on Sunday, January 30, at 8 pm. HP ialumni will give their views con- The general topic to be considered Ei,| .-‘‘fljlS . ] Vcoining changes and possible im- will be “The limits of general edu- HH^’WkVNf ' 'jjvTprovetnents lor the College in light cation: a pre-conference inquiry Hft^of their own College experience into the practical application of the ^i \ \ v^HSHpand its subsequent effect on their conference.” • \. i HBHBilives. The main purpose of this discus- -4 X | |I he alumni will be considering sion-debate will be to show the re- I ^ ^HbBSthe effect of their College educa- lationship of the conference ma-tion upon their personal develop- terial to gen ed. The debate’s spon-ment, their family lives, their atti- sors follow it up after the confer- "The ultimate aim of Karate lies neither In victory nor defeat, buttudes and activities as citizens, ence with a similar type of discus- in the perfection of the character of the individual."and their vocational careers. sion in retrospect. „ * , Fred McDowel, a rural bluessinger who will appear at theSixth Annual UC Folk Festival.i- "i i ?' m m Caw, Iof folk music that only recently leftthe air.Dillard Chandler sings tradition¬al ballads and spirituals, unaccom¬panied, in a harsh and straightfor¬ward style.A radio announcer in Galax, Vir¬ginia, singer and guitarist EstilBall was discovered by folkloristJohn Lomax.First northern appearanceThe religious singing of bothChandler and Ball, while rep¬resenting the white Protestant tra¬dition, shows influences of Negromusic as well. Both make theirfirst northern appearance at thefestival.Kentucky miner Roscoe Holcombadds to traditional ballads his orig¬inal banjo and guitar style and hisdriving, high-pitched singing style.HOLCOMB ASSEMBLED a half-dozen members of his church intothe Old Baptist Singers. The musicof this integrated group is thechurch singing of their community.Gary Davis started his career inthe south as a blues singer. He mi¬grated to Harlem where he joineda church and eventually became apreacher for a storefront congrega¬tion. Because his church bannedthe blues, Davis turned to religiousmusic, but even in this medium hissinging shows traces of the bluescharacter.Revival SingersSpiritual singers in the revivalistfashion, the Meditation Singers,(Continued on page three)Music plans includeharpsichord, choralchamber concertsFour concerts will be given oncampus this weekend. The firstwill be a Mandel Hall performanceof Mozart’s A Musical Joke, givenon Friday at 12:30 by the MusicalSociety.On Friday evening, at 8:30, alsoin Mandel Hall, the ContemporaryChamber Players, under the direc¬tion of Ralph Shapey, will performcompositions by Webern, Dallapic¬cola, Blackwood, Berio, and Wyn-er. Soloists will be pianist EasleyBlackwood, soprano Elsa Charl-ston, and baritone Charles van Tas¬sel.Sunday evening will see the 57thStreet Chorale and Chamber Or¬chestra, under the direction ofChristopher Moore, at the FirstUnitarian Church at 8:30 pm. Vi¬valdi’s Chamber Mass and Brit¬ten’s Hymn to St. Cecilia will be onthe program.All of these concerts are free ofcharge.On Saturday evening at 8:30 pmin Bond Chapel, harpsichordist Sil¬via Kind will give a recital ofworks by Couperin, Bach, Handel,Bartok, Podbielski, and others.Tickets for this concert are $1 andare available at the music depart¬ment, 5802 Woodlawn.Ministers Week at CTSFindings indiC3t6 prehistoric culture Cody, King among conference speakersThere may have been settled human life prior to man'sdomestication of animals and plants, said Maurits Van Loon,museum secretary of the Oriental Institute, in a lecture atBreasted Hall Wednesday night.Van Loon’s findings on the left ments were discovered. The 1965bank of the Euphrates River are excavation work made use of athe result of a recently completed stepped trench to explore theseexpedition to Mureybat, a site in discoveries. Two hundred fortySyria 50 miles east of Aleppo. square meters were opened, expos-WHILE HIS primary interest lies inS twelve building levels,in the civilization of the Anatolian According to Van Loon, approxi-highlands and western Iran, Van ir.ately two-thirds of these moundsLoon has undertaken this project gave evidence of a civilizationfor the specific purpose of salvag- which was in a “pre-pottery”ing ruins which will be flooded by sta§e-the Euphrates Dam when it is VAN LOON also indicated var¬completed in 1972. ious proofs of a settled existence.Van Loon will lead the institute's ^s'ng slides, he pointed out verta-digging in the Euphrates area. cal p‘ s' *hlch, ^ termed ‘ breadwhich will be a five or six-year °vens ‘ He als° f?“nd »a“s, o£project houses equipped with peepholes;depressions in the pavement thatHis first expedition to the region may have served as hearths; ani-was made in 1964, when 56 settle- mal jaws, perhaps sacrificially placed in the walls; and traces ofburials and skulls.In addition, 70 thousand pieces oftools, primarily flints, were uncov¬ered. A few implements such ascontainers and needles; and a fewproducts of finer quality designedwith decorative motifs were alsodiscovered.Plant life was revealed, said VanLoon, by the discovery of charredseed in the fire pits. He also foundbones of such animals as wolves,sheep, and goats.While evidence of domesticationdoes not appear until about 6,-000 BC, Van Loon estimated thatthe pre-pottery settlement existedfrom about 10,000 until 6,000 BC.He surmised that a subsistenceeconomy, upheld by food-gatheringand hunting, may well have beenpresent, although, he concluded,there are “still too many unknownfactors to say anything definite.” Rev. Martin Luther King, director of the Southern ChristianLeadership Conference, and Chicago Catholic ArchbishopJohn Patrick Cody will be among the featured speakers forthe Chicago Theological Seminary’s (CTS) 35th annual Minis-ter’s Week, January 24-26. —Other speakers wm Include Dr.Seward Hiltner, professor of theol¬ogy and personality at the Prince¬ton Theological Seminary, the Rev¬erend James Smucker, executivedirector of the Northern IllinoisAssociation of the United Church ofChrist, and Dr. Howard Schomer,president of CTS.THE CONFERENCE was found¬ed to “bring in ministers and keepthem abreast of current theologicaltrends.” according to Winslow Kel¬ly of the seminary's office of com-m.unications.HYDE PARK AUTO SERVICE(in South Shore)IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE, WE HAVE A CAPTIVEJaguar SpecialistJim Wiens says if we don't get enough Jaguar work, he will return to sunny California.Let's Keep Jim in ChicagoYou can also get a lubrication and oil change performed on your car —"any make" — by C. Kabumoto, Esq.HYDE PARK AUTO SERVICE7646 S. STONY ISLANDRE 4-6393 The dual theme for the confer¬ence is ‘‘Parish in Transition” and“Troubled People in a TroubledLand.”King will speak about his forth¬coming plans for Chicago in histalk ‘‘A Southern ChurchmanLooks at Church and Race inNorthern Cities.”James Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS - LINENS - TAILORING10% Student Discount with I D. CardDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESJEFFREY THEATREWednesday and ThursdayFebruary 2 and 3Exclusive ShowingAN ACTUAL PERFORMANCE OF THENATIONAL THEATRE' iOF GREATBRITAINThegreatestOthello everby the greatestactor of our time.LAURENCEOLIVIER'OTHELLOA B.H.E. PRODUCTIONALSO STARRINGVlllll UVluElVLUITOiaUHbrabourne MBURGE PAN AVIS I ON'TECHNICOLOR'FROM WARNER BROS.PPOOUCFO 9*ANTHONY HAVELOCK-ALLAN and JOHNFEATURE TIMES2:00-5:15-8:30Student Discount Rates for 2:00 & 5:15 PerformanceStudent Rates $1.25NC SEATS RESERVED DC Student Religious liberalsPRESENT•. i"The Role of the Church in the Present Crisis"JESSE LEE JACKSONSouthern Christian Leadership ConferenceDirector of Field Activities: CCCOSUNDAY, JANUARY 23, 7:30 P.M.UNITARIAN CHURCH PARLOR 1174 E. 57th ST.THE WORD FROM THE BIRD:QUALITYThe Max Brook Co.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERShas served the Campus with Unexcelled Qualityand Service Since 19171013-17 East 61st Street Phones: Ml 3-7447Across from Burton-Judson Ct. HY 3-6868King will deal with the role ofthe church in dealing with un-solved civil rights problems ofhousing and school discriminationin northern cities. He will speak atBreasted Hall, 1155 E. 58 st. at 11am on January 26. His speech,like the others, is open to the pub¬lic, free of charge.ARCHBISHOP CODY will speakon “Vatican Council and Beyond.”a discussion of the ecumenicalmovement in the Christian church¬es, at a dinner celebrating the con¬ference.Hiltner, this year’s the Alden-Tu-thill Lecturer, will speak on thetopics “People in the Suburbs,”“People in the Cities,” and “Peo¬ple at Work and Play.” He willspeak at 8:00 pm Tuesday, 9:30am Wednesday, and 3:00 pmWednesday, all in the seminarybuilding.2 ® CHICAGO MAROON January 21, 1966► schedule for liberal arts conference(Rooms vrill be listed in the Maroon and a conference calendarat a later date).Tuesday, 3:30“The role of technical music courses at the University of Chicago/’Easley Blackwood.“Commonality, uniformity, and community,” Stanley Fischer.“What non-scientific knowledge is of most woTth to the student?”Helmut Fritzsche.“The squeeze on liberal education; or, between the pincers of up¬graded high school demands and the press of prerequisites onthe early choice of a professional school,’’ Benson Ginsburg.“Curricular focus: contemporary problems, or, the great conversa¬tion,” Albert Hayes.“Biology as the ultimate science ” John Hubby and Gerson Rosen¬thal.“What know ledge is worth having about the past?” William McNeill.“Implications of evolutionary theory,” Everett Olson.“Shold there be a year-off to regain a perspective lost by spending4 years in an isolated, unreal environment?” George Playe.“The problems of teaching modern history in a liberal arts curricu¬lum,” Peter Stearns.“Art as knowing,” Joshua Taylor.“Are facts worth knowing?” Anthony Turkevich.“Is liberal education general?” Roger Weiss.Wednesday, 10:45“Eugenics and euphemics,” George Beadle and Robert Haselkorn.“The relevance of knowledge,” Paul Booth and Mike Goldfield.“Creativity and formal education,” John Cawelti.“What place, if any, should the study of religion have in a universi¬ty?” Lloyd Fallers.“Federal aid to education: how, w'hen, how much?” Milton Fried¬man.“Educational advantages of an inter-disciplinary approach to thesocial sciences,” Mark Haller.“The place of the fine arts in a college,” Harold Haydon and Chris¬topher Platt.“Science for fun in the liberal arts,” Roger Hildebrand.“What language is worth studying?” Edwin McClellan and BernardWeinberg.“Inquiry in mathematics,” Alfred Putnam.“Interdisciplinary programs in the physical sciences,” GersonRosenthal.“The curriculum of the BA in English,” Stuart Tave.“The foundations of mathematics in a general education,” IzaakWirszup.Wednesday, 3:30“Limitations on the application of biology and psychology in humanbehavior analysis,” David Bakan.“Should we eliminate the departmentalized structure of undergrad¬uate education in the physical sciences?” Morrell Cohen.“The individual and the institution,” Philip Jackson.“Computers and disputers: the limits of ‘science’ in social studies,”Gerhard Meyer.“The College’s responsibility to the contemporary; or, up-to-date,avant-garde, and way out,” Edward Rosenheim.“Can one bridge the gap between specialization and dilettantism?”Joseph Smith.“Interdisciplinary programs in the physical sciences,” JaniceSpofford and David Wake.“Coordination of high school and college subject matter in biolo¬gy,” Paul ;Voth. ,Wednesday, 3:45“Is abstract mathematics necessary?” Jonathan Alperin and Rich¬ard Lashof.Wednesday, 4:30“Does the literary critic contribute essentially to undergraduateeducation?” Meyer Isenberg.“The impact of religion and traditional social structure on the so¬ciety of the new states of Africa,” Robert A. LeVine.‘The humanist and the social scientist in the general science curric¬ulum,” Melba Phillips. IThursday, 3:30Knowledge for excellence in the age of the ordinary,’Mackauer. Christian' y* \ Calendar of EventsFriday, January 21TALKING NEWSPAPER: "Cambodiain the Vietnam Context,” Dr. Schomer,president of the Chicago TheologicalSeminary, speaker, Richard Hacks of theUC sociology department will present aneditorial analysis of the current "peaceoffensive,” Reynolds Club, 3:30 pm.SUPPER-DISCUSSION: “Demythologyof the Bible,” Professor Norman Perrin,speaker, Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn,supper at 6 pm, discussion following.FILM: “Quai Des Brumes,” Carne, So¬cial Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.LECTURE: ‘‘Can Jewish Tradition BeRelevent to Social Action Today?” Rab¬bi Richard Isreal, Hillel director. YaleUniversity, speaker, Hillel House, 5715Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.CONCERT: UC Contemporary ChamberPlayers, Ralph Shapey, musical direc¬tor, works by Webern, Dallapiccola,Blackwood, Berio and Wyner, MandelHall, 8:30 pm.Saturday, January 22MEETING: SDS regional conference,Ida Noyes Hall, 10:30 am.FILMS: "Let My People Go,” and‘‘Ivanhoe Donaldson, ’ Hillel House, 5715Woodlawn, 7:30 pm.FILM: “Gold Rush,” Judd Hall, 7:30and 9:30 pm.Sunday, January 23RELIGIOUS SERVICE: “SeparatedChristians and God’s One Temple,” theReverend W. Barnett Blakemore. deanof Disciples Divinity House, preacher,Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11 am.BRUNCH: David Orlinsky at HillelHouse for informal discussion, bagelsand coffee, affiliates 25e, non-affiliates50c, 5715 Woodlawn, 11:30 am.MEETING: Chess club, a discussion ofLost City ramblersto emcee folk show plans for the College intramural tourna¬ment, Ida Noyes, third floor, 3 pm.DISCUSSION: United Christian Fellow¬ship, 5810 Woodlawn, 5:30 pm.DISCUSSION: “Cybernation, Automa¬tion and Unemployment,” MaynardMoore, leader, Brent House, 5540 Wood¬lawn, 6 pm.MEETING: “Role of the Church in thePresent Crisis,” Jesse Jackson, directorof field activities SCLC-CCCO, speaker,sponsored by Student Religious Liber¬als, Unitarian Church parlor, 1174 E. 57,7:30 pm.FILM: “The Wild One,” Brando in trou¬ble, 55c. Pierce Tower, ninth floor, 8pm.CONCERT: 57th Street Chorale andChamber Orchestra, Christopher Moore.Monday, January 24MEETING: UC SDS chapter, ReynoldsClub, 3:30 pm.SEMINAR: “Vatican II: Renewal inRome,” Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn,4:30 pm.SEMINAR: “Dilemmas of the Modern iK^BBNIMINHMHMHMIMNMHMINIIiMiChristian,” (for undergraduates), Chap*el House, 5810 Woodlawn, 7 pm.LECTURE: “The Culture or Poverty:Mexico, San Juan, and New York,” Os¬car Lewis, speaker, a limited number offree tickets are available at the Univer¬sity Extension Office, AdministrationBuilding, room 303-A, call extension3137 for, UC students and faculty, UCLaw School auditorium, 1121 E. 60, 8pm., part of the Monday Lectures se¬ries.SEMINAR: “Paul Tillich’s Theology:An Introduction,” (special session forstudents in the College, Calvert House,5735 University, 10 pm.COFFEE HOUR: ‘Let’s Talk about It,”an open invitation to faculty and stu¬dents to meet with returned PeaceCorps volunteers, Ida Noyes library, 4pm.DISCUSSION: Returned Peace Corpsvolunteer Jon Well (Ecuador) willspeak at Snell-Hitchcock, 7:30 pm.DISCUSSION: Returned, Peace Corpsvolunteer Jim Fisher (Nepal) will speakat Rickert house, 8 pm.Fifty-Seventh at KenwoodUNUSUAL FOODDELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICESr(Continued from page one)use such devices as electronicequipment for their effects. TheDetroit gospel group can be com¬pared to Jim and Jesse McRey-nolds in their commercial sophisti¬cation.As in past years, the Folk Festi¬val concerts will be opened by thebagpipes of Chicagoan GeorgeArmstrong.APPEARING AS masters ofceremonies and in the workshopprograms will be the New LostCity Ramblers (Mike Seeger, JohnCohen, and Tracy Schwarz) andArchie Green.The Ramblers will conduct work¬shops in banjo, fiddle, guitar, andmandolin; and Green will discussdoing research in country music.Lectures, Panels plannedGreen and the Ramblers willalso conduct a panel discussion ondevelopments in country music.Also lecturing will be Pete Weld¬ing, editor of the blues magazineDownbeat.Tickets to the evening concertsare available for $3, $2.50, $2.00.Admission to the religious concertis $1.50. Tickets may be bought atthe Mandel Hall box office or bymail from the Folklore Society,Box 67, Faculty Exchange. Let’s talkabout achallenging careerin bankingLET’S TALK ABOUT the American NationalBank and Trust Company of Chicago.LET’S TALK ABOUT advantages and oppor¬tunities unequalled in the banking business formen of intelligence, maturity, and a genuineunderstanding of human relations.LET’S TALK ABOUT a growth company—All students interested in' working on a special bulletinnewspaper to be publisheddaily during the Liberal ArtsConference should contactJerry Lipsch at 363-3292 orat the SG office.THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty Discount AMERICAN 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 - $3ORGAN AND CHOIRWorks by buxtehude. bach. lingarelli and franckBEVERLY WARD / THE MEN AND BOYS CHOIRorgana t of t ho episcopal / man and boy a choir of taint paul I churchcathedra/ of taint jamat / /y/e settle. choirmaatartickets for joint demonstration and con cart available at tha church attic a. 624-3195 / uroodwotlh'ibook Stora. 1131 aast 571 h street / hr da park co-op credit union, new hyde park shopping canter.55th and lake park i mptehouse bat lover. 29 aast madison / tha raynolds club of the unnattily ofChicago (student tickets ontyj. 57th and untvattny avenueTUESDAY, JANUARY29 / DEMONSTRATION 7:30 PM, CONCERT8:30SAINT PAUL’S CHURCH—-/DORCHESTER AT 50th STREETDEMONSTRATION AND CONCERT 1.50 / STUDENTS l.CC „ -ERNEST WHITEa lecture ■ demon sirs tion by the designer of the\'emericen classic' or gen el taint paul'a churchORGAN DEMONSTRATION American National—with assets of $17 millionwhen opened on LaSalle Street in 1933, whichhad grown to $700 million at the recent year-end.LET’S TALK ABOUT profits. AmericanNational’s net earnings have increased 66.7% overthe past five years, and have risen steadily foreighteen consecutive years.LET’S TALK ABOUT personal development. . . American National is fifth in size amongIllinois banks, offering all the advantages of amajor bank while remaining small enough torecognize individual ability. Ten of our thirty-onevice presidents are under forty.LET’S TALK WITH an American Nationalrepresentative. He’ll be looking for qualified menwho seek challenge coupled with opportunity ...people-oriented men, the future leaders of theAmerican National Bank and Trust Company ofChicago. Interviews on your campus January 27.We serve thousands of people...but we serve them one et e timeAmerican National DankAND TRUST COMPANY OF CHICAGO/LASALIE AT WASHINGTON 60690FRANKLIN 2 9200 MEMOER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION4January 21, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • IsI iV* Classified Ads Great Society to feel pinchmm mmsmPERSONALSJOHN T. WILLIAMS extends greetings:•‘I will return,’’ he promised/threat¬ened on visit to old stamping groundsSunday, urged disciples to keep thefaith.• • PubliusLeni Riefenstahl fans, ex-Nazis, poten¬tial Nazis, A.D.L. members, moviegoersin general, see TRIUMPH OF THEWILL - 1934 Nazis documentaryWednesday, March 26 at 7 & 9 pm. IdaNoyes Theatre.MEDICAL STUD'eNTSJust received: 15 used medical books,mint condition, unmarked, insanely lowprice.Clinical Electrocardiograthy 75cGeneral Urology $4Technics of Phsychotherapy $4.50Essentials of Neurosurgery $4.50Textbooks of Opthamology $8.BOOK EXCHANGEReynolds Club Basement 10:30-3:30fcerman Shepherd pups 7 wreeks AKCreg. call Ext. 4737.The Shapiro Collection will be distributeed today—get numbers at 8:30 am.BUSINESS ADMINISTRATIONExecutive with chemistry backgroundinterested in university hospital or re¬search organization. Write to: FranzDuell, 54 Koblenz, Hohenzollern Str., 150Germany.Who really ran the Hutchins College-Hutchins or Champ Ward? - Find outduring the LAC.Air-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.When was the last time you heard aknight? • Hear one-during the LAC ofcourse.David Orlinsky guest at informal HillelBrunch this Sunday. 11:30 am. Bagelsand coffee. Affiliates 25c, non-affiliates50c.Support the UC war on poverty—invitea faculty member over for dinner dur¬ing the Liberal Arts Conference. Con-tact G.B. 130 for details.Use SG Chicago Concerts ticket service.Every Sunday 12-5 HOT KOSHER Corn-beef & Pastrami Sandwiches served onRosen’s Rye 50c, Mr. Biggs. 1440 E.57th St. 684-9398.Some of my best friends are Facultymembers- Would you eat with one?SG loans up to $25.00‘‘Here’s a good recipe for cookies!”“Yeah!”If Bakan says the Liberal Arts Confer¬ence is worth going to - that’s goodenough for me!Sign up now for SG summer Europeancharter flights in SG office Ext. 3272.“Some of the guys from Pierce & BJare coming to the cookie and cake bak¬ing party.” So are some of thegirls from Woodlawn Court and Black-stone.” “Think wee’ll get anythingbaked?”Wifey is coming to town.VISA’S cookie baking party Sat. morn¬ing, Jan. 22nd at 9:00 AM. 1453 E. 56thSt. Most of the results are for the pa¬tients at Chicago State (mental health)Hospital.Organizations, don’t forget to chooseyour candidate for Miss U of C.“This cake ought to be great!” “Let melick out the bowl.”Coffee Drinkers, Monday-Jan. 24 IdaNoyes Library, Peace Corps CoffeeHour 4-5:30 pm.JOBS OFFEREDWaiters boys, Quadrangle Club, lunchand or dinner. Call Dora ext. 3696.Private rm. & bd. in townhouse nearUniv. in exchange for helping with sup¬per of 3 small children and occasionalsitting. DO 3-3539. " Help wanted waiters a few evenings aweek, expd. PL 2-9251, Gordon’s Restau-rant 1321 E. 57th St.Openings in 46 countries; talk aboutthem with returned Peace Corps volun¬teers, Coffee Hour 4-5:30 Jan. 24th Mon.Ida Noyes library; students and facultyInvited.Student wife will care for children myhome Exper.; 493-1366,APTS. & RMS. FOR RENTFreeTENANT 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 7-7620.6900 South Crandon Ave. Deluxe High-rise 1 bdrm. apts. from $120; parquetfloor, see Mrs. Haley receiving rm. orsecurity guard. MU 4-7964.2l,a rm. apt. to sublet. Call 684-2462evenings.1>4 rm. Effic. for sublease occupancynow or Feb. 1, call J. White 363-2017,5455 S. Blackstone.roommateT wantedMale roommate wanted $50 mo. rent.MU 4-1309 aft 6 pm.Girl wanted to share 7 rm. townhousewith 2 grad, students; call eve.MI 3-5251.Male roommate to share 4 rm. apt., $50monthly; 643-5534. College aid to be cut by Vietnam costsFOR SALELOSTLost: green plastic lense case, Tues,Jan. 11; reward. 752-5685.RIDES WANTEDRides to and/or from NYC Jan. 28-Feb 6, share, etc. 217 Mead, Burton-Judson.RANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open Evenings — Billie Tregonza, ManageressUNIVERSITY 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 UniversityBUY YOUR TICKETS NOW AT REYNOLDS CLUB DESK OR BY MAIL WASHINGTON (CPS)—Edu¬cation programs are among theGreat Society plans likely tofeel the pinch of the Vietnamwar effort, sources at the US Of¬fice of Education indicate.The landmark education laws forschools and colleges that clearedthe first session of the 89th Con¬gress last year will not be cutback. The pinch, sources say, willbe in hoped-for increases in cur¬rent programs which very likelywill be postponed.It had been hoped that the fundsfor the $1.3-billion elementary andsecondary school aid law would bemore than doubled for the next fis¬cal year. Major increases werealso sought for the $2.6-billion pro¬gram for higher education.These plans were made, howev¬er, before the Johnson Administra¬tion revealed it would ask for anadditional $12 to $13 billion to fi¬ nance the expanding war in Viet¬nam.The Office of Education holds onto the slim hope that PresidentJohnson will push for a significantincrease in the school aid programwhich is aimed at bolstering theeducation of youngsters in low in¬come families.The Education Agency hopes tostrengthen its hand with the reportthat by Dec. 21, nearly 3,000 schooldistricts had programs approved^ Anyone interested in work¬ing on a daily mimeographednewspaper during the week f|of the liberal arts conference Ifshould contact Jeffrey Blum, f363-2540. The paper will keep j|| people posted on events ofV the coming day and perhaps| summarize and analyze those|| of the previous day." is under the new law. Funds were notavailable until after the schoolyear began, but most of these dig.tricts started programs during thecurrent semester.While a total of about 20,000school systems are eligible for aidunder the law, the fact that a siz¬able number were willing to startprograms in mid-semester is an in¬dication of the need, a spokesmansaid.Careers1959 Peugeot - 403, $250; BU 6-4391.1961 Simca. low mileage, snow tires,best offer. Call Larry 684-1785 between5-7 pm.Sandals mid-winter discount sale 10-20°%saving to students with ID card. Allsandals made to order. Adlib Studio,1422 E. 53rd St.Furn. for complete apt. $50 kitchen set,bed & desk. 667-5670 late evenings.1964 Corvair Spyder convertible; yelloww/black top; exc. cond; 4 new tires,radio, 4 speed. Call 363-7391.APT. FOR SALEEXCELLENT BUYLight, large, 6 rooms 2 bath apartmentmortgage FREE; must see to appre¬ciate; call FA 4-6783.IM briefs |Sixty-nine teams in ten leaguesstarted play in the winter basket¬ball league. This exceeds by sixthe previous high number of teamsachieved last year.One hundred ten shooters havesigned up and paid their entry feefor the annual rifle shoot January27 and 28. This competition is on ateam and individual basis, with theintramural department and theUniversity rifle club co-sponsoring.League table tennis will com¬mence Monday, January 17. No¬tices have been sent to all teamsadvising when they will play.Handicap handball tournamentwill probably be a wide open af¬fair, with both last year’s cham¬pion and runner-up departed fromthe institution. Twenty-nine menare scheduled to start on Monday,January 17. JESSELSOTSSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER SO TEARSWITH THE VERT BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. SSrd(TEST111FAIT 77. La protection financier* que voutdonnez 6 votre famllte aujourd’huidevra lul §tre procures d’une autrefaqon domain. L’assurance Sun Lifepout certalnement accompli? cettetfiche 6 votre place.En tant qua raprfrserrtant local da la SunUfa, pula-je voua visitor A un moment davotre ohoIxTRalph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays B FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYSEE✓ THE NEWDATSUN FOR ‘66Check In At Your DATSUN DealerToday-Check Out In A DATSUNSee the famous “Four-Ten" 4-dr. Sedans & Station Wag¬ons $1666 and $1860, and the fabulous SPL-311 Sports Carscomplete for only $2546. Drive these new DATSUNS and seewhy DATSUN-owners make up the fastest growing importedcar list in America today.(hicagoland DATSUNBALM — SERVICK - PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AVE. fc aavtrty HinaCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60620 PHONE 2394770 Recruiting representatives of the fol¬lowing organizations will visit the officeof career counseling and placement dur-ing the week of January 24. Interviewappointments for 1965-66 graduates maybe arranged through L. S. Calvin, room200, Reynolds Club, extension 3284.January 23-29Peace Corps—display tables mannedby Peace Corps recruiters will be inMandel Hall corridor and New Dormslounge during the week. The PeaceCorps exam will be administeredthroughout the week.January 24International Business Machines Cor-poration, Poughkeepsie/KingstonN.Y., Rochester, Minn. — SB ana SMcandidates in chemistry, mathematics,pnysics, or statistics.January 25Western Electric Company, ChicagoIll., Midwest, and East Coast — will in¬terview men tor business trainee posi¬tions; production; purchasing; SB andSM candidates in mathematics or pnys¬ics.January 26Sears, Roebuck ana Co., Chicago Ill —SB and SM candidates in mathematics—or statistics tor programming, systems,and data processing positions.January 27Quaker Oats Co., Cnicago, Ill. and na¬tionwide - will interview analytical andorganic chemists at all degree levels,anu men interested in advertising, busi¬ness training, market research, person¬nel, and prouuction.US Office of Education — positionswun oince of Education tor students onall degree levels from a variety of dis¬ciplines, special interest in business andeconomics, mathematics and statistics,all social sciences, English, and educa¬tion. Both group and individual meet¬ings will be neld.January 28US Office of Education — positionswith Office of Education lor students onall degree levels from a variety of dis¬ciplines. Special interst in business andeconomics, mathematics and statistics,all social sciences, English, and educa¬tion. Both group and individual meet¬ings will be held.Larco, Inc., Chicago, Ill. — trainingprograms in business management orsales open to men receiving degrees inany discipline.t, - . * IComingthis quarter:theMaroon magazineFt ' - ”CoJeauty salonExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting1350 E. 53rd S». HY 3-8302University Theatre PresentsMANDEL HALLFEBRUARY 11-12-134 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 21, 1966Steiner, whose special interestwas the relationship between thebehavioral sciences and the studyof business methods, publishedthree books and numerous articles.He was instrumental in organizingbusiness school seminars for oldergroups, and helped to establish anews program for a local televisionoutlet called “Feedback,” whichelicited and interpreted vieweropinion on local and national issues.Steiner joined the business schoolfaculty in 1958 after serving as di¬rector of research for Edward H.Weiss & Company, a Chicago ad¬vertising firm. He received his BAin 1951, his MA in 1954, and hisPhD in psychology in 1957.George P. Schultz, dean of thebusiness school, said of Steiner:“His work in the behavioralsciences will stand for years tocome as a monument to his intel¬lectual attainments. He accom¬plished much in his short career,but had far more still to contrib¬ute.”Steiner leaves his widow, hisdaughter, and his mother and fa¬ther.I OK's civil disobedience, but with doubts; —I protests tend to degenerate into violence String quartet concert shines; profusion of luxuriousthan Euclid: “The whole is oftentake the full legal consequences ^ess ^ban the sum of its parts.” He dience, not to cajole it. Their jag-UC law professor Harry Kalven gave civil disobedience a Melancholia Sinfonica, Chicago’s national disease, is in-ating -limited endorsement Tuesday night in a talk delivered at duced by satiation of the system with leaden symphonic fare. 80Un(hthe Reynolds Club. (Masterworks indifferently wrought, newer works indifferent- thl Skos ukovich FU-It QuTrtet. "ai-In the second of three lectures by UC faculty in a series en- ly writ.) For a clue to its cure, we need look no further most a frustrated symphony, it is atitled “Issues of Peaoe and War —Conscience and Society,” Kalvenstated that civil disobedience“might turn out to be a very spe¬cial, very exquisite form of pro¬test, if the questions it raises canbe clearly delineated.”Calling civil disobedience a“middle ground” between legalprotest and open rebellion, he 4 ..argued that the major test which cases, rather than acts of civil dis¬carry tremendous moral force andmay be a valuable new form- of po¬litical action.Yet even in the sit-in case, Kal¬ven expressed some serious doubts.He stated that he was bothered bywhether these were not in fact test might well have been referring to ged, tense, almost frighteningthe Symphony String Quartet reading was never tempered by(SSQ), four Chicago Symphony reyerence—*his was Beethoven sive orchestral creationsmembers who proved themselves compressed collage of the melan¬choly, the grotesque, the epic (orpompous, depending on your opin¬ion of Skostakovich), and every¬thing else he crams into his mas-reverence—this waswith vengeance. It was an exhaust¬ing experience, and could havecapable Monday night of genera- made a concert—if not ating far more electricity than their season— in itself,parent organization. On the other end, they wereTHE CONCERT was the first of joined by pianist Katherine Glaser was only half of it—every variationthree—another offering by the om- in Dvorak’s sunny Quintet in A, in tone, every contrast in mood,man1 who doesn’t1*know^uch "about lence andby"the coerdve effects of nipresent Harper Theater. Its sue- Op. 81. It is easy to overstate the was emphasized (not exaggerated)HvH disobedience but who knows such mass protests on society. cess can be described simply: with naivete of this piece, but the SSQ so that it seemed to expand, re-t r r ” he said the Posslb^e exceptions of the solo produced an ecstatic union of vealing its vastness for the firstwhat he lixes, n without pctnhiichimr ricriH rnipc performances by Ashkenazy, Ros- dance and song, energetic rhythm, time.For once, the score made sense,v/hole Probably because they chose toplay it as it it were a symphony.Never have I heard such massivetone from- a string quartet, but thatmust be applied to such activity is obedience, by the tendency ofaesthetic. “I’m in the position of a these acts to degenerate into vio-ecstaticWithout establishing rigid rules performances by Ashkenazy, RosKalven admitted his inability to for illegal activity, Kalven did offer tropovich, and Michelangeli, it was and juicy melodies, all performeddefine precisely what forms of civil a general warning. “Particularly the best concert I’ve heard in Chi-disobedience are appropriate, but when you’re young,” he said, cago all year,he did lay down some general “probably what you need is some Their approach to the solid, butguide-lines. He stated that action humility about your sense of injus- fresh program showed they do notwhich is clearly coercive or not re- tice. By all means have a sense of consider chamber a synonym forlated to a specific grievance is in- justice, but by all means don’t im- salon. From the first measures ofappropriate, while demonstrations, mediately condemn those who the Beethoven Quartet No. 11, Op.such as the sit-ins, which involve a don’t react the same way.” 95, they were out to seize the au-direct grievance and a willingnesson the part of the participants to If four members of the orchestrawith flawless, but never lifeless, can play this well without Marti-technique. The scherzo was truly non, just think what a hundred and“furiant,” the finale an exhilar- four could do.. .ating—rather than merely ingrati- Peter RabinowitzUC's Steiner diesGary A. Steiner, professor in thebusiness school and recipient ofthree degrees from the University,died Monday afternoon. He was 34. PEACE CORPS WEEKJANUARY 24-28Return Volunteers Manning Booths at Soc. Sci.;Woodward Court; and Mandel Corridor! Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty-Fifrti and Woodlawn Ava.Memorial services for GarySteiner, professor of psychol¬ogy in the graduate school ofbusiness of the University,will be held at 4 pm, Thurs¬day, January 27, in BondChapel, Steiner died January17.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign car hospitalMARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBlood Typing B Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICEComplete Lab. EKG & BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM • 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3-2000 TURN ON TOMORROW Fee. m*being one of the brains behind the coming gas turbineage ... or helping to develop a new aircraft alloy... orfinding out how to feed 4 billion people? Try your genius atInternational Harvester, where computers and researchare as familiar as tractors and trucks. We are a companythat supplies mechanical power to a world that is increas¬ing its population by more than 60 million a year. Our hori¬zons are unlimited. But our. immediate job is to attractyoung people who can match their strides with today’sonrushing technology. We have openings in research anddevelopment, design and testing, manufacturing and sales.We intend to offer the best combination of opportunity, responsibility and individual treatment. International Har¬vester is a 2-billion-dollar-plus annual business. We are theworld’s largest producer of heavy-duty trucks, a major pro¬ducer of farm and construction equipment, an importantsteel manufacturer, too. POWER and the people who pro¬vide it are our lifeblood. We need talented and imaginativegraduates in liberal arts, accounting, chemistry, mathe¬matics and business administration, as well as engineer¬ing. We probably need you.Interested? Contact your Placement Officer now for a date to see an IHrepresentative when he visits your campus. Or if interviews are not sched¬uled, write directly to the Supervisor of College Relations, InternationalHarvester Company, 401 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60611.International Harvester puts the future in your handsAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERJanuary 21, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • fMusic reviewSymphony soloist4spectacular' Art reviewNew exhibit sensitiveLast week was guest conductor Andre Previn’s turn at thehelm of the Chicago Symphony, and while he may not havereceived very many accolades for his uninspired programmingof Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony and Beethoven’s EmperorConcerto, he did manage to sell outthe house for the entire week. Inall fairness, however, the en¬thusiastic public reaction was in¬spired less by Previn than by hissoloist.The big excitement of the con¬cert was the Chicago debut of Ar¬turo Bencdetti Michelangeli, thelegendary Italian pianist who isspoken of in Europe with awedwhispers, compared to VladimirHorowitz as a super-human virtu¬oso, and noted for such eccentrici¬ties as driving racing cars in theAlps, transporting his own Stein¬way with him on tour, and givingconcerts only when in need of mon¬ey.True to expectations, his inter¬pretation of the Emperor Concertowas among the most curious andunusual that I have come across.To those of us brought up on theexciting, heaven-storming school ofBeethoven pianoism typified at itsbest by Rudolf Serkin. BenedettiMichelangeli’s interpretation mayhave appeared cool and undemon¬strative. But this attitude does nottake his personality into account.TO CALL HIM a virtuoso wouldbe a grave insult, for while he pos¬sesses a truly breath-taking tech¬ nique, he never flaunts it. Indeed,in his eschevval of all pianistic fire¬works, one may fed that he is arather cold and distant musician.Rather, his is the true grand man¬ner of pianism. His nobility of ap¬proach, so evident in his keyboardmanner, was especially noticeablein the breadth with which he builtand shaped the long lines of thescore. When he did exploit histechnique, it was as a master color¬ist. One need only remember thedelicacy of the trill sequence of thesecond movement and the glass-snr.ooth runs to realize what a posi¬tively awesome mechanism he pos¬sesses.Even his keyboard manner wasunusual. Seated on an extremelylow piano bench, his imperiouscountenance and hair remindedone of those pictures of FranzLiszt. He extends his hands onlywhen necessary, and, even then, sit¬ting so far back from the piano, henever climbs all over the keyboardas so many pianists do. Rather, helets his fingers do all the work,pedaling sparingly, and the resultsare the kind of effortless, flowingpianism reminiscent of Chopin pi¬anists. For sheer musicality, his performance must go down amongthe most spectacular displays thatI’ve ever witnessed.AN ASSISTANT CONDUCTOR ofan American orchestra once com¬pared recorded music to beingkissed over the telephone. WhileI’m not about to split hairs overth:c nninf T u/ill tkni vooa J _ The retrospective exhibit of Russo-French painter Nicholasde Stael at the Art Institute is a sensitive and sensible one.It represents the joint work of five museums in Europe andAmerica, and has fulfilled its responsibility with distinction.Besides the presentation of his ma- ——jor paintings, a selection of de more with the vigorous interplay ofStael’s drawings and collages are form and movement, and the inter-ings have one great advantageover live performance; you canturn down the volume when it be¬comes unbearable.This was approximately the trou¬ble with Previn’s performance ofTchaikovsky's Fifth Symphony. Hesuccumbed to the trap that liesopen for so many guest conductorsin Chicago: that of overemphasiz¬ing the already strong brass sec¬tion. While the results were notquite as bombastic as Solti’s fiascowith the Bruckner Seventh Sym¬phony last December, it was dis¬concerting enough to further spoilPrevin’s lackluster, unemotionalreading.Indeed, for so flamboyant a mu¬sical personality, Previn’s inter¬pretation was remarkably tame.Every so often, there would be aninteresting ritard or an unorthodoxvoice-shift, but, taken as a whole,the performance lacked the dra¬matic unity to hold it together.Truly, this concert belonged solelyto Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli.Ed Chikofsky also displayed.De Stael’s significance amongpost war painters has been recog¬nized for some time, but his sui¬cide in 1955 left unasnwered manyof the artistic questions raised byhis work. Although in this way hispromise was not fulfilled, his per¬formance was still of tremendousimportance, and the work on dis¬play is representative of his signif¬icant contributions.DE STAEL'S period of activeproduction was short—about 15years, but he was prolific and hispaintings show considerable diver¬sity during this time. Of his 'irst,naturalistic period, we are shownonly one painting: a moody "Por¬trait of Jeannine.” None of theearlier works are very exciting,and some are clearly derivative:‘‘Jeannine’’ looks like an early Pi¬casso, and “Composition” (1944) isreminiscent of Braque. By 1945, hewas experimenting with his ownforms. His abstractions during thisperiod were uniformly drab, andthe problem of color seems to havebeen of great concern. He worked est in the works of this period liesin broad, thick bars and heavydark curves, usually applied to thecanvas with a palette knife.As early as 1947, we see a hint ofsomething more unusual. In apainting entitled “In the Cold,” hehas added to a mass of jaggedwhites and greys and some star¬tling points of red which seem toemerge from the heart of the pic¬ture as the only warm spots in afrozen desert. Gradually colors be¬gin to play a more important partin his pictures; we begin to feel asense of spaciousness as he startsworking with large patches oflight. Although still abstract, paint¬ings like ‘‘Rue Gauguet” and ‘‘Holi¬day” have a solid sense of realitybehind them.IN WORK from the 1950 periodrecognizable objects begin toemerge and to dictate the use ofcolor and form. This is evident inSurewehavedeskjobs.Desk jobs at Cape Kennedy, helpingcheckout the Apollo moon rocketDesk jobs at an air base, testing theworlds most powerful jet engines.Desk jobs in Samoa, setting up aTVnetwork to help teach schoolchildren.The most interesting desk jobs in Ikeworld are at General Electric.(Have a seat) ‘‘Apples’’ and "Fallen Leaves.” DeStael also turns to an explorationof density in his “Compositions” of1951-2, the finest of which,“Roofs,” shows the huddled patch¬es of Paris rooftops crowded be¬neath a limitless white sky.Appropriately, the exhibition de¬votes most space to de Stael’smost important period: 1952-3.Here his colors are bold, and he isinterested in njovement, bodies,and space. His Tamous series of“Football Players” captures morethan the vigor and speed of a soc¬cer game; it is a whole new idiomfor representational art. Figuresplummet across the canvas ormingle in a wild melee in a realtour de force. In fact, most of thepaintings of t|iis period show theartist at the height of his powers,and all of them reveal a verystrong personality.Special mention should be madeof three paintings: a large 1952"Ballet,” a grey rocky setting em¬phasized by an unexpected line ofred, similar in concept to the 1947“In the Cold;” the excellent 1952"Road to Uzes,” in which trianglesof green, black, and gray mergeslightly off-center, giving animpression of speed; and the “Mu¬sicians” of 1953, another tour deforce.NOT ALL the paintings aremasterpieces; “Large RecliningOrange Nude” is either a satire orthe result of a particularly hardmorning after, and “Marseilles” isabout as subtle and interesting asa tricolor.In de Stael’s last years, his workbecame less precise and more mis¬ty—almost sentimental. Colors,once bold, were quiet, subtle, andmodulated. Only two paintings of1955 stand out: “The Blue Studio”and “The Cathedral,” both ofwhich display geometrical preci¬sion softened by moody colors. Hislast pictures, white and light blueimpressions of gulls and ships re¬flected in the waters of Antibes,are candy-floss; the end is anti-cli¬mactic. The exhibit, which is not,continues until February 13.Gerry FisherFirst, why not sit down with the manfrom G.E. when he visits campus.Talk with him about your goals.He’ll talk with you about the hun¬dred different avenues available atG.E. to help you reach those goals. You may be working anywherein the world, doing anything in theworld. From marketing applianceslike a new oven that cleans itselfelectrically... to designing a com¬puter that’s no bigger than a suitcase.Tbgress k Our Most Important "Product Interesting problems. Importantchallenges. Real rewards, in moneyand opportunity. They’re all part ofholding down a desk job at G.E.Come to General Electric, wherethe young men are important men. BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroAustin G.Neeley OtsO HondaPwteot TriumphComplete RepefrtAnd SendeePer A* Pope lor Import*Midway 1-45014052 Se. Cottaga GroveGENERAL ELECTRICA 5 CHICAGO MAROON • January 21, 19661MAROON WEEKEND GUIDEwmmmmmmmmm. mmWatch for our Book Sale coming January 25HEW BOOKS IN ARTBIOGRAPHYPSYCHOLOGYLITERATUREWonderful art books at reduced prices!Two of the Larousse encyclopedias listed for the firs} timeRemember: JANUARY 25, SALE STARTSBATTERED BOOK SALE CONTINUESTHROUGH SATURDAY JAN. 22.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. El!‘.3 Avenue“The SWING TO PEACE is the cross¬roads where the civil rights machineis stalled. Two whopping chunksof legislation have knocked the agit¬prop from under the militant groups,draining them of interest and money.If they are to continue militant theymust attach to the going cause, whichis Vietnam, but a lot of people don’tcare to subsidize an anti-U.S. move¬ment or one which argues that Ne¬groes who fight | For „ fre, copy of thein Vietnam are I current Istue of NA.disloyal to their B TIONAl REVIEW, writerace.” |*o Dept- CP-4, 150 E.35 St., N. V. 16, N. Y.-1UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorBOOKSSTATIONERYGREETING CARDS•k-k-k-k-k-kTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student Discount FILM-MAKERS NIGHTSATURDAY AT 8:00$1. or one 16 mm filmHyde Park Art Center5236 S. BLACKSTONE363-9565SmedleysON HARPEROPEN FOR LUNCH12 NOONFEATURINGTHE MAROONSTEAKBURGER & BEER*1 00 PIZZA PLATTER1508 Hydo Park Blvd.KE 6-6606 KE 6-3891Delivery .25TABLE SERVICIPIZZA AND ITALIAN FOODSANDWICHES1/2 FRIED CHICKENFRENCH FRIES • COLE SLAWROLL & BUTTER$1.50Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World14*2 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.m 4-6856 UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK•Si strong Bank*NEW CAB LOANS400- hundred1354 EAST 55th STREET4 MU 4-1200member F.D.I.CMODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 Hr..DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 L 55th HY 3-9259 Winter ClearanceSale ContinuesOur winter clearance sale ofwomens clothing is still infull swing. You will find skirts,sweaters, girdles and brasdiscounted 20% to 50% whilethey last. Hurry in and lookthings over.Womens DepartmentTHE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenueFREE DELIVERY3 FREE PEPSIS with each PIZZA(confirm phone: with take out orders only)CAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THE VHY 3-5300 FA 4-5525PIZZAMed. LaraeOHEESE ••••••••«••«•••••• •••••••••••• ••*»••••• 1.45 2.00SAUSAGE 1.80 2.35PEPPER & ONION — 1.65 2.20BACON & ONION 2.15 2.70COMBINATION 2.40 2.95MUSHROOM 2.15 2.70SURI•••••• 0##•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• 2.40 2.95 STUDENT & FACULTY SPECIALSALE10 to 20% DISCOUNTSANDALS - HANDBACS &BELTS MADE TO ORDERAD LIB STUDIO1422 E. 53 ST.DO 3-3819HARPER 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. 95 ("Serioso") Beethoven Op. 81 DvorakString Quartet #1 ShostakovichMonday, March 21, 8:30 pmString Quartet in C Major S,r'n9 Quart#t- „ , ,Op. 76 #3 ("Emperor") Haydn , ?P- ” . r S*™ue' B*rber,String Quartet in F Ma|or RavelMonday, May 16, 8:30 pmPiano Quartet Sn Eb Major, Piano Quartet in A Major,K. 493 Mozart Op. 26 BrahmsString Trio DohnanyiPRICES:All Three Concerts Individual ConcertsReoular <7 *0 Regular $3 50Students $5-00 Students 32.00Coll BU 8-1717 SALEstill inprogressatCOHN&STERN,"«town and Campus Shopin theNew Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St.Phone 752-8100January 21, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7SM Five new members namedAn added attraction for Ma- jrjve new members have been chief executive officer of the KernToon, reader s, scheduled . to e]ected to the. b0ard of trustees of County Land Company, San FranJmake its'debutvMarch 3, will the University. =’V * cisco; Andrew Heiskell, chairman:>be the.Maroon magazine. K«vV The five- new members^ are of the board of Time, Incorporated,The magazine.will be devoted to Dwight M. Cochran, president and New York,City; Lyle M. Spencer,-critical ev'uU'C research topics..andparticles rfrom atnovel^point ofv iew,J "according” tcT Da\ id Satter$^ ?newsC:editor|^pfe|t°hV-? Maroon?£and|>^originator, of Ihe^nagazine^.r^c |being sohcitedrfronf Universityijdents’lespe.cially,, although|they4\viU^^SlnladditionSSfudents/withianlifil^^SterestilandSt'alentAfinliphotographjy?^amlarLwill be needed ,* i,vIy4*^‘‘We^hope ' to/make the .Maroon |. m m aslmmm a gazinefaore gula tficam puslpu blifflast »| a* >,-Yc - jf* rEgfM*cation,”1 said Satterjf “and encour:.»\»ge anyistudeuf mginai'and* worthwhile,'.topic^to* .considerr-< exploring .it' further' and writing ■fitsWP ^pubhcatioj0^»^^mjpr*-?‘‘Of course, it ls^expected that;all\'stories"will be ^thoroughly/investi-^gated"andvresearched^he; added??, {? Any one5!, i nt ere s t e'd ?' i n^su b m i 1t in gj* .^anything-^alreadKi'completedSXorJ^^writin!gS|odne|fiing||forfuture;sfedi^|' -1 tions, shouldifc.ontact\Dayid ...Satterl^at,the;Ma';oon'officerex@-3265;» Sunday Morpings^|l:00 o'clockJACK A. KENT. MINISTERABORTION3'?^«PFEBRUARY :t ■ :■?.*•18Sp*gfF?5 *•?*»**•■HOMOSEXUALITY^??^yTHelFirstlUriitarianScteutxKi|^^Hicaqdgft5650 South Woodlawn Avenue *T , | ■ FAirfax'4-4100./ye ate- ~ ‘ ;PRE-MARITALSEX- | U -JANUARY 23-ADULTERYHRin?:??:■oseph H. AaroConnect jcutAMutual|^yl Life Insurance.' Protection135 S. LaSalle. St.SAM U E fijAlt B EEIRjj|"Buy Shell From Belt"470! S. Dorchester Ave. 1H • ttcAKenwood. 8-3150S’*C~A- . * *t a. *<■ .jvetoyputjyour^■orage problemoff: Until; tomorrow!PETERSON MOV I Isll1 |wvT'WAND STORAGE COIftH 2«55}'$;rboty-Av«u^ fei:BtD IIfSeieftlohfoJcorduroy "Levis", etc' etc. College graduatesynew to Ford MotoFCo'At,tAMfflAm»V»Ant»AM ♦ HA'Vl/V**! A*»A*1t 'A't/m 1 T h' foften commeht’on the ebmparative youth of manyof our- top executives;' .The example of these men-^n key-positions is evidence that‘being young;is noS| ■ | a ^Imversal Army Store::^3U e. 6ii«iS-yy-'w,2^744' ::4 'jOPEN SUNDAYS “9 30 -1 00 r -?handicap aUr.orddo?those;who possess ability anafllmBitionrin fartll"iWw’-;employei'J?ai.1?expect-^challenging a^ignm'e'ntafwh.le stHfcparticipitmg'opportunity^ to demonstrate ;-spet ial' skills .and^ini'li&i^^^fjileistillilea^riingitlie practical, diij&jij£j;day-as|»o( Ls ,'of thc businets. Consider the, experi-^encer.oi. dim vyeston, who has been witht*FordMotor Comjjany 'for.vthree years.i^f6lENfiuNDAYS#9':30^1:00 Jt i ...M^MiB?^0VdshingtonWni vm* • *.e. .* '-ztiTHE U. of C. ■ ^MEETS TO EAT M }l^’ORDON’S^RESTAURANT ,1321 E; 57HiMJO7.30 4.M.-I 4.M. Jim.came to Ford in'February; 1963. His "first'assignment was in marketing, ^analysis v, here his principal job was evaluating present and potential ■..dealer locations. For a time, he also gained?ex|>erience in the actual pur- *,'&$. chasing,bfidedler/locations; ,l5a<market potential with' Ford Div^ '■ ment gave hii&the'background h('& His job today? Only three yearsv<: . analyst in Ford Division’sjBusinJim AYeston s ..experience is not£i twenties can be challenging-and i■pwit?;;Tblk'to our representative when htan assignment forecasting sales an<(oce flattering .|,qr.S|an?ch.er = :1. *»v*!lW?sa #.!242»^Hyd« ''Fork BlviL ^7 -' * * "f 7!it Sr.DO 3-0727! 0 *4 StwdciAt Discount? ‘. Dm Arntikw Rm<L Dwiborn?|||jp An equal opportunity employerCHUCfAGO MA OO N 1