Vol. 74-No. 33 The University of Chicago Friday, February 4, 1966 Administration asksSGto survey housing needsby Joe LubenowJames Ritterskamp, UC vice-president for administration,has asked student government to conduct a survey to “estab¬lish the need” for University action to ensure the availabilityto students of privately owned Hyde Park housing.Students charge university interferes in editorial electionOfficials halt Circle paperby David SatterA major controversy is fast shaping up over the choice of the next editor of the Chi¬cago Illini, the student newspaper at the University of Illinois Chicago Circle campus.University officials have ordered a moratorium on the disbursement of funds necessaryto publish the Chicago Illini pending an audit of the newspaper’s books. Student leaders, inthe meantime, are charging thatthe audit is a thinly veiled attempt of the committee on student af- In the meantime, Podesta’s termto discredit Tony Podesta, the fairs, ordered a moratorium on the as acting editor, which had beenformer acting editor of the paper disbursement of funds to the Chi- by McCaig for the months of.... , , „ December and January has runcago lll.m pending a full audit of out and the Chicag0 mini is cur-and currently a candidate for theeditorship.PODESTA WAS president of llli- the newspaper’s books. rently without funds, an editor, orMcCaig then announced that he any plans for regaining either.ni student government for the had been asked by Robert JOHN DOE, a member of theacademic year 1964-5. He joinedthe staff of the Chicago Illini inruary 20. (Continued on page three)Reopening of Hutchinson Commons for lunch, conversationconsidered by University after trial during conference weekM. Crane, dean of student affairs, Chicago Illini editorial board, toldto postpone the choice of the new the Maroon that the audit is an ef-September of 1965, at which time editor until after the audit of the fort to accumulate financial evi-he was elected co-editor. Chicago mini's financial records, dence pointing to misuse of news-Board chooses editor The audit, according to one source, paper funds that would make TonyIn December, 1965 Howard may not be comPleted before Feb- Podesta an undesirable candidateMarx resigned as editor and Po¬desta was appointed acting editorby Ronald McCaig, chairman ofthe Chicago Illini board of direc¬tors.It is the board of directors, abody consisting oL- four students,four faculty members, and two ad¬visors, that chooses the editor ofthe Chicago Illini.A meeting of the board wascalled for December 16 to choose anew editor and then called off be¬cause, according to McCaig, not allthe faculty members were able toattend.A SECOND MEETING wasscheduled for the second week inJanuary. A request for an earliermeeting had been turned down byMcCaig.At the meeting, candidates forthe editorship were interviewed ina manner described as “a quickbrush over, rushed and superficial,”by a source on the Illini studentgovernment. No final decision on anew editor was reached and, in¬stead, a third meeting was sched¬uled for the fourth week in Janu¬ary by McCaig.Third meeting cancelledThis meeting, however, nevercame off. Nan McGehee, chairman Ritterskamp denied that the pos¬sibility of University acquisition ofHyde Park townhouses was viewedonly as a ‘‘temporary expedient”to diminish the housing shortageexpected for the fall of 1966.Winston Kennedy, manager ofthe University’s community andreal estate office, agreed that ifthe University begins to acquireHyde Park real estate for the spe¬cific purpose of making it availa¬ble to students, the facilities ob¬tained will continue to figure inprojections of housing needs forsome years to come.Kennedy agreed that a more pre¬cise determination of the extent ofstudent dissatisfaction with the ex¬isting housing situation would beuseful. He commented, ‘‘I don’tknow and I don’t think anybodyreally knows how large the marketis” for Hyde Park housing.Kennedy conceded1, however, that“at the present time there is a de¬mand for more off-campus housingfor students than is presentlyavailable to them.”He noted that in the absence ofHutchinson Commons will:ontinue to serve lunch aslong as it is economically fea¬sible to do so and the room isnot being used for another purpose,says UC vice-president for admin¬istration Janies Ritterskamp.The commons has been reopenedto serve lunch during the liberalarts conference. Only cold food isbeing served during this trial peri¬od.Ritterskamp explained that thefood service is being provided byan outside firm and that LylasKay, director of residence hallsand commons, is now consultingwith the firm on the feasibility ofkeeping a commons food servicegoing. Continuance and enlarge¬ment of the service will dependprimarily upon the outcome ofthese talks.The Reynolds Club, Mitchel Tow¬er, C-shop, and Hutchinson Com¬mons are all destined to be taken Hutchinson Commons fills with students at lunch time during theliberal arts conference week.over by the music department, but eteria if it is financially possible,Ritterskamp said that this will he said.have to wait until the money is Miss Kay said that a determina-available for the project. In the tion regarding the economics of themeantime, the commons is empty matter will be forthcoming veryand idle, and will be used as a caf- shortly. University intervention the HydePark housing market “will con¬tract” as landlords exercise theiroption to rent “to what they con¬sider more stable people”.When asked whether the Univer¬sity could do anything to keepapartments that it does not ownavailable to students, Kennedy re¬plied that his office could continue’Student Government hasprepared a "Student's Guideto Chicago's Building Code"which is available free in the:J SG office.The guide was prepared byPaul Levin, a member of theSG consultant board on stu¬dent housing and facilities.The material in the guide wasexcerpted from the city build¬ing code and contains the sec¬tions most relevant to studentapartment dwellers.sk : «anH z.its present policy of offering toguarantee tenants to landlords whoare willing to rent to students.SG president Bernie Grofmannoted that an effort will be madeto have students who move out ofHyde Park apartments notify stu¬dent government in order that oth¬er students can apply for the va¬cated facilities.Grofman endorsed the idea of ahousing survey. He felt that itwould reveal that “there are manystudents who desire apartments inHyde Park, but have had to liveelsewhere because of the increas¬ing scarcity of such accommoda¬tions”.SG plans to distribute the ques¬tionnaire next week to selectedresidents of dormitories and HydePark apartments, as well as to allstudents who live in South Shoreand Woodlawn.The questionnaire will include anattempt to determine the nature ofpresent student accommodations.It will also ask students how muchthey would be willing to pay fordesirable and conveniently locatedhousing.Residents of South Shore andWoodlawn will be asked whetherthey are living where they are be¬cause they cannot find suitable fa¬cilities in Hyde Park. IThe set may be odd, but the play isn't—Moliere's The Misanthropeat the law school auditorium starting tomorrow.t '..Odd set for pro actorsby Mark Rosin“Moliere is a discotheque? Well, it’s more like a magazinepuzzle in which you have to find the 94 missing items hiddenaround the room. There’s a guitar, there’s a garbage cancover....”Geneva Bugbee, who plays Eli- more scholarly interpretation, link-ante in the UC-sponsored proauc- lr!S the conception of the set withtion of The Misanthrope, opening the play’s translation.Saturday night at the law school "RICHARD WILBUR has doneauditorium, offers this description a fabulous job in translating Theof the plays’ unusual scenery. Misanthrope. He has used contem-John Reich, director, puts forth a (Continued on page nine) 2-S rating harder to getNew draft standards dueCollegiate Press ServiceWASHINGTON—College students had been expecting itfor weeks, but when the selective service director announcedlast weekend that college students would be drafted to meetthe demands of the growing military forces, it was still a shock.Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Ilershey, headof the Selective Service System,said the guidelines for local draftboards, “similar to those employedduring the Korean conflict,” willbe issued soon. They will apply tocurrent high school seniors andcollege students for the nextacademic year.THE ANNOUNCEMENT, whichhad been expected when draft quo¬tas continued above 30,000 amonth, recalled that special testscores or class standings wereused to determine deferment forfuture college study from 1952 to1963.Currently the primary requisitefor college deferment is satisfacto¬ry pursuit of full-time collegestudies. But increase in militarymanpower authorized or proposedlast August total 452,000, and draft¬ing from colleges will tap a pool ofmore than 1,800,000 young men.Hershey’s announcement fol¬lowed disclosure that the Armyand Marine Corps would draft 32,-900 men in March. The figure rep¬ resented another trend upward aft¬er a decline to 29,400 in the Feb¬ruary quota. Quotas for Decem¬ber and January were 45,229 and38,280.Guidelines advisoryThe guidelines for local boardsare not mandatory, but generallydetermine draft status. Hersheycalled them “advisory criteria,”which he said were decided after“consultation with other govern¬ment agencies and leading educa¬tion associations.”NEGOTIATIONS have beenstarted with testing agencies, hereported, and the certificate thatschools submit to local boards toreflect student status is being re¬vised to reflect class standings.The detailed guidelines will be“issued in the near future” as soonas they are determined, he said.Congress authorized an increaseof 340,000 in the armed forces lastAugust when it approved a budget addition of $1.7 billion for the pur¬suit of the war in Vietnam.New authorizationAn additional 113,000 men wouldbe authorized by the $12.3 billionsupplemental appropriations re¬quest now before Congress.THE DECISION to rely uponthe draft for Vietnam troops ratherthan turn to the reserves wasmade deliberately. Government of¬ficials described it as a “moreequitable distribution of the bur¬den.”In testimony before congression¬al committees earlier, Robert S.McNamara, Secretary of Defense,remarked that “in as much as itappears desirable to be in positionto deploy additional forces withoutcalling up reserves, these supportunits must be provided in the ac¬tive force structure.”The budgeted strength of thearmed forces as of next June 30w'ould have been 2,640,266 underthe original budget proposal for thecurrent fiscal year. The earlier ap¬proved increase and the currentproposal would raise the totalstrength to 3,093,109, with all but105,766 to be in service by June 30.Total commitment 270,000Official figures put 197,000 Amer¬ican troops in Vietnam at present,(Continued on page four)V Letters to the editorSG must cleanse itself,then change the worldTO THE EDITOR:In defending SG action on theGrofman impeachment, Bob Ross(Letter to the Editor, 28 January1966) says that he doesn't . . careone whit about the way one B.Grofman pays his phone bill. Wehave a world to build, a universityto revolutionize, a society to con¬front. Let’s get on with it.”While I hardly agree that evenan ideal student government islikely to build any worlds, revolu¬tionize any universities, or confrontany societies, I do believe that anysane person, no matter what hisviews on what a student govern¬ment can or should do. 'will agreethat those goals cannot beachieved when the group’s leadersdirect funds allocated to theachievement of those goals intotheir own pockets (as Mr. Grofmanhas done);—when the group’s lead¬ers lie to its members and the peo¬ple who elected them (as Mr. Grof¬man has done).I say to Student Government:“Thou hypocrite, first cast out thebeam out of thine own eye; andthen shalt thou see clearly to castout the mote out of thy brother’seye.” In other words, Mr. Ross, SGshould clean itself up before itbuilds any worlds.GUY MAHAFFEYSG lecture Is reminderthat King is honest manTO THE EDITOR:I would like to say a word ofthanks to Student Government andthe sponsors of the Ogden Memori¬al Lecture Series for bringing theRev. Martin King to Mandel Hall.One has read and heard, of course,of the central theme in King’s mis¬sion—the inclusion of hope for thetormentors’ redemption in the veryprotest against the torment. But itwas a valuable experience to beexposed to that mission in theflesh. It was a vivid reminder ofthe gr at thanks that this societyow'es (to fate? to God?) that Mar¬tin King is an honest man. If thiswere not so, if that device of re¬demptive hope were instead in thehands of a demagogue, all Hellwould break loose in this society.RANLET LINCOLN,DIRECTOR,ALUMNI AFFAIRSFreed accused of biasin his attack on ReaganTO THE EDITOR:Bruce Freed’s January 28th col¬umn should be clipped out and putaside as a perfect example of thepower of innuendo. Mr. Freedstates, in the course of his column,that Ronald Reagan has changed,somehow, from an “avid Goldwa-terite” in “far right field” into a“responsible, moderate (is it everpossible to see one of those two ad¬jectives without the other?) con¬servative,” but implies that this isall a bit of hypocrisy designed tofool the California electorate.All of this is apparently self-evi¬dent to Mr. Freed, and, it wouldseem, he expects the rest of us toaccept it on faith, for he providesHo examples of the Great Meta¬morphosis. Indeed, the only state¬ment of Reagan’s which is even mentioned is one in which he quitelogically states that anyone whovotes for him is supporting hisviews and not the converse.It is obvious that Mr. Freed doesnot like Reagan, but is it too muchto ask that he give us some validcriticisms of the man in place of anon-substantive smear? In partic¬ular, as one of 27 million Ameri¬cans who remain unconvinced ofSenator Goldwater’s “irresponsibil¬ity,” I would appreciate knowingMr. Freed’s conception of the dif¬ference between an avid Goldwater-ite in far right field and a responsi¬ble, moderate conservative.ROBERT G. BRADLEYGRADUATE, ECONOMICSRonald Reagan changed!reader questions FreedTO THE EDITOR:The Maroon's recent diatribeon Ronald Reagan’s campaign inCalifornia is quite interesting inthat all virtues seem to becomevices if a conservative adoptsthem. Those with tenacious memo¬ries might remember the adulationheaped on the astuteness of NelsonRockefeller, the most recent bene¬ficiary of Spencer Roberts’ tenderministrations. But it somehow be¬comes evil for Reagan to hirethem. When it was Goldwater whowouldn’t talk about issues, thatwas bad. When Reagan talks aboutissues Mr. Freed considers it apublic relations gimmick. WhenReagan says he’s not going to re¬quire a loyalty oath from thosewho vote for him (a most intelli¬gent remark, and one equally ap¬plicable to the Communist Party’ssupport of President Johnson in1964) this is regarded by Mr.Freed as an evasion of some sort.And finally we have the most glit¬tering generality of all, that Rea¬gan is making a “strange conver¬sion” from a “Goldwaterite” to a“responsible moderate conserva¬tive”. From this masterful piece ofrhetoric we must infer that the twoare mutually exclusive, and anyright-thinking person would realizeit. What Mr. Freed and the Ma¬roon really can’t stand is the possi¬bility that people might vote forReagan—and even worse, becauseof his positions rather than hissmile. So, try and depict him as asoap package to try to obscure thatfact. I trust that the voters ofCalifornia will have more politicalperspicacity than the editors of theMaroon.DANIEL J. BOGGS,LAW SCHOOLDelighted that (hikofskyis frank about his viewsI was delighted in reading EdChikofsky’s review of the Contem¬porary Chamber Players concertto find that he has no objectionagainst stating frankly his opinionson modern music. I have not beensurprised to hear several peopleattack his views, for people whoare insecure in their opinions reactviolently against any criticisms ofthem. One person accused Chikof-sky of trying to give objectiveevaluations of music he does notunderstand, though Chikofskymade clear the subjective natureof his remarks by honestly declar¬ing himself to be an “unabashedromanticist” faced with musicwhich he personally does not findenjoyable—thus expressing one ofthe fundamental theories of artisticcriticism: the critic is merely an¬other individual expressing his per¬sonal reactions to and evaluationsof works of art, and is by nomeans to be considered an arbiterof the merits of artistic works.One very common argumentused in favor of modern music is:“They all called Bach, Beethoven,Tchaikovsky, Strauss, and Stravin¬sky unmusical, revolutionary com¬ posers!” This argument, which canbe used by any tenth-rate compos¬er and any admirers he may befortunate enough to have, certainlydoes not prove that today’s revolu¬tionary composers will be the nextcentury’s Beethovens—thoughthere are some who like to feelthat it does.As a result of different back¬grounds. different people quite nat¬urally have different aesthetictastes; and to quote Easley Black¬wood, “You cannot change people’stastes.” Some people like modernmusic; Ed Chikofsky and manyothers like Nineteenth Century mu¬sic. Mr. Blackwood would doubt¬less agree that any attempts to geteither side to agree with the viewsof the other would be futile and,quite possibly, dangerous. Inaesthetic matters, any attempt tocriticize the opinions of another,whether he be a Maroon music crit¬ic or not, is absurd, as it impliesthat one person’s aesthetic opinionis better than another’s, though as,to again quote Mr. Blackwood,“anyone with musical tastes feelsthat what he doesn't like iswrong,” people will probably neverstop criticizing the personalaesthetic opinions of others.MAHONRI M. YOUNGEnough of Ed (hikotsky-he awaits Peter's returnTO THE EDITOR:In the Friday, January 28, edi¬tion of the Maroon, Ed Chikofsky,so-called “music reviewer,” notonly “betrayed” himself as an“unabashed romantic” (Whyshould he feel apologetic for beinga romantic?) but also the nation’sartistic educational system whosemost singular characteristic is itsuncanny ability to produce peoplewith tin ears who later becomemusic criics. For the pleasure ofyour readers, I have annotated afew of Mr. Chikofsky’s observa¬tions on the Schuller-Shapey bash.“Last Friday seemed to be a daywith virtually nothing to offer buttwentieth century music. Yet, inspite of this excess, . . .” No com¬ment should have to be madeabout this remark. Despite popularbelief, only in the twentieth centu¬ry has there been such a lag be¬tween composer and audience. I dohope that the excess of twentiethcentury “sweets” which appears tohave caused Mr. Chikofsky’s auralsystem considerable digestive diffi¬culties was neutralized by Rach¬maninoffs soda water.“What the composers unfortu¬nate enough to be represented onthe program seemed to be intenton doing is to nihilistically breakall the rules of music set downover centuries,. . . .” (Does theMaroon employ a proof-readerfamiliar with the English lan¬guage?) What rules, Mr. Ed?Which Centuries? Did Palestrinaplay the musical game with thesame set of rules that Bach used?Of course Beethoven was a docilelittle rule-follower. Why he neveronce crossed Boethius.“Substantially, both works’ (thecompositions by Berio and Dallap¬iccola) musical content was thesame, except for the fact that thebaritone spent most of his timeI C hicago Maroon |EDITOR IN-CHIEF .. Daniel HertzberjBUSINESS MANAGER Edward GlasgowMANAGING EDITOR Dinah EsralNEWS EDITOR David SatterASSISTANT NEWS EDITORDavid E. GumpertASSISTANTS TO THE EDITORDavid L. AikenSharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsCOPY EDITOR Eve HochwaldCULTURE EDITOR Mark RosinEDITOR, CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWDavid RichterASSOCIATE EDITOR, CHICAGOLITERARY REVIEW Rick PollackMUSIC EDITOR Peter RabinowitzASSOCIATE MUSIC EDITOR Ed ChikofskyPOLITICAL EDITOR Bruce FreedEDITOR EMERITUS Orvh»rt P. LeveyPHOTOGRAPHERS: Dick Ganz, Sieve Wolsy,Pu. »_A».Charter member of US Strident PressAssociation, publishers oi CollegiatePress Service. crooning like a bilious pigeon.”Excuse me, Mr. Music Reviewer;which work featured the pigeon?Maybe I’m wrong, but I seem torecall that some blonde in a bluedress also cooed for a while thatevening. And you forgot to mentiona work by some cat named AntonWebern (He’s dead you know). Imust caution you not to blink yourears or you might miss his works(They’re quite short you know).Perhaps you lost your program atJimmy’s after the concert and thusfailed to remember some of the in¬consequential details of the con¬cert.“Yehudi Wyner’s Serenade pro-provided some perverting mo-lacking only musical ideas.” EdChikofsky’s “Modern Music Fails’’provided some perverting mo¬ments, lacking only ideas aboutmusic.I believe, Mr. Chikofsky, that Iand my wife sat about four rows infront of you at the concert; I seemto remember your having difficultydeciding whether Blackwood’spiece was an upside-down or side¬ways rendering of Chopin’s HeroicPolonaise. Well, I’ve tried the Chopin both ways, and I must say, thedifference between Blackwood’sglasses and mine is considerableand worthy of careful study. I no¬ticed that by the Friday Maroonyou had chosen to equate Black¬wood’s work with the upsidedownChopin. I’m curious: how did youdo this? You obviously don’t lookat scores, listen to records, or at¬tend the open CCP rehearsals.“AH in all, it’s really a shamethat such really fine. . . .(journal¬ists) . . . as . . . (Hertzberg) . . .and the . . . (Maroon staff) . . .members should waste their timeon such trivia (Chikofsky). DidChikofsky attend any CCP concertsearlier this year? Rabinowitz did.What's he doing these days? W'eneed him.STEVEN CROCKETTGRADUATE STUDENTMUSIC DEPARTMENTNews MuseHelp for the Townhouses for students:solution to housing crisisTO THE EDITOR:One of my fondest illusions wasdashed when I found out in theMaroon that Pierce Tower cost $14,-000 per resident. Why else (I hadthought) would the Universitybuild such a monstrosity exceptthat it was the cheapest way ofjamming students in? Could it bethat this luxurious edifice was builtfor the PR department expresslyfor their color brochures? Whoknows?Just to prove that any studentcould design a better dormitory inten minutes, I have taken that a-mount of time from my studies andhave thought up a better one. Thisidea was inspired by the sugges¬tion of SG that the University buytown.iouses in the neighborhood.Instead of building anotherPierce Tower, why couldn’t UCbuild townhouses for students? Itwould actually be less than half asexpensive per student to build afour or five bedroom house (singlebedrooms) with a living room,dinette, kitchen, 2li baths,and a basement. They could be ar¬ranged in courts, and some couldbe sold to faculty members.Lower dorm fees? Student-facul¬ty communities? Good gad, I’mglad my ten minutes are up or Imight have thought of a dozenmore advantages.RICHARD HASHERQuote of the Day“I own a car, but... I’m toocheap to buy a Universityparking place.”Warner Arms Wick,dean of students, ut¬tered in conversationwhile running to catchthe IC.poverty warby John BremnerFinally the government has declared war on the war onpoverty. Lyndon Johnson finally provided Sergeant Shriverwith the opportunity to clean up the poverty program.Until recently, Johnson hadPeace Corps and the poverty pro¬gram, and, as a result, the povertyprogram.' suffered.AT LAST, realizing this, thePresident relieved Shriver of thePeace Corps in order to attempt tostraighten out the badly falteringattack on poverty.That the poverty program needshelp is beyond doubt. It has con¬tracted, as most government opera¬tions do, serious administrative ill¬nesses, and suffers from a bad caseof politics.In fact, politics caused problemsfor the program even before it gotstarted. What was originally to bea concentrated attack on “pock¬ets” of poverty was unmanageablyexpanded under pressure from pol¬iticians.Almost every congressman couldand did claim some kind of pover¬ty in his district, and the need fora program'—in the interest of hispeople and his own re-election.Whether the President resistedthis politically motivated expansionis unclear. The fact is that, if hedid, he failed. The program wasdestined for trouble from the start.WITH serious handicaps alreadycreated by congressmen in Wash¬ington, the politicians out in theprovinces completed the process.Local public officials were un¬cooperative in working with pover¬ty staffs, and repeatedly insistedthe program serve their politicalinterests, to the detriment of effi¬ciency and justice.A further snag was the role ofthe poor. They were supposed toparticipate meaningfully in their insisted Shriver head both theown salvation, but instead, theirplace was largely pre-empted byiocal pols.All this is enough to bring anydirector—or part time director—todespair. But there is perhaps aneven more serious defect to theprogram.IT IS an open question whetherpeople can really be brought upfrom poverty by anything but far-reaching and fundamental econom¬ic reform, even if politics andbureaucratic problems didn’t exist.We learned in the 1930’s that thereasons for poverty in one group,however large or small, were inti¬mately related to the workings ofthe whole system.Perhaps this is the case again;poverty may not be a mere softspot in an otherwise outwardlysuccessful economy. Johnson’s“one fifth of a nation” may hold asmuch deep social meaning for usas Roosevelt’s “one third.”Granted that Shriver doesn’t ac¬cept this gloomier view, he stillfaces the massive tasks of econom¬ic integration job retraining, andarea redevelopment. These ques¬tions alone are so complicated thatmost experts disagree on whateven a limited program shouldcontain.Thus, in the light of all the prob¬lems connected with the war onpoverty, it is certainly wise thatthe President is now at last direct¬ing Shriver to give it his undividedattention. But even that may notbe enough.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 4, 1966Dedicate new psych labs Princeton prof analyzes use of powerSees Afro-Asian stability1Dedication ceremonies Wednesday, January 19, heralded a new era for the University’s ' 11 1 / lOlUII OIUUIII L y {eminent 60-year-old psychology department.Two years of rebuilding and $1,300,000 went into the reconstruction of Beecher, Green,and Kelly halls a former dormitory complex between 58th and 59th st. on University ave. A anarchistic Vend7ncies“in'their use'of ftoeTnd the interna”grant from the National ScienceFoundation provided $490,000.Before the department movedinto its new center, it was locatedin 17 buildings around campus, in¬cluding an apartment building andan army barracks. Now only ananimal behavior laboratory is sit¬uated elsewhere. That lab is in Ab¬bott hall, a biophysiology laborato¬ry.The main floor of the intercon¬nected buildings houses the depart¬mental library, seminar and con¬ference rooms, a faculty loungeand reading room, and offices forstudent services and administra¬tion.On the upper floors of Beecher,the north building, and Green, thecentral one, there are laboratoriesand faculty offices. Kelly is sharedwith related social science depart¬ments.Facilities for data processingand photoduplicating, as well asmachine, woodworking, and elec¬tronic shops are located in theing special experimental equip¬ment for research projects. In ad¬dition, the building now containsthe counseling clinic, the Universi-Thh*tyC fun-time * f a c u 11y members Some of ,he new ^search equipment in UC's centralized psychology leSal order ”,and 159 students now use the new laboratory. He explains this inconsistency infacility. The department’s faculty terms of the apparent contradic-also hold appointment in 20 other tion between their belief in non-in-University departments, from and centralized facilities for this Apparently the investment is tervention and state sovereignty onby Dorie Solinger“The Afro-Asian nations have not displayed any notabletarchistic tendencies in their use of force and the interna¬tional legal order,” maintains Richard A. Falk, Milbrook Pro¬fessor of International Law at Princeton University. Falkspoke on “The Afro-Asian Use ofForce and International Legal Or- aggression had been committed, asder” at the Law School on January defined by the UN Charter. The31. Western powers, on the other hand,He sees the nations conduct as saw act as merely a humani-first resembling that of the old es- tarian mission,tablished states, as in the case of While Ghana could not interveneIndonesia’s threats to Malaysia, in the United states t0 protectwhich parallels American relations Southern Negroes, the Unitedwith Cuba; and second as being states felt free to act unilaterallycharacteristic of that of all newly- in the role of a policeman. Thus,independent states in the process these new nations contested thisof nation-building. Thus, problems double standard which creates anof boundaries and the historical international asymmetry,character of a national community AT TH1S t,mE the Guinea dele.must be resolved. gation introduced the idea of a re-FALK NOTES in the behavior of gional authority which would bethese countries an evolving the first agency to resolve disputedawareness of the need to formulate uses 0f force. According to Falkan approach to international af- this suggestion implicitly containsfairs in legal terms and of the need a concession of a need for the set-to reconcile their seemingly incon¬sistent attitudes concerning their tlement of claims, from which isderived a concept of an interna-endorsement of the international ti0nal legal order. At the sametime, however, extra-regional influ¬ences may legitimately be involvedin the process of solving the prob¬lems of decolonization.Looking at the overall pattern ofmedicine to sociology and educa- faculty was undertaken to provide paying off. Eckhard H. Hess, pro- one hand) and> on the other, their his topic, Falk generalized thatAt the commencement of the re- the utmost encouragement in its fessor and chairman of the depart- revisionist attempts to eliminate most of the uses of force by theconstruction program in 1963, imaginative investigations of the ment, said, “It is very gratifyingPresident Beadle said, “The pro- questions man raises about himself to be able to move to a really mod-gram for enlarged, modernized, and his behavior.” ern research center.”Career ConferencesGulf Research & Development Compa¬ny, Pittsburgh, Pa. — mathematicians,physicists, and chemists (all specialties)at all degree levels.Recruiting representatives of the fol¬lowing organizations will visit the officeof career counseling and placement. In¬terview appointments for 1965-66 grad,uates may be arranged through L. S.Calvin, room 200, Reynolds Club, extension 3284.February 7Equitable Life Assurance Society, tlcs at the SB and SM levels. Students February 10February 9CS Bureau of the Census, Washington,DC—students in mathematics or statis-New York, N.Y.—home office management training program for men receiv¬ing degrees in any discipline; actuarial , ., ., , .. - . —= ,program for mathematicians and stat- course tn mathematics and one course mathematics, political science, business• . . . i.. _ a. a r a s odminicfrotion ncimViAlAmr AAAnAminnin social science at the AB and AM lev¬els who have had a minimum of oneisticians. in statistics.i protest poor food colonialist and racist regimes. Afro-Asian nations are somewhatFalk compares the justifications related to the colonial experience,used by the Afro-Asian states for These involve: decolonization; is-their employment of force with sues which amount to the legacy ofthose of the major powers. He de- colonialism (boundaries, reliza-scribed how despite the principles tion of independence, unification,of the United Nations Charter, and assertion of control over inter-which tries to restrain aggression nal subunits); and neocolonialism,to self-defense against armed Falk places the current war inforce, the patterns and policies of Vietnam in the category of neo-the powerful states continue to be colonial issues by which “the thirdChubb & Son, Inc., Chicago, in., New based upon subjective interpreta- world is made to serve as the are-York N.Y - men receiving degrees in tion, rather than objective stand- na for resolving strategic conflictsin°the'propertynd casuauy1 fieid°S111 °ns ards of “just war”. of the major powers as a preven-February 14 THE PARTICULAR ATTITUDE tion of World War III.College of Guam, Agana, Guam can- of the Afro-Asian nations about “Given their position”, Falkfowdng faretaesa;CllleifmenttaryS education, the permissible uses of force, summarized, “their claims aresecondary education, educational ad-’ while including the delineation set compatible with the views of otherma^hJmAfcs^DoHUcafsSee^iS «P by the UN Charter, also in- countries on the issue of force.”volves the legitimacy of support- Specific examples, he maintains,anti-colonial war” and lead to a better understanding of“anti-racist war”. their attitude than do broad procla-Falk cited the Stanleyville opera- mations made at conferences,tion of November 24, 1964, as an Falk was educated at Yale Uni-administration, psychology, economics,language, fine arts, social science, • _ hnthscience and mathematics and for li- ln® ouuibrarians. February 15-16Nine Wisconsin state universities—per.sons who are interested in faculty posi¬tions. Vacancies exist in almost all sub-Charge lllini admin. ^aroon Magazinestifles its opponents(Continued from page one)Doe charged that the“Pure yellow potato salad” ings promptly to receive com-and “hamburgers whose buns men[s» an(*, after consjdering the® results of these meetings the vicestick to them ’ are among the president will take appropriate ac-complaints that have led An- tion.”drew Dolan, president of the stu¬dent government at the Universityof Illinois’ Chicago Circle campus,to call a boycott of the school’scafeteria today.“We have been negotiating withthe administration for over fourmonths, and these negotiationshave gotten us nowhere,” Dolan £or eddortold the Maroon. “If this boycott ...... ., ... , ,has no effect, we'll call another administration would like to selectone next week,” he added. Susan Stevens, a former student atAsked if the boycott had any re- the University of Illinois’ down-lation to the administration’s refus- state campus, as editor,al to allow the appointment of a Miss Stevens has gone on recordnew editor for the Chicago lllini, as saying that students do not havethe campus newspaper, Dolan said, a right to know everything that the“Only in a general sense, but if the university administration is doing,administration doesn’t call a meet- and has said publicly that she sup-ing to appoint an editor in time for ports the administration’s right tothe February 14 issue, this whole decide what is best for the studentsprotest could spread rapidly.” to knowJ,wl0y?°tt,Wi!i ha,Ve, thf 5UTr! Podesta a possible nuisanceU’T , a'T lHUd f' Podesta, as a former presidenthalf the students who eat at the . .cafeteria, accordine to Dolan. “We ot *tud“t ^eminent, » conver-have an obligation to produce for sent with general trends in umver-them,” he stated, “and we can't do sdy planning and is in violent op-very much through negotiations if Pos,*ion to them.the administration keeps telling us According to Doe, Podesta as ed-‘vve’re too new to help you’.” itor would be in a position to em-In a statement to the press, Nor- barrass the administration throughman A. Thomas, vice-president of *be newspaper media. The umver-the University of Illinois in charge . planning for the future,of the Chicago Circle campus, said, Hoe said. They re looking to the“Questions related to these and da^ when there 11 be 25,000 stu-other matters of student protest °n this campus, and they rehave been referred to the commit- willing to sacrifice the present,lee on students, a group of faculty “They’ll neglect under-graduateand students which has been advis- teaching in the interest of graduateing the vice president. research. Podesta opposes their“The committee will hold meet- plans; it’s as simple as that." ject areas and employment conditions instance of a confrontation of the versity. He is interested in the re¬factors of international legal order, lation of law and politics. Recently,At this time, Belgian paratroopers he has served on the Council forwere flown into the Congo by Ethiopia and Liberia in the South-United States planes to rescue hos- west Africa Mandate Case beforetages held by the anti-Tshombe re- the World Court. He is now work-bel factions in the civil war then go- ing on a project concerning the fu-ing on. The African complaint ex- ture of international law and its re¬pressed the concern that an illegal lation to developing economic, so¬use of force had occurred and that cial. and political restraints.are substantial and desirable.ComingMarch 3TOAD HALL IS NOT A MODEL SOCIALIST ENTERPRISE, BUT ITDOES ALLOW YOU TO ESCAPE THE EXCESSES OF NAKED STATECAPITALISM(U.C. Bookstore)TYPEWRITER, RADIO AND TAPE RECORDER SALESAND RENTAL BY THE WEEK, MONTH OR QUARTER.Reasonable rates, courteous service, quality equipment.TOAD HALL SellsRentsLeasesAnything Sold in Toad Hall May Also Be Leased or Rented1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500Near the Medici and Green DoorFebruary 4, 1966 * CHICAGO MAROON • IrnrnrnlMtUKttKtMttKHKBmmmmmmmmmi ■ i —■■■«— ■■■ ■ —■,nrTTO"" —.Korean War draft was based on rank, tests(Continued from page one)but officials indicated that navalforces and other support unitsbring the total committed in South¬east Asia to more than 270,000.How high that figure may go isthe great uncertainty at this point.President Johnson has said that hispledge to prevent the Communistmilitary takeover of South Vietnammeans that as many troops as arerequired will be sent. The Presi¬dent has said that he will return toCongress for more money, andpresumably, men if they are need¬ed.Some Congressional estimateshave put the total requirement inVietnam as high as 600,000 men.This will mean that for the firsttime since the Korean War stu¬dents will be yanked from collegesand universities and put into thearmed services. Unlike the presentsystem, student deferments will begiven sparingly.RIGHT NOW, everyone who istaking a full-time load at an ac¬credited college and is heading to¬ward a degree in—roughly—astraight line is granted a studentdeferment. The 1950 plan, however,was not so generous. It was basedon two yardsticks by which localboards were to determine whether a student was academically quali¬fied to be given a deferment.The first yardstick was classrank. The university gave to localboards each student’s class rank,in quartiles—a system changedonly three years ago.Cla9S rank guidelinesWashington suggested guidelinesfor satisfactory work. They were,basically, that a student at the endof his first year of college shouldrank in the upper half of his class;at the end of his second year in theupper two-thirds; and at the end ofhis third year in the upper three-fourths of his class.IF THIS were the only standard,the system would be disastrous tostudents in the better colleges. The1950 system, however, also usedanother yardstick to equalize thedifference between schools: an op¬tional, voluntary test.If a student thought he wasranked too low in his own school toget a deferment, but was well-edu¬cated in comparison to other stu¬dents in the nation, he would takethe national test, prepared for theSelective Service System by theEducational Testing Service andScience Research Associates.Test resultsWhen the test was first given in1951, 53 per cent of the freshmen. 62 per cent of the sophomores and71 per cent of the juniors passed it.The results varied widely with theschools, however; at one college,only 35 per cent passed it, while atanother, 98 per cent had a passingmark.THE TEST appears to havebeen weighted toward the sciences.Sixty-eight per cent of the fresh¬man engineers passed it, whileonly 58 per cent of the freshmen inhumanities did so.Students in the physical sciencesand mathematics had a 64 per centpassing figure, compared with 59per cent for students in the biologi¬cal sciences and 57 per cent in thesocial sciences. Only 48 per cent ingeneral arts and 42 per cent inbusiness school passed it. The low¬est scores were education majors;only 27 per cent of them passed thetest.Test aids defermentsA report published in 1951 report¬ed that many of those who took thetest were enabled, through it, toget a student deferment, eventhough they would not have g;.tenone through class ranking.FIFTY-TWO par cent of the jun¬iors in the lowar quarter of theirclass w'ere able to pass the test; 42per cent of the sophomores in thelower third passed, and among freshmen in the bottom half, 35 percent passed.How well did the 1950 systemwork?System efficientFirst, it worked efficiently. Of 1.2million youths who reached 18Vi inthe 12 months preceding the Ko¬rean War, 65 per cent either enlist¬ed or were inducted, 22 per centwere physically or mentally unfit,and only 13 per cent “escaped” ac¬tive service. Of this 13 per cent,many served in reserve units, soactually far less than 13 per centavoided their draft obligation.If the Vietnam war achieves theproportions of the Korean conflict,one can expect an equal effect ontoday’s male population.THE 1950 system had some seri¬ous effects, however. Besides theconsequences to the 65 per centwho had to take two or more yearsaway from their peace time pur¬suits, there was also a serious ef¬fect on colleges.The 1950 system cut into the stu¬dent population, and many small,liberal arts colleges ran deeplyinto the red. One small school wasforced to dismiss 30 per cent of itsfaculty—mainly young instructorswithout tenure.Companies reported severe short¬ages of engineers; in June, 1951 survey of companies showed thatthere was a need for 80,000 engi.neers, yet 19,000 would-be engi-neers were scheduled for the draft.Even though the 1950 plan did fillan immense need for manpower,many disagreed with it. Theyargued that neither class rank nortest scores were adequate or evenacceptable standards of a student’sintellectual growth.But, as Gen. Lewis Hershey saidin 1952: “I just can’t think of anyother way.”Griming proposescliche of servicefor new inducteesWASHINGTON (CPS) —Alaska’s Sen. Ernest Gruen-ing, a leading congressionalopponent to the war in Viet¬nam, has introduced legislationthat would prohibit the involun¬tary assignment of draftees tofight in Vietnam.If you re looking for a nice comfy placetoworkafter graduation,forget about General Electric.We don’t have any place where youcan curl up and snooze away thenext forty years of your career.There are no quiet little nooks inany of General Electric’s 130 oper¬ating businesses in 19 countriesround the world.But if you’re the wide-awaketype, G.E. can provide the excite¬ ment to keep you that way. Yourfirst assignment may be helping usfind applications for a whole newfamily of plastics recently devel¬oped by G.E. Or you may be work¬ing at Cape Kennedy on the Apollomoon program. Or you may beworking on the marketing team fora new home appliance. One thing is certain: You’ll beworking. You’ll have plenty of re¬sponsibility. What you won’t haveis a chance to doze off in the primeyears of your career.Talk to the man from G.E. whenhe visits campus. Come to GeneralElectric, where the young men areimportant men.degress Is Our Most Important ProductGENERAL ELECTRIC In making the announcement ofhis proposal, Gruening said he wasfree of a presidential agreementimposed last August. Grueningsaid President Johnson told him ata White House conference in Au¬gust that “if we were not out ofVietnam by January, I would befree to do anything I pleased.”Gruening’s proposal came in theform of three separate amend¬ments to the defense supplementappropriations bill for the war inVietnam. He was joined by Sen.Wayne Morse (D, Ore.) as co¬sponsor of the amendments. Morseis another critic of US policy inVietnam.Gruening said he was consider¬ing introducing the amendmentslast summer when he talked withthe President. “The President ear¬nestly urged me not to introducethe amendments,” Gruening said.“He said that in any event no draf¬tees would be sent to Vietnam be¬fore January.”PIZZA PLATTER1508 Hyde Park Blvd.KE 6-660& KE 6-3391Delivery .25TABU SERVICEPIZZA AND II AHA M FOODSANDWICHESVi FRIED CHICKENFRENCH FRIES COLE SLAWROLL 8 BUTTER$1.50BOOK SPECIALFORLiberal Arts ConferenceThe following five titles have beenselected by the Office of the Dean ofthe College as appropriate to theConference and we otter them duringthe conference at these "SpecialPrices" on our Special Sales Table.Liberal ArtsNormal Price Conference PriceJohn Dewey, Experience andEducation(Collier, $.95) $ MJacques Maritain, Education at theCrossroads....(Yale Y15, $1.25) $ .8$A. N. Whitehead, The Aims efEducation(Mentor MP373, $.60) $ ,40J. H. Newman, The Idea ef aUniversity(HRW, $1.25) $ .SiR. M. Hutchins, Education forFreedom(Ever, $1.45) $1XWSee other titles by campus authorsand Conference participants nowbeing featured in our display window.The University of ChicagoBookstore5802 S. Ellis Ava.4 • CHICAGO MAROON February 4, 1966U S budget to include education programsWASHINGTON (CPS)—The budget President Johnson sent to Congress calls for a “con- in the House only over prolonged directly to school districts based oasiderable” expansion of education programs during fiscal 1967, which begins July 1. Republican opposition. A House- an Office of Education formula.Appropriations for higher education programs would increase by $138 million. The Senate conference committee com- Larger burdenmpQSiuJp rails for imnortant shifts in Kovoral aroas promised on the appropriations for The number of school districtsbudget message calls tor important shifts in several areas. the Higher Education Act in the receiving money under the pro-A MAJOR change in the student , . . „ , gram would be cut from 4,100 toclosing days of the first session 3^00 and each district would beAppropriations increase stand to lose about $4 million aTotal appropriations for the Of- year if this cutback clears Con-fice of Education would increase to gress. Suburban school districts in$3.5 billion in fiscal 1967, comparedwith $3.3 billion this year. An esti¬mated $8.3 billion is appropriatedfor all federal education activities,including the National Defenseloan program would abolish direct ai>ie to receive aid. The Presi- during 1965.college loans under the National dent’s budget message predicted ONE of the most significant and dropped the funds that would asked to bear a larger percentageDefense Education Act. If ap- that three times as many students items in the budget message was bave se^ UP the corps. of the eduation cost of the childrenproved, all student loans would be wjjj receive aid in fiscal 1967 as the President’s announcement that No new programs in higher edu- of federal employees,made by banks and other private were aided in 1965. The President he will ask Congress for a $31 mil- cation are proposed in the budget SCHOOLS in the District ofinstitutions with the government predicted that in fiscal 1067 schol- lion supplemental appropriation for message. Columbia have estimated that thevguaranteeing them and paying grships will be given to 220,000 the current fiscal year to establishthree per cent of the interest cost, students; the work-study program the Teacher Corps by this spring.Students would have the same will aid another 210,000; federally Under the Higher Education Actrepayment formula as under the subsidized loans will go to 775,000 the administration is authorized toold NDEA program; forgiveness of students. establish the teacher corps, but noup to half of the loan would be The budget message estimates money has as yet been set asidegranted to teachers. that 1,300 colleges will receive aid for that purpose.To aid more students in the construction of classroom, This proposal was the most con-The shift will not curtail the library, and laboratory space. This troversial part of the Higher Edu- .number of students and colleges is double the number receiving aid cation Act of 1965 and was passed ^cl®nce foundation, Defense De¬partment schools, etc.ACTUAL expenditures would beincreased $1.4 billion, however, be- back into Elementary and Second-cause the two major bills for ary School Aid Act, primarily toschools and colleges were not en- bolster the education of children inacted until after the start of the denrived areasschool year last fall. Thus, fundsfor many programs authorized last '^ie school aid program, forWASHINGTON (CPS)—Conversion of the government’s given date last year, officials said year will be expanded in the next which $1.1 billion was authorizedstudent loan program from federal to private financing as that 16 per cent were overdue °r in fiscal year. during the current fiscal year willproposed in the President’s budget message will make about 'however, banking circies arc dirtc^fte'wggeit3tight^verThe increase to ”3 bilUon during th*90 per cent of the nation’s college and university students ready to cooperate "enthusiastical- education budget will come on the coming year- The increase is noteligible for assistance, an Office of — ]J wit_h ih« new program,” an Of- proposed cut in impacted area aid. as much as some had hoped forEducation official said.During the fiscal yearUp to 90 per cent of US students will qualify for loansNew loan plan will extend eligibility nearby Virginia and Marylandwould lose about $2 million if thereduction in aid is passed.The $191 million estimated as thetotal “savings” on the impactedareas program would be pumpedai year which cipal WOuld not have to be repaid ml;T ''‘TL" llsn^ *s ye,1’ oul "»»"* C1UC*ended last June 30, the number of by tj,ose who become teachers. VVh° ^ phairman of the House sub- would no longer qualify for aidFew loans yethis studies Pari nf tho nrin f‘ce Education spokesman said. n0 specific formula has been estab- before the boost in Vietnam warpleted his studies. Part of the pnn- Rep Edith Green (D> 0re Iished ^ yet feut many large citieg ^borrowers under the National De¬fense Education Act was about 319,-000. In his message, President An insured student loan program committee on education, said she under the proposed’ prog'ram. The A change Jn the sch°o1 aid for*was reserving judgment on the overall cost of aid to impacted mula—increasing the family aidprogram. “I’m not necessarily op- areas would be cut nearly in half, cut-off from $2,000 to $3,000—willuw. in ms message, rreMuem Was made a feature of the Higher " rd tn thp V, ““"T ' , 7 culim 1IU 1Johnson predicted that the number Education Act of 1965 which 5S ‘t T thil ! Sh Jhe impacted area proSram be postponed until fiscal 1968. Aof borrowers would rise to 775*00 cieared Congress late iast fall, butin the fiscal year beginning next 0ffjcjais sajd few Joans have beenJuJy E made under that program so far.Peter M. Muirhead, associate What the President now proposescommissioner of education, pre- js a cjjange jn the Defense Educa-dicted that the total would rise tion Ac{ 0f under which vir-dramatically in the years ahead {uajjy ajj 0f the outstanding stu-under the impetus of the new stu- dent Joans have been made. she said, ‘‘but I think we should allows the government to pay a ,see how well it works before we portion of the education expenses sp0Kesmanabandon the other plan.” said that this wouldfor children of a government em- kave cos^ an additional $350 mil-ployee. The payments are made lion.HE ALSO proposes changing thedefinition of eligibility from provenhardship, which officials saidamountd in practice to a “meanstest,” to a stated level of familydent loan program.HE EXPLAINED that loanswould no longer be restricted tostudents from the poorest families,but would become available tothose from families with incomes income—$15,000 a year,as high as $15,000 a year. Sixty per cent of the DefenseI his takes in a good proportion Education Act loans issued sinceof the middle-income families in 1953 the office of Education said,the country,” Muirhead said. “Ap- bave g0ne to students from fami-proximately 90 per cent of the stu- jjes whose income is below $6,000 adents in institutions of higher year. >' %'%« M V &.<■$!■ /M'1 ■The Women'* Athletic Asso¬ciation (WAA) report* thatthe basketball tournament is .*presently being held end willcontinue through March 3.Games are held Tuesday and I received appointments to federal teachers.Thursday evenings at 7, and | boards. • Robert W. Spike, director forare managed by Lynn Junker.Ti.e badminton tournament Three UCers get gov't appointmentsThree UC faculty members have change programs for students andlearning today come from familieswith incomes of $15,000 a year orless.”The total enrollment in highereducation institutions in the cur¬rent year is about 5.5 million.End federal loansPresident Johnson has proposednew legislation that would abolishdirect federal loans to college stu- Big loan investmentThe government has invested$609 million in such loans in theseven years the program has beenlaw, and 833,000 students have bor¬rowed.The money actually is lent tocolleges and universities in a lumpsum and they, in turn, lend it toindividual students. Repaid loansgo into the institution’s revolvingwhich new loans aredents and establish instead a sys¬tem of government guarantees to fund frombanks and other private institu- made.tions that make such education The delinquency rate on thel°ans- loans has been high, according toIN ADDITION, the government normal loan standards, Office ofwould pay a subsidy to the lenders Education officials say. On anyin order to maintain a 3 per centinterest rate for the student borrowers. Normal bank interest rateson such loans at the current timerange from 6 to 8 per cent.The loans would run as much asten years, with repayment de¬ferred until the student had com- begins February 14 and willbe played through February23. Games are played Mon¬day and Wednesday at 7 pm.Managers Sue Stengel andBarbara Ronningen of NewDorms can provid* more in¬formation to interested girls.Manager Peggy Olsen hasscheduled the Table TennisTournament for February 7and 9 at 7 pm.The Ford Swimming andDiving Meet will be held onWednesday, February 16, at4:30 pm in the Ida Noyespool. The Intercollegiate Bowl¬ing meets will be held Fri¬days, February 11 and March4.All WAA activities are opento all women connected withUC. $ The three are: the doctor of ministry program• Miss Soia Mentschikoff, profes- and professor of Christian ministrysor of law, appointed member of in the divinity school, appointed tothe National Council on the Hu- the National Council on the Hu¬manities. manities.• John Hope Franklin, professorof history, re-appointed to the USBoard of Foreign Scholarships.Franklin was elected vice chair¬man of this board last September.The board has jurisdiction over allinternational fellowship and ex- SAMUEL A. BELL"Bug Shell From BeWSINCE 19264701 So Dorchester Av*.KEnwood 8-3150Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete Selection ofboots, overshoes, insulated skiwear, hooded coats, longunderwear, sweatshirts,corduroy “Levis", etc. etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Student discount with adBOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroComplete RepairsAnd ServicePar AN Popular ImputeMidway 3-45016052 So. Cottage Grove CAMPUS SLUMBER SHIRTA bright red night shirt of soft, combed cotton, with V-neckand bottom vents. Individually gift-boxed, suitable for mail¬ing. An amusing and practical gift for people of all ages.Gift DepartmentEspecially appropriate for a Valentines' Day Gift.Adult sizes: Small, Medium, Large & X-Large $2.25Childrens' sizes: 8 and 12 $2.00The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.University Theatre TRYOUTS2nd Tonight At 8:30Shaw's OVERRULED and BACK TO METHUSAIAH (act one)Reynolds Club TheatreFriday 2:30 • 4:30 - 6:30-8 Saturday 1-3 TUXEDOSALES andRENTALSSpecial Discount to Faculty,Staff and Students forWASH PROMTHE STORE FOR MENSton -Sfnttm attfc titampu* ^ljuph the Mow Hyde Park Shopping Con for1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100February 4, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • (Speeches highlight liberal arts conference(Since ant/ attempt at full coverageof the liberal arts conference is im¬possible, the Maroon has elected in¬stead to cover just a fete examples ofthe many lectures and seminars thathave gone on around the campus thisweek.)Education can learnfrom history-WardExpressing the view that oureducational system can benefitfrom the lessons of history andthe experiences of other na¬tions, F. Champion Ward, vicepresident of the Ford Foundationand former dean of the College,outlined his plan for education inthe opening conference lecture atMandel Hall last Monday after¬noon.In his lecture, “Returning Coalsto Newcastle,” Ward said that thequestion of what knowledge is mostworth having has been answereddifferently throughout history, andsometimes the question has been,“who is worthy of such knowl¬edge?”WARD CITED UC’s history asan example of how views regard¬ing education have changed overthe years, in addition to his pre¬sentation of examples of under¬developed countries in Asia, Afri¬ca, and Latin America.“In Indian universities someUniversity Theatre PresentsFRI., SAT. $2, SUN. $1.50STUDENTS 50c OFFUniversity of ChicagoOratorio Festival SeriesROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and WoodlawnFebruary 20, 3:30 pmBEETHOVEN'SMissaSo I (Mil ii isRockefellerChapel ChoirMEMBERS OF THEChicagoSymphony OrchestraSOLOISTSPEGGY SMITHSopranoCHARLOTTE BRENTMezzo-sopranoWALTER CARRINGERTenorEDWARD WARNERBass-baritoneunder the direction ofRichard VikstromTICKETS:Reserved $4.50Gen. Adm. $3.50UC Students/Staff/Faculty$2.50ON SALE AT:University ofChicago BookstoreCooley's Candles5210 Harper CourtWoodworth's Bookstore1311 E. 57thChapel House5810 Woodlawn general education has been intro¬duced, and it has been a bit diffi¬cult at times to convince both fac¬ulty and students that it is impor¬tant. Similar situations have beenencountered in Latin America andeven Africa,” Ward said.Ward also pointed out demand'sthat have been voiced for a nation¬al system of education in the US.Taking note of the fact that thefour year college has served t > pro¬mote the main ends of Americaneducation today, Ward suggestedseveral alternatives to the presentsystem of education.HE SUGGESTED the possibilityof a three year course in generalstudies, with instructors specifical¬ly equipped for this type of teach¬ing. These three college yearswould be followed' by three yearsof specialized study at a universityfor an advanced degree, to be fol¬lowed by more advanced study ifdesired.While this basic plan could besubject to some alteration, Wardexpressed the belief that this typeof system on a national scalewould be the most practical andefficient plan we could follow.Gaining knowledgea continual process—Northrop Frye“Knowledge of most worthis not something one has; it issomething one is.”With these words, educatorand critic Northrop Frye began hislecture Tuesday entitled “The In¬struments of Mental Production.”FRYE HELD that knowledgecannot be chosen, but that it isgained continually and uncon- than learning specialized skill*right away.GENERAL education shouldhelp a student see that “every fieldof knowledge is a center of allknowledge,” according to Frye.Frye called for emphasis onmore facets of the humanities. Hefeels that the creative arts havenever achieved their proper placein education.Consequently, the arts do not re¬ceive proper attention in society asa whole, he stated: and, in a simi¬lar way, there is little greatness intoday’s literature because of an in¬sufficient reading public which canappreciate good writing.Frye turned from general educa¬tion to man’s use of knowledge,describing language of mythol¬ogy, which he said was the lan¬guage of concern. Men make amythological structure of the worldaccording to the way they do or donot want it to be constituted, hesaid.Calling on students to use knowledge to free themselves Poets, theologians, philosophers,from “enslavement,” dean of the College Wayne C. Booth and cultural historians build upopened the liberal arts conference week Monday afternoonin Mandel Hall.“A man who cannot learn for man must have, and this is quiteciously. “Actual scholarship,” hestated, “is esoteric, almost con¬spiratorial.”Frye termed the distinction be¬tween labor and leisure the mostimportant in human life. When so¬ciety polarizes into leisure andworking classes, alienation andwaste develop, he said.Reconciling this difference bycreating a “just state” has becomethe goal of a liberal education, hedeclared. This began with the Ro¬man culture and was continued bythe humanists of the Renaissance.ACCORDING TO Frye, the clas¬sics provided the humanists withall knowledge which could trans¬form society. The humanists envisioned two types of education: onefor the aristocracy which couldchange a useless leisure class into good rulers, and another, consist¬ing of manual training, for artisansand laborers.Frye believes that the Americanand French revolutions forced achange in this way of thinking.Carlyle saw a division betweenwork and two forms of anti-work—drudgery and leisure—rather thanjust leisure.The situation is again changing,Frye maintained. More peoplehave more leisure, as decreasingworkweeks put leisure almost onan equal footing with workinghours.Increasing specialization is alsoaffecting requirements for generaleducation, he pointed out. Techni¬cal training becomes obsolete soquickly today that a broad knowl¬edge of arts and sciences is betterBooth opens conferencethis structure, then try to usescientific ideas to support them.Evolution and mechanics, he noted,have been misused often in thishimself is enslaved by his contem- simply the capacity or power to 1 way.poraries,” Booth stated in reply to act freely,” he continued. ! FRYE CITED the theories ofthehis self-raised topic question, “Is Booth went on to relate the role Planck and Einstein as havingThere Any Knowledge That a Man of college in giving one this “capac-Must Have?” ity to think for oneself.”SPEAKING to a near capacity “A man is not likely to free him-Mandel Hall audience that had self without the aid of a college,”earlier been forced to move from Booth stated. “Part of the purposesmaller Breasted Hall, where fear- of college is to show one how toful conference planners had origi- think for himself.” been borrowed to upholdmythopoeic view of the world.This is unrealistic, Frye declar¬ed, because physical science rep¬resents a world which is unrelatedto the mythopoeic one. “The fact, that no place exists for God in anally scheduled all major lectures, In concluding his remarks. Booth j scientific view doesn’t exclude itTAhSAM-YfcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecioliziitt I*CANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY1! A.M. to 9:45 P-M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 Eat* 63rd St. MU 4-1062 Booth raised questions basic to the said, “In an age that confuses, asconference. ours does, a discovery of what it“Even if we accept the view that takes to be human is more difficultthere is some knowledge not worth than ever before.”having, our topic question is still IN THE course of his remarks,not answered,” he said. Booth also answered1 critics of theAnd then in a remark that conference. To those who felt that ibrought an outburst of applause, the question of the conferenceBooth quipped, “If we accept the “What Knowledge is Most Worthview that the only knowledge we Having?” would bring a differentmust have is self-preservation, we answer from everyone, Booth said,might as well pack up the College “There are simply not enoughand send it to the state universi- viewpoints to have every person'ties.” have his own viewpoint.”Booth went on to state that To those who thought few stu-knowledge other than that neces- dents would attend the lectures, he, |sary for survival is necessary, “for announced that all the rest of thethe purpose of being human.” lectures would be held in Mandel;“THE KNOWLEDGE necessary Hall, instead of Breasted, untilto be human is the knowledge a further notice. from a mythopoeic view,” he said.UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK*n strong bank”NEW CAR LOANSas low as^ ^ ^ hmmdnd1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200■umber F.D.i.CUniversity Theatre Present*FILMS BYSTANLEY KARTER • • The airline businessmoves fast —TWA careersfaster than most.The airline industry is one of the fastest growing in¬dustries in the country today. And TWA is right ontop of it all. As our worldwide scope and activity in¬creases, so do career opportunities. TWA has chal¬lenging opportunities for future MBA graduates inthe following disciplines:MARKETINGFINANCE(Treasury & Controller)STAFF SERVICES(Corporate & System Planning)TECHNICAL SERVICES(Engineering, Aircraft Maintenance)TWA's. salaries are competitive with those of othermajor corporations. Benefits include free worldwide airtransportation.TWA Will Be ConductingOn Campus InterviewsWednesday, February 16Please check Placement Officefor further information.TRANS WORLD AIRLINESAn Equal Opportunity Employer, (MLF) mmm am m' mzm mm i m .Ana Stanley, civil rightsvolunteer for the WestTennessee Voters Projectlast summer, will speakabout grassroots politicalorganization in Haywoodand Fayette County inTennessee. Everyone iswelcome to the meeting,especially those interestedin a West Tennessee Sum¬mer Project.Fayette County is theplace in which 34 UCstudents worked to finisha community center overspring interim last year.The meeting will be heldat Ida Noyes Hall Wed¬nesday, February 9, at7:30 pm.“IT IS IN THE nature ot a demo¬cratic society to try to combineand reconcile conflicting groupsand points ot view, and this traitextends to the conduct of foreignpolicy. It is normal, and sometimesadvantageous, that a democraticforeign policy should be a mixedsalad. But in the end even the bestof democrats cannot say both A andnot-A, cannot hang on to both halvesof a contradic¬tion.—Still, younever knowabout a Texan." For a free copy of th«current issue of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writ*to Dept. CP-5, 150 E.35 St., N. Y. 16, N. Y-University Theatre PresentsMANDEL HALLFEBRUARY 11-12-134 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 4, 1966Alumni agree that gen ed offers most Classifiedsrnntinnation of general education survey courses and enrmiracrpment nf rlns#» famltv.Continuation of general education survey courses and encouragement of close faculty-student relationships were among the recommendations of the 60 UC alumni and facultymembers last weekend at the center for continuing education to discuss “What KnowledgeIs Most Worth Having?”At a general discussion Sunday, was divided summed up the obser- W. Haydon, AB class of 1935 andmembers of the four discussion vations of their groups. president of UC alumni club of Los- groups into which the conference The speakers included Brownlee Angeles s[an)ey Mosk_ phD 1933and president-elect of UC alumniclub of San Francisco; WilliamRussell Sparks, PhD 1946 andpast president of UC alumni clubof New York; and Daniel C. Smith,AB 1938, JD 1940, and general PERSONALSSoc sci conference attempts to answerthe question of how bad things really aref Traditional knowledge versus practical application was thefocal point of argument in yesterday’s social sciences division counseJ of Weyerhaeuser Co. of Ta-F.. • ,1. tv i * c coma, Washington,presentation in the liberal arts conference.The presentation, entitled “The Relevance of Social Science H AL^MNI agreed that theF~ most valuable part of their collegeEducation to the Crisis of Our , .. . , , . , ,Time: or, How Bad Are Things. This, he said, would counter the S 1GS 3 660 G*r genera e u^Really?” was moderated by Don- “constitutional weakness in our so- ca*10n courses. The particularaid Levine, master of the social ciety which, for example, puts fads had not been as important assciences division of the College. foreign policy decision into the the perspective this brand of liber-LEVINE associated the relation- hands of the elites, and which al education gave them, they saidship between social sciences and takes the initiative for change outsocietv to three factors: actual 0f the hands of society.” Cosk asserted that the generallycrises such as the Vietnam war Leonard Binder chairman 0( the knowledgeable person is wanted inand the P°P1' P • department of political science, government, business, and the~ vrno r?e professions-cient knowledge and .want to com he con-' . C#mmi"”e“t j° «ay-Ihe inadecuacy" f andThe base £ ^0*1* d°" be post’ WASHINGTON PROMENADE. ’Feb.“ 19^1966.VISIT Great Britain the armchair rte.at International House (Home room) onFriday, Feb. 4. 8:15 pm. Excellent trav¬el films cover ancient & moderntowns, celebrated sports events, famouscathedrals, castles, and museums, andthe pageantry associated with the manyhistoric and dramatic events. Refresh-ments follow. Students 50c. Others $1.KAMELOT Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.,10% discount for UC students. JCHARTER FLIGHT EXCHANGETWO students want to leave June 15threturning Sept. 4, Europe charter. Willexchange with 2 wanting to depart June25 return Sept. 25. Call HY 3-4757I WANT to leave June 15. return Sept.4, Europe charter. Will exchange with 1wanting to depart June 25 return Sept25. Call 684-3270JOBS OFFEREDup ture could be solved unless today’s Poned as long as possible, and theUniversity Theatre Presentsaction, the knowledge built 4 .. . , ,, ,within the social sciences. students are taught their causes. program should be so organized soAccording to Richard Flacks, as- "|T IS well and good to have that a change of mind on the partdistant professor in the department theory and practice in the same of the student will not be penal-of sociology, college curricula course,” he later conceded, ‘‘but jzecishould be ‘‘integrated with present- you (students) have to force us today crises.” Such curricula togeth- say what’s going to be in our Sparks saw the pressure forer with projects in which students courses, however they are la- specialization as “invidious.” Gen-and faculty could work together, beled.” eral education, his group felt,would form a basis for public opin- He added that he advocated should be valued as an end in it-ion-making. co“rses ,?f ,h' prac“c*,1, as self, not merely a process prepara-well as pure-knowledge courses, . , t . ..but said he thought that students tory *° turning out specialists orshould take courses of the latter “good citizens.”type in many fields. Haydon criticizes reluctant facultyHarry Kalven, professor in the Haydon criticized faculty mem-law school, defined the difficulty as bers who were reluctant to venturehow to break with tradition. He into teaching outside their special-agreed that the traditional knowl- jjes ^11 the groups were adamantedge obtained through education jn urging the administration towould give insight to current divert any necessary resources tocrises, but opposed what he called finding faculty who were interestedthe dead hand of the book. in teaching, willing to work with“Perhaps the whole problem of students on all levels, and taking aeducation is restating the obvious personal interest in their students,in one’s own words,” he said. ANY PROBLEMS encounteredin this effort must simply be sur¬mounted, the alumni insisted, toattain the essential end.Although aware of the inconsis¬tencies of a “publish or perish”philosophy in regard to faculty,Cosk observed that this was thebest known way of getting facultymembers with high standing intheir fields. HEAR Mr. James Redfield on “TheStudy of Religion at the College.” Fri.,Feb. 4. 8:30 pm, Hillel House, 5715Woodlawn.THE Israelis. Exhibit of photos. ArchieLieberman Life, Look, photographer.Jan. 31-Feb. 13, Hillel House, 5715 Wood-lawn, open daytime & evenings.HAVE SHOVEL WILL TRAVEL: snowshaveling, also wall-washing and floorcleaning. Jobs For Teens BU 8-8343WRITER’S WORKSHOP (PL 2-8377)THIS is to certify that we are escalat¬ing the greatest mixer of the season.Dance at I.H. Assembly Hall tonight 8pm-1 am. Free.JACK STILLMAN’S‘ THE LITTLE ONES A B C'S”“a sparkling musical review. . . ”Kup, Sun-TimesSat. evening, 9 pm, Ad. $2.00POOR RICHARD’S1363 Sedgwick, Old Townfor res. call 869-1716, or 337-1716,after 8 pm.FINAL CONFERENCE EVENTS today1:30, Mandel Hall.TONIGHT Joy Bang Bash at PierceCommons, men 50c, women free.~HY 3-2438 GENL. OFF. Hy-Pk. Fem-male, 12-20hrs. vvk. Must be perm. & accur. Type 3refs: exp, emplr & yr. phones; typespeed begin hrly rate: if pref. morn,aft. eves, age, univ. status, write Stu¬dent Employment.LOOKING for a career? Openings InJewish Social Welfare and CommunalAgencies. Scholarships and graduatework study plans available. Contact Hil¬lel PL 2-1127WANTED Male companion for elderlygentleman. Must have knowledge ofGerman. Several hrs. every aft. Mon-Fri. Phone 288-1920 from 9-5ROOMMATES WANTEDMale graduate student wants additionalroommate for apt. at 58th & Kenwood.Own rm. Avail. March 1st. 643-6842MALE, own room $40/mo. Avail now . . .493-3630LOOKING for 2 or 3 girls who have apt.to share. Call 268-8643MALE roommate wanted. Avail. Feb. 1,own room. 5453 Everett, call John Port¬er at ext. 6014, Billings Hospital.TYPIST exper. Call MALE, $50MU 4-1309 mo., call after 6 pm.Tickets AtREYNOLDS CLUB DESK FOUR tickets for Fr. night folk concert.Must sell 324-1706X.W. I LOVE YOU. please take me tothe WASH PROM, Feb. 19BRUNCH at Hillel this Sun. Informaldiscussion Bagels & Coffee. Affiliates25c non-affiliates 50c, 11:30 am.COFFEE HOUR for all students andfacuty. 3 pm. Hutchinson Commons.LOST set of V.W. keys on leather case,phone DO 3-4376ORGY today 3 pm. Hutchinson Com¬mons. ROOMS FOR RENT5 ROOMS, partly furnished. Groundfloor. Prefer two or three men studentsor two or three working men. MU 4-8222COFFEE HOUR AT HARPER SURF,Sun.. Feb. 6, 8-10. 5426 HarperTHANKS to everyone who made theLAC a tremendous success.NOW that it’s almost over, can we canit the EX-LAC?FOR SALELOVELY 4 rm. CO-OP apt. SouthShore, mortgage FREE bldg, excellentbuy. Seen by Appointment. MU 4-5041evenitigs.FOR RENTREP. ABNER J. MIKVACandidate for U.S. Congressfrom 2nd Dist. (University)will address UC Young Dem-ocr'fs (and all other interestedstudents.)Wed., Feb. 9, 7 pmIda Noyes Hall FREETENANT 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,turn. & unfurn. NO 7-7620WANTED Fern, grad student interestedin rm. for rent or in exch. for BABY¬SITTING. Near campus PL 2-0637RIDERS WANTEDTO New York leave Feb. 9, return Feb.14th, call Allan Burger DO 3-9851 University Theatre PresentsDIRECTED BYJOHN LIONAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH--NEW & USED-Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsSERVICE CALLS - $3(TESTUSFAIT .7. La pfoteeflon flnanctSrt qua vouadonnez k votre famille aujourd’huldevra lui dtra procure d’une autrefagon domain. I.'assurance Sun Lifepeut certalnement accompllf cettetflche k votre place*Cn tant qua reprdsentant local de la SueUfa, puia-ja voua vlsitar k un moment devotre cholx?Ralph J. Weed. Jr.. CMJHyde Park laak Buildiaq. CMeoqe If. »•FAirfax 4-6*00 — PR 2-2390Office Hears 9 ta 5 Meted ays ft FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY SPECIAL SALEWINTER JACKETS50% OFFBROKEN SIZES & STYLESQtatttt atth (tfampuaIf* thm JVese Hyde Park Shopping Center ,1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100F.bru»y 4, 19*6 • CHICAGO MAROON • TwmrnwmmmmMCiMKMmmmMDe?aul's Interest Involved Theater reviewWatch St. John’s dispute with concern Rivals is overacted 1CHICAGO, Ill. (CPS)—The dispute between the faculty the educated laymen” and suggest¬ed the administration at St. John’s University in New York ed that “clencal paternalism is outof today/'has been closely watched at DePaul University in Chicago, one DePaul professor, Dr. Cor-Both schools are run by the Vincentian Order of the Roman nelius Sippel, assistant professor ofhistory, said, “If I were at St.Catholic church.The dispute at St. John s has its academic freedom, and salaries;roots in a 10-month old conflict and that, jn general, it was satis-thr* developed when the school’s fied with things as they are.faculty began seeking a strongervoice in policy making. The St.John’s administration dismissed 31teachers in December, and theUnited Federation of Teachers hasbeen on strike against the nation'slargest Roman Catholic universitysince January 4.THE DePAUL chapter of theAmerican Asssociation of Universi- r/nrinci'nle''ty Professors met early this week p pand prepared a statement support¬ing the striking faculty membersat St. John’s. The AAUP statement The four items mentioned in theDePaul statement sire some of thepoints of dispute in the St. John’scontroversy. The St. John’s admin¬istration has said the very natureof a Catholic university is at theheart of the dispute and that theschool’s leaders will not yield onwhat they consider to be a matter John’s, I doubt I would have stuckit out this long. I would have leftlong ago.”Why the difference between St.John’s and DePaul? The DePaulAAUP statement suggests that theindividual administrators, ratherthan Vincentian philosophy, is thekey to the answer. “Because of thenature of the men in power at De-Paul,” the statement said, ‘‘wefeel there will never be a reasonfor a strike protesting administra¬tion policy.”The statement concluded with aplea for the St. John’s administra¬tion to “reinstate these 31 teachers The National Repertory Theatre’s production of TheRivals brings to Chicago a Broadway interpretation of Sheri-dan’s classic comedy. But Broadway and Sheridan don’t com¬plement each other.The play catches the hilareous antics of characters drawnfrom the 18th century resort townEven though DePaul is operatedby the same religious order, ap¬parently it does not have the samealso^ noted °'that' the^Velationship Philosophy of the nature of aCatt- and to establish procedures thatolic university. The DePaul AAUP will protect . . . academic free-statement called this “the age of dom . .between the DePaul administrationand the school’s faculty was good.The statement said that the fac¬ulty had participated in universitygovernment, decisions on tenure, >m: ; ;; 4 K, v* 4 .* S* 'X *Calendar of Events• •. .< w.. mCrown Miss UC atWash Prom Feb. 19The seventy-first annual Wash¬ington Promenade will be held Feb¬ruary 19 from 9:30 pm-l:30 am.The traditional UC dance, commem¬orating the birthday of GeorgeWashington, was declared an an¬nual event by the first president ofthe University William RaineyHarper.Highlights of this year’s promwill include:• The crowning of Miss U of Cby President George Beadle, as thetermination of the contest which iscurrently being held under the di¬rection of Miss Judy Cohen.• Music by Dick Judson.• Entertainment by the Black-friars company.• A midnight buffet catered bythe Burns Catering service.Tickets for the event are on saleIn the Student Activities Office, atIda Noyes desk, the ReynoldsClub, and from dorm representa¬tives. Ken Levin is in charge ofticket sales.PIERRE ANDREfoe* flatteringv Parisian chicten skilledholr stylists ot5242 Hyde Perk Blvd.^ 2231 V 71st S».DO 3-072710% Student Discount Friday, February 4LECTURE: "Molecular Organization ofCilia,” Ian Gibbons biological laborato¬ries, Harvard University, sponsored bythe department of biophysics. ResearchInstitutes. 4S0. 4 pm.MEETING: International language Es¬peranto. first meeting for all interestedpeople, Chapel House seminar room, 4-5 pm.LECTURE: "The Typology of the Nar¬rator, Point of View in Fiction,” Profes¬sor Lubomir Dolrzel of the Czech Acad¬emy of Sciences, Prague University,sponsored by the Slavic department,Foster lounge, 4:30 pm.RECEPTION: Folklore Festival recep¬tion. Ida Noyes Hall, 4:30 pm.LECTURE: "Carcinoma of the Pro¬state,” Dr. Cornelius W. Vermeulen,professor in the department of surgery,Billings P117. 5 pm.FILM: "The Last Will of Dr. Mabuse,”Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.TRAVELOGUE: Films of Great Bri¬tain, sponsored by International HouseAssociation scholarship fund, students50c, others $1, International House, 8:15pm.CONCERT: Sixth Annual Folk Festival,sponsored by the Folklore Society, Man-del Hall, 8:15 pm.PARTY: “Joy-Bang-Bash,” featuringthe Flaming Creatures, sponsored byThompson House, men 50c, women free,Pierce Tower commons, 8:30-12:30 pm.PLAYS: Riders to the Sea J. M.Synge. The Bear, Anton Chekhov,lie, Eugene O'Neill. Tonight at 8:30,Reynolds Club theatre, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: "Approaches to the Studyof Religion at the College,” professorJames Redfield, master new collegiatedivision, Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn,8:30 pm.Saturday, February 5WORKSHOP: Folklore Festival, IdaNoyes Hall, all day.CONCERT: Sixth Annual Folk Festival,Mandel Hall, 3 pm.FILM: “The Court Martial of BillyMitchell,” Gary Cooper, admission 50c,SAMA members 25c, Billings HospitalPI 17, 7:30 pm.CONCERT: Sixth Annual Folk Festival,Mandel Hall. 8:15 pm.PLAY'S: Riders to the Sea J. M.Synge, The Bear, Anton Chekhov, lie, Eugene O’Neill, Tonight at 8:30,Reynolds Club theatre, 8:30 pm.Sunday, February 6WORKSHOP: Folklore Festival, IdaNoyes Hall, all day.RELIGIOUS SERVICE: “The Mythsthat Need Destroying,” the ReverendRobert W. Spike, associate professorand director of the D. Mn. program inthe divinity school, formerly director ofthe commission on religion and race ofthe National Council of Churches, Rock¬efeller Memorial Chapel, 11 am.BRUNCH: Informal discussion, bagelsand coffee, affiliates 25c, non-affiiiates50c, Hillel House, 11:30 am.DANCING: Sixth Annual Folk Festivalfolk dance party, wear soft-soled shoes,Ida Noyes Hall, 1:30-6 pm.MEETING: Chess club, a discussion ofplans for a University residence tourna¬ment, Ida Noyes, 7 pm.MEETING: “Worship,” Jack Hayward,professor of religion. Meadvilie Theolog¬ical Seminary, presented by the StudentReligious Liberals, 1174 E. 57, 7:30 pm.FILM: "On the Waterfront,” MarlonBrando, Thompson Film Festival, ad¬mission 55c, Pierce Tower, 7th floorlounge. 8 pm.CONCERT: Sixth Annual Folk Festival.Mandel Hall, 8:15 pm.PLAYS: Riders to the Sea, J. M.Synge, The Bear, Anton Chekhov,lie, Eugene O’Neill, Tonight at 8.30,Reynolds Club theater, 8.30 pm.Monday, February 7LECTURE: "The Relation of Urban De¬sign to the Social Sciences," MyerWolfe, Breasted Hall, 10 am.LECTURE: "Alienation and Autono¬my,” Bruno Bettelheim, director, SoniaShankman Orthogenic School, the Mon¬day Lectures series, law school audi¬torium, 8 pm. of Bath. They keep us laughing to- Qwn way- but don’t put me in aday not only because they’re so ,,funny in themselves, but because lrenzy-we recognize in them the types one It is hard to play such charac-might find at any fashionable re- ters too broadly, but the Nationalsort today. The characters -re not, Repertory succeeded. The produc- fhowever, out of Broadway. The tjQn was generany garish—Ladydashing young lover Captain Jack , ... ...Absolute is out to get Lydia Lan- Malaprop came out with red hair,guish, a very romantic, very eligi- orange eye-shadow, and a pinkble, and very rich belle who is plume. One can hardly miss thecarefully chaperoned by her im- hint that she is a comic figure, butposing aunt Lady Malaprop. As if Director Sydow’s comedy is quitethis were not enough material for cruel, making the loveably eccen- '£-*>endless complications, Sheridan trie lady Malaprop into a cruder,throws in a tyrannical father Sir more viscious caricature than Sher-Anthony Absolute and several rival idan ever wrote,suitors, country swain Bob Acres "FIGHTING BOB" Acres wasand the urbane Sir Lucious O’Trig- the victim of a similar misinter-ger. Further complications come pretation. Instead of the foolish butfrom a second set of lovers, Julia straight-forward rural gusto thatand Falkland. Sheridan created in Acres, Sydow '*'*SHERIDAN entices us through presents us with a petulant jack-their complex plotting with enor- ass Perhaps Sydow's interpreta-mously entertaining characters, tion is symptomatic of the wayMrs. Malaprop is vivid enough to Broadway looks at comedy,have added a word to the lan- _ . . ,guage. Jack calls her an -old >" »'£« ^ Professionalweather-beaten she-dragon," but atmosphere of the National Repor.her real attraction comes from her ™M,r« ls ”>«' refreshing. _precise pronouneiation of words lines were perfectly articulat-that are so ingeniously misapplied, ed. mak.ng Sheridans language aHer malapropisms include -an al- real f,leas1,'re •» ^ar. The playlegory on the banks of the Nile”; m»v«l w'tl> the smooft andshe says that she would not have a lhat marks <heyoung girl learn “algebra, or simo- Professional stage,ny, or fluxions, or paradoxes, or SEVERAL individual perform-such inflammatory branches of ances evaded the too-slick inter-*—1-learning—neither would it be nee- pretation. notably Ted Graeber,essary for her to handle any of whose Falkland had a spark of hu-your mathematical, astronomical, manity that fired several scenes,diabolical instruments.” At all The production quite rightly cuttimes Mrs. Malaprop reprehends several small historical allusionsthe true meaning of what she is from the text, and added a spiritedsaying, and the results are side- epilogue by Marya Mannes. Thesplitting for the audience. new ending helps the modern au- ^SIR ANTHONY is another clas- dience over Sheridan’s contortedsic figure—a blustering old codger denouement, although the addedwho says, “I’m compliance itself— social comment is a bit strong forwhen I am not thwarted—no one the play.more easily led—when I have my Edward HearneMODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPING■XPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1S42 IL 55th HY 3-9259 Tryouts for the secondTonight at 8:30 series ofthe year will be held inReynolds Club Theatre to¬day 2:30*4:30 pm, and to¬morrow 1-3 pm. This Uni¬versity Theatre produc¬tion will include Shaw’s“The Overruled,” and“Back to Methusalah” (actone).j:-: :Over the years the basic question of a new morality of our time has becomemore and more insistent. One of the areas which needs our constant rethinkingrelates to our personal action in the area of sexual morality. As we live throughthis period of change what are we thinking and how are we reacting in our per¬sonal lives?FRONTIERSOF MORALITYSunday Mornings —11:00 o'clock! JACK A. KENT, MINISTERABORTION HOMOSEXUALITYFEBRUARY 6 FEBRUARY 13The First Unitarian Church of Chicago5650 South Woodlawn Avenue FAirfax 4-4100 Morgan named distinguished service profWilliam W. Morgan, profes- founder and first chairman of thesor and chairman of the de- citi2en's Board ot The Universityof Chicago.partment of astronomy, has Morgan received his BS degreebeen named the first Bernard from the University of Chicago inE. and Ellen C. Sunny distin- 1927 and his PhD degree in 1931.guished service professor at the He has been professor of astrono-University my since 1947 and chairman of the. , . .. , department of astronomy sinceMorgan is noted for his research 1960on the structure of galaxies. He is From 1960 to 1963 he served ascredited with the discovery of the director of Yerkes Observatory,spirai arms of our own galaxy, the operated by the University in Wil-Milky Way, and the discovery of liams Bay> wisconsin) and of Me-supergiant galaxies, the largest Dona]d 0bservatory, Fort Davis,known visible structures. TexasThe new professorship honors the Morgan was awarded the Brucelate Sunny and his wife. Mr. Sunny Gold Medal of the Astronomicalwas a self educated New York tele- Society of the Pacific In 1958, andgraph messenger and telegraph op- was the Henry Norris Russell Lec-erator who became a business and turer of the American Astronomi-civic leader in Chicago. cal Society in 1961.Among other activities, he was He is a member of the Nationalchairman of the board of the Illi- Academy of Sciences, the Pontifi-nois Bell Telephone Company; a cal Academy of Sciences, and thevice president of General Electric American Academy of Arts andCompany; director of the World’s Sciences, and an associate of theColumbian Exposition in 1893, and Royal Astronomical Society.itiefc asA slopesDiscover something very specialfor your very special Valentine.Choose from a wide and excitingvariety of precious and uniquePins — BroochesNecklaces — Earrings Bracelets — BanglesCufflinks — Tie TacksHARPER COURT5210 S. Harper 324-7266NEW DAILY HOURS10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.Open Saturday and Sunday8 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 4, 1966Misanthrope features some real pros(Continued from page one) Stairs; Clifford Odets’ The Flower- and witty females like The Misarvporary American words, not Resto- £• of sPr,n* and Theater review8:30's a bit unevenFnJiiVh In our lknsuaee he Priv4t* Live. “Celiraene is the hardest part Almost inevitably, the “Tonight at 8:30” plays are toorenders the thought, ot the 17th Her films are also in the same sh« says- “It,s hastUy Produced and uneven in quality. The difficulty of set*Reicht”f‘- .. , , . Thf ?.««!,E«i"‘lnS;esy MissVariey does'^no? identify »Uh {“* * “°°? ™ 50 short a in °rd« to obtain full dramatic“Mr. Maronek, the chief set de- Kazan’* e/s* at Eri«n the extremely social Celimene. impact is further complicated in the current trio of one-actsigner, decided that the spirit of ' d * More obnoxious pteys by the primitive resources of —Diversity Reich sees a problem in the pos- the Reynolds Club Theatre, the insane. Why does she not reactAbout two years ago she decided sible shallow character of Celi- plague of unlucky accidents, and wben her husband is threatened byto seek more diverse roles. She ap- mene. “In order to give the part the apparent difficulty of casting the mutineers?peared in her first musical, the deuth ” he exnlains “we’re assum- • * t* f n *. ,critically acclaimed She Loves Me, ing that Celimene really loves Al- mJ™r roles J P m 0 the firstwhich starred Barbara Cook. ceste, he becomes more and more These problems and some others PIay ls weak characterization, thaMISS BAXLEY's first part in a obnoxious. You may love someone are especially evident in the first second play suffers from a snail-Shakespearean piay was that of for hrs motivation, but you still plays of the evening, lie andrealize you cannot live with him in Riders to the Sea> Both areSOu1Aet^DTt*xT^ <• • . nearly tragic plays, both rely onA FRiEND of mine sympathized and need atmosphere, and both re-deeply with Alceste that he qUjre careful attention to charac-the 17th century should be pre-Jfrved in the set, but that it shouldbn constructed of modern materi-jls, it gives the illusion of a 17thcentury drawing room, but it isreally pop art.’’There are other interesting mix-iffrvs of contemporary and classi-... , ii 4. i_ oiidKtrapcdicdii pidv wdb inai oira! in this production—notably the Beatrjce in Much Ado >h#u, Noth.casting of Barbara ax ey as e - ing, and earlier this year she ap-mono., peared as Kate opposite GeorgeMethod in the Misanthrope Grizzard, who plays Alceste in UC’sMiss Baxley was trained by Elia The Misanthrope in Taming of th.Kazan at the Actors Studio in New shrew.York. Her question: can you ap- sooffi!v the Method to Moliere?UNTIL RECENTLY she starred[only in modern dramas: TennesseeIWiiliams’ Camino Real and Periodof Adjustment; William Inge’s Bus■Stop and Dark at the Top of the Last season she appeared in theBroadway production of Checkov’sThe Three Sisters, with Kim Stan- was miserable at the end of the terization and timing. Neither?LaIV tGe0riluGn:Z."artCl. them is completely successful.lie is early O’Neill; it is closeto t/er six'rif^nitica lecturestfcdler■1■ Mortimer J. Adler, director of■tiif Institute for Philosophical Re-AJ„. rch, will present the first of aseries of six public lectures at theUniversity of Chicago at 8 pm,March 8, 1956, in the auditorium ofe law school.The title of his first lecture is“The Question About Man.”idler’s lectures will deal withI* general subject—“The Differ-nev of Man and The Difference ItMakes.-' They are part of the Bri-annica Lecture Series, which isiresented at the University eachcar under a grant from the Ency-lopedia Britannica.Here is the sche ule of the other|Tcclures to be presented by Adler,of which begin at 8 pm in theI,, school auditorium:March 10—“The Continuity ofNature.”March 15—“Man and Brute.”March 17—“Language andThought.”March 29—“Man and Machine.”'March 31—“The Difference It[Makes.”Admission to all of the lectures> open to the public without ticketnd without charge.Adler, who received his effort to emphasize the differentreactions to his role as Alceste. Al¬though he is extremely affablehimself, Grizzard has a strongidentification with the misan¬thrope.“It’s true that Alceste has hisfaults, his hypocrisy. He goes toone extreme, never seeing any- 1Sto melodrama. All too easily thetale of a monomaniac sea captainwho is driving his wife insane andhis crew to mutiny can degenerateinto a sort of parody of Moby Dick.The “8:30” production avoids thatpitfall, but it seems to go too far inmuch like him. I always rave .about petty faults, get annoyed be- ^tensity.cause of little things.”Classical training The key to the play is the char¬acter of Captain Keeney. It is hisGrizzard acted for two years at will alone that is standing upBarbara Baxley and George Griz-:ard.y of The University of Chicagooin J9C0 until 1952, when he be¬anie director of the Institute forhilosophical Research. The insti¬tute was located in San Franciscorum 1952 until the summer of 1963,ion it moved to new quarters at1 East Erie Street, Chicago.V. hile at UC, Adler was associ-ted with Robert M. Hutchins, theUniversity’s former Chancellor, incurriculum transformation based!>on the reading and discussion ofJH' Great Books. In 1947, this ac-ity was extended to adultspiough the Great Books Founda-on.Adler supervised more than 100holars for seven years in thereation of an “idea-index” to thereat Books, the Syntopicon,w hich is included in the 54-volume£^Veat Books of the Western World. like pace.There is very little action inSynge’s Riders to the Sea; itneeds a consistent atmosphere andtone to carry it along. It can bevery moving, but if it is allowed tolag at all, the old woman’s resig¬nation to death can look like meretalkativeness; the play can fallapart. And the “8:30” productiondoes lag.THE WHOLE thing could batightened up with a bit more care.The girls couid show more anima¬tion and emotion; the actors couldonp’c pond dualities But I’m verv the other diection. The actors per- enter more quickly on cue, ands gooa qualities. But m very f(Jrmances are curiously lacking in Maurya could get off the stagewith her absurdly huge stick inhalf the time it takes her and stillbe moving slowly What little ac¬tion there is might well be moreemphasized.But the play has its good points.The accents are consistent and thestaging imaginative, especiallywhen the keening women were re¬vealed through the backcloth al¬most as elements of Maurya’s imag¬ination. Phyllis Richmond playsMaurya perhaps too shrilly, butshe does achieve some tragedywhen she says, “It’s a great restI’ll have now, and great sleeping.”Sheila Jones is good as Cathleen,although she has a tendency todrop her voice at the end of sen¬tences. Sandra White as Noraseems to have considerable diffi¬culty with the stylized dialect.THE FINAL play of the group,Chekhov’s The Bear, has noreally minor roles, and since thaactors handle their parts with as¬surance, the pace is briskly main¬tained and the lines are consist¬ently funny; it is a deserved suc¬cess.The actors and director all enterinto the farcical nature of thisboisterous play with cheerful exag¬geration. Elizabeth Friedman is aAs part of the music department’s chamber music series, was perfect for the music and their not-too seriously widowed Elena,the Paganini Quartet gave a concert last week in Mendel Hall, °bnvious enthusiasm totally win' who is willing to mourn her hus-PhD and while their program of Haydn, Prokofiev, Webern, and niThe same approach marked their sents itsd^DaW^K^ye^is11^ boor¬ish and stubborn “bear” who is alltoo easily captured by a rogueisheye, and Arthur Krim is a veryley and Geraldine Page, and wasalso in the London production. Shesays that she enjoys the varietywhich the classic plays offer.CURLED UP on a seat, MissBaxley began to talk freely. “Ihave the training. I’ve always hadvoice lessons, movement—ballet Tennesseeand modern dance.”Playing Kate and Beatrice werevery gratifying, she says. Theseparts are very similar to othersthat she played in the past onstage and television, leading to herassociation with the role of causticMusic review the Tyrone Guthrie Theatre inMinneapolis, and has had extensiveclassical training. Besides Moliereand Shakespeare, he has also per¬formed frequently in modern playsand films.HE HAS appeared in EdwardAlbee’s Who's Afraid of VirginiaWolf?, Desperate Hours, for whichhe won the Drama Critics Circle against the violence of his men andthe pleadings of his wife. He isfanatically determined to get thelie, and his determination swaysa shipload of mutineers. But hisstrength is tempered by a weak¬ness and tenderness toward hiswife; this tenderness almost makeshim give way for a moment.TOM HOWARD does not convevAward; Happiest Millionaire; The the full intensity of Keeney’s pas-Disenchanted; and last season’s sion. Where Keeney is overpower-much praised Broadway revival of ing, Howard is merely gruff andWilliams’ The Glass petulant; and where a contrastMenagerie. His filmwork includes should be made between Keeney’s"From the Terrace" and "Advise treatment of his men and his treat-•nd Consent." ment of his wife, Howard is undulyWith this diverse background, he rough. Mrs. Keeney’s role is essen-finds acting in classic plays “like a tially a passive one and Sherryworkout at the gym.” It is work,but invigorating work. He loves it. Beck plays her too dreamily; it ishard to imagine her as going real-Quartet gives lively recitali ,esree from Columbia University Beethoven held few surprises, their instruments provided the performance of Beethoven’s Quar- ;• 1928, was a member of the fac- . ., , , j tet in F minor, op. 95. This Quartet tI, . n. T,„. _ „ curiosity. All four members played ' r , , M 1[Joseph H. AaronI Connecticut MutualI Life Insurance ProtectionI 135 S. LaSalle St.*-MI 3-5986 RA 6-1060 200 year old Stradivarius instru¬ments at one time owned by thegreat Paganini.IT WAS therefore surprising thatthe members lacked a more mel¬low and singing tone. This, howev¬er, was the only serious drawback;in matters of interpretation ande n s e m b 1 e playing the quartetplayed with obvious enthusiasmand enjoyment, qualities whichthey communicated in abundance.The novelty of the program wasthe Prokofiev Quartet in F Majorop. 92. Prokofiev wrote this workin 1941, while he was immersed inthe creation of his monumentalcontribution to piano literature, thethree War Sonatas. This quartetreflects the spirit of those works,as well as Prokofiev’s refinementof technique following his return tothe Soviet Union. He no longer em¬ployed dissonance for revolu¬tionary and shocking effects, butput it in proper perspective asmerely one device in the formalstructure of his works.THIS QUARTET is, thus, an ex¬ ample of the “new”, more thought¬ful, and conservative Prokofiev.But in spite of the work’s intro¬spection, the composer still in¬trudes periodically with jauntytunes characteristic of his earlycareer.Another typical characteristic isthe virtuosic demands that hemakes of his players. Here the Pa¬ganini members did an admirablejob of meeting the composer on hisown ground. This was the one workin which their slightly rough tone rounded out Beethoven’s middleperiod of chamber music and looksforward to the pinnacle of his cre¬ative output—the last five stringquartets. Here, while the perform¬ance was sraightforward, a bit morewarmth and less weariness of tonewould have made a great difference.But, don’t let such considerationssuggest that the performanceswere not enjoyable. The Paganini’senthusiasm and musicality were ofsuch a level to make one disregardsuch reservations.Ed Chikofsky rather patheticm the Chekhovsf the playaeaience, andevening worth-funny, fussy, ancold manservanttradition.THE GOODspill out into «£really make thewhile.As for the problems of the otherplays, they can be solved with alittle care, and we can certainlyhope that by this weekend’s threeperformances many of their pro¬duction bugs will have been ironedout.Gerry FisherTHE PUBIN THET JUST RECEIVED:BIG SHIPMENT OF FOLK MUSIC BOOKSReprints from Sing Outl $1.00Folk Songs of Peggy Seeger $1.95Jazz New Orleans 1885-1963 $2.95Charters: Poetry of the Blues $1.95And many, many more!The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Avenue New Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Eating Place in Hyde Parkfor the Faculty and StudentsMichelob 35c a glasslarge stein of Budweiser 35cYou can have a steak too, or the biggest steak-burger in town while listening to wonderfulHarry Fisher at the piano.February 4, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • *-W-4 .V ' • 'y.- »#;, - . : •Theater review .: 7. ... » 7 ,V>'r" «*> - • • I « ■ 1 . « » • « * »»♦. iWW*r nwar^vsB ' ""^ $Trojan Women staging dull Culture CalendarEuripides’ Trojan Women has to overcome more than theGreeks in this year's National Repertory production, which isin Chicago through February 19. Tasteless theatrical mechan¬ics, anachronistic staging, and some rather stolid male per¬formances combine to mar a series —, ©f excellent portrayals of the suf¬fering feminine remnants of a de¬stroyed people. iTHE PLAY presents the ebbv - and flow of despair in the women'% of Troy as they await transport toslavedom aboard the departing. “i GJPS?E Sl;il>s: Assist the backdrop Vcti’0""tr‘”m"lronic“ialighto'to'\,..r ««a>e city sacked and looted, Bun- , dejection is a constantpides shows the agony of Hecuba,W Queen of Troy, as her family, heriSsp country, and her freedom are dese¬crated by the victorious Greeks. of movement, thought, or speech:stalking fiercely across the stagein her prosecution of Helen beforeMenelaus, swaying sadly in theagony of Troy’s burning. Her sup¬ple face, its lines carved deeply byworry and torment, shifting with,.77;■.. is a constant mir¬ror of the deep inner suffering, sheis undergoing.Perhaps the finest performanceof all is that of Sloane Shelton asSliS Struggling passionately but vainly Cassand lhc mad prophetress ofagainst this fate of the vanquished, ’the cries of the tormented womengo from vengeful curses to a lossof all faith in life, humanity, and... * finally in the gods themselves. ■ •Counter to these women are set. - f the plundering Greek conquerors,,■ hoping only to return rapidly oncen more, in glory, to their own homes.This dream is as doomed, we are1 old by Athena and Poseidon at the Apollo, forecasting doom for her¬self and Agamemnon in the lustfulbed of conquest to which she issent. In her visions she appearstransformed; she moves, sings,and speaks with a superhumanbrilliance. ,/;; LEORA DANA is a fine, if a bittoo shrieking, Andromache, andDiana Frothingham, as Helen, isbeginning of the play, as the city appropriately seductive. The cho-the Greeks ; have so mercilessly rus Trojan women is excellent,‘ / sacked. A plaintive cry for a rec- particularly in the rhythm and toll-©gnition of sensitivity to the worth 'n8 resonance then \oic(s bioughtof human life through a portrayal to their despair5 -V- of the tragic consequences of the the. Greeks^ Talthybius, andabsence of such a vision. The Tro- Meneiaus. Alan Oppenheimer andjan Women contains a contempora- ',<),in Straub. move awkwardly mneitv both in its theme and the ;,heir warlike garb, and are unableu^^ri-A poetic harmonv of its plea .* to express any emotion outside ofTHE INTERPRETATIONS given grimaced faces on occasion,to the main characters in the dra- major fault of the pro-ma are of the highest, quality. Eva duction lies , with staging and tech-Le Gallienne, as.Hecuba, is superb nica* matters. Starting from an ex-.in heM ability to displays moods - citing poetic drama such as Eun-‘ ranging: froin fierce anger to quiet Pjdjs has given us, it is.a shame tostrength to the kind of hopeless^ hide it under a cloak of theatricals despair that renders one incapable lr'L'ks which add nothing to theplay. The costumes are, on the■■ I whole, adequate—the women are.. , . appropriately despairing in heavyYou won t have to put your dark drapes; the Greeks resplend-moving or storage problem ,eh| in weighty armor. But the:7 ,, ■■■■■■ •■ ghastly in gaudy masked extrava->r i J*wr" -sgj', the simplicity of the tale. The set Isa bit too new for a sacked Trojanwall, though the stair levels pro¬vide helpful grouping aides whichkeep the movement variedthroughout the action of the play.I really question the use ofchurch liturgical melodies for thechorus’ lamentations and othersuch heavy-handed devices as hav¬ing Hector’s son prance to hisdoom with a toy wooden horse inhis hand. Also, background musicof drums and bugles announcingthe Greek soldiers does nothing butmake it difficult to hear the spokenlines, and at times it becomes assick as the horse—as in a plink-plank-plunk accompanying a speechabout rain. It reaches its irritatingheights in the final destruction ofTroy, which is punctuated by heavydrumbeats, flashing simulated burn¬ing from the side of the stage, andsmelly smoke spewing across theaction.The Trojan Women is a marvel¬ously alive play, and this produc¬tion, at its poetic best, catches theforceful rhythms of sustained de¬spair that make this such an excit¬ing creation. I only regret that theactors and text are not left aloneto tell the story themselves.Paul Skenazy -• 4CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA—In their 75th Anniversary Season.Jean Martinon, Music Director and Con¬ductor; Irwin Hoffman, Associate Con¬ductor; Margaret Hillis, Director, Chi¬cago Symphony Chours.Twentieth Week—Thu-Fri, Feb 3-4—Haris Schmidt-Isserstedt, cond; HansRichter-Haaser, p. Shostakovich: Pre-lude & Scherzo for Strings, Op. 11.Beethoven: Cone No/4. Reger: Varia¬tions & Fugue.Twenty-First Week—Thu-Fri, Feb Ki¬ll—Jean Martinon, cond; Herman Prey,br. Brahms: Tragic Overt. Mahler:Kinclertotenlieder. Henze: Five Neapoli¬tan Songs. F. Martin: Cone for 7 Winds,Timpani, Percussion & Strings. Sat, Feb12—Martinon. cond. Brahms: TragicOvert. Mendelssohn: Sym No. 4 F. Mar¬tin: Cone as listed above. Stravinsky:Fire Bird Suite.Twenty-Second Week—Thu-Fri, Feb17-18—Jean Martinon, cond; GinaBachauer, p. Roussel: Pour une fete deprintemps. Diamond: Sym No. 8.Brahms: Cone No. 2.The Weeks of February 21 thru March13 the Orchestra will be on a tour of theSouth.Thu-Sat Concerts: Thu, 8:15; Fri, 2:Sat. 8:30. $2.50-$6.50. Fri gallery seatsfor students, $1.00 (available until 1 pmonly).Orchestra Hall Box Office: Daily,9:30-6; later on concert nights. Sun. 1-4.Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michigan.HA 7-0362: Sun & Hoi after 5: HA 7-0499.CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAPOPULAR CONCERTS—Irwin Hoffman,cond; Hans Richter-Haaser. p: Feb 5.Serge Fournier, cond; Gina Bachauer,p: Feb 19. Sat. 8:30. $2 50-S4.50. Orches- Thera are also lectures, workshops’folkdancing and hootenannies. EveiiiW*Concerts: $2.00-$3.00; Matinee, $nPFree adm to all other events Mancie/Hall. 57th & University. MI 3-0800 ex3567. ’ ->TheaterBAREFOOT IN THE PARK — Ned titmon's comedy starring Myrna Lov a rut'Sandor Szabo; Mike Nichols, dir Nnrht/ly, 8:30; Matinees, Wed & Sat at 2Cosed Sun. Nightly, $2.50-$4.95; FriSat, $2 75-$5.50. Matinees, $2'50-$4 50 -sBlaekstone Theatre, Balbo & Michigan! :‘CE 6-8240. ‘ £ aTHE HAPPY MEDIUM — A musicafrevue titled "Hip Happening"-stanmgBill Gerber. Rita Lerner. Barbai a»H? *benstein, Dick Sasso, Judi Sheppardand John Spina. Nightly, 9; Fri uyn tieSat. 9. 11:30 & 1 Closed Mon \$2.50 & S2.95: Fri, $3.00 & $.3 50//Saf j**$3.50 & $3.95. 901 N. Rush. DEf7:l()oo -»HELLO DOLLY!—David Merruk^'Broadway production starling Caicil -Channing: Gower Champion. dir„No'ht-ly. 8:30; Wed & Sat Matinees. 2 1 (rjSun. Nightly. $3 50-$9 tK); Mi,$3.50 $6 00. Shubert Theatre, 22 AV.i M,roe. CE 6-8240. is m M$ I®. 1HITS OF BROADWAY — A showtra Hall, 220 S. Michigan, HA 7-0362.JUS""‘‘‘firs You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.... ■.PETERSON MOVING!AND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave,646-4411Mmk ganzas totally incongruous withKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.- * < .'4 v-. - MU 4-6856 University Theatre today an¬nounced the opening of theChicago premier of Ionesco's"Amedee, or How to Get Ridof It," a three act farce whichwill be presented in MandelHall on February 11, 12, and13 at 8:30 pm.Tickets are $2.00 Fridayand Saturday, and $1.50 Sun¬day, with a student discountof $.50 on all performarres.Tickets are available at theReynolds Club desk. StartingMonday, February 7, ticketswill be sold at the Mandelcorridor boxoffice from 10am to 6 pm, and in PierceTower and New Dorms from6 to 10 p.m. COLLEGIUM MUSICUM — HowardM. Brown, cond. A concert of Renais¬sance secular music by Josquin, Mar¬tini, Gesualdo. Gabrieli. Monteverdi andothers. Sat. Feb 26 at—8:30. Free BondChapel, University of Chicago, 1025 E.58th. MI 3-0800, ext 3885.ExhibitsART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO —Painting and Sculpture of Nicholas deStael: Thru Feb 20. Prints and Draw¬ings Dept: Works of Durer: Thru Feb.There are also continuing exhibitions inthe Photography. Oriental and Decora¬tive Arts Galleries, in addition to thepermanent museum collection. Daily.10-5: Thu. 10-9:30; Sun, 12-5. Free. Mi¬chigan & Adams.Jazz, Folk, MusicADDIS AND CROFUT —Folksingers.Sat. Feb 19 at 8:30 $2 00; students.•SI.00. Illinois Room. Chicago Circle Cen¬ter. 750 S. Halsted. 663-2645.NEW LOST CITY RAMBLERS —Fri,Feb 4 at 8. Free. Commons. MiddleCampus. Lake Forest College, LakeForest 234-2770. musical comedy hits, changing' n’.oriMi-'ly; Robert Simpson, prod Tue Thu 7 11/9 & 10:30: Fri & Sat. 8, 10 & 11 30 vutA4^30, 7:30 & 9. Closed Mon/Nighty/$7.45-$8 45 (Price includes dinner anil!show) Imperial Room, Del Prado Hotel,'5307 S. Hyde Park HY 3-9600NATIONAL REPERTORY THI \ IRE J—Giraudoux' "The Madwoman of''Ch.t |.'lot” starring Eva LeGallienne;>M ga-iret Webster, dir: Feb 2, 8, 11 at 8 30;Feb 5 & 9 at 2:30. .Sheridan’s "The Rivals” starring -SvJ;via Sidney; Jack Sydow, dir: FelV/i 5 '9at 8:30; Jan 26 & Feb 12 at 2:30 fEuripides’ "The Trojan Women!-'-’star-Ev * — ' ‘ |i"ring Eva LeGallienne and Leora Dana;Margaret Webster, dir: Feb 1 4,/7'HO, j12 at 8:30; Jan 29 & Feb 2 at 2 30 “ ,, '$3.00-$5 50; Matinees, $3 II0-S5 OlT S/i- -debaker Theatre, 420 S. Michigan2973.SECOND CITY — "New Wine'! O/tBottles," is Second City's sixth anniG -./sary revue starring Sandra Caron,-JudyGraubart, Bob Klein, David St 1 intj< g^and Fred Willard Sheldon Patink.i,dir; Bill Mathieu, composer-p Nightly/9: Fri & Sat 9,11 & 1. Closed' Mon,.Nightly, $2.00: Fri. $2.50; Sat, 'N. Wells. DE 7-3992. '^ -,.5?SIXTH ANNUAL UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO FOLK FESTIVAL — Present-ed by the Univ of Chicago Folklore So¬ciety. Featuring: Jime & Jesse McRey-nolds and the Virginia Boys: Estil Ball,Muddy Waters. Sam & Kirk McGee;Rev. Gary Davis: Dillard Chandler; theMeditation Singers: Roscoe Holcomb;Fred & Annie McDowell; the Old Bap¬tist Singers; George Armstrong; TheNew Lost City Ramblers: ArchieGreen; Peter Welding Fri-Sun, Feb 4-6at 8:15. Sun, Feb 5 at 3 (Religious, gos¬pel music.) / SEE HOW THEY RUN — The co ratly |starring Rosemary Prinz. Feb 22 Mai-O. ^Nightly. 8:30; Fri 9. Sat 6 & 9 30 ,'Sim, 12:30 & 7:30. Closed Mon. Nightly &‘sun,./$2 25 & $3 25; Fri & Sat, $2.75 & $:)-50.~D’Amico's Piccolo Plavhouse, 214 N/Jlt-V;tawa, Joliet. 815-727-4618. /f.>/* 1 nisi' V.,< ' - 1' '-7*(/ * f 1.- J .I , ^■ iisi ■ • : 7 --/-i RANDELLBEAUTY A YD COSMETIC SATO YFA 4-200757C0 HARPER AVENUEAir-Conditioning — Open Evenings —* Billie Tregonxo, Manageress’■". ' “ .r. , , , ...James Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662• ' '''. IIMFMQ . TA II ODIMd MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYlliSB TESTSBlood Typing A Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICEComplete Lab EKG & BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM • 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3-2000 Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign car hospital HULL HOUSE THEATRE —’EugeneIonesco’s "Victims of Duty" and L:i:giPirandello's "The Man with the Flowerin His Mouth.” Every Fri, Sat &|Sun.Fri & Sat, 8:30; Sun. 7 30 F11 & Sat,•S3.90; Sun, $3.40. 3212 N. Broadway -348-8336. / - ‘ ||HULL HOUSE PARKWAY —MichaelShurtleff's drama "Call Me B\ M ^• 13 AJan'P..-Rightful Name”; Thru Febton’s "Sponono": Opens Feb 18 EveryFri, Sat & Sun. Fri & Sat, 8 30,- Sun,7:30, Fri & Sat, $2.50; Sun, $2 no .< ■ :67th St. 324-3880. w.. . - ' w//LAST STAGE — Oscar Wilde s-, FheImportance of Being Earnest Hu . <!Ziff, dir. Every Fri & Sat at 8 30 -Ev-ei \ Sun .it 7 30 ' Fri X SW 1$1.50. 1506 E; 51st St. OA 4-4200.■ "A Gold Mine of Good FoodCITY INN■10% STUDENT DISCOUNT/ HYDE PARK’S BEST■«.•,/ CANTONESE FOOD p"/f; 5228 HARPERHY 3-2559 JESSELSON’S] *©a HiY6 'jiff ■•'/‘"‘•••"•A *; ... . U,'v. '•/SERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARS‘-. WITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd BEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent Waving /Hair Cutting■ andTinting1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEAR/ CONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd Street % -j/HYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty Discount/’ifpUp’’ •. •If u ^ -- ? -i • r.. ■■ , - ,, ^ » -‘V .ANDERSON'S■BULKO SERVICE STATION5701 S. COTTAGE GROVE BU 8-9269Specializing in Quick andb Courteous service //FINEST GAS AT LOWEST PRICES Regarding a call from Southern Christian Leadership Confer¬ence Coordinating Committee:For students who are interested in working with block dubsand community organizations in the Hyde Park-North Ken¬wood Area, Organizational and secretarial assistance isneeded. . I , ?• ^Call Neal Lund 684-2541 evenings.CHICAGO MAROON • February 4, 1966. attentionguitarists andguitar loversauditionsfor participation in thoINTERNATIONALGUITARFESTIVAL(first of its kind in the MIDWEST)at Lake Geneva, June 10-11-12_All styles of Guitar playingAll guitar-family instrumentsAll performing levels welcomei ,,r details about Festival, and audi-dates, call: BR 4-7338 eves:612-2385or write:International FestivalsH001 N. Clark StreetChicago. Illinois 60626HONDASIMMEDIATE DELIVERY• All Models• All ColorsSEE THE NEW450 MODELFor A really good selection cometo South Side Honda center . . .One of Chicago's largest displaysof Hondas.EXCLUSIVELY HONDA!• Exclusive ley-eway plan• Bank financing• Insurance payment• ASK ABOUT OURLOW COST RENTAL PLANEarn extra money in yourspare time — become aHONDA REPRESENTATIVEfor your campus.Call or Write:SOUTH SIDEHONDA CENTER8426 South Ashland Avt.Phone 239-3611EXCLUSIVE HONDA ...SALES • SERVICE - PARTS ALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Srndwiches, and ColdPlates.After dinner don’t miss the newplays at the Last Stage. Join u»for cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.ORALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST & HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 8-7585 MAROONGUIDE$ for better living} X Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTEL!Fifty-Fifth and Woodlawn Ava.CorruptionOf TheDamnedA sizzling sequel toLust For EcstacySat. night at theHYDE PARK ART (ENTER5236 S. BLACKSTONE8:00 PM and 9:00 PM$1.00 Admission MR. PIZZAS9 ecv WE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTS IfHY 3-8282 c 0/ CFOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENAlso Ch. Broiled HamburgersPIZZAPor 2 Per 3 Per 4 Per 4 PartySeesege 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Meshroom 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper .................... 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Ancbevie 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Oaiaa or Garlic 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Taaa Fish or Oliva 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Chaos# 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vm and Vi 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Infra Ingredients 50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Popparoni Pina 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp „ 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacon 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pina 2.50 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00(faasoge. Mask rooms and Peppers) Box of Broasted Chicken20 Pieces, Golden Brown16 Pieces, Golden Brown10 Pieces. Golden BrownBAR B-Q RIBSSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGE,MEAT BALL1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Opea 7 Days a Weak — 4:00 p.n. fa 2:00 a.*. — Fri. to 3:00So*, fa 3:40 a.«. — Opaa 2 p.m. SaadaysCome SaturdayOne and AllHarperHYDE PARK'S ORIGINAL OLD TYME PUBSIX MONTH BIRTHDAYPARTYLarge Old Fashioned SchoonerSchlitz on Draught25FREE POPCORN AS ALWAYSandHORS D'OEUVRES Three major playwrights, three trenchant plays, one excellentproduction!HERMAN SINAIKOWithout doubt one of the finest student productions witnessedin Chicago for many a year.JAMES O'REILLY•. . Like riding a laff-rocket thru outer space!LEON BOTSTEINRIDERS TO THE SEAby John Millington SyngeILE THE BEARby Eugene O’Neill by Anton ChekovTONIGHT AT 8:30TICKETS $1.50 STUDENTS $1.00February 4-5-6REYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE57th and UNIVERSITYTickets Now at Reynolds Club Desk or By MallFebruary 4, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROONmrnmmmmmmmmmmmmmP It j£ (j Moliere's 'The Misanthrope' Opens TonightCampus Critics Comment“One of the most exciting among his (Moliere’s)comedies . . . rich in possibilities of interpretation, acting,and performance.”BERNARD WEINBERG, Professor and Chair¬man of the Department of Romance Languages andLiterature.poses. ‘A satire of speaking the truth for the wrong pur-KENNETH J. NORTHCOTT, Professor in theDepartment of Germanic Languages and Literature.“ Whether we want people to come with their Freudianeyeglasses or not . . . they certainly will.”EDWARD W. ROSENHEIM, JR., Professor inthe Department of English and of Humanities in theCollege.“Traits of human character and human situation thatconstantly recur.”WEINBERG.“Not so far removed from the 20th century.”NORTHCOTT.“Today, with the psychological insights that charac¬terize the 20th century, some people might approach thisplay with a kind of clinical curiosity . .ROSENHEIM.“A classical performance . . . part of the classicaltheatre.”WEINBERG.“We want to reach the audience which is seeingtheatre of the absurd . . . You can’t appreciate what isappearing in 20th century theatre unless you know whathas gone before to use as a yardstick.”NORTHCOTT.“We want to reach children and people for whom thegreat theatre of the past is imbedded in textbooks andanthologies.”ROSENHEIM.“A constant revelation.”WEINBERG.TV.” “We want to reach people who are tired of watchingNORTHCOTT. BARBARA BAXLEY and GEORGE GRIZZARD rehearse for Moliece'*"The Misanthrope," to be presented by The University of Chicago incollaboration with the Goodman Theatre. The supporting cast includesBRENDA FORBES and LEE RICHARDSON. "The Misanthrope" is producedand directed by JOHN REICH. The French comedy was translated bythe Pulitzer Prize winning poet RICHARD WILBUR. Performances runthrough February 27.“You can af]ord to lake the risk.”CONSENSUS.The University or Chicago in Collaboration with the Goodman TheatrePresentsAmple Parkug Moliere's Witty ComedyTHE MISANTHROPEPREVIEWS TONIGHT AT 8 P.M. AND TOMORROW AFTERNOON AT 2 P.M.OirENING NIGHT: Tomorrow at 8 P.M. Performances Run Through February 27The Law School Auditorium1121 East 60th StreetTicket reservations: Bursar's Office, Administration Building, 5801 EllisTues. through Sun. Eves. (8 p.m.) $4.00; faculty & staff $3.50; students, $2.00Sat. & Sun. Mats. (2 p.m.) $3.00; faculty and staff $2.50; students, $1.50Group Rates AvailableCHICAGO MAROON • February 4, 1966