Unity group to sue boardfor violation of state lawVol. 74-No. 37 The University of Chicago Friday, February 18, 1966New memo delays faculty action by Gary ChristianaThe Unity organization is readying a lawsuit chargingthe Chicago board of education with violation of Illinois’anti-segregation Armstrong Act by creating segregationalschool boundaries, and has good chances of winning its case,says George Benston, assistantprofessor in the business schooland a leader of the Unity group.Cen ed vote postponed Kenwood school, rather than theIlyde Park High, which is alreadyAccording to Benston, the group 0Ver 90 per cent Negro. Hyde Parkhas also ‘put objections in writing High will then follow the patternn f ft »«ft » i A ftt O ft £ ft Cf. fti ft 1 ftf 4-Un . . . .at the request ’ of officials of the 0f 0ther Negro high schools in lowThe faculty College Council has again postponed taking a vote on the controversial report Department of Health, Education,and Welfare (HEW)of its ad hoc curriculum committee, choosing instead to await a soon to be completed memo , ZZZ TJSST&nincome areas of the city, says Mrs.Hans Morgenthau, a member ofthe Unity group. The quality of theon general education from a new permanent curriculum committeeThe council vote, originally scheduled for yesterday, will be held March 1.council vote on the ad hoc commit-tee’s report had been postponedfrom December 9 to yesterday inresponse to student and faculty re¬quests for more time in which toconsider the ad hoc committee’sproposals for a radical revision ofthe present College general educa de-ago to approve board member Cy- cline, she declares, which will fur-A previous rus H. Adams’ plan for a high ther discourage any white middler AftUftftl 1m IT.. /T ft D nt»lr ft ft Tb _ 1 „ i- P— _ __ J 2 w ^ -Ltl Jschool in the Hyde Park area. TheUnity group had proposed a planThe ad hoc committee is com- for an educational park at the siteprised of Booth and the masters of 0f the present Hyde Park Highthe five collegiate divisions.BOOTH SAID that the postpone- Adams plan will in fact segregatement was agreed upon to give fac- Hyde Park High, which mainlyulty and students time to consider serves the Negro Woodlawn area,the new committee’s memo. Gins- Adams’ plan calls for a new class parent from sending his childthere.THE MORE far-reaching aims of„ , , F , u „ the Unity plan involve some fun-School, and now charges that the damcnta( difterc.nces aburg echoed this explanation, stat- school for 2,500 students adjoining cational park is simply beyonding that the new committee had re- the Kenwood High School at 4959 S.quested the postponement to allow Blackstone, and for a thorough re-for “the extra consultation” that it modeling of the Hyde Park school, declares Benston. He points thattion program. H ~THE NEW curriculum commit-appointed jointly by Dean -ofthe College Wayne Booth and theCollege Council, re-hoc comup ^H^iThe new committee is composedof professor of geography Norton Dean of the College Wayne mon year„ of general education between the two Hyde Park HighGinsburg, Harold H. Swift distin Booth faces yet another delay suggested for the College in the and the new Kenwood schools. with theboard of education, in addition tothe question of location of schools.The Unity proposal for an eou-the comprehension of superintend¬ent of schools Benjamin Willis,wished to make on its proposals. 6220 Stony Island.The report of the ad hoc commit- It is in the third provision of thetee urged the establishment of four plan that the crux of the Unity while urban educators today arethinking in terms of schools ac¬commodating 15,000 students, Wil-interdisciplinary courses, Liberal group’s charges lies. This section lis is still dedicated to notions ofArts I-IV, to serve as the “com- calls for a “clustering” of students the standard school housing 2,000to 3,000 students.In reference to Hyde Park Highguished service professor of an- in achieving College curriculum faculty-approved Levi plan for the THIS MEANS that the schools School both Benston and Mrs.reform.Theodore C. Sorensen,former aide to PresidentKennedy, will speak oh"The Kennedy Legacy"Tuesday at 4 pm in MandelHall. Admission will be freeand without tickets. reorganization of the College. will act together in providing a Tyiorgenthau emphasize that Wood-It was the Levi plan that author- complementary curriculum, so that jawn jUS£ tbe ^jncj 0£ area tbatthropology Fred Eggan, WilliamRainey Harper professor of Eng¬lish Norman Maclean, assistantprofessor of biology John Hubby,and professor and chairman of thedepartment of physics Mark Inghram. ized the council to set up a curri- between them they can offer aculum study committee. greater variety of courses thanThe new curriculum committee they could by acting independently,will finish its work on the memo at Students in the area served by needs the best and most advancedschools that can be afforded.Furthermore, the presence of aa meeting Monday, Ginsburg said, the two schools could go to either modern integrated school in WoodLevi aids in slum lawsuit This will leave a week for discus- one, depending on the courses theysion before the March 1 vote. chose.It is expected that the memo will The integration question then re¬try to satisfy both supporters and mains—which school will whiteattackers of the ad hoc committee’s Hyde Park students attend? The lawn could make all the differ¬ence to the status of that commu¬nity in the city, they say.WOODLAWN, Mrs. Morgenthaupoints out, could be the “naturalreport, which is considered to be Unity group contends that under choice for white middle class p?o-too radical by many members of the “clustering” proposal they will pie who can’t afford Hyde Park.”the College Council. go to the already well-integrated It is at this point, she states, thatthey will ask what kind of schooland executive director of the South East Chicago Commission,filed a suit in Circuit Court last week on behalf of tenants ofa Woodlawn slum building who are Woodlawn has, a factor which isoften decisive.by Joan PhillipsIn a case that may be of major importance in combatting IM .Chicago slum housing, Julian H. Levi, professor of law at UC SeiUltdT DoUQlcfS tcIlS Ol (irbdVT 810For the time being, the strategyof the Unity group is to delay anyaction on the pending Adams pro-Unveiling his current legislative proposal for attacking posal by pressing charges in courtgives strong support to Vietnam policysuing their landlord for not main- tion of the case by Richard New- - - * * - .. .... , ... „FWtaming the building in accordance house, attorney for the CRF, and urban problems, US Senator Paul Douglas discussed means ana oy tiling cnarges witn Htw itwith the city building code. seven UC law students: William 0f improving American cities through government action in m y UinS 1S C3Se m cour ’ enThe tenants, Daisy Knzer and Bowe, Merel Glaubiger, David . „ , , TT „ , .®. *Emily Lanier, won a preliminary Minge, Philip Moore, Charles a ^ a^ Breasted Hall Monday night,victory last week. Circuit Court Pratt, Robert Sandy, and John The congressional act DouglasJudge Richard A. Napolitano or- Young. suggested would provide federal In resp0nse to a question fromdered Mr. anc. Mrs. Jacob M. in A telephone interview, Levi money to cities for carrying out £bg audience, the Senator gave his its own plan for an educationalpark would be the most availablealternative for the board of educa¬tion, Benston says.According to Mrs. Morgenthau,the Unity group is now asking fora study to be undertaken by a fed-Feldman, owners of the building at told the Maroon that the suit seeks broadly based urban renewal pro- strong support to “the basic out-6401-03 South Kimbard ave., to con- the appointment of a receiver for grams. Cities would offer federally lines of administration policy intinue services to the tenants. the building who will fix up the acceptable plans encompassing Vietnam” and added a vehement eral a§ency under the DepartmentTHE OWNERS were also or property and borrow the money education, health, housing and condemnation of Communism. He of HEW to obtain some estimatesdered not to attempt to evict the necessary for repairs by means of community action needs for blight- characterized Communism as being and concrefe plans for its educa-a new mortgage with priority over ed areas to qualify for such aid. “worse” than Nazism, because* t*ona^ Par^ *dea-all existing liens. ONCE a city’s request is accept- while sharing the totalitarianismOriginally, Levi had asked the ed, Douglas explained, the govern- of Hitler’s regime, Communism Seecourt for an injunction to force the ment would finance up to 90 per “hypocritically” represents itselfowners to service the building with cent of the funds necessary for as standing for democratic ideals. • Exam scheduleutilities and not evict the tenants planning and developing the proj- When asked his stand on the 1 on page twoThe injunction demand was ect. In addition, the government “police state” in South Vietnam, • Interview withdropped when an attorney for the would provide technical assistance Douglas responded that “there are Douglas on page threeFeldmans agreed to abide by the for aspects of the programs requir- degrees” of oppression. fcourt’s order to maintain the sta- jng jt; and a federal coordinator totus quo until the receivership hear- oversee, but not direct, the proj-Julian Levi, head of the SouthEast Chicago Commission, hasfiled a suit in behalf of Wood¬lawn slum tenants. Levi said that this is the firstcase of its kind in the city of Chi¬cago and the state of Illinois. “His¬torically,” Levi said, “the onlyright of a tenant in the event that ect’s execution.In turn, cities receiving aid mustdemonstrate their willingness toconcretely aid their projects’ suc¬cess, Douglas emphasized. Rigid, , . , . enforcement of housing codes mustthe owner failed to maintain the ^ reinforced by intemive effortstenants, or in any way harrass to relocate families in decent hous¬ing. Cities will not be allowed tolessen local efforts merely becausepremises was to leave.”“This case raises the question ifwhether the lease is not more thanthem'^untU (he “SurThLS ™the case on February 23 and (hen “ e tcnant w‘S,d Phave the Problems, Senator said.The action, in which tenants for right tQ gue t0 obtain this>» Douglas praised previous federaltne first time demand the enforce- ifvi ctrpsced the imDortanee of urban renewal programs and re-ment of city laws against slum theL' parUdpition ^ of The law stu- counted his role in their passage,conditions was brought by a com- dents jn the preparation of the He especially lauded the rent sub-bmation of the tenants The Wood- cage «,The really important thing sidy program included in the 1965lawn Organization (TWO), and .g the concern for social problems federal housing act.the Community Renewal Founda- on the part of the students with the Rent subsidies, Douglas said, al-uon (CKF). application of their skills and low for smaller congregations ofLevi was assisted in the prepara- brains in an attempt to soive the people on public assistance than doproblem,” he maintained. Public housing, and enable the as-The student volunteers are mak- sisted family to assume a greatering a major contribution, Levi part of the burden of payment assaid. “They have worked hard and its income rises,effectively, and these people (the IN A question period followingtenants) have gotten legal rep- the talk, Douglas noted that theresentation that would normally rent subsidy programs are beinghave cost thousands of dollars. For administered by nonprofit organi-every hour I spend in the court- zations such as labor unions, in¬room, four or five hours have been stead of on an individual familyspent by the students in research basis, to prevent subsidizing alumand preparation elsewhere.’* dwellings.Copy for the Chicago Liter¬ary Review should be turnedin to the editor in the Maroonoffice no later than Friday,February 25. A limited amountmay be submitted on the fol¬lowing Monday, but contribu¬tors who wish the extra timeshould contact the editor atext. 3269.Letters to the editorWick djfends Piccadilly;b'anies housing shortageTO THE EDITOR: to standard and that work wouldbe going on during the year, withthe extra dirt, noise, and inconven¬ience that are to be expected insuch circumstances. We did assure ance for the probability that any¬body who merely works for theUniversity is stupider than anystudent, I find that question hardto answer. central clearing house is being setup for these problems. Call BrentKramer at 684-3786.KENNETH KR1CHCollege Woods look in on the two fulltimesecretaries employed by StudentGovernment to make certain thatthings are operating smoothly or,at the very least, that they are op-May I offer ycur readers someperspective on your story of Feb¬ruary 11 about the unhappy condi¬tions at the Piccadilly?The building is one of severalthat the University bought in itsefforts to conserve the neighbor¬hood. It was not a bargain, butsince this was not a business ven¬ture, that was a minor considera¬tion. One by one, most of the build¬ings bought for similar reasonshave been thoroughly rehabilitatedbefore we offered them to students.We are proud of 1401 Hyde Park,the Fairfax, the Chicago Arms,and others with 1025 apartments inall. Visit them some time.Why did we not do the same withthe Piccadilly? Because we werefaced with a sudden flood of grad¬uate students asking for housingin an extremely tight market.(Graduate enrollment in October,r"5, was nearly 15 p?r cent abovet' e year before.) We had a hardc mice; should we make the Pic-c-dilly available to approximatelyl'° single students and 55 s udentf rtilies, in spite of its condi ion,( chould we hold it off the marke*voile we put it in proper shape?What wouid you have done, assum¬ing that you were no be ter atworking miracles than the nextir ~n?We chose to use it, warning pros¬pective tenants that it was not up them that it would be safe, and weoffered special low rents in partialcompensation. During the summer,after the former tenants had beenrelocated, we concentrated our ef¬forts on basic safety factors likethe electrical system. I have hadno reason to think we made thewrong choice, although I am surethat Mr. Cady would have beensaved many headaches if we hadlet the students who now live thereshift for themselves in a strangecity.^ou may wonder how we can beso unprepared for a surge of stu¬dents. One reason is that rehabili¬tation must be planned more thana year in advance. The chief rea¬son. however, is that the art ofpredicting graduate enrollment isrudimentary. Each department,committee, and professionalschool makes its decisions sepa¬rately and case by case. Althoughthe quality of last year’s applicantswas unusually high, not manym re were admitted than the yearbefore. Put a noticeably higherproportion of them came—to ourcombined pleasure and embarrass¬ment. Was Ho Chi Minh partly toblame?At best, the Piccadilly could notbe up to our standard, as we ex¬plained to the tenants. If there isrn issue, then, it is whether Mr.Cady and his staff have done thebest that could reasonably be ex¬pected of them with what they had.After making the customary allow¬ WARNER WICKDean of StudentsDraft dodging not urgedin Friday SOS meetingTO THE EDITOR:Normally I am not very offendedby inaccurate reporting in the Ma¬roon but the article on the SDSdraft meeting in Tuesday’s paperis seriously misleading. Your head¬line read, “Defy the Draft, SDS’ersTold.’’ You should realize that urg¬ing persons to defy the draft is acrime punishable by up to fiveyears and $10,000. Even so, somegroups, such as The Peacemakers,and some individuals, like A. J.Muste, are urging this. Paul Lau-ter, however, is not. He simplymentioned refusing to accept in¬duction and therefore going to jailfor two to five years as an alterna¬tive open to those who cannot con¬scientiously serve in the armedforces. Moreover he counseledyoung men not to try to cop outwith fake flat feet, high blood pres¬sure, or homosexuality. He urged astand on principle, not draft dodg¬ing.I feel that these corrections aremost important as Mr. Lautercould be prosecuted if he had actually said the things that you indicate he did.For those who are in difficultyover the draft or have questions, a Coulter House candidateis first year law studentTO THE EDITOR:Just to set the record straight(and to chide you gently for care¬less reporting), the Coulter Housecandidate for Miss University ofChicago, Janet Roede. is not a“first year student,” as you de¬scribed her, but a first year lawstudent.If your description of the otherlovely candidates is not inaccurate,this makes Miss Roede the onlvcandidate chosen from the graduate and professional schools, andtherefore especially worthy of thevotes, not only of the College, butalso of students in the graduate divisions.BOB SCAVULLOCoulter Hous"Social ChairmanWant to abolish SG;score Grofman, WoodsTO THE EDITOR:We have never before objected toallowing Mr. Grofman. MissWoods. Mr. Abrams or anyone els-'amuse himself by playing studentgovernment. However, it does notseem too much to ask that some¬time between th'ir escapades inCuba, Vietnam and the SG check¬book that Mr. Grofman and Miss crating. Perhaps it is too much toask that Mr. Grofman stop playingMONOPOLY with the Student Gov¬ernment funds long enough to seethat the charter flights are runningefficiently, that Miss Woods stopfancying herself Dean Rusk for thefifteen minutes eac>' day it wouldtake her to keep th ising file upto date, or that Mr. . brams stepdown from his seat on the SupremeCourt, to which no one save hisown imagination will ever appointhim, for the few minutes thatwould be needed to correct themistakes SG Treasurer Steve Liv-ernash is continually making in thefinancial records. Perhaps this isindeed too much to ask. but it isbeyond us how it can be asking toomuch that one of these three orany of the other many capable andintelligent members of our studentgovernment give in five or tenminutes of his time to see that thetwo SG secretaries are working onSiudenf governmen* hu in ss andnot typing term pipers f"r SG offi¬cers. It is fairly obv'o’i.- th t what¬ever the secretaries sp r.d most oftheir tini" doing it >s not workingcn SG business. 0~" secretary'•orking eight hours :> H?v wouldbe sufficient to accompli'-h most ofthe things SG does "■ well rsmany rr the things it Hrm« to do.'t would seem that two ^cretar eswould in the forty hers a week"ach »s in attendinc" h<>r desk,h" ab’e to run th" charter flights,keep th" housing fi1" c’^-enh •',ndeven have some tini" l"*t over toD’oe and ditto the abundant trashMr. Grofman feels compelled toEt’s getting nearThe time and place of examinations not listed below will beannounced by instructors. Evening and Saturday classes, unlessothenvise announced by the instructor, will have examinationsduring regular class hours. Please note room assignments forexaminations.An?*omy ^05—Zool 205 Fri Mar 18—1:30-3:30 Z 14Anthropology 212 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 W 104Anthropology 215 lues Mar 15-1:30-3:30 SS 105Art 230 Wed Mar 16—8-10 CL 10Art 260 Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 CL 10Biology 112 Tues Mar 15—4-6Variant A K 103, B 106Variant B E 133Variant C K 107 ‘Biology 114 Thur Mar 17—8-10 SFL 6Biology 202 Wed Mar 16—8-10 B 106Chemistry 106 Fri Mar 18—8-10 K 107Chemistry 116 Fri Mar 18—8-10 K 107Chemistry 132 Fri Mar 18-8-10 K 103Chemistry 221 Thur Mar 17—8-10 K 107Chemistry 262 Wed Mar 16-8-10 K 103Chi-«*se 202 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 CL 10Economics 202 01 Wed Mar 16—8-10 BE 103Economics 223—SocSci 250 Tues Mar 15-10:30-12:30 LAW CEconomies 225 Mon Mar 14-4-6 Ro 27Economics 240 Fri Mar 18-10:30-12:30 SS 106Economics 290—SocSci 27* Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 S 106Education 245 91—Phycho 251 Mon Mar 14—4-6 E 207Education 251 Wed Mar 16-8-10 HHB 134 BEducation 288—Eng 204 Thur Mar 17—8-10 WB 103English 102 Mon Mar 14—4-6Variant A K 107Variant B AB 101,AB 133, RoVariant C E 133, B 106,Z 14English 204—Educ 288 Thur Mar 17-8-10 WB 103English 207 91 Mon Mar 14—4-6 CL 18English 208—Educ 309 Tues Mar 15—4-6 AB 133English 216 Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 SS 108F ->plish 236 Mon Mar 14-4-6 CL 16English 237 Thur Mar 17-1:30-3:30 E 203English 240 Fri Mar 18-8-10 CL 20English 252 Tues Mar 15-1:30-3:30 CL 11English 258 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 LAW BEnglish 262 Tues Mar 15—10:30-12:30 CL 11English 295 Mon Mar 14-1:30-3:30 CL 11English 297 Fri Mar 18-10:30-12:30 CL 20English 299 Mon Mar 14—4-6 CL 11French 101 Wed Mar 16-1:30-3:30 CL 11French 102 Wed Mar 16-1:30-3:30 K 107French 105 Wed Mar 16-1:30-3:30 E 133French 202 Wed Mar 16—1:30-3:30 S 106French 203 Fri Mar 18—1:30-3:30 K 110French 204 Fri Mar 18—10:30-12:30 G-B 116French 208 Fri Mar 18—10:30-12:30 WB 202General Slavic 205 Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 WB 102Geography 201 Thur Mar 17-1:30-3:30 RO 28Geophysical Science 132 Fri Mar 18-8-10 RO 28German 101 Wed Mar 16-1:30-3:30 CL 16German 102 Wed Mar 16—1:30-3:30 LMHGerman 105 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 CL 16German 231 Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 WB 202German 235 Wed Mar 16-8-10 WB 203German 238 Fri Mar 18—10:30-12:30 WB 103German 280 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 CL 11Greek 102 Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 CL 21History 132 Mon Mar 14-8-10 LMHHistory 212 Fri Mar 18-10:30-12:30 SS 107History 222 Wed Mar 16-8-10 SS 305History 226 Thur Mar 17-1:30-3:30 K 110History 232 Tues Mar 15-10:30-12:30 RO 2History 23* 01 A 02 Mon Mar 14—10:30-12:30 RO 2History 241—Hist 357 SocSci 271 Mon Mar 14-1:30-3:30 E 202History 246— SocSci 246 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 SS 105History 249 Thur Mar 17—4-6 CL 20History 252 Tues Mar 15-10:30-12:30 SS 103History 262 Wed Mar 16—8-10 RO 2History 272 01 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 RO 2HumaniUes 112A Thur Mar 17-1:30-3:30 LMHHumanities 112B Thur Mar 17-1:30-3:30 K 107Humanities 122 Mon Mar 14-1:30-3:30 LMHHumanities 202 Thur Mar 17-1:30-3:30 E 133Humanities 250—Hum 322 Tues Mar 15-10:30-12:30 S 106Humanities 277—SocTh 356 Mon Mar 14—4-6 SS 122 that special timeideas A Methods 212 lues Mar 15-8-10 LAW BIdeas A Methods 252 Thur Mar 17—4-6 CL 11Italian 102 01 Wed Mar 16-4-6 AB 420Japanese 202 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 OR 210Latin 102 Wed Mar 10—8-10 CL 26Latin 205 Fri Mar 18—10:30-12:30 CL 21Linguistics 225—Anthro 371 Tues Mar 15-10:30-12:30 SS 107Mathematics 101 EA Mon Mar 14—8-10 E 308Mathematics 102 CA Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 E 207Mathematics 102 Wed Mar 16—10:30-12:30 LMHMathematics 151 12 Thur Mar 17—8-10 E 207Mathematics 151 21 Wed Mar 16—8-10 LAW CMathematics 151 32 Tues Mar 15-10:30-12:30 E 206Mathematics 151 51 Fri Mar 18-4-6 E 206Mathematics 152 21 Wed Mar 16—10:30-12:30 E 206Mathematics 152 31 Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 Z 14Mathematics 152 32 Tues Mar 15-10:30-12:30 E 202Mathematics 152 41 Fri Mar 18—10:30-12:30 E 203Mathematics 152 42 Wed Mar 16-10:30-12:30 E 207Mathematics 152 51 Fri Mar 18—4-6 E 312Mathematics 152 61 Wed Mar 16—10:30-12:30 E 203Mathematics 152 71 Wed Mar 16-10:30-12:30 E 202Mathematics 153 51 Fri Mar 18-4-6 E 207Mathematics 203 11 Fri Mar 18-8-10 E 202Mathematics 204 11 Fri Mar 18—8-10 E 207Mathematics 204 12 Thur Mar 17-8-10 E 305Mathematics 205 51 Fri Mar 18—4-6 E 308MathemaUcs 241 31 Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 E 203Mathematics 251 21 Wed Mar 16—8-10 E 308Mathematics 252 31 Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 E 206Mathematics 252 41 Fri Mar 18—10:30-12:30 E 206MathemaUcs 253 12 Thur Mar 17—8-10 E 206MathemaUcs 281 41 Fri Mar 18-10:30-12:30 E 207Music 152 Wed Mar 16—4-6 Mus 101Near Eastern Archeology 200 Mon Mar 14-8-10 CL 10Oriental History 202 Fri Mar 18—11:30-1 OR 208Philosophy 204 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 RY 358Phiosophy 208 Tues Mar 15-10:30-12:30 S 201Philosophy 232 Wed Mar 16-4-6 H 106Philosophy 236 91 Wed Mar 16-4-6 CL 11Physical Science 106 Thur Mar 17-10:30-12:30 K107, RO 2,B 106, CLPhysics 112 Thur Mar 17-10:30-12:30 E 133Physics 122 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 E 133Physics 132 Wed Mar 16—8-10 E 133Physics 201 Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 E 133Physics 217 Wed Mar 16-8-10 E 202Physics 222 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 E 203Physics 226 Fri Mar 18—10:30-12:30 E 202Physics 236 Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 E 202Political Science 237 Wed Mar 16—4-6 E 133Political Science 252—SocSci 262 Fri Mar 18—8-10 SS 305Political Science 256 Tues Mar 15—10:30-12:30 E 133Psychology 204 Wed Mar 16—1-6 Z 14Psychology 212 Mon Mar 14—10:30-12:30 K 107Psychology 251 91—Educ 245 Mon Mar 14-4-6 E 207Psychology 253 01 A 02— Tues Mar 15—8-10SocSci 253 S 106Russian 102 Wed Mar 16-1:30-3:30 RO 2Russian 202 Wed Mar 16—8-10 WB 102Russian 205 Mon Mar 14-10:30-12:30 WB 203Russian 271 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 BE 10Russian 297 Mon Mar 14-1:30-3:30 S 106Social Science 112 Tues Mar 15-8-10 LMHSocial Science 122 Tues Mar 15-1:30-3:30 LMHSocial Science 231—Anthro 345 Wed Mar 16-10:30-12:30 RO 2Social Science 241 Thur Mar 17-4-6 K 107Social Science 246—Hist 246 Fri Mar 18-1:30-3:30 SS 105Social Science 250—Econ 223 Tues Mar 15—10:30-12:30 LAW CSocial Science 233 01 A 02- Tues Mar 15-8-10Psycho 253 S 106Social Science 262—Pol Scl 252 Fri Mar 18-8-10 SS 305Social Science 271—Hist 241 Mon Mar 14-1:30-3:30 E 202Social Science 275 Mon Mar 14—10:30-12:30 AB 133Social Science 279—Econ 290 Mon Mar 14—10:30-12:30 S 106Sociology 204 Thar Mar 17-8-10 S 106Sociology 206 Wed Mar 16-8-10 S 106Spanish 102 61 Wed Mar 16-1:30-3:30 BE 16Spanish 105 Fri Mar 18-10:30-12:30 K 304Spanish 202 Fri Mar 18-4-6 CL 16Spanish 230 Mon Mar 14—10:30-12:30 SS 106Statistics 200 01 Fri Mar 18—1:30-3:30 E 202Swedish 102 61 Fri Mar 18-8-10 WB 10)Swedish 202 Tues Mar 13—1:30-3:349 WB 207Zoology 205—Anat 203 Fil Mar 18-1:30-5136 1M provide for the voting public.Although most of the serviceswhich SG claims to provide areabominably run, until recently onedepartment, the loan service, wasadministered with a tolerable de¬gree of efficiency. This is no longerthe case. The Loan $ rvice whichprovided such a profusion of fundsfor Mr. Grofman during his spreeof th" last six months, has been tooinsolvent to make a loan of evenfive dollars to anyone who is notpresident of the assembly. Con¬cerning the vanishing loan funds,the cause of their evaporation isuncertain though it seems thatMr. Grofman has been escalatinghis personal war on poverty or thatsomeone mistook the loan servicemoney for tickets to the HubertHumphrey speech and carelesslyleft it lying around the SG office.Student Government has, inshort, become so inefficient, so ri¬diculous, and so troublesome that ithas ceased to be amusing and hasbegun to be annoying. It is time weput an end to what has seldombeen more than an exercise intriviality by abolishing it and giv¬ing its duties to more responsibleorganizations such as the Co-opand the Interdorm Council. Cer¬tainly, the thousands of dollarswasted on Student Governmentcould be better employed in somereal campus need, like tearingdown Pierce Tower.PHILIP M. GIRALDIHALPH HERGERTJOHN K. TAYLORPraises Amedee; callsreview, not play, absurdTO THE EDITOR:The title of the review of Ame¬dee in Tuesday’s Maroon was“UT makes absurd attempt at ab¬surdist theater”. “Absurdity” is nodoubt a popular concept thesedays, and for the sake of preserv¬ing whatever meaning it has weought to use it with some care. Isuggest that it would have beenmore appropriately applied to thereview itself than to the perfornirance reviewed. Mr. Salins oughtperhaps to have re viewed the playbefore reviewing it. Even in thatcase, however, it is not likely thathe would have enjoyed it, becaus#he seems to be quite pre-occupiedwith his “search for meaning”—and it might thus have been mor«(Continued on page five)» • CHICAGO MAROON • February 18, 1966Olson calls for change in artistic theory; Doughs interviewcites advantages of common terminology Senator against grad study defermentby Rick Pollack . ^ O Jcritical theories, emphasizing the need to make use of logical,“scientific” methods and the value_ , . . *1 _ ] , , . , , , The following is the text of an in-Speaking in the Monday lecture series at the law school terview with Senator Paul Douglasauditorium February 14, UC professor of English Elder Olson conducted by Maroon reporter Johncalled for a change in the basic method of creating artistic and K speech Monday “night. BreastedMaroon: Senator, what is yourposition in regard to the UnitedStates effort in Vietnam?Douglas: To withdraw and leaveno free world forces would be toturn South Vietnam over to Com¬munism. I think the domino theorywould apply. Laos and Cambodiawould go, Thailand would fall next,and then Burma would be crushed,followed by Malasia. Would Indiabe able to remain neutral? I don’tthink it could.On the other hand, I agree withthe President’s restraining fromthe bombing of Hanoi, Haiphong,and China. That type of bombingwould kill large numbers of civil¬ians. I hope we don’t do that. Andin a showdown with China, Russiawould come in on their side and anuclear war would result. Our pres¬ent commitment is justified, butwe should not get bogged down ina land war in Asia.Maroon: How do you feel aboutdissenters from administration pol¬icy?Douglas: Let them talk. Wehaven’t declared war. As for theSenators, no one should questionthe patriotism of Senators Ful-bright, Morse, or Gruening. I dis¬agree with them, but they are notpro-Communist.of past critical systems.Olson, who is a poet, playwright,critic, and theorist, stated his hy¬potheses about the general irrele¬vance of most critical activity >ycomparing the practice of artistictheory to scientific inquiry.A SCIENTIST studies some¬thing; and he does it with method,Olson said. His intellectual heirsare left a definable problem tocontinue working on, and the meth¬od with which to work.Because scientists share a com¬mon terminology, and can there¬fore communicate easily with oneanother, focusing of scientific re¬search on a single problem leadsto what Olson called a “horizontal”development of thought along asingle line.In contrast, artistic theory iscommonly separated from prac¬tice, he stated. Theory is thoughttoo tenuous, too abstruse. Often,theories are at variance with othertheories.Terminology too is unclear andill-defined, according to Olson Twomen cannot cooperate in criticalwork because they cannot com¬municate effectively with each oth¬er, and their problems are not de¬fined similarly.PARTLY because there is thisterminological confusion, problemsare never delimited, and thereforenothing gets beyond dispute.Theoreticians of the arts, Olsonstated, are “men studying, notmen studying something”. No sub¬stance is left behind by the deadcritic; no critic leaves a methodol¬ogy which other critics can use asa tool. Consequently, other critics canonly try new approaches, he said.This proliferation leads to a “verti¬cal” development of artistic theo¬ries, each critic working out histhoughts as far as he is able, andstopping there. No one continues asingle line of thought.To Olson, this seems a curiousparadox. “The things of art aremade by man and for man, andare experienced as wholes,” he de¬clared.SCIENCE is concerned withwhat the eye cannot see, Olsonsaid, and with what is mysterious,not made by man. We do not ap¬prehend nature as a whole, but inparts. It would seem, he noted,that artistic production would beeasier to investigate.Scientific theories are knowl¬edge, Olson continued, while, be¬cause of their connection with par¬ticularities, artistic theories areoften thought mere “witnesses ofchange in opinion and taste.”Olson sees artistic theory Maroon: What do you thinkabout the draft?Douglas: The draft is necessary.However, we have provisions forconscientious objectors, and theydo not even have to take the mili¬tary oath.. Maroon: What about student de¬ferments?Douglas: I am not for deferringstudents as such. Deferment until22 is all right, but not to 26.Maroon: What are your views onfederal aid to public schools andany federal control going with it?Douglas: We (Congress) are giv- ments, and will send the bill to theslumlords.. Maroon: Is this in the worksnow?Douglas: Yes, it is.Maroon: What is your position inthe primary contest between Con¬gressman O’Hara and Representa¬tive Mikva?Douglas: Both are good men.There will be heartbreak whoeverwins. Mikva has been a splendidmember of the state legislature.O’Hara has been one of the verybest members of Congress. He hasthe best attendance record in Con¬gress. He does his share as aing federal money to schools, and member of the House Foreign Af-we should decide on the relative fairs Committee. I remember himdegree of financial need on a per as lieutenant governor of Illinois,as(Continued on page six) pupil basis and give the aid to themost disadvantaged. But how can Iknow about a school in Kenwood oran expanded school on Stony Is¬land? I don’t. But the school boardand the people in the localityshould.Maroon: What do you think ofDr. Martin Luther King’s activitiesin Chicago?. Douglas: Dr. King is a sincereman. We welcome him. We are allopposed to slums. The key (toslum improvement) is housingcodes and relief rents. The citypays the landlord of the people onrelief. We are going to shut thisoff. The city will move the tenantsto as decent housing as can befound, will rehabilitate the apart- and his excellent work on the whit®slave trade and the minimumwage. I caution young people torecognize O’Hara’s strong points.UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorUniversity of ChicagoOratorio Festival SeriesROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and WoodlawnFebruary 20, 3:30 pmBEETHOVEN'SMissaSwlikimiisRockefellerChapel 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 Candies5210 Harper CourtWoodworth's Bookstore1311 E. 57thChapel House5810 WoodlawnWHERETHE U. of C.MEETS TO EATGORDON'SRiSTAURANT1321 E. 57th7:30 A.M.-l AM.WAY OUT OPERATION No, it’s not anedical operation. This is a scene in the "clean room” oftur Solar Division. Here is dramatic evidence of how far)ur work carries us in the fascinating world of POWER,rechnicians are preparing a guided missile ducting sys-em for shipment. Standards of cleanliness are super-jurgical because even a microscopic particle of dirt could3low a hole in the system when in use. Aerospace is per-laps the least known side of International Harvester; our'way out” operation. It is only one part of our broad diversi-ication in mechanical power. We make the world’s mostcomplete lines of farm equipment and motor trucks. Ourinstruction equipment and steelmaking sides are grow¬ ing, too. We are turning out over 1,000 different productsfrom gas turbines to garden tractors, to the tune of2-billion-dollars-a-year in sales. And we need more peopleto continue at this pace. We need talented and imaginativegraduates in liberal arts, accounting, chemistry, mathe¬matics and business administration, as well as engineering.You will find here the security of a company that servesbasic industry. You will thrive on the action and opportunitythat a diverse, dynamic and growing company alone canprovide.Interested? Contact your Placement Officer now for a date to see an IHrepresentative when he visits your campus. Or if interviews are not sched¬uled, write directly to the Supervisor of College Relations, InternationalHarvester Company, 401 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60611.International Harvester puts the future in your handsAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYERFvhrawy 18, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • $Foreign AffairsContaining China is US rationale in Vietnamby Gary Porter nomic cooperation. In such a sys- tus in that part of the world,tem it would be expected that REFUSING TO recognize theLast year I asked several State Department officials whose responsibilities involve south- Cambodia would be more interest- geographical fact that China is aneast Asian affairs about the “containment” of Communist China. The answers I got are of ed than she is now in regional eo- Asian nation and that we are not,BOme value, I think, in understanding their thinking on the US role m that area. AID mission, and diplomatic rela- as a permanent Asian power NatI HAVE CALLED the idea of containing China a symbol and an article of faith. What tions with the US. “in short,” as uraliy, we think we can achieve aI mean is that our deep and dan- — °ne official put it, “we would be in new political order which will en-gerous involvement in Vietnam de- with these states as through our trals of Asia are in reality pro- sam® P°sihoQ Mas Communist dure more or less permanently. Wemands a larger rationale and it isthe primary function of this idea tofurnish it. American officials haveconvinced themselves that thepower of China is what is ultimate- policy toward China.THE QUESTION on which theidea turns, then, is how our effortsin Vietnam affect the states inquestion. With regard to Thailand,the connection is clear enough; thely involved in Vietnam, and this Thais are so deeply involved in the require such a belief to do his ownwar in serving as an air-base forus that a shift away from her pres¬ent alliance with the US is incon¬ceivable.conception reminds them that whatwe are doing is necessary as partof the long-term struggle with Chi¬na. It does not involve any im¬mediate policy apart from the suc¬cessful prosecution of the war inVietnam, but it does involve a kind Chinese economic aid, but not roundly thankful for the network of ch™ “ Cambodia do so, however, on y by overlook.American military alliances there, ,,,Thf h»Pe »f ma*‘nf thf us a P0' inf tha real bases »< Chinese politi-regardless of how they may public- ‘tical P®»“' a<)ualf ‘ n°‘ s"Per‘°.r- aa'P°wer.lv dpnrerate it An inouirv to the to Chma on the mainland of Asia is This is not a sensible objective ofBurma desk officer who is too low no doubt honorably conceived, but foreign policy in southeast Asia,in the Departments hierarchy to clearly much more is involved simply because we did not choosethan guaranteeing these nations it on its own merits, but rather outindependence from China. It is of a need for some grander pur¬nothing less than an unwillingness pose for the disproportionatelyto tolerate an inferior political sta- costly venture in Vietnam.job, made it clear that it is farfrom the truth. He told me, inbrief, that while there are someBurmese officials, mostly militaryof grand design for the area—a de¬sign which military victory is tomake possible.It is not Chinese military aggres¬sion that concerns us, but Chinesepolitical powder. This power or in¬fluence is gauged in terms of thediplomatic position of the govern¬ment of Southeast Asia toward Chi¬na and the US. Any increase inChinese influence is seen as rough¬ly equivalent to a loss in Americaninfluence, so that containment op- tbeerates as much through our ties But in Burma and Cambodia, officers, who see a Burmese stakethe US has undeniably lost in- in the Vietnamese war, they arefluence to China. Burma accepts not the Burmese who favor herpresent neutralist policy; further¬more, the most pervasive fearamong virtually all of the Burmeseelite is that the country will bedragged into a war similar to theone in Vietnam.The official belief in question is,in short, just one form of the delu¬sion that what we are doing isfundamentally in everyone’s in- :""V. .CareersAmerican aid; Cambodia has sev¬ered all relations with the US whileretaining close ties with China.Neither government has given theslightest support for the US posi¬tion in the Vietnamese conflict.The officials with whom I talkedcould not accept this situation asthe reality. They cling tenaciouslyto the belief that behind their offi¬cial position the Burmese andCambodians are both grateful forfirm American stand and it * - rm / k ' 'v . „ ;■!Recruiting representatives of the fol- candidates in mathematics or statistics-lowing organizations will visit the office an degree levels in chemistry (all sue’-of career counseling and placement dur- .. , . , , . . Hing the week of February 21. Interview cializations), all degree levels in physic*appointments for 1965-66 graduates (atomic, solid state, plasma).may be arranged through L. S. Calvin,room 200, Reynolds Club, extension 3284.February 22Texas Instruments, Inc., Dallas, Tex¬as—SM and PhD chemists (except or¬ganic), PhD solid state physicists forterest, and that all men of good |£Ens in research laboratories. WinWill understand it, though they may interview students at all degree levelsnot say so.THE POLITICAL shift in Cam-gravely concerned lest she not ful- bodia and Bl|rma (rom closefill her commitment to South Viet-Cobeauty salonS ExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting1950 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 nam. Thus one official said thatthere is “some evidence that therole the US presence in southeastAsia plays is understood by bothBurmese and Cambodian leaders.”THIS NOTION has its origins inthe much older one that the neu-Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 cooperation with the US can thusbe treated as only a temporaryphenomenon connected with thewidespread belief that the USwould have to eventually withdrawfrom Vietnam. If America couldemerge with a decisive victory,therefore, either ratified by anagreement with the Communist na¬tions or enforced by an indefiniteUS policing operation, all this willchange.We would then be able to drawthese neutrals, as well as our al¬lies, into an open; i.e.. Western-ori¬ented, system of political and eco- in above disciplines and in mathematicsfor assignments to other divisions.Young Women’s Christian Association,Chicago, Ill. and nationwide—positionsas program directors and recreationaldirectors for women receiving degreesin any discipline.February 23United Aircraft Research Laborato¬ries, East Hartford, Conn.—SB and SM Standard Oil Company of Ohio, Cleve-land, Ohio—chemists at all degree lev¬els (analytical, organic, physical).Allstate Insurance Company, Skokie,Ill.—business training program for men’receiving degrees in any discipline.February 24John Hancock Mutual Life InsuranceCompany, Boston. Mass.—students re¬ceiving degrees in any discipline fortraining programs in management nrmarketing. Mathematics and statisticsfor actuarial training program.National Aeronautics and Space Ad¬ministration (Goddard Space FlightCenter), Greenbelt, Md —SB and PhDcandidates in physics.James Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS - LINENS - TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. CardHONDAjust around the corner world’s biggest seller!Immediate delivery or lay-away plan for ALL MODELSLOW COST INSURANCE, LOW COST FINANCINGComplete Sales, Parts, and ServiceHELP WANTEDFull and Part TimeOn Campus & In StoreSales and ServiceRepresentatives Bob Nelson Motors6052 & 6136 S. Cottage Grove.i •* <* ?' •/ ! : iMl 3-4500 (just around the corner) DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESJESSELSOTSSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 TEAMWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, 30 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdSERMONSYMPO!ON VIETSunday, Feb. 2UNIVERSITY ClDISCIPLES Of ANDSIUMNAM0, at 10:30IIC1IUII OFCHRIST5655 S. UNIVERSITYClark M. WilliamsonMinister SWING INTO SPRINGIn the brightest, boldest hues in wearable, washable shifts.Some with bows, some with belts, some with pockets. All soreasonably priced you may want several. Raspberry, orange,apple green, red, aqua.Sizes 8 to 18 $9.75 to $12.95WOMENS' DEPT.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueAMERICAN 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 - $34 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 18, 1966SClassified Adsf ■PersonalsIDA NOYES COFFEE HOUR: DAILY2-5, also coffee through the evening.Gerp Trog? Hrgdul! Thompson Sun. 8"^WRITER’S WORKSHOP (PL 2-8377)Xs part of “National Turn Your Girl¬friend On Week,” get her feet off theground with an American Airlines \2fare Youth Club card—the poor man'saphrodisiac. It's safer than OperationMatch and at the same price. Call nowfor post-Valentine’s Day price massa¬cre. Campus rep Ed Taylor, DO 3-2293.(Robin flies l/2 fare on American, socan you.)KAMELOT Restaurant. 2160 E. 71st St,X0re discount for UC students.Bring Ray-gun: This Island EarthAttention Spy novel fans—Don Hamil¬ton, author of the famed Matt Helm se¬ries, will be at an autographing party atthe bookstore, Volume One (In Piper'sAlley), 1608 UN Wells, Sat, 9-10:30 pm.pm.BRUNCH at Hillel this Sun. Informaldiscussion, Bagels & Coffee. Affiliates25c non-affiliates 50c, 11:30 am.DuBois Presents M. Myerson, “An Eye¬witness in Vietnam,” at Breasted Hall,Feb. 22One-day ski trip to Alpine Valley, Wise.,Wed. Feb. 23, Call PL 2-9718.For a Special STUDENT DISCOUNT onall diamond WEDDING & ENGAGE¬MENT RINGS call E. Glasgow, nights,641-4512.THE PHOENIX needs literature! Poet¬ry, short-stories, one act plays, criticalessays. Please help. Send to PhoenixMagazine. 1212 E. 59th Ida Noyes Hall.Ski—wuffle on Wed. Call PL 2-9718Is there a major dichotomy in the waypeople think? Do you possess a mindwhich accepts all logical rational argu¬ments regardless of emotional implica¬tions and which holds nothing as ulti¬mately holy including your own feel-ings? Call MU 4-3053.Don’t forget to return your housingquestionnaires to the Student Govern¬ment office as soon as possible.Tickets for all events at Orchestra Hallcan be obtained at the Student Govern-ment Office.GRADUATING?Be sure your picture graces the pagesof CAP & GOWN. Sitting is free. Rey¬nolds Club Feb. 14-23. It you receivedan appointment card come at that timeor reschedule. If no appointment, dropby anyway.DEPOSITS ON ALL STUDENT GOV-E R N M E N T SPRING INTERIMFLIGHTS MUST BE MADE TODAY INTHE SG OFFICE.Mushroom Man Wants a Kitty Cat! Jobs offered .. • , Letters to the editor'*>r tSTUDENTS: Part time Jobs avail, fortypists, technicians, interviewers, order¬ly. Apply in person. Personnel Office,956 E. 58th St.LAWYER’S AID S400Dynamic young attorney will teach youto keep court calendar, contact witness¬es, even help with briefs In elegant ofc.suite: 9-5. $400. Prefer a little s.h. Con¬tact Miss Heydegger at STAR, Inc., 116S. Mich. R. 1302, ST 2-9772.PHYSICS MAJORS: NEED MONEY?Rescue Helpless FEMALE! Tutor Phy¬sics 112 Contact Diana x2421, NewDorms.An established quality travel organiza¬tion is looking for a campus rep to sellstudent tours to Europe for Summer ’66.Call evenings or Sun. 334-4663.Rms. & apts. for rentTO SUBLET: 6la rms. with 2 baths, 3rdfloor, 5600 S. Blackstone MI 3-4411 (bf.4 pm) or 643-4182 (after 5).TO SHARE—unusually attract, town-house with 3 Female grad, students.Own large rm. On campus. 643-5251.5 ROOMS, partly furnished, groundfloor, prefer two or three men studentsor two or three working men. MU 4-8222.For saleSTURDY Oak Dining set, table with 5leaves, 6 chairs and buffet; sleepingcouch; 2 end tables; matching cocktailtable, 2 lamps; telephone table; 2 easychairs; floor lamp; rug 9’xl2’ (wool);bathrm. hamper; drapes. MI 3-6470.GARRARD Autoslim, $24 521-0460SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS: WHOLE¬SALE WAREHOUSE SALE! Call forappt. to sale at 1725 S. Michigan Ave.939-4993. All sales cash.16 mm Bell & Howell movie camera,wide-angle, normal, & telephoto lens.Call Ted after 5 pm 673-3638.1964 CORVAIR Spyder convertible; yel¬low w/black top. Exc. cond.; 4 newtires; radio; 4 speed. Call 363-7391.FISHER 440 receiver, 2 wks. old., $250.521-0460. (Continued from page two)profitable for him to spend anevening at the library, or in churchif he is so inclined, rather than atthe theater.Mr. Salins asks a host of impres¬sive questions illustrating (caus¬ing??) his admitted confusionabout the play. Was Amedee’s in¬sistence that he is not the Amedeefor whom the letter is intended a“clear example” of X? or of Y? orof Z? When he was floating in theair, what did that mean? “Is theprotesting Amedee really in controlof his freedom?” Oh, if only Iones¬co could have spelled out the an¬swers to these questions moreclearly, then surely we would haveseen a play worthy of our atten¬tion!!But perhaps it would be more tothe point if we could help Mr. Sal-ins to stop spelling out hisdamned questions. Is the protest¬ing Barry Salins really in controlof his freedom? Why must histheater either provide him with ex¬plicit answers to his deep ques¬tions, or else be “a staging of art¬less nothingless”? Why must some¬thing be either this or else that?Why must he wonder whether alengthening foot is indeed a phallicsymbol? Why is he unable just tolook and enjoy? Why can’t he befree to watch a play, somethingadmittedly unreal, without makinghimself unreal? It is fun, Mr. Sal¬ins, to be free.Note to friends of Wuffle, esp. J.F.H.:don’t forget the party tomorrow night.I want, I want, I want! M.L.Like Yossarian, Wuffle Lives.Student Religious Liberals sponsor:“The Current Issues in Health Service,”Odin W. Anderson, Research DirectorCenter for Health Administration Stud¬ies, U of C, Feb. 20th, Unitarian ChurchParlor, 1174 E. 57th, Sun. 7:30 pm.Witnesses neededWill some of the approximately twentyU of C students who witnessed the colli¬sion of a Ford Station Wagon andDodge Sedan at the corner of 56th St.and University on Feb. 2nd pleasephone 363-4230 if willing to make state¬ment regarding accident: Time of colli¬sion approximately 3:00 pm. SOUTH SHORE VALLEYTROPICAL HUTWILL BE THEREKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK*a strong bank”NEW CAR LOANSas low as$ 375~ hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200iber P.D4.C. 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, C]pb andFilet Mfgnon Steaks/ "SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.After dinner don’t miss the newplays at the Last Stage. Join usfor cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.URALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST& HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 *.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 8-7585Seduction Smoothly AccomplishedNo playboy worth his salt would attempt suchan enterprise without music. Soft. . . Suggestive. . . Plaintive Music! But how to manage on astudents' budget? See us. Everything can bearranged. From a $5000 system for cash to a $39FM radio on time.Don't take chances. See us first.TOAD HALL SellsRentsLeasesAnything Sold in Toad Hall May Also Be Leased or Rented1444 E. 57th St. BU 84500Near the Medici and Green Door John Lion’s interpretation of Am¬edee was indeed fun; it was a won¬derfully fresh breath of air, and itis unfortunate that Mr. Salins’ in¬ner web of profundities preventedhim from breathing it in.But maybe his review served apurpose after all; in a sense it wasalmost more than Ionesco couldhave asked for, and ought perhapsto be appended to the play as akind of epilogue. As far as I canrecall the word “absurd” did notoccur at all in the performance;clearly Mr. Salins brought it inwith him. For those of us who thor¬ oughly enjoyed the performance,Mr. Salins’ merciless cerebral tor¬turing of a rather uncomplicatedexperience exemplified dramatical¬ly the full meaning of the word—and in that sense, perhaps, exem¬plified the meaning (if we musttalk that way) of the play.KENNETH W. SIMONMl 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospitol NEW PHOENIXPAPERBACKSFrazier: The Negro Familyin the United States $2.45Janowitz: Helping Hands $1.75Schaller: The Yearof the Gorilla $1.95Stigler: Essays in theHistory of Economics $2.95THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. Ellis AvenueWhat's new?Doobie Doo. A hardback novel by Ivan C. Karp that isnot only unrequired, but, according to some early read¬ers and reviewers, un-American.Doobie Doo is the history of a pioneer of pleasure whohas his cake and eats it without dire results. Except tothe cake*rlt is &n investigation into the dazed plight ofsophisticated, nusbandless city girls which raises thequestion: How much love should wisely be given to thedesperately needy?Until it was published last month, we had dozens oflines like this to use describing Doobie Doo. Now thereviewers have taken it away from us. (See below.)Nearly all of us have had a marvelous time reading it.This isDOOBIE DOOThis is ivhatsome earlyDOOBIE DOOfans sayC KAPP“Doobie Doo is a novel with convoluted plot — complete with sub-plotthat in the end gets properly hooked up with the main plot — [which] isa parody of novels with convoluted plots and a spoof of the spoof genreand is awfully funny . . . The chief performers in the circus that goeslickety-cut are Maynard Ricefield, a musicologist who works, on theperiphery of his vocation, in a company that manufactures clavichords,harpsichords and harpsichord kits, and the two beautiful girls betweenwhom he divides his evenings fair and square . . . ‘Whoever said that lifewas real was living in a dream world,’ observes Clarissa (one of theheroines, the ‘wordly’ one). The book is full of such profoundities as thiswhich, while they bring the reader to the brink of lunacy, do not bogdown the narrative.” —jean Stafford“A wildly funny avant-garde novel with a message. The message is:*If everybody refused to sing commercials, there would be no singingcommercials'.” — Charles poore, N. Y. Times“An outrageously funny novel ... a little Rock and Roll running amokmight be just what the American novel needs at this stage. Hang onHenry James, Henry James, hang on.”—DONALD D. JONES, Kansas City Star“A doozey . . . Karp has real talent. He is funny, hip, cynical, brazen —and he can write.” —JOHN BARKHAM, Saturday Review Syndicate“Roy Lichtenstein has helped . .. with n Pop book jacket that billboardsa red-dotted girlface and a great, cliff-hanging tear, poised on the lowercilia. But what Karp does with this hokum is to reach right inside thetear. Funny tear. It is not empty, but full of salt, humor, damp warmth,and, I think most important, refractions that bring out all the sparkle andplenty that so many shnooks claim is missing from Today’s Living. Funny,funny, saving tear.” —brock bower, book WeekDOOBIE DOO is published by Doubleday & Company,Inc., Garden City, New York, which usually devotesthis column to Anchor Books, but couldn't resist thetemptation to slip one special hardcover book in,DOOBIE DOO sells for $1.50, and like Anchor Books,is available at one of the best equipped booksellers inthe country — your own college store.February 18, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROONMusic reviewArt theories of past valid1 (Continued from page three)knowledge also. Many people havethought that by applying the more*xact principles of some scientificdiscipline to the study of artistictheory, more exact results wouldbe obtained. This recognizes thefact, he said, that artistic theory isgjot independent, but rather de¬pendent on concepts borrowedfrom other areas of thought.» But the notion that one may ob¬tain more exact results by usingmore exact principles from otherdisciplines, Olson pointed out, im¬plies that the older theories are ob¬solete, or contradictory, or thatthere is only one true method.THE VARIOUS theories of artdo contradict each other if onekeeps only to the level of terminol¬ogy, Olson noted. But “the functionOf words in their context as well astheir dictionary meanings, must bedetermined before contradiction isassumed.”I Often, after this examination, ap¬parent disagreements and contra¬dictions disappear, he said. The rea-gon for this confusion of terminolo¬gy is the fact the significations of word3 are finite, while the ideasexpressed by them are infinite.Olson declared that definitionsare restrictive; their meaningscontract the limits of the universeof discourse. Since solutions arerelated to the discourse, there is aplurality of solutions related to theplurality of discourses.The problem of determining howmany artistic theories there can beis thus reduced to the problem ofdetermining the number of possiblesystems of discourse, that is, phi¬losophy, Olson declared.OLSON concluded by sayingthat the artistic theories of thepast are still valid. If an effort ismade to understand the terminolo¬gy of these older philosophies,knowledge of the past lays a solidfoundation for future artistic theo¬ries in much the same way thatthe past of science is relevant toits future, he said. Musical chairs hampers CCPIn order to survive at UC without deciding to burn thewhole place down, you have to be able to differentiate be¬tween content and administration. Thus, while few musiclovers could be indifferent to the Contemporary ChamberPlayers (CCP), it is natural for aSAMUEL A. BELLUNCI TfMgvtl S. Banbo—iMist Ti- The scientific knowledge of artrequires a knowledge of the past,and and an ability to tell the truefrom the false, he said. The intro¬duction of science into art will leadto the logical formulation of prob¬lems and then possible solutions.“When art is brought into thecondition of science, we may nothave more great works of art, butwe will have more knowledge ofman.”PIERRE ANDREf(M« flatteringPamiati chicten drilledboir stylists of9942 My* Park Blvd.MM E. Met M.DO I-0T2710% ftadent Discount Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete Selection ofboots, overshoes, insulated skiwear, hooded coats, longunderwear, sweatshirts,corduroy "Levis”, etc. etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PI 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Studont discount with ad UC-er to respond with ambiv- faltness.Jbut little apparent individ-alence. For, as Tuesday’s concert uallty. It did boast one impres-proved, the CCP has, like every- slvely oppressive climax in thething else around here, a charac- second eOiig, but its effect was mit-teristic inconsistency. igated by an ending reminiscentON THE content side, there of Honegger’s train music—hardlywere the two CCP trademarks: im- appropriate for a work about thepeccable performance and taste. Titanic.Except for the Village Scenes by BUT although (or perhaps beBartok—in which soprano Neva cause) the CCP provides the mostPilgrim and pianist Easley Black- consistently stimulating concertswood took a careful approach too around, setting performance stand-deliberate for the exhuberant folk ards to which the Symphonycharacter of the music—perform- might fruitfully pay attention, theirances were superlative. Who else administrative blunders cannot gocould give such a lucid reading of unnoticed. Tuesday’s program in-Webern’s Four Songs, Op. 13? Here eluded about 70 minutes of music;nothing is extraneous, and every another 30 or 35 (exclusive of in¬breath of tone must be just right; termission) were exhorbitantly de-as in Mozart, the slightest slip can voted to rearranging chairs on thedoom the whole performance. It stage, a superfluous venture car-requires a great deal of rehearsal, ried out a la Chaplin. Chairs wereand the results proved that the forgotten, and at one point theyCCP has not squandered its were set up for the wrong piece,wealth. necessitating starting over again.On the taste side, every work More serious, the music waswas a miniature masterpiece, from deprived of the performing condi-the well-selected sample of Ives tions it deserved. Given 28 songssongs to Dallapiccola’s unusitllly (lasting an average of two and asensual cycle in praise of Eros, half minutes each) and inadequateThe one exception was Shifrih’s synopses (rather than full dual lan-somewhat lengthy Satires of Cir- guage translations), no normal au-cumstance, a work of much bten- dience can give this concentrated' music the proper attention. If theShifrin had been replaced by De¬bussy or Schubert, Rochberg’s Blake Songs would have encoun-tered a less tired and more recep.tive audience.With soloists like Neva Pilgrimand a conductor like Shapey doingotherwise unperformed music, theCCP, if it merely wanted to be Chi-cago’s finest, would need go nofurther. But why be content withChicago standards? Why not liveup to its full potential? Why notdump the distracting musicalchairs and the unrealistic pro¬gramming? As it is, the large-scaledefection at the half-way marksays something not only about theaudience, but also about the CCP.You can’t convert anyone if theywalk out on vou.EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty DiscountROBERTS BOOKSSTATIONERYGREETING (ARDSTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student Discount FEW HOWEVER, walked out onlast week’s Symphony concert; butthen again, not that many came.After a searingly dramatic Trau¬matic Overture (the gutsiest ofMartinon’s unorthodox, but ofteneffective, Brahms readings), bari-tone Hermann Prey sang Mahler’sKindertotenlieder and Henze’s FiveNeapolitan Songs. In the former,his appropriately dark-hued voicewas too small, being buried inMartinon’s compassionate accom¬paniment. But he rang out withgusto in the Henze, an oddly dis¬turbing work in which a fairly sim¬ply lyrical vocal part is superim¬posed on a complex chamberor-chestra background. It is built onthe tensions between the carefreeand tragic aspects of love, with thelatter eventually choking the pieceto a depressing conclusion.AS AMATTEROFare sewnby hand*to ilex onyourfoot ... when there has been an additionto the family, it's high time to think ofan addition to your Sun Life insuranceportfolio.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 - FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYThe penny loafer'sback to campus witha foam cushionedinsole making Trujunsfeel as good as they look.And look at all the waysthey're up and coming:black cherry, black forest orgolden harvest Scotch grain leather.Black cherry, palamino or blacksmooth. All leather lined.Roberts Trujuns $13.00 to $18.00.‘Handsewn front*Wouldn't you like to be In our shoes? Molt of America Is. International Shoe Co.. St. Louis, Mo.Available at these fine stores:BAST SIDE BOOTERY10550 S. Ewing Ave.Chicago, III. KREMIN'S BOOTERY809 West 79th St.Chicago, III. AL'S SHOE BOX147 East Walnut St.Oglesby, III. GOLD CITY INNrr'A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Cat More For Less)Try Our Convenient Take-Out OrdersThe concert ended with a picnicby the principal winds, whoromped through Frank Martin’sConcerto for Seven Winds, Tim¬pani, Percussion and Strings withenthusiastic virtuosity. It was a fit¬ting conclusion, for Martinon wasat his best, and that’s always sortof a holiday: that is, inimitable butinfrequently.Peter Rabinowitz4 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 18, 1966.;.,A,%.X«*X,*X~X~X~X"X‘,X~X*X*yI'MARP^Nf GUIDE |l for better living |PIZZA PLATTER1508 Hyde Park Blvd.KE 6-6606 KE 6-3891Delivery .25TA8LE SERVICEPIZZA AND II ALIAM FOODSANDWICHESi/a FRIED CHICKENFRENCH FRIES COLE SLAWROLL « BUTTER$1.50CINEMAChicago Av«. at MichiganNew Yorker"One of the years best films"Rita TushinghamNew York Hearld Trib “Absorbing storyof to ng people P.'ises with the tempoof youth" — a story of restless youth in. triangle.•THE LEATHER BOYS**In a film by Sidney Furie director of''The tperess File"ATTENTION CHICAGO STUDENTSBring in this ad fora special $1.00 RateGocd every day but Saturday for thispicture only. Weekdays open t pm. Satur¬day & Sunday open 1:30. AUDIENCESTRIKESBACKEight MillimeterFilm-makers NightThe Hyde ParkArt Center5236 BLACKSTONESATURDAY NIGHTAT EIGHTBring Your Fitm,Poems, Stag Features,and Family Classics$1.00 or One Fi!mSunday, February 20, 1966UNIVERSAL DAYOF PRAYERfor Students• Ecumenical Service at Rockefeller Chapelat 11:00 am• "Ecumenism After Vatican II" —Monsignor John Quinntalk and discussion at 7:00 pm r -G orious WeekendYou won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Avg.646-4411 RANDELLBEAUTY AMD COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Opea Evenings — VtVfio Tregonio, ManageressJimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELE £JFifty-Fifth and Woodtown Are. .T1THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:Old Fashioned Sauerkraut& Frankfurters 49cEvery Tuesday Night You can have a steaktoo, or the biggeststeakburger in town.Harry Fisher at the piano. Dancing. Free popcorn.Michelob 35c a glass — Large stein of Budweiser 35cSmedleys Last Two Days!SPECIAL SALEj ON HARPER WINTEROPEN FOR LUNCH12 NOON JACKETSFEATURINGTHE MAROONSTEAKBURGER & BEER 50% OFFBROKEN SIZES & STYLESil 1 CMliDUIlvEilA Ut DhSIt$|00 tifatMt a«& Gamp#*In the Wow Bgde Park Shopping Center1502-06 L 55th St. Phone 752-8100February 18, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7UC host to college pressThe Maroon will play host today and tomorrow to a mid¬west regional conference of over 150 staff members of collegenewspapers from seven states.Milburn P. Akers, retired editor of the Chicago Sun-Times,and Jimmy Breslin, well-known col-umnist for the New York Herald writing, photography, and advertisTribune, will be the featured inS-. . A SPECIAL panel discussionspeakers for the weekend. Saturday will present Nick VonThe conference is sponsored by Hoffman of the Daily News andthe US Student Press Association Loy Miller, Chicago bureau chief(USSPA), a national organization for Time magazine, discussing ob-with over 250 member papers, 75 jectivity in news writing. Anotherof them in the midwest. special panel will pit Rogei Ebertformer editor of the University ofAKERS WILL speak tonight at 8 jnjnojs Daily I Mini, against Richardpm in the Hopkins room at the law Qray( assistant professor of jour-school, 1121 E. 60th street. His top- naiism at Northwestern, on theic will be "A responsible campus topic: “Resolved: student paperspress.’ Breslin’s informal talk will si-j0nid not have as much freedombe the feature of a luncheon at as they’ve been yelling for.”12:30 pm tomorrow in the Center Mar00n staff membersfor Cont,imingEducanon, 1307 stul reserve space „ the6°th. Cost of the luncheon is being Bres|in ,uncheon A limited num.paid by the PepsiCola company. b , tickcts , Saturday ni h,.s1' ,?ccdS,°. sllbs(,d,Md a. lu"ch™" performance of The Misanthropefor USSPA s eastern regional, held !' . , K . v...... vN..sp • • sa;.^ a . .... v ..... ... . . ....Calendar of EventsW&si mmFriday, February 18in New York in December. has also been reserved for staffmembers of registered schools.Besides the Breslin luncheon, to- Maroon members should contactmorrow’s program features morn- David L. Aiken, conference co-or-ing and afternoon workshops on dinator, for information, at 288such topics as newswriting, feature 7961.TWA has studenttravel Programsfor all Europe andthe Middle East.What more do you want—wide-screen color movies*and 8 channels of good listening?We have all those, too. On our StarStream Theaterflights to London, Paris, Rome, Frankfurt, Shannon,Milan, Zurich, Geneva, Lisbon, Madrid, Athens, TelAviv.See the sights and meet the people—or study history,language, politics, economics, art, music, drama.TWA has the tour for you, including special cycle-and-hostel tours. You’ll travel with people your ownage—and, of course, all trips are co-ed!And remember TWA for week-end trips home.TWA jets serve major cities throughout the U. S. Sendus the coupon and we’ll send you the information.Then, call your travel agent or TWA.We’re your kind of airline.TWA,Tour Dept. 609,605 Third Ave.,N.Y.,N.Y. 10016Please send complete information on student tours toEurope. LIVING NEWSPAPER: “Report on theChina Conference,” James Osborn, ad¬ministrative assistant for the China con¬ference and graduate student in geogra¬phy: and “India’a Attitude to China,”Len Gordon, specialist in Indian civili¬zation. Ida Noyes Hall.LECTURE: "Civilization, Traditionand Law,” Malcom Sharp, professor oflaw. University of New Mexico, present¬ed by the Social Sciences 1 staff, Man-del Hall, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: “Modern Ethical Theoryand the Status of Religious Theory andEthics,” Dr. Allan Gerwirth, Swift Com¬mons, 7:30 pm.DISCUSSION: “W'orship and/or Sacra¬ments?”, Lou Clavelli s apartment, 5527Everett, telephone 752-8975, 8 pm.LECTURE: “Problems in the Dating ofthe Book of Deuteronomy,” ProfessorShemuel Yeivin, department of ancientMiddle Eastern studies. University ofTel Aviv, and visiting professor OrientalInstitute. Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn,8:30 pm.HOOTENANNY: Woodward Commons,starting around 10 pm.Saturday, February 19W'ORKCAMP: Volunteers are neededfor a painting, decorating, and tutoringproject at Casa Centrale. a Spanishspeaking church and medical clinic,sponsored by the Friends of the Interna¬tional Voluntary Service, for further in¬formation call Art Glenn, 644-0800.COFFEE HOUR: Discussion of careeropportunities in social work and thetwo-year master's degree program withfaculty, students, and practicing socialworkers, the school of social service ad¬ministration, 969 E. 60 st., 10 am-12 pm. FILM: “Suddenly Last Summer,” Eli¬zabeth Taylor, admission 50c, SAMAmembers 25c, Billings Hospital P117,7:30 pm.HOOTENANNY: Father McCreve, hisguitar and Irish tenor, admission 15c,refreshments for small fee, BrentHouse, 5540 Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.WASH PROM: Crowning of Miss Uni¬versity of Chicago, midnight buffet, IdaNoyes hall, 9:30-1:30 pm.Sunday, February 20RELIGIOUS SERVICE: “The AmazingGospel of Joy,” E. Spencer Parsons,dean of the Chapel, speaker, service forthe Universal Day of Prayer for Stu¬dents, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 11am.DISCUSSION: "The Negro Family,” atwo-part discussion by Dr. VirginiaLewis, assistant superintendent of Chi¬cago Public Schools on "Education andUpward Mobility,” and Dr. JeanneSpurlock, chief of the child psychiatricdepartment, Michael Reese Hospital, on“The Dynamics of Family Life,” spon¬sored by the Alpha Gamma Pi sorority,the school of social service administra¬tion, 3-5 pm.CONCERT: Beethoven’s Missa Solent-nis, the Rockefeller Chapel Choir, mem¬bers of the Chicago Symphony Orches¬tra, Richard Vikstrom, conducting.Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 3:30 pm.ECUMENICAL STUDENT DINNER:"Ecumenism After Vatican II,” Monsig¬nor John Quinn, reservations at Brent,Calvert, or Chapel Houses, 85c, SwiftCommons, 6 pm.LECTURE: “The Current Issues inHealth Service,” Odin W. Anderson, re¬search director UC center for health ad¬ministration studies, sponsored by the Student Religious Liberals, UnitarianChurch Parlor, 1174 E. 57, 7:30 pm.MOVIE: "This Island Earth,” admis¬sion 50c, Pierce Tower, seventh floor rpm.RECITAL: A harpsichord recital In-Laurence Liben, Ida Noyes library 8pm.Monday, February 21LECTURE: “The Sonnet as a LiteraryProblem.” visiting professor SvetozarPetrovic of Zagreb University, Yugos¬lavia, presented by the department ofSlavic languages and literatures. FosterLounge, 4:30 pm.FILMS: “Sword and the Flute.” “Rai.put Glory,” “Forgotten Empire,” and"A Page from History,” presented bvthe Indian civilization course, studentidentification cards are needed for ad¬mittance to the building, Roswnwald 27:30 pm.LECTURE: "The Atomic Nucleus,”Hans A. Bethe, professor of physics,Cornell University laboratory of nuclearstudies, in the Monday lecture series,law school auditorium, 8 pm.MEETING: UC SCLC-S'COPE chapter,discussion of plans for this summer'scivil rights project, Ida Noyes Hall, eastlounge, 8 pm.MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPING■XPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 L 55Hi HY 3-9259Name_Address.City.State. .Zip Code.My travel agent is:.Nationwide... Worldwide... depend on What is the roleof young people ina world in crisis?READNEW WORLDREVIEWon questions of civil rights, peacein Vietnam, life in socialist lands,U.S. foreign policy, cultural andstudent exchanges•FREE WITH $1.004-MONTH TRIAL SUB:NWR'i handsomely printed book¬let with translations from thepoem sequenceThe BratskHydroelectric StationYEVGENY YEVTUSHENKO•New World ReviewSuite 308, 156 Fifth Ave„ N.Y, 10I enclose $1 for 4-month trialsub. Send me free copy as notedabove.Please print clearlyNAMEADDRESSCITY, STATE - BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentreComplete Re poireAnd ServiceFor AN PopularMidway 3-45016052 So. Cottage Grove MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBlood Typing t Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICEComplete lab EKG l BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon thru Sat 9 AM 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3-2000BATTEREDBOOK SALEContinues through Wed., Feb. 23Many titles at 50% and morereduction in price.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE•At nominal charge. Movies by Inflight Motion Pictures, Inc. TWO BY SHAWOverruled and Back To Methusalah (Act One)TONIGHT AT 8:30Tickets $1.50 Students $1.00FEBRUARY 24-25-26-27 (Evening)SUNDAY MATINEE FEB. 27 at 3 o'clockREYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE57th and UNIVERSITYTickets Now at Reynolds Club Desk or By MallI • CHICAGO MAROON • February 18, 1966