Housing protest sleep-in tonightby Jeff KutaStudents disgruntled by housing conditions in the University neighborhood—both domi-tory inadequacies and lack of suitable apartments—will stage a “sleep-in” on the lawn ad¬joining the administration building beginning tonight at 10 pm.According to Ernie Dornfeld, first-year student in the College and president of the newlyregistered ad hoc committee onstudent housing which is promotingthe sleep-in, “We want to bring thehousing problem to the attention ofthe people in power, to show themthat student apathy on this issuehas ended.”Among students speaking to theprotestors over loudspeakers willbe Bernie Grofman, fourth-yearstudent in the College and formerStudent Government president;David Rosenberg, second-year stu¬dent in the College and chairmanof the student consultant board onhousing; Jeffrey Blum, second-year student in the College and SGrepresentative (Independent, Col¬lege-at-large); Alan Bloom, third-year student in the College and SGsecretary; and Steve Kindred,third-year student in the College.Also scheduled to speak at the UC students will seek to relieve the housing shortage tonight bysleeping on the lawn outside the administration building.James Newman, assistant profes- that they may attend the meeting,sor of sociology Richard Flacks, Informal entertainment will con-and associate professor of humani- sist of protest songs performed byrally are dean of students Warner ties Frederick Siegler. Several oth- a hootenanny group from Wood-A. Wick, assistant dean of students er faculty members have indicated ward court. Peter Rabinowitz, grad¬ uate student in the department ofSlavic languages and literatureand former member of the ad hocstudent-faculty committee on socialrules, will emcee the program,which is expected to last aboutfour hours.AFTER THAT, weather permit¬ting, many students will remain onthe quadrangles through Saturdaymorning.Also referring to itself as “stu¬dents interested in improved hous¬ing,” the 15-member ad hoc com¬mittee presented the basis of itscomplaint in an early draft of itsobjectives now being sent to theUniversity’s trustees.“Although the administration isaware of the present (housing) cri¬sis, we feel that it has neglected itsresponsibilities,” the draft says.“Faced annually with an increas¬ingly desperate situation, it has di¬rected its efforts towards providingjust enough housing to accommo¬date the freshman class, while ig¬noring the living conditions of theupperclassmen.”A subsequent leaflet prepared byDornfeld, Rosenberg, and Blumsummarized the committee’s spe¬cific demands. TO ALLEVIATE the present cri¬sis:• purchase of apartment build¬ings;• pre-arranged leases for stu¬dents in open-market buildings;• conversion of houses in theSee texto? students!eep-in demandson page threeneighborhood into small co-opdorms;• improvements in existingdorms—1 o u n g e s, more singles,soundproofing.Long-range proposals:• all undergraduates housingwithin ten minutes’ walking dis¬tance from the quadrangles;• varied types of housing—co¬ops, apartments, cluster dorms,townhouses;(Continued on page three)Vol. 74-No. 50 The University of Chicago Friday, April 29, 1966Council completes "common year" plans Heagy seeks structuralreforms for efficient SGby Joan PhillipsIn order to make SG effective and meaningful in housing,social rules, curriculum, orientation, and bookstore reform,the new Student Government (SG) president Tom Heagyintends to propose significant structural reforms within SG.“I want to give the exec as muchCurricula changes passed power as possible that was former¬ly exercised by the president, andthe Assembly as much power aswas previously exercised by theexec,” Heagy told the Maroon.Heagy wants to see SG as decen-by Mike Seidman tralized as possible, with SG proj-The faculty College Council has approved a series of wide-ranging revisions in the ects run by the best people, re¬humanities and social sciences curricula for the next academic year. The changes are not sardlfss of whether they are as-sembly membersretroactive, and will have no effect on the course requirements of present students. „F0R EXAMPLE « Heagy ex-The Council’s action completes plans for the “common year” program which will be plained, “the chairman of a proj- “There has never been a func¬tioning committee system in SG inmy memory,” Heagy said. “As itis now,” he continued, “all of thisprimitive discussion takes place inrequired of all entering studentsnext year. The contributions of the akje t0 take one 0f three humani-biological sciences and physical ties common-year courses:sciences to the common year wereapproved last week.AS THE new curriculum emergesIn its final form, it will re¬quire of most first-year studentsone three-quarter sequence in thehumanities, social sciences, biologi¬cal sciences, and physical sciences.In addition, a small number of stu¬dents will be able to substitute aspecial course Liberal Arts I forthe social sciences and humanitiesrequirements. Other course re¬quirements will be determined byeach collegiate division for its stu¬dents.As explained by Arthur Heiser-man, master of the humanities col- the student’s field of concentration.This humanities program was ect committee, such as the book¬store consultant board, would bearprimary responsibility for SG ac¬tions in that area.“Although the chairman wouldbe guided by the basic policies ofthe Assembly, and would work inclose relation to the chairman ofprime responsibility would be his,’Heagy added.Will try for amendmentHeagy also said that he wouldtry to get a by-laws amendmentpassed to give non-assembly mem¬bers who are project chairmen• A three-quarter sequence in approved by the College Councilart, music, and literature; despite some dissent caused by its• A three-quarter sequence in failure to provide a mathematicsthe analysis of humanistic texts; requirement.• An experimental three-quarter THE SOCIAL sciences cnntrihu-sequence of an integrated nature llon to the common year wiI1 con. the campus action committee thedealing with a variety of humams- sjst 0f either the present Social "r""“tic materials. Sciences 111-112 sequence or theThe revised humanities curricu- Social Sciences 121-122 sequence,lum, which Heiserman calls “quite pius Social Sciences 125, which willexciting,” also includes a number focus on a substantive problemof new programs beyond the com- such as equality in modern society,mon year. Replacing the present , . . ,,English 101-102-103 sequence, for socia^sciencerwill^lso^hdd for speaking Privileges in the Assem-example, will be a committee on s?cial sciences will also oe neiotor „us„u cH.Honto with Hif elght free electives, at least three J^,h Will hP referred of which must be outside the social Heagy also expects the campus *u..u, utwrei «i mt uuiutmucd iui- ficulty in this area will be referred scjences. one two-quarter course in action and the academic affairslegiate division, students will be f°r,.;. ona[ *nd CUUrfeft,VV05r,; nS the social sciences outside the stu- committees to bear the main leg- the Assembly which is too large to«eJii hi rem.ired° tn dent’s field of concentration; and islative burden of SG. He stressed do it, and which results in long,take’a eorrmetenev exam in Ene *w0 three-quarter courses in the the importance of having the initial unproductive meetings.”Anthalrar Cnnafnr flarlr ,-*? competency exam in Eng- study of societies and civilizations, discussion and amending of legisla-ApfneKer, senator llarK Ush composition and unsuccessful one yo£ which m be some formI t, i I \ i performance on the test will resultlO SpedK (separately) at in a one-quarter English composi- Tom HeagyO . I it || ij j tion requirement.breasted hall Monday IN THE area of foreign lan¬guages, the humanities department• Herbert Aptheker, leading plans a “language center” with atheoretician of the US Communist more flexible curriculum based onParty and head of the American the student’s proficiency, ratherInstitute for Marxist Studies, will than on the number of courses hespeak on “A Marxist view of the has previously taken.Vietnamese war” Monday evening in the near future, Heisermanat 7:30 in Breasted Hall. Admis- plans a “language dorm” with res- (Continued on page two) or reject it. unproductive meetings.tion done in committee, with the ORDER TO INCREASE theAssembly then deciding to accept efficacy of the two main legislativeFederal or civil officials entitled to seestudent's complete academic transcriptby Elbe KaplanAccording to a long-established policy, any federal or civil committees (campus action andacademic affairs), Heagy intendsto propose several by-laws amend¬ments. These would provide thatall Assembly members be notifiedof every meeting of those two com¬mittees, and of the topics to beconsidered at those meetings. Also,they would provide that both of thelegislative committees would meetsion for the talk, co-sponsored by ident heads who are native speak- official bearing proper credentials may see student academic between Assembly meetings. Heagythe UC Dubois Club and SPAC, is ers of various languages and “lan- records UC officials have revealed.50c. 2u82g tables’' in the cafeteria atAptheker recently visited North which only a foreign language will ^ query directed at dean of students Werner A. Wick byVietnam as part of a fact-finding be spoken. Alan Sussman, a student, at themission with Tom Haydn of SDS In addition to his common-year draH policy meeting Wednesday the recor(js are kept confidentialsid.™*professor staughion tothe;revelationot <“ty i**™• Senator Joseph S. Clark, Dem- six courses in mathematics, the so- Responding to Wick’s previous Sullivan noted that the practice isocrat of Pennsylvania, will speak c i a 1 sciences, the physical assertion at the meeting that tran- a common one followed by manyon “The new urbanism: fiscal, en- sciences, or biology; three courses scripts are kept confidential, Suss- °fher universities. Generally, offi-vironmental and political aspects” in the humanities outside of the man told the group of seeing feder- ^als Present their identification toat 11 am in Breasted Hall. student’s field of concentration or al narcotics agents being shown tPe registrar herself before beingClark’s lecture will be the sixth in the history and philosophy of student records in the UC reg- shown any records, she said,in a series entitled “Key figures science; three more advanced hu- istrar’s office. Wick admitted that She could not remember the spe-discuss urban affairs.” The pro- inanities courses also not in the this has happened with grade tran- cific incident of which Sussmangrams were developed jointly by student’s field of concentration; six scripts. had spoken, stating that it hadthe UC center for urban studies courses in a foreign language or “This has been the practice from probably occurred during her re-aud center for public administra- the equivalent of two years of lan- time immemorial,” Wick later told cent vacation. She affirmed the of-tion. guage training; six courses of free the Maroon. “Certain official peo- ficials* requests as a regular oc-Admission to the lecture is with- electives; and a minimum of six pie can inspect, but not get official currence, observing, “We see aout ticket and without charge. and maximum of twelve courses in documents.” Otherwise, he said, great many of them.” said.Another by-laws amendmentthat Heagy would like to see pro¬posed and passed would providethat a % vote in the Assemblywould be necessary to consider anyamendment that had not previous¬ly been presented to the committeein some form.(Continued on page four)Vs ■■ ■ ' JElection of next year's fMaroon editor-in-chief willbe held today at 4 pm inthe Maroon office. All* Maroon staff members arerequired to attend.f < - <v- " j? K v»" >*'» SltRiiug—r—wimww— imwwEDITORIALHousing: the time has come for actionOver the past few years the prob¬lem of student housing at the Univer¬sity has been allowed to grow steadily,unchecked by the administration, un¬til it has reached the crisis propor¬tions of today. Available off-campusapartment housing, once the panaceafor any UC on-campus housing short¬age, has dwindled, quite predictably,as Hyde Park has become a desirableplace to raise a family because of thesuccess of University-sponsored urbanrenewal in the area. Has the Universi¬ty started a comprehensive programfor building compensatory on-campushousing or buying off-campus apart¬ments to provide living space for itspresent student population? No, but ithas announced plans to double thenumber of students in the Collegewithin the next ten years. And so thepresent student housing crisis will getworse.The University, of course, seems tohave an easy answer for all this. It issimply liquidating steadily its obliga¬tion to provide housing for undergrad¬uates. (Graduate students? They were relegated to distant South Shoreyears ago.) The administration is nowlimiting itself to assuring housing forfirst-year students and a few secondand third-year ones in Pierce and NewDorms. It doesn’t have to worry abouta run on rooms in these two dorms; asthe recent SG housing poll has shown,a high percentage of current dormresidents are intensely dissatisfiedwith the match box doubles, poorfood, and oppressive social rules atPierce and New Dorms. The run, in¬stead, is on the small number of avail¬able places in Snell-Hitchcock, Black-stone, and 5400 Greenwood. Whatabout the plans for the long-heraldedPierce II dormitory that students willwant to live in? The plans for it stillaren’t off the drawing boards yet.Meanwhile, second, third, and fourth-year students, repelled by Pierce andNew Dorms and rejected from Snell-Hitchcock, Blackstone, and 5400Greenwood, are frantically searchingfor apartments in Hyde Park that justaren’t available.It would be unfair to imply that the administration has been completelyimpervious to the crying need forUniversity action in the field of stu¬dent housing. Last month the Univer¬sity announced the purchase of twotownhouses, housing up to six stu¬dents each, for use as off-campushousing. While numerically this actionis of little help in the present housingcrisis, it does signal recognition by theadministration, partly as a result ofheavy lobbying by Student Govern¬ment, of the type of informal, small-group living that many UC studentsdesire. More important, the Universi¬ty announced that it is converting therecently purchased George WilliamsCollege into singles for nearly 100students, with common cooking andlounge facilities. This is the first seri¬ous step by the administration to at¬tempt to deal with the crisis in studenthousing caused by years of inaction.But much more must be done bythe University. It must purchase orrent—now, not in two or three years—whole apartment buildings for useas student housing. Only in this way can UC effectively deal with the pres¬ent housing situation and at the sametime prevent itself from having a su¬pervised all-dormitory College whichwould lack the spirit of off-campus in¬volvement that has given the Univer¬sity its unique spirit of independence.If the administration is willing to putone-tenth the effort into this endeavorthat it now employs in its massivethree-year $160 million expansiondrive, the housing crisis could be suc¬cessfully dealt with.But there is no sign at present thatthe administration is willing to takethese necessary steps, despite therapidly worsening housing situation.Therefore, in an effort to make theadministration aware of its duty in thestudent housing crisis and to promoteunified student action in makingknown student grievances on housing,we strongly support tonight’s sleep-inin front of the administration buildingand urge all students, graduate andundergraduate, to take part in it. Thetime has come for action.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the rest, ^ foreign car hospital Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweat¬shirts, "Levis," rain parkas,tennis shoes, underwear, jack¬ets, camping equipment, washpants, etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9.30 100Student discount with id Blackfriars begins its annual the Mandel Hall box office or atsortie into the world of musi- thedoor<Like past Blackfriars produc-cal comedy tonight, as thisyear's show "Hey Mannv, Get “T’ "Hey Manny" is completelystudent-produced, student-written,James Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS - LINENS - TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. Card This! There’s This Guy, See, AndThis Girl, See. . .” debuts in Man-del Hall at 8:30 pm.The show will run tonight, to¬morrow night, next Friday, andnext Saturday. Tickets, priced at$2 and $1.50 with a 50 cent discountto students, are available either at and student-acted. This year’sshow continues a Blackfriars tradi¬tion that dates back to the turn ofthe century. Shows in the recentpast have included “Sing OutSweet Rock,” “Road to Dunsi-nane”, and “Casino in the Sky”.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient end Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856The COURT HOUSE in Harper Courtoffers to students• Welsswurste with Potato Salad $1.10• A Stein of Imported Pschorr Munich Beer 70all for $1.50* (after 9:30 pm)^students under 21 figure less for soft drinksClosed only on Monday* THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMOUNTING; MATTING;NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIES8e Sure toAsk for Weekly SpecialDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111 PENWRITERS’WORKSHOPFiction, Poetry, PloywritingColorado, tummar 1966: residentwrilora: Robert Creoley, PaulBlackburn, poetry; DonaldBartholmn, fiction, A staff of alx.For brochure: Director, AWW,855 West End Ava.. NYC 10025. (Continued from page one)history of Western civilization andthe other an interdisciplinary studyof a society outside Western Eu¬rope and North America.Students in the social scienceswill also be required to takeMathematics 101-102, as well asmore advanced work in eithermathematics or a language. Forhis work in a field of concentra¬tion, the student in the socialsciences will be required to take noless than six and no more than elev¬en courses, of which no morethan nine shall fall within one de¬partment.Master of the social sciences col¬legiate division Donald Levinestates that his division plans someform of "integrative experience” foreach of the fields of concentration.Such devices would include groupor individual tutorials, generalseminars and bachelor papers.In addition, Levine revealed thattwo new fields of concentration,public affairs and social philoso¬phy, are in the planning stage fornext year.RANDELLBEAUTY AJVD COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE RA 4-2007Afc-C—rfPtonJag — Opw Evening* — MM* TrBERKSHIRE STOCKING SALEClose out of all Berkshire hose for women. Sale starts Friday,April 29th. Limited supply only, so be sure to come early.Regular Price $ .99 pr. Sale Price $ .55 pr.Regular Price $1.35 pr. Sale Price $ .79 pr.Regular Price $1.65 pr. Sale Price $ .96 pr.Regular Price $4.95 pr. (Lycra) Sate Price $2.88 pr.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE. :AUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting1859 E. 53rd ft. HY 3-8302 Jimmy*sand the University RoomSec collegiate divisionBlackfriars7 'Hey Manny7 debut tonight enumerates requirementsRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty-Fifth end Woodlnwn Ave.PHASETwo Shows NightlyFrl., Sat. 8 & 11 admission $1.00Weekdays 8 & 10 admission .75Closed Mondays appearing in May . . .Big Joe WilliamsJames CollierWednesday's ChildrenShep SlaslawSue HorowitzCoffee Shop with Entertainment 1603 I. 63rd BU 0-9837 DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 go 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Discount CONTACT LENSES[ jEsasorsSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 80 YEARSWITH THE VERY BIST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 1-9186 1340 K. 53rd2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 29, 1966 IPHStatement of ad hoc committee on student housingDemands for actionWe fee! that the University has shirked its responsibility in notproviding its students with adequate housing. Certain generalprinciples must guide the University's policies in this matter.Housing must be reasonably close to the Quadrangles—10 min¬utes' walking distance at the very most. The facilities built muststrike a reasonable balance between privacy and community—thestudent should be able to be alone when he wants, yet feel that heis part of the larger community. A wide variety of facilitiesshould be available for students' varying tastes. Past Universityactions ignore these principles. WE WANT ACTION NOW.Immediate demandsFACT: A number of apartments are currently available in the im¬mediate University area and leases on others will expire duringthe summer.DEMAND: The University must immediately find these apart¬ments, guarantee their leases and make them available to stu¬dents for the coming academic year.FACT: Twenty-five apartment buildings have been available forsale in the area in the past year. The University took no advan¬tage of this opportunity.DEMAND: The University must immediately purchase thosebuildings still available and renovate them. The University mustmake them available to students at low rates for the comingacademic year.FACT: Many buildings in Hyde Park, especially along 55th st.,have been razed in the past few years; on many of their sites noother buildings have been erected. Further, many buildings havebeen razed only to be replaced by non-residential structures.DEMAND: The University must not raze any apartment build¬ings in the immediate University area unless immediate construc¬tion of other dorms or apartments on those sites is undertaken.FACT: The University now owns many apartment buildings inthe University area. Apartments in these buildings are now rent¬ed on the open market.DEMAND: The University must give its students priority in rent¬ing units in these buildings.FACT: The present major dormitories have never been complet¬ed according to plans. What has been completed is totally inade¬quate and unlivable for respectable human beings.DEMAND: The University must complete construction of thesedorms on improved plans and remcdel and soundproof present fa¬cilities to make them livable.FACT: Already 500 University students live in South Shore.DEMAND: The University must provide campus bus service toSouth Shore.FACT: Many University girls will not live in Woodlawn for fearof inadequate police protection.DEMAND: The University must provide police protection Innorth Woodlawn.FACT: The University has taken miserably little responsibility inarranging adequate off-campus housing for its students.DEMAND: The University must provide a full-time staff memberto carry out these demands.FACT: The University plans to increase its enrollment by a largepercentage in the next five years. Present housing facilities arenot even adequate for present students at the University.DEMAND: The University must not increase its enrollment with¬out providing adequate housing facilities of the nature describedhere.Long range demands1. The University presently owns a plot of land in northwestHyde Park on which it could build an apartment building with 90three-four bedroom units. The University must begin constructionon this building immediately so that students and faculty can oc¬cupy it by fall of 1967 or earlier.2. The University must build apartment buildings on the land itcurrently owns and on other land available in Hyde Park andWoodlawn.3. The University must build some dormitories in the quadran¬gles themselves.4. The University must immediately commence building newdormitories and immediately begin construction on those build¬ings currently planned.These dorms:a. must contain only single rooms and suitesb. must be coeducationalc. must provide excellent study, meeting, and dining facili¬tiesd. must have a maximum house size of 60 students.e. must be located no farther than 10 minutes' walking dis¬tance from the quadrangles Sleep-in all right ifproperty left alone(Continued from page one)• future dorms with all singles,two-room doubles or suites,lounges on all floors, common fa¬ll cilities.BLUM INTERPRETED the de-j mands as promoting the interestsof both dorm and apartment dwell-| ers, but also stated that “with| dorm people now looking for apart¬ments, the possibility of not findingthem and having to stay in thedorm system this spring wouldseem to indicate that they have agreater interest in the protest.“But in the fall quarter, whenapartment dwellers see the faultsin their apartments and freshmenare just entering the dorms, thesituation is reversed.”He pointed out, however, that“those apartment people to whom■ we have talked are almost unani¬mously interested.”Dornfeld explained that the prob¬lem of most apartment dwellers isone of distance. “Several studentswho live at 51st st. could be movedcloser to the quadrangles if theUniversity would build housing on,say, 55th st,” he said.AN OUTGROWTH of discussionsat Flint and Hitchcock houses, thead hoc committee’s plans for the:: sleep-in took shape over the lasttwo weekends when Grofman, Ro¬senberg, Blum, and others connect¬ed with SG were asked for support.Origin ally, the group had? planned to keep their plans fromthe administration until this morn¬ing to prevent the possibilities ofunfavorable publicity or punitiveaction. Later, they learned that| both Wick and assistant dean of| students James Vice knew of the| sleep-in.Wick claims that, with limita-; tions, most of the objectives of theI ad hoc committee are part of thei administration’s 'present housingl program.I “But the University has alwaysrecognized the rights of students to; protest aspects of University policy; which they believe are wrong, asl long as they don’t interfere withI the rights of other students or withl operations of the University,” headded.VICE TOLD a representative ofthe committee Wednesday that\ “the administration will not take1 measures against the protest un-\ less there is property damage,”and later suggested at Wednes-\ day’s freshman council meeting| thot women dorm residents whowish to participate consult their| resident heads for permission to* stay out all night and then sign outto the quadrangles.Affirming the legality of Vice’ssuggestion, co-resident head ofRickert house May Reisz announcedyesterday that women residents ofWoodward may remain at the sleep-in overnight without reducingtheir normal hours allowances aslong as they first sign out “to theflagpole.” How many of these new books have you read!Toland: THE LAST 100 DAYS . .$8.95Sivaram: THE VIET NAM WAR: WHY? . . .$3.50Capote: IN COLD BLOOD . .$5.95Tuchman: THE PROUD TOWER . $7.95Beadle: THE LANGUAGE OF LIFE . .. . . .$5.95THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE./. Knock A-Boots by Bates—tha swinginest kicks in townlS' In colors that are the coolest! Shownl the keen light¬weight model; uniined and made of soft and smooth gloveleathers. Come ki soon—you'll see what we mean. Make thein Knock A-Boots. $16.00G^Skty,MC©oam $c (HampufiTHE STORE FOR MENh the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th SI. Phone 752-8100HEYMANNY!GETTHIS Tonight is Opening NightBLACKFRIARS50th Annual Musical ProductionUA Thrilling Reconstruction of those ExcitingTimes that Marked the Cinema's Entrance intothe Land of TALKIES"Tickets on Sale Mandel Hall Corridor$2.00-$1.50 STUDENT DISC. $.50Show Time 8:30 PM - April 29-30, May 6-7Phone Ml 3-0800 Ext. 3271April 29, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 0Discuss University deferment attitude Heagy suggests by-law ammendments;Wick and Booth differ on draft policy ^ "> 'm?nm s,t-ei"-SG rela,it«by John BealWarner Wick, UC dean of students, and Wayne Booth,dean of the College, presented opposing views on the use ofgrades for deferment from the draft at a forum in MandelHall Wednesday afternoon.Wick stated that the UC policy of But Booth declared, ‘I opposeproviding the student with the op- the use of the University as a parttion to give or not give the Univer- of the Selective Service system,sity permission to send grades and even in this mild form. It is anti¬class ranking to his local board educational and provides a prcc-“puts the responsibility on the stu- edent for governmental use of uni¬dent. I think that this is where the versities.”responsibility ought to be.”The Arabic Oud is thegrandfather of the Lute.The Indian Sitar is made outof the pumpkin.See and hear them both attheInternational Guitar FestivalLAKE GENEVA, WISCONSINJUNE 10-11 -12for tickets and informalion6001 N. Clark,•r call 743-2621 avanings 642-2385 AT THE meeting sponsored byUC Students for a Democratic So¬ciety (SDS) Wick outlined the poli¬cy the University plans to followwhen local boards request gradetranscripts and class rankings.If the student has not alreadygiven the University written per¬mission to send the requested in¬formation to the board, he will becontacted and provided an oppor¬tunity to do so.If th: student declines to givethis permission, the University willinform the local board that the stu¬dent has not authorized it to sendthe requested information.W7ick declared that this is a mat¬ter ‘‘primarily between each reg¬istrant and his local board.“You ask to be treated as re¬sponsible citizens and be permittedto make your own decisions. TheUniversity ought net to interferewith students’ freedom of choice insuch an important matter,” hesaid.WICK GAVE the grade point av¬erages for the academic year 1962-63. According to Wick a 2.33 aver¬age would place a first-year stu¬dent in the upper half of his class, a 2.00 average would place a sec¬ond-year student in the upper two-thirds, and a 1.92 average wouldplace a third-year student in theupper three-quarters of his class.He indicated that the grades thisyear, even with the elimination ofwomen, would be roughly thesame.Booth, speaking on student defer¬ments in general, said, “Morally,it is just as unfair to have defer¬ments on the grounds of brains asit was to have them on the groundsof money in the Civil War.“Whenever the rewards of edu¬cation are used for non-educationalends, education suffers,” he stated.It also suffers when students stayin school only to avoid the draft ortake easy courses to maintain ahigh grade average, he comment¬ed.BOOTH DECLARED that a uni¬versity should not take a publicstand on an issue simply because itis important. This, he said, woulddestroy its position as a platformfor discussion.“But if an issue threatens theeducational process and integrityof a university, then it should takea stand. It docs seem to me. thatthe University’s preparing specialrankings for males is use of theUniversity for performing a gov¬ernmental duty,” he stated.This could be the first step, henoted, toward the use of universi¬ties as the Communists have, theNazis did, and the CIA did atMichigan State University.“It is a seriously mistaken policyand ought to be changed,” Boothsaid.STAMP OUTBLIND DATES! $3EveryDooy s talking about it. Everybody's doing it. Operation Match. It's camp.It's campus. It's the modern way to meet. It whammo's blind dates.It started at Harvard. The original Operation Match—featured in TIME, LOOK,end the coming May GLAMOUR. Already there are over 100,000 ideal dates inour computer's memory bank. Now's the time to line up your Spring Fling.Let our IBM 7090 Computer (the world's most perfect boy/girl matcher) select6 ideal dates for you—right from your campus area. (Now a gal can really choosethe kind of guy she wants, not just wait and hope he comes along !)Just send us the coupon below... we'll send you the Operation Match Quam*titative Personality Projection Test Questionnaire.Answer the questions about yourself, what you're like, and what you like. Returnthe questionnaire with $3.00. Then we put our 7090's memory bank to work. Itreads out the qualifications of every member of the opposite sex in your collegearea, and programs 5 or more ideal dates for you. You receive names, addresses,and phone numbers. Guys call the gals. You're just a telephone apart.Also, your card is kept continuously active. You receive as many dates as the7090 finds matches. The sooner you apply, the more dates you may get.Let the 7090 take the blinds off blind dating. Get modern. Get electronic. Getset quick with your ideal dates.Dear IBM 7090... I am 17 or over (and 27 or under) and I want to help stampout blind dates. So mail me my questionnaire. Quick!NAME SCHOOLADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP CODE| nrayTiani qc5 mjith jt Compatibility Research, Inc. / 75 East Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60601 •kiai*i«iai«i»iiiai«iaiaiaiaiiiSiWiViaia,aiaiaiaiais,aiaiaia,aiai4 (Continued from page one)Heagy stated that “It is up to thecommittees to formulate alterna¬tives, and to the Assembly to de¬cide between them.“I think a lot can be done to in¬crease the function of the rank andfile members of the Assembly,”Heagy declared. “1 want to see SGno longer be an oligarchy of a halfdozen people or less, but to actual¬ly be a representative governmentconsisting of an Assembly of 49people,” he said."BEFORE YOU CAN TALKabout involving the 7000 studentswho comprise the student body atlarge, you must talk about involv¬ing the 49 students who comprise the Assembly,” Heagy asserted. Hepointed out that the Assembly haslo be the basis of contact with thestudent body; “it can’t be based ona barrage of PR from the presidentand one or two associates,” hesaid.“I do think that housing will bethe biggest issue, but the mainproblem for SG will be its relationto the students,” Heagy declared.“If really meaningful progress ismade this year, it will be in termsof communication between rep¬resentatives and their constituents,rather than in terms of spectacularachievements which we had duringthis past year but which didn'treally affect campus interest inSG,” Heagy concluded.Calendar ot eventseFriday, April 29POETRY-READLsC: Florence JamesAdams poetry-reaoing contest finals,bond chapel, 3:30 pm.FORUM: "Power and professionalismin medicine,” Morris Janowitz, profes¬sor of sociology. Dr. Quentin Young,vice president, medical committee forhuman rights, Billings hospital, room P-117, 4 pm.FOLK DANCING: Instruction and opendancing, Ida Noyes hall, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: "Beyond historicism," E.H. Gombrieh, University of London, lawschool auditorium, 8 pm.BLACKFRIARS: “Hey, Manny..etc.,”Mandel hall, 8:30 pm.HAPPENING: ;”Keep right on paint¬ing,” sponsored by inter-faith cqmmit-lee. Ida Noyes, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: "Vietnam and the firstamendment,” George Anastoplo, lectur¬er in the liberal arts, Hillel house, 8:30pm.JAM SESSION:. Joseph Jarman houseband, open all, Reynolds Club southlounge, late afternoon.Saturday, April 30WALKING TOUR OF THE QUADRANT.GLES; Alan Bloom, guide, leaves IdaNoyes 10 am.FILM: “Raisin in the sun." with SidneyPoitier, Judd 126, 7:15 and 9:30 pm.BLACKFRIARS: "Hey Manny,” Mandelhall. 8:30 pm. ,Sunday, May 1RADIO PROGRAM: “Civil disobedi¬ence: when and when not.” Harry Kal-ven, professor of law. WFMF, 100.3me., 7 am.ART EXHIBIT: Bachelor of fine artsexhibition of works by Allan Bridge,May 1 through May 7, Midway studios,6016 Ingleside, daily 9 to 5. Sat and Sun10 to 4.RELIGIOUS SERVICE: “For the timebeing,” Rev. Fred Craddock. Phillips University, Oklahoma, preacher, Rocke¬feller Chapel, 11 am.i t.VflVAL OF NATIONS: Internationalhouse, 2 to 6, exhibits, foods, mo\ies—8to 10 pm. festival program $1.FILM: "Joan of Arc," two lilm studies,inter-faith committee, Mandel hall, 7:30pm.TELEVISION PROGRAM: "Civil diso¬bedience,” Francis Allen and Harry Kal-ven, professors of law, Alan Gewirth,prolessor of philosophy, WMAQ, chan nel5, 9 pm.TELEVISION PROGRAM: "Light, lib¬erty, and learning." with WavieBooth, Milton Frieoman, Edward Ro¬senheim. William McNeill, Dr. RobertPage, and Peter Vandervoort, "Off thecoff," WBKB, channel 7, 12 midnight.Monday, May 2LECTURE: "The new urbanism,” USSenator Joseph S. Clark of Pennsylvan¬ia, Brealed hall, 11 am.MEETING: UC SCOPE organisingmeeting for "Chicago project" with thesouthern Christian leadership confer¬ence, Earless Ross of SCLC staff, IdaNoyes hall, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: "A Marxist view of theVietnamese war," Herbert Aptheker,just returned from Vietnam, sponsoredby UC Dubois club and SPAC, Breastedhall, 7:30 pm.FILMS: "Nehru on China,” Story of Sa-dar Vallabhai Patel,” and People'spresident (Ayub Khan)," Indiana Civcourse, Rosenwald 2, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: "Some reflections on thenatu-e of consciousness," Brian A Far-rel, Wilde reader in mental philosophyand fellow of Corpus Christi college, Ox¬ford University, a Monday lecture, lawschool auditorium 8 pm.PLAYS: "Wist of the wind.” by JackCunningham, "I can't imagine tomor¬row,” by Tennessee Williams, and “Sixmiles from Leib,” by Richard Vertel.University theatre, Mandel hall, 8:30pm.BOOKSSTATIONERYGREETING (ARDS■kk-k-k-k-kTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student Discount PIERRE ANDREfact flatteringParisian chicten skilledhoir stylists of5242 Hyde Park Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710% Student DisceuntOIUIIIYIBA HALLEnterprise ProductionspresentsBIGGEST SPRING BLUES CONCERTFRIDAY. MAY 6th AT 8:30 PMCHICAGO: FACES OF THE BLUESJunior Weils Blues Band Saliie Martin Gospel SingersSleepy John Estes Big Joe WilliamsArt Hodes Irwin HeiferTickets: $5 $4 $3 $2 Orchestra Hall Box OfficeMail Orders: Enterprise Productions50 E. Chicago Ave. 337-4400Student Tickets are available at reduced rates atEnterprise Productions, 50 E. Chicago Ave. andToad Hall, 1444 E. 57th Street4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 29, 1966Theater review•■sun.—; rjThe Insect Comedy' needs juvenile hormoneThe Insect Comedy, a 45-year-old satire by Josef and Karel Capek, is being aired out Ross and, especially, Caryl Math- transitional dance numbers choreo-somewhat successfully at the Lincoln Park Theatre tonight and tomorrow night. But like ews* They are the typical subur- graphed by Marlene Steinbergan old ball gown stored in a trunk for half a century, it is a little wrinkled and threadbare sriL^atLseem t0° di££icult and are not’ ex*and has lost much of its newness.Kapek brothers lived in —and the necessity of keeping theirnewly acquired position in thecommunity. The beatles must geturally someone steals the beatles’treasure, and the distraught bugsTheCzechoslovakia during World War I glossian snails slowly crawl by,while it was fighting for its libera- and upon seeing dead mothstion and troubled by struggling mi- around the body of the tramp, theynority groups within its borders, pass on—resolving to mind theirThis play, written between the own business and live their ownCzechoslovakian liberation and the lives as best they can.events which were to cause World The obvious treatment of theWar II is, unsurprisingly, quite, comparison between the insect and ________ _-ecrK1„cynical, and olten focuses on the human societies makes the com- ?. , .’ p . yf/sadistic and inhumane side of mentary by the tramp unnecessary , ’, M F, ,Thnm;i. Fman’s nature. The repetition of ancj sometimes annoying despite K . y’th ’ ^ i , ‘these themes is at times trvins. if- c.,v*_ Kelley), the proua father ofThe Insect Comedy isplay about which it would Ds nice tations, which make it difficult forto say that it is as true today as it eVen a superlative cast to make ofit more than an occasionally inter¬esting and entertaining production.Under Frederick Wroblewski’sdirection, the cast members gener¬ally perform well. Paul Tomasello,as the tramp, is excellent. Demon¬strating a fine sense of comedyand pathos, he is as impressive in and demanding. Unfortunately,their neighbors are even moregrasping and they are gobbled up.WROBLEWSKI'S staging is gen¬erally good, and his use of a whiteplaying area with raised pedestalsas flowers is effective. “The Ants,’ cept for the dance at the end of th«effective.“Creepers and Crawlers,” at allThe Insect Comedy, after yearsof storage in moth balls, smells lit¬tle of camphor. What may havebeen exciting in it has becomeanother. The best things in life are .always the hardest to keep, so nat- which presents the ant-thropomor- ^mlliar* out the Lincoln Barkv 1 7 * UlniTAKc hmrA ehnlrAn if n nAiit imphic and ant-centered view of theworld and the easy conversion ofan automated work force into awar machine, is well directed andhas a fast pace; it does not degen¬erate into the frenzy that it could Players have shaken it about inthe air, and their effort is worththe small admission price.Mark Rosinis at times trying. its humor The olav’s lack of sub- Kelley)’ tne Pr0UQ tatner ot a eraie imo me irenzy mai 11 comamedy is the type of etyTthe basis of Us built-in limi- gr0Wing’ and whimng’ larva (weU f,onceivab‘y hav,e bfn consideringich it would be nice tatiL which make it difficult for Played by Judith Jonassen), boasts the number of characters andwas when it was first written; un¬fortunately, however true its com¬ments on man may be, its theatri¬cal validity suffers from a lack ^ffreshness and originality.The Insect Comedy is an elab¬orate, almost all-inclusive criti¬cism of human society, presentedrather unsubtly, but sometimesquite amusingly by analogy withthe insect kingdom: the butterflies,the creepers and crawlers, and theants. Act I, “The Butterflies,” par¬odies love rituals; Act II, “Creep¬ers and Crawlers,” mimics middle-class life and the Protestant Ethic;and Act III, “The Ants,” ridiculesthe institution of war (fought, ofcourse, for liberty, right, and jus¬tice). The ideas contained in ThoInsect Comedy are, 45 years later,familiar. They are not vitally pre¬sented; the novelty of seeing insectsas human stereotypes soon oisinte-grates, and all that is left are Oz-zie and Harriet of the ant worldand similar characters.THE PLOT is a sort of inebriat¬ed Alice in Wonderland. A tramp,whiskey bottle in his coat, afterwatching a typically effeminatebutterfly collector, observes andconverses with the inhabitants ofthe tiny universe in the park foli¬age and learns the secrets of life:that man is ridiculously self-cen¬tered and pitted against his neigh¬bor; that foolish games interferewith establishing and maintainingpersonal relationships; that thereis a horrible pleasure which manderives from inflicting or seeingpain inflicted on others; that manis blind in not realizing a commonhumanity. Unlike Alice, the trampdies after this revelation, frustrat¬ed because he cannot live after fi¬nally learning how. Two unPan- of his offspring while he is out pro¬curing food to satisfy her rapa¬cious appetite. Mr. Fly is despisedby the jealous parasite (HowardElfman), who feels that every in¬sect should get food according tohis need; he promptly eats papaFly’s food and his precious larva.Part of the food which he consumes amount of movement involved.Competent staging, however, doesnot hide the fact that “The Ants”does little more than rehash com¬mon ideas on the evils of war.Carmi Colombo’s lighting makesthe most of the changes of moodand types of insects and comple¬ments the costumes, which arethis small role, as he was earlier w Cricket couple, parents to be, always satisfactory and, in the casethis year as the old vagrant in The acted exceedingly well by Allan of the snails, really ingenious. TheCaretaker. The tramp’s explanato¬ry remarks, though largely super¬fluous to an understanding of tjha,play, are welcome because theygive Tomasello the opportunity totake over the stage quite master¬fully. ,KEN SWANSON, Elizabeth Har¬ris, Arnold Harris, Howard Elf¬man, and Christine Bergstrom dis¬play varying degrees of competen¬cy as the butterflies. They are ham¬pered by the ordinary quality ofthe material in this segment. “TheButterflies,” with its stock lovecharacters, poet, femmes fatales,coy women, and compulsivelymasculine suitors, may be the fore¬runner of the pedestrian sex farqeswhich provide Doris Day «t alsuch a nice living. x ' <“Creepers and Crawlers” reallyjoyable form the !Capek’s view ofthe vanities and follies of God’screatures, the sometimes sense¬lessness of their industry, and thefutility of their trying to reachhappiness while they are fightingeach other. It is the best acted andmost comical portion of the playand is almost hilarious when Mr.and Mrs. Beatle, played beautifullyby Wilfred Cleary and LillianMackey, walk on stage with theirstatus symbol: a manure ball—their “pile,” their “little treasure.”This accomplishment, of course,brings problems of possible theftGOLD CITY INN"A Gold Mine of Good Food”10% STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559IN CHICAGO — MAY 3 and 4AMBASSADOR EAST HOTELSuite 839-840 11 AM - 9 PMEXHIBITION ANDSALE OFORIGINALPRINTS LITHOGRAPHS, ETCHINGS, WOOD-CUTS AND SERIGRAPHS BY SUCHARTISTS AS ALBERS, ALTMAN,BERDICH, BLAUSTEIN, BONTECOU,FRASCONI, HINMAN, M. KOHN,KRUSHENICK, M. LEVINSON,MOTHERWELL, PETERDI,RAUSCHENBERG, RIVERS,YUNKERS, ZOX *. OTHERS.“The collection of prints at Franklin Siden'sranks easily among the best in the Midwest."MIDWESTERN ART REVIEW, MARCH 1966FRANKLIN SIDEN GALLERY213 David Whitney Bldg. / Detroit / MichiganPAINTINGS □ SCULPTURE □ PRINTS STEREO HI-FI COMPONENTSTV, FM RADIOS, CLOCK RADIOSTAPE RECORDERSTYPEWRITERSReasonable Rates, Courteous Service, Quality EquipmentRENT OR BUYReasonable Terms Can Be ArrangedWE REPAIR ANYTHING WE SELL (ALSO ANYTHING ANYONE ELSE SOLD)TOAD HALL1444 E. 57th ST. BU 8-4500THECOURT HOUSEIN HARPER COURTm Lunches 11 A.M. - 2 P.M.m Our Own Chef's Pastriesm Dinner from 5 P.M.# Weisswurste with Potato Saladfor lunch and after dinner ($1.10)DELIGHTFUL ATMOSPHERE - CLASSICAL MUSICDomestic & Imported Beer on tap Open till 2 am Closed MondaysApril 29, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Music reviewContemporary opera festival a source of prideMusically provincial as it may be, Chicago has the seldomrealized potential to outdo itself—and everyone else. Suchoccasions usually go unnoticed. Last Friday was a case inpoir.1, a festival of conterapoiary opera of which any Americancity could be preud, but of whichours, for the most part, was proba- rence Moss’ Tha Brute. If it wasb*y unaware. not overwhelming experienceThe Chicago Symphony concert th Martinon’s concert was, it waswas one of Marti non s best. In Biz- . ... x . ..et’s Symphony in C, he displayed Probably more significant in thean uncanny ability to project the long run, both for the campus dis-unpretentious simplicity of a cussion it encouraged and for theyouthful score. Its charm was un- extension of the CCP’s repertoiresweetened by any exaggeration oftempo, dynamics, or coloration, sothat even this most cynical of lis¬teners—usually repelled bycuteness—was drawn in. that it represented.One obstacle to success wasMoss’ text, adapted from Chek-its hov’s farce The Bear. Abridgementof plays for operatic use may be aEVEN MORE significant was his necessary evil, but this particularperformance of excerpts from Al- castration is unjustifiable, tor in¬ban Berg’s unfinished opera Lulu, stance, since most of Smirnov sI’m no apologist for excerpts, but I monologues are cut, his charactersee three justifications in this par- is distorted, Chekhov portraysticular case. First, it will be some him as an oafish inveterate talkertime before we hear it complete in vvith pretensions to being an lmChicago—for some reason, Woz-zeck’s popularity has yet to reachhis younger sister. It's a choice ofexcerpts or nothing. Secondly,these fragments, arranged in asort of symphony by Berg himself,stand up better than most—theymake as much a coherent unity as,for instance, Hindemith’s sympho¬ny from Mathis d:r Maler. Butmost important, missing Marti-non’s stupendous reading wouldhave been more an injustice toBerg than chopping up his opera.Although Lulu is soaked in bloodand sex as the Bizet is in flowersand sunlight, Martinon’s approachto it was similarly straightfor¬ward. purged of all egocentricity.Clean and analytic, it played downthe post-Mahlerian lushness andaimed instead at illuminating thecomplex polyphony.In fact, the score emerged asclearly as possible without beingantiseptic—everyone, including thebrass, had just the proper perspec¬tive. It was, perhaps, a trifle cool,but the music’s starkness was farmore crushing and its counterpointfar more comprehensible than inOrmandy’s slushy perversion of it.The only real flaw was the visualpresence but auditory absence ofsoprano Bethany Beardslee—butthis appeared a quirk of the hall’snotorious acoustics.IN THE evening, the Contem¬porary Chamber Players (CCP),under Ralph Shapey, gave fullystaged productions of two morerecent operas in Mandel Hall—Hu¬go Weisgall’s Purgatory and Law- posing lady-killer. The libretto de-emphasizes his pompously “bear¬ish” qualities, and hence mini¬mizes the irony. In addition, thecuts eliminate all motivation forthe action, as well as much of thehumor. Little remained—hardly aplot summary, much less effectivetheater.More important, the music just didn’t complement the text—its hu¬mor, on first hearing, was only oc¬casionally apparent. There are twopossible explanations. First, themusic may simply add nothing tothe play’s comic content—in whichcase, why have the opera at all?THE OTHER possibility is thatthe music contains that type ofsubtle humor which comes out onlywith familiarity. In this case, Mosshas picked the wrong libretto.Good as the Chekhov play maybe, you would hardly want to re¬turn to it repeatedly—it has blind¬ing surface glitter, but unlikeChekhov’s more serious works,little new appears the second orthird time around. The only reallyappropriate music would have tobe of equally instantaneous appeal.There is an inherent contradictionin a comic opera in which the mu¬sic can only be appreciated afterthe text becomes stale.My reaction, however, may bepartly due to having seen UT’s ex¬cellent production of the play sev-Music WorkshopOPEN SESSIONSlisten or playbeginning todayJOSEPH JARMANREYNOLDS CLUBMODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGIXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1142 L 55th HY 3-9259Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentreAnd SendeeNr Al Popular ImportsMidway 3-45016052 So. Cottage GroveHONDA SOUTH & SOUTH EASTSEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES • SERVICE - PARTS• PICK UP A DELIVERY• EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESMl 3-4500BOB NELSON MOTORS CHICAGO'S LARGEST &413* s cottage grove JUST AROUND THE CORNERSee the MAROON classifitd for your campus sales representativeNOTICEThe test for SentryPreferred YoungDriver Program isbeing held today.RSI UPSIL0N FRAT HOUSE5639 S. University9:00 AM to 11:30 AMand1:00 PM to 4:00 PMJim Crane 374-0350Young men under 25 may qualify for savings ofup to $50 or more on their car insurance. Can youqualify?looks outfor youSENTRY. TL INSURANCEThe Hardware Mutuals Organization eral months ago. Perhaps comingstraight to the opera, I would havefound it more amusing than I did.Weisgall, in contrast, took Yeats’play word for word and set it tomusic which mirrors and amplifiesits grim erotic power. Yeats al¬ways predominates—the wordsproduce most of the impact. Evenin the climaxes, the orchestra isheld back, adding support ratherthan taking over completely.Because of its verbal emphasis,it is hard to evaluate Purgatory,since Charles Van Tassel andThomas MacBone completely swal¬lowed their lines. In addition, theformer, although in magnificentvoice for most of his range, onlyapproximated his lowest notes.The instrumentalists, as always,seemed in full command of thescores, and Neva Pilgrim andMichael Cousins were excellent,boht vocally and theatrically, in the Moss. In face, considering that thiswas the CCP’s operatic, debut, itwas a miracle, even if they did notsurmount all the problems of themedium. With a few more tries,their opera ought to be as flawlessas the rest of their concerts. As ibis, in one less-than-perfect evening,they’ve done more for contempo¬rary opera than the Lyric has donein the past five years.Peter RabinowitzYou won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall .us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12455 S. Defy Avow646-4411 YOU OON'T HAVE TO SPEAKRUSSIAN FOR A 3-WEEK SUMMERSTUDY EXCHANGE VISITTO THE USSRCitizen Exchange Corps, praisedby Vice President Humphreyand other U. S. officials, wantsyou to apply for 3-week partici¬pation in summer exchangeseminar to study Soviet life inMoscow and Leningrad. Applica¬tions also available for somefull and half-scholarships. Forfull information write CITIZENEXCHANGE CORPS today.NameAddressCity State ZipSand to Citiaan Exchang. Corps,Dopt. Cl, 550 Fifth Avonut, NowYork, N Y. 10034;i -j u a ■ a ■ ■ ■ i(TESTFAIT ... L’homme qui a un programme bien6tabli d’assurance Sun Life est dansune situation enviable. II n’y a per-sonne de mieux pr6par6 k envisagerI’avenir que I’homme qui a pourvu kses ann$es de retraite et a la sGcuritdde sa famille, au moyen de I’assurance-vie.£n tant que representaot local de la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter 4 un moment davotre choix?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHydo Park Bank Building, Chicago IS, III.FAirfax 4-4800 - FR 2-1390Offico Hours 9 to 5 Mondays Z FridaysSUN LIFE DU CANADA, COMPAGNIE D ASSURANCE-VIEUNE COMPAGNIE MUTUELLEKEYPUNCHING• 500 CARDS OR MORE •• FAST TURN AROUND •FOR ESTIMATE CALLSHEILA BLIXT 332-4708R. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.33 NORTH LaSALLE STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60602COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTSSPRING SALEBRUSH STROKE PRINTS$| 98Many Old Masters Impressionistsand Moderns from which to choose.FRAMES *2.95 & upTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. ELLIS AVE.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 29, 1966MAROONWEEKENDGUIDESINS OF THEFLESHAPOIDSby Mike Kuchar,who brought you Lust forEcstasy, Corruption of theDamned, and I was a Teen-aged Rumpot.Saturday Night at 8:00 and9:00 on the new giant screenat the Hyde Park Art Center,5236 BlackstoneAdmission $1ALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.After dinner don’t miss the newplays at the Last Stage. Join usfor cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.CIRAL5 HOUSE OF TIKI51ST A HARPERFeed served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 1-7585 SAMUEL A. BELL“*•»» Shmtt From BmWSINCE 19244701 S. Perch ester AmKKewood 8-3150MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBleed Typing 4 Mi teeterSAME DAY SMVICiComplete lab EKG 4 BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Men. thru Sat, 9 AM 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3 2000JEFFERY THEATREFRI., APRIL 29thACADEMY AWARDWINNERSHELLY WINTERS“ONE OF THEYEAR’S10 BEST!-Va* Kent AWM -ff-M r«en,sTHE PANDRO S. BERLMN-CUY GREEH PRODUCTIONIN PANAVlSION*plusCOLUMBIAPICTURESpr.Mnt.MARTINaa MATT HELM"BniSilencersA MEAOWfiY CLA'JOC peAiclwCOLUMBIACOLORSTARTSMAY 6Julie Christieu DARLING //SmedleysON HARPERItalian FoodSteakburgersPitchers of SchlitzON TAP EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StraetHYd« Park 3-8372Student end Faculty Discount For the Convenience and Needs of the University . . .KING RENT A CAR1330 E. 5?rd ST.DAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYAS LOW AS $4.95 PER DAYIf you require a rental car for business, pleasure, ©r while yeurcar is being repaired call us atMl 3-1715UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKstrong banh"NEW CAR LOANSas low as$375~1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200FJ>.LC INTERFAITH COMMITTEE FOR FOTAYes, it's half happened. Last chance. Tonight.Live Belly Dancer. KEEP RIGHT ON PAINTING.THE EXISTENTIAL SKETCH OF THE NUDE-A HAPPENINGwith Works of Ferlinghetti, Mankowitz, Kafka, othersIDA HOYES THEATRE8:30 pm 50c AdmissionTickets on Sal# at tho DoorTHE PUBIN THENew Shot eland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:Southern Fried ChkkonIn a Basket .... $1.50Generous Order Every Sunday Night You can have a stocktoof or tho blggootsteakburger In town•Now—A Parade of Piano Artists (or Your Pleasure and DancingCUNCTANDO RESTITUIT REM— ENNIUSDue to divine discontentand deviant deciduousdevelopmentsthe STROLL1NQ PLAYERS willpresent Two AdditionalPerformances: 1 p.m. TODAYbehind Rockefeller Chapel and1 p,m. Monday next to the C. ShopYour patience and forbearancewill be appreciated— Strolling PlayersrT,ir ■ -W1 Wl '-'■ ' - ^,', , v.,., r -ws* , % vClassified advertisements'n\*pY' v *\ y ^ trn ">"' ■ IPERSONALS RMS. & APTS. FOR RENTLeave unwanted textbooks & paper¬backs with student co-op now. Sciencefiction and gen ed texts esp. welcomed.Have a wad of cash waiting in the fall.How registering for summer jobs. Rey¬nolds Club Basement. 10-4 M-F. Rm. avail, in exchange for babysitting.5714 Kimbark. Call 324-1396.2 men to room with bus. stud. nxt. yr. 2blks. from cam. 493-8288.O-Board + SHA — Orientation Assistant. Orientation Assistant MeetingSunday. 3 pm. INH.Sleep in tonight at 10.00. Front of Ad¬ministration Building. HOTEL SHORELANDSpecial student rates Hotel rms. withprivate baths. 2 students/rm. $45/stu-dent per mo. Complete Hotel Service.Ask for Mr. N. T. Norbert, 5454 S. ShoreDrive.Lieder, muss ich aufhoren? Exceedingthe vocabulary happens to strain thegavings. Still the sun rises.ANTONIONI'S “L'ECLISSE"and an experimental film from the In-stitute of Design at IIT. Films presented by CINEFORUM and introduced bySrof. Charles Sharp, May 4. 8 pm.,UB AUDITORIUM (35th & State), IlTCampus. 60c admission.feEl Male roommate wanted. Large separatebedroom in large, clean, quiet, attrac¬tive furnished apt. By 55th 3 blks fromPoint. For 3 months or more between6/1-10/1. Reas. Terms. FA 4-9500, Rm.1621, btwn. 7-10:30 pm. ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENTWe are a relatively small, but national-ly-knowrn company, who counsels indus¬try in the installation of Better MethodsPlans. These Plans are the means bywhich companies enlist the participationof all management personnel in thecompany’s cost reduction effort.I am looking for one or two young menwho would like to join me on a partner¬ship basis, and in the next eight or tenyears take over its operation on a fran¬chise or full-ownership basis. No invest¬ment required at present.Here is an excellent opportunity forsome young men with drive who wantsto be earning $20,000 annually two orthree years from now.S. J. FECHT AND ASSOCIATES1108 Dundee Rd., Northbrook,Dlinois. 272-0999. S'outhside near 87th and Stoney. 7 rmbrk. bung. 3 bdrms, full basmt. Rec rm.Storm wds. Drainage. Birch cab. 7 clos¬ets. Exc. shpg., transp. RE 1-7605(owner). 4 rm. apt. furn. 5423 Woodlawn$85 mo. Jay. MI 3-6000 rm. 435.Wanted: 2 men to share 5 rm. apt. forsummer. Own rms. $38.33 ea. per ma5343 Woodlawn. Joe Kelly MI 3-9326.Summer sublets56th 8c Univ., furn. 5 rms. 2 baths; 2girls to live with 3rd; for mo. of Sept.752-8417. Spacious faculty apt. for summer sub¬let. mid-June-end Aug. 4 bdrms; 1baths; huge living rm; modern kitchenAll appliances; back yard Walking disitance to campus. HY 3-9468.4 rm. pleasantly fur. $110/mo. 53rd &Kenwood; HY 3-7209.5428 S. Woodlawn, Apt 3C 41,a rms. furn.CHEAP, Excellent loc. 667-2740.4 rm. apart., light, spacious, integrated,opp. park, shop cent, 54th 8c Kimbark.Avail. July 1, $105, furn. poss., X 3989or 752-4413. Houses for sale Apt. to subleft,, mid-June thru Sept. For2 or 3. Air conditioned, fully furn., mod¬ern, high-rise. 6730 South Shore Drive.Call 363-8058 between 6 & 7 pm. For rent. Charming old farm houssmiddle of 15 wooded acres; 1 mi. fromTremont trafin station & 3000 acre Indi¬ana Dunes State Park. Nr. free publiabeach. 2 bdrms., sleeps 8. Furnished(includes TV) except for linens. 45 min.from U of C via train or expressways.May 15th to Sept. 30. Including all utili¬ties even phone (local). Dial (219 ) 929-0058.~£WARE OF MEMBERS OF VISA!^Venusians In Secret Association)e e. cummings says: there is some shiti will not eat.protest housing conditions tonightHEY BERNY. GET THIS?Jf your name is Bernard. Fairbanks, or.unningham bring identification to gettwo tickets for the price of one for to¬night’s opening performance of Black-friar’s new musical comedy, “HEYMANNY, GET THIS. THERE’S ThisGuy, See, and this girl see. Fortickets call ext. 3271 or go to the Man-del Hall box office. 2*2 room apartment with murphy bed.Ideal for young couple. Unfurnished butpresent tenant would like to sell almostall of present furnishings. Near 57th andBlackstone. Convenient to campus, lake-front. IC. and commerce. ONLY $93 PerMonth. Start Sept. 1st. Call 363-1799. RAY DISTRICT, Maryland bet. 57-58,excellent condition-new kitchen, patio,lv. rm., dn. rm., fam. rm., 3 bdrms., 3baths, fin. basement, $31,500. (inclstove, refrig, air conds, dishwasher,etc) Call 684-2867 or MI 3-0800, X 3630for appt. Ideal for 3-4. June 15-Sept 25. 6 lg. furn.rms. + sunporch. Near campus, shop¬ping. IC. $150/mo. 5305 Woodlawn. 643-6669 after 5 pm. «> ; jWanted: Male grad Student to shareapt. with 2 others. S. Shore. $50/mo.,own rm. Furn. C. Detz, X 4119.LOST & FOUNDLOST: Male cat about 7 mo. old. Or¬ange striped. Call FA 4-9274.MEET YOUR PERFECT DATEDateline Electronic Research, Inc. Nowprogramming 3rd improved continuousMATCHING series—A new, expandedprogram with enrollment fee reduced to$3 for adults aged 18-27 & $5 for adultspver 27. Questionnaires will be alongside the Maroon at your favorite sta¬tions starting Tues. 5/3. For info.Write Dateline Electronic Research, Inc.PO Box 369 or call 271-3133. LOST: White keycase w/7 kevs. Re¬ward. BU 8-6610, R. 1125. POVERTY STRICKEN? B« a 3rdrmmate. $32/mo. 6108 Ellis. 5 rms.furn. 6/15-9/15. 324-1163. Own bdrm.ROOMMATES WANTED: 2 males forsummer. Your own rm. $44/mo. forlarge, clean apt. on 53rd. V/x blocksfrom Kimbark Plaza. Call Ml 3-3 »evenings.1-2 fern, rmmtes. for summer, opt. forfall. Own rms. $30/mo. 5300 Green¬wood 324-1970.3*2 rm. furn. apt. for 2 or 3. $95/rho.June-Sept. 1. 2 blocks to Point; 4 blocksto 55th St. Shopping Center. MI 3-1808, WUCB has been doingsome experimental pro¬gramming in the last fewweeks and is interested inthe reactions of listeners.Non-listeners as well areinvited to submit sugges¬tions, comments, threats,etc. Call Todd Capp, BillingsHospital, Room W700mmmmCome See THE STONES in our back¬yard Univ. House 5737 Univ. Ave. NO¬BLEMEN tonite at 9.Last Chance Happering—TONIGHT!Flacks! Grofman! Kindred! & a cast ofthousands! S’leep-in Tonight.!EXHIBITExhibit of graohics, “The EmancipatedJew as Artist/’ Through May 10th. Hil-lel House, 5715 Woodlawn, open daytimeand evenings. Mon.-Fri. & Sun.Bless our soul (by the Noblemen) Uni-versity House at 9 tonight.Writer’s Workshop (PL2-8377)"icAMF.LOT Restaurant, 2160 E 71st-St10% discount for UC students.’tonight•■4-u ,B;J c*nem* is proud to showThe Rest Is Silence”, Helmet Kaut-s (“The Captain from Koepenick,”The Devil's General”) reworking ofthe story of “Hamlet” in post-war Ger-many. \Vith Hardy Kruger, Peter VanEyck and Ingrid Andree.Also Robert Benchley in “The Witness.”8:00. 75c B-J Dining Hall.Reform Sabbath Eve. Services everyFriday at 7:30 pm at Hillel House.I would like to rent a motor-cycle ormotor-bike for this summer. 493-9360after 10 pm.HIDE TO N.Y.C. LeavingWed. May 4. evenings call 643-0489.If you’ve never had a Berliner Weissecome down to the Courthouse Restau¬rant and try one. APTS. FOR SALECar Won't Run Right?Don't Run Around in Circles,ra|| lie5527 S. University, Apt. 4w. Spaciousliving-dining rm., wood-burning fire¬place. Modern kitchen with washer. 2bedrooms, study (or 3rd bdrm.) Exc.nghbhd., bid., main., pking., publictransp. Must sell $11,300. Monthly as¬sessment $97, Will not rent or lease.Call 643-9592 or 363-2867.FOR SALESolid Dining table, 4 ohairs, $25. Wood-len wardrobe," 5 shelves, $17.50/cali667-5262 eves.’61 VW conv., reas., 684-0954.JOBS OFFERED Vw a ii u jHYDE PARK AUTO SERVICE(in South Shore)Wanted for market research, part-timeinterviewers; select, convenient eve¬nings. Miss Grey, 943-2686.Part time help wanted—OVER 21, wait¬er or waitress, apply SMEDLEY’S, 5239Harper.Wanted: Someone to do ironing, approx.4 hrs. wk. Call 643-6465.Need part time waiters / waitresses /lunch hostess. Courthouse Restaurant inHarper Court. Ask for Hans Morsbach.• ■- • - / 'v <. •• 'f'V'/**;- „UC SCOPE will organizeone local group in MartinLuther King's union to end/ slums on the West Side thisspring and summer.Anyone interested in help- 7646 S. Stony Island RE 4-6393JIM HARTMANTOYOTA LAND CRUISER"World's Toughest 4-Wheel Drive"6-Cyl. 135-H.P. Engine 85 M.P.H.HARDTOP AND STA. WAGONS247-1400 3967 $. ARCHER ing or otherwise getting in¬volved in the "Chicago-Pro-ject" should attend Monday'smeeting at 7:30 pm at IdaNoyes. Earless Ross of theSouthern Christian Leader¬ship Conference staff willdiscuss UC's role in theChicago Movement.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH-- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsSERVICE CALLS - $3DON'T take that summer job.IT'S VERY LATE, BUT WE STILL HAVE 17 COLLEGE(Under 28 Years Old) TOURS AVAILABLE TOEUROPEARE YOU GOING WORK (Real World) NEXT YEAR? ARMY NEXTYEAR? MARRY NEXT YEAR? - THEN GO THIS SUMMER.S.T.O.P. COLLEGE TOURSTOURS THAT GIVE YOU A YOUNG ADULT'S INSIDE TRACK TOEUROPE AND SCATTERED WITH FREE AND INDEPENDENT DAYSTO WANDER ON YOUR OWN.Call your Campus Representative Hans EndlerFA 4-8200 No. 753 University Theatre and FOTAPresentThree PlaysTENNESSEE WILLIAMSI Can’t Imagine TomorrowJACK CUNNINGHAMSix Hours To LeibRICHARD VERTELWisp Of The WindMANDEL HALLMonday Night, May 2nd, 8:30 p.m.Tickets 50* at the door J8 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 29, 1966