University plans to subletapartments to undergradsby Ken SimonsonThe University will sublet apartments to undergraduates,according to dean of students Warner A. Wick.At present, Wick said, the University buys leases of smallapartments and rents them to incoming graduate students vol. 74—No. 52who request housing. Although UC The University of Chicago Friday, May 6, 1965is required to buy the leases for ayear at a time, it rents to the stu¬dents only during the period theywish to live in the rooms.Wick indicated that this practice approach to the housing problemthan buying existing apartmentbuildings from which tenants couldnot easily be moved.PLANNERS of a new tower dor- Foes of ranking plan sit-by Gary ChristianaA group of about 300 students voted unanimously to stage a mass demonstration includ-would be extended to undergrad- mitory adjoining the presentuates who requested it. A sign-up pjerce Tower are currently work-list for this purpose will be availa- jng determine what its final de-ble in the housing office. Students sign sh0uld be, according to Wick, ing a sit-in and picketing of the administration building next Wednesday.denosk^and* agr ee* to b^assi"ned to He that a s,tuden,t committee The demonstrators will be protesting the possible use of grades for ranking Universityaeposu ana agree 10 De assignea 10 lg advising on plans for the new ..j^x,. r .1 » 1 *x Jan apartment. building, which would be for men students for the draft.Wick cautioned that most of the an(j Women, and that dormitory An executive committee of 23 THE POSITION, as stated by a indicate a pro-war feeling, but sim-apartments available would be in resjdents were also consulted by elected at Wednesday night’s meet- spokesman for the anti-ranking pjy tfoat was not ^ purposeapartment hotels and efficiency means 0f a questionnaire distribut- ing of students who signed a state- SrouP> *s that “The sit-in will be ^ ^ . . . make oeneral naiitieniunits, suitable for one or two peo- ed last quarter. ment noDosing the use of their held only if the administration re- y 0 politicalpie.HE ADMITTED he was unsurehow great the demand would be,since the larger six or seven-roomapartments for which students gen¬erally state a preference are notavailable for this purpose. Hepointed out that the University wastaking a loss on this operation, andthus could not afford to overextenditself.Hyde Park and 51st st. would bethe places in which the Universitywould try to locate most students,Wick said. However, he added thatif demand were sufficient, somestudents might be placed in South 1 iddi ifuauu. incut uppuauig me uac ui uitu , rpsnlntmncPresent plans for the new tower grades in male class ranking will ^uses to reverse its stand on rank- "_ ___ . ...«^ • . in rf in n nnUli/t fif a! Atvi Anf ^ Of tV> A f V»lcall for mostly two-room doubleswhich could be arranged partly tosuit the taste of the inhabitants.The tower would also include morerecreational facilities than existingdorms, Wick stated. undertake to contact the Commit¬tee of the Council of Faculty Sen¬ate, as well as dean of studentsWarner Wick, Provost EdwardLevi, and dean of the CollegeWayne Booth on their position.Also displays Liberal Arts I ing in a public statement.” Of the three courses of action upPrevious to the vote on the sit-in, for voting before the meeting, thethe group decided, by a large ma¬jority, against taking any stand onthe war in Vietnam as part of theirformal position. The vote did not students chose the demonstrationas the most effective means ofmaking their position krown. Themotion for a rally in front of theadministration building Friday wasdefeated, while a proposal to bringthe issue before the trustees wasapproved as a preliminary to themass demonstration., . . There was some division of opin-by John Beal ion at the meeting as to whether_ __ r Five new interdisciplinary majors will be available to students in the New Collegiate mb0ere ™anstf protestShore, in that case, campus bus Division (“fifth college”) next year as part of the curriculum of the new College study area ieast iess dangerous. & °F 3service would be extended to in- whjch was passed by the College Council Tuesday. A MOTION was made to stormAt the same time master of the New Collegiate division James Redfield disclosed plans en masse the conference of the Fac¬ulty Senate on Tuesday, but thiswas defeated in favor of a decision‘Fifth college’ announces five majorsto Southelude occasional busesTransit Authority buses.Wick said that plans are pro¬ceeding for construction of inex- for Liberal Arts I, the new divi¬sion’s contribution to the generalpensive cluster-type housing along education core program.55th st. between Greenwood and The New Collegiate Division cur-Drexel ave. These buildings could riculum will include the five newbe constructed in less than a year, majors, an extensive tutorial pro-he said, describing this as a better gram, and a number of intradivi-sional courses and activities. ThePhy sci here to staywith little change The five majors within the divi¬sion are:• Civilization studies, underthe chairmanship of Milton Singer,professor of anthropology.• History and philosophy ofscience, with Dudley Shapere, as-catalogue description of the new socjaje professor of philosophy, asdivision says, It inherits little program chairman,from the previous collegiate organ- # philosophy and psychologyization, and therefore the curricu- with Eugene Gendlin, assistantlar plans are somewhat tentative, professor of psychology and phil-The present general educa- Boofh^aiT th“? *‘urriSr osoph7' fs cha!rrn' . . . oftion physical science course plans are 2VI rZnTmbw;; JjSd methods" ^tth0 asstdate professorWill be retained in the college «'«*£*!,“d^an'd do cifairman"’VS?R^eid, master of the■text year under the curriculum these new things and see what Pr°g on pane four) New Collegiate Divi.ion.for the physical sciences collegiate happens. (Continued p gdivision passed by the College ^ ■council Tuesday. The new curricu¬lum does modify, however, the gen¬eral education requirements forstudents mijoring in the physicalsciences.The physical sciences componentof the common year will be thepresent physical sciences 105-6-7,although in a slightly revised form,plus an experimental variant for e Sis-;UC draft policy statement to send someone as a representa¬tive. General opinion was that thefaculty would be sympathetic totheir position.A motion to hold the sit-in at anearlier date was voted down to al¬low time for plans of action tocrystallize and for the chance thatthe negotiations with the adminis¬tration might obviate the need fora sit-in.Assistant professor of historyJesse Lemisch, assistant professorof sociology Richard Flacks, andassistant professor of history Wil¬liam McGrath, who attended themeeting, were nominated to thecommittee as a token of student-faculty solidarity, but all three de¬clined.Register for draft test,council of grad schoolsurges graduate studentsThe Council of GraduateSchools of the United States isThe basis for the University's po- strongly urging all graduate(Editor’s note: The following is boards is as follows: The Universi- contact the student and to ascer-the complete text of a statement of ty will provide this information tain his wishes, but will in no eventthe University’s position on the on|y in response to a request from furnish information without thethose with some knowledge of phys- dra^ issued last niyht by President a student. A student who has given student's consent.ics, chemistry, and mathematics. Beadle.) advance permission that such in-™d chemStry from amgeophJSal Th, president .* th. Unlv.r.»y 'd0r™*'f'h“ tltior. h hirtoHc on, *h.» » i. students to register for theand astronomical viewpoint. ‘ °J Ch,“fl0' after meeting with the th# Unlver$ity, The University will J»P Vh* ^"nfo^ma draft deferment test when registra-HS r °’"r HrSSS rxzrif they notsci^gen^ed wurseha^not yet" been . University of Chicago', posi- /^received b!f 10 3 lettef t0 aU gr3dU3te de3nS>completed, so that it is too soon to t'.°” w'tb r#*Pect furnishing 0 i- from a selective Service Boardknow the extent of any changes. c'a* transcripts °f grades, gra e and no advance comment has beenThe experimental variant, he said, averages, or relative class stand- given by the student, the Universi-a new approach to teaching ing of students to Selective Service ty will take all reasonable steps toisphysical science, and we want tosee how well it works.”Students enrolled in the physicalscience division will take the three“common care” general educationcourses of the other divisions anda basic science course their firstyear. They will then be required totake one additional three-quartersequence from another division’sgeneral courses and three se¬quences of three courses from out¬side their area of specialization,though these will vary with the de¬gree program.The division will also requireproof of competence in Englishcomposition and a modern foreignlanguage. The number of quartercourses required for graduation inthe collegiate division will remainat 42. The number of requiredcourses in the area of specializa¬tion is 21.Platzmau said that the programof the division will give the studentthe option of taking more sciencecourses or more gen ed courses.“We like our students to shoparound,” he stated,” and we areencouraging them to do so.” Interview with Mikva nity. This historic position is pro¬tected under the present rules ofthe Selective Service system.The University is deeply consci¬ous of the many questions whicharise as to the justice of the Selec¬tive Service system and its impactin the educational process. Objec¬tions have been raised as to theuse of grades, class rank, special, , r,, , _» I examinations, to the very idea of v.—. ...\\ hat does State Representa- student deferments, and indeed to they graduated.five Abner J. Mikva, a candi- °“r Asia:’ The matter of student defermentdate for the Democratic nomin- has been carefully examined anddebated in both the faculty Com-ation for the US House of Rep- mittee of the Council, and in the.. , r,,. Council of the Academic Senate,resentatives from the Illinois a resu|f 0f these deliberations the council said, “Since decisionson deferment are the primaryresponsibility of the local draftboards and since many of these in¬terpret directives very literally, itis likely that some boards will in¬sist that even graduate students inresidence must qualify by passingthe test if they cannot establishtheir rank in the class in whichState RepresentativeAbner J. Mikvat x „ M9SH > - ^ K Dean of students Warner Wickcommented, “In many cases, itwould be impossible to establishrank in class for students who re¬ceived undergraduate degrees in1965 or before.” Therefore, heurged, all graduate students shouldsecond congressional district, in Fal”-uary the Committee of the take the test, since it may be the0 Council unanimously passed a res- only basis their draft boards havethink about the role of a Con- Olution which stated “Studentsshould retain the right to withholdgressman, urban problems, the or divulge their grades and otherpoverty program, the dl aft, the Service purposes as they see fit,war in Vietnam, his opponent?mation to D>-aft Boards only if thestudent requests or gives the Uni¬versity permission to do so." TheCommittee of the Council also de¬cided to refer the matter to theSee the special Maroon pre¬primary interview with Mikvaon page five.(Continued on page three) on which to make a decision onwhether to grant a deferment.According to the guidelines re¬cently set by the Selective Service,graduate students must attain ascore of 80 on the test to be consid¬ered eligible for a student defer¬ment if their rank cannot be deter¬mined or if it is below the mini¬mum requirement. The new testdate is June 24, and a deadline forregistration will be announce!shortly.ii01,?j§lfI1:Hi|f|I EDITORIALRevelation Letters to the editorLast Friday’s student “sleep-in” to protest the University’shousing policy, or, rather, the the lack of one, produced atruly unprecedented event. Dean of students Warner Wick,In front of hundreds of witnesses, not only revealed that theUniversity does, in fact, have a policy on student housing;he also gave students some hints as to what specific actionsthe University will take to remedy the current student hous¬ing shortage. True, Dean Wick was vague on these specifics,but this did not detract from the unique character of thisevent.The fact that it took a large, well publicized student demon¬stration to bring about the disclosure of what, after all, washardly top secret information is indicative of the nature ofthe housing policy of the University. Unfortunately, UC ad¬ministrators seem to have an unrelenting fear of disclosing thedetails of any University housing project until every minutedecision about it has been irrevocably made. As a result, UCstudents never really know anything about the project untilconstruction has begun. By then, it is too late for the admin¬istrators to correct aspects of the new housing that will betruly objectionable to students.We on the Maroon are especially aware of this attitude;every time we are let in on the details of a new dormitory,it is on an “off the record” basis. And the same thing hap¬pens to SO officers and the members of ad hoc studenthousing groups who are let in on housing “secrets.” Theyare never allowed to reveal the University’s housing plansto the student body at large. The result is student frustrationat the apparent disregard by the University for the housingneeds ot students. Then comes the sleep-in. Replies to Livernash'sSG charter flight claimsTO THE EDITOR:In response to Mr. Livernash’sletter:1. I have looked at our file copyof the letter to the internationalcharter flight passengers to whichMr. Livernash referred and findthat indeed passengers were re¬quired to return waiver forms.However, returning the waiver didnot constitute waiving their refund.i Chicago MaroonEDITOR-IN-CHIEF Dantal HarttbgrgBUSINESS MANAGER Edward GlasgowMANAGING EDITOR Dinah EsralNEWS EDITOR David SattarASSISTANT NEWS EDITORDavid E. GumpartASSISI ANTS TO TNI EDITORDavid L. AlkanSharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsCOPY EDITOR Eva HochwaldCULTURE EDITOR Mark RosinEDITOR, CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWDavid RlchtarASSOCIATE EDITOR, CHICAGOLITERARY REVIEW . . Rick PollackMUSIC EDITOR Peter RablnowitiASSOCIATE MUSIC EDITOR Ed ChikofskyPOLITICAL EDITOR Bruce FreedEDITOR EMERITUS Robert LeveyIt does not seem unreasonable for the University to re¬veal to all UC students some of the hard core details of itshousing plans—number of rooms, number of singles anddoubles, size of rooms, etc. This will do more than just easeetudent frustration; it just may result in the construction bythe University of housing that students will want to live in. STAFF: Mike Seidman, Bob Hertz,Ken Simonson, Jeff Kuta, NancySteakley, John Beal, Karen Edwards,Beverly Smith, Joe Lubenow, FredMelcher, Gary Christiana PenelopeForan, Ellie Kaplan, Tom Heagy,Michael Nemeroff, Paul Satter, PaulBurstein, Ellis Levin, MahonriYoung, Monica Raymond, SladeLander, Dory Solinger.Charter member of US Student PressAssociation, publishers of C«<UegUt«Press Service. It was made clear in the letter thatonly if they signed the form didthey waive their right to refund,and that was up to them. In pointof fact, approximately 70 per centof the passengers elected not tosign and will (if Mr. Livernash everbrings our records back) receivetheir refunds.2. Travel agents for SG receiveno commission from SG, but onlyfrom the airlines. For this they as¬sist in various ways the actual run¬ning of the flights, and in additionprovide services to the passengers.As far as I know, they do not andhave not provided services to SG.To do so would be In violation ofFederal law.3. Student Government has onefull-time secretary and one part-time secretary. In 1962 the SG sec¬retary worked 15 hours a week;this has since grown to 37Vi hours.In 1964 a part-time secretary wasadded, whose successor now works9 hours a week. Most of the in¬creased secretarial time was ne¬cessitated by SG’s taking over thehousing file in 1963 and greatly ex¬panding it since then. Also in 1964,the charter flight committee hireda charter flight director for 15-20hours a week, whose successornow works 37'/2 hours a week. Thisincrease was necessitated simplyby the expansion of the charterflight program.The one and only full-time SGsecretary is indeed quitting. Hiringa replacement for her seems clear¬ly to be an administrative matter.No one is hiring an additional sec¬retary. No one is spending anymoney not already allocated, noteven $10.4. The reasons for abolishingthree exec posts are incrediblyreasonable, have been explainedincredibly often and are repeatedlyignored. I’ll pass up this opportuni¬ty to do so again.5. Contrary to Mr. Livernash’sstatement, Steve Silver, vice presi¬ dent of Student Government, in-forms me that he knows nothingand cares less about charterflights, etc. and intends to devotehis energies to his constitutionalduties. The present charter flightcommittee is composed of thethree people in the world uhoknow the most about the UC chart¬er flight program (Jerry Hyman,Bernie Grofman, and Sue Heston)’myself as SG president and Mike,Yesner (ex officio) as SG treasur¬er.6. I find myself forced to spendan absurd amount of my time asSG president going over the prob¬lems or mistakes of the SG’s of thepast two years. You know, I reallydon’t care. I’m interested in the 'coming year. I’m interested in thehousing problem, the question ofclass ranking for the draft, socialrules, the bookstore, the courseevaluation project, the new curric¬ulum in the College, the privacyof student records, and ways of _making SG more effective so it candeal with these and other problemsas they arise.TOM HEAGYf wmsmmmmmmmi mmmmA faculty-letterman soft¬ball game will bo held Sun¬day, May 8, on fho Midwayand University avo. at 3pm. Refreshments will beserved at the traditionalevent, which will featuresuch all-star sluggers asGeorge Playe, dean of un¬dergraduate students, MarkAshin, associate chairmanof the English departmentand associate professor ofEnglish, and Harold Met¬calf, dean of students inthe graduate businessschool. All are welcome.wmfmmamsmmmmamSAMUEL A. BELL•>«* 8h*n Frmm BeH»SINCE 192«4701 8. PorinRii AmKleweed 8-9156 MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPING•XPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1942 8. 55th HY $-9259 Protest Vietnam war, Marxist urgesUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOORATORIO FESTIVAL SERIESROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street & Woodlawn AvenueLe R0I DAVID(KING DAVID)A Symphonic Psalm by A. HoneggerMay 15, 1966 . 3:30 p.m.ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIR (45 Singers)memberi of theCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (45 Players)with ROGER PILLET as NARRATORDOROTHY LINDEN KRIEG (Soprano)CHARLOTTE BRENT (Mezzo-Soprano)WALTER CARRINGER (Tenor)Under the direction ofRICHARD VIKSTR0MTICKETS AVAILABLE AT:Downtown Graduat• School of Business190 I. Delaware PlaceCooley's Candles, 5210 Harper CourtWoodworth's Bookstore, 1311 E. 57th StreetUniversity of Chicago Bookstore, 5802 S. EllisUC Student/Faculty/Staff $2.50Reserved $4.50 General Admission $3.50 by Ellio KaplanPresenting a refutation of arguments in support of thewar in Vietnam, Dr. Herbert Aptheker urged a capacityaudience in Breasted Hall Monday night to work for an endto the conflict.A specialist in Negro history anddirector of the American Institutefor Marxist Studies, Apthekerspoke under the joint sponsorshipof the W.E.B. DuBois Club andSPAC.In the light of the official justifi¬cations for our presence in Viet¬nam, Aptheker deplored the loss oflife incurred in the war. It is thisloss of life for an unworthy cause,he said, which has aroused hisstrongest feelings against the war. enous quality of the revolutionarymovement in Asia is true,” he af¬firmed.“Hitler was emboldened and en¬couraged by forces of capitalisticmonopoly,” said Aptheker, in amovement “to crush socialism”and to “oppose socialism for reac¬tion and fascism.” weapons ... To stand firm may bean admirable policy, but not if youhappen to be standing in a patch ofquicksand,” he said.Aptheker won himself a standingovation with the declaration,“Those advocating this course arethe patriots; I am the traitor. Ifobjecting to this course makes onea traitor, please put my name highon the list.”HE CALLED for “one millionAmericans marching in Washing¬ton, perhaps right before the No¬vember elections, shouting, ’Stopthe killing in Vietnam’!”Aptheker first attacked the waras a support of the “domino theo¬ry,” asserting that rather than re¬taining allies for the US, pursuit ofthe war is “embarrassing govern¬ments and infuriating populaces.”He likewise classed the argu¬ment of the need to halt Chineseaggression as spurious and attrib¬uted the anti-Chiense attitude to“most of the ruling class of theUnited States. Questioning whatthe likely US reaction would be ifChina presented to America athreat as geographically imminentas America now presents to China,Aptheker noted Chinese restraint.Reviewing the course of the Ko¬rean war, Aptheker found evidenceof Chinese restraint. Not until US-UN forces advanced past the thir¬ty-eighth parallel and she felt herown borders threatened did Chinaannounce an intent to fight, he re¬called, and after routing McAr¬thur’s troops she stopped at theNorth Korean border, rather thanprosecuting the war further.APTHEKER DENIED the likeli¬hood that withdrawal from Viet¬nam would be “another Munich”to the world and hit the inappropri¬ateness of this analogy. “The indig- Aptheker controverted the Ad¬ministration assertion that theVietnamese conflict is not a civilwar. He cited a speech by SenatorStephen Young in which the Sena¬tor quoted General Westmorelandand General Stillmore’s admissionthat most Viet Cong are SouthVietnamese.Aptheker compared the USavowal of anti-Communism as ajustification for the war to Hitler’sprofessions of anti-Communism tojustify his anti-Semitism. To him,the US war effort exemplified thecapitalist bent for colonialism, incontrast to the socialist dedicationto oppose colonialism. He praisedsocialism as the bulwark of liberal¬ism, humanism, and scientific en¬deavor.He called the war a continuationof the 2400 year-old struggle of theVietnamese people against succes¬sive foreign invaders, assertingthat they would continue to fightfor their independence as a unitedcountry, sustained by their ownvalor and by the knowledge thatthe world’s 14 “Socialist” nationswould come to their aid if asked.REPUDIATING the policy of“negotiation from strength”, Ap¬theker likened it to the Dulles poli¬cy of “brinksmanship”. He decriedthe numbers who would have to diein the furtherance of this policy,which he called “criminal”.“To call this language inade¬quate is only to describe the inade¬quacy of our language prior to thedevelopment of thermonuclear In concluding his address, Ap¬theker denied US willingness tonegotiate. Having defied the termsof the 1954 Geneva agreementwhich called for elections in 1957,he noted, the US now declares it¬self willing to participate in “un¬conditional negotiations” while set¬ting two conditions: exclusion ofthe Viet COng from negotiationsand a refusal to consider at thistime a united Vietnam.IN A question period followinghis talk, Aptheker was asked whathe considered to be the actual rea¬sons for the prosecution of war,above and beyond those which hehad just repudiated. He repliedthat the US had a strategic interestin taking over the colonialist posi¬tion formerly held by other worldpowers, in imposing a "Pax Ameri¬cana” on the world, and in exploit¬ing the rich mineral resources ofVietnam.In response to a student query asto how the US might transformwhat Aptheker had seen as an im¬perialistic drive into a constructiveforce to aid needed social revolu¬tion in the world, Aptheker deniedthe US government could do this.Referring to Aptheker’s assess¬ment of capitalistic countries «scolonialist and socialist countriesas anti-colonialist, a member ofthe audience asked for an explana¬tion of the Soviet conquest of East¬ern European countries afterWorld War II, the invasion of Fin¬land, and the suppression of theHungarian revolt. Aptheker repliedwith a recounting of the eventsleading up to the Munich confer¬ence, the German attack on Rus¬sia, and the influences which madethe taking of Finland a matter ofRussian self-preservation.CHICAGO MAROON May 6, 1966President Beadle on the draftUC draft policy statement Kentucky balladeer to appear tomorrow(Continued from page one)Council of the Senate so that thereI would be full discussion. On April]2th, the Academic Council, with¬out dissent, resolved that "studentsshould retain the right to withholdor divulge their grades and otheracademic information for SelectiveService purposes as they see fit,and the University should furnishgrades and other academic infor¬mation to Draft Boards only if thestudent requests or gives the Uni¬versity permission to do so."The University recognizes thatthe Selective Service policy is amatter of deep importance to insti¬tutions of higher learning. TheCommittee of the Council on April19th expressed this concern bypassing unanimously the followingmotion: "The President is asked toseek the approval of the Associa¬tion of American Universities at itsnext meeting to urge the AmericanCouncil on Education to institute astudy to determine if presentguidelines for student defermentcan be improved." I reported tothe Committee of the Council onMay 3rd that I had carried out thewishes of the Committee at the April meeting of the Presidents ofthe Association of American Uni¬versities.Questions concerning the justiceof the present Selective Servicesystem inevitably raise questionsas to what system would be pref¬erable. No clear alternative has sofar been proposed which has foundwide faculty acceptance. The Uni¬versity is, of course, aware thatamong some faculty and studentsthere is the view that the Universi¬ty should refuse to supply SelectiveService Boards with the class rankgenerally or class rank amongmales even if students request it.The University's view, which wasunanimously expressed by theCommittee of the Council at itsmeeting of May 3rd, is that thistype of class ranking is covered bythe Council's resolution. In supply¬ing such information, the Universi¬ty wishes to emphasize that it is inno way altering its methods ofevaluating student performance;on the contrary it is agreeing torespond to individual students' re¬quest for evaluation that is alreadyavailable. It would be incompatiblewith the responsibilities of the Uni¬versity to fail to furnish these types of academic data at the re¬quest of the student as long as thisinformation is relevant to the op¬erations of the national policy. TheUniversity's view Is that those whoseek to change national policy onSelective Service should be encour¬aged to examine, discuss and per¬suade; and the University will en¬deavor through discussion to con¬tinue to seek ways to improve se¬lective Service Policy. To this endthe Committee of the Council is ar¬ranging a series of meetings withstudents and with faculty.(Editor’s note: The members ofthe committee of the council of theFaculty Senate are: professor oflaw Walter J. Blum, professor ofeducation and, psychology Jacob W.Getzels, professor of philosophyAlan Gewirth, professor of medicineand physiology Dr. Clifford Gurney,professor of physics Roger Hilde¬brand, professor of business HarryRoberts, distinguished service pro¬fessor of physics William Zacharia-sen, President George W. Beadle(ex officio), Provost Edward H.Levi (ex officio). Gewirth tvas notpresent at the meeting at whichthis statement ivas drawn up.) Roscoe Holcomb, balladeer of the Kentucky mining country, willappear Saturday night at Ida Noyes Hall along with the Camp CreekBoys, a fiddle and banjo group also known as the Galax StringBand, at a concert of old-time mountain music. Tickets for the show,which is sponsored by the UC Folklore Society, are on sale at theMandel Hall corridor box office for $1.50, with a 50c student dis¬count. The show will begin at 8:15 pm.1HEY MANNYGET THISA NEW MUSICAL PRESENTED BYBLACKFRIARSTONIGHTTOMORROW 8:30 P.M.“Carol Gutstein — whew!"“inept to non-existent""substance""superfluous""distinguished""thinly sliced piece of Swiss cheese' Tickets $2.00 - $1.50Students $.50 DiscountMANDEL HALLTickets Available At DoorCOME DOWN TOTOAD HALL1444 E. 57th ST. BU 8-4500AND SEE THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A HIPPOPOTAMUS ANDA RHINOCEROS.IF YOU DON'T ALREADY KNOW WE WILL PROVIDE A TAC-TILE DEMONSTRATION.HI-FI, TYPEWRITER A TAPI RECORDERRENTALS, REPAIRS t SALESReasonable Rates, Courteous Servico, Quality Equipment traditionally tailored permanentlypressed Vanopress™'Broadclothfrom the “417” Collection byVAN HEUSEN1A Vanopress shirt is permanently p. essed theday it is made... and it will never needpressing again. This Vanopress shirt haseverything. And that includes th8 important“417 V-Taper" for a slim, trim fit, classic Yorkbutton-down collar, traditional front centerplacket and back box pleat. Made of aneasy-going blend of 65% Dacron* polyester,35% cotton. Short sleeves. White, blue or maize. $6.v Stety,MCQbmm & damptw &ifopTHE STORE FOR MENIn the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100.May 6, 1966 CHICAGO MAROON * >Integration of coerces in 'fifth college' *” ■***wl"considered unique among US uniyercHios J ry tO keep COffee Shop Open at night(Continued from page one) The intradivisional activities en-Dlace the present ideas and meth- visioned by Redfield include one A group of students and faculty calling themselves the ad proposal, unless the students,-«•*->”' . r'div^n".'".*"dm1* h0C CT““ for library coffee shop has been trying to con-i e History and philosophy of reh- °ith a g’mall number of books vince the University administration to open the coffee shop insisted. ii gion, with associate professor of which everyone in the division will on the fourth floor of Wieboldt during the evening to pro- Gwynn told the Maroon that al-humanities Herman Sinaiko as pro- be required to read, the requiring Vjde a iounge for those studying in though he is sympathetic to thegram chairman. This major will of all students in the division to eat Harper library. ciutiei 0n campus for students to «rouP’s cause> he believes thatStephen Gabel, spokesman for get together informally at night ^be coffee shop in Wie-the group, and Jerry Lipsch, chair- over a cup of coffee. boldt would weaken the securityman of the Student Government Commenting on the need for arrangements at Wieboldt.(SG) campus action committee, such places, Lipsch said, “The HE POINTED out that the prob;have discussed the issue with dean whole Idea of an intellectual com- lem *s n°t 0T,ly one of preventingof students Warner A. Wick and munity involves the notion that in- people who do not belong in the li-not be open to students until the together once a month, and specialfall of 1967, unlike the other four, divisional programs such as bring-which will accept students this fall.The four programs opening nextfall will offer at least one newthree-quarter sequence course.Each program is developing its ing visiting scholars to the campusand involving the students withthem.Liberat Arts I, the division’s con-nwn rpm.irement« for its students tlSu?on. to U* Stanley''e".“Gwynn, assistant direc- tellectual and’social "aspects of life brary from getting in as othersown requ e e ; which will take the place of the hu- tor for readers> services at the li- here are inseparable. But if stu- leave through the downstairs door,tional^studies program1 will require brary, but met with little success. dents make an exodus every after- but also of keeping students from[he preset tTformative sUge b^t thegener GWYNN INDICATED, Gabel noon, or if those who return have going out that way with libraryapproved aj outlines were revealed by Red- said, that opening Wieboldt at night no place convenient to study, to get books that hare not been checkedlence; a f;eid would present a security risk un- together and talk, you can’t have a °ut-lization sequence; annon-western history sequencethree-quarter sequence in problems THE COURSE will he open only less a guard was placed on the>nd methods in civilizational stud- , „ p of selected firsl. third floor stairway, or unlesss/sr. iirhi/tK i o MAttr Km n rf H/lirn Anun • r iu>iwa s4/-*av* aaiiM Ka mcto IaHies, which is now being developed;a senior seminar; and, for somestudents, a world history sequence. year students. Among the instruc¬tors for it next year will be Dean wire door could be installed toclose access down the stairs.Gwynn anticipated that the cost of... . .. Booth, Redfield, dean of undergrad- <fwynn anucipaiea mat me cusi ulCivilization studies chairman ctlwWc nrn- the door might be prohibitive, Ga-Singer said that this major is anoutgrowth of the present civiliza¬tion study courses, and that it willprovide an opportunity for compar¬ative civilizational studies or for fessor of French, George Play, Si¬naiko, and Ray Koppelman, mas¬ter of the biology collegiate divi- bel said.According to Gabel, Wick indi¬cated that a guard would cost $20the study of a particular aspect of chemistr>: Wok>»sion and associate profeswr of bio- per night, and that “we don’t havea civilization.“No American college has at¬tempted this type of integration,”he stated.All students in the New Colle¬giate Division, regardless of theirprogram, will spend one quarter oftheir time, or the equivalent ofnine quarter courses, engaged inindependent study.REDFIELD said that each stu¬dent will have an advisor, or tutor,for this “non-course” whose jobwill be to see that the student is According to Redfield, the firstquarter (double quarter) of LiberalArts I will emphasize informal dis¬cussion and tutorial studies, withthe theme being the instilling intothe student of a “healthy scepti¬cism.”The winter would be devoted tolecture, joint readings, and formaldiscussion, based on the analysis ofthe systems of a few works.The spring would be spent in thestudy of various aspects of a num- the money for that sort of thing.'However, Gabel and Lipsch sug¬gested that, instead of a guard, theadministration could put a paddlelock on the bottom door, similar tothe lock now on the third floor door real community.“The trouble with the adminis¬tration is, for all the lip-servicethey pay to ‘community’, when itcomes to realizing the material ne¬cessities of such an idea, they sud¬denly lack the energy and vitalitythey seem to be able to devote toother concerns,” Lipsch asserted.Asked whether, in joining Gabel,he was acting as campus actionchairman, Lipsch said, “I don’tknow whether the Assembly or mycommittee would support this, andI don’t know whether I was actingofficially. I know I would havebetween Wieboldt and Modern Lan- helped whether I was in govern-guages. The lock succeeds in pre- ment or not. If I can’t work withventing people from using the and join ad hoc groups as campusdoor, and Gabel sees no reason action chairman, I’ll resign fromwhy such a measure would not government.”work on the downstairs door.“The problem with the down- Gwynn does not think that a pad¬dle lock on the downstairs doorwould be adequate as a securitymeasure, and he feels that a wiredoor installed on the third floorwould be “a visual abomination.”Gwynn also pointed out that until10 pm students could go to the co£fee machines in the Social Sciencesbuilding, and suggested that they“tank up before 10.”Although Gwynn sees it as asecurity problem. “If the Universi.ty wants to do it, it’s okay withme,” he said. “I suppose the deci¬sion is up to the dean of studentsand the dean of the humanities,"Gwynn declared.Anthony J. Eidson, head of cam¬pus security, said that he thinks apaddle lock could be used on aisGABEL SAID, “Some of us at the trial basis. “The cause is verysleep-in, in response to the tenor of worthwhile, and I think the libraryadministration remarks, wanted to users would certainly appreciate asee whether the administration, if coffee shop,” Eidson said. “I hopepresented with a worked-out pro- something can be worked out.”stairs door is not that it can beopened from the outside, but that,— __ „ ___ — — . , . . .. . if it were used as an exit, people ni„, «, nuiAt;u'uui pm-doing something worthwhile. Dur- oer oi master works from me point from the outside could come in as posal, originated by students to FREDERICK A. SIEGLER, asing the fourth year, Redfield noted, of view of the various concerns of others went out,” Gabel pointed fill a real student need, would be- sociate professor of philosophy andthis part of the program will gen- the social sciences and the human- out. gin now to practice what It has member of the ad hoc coffee shoferally be devoted to “some sort of ities. jf this problem could be solved, been preaching' about the idea of aThe reading list has not been there would be only one possible University community,drawn up yet and the topics have access to the coffee shop—via the “We were quite aware of thenot been chosen, but those involved library, he said. At the present priority nexus. To confront thetime, there is only one way intosubstantial writing.”In the other two years it will in¬volve such activities as reading,auditing, or writing papers. Thisindependent study will be super¬vised by Karl Weintraub, associate progress isprofessor of history. these ends.with the course insist that realbeing made toward...the man who has a planned SunLife program is in an enviable position.No one is better prepared to face thefuture than the man who has providedfor his retirement years and hisfamily's security through life insurance.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfsx 4-6800 - FR 2-2390Office Hour* 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY the library at night, and there is aguard at that entrance.THE PLAN to open the coffeeshop grew out of the mass meetingof people rained out of last week’ssleep-in. Assembled in Kent, theprotesters discussed the lack of fa- predicted ‘no money for that sortof thing’ plea from Wick’s office,we argued that the administrationshould re-order priorities to pro¬vide for the financial support of a group, commented, “During thepast decade, the quadrangles havebeen allowed to become more andmore a ghost town in late afternoon, evening, and weekends. Thaiseems to me to be corruption olthe original purpose and spirit ofthe quad.“At the moment, distance, secur-UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK•*« bank"NEW CAR LOANS$ as low as37S-1354 EAST 55ri» STREETMU 4-1200F.D.LC. coffee shop in the library—some- ity worries, and lack of proper fa-thing we think is very important to cilities discourage use of the li¬the idea of a campus which is not brary and the quad in general aidead after five, a notion which night. The quad should be—as itsome nine-to-five administrators was meant to be architecturally—aseem to have difficulty visualiz- focus of community life at the Uni-ing,” Gabel declared. versity,” Siegler said.“Policy means nothing unless im- Dean of the humanities, Robertplemented. And experience indi- E. Streeter and Wick were unavail-cates to me that when the admin- able for comment on the securityistration temporalizes on a student problem.Who is your ideal date? Thousands use Central Control and its high-speedcomputer for a live, flesh-and-blood answer to this question.Your ideal date - such a person exists, of course.But how to get acquainted? Our Central Control computerprocesses 10,000 names an hour. How long would it takeyou to meet and form an opinion of that many people?You will be matched with five ideally suited personsof the opposite sex, right in your own locale (or in anyarea of the U.S. you specify). Simply, send $3.00 to CentralControl for your questionnaire. 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Call the Personnel Department at UN 4-6050, Ext. 220for an Interview appointment.Mikva InterviewMikva cites his record in the Illinois Housets ft The following is the edited text erably since I first introduced it. I!« %.■»/ an interview with State Representa- was one of the co-sponsors andcl Itive Ahner J. Mikvm conducted by played a very active role in the%_$llis Levin of the Maroon April 14. anti-crime legislation that wasMikva is a candidate for the Demo- passed by the last session of thecraiic nomination for the US House General Assembly. As chairman ofof Representatives from the Illinois the House Judiciary Committee insecond congressional district. He is the last session I had a great dealopposing incumbent Democratic Rep- to do with shaping legislation suchresentative Barratt O’Hara in the as the new juvenile court act andmJnne 14 Democratic primary. this anti-crime legislation. Andj*' The second congressional district many of the other bills that vitallyincludes South Kenwood, Hyde affect social welfare law enforce-I’ark, Woodlawn, the seventh ward, ment, and the other importantparts of the eighth and ninth problems of state government.wards, the tenth icard, Calumet and Maroon: You indicated that youThornton townships. Calumet City, woro chairman of the Judiciaryund Dolton to the Indiana border. Committee in the last session ofThe interview with State Repre* the Illinois House. Did you serveentative Mikva has been edited to on any other committees?reduce its length by eliminating Mikva: Yes, during my years inv'hole questions and answers. No the House I served on the Houseanswers printed have had any por- Appropriations Committee, on thetions deleted. House Executive Committee, onThe Maroon will publish next the Public Aid Welfare Committee,Friday, May 13. the edited text of on the Military and Veterans Af-•a parallel interview conducted by fairs Committee during my firstlevin with Representative O'Hara. State Representative Abner J. Mikva talking to UC students.V ' *» *< '/v ""!Maroon: What do you conceive ofas the role of a Congressman? session, on the Elections LawsCommitee during my first or sec¬ond session, and during this lastsession, of course, I also served onMikva: I think the Congressman has the Chairmen’s Committee, whicha dual role. lie has a role, of was sort of the policy making corn-course, that involves him in voting mittee for the Democratic party in*n measures and doing his work in the House of Representatives.'Washington. But I might add that Maroon: As chairman of tho Judi-even in that role he also has a ejary Committee in the last ses-responsibility for initiating legisla- sion> what did you feel was yourtion, for helping to shape legisla- ro|e?tion, for seeing to it that the leg¬islation that comes out as the fin¬ished product in fact is geared toi.yieet the problems as he seesthem. It’s more than just a kind ofautomatic response of yea or nayto a bill when it finally comes upfor final passage. To me the im¬portant work that I’ve always seenin the legislative area is done longbefore that final day. For example,research show that there were 103bills, 103 roll calls, of which 100 in¬volved votes which were passed bya 20 or more vote plurality, whichmeans that there were only threethat could be really consideredcontested on the final vote. Thefights about those bills were all Incommittee in the kind of colleaguelobbying that goes on. The secondpart of the role of Congressman issort of to act as an ombudsman for Mikva: I felt my role as chairmanwas to make sure that every billthat came before the committeewas given a full hearing, that wit¬nesses who had an interest in testi¬fying for or against the bill weregiven an opportunity to beheard and heard as fully as wasfeasible. Sometimes, though, wit¬nesses tend to filibuster or filibust-; n „ er in numbers. For instance, atJfl the last session of Congress my . . ... T .... ’thni.t 4K„f 1A9 °ne P™* we had, I think, over 700witnesses who wanted to testifyagainst a gun bill, and under thecircumstances I was required toget them all together and ask themto choose their spokesman so thatthe whole legislative processwouldn’t get bogged down. I sus¬pect that’s what they really wantedto have happen, but I held thecommittee in session sometimes aslate as two or three o’clock in the..... . morning to make sure that all wit-ai cowtitaMCy; h« II th« closest were beard , wt that themk between the people end their commiu« ch,irman had • specialfederal aovemment And he ousht obligatio„ to t0 |t that bills tbat° *7 * responsibihty, and I dH come „f committM wereink does have a responsibility, c|ear|y drawn and as unambiguoustor making them aware of what 'aibIe , w, tba,their federal government Is doing, u ^committ« cbaiman I didI and In tarn findnig out from them ’ h ial ri bl,the need, that ought to be met by , , p,Me the voting of thegovernmental action. In short committM iB any parUcui,r waymaintaining . very close liaison j ^with the eommumbei, community „„ judgraMt abmlt , p^pp.organisations, and the people in it. Ja, h,st„Jfr^,r „ chairman nilMaroon: Looking thon of tho rolo would otherwise, but I didn’t useof Congressman from tho first the power of the committee to trvpoint of view that you Initially tug- to either ram proposals throughgested, how would you say that that the committee didn’t want toyou stand as an example of some- pass or keep proposals the com¬ono who was in tho Illinois House mittee did want passed,in tho rolo of Initiator? How, for Maroon: Did your committee per-example, did you operate to pass form any investigations?legislation that you particularly fa- Mikva: Not the Judiciary Commit-vored? tee. I have headed up during myMikva: As part of this campaign I years in the Legislature two orwent through my ten years in the three investigations that are prob-Legislature and reviewed the rec- ably the most famous, or most noto-ord of bills that I had actually ini- rious, depending on which side youtiated and have been primarily were on. The Investigation of pur-responsible for, and I was quite chasing practices in the mental\pleased with the record. I’m talk- health department in the 1959 ses-ing now about bills that were ac- sion. I consider that a very suc-tually passed and enacted into law. cessful investigation, and we dis-The new mental health code that is closed a good deal of inefficiencynow part of the Illinois statutes and corruption. We forced drasticand is one of the most progressive changes in the purchasing proce-in the country was mine. The cred- dures. This became an importantL it reform legislation that was issue in the 1960 campaign, and, in> ^passed in 1961 was mine, included fact, I think in part, anyway, theyled to a revitalization of the wholemental health department.Maroon: Returning to the secondrolo of a Congressman, as wassuggested before, how have you asa state representative attempted tosome legislation that I had beenworking on since even before Iwent into the Legislature in 1957. Iwas the chairman of the sub-com¬mittee which drafted the new Illi¬nois criminal code which is one ofthe best in the country. I shouldn’t keep in touch with your constitK^say drafted—which reviewed the uents, and how do you Intond to! draft of the Illinois Criminal code handle this if you're elected towhich finally brought out the code Congress?that was passed by the Legisla- Mikva: Now there’s a place whereture. I indicated that I Was the I have no doubt that it is easier tosponsor of the first open occupancy communicate with your constituen-bill that was initiated in the Illinois cy as a state legislator than it is aslegislature, and while we still have a Congressman, with one excep-yet to pass such a law, I think that tion. And that is that the newslet-the proposal has advanced consid- ter that I sent out of my constit¬ uency was paid for by me. Thereis no allowance made for it by thelegislative body. As the list grew tosome eight or nine thousand peoplewho were receiving it, it becamequite an expensive proposition tomaintain it. But I felt that was oneimportant way of communicating.My newsletters, rather than seek¬ing to summarize every bill thatwas passed, sought to deal withimportant subjects in some detail,and I always made it clear in mynewsletters and otherwise that Iwould make available the legisla¬tive digest which showed all thebills that had been enacted intolaw and all the bills that had beenacted upon, as well as a voting rec¬ord of how people had voted. Theother way that a legislator com¬municates with his constituency, ofcourse, and this to me is the mostimportant way, is by personal con¬tact with them. All the time I wasin the legislature I gave the highestpriority to any speaking engage¬ments that were offered to me inthe district, and I would turn downvery tempting ones elsewhere inorder to appear at a local PTA ora local Kiwanis club or a local bus¬inessmen’s group in the district totell them what I was doing andfind out what they were doing. Ialways insisted on a question peri¬od afterwards, or insist that Iwould like one to make sure thatthey had an opportunity to statewhat was on their mind and askme what I was doing. As far asCongress is concerned, I feel that aCongressman has the same kind ofresponsibility, and I know that thegood Congressmen are back intheir district two and three times amonth. You know Congress stillmeets only four days a week onmost weeks, and the good Con¬gressmen are back on those three-day weekends talking to their con¬stituents, accepting speakingengagements, making sure peopleknow what’s going on.Maroon: Do you too any specialneeds in tho second congressionaldistrict?Mikva: Just about every need thatis encompassed within a polygloturban area is present in the secondcongressional district. I thinkthat’s what makes the district soexciting and so challenging. Peoplein this district come from a varietyof backgrounds, have a variety ofinterests, have a variety of prob¬lems. But the needs range all theway from schools, which is univer¬sal throughout the district, to theneeds for federal assistance toschools and for particularized fed¬eral assistance to schools to meetthe inner city school problems, toflood control problems at the southend, to mass transit throughout thedistrict, to air pollution throughoutthe district. When you say specialneeds, to me these are specialneeds because I think the historyof this country will be writtenwithin the next 50 years in termsof what Congress does to and forthe cities.Maroon: As a state representativefor part of the district, how did youattempt to meet some of thesethings? ....Mikva: Well I’ve always felt that afair housing law was of particularinterest to the south side of Chica¬go because I felt that we couldonly hope to achieve and maintain integration in our own communityto the extent that the pressure ofNegro ghetto is equalized through¬out the urban area. I also felt thatthe only way you could persuadewhite families to remain in manyinstances in an integrated areawas to persuade them that it wasour public policy to try to achieveintegration in housing, rather thanto maintain the segregated pat¬terns of yesteryear. I’ve been theleader in much of the efforts to ob¬tain additional assistance for ourschools from the state legislature.Indeed in many instances I evenopposed my own party in seekingto get higher assistance for theschools. Representative Scariano,who has become somewhat of aschool specialist, and I on severalinstances led the fight to increasethis assistance even though ourown administration was opposed tofurther assistance. These are acouple of examples. Credit reformwas another. This is a set of prob¬lems that particularly affect thisdistrict. Urban renewal changeswere another. Eliminating the landtrust on anonymity which made itdifficult for the city to find out whothe slumlords were was another.This, incidentally, was an idea thatcame to me from one of the com¬munity organizations. I can nameseveral others like that.Maroon: What might a Congress¬man do to meet some of thesoneeds?Mikva: I think that there ought tobe some substantial changes madein the Elementary School Act tomake the act more meaningful interms of the inner city school prob¬lems. For example, at presentthere is a restriction on using anyof the funds for capital needs, andyet one of the desperate needs ofChicago schools is more buildingsand more bricks and mortar in or¬der to find enough places to housethe kids that are in the publicschool system. I’d like to see thatrestriction changed. I think wehave to have some much tougherlaws in terms of air pollution andtreat them as a national problemor as a multi-state problem thatthey really are. Certainly in thesouth side of the Chicago areatrying to solve air pollution on acommunity level or city-wide levelis just not sufficient. It has to betreated on an urban-wide areawhich includes the Gary-Hammondcomplexes. I think problems ofprotecting the lake front, makingsure that federal funds aren’t usedto grab further pieces of the lakefront either for highway use or mil¬itary use or other uses, is some¬thing that a Congressman can andshould uniquely initiate from thisarea. The more I think about theNike site that sits out there onPromontory Point, the more dis¬mayed I become that there wasn’tsomeone who had introduced a billin Congress to see to it that rec¬reational lands had not been takenaway unless substitute facilitieswere provided. Certainly in thecase of Nike sites it could havebeen put oa filled land if it wasthat important that they be at theedge of the lake area, the way theyare.Maroon: What has ltd you to sooktho nomination for Congress fromtho second congressional district? Mikva: Well, I think I try to take apage out of the late President Ken*nedy’s book, who said that a candi¬date ought to ask himself one ques¬tion before he runs for public of¬fice: does he think he can do thejob better? And I honestly felt thatI could do it better than, the incum¬bent, and from here on in it wouldbe up to the voters to decide. Ithink I had a pretty good schoolingin a pretty tough league after tenyears in Springfield. I think I knowmy way around the legislative pro¬cess and the legislative arena. Ithink I could be a good Congress¬man for this area.Maroon: Turning, if wo may, tosome of the problems that face thecountry, could you givo us an an¬alysis of how effectiva you thinkthe poverty program has been,especially in Chicago?Mikva: I think the parts of the pov¬erty program that have gonethrough the private agencies havefunctioned quite well, programslike SWAP which existed beforethe poverty orogram and whichnow receive funds from the pover¬ty program, programs like some ofthe ones that are being run like theChicago youth centers and some ofthe boys clubs and so on, which in¬volves street worker activities,street worker programs. All ofthese, I think, are functioning quitewell, and I think that there's *substantial benefit being receivedfrom the tax dollars being spent.I’m not that sanguine about theprograms that are being funneledthrough the public agencies. I’mnot satisfied that the poverty pro¬grams, as they’re now being runthrough the urban progress cen¬ters, are achieving maximum re¬sults for the money that is beingspent. I’ve been somewhat disap¬pointed, for example, in the com¬munity representatives programs.Here, too, getting back to this om¬budsman idea, the community rep¬resentative as I understood it wasto be a kind of ombudsman for thopoor in the community. And in¬stead, because of the way they’reselected and because of the way thepoverty program is run from with¬out, rather than from within thecommunities of the poor, I’ve no¬ticed that the community reps arefrequently treated with the samesuspicion and fear that the proba¬tion officer and the policemen andthe welfare investigator are treat¬ed. Well, this isn’t the way an om¬budsman should function. I’d liketo see more of the methods of pri¬vate agencies copied. I’d like tosee more involvement of indigen¬ous people in the community in thepolicy making or at least in theprogram making for the communi¬ties of the poor. I’m convinced ofthis. Eliminating poverty means inmany instances reforming thecommunity. And you don't reforma community from without. Youreform it from within. Without theparticipation of the people whoknow the problems best in mean¬ingful capacities we’re not going tosolve these problems.Maroon: Will there bo any spocifietypos of changes you would liko tosee made in the program as such?Mikva: Yes, Id like to see a littlemore control, if you please, given toa kind of pluralistic arrangement,and I sort of feel that the overallcontrol of the poverty programnow, particularly those parts thatare funneled through the publicagencies, is in the political organi¬zation in the town. 1116 notion some¬how is that if we funnel enoughmoney into there, into local gov¬ernment, it will trickle down to thepoor. And like most trickle-downtheories, most trickle-down pro¬grams, it just doesn’t work. Iwould rather see this money spentand be funneled through pluralisticcontrol groups which include rep¬resentatives of private agencies,again in meaningful capacities,and that approval for program#and Initiation of programs comethrough sources other than what Iconsider the presently controlledcommittee which determines whatpoverty programs will be broughtinto Chicago.(Continued on pago sfx)May 6, 1466 • CHICAGO MAROON • «Mikva calls for "substantial re-evaluation" of draft system(Continued from page six)Maroon: You don't feel then thereis sufficient participation by thepoor themselves in the planning ofthe program?Mikva: No, 1 don't, and I alsodon’t feel there is sufficient partic¬ipation by the other parts of oursociety in the planning of theseprograms. I think they are by andlarge planned, for want of a betterword, by the establishment of pub¬lic agencies, rather than involvingpeople from private agencies andpeople from civic groups and so onin the planning so they would oper¬ate really independently of the po¬litical establishment. I think that’svery important.Maroon: Along these lines, maiyRepublicans have charged that theChicago Committee on Urban Op¬portunity is just a political plumunder the thumb of Mayor Daley.Do you feel that this is true?Mikva: Well, it’s kind of a pat an¬swer that I can’t buy. I think thatthere are programs that have notbeen run or have been curtailedbecause of concern by the politicalestablishment, and I don’t knowthat I attribute all the blame forthat to the Mayor. But I know thatseveral committeemen have putthe kebosh on certain kinds of pov¬erty programs because they sawthem as a threat to their politicalestablishment. I know that the pro¬posal for legal aid to the poor washung up for considerable time be¬cause of the concern that this legalassistance might also include suitsagainst thp city, and it took agreat deal of backing and fillingbefore they finally got an agree¬ment on the program, and I’m stillnot sure how well that agreementwill work. So I don’t know that youcan say baldly and candidly thatit’s all a political plum for theMayor and therefore it ought to bewiped out, which some of the Re¬publicans are saying. What I dosay is it isn’t working as well or asefficiently as it should. And itisn’t; it has not reached down tothe poor the way I had hoped itwould and the way that I’m surethe sponsors of it had hoped itwould. Maroon: Have you bean involvedit any aspect of the poverty pro¬gram?Mikva: Directly and formally, no.I’ve tried to keep track of w'hat’sgoing on. My wife serves on one ofthe technical advisory committeesfor the poverty program. As I say,I’ve in turn tried to keep trackthrough various agencies that I aminvolved with in terms of what’sgoing on, and I’ve tried to keeptrack with what urban progresscenters in the area are doing.Maroon: What do you consider tobe the major problems of the ur¬ban areas in the nation?Mikva: Education, air, housing, rec¬reational space—in short the amen¬ities, as well as the necessitiesthat make urban living pleasantand possible. If urban area docsnot permit its citizens to get totheir jobs within a reasonable timeand by reasonable means and areasonable expense, the urbanarea can’t survive very long. If anurben area doesn’t provide thekind of school system which willencourage people to live there, tosend their kids to these schools, itwon’t survive. If the urban areainsists on poisoning its citizens bypollutants that it throws out in theair it w'on’t survive. And if wecan’t have enough green spacearound so that we feel we havesome elbow room and someplacefor recreational purposes, then itseems to me that the urban areacan’t survive. I would considerthese the top ones. There are oth¬ers, all of the things that make lifeworth living are involved in urbanaffairs, but I would say these arethe major ones.Maroon: And these problems aremanifested in the second district?Mikva: Clearly, and they all haveimplications which require federalassistance and federal help. Wecan’t solve these problems by our¬selves.Maroon: What about the problemof transportation?Mikva: No question that we needfederal assistance there, I mightadd there is a federal program al¬ready on the books which could bsof substantial assistance to us.QCoung cAmericaon the Qo-Qoby Patti Poulsen“Miss 400 Astrojet"' N Flush: The biggest news ever to hit teen travel is the newhalf-price plane fares! 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Don’t wait ’til you arrive to call; yourfriend may already have plans and nothing beats the inside know-howof a native for getting you the right spots.* * *Don’t take everything with you that isn’t nailed down.Porters are always around except when you need them.^ Just in case you should be one of “the chosen ones”however, be sure to have some quarters in an accessible pocket.* * ❖Now, to get down to important business—where the kids are. The INspots are: More than ever before Nov York is where the action is.T wenty years ago young people made pilgrimages to Paris; today theycome to NYC—the young people’s town... Provincetown, America’sBohemia on the Waterfront and one of the liveliest, swingingest stretchesof sand on the American Mainland... Washington—for a cultural-political survey course the fun way!... Los Angeles where the liveliestseason is the summertime when the Hollywood Bowl, Greek Theater,Disneyland and the indomitable beach parties get into full swing.^ * * *f\<i€ Quickies: Don’t miss—New York’s Washington Square inGreenwich Village, scene of a gigantic art show in the' spring and fall and folk singing every Sunday afternoon... the Tombs in D.C.—a noisy cellar where beer starts at 354 andyou can chew on a Polish sausage for all of 114... “Pop” folk musicat The Troubadour in L.A. where if you can prove you’re 16 you geta 50% discount at the door... San Francisco’s Windsor Hotel, theperfect pad for the student shoestring—plushy for the price ... “Camp”is IN and so is camping in the Grand Canyon area...One of the farthestout discotheques is Boston’s Bibliotheque which does look like a libraryl* * *For more of where the action is—send for a free 64-page booklet“Go-Go American.” It contains detailed information on student pricedaccommodations, restaurants, and 200 IN discount coupons for topspots all over the country! Just drop a card to Dept. ML, Youth PlanHeadquarters, 633 Third Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017.For Vi-Fare Cards Contact CampusRep. Ed Taylor, DO 3-2293, 5625 Woodlawn This district includes the Dan Vietnamese conflict started, and the Vietnam protests that haRyan or pieces of the Dan Ryan that is continually review the mili- been taking place on campuses andhighway ar.d the area that’s served tary budget to see where fat can in the streets?by the Dan Ryan highway. There be trimmed off a bit. You know’ Mikwa- iv» ai,,,,,,. K„u jwas a median strip that was ac- that is the single largest expendi- lbp -jot,. f ,eved ^at -quired there at several million dol- ture that goes into the federal bud- m..-t rpmnjn nhc«i t I emocracylars which is lying fallow. There is get. Like all bureaus, I would say S S tA, lnV1?a,e- 'a program already on the books bureaucrats, but let me talk about lo ‘ . 1 ®r e/F°rtsunder which federal funds would it as bureaus, like all elements of lTSh Y T-00"*be available to finance a mass government there is a tendency to u... *b . . r.f n°Tions,transit system on that median get loose There is a tendency to (0r the democratic process Ke *strip. From my calculations it is overexpand; there is a tendency to at Dppi(,inn>. in a Pconceivable that most of the mon- overreach. Since the Vietnamese made bv disspnt hv nmt t jPeey, if not all the money that would conflict has started, everybody in ^mentf by debates ind" lifbe needed for establishing the sys- Congress, or almost everybody in ufUmate ^ b? fj a"d 'J* ’tern, could come through federal Congress, seems totally unwilling a siftina and winnnwin* rli ?funds. But the local officials have U> review the military budget and ?nf ,ir the rightSolutions Sthus far been unwilling to make «« where it can be cut without hard for some ^opTe to und ?application for these funds, I sus- doing damage to our military sland because t0',hem ,hepect because of some pressure capacity, and I think that a good seems SQ e Tbeyfrom the competing railroads who amfliiirt °f money can be saved stand wh e'veryone won’t buvdon’t want to see any mass trans- here which would reduce substan- their answers { think Wjn™*portation in this area. I think it’s 'al y the inflationary pressures Churchill once described democraabsolutely essential, and anyone that are now existent. cy as a terrible form of governwho’s driven down the Dan Ryan, Maroon: You then disagree with ment, except that every other formanyone that's talked to the people the suggestion that the better al- js worse. And sometimes decisionswho live out there, know how ternative might be to cut back on in a democracy are hard to reachessential it is. I think that this is *om« the Great Society spending and the process is an unhappy onean area where a Congressman to meet the needs of the Vietnam for those who see the answers andcould do a great deal of pushing war? can’t understand why everyone •*and see to it that the local officials Mikva: Absolutely. doesn’t agree with him. But I thinktake advantage of the programs Maroon: Do you see any need for ,hat .we must defend and protectthat already exist. re-evaluation of the draft sys- rights of students, and for thatMaroon: Could you give us your tern which some Republicans have ma^er °f adults as well to dissentappraisal of the current guns and called for? and state their dissent in anvbutter debate? Mikva: j see a need for substantial Peaceful ^ desire And IMikva: Well, I have a short hand re-evaluation of the draft system. I Iway of talking about it. I just am see a need for re-evaluating it to ^ 3W 1absolutely unwilling to let Red Chi- make sure that it is not being used „! *? t0 m,a^e4 SUrena or North Vietnam decide how as some kind of a punishment de- 1 USed 3S * ° ub t0 Stl'much social progress we can make vice by which dissidents in our so- ‘ aisseni-in this country by deciding how ciety are drafted into the army as Maroon: 0n • relat'd subject,many guns we’re going to send punishment for speaking an unpop- could y?u commant on our involve-over to Vietnam, which basically ular piece. I refer, of course, to m#nt with v,atnam?seems to be the current situation the situation with the Michigan Mikvo: I’m not happy with our in- 4in Vietnam—that for every action draftees. I see the need for revis- volvement in Vietnam. I don't sup-on our part there's an opposite and ing it to broaden a little bit the no- Pose that anybody is. I have themore than equal reaction on North tion of conscientious objection. I feeling that we sort of applied aVietnam’s and Red China'a part, feel very strongly that there ought policy which worked reasonablyAs I say, I’m unwilling to give to be methods of substitutes—of al- well in Europe after World War IIover that power to them. I feel ternative service, not substitute to areas where the same ingredi-that we must continue the social service—of alternative service ents For success were not present,programs at home, that it belies which ought to permit people who J refer, of course, to the fact that .our whole notions of what govern- have an honest and conscientious in Europe we were dealing with ”ment ought to be doing if we say objection to the war to serve in countries that had traditions of de-at this point that we can’t afford to some other capacity that doesn’t rnocracy and fairly well-developeddo the things that will give our cit- involve carrying arms. I think that economies where a modest amountizens the better life in order to our democracy ought to be strong of military assistance and econom-solve the problems in Vietnam. enough to tolerate that kind of dis- ic assistance were sufficient toMaroon: Are we in a war econo- sent. I feel that the system has to revitalize them and re-establishmy? Do you feel that we need a be looked at long and hard to them as democracies and as alliestax increase, and if we did, would make sure that it does not continue as well. And we tried to apply, Iyou vote for one? as a kind of poor man’s war with a think, that same policy w’ith Viet- AMikva: No, I don't think we're on ?°OT ">?”'? As !J«* over »«n. forgetting that we were deal-a war economy. 1 think there has tbe stBtisUcs I have the distinct w,th * l>a<1 »»been some heating up of the econo- foehng that the present college de- such traditions that had a greamy, which creates some problems. ,er“ent Pr°f works out in deal of instability and a ack oI think, though, that they can be suah a way that the kids who can- any history of even centralizedsolved without a tax increase. I »“ord [° to s'h»o1 end, UP eov«™ment, »lone democraticwould much prefer to see the drafted. and many wh<> ca" afford institutions. I think we re mherit-su«eestions made bv Senator to g0 to schoGl Frequently avoid the some of those mistakes andDolglasThat Te dose up some o dft- * d<>n’t think it ought to be judgements as we see what> going \the tax loopholes which ought to be Put on *hat b3518, 1 know that we ™ CHUrren?y theret *e reall^e thatclosed up anyway, many of which hav,e a. des”;e and a necessity for the dissent against the Present re-could bring or take out of public Protecting the brain power of this gime is not limited only to the Vietcirculation those extra funds which 4but at lhe s3™ lime I Cong, but mcludes a lot of otherare heating up the economy. Sec- think that an economic discnmina- elements in South Vietnam, andondly, I would like to see us con- tlon in the.draft !s something that we re faced wi h a situation where ,tinue to do what Senator Douglas cannot Justlfy ln a democracy. there s a great deal of instability aand others were doing before the Maroon: Do you see any other ba- and we re caught in the middle ofsis for establishing a system of the Jt- I think, though, at this point todraft? talk about what might have beenMikva: I’m still very troubled by in 1954 and 1956 is avoiding theit. I wish I could tell you what my problem. I think we are in a situa-LASTS LONGER ■ STAYS LIVELIERMOISTURE IMMUNEashaway MULTI-PLYfor Regular PlayApprox. Stringing CostTennis $3Badminton $4 solution is to that third problem J!00 wherG twe have thrown downthat I mentioned, this question of tbe gauntlet in Vietnam and weeconomic discrimination. All I caunot simply pick up our marblesknow is that at present something and g0 home. I do think that therelike six to seven times the average are ways and mGans °( 1,nutenf7fy;number of kids are being drafted our eFforts to peel the Vietfrom Hammond js are being draf- and Nortb Vietnam off ofed from the country as a whole. ‘hue.,r pre8eni domination by RedAnd when you look over why, the ^bma and bringing them to t eanswer is very obvious, and that is Peace table. I would like to see usthat the average draftee in Ham- feentuate and increase every ef-mond comes from a family that Fort to achieve that end. I, for one,cannot afford to send him to 4WGuld have wished that we hadschool, and he’s drafted. When you take" advantage of the Pope s pro-look over some of the suburbs posal for a cease-fire over thewhere more of the families are af- ^asFm Period, even though 1fluent and their kids do go to ™ght have been rejected by theschool, they aren’t drafted. This ?ther side But it seems to me thatroubles me. As I said, I don’t WOGld, have been important forknow what the answer is. Maybe u?and four our reputation with ouithe answer is to make it clear that a llflf }° have been quick to jumpanyone who wants to go to school at tbat sAuggestlGI\1 WOuldand can go to school is going to be f.ee/he Administration make clearable to, whether they can afford to thaJ tWhe are Prepared to negotiateor not. And face their serVice after Wdhtth^ Co”g *** bargaschool, as do the folks who are for- lng tablf/ 1 ^uld llk* 10 Se* 1tunate enough to have the funds. I s»™ort he nGt,ons °/’T h« 1would still hope for the day that Kc"united n u“r !we can eliminate the draft. I real- ,seek t0 achieve a unitedize that to talk about that during YifiS°ASHAWAY PRODUCTS, INC., Ashaway, Rhode Island celeration of the war in Vietnam,because I think it’s not in our in¬terest. I think that to try toSTf • P'rmanent draft ln a de- victory6there^hat^om^of Sthe Vietnamese conflict is like,sounds like daydreaming, but I’mstill uncomfortable about the no¬mocracy.Maroon: What are your feelings on (Continued on page seven)CHICAGO MAROON May 6, 1966Mikva asks increased Vietnam peace efforts(Continued from page five)itary experts talk about might in¬volve as much as 2 or 2Vi mil¬lion American troops, and I don’tthink that that’s in our self-interestat all. And even that is predicatedon the notion that Red China willnot intervene. And I remember thelast military expert who assuredus that Red Chinese would not in¬tervene, and that was in South Kor¬ea. And we paid a very high pricefor that mistake in military judg¬ment.Maroon: Do you then support theAdministration's stand?Mikva: I do not support the Ad¬ministration’s stand insofar as theyindicate that they're prepared tosubstantially accelerate the war.It’s very hard to know what theAdministration stand is in this res¬pect. I do support the Administra¬tion’s stand when they indicatethat they’re going to bend everyeffort to try to find a peaceful solu¬tion to the problem. I was pleasedwith the President’s bombingpause toward the end of last year.I would have wished he would havecontinued it, at least until the Unit¬ed Nations could have had achance to act on the submission tothem of this dispute, to see wheth¬er they could find a solution to it. Iwould like to have seen, as I said,the Easter cease-fire proposalagreed to by the Administration. Iwould like to see the Administra¬tion unequivocally state that we’reprepared to negotiate with the VietCong at a peace conference. I stillhave yet to see a clear-cut state¬ment of that. I would like to seesome suggestions from the Admin¬istration on what kind of supervi¬sion there would be of a truce andof the election machinery, becauseI think these are ways of offeringbait to the Viet Cong and NorthVietnam which will, I hope, helpbring them to the peace table. Myown feeling is that it’s a Congress¬man’s responsibility—and here Imay sharply disagree with otherswho are in Congress—that I thinkthat a Congressman continues tohave the responsibility to disagreewith the Administration even onforeign policy matters if he thinks they’re wrong. Again I think that’sa part of the Congressional role inmaking, in helping to shape foreignpolicy.Maroon: Do you sot a role forCongress in shaping our foreignpolicy?Mikva: Yes, I do. I think that therole of Congress is to review for¬eign policy established by the Ad¬ministration, to make suggestionsas to changes, to act as the publicforum in which debates about for¬eign policy take place, becauseagain this is the democratic meth¬od. It’s not as efficient as othermethods, but it works better in thelong run. And I think the notionthat a bipartisan foreign policysomehow-precludes Congress fromdoing anything about foreign policyis a mistaken notion and is incom¬patible with a free society. I wasvery pleased to see the SenateForeign Relations Committee bringthe subject of Vietnam into thepublic forum. I would have wishedthat the House counterpart haddone the same thing. Not to rehashwhat’s already been done, but interms of making or being a part ofthe shaping and review of foreignpolicy, otherwise Congress be¬comes a kind of rubber stampwhich merely votes the appropria¬tions to carry it out. Obviously,once the policy has been estab¬lished, the appropriations role be¬comes a kind of mechanical role —to refuse to vote an appropriationfor a policy that has been esta¬blished and is going to be carriedout is kind of a “dog in the man¬ger” attitude about the problem. Iwould much prefer to see Congressdebate these issues on the meritsin terms of what our policy,.oughtto be. I was most pleased again tosee the Senate Foreign RelationsCommittee start on what I think isa constructive solution, if not toVietnam, at least to our attitudetoward all of Southeast Asia andmost of the other underdevelopedareas of the world, and that is toreview our whole approach to for¬eign aid and economic aid, with aneye toward recognizing that itshould not be a weapon in the ColdWar, but rather a weapon in thewar to eliminate or diminish econ¬ omic poverty and need throughoutthe world, to give these countriesthe opportunity to develop a whole¬some economy in which democrat¬ic institutions can thrive.Maroon: You soo the House thenas possibly undertaking a similardebate on the war?Mikva: I feel they should. I don’tknow whether they will or not. TheHouse has been singularly quietabout the whole dispute in Viet¬nam, and for that matter on for¬eign policy generally. I don’t under¬stand the institution of Congress tomean that once a President has orthe Administration has made a de¬cision that Congress has nothing tosay about it, or that Congressshould have no role in helping himmake a decision.Maroon: What role do you see Chi¬na playing in the war in any possi¬ble further escalation?Mikva: Well, I think at this pointthey have the best of all possibleworlds. They see us exposed with aquarter of a million troops and asubstantial amount of our where¬withal at very little cost to them. Ithink that if we escalate to thepoint where we could possiblybring about a military conclusionto the war, that they still are inthe flexible position of by throwingin more materials or a lesser num¬ber of troops than we have to putin continue the kind of stalematethat now exists. It seems to me,therefore, that by our creating theacceleration, the escalation, we’replaying into their hands.Maroon: What should Americanpolicy bo towards China?Mikva: I think we must be con¬cerned about the isolation of China,whether it’s self-imposed or im¬posed by us. I think that it is notsufficient for Secretary Rusk, it isnot a sufficient answer to say thatthey hang up every time we wantto talk to them on the telephone,because it still concerns us thatwe’re not talking on the telephone.I think that our attitude towardRed China ought to be to try tobreak down that isolation as muchas possible and do whatever is nec¬essary to help bring that about.Certainly it is not helping to bringit about when we are the leaders of the opposition of admission to RedChina in the UN under any circum¬stances. Not only do we promotethe isolation, but we use up a greatdeal of good will with our allieseach year as we force them to joinus in opposing the admission ofRed China to the United Nations.Maroon: Turning now specificallyto your primary contest, with theSteelworkers and COPE supportingyour opponent and the Packing¬house Workers and their interna¬tional president and the UAW sup¬porting you, do you see any signifi¬cant split in the ranks of organizedlabor in the second congressionaldistrict?Mikva: I don’t consider it a split. Ithink a primary contest is a healthything and I think that people andunions ought to be free to respect¬fully differ on who they back. Asfar as I’m concerned, this is goodfor the district; this is good for theDemocratic Party; and it’s goodfor people’s participation in poli¬tics. I predict more people will beinvolved in this primary electionthan have perhaps ever beforevoted in a primary in this districtand that’s healthy. That meansthat people are accepting a politi¬cal responsibility which I considervery important, and I think thatunions have a political responsibili¬ty. Sure, as a candidate I wouldhave wished that all the unionswould have supported me. Theyaren’t. I think the memberships ofthe unions, as has been the case inevery other election, since we dohave an Australian ballot, aregoing to consider themselves andindeed are free to vote their ownpreferences. I certainly don’t in¬tend to write off the entire Steel¬worker Union membership and saythey’re all going to vote for my op¬ponent. I don’t believe that for aminute. I’ve been campaigning atthe plant gates at US Steel andother companies under contractwith the Steelworkers Union. I’vebeen enjoying a very good re¬sponse, and I anticipate getting agood share of Steelworker Unionvotes, as weH as of the other un¬ions here too. And I don’t see it asany kind of meaningful split in the labor union movement. I feel thatI’ve had some differences, somesubstantial differences, with theleaders of one of the trade unionsinvolved, but that has really noth¬ing to do with the union movementas such.Maroon: Would you like to com¬ment on your opponent?Mikva: Well, he’s a very fine manand I’ve had no personal quarrelwith him. I supported him in thepast and voted for him in the past.As I said before, I think at thispoint I can do the job better. Ithink that the district needs morevigorous representation, more imag¬inative representation, and in alldue modesty I think I can providethat. I hope that the majority ofthe voters in the Democratic pri¬mary agree with me.Maroon: Would you have any addi¬tional comments that you wouldlike to make?Mikva: No, except, well, I wouldlike to say this. I think that the di¬rect primary was one of the greatreforms of this century. We hadhopes that it would finally elimi¬nate the boss rule of the parties,which had been the pattern underthe old convention system. Unfor¬tunately, the primaries are undergreat attack because citizens re¬fuse to vote in them. And I hopothat whoever people are going tovote for in this congressional pri¬mary or in the state senatorialprimary or in any of the other pri¬maries that are currently undei-way in this area, I would hope thatpeople would take advantage of theopportunity to have a say in partyaffairs by coming out to vote in theprimary. If there’s a large vote inthe Democratic primary in thisdistrict, I have no concern aboutthe party itself, because it willmean the people are taking thekind of interest they ought to takein Democratic politics and in Dem¬ocratic candidates.Next Friday — an interview withthe man Mikva is opposing, incum¬bent Democratic Representative Bar•ratt O’Hara.•: ’ * 1 * s "mmm m mmCalendar of eventsmm UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTSFriday, May 6FORUM: *‘The moral dilemma of beingan American in a revolutionary world,St. Clair Drake, professor of sociology,Roosevelt University, “The legacy ofcolonialism”: Eugene T. Gendlin, pro¬fessor of psychology and philosophy atUC, “Historical determinism and per¬sonal choice”; Paul Lauter, AmericanFriends Service Committee, "Revolu¬tion and violence”; Judd 126, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: "Symbolism and threetwentieth-century Bengali poets,” Jyo-tirmoy Datta, Foster lounge, 4 pm.FILM: “Frankenstein meets wolfman,”seventh floor Pierce Tower, 7 pm.FILM: "Breathless,” doc films, Soc.Sci. 122, 6, 8, and 10 pm.FOLK DANCING: Instruction and gen¬eral dancing, Ida Noyes hall, 7:30 pm.BI.ACKFRIARS: “Hey, Manny, etc.,”Mandel hall, 8:30 pm.CONCERT: Chamber music concert,musical society, Ida Noyes library, 8:30m.ECTURE: “The servant of the lord inIsaiah,” Father John McKenzie, visitingprofessor, divinity school, Hillel house,8:30 pm.Saturday, May 7PROJECT: International voluntaryservice, helping the Chicago city mis¬sionary society with the friendly townsproject, call Joan Miller 643-8434, leaves8:30 am.TENNIS: Chicago intercollegiate tennischampionships, varsity courts, 9 am.FILM: "Frankenstein meets wolfman,”seventh floor Pierce Tower, 7 pm.CONCERT: Old-time mountain music,featuring Roscoe Holcomb and theCamp Creek boys, Ida Noyes 8:15 pm.FILM: “Raisin in the sun,” S'NCCfileks, profits to Holmes county (Miss.)freedom Democratic party, Judd 126,7:15 and 9:30 pm.PARTY: Bat blast, Pierce commons,8:30 pm.BLACKFRIARS: “Hey, Manny, etc.,”Mandel hall, 8:30 pm.CONCERT: Music of the renaissance,collegium musicum, Bond chapel, 8:30pm.SUPER COLOSSAL PARTY: AnnualMaroon extravaganza, everyone invited,5343 Woodlawn, third floor, 9 pm on.Sunday, May 81 - VERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE:' e reality of prayer,” Rev. E. Spen-c ■ Parsons, dean of the chapel, Rocke¬feller chapel, 11 am.SOFTBALL GAME: Varsity vs. faculty,sponsored by the Order of the C., themidway at University avenue, 3 pm.FILM: "Frankenstein meets wolfman,”seventh floor Pierce Tower, 3:30 pm.TELEVISION PROGRAM: Interviewwith George Stigler, professor of eco¬nomics, channel five, 10:30 pm. Monday, May 9VISTA RECRUITERS: Mandel hall lob¬by, all dayLECTURE: “The science and aestheticsof Moire,” Gerald Oster, department ofchemistry, Brooklyn Polytechnic Insti¬tute, Kent 103, 2:30 pm.LECTURE: “Experience in psychother¬apy,” David Orlinsky, assistant profes¬sor of the social sciences, Ida Noyes7:30 pm.LECTURE: “Triumph and failure inancient Egypt,” John Wilson, professorof Egyptology, law school auditorium, 8pm.LECTURE: “Whole man or citizen? dif¬ferentiation or alienation,” ElizabethMary Wilkinson, professor of German,University College, London, Soc. Sci.122. 8 pm.LECTURE: “New light on Parmagiani-no's Surprise and Old Shepard,” BerthaWiles, associate professor emeritus, de¬partment of art, Classics 10, 8 pm..r . ■■ ';V ^The implications of thenew curriculum changeswill be discussed and ex¬plained by the five collegi¬ate masters and Dean of .the College Wayne Booth *1at an open meeting on ||i Monday, May 16, 4:30 pm |in Mandel Hall. The pro- %gram is being held prior topre-registration for fallquarter, as students will beasked during pre-registra¬tion to declare themselvesinto the one of the five col¬leges.Documents regarding thenew organization of thefive divisions are now avail¬able in the College dean'soffice, Gates-Blake 132, uand in each master's office •for his particular division.y.. .... * MEASUREFORMEASUREShakespeare's Rarely Produced Dark ComedyDirected by James O'ReillyDesigned by Virgil Burnettin MANDEL HALLFRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAYMAY 13, 14, 15 at 8:30 PMMATINEE —2:30 SATURDAY$2 FRI.-SAT. EVE / $1.50 MATINEE & SUN. EVENINGFACULTY STUDENT DISCOUNT 50cTICKETS ON SALE NOWREYNOLDS CLUB DESKMay 6, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 1MHNHMR1 MHBHHHIBHIHHMWIHHHHHhmM Theater reviewHey Manny! musical entertains Classifiedsmmm s mm, mmeHi, ho! Spring is here, and Blackfriars are in seasonagain. (Pot shots, anyone?) This year’s production “HeyManny! Get This—There’s This Guy, See, And This Girl, See.. lives up to its improbable title: it is Long, by Incoherent,out of Superfluous... However, it - 'has plenty of laughs and some dis- house played Julie, Nice-Girl*-Fin-tinguished music, presented bv a ish-Last, with forthrightness,talented and lively cast, which cha and audibiiity (bless hershould make it worth the price of ’ _ , . , ,admission. And the show runs for heart.) and to watch hei movetwo weekends, so there is still time around—even walking, let aloneto catch it this coming Friday or dancing—is always a delight to theSaturday night. . . eye; Edrene Furman (Bad-Girls-The subject of the ‘'plot” is the Sometimes-Finish-Last-Too) is al-haek but perennially hippy one Ways a delight to the eye, period...known as Going Hollywood—in this and she is a creditable comedi-case, circa 1929, when Talkies first enne, weather and script permit-made the scene. Unfortunately, the ting Her second-act song-and-seript, (written by Blackfriars* Ab- dance number was most effective,bot, William Wolfson.) is somewhat and i shall hear her wailing ‘‘Char¬less solid than a piece of thinly r i0tte!” in my dreams for weekssliced Swiss cheese. The significant (0 COme. Costas Gekas, German-action takes place before the open- Director-With - Heavy-Jodhpurs-Ac-ing or behind the backdrops some- (,cn() looked stunning, though hiswhere; most of the scenes suffer j,nes were frequently unintelligiblefrom excess dialogue and fallen _but I expect no one understoodtag lines; the characters are so v*on Stroheim either. Anyhow, westock that even a stock company aj| g0( (he point. And Donald Dis-would be embarrassed by them— appointed-Writer Swanton turnedbut why go on"5 On the credit side, bis customary well-defined per-none of the foregoing seems to formance.matter very much. of the “bits” among the chorus,DAVID KATZIN, as J. G. Gor- single out Sandy Scott. Anne Thai,don. Big-Producer-Type, came on Robert Levey, and Tried-and-Trueloud and clear; though slightly Vincent Kruskal (did you knowhampered by an overflow of misdi- (bat Ape-boys have blond beards?),rected energy, he established his wh0 share a learned and/or natu-characterization at once and main- ra] talent for letting an audiencetained it consistently, often dis- know they are there —for a roo-plaving a sharp sense of comic son> yetf The remainder of thetiming. As Berny. Boy-Actor-Who- chorus, while less distinguishable,Wins-Fame-But-At-What-A - Price!, was certainly distinguished by itsJerrold Ziman took a walk on the brisk cheerfulness; the dancersmild side, occasionally getting lost Were cute, and the choreographybetween the busy scenery and the (by Barbara Sternfeld) reasonable,more aggressive members of the As a matter of personal taste, Ichorus, but his performance was like bouncy numbers like “Berny”generally believable and his sing- and “Vo-do-de-o-do”, but the quasi-ihg voice pleasant. Steffi Abes- ballet (“Julie’s Dream”) was well-BUY HER APLUSH ANIMALA building full of exotic camels,big built, 6 foot giraffes, hugepandas, ferocious tigers, biggestlong hair dogs, monkeys, alliga¬tors, bears, and others.ANIMALWONDERLAND5960 W. OGDEN AVENUECICERO, ILLOL * 9854 UTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingT990 K. 5M St. NY I-S992EYB EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty Discount Ml 3-31135434 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the rest, ** foreign car hospitol executed and a charming numberof its type.CAROL CUTSTEIN composed allof the music, orchestrated most ofit, wrote out parts, played onenumber on the piano and conduct¬ed the rest—whew! on that score,heartiest congratulations are due.And the music, while not the sortthat one goes out whistling, wasgenerally good; the main problemwas that the orchestra was notquite equal to it, and the tempo oc¬casionally fell short of the stageperformers. As for Robert Reiser'slyrics, they may have been mar¬velous. I g.ve him the benefit ofthe doubt, as I was unable to un¬derstand one word of any of them.David Katsive’s sets were ade¬quate, though not up to his usualstandard (and will he or PeterSchmidt please brace Oscar se¬curely by next weekend—beforethe M.C. is re-named Fulsome J.Overthrown?). Paul Miller’s themovies were darling, but whatwhat were they for? Except to addto the running time, which was al¬ready well on its way to eternity.The lighting was okay, Jack; thecostumes more or less inoffensive,Catherine; the make-up a touchheavy-handed, Sandra—but, that’sHollywood for you. And though themaking was definitely under par,the tcch ran as smoothly as can beexpected in Mandel Hall. As forthe direction of the show, it cov¬ered the entire territory—from In¬ept to Nonexistent. One can onlyassume that Bob Reiser lost hiscompass. There were one or twoexceptions. I did enjoy the materi¬alization of “Columbia” as in “Pic¬tures.”I shall close with what mayseem to be a surprising piece ofadvice: Go And See The Show.This group has come up with anentertaining evening, despite theabsence of “professional” compe¬tence. I confess; the audience sur¬rounding me Saturday nightlaughed its head off, applauded vo¬ciferously, and departed into thenight looking cheerful and satisfied—which constitutes a far more noteworthy recommendation than anycarping critic could offer. Ah, so!Best wishes, Manny—whoever youare!Rufh Stack PersonalsMARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBlood Typing & Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICEComplete Lab. EKG t BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3 2000 STUDENTSPart-time JobsNow AvailableCome to Personnel Office956 E. 58th ST. You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Are.646-4411 EVERYBODY MUST GET STONEDMaroon party. . .Saturday night.George Bernard Sihaw’aDON JUAN IN HELLRuns Mav 6 through June 5 at THELAST STAGE, 150S E. 51 St., Frt. A Sat.«:39, Sun. 7:30. Res. OA 4-4200.FRANKENSTEIN MEETS WOLFMAN—Thompson House Lounge. Fri. A Sat.at 7 Sun. at 3. Admission 50e.International House presents its annual“May Ball, Friday May 6. from 8 pm2 am. All invited.Hull House Theatre Production “TheTheatre of Peretz", 11th St. Theatretienefit South Side School of JewishStudies—Special student rates—Sun.eves. May 8 A 15, phone 375-0054.WANTED: ticket to convocation June11. Contact Lisa Blair, Blackstone 409.The annual Charles W Gilkey lecture-God: Dead or in EclipseORDo Theologians (I.ike Doctors) BttryTheir Mistakes??? Tues.THE NOBLEMEN—In Concert OriginalBatman Short (1943).EXHIBITExhibit of graphics. “The EmancipatedJew as Artist.” Through May 10th. Hil-lel House. 5715 Woodlawn. open daytimeand evenings. Mor\,-Fri. Sc Sun. mElectronic. Audio Happening. You haveto hear it!Writer's Workshop (PL 2-8377).K.AMELOT Restaurant. 2160 E. 71st St.10°- discount for UC students.Dance to FRANKENSTEIN MEETSWOLFMAN. You have to see It! I All Amore. Sat. 8:30. Pierce.Ad Lib Studio-5056 Lake Park—268-6910.Re-Opening special. 10-20r;, Discount onSANDALS. 55 styles to choose from,good till May 31. 1966Spass und Spiele bei der Deutsch-ein&milldneihorchendhappening. um halbdrei Uhr. SS 107.Who belongs to VISA? VacciUators InSearch of Anything???Reform Sabbath. E%re. Services, everyFriday at 7:30 pm at Hillel House.If you've never had a Berliner Weisse,come down to the Courthouse Restau¬rant in Harper Court and try one!sTHAPPY BIRTHDAY, HAPPY BIRTH-DAYBand Party-Sat May 7.-9 pm. 2049 N.Dayton (900 W'esti Blues Band-JugBand-Supreme Beings.AARDVARK FILMS PRESENTS AwardWinning EXPERIMENTAL A UNDER¬GROUND FILMS This Tues. May 10. at7. 9. A 11 pm. at Poor Richard's, 1363N. Sedgwick. Admission $1.50. No ID Re¬quired. Information: 261-8569. Coming:Un Chien Andalou, Caligari, The Con¬nection.Can a deity from many lands find hap¬piness in eclipse? Tuesday, 8 pm at theLaw School Auditorium.TOURING USA-CANADA-MEXICO. Areyou interested?, to accompany male Afemale students for an interesting studytour, your help to plan trip is wel¬comed. Start: around June 15; duration6 wks. For further information call: 864-1390 between 6-7 pm.MEET MUSHROOM MAN. MaroonParty. Sat. Clue 5. m be at BlackfriarsMay 6.- lostLadies wristwatch, Ida Noyes Hall lastFriday night. $4 reward for return toMaroon Business Office, X 3385.White key case with 7 keys. Reward.BU 8-6610, Rm. 1125X. Beautiful, fully furn. (air-cond.. TV.,Stereo) 4 rm. apt. Must sublet this sum¬mer. 6730 S. Shore Dr. Call 363 8058 be¬tween. 6A7 pm.2 Bdrms. (one with own balh. one im¬mense) in 8 rm. apt. Completely furn.TV, sun porch. Ritzy block (bet. 51-52on Kimbark) call Blf 8-0613 mornings ordinner time.Kenwood A 53rd, furnished, clean. 2bdrms., 324-4629.For rent. Charming old farm housemiddle of 15 wooded acres; 1 mi. fromTremont train station A 3000 acre Indi¬ana Dunes State Park. Nr. free publicbeach. 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.June 1-Sept. 15. 2. girls wanted to share6 rm. apt. own rms.. 53 A Wdlawn,$49/mo. Call or lv. message. BU 845610,X2310 & 2318.Help wantedCLERK-TYPISTPreferably students wife who will re¬main empl'd for at least next 2 yrs.Full time position w/good starting sal¬ary + periodic increases. Pleasantworking conds., many fringe benefits,includ. insurance, liberal vacations Aprofit sharing. Must type 50 wpm. dicta-phone exper. helpful. Hyde Park CoopSupermart. Call 667-1444,Need part time waiters/waitressea/lunch hostess. Courthouse Restaurantin Harper Court. Ask for Hans Mora-Uach.Full-time Sect’y. wanted. Campus loca¬tion. Experienced, call 643-3022. JeanWalbridge,ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENTWe are a relatively small, hut national¬ly-known 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-chies or full-ownership basis. No Invest¬ment required at present.Here is an excellent opportunity forsome young men with drive who wantsto !>e earning $20,000 annually two orthree years from now.S.J. FECHT AND ASSOCIATES1108 Dundee Rd., Northbrook.Illinois. 272-0999.Part time worker needed for education¬al/recreational after-school programfor disadvantaged children in Kenwood-3-7 pm. wkdays. Cali 493-0101, after 2pm.Secretary wanted for project on campus—full or part time—flex, situation. CallDona Rubin, MI 3-4335,.Quadrangle ClubBartenders, 21 yrs. of age and over, towork thru summer A met. yr. $1.75,hr.+ dinner. 4:30-8. 6 nights wk. Depend¬able, no exper, necessary. Call Dora,X3696Riders wantedTo share driving, free, to A from LosAngeles. Lv. approx. June 23, return in3-4 wks. Univ. X3118 days. Home phoneTR 4-3962. Mrs. Anna Bell Worrill.Wanted-Rider to Boston. Lv. Mon. 5 fcall 266-8391. evesApt. lor galeSummer SubletaJames Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1343 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9642SHIRTS-LINENS-TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. Card 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 24744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Student discount with ad Summer Sublet with WUFFLE, 7 rm.,fully furn. 324-5263.4 rim., furn. S. Shore, $90/mo., 7806 S.Phillips, 731-0712.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.Cool attractive 2 bdrm. apt., edge ofcampus. Rent modest for good tenant—752-8439.4 rm. apt. furn. 6046 Dorchester,$95/mo. 667-7506 after 4 pm.31 j rms.. Married Studs, air cond..fum., $118 (all utils) from 6/14-8/31.752-8626 after 6.7 spacious rms., 4 bdrms. completelyfurn., $130. 80th Wdln. FR 4-4780.Lg. mod. 3 rm. apt. E. 50th PI., furn.,mod, elect, kitchen. $180/mo. 886-6733.Freshly decorated and modernized 6',arm. furnished apt, with terrace, sum-mer sub. 324-5409.Fully furnished 7 rm. 4 bdrm. apt. Oneblock from campus. Perfect for 4 stu-dents. 342-5363.Jeffery & 72nd, 5 rms. furn. ideal for 3-fllS/mo. 888-7991.Beautiful 1 rm7 1 bdrm. apt. Avail.June-Oct. furn. 8 biles, fr. UC. Only$97/mo, Pali 643 3520 eves.For 1-4 Studs, (own rms.) $38.50/per-eon/mo. 60th Wdlwn. FA 4-7431.57th A Maryland, furn. house, 6 rms. 2batlhs, for summer, $150/mo. For fami-ly. DO 3 3710.This is what you’ve been looking foriNear campus, gd. shppg.. IC. Avail.6/15-Sept, or 0(3. 5309 Wdln. 324-3111. Pleasant 6 rm. apt. 5587 S. University.Apt. 4w. Spacious living-dining rm.,wood-burning fireplace. Modern kitchenwith washer. 2 bedrooms, study (or3rd bdrm.) Exc. nfhbhd.. bid., main.,pking., public transp. Must aell. $10,700.Immediate Occupancy. Monthly assess¬ment $97. Will not rent or lease. Call643-9892 or 363-2867.Rms. A «pt$. for fontHOTEL SHORELANDSpecial student rate Hotel rms. withprivate baths. 2 students/rm. 148/stu¬dent per mo. Complete Hotel Service.Ask for Mr. N.T. Norbert, 5454 S. ShoreDrive.Wanted: Male grad student to shareapt. with 2 others. S. Shore $S0/mo.,own rm. Furn. C. Detz X4U9 or 667-2372.4 rm. apt. to rent immediately.$110/mo. 61st A Gmwd. Call R. Fultonor S. Mayer, 752-9538.Want female rmmate to share 5 rm.apt. near 55th A Kimbark Part. fum.$65 mo./person. MU 4-2435 eves.For saleHarmon-Karden Citation IV amplifier(factory wiredi in walnut cabinet. Gar¬rard Turntable on matching walnutbase. Originally priced at $286.80 willsell at $135.00. Call X 3594 days orMU 4-5677 eves.Stereo FM-Phono-Taoe recorder-set wfGarrard A-SHURE Ctge. 3 spd. 4 trk.record/playback. $150 record player$12. Stereo port, phono or floor model.$28. ES 5-9532,'56 VW deluxe sedan, grey, leather in¬terior, etc. asking $1450/best offer. 684-3890.'63 50cc Honda 3000mi. exc. cond., tools,baskets, $155 . 752-8626.•64 VW sunroof, r. Ik. new. $1150/bestoffer. 225-2568 after 5 pm.’64 VW sedan, grey, 21200/best offer.Call 225-1732 after 6 on wkdays.*54 Olds-Automatic, Pr. brakes, steer¬ing, radio. $75. 752-7398.body poor, first $425 1 top, per. 684-0954.Apts, wanted2 bdrms., fum.. up 4o $150/mo. It.June-Aug. (flex but must include Julyand Aug) two Harvard law stu¬dents (male) working for Chicago lawfirms. Call collect. $17-547-293^ W.S.Williams, Pennypacker 41, Cambridge,Mass. 08138, xWanted: Apt. for next year. Will sub-'lease for summer If necessary. Call 667-$166. /«• • CHICAGO MAROON May 6, 1966Music reviewBrawl steals Hoffman's showAlthough it was one of Irwin Hoffman’s best efforts, form a coherent whole, individual-the most striking aspect of last Friday's Chicago Symphony ly th?y are touched by genius.concert was a balcony fist-fight midway through Strauss’ U W! rfare conductor ?ith the_ , . o - mu- • , f . , V . ® oirauss versatility to make everything in itFour Last Songs. This is unfortunately indicative of the level come off; equally rare is the con-of excitement our assistant conductor was generating onstage.Hoffman’s main problem is a technical mastery ductor who, when faced with suchgives the impression of complete 8 massive selection’ is unab1' *»convey any of it. Hoffman (sur-lack of confidence. Once he finds a She has, however, three major Saens’^ Thfrd ranks ^bov^hi^Mo-manageable dynamic level or tern- flaws. First, her volume dips radi- zart) was at his best when thepo, he stubbornly hangs on to it. cally in her lower register, where noise was least, such as the open-Repeats are played almost identi- Strauss dragged her much of the ing of the fugue. Here he broughtcally each time around, and his time. ^ilh Hoffman’s loving, but out the music’s tortured quality torhythms are proper, stiff, and un- loudish, accompaniment, she was a degree I have never heard be-responsive to the demands of the but inaudible. Secondly, her fore. In the bigger sections howev-music. German enunciation isn’t. And f:- er, he was unable to keep everyoneThus, his reading of Haydn’s Ox- nadyt ber singing is too cool and in line, and the music disintegratedford Symphony recalled the Berk- unemotional. Despite the grandeur into cacophony.•ley Overture: impersonal, tired, °* tbe sbeer size of her voice, her All in all, a solid program, com-seemingly mass produced. True, Performance of Weber’s “Ocean! petently performed, but withoutthe quieter passages (especially You Monster!’ was as passionate much distinction. It was betterthe adagios) were well handled, as a dr'zsde in a tea-pot—and iced than many concerts we get here;with just the right proportions of tea at tbat- but it just couldn’t compete with arich string tone and clarity of line; CONCERT closed with good brawl.infused with, but not smothered by, Strauss’ sonic smorgasbord, Thus Peter Rabinowitzlyricism. Ate Zarathustra. Most modern lis- vBUT HIS dynamics, besides teners, it seems, find themselvesbeing too consistent, were also afflicted with musical indigestionpoorly chosen. The stormy sections after this rambling and inconsistwere watered down by fortes ren- ent work, which can leap grauti-dered mezzo-piano, resulting in a tously from a Viennese waltz toloss of the contrast which moves early experimental polytonality. Asthe symphony forward. Not much a display of stylistic virtuosity, ithelp came from his tempos either, is pretentious, even tasteless—butwhich, espcially in the whiplash fi- it’s a great none the less. Fornale, tended to be slow. whether or not the various sectionsThe program also included thelocal debut of soprano MontserratCaballe, rumored to be the biggestwindfall for Bellini and Donizettisince Sutherland. This reputation,of course, doesn’t imply much af¬finity for the Germans; neither,unfortunately, did her perform¬ances here of Strauss and Weber.As expected, she has a large, fullvoice—at least in the upper range,where she tosses off complex pas¬sages with startling ease and ever-ingratiating tone. Her pitch occa¬sionally wavers, but otherwise she All students interested indoing canvassing or officework for the Southern Chris¬tian Leadership Council'sUnion to End Siums on theWest Side should meet out¬side Ida Noyes Hall on 59thst. at 9 am tomorrow.DO 3-7644DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-6866PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED EYE EXAMINATIONSNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Discount CONTACT LENSESKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 JESSELSOTSSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdBOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroComplete RepetisAnd ServicePer AM Popular ImportsMidway 3-45016052 So. Cottage Grove HONDA SOUTH & SOUTH EASTSEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES • SERVICE • PARTS• PICK UP & DELIVERY• EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESMl 3-4500BOB NELSON MOTORS CHICAGO'S LARGEST &613* s cottage grove JUST AROUND THE CORNERSee the MAROON classified for your campus sales representative AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH-— NEW & USED —Seles and Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles end Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% dleeeunt te students with ID cardsSKRVICI CALLS - $3AN "EMBARRASSED" JEWISH STUDENT?A Rochester U. Student and Historian Morris U. fchappesDIALOGUE ON JEWISH IDENTITYIn May Issue ofJEWISH CURRENTS *A Secular MagazineSingle copy $.40 Subscription $4.00 a yearSPECIAL OFFER TO STUDENTS ONLY -SEND JUST 10 CENTSIN STAMPS OR COINS FOR MAY ISSUE TOiJewish Currents, Dept. I,22 E. 17th St., New York, N.Y. 10003ATTENTION SENIORS!BECOME A MONTESSORI TEACHERMIDWEST COURSE BEGINSJuly 5Write for application:Midwest MontessoriTeacher Training Center1010 West Chicago AvenueChicago, III. 60622Attn: C. M.’VISUAL AWARENESS: A NEW DIMENSIONOP CITIZENSHIP RESPONSIBILITY"Speaker: Dr. Kenneth MarantzProfessor of Art — Laboratory SchoolAt the Sunday Meeting of the Chicago Ethical Society10:45 AM Sunday, May 8HYDE PARK NEIGHBORHOOD CLUB5480 So. Kenwood AvenueFar Additional Information Cali theChicago Ethical Society Office 332-7473Walter Lawton, Leader 4tPHOTOGRAPHYPRE-INVENTORY SALEReels and cans for movie film—8 & 16mm ...•••• « *.$ .35.53..3 .99AT THE ■ 4UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE.PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhoir stylists of5242 Hyde Fork Blvd.2231 L 71st St.DO 3-072710 % Student DiscountPERUSE!INDITE!!ADVERTISE!!!CHICAGO LITERARYREVIEW"the reviews . . . reedlike those in theNew York Timet1*Roger WelsiHead of UCSoc I Staff.i<•< FOTA MUSICAL SOCIETYCHAMBER MUSIC COXCERTiSTRING QUARTETWOODWIND QUINTETMUSIC FOR BRASS Richard WernickMel PowellGabrielli, SchubertMUSIC FROM SUITE FOR KING JAMES IIDA NOYES LIBRARY 8:30 PMTONIGHT?, O*May a 1*66 * CHICAGO MAROON * 9Theater reviewVaried faults plague last three 8:30 productionsTonight at 8:30Wisp in the Windby Jack CunninghamDirected by Alan HarrisHe Jonathan WardShe Sandra SeligsonI Can't Imagine Tomorrowby Tennessee WilliamsDirected by Wayne TignorOne Julia FremonTwo Paul LazarowSix Miles to Leibby Richard VertelDirected by Marc CoganGoat (Alexander)Joseph EhrenbergTraveler (Mr. Boscoe), Richard EnoDirector of CompanyRichard VertelGirl Eugenie RossMartha Diana MellenJazz Musicians ...Sam ThomasDouglas MitchellRobert HodgeThe last set of “8:30’s” per¬formed as a one-shot job inMandel last Monday night,might have been subtitled “SixLonely People,” for the three one-act plays which made up the bill,in so far as there was any unity inthe collection, were concerned withexploiting the dramatic possibili¬ties of two lonely characters tryingto communicate and share theirexperiences and insights.From the time Sophocles addedthe third actor 2300 years ago untilthe beginning of this century, nodramatist, to my knowledge, wasinterested in restricting himself toUnrelieved duologue. Not only doesthis strain the author’s invention,but unless he is a very good oneindeed, he will bore the audience.Perhaps the best play written inthis form was Yeats’ Purgatory;the only financial success was Wil¬liam Gibson’s Two for tho Seesaw; the failures by now must reckon inthe hundreds.THE FIRST failure of the eve¬ning Wisp in the Wind could not bestrictly said to have fallen a casu¬alty to its two-character structure.True, it was completely undramat-ic (except in form), but I doubtthat Mr. Cunningham—with whoseworks I am blissfully unfamiliar—could have done any better with 20actors. In parts, the play read as asuccession of lyrics, and not verygood lyrics at that In other spots,it sounded like a group of strung-together sentences spawned from atransformational grammar with alimited vocabulary.But it was not only Mr. Cunning¬ham’s way with the Englishtongue which was so distressing.He also has a way with plot—in¬venting none, he leaves the au¬dience to make up what it will. Hisidea of character does not happento include that of personality: hisactors function as neither more norless than reciters of facile lines.All told, it was a rather insipidhalf-hour, during which I foundmvsclf wishing more than oncethat I had stayed in the ModernLanguage Reading Room amongthe bound volumes of PMLA. But Ipraise the play with these faintdamns.Wasted on this bit of nonsensewere Jonathan Ward and SandraSeligson, who seemed eminentlycapable actors. The latter especial¬ly has a fine, mobile face and goodexpression. One wonders how twopeople of obvious sensitivity couldhave rehearsed, much less per¬formed the play. As Harry Bourasonce said, in another connection,they could have bottled the playand sold it as a powerful emetic.The second failure was a moreor less noble effort by TennesseeWilliams, I Can't Imagine Tomor¬row. I read this play when it ap¬peared in Esquire Magazine, and I must admit that it plays betterthan it reads. If early Williams hasthe atmosphere of the dog days ofsummer, I Can't Imagine Tomor¬row is like a cool autumnal day.All passion s—even hope—aredead, and all that is left is resigna¬tion and the ashes of a dying love.AS THE woman, Julia Fremonturned in an astonishing perform¬ance. I have been a fan of MissFremon’s for some time, and Ithought she might never againreach the brilliance of her readingof Sonya in Uncle Vanya, so suiteddid she seem to the part. But I findthat I misjudged her: Miss Fre¬mon is a real actress, and whatev¬er part she may play, she will al¬ways seem “typed,” for she actedthe burnt-out woman, sick anddying of cancer, as well as she hadthe patient, dutiful teen-ager. MissFremon was ably seconded byPaul Lazarow, whose teamworkwas as impressive as her perform¬ance.The play, as I said, was a failure—but Tennessee Williams’ failurescan still be good theatre. It seemedto side-step the real issue of theloneliness of the human condition,by means of a detour into sen¬timentality. Williams’ early lyri¬cism is gone, and while his wildand mordant images remain, theyhave become unresolved symbolsof unstated themes. What Williamshas not lost is his ability to createcharacters who come alive, whoseexistence does not seem confinedto the pages of the script. And aslong as this born dramatist holdsthis power, his plays will alwaysbe worth seeing.The last piece of the evening, SixMiles to Leib by local boy RichardVertel, was an enigmatic and equiv¬ocal failure. Like Six Charactersin Search of an Author, Leib be¬gins with a frame concerned withthe problems of production, the ri¬ valries of the actors, etc. Like Pur¬gatory, the long, central section ofLeib is an expressionistic and high¬ly poetic drama, with its two maincharacters generalized into almostmythological types. Like Play,Leib ends with a short sectionwhich implies that the action of thecentral section is to be repeatedfrom the first cue. But althoughthe play seems drawn togetherfrom various works of Pirandello,Yeats, and Beckett, its main prob¬lem is not eclecticism.NOR IS it a want of dramaticsavvy. The middle section of Leibkeeps its two characters on thestage alone for nearly an hourtalking about themselves and eachother without the device palling.And this argues a talent for thetheater, for the theme of the play,which could be roughly summar¬ized in Tennyson’s lines “To sailbeyond the sunset, and the bathsof all the western stars, until Idie,” is hardly so original as tocommand our attention by itselffor very long. It is true that Ver-tel’s play was aided by the excel¬lent performances of Dick Eno andveteran Joe Ehrenberg, but as thefirst offering of the eveningproved, no amount of acting couldhave helped a really bad play. No,Vertel is truly a man of the thea¬ter, and one of quite promisingtalent.But Vertel has a real problem:his inability to take anything se¬riously. For example, the middlesection of the play, which mighthave stood alone as a powerfulshort piece, was undercut by beingjuxtaposed with the Pirandellesqueframe, which stated in effect thatthe actors were having a hard timegetting that dog of a play on theboards. But a more serious sort ofundercutting was effected by MarcCogan, Leib'* director, who hadapparently instructed the actors(and with Vertel’s approval, sincehe was around to watch) to over¬ act their parts to the point of ludi¬crousness in the most passionatesections of the play. And so onenever knew whether he was watch¬ing an expressionistic play or aparody of one. I rather doubtwhether Mr. Vertel knows himselfwhether it is straight drama orparody.Now it may be a sign of modestyto present one’s efforts, and thento mock at them self-deprecating¬ly, but it does not make for suc¬cessful theater, for it producesonly the symptoms of irresolution.On the other hand it may well bethat Mr. Vertel’s problem was notmodesty, but fear that if he pre¬sented his dramatic ideas in soberseriousness, others unsympatheticto his designs might laugh at them.But Mr. Vertel has no reason tofear, for his innate abilities are anunanswerable argument to his crit¬ics.My own fears are of a differentnature. It is very difficult—indeed,with a little experience of life, it isvirtually impossible for an earnestman to avoid learning to laugh athimself. But how is one to learn totake seriously what one has alwaysmocked at? Mr. Vertel is sufferingfrom a bad case of irony—and Ifear that it may be incurable.David H. RichtermmmmmMmimKMmmKM i iThe Collegium Music-um, und*r the directionof Howard Brown, willgive a concert in BondChapel on Saturday eve-n?ng at 8:30.The program includeschoral music by Ocke-ghem, Obrecht, and Schu-tez. There is no admissioncharge.THE DIVINITY SCHOOL • THE CENTER FOR MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIESTHE DIVISION OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES OFTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPRESENT A SERIES OFFour Public LecturesTHE ENCOUNTER BETWEEN MAN AND NATURE:THE SPIRITUAL CRISIS OF MODERN MANBySEYYED HOSSEIN NASHAgo Khan Professor of Islamic Studies, The University of Tehran, IranMAY 23MAY 24MAY 25 <MAY 26 <Each evening at 8:00 P.M. The Predicament in the Present-Day Encounter of Man and Nature withan Analysis of Scientific, Philosophical, and Religious Questions InvolvedThe Causes for the Present Condition with an Analysis of Factors in theHistory of Science and Western Philosophy and Religion in General ThatHave Brought This Situation AboutThe Assertion of the Metaphysical Principles in the Light of Which NatureCan Acquire a Spiritual Significance with Special Reference to OrientalTraditions, Particularly Islam and HinduismThe Application of Some of These Principles to Present-Day Problems,Both Moral and Philosophical, That the Application of Science to NatureHas Brought AboutTHE LAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM 1111 East 60th StreetHO ADMISSION CHARGE EVERYONE WELCOM*Profes&or Nasr's lectures are part of a series of events made possible by a grantfrom the Rockefeller Foundation to study the impact of the coming of the NuclearAge upon the affairs of man.Where are the great unwashedof UC going Saturday night?TO THE MAROON PARTY, OF COURSE. ..5343 Woodlawn—3rd Floor9 pm“I would not feelso all alone... ”THECOURT HOUSEIN HARPER COURT* Lunches 11 A.M.-2 P.M.* Dinner from 5 P.M.* Our own Chefs pastries* Beef Fondue Served Anytime* Weisswurste with Potato Salad9 Sunday Brunch from 8 A.M. -1 P.M.for lunch and after dinner ($1.10)DELIGHTFUL ATMOSPHERE - CLASSICAL MUSICDomestic & Imported Beer on tap Open till 2 A.M. Closed MondaysORCHESTRA HALLEnterprise ProductionspresentsBIGGEST SPRING BLUES CONCERTFRIDAY, MAY 6th AT 8:30 PMCHICAGO: FACES OF THE BLUESJunior Wells Blues Band Sallie Martin Gospel SingersSleepy John Estes Big Joe WilliamsArt Hodes Irwin Heifer ’Tickets: $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 Street CongratulationsDave"the Kid"PHASETWO SHOWS NIGHTLYFr!., Set. I I, 11 admission 81.00Weekdays 8 A 10 admission .75Closed MondaysCoffee House with EntertainmentBig Joe Williams S., S., T., A W.James Collier Th., F., Sat.Shep Saslaw Sun., T.Sue Horowitz Th., F.1603 E. 53rd BU 8-9837ALOHA 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 Yakl,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well at T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.After dinner don’t miss the newplays at the Last Stage. Join u«for cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST A HARPERFeed served 11 a.nrt. te 3 e.m.Kitchen closed Wad.LI t-7515THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkYou can have a steaktoof or the biggeststeakburger In town.n ei .THE PUB SPECIAL:Southern Fried ChickenIn a Basket $1.50Generous Order Every Sunday NightNow—A Parade of Piano Artists for Your Pleasure and Dancing JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAP Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060For the Convenience and Needs of the University . . .KING RENT A CAR1330 E. 53rd ST.DAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYAS LOW AS $4.95 PER DAYIf you require a rental car for business, pleasure, or while jourcar is being repaired call ua atMl 31715STUDENTSSPECIAL SALE40% f»m.3.794.793.79OFF(Ooo* UNTIL MAY 14)d ISCOUNT records inc.NOW ON ALL CLASSICAL A FOLK LPSON3.47ll7 Columbia2.27 RCA VictorDeutsha GrammaphenLondonArchiveVanguardElektraMI N. LA SALLE (Corner L«k«) Bach GuildOpen Mon. A Thur*. 1<L8, Daily Incl. Sat. 9-4 FolkwaysJust Bring This CouponllNOW Storage Special!You can have Ample Closet Space by using our Safe StorageFacilities for your Out Of Season Garments. 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Thaddeus. Illus. Pub. at $7.50. Saleand high drama, of the great the 20’s and 30’s, highlights of With 23 photographs. Pub. at $8.75 2.98Burke & Wills Expedition of 1860.Maps and illus. Pub. at $5.95. Sale99 Couzens’ historic feuds with An- Sale 2.98drew Mellon and others, champion- The Constitution—TO SECUREing of FDR Mellon and others, THESE BLESSINGS. By Saul K.championing of FDR and the New Padover. Masterful compilation ofDeal, etc. Pub. at $5.95. Sale 1.49 the great debates (and compro-MARSHALL OF FRANCE in the mises) at the Constitutional Conven-inRELAX WITH YOGA. By ArthurLeibers. Contains all the breathingexercises, diet principles, show-how photographs of all postures.Pub. at $2.50. Sale 99The Trial of Jack Ruby—DALLASJUSTICE. By Melvin M. Belli, withM. C. Carroll. The real story, toldby Ruby’s defense attorney, of theman who killed J.F.K’s assassin—and the incredible courtroom dra¬ma that followed. $5.50. Sale ...99PEGLER: ANGRY MAN OF THEPRESS. By Oliver Pilat. Superbbiography of the colorful, con¬troversial newspaperman whowielded the most vitriolic pen inAmerican journalism. Pub. at $3.00.Sale 99 Americana Classic—THE COMMU¬NISTIC SOCIETIES OF THEUNITED STATES, by CharlesNordhoff. Pub. at $12.50. Sale..3.98ETRUSCAN MAGIC & OCCULTHINTS & TIPS FOR THE HANDY¬MAN. By Bernard Gladstone.Hundreds of time and money-sav¬ing ideas. Easy-as-pie instructions, FAMOUS CITIES OFTHE WORLDA distinguished series of photo¬studies of the most endlesslyfascinating cities of the world.Each 9”xl2” volume is the workof a well-known photographer,each captures the city’s breath¬taking art and architecturalwonders, everyday life and spe¬cial charm. Beautifully pro¬duced in England, where print¬ing, engraving and binding costsare lower than ours, these are$5.00 values:FLORENCE. Photos by L. Do-nati. Text by Edward Hutton.174 illus. Special 2.98ROME. Photos by R. S. Magow-an. Text by Richard Aldington.180 illus. Special 2.98PARIS. Photos by Andre Mar¬tin. Text by Andre Maurois. 175illus. Special 2.98NAPLES. Photos by Jan Lukas.Text by Peter Gunn. 205 illus.Only 2.98MEXICO CITY. 194 Photos byBob Schalkwijk. Intro, by J. M.Cohen. Only 2.98 Leland. An amazing study of thesurvival of Etruscan paganism inmodern Tuscany. 60 unusual Illus¬trations. Pub. at $10.00. Sale...4.98OLD SHIP PRINTS. By E. KebleChatterton. 110 reproductions ofmasterpieces by Reuwich, Doddand Duncan, Cruikshank, Dutton,many others. Special Import.. .7.95THE AGE OF REVOLUTION:1789-1848. By E. J. Hobsbawn. 102illus., maps. Pub. at $7.50. Sale3.98GOYA—Hi« Life and Work. ByJean Francois Chabrun. With 120reproductions, 49 in full-color.A CONCISE DICTIONARY OF AB¬BREVIATIONS. Ed. by Prof.«tionsSe Acronyms’ B dipped^'and Age of Louis XV. By J. M. White, tion. 474 pp., 87 engravings. Pub.short forms-essential for the li- Amazing life, times, and loves of at $7.50. Sale 2.98 ?y i4,°hmrv nffirp desk mizzle fan Pub. Maurice de Saxe, companion of CHINESE COOKING FOR PLEAS-at $3.75. Sale .’ 99 both Louis XV and Frederick the SURE. By Helen Burke, in collabo- or‘ 9/aGreat. Pub. at $6.00. Sale 1.77 ration with Fu Tong, famed Orien-HUNGARIAN-AMERICAN COOK tal chef. The finest Chinese cook-BOOK. By Mme. Rosa Green. book on ,the market, bar none.From Goulash and Chicken Papri- Very Special at 2.98kash to Dobosh Torte and Tiroler J^E PRIMITIVEStrudel-over 1,300 mouth-watering *AN- By Paul Radm. Pub. at $5J)0.affirmative answers to jaded ap- Sa €petites. Orig. $3.50. Sale 1.98Yogi Berra to Ben Hogan—THEGILDED AGE OF SPORT, 1945-1960. By Herbert W. Wind. Criticalyet loving look at our post-warsports scene—its leading events,heroes, goats, frauds, etc. Pub. at$5.95. Sale $1.98Paul Goodman's UTOPIAN ES¬SAYS AND PRACTICAL PROPO¬SALS. Required reading for every¬one concerned with America’sdrift into moral and political chaos.YOUR MEMORY. By O. W. Pub. at $5.00. Sale 1.98Hayes. Amazingly simple method A LETTER TO A YOUNG PAINT-for developing a super power ER By sir Herbert Read. Thememory in less than a week! main feature of this stimulatingPub. at $2.75. Sale .99 volume is an important essay onTHE GREAT CHICAGO FIRE. By the problems of expression in anRobert Cromie. History of the 1871 age of doubt; in the latter part, Sirdisaster, remarkably-detailed in its Herbert gathers together apprecia-re-ereation of the personal and so- tions of 22 contemporary artists—cial background of the tragic event Brancusi, Moore, Klee, Hepworth,and its aftermath. Illus. Paper- Bacon, others—and reproduces aback. Pub. at $2.75. Sale 99 representative work of each. 22plates. Pub. at $5.75. Sale 1.98HEINRICH VON KLEIST: THEMARQUISE OF O—And Other Sto¬ries. Trans, by Martin Greenberg.shortcuts, show-how illustrations. First complete collection in Eng-Pub. at $3.95. Sale 99 lish of the subtle, sinister, shock- JEwiSH COOKING FOR PLEAS- Over 130 reproductions" ^ in YuiiTHE FISHERS OF MEN. A fine *ng shoft novels a£d stores that URE. By Molly Lyons Bar-David. color. Pub. at $15.00. Sale ...7.95translation of Michele Saponaro’s yc,uenced Kafka- Pub- a* Over 450 taste-tempting easy-to- LIFE UNDER THE MICROSCOPEcontinental best seller, “I Discepo- *500, bale make, traditional favorites from _with 460 Captioned Photographs.li.” Pub. at $5.00. Sale 99 Tb« Life and Opinions of T.E. Bagel and Kugel to Gefilte Fish 4 Full-Page Color Plates. By OTHE WORD GAME book Rv HULME- by AR- Jones- Both a and Blintzes. Over 150 photos, 24 in jirovec et al. Pub. at $9.95. SaleWrn & Marv Morris Dozens of em critique and a biograPhy of one of full color. 8”xll”. Special... 2.98 5.88y the leaders of the 20th century FELIX MENDELSSOHN AND HIS DICTIONARY OF MODERN BAL-avant-garde. Pub. at $4.50. Sale TIMES. By Heinrich E. Jacob. LET. 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Special Import. 6.95PREHISTORIC SEA MONSTERS.By Josef Augusta and Zdenek Buri-an. Special Import 5.95THE ART OF ANCIENT KOREA.Text by J. Barinka, photographsby W. Forman. 132 full-pageplates, 38 in shimmering color.Pub. at $10.00. Sale 5.88THE ROCK PAINTINGS OF TAS-SILI. By Jean Dominique Lajoux.THE AMERICAN WEST—PictorialEpic of a Continent. Over 1,000 554 pp. 400 striking wood engrav¬ings. Pub. at $10.00. Sale 4.98THE ARTS IN THE MIDDLEAGES AND THE RENAISSANCE.By Paul Lacroix. 500 pp. Pub. at$10.00. Sale 4.98FRANCE IN THE EIGHTEENTHCENTURY. By Paul Lacroix. 489pp. Pub. at $10.00. Sale 4.98INVITATION TO VENICE by Mi¬chelangelo Muraro, Intro, by Peg¬gy Guggenheim. The most sump¬tuous and unusual portrait ofVenice that has ever been pub¬lished. Over 450 pages, magnifi¬cently bound and printed in gra¬vure, 10”xl2”. Pub. at $19.95. Sale9.95Genius of the Camera—THEWORLD OF ATGET. By BereniceAbbott. With 176 selected Atgetphotographs, each reproduced on aseparate 10x13” page. Pub. at$20.00. Limited Offer 9.95DEGAS: His Life and Work. ByJean Bouret. At long last—a com¬prehensive modern biography andDrawings, Photos and Prints: Text critical study of the great Frenchtertaining pastimes based on ourfunny English lauguage. Pub. at$4.95. Sale 99Lancelot L. Whyte's FOCUS ANDDIVERSIONS. Rich W'ith personalstories about such colleagues asEinstein, Rutherford, Bohr, et al,this is the delightfully outspokenfsh^cienUst^Pub ^af SfToo^Sale *79 V,0R: Th# Integrative Process in culture, religious beliefs and prac- ciegg. Orig. pub. at $10.00 5.95 ductions, 65 in full color, of hisa iauumu ...... ‘ . * Dreams, by Thomas M. French, tices of prehistoric man. 117 illus-f J“N TREA.DER* Ed,,S E‘ M.D.—A majdr work designed to trations. Pub. at $5.95. Sale ...2.98Del^htfd?m’ th' 1Ge°rge establish psychoanalysis on a firm THE HEART OF BEETHOVEN‘‘full man”—the ^ost^famous of scientific foundation. Pub. at $6.50. Selden Rodman’s superb study of volume "study" of the "background- Alighieri. Handsome, large formatDr Samuel Johnson’s works- the Sle *be great comPoser’s life and art, religious, philosophical, ethical andlives of Savage and Milton “Ras THE INTEGRATION OF BEHAV- interwoven with 48 magnificent political—of Dante’s ‘‘Divine Com-nves 01 ravage and Milton, Has- lftD. TU. n lithograohs bv James Kearns. Pub. >. t>..k tk. o *r~ifamous Preface to by Lucius Beebe and Charles master, with 132 excellent repro-MEDIEVAL CULTURE: An Intro¬duction to Dante and His Times.By Karl Vossler. Monumental two- finest pastels, paintings and sculo-ture. Special Import 5.95THE DIVINE COMEDY of Danteielas,” the famous Preface to,OR: The integrative Process lithographs by James Kearns. Pub>- edy.” Pub. at $10.00 The 2 Vol. Set“Shakespeare,” light and serious j" a P^choana'ytk Treatment, by ^ _ Sale 5.95verse, satirical essays, a sampling Thomas M- French, M.D. Based on ETERNAL EVE: The Mysteries of THE WORLD OF LOVE. Ed. by I.of letters, quotations from Boswell an exPansi°n °f Freud’s traumatic Birth and the Customs That Sur- Schneider. Magnificent, two-vol-that illustrate “Johnson talking,” theory of neurosis> thi« important round It. By Harvey Graham. Pub. ume collection of great writings onmuch more. Pub. at $6.50. Sale y°lume demonstrates, first theoret- at $6.00. Sale 2.98 the meanings and experience of1 98 ically and then by detailed study ANCIENT SEMITIC CIVILIZA- love. Over 1,100 pages of fascinat-marcham ciei n in Y c of one patient’s analysis, the rein- TIONS. By Sabatino Moscatin. Lu- ing reading, handsome slipcase.oriALL field III. By Ste- tegrative influence of treatment on cid, absorbing history of their ori- Pub. at $17.50 2 vol. set Sale .7.95pen Becker. Candid, explosive behavorial patterns. Pub. at $10.00. gins, languages, and races. Pub. at jHE WINES ANDbiography of one of the most re- Sale ..1.98 $5.00. Sale .... 2.98markable Americans of the 20thcentury. Photos. Pub. at $7.50.-Sate— i.9c VINEYARDSL. Jacquelin & gift edition. Orig. Pub. at $6.50Only 3.98THE ABELARD FOLK SONGBOOK. Ed. by Norman Cazden.Complete with piano and guitar ar¬rangements, folklore notes on eachsong. Pub. at $6.95. Sale 3.98BOOKS & THEIR MAKERS INTHE MIDDLE AGES. By GeorgeHaven Putnam. Monumental two-volume history of the productionand distribution of literature fromthe fall of the Roman Empire toOF FRANCE. By „.THE MANY WORLDS OF LEO A r f °* Yugoslavia—S E R B I A N r. Poulain, with 76 photos and 17 the close of the 17th century. 997ROSTEN. Hugely pntertaining col- LEGACY. By Cecil Ste wart Tin- maps. Hailed in France as “a true pages, unabridged. Orig. pub, a tlection of Rosten’s best stories, usually beautiful volume contains encyclopedia of everything one $17.50. 2 vol. set now 9*9*the DOMESDAY DICTIONARY, humor, social commentary, trav- 81 magnificent illustrations of By- needs to know about French GEORGE CATLIN AND THE OLDBy D. M. Kaplan & A. Schwerner. elogues, satire, memoirs and sun- zantine churches, monasteries and wines.” Pub. at $9.95. Sale....5.95 FRONTIER. By Harold McCrack-Tascmating, brilliantly ironic lexi- dry pieces. Pub. at $5.95. Sale.2.98 frescoes, many drawings. Pub. at jHE GREAT TRAVELERS. Ed. en. With 167 striking reproductions,C0“;U™eil keywords and names HISTORY OF COINS AND SYM- $6.00. Sale 2.98 by Miiton RUgoff. Incomparable, 36 in full color, of Catlin’s un-|«!C* a1, psychoanalyt- BOLS IN ANCIENT ISRAEL. By THE WORKS OP RABELAIS, two-volume treasury of over 100 matched paintings and drawings ofu. T r> £rraccuracy and W. Wirgin & S. Mandel. Pub. at Complete and un-expurgated. Un- first-hand narratives of wayfarers, American Indian life. Pub. athonesty. Pub. at $5.95. Sale ...1.77 $7^50. Sale. .2.98 surpassed satire. Only 2.98 wanderers and explorers in all $18.50. Sale. 9.95He University of Chicago Bookstore — 5802 Ellis Ave.1