Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary Year MIDWEEKEDITIONVol. 75-No. 25 The University of Chicago Tuesday, November 29, 1966Ranking Debate GainingNationwide Momentumby David L. AikenWhile UC is preparing its own conference on the draft, and discussing the idea of a studentreferendum, students elsewhere are taking action through their own conferences and ballotingon the draft and on ranking.At the University of Michigan, where on November 16 two-thirds of the students voting ina referendum opposed ranking, aThe Piccadilly Hotel, which is undergoing renovation.« mmmmmmmmmmsmmmm mmmmmm m m m m sit-in has been threatened if the ad¬ministration does not accept thisvote as binding.Michigan UltimatumA mass “teach-in” five days af¬ter the balloting at Michigan pro¬duced an ultimatum to the adminis¬tration. It was given one week inwhich to abolish class ranking, orface a sit-in in the corridors of theadministration buildings on the AnnArbor campus.A rally has been scheduled fornoon today, at which the adminis¬tration’s response will be an¬nounced. If it is not favorable, stu¬dents supporting the demands willpresumably be prepared to spendtheir lunch hour sitting on the hardfloors of the building.Tied with the ranking demand,incidentally, is a demand thai thePiccadilly Renewal Nears Completionby Michael SeidmanAlthough yet to be cited by the Ford Foundation, the Piccadilly Hotel, like UC itself, ap¬pears to be entering a “rennaissance.” Formerly a primary source of student discontent andUniversity embarrassment, the building has now been almost entirely remodeled.“The Pic is a palace,” said one Piccadilly resident who was a leader of the group of studentswhich last year protested againstthe building’s alleged lack of heat,faulty elevators, and filthy condi¬tion. “It’s marvelous. It’s excellent.All the apartments which have beenrenovated are just beautiful,” shecontinued.THE PICCADILLY, located at5107 South Blackstone Avenue, waspurchased by the University inJanuary, 1962. Constructed in 1927,the building originally housed a3000-seat theatre used for movies,vaudeville, and political rallies.Since its purchase, the building hasbeen under the jurisdiction of mar¬ried student housing.Renovation, which began lastwinter, has been proceding onefloor at a time throughout the sum¬mer, and the contractor is nowpredicting its completion by Janu¬ary, according to John Rogers,manager of the married studenthousing division of University Real¬ty Management.The renovation has included re¬modeling of individual apartments,new bathroom equipment, an en¬tirely new boiler system, and newelevator systems. As each floor,was renovated, students living inthe apartments affected weremoved either to the floors above orto to apartments around the neigh¬borhood."An Agonizing Process"Remodeling has been an agoniz¬ing process,” said Rogers. “Thewhole thing was a kind of harrow¬ing experience. I can only hope wewon’t have to go through it again.”“It’s ^ been going along prettygood at this stage though,” Rogerscontinued. “Students have gottenused to the mess in the halls andthe inconvenience of remodeling.”ALTHOUGH SOME studentshave continued to voice minor com- place last year, and that most stu¬dents appeared satisfied with theremodeling. Moreover, Rogers hasindicated to residents that the rentcut, originally granted to tenantslast year, will continue until the re¬novation is completed.“We're fairly well satisfied,”said one resident. “Things are notperfect, but our objections aren’tterrible ones.” A few tenants com¬plained of poor elevator service,problems with the incinerator, anddrafty windows, but most seemedto feel that there was little the Uni¬versity could do to improve the si¬tuation.“I don’t think that anyone shouldreally complain,” said a tenant.“It’s true there are problems, but they really did the best they could.There are a few people who arenew, and there’s one who is achronic bitch and is always com¬plaining, but that’s juU her na¬ture.”Still ProblemsAlthough pleased with the pro¬gress thus far, Rogers indicatedthat there were still problemswhich had to be faced. In particul¬ar, the water pipes were not entire¬ly replaced, and, according toRogers, there will probably beproblems with them in the future.In addition, the remodeling ofparts of individual apartments wasabandoned because of the expense.“It’s still an old building,” re¬marked one tenant, “but now it’s adamn good place to live. UM administration rescind a recentban on sit-ins.MEANWHILE, there has arisen aspate of referenda on campusesacross the country. In addition tothe vote at Michigan, polls havebeen taken at the University ofMinnesota, City College of NewYork, Marquette University in Mil¬waukee, Goucher College in Balti¬more, and are scheduled at manymore.Behind many of these ballotingsis a call by the National StudentAssociation (NSA) for member stu¬dent governments to sound outtheir constituents on the issue ofclass ranks and the draft system ingeneral.So far, most of the polls haveshown that most students:• Oppose ranking;• Oppose the present basic sys¬tem of Selective Service, but as¬sume some sort of system is neces¬sary.Would prefer that persons se¬lected under the system have somechoice of alternative service, suchas the Peace Corps, VlSTAf or simi¬lar work.At OCNY, for example, 4200 ourof the campus’s 9000 studentsturned out for a referendum, inwhich two-thirds of the voters op¬posed ranking.At Harvard, four-fifths of stu¬dents voting reported they weredissatisfied with the present sys¬tem, and about the same propor¬ tion favored alternative service forthose conscripted.The ranking question showed adisagreement between Harvardgrads and undergrads. Gradswere almost evenly split, with 136voting in favor of ranking, 124against, while undergrads opposedranking by almost three-to-one.MORE THAN half the studentscasting ballots at the University ofMinnesota favored a selective sys¬tem of the present type, with defer¬ments. Next in favor was the ideaof universal military service, whichattracted 21 per cent, and a lotterysystem, which drew 10 per cent.A separate question showed thatmore than three-fourths of theMinnesotans favored the option ofalternative service for those select¬ed.Alternative service also came outstrong in a recent Louis Harris pollof the general American public, al¬though the Harris poll’s questioni tied the offer of alternative serviceto a system of universal service forall men between 19 and 26. Respon¬dents favored this system by four-to-one, while rejecting the idea of alottery by a three-to-one margin.The Harris poll was prepared fora conference on the draft held No¬vember 11 and 12 in Washington.Co-sponsored by the American Vet¬erans Committee, NSA, and otherorganizations, this National Confer¬ence on the Draft heard a series ofspeakers propose a variety of revi¬sions in the draft system.For Public SessionsDraft Tickets ReadyWilson Predicts Trouble for Johnsonby Lynn McKeeverPassing presidential legisla¬tion will be more difficult afterthe recent elections accordingto Henry Hall Wilson, Jr., ad¬ministrative assistant to PresidentJohnson, who discussed the newcharacter of Congress at the LawSchool Monday.Wilson, who replaced Lawrence.F O’Brien in 1965, claimed that theDemocrats’ loss of seats in the lastelection cannot be traced to anyone issue, and, therefore, does notpoint to a “mandate of the people.”ACKNOWLEDGING inflation asa major issue in the campaign,Wilson described Johnson as “con¬cerned” about welfare legislation,interest rates and war-time spend-Plaints, Rogers pointed out that! ing. Nevertheless, Wilson stated,there have been no organized pro- the President “has not decidedtests such as those which took about a tax increase. He will de¬ cide after he receives the results ofall the returns.”On the question of civil rights,Wilson did not seem optimistic:“We have lost 94 seats, Ford hasgained 47, and our losses would begreater if Southern Democratshadn’t taken Republican seats,”One of the most important prob¬lems of the party today, accordingto Wilson, is the Southern Demo¬crat.Southern Problem“In the South, the stress is in theprimaries and the candidate is notreally running with the nationalstandard-bearer,” he said. “He sel¬dom has a strong political or labororganization behind him.“Because of seniority, Congres¬sional leadership often comes fromSoutherners,” Wilson said, notingthe examples of Sam Rayburn, RoyPatten and Wilbur Mills. UC students may obtain tick¬ets to the public downtown ses¬sions of the UC Conference onthe Draft next Wednesday bysending $2.50 to the Chicago Coun¬cil on Foreign Relations, 116 S.Michigan Ave.The tickets will be good for after¬noon and evening panel discussionsin the Grand Ballroom of thePalmer House.The first, from 4 to 6, will be o”alternatives to the draft. From 8 to10, “The effects of implications ofthe alternatives on education, themilitary, democratic society andother phases of our national life”will be discussed.THESE PUBLIC sessions willfeature reports by participants inthe closed four-day conference onthe draft starting Sunday at theCenter for Continuing Education oncampus.Only students whose credentialsas experts on the draft have beenaccepted by a screening committeewill attend the campus sessions.Press correspondents will be ad¬mitted to all sessions, but havebeen instructed that they may notattribute quotes to participants intheir conference discussions.PARTICIPANTS in the confer¬ence represent education, the mili- manpower allocation. Participantsinclude:• U.S. Senator Edward M. Kenne¬dy, Democrat of Massachusetts,who supports a national lotterywhich would give everyone, regard¬less of his social or educationalbackground, an equal chance ofbeing drafted.• Lieutenant General Lewis B.Hershey, director of the SelectiveService System, who favors a uni¬versal military training system, un¬der which all men would serve inthe armed forces for at least sixmonths. The armed forces wouldaccept and rehabilitate those whocould not meet present intelligencerequirements.• Margaret Mead, anthropologist,who has called for a national serv¬ice program in which all youngpeople, including girls, wouM bedrafted, but given the choLe ofserving in the armed forces or inorganizations like the Peace Corpsor the National Teacher Corps.• Milton Friedman, UC Distin¬guished Service Professor of Eco¬nomics, who favors the creation ofan all-volunteer professional mili¬tary force, and the elimination ofthe draft except in times of majorcrisis.• Hans J. Morgenthau, UC Dis¬tinguished Service professor ofpolitical science and history a fre-tarv, and several government agen- quent critic of United States fore-cies concerned wdth youth and, ign policy.Oh No! It's That Time AgainThe time and place of examinations not listed below willbe announced by instructors. Evening and Saturday classes,unless otherwise announced by the instructor, will haveexaminations during regular class hours.Anthoropology 211Anthoropology 213Alt 206 = Hum 281Art 210Art 230Biology 111 Mon Dec 12En Dec 16Fri Dec 16Mon Dec 12Wed Dec 14Fri Dec 16Biology 113 Thur Dec 15Biology 201 Wed Dec 14Lab exam: Tues Dee 13Botany 212 Tues Dec 13Botany 250 Mon Dec 12Chinese 111 Wed Deo 14Chinese 114 Mon rice i2Chinese 201 —Soc Sci 210 Mon Dec 12Chinese 214 Tues Dec 13Chinese 275 Mon Dec 12Chemistry 105 Fri Dec 16Chemistry 131 Fri Dec 16Chemistry 201 Fri Dec 16Chemistry 220 Tues Dec 13Chemistry 261 Wed Dec 14Economics 201 01 Wed Dec 14Economics 201 02 Fri Dec 9Economics 270 Mon Dec 12Economies 276 =Soe Sci 276 Mon Dec 12English 211 Tues Dec 13English 213 91 Wed Dec 14English 216 Wed Dec 14English 225 Mon Dec 12English 230 01 Fri Dec 16English 230 02 Fri Dec 16English 237 01 Thur Dec 15English 244 Mon Dec 12English 258 Tues Dec 13English 259 91 Wed Dec 14English 275 Thur Dec 15English 285 Wed Dec 14English 298 Wed Dec 14French I Wed Dec 14French I-II, II, HI Wed Dec 14French 206 Fri Dec 16French 207 Fri Dec 16French 210 Wed Dec 14French 212 Wed Dec 14French 230 Wed Dec 14French 240 Mon Dec 12Geography 207 Mon Dec 12Geophysical Sciences 131 Fri Dec 16Geophysical Sciences 207 Mon Dec 32Geophysical Sciences 234 Mon Dec 12Geophysical Sciences 281 Fri Dec 16German 101 Wed Dec 14German 104 Wed Dec 14German 230 Mon Dec 12German 236 Wed Dec 14Greek 101 01 + 02 W7ed Dec 14Greek 204 Fri Dec 16Greek 211 Thor Dec 15Greek 244 Tues Dec 13History 131 Sat Dec 10History 201 Tues Dec 13History 211 Fri Dec 16History 214 Tues Dec 13History 228 Thur Dec 15History 237 01 + 02 Mon Dec 12History 245 —Soc Sci 245 Mon Dec 12History 248 Thur Dec 15History 251 Thur Dec 15History 271 Mar. Dec 12History 274 =History 305 Fr i Dec 16Humanities 101 Mon Dec 12Humanities 104 Mon Dec 12Humanities 106 Mon Dec 12Humanities 107 01 Mon Dec 12Humanities 107 02 Mon Dec 12Humanities 204 Mon Dec 12Humanities 207 Wed Dec 14Humanities 207,Variant B Wed Dec 14Humanities 211 =English 211 Tues Dec 13Humanities 220 =Hum 2fll = Art 206 Fri Dec 16Humanities 234 =Music 261 Mon Dec 12Humanities 240 Fri Dec 16Humanities 253 =Id & Meth 211 Fri Dec 16Humanities 281 =Hum 220—Art 206 Fri Dec 16Humanities 283 01 —Ling 220 Thur Dec 15Humanities 203 02 —Ling 220 Mon Dec 12Ideas & Methods 151 Wed Dec 14Ideas & Methods 211 —Hum 253 Fri Dec 16Ideas & Methods 251 Thur Dec 15Ideas & Methods 261 Tues Dec 13Ideas & Methods 291 Fri Dec 9Italian I-II 91 Wed Dec 14Italian 203 Tues Dec 13Japanese 111 Mon Dec 12Japanese 201 =Soc Sci 215 Mon Dec 12Japanese 211 Wed Dec 14Lake Meadows Ice SkatingRink and Skating SchoolCHICAGO'S LARGEST ARTIFICIALLYFROZEN ICE SURFACE.NOW OPENPUBLIC SESSIONS DAILYClosed MondayPrivate & Class Lessons AvailableAdmission $1.00 Children 50cSat. ft Sun. $1.25 and 75c33rd Street and Ellis Ave.3 Blocks East of South ParkwayPhone VI 2-7345 4-64-610:30-12:3010:30-12:308-101:30-3:30Variant A:K 103Variant B:Ab 133Variant C:10:30-12:308-109-31:30-3.304-68-1010:30-12:304-68-1010:30-12:308-108-108-108-108-108-104-610:30-12:304-64-64-61:30-3:304-64-64-610:30-12:3010:30-12:301:30- 3:304-64 68-104 610:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:304-610:30-12:3010:30-12:304-610:30-12:308-104-64-610:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:308-108-1010:30-12:304-61:30-3:3010-128-1010:30-12:3010:30-12:304-610:30-12:304-68-1010:30-12:304 64 68-108-108-10 K4-610:30-12:308-101:30-3:301:303:304 610:30-12:3010:30-12:3010:30-12:304-610:30-12:3010:30-12:304-64-6468-101:30-3:301:30-3:304-610:30-12:304 68-10 Ro 26Lx 3Cl 10Cl 10Cl 20Cl 16BE 10K 10Ro 26Ab 101,Cl 10,Ro 2K 107Wb 103K 304K 304K 304Wb 103E 203Ro 28Ro 27Ro 28W 204Ro 28LMHBE 16Wb 103Wb 207Cl 20Cl 26Cl 25BCl 16LMHSS 306SS 107SS 105Ry 358Ro 2SS 106LAW BSS 105Ro 2E 306LMHK 107103, E 133K 304K 304BE 106LMHJ 126d 16a 10Mus 101LAW BLx 6Cl 10Cl 10BE 103Lx 3Lx 6LAW CLA W CSS 122Ab 420Ab 420F 306Ry 368Ry 368TYPEWRITERSRent a portable, standard orelectric typewriter and wewill apply three months ofyour rental fee toward thepurchase price. For a shorttime only, with the purchaseof some typewriters, you willalso receive a typewriter tablefree of charge.The University ofChicago Bookstore Latin 101Latin 204Latin 216Linguistics 220 01 =Hum 283Linguistics 220 02 —Hum 283Cl 10 Mathematics 101Mathematics 103Mathematics 150 12Mathematics 150 21B 106, Mathematics 150 32Mathematics 150 42Ab 101, Mathematics 151 12Mathematics 151 21K 107 Mathematics 151 31LAW C Mathematics 151 32B 106 Mathematics 151 41B 105 Mathematics 151 42CRB 101 Mathematics 151 44B 205 Mathematics 151 53Mathematics 151 53Mathematics 151 61Ro 26 Mathematics 152 51Cl 16 Mathematics 152 51Mathematics 153 12Cl 10 Mathematics 153 51S 201 Mathematics 202 31BE 16 Mathematics 202 41K 107 Mathematics 200 31K 103 Mathematics 203 41k no Mathematics 203 42K 107 Mathematics 204 11K 103 Mathematics 251 21Mathematics 251 41Mathematics 252 71SS 302 Mathematics 253 52B 106 Mathematics 261 12SS 106 Mathematics 280Music 151 41Ry 358 Music 201Cl 16 Music 211Lx 2 Music 221Cl 10 Music 231234Cl 16Cl 16cn io Music 261 — HumCl 16 N.C.D. IllCl 11 N.C.D. 151 =N.C.D 202N CD 211N.C.D. 217 =Philosophy 217N.C.D. 220Norwegian 101Oriental Civ. 240 =rSoc Sci 257Philosophy 204Philosophy 206Philosophy 217 =N.C.D. 217Philosophy 231Philosophy 238 91Physical Sciences 106Physical Sciences 106Physical Sciences 115Physics 121Physics 131Physics 211Physics 215Physics 221Physics 225Physics 235Political Science 203Political Science 231Political Science 256Political Science 263Psychology 202Psychology 211Psychology 220 =Soc Sci 208Public Affairs 210Russian 101 = 1-GRussian 151 = I-SRussian 201 01+02n-IIlRussian 204 01 + 08Russian 207 01Russian 255Russian 277Social Sciences 111Social Sciences 121Social Sciences 220Social Sciences 230Social Sciences 246 —Hist 246Social Sciences 256Social Sciences 257 =O C 240Social Sciences 276 =Econ 276Sociology 202 —Psychology 220Sociology 205Sociology 206Spanish ISpanish MI, IISpanish 207Spanish 210Spanish 221Spanish 230Statistics 200Swedish 101Swedish 201Swedish 233Zoology 207 Wed Dec 14Mot Dec 12Mon Dec 12Thur Dec 15Mon Dec 12Mon Dec 12Fri Dec 16Tues Dec 13Wed Dec 14Thur Dec 15Mon Dec 12Tues Dee 13Wed Dec 14Mon Dec 12Thur Dec 15Fri Dec 16Mon Dec 12Mon Dec 12Mon Dec 12Mon Dec 12Mon Dec 12Fri Dec 16Mon Dec 12Tues Dec 13Mon Dec 12Mon Dec 12Fri Dec 16Mon Dec 12Fit. Dec 16Mon Dec 12Fri Dec 16Wed Dec 14Fri Dec 16Fri Dec 16Tues Dec 13Tues Dec 13Fri Dec 16Thur Dec 15Wed Dec 14Mon Dec 12Thur Dec 15Mon Dec 12Mon Dec 12Mon Dec 12Wed Dec 14Tues Dec 13Tus Dec 13Fii Dec 16Thur Dec 15 tWed Dec 14Thur Dec 15Thur Dec 15Fri Dec 16Fri Dec 16Thur Dec 15Mon Dec 12Tues Dec 13Fri Dec 16Tues Dec 13Mon Dec 12Wed Dec 14Wed Dec 14Wed Dec 14FYi Dec 16Fri Dec 16Mon Dec 12Mon Dec 12Tues Dec 13Tues Dec 13Fri Dec 16Mon Dec 12Thur Dec 15Mon Dee 12Tues Dec 13Wed Dec 14Wed Dec 14Mon Dec 12Mon Dec 12Fri Dec 16Mon Dec 12Sat Dec 10Thur Dec 15Tues Dec 13Mon Dec 12Fri Dec 16Mon Dec 12Wed Dec 14Thur Dec 15Mon Dec 12Mon Dec 12Thur Dec 15Tues Dec 13Wed Dec 14’-d Dec 14Wed Dec 14Fri Dec 16Mon Dec 12Fri Dec 16Mon Dec 12Fri Dec 16^ri Dec 16Wed Dec 14Tues Dec 13For latest developments inCHINAS CULTURAL REVOLU¬TION subscribe now to PE¬KING REVIEW $4.00, air¬mailed weekly. Write for freecatalog of 700 imported pub¬lications in English from Chinaincluding: Selected Works ofMao Tse-tung, 4 vols. each$4.25 cloth, $2.7i paper.CHINA BOOKS & PERIODI¬CALS, 2929 24th Street, SanFrancisco, California, 94110 8 10 SS 12210:30-12:30 Cl 2110:30 12:30 Cl 2610:30 12:30 Cl 104 6 BE 1031:30-3:30 LMH8 10 E 2028-10 E 3058 10 S 10610:30-12:30 E 2031:30- 3:30 E 202• 10 E 207• 10 E 30610:30 12:30 E 20610:30 12:30 E 20610:3012:30 Cl 111 30- 3-30 Cl 101:30- 3:30 Cl 111:30- 3:30 E 3051.30 3:30 Cl 164 6 E 3054-6 E 2071:30-3:30 Cl 208 10 E 2031:30- 3:30 E 20710:30-12:30 E 30810:30-12:30 E 30510:30-12:30 E 30610:30-12:30 E 3081:30-3:30 Cl 188 10 E 3088-10 E 30510:30-12:30 E 2064-6 E 3081:30-3:30 E 3058-10 E 31210:30-12:30 E 207+ 6 Mus 1018 10 Mus 2011:30 3:30 Mus 101+6 Mus 20110:30-12:30 Mus 20110:30 12:30 Mus 1014 6 BE 10+6 Lx 31:303 30 SS 10610:30-12:30 BE 104-6 SS 30510:30 12:30 SS 1078 10 Wb 10310 3012:3© Or 20810:3012:30 Wb 20210:3012.30 S 4064 6 SS 306+6 Wb 1031:303:30 S 1064-6 B 106,K 103,K 107,E 13310:30 12 3© Ro 28 10 E 133+6 E 133OlO E 1338 10 Ry 2518-10 E 20210:30 12.30 E 13310:3012:30 E 20210:30-12:30 E 20210:3012:30 SS 10610:30 12:30 SS 1071:30- 3:30 SS 30510:3012:30 SS 10610:30-12:30 B 10610:3012:30 Ab 10110 3012 30 Ab 1014 6 a 1810:3012 30 B 1068-10 Cl 1810 :3012 30 s 10610:3012:30 Ro 2710:30 12:30 Cl 1646 S 206012 LAW 1*10 LMH10:30 12:30 LMH10:30-12:3© Lx 6*« Ro 24-6 SS 106' S 40010:30-12 30 Or 2064 6 Ry 35810:30-12:3010:3012:304-610.30-12:3010:30-12:301:30 3:304 64 610:30-12:30+ 68 1046461:30-3.30 Ab io<:SS 126S 1WS 10<Cl 16Cl 11G-B 50'BE 17SS 1(«SS 126Wb IOCWb 206Wb 20!Z 14WOMENSCLOTHESDISCOUNTEDSalesmen's sample jacketsslacks, skirts, blouses, oveiblouses and sweaters.sizes 7-12HRS: SAT. I. SUN. UNTIL XMASEVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT•401 SO. CONSTANCE 375-M2I The University of Chicago1966 1967ORATORIO FESTIVALROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th St. & Woodlawn AvenueTWO PERFORMANCESjFriday EveningDecember 9, 1966at 8:00Sunday AfternoonDecember 11, 1966(SOLO OUT)I /HANDEL’SMESSIAH*IjRichard VikstromDirector of Chapel MusicTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPELCHOIRiwith 27 members of theCHICAGO SYMPHONYORCHESTRASoloists| Neva PilgrimSopranoCharlotte BrentMezzo-SopranoWalter CarringerTenorHenri NoelBaritoneTickets: Reserved $4.50General Admission $3.50UC Fac/Staff $3.00Students $2.50On Sale At:University of ChicagoBookstoreChapel House5810 WoodlawnCooley's Candles5210 Harper CourtWoodworth's Bookstore1311 E. 57th St.Series Tickets (5 Concerts)still available at$15.00, $12.00, $10.00and $7.00For furtherinformation callMl 3 0800, Ext. 33872 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 29, 1966IKoufax ReplacementsForces of Good, Evil ClashIn Latke-Hamantash Debate“To Grad(t)e or Not to Grad(t)e”—that will be the purportedrpiestion at Wednesday night’s Latke-Hamantash debate (finalexam? class warfare?), at 7:15 pm in Ida Noyes.The annual struggle between the forces of good and evil(or both, depending on your preju¬dices) is being replayed this yearfor the 21st time under the sponsor¬ship of Ilillel House, noted show-business entrepreneurs.MAX D. TICKTIN, rabbi of Hil-lel, has also denied rumors thatnoted authority Sandy Koufax willput in a special appearance.As replacements for Koufax, ITil-k*l has rounded up a bunch of sec¬ond stringers. They are:• David (neo Freudian) Orlinsky,who plays outfield for the Psych.Delies;• Warner (Arms!) Wick, self-styled Kantian, noted for his per¬formances on athletic fields;• Joseph Kirsner. a medicalschool cut-up. who will presumablydiscourse on the gastrointestinal ef¬fects of the latke and Hamantash; • Norman Miller (not, as hadbeen hoped, Norman Mailer), whowill sociologize on the topic; and• Edward Stankiewicz, of Slaviclanguages (and we all know aboutthose Slavs).IN A brilliant move at audienceinvolvement, Ticktin has an¬nounced that students will be ableto enter the fray (take out theiraggressions) after the professorshave been shut up.In a futile attempt to introducesome semblance of order in theproceedings, Sol Tax, dean of theExtension Division (also known asthe Road Team), will pose as um¬pire.The truth being free, there willbe no admission charge for thoseattempting to pack into the CloisterClub. Ticktin denied reports that the room would be renamed theKoufax Memorial Arena for the oc¬casion.After the orgy of protund oratory,Hillel will host a disturbinglybiased feast of latkes, at 5715 S.Woodlawn.—DLAPATRONIZEOURADVERTISERSTape recording, duplicating,editing.Done right, reasonable ratescall WUCB, x3588 Academic Victory?!Riesman Speaks at UCDavid Riesman, professor of so- sor from 1946 to 1959, collaboratedciology at Harvard University and with Reuel Denney, another UCauthor of The Lonely Crowd, will professor and Nathan Glazer tospeak at Mandel Hall Thursday. | produce The Lonely Crowd whichRiesman, whose talk will begin gained for him national publicity,at 8 pm, has announced that his j The book traces the effects of childtopic will be “The coming victory rearing practices on individual mo-of the academic — a mixed bless- j tivation. -ing?’’ There will be no admissioncharge.Riesman, who was a UC profes-STUDENTS—Part Time Jobsavailable now. Call at thePersonnel Office956 E. 58th Street Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259NSA DiscountsTHEATRE FIRST, INC.PRESENTSEdward Albee'sWHO'S AFRAID OFVIRGINIA WOOLF?December 2, 3, 4Friday & Saturdays 8:33 p.m. — Sundays 7:30 p.m.General Admission *1.75 — Students *1.19THE ATHENAEUM THEATRE2936 N. Southport Avenwo LA 5-9761 21st LATKE-HAMANTASH SYMPOSIUM"TO GRAD(T)E OR NOT TO GRAD(T)E"Prof. Edward Stankiewicz, SlavicLanguagesProf. Warner Wick, Dean of StudentsProf Joseph Kirsoer, MedicineProf. Norman Mitler, SociologyProf. David Orlinsky, Psychology Prof. Sol Tax, Anthropology ModeratorWednesday November 30 7:15 pmIDA NOYES CLOISTER CLUB 1212 E. 59th ST.Latkes and Cider at Hillel House (5715 Woodlawn)After Program UNIVERSITY THEATREannouncesTrvoiitfsMON-TUES-WEDDec. 5, 6, & 7Reynold's ClubFrom 7-9 pm.forLysistrataWinter Quarterproductionin Mandel HallThe moon man returned with hisbig brother wrapped in beautifulScandinavian Christmas paper, AHOY THERE,Just Off The Boat!•Scandi j,mpoinavian“Mon* of WJnfcCall NO 7-4040HOURS: WEEKDAYS & SATURDAYS 11-9SUNDAYS 12-65300 LAKE PARK rl.S And his family, friends, and relatives:made of solid teak parquet blocks: wooden carving boards, lazy susans,cheese boards, spice racks, stainless steel serving pieces for all your needsfrom $1.95., Swedish pottery, A zoo-ful of wooden animal carvings, WoolenSweaters, jackets, caps, Hand-made Rya rugs, Candle-holders in any finishand shape, Whale tooth carvings and jewelry, Rosewood bracelets, rings,berets, cufflings, tie clips, necklaces and headbands Also, an assortmentof 92 beautiful Danish lamps.Adds up to one Gift Shop, n'est-ce pas?Don't Forget...we also carry multiform bookshelfs as well as a complete line offurniture.November 29, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Piccadilly ProgressThe Piccadilly is now a “damn good place to live,” accordingto one of its tenants. Coming six short months after Piccadillyresidents circulated a protest petition which rocked UniversityRealty Management, such a statement is remarkable.Although it is obvious that the Piccadilly still has its prob¬lems and probably always will, the Housing Office has clearlysucceeded in reversing a trend, and they should be congratulat¬ed for it. In many respects, the Piccadilly controversy repre¬sents a landmark in student-administration relations, and itssuccessful conclusion bodes well for the future.Here is one of those rare cases where students presentedlegitimate grievances to the administration, where administra¬tors listened sympathetically and admitted their mistakes, andwhere the result was a solution which left everyone satisfied.There are, of course, several factors that make the Piccadillycontroversy unique The fact that all the residents of the apart¬ment are graduate students and that some hold faculty ap¬pointments undoubtedly put more pressure on the administra¬tion than they might otherwise have felt.But if the Piccadilly is not the Conrad Hilton, its renovationis at least a start. “Autonomous mismanagement” is at anend—at least at the Piccadilly—and we are not about to mournits passing.One other advance in living conditions for UC students wor¬thy of note is Dean of Students Warner Wick’s recent invita¬tion to the Inter-House Council to meet with him and otherdeans on autonomy for the dorm houses.This promises considerable progress in the movement to¬ward “self-determination” for dorm students in such questionsas social regulations. Ideally, each house should decide for it¬self what restrictions, if any should be placed upon the enter¬tainment of guests in rooms, and other matters. Each houseshould also decide on any penalties to be imposed for infract¬ions of the rules.We hope students in these discussions express a strong will¬ingness to accept these responsibilities.November DaysThere's a special something about the University as Novem¬ber draws to a close. The walls are grayer than usual and thewind is harsher.Exam schedules are posted and the library is busier. Byclosing time the Social Science Reading Room still has mid¬night-oil burners racing to finish their ten week s work Every¬one is worried about impending exams and there are fewer andfewer parties. Hangers-on mope around in front of Nicky slooking for the action but they know that their friends arestudying for a change.The atmosphere is almost enough to get a person down. Onesage explained to a first year College student from a morehospitable climate that by the end of November Chicago andUC start to get beastly. “And,” he added, “It’s going to get aHell of a lot colder before it gets any warmer.” Letters to the EditorChicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief • .David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanFeature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyPolitical Editor John BremnerEditor Emeritus Daniel HertzbergEditorial Staff—Kenneth Simonson, Slade Lander, Ellis Levin,Richard Rabens, Joe Lubenow.News Staff—John Moscow, Harold Sheridan, Angela DeVito,Robert Skeist, Ina Smith, Seth Masia, Vivian Goodman,Cathy Sullivan, Jeffrey Blum, Leanne Star, Maxine Miska,Alfred Marcus, Marge Pearson, Leslie Recht, Helen Schary,Ann Garfield, John Welch, T. C. Fox, Gloria Weissman,Marlene Proviser, Ilene Kantrov, Roger Black, LarryHendel, Anita Grossman, Larry Struck, Lynn McKeever,Sanford Rookowitz, Peter Stone, Susan Loewy, David Jacob¬son, Harold Kletnick. Vietnam OpinionTO THE EDITOR:In view of the continuing heateddiscussion on this campus of theViet-Nam war and the draft, it isunfortunate that there has beenno accurate study of student opin¬ion on 'these issues. This defi¬ciency is particularly regrettablein view of UC’s upcoming Decem¬ber conference on the SelectiveService System. This meeting,called to consider an institutionwhich vitally affects the lives ofstudents, will have to proeedewithout a true picture (indeedhardly any picture) of studentopinion on the subject. The valueof any student participation isquestionable: the group favoringthe status-quo, lethargic and un¬organized as usual, will remainlargely silent. Several of thegroups most opposed to the pres¬ent system have refused tohave anything to do with the con¬ference, as usual refusing toparticipate in anything construc¬tive and fearing association to aconclusion which may differ fromtheirs. In particular, the confer¬ence will have no real idea of thesize of the various groups.It is obviously too late for an¬other Student Government refer¬endum, whose value would bealso quite open to doubt anyway.Because SG is held in such lowesteem on this campus, its refer¬enda generate as much disinter¬est as its notoriously disinterest-ing elections: neither attract themarginally interested, whose opin¬ions, must be had in this case.Also, as SG has demonstrated inthe past, it is unable to conduct ameaningful poll; it rather pre¬sents a limited choice of cliches.The results are hard to correlateto anything.There is, however, an organiza¬tion on campus which has theability to construct a meaningfulsurvey, the apparatus to reach alarge number of students, and theinterpretive knowledge to presenta helpful picture of the results.And if they act with speed, theymight even have this ready forthe conference. I refer of courseto the National Opinion ResearchCenter. They could put forward alarge number of questions usingtheir computers they might alsobe able to correlate answers tospecific questions (as ‘Do you op¬pose the war?’ and ‘Do you op¬pose the draft’) so we could seewhat part of the opposition to thedraft is related to opposition tothe war, etc.If the University is going to thebother of sponsoring internationalconference on the draft, theyshould also present it with the in¬formation it needs. Otherwise itwill be a mere rehashing of theold positions. Such a poll of ourstudent body wmuld also be ofvalue to our legislators who mustreconsider next year the existingsystem as the 1948 law which ex-tablished it nears its expiration.CHARLES BERGAt Heagy's WordTO THE EDITOR:Must be the season of the witchthat’s rattling our beloved col¬league’s brains, but SG Prexy Hea-gy, you asked for it: I will take youat your word. You said in lastTuesday’s Maroon that the reasonStudent Government advertisesonly in the Other is because Ma¬roon rates are higher. You went onto say that you would change yourways if and when we met competi¬tion. So be it. From this day forthour rates will meet price-cuttingcompetition for the poorer studentgroups like yours. While we hate tolower rates—as the Maroon has al¬ways operated in the red—we like¬wise don’t want student groups toforego the advantage of using theirown University newspaper. All eyes will be on you from nowon, Tom, to see if you followthrough. Divide your advertisingpie evenly between the two newspa¬pers. Split the ticket. “We needyou, sweetie.”BORUCH GLASGOWMoody ReviewTO THE EDITOR:I should like to make a fewcomments on Mr. Haven's reviewof the Moody Lecture (Maroon, 22November, p. 10).First, the readers, I hope, gen¬erally expect more objectivecriteria than Mr. Haven’s reli¬ance on unsupported comparisonand his ability to turn on or offfor a given work. That AnthonyHecht’s “The Vow-’ turned himoff as “a poor imitation of DylanThomas” is scant reason to dis¬miss the poem. If the poem is de¬rivative, what are the models forit in Thomas’ works? The readercertainly cannot accept the viewthat a poem is a “poor” imitationof an uncited, perhaps non-ex is tent, original. Also, thecritic’s ability to turn on or off isunquestionably his own affair.Give the reader intelligent ana¬lyses, not off-handed, subjectivepronunciamentos.Secondly. I find little sense inMr. Haven’s charge that WilliamSnodgrass’ “Regraduating theLute" is “glib.” The poet tookgreat pains to prepare his audi¬ence for the series of images thatdraw on this rather uncommonart and for the climactic lover’sinscription with which the poemends. But the critic ignores therelevance of the poet’s remarks,and fails to note the success orfailure of the poet’s attempt toassimilate into his verse the intri¬cate process of “regraduating.” He tells us the poem is glib.Finally, in a singularly unin¬formed and crude statement, Mr.Haven labels Snodgrass’ remarkson Monet as “insuferable bullsh¬it.” I have noticed this Berkele-yesque vigor of expression else¬where on campus, and even enjoythe explosion of forceful monosyllables myself on occasion, but acritical review is not the place forletting go. Besides, a few minutesof research will prove that ourcritic is not only inexcusablycrude, but that he is also verywrong. What Snodgrass saidabout the “immersion” of objectsin Monet’s painting is generallyaccepted by art historians, exceptfor the fact that the poet’s enthu¬siasm for the painter’s sensitivityto experience may have causedhim to overestimate Monet’s over¬all influence. See, for example,George Besson's Monet, p. fi, fora view similar to what our criticlabels “bullshit.” And, onceagain, the poem is neglected, in¬sufferably.A. B. FOXWar Vigil SetTO THE EDITOR:In the spirit of the recent vigilheld in memory of Norman Morri¬son, we have decided to holdweekly vigils in protest againstthe war and in acknowledgmentof our share in the responsibilityfor it.We will stand in silence inHutchinson Court from 12 noon to12:30 this Wednesday, and if wecan, each succeeding Wednesdayuntil the war ends.Any who may wish to join usare welcome.PETER CAPLANJAMES OSGOODOFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SHOREIAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DriveENTRANCEPI 2-1000PRIVATECall Mr. N. T. Norbert —CUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCALL MRS. BLIXT AT 782-2118FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. 60602"SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT"PHILLIPS JEWELRY COMPANY_^50%OFFON ALL DIAMOND//ENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RlNGS67 E. Madison Room 1101 DE 2-6508Campus Representative: E. GLASGOW — Ext. 3265 or 324-9020CHICAGO MAROON • November 29, 1966To Influence Decision-MakingNobel Winners To Be Honored at DinnerDr. Charles B. Huggins and Rob¬ert S. Mulliken, the University’s1966 Nobel Prize winners, will behonored at a civic dinner to be heldThursday in the grand ballroom ofthe Palmer House.The formal dinner is sponsored by the Citizens Board of UC.In addition to Huggins and Mul¬liken, speakers at the dinner willinclude George W. Beadle, Presi¬dent of the University and FairfaxM. Cone, chairman of the Universi¬ty’s Board of Trustees.CareersRecruiting representatives of the fol¬lowing organizations will visit the Office..[ Career Counseling and Placementduring the week of November 28. Inter¬view appointments for 1966-67 graduatesmay be arranged through Mr. L. S.Calvin, room 200, Reynolds Club, Exten¬sion 3284.November 291 I. T. Research Institute, Chicago,1)1. — all degree levels in Chemistry,Mathematics, Physics, Statistics, andBiological Science. Schedule permittingwill interview graduate students inihese departments for summer employ¬ment.November 30National Center for Health Statistics,Washington, D C. S.B. and S.M. in Sta¬tistics or Mathematics (including sixsemester hours in Statistics); S.B. andS.M. in Social Sciences (including sixsemester hours in Statistics) Courseswith content of at least 50% statisticalmethod or EDP courses may be count- ed toward meeting the statistics re¬quirement.December 1U. S. Department of the Navy, Wash¬ington D.C. — representative will dis¬cuss the Management Intern programof the Navy and other Federal agen¬cies. Management Interns must passboth the Federal Service Entrance Ex- Iamination and the Management Intern 1option.December 2Allied Chemical Corporation, Syracuseand Buffalo, N. Y.; Morris Township, N. jJ ; Hopewill, Va. — Chemists at alldegree levels and in all specializationsCareersRepresentatives of the following grad jschools will be in the office of CareerCounselling and Placement. Appoint- jments may be arranged by calling ext. 13282.Wednesday, Nov. 30—Peter Krogh, as¬sociate dean of the Fletcher School.Friday, Dec. 2—Frank Sobol, Stanford !Univ. school of education. Student Council Set for Hum DivisionA council of students thatwill represent students in theUniversity’s social and academ¬ic decisions is now being form¬ed by the Humanities Collegiate Di¬vision.According to Stuart Tave, Masterof the Humanities Division, the stu¬dent elected council will seek touse its status as a part of the Hu¬manities Division to influence theUniversity’s decision-making pro¬cess.“The business of the council willbe what it wants to be,” said Tave.He sees faculty-student dinners,lectures, and department or inter¬departmental discussion as possibleactivities in the jurisdiction of thecouncil.The council may also help in cur¬ricular matters by evaluating pre¬ sent courses and degree programs ■and helping to plan a senior semi¬nar which will cross departmentallines, noted Tave.In order to elect representativesto the council, the division is spon- jsoring a series of free luncheons,one for each department, beginningThursday and running through nextweek.A11 students in the division shouldreceive invitations to their depart-!mental luncheon in the mail. Theluncheons will be at 12:15 at theQuad Club, except for the Monday jluncheon for students with no ma-!jor field which will be at 12:15 inBurton Lounge.The schedule for departmentalluncheons is: history, Thursday;general studies, Friday; no major,:Monday; art and music, Tuesday;foreign languages and literature, Wednesday; philosophy and linguis¬tics, Thursday; and English, Fri¬day.If any member of the HumanitiesCollegiate Division does not receivean invitation in the mail, he mayobtain one from Maureen Byers,107 Gates-Blake.PHOTOGRAPHICPlace your order now forChristmas cards in color orBlack and White.Check the sales items on ourPhoto countr at:The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueThe latest thing In student accessories. It comes halfway up to regularJet Coach fare, but it covers you all the way home.To qualify, you mustbe young—under 22. You must be able to fill out a simple form.Then Ifyou have $3, you’re halfway home at half fare. You’re a member ofTWA’s 50/50 Club...eligible for Mini-fare everywhere we go in theU. S. Stop in at your nearest TWA office for a fitting.♦Service mark owned exclusively by Tirana World Airline*, Inc.Welcometo the world ofTrans World Airlines' CONTACTWEARERS!One solution forcomplete lens careLensine’s special propertiesassure a smoother, non-irritatinglens surface when inserting your“contacts." Just a drop or twowill do it. When used for cleaning,a unique Lensine formula helpsretard buildup of contaminantsand foreign deposits on thelenses. It’s self-sterilizing andantiseptic. Ideal for wet storageor “soaking” of lenses. Lensinereduces harmful bacteria con¬tamination.• • •FREE CARRYING CASE. Exclusiveremovable carrying case withevery bottle of Lensine. Thescientific—and convenient—wayto protect your contacts.LENSINE fromThe Murine Company, Inc....eye care specialist for 70 yearsNovember 29, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Music Review ■*Are you sure todayis homecoming?% - : .?y,iMrMP■Mj-4mmmmm\^r . ••■? x-*.' i/t''4fwGil els Adds Warmth to PianoActually, the most surprising aspect of Emil Gilels’ perfor-jmance of Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto with the Chicago ISymphony Orchestra last week, marking the CSO’s return ^from a three-week Eastern tour, was that he actually did playthe Emperor Concerto, as sched¬uled. Of late, the eminent Sovietpianist has been changing his pro¬grams right and left, and the factHat he did play what was planned•head of time came as a distinctgfcock. But, no matter, the Emper¬or it was, and in Gilels’ own grandstyle, it was a performance to sendjubilant critics to their already-battered thesauruses. looking fornew encomiums with which to gar¬land this already fabled keyboardmaster.Gilels was the first Soviet artistto venture to this country followingthe post-Stalinist cultural thaw,when he made a month-long tour inOctober, 1955, and a comparisonbetween recordings made at thattime with the CSO with his presentplaying is most revelatory. Thatfantastic note-perfect technique,with those bullet-proof two-hand oc¬taves. each of which can drown outan orchestra with a single sforzan-do, is still as strong as ever. Now,however, his playing has taken onan added degree of w'armth andpliancy that was missing back inthe early days.Objectivity is the key. Gilels isone of those pianists who consis¬tently strives for the grand line ofthe music, and is not prone to- !w ards the sort of neurotic aberra-;tions that characterize his compa-;triot. Sviatoslav Richter. Rather,his present style combines this!structural concept of interpretation,with a greater amount of give andtake on his part. No longer as relentless, he lets the music breathe,and when he does let out all thestops, as in the opening of the Ron¬do Finale, it is in better perspec¬ tive, and his over all conceptionhas added cogency.Yet, lest I wax too analytical, letme add my own bravos with therest of the gallery claque. It wasthe kind of real rollicking perfor¬mance of which Gilels is capableon those rare occasions when helets his hair down, and ConductorJean Martinon’s accompanimentneatly dovetailed with it.If the Beethoven performancewas thus illustrative of dove tail,then Willard Elliot's Bassoon Con¬certo was, respectively, as illustra¬tive of dove dung as anything I’veheard lately. Elliot, first-chair bas¬soonist of the Orchestra, follows ina long line of professional instru¬mentalists who haven’t been ableto resist the temptation to writeconcertos for their instruments. El¬liot’s, however, misses the boat onseveral counts.First of all, the obvious and pri¬mary objective of a concerto issupposed to spot-light the solo in¬strument against the vast back¬ground of the orchestra, not to buryit and lose it in the orchestral fab¬ric. The Emperor Concerto, for in¬stance, provides an example of theultimate fusion of the classical con¬certo, with its “question-and-an-swer” mode of development, withboth the full-blown virtuoso “spotlight” concertos of Liszt and Rach¬maninoff and the “symphony witoinstrumental obbligato” concertosof Brahams.This sort of frame-work provides |quite a lot of leeway, but Elliotavoids all the alternatives. Theproblem seems to lie with the in¬strument. It’s pretty difficult towrite in a way so as to make the THE NEW YORK PRO MUSICAThePlau of DanielRockefeller Memorial ChapelDecember 12-17,1966bassoon abandon its normal role asan accompanying instrument andto make it the queen when it is atheart one of the back row hand¬maidens. True, Mozart was able toovercome this, but, after all, how-many Mozarts are there?What is far worse. Elliot devel¬ops the piece in the cerebral andsterile latc-Schoenberg idiomwhich, while attesting to his com¬positional mastery, possesses fewelements with which to reach hisaudience.Opening the concert was FrankMartin’s bracing Les quatre ele-1merits, which, incidentally, was;dedicated to conductor Ernest An-sermet, who, along with Martin. |has categorically rejected Schoen jberg and who is currently prepar-!ing a book in which he mathemati¬cally repudiates the Schoenbergianserial technique of composition.This, of course, is tantamount toslaying the seven-headed, twelve-toned hydra with its own sword.GOOD LUCK FELLA!Ed Chikofsky"Coca-Colo*,and,'Cok«"or« regtsfered trade-mark* which Identify only the product of The Coco-Cola Company.Tickets by MailPlay of Daniel Benefit OfficeRoom 1717, 221 North LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois G0601Evenings, 8:45 p.m., $6, $5 & $4Matinees, (Wed. & Sat.] 3:00 p.m., $5, $4 & $3Feeulty student 'staff discount tickets available at BursarsOffice from 11:00-3:00 pm.ONE DAY ONLY!Saturday, January 7 at 7:30 & 10:30IN PERSONDR. TIMOTHY LEARYIn a Psychedelic Celebration entitledTHE DEATH OF THE MINDRe enactment of the world s great religious myths using psychedelicmethods: sensory meditation, symbol-overload, media-mix, molecularand cellular phrasing pantomime, dance, sound-light and lecture-sermon-gospel.PSYCHEDELIC ART BY JACKIE CASSEN & RUDI STERNSPONSOR EO 8Y L‘EAGUC FOh JPiRiTuAL ftiSCOVERYPRICES: $4.50. $4.00, $3.50, $3.00Tickets available at:STUDENT GOVERNMENT OFFICEor mail order toARIE CROWN THEATRE BOX OFFICEMcCORMICK PLACEDue to the unprecedented demand for tickets to this celebration weurge you to buy your tickets immediately.ARIE CROWN THEATREMC CORMICK PLACE Any flnfftn !• won fun with ict-told Coke on httnd. Coca-Cola has the taste youfitvw got tired of... always refreshing. That1* why things go hotter with Cok#...after Cok«...after Coke.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 29, 1966 uortiea under the authority ot The coca-cola Company by Coca-Cola Boitimq Company of Chicago.NY Pro Musica To Varsity WrestlingGive Play of DanielThe Pla}7 of Daniel, a 12thcentury musical with Englishverse narration by W. H. Au¬den, will be performed by theNew York Pro Musica from De¬cember 12 through December 17 atRockefeller Memorial Chapel.The play, which is presented aspart of the University's 75th Anni¬versary celebration, will have sixevening performances at 8:45 pmand two matinees, on Wednes¬day, December 14 and Saturday.December 17, at 3 p.m. Tickets areavailable at Lowe’s Record Shop.55th St. and Lake Park Avenue andat the Bursar’s office. The Play of Daniel was revivedin 1958 by the late Noah Greenberg jafter 800 years of neglect. It tellsthe story of the prophet Daniel, his jencounter with Belshazzar, his deri-.phering of the handwriting on thewall, Belshazzar’s destruction byDarius, Daniel’s trial in the lion’sden and his eventual deliverance.The New York Pro Musica, in the ■original Greenberg production, isunder the direction of John White.Among the medieval instrumentswhich the group will use in the per¬formance are the hurdy-gurdy, re¬corder, rebec, vielle, psaltery, min¬strel's harp and portative organ. Team To Be BestIn 7 Years—Baillie“If we're not plagued by in¬juries this will be the best teamI’ve seen in the seven yearsI’ve been here,” said Jim Bail-lie, new head coach of the varsitywrestling team.Baillie, a member of the wres¬tling team while an undergraduatej at UC and assistant head coach un¬der Clifford Cox for the past two! years, feels he has a “young team! with the potential to have an excel¬lent season.”The award-winning Hailstonesand Halibut Bones ($3.25), byMary O'Neill with illustrationsby Leonard Weisgard, appeals toall ages. It's about colors: thecool green sound of tricklingwater, the show-off shout of red,the quiet white of a pair of whis¬pers talking. You might say itexpands the consciousness.William Blake’s Songs of Inno¬cence do too, and they're newlyavailable in two ways. One vol¬ume ($3.50) has the poems andbeautiful illustrations by EllenRaskin. In the other ($3.95),Miss Raskin has set the poems tomusic, as well as illustrating thebook. Are you goingto buy the kidsa sub-machine gunfor Christmas?•IdoubledayThings that move fascinate youngreaders or listeners and the ABCof Cars and Trucks ($3.25),by Anne Alexander, shows andtells about all kinds of vehicles.Charles Dickens’ A ChristmasCarol is a traditional pleasure,and your college store has a lovelyfacsimile of the first edition, illus¬trated in color and black andwhite ($3.95). Or look into astocking-stuffer-sized book calledA C hristmas Panorama ($2.50).It looks small, but folds out toover six feet to display, in fullcolor, two old favorites: A Par¬tridge in a Pear Tree on one side,The Friendly Beasts on the other.The point of all this is that whatyou give children doesn't have tobe something that won't last pastNew Year's Day. Each of thesebooks — and many others on dis¬play in your college store — willgive hours and months and evenyears of friendly companionship.... a doll that moves Its eyes?How about a game with 9,000pieces to lose?Christmas it for kids, you know,and the stores are full of childishfancies at fancy prices.Your college store also has a dif¬ferent kind of present you oughtto consider. Even though theydon’t spurt fire, flutter, snap, orpop, books are wonderful giftsfor children. Especially bookslike these. ' W - V:CALENDAR OF EVENTS. V. ... . ~ - ... ..... .Tuesday, November 29MEETING: Inter-house Council. JudsonLounge. 7 pm.Wednesday, November 30LECTURE: Jerome Taylor discussingthe medieval theater, 4 pm, Reynoldsj Club Lounge.j LECTURE: “The Basis of Bonhoeffer’sNew Thinking,’’ by Eberhard Bethge,J CTS; Mandel, 4:30 pm.ANNUAL LATKE-HAMANTASH SYM-i POSIUM: sponsored by Hillel Founda-j tion. Ida Noyes Hall, 7:15 pm.DISCUSSION SERIES: “The American| Jury”, Harry Kalven, Professor of Law and co-author of The American Jury,fifth floor lounge, Pierce Tower, 7 pm.Thursday, December 1MEETING: Wash Prom Committee, 7pm, Ida Noyes.LECTURE: “Some Reflections on thePhysiological Significance of Recent Ad¬vances in Knowledge of Fine Structureof Cells and Tissues”, 8 am, Abbott 133,951 East 58th Street.LECTURE: “The Coming Victory of theAcedemics: A Mixed Biessing”, DavidRiesman, sociologist, Mandel Hall, 8pm.LECTURE: “Burke, Marx, and Histo¬ry”, by Conor Cruise O'Brien, Prof, ofEnglish, NYU; Rosenwald 2, 8 pm.FREEYou can get a copy ofCAP & GOWNThe University of ChicagoYearbookBy bringing the registrationcoupon to the Bursar.Plus a handling charge of $5.00ANOTHER CIVIC IMPROVEMENT FOR CHICAGORICHARD J. DALEYMayorNovember 29, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Jl)lP ^Classified Advertisements“I got my turkey through the ChicagoMaroon people-grabber want ads.” saidHadda Gobbler, noted eipcure. The Ma¬roon offers stomach-filling, eye-popping,edifying rates for students and “other”university people. Write our fine, feath¬ered ad-grabber. Miss Lee Hunt, at 1212E. 59 St. Remember, though—only threemore shopping days till the last Maroonof the quarter.PERSONALSHanukah menorahs and candles for saleHillel House. 5715 S. Woodlavvn.CRIME OF SILENCESpeaker: Gordon Zahn. Prof, of Soc. atLoyola U., author of German Catholics& Hitler’s Wars. Fri., Dec. 2 at 8 P.M.302 S. Canal St. Don. 50c Auspices: Fri¬day Night Socialist Forum.HISTORY CLUB meeting Prof. AR¬THUR MANN. Recent Interps. in Amer.History. Thurs. 8:00 Ida Noyes.Fiddler on the Roof, McVickers. Schoolrates, limited $3 & $4. RE 1-8043FREE RIDE to L A. for person w/gooddriving record. Aft. 6 PM, HY 3-5656Found: gold ring in R. Anduin. CallDeagol, SLinker 2-9511brother Deagol Grad students seek 3 bdrm apt in HydePk Settlement poss on furn Suggestionswelcome 324-2862Four male graduate students desperate¬ly need female cook or cooks. Freemeals. Call 324-7431David Ben Gurion will not sit on thefloor with most of us at theLatke-Hamantash symposium Wed. 7:15Cloister Club.Gentlemen, you’re invited to the Black-stone Coffee Hour Tonight, 9-11, 5748 jBlackstone. Free coffee & homemadecookies. |Matzoh Ball lives! w s, > 'v ><*>, ;,c.vs 1To see the doncaster collection of cus¬tom made suits and dresses, call 324-8907‘57 OLDS. 9125 Good cond. Call X2438 orMU 4-5760 aft. 5.TO RENT WANTED: to share apt with male stu- | 2 girls seek 3rd immed occ. own rm <ji)dent (s) having same. For Jan 1, 1967. : mo grad stu/workg girl 55 Sc Cornel!684-0302 or 324-2237. I Linda 751-9444.Avail Dec. 28 mod 5 rm apts. 2 bdrms.9158. 7818 S. Luella. Aft. 5: 721-69175*2 rm. apt. Dec. 1 363-7375 aft 5Waned: studio space—Must be heated—Comm. Artist—x3753. . . Barry.Ball for peaceJOBS OFFEREDOur boss wants “A Poetic Photogra¬pher” (SIC) Maroon prints last year'spublicity photos. Would you trust ayearbook photographer? Free film, freerein: Dave B. 684-8480Salesman and stockroom helper. Needdriver’s license. Interest in electronicsdesirable. Apply in person to Frank atToad Hall, 1444 E. 57th.FOR SALEWeIN MEMORIAMwill miss him. SmeagolKAMELOT Restaurant. 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC students.Writer’s Workshop PL 2-8377.Russian by native, experienced teacher.Rapid method. Trial lesson No chargeCE 6-1423 9-5 pm.Congratulations to all the amorous Ma¬roon types—best wishes to M S., P.F..and B.E.G.Representation for the National Latkefront? VW—1964. Must Sell $875 667-14651965 MGB, BRG, very good cond. ex¬tras. ES 5-3255. PLAN AHEADEstablishedNon-Profit Air TravelEUROPEapprox. S200 ROUNDTRIPMexico City $110; Tokyo $250ETC, Invest $1.00 for info, to:TRAVEL INFORMATION SERVICEBox 494, Berkeley, Cal. 94701 BOOKS BY CAMPUS AUTHORSCHURCH, STATE AND THE AMERICAN INDIANSby R. Pierce Beaver 6.75AN AMERICAN PRIMERby Daniel J. Boorstin 14.95THE SECULARIZATION OF MODERN CULTURESby Bernard E. Meland 4.75THE UNIVER5I1Y OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restr—, foreign cor hoipital EARN UP TO $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOW CABShort or Full-shift adjusted to your school schedule, day, night, or weekendWORK FROM GARAGE NEAR HOME OR SCHOOL21 OR OVER, HAVE DRIVER'S LICENSECA 5-6692 or applyYELLOW CAB CO-120 E. 18th ST. Keyed-upstudents unwindat Sheraton...and save moneySave with weekend discounts! Send for yourfree Sheraton ID card today! It entitles youto room discounts at nearly all SheratonHotels and Motor Inns. Good over Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays, summervacation, weekends all year round.SEND FOR YOUR FREE ID CARD/COLLEGE RELATIONS DIRECTORc/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008Please rush me a free Sheraton Student ID Card (or a free Fac¬ulty Guest Card). I understand it entitles me to generous dis¬counts all year long at most Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns.NameAddress •Student □ Teacher Q J.... .......JSheraton Hotels & Motor InnsSO POTT The Chicago Symphony Orchestra presents con¬temporary music, as well as baroque, in itsChamber Music Series. Special discounts arsnow being offered to students and faculty: only$2.00 per single admission (regularly $4.50)/seriestickets for six remaining concerts, only $11,00.On December 6, the Chicago Symphony StringQuartet and guest artist, Gyorgy Sebok, piano,will play:Szymanou tki: Quartet forStringsSchubert: Wanderer Fantasiafor PianoFranck: Quintet forPiano and StringsThere is more to life than trivia, football, andstudying—make December 6 the day you dis¬cover chamber music.Single admission and series tickets are avail¬able at Orchestra Hall Box Office, 216 So.Michigan, or phone 427-0362 for information.CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAJEAN MARTINON, MUSIC DIRECTOR8 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 29, 1966