Chicago Maroon WEEKENDEDITION75th Anniversary YearVol. 76—No. 50 The University of Chicago Friday, April 21, 1967Gen.McNeill Defends Decision on Lemisch in Soc 122Terry Moyemont as the servant and David Katzin as the landlordin G. E. Lessing's Mima von Barnhelm, at the Reynolds Club Theatre,his Friday, Saturday, and Sunday evenings, and Saturday afternoon.Admissions Informer Won't Be ChairmanThe College Historv Group has been in existence for severaldecided to institute a method >'?ahrs' is an i“,ormal “nianization. j of history professors who teach atof polling its members in order i least some 200-level courses.to pick a chairman. In previousyears, the Group’s chairman hasdesignated the chairman for thefollowing year.The History Group’s selection ofa chairman has attracted particu¬lar interest this year because PeterStearns, assistant professor of his¬tory and the group’s present head,had designated the faculty membercharged with divulging confidentialadmissions information as thechairman for next year. The facul¬ty members identity has not beenpublicly revealed.In a letter sent to Dean of theCollege Wayne Booth after Wednes¬day s meeting, Stearns stated thatthe Group decided without objec¬tion that it would be more ap¬propriate to elect its chairman andthat the professor who had been in¬formally designated as chairman,r >car l,ad agreed to,step petition tor his retention signed by: „B ,t would ^ impr0per l0200 students tall<f '» aa j paraphrase what was said, to re-t,on on the part of the department 'rt >the yot(, or t0 giy(, you mypersonal opinion,” McNeill told theSPAC Picks Jeff BlumFor the SG Presidencyby John MoscowJeffrey Blum, a third-year student in the College and a leader of Students Against theRank (SAR), won the endorsement of the Student Political Action Committee (SPAC) for theoffice of SG president at a SPAC caucus last night in Ida Noyes Hall.SG elects its own president but the SPAC nomination is equivalent to election since SPACholds a clear majority in the SGb ernment,’ he stated. “This univer- Denouncing the current state ofBlum s program was expected to sity needs to be democracized — the University, Blum said, “This isbe centered on campus issues, students should have their fair j the ivory tower par excellence, andespecially academic questions He share of power—and I’m not quite that’s got to go. I hope to stimulatespoke last night in favor of abolish- sure of what their fair share is. Iting the grades, greatly loosening isn’t a veto power over the faculty,course requirements, abandoning but it certainly involves open de-~ Ed. courses, and examining cisions. If aMy major group is dis-the need for a quarter system. Oth- enfranchized the community is il-er issues brought up with his ap- legitimate.”proval included forthcoming refer- Blum also spoke of the possibilityend a on the severance of UC ties 0f having a draft counselling centerwith the National Student Associa- on south of campus, whichtion and on the abolition of all would aid both University studentsranking in the University. | and Woodlawn residents in legalBefore his nomination, Blum encounters with their draft boards,spoke about the use of SG and its He also plans to make SG officesrole in UC life. ‘‘I think of SG as a and material available to anti-war Dan Friedlander, Social Sciences,student union, not a student gov-! groups. Treasurer.conflict.I don’t expect to create a revo¬lution this year,” he continued. ‘‘Ithink SPAC’s campaign would belost if we didn’t try though.”other members of the execu¬tive committee of SG were alsoslated at the meeting. JerryLipsch, SPAC chairman and athird-year student, was nominatedfor vice president, Dave Rosen¬berg, third year, Secretary, andby Jeffrey KutaWith charges shifting from outright political bias to an“unconscious” academic bias, Chairman William H. McNeillsought Tuesday afternoon to defend the Department’s de¬cision to refuse tenure in the Lemisch case.‘‘His politics were not mentioned,, -and the levels of discussion wereon scholarship and teaching,” hemaintained before a crowd of about200 in Soc Sci 122.Jesse Lemisch, an assistant pro¬fessor of history noted for hisleft-wing activities, received notifi¬cation on December 15 that his con¬tract would not be renewed for asecond three year term. When a was set up to assess the merits ofjunior faculty members whoseterms will expire at the end of theyear. A report on Lemisch by thecommittee was discussed by a bodyof tenure members of the depart¬ment, who then voted by secretballot. The decision was eventuallysubmitted to Provost Edward H.Levi.adde.Stearns refused to relate the His¬tory Group’s decision directly toihe admissions policy. “This is areform we’ve been thinking aboutfor some time,” he stated. Allmembers of the Group promised tokeep the events of Wednesday'smeeting confidential, and no othermember was available for com¬ment.t he College History Group, which an ad-hoc committee inLemisch was organized.IN THE TUESDAY meeting,which was arranged by the ad-hoccommittee, McNeill asserted thatthe manner in which the Lemischdecision was made did not differfrom that of any other tenure deci¬sion.He explained that a committee crowd. He said this might have aneffect on future tenure delibera¬tions. William McNeill defending decision of the History Departmentnot to renew the contract of Jesse Lemisch.McNeill implored the crowd. “The and have prejudices. There is abso-Responding to a charge by Ron umversity must be built on mutual 1 lutely no reason this can’t he takenTabor, a second year student and a and jrust >♦ to the students or the Universitymember of Studen/hsa/\pm^™s | Speaking in terms of a “credibili-1 community as whole.”eratic Society, 0 - „ f th vpar shldent Rusti He saicl &e dld no1 understand‘‘common man” approach to histo-j ’ d t McNeill that “our why so much secrecy is maintainedry might have influenced members; Woods replied to M^.lUhat our I ^ ^ of facuKy ,enure deci.of the department to reject his aca-, . »> j sions and advocated a “minimaldemic credentials, McNeill stated: p j . . , program” to make such conflictsShe decried the fact that Lemisch «he Lemisch incident compre.He said he did not understandNude Swimming at George WilliamsGood, Clean Fun “How can you or any one dte! “““'“"'““""‘“'““Ik the Lemisch incidentknow, and how can I clear myself, had no^bcen_perso„ally confronted hensible „ students.or others, of the charge of uncon-scious motivation?”by Leanne StarA girl needn’t bother with abathing cap at the George Wil¬liams’ swimming pool. In fact,several females have giveneven more freedom to their strokesby forgetting their bathing suits.It has been rumored that co-edswimming au natural has been aquietly popular pastime at GeorgeWilliams this quarter. ‘The Coun¬try Club Dorm,” located at 915 53rdStreet, opens its pool to the Univer¬sity-at-large every evening from9 H» p.m. Bathers are required tobring their own suits, but it seemsthat lately some have been forget¬ful.CONDITIONS ARE perfect for ... . . .L,- j 1 McNeill pointed out that tenurethis sport, according to a_ third year . deds.ons ^ often di£fieult t0 with theand that studentsfrom the decision.department’swere criticisms j , ,excluded ! Calling McNeill s remarks “unex¬ceptionable and excellent,” Donald•„ Levine, Master of the Social Sci-rociHilnt nf thp dnrm “There’s only aic ullcu uuui-uh w., ^1ss "cods defended emisc s ence$ Collegiate Division, saidIL Lowi pn H„f„ iat* in thP Pve-1 make because the quality of eandi-! interpretation of historical forces, there was ,<a lack of informationdates usually ranges from good to as resting in the common man j and a lack of understanding” in theexcellent. “And we strive for excel-: contrasting his approach with that; ad_hoc committee’s statement onlence,” he added. of historians like Daniel Boorstin. | the Lemisch case._ _ , . , I She said Lemisch’s approach was 1 , , .HE MAINTAINED that students “his own prerogative.” I He said procedures for evaluat-one guard on duty late in the evening, the pool is soundproof, andthe lighting is dim.” But, while thisstudent was proud of the possibili¬ties, he would not admit to actuali¬ties. “Suffice it to say that herehave been rumors of mixed nudebathing in the wee hours of themorning.”The pool’s lifeguard, a third yearstudent, stated that he was awareof the rumors, but would not ac¬knowledge them. “The rumorscan’t be confirmed, but, then, theycan’t be denied.”WHATEVER THE case may be,George Williams’ newest sport,along with its bathers, has been ex¬posed. and administrators are not quali¬fied to make judgements on tenure,although he said the latter play apart in the process because theyare “the custodians of the money.”The decision, McNeill claimed, ing faculty are “extremely fair’“Lemisch has to build his case, and claimed that the highest intel.from the bottom up, and this has iectU£d standards are maintained,slowed him down time and time; He added however that studentagain He has the courage to ask opinion should be consulted per-xne decision xnuneiii uauucu, himself a question that takes years j baps jn tbe form 0f course evalua-“must rest with those professors a"VerH re"Sr7men',S1aSnWi„y|tiont<>rms-who are qualified to make it.” mISuscriol ” ' When asked after the mee,ing“This does not mean that they j complete manuscript. whether the original decision not tocan’t make mistakes,” he pointed! MELVIN ROTHENBERG, an as- rehire Lemisch was at any pointout, and added: “But nobody con-! sistant professor of mathematics, reconsidered on the suggestion ofsciously wills that.” | called for “some way of challeng- higher officials, McNeill replied,“Believe in my good faith and in ing. debating, or questioning tenure! “Even if it had been. I wouldn’t tellthe good faith of my colleagues,” decisions.” “People make mistakes you.”Vietnam Report No. 6An Important Propaganda Coup, But for Whom?by Howard MoffettSAIGON (CPS)—The nameof the game is psychologicalwar, and Americans play it big.The Joint United States PublicAffairs Office (JUSPAO) juts uplike a great white rock on the cor¬ner of Saigon’s busiest intersection.With over 600 employees (includ¬ing 175 Americans) a yearly bud¬get of $10 million, it is probablythe biggest propanda machine onecountry has ever built in another.Its triple mission is to host for¬eign correspondents covering Viet¬nam, coordinate all news comingout of American agencies here, andprovide resources and skills for theSaigon government’s psychologicalwarfare effort against the VietCong.Last week, JUSPAO releasedthree photographs to the press.They had been taken from filmcaptured earlier this month in Op¬eration Junction City, in War ZoneC northwest of Saigon. You mayhave seen them by now: individualshots of three Vietnamese in peas¬ant clothes and jungle setting.THE THREE SUBJECTS were intended the photos to convey isthe nationalist revolution which hasvery important to Americans, be-1 already been accomplished in thecause for some reason Americans North? The People’s Army of Viebconsider it very important to know1 nam’s daily newspaper refers towhether or not Hanoi controls the the North as the “large rear base”NLF.TO MANY VIETNAMESE, that and the South as the “large frontline” of the revolution. The basicquestion is academic. It is obvious ^aci^s are ^at the Viet Cong areto them that the North suppliesmuch of the Viet Cong’s equipment,personnel, and policy direction. Itis presumed that many key men inthe Front are either Northern-trained or native North Viet¬namese, and further that they arein regular radio communicationwith Hanoi and probably take someorders from the Lao Dong Politbu¬ro. Vietnamese; that an overwhelmingmajority are native Southerners;and that the blood and guts of themovement still come out of the vil¬lages and hamlets of South Vietnam.Wrong Message?The important question about theJUSPAO photos then becomes: didthe Vietnamese who saw them getthe message JUSPAO intendedSo what? Isn’t that to be expect- them to get—or quite a differented? Isn't the North better equipped one? One young Vietnamese radi-to direct the total effort, which the cal, a civil servant who works ininsurgents view as a completion of the Commissariat for Refugees, studied the three photos for severalmoments. His first words were:“They are very close to the peas¬ants, you know.”Another South Vietnamese, afirm anti-Communist, remarked:“If I had been running JUSPAO Iwould never have released thosepictures. They are free propagandafor the Viet Cong. Look, if youwere an ordinary cydo driver or apoor farmer, whom would you iden¬tify with—our Northern generals,with tbeir fancy uniforms and U.S.cars, or the Northern generals inthose pictures?”“Where would you go to get pic¬tures like that of our generals?—you’d go to Maxim’s in the eve¬ning. (Maxim’s is Saigon’s hottestnite spot.) If you were poor, whatwould you have to lose by going outto join the men in those pictures? want only to serve their people.”HE WAS SAYING somethingvery simple, but something manyAmericans do not understand: Pos¬sibly JUSPAO miscalculated themessage. Maybe, instead of sayingwhat JUSPAO wanted it to say, themessage those photos took to Viet¬namese farmers, cyclo drivers andschoolboys went more like this:"These men are like os. Theywear simple Vietnamese clothesrubber sandals. They live in thejungle, not in a palace. And theyare willing to fight and die fer whatthey believe. Maybe I should betoo."Propaganda coup? For Whom?Bogey as Good-Bad Guy in HIGH SIERRAThe Raoul Walsh pic with Ida Lupino as Bogey's woman. 10:30 pm tomorrow night. Along with THE ROARING TWENTIES at 6:30 and CASABIANCA at 1:30.All at BOGEY TIMES THREE, presented by Ooc Films. Mandel Hall, 57th and Un iversity. Ona dollar.named as:• Nguyen Chi Thanh, the onlyfour-star general in the North Viet¬namese army beside Vo NguyenGiap, and a member of both thePolitburo and Secretariat of theLao Dong Party in Hanoi. Thanhwas identified in the JUSPAO re-jlease as commander-in-chief of theLiberation Army of South VietNam, and chief of the Central Of- jfice for South Vietnam (COSVN), |which is said to direct all Viet Congactivities from its shifting base inWar Zone C.• Tran Do, a two-star general inthe People’s Army of North Viet¬nam and an alternate member ofthe Lao Dong Party’s Central Com¬mittee. Do was named by JUSPAOas a deputy commander of the Lib¬eration Army.• Tran Van Tra, a three-star gen-'eral in the People’s Army and analternate Lao Dong Central Com-1mifctee member. He was identifiedas another deputy commander ofthe Viet Cong’s Liberation Army.Lest anyone miss the point, theJUSPAO release said: “These pho¬tographs, along with much collater¬al information, are further evi-!dence of Hanoi’s direct control overthe so-called National Front for theLiberation of South Vietnam.’ ” jBy all odds, then, it was a propa¬ganda coup: a dramatic indicationthat Hanoi directs and controls theFront, in a visual form that eventhe simplest schoolboy could under¬stand. JUSPAO probably reasonedthat thousands of people would seethose pictures and think:"These men are Northerners.They are leaders of the CommunistParty in Hanoi. They are directingthe Viet Cong effort to subvert thegovernment of South Vietnam.”But that is an American point ofview. The message that JUSPAO Free toChicagoStudents iiSAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE 1*MPICKUP l DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200Permanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingm« 1 53rd k. NY 1-tlOl 25c toothersA new booklet, published by anon-profit educational founda¬tion, tells which career fieldlets you make the best use ofall your college training, in- jeluding liberal-arts courses—which career field offers100,000 new jobs every year—which career field producesmore corporation presidentsthan any other—what startingsalary you can expect. Just il send this ad with your nameand address. This 24-page,career-guide booklet, ‘‘Oppor¬tunities in Selling,” will bemailed to you. No cost orobligation. Address: Councilon Opportunities, 550 FifthAve., New York 36, N. Y. A TAX INCENTIVE!If you purchase any of the following used equipment with anincome tax refund check we will deduct $5.00 from the sell¬ing price.Used High-Fidelity Equipment-60 Day GuaranteeSONY 250-A quarter track stereo deck $104.95SONY TC 263-E transport and SRA-3 record pre-amp 124.95TANDBERG 64 quarter-track stereo deck 374.95AKAI 3-speed quarter-track stereo deck (similar to Roberts 770).... 164.95DYNA FM-2 stereo tuner 69.95SCOTT 370-B stereo tuner 74.95GROMMES C-502 AM/FM 50-watt stereo receiver In walnut case 149.95HARMAN KARDON Trio stereo amplifier 69.95MC INTOSH 30-watt basic amplifier * 74.95BOZAK-JANTZEN speaker system in custom enclosure 149.95GOODMANS Alpha speaker system in walnut "... 29.95USED EQUIPMENT - AS ISKNIGHT KF-90 AM/FM tuner with KS-IO multiplexer $ 59.95KNIGHT 141-M stereo FM tuner 64.95KNIGHT 7408 stereo amplifier 49.95REK-O-KUT Rondine Deluxe 3-speed turntable with 16" ESL arm 64.95GARRARD Auto Slim stereo changer 19.95ADMIRAL 19" portable TV 54.95WE SELL High-Fidelity Components and ConsolesAND RENT Typewriters - Television * Business MachinesOUR PRICE GUARANTEE We will refund the difference If, within 30 daysON NEW MERCHANDISE: of purchase, you can buy for less.TOAD HALL1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-45002 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 21, 1967Doubts Technocrat Ruling Classr[own Developer Klutznick Calls ForEnd of Slums, New Urban Communities“The principles of new towndevelopment should be appliedwith vigor and with deliberate'}iaste to create a sense of prideand hope of emerging communityin the slums of old cities,” accord¬ing to Philip M. Klutznick, a notedv developer of new towns.KLUTZNICK ADDRESSED aBreasted Hall audience of 150 Tues¬day on the topic of “Viable NewCommunities inside and outside theOld City.” His lecture was the firstin a series of six on “New TownPolicy.”From 1947 to 1959 Klutznick. headed the iirm which developed ;Park Forest, a community of 34,000south of Chicago. He also devel-jAshdod. Israel, a new deep-waterport on the Mediterranean, and* served as American ambassador to the United Nations Economic andSocial Council.Klutznick pointed out five majoraspects of urban problems:• Solutions to many of the prob¬lems have not yet been found inany country. The U.S. has themeans and the necessity to findnew answers to these difficulties.• The problem of slums is notmerely an economic or physicalone. To improve the cities, wemust solve social problems as well.• The roles of local, state, andfederal governments must change.The federal government will haveto contribute more financial assist-;ance. At the same time, states |must operate more efficiently toprevent the federal governmentfrom exerting too strong an influ¬ence. Municipal governments must(Continued on Page Five)Hum, Phy Sci, To Add New CoursesSeveral new courses havebeen added by the Humanitiesand Physical Sciences Colleg¬iate Divisions for this comingacademic year.Stuart M. Tave, Master of theHumanities Collegiate Division hasrevealed that for the first time aI, group of interdisciplinary SeniorSeminars will be offered for fourthyear students in the humanities.Enrollment will be limited but ifthere is room and if the instructor, approves other students may beadmitted. The seminars now sched¬uled are:Literature and Philosophy, an ex¬ploratory seminar on Plato’s theoryof art and its applications to partic-ular works of literature, taught byi Herman Sinaiko.Taste in England, 1870-1900, a| study of taste in the arts as ex-' pressed at various cultural levelsm literature, art and music, taughtjointly by Grosvenor Cooper,1Donald Herring and Joshau Taylor.Communications and Culture, aninquiry into the role in human cul¬ture of patterns and methods ofcommunication—social. aestheticand technological—taught by Johnr Cawalti.Major Texts of Antiquity and theRenaissance, to include Ilomer,Vergil, the Bible, Ovid, Cicero,1Dante, Rabelais, Cervantes, taught1 by Arthur Heiserman.The Iconography of Romanti¬cism, dealing with the arts and lit¬erature of the period from Blake toRossetti and its various themes and1 problems, such as mythology, real¬ism. eroticism, a two-quarter semi¬nar taught jointly by Virgil Burnettand Jerome McGann.The Physical Sciences CollegiateDivisions has announced that a newcourse Information and Computerswill be offered for the 1968 springquarter. The course, which is thefirst to be offered in this area, willI be under the direction of Profes¬sors Victor Yngve and Robert Ash-enhurst. As described by the divi¬sion. the course will cover “Basicconcepts of information and its' representation. Information pro¬cessing and processors. Symbolsystems; numerical systems; lan¬guages and other non-numerical, troductory course and will be opento six students from each collegiatedivision. Only a minimum mathe- jmatics background (Mathematics101-2-3 or equivalent) will be re¬quired.In addition, Mathematics 101-2-3will appear in a reorganized form.Previously it has been taught insmall sections by instructors andteaching assistants. Beginning thisyear, it will be divided into threesections, each taught by a seniormember of the Mathematics De- ipartment.Section 1. taught by ProfessorIrving Kaplansky, Chairman of theMathematics Department and theI College Mathematics Staff, will bethe “Social Science variant” of thecourse.Section 2, taught by Professor Is¬rael N. Herstein will utilize someexperimental elements, further de¬veloping materials and ideas intro¬duced by Professor Herstein intothe course two years ago.Section 3 will be “normal” var¬iant of the course, its materialsand methods designed for most stu¬dents concentrating outside of thesciences. It will be taught by Pro¬fessor Alfred L. Putnam.Both Sections 2 and 3 are direct¬ed to the needs of the average stu¬dent and any one of the three ver¬sions will serve to meet the prere¬quisites for entering calculus, Math151.CINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANACADEMY AWARDWINNER"A MAN & A WOMAN"In Color Anouk AimeeSun-Times * * * *AMERICAN—For anyone whose ever been In loveStudents *1.50 with I.D. card every daybut Saturday.Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. & Sun.open 1:30systems.” It is intended as an in-New Books of Current InterestThe Linguistic Turnby Richard Rorty $10.00The Death of a Presidentby William Manchester $10.00Systematic Theologyby Paul Tillichone volume edition $12.50GENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENTUniversily of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. Bell Discusses Post-Industrial Worldby Jessica SiegelVisiting Professor of Sociol¬ogy Daniel Bell told a sparsecrowd at Mandel Hall Tuesdaynight that he didn’t think tech¬nocrats will form the new rulingclass in post industrial society.According to Bell, government isultimately determined by politicaldecisions are an element of irra¬tionality in society that threatensthe rationality of the technocrats.IN THE LAST FIVE years, Bellsaid, “technology has become thenew bugaboo for the intelligensia.” !Bell noted the irony of the fact thatat one time technocratism (as so-;cial planning) was one of the sta¬ples of progressive thought andwas denounced by reactionaries.Today, Bell explained, technocra¬tism represents manipulative socie¬ty which is attacked by the left andembraced by the right.Four FiguresAccording to Bell, there are fourfigures who “each in their own wayshaped the dimensions of techno- Jcratic thinking and were prophetsof the Post-Industrial Society.”The first figure, Bell said, wasthe French philosopher Saint-Simon. Saint-Simon coined theword “industrialism.” He forsaw anew society organized in a rationalfashion instead of being based onreligion or the military. In this newsociety, the new noblemen wouldbe the industrial chiefs and scien¬tists, and the new priests. Saint-Simon felt, Bell said, that the socie¬ty was divided into three parts: thehaves, the have nots, and the menof sciences (who had a natural rightto rule.) The technocrat for Saint-jSimon would have authority be-!cause of technical competence.THE SECOND FIGURE Bell dis-1cussed was Frederick W. Taylor,an engineer who applied techno¬cratic modes to industry. He be¬lieved in scientific managementand was interested in saving ener¬gy and motion. This he did by split¬ting work into its most efficientparts. Taylor analyzed the job of shoveling pig iron in this manner.He felt for any job there was “theone best way of doing it.” In thebeginning his studies were resistedby industry. His view, said Bell,forsaw society based on superiorknowledge not wealth or heredity.The third figure Bell named wasThorstein Veblen. In Veblen’s bookThe Engineers and the Price Sys¬tem many theories were presentedbased on those of Saint-Simon, Bellsaid. Veblen felt that productionengineers control society becauseof their indispensibility. He forsawa 'movement towards techniciansbecoming the managers of society.Veblen, according to Bell, believedthere was a radical opposition be¬tween the military spirit and theindustrial spirit. Waste, display,and heroics were natural elementsin the military spirit while rational¬ity, profit, and efficiency played agreat part in the industrial spirit.Veblen felt industry would erodethe military.Points Out IronyBell pointed out what he felt wasthe irony of this. Rationality, Bellsaid, was furthered in our societyby war not peace. The mass armyin Bell’s view, has become the ba¬sis of all types of planning and thishas produced a mobilized societywhere science is put to the use ofwar. The private needs, Bell said,are secondary to the governmentalones.The fourth figure for Bell is Sec¬ retary of Defense Robert S. Mac-Namara who he feels has helpedfurther a mobilized society. Since1945 there have been three com¬plete revolutions in military tech¬nology. Three systems of weaponshave been replaced unused. The“systems revolution in the Penta¬gon has introduced a new form ofrationality to government,” Bellstated.BUT DESPITE THE fact thatmany of the predictions of the fourprophets have been realized, Bellsaid he is still firm in his beliefthat the technocrats will not be¬come a new ruling class. Teehno-cratism and rationality are lostwhen politics is introduced in deci¬sion making. This is especiallytrue, said Bell, in foreign policywhere nationalism plays a largerole.CAN'T AFFORD NEWFURNITURE?Try TheCATHOLIC SALVAGEBUREAU10 E. 41st St.3514 S. MichiganCARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998OPEN SUNDAYS 11-4DIRECT MILL OUTLETOpen Sundays from 11-4Has wtiat you need from a *10 Used 9X12Rug, to a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants & Mill Returns at fractionof the Original CoshDecorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY THE HUMANITIES STUDENT COUNCIL IN CONJUNCTION WITHTHE FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS, PRESENTSRICHARD G. STERN, Professor In the Dep't. of English and Com¬mittee on General Studies in Humanities.reading from his playDOSSIER:Age. EARTH Twenty-four Blackouts from the Middle Electriccommissioned by Lincoln Center in New YorkMonday, April 24, 19678:30 p.m. in the Reynolds Club TheatreAdmission is freeExciting Art First' Exclusively AtThe University of Chicago BookstoreCollector's Choice of the World'sGreat DrawingsReproduced in the Most Exacting Color and DetailIncredible Value at $1.00 eachReadi-frames at $2.95 and up.GENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENTUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.50,000 different LONGPLAY RECORDS (count'em) are always in stock at DiscountRecords, Inc. — among which you will find a most comprehensive inventory ofCLASSICS (including imports and much esoterica) • ROCK 'N' ROLL (Beatles,Animals, Turtles, etc.) • BROADWAY SHOWS (Off-Broadway, too) • FOLKMUSIC (Folk Rock, if you prefer) • hundreds of OPERAS (complete or hilites —even some without singers!) • JAZZ (near-in and far-out) • MOOD MUSIC• Current POPS • EVERYTHING! “1ALL AT A SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGTHIS CARD ENTITLES YOU TO A DISCOUNT OFYOU MUST PRESENTTHIS AD AT TIMEOF PURCHASE 38r<* offer expire* May 31, 1967discount records, inc. OFF ON ANY ONE-TIMELIST RECORD PURCHASE,PRICE* LARGE OR SMALL201 N. LaSalle Street(Corner of Lake)and 55 W. MonrooChicago, Illinois 60601Phone: CE 6-2187Coast to-Coast Branches in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Lo* Angeles, Detroit and CollagesApril 21, 1967 > • CHICAGO MAROONNew Bookstore Is Three Years Away;Lexington Hall Rejected As Possible Site^ Chester Speaks!A Mistress For Every Man“A new bookstore is aboutthree years away,” accordingto Dean of Students Warner A.Wick.Reporting on a meeting of the ad¬ministration's Physical PlanningCommittee held Wednesday, Wicksaid that several possible sites fora new bookstore were discussed,and will be closely examined in thenext few weeks.THE PRESENT SITE of Lexing¬ton Hall was definitely eliminatedas a possible bookstore site, Wicksaid. Even after the College Hu¬manities classes and studios aremoved to Cobb Hall when it isready, Lexington will be needed for“swing & space,” Wick said.“There are others waiting in thewings” for space in Lexington, hesaid, though he declined to specifywhich departments would use it.Cobb, incidentally, might “con¬ceivably be ready by this October,”Wick commented, but he said this is “not probable,” since there havebeen delays in delivery of steelroofing material.“For real-estate type reasons, wecan’t talk about the other sites”that are being investigated for thebookstore, Wick said. He indicatedthat at least some of the possiblesites are not now owned by the Uni¬versity.IN THE 1965 REPORT of a facul¬ty committee on student facilities,chaired by Walter J. Blum, Profes¬sor of Law, Lexington and the pres¬ent site of the Music departmentwere discussed as possible book¬store sites. Presumably, the MusicDepartment site would be availableas soon as a new facility is built forthe department at 56th and Ingle-side.The Blum report did not makeany definite recommendationsabout a bookstore site, since eachpossible site had its advantagesand drawbacks. by Leanne Star“Students at the Universityof Chicago haven't got enoughschool-work. If they had morework, they wouldn't have timeto demonstrate.”Bertrand Russell wasn’t avail¬able to give an opinion about UCstudents, but the Maroon was ableto consult the world’s next mostprolific philosopher, Chester. Ches¬ter—he refuses to give his fullname, pleading, “I’m wanted byboth the FBI and the CIA”—is one |of a diligent crew of printers whocondescend to publish the Maroontwice a week.The orangeshirtcd, cigar¬smoking printer-philospher admitsthat his knowledge of UC studentsis limited to Maroon staffworkers—but nonetheless offers hisopinions generally and generously, j“THEY SHOULD PAY more at-1tention to girls than boys—if theycan tell the difference. But withMaroon ClassifiedsPERSONALSControl your fate: Have answered anyquestions concerning the draft at Quak¬er House, 5615 Woodlwn., Fri., 28 at4:00. Sponsored by the We-.Won’t-Go-Group. 'Tune in and Turn on at the Bander-snatch Discotheque. Sat., April 22,8:30-12:00. JKamelot Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st ST. j10% discount for students.ART EXHIBIT: “FROM JEWISHPOEMS.” Lithographs illustrating se¬lected excerpts from the poetry of Yid¬dish writers. Aprii 14-May 3. HILLEL.BANDER SNATCH SUNDAY SPECIAL799c Sunday dinner (Apr 23) served5:30-6:00 main course, drink, salad.SRH is just about over the hill! Funnyshe doesn’t look very old. Felicitations.Photographer needs several weddingpictures for his portfolio. Will cover atcost 278-8374.A liturgical Hymn-Sing?KOINONIA: Dinner (75c) at ChapelHouse, 6 pm tonight. Then Hull HouseTheatre at Parkway.100% DYLAN THIS WEEK = BAND¬WAGON-6-8 PM WUCB 640.Two tickets available for Old Vic “Ro¬meo and Juliet”. Saturday, April 22,matinee. BU 8-2134.SWEETE MUSICKE-as always-at theOTHER SIDE Fri.: Classical guitarist,Jan Arnold. Sat: the sound of WalterLowe. Coming! Chababa Urmbla-African Drums. 1603 E. 53rd.LEGAL NOTICENotice is hereby given pursuant to “AnAct in relation to the use of an assumedname in the Conduct of transaction ofbusiness in this State.” as ammended,that a certificate was filed by the un¬dersigned with the County Clerk ofCook County, file No. B-1306 on thefourteenth day of February 1967 underthe assumed name of SCAN with placeof business located of 1529 E. 53rd St.The true name and address of owner isScandinavian Imports Inc. 5300 S. LakePark, Chicago, Illinois.FOR RENTClean 5 rm. apt. $125.00 SA 1-7025.2 bedrm. apt, large living rm., dinettekitchen, modern. Great closets. Air con-ditioned. Parking S. Shore. SA 1-2025. ;2'2 rms. available May. 54th & Ken- jwood. MI 3-4061 I2 male grads to share 3rd 5',i rm. 5340Harper. $52/mo. Begin June 17 or 24.Option for fall. Economical nearby clean quiet unfum. ifront apt. 2'2, 3. Private bath $87.50 up. |Free utils, and parking. Williams, 6043 :Woodlwn. |Effie. 5143 Kenwd. avail. June 1. $70.Call 493 1366 after 7 pm.Girls have beautifully furnished apt toshare, own bedrm. MU 4-7086. iRm and/or bd, male students, spr., 1sum., next year. BU 8-8495: 643-9220.SUBLET: 72 & Jeffrey, 5 rms., Partial¬ly furn. Avail, also for fall. $115/mo.288-7991. ISUBLET: 4 rm. apt., remodeled kitchen .and bath, pantry. Near campus. Supris- 'ingly low rent. Avail. June to Sept. 667-5118. ISUBLET: 2 girls wanted to share apt |with 2 others. Own bedrms. IV2 baths, jkitchen, living rm., nice porch, near ;campus, Co-Op, I.C., Point. AvailableJune-Sept. 5553 Blackstone. 752-2821.2 Fern, to share apt. w/3rd-$1153gmo.next year. 54th & Univ. 684-7597. Willsell furniture.JOBS OFFEREDProgrammer of electro-mechanical orsolid state equip, for behavorial studies.Part time or consulting. Apply: Perso-nell Dept.. Wiebolt Hall, Rm. 117 340 E.Superior St. An equal opportunity em¬ployer.Real estate, renting & management.Must have car. 6-8 wks during summer.Collect rents, serve notiees, supervisebldg. Call for appt. RA 3-1923, Mr. New-mann.Will Finance orPay Cash for:-NEW PRODUCTS-PRODUCT IMPROVEMENTS-INVENTIONS-FORMULAS-NEW BUSINESS IDEASCall 268-3395 WANTEDFemale wants traveling companion thissummer who is interested in seeingSpain, Yugoslavia, Greece, etc. Possibil¬ity of renting a car. Call Fredrica 684-6993.Married couple seeking apt. June-Aug.752-1772 eves.Males desires to share apt for summerw/option for year. Close to campus pre-fer. 61 st-EUis ave. 288-2783 7-10 pm.Two female rmmtes. wanted for sum¬mer 5 rm apt. 53rd & Univ. Call 363-0413.Summer sublet for June and July for Uof Pa. Law School student and wifeWrite Robert Galss, 532 Pine St., Phil.,Pa. 19106 immediately.Live and Let Lave! 4-8 rm. apt. forSept. Will take in June if necessary CallBU 8 6610. rm 3228. Leave message ifnot in.House to rent Hyde Park 3 or morebdrms^ June 1 occup. 288-4192. JCheap double bed. Call J.B.: 643-6842Archaelogical volunteers needed for digin Israel. Two sessions: June 25-July 14,July 14-August 4 Academic credit. Ba- \sic cost $625 including New York-Israeltransportation. Write to Dean Paul M.Steinberg, Hebrew Union College Bibli- ;cal and Archaelogical School, 40 West :68th St., New York, N.Y. 10023.Young piano - player to play 2-3nights/wk. with well known ragtimeband. Pay top union scale. 825-5283.Fern, rmmts needed to share apt. Be¬ginning May 1 or June. $45/mo. Call 667-2145.STATIONERYBOOKSGREETING (ARDS•k-k-k-k-k-kTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student DiscountMUSTANGS - TEMPESTS - FORDS - PONTIACSRENT-A-CAR their high IQ’s, they should be ableto do that.” Continuing on thistheme, Chester hypothesizes that“every guy at UC should have amistress.”Exactly how to acquire one is an¬other matter. Male students at theUniversity naturally lack appeal,according to Chester, who de¬scribes the typical student in theseterms: “He needs a bath and cleanclothes. Also a haircut and espe¬cially a shave.” On a personalnote, Chester adds, “I wouldn’twant my daughter to marry one.”The other printers agree. Whenasked to give a general opinionabout UC students, some of thepressmen express themselves inthe most fundamental terms. This“freedom of language” is explainedby one of the workers in this way:“We're very liberal here, morethan at the University.”While openly defamatory of stu¬dents, the men are more evasiveabout the quality of the Maroon.One of the printers comments onlygenerally that “We publish somevery fine newspapers.” (The Sun- Standard prints several local news,papers.) Including the Maroon?“Well, I’ll say we print it, anv.way.” *ONE WORKER, who calls him.self the “radical” of the group, at.tempts to explain the printers’ hos.tility: “The students at UC are tooselfish—they think they’re very im. ?portant, but they have no feelingfor anyone else.”Chester nods at this and then de¬votes himself to eulogizing prole. ,tariat power and sharing his favor¬ite bits of pornography with his fel¬low printers. He concedes one ho.iefor the Maroon and the University:“I like to read the Personals in the #newspaper. There’s always someguy advertising for a mistress. Atleast he knows what’s going on.”THRILLING CANOE TRIPSExplore, fish, relax In the Quetico-Superior Wilderness. Only $8.00 per per¬son per day, also group rates WriteBILL ROM. CANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota.Palm Beach* engineers poplin suits of a light¬weight blend of Dacron* polyester and cotton.Engineering means taking advantage of moderntechnology, rather than time-consuming and costlyold-fashioned methods. Palm Beach uses sophisti¬cated, complex machinery to construct the founda¬tion for shape and fit right into the fabric—to stay.I hrough the economies of engineering, Palm Beachcan give you finely detailed tailoring in suits thatcost far less than they look.Palm Beach"the engineered suitPalm Beach engineerspoplin <0 perfectionLg. furn. rm. in my apt. for fern. Somebabysitting. 684-1369.So. Shore. 1 bedrm. Furn. apt. Avail. |May 15 or before, air cond., 16 ft. sun-deck, lg. rms. Grad students or cpl$135 374-3888 after 6 pm.SUBLET: 4 rms.. furnished, light andairy, 52nd and Univ.; $110/mo. June21-Sept. 26; 363-3723.Be Practical!.Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweat¬shirts, rain parkas, tennis shoes, junderwear, jackets, "levis,"camping equipment, wash pants,etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd St.PL 2-4744Open Sundays 9:30 - 1:00 BYVolkswagens $4.50 for 12 Hrs.Plus per Mi.Includes Gas and InsuranceRent A Volkswagen For That Special Date Tonife.Cheaper Than A Honda And A Heck Of A LotMore Comfortable.LOCATED AT:HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd Ml 3-1715 •Reg. T.M. Coodall Sanford IncorporatedFrom $4995(Ml v Stety,~doom $c (Campufl &f}opin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-81004 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 21, 1967David L. AikenO’Connell and Lemisch: Similarities and DifferencesCharges of “political bias”seems to be flying rather thickthese days.In two cases, SDS has ques¬tioned the reasons for decisionswhich, they think, were motivatedby discriminatory attitudesagainst leftists. In this aspect, thecharges against Charles O’Connelland Jesse Lemisch are similar.There is another way in whichthe cases are similar. In neithercase can the charges be substan¬tiated, except with highly du¬bious, circumstantial evidence.Various comments were made byvarious people, or certain scrib-blings were found in a file. From(Continued from Page Three)reduce bureaucracy and overlap¬ping jurisdiction which dilutes thevalue of the assistance they re¬ceive.• All people must be given themeans to live in decent housing.Widespread assistance to the poorwill be necessary to eradicate themarket which exists for cheap, sub¬standard housing.• New building and planning tech¬niques will have to be developed toproduce enough homes in the fu¬ture and to solve problems oftransportation, water and air pollu¬tion, and educational and recrea¬tional problems.KLUTZNICK CAUTIONED devel¬opers against trying to accomplishtoo much. He noted that out of thetoo or more new towns now beingplanned or built, many would failbecause builders did not have suffi¬cient capital, and more would notbe accepted by the public.He warned that a new town must these are deduced evil motives.THERE ARE, however, differ¬ences between the two cases.There is a difference in the likeli¬hood that the evidence availableindicates what SDS says it indi¬cates.In the case of the present Direc¬tor of Admissions and futureDean of Students, accused of biason the basis of hasty remarks jot¬ted down in an applicant’s folderafter an interview, there is nodoubt in this reporter’s mind thatthe charges are fantastic. This isbased on five years of acquain¬tance with the man, on the expla¬nations of the . circumstances in which such comments are typical¬ly written, and on the evidence ofprecedent—if O’Connell allowedsuch biases to influence admis¬sions decisions, why would therebe so many College students ofradical persuasions runningaround campus today?THE LEMISCH cast involvesalleged biases on the parts of allthe tenured members of the De¬partment of History, and presum¬ably the members of the CollegeHistory group as well. In additionto the charge of political bias,there are questions as to the va¬lidity of the judgments made onLemisch’s research, and sugges-Necessary tions that there was a “backlash”against his participation in sit-insand demonstrations on PresidentBeadle’s lawn.The Lemisch case is more com¬plex than that of O’Connell formany reasons. It is more difficultto guess what is really going on inthe minds of 26 tenured facultymembers than of one administra¬tor. It is harder to judge whethera certain approach to historiogra¬phy is really promising if you’renot an expert. Being neither apsychoanalyst nor an historian bytrade, I do not presume to judge.These are not, however, the onlyquestions.The particular details of the de¬cision of the members of the His¬tory Department on one man arewhat is upsetting people right now, but the immediate issue ispart of a larger one which willremain whether one man remainsor not. This larger issue is whatsort of a department the presentfaculty are seeking, and whetherstudents in the department shouldbe able to discuss such questionsand be heard.IF THERE are doubts as to thewillingness of faculty members toharbor in their midst other menwho seem to challenge presentmethods, then questions of meth¬od should be discussed amongfaculty and students in the de¬partment. The same holds for oth¬er sorts of questions, and otherdepartments. There really is nocause for all the secrecy in thiscase.New Building Techniquesoffer prospective buyers more thanthey can find elsewhere, or at leastthe same amount of value at a low¬er price. Home buyers tend to beconservative, he said, and most arenot willing to pay more money for“clever ideas and expensive de¬signs.”“The outlook is not encouragingfor the production of many newtowns under existing market condi¬tions without exceedingly largecapital outlays and great risk¬taking with relatively modest re¬turns, unless new approaches andfresh ideas can be invoked,”Klutznick said. To make these newapproaches easier for developers,he suggested that part of their costbe borne by the public sector. Within existing cities, there isroom for new cities to be construct¬ed. If “our planners would carveout enough acreage or air rights ora combination of both, to createcomplete new towns within thecity, there would be enormousroom for the development of betterliving opportunities,” Klutznicksaid. This would greatly reduce theflight of urban upper-and middle-class families to suburbs.The next lecture in the series willbe presented by Albert Mayer, de¬signer of new towns around theworld. He will speak on “The De¬sign Dimension of New Towms”next Tuesday at 1 pm in BreastedHall. The lecture is free and opento the public. TELEVISION LABORATORYAMERICAN RADIO AND- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes - Batteries10% discount to studont* witti ID card*CHRONIQUE D UN ETE: Chicago Premiere!Jean Rouch and Edgar Morin examine the lives of young Parisiens in the summer of 1961. A* Doc Films tonight. Soc Sci 122, 59th and University. 7:15 and9:15. 60 cents.Baptist Graduate Student Center4901 S. ELLIS AVE.Spring Sunday Seminar: Message and Media: Issue For Religious MeaningApril 23—Has The 20th Century Artist Abrogated His Responsibility?Milton Horn, SculptorApril 30—Religious Folk-Rock: Sacrament or SacrilegeDavid Holloway, Graduate Student, English Dept. U of CMay 7—Film Program: Guernica (Alain Resnais), Phoebe, Super-Up(Kenji Kanasara), Two Men in a Wardrobe (Roman Polanski)Henry Herx, Director, Center for Film StudyMay 14—The Meaning of McLuhanArthur Miller, Graduate Student, Library School, U of C, StaffNewberry LibraryMay 21-Theatre of the Absurd: Function and FocusJames O'Reilly, Director, University Theatre, U of CMay 28—Should the Church Massage the Media?Ben Gums, Director, Dept, of Radio and TV, Church Federation ofGreater Chicago.All Programs begin with a buffet at 5:30 PM. Stearer - Discussion 6:7:30 Why muststudents teachersconfurm to theSouth Central Bank agrees! Now students, facultymembers and employees of the University of Chi¬cago can have Free checking accounts. No balancerequirements. No monthly maintenance charge.No charge for checks drawn. Ease your expenseload. Bank with South Central. A special universitybanking department simplifies procedures. AtSouth Central college accounts are appreciated.SOUTH CENTRALBANK555 W. Roosevelt Rd. Jeffro Plaza 421-7100April 21, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Of Jesse LemischTHE PROBLEMS POSED by tenure are among the mostdelicate and difficult that any university must face. Based as itis on a subtle balancing of a wide variety of interconnectedfactors, deciding which faculty members are to be kept andwhich are to be given their walking papers is never pleasant.When the professor happens to be especially popular or activein student affairs, the decision becomes potentially explosive.Jesse Lemisch is among the most popular professors atUniversity of Chicago. During his brief stay here, he has beenpersistently outright in his defense of what he viewed as stu¬dent interests and unusually generous in his willingness todevote time to student affairs. Thus, an explosion was bound tooccur, and when it came this week, the tenured members ofthe history department had presumably armed themselves toanswer it.Frankly, we are not particularly interested in either the stu¬dent explosion in defense of Lemisch or in the efforts whichhave been made to meet it. The arguments that go into discus¬sions of contract renewal are extremely complex and technical,and although we are not convinced that there is any particularmerit in keeping them secret, neither are we convinced thatthe average student is conversant enough with the currentliterature in the field of American history to be able to make ameaningful evaluation of Lemisch’s work.*; » 'A ■' “ i HNOR ARE WE convinced that Lemisch’s dismissal can itselfbe dismissed as still another manifestation of an insidious polit¬ical bias which left-wingers would have us believe is engulfingthe University. There can be no doubt that Lemisch madeenemies during his stay here and that such feelings must havesome effect on a decision which is in part determined by thoseenemies. But so long as contract decisions are made by humanbeings, personal bias must always be a factor, and the signifi¬cant fact in this case is that reasonable steps seem to have beentaken to keep its influence to a minimum and to decide thecase on its merits.What does disturb us about the Lemisch case, however, isthat, as in so many other University decisions, it is obvious thatimportant interests are going unrepresented. It is all too easyto forget that the majority of those connected with the Univer¬sity of Chicago are not administrators or faculty members, butstudents, and that even the most rudimentary notion of fair¬ness requires that their interests be considered in a decisiondirectly affecting them.UNFORTUNATELY, no such consideration seems to havegone into the Lemisch case. It is true of course, that the histo¬ry faculty examined Lemisch’s teaching ability before reachingtheir decision, but in this case, teaching is only a small part ofwhat Lemisch has contributed to UC students. It seems to us;that it is Lemisch’s extra-curricular activities—his ability todemolish a powerful administrator with a singular colorfulphrase or his willingness to discuss with students, aspects ofthe University which other faculty members consider fit con-versation for only the Quadrangle Club — which make himuniquely valuable to students and thus to the University as a !whole. Big powerful Universities need rabble-rousers and nay¬sayers—people who are willing to goad all encompassing bu¬reaucracies and force them to take notice of those whose inter¬ests they occasionally trample on.We think that Jesse Lemisch has served that function andthat even if he has served it to the detriment of his moreacademic persuits, he is nevertheless doing more than enoughto merit his continued employment by the University. More¬over, with a little ingenuity, it seems to us that a way could befound to allow him to stay without overturning the elaborate jand perhaps indispensible tenure system now in effect. Forinstance, we see no reason why UC could not follow Antioch’sexample by hiring an “agitator in residence” or why it couldnot implement a system whereby students had a right to hireone faculty member per year.WE ARE WILLING to recognize of course that suchschemes present technical difficulties and undoubtedly deservemore study. But what is disturbing is that there is hardly achance in the world that they will get that study—or at leastthat they will get it in time to save Lemisch’s job. And JesseLemisches are hardly a dime a dozen. Having let our agitatorin residence slip through our fingers, we are unlikely to find areplacement for some time to come. Trial Balloon for King?' The mass of humanity that wasthe Spring Mobilization may verywell be remembered for morethan its mere size, since it mayhave marked the start of a Mar¬tin Luther King for Presidentmovement.The great siz > of the New Yorkdemonstration, by some estimatesmore than a quarter of a millionpeople, showed in the most effec¬tive way since protests againstthe war in Vietnam began that atruly significant number of Amer¬icans oppose this country’s role insoutheast Asia. And it must bekept in mind that those whoturned out last Saturday repre¬sented only those who felt strong¬ly enough to have given a wholeday to demonstrate for their be¬liefs. How many other Americansharbor strong doubts about ouractivities in Vietnam is anyone’sguess.ADDITIONALLY, THE marchshowed, for the first time, thatmost of the many groups with asmany varying degrees of opposi¬tion to the war could be ralliedunder one banner. If the same un¬ ity that was shown Saturday inCentral Park and United NationsPlaza could be shown in an elec¬tion, President Johnson wouldcertainly have cause for worry.This is where King becomes im¬portant. It does not appear tohave been an accident that thetwo speakers immediately follow¬ing him last Saturday called onhim to run for Pj esident in 1968.In view of several importantfacts, not the least of which is themassive turnout for the Mobiliza¬tion, the idea of King running forPresident is not as incredible asmight at first seem.THE MOST RECENT Galluppoll shaws that four of every tenDemocrats are unhappy over theway Johnson is handling the war.This is not to say that a King-Spook ticket could capture 40 percent of the Democratic Party’svote. Rather, it is important in thesense that if nearly a quarter of amillion people holding positionsranging from immediate with¬drawal from Vietnam without ne¬gotiations to simply a halt in thebombings could assemble underMichael Seidman one banner, then logically there islittle to keep many of the untoldmillions who simply have gravedoubts about what this country isdoing in Vietnam from casting aprotest vote for King.Logic, unfortunately, is not al¬ways the decisive factor in poli¬tics and in thus vein it is not diffi¬cult to see the pitfalls of a Kingfor President movement. The in¬herent problems in forming athird party are in themselveslarge enough obstacles in a coun¬try that is based on a two-partysystem. And even if King didmanage to organize a peace-civilrights party, there is the more ba¬sic question of just how many ac¬tual votes he would come outwith.FOR NOW, IT appears as if theMobilization served as a trial bal¬loon for King. And if the war inVietnam stays the same or getsworse, more trial balloons couldbe forthcoming, threatening tofloat high above the White House.In any ease, the many possibili¬ties make for interesting specula¬tion.An Administrative Lesson:Maturity Works Both WaysAs positions begin to harden inthe bitter dispute centeringaround A d m i s s io n s DirectorCharles O’Connell this week, agrowing impression that the Ad¬ministration is not playing entire¬ly according to Hoyle has startedto irritate even unbiased observ¬ers.Consider for exampleO'Connell's insistence that asmuch as he would like to speakout, he can neither affirm or denythe accuracy of the statementsSDS quotes hin. as making lest heviolate the confidential nature ofindividual admissions files. Verycommendable sentiments—exceptthat Associate Dean of Under¬graduate Students James Vice :nhis public defense of O’Connelllast week asserted that the admis¬sions officer had cast the vote anumber of years ago which per¬mitted the admission of an appli¬cant both of whose parents weremembers of the Communist Partty. Presumably, if documentspotentially harmful to O’Connell must be protected for the sake ofthe applicant’s right to confiden¬tiality, then documents potentiallyhelpful must fall into the samecategory. The Administration'sblatant double-think on this mat¬ter leads one to believe that theymay be protecting more than theapplicant.WHAT MAKE? this positioneven more foolish is the fact thatthe contents of the file in questionis already quite beyond protec¬tion. It is an open secret thatO'Connell did :n fact make thestatements alleged against himand that a photostat copy of thefile is extant to prove it. By refus¬ing to put all his cvrds on thetable and admit what is plain foranyone to see, O Cornell has onlysucceeded in aggravating the Ad¬ministration's already seriouscredibility problemOf course, the fact that the dis¬puted file does exist, in no way ofitself proves the validity of theSDS charges. The question thenbecomes whether the sections ofDavid H. Richter the file which SDS has quoted doimplicate O’Connell when taken inthe context of ibe rest of his ca¬reer, and it is the feeling of thisreporter at least that they proba¬bly do not. Dispits his inability toingratiate himself with the cam¬pus left, O’Connell has built up animpressive record during hisyears as director of Admissions,and although he is undoubtedlyguilty of a serious indiscretion, itwould take agood deal more proofto demonstrate that his guilt ex¬tends beyond simple foot-in-mouthdisease.Indeed, as O'Connell himselfhas pointed out, an admissions of¬ficer must frequently interviewcandidates for as long as eightconsecutive hours with only twoor three minutes between inter¬views to file his reports. Undersuch circumstances, it is not diffi¬cult to see how a tired and ba¬ns sed interviewer might let slip aremark which, when examined la-(Continued On Page Eight)Corn Belt Meeting WithBald Dome 'Other' EditorI mean, so you’re at one ofthese student press conferences,where the Old Hands from theGreat Metropolitan Dailies comearound and tell you that you’rethe leaders of the next generation,even if they aren’t paid to do it,but what the hell, you listen, it’sat the University of Wisconsin,and there’s lots of talent up therein Madison, you’re there for agood time, and maybe you’ll learnsomething.So you wander into this semi¬nar, it’s on public relations, youdon’t give a hoot in hell aboutpublic relations, but you figurethat nobody else around theredoes either so maybe you’ll heara little gossip. And there’s thislittle guy up on the platform withthe moderator, with a bald dome and a brown Vandyke, he’s AllanKatzman, editor of the East Vil¬lage Other.AND YOU THINK, great, thisguy isn’t going to tell you howyou’re the leaders of the next gen¬eration, because you know whatthe EVO is like how they tellyou how to make marijuanafruitcake and run cuts of LBJ’shead on Hitler’s uniformed shoul¬ders, and have funny stories likepeyote-dreams with headlineslike “The Curse of the Octacunt.”And you’re right, he doesn’t tellyou how great you are, but hedoesn’t call you names either,he’s being a nice guest and verycool about the whole thing. Sincethis seminar is supposed to beabout public relations, he talksabout what good friends he is with Captain Fink of New York'sFinest, and what a good job theHell’s Angels are doing over inThe Haight-Ashbury keeping thepeace and he doesn’t put you onmuch at all, just a couple of sto¬ries about Emmett Grogan thatcouldn’t be true but just mightbe true anyway, you know whatI mean.Eventually it’s time for ques¬tions, and this cute chunk of hicksticks up her hand and askswhat’s a hippie, like she hadvaguely heard of them and want¬ed to know what it was really allabvnt. And he tells her, you know,about dropping out and the acidscene, but he’s very reluctant totalk about them, to define them,sort of like it was against his reli-(Continued on Page Eight)CHICAGO MAROON April 21, 1967■' ' • > • w . . r.Letters to the Editor of the Maroon* m r'* * *** j * ' m.Student Activistsro TIIE EDITOR:When, in tne early Sixties, stu¬dents began again to engage inactive protest, many in the aca¬demic community applauded thisdevelopment as a sign that stu-lents were awakening from theong paralysis of the Eisenhowervears. After a while, students be-^an to turn their attention to theQuality of life within universities,rhis development prompted manyfaculty members to respond tohe new criticism and protest byindertaking seriously to examinehe problems of higher education.Recently, however, a new mood isdiscernible among administratorsmd professors: the tendency torespond affirmatively to the stu¬dent movement is being replacedt>y a desire to discipline and re¬press it.This new mood is in part afunction of the fact that some fac¬ulty and administrators feel theirtraditional perogatives to bethreatened by the student thrust.In part, it stems from fears aboutthe financial well-being of the uni¬versity (some faculty membersbelieve that “trouble” on a cam¬pus is correlated with a decline indonations and the easy flow ofgovernment contracts). In part, itis an expression of straight¬forward political conservatism. Inpart, it may have to do with ageneral constriction of the politi¬cal atmosphere due to the escala¬tion of the war. Typically, howev¬er, the public justifications formore punitive attitudes towardstudents put the blame on the stu¬dents: they are acting illegiti¬mately, they have no respect forthe life of the mind, they resem¬ble fascists, they are not interest¬ed in their studies, are poor stu¬dents, are against academic free¬dom, etc. These chracterizationsare made more coherent by suchobservers as Lewis Feuer and Na¬than Glazer, and are reinforced,as are all stereotypes, by occa¬sional excesses of some students.1 do not know how widespread such faculty attitudes are. Theyare, it seems to me, the kinds ofattitudes one would expect fromany group in authority which feelsitself challenged. However, in aninstitution whose national reputa¬tion is one of commitment to aca¬demic freedom, openness to dis¬sent, controversy, and liberalvalues, such a mood is a causefor concern.I believe that many facultymembers and administrators atChicago are coming to share thisemerging mood of punitivenesstoward student activism (and myimpression is that this is moretrue of the faculty than the ad¬ministration). I do not believethat this is yet “policy”; thereare a great many who do nothave this view. Still, the remarksmade by Mr. O’Connell are an in¬dication that this mood is begin¬ning to influence the process ofadmissions to the University. Thefailure to renew Jesse Lemisch’scontract may be a similar omen.Although the facts in this case aredifficult to obtain, it appears thatkey members of the History De¬partment believed that Mr. Lem¬isch’s “political convictionsimpeded his scholarship.” Al¬though it is not generally true, asyet, the political criteria are usedas a basis for student admissionsor fellowship awards, or as a ba¬sis for personnel decisions, thesetwo events indicate to me thatsome key people in the Universitydo think such criteria are admis-sable and, in the present sit¬uation,The reason for raising thesematters, in my opinion, is not toinvolve us all in a discussionabout the competence of eitherMr. O’Connell or Mr. Lemisch.Rather, it seems to me necessaryfor us to have some open debateabout the mood to which I refer and its possible effects on Univer¬sity practices and stated policies.Thus, the statement of PresidentBeadle and the committee are notat all reassuring. In effect, thisstatement asserts that such prac¬tices and policies are not the con¬cern of students; there is nocause for concern anyway, sinceestablished procedures for imple¬mentation and review of thesepolicies are functioning properly;the real problem in this case wasa faculty member’s breach ofconfidence; the University hasthe right to decide who shall andshall not be admitted. The state¬ment does not help us find out towhat extent the university’s poli¬cy of non-discrimination is beingundermined by the observableanxieties, stereotypes and preju¬dices of some faculty membersand administrators. I think it iscorrect to say that the universityhas a right to establish whatevercriteria for admission, etc. itwashes. What it does not have aright to do is to retain a reputa¬tion for liberalism, pluralism andopenness to activism, while oper¬ating according to some othermodel. Those of us who are here,in part, because of this reputationhave some right to determinewhether this is justified.If the University intends tomaintain a policy of non¬discrimination, then somethinglike the following steps ought tobe possible:1. A clear statement from theCouncil of the Senate or othercentral authority to the effect thatthe University intends to maintainits policy of non-discriminationwith respect to consideration ofstudents for admission and aid;that the University welcomes stu¬dents and faculty of diverse politi¬cal belief; that the Universitywelcomes students and faculty who are independent of spirit,skeptical of authority, and con¬cerned to be fully citizens.2. To implement this policy, aUniversity “omsbudsman” will beestablished—as Stoney Brook hasjust done—which will be capableof freely reviewing situations inwhich students and faculty feelsome injustice has been done. Ob¬viously, an omsbudsman need notbe restricted to overseeing “polit¬ical” issues, and could be es¬tablished as a faculty or faculty-student committee.Let us, in any case, have a freediscussion of these matters. De¬spite the recent statement issuedby the President, I still believethat this is possible here.RICHARD FLACKSASSISTANT PROFESSOR OFSOCIOLOGY(TESTn Defends BoggsTO THE EDITOR:Mr. Haronsen in his attack onMr. Boggs overlooks severalfacts:*1) Participation in the opera¬tions of the Student GovernmentElection Committee is quite achore which few are willing to un¬dertake. To require members toforego an opportunity to continuework in SG next year might re¬duce the ranks of the “willingones” even further.*2) Mr. Boggs >ost by a meager17 votes in his bid for SG repre¬sentative, yet won handily in therace for NSA representative. Itwould seem that this alone wouldserve to erase any lingeringdoubts as to Mr. Bogg’s integrity.CELESTE M. STACHNIKFAIT ... Un Jour, votre famllle aura besolnd’argent lorsqu’elie n’aura plus votrasalaire, ou bien vous aurez vous-memebesoin d’un revenu pour votre retraite.L’assurance Sun Life peut vous pro*curer les deux.En tant qua repr6sentant local de la SuaLife, puis-je vous visiter i un moment devotre cho!x7Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE DU CANADA, COMPAGNIE D’ASSURANCE-VIIUNE COMPAGNIE MUTUELLEBogey as Good Guy in CASABLANCAThe Michael Curtiz Academy Award winner, with Ingrid Bergman, Peter Lorre, Sydney Greenstreet. 8:30 pm tomorrow night. Along with THE ROARING TWENTIESat 6 30 and HIGH SIERRA at 10:30. All at BOGEY TIMES THREE, presented by Doc Films. Mandel Hall, 57th and University. One dollar.MANDEL HALL • 57th and University8:30 p.m. FRIDAY, APRIL 28 I FRIDAY, MAY 5SATURDAY, APRIL 29 | SATURDAY, MAY 6TICKETS: $2.50 ond $2.00 • Student Discount $0.50.On sole otter April 17 ot Mondel Holl Box Office. Scandinavian Imports proudly announcesa new addition to their staffW-sJune StrJforJ MLnThe well-known interior decorator from Hyde Park. Anexpert and teacher in her field, Mrs. Blum will be glad to ad¬vise you with your decorating problems.As well as being able to give you a few hints on eitherfurnishing an elegant home or squeezing every bit of spaceout of a small apartment, Mrs. Blum also tends the CoffeePot for your shopping pleasure.At present our store is being remodelled and all floorsamples are available at big discounts!Come in and Haggle.Scandinavian Imports53rd and Lake Park NO 7-4040April 21, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7David H. RichterThe Hippies and Peanut Butter 43 UC Papers Presented at Meeting(Continued from Page Six)gion. And this other one, a guyfrom a corn-belt college, askswhether the hippies are going togrow up and get responsible andwork for a living like everybodyelse, and Katzman smiles sadlyand says no, they won’t, they’vedropped out for a reason and theyaren’t going back. And you hearhim talking about how bright thehippies are, how creative, andyou know he knows he isn’t get¬ting through. Not at all.THEN YOU GO TO dinner andKatzman is going to give thespeech, and he does, talking aboutthe EVO style of journalism, theway they gang-write the stories,the way they use photocollage,the way they combine a storywith an irrelevant headline andsome unconnected photo to pro¬duce a total effect, and you knowhe’s being nice and dull for every¬body, and they give him a politehand and start asking more ques¬tions.And it's the same bag all overagain, some of them asking abouthis paper, but most of them want¬ing to know about the hippies, andthe underground movement andwhy it doesnt’ come up aboveground and stay there andyou’re really feeling for the kidsfrom the small colleges becauseeven though they know thatmom’s applie pie is the best, theyMichael SeidmanAdmissions at UCAnd Fair Politics(Continued from Page Six)er might seem clearly incriminat¬ing.Under the circumstances, fromthe standpoint of both good publicrelations and a fair admissionspoiicy, the Administration wouldhave been well advised to investi¬gate a system which requiressnap judgments in a matter sovital. A student-faculty committee(excuse the expression) mighthave been established to investi¬gate the whole interview proce¬dure, and if this action had beencoupled with a mild rebuke toO’Connell closely followed by areaffirmation of basic faith in hiscompetence, all but the most ex¬treme campus groups would prob¬ably have been pacified.BUT INSTEAD, President Bea¬dle has seen fit to precipitate stillanother student-administrationcrisis by attacking the now fright¬ened, helpless, and thoroughly re-pentent faculty member who firstreleased the information while atthe same time using the mostclumsy and inept device imagina¬ble to hide the basic facts of thecase.Administrators have done agreat deal of talking in recentmonths about the necessity for de¬veloping more mature student-administration relations. But itclearly takes two sides to createan impass, and if calm discussionof campus issues is ever to re¬place crisis politics, there willhave to be some growing up onthe other side as well.RENT A TRUCK$o 00 Per HourDO-IT-YOURSEIFTIIUC K RENTALSO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hour really want to know about all thishippie scene, and they aren’t real¬ly ever going to find out becausethey’re just a little afraid of it.Like what if they got hooked on itand had to tell daddy?And after the dinner you go intothe lobby of the Wisconsin Centerami this big corn-fed girl aboutsix feet ten comes up to you andasks, really now, do you thinkthere is actually any value inwhat Katzman is doing, or inwhat is going on in the East Vil¬lage, in The Haight-Ashbury, inYorkville. And you know you’renot going to be able to communi¬cate your own pleasure in thissort of anarchy, not to her, be¬cause if she doesn’t know how tohang loose at all and can’t seewhy anyone would want to, well,you might as well hang it up withyour explanations. But you don'tgive the kind of qualified ad¬miration that you think might getthrough, that you> know Katzmanpublishes a lot of utter dreck butyou think it’s maybe a good ideato get a look at the you-ess-avthrough EVO’s astigmatic eye¬balls every once in awhile. Andthat there’s some fine creativework too, along with the dreck. ny, not like you’re a nut, under¬stand, but just the opposite, thatshe was writing Katzman off assome screwball, but that youwere something else she couldn'tplace because if she took you bythe nose and shaved off your cutelittle goatee and mustaches she’dhave something that was reallyallrightmk, who could be an ad¬vertising exec or a CIA man orsomething respectable. And shecan’t write you off likeKatzman, though she wants tolike crazy, because, goddammit,your bellybutton is clean and youstink of English Leather insteadof armpits. Some 43 paper-abstracts,representing the research ofover 100 biochemists and doc¬tors connected with UC, arebeing presented as a part of the51st annual meeting of the Federa¬tion of American Societies for Ex¬perimental Biology (FASEB).Some 3000 paper-abstracts arebeing read, in addition to seminarsconducted by leading members ofevery medical discipline, and the shear bulk of scientific brain powergathered under one roof provokedone participant to observe that“Were an A-bomb dropped on theHilton (Hotel) today, American biological advancement would bewiped out for the next 50 years.”INDEED, SOME 20,000 registrants have gathered for this conference, including such illustriousnames as Nobel Prize-winning Doc¬tors Fritz Litmann of RockefellerUniversity and Konrad Bloch olHarvard.s® UBii ■=?'>Calendar of Eventsv 5 .< ?*' “ W* ' <fFriday, April 21 Monday, April 23And you feel so sorry for thatfunny look she gives you that youwant to say, look Quasimodo, itwas all a put-on, there is no EastVillage, Haight-Ashbury is reallyfull of peanutbutter factories,there are no hippies, the wholething was made up by a conspira¬cy of Katzman’s with a couple offriends of his on Time Magazineproviding the publicity, don’t youknow when you’ve been hoaxed?But I couldn’t tell her that. She LECTURE: “Electricity and Magnet¬ism”, Professor Roller. Abbott 101,2:30pm.MOVIE: Chronique d'Un Ete’, JeanRouch and Edgar Morin. Soc. Sci. 122,7:15 am, 9:15 pm.MUSIC: New York String Sextet, Man-del HaU, 8:30 pm.THEATRE: 'Minna Von Barnhelm’.8:30 pm in Reynolds Club Theatre.$2 00. $1.50 with ID.Saturday, April 22AND SHE LOOKS AT you fun was part of the talent and you’vealways got to be polite to the tal¬ent. You really do. THEATRE: ‘Minna Von Barnhelm'.2:00 in Reynolds Club Theatre. $2.00,$1.50 with ID.MOVIE: Bogey Times Three MandelHall. All 3: $1.50, $1 with ID. 50c withassociate membership. Starts at 6:15pm.MEETING: Draft Counselor TrainingSession, We Won't Go, Reynolds ClubSouth, 2:00 pm. THEATRE: ’Minna Von Barnhelm'.8:30 pm in Reynolds Club Theatre$2.00. $1 50 with fD.PARTY: Nude Swimming, Geo. Wil¬liams pool, midnight, couples only.SERVICES: Rockefeller Chapel, 11 amPreacher: Tom Driver, Associate Pro¬fessor of Christian Theological Semi¬nary, New York City. “Pacem in Ter¬ris".LECTURE: Hannah Arendt, Professor.Committee on Social Thought, “Revolu¬tion and Freedom,” Mandel Hall, 8 pm.DANCE: UC Folk Dancers. 7:30 pm,Ida Noyes Hall. 25c admission.THEATRE: 'Minna Von Barnhelm'.8:30 pm in Reynolds Club Theatre.$2 00. $1 50 with ID.LECTURE: "The Society of Explor¬ers”, Social Science 122, 8 pm.FILM: “Nine Hours to Rama". JuddAuditorium. Free.Bogey as Bad Guy in THE ROARING TWENTIESThe Raoul Walsh pic with Cagney as Bogey's bootlegger rival. 6:30 pm tomorrow night. Along with CASABLANCA at 8:30 and HIGH SIERRA at 10:30. AM at BOGEYTIMES THREE, presented by Doc Films. Mandel Hall, 57th end University. One dollar.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Woodlawn Ave.Sunday Afternoon at 3:30APRIL 23G. F. Handel'sSolomonFIRST CHICAGO PERFORMANCERICHARD VIKSTROM, Director of MusicROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRMEMBERS OF THECHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAEDWARD MONDELLO, HarpsichordHENRI NOEL as SolomonNEVA PILGRIM as the Queen of ShebaWALTER CARRINGER as ZadokANNE REISIG as Pharoah's DaughterELSA CHARLSTON and KAREN TILLOTSONas Women of JudahTICKETS:RESERVED $4.50 GEN. ADM. $3.50 UC FACULTY/STAFF $3.00ALL COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY STUDENTS $2.50ON SALE AT:Ticket Central. Lowe's, 212 N. Michigan and all Ward Stores, U.of C. Bookstore, 5802 S. Ellis Avenue, Woodworth's Bookstore,1311 E. 57th Street, Cooley's Candles, 5210 Harper ct. *-8 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 21, 1967FOTA Ready for 13th Year Maroon Baseball Opens With Two Wins'The Festival of the Arts(FOTA) is presenting a widevariety of cultural events inthis, its thirteenth year, ac¬cording to Jack Kolb, one ofFOTA’s planners.“We’re planning a lot of first class events and it would be worth art exhibits, and a variety of talks. Over Illinois State Teachers; Ryan Starseveryone s while to try and attend I The Festival is an opportunity for ’ 7at least some of the events,” said many kinds of activities dealingKolb. i with the arts to be brought together by Syd Unger Ornstein started the game for UCLast Saturday the Chicago; and retired the first 11 men heOne of the highlights of this on the University campus. In the Maroons opened their 19671 faced. In the four innings heS& SratK exhibits,C*danc'e ! ■—» in grand style by sweep- J Pitched he aiiowedonly 1 hit and 1tries is today. 'formal events have made up the; ing a double-header from Ill-) r«n. Cullen finished up for UC andOther events planned are movies, agenda of the Festival.The FOTA ScheduleFESTIVAL OF THE ARTS 1966-67Unless noted specifically, all events arewithout ticket and without charge |CONTINUING EVENTS «ND EXHIBI- jTIONS DURING THE FESTIVALStudent Art Show. Art work in various Jmedia by U of C students will be exhib- Iitcd in Lexington Hall 5831 University IAve. (for information contact JeremyBangs, 3? Hitchcock Hall) !An exhibition of paintings by Grace *Hartigan, a New York artist, at Wood- |ward Commons, 5825 Woodiawn Ave.April 3Gnd—May 22nd. Miss Hartigan jwill deliver a lecture on her work on iMay 25th. I 4:00 Rockefeller Chapel, 59th and WoodChess + cookies, lemonade and coffee lawn Ave. Interfaith Committee on thewill be available FREE on Swift patio Arts presents a Vespers Service, with(behind the C-bench) during the Festi- modern dance. Admission by ticketval. Sponsored by the Humanities Col- j only; free Uckets available at Chapelluge Student Council (Tor information Office or Chapel House, 5810 Woodiawncontact Ted Heald, 324-4829) ■ Ave.8:30 Mandel Hall, 57th and University8:30 Ida Noyes Library. 1212 59thAve. Blackfriars presents Rodgers andHart's The Boys From Syracuse. Ad¬mission 2:00, 2:50 (.50 student dis¬count)—tickets available at ReynoldsClub desk—SATURDAY, APRIL 298:30 Mandel Hall, 5t7h and UniversityAve. Blackfria-rs presents Rodgers andHart's The Boys From Syracuse. Ad¬mission 2:00, 2:50 (.50 student dis¬count)—tickets available at ReynoldsClub desk—SUNDAY, APRIL 30 Street. The Chicago Maroon sponsorsreading of the best poetry submitted byU of C students. Prizes will be award¬ed. Refreshments.INDIVIDUAL EVENTS(All times are PM)SUNDAY, APRIL 237 oO Calvert House. 5735 University Ave.John Fry, minister of the 1st Presby¬terian Church, who has been workingv ith the Blackstone Rangers, will speakon “The Phenomena of Humor.”MONDAY, APRIL 22 j 7:00 Jimmy's Tavern. 55th and Univer¬sity Ave. Chicago Review presents areading by John Schultz (short stories)t and Lucien Stryk (Poems and Zentranslations). Minors permitted duringreading, (for information, contact Iven! Lourie. Chicago Review)7 00 Lexington Hall, 5831 UniversityAve. Prizes for the Student Art Compe¬tition will be awarded Herbert Kessler,assistant professor of Art history, willpreside, (for information contact Jere¬my Bangs. 37 Hitchcock Hall)8 30 Reynolds Club Theater (3rd floor),5706 University Ave. Play ReadingRichard Stern, professor of English,will read from his new play DOSSIER:EARTH Twenty-Four Blackouts fromthe Middle Electric Age (commissionedby Lincoln Center in New York).TUESDAY, APRIL 258 u0 Breasted Hall, Oriental Institute,1155 58th Street. Grace Hartigan. promi¬nent New York artist, will speak onThe Evolution of a Painting-’ (withslides of her work).FRIDAY, APRIL 2812:30 Hutchinson Court (behind theCommons) 57th and University Ave. Aconcert by the U of C concert band.3 no Bond Chapel (behind Swift Hall).Florence Adams Poetry Reading Con¬test. Preliminary Competition (finals onMay 5th) (for information contact Eng¬lish Department, Wieboh 205) 8:00 Ida Noyes Theater 3rd floor), 121259th Street. FOTA Film Festival. Ashowing of the best films entered bystudents and members of the Universitycommunity, (for information, contactCarol Axelrod, 667-1824)MONDAY, MAY 18:00 Ida Noyes Cloister Club, 1212 59thStreet. "Knife in the Water"—film byPolanski. Sponsored by Interfaith Com¬mittee on the Arts. .60 admissioncharge.TUESDAY, MAY 27:30 Ida Noyes Cloister Club, 1212 59thStreet. An exhibition of films of theModern Dance. .50 admission charge.THURSDAY. MAY 48:00 Breasted Hall. Oriental Institute.1155 58th Street.. Student Governmentsponsors a lecture by Aaron Copland,American composer and conductor ad¬mission .75 students. 2 00 others. FRIDAY, MAY 5(Special Convocation; 75th Anniversaryi Year—see announcements)3:00 Bond Chapel (behind Swift Hall).Florence Adams Poetry Reading Con- ,| test. Finals. Prizes to be awarded.4:00 Bond Chapel (behind Swift Hall).Collegium Musicum presents a concert;details to be announced.8:30 Mandel Hall, 57th and University 1Ave. Blackfriars presents Rodgers andHart’s The Boys From Syracuse. Ad- !mission 2.00. 2.50 (.50 student ,discount)—tickets available at ReynoldsClub desk—SATURDAY, MAY 6 | 48:30 Mandel HaU, 57th and Ur^iversityAve. Blackfriars presents Rodgers andHart’s The Boys From Syracuse. Ad-mission 2.00, 2.50 (.50 student)discount)—tickets available at ReynoldsClub desk— jSUNDAY, MAY 77:30 Hillel House, 5715 Woodiawn Ave. ,“The Last Chapter’’ film, student ad¬mission .75 |MONDAY, MAY 8 |8:00 Ida Noyes Cloister" Club, 1212 59thStreet. “Eclipse’’ film by Antonioni.Sponsored by Interfaith Committee onthe Arts. .60 admission charge.Other events and changes will be an¬nounced later. .The Strolling Players, also sponsored by jFOTA, will perform later in the monthof May. Details to be announced. Teachers (Chicago) j als0 allowed only 1 hit and 1 run inthe 3 innings he worked, whilepicking up his First collegiate win.WITH CHICAGO trailing 1-0 mid¬way through the game, Clarkscored all the way from secondbase on a routine infield out—hisboth daring base running provoking theEagles to commit their only errorinois StateNorth.J. Kyle Anderson, Head Coach ofUC’s varsity Baseball team calledthe opening day victories a “realnice start.” Coach Anderson _ feltthat “a good defense was the keyto the Maroon’s success.” (UCplayed errorless ball ingames.)STAGG SCHOLAR John Ryans, 0£ the secomj game. Preston alsohits in 3 appearances, including oneextra-base hit.In the first game Chicago pound-In the second game a combina-and Denny Cullen andby PrestonJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow U youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.11659 1. Doty Ave.•46-4411 UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK•*« strong battle*9NEW CAR LOANSas low as$450 per hundredISM EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200 *4-F.D.LC PROFITABLE EMPLOYMENT AS WATCHMANDURINGSUMMER VACATION PERIODStudents age 27 years or over who wish or need summer employment, work forTHE KANE SERVICE—one of the largest plant guard and watchman services inthe world.Earn op to $95.12 per week, depending upon boors worked.Choose your location for convenience, Easy pleasant work! Become acquaintedwilh industrial locales in the Chicago and suburban area.Vacation "fill-ins" are from one to three weeks on each assignment and we canuse you on such details until next FALL.No previous experience necessary! We prefer to train you for our work on thejob at full regular pay.THE KANE SERVICE501 N. Dearborn Room 508 Chicago, III. 40410 MO 4-4181 International House Association,U. of Chicago campus,1414 East 59th St.,is sponsoring three group trips thissummer. Tel. Bl 8-0689 v(1) Niagara Falls and Detroit Week¬end, June 9-11; Friday night—Sundaynight. Visit Greenfield Village, FordMuseujn, then on to the Falls. Sleep inDetroit, Niagara Falls "Y's". Roundtrip chartered bus fare, $25. Twonights sleeping, about $5.(2) Shakespearean Theatre Festival,Stratford, Canada. Weekend, July 21-23. Friday night—Sunday night. Re¬served tickets at $2.50 each for TheMerry Wives of Windsor, Richard III,Bath Festival Concert—Yehudi Menu¬hin, soloist. You may order instead,Albert Herring, by. Benjamin Britten orCosi Fan Tutti, by Mozart. Exhibits:Theatre, Books, Paintings. Also swim¬ming and boating. Round trip, chart¬ered bus fare, $20. Rooms in privatehomes, $3.50 to $5.00 per night.(3) Expo 67, Montreal, Canada, July28-August 6. Besides the exhibits,there are many free attractions: DailyBandshell Festivals, Expo Band, trouba¬dour acts on mobile stages, and newextravaganzas. Also featured; MauriceChevalier, Kabuki theatre, Cuba Fies¬ta, Jamaica Dance, Swiss Folkloric,others. Round trip fare, $38.30. Sleep¬ing, $3.00-$3.50 per night. $3.00charge to non-members.Deposit of $10.00 required on eschreservation.Be a sport[Also sophisticat«4finte" *discriminatingand an aH{aroundswell guy.fDrink Carlsberg^-the mellow, flavQrfuUtfer of Copenhagen.ana bcui.d b, Ih« Cb'iaba'i Bia-arXi. D«nm»n M*'**-1'*-- 104 (. 4W St- H-Xt, A Special A2035 W. 95th ST. X Musicraft48 E. OAK ST.#PR 9-6900 DE 7-4150Sony PR-150 Recording fape, 1800 ff. Myiar, 1" Reel,lisl price $6.20. Af Musicraff, with coupon, only $2.95. OfferExpires May 10, 1967.• Sony Tape Coupon •• Redeem this bonus •• Coupon at Musicraft ^• 2035 W. 95thPR 9-6900 •• 48 E. Oak May 10DE 7-4150 Expire* •April 21, 1967 CHICAGO MAROONCulture CalendarMusicCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAIn their 76ih season. Jean Martinon,Music Director and Conductor: IrwinHoffman. Associate Conductor: Marga¬ret Hillis, Director, Chicago SymphonyChorus.Twenty-Sixth Week—Thu & Fri. Apr20 & 21 Irwin Hoffman, cond; ByronJams, piano. Rachmaninoff: SymphonyNo. 2 in E Minor, Op 27. Prokofieff:Piano Concerto No. 1, Op. 10. R.Strauss: ’’Burleske.” _ . ,Twenty-Seventh Week—Thu, Fri &Sat Apr 27-29 Jean Martinon. cond;Evelvn Lear, soprano; Thomas Stewart,baritone. Berg: Seven Early Songs.Bartok: “Bluebeard’s Castle.’Twenty-Eighth Week—Thu. Fn & Sat,May 4-6* Jean Martinon cond; MstislavRostropovich, cond. Mendelssohn: Mu¬sic to “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.Schumann: Symphony No. 1 in Bb Op.38, “Spring.” Shostakovich: Cello Con¬certo in Eb, Op. 107. _.Thu-Sat Concerts: Thu, 8:15; Fn, 2,Sat, 8:30. $2.50-$6 50. Fri galleryseats for students. $1.50 (available until1 pm only). Orchestra Hall Box Office.Dailv 9:30-6; later on concert nights.Sun 1-4 Orchestra Hall. 220 S. M1?]1*'gan. HA 7-0362: Sun & Hoi after 5: HA7-0499.CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAIrwin Hoffman, cond; Adolph Her-seth, trumpet, Dvorak: “Scherzo Ca-priccioso,” Op. 66 Haydn: TrumpeConcerto in Eb. Rachmaninoff: Sym- ;phony No. 2 in E Minor. Op 27.Tue Apr 25 at 8:15. Edman Hall.Wheaton College. Tickets on saie atWheaton College Business Office. MO8-3200. ext 272.ROBERT SHAW CHORALE AND OR¬CHESTRA—Robert Shaw. cond. Pro¬gram to be announced Sun Apr 20 at3:30. $3.50-56.50. Orchestra Hall. 220 S. IMichigan. Tickets: Allied Arts Crop, 20N. Wacker. FR 2-0566.TheatreProfessionalBAREFOOT IN THE PARK—Neil Si-,.non’s comedy. Thru May 28. Tue-Fn,8:30: Sat, 6 & 10:45; Sun, ' :30. Tue-Thii,$4 43: Fri & Sun, $5.53: Sat. $6.67 (in¬cludes dinner served approx, one hourbefore curtain time). Candlelight Dinner (Playhouse, 5620 S’. Harlem, Summit. CL ;8*7373-BRISTOL OLD VIC COMPANY—Repertory' of Shakespeare plays. “Mea-jsure for Measure” Thu. Apr 20. Ro-meo and Juliet” Fri. Apr 21 &.Sat. Apr22 $3.50-$6.50 (evenings): $2 a0-$5.5O(matinees). Opera House, 20 N. Wack- ;er. Tickets: Allied Arts Corp, 20 N.Wacker. FR 2-0566.DIAL M FOR MURDER—StarringJoan Fontaine. Thru Apr 23. Nightly, |8:30. Wed, 2:30 & 8:30; Sat, 6 & 9:30;Sun, 7. Closed Mon $3.00-$4.00. IvanhoeTheatre, 3000 N. Clark. 248-6800.FIDDLER ON HIE ROOF—The jBock-Hamick musical starring LutherAdler and Dolores Wilson. Matinee star, !Paul Lipson. Nightly, 8:30; MatineesSat & Wed at 2. Closed Sun. Evenings.$3.00-$9.00: Matinees, $2.50-$6.00. jMcVickers Theatre, Madison nr. State.782-8230.THE ODD COUPLE—Neil Simon snew comedy hit starring Dan Dailey jand Elliot Reid. Mike Nichols, dir.Nightly, 8:30; Wed & Sat Matinee, |2. Closed Sun Nightly, $2.75-$5.50: Fri & jSat $3.50-$5.95. Matinees, $2.50-$4.95. jBlackstone Theatre, 60 E. Balbo. CE ;6-8240.THE OWL AND THE PUSSYCAT—Starring Pat Suzuki. Apr 10-29. Stude- Ibaker Theatre, 410 S. Michigan, j922-2973. SECOND CITY—24th satirical revue“The Return of the Viper.” Paul Sills,dir: Fred Kaz, music. Cast includes J.J. Barry, Martin Harvey Friedberg,Burt Heyman, Sandy Holt, Sid Gross-feld, David Walsh and Penny White.Sun & Tues-Thu, 9: Fri, 8:30, 11 & 1.Closed Mon. Nightly, $2.50; Fri & Sat.$3.00. 1846 N. Wells. DE 7-3992. MO4-4032 after 8:30.SECOND CITY PLAYERS—Wed, Apr12 at 12:45 pm Free. Chicago Room,University of Illinois, 828 S. Wolcott,Chicago. 663-7770.College and CommunityCHARTER, LTD—Barat College Play¬ers under the direction of Val Bettin.Production to be announced. Fri, Apr 21& Sat, Apr 22 at 8:30. Adults. $1.50;Students, 75c. 1420 W. Granville.588-2300 or 743-8030.ELMHURST COLLEGE THEATRE—"And People All Around” by GeorgeSklar. Thu-Sat. Apr 20-22 at 8:15. $1.50.College Gymnasium, 190 Prospect, Elm¬hurst. BR 9-4100.ENCORE THEATRE—Meredith Wil¬son’s “The Music Man.” Tom Ventriss,dir. Thu & Fri. 8:30: Sat. 8 & 11: Sun.7. $2.25-$3 50; $4.50 (including dinner).1419 N. Wells. 664-5533.HULL HOUSE THEATRE—“The Dev-ils” by John Whiting. Robert Sickinger.dir Apr 14-16. 21-23 & 28-30. Fri & Sat.8:30; Sun, 7:30. Fri & Sat, $3.90: Sun,$3.40. 3212 N. Broadway. Telephone re¬servations accepted. 348-5622.HULL HOUSE THEATRE ATPARKWAY—A twin bill: “The Integra¬tors” by Norman Mark and "Requiemfor Brother X” by William WellingtonMackey. Dick Gaffield, dir. Fri & Sat,8:30; Sun, 7:30. Fri & Sat, $2.50; Sun,$2.00. Students, $1.00 Fri & Sat. Park¬way Community House. 500 E. 67th St.Telephone reservations accepted.324-5622.LOYOLA PARK PLAYERS—RobertBolt’s “The Flowering Cherry.” MarieRoach, dir. Fri, Apr 21 & 28 at 8:3t>;Sat. Apr 22 & 29 at 8:30. $1.00. LoyolaPark Fieldhouse, 1230 W. Greenleaf.AM 2-0690.NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITYTHEATRE—“Finnegan’s Wake” byJames Joyce. Robert Schneideman, dir.Apr 21-23 & 27-30. Nightly, 8: Sun, 4.Thu & Sun. $2 00: Fri & Sat. $2 75.Speech Auditorium, 1905 Sheridan, Ev¬anston. 492-7282. • ,--> • ■ '-‘tTHE CHICAGO CITY PLAYERS—Three one act plays bv Jean ClaudeVan Italie. Fri & Sat, Apr 21. 22, 28, 29,8:30 pm Sun, Apr 16, 23, 30, 7:30 pm.615 W. Wellington Ave.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO—Univer¬sity Theatre presents “Minna von Barn-helm," by G E. Lessing. A new trans¬lation by Kenneth Northcott, directedby Andrew Harris. April 21, 22, 23 at8:30 pm. matinee April 22 at 2:00 pm.$2.00. $1.50 with student I.D. Reynold?Club Theatre.Blackfriars presents Rodgers andHart's prize-winning musical comedy,“The Boys from Syracuse,” adapted byGeorge Abbott from Shakespeare's“Comedy of Errors.” Directed by Ken¬neth Northcott. Fri and Sat April 28 &29, Fri, and Sat. May 5 & 6, 8:30 pm.Mandel Hall. Tickets cost $2 50 and$2.00, with a 50c student and facultydiscount. Box-office opens in the MandelHall corridor on Monday, April 1*7. Ex¬tension 3280.VALPARAISO UNIVERSITY THE¬ATRE—Durenmatt’s “The Physicists.”Thu-Sun, Apr 13-16 at 8:15. $125.Kroencke Hall, Valparaiso University,Valparaiso, Ind. 462-5111, 462-8740. Blackfriars Will Stage Fiftieth MusicalComedy-vThe Boys from Syracuse'Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259NSA Discount*Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 The Blackfriars, one of Ameri¬ca’s oldest musical comedy socie¬ties, is presenting Rodgers andHart’s The Boys from Syracuse.The production, which will bestaged in Mandel Hall Friday andSaturday nights, April 28 & 9 andMay 5 & 6 at 8:30 p.m., is the fif¬tieth in a series of musical comedyproductions which began in 1898. jThe Boys from Syracuse, adaptedin 1938 by George Abbot fromShakespeare’s The Comedy of Er¬rors, is, as Blackfriars’ Abbot MikeMerritt stresses, “in the long tradi¬tion of Blackfriars’ shows. It is anuninhibited romp, this time throughancient Greece, hilarious and me¬lodic.” Merritt said that “in choos¬ing a Broadway play for the firsttime, we wanted to find a workthat was harmonious with Black¬friars’ spirit. The Boys from Syra¬ cuse is a great tonic, re-inforcingthe traditional Blackfriars’ beliefin the therapeutic value of laugh¬ter.”The Boys from Syracuse is di-recetd by Kenneth Northcott, Deanof Graduate Students in the Hu¬manities. Since coming to Chicagofrom England, Northcott has ap¬peared in Hull House productionsof two of Pinter’s plays, The Col¬lection and The Dumbwaiter. Hehas also performed in David Sus-skind’s television presentation ofThe Dumbwaiter (1965) on F.ssoRepertory Theatre. At the Univer.sity. Northcott has directed Tar-tuffe and The Lady's Not forBurning.Tickets for The Boys from Syra¬cuse are being sold in the MandelHall box office.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644PRESCRIPTIONS FIUEO EYE EXAMINATIONSNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Diacewnt DO 3 6866CONTACT LENSESTurin Bicycle Co-OpPRESENTS LIVEA cross-section of hippies, beats, anarch¬ists etc. In freak out or lowest prices fornew Carlton, Raleigh, Falcon, Gitane,Ranger and Robin Hood bicycles. Touringand competition equipment. "Factorytrained" mechanics. Used bicycles. Freedelivery.1952 N. Sedgwick WH 4-8865M-F 2 00 - 8 30 Sat. & Sun. 10-8Closed Thursdays. Ml 3-31135424 S. Klmbarkwe sell the be*t,and fix the restforeign cor hospitalJIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAP jesselsmtstSBRV1HC HYM PARK POK OVIK M VtAKtWITH TH1 V«RY »«ST AMO FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2*70, PL 2-8190, DO *-*!*« 1*40 I. 5WEYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Sfudtnt and Faculty DiscountPIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at '5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT PLEASE WOMEN ALL-OVERWherever she likes to wear jewelry,we’ve got just ttie thing. Necklaces,earrings, rings [for toes or fingers],pins [for lapel or navel], andbracelets [for arm or knee].Our unusual exotic jewelry Is gath¬ered from Africa, Asia, LatinAmerica and other placeswhere it’s used to do justabout everything: bringgood luck, ward off evilspirits, foretell thefuture, drive awgloom, i n c r e awarmth andpassion, andbecomewelcomeadditionsto anywardrobe.Come seefor your¬self !J«w«lrf a Handicraft* • SculptureHarper Court — 5210 S. Harper324-7266Convenient Hours: Noon to I p. m dally IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALE,HAVE A DRIVER’S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN UP TO $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.Student Coop10cBOOK SALE* Library duplicates & discards 4000volumes.* Restocked dailyMON. THRU SAT.REYNOLDS CLUBBASEMENT 10:00 — 6:0010 • CHICAGO MAROON April 21, 1967WEEKEND CUIDE ]THE WONDERFUL SOUND OF MUSICALIVE AND LOVELY HAS RETURNEDAND MANY THANKS FOR THE WONDERFUL RECEPTIONTHE BAROQUETHIS WEEK FEATURESThe FabulousJUDY ROBERTS TRIOFRI. & SAT. NITEJOHN GITTIN, U of C's own on pianoMON, TUE, & THURS NITESOur Regular Sunday Afternoon GuitarFolk Music Sing-Around 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.With George Richardson and Charles Buban★ 1510 E. 53rd St.Relax in quiet atmospherePL 2-3647TAl-SAM-YfcNdhihbi • amimcamCAMTOMBSI AMDW AJM. t»mi *49 PMTMOI OUTin m 4-1092 Elect "BECKET"Next Chicago Hit!Opens Thurs. May 4HARPER THEATRE5238 S. Harper near the LakeTicketInfo. BU 8-1717Student Rates. SATURDAYAPRIL 22Everyone 18 and olderis invited to a hugeMIXERfrom 8:30 p.m. until 1:00 o.m.on the entire mezzanine floorof theLA SALLE HOTELcorner ofMadison & La Salle StreetsIN PERSONWLS DISC JOCKEYDEX CAROwill be your host and M.C.for this occasionTWO BANDSA popular rock groupwill entertainIN THE BALLROOMwhile a conventional ballroomorchestra entertainsIN THE BARStudents fromChicogoland Universitieshave been invited to join usat this mixer along withpersonnel from otherselected companies.CASUAL DRESSAbout half of us will wearsweaters, slacks, sportshirts, etc. The other half,suits or dresses.STAG OR DATESStag preferred HY 3-3333 71st & JEFFREYJEFFREYTHEATREHELD OVER SECOND WEEKWINNER OF FIVEACADEMY AWARDS!Who’s Afraid ofVirginia Woolf?WITHELIZABETH TAYLOR — best actressSandy Dennis — best supporting actressand — RICHARD BURTONPLUSMichael Caine and Vivian MerchantI NALFIEJEFFREYTHEATREHY 3-3333 71st & JEFFREY)1106 WESTBABY HUEYAND THE BABYSITTERSTHE ROVIN’ KINDTHE CHAMBERS BROTHERSTHE BUCKINGHAMSTHE EXCEPTIONS THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde Park-4 AND MANY OTHERS, Wde Open Wed. thru Sun. at 8 P.M*fte Color TV! Boutique I Library! Soda Fountain! Bar! Scopitone!Advance, price tickets on sale at ail WARD stores~ . end at Ticket Central, 212 North MichiganToOmaCheetah par^y for 50-2000, call Miss Prusa at MO 4-5051 / THE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWNMichelob and Budweiser on Tap!Piano Selections Friday & Saturday evenings ...JDL Party WartPARTY WINE:Select your party wines from the MOOdifferent kinds of wine always in stock. SPRING SALEMay WineSpecially selected German May Wine farabove ordinary quality. Serve it straight,in punch or with sliced strawberries. Chateau Du Juqe 1964Moderately sweet with velvety softness.It's the paragon of the small wines ofBarsac. Serve chilled with light foods.$]98 FIFTH 3 for $539 $249 fifth 3 for $669Chateau Giscours 1952 Chateau Lafour 1944A Grand Cru Classe Margaux. Rich withbody and vigor, lively with much finesse.A favorite since Roman times and still anoble wine to serve with red meats.Excellent vintage. Light, soft, dry red table wine of Bor¬deaux. Has a clear, clean, astringent tastenot often found at this price level.$249 FIFTH 3 for $669$3»s FIFTH 3 for *1075 Scaint-Estephe 1964KlusseratherBruderschaft RieslingSpatlese 1964An unusual combination of delicate flavorand flowery perfume, rarely found inwines this price. Has less finesse than other Medocs butpossesses more stuffing, more fullnessand has a great vinosity. Serve withred meats.*1 98 FIFTH 3 for $539$298 FIFTH 3 for $800Chateauneuf-du-PapeLa Fiole 1961A dry red wine with great depth inflavor, for very full flavored foods. Thebottle is a copy of a handmade Monkishoriginal.$379 fifth 3 for *1000Verneuil Pouiliy Fuisse1964The strong rustic flavor and simplecharacter of this wine pleases almostanyone. Sandwiches, poultry or any sim¬ply flavored foods can be greatly im¬proved by using this wine. Cios Plince 1964This Pomerol has body, color, generosityand an agreeable savour as well as dis¬tinctive bouquet. Serve at room tempera¬ture, with red meat.$249 FIFTH 3 for $669Beaujolais 1964Always best when young, in France thiswine is used up before it is four yearsold. A clean well made wine to servewith the average meal.*1 98 FIFTH 3 for $539french Sauternes 1962A regional wine selected for it's speciallyrich flavor. Serve chilled with fruit ordesserts. Sweet with grapey richness.>2” .... 3 for *7" *t” 3 for >5” DOUBLE DISCOUNT PARTY SALEBUY 6 BOTTLES GET 1 FREEChateau Lafitte GrandCru 1962Not to be confused with wine of asomewhat similar name. This wine doesnot require the tremendous age or price.Delicate, soft, and very pleasing to thetaste. One of the best buys of its type.$2.98 1 free with 6St. JohannerKlostergarten Spatlese1964Blending grape types has enabled thegrower to create a masterpiece of thevinter's art. This is a great wine forthe price.$2.98 1 free with 6Grand Cru Vaudesir1964This field is the rarest of the grandgrowths. The wine is very elegant, aroma¬tic, the finest of its kind. Great wine anda great vintage.$4.49 1 free with 6 Liebfraumilch Spaetlese1964Specially late picked grapes are selectedfrom vine covered hillsides to bring thisnaturally sweet yet delicately dry fablewine.$1.98 1 free with 6Beaujolais St. Amour1964A fresh fruity parish Beaujolais with anice bouquet. Serve with cheese or redmeat.$2.19 1 free with 6Brouilly 1964This is the best of the parish wines ofBeaujolais. tight in fruit, tartly dry. It isa pleasant tasting everyday wine. Shouldbe drunk with cheese or red meat.$2.19 1 free with 6PARTY CHEESE:There are 225 different cheeses from 17 different countries available at the Party Mart.English StiltonConsidered to be the finest Englishcheese. Hard, mild, blue-veined, cow's-milk cheese. Milder than Roquefort orGorgonzola. It was first made about 1750.$1.99 PER POUND1963 Vintage CheddarThis cheddar has a most unlikely taste.When you first taste it, the flavor seemsmost mild, as the flavor becomes morediluted in your mouth the full characterof its taste begins to be noticed and thefull richness comes out.$2.50 PER POUNONew York Herkimer—2 Years OldA fairly dry cheese with a crumbly tex¬ture and a sharp flavor.99c PER POUNOPEPSI COLA8 pack 69cHALF QUARTS PLUS deposit PARTY BEVERAGES:OL Party Wart Danish MunsterSemisoft, whole-milk cheese which wasfirst made in the vicinity of Munster,West Germany.$1.39PER POUNDAlpenjoy Cheese withor without SalamiSoft mild cheese with a distinctive flavor.Available with Salami also, which givesan added piquant taste to the cheese.$1.49PER POUNONorwegian BlueBlue, Blue-mold, or Blue-veined cheeseis the name for cheese of the Roque¬fort type. It is made from cow's orgoat's milk. $1.25PER POUNDI SCHLITZ DRAFT BEERi 12 ox. no deposit bottlesI 6 pock 89c\ case of 24 $3.49! with this couponIOpen Daily 10 a.m. 11 p.m. Sunday 12 Noon -9 p.m. 2427 E. 72nd