mmrnmC.lVol. 76-No. 53 U.S. POSTAGEv'kn*CHICAGO, ILL.Peimit No. 6444 igo Maroon75th Anniversary YearThe University of Chicago MIDWEEKEDITIONTuesday, May 2, 1967Former EmissaryEdwin ReischauerTo Speak on JapanEdwin O. Reischauer, for¬mer United States Ambassadorto Japan, will speak on “Ja¬pan’s Role in the ModernWorld’’ Thursday at 4 pm inBreasted Hall.The public will be admitted with¬out ticket and without charge.R EISCHAUER'S talk will besponsored by the University’s Com¬mittee on Far Eastern Studies. Theformer ambassador will be one of26 scholars from around the worldreceiving honorary degrees at theUniversity’s 75t’h Anniversary Con¬vocation Friday.Reischauer, ambassador to Ja-1pan from 1961 to 1966, was one of ithe most popular U.S. ambassadors Ito that country. He was born in IJapan of American missionary par-1ents and can speak, read, and write;Japanese. His appointment was jwidely acclaimed in Japan. IIn the United States, he is recog¬nized as an expert on Japanesestudies. He has written a numberof books about Japan including Ja¬pan, Past and Present and TheUnited States and Japan.ONE OF his theses has beenthat, contrary to popular belief, de¬mocracy was not imposed upon Ja¬pan after World War II but was,rather, a natural development thathad been temporarily halted by themilitaristic dictatorship that fell in1945.Reischauer received a B.A. de¬gree from Oberlin College in 1931,and an M.A. in 1932 and Ph. D. in1939, both from Harvard Universi¬ty.He is presently on the faculty ofHarvard University. Reischauerjoined the Harvard faculty in 1938,and served as director of the Har-vard-Yenching Institute from 1956to 1961, During and immediately af¬ter World War II, he served withthe U.S. War and State Depart¬ments.The University of Chica-9° NSA committee willmeet Tuesday, May 9 at7.00 pm in Ida Noyes Hall.All elected Delegates andAlternates MUST attend;others are welcome. MAY DAY IN CHICAGO finds UC students enjoying the balmyweather following an April in which it seemed to rain every day.Yesterday, the perfect way to halt the University's inhuman grind A professor of anthropology atwas simply to lie in the grass and soak up the sunshine. the College de France in Paris,First Meeting ThursdayStudents Organizing Against Bookstoreby Jeffrey KutaThree second-year students in the College are organizing the newest of UC’s “against’’groups, Students Against the Bookstore (SAB).Billy Salter, Ken Kaufman, and Noah Friedkin are forming their new group in the hopeof quickening University action in starting construction of a new bookstore. They feel thatconditions in the University Bookstore as it now exists are intoler¬able.THEY H/7E reserved the first,floor Ida Noyes lounge for a meet¬ing Thursday at 8 pm and are urg-!ing all interested students to at¬tend. A letter to the editor from jthe three can be found in this jissue.According to Salter, the purposeof the Thursday night meeting is to“get plans and ideas from people,especially if they’re new and dy¬namic. We want to see just whatkind of action will get the mostsupport.”Whatever the most effective planturns out to be, Salter says, SABwill follow it up.“If it looks like we have enoughsupport for a boycott, fine. If thestudents want to sit in, that’s okaytoo. And if they decide the bestthing to do is to break the Book- Jstore physically, we’ll go under¬ground and do that.”WHILE Salter believes a full-jscale boycott is probably the bestidea, he emphasizes that the pur¬poses of the meeting isn’t to assem-1ble those who want to ~vcott, butthose who want to act,“People have talked for a longtime,” Salter points out, “but nowis the perfect time for action. It’sthe middle of the quarter and stu¬dents don’t need textbooks andthere are certainly other placesaround campus to eat.”SAB is operating on the promisethat the University, if it decides togive sufficient priority to a newbookstore, will not hesitate to buildit. The problem is, as Salter pointsout, that although the administra¬tion is aware of the Bookstoreproblem now, “they’re not suffi¬ciently hung up on it.”HOW TO GET them hung up onit? Salter rephrased three of thepossible alternatives: In the intellec¬tual sense, with petitions; in thefinancial sense, with boycotts; inthe irritable sense, with pickets;and in the physical sense, withbricks. Friday ConvocationHonors 26 ScholarsTwenty-six scholars, including Northrop Frye, Claude Levi-Strauss, Talcott Parsons, Allan R. Sandage, and B. F. Skinnerwill receive honorary degrees at Friday’s special 75th Anni¬versary convocation. ; Strauss has sought the detorThe University makes it a policy j niinants ot human behavior not into confer the degrees on for schol- , socjai relations but within the inter-arly rather than public achieve-. nal logic of systems of ideas asmenfs- they appear in culture. Just electedFrye a professor of English Lit- j a foreign associate of the Nationalerature and principal of Victoria Academy of Sciences, he is alsoCollege at the University of Toron-1 currently in the news as author ofto, has recently organized curricula ; The Savage Mind, published by thefor literary study based on princi- uc Press.pies he follows as a critic. His in- Parsons, long known to studentsfluence has been widely felt in edu- 0f soc II in the College for hiscational circles as well as among translations of Max Weber, hasliterary critics. broken new ground in medical andlegal sociology, the study of strati¬fication, and in the search for linkswith related disciplines. He is aprofessor of sociology at HarvardUniversity.Since his first work in laying thetheoretical grounds for the incorpo¬ration of stellar evolution into mod¬ern astronomy and reformulatingthe cosmological problem left unre¬solved by Hubble, Sandage hasj made fundamental contributions tothe indentification of quasi-stellarradio sources. The youngest astron¬omer ever elected to the NationalAcademy of Sciences, he is asso¬ciated with Mount Wilson and Paio-mar Observatories in California.Maroon jhoto by David MooreWHEN WILL THE BOOKSTORE CAVE IN? That's the obvious questionafter viewing the pieces of wood, rope, and scotch tape nowholding the Bookstore in place.Five Professors Urge Faculty SupportFor May 10 Day of Inquiry on Vietnamdent of Student Government, sig¬nals the beginning of a nation-wideprogram organized by a group ofstudent government presidents andnewspaper editors who met recent¬ly with Dean Rusk. The programpromises to involve many, both stu¬dents and faculty, not previouslyactive in peace activities.“We are asking you to cancelyour classes on May 10 and to hold,in their place, special classes onVietnam, both as a manifestationof support and in order for you andyour students to participate in theactivities planned on that day. Wealso urge those who are willing toplay a more active part to attend aplanning meeting at 4:30 pm Tues¬day, May 2, in the Ida Noyes The¬ater. There is an urgent need formore faculty assistance in the plan¬ning and arranging of this pro¬gram.”Five UC faculty membershave called on their colleaguesto use regular class time May10 for a discussion of the warin Vietnam.Melvin Rothenberg, associateprofessor of mathematics, DavidBakan, professor of psychology,William McGrath, assistant profes¬sor of history, Howard Brofsky, as¬sistant professor of music, andAlan Gerwirth, professor of philoso¬phy, in a letter to be sent out thisweek called on other UC facultymembers to cooperate and partici-pate in “The May 10thUniversity-wide effort to explorethe problem of the widening war inVietnam.”THE LETTER continued: “ThisDay of Inquiry, initiated by the edi¬tor of the Maroon and the presi- Students wishing to at¬tend The University's 75thAnniversary Convocation :may obtain tickets fromtheir deans or departments.Skinner, the Edgar Pierce Pro¬fessor of Psychology at HarvardUniversity, has done more in thefield of behavioristic psychologysince the heyday of the Chicagoschool in the early twentieth centu¬ry. His Journal of the Experimerrtal Analysis of Behavior, now in itsninth volume, is far-reaching in itsinfluence in psychology, pharma¬cology and neurology, education,therapy, and cultural planning.The recipients come from sevencountries, including the UnuedStates, and their fields of scholar¬ship range from anthropology andbiology through economics and his¬tory to physics and mathe/nitics.More than 1,600 guests fromvarious parts of the nation are ex¬pected to attend the Convocationwith many also expected to attenda series of special events that willfollow.The convocation will begin at 10am this Friday in RockefellerChapel. The Maroon will publish aspecial four page supplement onthese and other recipients of honor¬ary degrees.Northrop FryeRFK Demonstrations Make Johnson CautiousCalls War Protests Effectiveby Mark R. KillingsworthWASHINGTON, D.C., (CPS)—Senator Robert F. Kennedy (D.-N.Y.) says that Viet¬nam war protests have made the Administration conduct the war more cautiously but addsthat he doesn’t think “doves” can do very much to further their own views.Kennedy gave his views in an interview in his office here.Asked if Vietnam demonstrations |and protests have had an impact onthe country, Kennedy declared:“Yes, they have. People (whosupport the war) are much moreconscious now of what our nationalpolicy is. They’ve had to answer avocal segment speaking in behalf]of a different viewpoint.”And, Kennedy added, “If it (theVietnam protest) hadn’t occurred,and if the dissent didn’t exist, we’dbe doing things in Vietnam wearen’t doing.” He did not elaborate.Does he think the Administrationhas been paying more attention tostudents and young people sincethe protests began? “I think every¬body has,” Kennedy replied.Although he suggested that dem¬onstrations have made the Admin¬istration exercise restraint in wag¬ing the war, Kennedy declared thatsuch protest could not actuallychange Administration policy.Critics of Administration policyare a minority, he explained, andso their demonstrations cannothave much positive influence onpolicy.Asked what students and privatecitizens could do to support his ownstand on Vietnam and to promotenegotiations in view of this fact,Kennedy said “I don’t know. Idoubt if there’s very much that canbe done.”“I suppose if a majority of thepeople thought we should changeour policy, demonstrations mighthave some effect and those whowant our policy changed might besuccessful” Kennedy said.“But they are a minority. Myown viewpoint is in the minority —the position that the bombingshould be stopped — and many Ad¬ministration critics consider that’s‘too moderate.’ ”“If you go from me to those whofavor more extreme positions youstill have a minority of the people.This group, even if it acted togeth¬er can’t turn the rest of the coun¬try to their view” Kennedy contin¬ued.“It can have an effect — basical¬ly by making people more aware ofits doubts of the war and by mak¬ing people who support it try toanswer them” he added.“But the people who want an endto the bombing are outnumberedby those who want more targetsbombed by about two to one. Thosewho generally disapprove of thewar are outnumbered be those whogenerally approve by four or fiveto one.” Kennedy added that he hopes thecampaign of “massive civil disobe¬dience” which the Rev. Martin Lu¬ther King, Jr., says he will start ifthe war intensifies “will not be nec¬essary.” And Kennedy added “Idoubt it will be effective.”The recent assertion of John Ken¬neth Galbraith, the new chairmanof Americans for Democratic Ac¬tion, that the Vietnam “disaster”could mean “the death and burialof the Democratic Party” is “a lit¬tle extreme,” Kennedy added.While a number of commenta¬tors including The Nation maga¬zine, have said that the Adminis¬tration may decide to launch an in¬vasion of North Vietnam, Kennedysaid he sees “no sign” that this willhappen.Asked if the greatest problemfacing students and young people istoo much radicalism, as suggestedby some of the mass media, or toomuch apathy, as suggested bylarge segments of the collegiatepress, Kennedy replied quickly:“Definitely the latter.”“A majority of students aren’tactively involved in anything,” heexplained. “The energetic, vocal,articulate, active minority is alien¬ated from society, but from thatgroup will come some of society’sI leaders.“That is unfortunate,” Kennedydeclared “because this alienatedgroup is only a minority.”Although he was pessimistic onthe positive—as opposed to re¬straining—influence which demon¬strations can have on policies likei Vietnam which enjoy majority sup¬port, Kennedy stressed studentscan have a political impact if theyorganize.“I think you can get actively in¬volved, you can have an impact,”Kennedy said. “The university stu¬dents can have a tremendous effectif they organize themselves.”“The group that’s more interest¬ed and more active than most stu¬dents, the group that’s now at theforefront, has given a differentcomplexion to student political in¬volvement. But if you got all stu¬dents interested and active thatwould be a helluva force,” he add¬ed.Kennedy said he didn’t “want toadvise anybody” on whether to joina New Left organization or workwithin the Democratic Party, al¬though, he added, “Of course, I be¬lieve in the Democratic Party.” Headded that the New Left “varies with individual groups — you can tcharacterize it as a whole.”Discussing protest in general,Kennedy declared, “You can’t justbe against something. It’s notenough to walk around with a pick¬et sign with a dirty word.“Nihilism is not a major politicalideology in America. The idea thatjust because someone is over 22 heis bad is not very productive. It’simportant to think about alterna¬tives, to offer alternatives,” hesaid.But while some commentatorscharge that protestors and the NewLeft generally have failed to offeralternatives, Kennedy said:“I’m not that critical of them (inthat regard). There are a lot ofprotestors who do have alternatives— I may not agree with them, butat least they have offered alterna¬tives.”Asked if affluence and the isola¬tion of many college campusesfrom problems like the urban ghet¬to will mean that this generationwill decide that “the comfortablelife would be the attractive andeasier alternative” to tackling na¬tional problems — a fear he voicedlast year — Kennedy replied, “It’stoo early to tell.”(This article is copyright, 1967, byTHE MICHIGAN DAILY. Permis¬sion to reprint granted to the Col¬legiate Press Service and its colle¬giate newspaper subscribers by THEMICHIGAN DAILY.)Friedman To SpeakOn Simons7 TheoryMilton Friedman, UC professorof Economics, will present thethird Henry Simons Memorial Lec¬ture at 8:30 pm Friday, in the LawSchool auditorium.Friedman, the Paul SnowdenRussell distinguished service pro¬fessor of economics, will speak on“The Monetary Theory and Policyof Henry Simons.” The lecture isopen to the public without ticketand without charge.The lectureship was establishedin 1956 by the Relm Foundation ofAnn Arbor, Michigan, to honor thelate Mr. Simons, a University pro¬fessor who served for 29 years onthe faculties of the Department ofEconomics and the Law School.MAROON - FOTA POETRY AWARDSto be announcedand presentedThurs. May 4, 7 p.m.Ida Noyes LibraryREFRESHMENTS SERVEDPOETS WILL BE ASKED TO READ THEIR POEMS.ALL CONTRIBUTORS SHOULD BE PRESENT.THE PUBLIC IS WELCOME. Hannah Arendt Terms Successful NationOne Which Knows Revolutionary Pastby RickThe nation which best un¬derstands its revolutionary tra¬dition and is best able to ex¬plain it to the rest of the worldwill be the nation that succeeds inthis world, Hannah Arendt saidSunday evening in her last publicappearance before leaving UC forthe New School of Social Researchin New York.“Revolution is the most topical ofall subjects, ” Miss Arendt said,and proceeded to trace revolutionshistorically.The world is faced with so manyrevolutions, she said, because theWest, in retreating from its imperi¬alistic history, has left as its legacythe idea of the nation state. Thevisible failure of the newly createdstates leads to revolution.REVOLUTIONS, as opposed toalterations in government struc¬ture, are a distinctly Western tradi¬tion, Miss Arendt observed. TheU. S. might do best to explain itssuccess as a nation as a directconsequence of its first revolution,Karl Weintraub NamedDonnelley History ProfKarl J. Weintraub has been ap¬pointed the Thomas E. DonnelleyAssociate Professor of History inthe College.The appointment is effective July1.Weintraub, known at the Univer¬sity for his teaching ability as wellas for his scholarship, has been amember of the faculty since 1955.The Thomas E. Donnelley Profes¬sorship, established in 1959, is inhonor of the late Thomas E. Don¬nelley, who was chairman of theboard of the R. R. Donnelley &Sons Company, Chicago.Donnelley was an active trusteeof the University from 1909 to 1938and an Honorary Trustee until hisdeath in 1955 at the age of 87. Pollackand the lack of revolutions sincethen, she noted.“In a generic sense, we definerevolution as coeval with history;this is false, though we can defineW'ar this way, because we knowwhen revolution in the modernsense first occurred.”Miss Arendt explained that theFrench Revolution was the firstrevolution in the modern sense.“The distinct quality modern revo¬lution possesses is noted in the say¬ing of Condorcet ‘The name revolu¬tion can be applied only to revolu¬tions whose aim is freedom," ”Miss Arendt said.EARLIER, she observed,revolution had only the sense ofrevolution implied by the motto onCromwell’s Great Seal “Freedomby God’s Blessing Restored.” This,she noted, refers to civil rights!and not political freedom, and istherefore not very different fromthe political ideas expressed byCharles I on the scaffold. Since theFrench Revolution, we have cometo associate political rights as wellas civil rights with freedom.COMPARING the French Revolu¬tion with the American Revolution,Miss Arendt found differences use¬ful in creating concepts of revolution. In the first state of the Ameri¬can Revolution, there was violence,and in the second, the constitutionof a new government. In theFrench Revolution, though, thefirst stage was the disintegration ofa constituted government and thesecond stage violence.“Revolutions always seem to suc¬ceed at the beginning not becausesomeone has seized power, but be¬cause the power is there, andsomeone picks it up in the street,”Miss Arendt said.Miss Arendt also discussed theattractions that revolution holds formen. Quoting a line from Vergil,Miss Arendt said that the ideas ofbirth, and rebirth, controlled byman, gives men the idea of creat¬ing something new and better.When man believes this, it becomesthe “ontological sine qua non.” forrevolution.BABY HUEYAND THE BABYSITTERSTHE ROVIN’ KINDTHE CHAMBERS BROTHERSTHE BUCKINGHAMSTHE EXCEPTIONSAND MANY OTHERSWide Open Wed. thru Sun. at 8 P.M.Plus ColorTV1 Boutique! Library! Soda Fountain! Bar! Scopitone!Advance price tickets on sale at all WARD storesand at Ticket Central, 212 North MichiganTo throw a Cheetah party for 50-2000, call Miss Prusa at M0 4-50512 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 2, 1967USYC—CIA Ties HintedIn Investigation ReportNEW YORK, N.Y. (CPS) —A report admitting possibleties between the Central Intel¬ligence Agency (CIA) and theUnited States Youth Council(USYC) has been issued by an in¬vestigatory commission appointedby the USYC membership.The commission was appointedMarch 4, after a heated meeting ofUSYC, a confederation of morethan 30 youth and student organiza¬tions.but THE COMMISSION failed\ 5 )0 uncover concrete evidence thatthe Foundation for Youth and Stu¬dent Affairs of New York (FYSA),USYC’s leading source of funds, isa CIA conduit.The report states that examina-jtion of FYSA’s files gave commis¬sion members “nothing to indicate jthat it had served as a conduit for |the Central Intelligence Agency”but that “in view of the testimonypresented to the commission andthe refusal of the Foundation to Jdisclose its sources of income, wedo not dismiss the possibility thatthese allegations may, in fact, betrue.”COMMENTED the commissionreport, “It is quite likely that theCIA is or has been interested in theprograms and projects of USYC. If.^o. die Council was and is now vul¬nerable and susceptible to any ef¬forts the government may havewished or wishes to make to influ¬ence its operations.”The commission recommendedthat the youth organization refuseto accept financial support from■ organizations, foundations, or per¬sons who refuse or fail to publiclydisclose the source of their in¬come” unless the full Council mem¬bership gives prior approval.According to the report, individu¬als who worked with the CIA whileassociated with NSA and thenworked for the USYC “denied thatthese (CIA) relationships continuedor existed during their term ofservice in the Council.” While those involved denied thattheir past association with the CIA“has in any way been reflected intheir work in the Council,” thecommission said, “it is quite possi¬ble the CIA influence was reflectedin their work, whether or not thereexisted either formal or informalcontacts with the CIA.”DESPITE conflicting testimony,the commission developed the opin¬ion that the current USYC presi¬dent, James Fowler, had not beenaware of CIA covert funding of pri¬vate organizations. Fowler waspreviously employed by NSA's In¬ternational Commission. Graduate Women UnhappyNew Housing Protest Mountsby Ken SimonsonA quiet year for the office of student housing has gone bysince last spring’s sleep-in protest in front of the administra¬tion building. Now a group of graduate women are up in armsabout their housing.A vast majority of the 96 resi¬dents of 5518-26 Ellis Avenue havesigned a petition in opposition tothe proposed conversion of theirbuilding to men’s housing next fall.The women, who were notified ofthe change by letter on Thursday, aday before the information becamepublic, were given a choice of mov¬ing to a new apartment building at1400 57th Street or to Harper Surf,at 5426 Harper Avenue.THE WOMEN SAY that the newchoices are less desirable thantheir present housing for several reasons.• Ellis is closer to campus andsafer. It is on the edge of the cam¬pus and the area is patrolled bycampus police. In addition, stu¬dents who stay on campus at nightcan get to the dorm without leavingcampus.• Ellis is less expensive than thenew apartment building. Doubles inEllis will cost $69 per personmonthly, excluding utilities.Three-bedroom apartments in 140057th will cost $260 a month, includ¬ ing utilities. They are suitable forthree to five occupants. However,the new building is unfurnished, ex¬cept for refrigerator-freezer andstove. Ellis is completely furnished.Since most of the women would beoccupying the new building for onlya year, buying furniture would beuneconomic.•There are better facilities at El¬lis than at Harper Surf. Everyapartment at Ellis has a kitchen,whereas Harper-Surf has only acommunity kitchen.• Most of the apartments at Ellisare doubles, which many graduatewomen prefer, according to JudySolow, one of the organizers of theprotest. Harper-Surf has just sin¬gles and 1400 57th is most suitablefor four occupants.Why DoYou ReadSo Slowly?A noted publisher in Chicagoreports there is a simple tech¬nique of rapid reading whichshould enable you to doubleyour reading speed and yet re¬tain much more. Most peopledo not realize how much theycould increase their pleasure,success and income by readingfaster and more accurately.According to this publisher,anyone, regardless of his pres¬ent reading skill, can use thissimple technique to improvehis reading ability to a remark¬able degree. Whether readingstories, books, technical matter,it becomes possible to read sen¬tences at a glance and entirepages in seconds with this meth¬od.To acquaint the readers ofthis newspaper with the easy-t" follow rules for developingrapid reading skill, the com¬pany has printed full detailsof >ts interesting self-trainingmethod in a new booklet, “Howin Read Faster and RetainMore,” mailed free. No obliga¬tion. Send your name, addressmid zip code to: Reading, 835thversey, Dept. 164-815, Chi-('ah(>, Ill. 60614. A postcard willdo. Alfred Hitchcock’s To CATCH A THIEFCary Grant and Grace Kelly on the Riviera. Tonight at Doc Films. Soc Sci 122, 59th and University. 6, 8, and 10 pm. 60 cents.Summervcscationitis.(How to spot and get rid of).Fluorescent fade-out.That's from being cooped up all winter.What you need for that sallow palloris some sunshine Vitamin D. There’s awhole lot of it available at SunsetBeach in Acapulco,The good books.They have the possibility of beinggood symptoms. That's if yousefek summer scholastic*. Say in'Mexico City. Or Acapulco^ Pallid peepers.There's no sparkle in those baby-blue1^eyes. It's been knocked out by all thoseexams. Get that vitality back. See whatgood is still left in the world. Go toExpo 67, Montreal,,Up lingo.vThey're letters from good buddletaway for the summer. The bestway to avoid them is not to bethere when they arrive. Be inPuerto Rico instead.Racquet squad.That's the tennis team In yourneighborhood during the summerA.You'd find snorkeling or scuba divingin the Bahamas would make playingtennis seem like last summer'*bad sport„College fatiguesThat'* the uniform you wore all semester,Get rid of those o.d.'* (olive drab*).Break out the white levis. And throw oqO colorful Mexican serape^ BIT Down.That's all you've known summerafter summer. A change of palat^would do you good. In Bermuda Orfew savory morsel* of Hopping Johrf[with a sauce of Paw-Paw Monte*pqpusually does the tricky©We want everyone to (ly VNotes If symptom* get worse, see your travel agent or call Eastern^CHICAGO MAROON • 3May 2, 1967New Housing—Usual PlanningA YEAR HAS PASSED since 500 students rallied to protestthe lack of adequate student housing, but one need only look atthe latest University plans for apartment and dormitory livingto see how little progress has been made.Usually the administration waits until considerably laterthan the end of April to announce its stop-gap measures de¬signed at putting a roof over everybody’s head. But in allother ways, the plans for a new student apartment building,an extra townhouse, and some reshuffling of graduate womenbear the usual characteristics of UC housing arrangements—very little for a very high price.The new apartment building is a case in point. It seems thatUniversity administrators should realize that $260 a month fora three bedroom apartment is far, far too much. The averageparent would realize it, and virtually all the students realize it.Yet, the University's answer to student demands for reason¬able living conditions at a reasonable price is a building of airconditioned, but unfurnished apartments; divorced from theuniversity house system, but restricted to women, and able toaccomodate five in theory, but only three in practice, becausesomeone thought that student apartments need master bed¬rooms. It is true that master bedrooms can accomodate two,but they can’t accomodate two comfortably under any othercircumstances but circumstances that we’re sure the Universitywouldn’t condone.THE MARYLAND AVENUE townhouse that the Universityhas bought is comfortable and large. The rent can be split to areasonable figure for each resident. But the university boughtone townhouse, which will affect the housing of a total of sixpeople.Also deserving of comment, is the decision to convert theEllis Avenue apartments to men’s housing, despite the fact theoverwhelming majority of the Ellis Avenue women residentswant to stay. The graduate women who live there now pointout that the apartments are comfortable, close to campus, andprovide a reasonably safe and well patrolled access to thequadrangles at night.Ellis residents are now circulating a petition asking that theuniversity retain the Ellis Avenue apartments for women’shousing. They have, however, only a slim chance of success.These decisions are made without student participation andapparently without any real concern for student’s needs andwishes. They’re usually enacted the same way.The UC experience in student housing is in its way one ofthe most forceful arguments on behalf of student participationin University decision making that can possibly be made.DECISIONS, LIKE THE ones announced last week on stu¬dent housing, are made after a consideration of both the re¬sources at hand and a definite list of priorities established inadvance. The current situation is such that adequate housingis at the very bottom of that list of priorities and nothingabout changing the situation. Until the situation is changed,students are going to every day appreciate anew the classifica¬tion of UC as one of the three schools in the country where onecan live with the least physical comfort—and, we might add,pay for the privilege.Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief . .David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanKenneth SimonsonExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterFeature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor ... .Edward ChikofskyAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsEditor Emeritus Daniel HertzbergThe Chicago Maroon, founded 1892, issued every Tuesday and Fridaythroughout the University of Chicago school year, except during thetenth week of the academic quarter and during examination periods,and weekly for eight weeks during the summer, by students at theUniversity of Chicago. Located in rooms 303, 304, 305 Ida Noyes Hall1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637, Distributed without chargeon campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood. Subscriptions by mail$6 per year. Charter member, United States Student Press Assn.Publishers of the Collegiate Press Service.CHICAGO MAROON May 2, 1967 GadflyHobson Answers CriticismsOf SDS Attack on O’ConnellMay I answer some of the criti¬cisms recently made of SDA sstatements on political bias in anadmissions case?SDS has been criticized for “de¬manding O’Connell’s head” op thebasis of rumors (David Richter inthe Maroon April 28). Donald Le¬vine (Gadfly, April 14) sees SDS’sactions in general as involving a“downgrading o f rationality”which “argues that. . .the Uni¬versity’s insistence on institution¬alized procedures for discussionand careful examination of all is¬sues is pedantic, time-consuming,and action-stalling.” These criti¬cisms involve questions ofstyle—how SDS acts and reachesdecisions, what Mr. Richter calls“the paranoid style.” They alsoinvolve questions of substance—whether there is anything inSDS’s charges.LET ME DISCUSS each ofthese in turn. What about the“paranoid style” and “downgrad¬ing rationality”? SDS has made acharge on the testimony of sixfaculty members; we believe ourinformation is accurate but arenot satisfied—we have asked fordisclosure of the document withMr. O’Connell’s comments.The University’s response hasbeen to invoke “the general valueconsensus prevailing in our socie¬ty,” “the right. . .to determinehow the pursuit of (its) goals is tobe perpetuated through the choiceof the succeeding generation ofscholars,” and othtr vague yetalarming phrases in support of itsright both to remain silent and(apparently) to exclude whomev¬er it likes. This amazing docu¬ment—the report of the Provost’sCommittee, which the Maroonshould certainly publish in full—seems (I emphasize) both to cor¬roborate SDS’s charge as to whatwas done and, what is worse, todefend the right to do it. Is thisresponse to be characterized as“insistence on. . .careful exami¬nation of all the issues”? Or asinsistence that the issues not bediscussed, that action is “pedan¬tic. . .and action-stalling” whenthe main problem is how to insu¬late admissions policy, and the of¬ficer chiefly responsible for it,from charges of having violated political rights? Who, then, has“downgraded rationality” in thiscontroversy—SDS, or the Admin¬istration?Does Mr. Richter think SDSwas lying about the six facultymembers and what they said? Ifhe does, let him say so. If not,what about their testimony? Mr.Richter says it is not proof. Ofcourse it isn’t; SDS’s demand fordisclosure is precisely a demandfor proof—or disproof. If Mr. Ri¬chter is concerned about proof, lethim endorse this demand. But isit reasonable to call a demand fordisclosure “paranoid”?THERE REMAINS THE ques¬tion of substance. Let us assumeMr. Levine is right about SDS’smotives. Let us go further: as¬sume that, like Karl Marx in thedemonology of Time magazine,SDS is upset for the sole reasonthat it has carbuncles on its ass.Still our charges stand and fall ontheir own merits—not on ours.This is what is most depressingabout the controversy: no one willdiscuss on their merits the ques¬tions of what has been done andwhat should be done. There isreason to believe the Director ofAdmissions and designate Dean ofStudents has written, reporting anapplicant’s statement that his fa¬ther was fired for political rea¬sons during the McCarthy period,“You can see what kind of familyhe comes from.” Madisonian ad¬missions spokesmen say suchcomments may have had no ef¬fect, that there are “ehfecks andbalances” in the admission proce¬dure. True—but ought one of the“balancing” positions to be occu¬pied by a biased man? Facultyliberals, whose heads I have seenjerk a full inch at the word “nig¬ger,” suggest that comments likeMr. O’Connell’s might be a "jeud'esprit." Tell that to this appli¬cant’s father! Some jeu; some es¬prit. Finally Mr. Levine, who de¬scribes himself as “a liberal edu¬cator,” shows a similar insensi¬tivity to libertarian values inmaking the controversy the oc-cassion for publishing a piecewhose effect is to back up the Ad¬ministration's view that the issueis not the occurrence of some¬ thing shameful, but the proprietyof making it public. Let Mr. Le¬vine, or Mr. Richter, publish theirarticles six months hence—I amnot suggesting that SDS doesn’tneed criticism—but let themspeak to the substantive issuenow.Precisely because society doesimpinge constantly on the Univer¬sity, SDS does not often have thepleasure of acting on a purely li¬bertarian issue. When this hap¬pens, it is all the more disheart¬ening that liberals like Mr. Levineshould totally abandon the field.THE ADMISSIONS controversyappears to be dying down. Mr.O’Connell’s position and—what isfar worse—the right to makeRed-baiting comments in admis¬sions documents seem to be in¬tact. Intact they will remain untilstudents and faculty make surethis sorry business is settledpublicly. The distressing articlesof Levine and Richter make suchan appeal look almost hopeless;but it is necessary to reiteratethat three central questions re¬main, which these articles neitheranswer nor even ask:Were six members of the Uni¬versity faculty lying in their re¬ports of the comments written byMr. O'Connell? Were they irra¬tional in concluding that the com¬ments were no "jeu d'esprit"?Were they guided—in Mr. Le¬vine’s happy phrase—by “passionwithout reason” in being shockedas hell?If the SDS statement is correctand if, as the xMaroon said editorially April 14, any admissions of¬ficer who writes comments suchas those quoted “is seriously in¬fringing the rights of an appli¬cant,” ought that officer to contin¬ue as Director of Admissions, orbe made Dean of Students?Regardles of who holds what of¬fice, and of SDS’s motives orstyle, does not the confidence ofthe whole community require thatafter deletion of all identifyingreferences, the document in ques¬tion should be made public?Christopher Z. Hobson(Mr. Hobson is a graduate studentin the Department of PoliticalScience and a member of Studentsfor a Democratic Society (SDS).)Letters to the EditorA New Bookslore Now!TO THE EDITOR:We want a new Bookstore now!Lots of other people want a newBookstore now too and some of, them have been doing thingsabout it, from bombs to informalpetitions. The time has come forall interested parties to organizetheir efforts. It is ridiculous toonce more catalog the Book¬store’s faults and again list ourgrievances. Many, probably most,people on this campus are agreedthat we need a new Bookstore; letus then get together to do every¬thing we can to get a new. Book¬store as soon as we can.We have several ideas, rangingfrom the obvious one of picketingand sitting-in to the possiblity ofsending letters to the past andprospective large money donorsto the University. However, thepoint of this letter to the Maroonis not to propound our ideas butto gather new ideas and a suffi¬cient number of people to imple¬ment them. For the University ofi Chicago to merit its claimed sta¬tus as the “Harvard of the Mid¬ west” it should be more Harvardand less midwest. , *There will be a meeting for allinterested people in the first floorlounge of Ida Noyes Thursdaynight at 8 pm.NOAH FRIEDKINKEN KAUFMANBILLY SALTERNothing InspectedTO THE EDITOR:I am writing in response toRandy Klein’s letter in the Ma¬roon of April 28 on behalf of bothMiss Lylas Kay, Director of Resi¬dence Halls and Commons, andmyself. Mr. Klein stated in hisletter that “three well-dressedmen have been wandering aroundPierce Tower, New Dorms andHitchcock Hall” and enteringrooms “under the pretense, ‘Wewant to see if your walls needwashing’.” Mr. Klein implies thatthe three “well-dressed men”were in the residence halls forreasons other than those stated.He is explicit in stating that theUniversity must have allowedthem to enter and in doing so cooperated in an invasion of pri¬vacy.As a matter of fact, the menwere in the residence halls tomake plans for the decorating tobe done during the summer. Ad¬vance notice had been given thatthey were to be there. Mr. Os¬wald, the Supervisor of Mainte¬nance for Residence Halls andCommons, with two painting con¬tractors, visited Snell-Hitchcockand Woodward (but not Pierce) toinspect walls so that they mightlist those that needed to bewashed and those that should bepainted. Signs announcing thatthey were to be in the dorms hadbeen posted several days in ad¬vance, and students had beenasked through them to cooperate.The policy is for men’s dormito¬ries to be visited in the morningsand those for women in the after¬noons, and this schedule was fol¬lowed.Let us assure you that nothingis inspected on such occasions butthe condition of the physical facil¬ities. It has long been our policynot to search student rooms eitherovertly or covertly.(Continued on Page Six)Wick, Vice Will Teach in SpringSoc Sci Division Plans New CoursesThe curriculum of the social sciences collegiate divisionwill feature a number of revisions and additions duringthe coming academic year, according to Master Donald N.Levine.The curriculum for Social Sci¬ences 121-122 is being basically re¬vised under the chairmanship ofDavid Orlinsky. The autumn quar¬ter will consist of reading in depthfive “eye-and mind-opening” books,while the winter quarter will be de¬voted to studying how social scientists investigate and obtain morereliable knowledge about socialphenomena.THE HISTORY of Western Civi-lizatioi course will offer two vari¬ants in the spring quarter, oneseeking to integrate materials fromAmerican history with those fromEuropean history during the mod¬ern period, the other viewing mod¬ern Euro-American history interms of a series of revolutions.The non-Western Civilization of¬ferings will be enriched by the ad¬dition, for the first time, of athree-quarter sequence, Introduc¬tion to African Civilization.New CoursesSeveral ‘‘advanced general edu¬cation courses” will be added, in¬cluding: Subjection, Domination,and Equality, to be taught by as¬sociate professor of political sci¬ence Suzanne Rudolph (winterquarter); Tocqueville, by RalphI.erner, associate professor of polit¬ical science (autumn); Professionsand the Individual, by assistantprofessor of social science JohnSims (spring); Education and So¬ciety, by Philip Foster, associateprofessor of education (winter);the University as a Community, byWarner Wick, professor of philoso¬phy and retiring dean of students,and James Vice, lecturer in the so¬cial sciences and assistant dean ofundergraduate students (spring);and Colloquium: Philosophy of theSocial Sciences, by Levine and Jo-M'ph Schwab, William Rainey Har¬per professor of natural sciences(spring).DESCRIPTIONS OF THESE andthe other courses offered next yearin the social sciences collegiate di¬vision may be found in thebrochure describing requirementsand courses prepared by the divi¬sion available in Gates-Blake 120.A number of the concentrationprograms will feature new coursesNEW BOOKSBY CAMPUS AUTHORSThe limits of Symbolism: Studies ofFive Modern French Poets, by BernardWeinberg, University of Chicago Press$10.00Dostoevsky: The Notebooks for Crime& Punishment - edited and translatedby Edward Wasiolek. University ofChicago Press $6.95GENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENTThe Universityof Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis AvenuePHOTOGRAPHYSmartly styled, sleek and streamlined,easy to use new Kodak Instamatic 10SCamera. Come to see this fashionablecamera in complete flash cube outfit.PHOTO DEPARTMENTUniversity ofChicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE and requirements during the com¬ing year. The psychology program,under the chairmanship of associ¬ate professor Salvatore Maddi, willoffer a new two-quarter introducto¬ry sequence, on the concepts andmethods of psychology; the se¬quence will be taught by a staffcomposed of members of the de¬partmental faculty. The public af¬fairs seminar, offered this year forthe first time by geography profes¬sor Gilbert White, will be offerednext year once each quarter.Group TutorialsAnother curricular innovationconsists of the institution of grouptutorials throughout the collegiatedivision. Up to six students maysign up for such tutorials by mak¬ing arrangements with a memberof the faculty on a list to be postedat the office of the Master at thebeginning of each quarter. The en¬tire faculty of the division of socialsciences is being canvassed to find I in the autumn quarter.volunteers for such tutorials nextyear. Each faculty member will beinvited to name one or more topics,books, or authors on which hewould work with a small group ofstudents during one of the quartersnext year. In some cases, thesegroup tutorials will deal with worksin one of the main European lan¬guages.Levine said he expects an in¬crease in the amount of studentparticipation in the work of the col¬legiate division. He has been meet¬ing during the last two quarterswith an Ad Hoc Student AdvisoryCouncil, composed of ten studentsfrom the various concentration pro¬grams. This group has helped inthe planning of collegiate divisionaldinners and the spring forum ser¬ies, and has produced a number ofpromising ideas for improving thecurricular and extra curricular lifeof the collegiate division.Next year, the student councilwill be transformed into an electivebody, with groups of students ineach of the concentration programselecting their representatives earlyCalendar of EventsTuesday, May 2MOVIE: To Catch a Thief. Doc. Films.6, 8. 10 pm. Social Science 122. 60c.LECTURE: “The Governmental andAdministrative Dimension of NewTowns," Robert Steadman, Committeefor Economical Development. BreastedHall, 1 pm.SEMINAR: “Recent Advances in Mole¬cular Mass Spectrometry.” F. W.McLafferty, Professor; Purdue Universi¬ty-FOLK DANCING: International HouseAssembly Hall 8 pm.LECTURE: “Synthesis of Natural Prod¬ucts, t,“ George H. Buchi, Professor,Department of Chemistry, Massachu¬setts Institute of Technology. Kent 107,8:15 pm.CONCERT: Contemporary ChambersPlayers String Quartet. Works by Nemi¬roff. Haydn, Blackwood, and Webern.Mandel Hall 8:20 pm.LECTURE: “Mexican and CentralAmerican Culture in a Crucial Stage:8000-5000 BC,” Jose L. Lorenzo, Direc¬tor, Mexican Department of PrehispanicMonuments. Breasted. 8:30 pm.MOVIES: Dance Films, Cloister Club,Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm. 50c.LECTURE: “The Gospel According toPeanuts,” Mrs. Robert Short. McGiffertLounge, 5751 Woodlawn. 8 pm.Wednesday, May 3MOVIE: "Each Dawn I Die" and“Quixote”. Doc Films. Social Science122, 7 and 9:30 pm. 60c.DISCUSSION: “The Function of BlackPower,” Richard Flacks, Department ofSociology. Fifth floor lounge. PierceTower, 7 pm.CARILLON RECITAL: Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel, Daniel Robins, Universi¬ty Carilloneur. 5 pm.LECTURE: “The Economics of Pover¬ty,” Eugene Smolensky, Associate Pro¬fessor, Graduate School of Business. 65E. South Water Street, 7 pm.Thursday, May 4FOLK DANCING: English CountryCINEMATOGRAPHERS!!You are invited to submit yourfilms for showing at Barat Col¬lege's NEW CINEMA '67 Satur¬day, May 7.We wish to show the world justwhat is going on in the field ofthe artistic film. Send yours!Have your say! Make a dent!Full personal credit givenProfessional HandlingReturn Postage Paid IfSent by Mail.Films must be received by May5. For more information write:LOUISE FARRELL orJANE STANLEYBARAT COLLEGELake Forest, Illinoisor call: ID 24444 Ext. 242 Dancers, Ida Noyes Hall, 8 pm.LECTURE: “The Renascent City andIts Complementary New Towns,’ PhilipKlutznick, new town developer. Breast¬ed Hall, 1 pm.BASEBALL GAME: vs. University ofIllinois, Chicago Circle, Stagg Field,musicologist. Ida Noyes Library, 3:30p.m.LECTURE: “Problems of Authenticityand Authorship in Music.” Alan Tyson,composer. Breasted Hall, 8 pm.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Hi 11 elHouse: 7:30 instruction, 9 pm dancing.LECTURE: "Trends in ContemporaryMusic,” Aaron Copland, composer.MOVIES: John Huston’s celebration ofthe courage of the soldier: "San Pie¬tro,” plus "Orange and Blue.” B-JCinema, 9 pm. Judson Dining Room.FREE.CONCERT: Jimmie Tarlton, sponsoredby Folklore Society. Ida Noyes, 8:15.$1.25, students, $1.LECTURE: “Income without Work?The Challenge of Abundance." RobertTheobald, British Economist. School ofSocial Service Administration. 8 pm.75c., students 50c.LECTURE: “Japan’s Role in the Mod¬ern World,” by Edwin Reischauer, Pro¬fessor, Harvard University. BreastedHall, 4 pm.POETRY CONTEST RESULTS:MAROON-FOTA Poetry Awards will beannounced and presented. Poets willread their poems. Refreshment servedIda Noyes Library, 7 pm.MLIBRARIAN TRAINEESLIBRARY TECHNICIANSOpenings atTHE CHICAGOPUBLIC LIBRARYFor graduating students from allfields of specialization.LIBRARIAN TRAINEEPOSITIONSProvide for work-study program inwhich Trainee completes require¬ments for Master’s degree in Li¬brary Science while acquiringpractical library experience.LIBRARY TECHNICIANPOSITIONSProvide an opportunity to assistprofessional librarians in an in¬teresting variety of library ser¬vices, without further educationalrequirement.INDIVIDUAL PREFERENCESCONSIDERED IN MAKING AS¬SIGNMENTS.EXCELLENT STAFF BENEFITSFor Information Please Contact:Mrs. Charlotte Shabino'Personnel OfficeThe Chicago Public Library78 East Washington StreetChicago, Illinois 60602Union Board Concerts of l.l.T. will present the Chamber Symphony ofPhiladelphia, a "superb virtuoso ensemble," on May 5, at 8:30 P.M. Theconcert will be held in the Hermann Union Building at 32nd & Dearbornon the l.l.T. campus. Tickets are $3.00. O'Reilly To PresentOne-ManAn unusual production ofShakespeare’s Othello will bepresented in the Law Schoolauditorium on Friday, May 5,at 3 pm. Entitled Othello, the Moorof Venice: A Dream Play, theadaptation of Shakespeare’s dramaof love and jealousy will be told ina series of flashbacks.The production of Othello wasconceived and produced by JamesO’Reilly, Director of the Universityand Court Theatres, and VirgilBurnett, Instructor in Art and inthe College.THE ADAPTATION, about anhour in length, employs modernEuropean staging techniques to ex¬plore the story from within themind of the chief character, Othel¬lo.Othello is the only character toappear on stage throughout theproduction. The voices of othercharacters are heard on tape re¬cordings, while color slides of Re¬naissance paintings and engravingsare used to highlight the themesand symbols of the play. 'Of hello'“Virgil Burnett and I felt that theessence of Shakespeare’s storycould be told from within the mindof Othello, so we decided to use thistechnique in our adaptation,”O’Reilly said.O’Reilly explained that, for ex¬ample, the play begins with themurder of Desdemona. As Othellobegins to think of the events thatled to the murder, a slide of Re¬naissance Venice is flashed on thestage backdrop."THE AUDIENCE IS visuallytransported into the scene,”O’Reilly said, “and as a result, intoOthello’s consciousness.”Allegorical engravings are oftenused to depict Othello’s feelings, headded.“We use engravings of demonsand monsters when Othello is first| tempted by Iago to think that hislove, Desdemona, is unfaithful tohim. These represent the pangs ofjealousy that are stirring withinOthello.”A performance for the generalpublic will be presented in the au¬ditorium of the Law School at 8p.m. Saturday, May 6. Tickets, at$1.50 each, will be on sale at thebox office.DanishModem(Interiorby Carlsberg—1ZO Years Old)Drink Carlsberg—the mellow, flavorful beer of Copenhagen.ffirewMi and bottled by the Carlsbtig Breweries, Copenhagen, Denmark • Carlsberg Agency, Inc., 104 E 40th St., N.Y.APPLICANTS WANTEDfor a challenging summer researchproject investigating aspects of U.S.policy in Viet Nam.Southeast Asia ResearchGroup & Information Centerfor application call: ES 5-1900May 2, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Letters to the Editor of the Maroon - * iU MS?1 HH(Continued from Page Four)We trust that students will notconfuse occasional visits to theirrooms by maintenance personnel,who have necessary tasks to per¬form, with “room searchers.” Werespect the students’ right to pri¬vacy. and we hope that studentswill understand our need to main¬tain the physical plant.To avoid misunderstandings (orembarrassment), Miss Kay andT have agreed that notices of suchtours will be posted more widelyin the future and that in women’shouses, a woman supervisor willaccompany the visitors.James e. newmanASSISTANT DEAN OFSTUDENTSPraise for LemischTO THE EDITOR:The first time I registered for aclass with Jesse Lemisch was anaccident; since then I’ve takenthree more classes from him.Jesse Lemisch is an aberrant atthis university. While a number offaculty members insist on havingunlisted telephone numbers, Jesseasks students to call him withproblems.One of the vague reasons for hisdismissal was offered by PeterStearns at a recent College Histo¬ry Group meeting when Stearnssaid that one criterion for con¬tract renewal was how well aprospective professor had cooper¬ated with the administration. Idon’t know how well Lemisch comes off at a cocktail hour, but Iwish that more professors had thesame communication and cooper¬ation with undergraduate stu¬dents. But, of course, studentsaren’t really necessary to a uni¬versity.Another sweetly vague reasonfor dumping Lemisch is that hishistorical methodology is as aber¬rant as his relations with stu¬dents. Lemisch has made thegreat error of seeing Americanhistory as something more than astring of anecdotes about Wash¬ington’s moral fiber and Lincoln’spulling a pig out of a mudhole.Maybe it is better to follow Boors-tin’s characterization of Quakersas masochists than to ask if a bel¬licose war machine might be sick¬er than a group of pacifists. AsBoorstin has shown, his thesis isclearly worth more cash on theacademic barrel head.While Jesse Lemisch teacheshere, it is possible to get a viewof America history considerablymore sophisticated than that of¬fered in high school. After heleaves we can all save tuition byauditing classes at Hyde ParkHigh.CHARLIE SMITHSPAC and DemocracyTO THE EDITOR:H. L. Mencken defined democ¬racy as “The belief that the peo¬ple know what they want, and de¬serve to get it, good and hard.” Ifthe 10% of the campus that votedfor SPAC candidates can be con¬ m MNMHNMiM - taw* w* .i mmmmsam wmmmthat its members are intellec--sidered as democracy, Mencken’swords are certainly being borneout. After only one meeting theNew Student Government is al¬ready on record as 1) opposingthe war in Vietnam, 2) believing tuals, and 3) in favor of dictatingto the faculty who their col¬leagues should be, in the case ofJesse Lemisch. Despite a lack ofMaroon coverage of such niceties and the Assembly’s dislike of re¬cord votes, the new Assemblypromises to be one of the greatestshows on earth. The campusshould come and watch.DANNY J. BOGGSNEW BOOKS OF CURRENT INTERESTThe Idea of the Humanitiesby R. S. Crane - 2 vol. set $15.00Treblinkaby Jean-Fracois Steiner $ 5.95The Psychology of Communicationby G. A. Miller $ 4.95General Book DepartmentTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue SomethingTo SingAbout . . .Bad D3AI£fi'§based on Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors.Performances on two consecutive weekends: April 28-29, May 5-6.Tickets $2.00 and $2.50, with a 50c student discount.TICKETS ON SALE AT THE MANDEL HALL BOX OFFICE.SPRINGTIME IS PIZZA TIME!Nicky’s Pizza And Restaurant"ROYAL PIZZA BY NICKY THE UNCROWNED PIZZA KING"Fast Delivery Hot from the Oven 1208 EAST 53RD STREET.V.W.V.VAV.V/AV/AWAV.VAV.V/AVV^AVWWAWAV.WATAWA'/AWASJNICKY'S TAKE-OUT MENUI Assortments Small Medium LargeCHEESE 1.40 2.20 3.20SAUSAGE 1.65 2.50 3.50ANCHOVIE 1.65 2 50 3.50ONION 1.50 230 3.30PEPPER 1.65 2.50 3.50MUSHROOM .: - . 1.65 2.50 3.50BACON 1.75 2.60 3.60HAM 1.75 2.60 3.60CHICKEN LIVERS 1.75 2.60 3.60PEPPERONI 1.85 285 3.85SHRIMP 2 00 3.00 4.00GROUND BEEF 1.65 2.50 3.50COMBINATION 2.50 3.75 5.00EXTRAS ADDED 35 .50 .75RIPE OLIVES EXTRA . 35 .50 .75ONIONS EXTRA 15 .25 .35 *####»#######################^We Put Cheese on All Our PizzasE We serve Royal Crown Cola, Diet-Rite Cola and Nehi flavors..vav.v.v.v.v.v.v.v,vavav.Wav.v/./.vw.v.,a\v/.v.v//.vav.v.vv,v.,.va,S CallFA 4-53406 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 2, 1967Music ReviewChicago Symphony Performance Lacks DelicacyNo matter what Verdi is reputed to have said about the importance of the box office, ap¬plause is still a pretty poor gauge of the success of a performance in artistic terms — asanyone who has ever listened to the Metropolitan Opera broadcasts can testify. The applauseat Saturday evening’s concert at Orchestra Hall was enthusiastic but the results were disap¬pointing. The Seven Early Songsby Allan Berg (which had neverbefore been performed by theChicago Symphony Orchestra) andBela Bartok’s Duke Bluebeard'sCastle (Opus 11) are, despite theirheavy scoring and sonorities,works which demand the utmostdelicacy, both in timing and ex¬pression, from orchestra and so¬loists. These qualities were missingin su'dh measure on Saturday eve¬ning that the remaining good workand honorable intentions went com¬pletely by the board.PART OF THE problem was evi¬dent from the beginning of theBerg songs which started off theprogram. Evelyn Lear was in finevoice, but it was occasionally evi¬dent that the orchestra was playingtoo loudly for her to be heard incertain passages.The Berg was sung in the origi¬nal German. This reviewer hadhoped that the deservedly in¬creased attention which Blue¬beard's Castle has been receivingrecently might render possible aperformance in the original Hun¬garian, but the decision was madefor the added intelligibility of anEnglish translation. Bela Balazs’text has been available for sometime in an excellent singing trans¬lation by Chester Kallman. Whythis was not used is a mystery tothis writer especially since the ver¬sion by Christopher Hassall whichwas chosen for this performance isso pitifully inadequate as to makethe occasional awkwardness ofKallman’s version seem eloquentby comparison.As for the performance: sincethis is a score one know fairly weU,one has no hesitations about report¬ing that M. Martinon shares re-s|x>nsibRity with Mr. Hassall forsabotaging the evening. There were, again, occasions wherein theorchestra entered ahead of thesinger, and instances of impreciseattack. Worse, M. Martinon’s tempiwere erratic and lacking in consist¬ency: one passage often would notbalance another and his stop-and-start phrasing threw effectivetiming to the winds, robbing thework of its shape. And it was loud: M. Martinon revels in orchestralsonorities. Seldom have I heard acomparable abuse of timpani andbrass.IT IS SAID that Sir ThomasBeecham was heard yeMing to hismen one evening, as he entered thepit to conduct a Gotterdammerungwith Frida Leider and Lauritz Mel¬chior in the cast: “These singers think they’re going to be heard to¬night, and we’re going to make jol¬ly well sure that they’re not!” Andso it was on Saturday evening. Iwas especially sorry for ThomasStewart who was frequently sinnedagainst by M. Martinon and Mr.Hassall. He often sounded harsh,and though he bad no trouble ridingthe orchestral storm, one felt theeffort it cost him. Under better cir¬cumstances he would probablyhave been a most mellifluous Blue¬beard. Miss Lear has all the mak¬ings of a sumptuous Judith and Ihave no doubt that her perfor¬ mance — as much as I heard of it— was a fine one. But Judith has alot to do in the lower half of hervoice and this was precisely whereshe was overpowered. Infuriating¬ly, what should have been her cli¬mactic high C at the opening of thefifth door was completely obliterat¬ed by M. Martinon and his orches¬tra. Naturally, the impossibletranslation and lush sonorities ef¬fectively prevented either singerfrom making anything of the text.These two fine artists deservedmuch better.W. J. Murnane^BUDGET<rouncMONEY,‘BUT eSOT ‘TOUR&UN!Live at Oneof San Francisco’sTwo Most PopularResidence ClubsLIVE for less money and havemore fun at night and week¬ends with other single men andwomen. Like young lawyers,secretaries, or graduate stu¬dents, to name a few.LIVE for at least $50 to $100per month less than the costfor rent and meals in an apart¬ment or hotel room.LIVE where your staff does allthe caring about grocery shop¬ping, cooking and cleaning.LIVE where just $95 a monthincludes meals by a chef,linens, maid service, cocktailparties, dances, color TV,switchboard and mail service...AND DATE-ABLE NEW PEOPLE!Write for free brochure:The Monroe, 1870 Sacramento,San Francisco 94109MONROEKEN MORE Wednesday: Underground, UndergroundBruco Baillie's QUIXOTE, an experimental journey across America. And Cagney in the stir again in EACH DAWN I DIE, the best prison pic of them all. Tomorrownight at Doc Films. Soc Sci 122, 59th and University. 7 and 9:30 pm. A0 cents.Mini-fareThe latest thing In student accessories. It comes halfway up to regularJet Coach fare, but it covers you all the way home.To qualify,you mustbe young—under 22. You must be able to fill out a simple form.Then ifyou have $3, you’re halfway home at half fare. You re a member ofTWA’s 50/50 Club...eligible for Mini-fare everywhere we go in theU.S. Stop in at your nearest TWA office for a fitting.•Barrlea mark owned eicluairely by Hsu World Airline*, lac. ^Welcome [TWAto the world ofTrans World Airlines*May 2, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Three UC Professors Named to NASThree UC faculty members in theDivision of Physical Sciences wereelected members of the NationalAcademy of Sciences at the 104thannual meeting of the NAS earlierthis week in Washington, bringingto 33 the number of UC facultymembers who are members of theAcademy.Charles S. Barrett, Eugene N.Parker, and Anthony Turkevichwere among the 45 members elect¬ed this year to the Academy, whichwas founded to encourage the ap¬plication of science to the improve¬ment of the general welfare. Al¬though established by a Congres¬sional Act signed by Abraham Lin¬coln, the Academy is a private in¬stitution, and acts as an official ad¬visor to the government whenaisked.Barrett is professor in the Insti¬tute for the Study of Metals, andthe author of The Structure of Met¬als, which is a standard work in the field of metallurgy. His recent jresearch has been concerned with!crystal structure determinations |and neutrons near absolute zerotemperatures.Parker, Professor in the Depart¬ment of Physics and in the EnricoFermi Institute for Nuclear Stud¬ies, received the 1965 Space ScienceAward of the American Institute ofAeronautics and Astronautics. Hiscurrent research is focused on the dynamics of solar, interplanetaryand geomagnetic phenomena.Turkevich is James Franck Pro¬fessor of Chemistry and in the Fer¬mi Institute. He received the Atom¬ic Energy Commission’s E.O. Law¬rence Award in 1962. His currentresearch is concerned with the in¬teraction of high energy particleswith complex nuclei, and onradio-activity induced in meteoritesby cosmic rays.Chess Team Undefeated; One Match LeftThe UC Chess Team is on a fivegame winning streak, and is unde¬feated so far this year.Last Saturday the team won atournament at West Lafayette, In¬diana. After Purdue defeated thej University of Indiana 4-1 Chicagobeat both Purdue and Indiana by 4-1scores. Mike Day, Harolc. Winston,and John Detrich won both theirgames while Barrie Richmond andRod Decker of Chicago scored 1-1. So far this year the ChicagoChess Team is undefeated inmatches with other schools. Chica¬go previously defeated Illinois In¬stitute of Technology 6-4, IllinoisTeachers College 8V2-IV2, and theUniversity of Wisconsin (Milwau¬kee) 3-2.The Chess Team's final matchwill be played in mid-May againstU. Illinois (Chicago Circle).a » MMaroon Classified AdsPERSONALSDear Phantom Envelope Stuffer: I re¬pent. Please write! Love S.NEW YORK-LONDON VIA TWA.Round-trip fare $255. Sept. 1-Sept. 27.Call 363-6451.YORK: Where's Dicky your boy, thatwas wont to cheer his Dad in mutinies?MargaretART L HIBIT: “FROM JEWISHPOEMS.” Lithographs illustrating se¬lected excerpts from the poetry of Yid¬dish writers- April 14-May 3 Hillel.Duchess: Make the bed, and leave theWorld for me to bustle in!Momento MoriKAMELOT Restuarant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% Discount far UC students.Disertation typist available. Reasonablerates. Marge X 8264Menageadeux? Why not, expecially inthe spring? Call Peter, 493-5750.KOINONIA: Call X3392 or HY 3-6451TODAY to reserve your ticket $2) toBlackfriars for Friday’s theatre party.Grad student desires mistress for May;Call Jack, 538-2721, evenings after 9.“Tra-la, It's May. The lusty month ofMay.”Make the scene with a car that’s clean!Girls’ Jr. Leader Corps is having a carwash on Sat. & Sun., May 6 & 7 from12-4. Give your car better pickup! Onlyone dollar! 1833 E. Tlst St. Free smilewith every wash.It's where IT is. Bandersnatch Discot¬heque. 9-12. Guys 75c, Girls, 50c.Lost, black umbrella at Rock. Chapel(4/1). Reward. Schulz, Pierce FA 4-9500Spring is a time for new beginnings.Everyone is on the prowl. Smile. May isa friendly month.Check out Bandersnatch Movie DEN-PALS Fine Flicks. Tues-Thurs: 8:30, 11.Wed-Fri. 11.What's happening? WED: comedyw/Jim Jackson, Walt Bradford.THURS: fold sound of Carol Rodgers.FRI-SAT. Walter Lowe plus. THE OTH¬ER SIDE. 1603 E. 53rd.The flowers appear on the *arfch; thetime of the singing of birds is come,and the voice of the turtle is heard inour land. Song of Solomon.John Huston’s brilliant portrait of a sol¬dier at war: “San Pietro.” B-J FREECINEMA 5/4, 9 pm, judson diningroom! FREEJOBS OFFEREDDo something different! Manage acoffee shop. Apply in person at THEOTHER SIDE. 1603 E. 53rdAPPLICANTS WANTED: challengingsummer research project investigatingaspects of US policy In Vietnam. South¬east Asian Research Group & Info. Cen¬ter. ES 5-1900TO SUBLET6 rms., 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, very spa¬cious and completely furnished, onHyde Park Blvd., available June 15-Oct.1, Call 924-9213.4 rms., completely furn., best suited forcouple. 6048 Dorchester. $100/mo. JuneRENT A TRUCK$^00 Per HourDO-IT-YOURSELFTRUC K RENTALSO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hour 15-Sept 15. 288-8561Lge. cool, neat bsm’t apt. 3',2 rms. June15-Sept 15. $85 . 53rd Sc Kimbark 643-35182>/2 rm. apt, furn., available June12-Aug. 31. 60th & Stony $80/mo. includ¬ing utilities. 288-0896 after 4 pm.5 rms. furnished, 2 blocks from UC.June-Oct. 752-8881.8 rms., 4 bedrms., 3 baths, furn. Nearlake Call 493-53447 lge. rms., 4 bedrms. 60th and Black-stone near IC and campus. $140/mo.643-02361 male rmmte., lge. well-furn. rm.,June 15-Sept 15, 54th Sc Kimbark. CallBob at 752-05535'i lge. rms., 1 maybe 2 air condition¬ers, television, good kitchen, and bath¬room. Convenient location. 684-13664*/2 room apartment available June21-Sept. 26. Some air conditioning.493-3153.2 bedrm. apt., 5400 Woodlawn. Call324-9444 evenings.4 rms. furnished, super lg. liv. rm., 2lge bedrms, lg. kitchen. AvailableJune-Sept.; 51st Sc Harper; $125/mo.493-5750.5 rms. Spacious and bright. $135/mo.268-1851.7 rms. 3 bdrms, porch, completely furn,new painted, vicin. 55th Sc Knwd. Je-/Sept. $160/mo. 643-7450.FOR RENTRm. and/or board, male students, spr.,summer, next year. BU 8-8495, 643-92206 rm. apt. available, So. Shore, 3bedrms., 2 tile baths, tile kitchen, furn.or unfurn. SO 8-54374 rms. $100/mo. Available immediately.Near Harper Court. Call 752-7049 after6.House to rent. Hyde Park 3 or morebedrms. June 1 occup. 288-4192Economical nearby clean quiet unfurn.apt. 3 rms. Private bath. $89.50 up.Free utils, and parking, porch, viewshopping. Williams. 6043 Woodlawn.WANTEDTuba or sousaphone player to play Sat.nights with well known Ragtime band.Pay top union scale. 825-5283.Young piano player to play 2-3nigtits/wk. with well known ragtimeTYPEWRITERThe new Smith-Corona full poweredelectric Model 250 has a full 12" pa¬per capacity, electric carriage returnand repeat ke^s. It is designed es¬pecially for office and home use andhas all the features of standard of¬fice electrics at only half the cost.Time payment plan for students, fac¬ulty and employees. Come in for afree demonstration.Typewriter DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue r if. : j*band. Pay top union scale 825-5283 13'2 rms. Campus vicinity.June 30. Call 684-8260 OccupancySummer sublet for June and July for Uof Pa Law School student and wife.Write Robert Glass, 532 Pine St., Phila.,Pa., 19106 immediately.Fern, rmmtes. beginning May or June,for summer. $45/mo. 667-2145.Fern, rmmts. for summer possibly nextyear. Close to campus. Own room.643-0358Rmmte wanted for summer and nextyear Call Kate Sillars, 363-2294 eves.Student to share 4 rm. furnished apt.this summer, possibly next year. OwnBedrm., 61st & Harper. $62.50/mo. CallDavid 494-5750.LEAVING? Hyde Pk apt. wanted by7-1. Any gd. value. 2>2-8 rm. 752-3950.Male grad. stud, to share 4 bedrm. apt.$55. Summer and next year. 493-2822.FOR SALE1/5 share International 505 sailboatMooring in Jackson Pk. Harbor. $280Call Dan X 3970 or 752-5205.Must sell Citroen 2 CV. Inexpensive363-8809 eves. $50 or bestKarmann-Ghia, ’63 convertible, BlaupAM-FM, white. Call Bob at 752-0553.Component sound system Amp-AM FMStereo tuner, 2 speakers. Gerrard 50table. $150 All or nothing. MU 4-1490Furniture,363-2592. odds and ends. Cheap.’59 Volvo. Must sell immediately fornext month's rent. $175 call MU 4-1490.Selling Out: tons of interesting books.50c each. 2915 W. Cermak Rd. Chicago762-2337. Open 7 days/wk. 11 am-7 pm.ClassifiedVespa 150 cc. mot. scooter. Very goodcondition. $255-instruction. After 6. R. jSchrag 684-4204.White ’61 Corvair Under $100. ContactN. Dickler 684-4204 at dinner- time. THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59th STREET AND WOODLAWN AVENUESUNDAY AFTERNOON AT 3:30MAY 7THE ROCKEFELLERCHAPEL CHOIREDWARD MONDELLO. Organistwith members ofTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAunder the direction ofRICHARD VIKSTROMTHE NATIVITYas sung by the shepherds VIRGIL THOMSON(World Premiere)Commissioned by the Women's Board incelebration of the 75th Anniversaryof the University of ChicagoCONCERTO FOR ORGAN, STRINGORCHESTRA & TIMPANI FRANCIS POULENCHARMONIEMESSE FRANZ JOSEPH HAYDNNeva Pilgrim, Soprano Charlotte Brent, Mezzo-sopranoWalter Carringer, Tenor Henl Noel, BaritoneTICKETS; Reserved $4.50 General Admission $3.50 UC Fac/Staff$3.00 All College and University Students $2.50ON SALE AT: TICKET CENTRAL, 212 N. Michigan Ave.University of Chicago Bookstore, 5802 S. Ellis Ave.Cooley's Candles, 5210 S. Harper AvenueWoodworth's Bookstore, 1311 E. 57th StreetMAIL ORDERS TO: Oratorio Festival5810 S. Woodlawn AvenueChicago, Illinois 60637Please make checks payable to the University of Chicago andenclose stamped, self-addressed envelope.> - +Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the b«*t,and fix the rest^ foreign cor hospitol PETERSON'SUltra-Modern Storage Facilities Protect Your Possessions-«» "CONTAINERIZED CARE"Our beautiful new warehouse features every Our "Containerized Care" eliminates piece-by¬advance in scientific storage . . alarm gong, piece re-handling . . . assures maximum speed,anti-fire sprinklers, humidity control, insulated safety, economy. Each item is wrapped, andwalls, dust-free floors ... to mention a few. padded then packed in giant, sturdy containers.PETERSON moving & storage co.DAILY PICKUP IN UNIVERSITY AREA646-4411 Authorized Agent for United Ven linesServing the Greater Hyde Park Area Since 17HIII. MC 19918 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 2, 1967