JChicago Maroon WEEKENDEDITION75th Anniversary YearI Vol. 76-No. 54 The University of Chicago Friday, May 5, 1967Pressure Moves WeighedAt First Meeting of SABby Michael KraussAt its first meeting last night the Students Against theBookstore (SAB) discussed tactics to be used in pressuringthe University administration into quick action on the Book¬store. :Headed by three second year stu¬dents, Billy Salter, Noah Friedkin,and Ken Kaufman, the group isseeking to coordinate the efforts ofthe many ad hoc groups and indi¬viduals who have voiced concernover the University Bookstore. Thekind of merchandise available, thehigh prices, and the shortage ofstaff have been a subject of con¬cern for twenty years, Salter as¬serted, but the present imminent |danger of the building crumblingover the heads of employees andpatrons has brought the old prob¬lems into sharper and more im¬mediate focus, he continued.THE GROUP WILL try to gener¬ate interest in the problem, andwill be largely concerned with“digging up embarrassing facts.” , main open some evenings.SAB feels certain that the adminis- j predicts that the final report will | involved on the Asian mainland,tration is aware of the “deplora-i probably include similar proposals.1 but we should maintain the Seventhble” state of the Bookstore, and is "Bridge Between Worlds'E. Reischauer on Japanby John MoscowJapan, in the future, will serve as a bridge between the two halves of a badly dividedworld, according to Edwin 0. Reischauer, former U.S. Ambassador to Japan and UniversityProfessor at Harvard.Speaking to an overflow crowd of more than 300 at Breasted Hall yesterday, Reischauersaid that, ‘‘the world is divided —Bookstore view several ways—there is a rich, welldeveloped, prosperous, modernNorthern hemisphere, including Ja¬pan. There is a white, Western civi¬lization, which does not include Ja¬pan. Japan’s role in the modernworld is to bridge the gap betweenthe various worlds.”"JAPAN,” CONTINUED Reis¬chauer, ‘‘is a great inspiration toother Asians because she hasshown that a non-Western land canachieve the same prosperity as anycountry in the West.”The former Ambassador attackedthe American presence in SouthVietnam, but felt that the U.S. hadj a definite peace-keeping role inSalter: Asia. ‘‘We must not be militarilyanxious to remedy it. The problemas they see it is to convince theadministration that the projectshould be given priority over var¬ious other endeavors for which Uni¬versity funds are earmarked. Copland Cites Music Trendsby Roger BlackAaron Copland, the American composer speaking as a spectator rather than a partici-Within the next two years the pant surveyed “Contemporary Music Trends” in a talk last night before 200 students.tass°H„sIMta!'1or “When people go to New York to go to a show, they look up the latest show,” Coplandof a surgical ward, so the problem said. “But for some curious reason they have great resistance to anything new in music,of finding a new location cannot be j They j00k on music, he said, aspostponed much longer. i “a warm bath—music to get intoA student faculty committee ! and lolI around in. They don’t wantheaded by Richard Wade, Profes-1 tQ be disturbed ”sor of History, has submitted a pre. j COPLAND CHARACTERIZEDliminary and confidential report toa planning commission. According American musicians m the twentiesto Wade, a final report, to emerge an< afterwards in tuns ow ithin a week or ti™. will include ?tteInPts to f1 "ay tr0™ ,hf„ hot'sueh specific proposals as possible bouse sound of the noneteen cen-locations. tury. “In fche twenties he said, withSalter, who claimed to have read the influence of jazz, music took onthe report, said that Wade’s com- new rbytfoms, melodies, and haijmittee has been observing other monies, and thieu out the odcollege bookstores; he said it in¬cluded recommendations that thelarger University community deter- forms.In a question and answer periodCopland was asked to tell somemine which books will be made ! thing of the part he played in the course to the generation of thetwenties,” he said. ‘‘I thought a lotin those days of writing a particu¬larly American music. ... Ofcourse it was jazz that appeared tobe the key to the situation.”Copland said Chat people tend tobreak his work into two parts, theunaccessible music (such as thelater serial pieces) which “somepeople like and some people aremystified by,” and the accessiblemusic (such as Music for Theater)Which “some people like and some who think that “since it’s music, —naturally it’s meant for everybodyto love.” But, he said, there is noreason why there shouldn’t be dif¬ferent music for different things.THE FIRST IMPORTANT com¬posers to revolt from the nineteenthcentury, Copland said, wereSchoenberg and Stravinsky. He de¬scribed Schoenberg as “an un¬happy German” who was thoughtof by traditionalists as a destroyerbut who worked hardest to build.”Copland said that Schoenberg, inavailable and that the bookstore re- music he discussed. “I belong, of it.” There are some, Copland said,people think perhaps that I inventing the twelve tone method,shouldn’t have gotten involved in i “emancipated the dissonance as-» -» • ■» I Irvnrf n c* if c* n f i cifi rrrl f k A nAmnAPAt* ^Program Slated for Anti-War Inquiryby Ken Simonson dents to agree not to attend regularSix workshops, a seminar on classes and/or attend special Viet-„ t,,. c •, j ((4 nam classes. The letter to the fac-{ otests fail, and a town u^y askS them t0 suspend classes,meeting,” possibly featuring hold special classes even if they doVale professor Staughton not normally teach on Wednesday,Lvnd, are planned as features Meni ,he workshops °r g° t0 theof next Wednesday’s Day ofInquiry on the war in Vietnam.Organizers of the inquiry are at¬tempting to gather support fromfaculty and students. Yesterday, a “town meeting.The organizers aim to solicit fur¬ther- support by means of a leafletto be distributed Monday. Prelimi¬nary discussions may also be heldin the dormitories on Tuesday,fetter was sent to all faculty mem- A FORUM on the responsibilitybers asking them to co-operate of intellectuals in anti-war activityW|ih the program by canceling may include Saul Bellow, novelist^■ and professor on the committee onsocial thought.John Dolan, assistant professore| isses or holding instead specialemsses on Vietnam. The letter wassigned by professor Howard Brof-'k.v, Marlene Dixon, John Dolan,hichard Flacks, Alex Orden, Miltontosenberg, Melvin Rothenberg,Hermanfhoa ms. S i n a i k o, and Peter of philosophy, and Leo Schlosberg,a third-year student in the college,will lead a workshop on draft resis¬tance.A liberal Democratic politician,PETITION is being circulated as yet undecided, and representa-ainoiig the student body asking stu-' tives of the Committee for Inde¬ pendent Political Action, will parti¬cipate in a workshop on electoralpolitics.Seminar and "Town Meeting"A “Vietnam summer” workshopwill deal with ways in which stu¬dents may engage in anti-war ac¬tivity in the U.S. this summer. Anassistant to Clark Kissinger, direc¬tor of a national Vietnam summerprogram, will attend.Participants for the seminar onwhy protests fail have not been set.The “town meeting” is tentative¬ly planned for 3:30 in Mandel Hall. long as it satisfied the composer.The major drawback Copland sawin Schoenberg’s works was thatthey were tinged with nineteenthcentury romanticism.It was Stravinsky, Copland said,who made the first clear breakwith this romanticism. Stravinsky’sfirst, extremely exciting works,such as Petrouchka and Rite ofSpring were free of the “hothousesound.” Copland explained Stravin¬sky’s work during the thirties,which used almost eighteenth-century forms, as even more cou-cious attempts to break with thenineteenth century romaticism.Copland went on to discussSchoenberg’s immediate followersThe meeting will include reports on .the workshops and speeches by one! Webern and Berg. Webern, he said,or two nationally-known figures, perfected the twelve tone method,Lynd, who went to North Vietnam bjs discontinuous, “atomized,”last fall without government per- musjc and helped to make “a newmission, is considered a likely „ ,speaker. The meeting will conclude ldeal- Copland connected Stock-with a speech by Jeff Blum, SG hausen and Boulaez, whom he dailypresident and organizer of the in- called “annoying young men.” with the treatyquiry, on “Where Do We Go from ’ ‘ ! , w.th the US may be unilaterally dejjere?»> (Continued on Page Four) 1 nounced by either party.Fleet offshore as a stabilizing influ-' ence.”Reischauer was especially pes¬simistic about American involve¬ment in South Vietnam. “We tendto have a gloomy view of the Asianhalf of the world due to the tragicwar. The instability of most of thenew nations gives us a bad pic¬ture.“I am greatly worried aboutwhat we might do,” he continued.“Escalation of the war by invadingthe North or by attacking Chinawon’t win for us. That is fightingthe wrong war in the wrong place.“What is more frightening isWhether we win, lose, or draw, theexperience may prove so frightfulthat we might withdraw from ourpresent overcommitment to ser¬ious undercommitment in develop¬ing underdeveloped nations. Thisisolation is the largest cloud on thehorizon.”REISCHAUER STRESSED theimportance of nationalism in Asia,saying “Nationalism stands strong¬ly against any one wave, any onenation dominating Asia.”Japan, according to Reischauer,will be one of the most importantinfluences in leading the Asianbloc. It has, presently, the fourthlargest economy in the world to¬day, surpassed only by the US, theUSSR, and West Germany. Its100,000,000 people produce morethan the 700 million of China, morethan all of Latin America, morethan twice as much as Africa, hesaid. This economic dominance, hepredicted, will lead to Japanesedominance in Asia.The principle force acting againstsuch dominance, Reischauer main¬tained, is Asian distrust of Japandue to her militarist position beforeand during World War II.Discusses Internal FactorsReischauer went on to describesome internal factors. He stressedthe stability of Japanese democra¬cy, but derided the idea that de¬mocracy was new to Japan whenthe Americans occupied the coun¬try. “One does not export democra¬cy. It must be a homegrown com¬modity.”IN JAPAN IT WAS homegrown,he asserted. As early as the 1870’sformer leadership groups demand¬ed a share of power,” and due topeculiar circumstances, got it. Bythe 1920’s there was a viable parlia¬mentary system that lasted untilthe military started a swing back.“After 1945 they were able to refur¬bish their own democracy.”“Despite the fact that the Japa¬nese democracy is at least as sta¬ble as those of Germany, Italy, andFrance, its basic problem is one ofstability. There are deep divisionsin Japan—between the conserva¬tives and the Marxists.”The conservatives favor continu¬ance of the treaty with the UnitedStates, while the Marxists view theUS as the source of most worldproblems. “The Left has a targetSpeaks at SSAMan Must Have Honesty—TheobaIdby Michael Krauss"The time has come to gamble on the ability of man to grow up, to mutate, and to adaptto the world around him, and to do it in a hurry.”This is how Robert Theobald, author and chief spokesman for a nationwide guaranteedincome, summarized the world situation today.Speaking^^t^night orientation and drastically alter its , meat of the American public of his Student Homosexual Defense LeagueRecognized as Legitimate by ColumbiaService * Vi OJTheobald called the basic obstacle Present system of values,to social change a lack of educa- “This must come about withintjon the next two years,” he asserted,“As a result of our educational j ‘'because afterwards the world willand social systems every person j have degenerated into a struggle ofhas a different view of reality, and rich against poor, white againstno one can understand or tolerate non-white, and it will be too late,another’s views. “Unfortunately,” THEOBALD is currently organi-he continued, “there is enough re- zing a project to accomplish this,inforcement from reality to sustain Through the mass media. Throughall these different views.” contact with as many secular andAccording to Theobald, mankind religious organizations as possible,must undergo a psychological re- he hopes to inform a major seg-Flacks Sees Potential for Black Power"The real gap between the come the psychological setbacks ofNegro and the white has not' '^longing to a suppressed group, , . „ . , ..,i. „ and to identify with their race,changed since the mid-fifties,” i t .., , „1 1 FLACKS SAID that the idea of aaccording to Richard Flacks, j ]0eaj political autonomy for the Ne-an assistant professor of sociology. gro community goes against theFlacks, speaking on “The Func¬tion of Black Power” at PierceTower, Wednesday night, said thatthe first need in the Negro commu¬nity is to form an “independent or¬ganization which has significant po¬litical power.”ACCORDING TO FLACKS, thecivil rights movement has done agreat deal in the way of achievinglegal equality for Negroes, but thishas not prevented the relative dete¬rioration of the Negro’s social andeconomic status. Flacks main¬tained that Negro leaders seeking“Black Power” see this phenomen-om as stemming from a lack of!political and economic power.Flacks described the meaning ofthe Black Power movement asthreefold. He said that it is: 1.)seeking “control over institutions inthe community that effect the Ne¬gro,” 2.) seeking “self determina¬tion for Che community and its re¬sources,” and 3.) involving “theemergen ce of vocal youngNegroes” who are able to over- present trend in American society,whichis toward centralization. Healso expressed concern over thewhite power structure’s response tothe Negro drive in this country. Henoted that two major black “legiti¬mate representatives,” Adam Pow¬ell and Julian Bond, have had trou¬ble keeping their seats.Flacks went on to say, “If wecould get out of Vietnam and real¬locate the funds spent over there toreduce the polarization in our so¬ciety, there would be a great relax¬ation of racial tensions.” views by autumn of this year. Atthis time he will present a series oftelevision shows on the CBS-TVnetwork to educate the public abouthow to relate to a technological so¬ciety.Theobald said that the organiza¬tions which are presently attempt¬ing to create social change are“thoroughly inefficient” becausethey do not attempt to change thevalues of the people in the rightway.He went on to say that “manmust be honest, for an operationalsocial system must be based onhonesty.” He must be humble or“he will upset the ecological bal¬ance of the world,” and he must be“loving, not hating.”“Man is now profoundly proud,”he continued, “and he is involvedin the process of destroying theworld... .He is the most efficientparasite invented, and like all par¬asites, the more efficient he be¬comes the closer he will come toeliminating the source of nourish¬ment.”THROUGHOUT his lecture Theo¬bald stressed the necessity of agovernment-sponsored guaranteedincome, based on the idea that “aman is entitled to his money re-1gardless of his condition.” The Student HomophileLeague, an organization to im¬prove the status of the homo¬sexual in American society,has been granted official recogni¬tion as a campus group by Colum¬bia University.The league is not a social organ¬ization, but rather views its roleas primarily educational, on thepremise that all the abuse homo¬sexuals suffer comes from un¬founded fears based on ignorance.It will also seek to represent anddefend homosexuals in conflictswith prejudiced authorities.Leadership of the group is evenlydivided between homosexuals andheterosexuals. Prominent student figures at Columbia, sympatheticto the group’s situation, helped it inits fight for recognition.THE IDENTITY of the group’smembers is kept strictly confiden-j tial and the League had been func¬tioning underground before its rec-ognition. It has another under-f ground chapter at the University ofHartford and plans to establish newunits at major colleges and univer¬sities around the country includingUC.The League denies the assump¬tion that homosexuality is a sick¬ness but warns that many homo,sexuals, subjected to society’s sus¬picion and discrimination, becomeconvinced that they are not reallyhuman beings, having the potentialfor a productive and positive Me.FOTAFilms in DepthMAY 8Antonioni’sEclipse8 pm, Cloitster ClubINH—*0*A Preview and Dinner Discussionwith film critic Maurice Fargewill be held the day of eachshowing, 4:30 p.nt. at ChapelHouse, 5810 Woodlawn.Sponsored by the Interfaith Committeefor the Festival of tha Arts 1967 MEET YOUR PERFECT DATE!You too can be amongst the thousands of satisfied adults. LetDateline Electronic computers programmed for women ages 18 to45 and men 18 to 55 take the guess work out of dating.Continuous matching with a new, expanded program with enroll¬ment fees reduced to $3.00 for adults ages 18 to 27, and $5.00 foradults over 27.For quick results send for your DATELINE ELECTRONICquestionnaire today. No obligation. RESEARCH INC. (CM)Strictly confidential. P.O. Box 369,Name Chicago, III. 60645Address For Add. Info. Cal)City State Zip Code.... 271-3133STRIKEA Wow against inflation. Pay less foryour bicycle—arbitrate with us today.Lowest prices for new Carlton, Raleigh,Falcon, Gitane, Ranger and Robin Hoodbicycles. Touring and competition equip¬ment. "Factory trained" mechanics. Usedbicycles. Free delivery.Turin Bicycle Co-Op1952 N. Sedgwick VvH 4 3865M-F 2:00 - 8:30 Sat. & Son. 10-8Closed Thursdays. In Spring, 1965, University Extension inaugurated the MONDAYLECTURES, a series designed to bring together the whole uni¬versity-undergraduates, graduate students, faculty members,and members of the community—with distinguished scholarsand scientists, to initiate a new discussion on the nature of man,his place in the universe, and his biological, intellectual, andsocial potentialities. The success of the initial series led to itsestablishment as a permanent feature of campus life.Admission to the series is $10 to the general public. A num¬ber of regular series tickets have been made available, on aquota basis and without charge, to students and faculty. Since afew seats are generally available at each lecture, “stand-by”tickets have also been distributed to students and faculty. Thesetickets admit holders to whatever vacant seats remain at 8:00F.M., or failing that, to a seat in an overflow room where thelecture and discussion may be heard over a loudspeaker.All regular tickets for the current MONDAY LECTURES havebeen distributed. Stand-by tickets are being distributed at theInformation Desk, Administration Building and at the Center forContinuing Education, Room 121, to students and faculty untilthe supply is exhausted. Remaining lectures include:Lawrence S. Kubie May 8The Concept of Changein Human PsychologySherwood L. Washburn May 15Evolutionary Thoughtson Human NatureRobert Gomer May 22The Tyranny of ProgressTHE MONDAY LECTURESLaw School Auditorium 8:00 P.M. People seldom see itit's turned on. It’s that small.Then they can’t see anything else.It sounds that big.STORE HRS:Mon. a Thor*.10-9Tu#*., W««l., Frt., Sat.10-6.30The KLH Model ElevenStereo Record Playing System.Here’s a portable record player that’s really portable.Just 28 pounds.But it does away with the old wive’s tale that you needbig hunks of equipment to get big sound.It’s the KLH Model Eleven. A component stereo recordplaying system in a handsome suitcase.It has everything you need to enjoy stereo or mono records.It’s got KLH quality. Throughout.There are specially designed KLH full range speakers; adistortion-free solid state amplifier; an automatic turntablecustom-built for KLH by Garrard; magnetic cartridge withdiamond stylus; inputs for tuner and tape recorder, and manyother features.Come down to the store. Listen to the big sound of thelittle Eleven.Bet you run out of the store with one. And you won’t needtrack shoes or muscles. It’s that light So is the price.Just $199.95.Stereo FM »269w48 E. Oak St.Di 7-41502035 W. 95th StPR 9-6500r/C SYSTEMSHIGH2 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 5, 1967Fromrehearsal hallto perfection 'to performance.mrwowpoks, * MCSfllM MOONSCHUHfv** «vi fcHO OASClftlO*Despite Petition, ProtestsAdministration Still Firm on Housingby David L. AikenAdministration officials donot appear likely to reversetheir decision to turn over theUniversity-owned apartmentbuilding at 5518 Ellis to boys, evenafter a petition and protests fromthe graduate women who are nowliving there.There is a possibility, however,that girls who want to stay in Elliswill have one section of the build¬ing reserved for them. James E.Newman, Assistant Dean of Stu¬dents for Housing, said yesterdaythis compromise is “under consi¬deration.”Almost all of the approximately80 women now in the Ellis buildingsigned a petition protesting thechange, in Which graduate womenwill be housed in Harper Surf at54th and Horper, at the buildingwhich is now under constructionat 57th and Dorchester. The Ellisbuilding will be turned over to undergraduate men, under the ad¬ministration’s plan.ELLIS RESIDENTS Paula Mei-netz and Judy Solow took their pe¬tition to Newman and to Dean ofStudents Warner A. Wick thisweek, but reported they did not getany satisfaction.The petition said that the Ellisbuilding is closer to campus thanHarper Surf, less expensive thanthe new building on 57th, and hasbetter facilities than either.Miss Meinetz said that the 57thstreet building will have one “mas¬ter bedroom” and two smaller bed¬rooms, each of Which is smallerA Laughing.Slashing Show"- N.Y. TIMESm/&b\wh/vt a loveut wur«*« + ***##*#***********starring TERRY LOMAXOpening May 5GOODMAN THEATRE200 S COLUMBUS DRIVE • CE 6 2337 than the two rooms in each apart¬ment at Ellis. To afford the $260rent at 57th street, she said, fourgirls would have to live in theapartment, with one girl sleepingin the dining room.Newman said It was decided touse the new 57th street building forgirls because it would offer bettersecurity. When this decision wasmade, he explained, it was felt that“the best available building”should be turned over to men, tokeep a balance in facilities for thetwo sexes. Ellis was felt to be themost appropriate building for themen, Newman said.Girls Not ConsultedThe girls now living in Ellis werenever consulted about the change,Newman conceded. He explained 85to 90 percent of the women in Ellisdo not live there more than oneyear, either because they are at the University only for a one-yearMA program, or because they findother facilities.Other groups, however, were con¬sulted in the course of the adminis¬tration’s deliberations about nextyear’s housing plans, Newmansaid. These groups included Stu-d e n t Government, Inter-HouseCouncil, and the committee of pres¬idents of women’s dormitoryhouses.NEWMAN ALSO mentioned thatmost graduate women seem to pre¬fer single rooms, according to re¬sults of questionnaires that thehousing office sends to enteringstudents before they arrive. MissMeinetz remarked, however, thetwo rooms in the apartments in El¬lis are always used as two separatebedrooms, never as “living roomand bedroom,” as the questionnaire| states.SATURDAYMAY 6Everyone 18 or over isinvited to aPSYCHEDELICMIXERfrom 8:30 p.m. until 1:00 o.m.on the 11th floor — South Towerof theSHERATON-CHICAGO HOTEL505 North Michigan AvenueSTROBE LIGHTSThe entire ballroom will bealternately flooded with lightand completely blacked out.Each period of light will lastonly a fraction of a second.You will be able to see thepeople around you only duringthat portion of each secondwhen the lights are on. Every¬one s motion will therefore ap¬pear to be broken into a seriesof "still shots."Because the periods of lightwill be synchronized to the beatof the music, you will find your¬self immersed in a unique andcompletely rhythmic environ¬ment. You will not only hearthe rhythm and feel it, you willsee it!WCFL DISC JOCKEYDICKWILLIAMSONwill be your host.C ASUAL DRESS is encouraged,but suits and dresses areO.K.,too. STAG OR DATE (stag pre-£ terred.) BAR OPEN.“ N you need more informationphone 726-3285.»••••••• I WANT TO KNOW(How Citizen Exchange CorpsHelps Americans Find Out)IF RUSSIANSHAVE HORNSSend me FREE reprints of N.Y. Times articles and editorialstelling about CEC, a non-profit, tax exempt foundation.Tell me how CEC brings together Americans and Russians ofall ages and occupations to meet their counterparts in both theUnited States and the Soviet Union . . . and how I can partici¬pate in this program. 3 WEEK STUDY-EXCHANGESLEAVE NEW YORK CITY ONJULY 14AUGUST 5AUGUST 26NameAddress SchoolState Write to:CITIZENEXCHANGE CORPSZip 550 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C., 10036Everybody cIimn for l«o-«old Coco-Cola. Coko hattho tasto yo« novor gel fired of...always refresh¬ing. That** why thing* go bettor with Coko...afterCoko...after Coko.Bottled under (he authority of the Coca Cola Company byThe Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Chicago Biological WarfareReports Are Denied iDr. Robert G. Page, associ¬ate dean of the biologicalsciences division, denied yes¬terday a report that UC has acontract with the army for chemi¬cal or biological warfare research.The charge was contained in anarticle by Seymour Hersh in thecurrent issue of the New Republic.UC was among fifty-three collegesand universities mentioned in thearticle.Mrs. Ethel Pearson, secretary toNorman Nachtrieb, chairman ofthe chemistry department and nowin Puerto Rico, said, “I have cop¬ies of all the contracts and there isnothing that has anything to dowith chemical warfare.”A recent article in Science maga¬zine also listed UC as an armyCBW (chemical and biological war¬fare) contractor. In response to it,UC contracts were reviewed by thebiological sciences division and, ac¬cording to Page, “we had nothingto do with any of the agencies thatgive bacteriological warfare con¬tracts.”According to the article, most ofthe CBW research that the armycontracts is unclassified, but not allof it. Hersh described work thathas gone on at Western Reserve (“absorption of a biologically ac¬tive substance through humanskin”), the Stanford Research In¬stitute (“aerosol sprays and chemi¬cal stabilizers”), Rutgers (“psy¬chochemicals”), and Indiana(“psychological studies of the ef¬fects of incapcitating agents”).At the University of Pennsylva¬nia last week, according to the Col¬legiate Press Service, there was athree-day demonstration, includinga sit-in in the president’s office,protesting Pennsylvania’s involve¬ment in CBW research. Leaders ofthe demonstration have rejectedPresident Gaylord Harnwell’s pro¬posal for a student referendum.Other universities listed in theNew Republic article as havingarmy contracts include California,Harvard, MIT, and Illinois.Hershey Cancels Draft TestWASHINGTON—Selective Ser¬vice Director Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Her¬shey has announced that plans forconducting a Selective Service Col¬lege Qualification Test for highschool seniors and college studentsthis fall have been cancelled.The decision was based on theuncertain future of college studentdeferments, Hershey said.Jeffery Theatre1952 E. 71st St. HY 3-3333WED. & THURS.MAY 10-11Two Days OnlyIfONIOIMJVSKY , *C7*oA|0CA*ewi a* I Paramount OH. THt BOLSHOI MOORE.. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAS TECHNICOLOR’3 PerformancesPer Day At 2, 4 & 8 P.M.SPECIALSTUDENT DISCOUNT RATESTickets now on saleat box officeMay 5, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Reprisals Against Participants in SpringMobilization at Penn State, U. of TexasReprisals against students who participated in last month’sSpring Mobilization Against the War in Vietnam may be!taking place on at least two major campuses.Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents have ques-jtioned students at PennsylvaniaState University about their alleged j Justice Department spokesmaninvolvement in the burning of draft sessions said one of the rea-'cards in New York s Central Park sors individuals were not arrestedduring the April 15 Mobilization. immediately following the NewThere are reports that similar York burnings is that “the Federalactions are taking place throughout government doesn’t have a largethe country. police force” to “swope in and ar-Two students at Penn State who .,«(.* them there ”have admitted burning their draftcards were contacted by FBI ‘Rs n°t so easy proof,agents and asked to sign state- Sessions commented. I think youments waiving their Constitutional cant just go up to a guy and de¬rights. Both declined to sign the niand to see his draft card,statement. The Justice Department spokes-Penn State vice-president for stu-1 man said that where proof was ob-dent affairs Charles L. Lewis said tajned. individuals would be arrest-the FBI is not required to request e(j anc| pr0secuted.permission to visit students on the 1campus. He said the school re- At the University of Texas, aquests that the FBI and local police flurry of charges have been tradedrefrain from disturbing classroom between the school’s chapter of theactivities and from entering the Students for a Democratic SocietyUniversity residence halls. (SDS) and the campus police. TheLewis said the FBI had not offi- charges have grown out of an inci-cially contacted the university on dent in which a female anti-warthe matter. demonstrator was attacked by aIn Washington, an FBI spokes-! counter demonstrator, during aman said the Bureau was “car-1 campus protest held as part of therying out our responsibilities under Spring Mobilization. According tothe law” with regard to draft-card an informed source, a clash be-burning cases. The FBI spokesman tween SDS members and the policedeclined to state what specific ac- followed the attack and the SDS;tion the Bureau was taking in cases chapter is currently under threat ofarising from the widely-reported being banned from campus by theApril 15 activities. University administration.Copland Cities Faults of Electronic Music(Continued from Page One) t sic of chance.” “There is one thingthe trend started by Schoenberg about Cage, when he gets an ideaand Stravinsky. * I like that he carries it all the way toCopland spoke next of a separate, the end.”parallel, trend in modern music, THE THIRD MAJOR stream in“indeterminacy,” the prime expo-1 contemporary music described bynent of which is John Cage, a Copland was electronic music. Notneighbor and friend of the compos-! entirely sympathetic, and somewhater. Copland called Cage an “abso- reluctant to call it music, Coplandlute charmer.” “When he's around, j said, however, that it is “certain toI believe everything he says. It’s j seriously affect the course of mu-only when he goes away that I be- sic.” The main disadvantage it has,gin to think about it, and become he said, is that it is always theslightly nervous.” Copland de-lsame, since it is created and per-scribed and defended Cage's “mu- formed on tape.GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food”10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559I Eat More For Less)Try Our Convenient Take-Out OrdersNEW BOOKS OF CURRENT INTERESTThe New Poetsby M. L RosenthalA Critical Approach to Children's Literature $6.50edited by Sara Innis FenwickA Man in His Time $4.50by John l. SpivakKhrushchev $7.95by Mark FranklandGeneral Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue $6.954 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 5, 1967 Si lire- taking Heading Dynamic*my grade average lias gone ii|»about one full point!*’This is what Charles F. Shelby, a student fromLemont, Illinois says about Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics:“Thanks to Reading Dynamics, I can digestprodigious amounts of material in a very brieftime. Since taking the course, my grade averagehas gone up about one full point. This is dueto both the wider reading I can do, and theefficient methods of taking notes presented inthe course.”Would you like to raise your grade averagea point? Charles Shelby is just one of hundredsof thousands of Reading Dynamics graduateswho have profited tremendously from theirnew-found reading skills. People who start ataverage speeds of 250 to 350 words per minute,finish the eight-week course reading at speedsof 1,500 to 2,000 words per minute—manyread even faster.But there’s more to Reading Dynamics thanjust being able to read fast. Reading Dynamicsis unique in that it develops comprehension andrecall skills as well. Our graduates show anaverage increase in comprehension and recallof 6%. Imagine what that could mean to youin your studies.Unlike other “speed reading” courses, Read¬ing Dynamics does not depend upon mechanicalaids as a pacer. Your hand is your pacer. Con¬sequently, your reading abilities don’t sufferthe minute you leave the machine. Actually,they improve with practice.Figure it out! The more you read, the moreyou know. If your future depends upon whatyou learn in school (as it does for most stu¬dents), next to college itself, Reading Dynamicscould be the wisest investment that you'll evermake.FOR MORE INFORMATION, PHONE7#2-97»7OR MAH THIS COUPON!EVELYN WOODReading Dynamics Institute180 North Michigan Avenue-Chicago, III. 60601OTHER INSTITUTES:Evergreen Park, Evanston,Oak Park, Aurora, Rockford Results Guaranteed! To prove that you,too, can become a rapid reader, ReadingDynamics guarantees in writing to at leasttriple your present reading speed withequal or better comprehension, based onbeginning and ending tests, or we’ll refundyour tuition payment in full. Find out allabout it.FREE ORIENTATION CLASSESATTEND A FREE ORIENTATION. Getthe full details on how Reading Dynamicsworks. See a dramatic movie showing sena¬tors, congressmen, successful people takingthe Reading Dynamics course. Hear themtell what it has done for them. Find outwhat it can do for you. No reservationsneeded. No obligation. Next classes startMay 15 through May 20 near you.IN CHICAGO:Reading Dynamics Institute, 1M N, MichiganMon., May 8 - 12:15, 5;30 p.m.Toes., May 9 * 12:15, 5.30 p.m.Wed., May 10 - 12:15, 5:30 p.m.Thors., May 11 - 12:15, 5:30 p.m.Frf., May 12 - 12:15, 5:30 p.m.Mon., May 15 - 12.15, 5:30 p.m.Toes., May 18 - 12:15, 5:30 p.m.Wed., May 17 - 12:15, 5:30 p.m.SOUTH SIDE:10540 South Western Ave.Mon., May 8 - 8:30 p.m.Sat., May 13 - 10:30 a.m,EVANSTON:North Shore Hotel, Ull Chicago Ave,Toes., May 9 - 8:00 p.m.Set., May 13 - 10:30 a.m.OAK PARK:Oak park Arms Hotel, 408 S. Oak Park Ave.Wed., May 10 - 8:00 p.m.Tues., May 18 - 8:00 p.m.AURORA:Valley National Bank Bldg.Northgate Shopping CenterToes., May 9 - t.00 p.m.Thors., May 11 - 8:00 p.m.ROCKFORD:The Paust Hotel, 830 E. State St.Wed., May 10 - 8:00 p.m.Mon., May 15 - 8:00 p.m.EVELYN WOODREADING DYNAMICS INSTITUTE180 North Michigan Avenue—Chicago, III. *0801 ...□ Please send complete information and class schedules. *□ I can't make the orientation; please call me atNameAddressI City State “ Zip CM-5 5mUC Track Runners WinSeason’s First 4 Meetsby Syd UngerUC’s outdoor track team gotoff to a fast start this seasonby winning its first four meets.On Wednesday, April 5, UCdefeated Lewis College by a scoreof 75-70, winning 10 of the 15events. The highlight of the meetwas the 10:37.0 time turned in byUC’s distance medley team of BobI .a Roque, Chuck Stanberry, TedTerpstra and Pete Hildebrand.HILDEBRAND, who scored 10points, was voted the outstandingathlete of the meet. John Beal ledUC with 13 points and Rich Joch-man was third with nine.UC’s second victory came onApril 12 in a frosh-soph meet withWright and Wilson Junior Colleges.The totals were: UC, 110; Wright,38; Wilson, 20. Steve Riess, KenThomas and Jim Haydon led UC inscoring.The following week UC’s frosh-sophs again defeated the WilsonJ.C.’s, 112-31. Ken Thomas, SteveRiess, Scott Ferry, I>ave Brent,Howie Wollitz, Joe Frank, Rich David L. AikenVi ill UC Follow Page Report?Joehman, Jim Haydon and BobSarracino all turned in fine per¬formances.4-1 RecordLast week UC slipped past Valpa-riso University, 73-72, winning the!meet in the last event with a 3:28.7mile relay, run by Sarracino. JohnMcLees, Steve Kojola and Terps¬tra. Beal, Hildebrand and Kojola '■lead UC in scoring.The team suffered its first losslast Tuesday when it was beaten, j89-56, by Bradley University atPeoria. The team now has 4-1 re¬cord.UC’s team achievements have al¬most been matched in stature by;some of the individual perform-1ances turned in at various invita¬tional meets.At the Drake Relays last week¬end, Beal placed third in the broadjump in the university and collegedivision with a leap of 24’3V4M.!This marked the first time since1927 that UC has placed anyone inthe Relays. Hildebrand and Terps¬tra also competed for UC but failedto place.SDS Plans Mass Anti-War LeaflettingOf Shopping Centers Saturday MorningThe UC chapter of Students,for a Democratic Society plansto distribute 30,000 leaflets in15 Chicago area shopping cen¬ters this Saturday. 'Hvis will be thefirst effort of a UC group againstthe Vietnam war to reach people |outside of Hyde Park or SouthShore.The leaflet attacks PresidentJohnson for not keeping faith withhis election promise. It quotes his 1964 campaign statement that hewould not send American soldiersto Asia and cites recent casualtyfigures.The leaflet also lists severalways in which people may voice:their opposition to the war. Theseinclude draft resistance, applica¬tion for conscientious objector sta¬tus, immigration to Canada, neigh¬borhood organization and refusal topay income or telepnone excisetaxes. People at the University of Chi¬cago have always had a certainamount of pride that their institu¬tion was a leader—at the top inacademic quality, first in its re¬gion, first to try educational inno¬vations.Last week, the Page committeeon student-faculty relations gavethe UC faculty and administrationan opportunity to put UC not quitein the forefront of institutions interms of degree of student partici¬pation, but at least a bit fartherahead than it has been.Several recent surveys indicatethat at quite a few institutions,students are already serving on avariety of supposedly “policy¬making” committees, but at onlya baby-sized handful do they real¬ly, actually exert influence whichhelps shape the course of events.The most comprehensive surveywas done by E. G. Williamson,dean of students at the Universityof Minnesota, and Johns L. Cow¬an, a staff member in William¬son’s office.At 61 percent of the 695 institu¬tions they surveyed, studentswere members of various sorts of“policy-making” standing com¬mittees, and in 85 percent of thesecases the students had votes onthe committees. These were typi¬cally committees with limitedareas of concern; it seems thatpractically anything was countedas “policy-making”.“Actual participation in chang¬ing policies is less than formalparticipation,” however, they re¬port. In only 40 percent of theschools did student governmentsor other organizations have anyopportunity to review administra¬tive policy changes before theywere adopted.According to student govern¬ ment presidents, at half theschools the student governmenthad recently pressed for changeor clarification of some policy,and had been successful in abouttwo-thirds of the attempts. Deansof students, however, did notseem to take much notice of theseself-proclaimed attempts on thepart of the student governments—only 30 percent of the deans re¬ported that any such efforts or at¬tempts had even been made, muchless successfully made.Other studies bear out the Wil¬liamson and Cowan findings. Amore limited questionnaire sur¬vey of 36 institutions in New Eng¬land by W'illiam T. Phelan, a PhDcandidate in the Department ofEducation at UC, showed that lotsof schools had student memberson committees for such excitingthings as enforcing student disci¬pline (28 schools out of 36) or in¬viting speakers to campus (26schools). At almost two-thirds ofthe schools, however, studentswere members of none of the uni¬versity-wide “administrative or¬gans”—the real decision-makingbodies. At five institutions, stu¬dents were on alumni boards, andwere represented in the facultysenate of one lonely school.Another study, by DorothyHynes of Cornell in 1951, showedthat in the 70 schools surveyed,committees on “student affairs”were found most frequently (79percent of the schools). In onlyeleven percent of the schools werestudents represented on curricu¬lum committees, in only ten per¬cent were they on academic af¬fairs committees.Time after time, a select fewinstitutions were cited as models.Most frequently praised, of course, was Antioch college, atwhich students, faculty, and ad¬ministrators are equal partnerson both the Administrative Coun¬cil, which makes decisions aboutthe curriculum, budget, plant,and faculty appointments, and theCommunity Council, which de.cides matters related to studentlife and facilities.A few other places, such asDennison University, and SarahLawrence College, also have ef¬fective means of bringing studentsinto the process of making finaldecisions. More recently, Roose¬velt University in Chicago wel¬comed students to all the policy¬making faculty committees andto the faculty senate itself, wheretwo representatives of the StudentSenate have voting rights.Compared to the truly innova¬tive institutions just mentioned,UC would still be pretty conserva¬tive even if all the recommenda¬tions of the Page committee wereadopted.Compared to most of the rest ofthe institutions in the country,however, UC would be a solidleader if it took even these haltingfirst steps.Will UC’s faculty have the cour¬age and foresight to take thesesteps, by first accepting the Pagereport, then actually implement¬ing it in every department?That remains to be seen.Calendar of EventsFriday, May 5MOVIE: 'Zorba the Greek'. Hyde ParkUnion Church. 5600 Woodlawn, 8 pm.l’OETR\ CONTEST: Florence AdamsPoetry Reading Contest, Finals. BondChapel, .'i pm.CONCERT: Collegium Musicum, BondC’lwpel 4 PM FREE.I.KCTURE: 'Maimonides' I.ecture onAstronomy,' Ralph Lerner. Hillel House.R :i0 pm.HI.M: Le Joli Mai'. Soc Sci 122. 7:15and ft: 15 pm.THE \TRE: “The Bovs From Syra¬cuse". Mandel Hall, 8; 30 pm.Saturday, May 6CONCERT: Collegium Musicum, BondChapel. 8:50 pm. FREE.THEATRE: The Boys From Syracuse’.Mandel Hall. 8:30 pm.Sunday, May 7SERVICES: Rockerfeller MemorialChapel 11 am. Preacher: Rev. SpencerH Parsons. Dean of the Chapel. ’TheGreat Commission.’FESTIVAL: Annual International House»f Festival of Nations. Afternoon pro¬gram, 2-6 pm. FREE. Evening pro¬gram, 8-1 pm 50c for House residents.$1 others.OANCE: Folk dance, Ida Noyes Hall,<:» pm, 25c admission .I II.M: ‘Operation Abolition'. Banders-natch. 7:30 pm.HI M: ‘Operation Correction’. Banders-natch. 7:30 pm.Monday, May 8LECTURE: ‘Problems of the Late 19thCentury Physics’, Professor Max Klein.Abbott 101, 2:30-3:30 pm.WORKSHOP: in non-voilence, Ida Noy-es Hall, 4 pm.HIM: Day Shall Dawn’. Social Sci¬ence 122. FREE.LECTURE: ’The Concept of Change in Human Psychology’. Lawrence S. Ku-bie. Law School Auditorium, 8 pm. UCfaculty and students FREE.MEETING: SDS Chapter Meeting, 7:30pm, Ida Noyes Hall.LECTURE: The Controlled Synthesis ofPeptides in Aequeous Medium’. Dr.Ralph F. Hirschmann. Kent 103. 4 pm.LECTURE: ’Ottoman Baroque andElecticism’. Apcullah Kuran. BreastedHall Lecture Room, 8 pm. Free. There will be a short meeting for anyone interestedin earning free tickets to THE RHYTHM & BLUES FES¬TIVAL by working for the FOLKLORE SOCIETY, on Sun¬day, May 7th, at 1:00 pm, at 5305 S. Woodlawn, 2ndfloor. UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK•*« strong bank”NEW CAR LOANS$450 per hundred1954 CAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200Chicago Premiere!: LE JOLI MAIChris Marker's cinema-verite masterpiece. Tonight at Doc Films. Soc Sci 122, 59th and University. 7:15 and 9:15. 75 cents.PEOPLE WHO KNOW CALL ONCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANINGAll Pressing Done on PremisesSilks Hand FinishedExpert Alterations and Repairs1363 E. 53rd St. PL 2-966210% STUDENT DISCOUNTContemporary Music SocietyPRESENTS3 Guitars(ARNOLD, LEWIS, YOGEL)Reynolds Club Lounge Fri., May 5, S pm JAMES O’REILLY & VIRGIL BURNETTpresentA DREAM PLAY ONOTHELLOby WM. SHAKESPEAREONE PERFORMANCE ONLYSaturday, May 6th at 8:30 pmLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM60th and UniversityAdmission $1.50TICKETS ON SALE AT REYNOLDS CLUB DESKMay 5, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON--May 10thTHE WAR IN VIETNAM besides raising questions of moral¬ity or the lack of it in the conduct of America’s foreign affairs,also has posed the problem of the extent to which dissent athome can influence national policy.Senator Robert F. Kennedy said in an interview published inlast Tuesday's Maroon that anti-war protests have helped pre¬vent the war from being escalated further and his statementmakes good logical sense. But the ability to make escalationmore painful for a consensus conscious President is not thesame as the ability to actually change policy.On April 15, a quarter of a million people at the very leastmarched against the war. Three days later the war was escalat¬ed. This latest escalation, because it followed so closely on theheels of the biggest anti-war protest in American history wasespecially effective in showing how little activists have beensuccessful in changing the course of events.The question becomes then, just what is it going to take toend this tragic conflict. It’s clear that the Spring Mobilizationdid not do very much to prevent the bombing of North Viet¬namese air bases and it didn’t do very much to persuade Gen¬eral Westmoreland that he shouldn’t hint that protestors areguilty of treason in an address before Congress.IT SEEMS TO US that the Spring Mobilization’s greatestfailure was its failure to convince those who make policy thatthe anti-war movement consists of millions of reasonable, con¬cerned and essentially patriotic Americans who are profoundlydisaffected with government policy in Vietnam.When those who make policy are not convinced that this isthe case, they find it startlingly easy to ignore dissent. It iswith this in mind that we are asking every student andfaculty member who doesn't believe that we can or shouldbe involved in a war of attrition in Asia, to take part in theMay IOth Day of Inquiry.Lest there be any misunderstanding, the Day of Inquiry isbeing organized by people who are unhappy about the war inVietnam. The name, however, is not a misnomer. The day isnot a day of accusation or a war crimes tribunal. Rather it is anhonest attempt to involve the greatest number of people possi¬ble in a discussion of the crucial issues involved in America’srole in one of the most controversial wars of the century.THE UC DAY OF Inquiry is part of a national effort beingorganized by the college editors and student body presidentswho have written to President Johnson and spoken with Secre¬tary Rusk. The object is to involve as many people as is possi¬ble in the Day of Inquiry and to involve people who have neverparticipated in anti-war activity before.The idea of the Day of Inquiry—making dissent respect¬able—may offend the aesthetic sensibilities of some; but thosewho object would do well to remember that as dissent be¬comes more and more respectable it becomes less and lesseasy to dismiss.ig 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 Fri&avthroughout 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 theUmv^sity of Chicago. Wated in rooms 303, 304, 305 Ida Noyes Hail,1212 E, 59th Street* Chicago, Illinois 60637, Distributed without chargeon campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood. Subscriptions by mailasa.**— ***•*“ «* « A, .... ' v ' } >, GadflyIntellectuals and Politicians:Some Reflections on a DebateIn She Maroon of April 14, I in¬vited Professor Morgenthau to adebate before the student body onthe questions some may have en¬tertained about his disquisition onIntellectual's and Politicians.So far, from his quarter, thereis dense silence and complete in¬visibility.Therefore, to assist students inthe assessment of his demeanor, Ioffer in parallel, a contrast be¬tween the intellectual (if there issuch a thing) and the politician(and we know there is such athing) respecting debate. Morecould be said, but I respect yourproblems of space.THE INTELLECTUAL (cogi-tans), according to ProfessorMorgenthau, “oriented towardstruth.”Of course, I wilt debate. Mytime is very precious, being fullydevoted to my students and to re¬search, yet noblesse oblige. For Ibelieve in illumination. Obscuran¬tism is so often fostered by spe¬cial pleading if there is not pres¬ent a critic to help those who donot yet know enough of the contri¬butions of political science, na¬tional and international.I could be humiliated by beingshown to be in error. Instant andpublic cross-examination beforewitnesses might demonstrate thatmy knowledge, historical, (e.g.the Visigoths) or contemporary(e.g. Communist and pre-Communist China), is wrong andirrelevant, right but irrelevant, orwrong and relevant. But, then, Ishould have learned somethingnew, though I had lost my preten¬sion of omniscience. The reason¬ing would touch my conscience soas to compel me to discard theo¬ries based (allegedly) on facts(so-called), and I would have tore-think my generalities.It could happen that I would beinhibited in talking so glibly orpompously, aware that knowledg-able critics were in the wings,men who can point out the perilsof wishful thinking and set thefacts right.HOWEVER, THIS IS preciselythe process that the scholar quascholar, the scientific man, hasvowed to respect, before bis stu¬dents and fellow-men as in the fo¬rum of his own mind and con¬ science. They seek light. Theyseek objectivity. They plead forthe honest intellect, truly candid.After that, they can do the wish¬ful thinking for themselves, ortheir favorite politicians can do itfor them.The pain of being shown to beweaker in mind and characterthan I thought smarts. But it ispart of the price paid for the dis¬covery of truth by continuousre-examination of other minds, inthe light of other facts, and ofother values. No one has the rightto tell another person to assent ordissent, least of all an intellectualuntil he has heard or studied, allsides of the matter.The truth is more sublime thanany political stature, or politicalfriendship, or welcoming handsfrom audiences and newspapers.It is even more valuable, I think,than the exuberance of regardingone’s self as a hero.More light!THE POLITICIAN (reading ad.vice tendered by his publicitymanager:Debate? God, no! Run, run foryour life!Do not dare to appear beforeone and the same public at oneand the same time with a skilledopponent, and so subject yourreasoning and rhetoric to doubt.You are now on a winningstreak. Why risk all the capitalbuilt up - by years of almostwhole-time political activity,speeches all over the country, at¬tendance at committees, and sac¬rificing all your valuable researchtime for journalism and organiza¬tion?What is the fortune of a politi¬cian? Support, approval, num¬bers, votes, applause. In a singlethrow, a sophisticated opponentcan strip you of all this, of credi¬bility, Remember tricky DickNixon’s fate the moment Kennedyshone a strong, knowled gablelight on him in debate? Run foryour life!If you throw in your most effec¬tive assets, academic reputationand invective, he will challengeyou to produce evidence, or standrefuted. He might be able to dem¬onstrate that the former is ques¬tionable and the latter scurrilous.Run for your life! THE STRENGTH OF the politi¬cian’s appeal has always been topander the pleasure of his listen¬ers while hiding from them thecost of his policies. They love thepleasures preferred. But, supposethat the critic demonstrates thatthe pleasures the politician offersto procure (e.g. you can pick andChoose which laws to obey, ac-cording to your convenience,called conscience) are not as no!ble or heroic as you preach? Theywould scatter your pile of politicalcapital. The ovations would dieaway. The listeners would realizethat you had deceived their inno¬cence.Since politics involves the play¬ers’ characters as well as theirbrains, your opponent would havethe right to examine your mo¬tives. He could legitimately stripyou of two shirts politicians haveworn in all ages. One is the mar¬tyr’s shirt, for example, the pre¬tence that McCarthism is victim¬ising you. It is a classic gambitfor paralysing counter-dissent.The other shirt is that the politi¬cian is suffering agony for Whathe says. But an opponent mightdemonstrate that such a politicianhad never had it so good in all theyears of his life as since tie ad¬vent of the war in Vietnam. Hemight list all the perquisites youhave been showered with. Run foryour life!Should you still try to win ap¬plause by sarcasm, sneers orsmirks, or name-dropping, twocan play at that game, and forkeeps. If you vilify public leaders(as Professor Harold J. Laskiused to vilify Winston Churchillyears ago), the same principlemay convince the audience thatyour phrases are only imitationjewelry. The onlookers mighteven sic Freud to you! Run foryour life!But, seriously, don’t debate.Keep mum! You’ve reviled thestupidity of the public enoughtimes, to know they’ll forget yourfallacies if only you keep yourmouth shut. Don't risk your infal¬libility even the Pope does not.Herman Finer(Mr. Finer is a VC professoremeritus of political science anda professor of political science atthe University of Illinois, ChicagoCircle Campus.)Letters to the EditorUC’s Black StudentsTO THE EDITOR:The University of Chicago hasone of the most effective securitysystems that we have ever en¬countered. Its purpose is to pro¬tect the University’s communityfrom the “threatening hordes”across the Midway. In order to dothis many campus and city policeemploy Gestapo-like tactics indealing with black people. We aretired of this constant harassmentof our race. As black students weare very familiar with the pur¬pose and methods of policemen inthis community.Black students are continuouslycarded throughout the campus,under circumstances in whichmost white students are not.Black men, even when accompa¬nied by residents of the dorm arecarded. In Ida Noyes Hall everyblack person is automatically as¬sumed to be a SWAP tutee untilhe proves otherwise.We were warned during Orien¬tation Week that it was dangerous to walk the streets after dark.This is definitely true. Severaltimes this year policemen havethreatened to jail us for taking awalk in Hyde Park. Usually thecop bursts out of his car and de¬mands identification. During oneof these incidents the policemanwas informed that this was notthe Union of South Africa. Hethen threatened to take us alldowntown and only the presenceof a white classmate saved us. Onanother occasion the officer wasinformed that we all lived at 5S25S. Woodlawn. His response to thiswas, “You can’t live there, that’sthe campus.” If we are across theMidway with a white male, weare automatically consideredprostitutes by the police.Perhaps the most revealing in¬cident took place at the LawSchool Lounge. As five black stu¬dents approached the lounge, alittle man in a blue uniform cametowards us waving his arms andscreaming, “You can’t come inhere!” He explained to us thatthe lounge was only for law stu¬dents. We asked why he hadn’tstopped all of the undergraduates we saw in the lounge. He said(and this is a direct quote) “Theyare all right, we’re here to stopgroups like you.”The latest episode at this pecu¬liar institution involves a blackstudent from Boston University.This young man was visiting aresident of New Dorms. Theguards began clearing the CentralUnit. However, at 3 am therewere still several couples linger¬ing. A policeman approached theblack couple and belligerentlytold the young man to get outThe visitor was understandablyupset by the policeman’s attitude.As he walked towards the door,he was addressed as “boy”. Hewas picked up while crossing theMidway by campus police andwhisked to their headquarters. Al¬ter interrogation about the inci¬dent, they debated his fate. Hewas told that he would eitherhave to pay a $50 fine and spendthe night in jail or be bannedfrom the campus. They decided tobe lenient and only told him notto come back to the dorm.These events reveal an attitude(Continued on Page Seven)6 • CHICAGO MAROON May 5, 1967Vol. 76-No. 54 Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary YearThe University of Chicago CONVOCATIONSUPPLEMENTFriday, May 5, 196726 Will Get Honorary DegreesAt Today's Special ConvocationNaom Chomsky Kenneth S. ColeACHIEVEMENTS SCHOLARY, NOT PUBLIC Today’s 75th Anniversary Convocation, which begins at 10 am in Rockefeller Chapel, willmark the presentation of the second largest number of honorary degrees at one time in theUniversity’s history.Twenty-six scholars will receive degrees today, a number exceeded only once, when 35 de¬grees were awarded at the 50th An-1niversary Convocation.Several professors have calledoff their classes so that studentsmay participate in today’s series ofevents marking the University’s75th Anniversary.In keeping with a long-standingUniversity policy, the degrees willbe awarded for scholarly ratherthan public achievements.THE RECIPIENTS representseven nations, including the UnitedStates. Their fields of scholarshiprange from anthropology and biolo¬gy through economics and historyto physics and mathematics.President Beadle will deliver thekeynote address. More than 1,600 guests from var¬ious parts of the nation are expect¬ed to attend the Convocation, andmany are expected to attend a ser¬ies of special events which will fol¬low. Following the Convocation, thehonorary degree recipients will behonored at a luncheon in Ida NoyesHal.The afternoon and evening activi¬ties will include:• 3 pm — “Othello, the Moor ofVenice: a Dream Play,” Law SchoolAuditorium. This unusual versionof the Shakespearean play will bepresented in a series of flashbacks,opening with the death scene. Only one character will be on stage! throughout the performance —Othello, played by James O’Reilly,director of the Court and Univer¬sity Theatres. Other voices will beheard on tape recordings. Colorslides of Renaissance paintings andengravings will be used to illus¬trate the play’s symbols andthemes. The production was con¬ceived by O’Reilly and VirgilBurnett, instructor in art.• 4:30 pm — a concert by theCollegium Musicum, Bond Chapel.It will include a number of madri¬gals and chansons by three mid-sixteenth century composers. How¬ard M. Brown, associate professorof music, will conduct.List of Recipients, Qualifications, and Degrees• Nikolai Nikolaevich Bogolubov,director of the Joint Institute ofNuclear Research at Dubna, USSR(Doctor of Science).Bogolubov is one of the SovietUnion’s leading mathematicalphysicists. He was awarded the Le¬nin Prize in 1958 for his work indeveloping a new method in quan¬tum field theory and statisticalphysics which resulted in partiallysubstantiating the theories of su¬perconductivity and superfluidity.He received the Stalin Prize in1947.• Noam Chomsky, the Ferrari P.Ward professor of modern lan¬guages and linguistics, Massachu¬setts Institute of Technology' (Doc¬tor of Humane Letters).Chomsky has revolutionized con¬temporary thinking about grammarand is considered to be at presentthe person exercising the mostpowerful influence on the teachingof the nature of the English lan¬guage.His monograph, Syntactic Struc¬tures (1957), has been described asthe most important theoretical■work on linguistics to appear innearly a quarter of a century.• Kenneth S. Cole, senior researchbiophysicist, National Institute ofNeurological Diseases and Blind¬ness. Bethesda, Maryland (Doctorof Science).Cole is an undisputed leader inIhe United States in the study ofthe electro-physiology of excitable!LSSUt*s. He was the first to recordintracellular resting and action po-t > Nal of the squid axon fiber. WithMarniont he developed the basis of•Maying and controlling changes inthe membrane potential of thes luid axon so that membrance cur-ivnts could be studied under a vari¬ety of conditions. His work at the MetallurgicalLaboratory during World War IIproduced much of the foundationfor present knowledge of the bio¬medical effects of radiation.• Henry Clifford Darby, professorof geography, Cambridge Universi¬ty, England (Doctor of HumaneLetters).Darby’s six major books are asignificant contribution to the liter¬ature of historical geography.Much of his worldwide reputationis based on The Domesday Geogra¬phy of England, of which he is bothgeneral editor and major contribu¬tor. Four volumes of this workhave appeard so far, furnishingmany new insights into various top¬ics in English geography.Darby received the Daly Medalof the American Geographical So¬ciety in 1963. He is a past presidentof the Institute of British Geogra¬phers.• Max Delbruck, professor of biol¬ogy, California Institute of Technol¬ogy (Doctor of Science).Delbruck is the father of bacter¬iophage genetics. He generatedmost of the early ideas and enthu¬siasm for a group which eventuallyincluded a large fraction of molecu¬lar biologists.The kinetics of progeny phageproduction, the phenomenon of mu¬tual exclusion of related particles,and the production of mutants inphage are among the fruits of Del-bruck’s work with Luria (see be¬low).• Northrop Frye, professor ofEnglish literature and principal ofVictoria College, University of To¬ronto (Doctor of Humane Letters).Frye’s influence has been widelyfelt in educational circles as wellas among literary critics. As a crit¬ic, he has the ability to perform in a wide variety of areas and tosynthesize modes of criticism andplace literary works in context. Inrecent years, he has organized cur¬ricula for literary study based onhis critical principles.His worics, Design for Learning(1962) and The Educated Imagina¬tion (1964), have become central tomany of those who are now reord¬ering programs of instruction in lit¬erature in the United States andCanada.• Murray Gell-Mann, professor ofphysics, California Institute ofTechnology (Doctor of Science).Gell-Mann’s work has added newterms to the technical language ofphysics and germinated severalnew areas of research in both theo¬retical and experimental physics.His work with Goldberger led tothe dispersion theory, a modernform of quantum field theory; hisconcept of “strangeness” explainedHenry C. Darby the stability of some then newly-discovered particles, predicting themanner in which they were subse¬quently monstrated to occur, andhis charge-conjugation of neutralparticles, an idea introduced (withPais) in 1954, led to discovery of anew particle, from which much sig¬nificant experimentation has arisen.• Alfred Day Hershey, director ofthe Genetics Unit, Carnegie Institu¬tion, Cold Springs Harbor, NewYork (Doctor of Science).Hershey discovered genetic re¬combination in bacteriophage. Thismade possible study of fine struc¬ture in the linear arrangements ofgenes at levels of discriminationhitherto impossible. Hershey alsodiscovered that the nucleic acid,not the protein, of the bacterioph¬age entered infected bacteria.Thus it was demonstrated thatI the entire genetic information nec-(Continued on Page Two)Max Delbruck • 5:30 to 6:30 pm—a receptionin the Quadrangle Club.• 8:30 pm — a performance ofthe Rodgers and Hart musical com¬edy, “The Boys from Syracuse,”Mandel Hall. Presented by theBlackfriars.Honorary degrees are awardedafter a faculty committee screensnominations provided by facultymembers. AH nominees also mustbe approved by the Board of Trust¬ees.SINCE the University was found¬ed in 1891, it has awarded 287 hon¬orary degrees in 318 convocations.Among the recipients have been 20Nobel Prize winners.The University awarded its firsthonorary degree, an LL.D., toPresident William McKinley at its26th Convocation on October 17,1898. Another American President,Theodore Roosevelt, was awardedan honorary LL.D. on April 2, 1903.World-renowned scholars whohave received honorary degreesfrom the University include repre¬sentatives of all disciplines, fromj the natural sciences to the human-i ities.Northrop FryeMurray Gell-Mann Alfred D. HersheyGerhard Herzberg(Continued from Page One)essary to direct synthesis of a com¬plete organism was contained innucleic acid separate from proteinin at least one case.• Gerhard Herzberg, director of theDivision of Pure Physics, NationalResearch Council, Ottawa, Ontario,Canada (Doctor of Science).Herzberg is one of the most im¬portant figures in experimental mo¬lecular spectroscopy. He has em-jployed the unambiguous quantita¬tive power of spectroscopy in fieldsranging from chemical thermody¬namics to astrophysics.Herzberg’s own work, as well asthat he directs at the Council, hascome to define the center of gravi¬ty of experimental spectroscopy.The group of which he is the nu¬cleus is the world’s center for mo¬lecular spectroscopy today.• Ha jo Holborn, the Sterling pro¬fessor of history, Yale University(Doctor of Humane Letters).Holborn is acknowledged to be aleading contemporary historian ofGermany. The third and final vol¬ume of his History of Modern Ger¬many, now nearly finished, willcomplete what has been called “thebest general history of Germanyever written in any language.”In an age of historiographicalspecialization, he has published ex¬emplary works in a variety offields. Holborn has made the philo¬sophy of history a concern of thediscipline of history, as well as ofphilosophy.• Torsten Husen, professor andhead of the Department of Educa¬tion and Institute for EducationalResearch, University of Stockholm(Doctor of Laws).Husen is an eminent specialist ineducational research. His early Hajo Holbornwork included a comprehensivestudy of twins in Sweden, and of so¬cial influences on educability. Hewas, a pioneer in the now wide¬spread research on “reserves oftalent.”He was director of the researchprogram of the Swedish govern¬ment designed to guide the reor¬ganization of the school system inthe 1950’s, and he is now technicaldirector of the 12-nation achieve¬ment testing project, the first re¬sults of which have just beenpublished.• Har Gobind Kborana, professorof biochemistry, Institute for En¬zyme Research, the University ofWisconsin (Doctor of Science).Khorana’s work has centered inthe synthesis and degradation ofpeptides and phosphate esters. Hehas developed many new syntheticI methods and from application ofthese has made discoveries whichI are of great significance for bio¬chemistry and genetics.His earliest work with carbo-diimides led to the present recogni-| tion of these as among the mostvaluable reagents for the prepara¬tion of peptides and phosphates.• Harold D. Lasswell, the EdwardJ. Phelps professor of law andpolitical science, Yale University(Doctor of Laws).Lasswell, a political scientist andlay psychoanalyst by formal train¬ing, stands as a pioneer in the pro¬cess whereby the study of politicsis being converted to a science ofsocial behavior. He has applied the! medical sciences, especially psy¬choanalysis and depth psychology,to the study of motivations under¬lying participation in politics, andhas opened up new channels in thedevelopment of a political sciencebased on rigorous interpretation ofdata.He has sought acceptance forweighting the understanding of be¬havior equally with the solution ofsocial problems.2 • MAROON CONVOCATION SUPPLEMENT • May 5, 1967 Who Are the Men?They're ScholarsOf All Interests ...• Jean Leray, professor of mathe-1matics, College de France, Paris(Doctor of Science).Leray is the world’s principal ex¬pert on hyperbolic partial differen¬tial equations. He wrote fundamen- jtal papers on the existence theo¬rems for the equations of hydro-1dynamics and constructed most ofthe original technical devices usedin the radical transformation of al¬gebraic topology after World WarII.Leray invented the concepts ofspectral sequence and of sheaf, thetwo Chief tools of this development,and applied them for the first timein his work on the homology theoryof fibre bundles. Recently he hasconstructed remarkable theories ofpartial differential operators and ofresidues of functions of severalcomplex variables.• Claude Levi-Strauss, professorof anthropology, College de France,Paris (Doctor of Science). Levi-Strauss has sought the de¬terminants of human behavior notin social relations, but within theinternal logic of systems of ideasas they appear in culture. He hasavoided both the theoretical limita¬tions of cultural relativism and re-ductionism and has returned to thestudy of culture its compartive di¬mension and its autonomy.He is unique among social scien¬tists in his concern with the philo¬sophical significance of his theo¬ries. He is regarded as one of themasters of modern French proseand is acclaimed far outside thediscipline of anthropology.• Salvador E. Luria, professor ofmicrobiology, Massachusetts Insti¬tute of Technology (Doctor of Sci¬ence).Luria, together with Max Del-bruck, laid most of the foundationsof bacteriophage genetics. Theystudied the phenomenon of exclu¬sion of closely related phage parti¬ cles, the morphology of phage andphage-infected bacteria, and muta¬tions of bacteria which made themresistant to phage infection.Each of the studies led to a burstof activity on the part of other ge¬neticists. Luria has continued fruit¬fully to investigate a variety ofproblems concerned with the de¬tailed mechanism of bacteriophagereproduction.• John Willard Milnor, Universityprofessor of mathematics, Prince¬ton University (Doctor of Science).Milnor, one of the world’s leadingtopologists, has made contributionsin algebraic asd differential topolo¬gy and discovered the existence ofinequivalent differential structureson spheres of sufficiently high di¬mensions.The youngest member of the Na¬tional Academy of Sciences, he re¬ceived one of the two Field Medals,considered the mathematical equiv¬alent of the Nobel Prize, at theJean Leray Claude Levi-Strauss Salvador E. LuriaTorsten Husen Har G. Khorana Harold D. Lasswellquadrennial International Mathe¬matical Congress (Stockholm) in'1962.• Franco Modigliani, professor ofeconomics and management, Mass¬achusetts Institute of Technology(Doctor Of Laws).Modigliani demonstrated clearlyand rigorously how the macro-econ¬omic theory of price levels and em¬ployment could be built up fromthe analysis of individual behavioremployed in micro-economic theo¬ry. Modigliani effected a rap-proa chement between the twodominant doctrines, properly devel¬oping the foundations of Keynes’General Theory, and anchored ma¬cro theory firmly in the main¬stream of accepted economic theo¬ry.His work implicitly suggests theline of attack for the profession inthe understanding of macro phe¬nomena.• Alberto Monroy, professor ofcomparative anatomy, Universityof Palermo (Doctor of Science).Dr. Monroy is a leader in thefield of molecular biology and earlyembryonic development. He hasbeen continuously on the forefrontof studies on the physiology of ga¬metes and fertilization and of dif¬ferentiation in early embryonic de¬velopment, and his recent book onihe physiology of fertilization hasbecome a standard for reference.He has worked in several labora¬tories in Europe and in the UnitedSlates contributing both from thescholarly point of view and as apioneer and modern investigator tothe progress of basic biologicalconcepts.• Talcott Parsons, professor of so¬ciology, Harvard University (Doc¬tor of laws).As much as any other singlescholar, Parsons has excited inter¬est in basic theoretical questions ofsociology since his first majorwork, Th* Structure of SocialJohn W. MilnorAlberto Monroy Action, was published in 1937. His1 insistence on theoretical analysishas lent balance and meaning toburgeoning techniques for empiri¬cal study.He has broken new ground inmedical and legal sociology, thestudy of stratification, and in thesearch for links with related disci¬plines. He has facilitated communi¬cation among the social sciences toan unprecedented extent, and manyscholars in these related disciplineshave adopted his modes of analy¬sis.• Willard Van Orman Quine, theEdgar Pierce professor of philoso¬phy, Harvard University (Doctor ofHumane Letters).Quine has demonstrated the re¬levance of mathematical logic tothe perennial problems of philoso¬phy. To his contributions in mathe¬matical logic as such he has addedan innovative formulation of onticcommitment in terms of quantifica-; tional logic and penetrating an¬alyses of propositional attitudesother fundamental concepts.! Through the clarity and appeal of |his writing and the breadth of hisi knowledge, he has done much to| keep philosophy abreast of contem-| porary science.• Edwin O. Reischauer, Universi-j ty professor. Harvard Universityj (Doctor of Humane Letters).I Reischauer is recognized as a| founder of Japanese studies inAmerica. His work with elementa¬ry Japanese language and the se¬lection of texts for university stu¬dents reflects his concern for mod¬ern Japan and his desire thatAmericans better understand herculture. His publication of Ennin’sdiary demonstrates his facility andperception in dealing with ancienttexts.He led the Harvard-Yenching In¬stitute from 1956 to 1961, and in adistinguished career as AmericanAmbassador to Japan from 1961 to1966 brought increased understand¬ing to Japanese-American reJa-Talcott ParsonsFranco Modigliani ... a Japan Emissary,A Former Soc II Proftions. His teaching has influencedthe great majority of leading Japa¬nese scholars in America today.• Paul Ricoeur, professor of philo¬sophy, the University of Paris(Doctor of Divinity).Ricoeur’s philosophy of regainedunity centers upon the reconcili¬ation of man with himself, hisbody, and the world. Man’s faultedunity is particularly exemplified inambition and hatred, and final re¬unification can be found only in thedimension of transcendence. Ri¬coeur’s work has influenced psy¬chology, anthropology, and historyas well as philosophy and theology.He is the rare scholar who cancontribute effectively across disci¬plinary lines, and is one of the fewworld leaders of the phenomenolo¬gical school.• Allan R. Sandage, Astronomer,Mount Wilson and Palomar Obser¬vatories, California (Doctor of Sci¬ence).Sandage’s first work laid thetheoretical grounds for the incorpo¬ ration of stelar evolution into mod¬ern astronomy. Later he reformu¬lated the cosmological problem leftunresolved by Hubble and recentlyhe has made fundamental contribu¬tions to the identification of qua si-stellar radio sources. His recogni¬tion that there are numerous dis¬tant galaxies among so-called bluestellar objects expanded possibili¬ties for cosmology unanticipatedeven two years ago.He has received the EddingtonMedal (Royal Astronomical Socie¬ty) and the Helen Warner Prize(American Astronomical Society),and in 1963 became the youngestastronomer ever elected to the Na¬tional Academy of Sciences.• B. F. Skinner, the Edgar Pierceprofessor of Psychology, HarvardUniversity (Doctor of Science).Skinner has shown that the ex¬perimental and analytical methodsof natural science can be applied tothe behavior of animals and men.His descriptive behaviorism hasachieved far-reaching influence inpsychology, pharmacology and neu¬rology, education, therapy, and cul¬ tural planning. He and his studentsfounded the Journal of the Experi¬mental Analysis of Behavior, nowin its ninth volume, which adds 500pages annually to the psychologicalliterature.His research, Which has madepossible dealing with the will andmotives of men and beasts experi¬mentally may, through verbalanalysis, be able eventually to dealwith their thoughts as well.• Robert M. Solow, professor ofeconomics, Massachusetts Instituteof Technology (Doctor of Laws).Solow has repeatedly opened newareas of research. His works oneconomic growth, technologicalchange, the integration of theoriesof investment and technologicalchange, the elasticity of substitu¬tion production function, and theeconometric theory of distributedlags have widely influenced subse¬quent study in each area.I Solow was an influential member! of the staff of the Council of Eco-| nomic Advisers (1961 to 1962) andhas received the John Bates ClarkMedal (1961).May 5, 1967 • MAROON CONVOCATION SUPPLEMENT • 3Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Hems Prc m TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 JESSELSOTSS&AVIH4 HYD8 tAJUC PM OVM M YIAMWITH THI YtPY BIST AHO FMSMOTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-28TO, PL 2-8190, DO i-9186 1840 I. 3H4 INTERESTED INESP?Meeting IDA NOYESThursday—8:30 Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1*42 E. 55 HY 3*25?NSA Discount*GO FOR BAROQUEBandersnatch Recorder ConcertMay 11,9 pm Baroque to Modern STATIONERYBOOKSGREETING (ARDSk k k k k kTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student Discount EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StrestHYde Park 3-8372Student end Faculty DUceuntTAl-CCArMA&NC ANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHES11 AJL la 9t4f MLORDERS TO TAKf OUT1118 So* «9rd *. MU 4-1042BOB NELS0B MOTORSImport Centro6052 So. Cottage GroveUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorFree toChicagoStudents25^ toothersA new booklet, published by anon-profit educational founda¬tion, tells which career fieldlets you make the best use ofall your college training, in¬cluding 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. Justsend 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 discussion with Alfred HitchcockAlfred Hitchcock speaks, in person, Friday May 12 at 3:00 pm in the law School Aucfitorium. Tickets (free) are available on a first-come-fir*t-served basisIda Noyes 301 beginning at 11 AM, Monday. Associate Members may pick up tickets at tonight's showing A Doc Films presentation.Pre-vacationoffer.All the travelers checks you want—up to $5,000 worth—for a fee of just $223. At banks everywhere, during May only.You can save real money bybuying First National CityTravelers Checks now for yoursummer vacation trip. Readhow.Normally travelers checks carrya fee of a penny a dollar. It costs $1for $100 worth of checks, $2 for$200, $10 for $1,000, and so forth.Now, during May only, you canbuy any amount you need — up to$5,000 worth — for only $2, plusthe face value of the checks. Youcould save up to $48. (For less than$200 worth, of course, the fee is lessthan $2.)If you’re planning a trip toEurope, what you save from thisoffer could pay for an extra day onthe Rhine. Or dinner and Shake¬speare at Stratford.Or a patch of grass at the New¬port Jazz Festival, if you’re stayingcloser to home.Welcomed everywhereFirst National City Bank hasbeen in the travelers check busi¬ness for 63 years. Our checks areknown and accepted in more thana million places throughout the world — airlines, car rental agen¬cies, steamship lines, hotels, mo¬tels, restaurants, stores, etc.You can spend them as easily atLe Drugstore as at the drugstore.And they’re just as convenient ona weekend trip as on a world tour.Fast refund in case of lossThe greatest advantage of FirstNational City Travelers Checks isthat you get your money backpromptly if they’re lost or stolen.We’ve built a security network of25,000 banking offices around theworld where you can get lostchecks refunded fast. On the spot.How do you find the nearest re¬fund offices? In the ContinentalU.S., call Western Union Operator25. Abroad, we’ve supplied everyprincipal hotel with a list of thenearest offices.No wonder we’re called theMaximum Security travelers check.Buy now, travel laterBuy your travelers checks now— at a saving — and use them later.Many people, in fact, keep sometravelers checks on hand as insur¬ance against the day when they mayneed cash in an emergency. Offer good only in U.S. andPuerto Rico, May 1*31,1967Never before has such completeprotection for your cash been soinexpensive. So act fast. Get yoursummer supply of First NationalCity Travelers Checks now. Theycan be bought at most banks andsavings institutions.If your vacation money is in yourlocal bank and you won’t be homeuntil after May 31, you can stilltake advantage of this offer. Justmail this ad to your parents and askthem to send your money to you.Note to all banks andsavings institutionsDuring the month of May, we’remaking this unusual introductoryoffer to your customers at no costto you. Your customer gets the sav¬ing, but you earn your normal com¬mission. -FirstNational CityTravelers ChecksMember Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.© 1967 First National City Bank, New York.4 ♦ MAROON CONVOCATION SUPPLEMENT • May 5, 1967Letters to the Editor of the Maroony*;MM,:'Mi* l . WmXM-'m(Continued from Page Six)towards black people which per¬vades this campus and Americansociety. We feel that either thesecurity system must apply to ev¬eryone or be totally abolished.The central problem lies in thisUniversity’s attitude towards theblack community. Until this basicbias is corrected, there can be nopeaceful relationship between thetwo communities.CAROLYNN CHARLESTONKAREN L. EDWARDSLINDA R. MURRAYCAROL SHIPPRENEE TAYLORDARLENE WASHINGTONBARBARA ALLENCorrecting the RecordTO THE EDITOR:I find myself in the unenviable,and apparently common (seeAlan Bloom’s letter in the April28th issue), position of being mis¬quoted by the Maroon. I was oneof those interviewed by LynnMcKeever for the article on thesupposed CIA-WUS affiliationwhich appeared in last Tuesday’sMaroon (April 25, 1967). In the ar¬ticle I was quoted as saying that,“Only 39%” of the total donationsto WUS since 1954 have comefrom FYSA. This figure shouldhave been 0.39%.To correct the error, and tostraighten out the record, I wouldlike to relate the following facts.Some thirty (30) organizationshave been mentioned by the pressas alleged “fronts” for CIA funds.From 1954 through 1966 WUS-USAhas received funds from three ofthese funds, including the Foun¬dation for Youth and Student Af¬fairs. Total donations by thesethree organizations amounted to$45,988.39 out of a total income of$10,8%, 748.40. 'Those adept inhigher mathematics can tell youthat this amounts to only 0.39%or less than half of one percent.IN THE year 1964 the AmericanFriends Service Committee re¬ceived more money from thesesupposed “fronts” than WUS hasreceived in total since 1954. I saythis not to accuse the AmericanFriends Service Committee but toindicate that these funds mayhave given money not controlledby the CIA. It is impossible forme to believe that the AmericanFriends Service Committee couldhave served as a source of infor¬mation for the CIA.It seems to me that the seriousconcern is not the contributionsfrom FYSA and other supposedmiddle-men for the CIA, but isthe vague possibility that some ofthe resources and projects ofWUS could have served CIA pur¬poses.Iam especially concerned withthe role of the delegates fromNSA, an organization alreadyshown to have CIA affiliations,who serve on the WUS Board ofTrustees. However, I strongly feelthat it is unlikely that the basicintegrity of the World UniversityService has been destroyed, and Iwould hate to see the very worth¬while projects of WUS hamperedbecause of vague, secretive, thirdand fourth hand reports which arebased on comments from admit¬ted liars.I FEEL that WUS expeciallyneeds my support this year, be¬cause its drives will definitely behurt by these serious charges. Iplan to send a donation to WUS,and invite all those who share myconcern to make similar dona¬tions.Anyone who wants to join me indonating money to WUS, or wouldseriously like to discuss either thefacts or my feelings about WUS, is invited to contact me at Inter¬national House.ROY HENDERSONStudent ParticipationTO THE EDITOR:Recently, there has been muchdiscussion about student partici¬pation in university affairs. Theimportance of this issue is ob¬vious and increasing, but the di¬rection of the discussion givescause for alarm.In the most practical sense,real student participation dependsupon two factors — interest onthe part of the students and ac¬ceptance by those in charge, i.e.the faculty and administration.Students who are concerned aboutcampus issues have the essentialrole of communicating this con¬cern to other students and per¬suading the administration thatstudents are prepared to acceptcertain responsibilities. At pres¬ent activist students are failing inboth of these persuasive tasks.The most glaring (and inexcus¬able) failure has been in mobiliz¬ing student opinion. The primereason for this shortcoming isthat many vocal students are sodeeply committed to certain posi¬tions that they automatically re¬ject even reasoned disagreementas deliberate misrepresentation ofthe “facts”. They are simply un¬able to engage in the self-criticism essential to any publicfigure.The problem is widespread. Theletter of Kevin Sweeney in Tues¬day’s Maroon is an unsettling ex¬ample. Sweeney writes, “Mr.O’Connell’s bias was not againstpolitically active students gener¬ally, but against those holdingcertain extreme positions. Mr.O’Connell would not exclude astudent for being unduly active in,say, Citizens for Romney. . .Mr.O’Connell looks for students who will not rock the boat.” Sweeneyrefers to “Mr. O’Connell’s at¬tempt to remake the Universityafter his own image.”To draw these sweepingcharges from the comments onthe margin of the interview sheetin question is to build a house ofcards. How Sweeney can predictMr. O’Connell’s opinion about afull-time supporter of GeorgeRomney is mystifying. However,Sweeney saves the best (or worst)till last. “The O’Connell casedemonstrates that there is a needfor student participation in theformation of University policy.”Just as all rivers flow into theFather of Waters, so all problemslead to the same solution even ifmountains lie in the path.Nowhere is there thought of re¬vealing why the student is quali¬fied, to say nothing of best quali¬fied, to correct the alleged inequi¬ty. Neither is there demonstrationof why one incident implies aneed for student participation inmuch broader “university poli¬cy.” The phrase of the moment isexpected to blind the reader’sperception of the logical deficien¬cies of Sweeney’s collection ofperverted enthymemes.This same pattern is repeatedover and over in discussionsabout student role. One exampleis the SDS “fact” sheets them¬selves. Student disregard forthese documents is palpable. Ihave heard students who partici¬pated in the New York Mobiliza¬tion laugh at SDS’s thinly evi¬denced crisis-a-week tactics. Soexcessively passioned is the argu¬ment and so exaggerated are theinferred abuses, that the poten¬tially most receptive ears areclosed.And why shouldn’t they be? Ifstudents here are learning any¬thing, it is how to distinguish thesound argument from the spur¬ious; how to separate distortionsof reality from objective concern.Student spokesmen seem to have learned their lesson well when itcomes to uncovering Administra¬tion double talk. It is time thatthey give the rest of us the creditfor possessing similar powers ofexamination. Otherwise theyshould not count on improvedcommunication with the body ofstudents.There are those who would in¬terpret the recent Student Gov¬ernment elections as a victory forthe activist SPAC platform. Rath¬er they were chiefly a response toSG’s past ineffectiveness. The keyword was reform. Unless SPAC’spresent euphoria is channelledand the mushrooming demagog¬uery is overshadowed by thought¬ful, rational, and responsible SGpositions, cheated students willagain demand a change.Now, if the students themselvesare not aroused by the currentdiscussion, how can one expectadministrators to be convinced oftheir own alleged misconduct andinefficiency? More importantly,how can those held responsiblefor administration be expected toturn over power and responsibili¬ty to students who have demon¬strated little ability to even intel¬ligently discuss these responsibili¬ties but confine themselves tomisapplied rhetorical exercise?The style of argument is oftenso perverse that the demandsthemselves are ambiguous. Whenthe Faculty Senate met students’demands to abolish male classrank, leaders said they had been“betrayed.” The lack of clear,logically articulated positions re¬sults in a communications break¬down which can serve only todrive the administration into thesanctuary of bureaucratic reac¬tionism.Whether or not a democraticuniversity is a desirable goal, itwill not come about until there is a new birth of reason at the Uni¬versity of Chicago.It would be refreshing and con¬structive if student spokesmen forsolutions to campus problemsscrutinized their own solutionswith the same intensity of intel¬lectual inspection which theyclaim to apply to the ideas oftheir opponents. Failing in this, itwould help if student reformerscould construct their argumentsmore judiciously. Maybe then oth¬er students could seriously consid¬er the views expressed withoutdoubting their own intellectual in¬tegrity.The result could only be morerational discussion and less inef¬fective back biting; more genuineproposals and fewer sloganisticdemands; less disoriented agita¬tion and more progress towardreal student participation in uni¬versity affairs.JOHN A. McLEESIndia FamineTO THE EDITOR:While the food problem in Indiacontinues to be serious, the situa¬tion in the State of Bihar, India,is critical. Famine has begun totake a heavy toll among the peo¬ple. The situation cries for help.Mass famine can be avertedonly by the efforts of private re¬lief groups like CARE. Almost sixmillion people are being sustaineddaily as a result of their efforts.We appeal to all peoples ofgoodwill to send any possible con¬tributions to: CARE—Bihar, Indiafamine relief, 220 South State St.,Chicago.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866IYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FIUED CONTACT IENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty DiscountUNIVERSITY THEATREpresentsShakespeare'sRichardthe ThirdDirected by James O'ReillyMANDEL HALL-8:30 pmMAY 12 13 14Friday $2 — Saturday $2.50Sunday $1.75Student Faculty Discount 50*Tickets on Sale NOW at Reynold’s Club Desk F. ASSISIC. MILGROMV. LECHNERCONTEMPORARY MUSIC SOCIETYpresentsAndrew HillConcert in The RoundMay 7, 5-9Reynold's Club LoungeGEN. ADM. $1.25 STUDENT $1—large variety of candles and holders—the unusual in gifts—special importsCooley’s CandlesIn Harper Court5210 S. Harper363-4477open every day & eveningsMay 5, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Music ReviewBlackfriars Trigger Laughs on Cerebral CampusThe boys from Syracuse is a good choice for Blackfriars’ annual musical com¬edy. presented last weekend and next (May 5 and 6) in Mandel Hall. Boys is a good choice fora university audience, since it is a 1930’s Rodgers and Hart spoof of Shakespear’s A Com¬edy of Errors. "There are two obvious interpreta-. both being all elbows and knees i ually boring,tions of the show: to present it as it' with invisible bodies, and apparent- The choreography by Kathy Wex-was written, a broad slapstick ly costumed to accentuate their an- ler and Barbara Sternfeld is some-spoof. or to spoof the spoof of a gles, their awkward movements times clever and imaginativeAlthough the pro- could have been capitalized upon;1930’s musicalduction tends toward the former, it instead they detracted from theirturns out to be neither, but swings performances. Bryan Dunlap's (An-between the extremes of broad tipholus of Syracuse) big, lustyslapstick humor done with too voice however, pulled focus fromheavy a hand, and attempts at his awkwardness, and made merealism not in keeping with its mu- wonder where in the world all thatsical comedy atmosphere. There voice came from,are points in the arc of the pendu- EILEEN W AT Z U L I Klum, however, which are moments ADRIANA has a great deal ofof well-balanced performance and stage presence and a maturity andinterpretation. ! poise perfectly suited to the part.THE TWO DROMIOS, besides! Her voice is good and strong, butbearing an amazing physical re-j suffers from a limited range,semblance to each other are consis- j Louise Wilkinson, well cast as thetantly the brightest spots in the ingenue Luciana, sings “This Can’tshow. They deliver their lines with j Be Love" and “You Have Casta good sense of comic timing, their j Your Shadow On the Sea" in acharacters are well-defined and rich, full voice, and has a securitythey mimic each other delightfully, in her music which is not evident inIt seems to me that it is unneces-' her acting. Liz Smith gives a spottysary in view of the competence of performance as Luce, the Ralphboth actors, for Frank Sabatino as Kramden of Dromio’s life. At timesDromio of Syracuse, to render such she delivers droll and lusty laugha stylized and often too effeminate lines with Ethel Merman Pazazz,version of Stephen Goodman’s; at other times her voice and hermore natural Dromino of Ephesus, presence fade into the wings.Here is one of the places where a Donald Swanton is not on stageunity of interpretation w'ould have enough. His acting and singing arehelped. ! excellent, and the last awful lineThe characters of the two Anti- which is not in the script, is apholi, on the other hand, while dis- Swantonian that only he could de-tinctly and rightfully different, liver. Stephen May, as the Sorcer¬er, is really funny after a weakstart, but the reason for his Austro- Yiddish accent is unclear.Kenneth Northcott’s direction isspotty, at times, his actors seemunsure of exactly where they are togo, or why they stand where theyare or what they are to do whilestanding there. His direction showsa lack of sensitivity to the poten¬tials and limitations of young inex¬perienced actors. For example, thej Three Maids (Joan Tapper, NinaCoven and Barbara Ebert) arecute, funny, enjoyable and memo¬rable, although they probably havethe smallest parts in the show,j They are played cleanly, surelyand well because they are playedas bright young girls with a joie devivre that adds quality and eredence to any performance. TheCourtesans on the other hand, withall the potential of being alluring,vital young bodies, turn out to be Ad¬riana, Luciana and Luce, as theAndrews Sisters singing “Sing For;Your Supper’’, do a three girl birdwalk that is hilarious. The first act,1however, closes with a squaredance with a few steps added fromprevious Blackfriars shows. Otherplaces in the show, particularly inAS the “Falling in Love with Love” isequence, choreography could be ]used with more discretion and ori¬ginality.would profit by more coordination; Dave Meserve’s lighting is inter¬esting and well cued. In the fantasysequence especially, where Dromiois allowed to see a vision of hislong lost brother, his colorful mix¬ture of red and blue gives the scene a character which helps make ahigh point in the show.THE MUSIC IS enthusias¬tically executed under the di¬rection of Barry Salins andpencil-waving Edward Chikofskyand often was the only force thatkept the show alive. Donald Druker’s superb percussion made someof the funny moments funnier.Does all this add up to: “Don’tsee Blackfriars’”? On the contrary.Blackfriars this weekend should liewell attended. The bright spots provided by the Dromios, the chorusand several of the major characters make it worth seeing. Blacki friars is one of the few light¬hearted tradition laden organi/aLouise Wilkinson » Luciana in •... , T. group of people who unite in anthe Blackfriars production of The effort because of talent, interestBoys from Syracuse. Friday and and enthusiasm, and their workSaturday, May 5 and 6, 8:30, should be supported by anyonep.m. in Mandel Hall. Tickets avail-1 wanting at least one evening a yearable for both performances in , of simple uncerebral fun.Mandel Hall corridor. > Loraine SternGottliebbIauty salonExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingMM B. IM tk. NY 1-M02 these girls (none of whom are in-The Columbia CollegeTheater Workshoppresentsa stirring revival of thetopical hit of the 1930'sMARC BLITZSTEIN'STHE CRADLEWILL ROCKstarring a residentand student companyMAY 12*, 13, 14, 19*, 20*, 21tickets by mail, phoneor at college office$2.50COLUMBIA COLLEGE THEATER540 N. Lake Shore Dr.Phone 467-0300*sold out Renaissance Group to Resurrect PlaysThe Renaissance Players, a conception of poetry proffered by and that the Renaissance Playersnewly-formed group of profes- IM_ „ , : Plantations mb be a significantJj • a * j • THE DELIGHT wall come from research tool,sors and students interested in tbe intrinsic interest of the plays.drama Of the Middle Ages and both as entertainment and cultural THE PROGRAM, which will beEarly Renaissance, will present its history, D Andrea stated. The in- offered May 25, 26 and 28, is per-struetrion,” he added, “may be in-1 fectly balanced: John John, direct-valuable. These will be authentic ed by D’Andrea and starring Ken-productions, and the audience can, netih Northcott, Dean of Students inobserve staging problems, portray- the Humanities, is a bawdy farce;al of character psychology and oth- Mundus Et Infans, directed byer facets of the theatre not obvious Alan Nelson, assistant professor offounder members of the Renais- from reading the texts.” English, is an elevating moralitysanee Players, 9aid that the plays D’Andrea emphasized that the play. Members of the audience canwill be performed with the dual ob- study of the living stage is becom- therefore find enjoyment, and intel-jectives of teaching and delighting, ing increasingly important as an lectual and moral edification all inin harmony with the Renaissance area of major scholarly research, the same evening.* ***** :■**''*'*# mmtm -ww »§t»* ** vMaroon Classified Adsfirst program of plays at the end of jthis month.Paul D’Andrea, an assistant pro¬fessor of English and one of the... *•*.PERSONALSBroadway chorus girls.THE CHORUS WAS CLEARvocally excellent, providing mo-“Ladies of the Evening” withcontinuous tableau, and a nuwith the potential of a being a rous-PIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT THE ORIGINAL SOUTHSIDE JUG'BAND appearing Saturday, May 6, atEIN STEIN 1973 W. Lawrence 9 pm.SDS leafletting postponed until Sat. May j13. |Share a car with me. Mostly Spain. SeeEurope, June-Sept. Ken. HY 3-9832.Send a lover to Nashville.Russian by highly experienced nativeteacher. Raipid method. Trial lesson, nocharge. Call 236-1423, 9-5 pm.Disertation typist available. Reasonablerates. Marge X 8264.Kamelot Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st ST.10% discount for UC students.I.I.T. Union Board Concert-ChamberSymphony of Philadelphia; HermannHall, 32nd & Dearborn; May 5 at 8:30Tickets $3.00Koinonia: Tonight at 6 pm. in ChapelHouse, dinner (75c). Theatre party toBlackfriars production.Band’ersnatch Presents“operation Abolition” 9:30 May 7th.“Operation Correction’’ 11:00 May 7th.(the only films with more villans thanthe “Iron Claw”)Bandersnatch Sunday SpecialComplete Meal 99c- Sun., May 7, 6:30 pmmain course drink saladMen! A jug of punch, a loaf of cookies,and US! Come to Blackstone Hall par¬ty, 5748 Blackstone, Sun., 9-11 pm.LOST: green bookbag containing note¬books and Kant's 'Critique of Pure Rea-1 son’ 288-7193.i See film classic-Eclipse-Monday, MayI 8th-Ida Noyes.Instruction in modern jazz piano byDave Baker student, Indiana U. grad,r John Gilmore DO 3-0734* punch the girls, cookie? cookie the. punch? the girls punch the cookies?-NO,cookies, girls, punch!! Men invited toBlackstone dorm party, Sun., 9-11 pm.LECTURE; ‘Maimonides’ Letter on As¬trology’, Prof. Ralph Lerner, May 5,8:30 pm. Hillel House.FILM: ‘The Last Chapter’. Sunday,May seven, Hillel House, 7:30 pm. Ad¬mission: 75c, students; others, $1 00TO RENT6 rm. apt., So. Shore. 3 bedrms. 2 tilebaths, tile kitchen, furn. or unfurn. SO8-5437.Fully furnished, air conditioned apt. orjust furniture. Available from June 8on. Call 363-8058.Prospective sublease has vanished!Effic. apt. available June 1. 5143 S.Kenwood, Apt. 102. $70. 493-1366.Large 6 rm. house, backyard, garage,begin June. $150. 363-5797. summer, and next year. BU 8-8495,t apt. 3 rms. Private bath. $89.50Free utils., parking, porch view.rooms/October 1. Inq. Quaker House.TO SUBLET5 rms., unfurn., South$120/mo. 493-7125. Shore, June-2 bedrm. apt., 5400 So. Woodlawn. Call5 rooms, furnished, 2 blocks from UC.June - Oct. 752-8881. 643-8153 after seven.New summer dresses, suits Sc sportswear, NY Sc Calif, designers. >2 price.Mad Mad Mad Rack. Dresses $2-3-5Values up to $40. DI 8-6800, rm 429.Desks, chests, dining rm and kitchensets, inexpen. Blond spinet piano- $325RE 1-3373: 8219 S. Paxton, evenings orweekends only,Volvo parts, tires. HY 3-9832 Ken.1/5 share international 505 sailboatmooring in Jackson Pk. Harbor. $280Call Dan x 3970 or 752 5205.Two twin beds w/box springs and bases$18 each, 2 light wood chests, $10 eachTV all in excellent condition. 684-6991.Large cool, neat basement apt., 3‘a . OLSON, 24 W stereo receiver. 1 yr. old.rms. June 15-Sept,bark 643-3518.7 rms., 3 bedrms., porch, completely !furn., newly painted, vie. 55th & Ken-wood. June • Sept. $160/Mo. 643-7450.3 rms., June 25-Sept. 5. furnished. Nearcampus. $75/mo. 667-1323.15. $85. 52 & Kim- $75. MIRACORD, 10 H, automatic turntable. 3 mos. old $70 OR BOTH FOR$130 463 3585, 521-0460WANTEDl'i lge. rms. for summer. 51st & Uni-versity. Gary. 493-5360 or 643-5541.y brand new townhouse, nearcampus. 612 lge. rms., 3 bedrms., plushuge basement, completely furnishedAvail. June-October. $175/mo. 538-10273 rm. apt., completely furnished, mod¬ern kitchen, piano. June 15- Sept. 15. 1or 2 persons. NR. Campus. S125/mo.643-3<"^ Apartment, 2-4 rooms, campus vicinityfor fall, will take for summer. JeanneSafer FA 4-8200, room 511.Summer sublet needed near International House 752-1746. after noon.Two girls need summer sublet. CallBarbara. 667-5172 or Nancy, 493-6074Commune apt. (6106 Ellis). $80/mo.June 15- Sept. 15 4!,2 rooms. BU 8-2292Evenings.Single male student needs responsiblermmte for June 15- Sept. 15. Nr. 57thand Maryland. Furn., very clean. Singlefern. stud, needs responsible rrpmte forJune 15- Sept. 15. also near 57th andMaryland. CA11 Dave 752-8457.2>,<s room near campus. Excel, cond.Furn. June 12-Aug. 31. $65/mo. includ.utilities or offer. 288-0896.4 rms. furnished light, and airy. 52 andUniv. $110/mo. June 21- Sept. 26363-3723. 1 bedrm. apt. w/garage, new Califsterile. 2',a mi. UCLA in exchange for1 bedrm. w/den or 2 bedrm (assumedno garage) in So. Shore or Hyde Park-Kenwood. June 10-Sept. 15 (flexible)Write Andrea Tyree, dept, of sociologyUCLA 90024.LEAVING? Hyde Pk. apt. needed by 7/1any gd. value 2!;>-8 rm. 752-3950.2 bedrm. apt for next fall. Call 493-3758.363-3578.8 rms., 4 bedrms., 3 baths, furn. Nea)lake. Available June - Oct. Call 493-53444 furn. rms. Great So. Shore locationJune 15-Sept. 15. REASONABLE.221-4678 after 7:30 (any day except Fri¬day.)JOBS OFFEREDExciting public contract part-time sell¬ing in large LXX>P area building. Per¬sonalized Christmas cards. Please writeMrs. Florence Moss, Plaza Card Shop,The Merchandise Mart, Chicago, Illinois60654, giving age, Chicago address andtelephone number, (women only).Rm. and/or board, male students, spr.. Do something different! Managecoffee shop. Apply in person at T1OTHER SIDE. 1603 E. 53rd St.FOR SALE1965 VW black sedan. Make offer. Call Summer sublet for June and July for Uof Penn Law School student and wife.Write Robert Glass, 532 Pine St. Phila .Pa., immediately.Fem. rmmtes. for sum (begin May orJune) $45/mo. 667-2145.Fe grad, student for sum. and/or fallOwn rm., newly decorated. $60nio.493-6415 after 7 pm.Fem rmmte for summer (next yr?)Own rm. in 4 rm. apt. 50/mo. Somefurn. Call Cindy 493-5839. 5424 DoiChester.Used air conditioner,BTU, call 285 0825. 115 volt, 5,(M>0Rmmte., for lummer. Furnished aptnear campus. $36/mo. Rich 752-5383.Responsible couple needs 2 bedrm-house or apt. by June 30. 667-6416 e'esSc wkends. _$20.00 for helping to secure for 2femalestudents an apartment for next jenear campus apartment tor. 751-8457 or 684 3581.CHICAGO MAROON • May 5, 1967Film Festival ReviewArtsy Downs and Ups of FOTA Films1 he trials of the poor independent filmmaker are many. He is forced to work withcheap or rented equipment or no equipment at all. He cannot afford to hire actors or usethe more sophisticated film techniques. Once ne has finished a movie, he will be lucky tofind someone to show it to. And if he does, it will most likely be in a situation such as thesingularly non-festive FOTA Film —"Face", a painting by MelPekarsky which was stolen lastDecember from the AnnualRenaissance Society Young Col¬lector's show is believed to be inthe Hyde Park area.Anyone who has knowledgeof the painting's whereaboutsshould leave word at the Maroonoffice. The painting can be re¬turned to the Maroon mailbox inIda Noyes Hall and will be for¬warded to Mr. Pekarsky. Theidentity of anyone returning thepainting or giving informationrelating to it will be protected. Festival held Sunday night, wheremechanical failures are frequent,the screen is small, and the roomis hot.There was really not much wrongwith any of the six films shownSunday that couldn’t be correctedwith ten thousand dollars. Perhapssome skeptics will argue that mon¬ey could not make up for the coher¬ence and meaning that most of themovies lacked. But presumably thedirectors are talented and intelli¬gent enough to be able to turn out agood and important film, if theirenergies were not drained off bytechnical and financial struggles. former UC student John Lion. Itpremiered here in the fall.The story is about pop culture(motorcycles, hippies, Pepsi) and Pepsi sign, then the backgroundchanges to a small altar in a bareroom, and then back to the Pepsisign. Complicated tricks are at-homosexuality (the plot runs: boy | tempted, and brought off well. Allhas boy, meets girl, has girl, in all, Poop shows the presence ofchanges mind and returns to boy), la director, and the director shows,THE CAMERAWORK and edit¬ing, compared to the other five, arerefined. They are appropriate, no¬ticeable when they should be andunobtrusive the rest of the time.Lion uses photographic deviceswell: visual puns, negative and col¬or film cut in with the black andwhite. One of the best scenes hasone boy kneeling, as if to pay hom-ALTHOUGH THERE WERE age to pop, in front of a giant neongood parts in all of them, the filmsshown Sunday, with one importantexception, were undeniably bad,and one begins to wonder how “tal¬ented and intelligent” these direc¬tors are, and what exactly theyhave learned.The exception is Pop Soc Poop,made in Chicago last summer by Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 if not a perfected style and tech¬nique, the beginnings of both.This was confirmed by anunscheduled fragment by Lion called Two Events. (The twoevents, I gathered, are The Comingof Spring and The Falling in Love,but my choice may be arbitrary.)Two Events is a fine piece of film,lyric and beautiful. It is a furtherstep from Pop Soc Poop, and verymuch a step in the right direction.Mom Art by Alan Sussman is thewittiest, of the films shown. It ishis first, made during the summerof 1965 in Seattle and Tacoma. Anddespite obvious amateurishness anda non-worn subject, it is hysterical¬ly funny.(Continued on Page Ten)GET INTO THEBandersnatch Discotheque BagCouple 75* Stag 50* 19th Independence Day of Israel Celebrationwith GEULA GIL and TrioSunday, May 21st 8:30 p.m.PARKER HIGH SCHOOL330 W. Webster (near Lincoln Park Zoo)Refreshments$1.00 admission ($1.50 at the door)Tickets can be obtained at Hillel House, 5715 WoodlawnCINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANACADEMY AWARDWINNER"A MAN & A WOMAN"Anouk AimeeIn ColorSun-Times * * * *AMERICAN—For anyone whose ever been in loveStudents $1.50 with 1.0. card every daybut Saturday.Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. & Sun.open 1:30SAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FRO/yi BELL'SINCE 1»24PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 MUSTANGS - TEMPESTS - FORDS - PONTIACSRENT-A-CARBYsMsVolkswagens $4.50 for 12 Hrs.Plus 6* per Mi.Includes Gas and InsuranceRent A Volkswagen For That Special Date Tonite.Cheaper Than A Honda And A Heck Of A LotMore Comfortable.LOCATED AT:HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd Ml 3-1715THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWNMichelob and Budweiser on Tapi based on Shakespear's Comedy of Errors.&®E>6BBS COABS'SPiano Selections Friday & Saturday evenings with girls in it, too!SOMETHING FOR EVERYONETICKETS ON SALE AT THE MANDEL BOX OFFICEfor performances tonight and tomorrow night(May 5 and 6, 8:30 p.m. in Mandel Half)TICKETS: $2.00, STUDENT PRICE, $1.50Mav 5. 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9Theatre ReviewNew Plays Successfully Handle Race ProblemsThere is a growing recognition by modern playwrights thata major function of drama is to raise questions and reflectconflict that is related to the lives of ordinary people. Thetwo plays at the Parkway Community Theater at 500 E. 67street, both first works of youngplaywrights, have a very promisingorientation of this kind.The audience is ushered into thefirst play. The Integrators by Nor¬man Mark, to the canned musak of“My Country ’Tis Of Thee” (andone wrell dressed woman earnestlyasked “should we stand?”). Thestage is set for a staged televisiondiscussion of “important problemsof unimportant people”. The prob¬lem for the night is “Will the Negrofit in?”. A typical Mr. CharlesBlack (Herb Jones) and a typicalMr. Charles White (Bob Weiss)answer such question as: “Whatabout them?White: I never think about you.Black: You just met me. or“Would you w'ant them to shareyour restrooms?”Black: Baby, all nations are wel-come in my latrine.Something is lost in transla¬tion, because each line is placed toincrease the humor of each succes¬sive one. And the audience hasgood laughs from it.THE LAUGHTER continues asthe differences between the charac¬ters are more clearly defined. Butin this character definition also lies the basis of the problem of main¬taining the play’s sharp comment.The playwright’s view of integra¬tion is ambiguous: is it an impossi-ble farce or is the Negro justifiedin his minimal demands? Sinceboth are implied, Herb Jones is ex¬cellent in playing his role with anatural ease so that the acting dis¬appears, while Bob Weiss appropri¬ately caricatures the hostile hypo¬critical white. These two contrastto moderate moderator Marve Gar¬dens—of Monopoly?—(Dave Cox)as a laughable, obnoxious, neutralfool. As the comical contrast slipsinto serious hostility, the play be¬gins to lose not only its humor, butits impact.The transition is even more ten¬uous in the second half, really askit in itself. It is another televisionshow, a national mediation to settlethe problems between the races.Again the actors are the same(don’t all of them look alike?).The actors very wisely opt to playthe scene broadly and bring out thefarce, but perhaps they shouldhave played it even more broadly.FOTA Holds Screening of New Films(Continued from Page Nine)IT BEGINS TAMELY WITH aCampbell soup can, an SOS box,and amusement park signs, andworks by degrees up to fire hy¬drants, totem poles, and signsreading, “Try It and See.” and (ona trash basket in the Seattle Cen¬ter) “Keep Your Center Clean.”Sussman juxtaposes a neon “JesusSaves” with a neon “Savings In¬sured Up To $10,000,” and a close-up of a fat girl’s rear end with aninexplicable sign, “Thick Butt.”There are shots of the strangelysuggestive monorail car approach¬ing on its single track, and the yel¬low elevator rising slowly on theSpace Needle, finally disappearinginto the huge circular restaurant.At the end there is a big gushingfountain. Sussman calls it “subli¬mated eroticism.”Edgar Says My Head is ComingApart, made by Sandy Morgensteinlast summer, is composed of multi¬ple nightmare images. There arepictures of a bloody bandagedhead, a man struggling to get outof a plastic bag, a monkey in acage, and two men on a rock in alake. All of these images slide inand out of each other in double andtriple esposures. The effect is inter¬esting, but confusing.At the beginning of the festival, itwas announced that The Girl Withthe Green Honey Taste, by Eric Jo¬seph and Paul Miller would not beshown because it w'as “injured inthe editing.” However, it was ap¬parently hastily repaired, and it ar¬rived in time to be shown.Like Pop Soc Poop, The Girl wasmade in Hyde Park and has aboy-boy-girl plot (with another girladded). But there the similarityends. The photography is unre¬markable. About the only goodthing in the picture is the cleversilent movie-type titles.THE FIRST FILM shown wasMike Fauman’s Chicago OpenHousing Marches, 1966. It was sim-1ilar to television coverage of the jevents, with the exception that thesound was recorded separately. Attimes there was no sound; at timesthere was no picture. The photogra¬phy was comparable to TV newsphotography.The film contrasts the violent jand ugly reactions of Chicago ILawn and Cicero whites to theipeaceful resolve of the marchers.But what could have been taut, near-violent documentary is brokenup by long pauses, long explanato¬ryparagraphs, and, at the beginningand end, stretches of interminableChicago blues.I suspect (and hope) that theFOTA festival is not really repre¬sentative of what Chicago filmmak¬ers are doing. It was organizedonly two weeks before it was held.Some films could not be obtained.Others were not yet finished. Thefilms were not screened before¬hand, and they were presented withthe abandon that has become asso¬ciated with filmic occurences at UC(the first film was delayed thirtyminutes while the FOTA peoplelooked for an extension cord).WE HAVE BEEN PROMISEDthat the second Annual FOTA FilmFestival, if there is one, will bemore organized. Certainly thereare a number of good films on thiscampus—(certainly there areenough people here capable ofmaking good films)—to make it aninteresting, perhaps exciting,worthwhile occasion, rather thanthe boring, unfortunate, finallyworthless duration that was passedoff as a festival last Sunday. The humor has its incisive mo¬ments (though fewer than in thefirst skit) as when Mr. White re¬minds us what the whites foundedthis nation on: Selfishness (Wewanted privacy so we decided tocontrol the rest of the continent).But where the lines are playedstraight instead of either being un¬der or over played, each characterassumes either a dignity or a se¬verity that makes the later lapsesinto babyishness seem silly and notfunny. There is also less precisionin timing, while there is more of itneeded here. In parts it even seemsthat the actors have given up andare playing, not acting. It is notpolished, yet it is enjoyable; theaudience gives it full laughter,which is its own justification.THE SECOND PLAY, Requiemfor Brother X, by William Welling¬ton Mackey, is a strange contrast,set creatively behind bars with con¬tinuous heart beat soundingthroughout. The play leads theaudience not to a release of tensionthrough laughter, but to the inten¬sification of it by sharpening theconflicts of race.The play is about a poor Negrofamily just after the death of Mal¬colm X, during the audibly painfulpregnancy of a white girl, (Bar¬bara Brega) whose child is fa¬thered by one of the sons. This son,Nate (Bill Vines), is a follower ofMalcolm and the only really mobilecharacter. The family’s conflict isnot only of each with his race andsociety, but generational and situa¬tional. The father Jude (ClarenceTaylor) a wheelchair paralytic, isfunctionally immobilized from act¬ing out his frustrations, although heis verbally responsive, spewingcriticisms at his son Matt (CraigRedmond) and his wife (Adrian Ri-card) who are trying to make it in a white man’s world playing by thewhite man’s rules. Their immobili¬ty in the face of conflict is physi¬cally shown as they never leave thechairs they sit on. The sixteen yearold daughter (Christine Earl), incontrast to the rest, performs afruitful action during the play—shedelivers the little white girl s child.The play and its charactersreach their high points when theemotions are concretized, specificand personal (when, for example,the father warns his sons, or whenNate tells a story and Matt lis¬tens). These are moments of bril¬liance. It is exciting theater when(in parody of church gospel) al¬most all the characters are talkingat once: Nate with joy and agonysaying how he is going to get out ofthe draft, Matt with frenzy repeat¬ing “shut up daddy” anl daddywith powerfully insightful humorsaying “yessir, tell it,” and thewhite girl screaming in the back¬ground. Here it is glorious, the con¬flicts of each are clear and theaudience hangs on as Nate carriesthe play.BUT THE PLAYWRIGHT seemsto have been unable to maintainthis Clarity. At times the frustra¬tion of the real situation comesacross as the frustration of actorswho cannot get across the fullnessof their roles. This is partially be¬cause the play lacks a certaindepth of substance. It offers no al¬ternatives to the problems and thenmust instead delve into those prob¬lems. As the playwright tries to hitat the same points, instead ofcreating a deeper sense of mean¬ing, the meaning becomes less co¬herent. Emotion kept at a highpeak begins to breakdown and fadeinto gestures. Given this problem,the characters occasionally need asubtler interpretation, moving away from the “Great Philosophi.cal Abstract Ideas” (as when Natebreaks a fine acting moment say.ing “I loved”).In the same w'ay, Matt, who hasthe difficulty of playing a wishy-washy character, is such an ab¬stracted concept that he often suc¬cumbs to substituting symbol formeaningful expression. Even thewishy-washy person must be actedwith conviction. Redmond is bestwhen he responds concretely to theother Characters and listens tothem and himself.ON THE OTHER hand, thosecharacters who are not given sub¬stantive parts begin to bring theircharacters alive. Adrian Rieardcarries the significance of Che wifein her worn out, tired of crying fa¬cial expression. Christine Earl isrefreshing in that she uses thespeech of the ghetto instead of theenunciation of a white gramma¬rian, and so the audience respondseven to her small role.The overall impression of theplay is not of the flaws, but of itsmoments of greatness (which im¬plies even a stronger potential inthe playwright, the actors and thedirector). For the careful depictionof their roles. Bill Vines and Clar¬ence Taylor alone make Requiemfor Brother X worth seeing. It is inthese characterizations that thesensitive direction of Dick Gaffieldis most apparent. He converted thescript which was written for areading only, into a drama whichachieves its increased effectivenos-sthrough the contrasts of motionwhich staging allows.In the near cultural wasteland ofChicago, you should reserve yourseats for the last performances ofthese two plays (this weekend!now.H.T.B.Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweat¬shirts, rain parkas, tennis shoes,underwear, jackets, "levis,"camping equipment, wash pants,etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd St.PL 2-4744Open Sundays 9:30 - 1:00CHILDRENS' BOOKS OF CURRENTDoctor Dolittle's Return INTERESTby Hugh LoftingDoctor Doolittle and the Secret Lake $4.95by Hugh LoftingDoctor Dolittle's Puddleby Adventures $5.50by Hugh LoftingDoctor Dolittle's Circus $4.95by Hugh Lofting $5.50General Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue THEY’RE HERE!BANDERSNATCH PRESENTSOperation Abolition&Operation CorrectionTwo Views of H.U.A.C.'Abolition" made by House on Un-American ActivitiesSUN. 9:30 - TUES. 9:30"Correction" made by American Civil Liberties UnionSUN. 11:00 - TUES. 11:00Sadism—Police—Brutality—PinkosPatriotic Paranoia VSOMETHING FO R EVERYONE...Adultery, Prostitution, Slavery! Masochistic Grovelling! Sadistic Beatings!See a musical microcosm of the ancient world in all its decadence, Blackfrair's production of Rodgers and Hart's The Boysfrom Syracuse, based on Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors. Tickets $2.00 with a 50c student discount. Performances May 5-6,8:30 p.m. in Mandel Hall.TICKETS ON SALE AT THE MANDEL HALL BOX OFFICE.10 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 5, 1967j I ^"^mwwwwwww ^MWWffW^MW.W/WWWWW«WWWW WWWaroon Poetry Contest W*? -* * * ' ' <f* , "*. <■ innersAfter long deliberation, wehave found these poems to havethe greatest merit amoung those To My Sister,On Her Thirteenth Birthday It's a Plum Grape Fielding,But I Can Barley Till Ryesubmitted. Monica Raymond's ToMy Sister, On Her ThirteenthBirthday, was given the firstprize of $25. The second prize,$15, went to Paul DeVore for his Standing before the mirror, like thoseCalico girls, the priggish prairie lassiesThe textbooks do their best to teachWere your ancestors, putting your hair up.Till a year ago, your firmly folded itIn plaits each morning, in the same wayYou wove camp potholders, made birdsFrom clay, leafprints with a toothbrush. (Since my heroin—mint in the berry hyacinths—in ourgreener salad daysNever hemped nor hedged in her melon voice norpaw pawed my clumsy ways,/ now mince no worts—cauliflower a flower—andsencereally wish to show herWhy / tractor alfalfa world around and on whatgrounds .von’ clover.)It's a Plum Grape Fielding, but ICan Barley Till Rye.Randall Reid, Assistant Profes¬sor of English and HumanitiesBrian Dunlap, Editor, ChicagoLiterary ReviewPenelope Glasgow, MaroonEdward Hearne, Editor, Chica¬go Literary ReviewJack Kolb, Chairman, FOTAMark Rosin, Feature Editor,MaroonWhispers of ImmoralityGrishkin, indeed! the buxom wench,has my metaphysic fairly burning;her frank, compelling influencebodies concepts forth concerningGrishkin, the lass, with her Slovacbumand her own concupiscent arms,divining my material endto circumspeculate her charms.For Grishkin is large; in consequence,pathetically breathes with emphases.Sadi round, synthetic definitionslend promise of gymnastic bliss.I nperipatetically she regardsthe contours of a modern friezei which her passive intellect describesin cogent crosswordpuzzleze.4 rut when discursively she revealsthe ample virtues of her sex,I the elucidation makes me wise;she proves a very haruspex.Now abstract entities tax my mindWallula leialala‘ for this gay science have I resigneddelights of incunabula.Gregory desJardinsDreamI dreamt of you last night. I thoughtI feltyour stubbled chin like bristles ontny breastdnd neck and ear and cheek andnose, or smeltThe sweat that wets your hard,broad, hairy chest.I dreamt of us last night. I thoughtH<? rolled(her and over, as I’ve wished to do,bh arms like barrel-hoops thatTScarte could holdhe ,,s er-brimming laughter ’twixtus two.1 dreamt a while last night. I thoughtlucre cameF°!k cycling at the door we mustlet in1» chat with us and leave. We didT i 1 aS<un. but it was not thesame.Alison P. Kaufman At twelve you let it down one day in the park.And the old men (so melded to their benchesThe pigeons treated them as one stoneConfiguration) sprang up to watch you pass.The chinless delivery boys stoppedStill on their bikes, leaving tomatoesSplit on the pavement, sodden strawberries,Cream and Chiclets, running in the gutter.That spring you wore a blouse with roses.They caught in your hair, you walked everywhereWith a trail of petals. The street magiciansSawed you in two, and argued whichWould have the legs, and who the top halfWith the miraculous hair. A subway rideBrought a million midnight proposals. There wasNo help for it. You had to put your hair up.Standing before the mirror, like Seurat’sBather, whose every point of skinIs a point of light, putting your hair up.She lives in a world made private by paintAnd canvas. You, in this room whose white shadeKeeps out the street, framing you shiftingBetween two poses. Now, lifting your hair upStiff and serene. Now, letting it down.Monica RaymondThe Day the Sky Fell1 showed him how to draw the sky.Perhaps it was wrong. The others allDrew lovely pictures, with flowersthe sizeOf flowers, lower than windows,withoutThe rays on the sun, or smoke inspiralsOut of the chimneys. He was the onlyOne in the class who drew the skyIn one blue line at the top of thepage.So I showed him how the sky comesdownTo the edge of things. You can seeit betweenThe burs of the yard, or in crevicesBetween empty branches. He lookedout the windowA little while, in his blue plaid shirtWith efficient cuffs. And lie said Isee.The sky comes down, like a windowblind."Then he scribbled the sky across thepageIn 'angry streaks, across the facesOf children playing that he haddrawn,And mothers waiting on crookedbenches.As if a pool of ink had spreadOut from the center of it. Then,One by one, he laid the crayonsDown in the box, in the neatest rowsWhich the other children never do.Monica RaymondRENT A TRUCK$^oo Per HourDO-IT-YOURSELFTRUCK RENTALSO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hour Wind Bluesthough there is no windthe blues blowing through my shirtin a ragged way through the holes inmy buttonsand the little thready crevicesbetween the individual strandsof clothand on a clear day you can seethrough the wind but on this wet daythe views are gone due toatmospheric protuberancesforming wind through thecrevices between thethready strandsand though no wind blowsthe raggy bags of flapping pantsin agony of breath are breezing intothe wet airwhere they and me are being eatenyes i must say eaten, in time,by the ragamuffin sleeves, which areblue.Dan CampionYou won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcell ms today.PITER SON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1245S S. Doty Ay.•40-4411Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the rest / think it was parsley poppy-doveFor this girl who pepsin chives;Myrrh I'vy cedar, my soul nosegay,But when site’s gone . . . endives.Young poppies like to spearmintAnd waste much thyme on cinnament(All despice the voice of resin,Which pines fir origan in its season).But thistle never nettle more;She reached marjoram, mustard score.'And now the laurel leave at bayHer berry herb bane wish to play.She sesame, at last, “1 cantaloupe but marijuana";My artichoke, threw carraway, and dreamed a savorydrama.(I garlic dared, but sages too do need the earth’s goodsalt;And though lotswife may bane their life, it’s not a sourfault.)So / made bold—though, if truth be told, the mere hopemade me pallid—To toss and savor, dress, undress this fit-for-Caesarsalad.Hence: “Lettuce, when the nightshade’s down’’(Bold! As though I’d known herbivore!)"Disport ourselves from root to crownDill harvests yield no more.”Yes, weedtumbled well, but lentil did she knowHow mocha in me this seedling wish had then begun togrow;I or of all the tempting cinnsamen, this rose-hipped,-mallow budDoes stir a fiery sap in me . . . "Oh, be my constantcud!”(And who but herbicides?)Paul DeVoreAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes - Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsASAMATTEROPACT ... Still Life Insurance ft a ture wayto financial independence for youand your family.Aa a local Sun Ufa representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOn. North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYMay 5, 196/ • CHICAGO MAROON • 11The Party MartHeadquarters for all party needsWINE CELLAR SPECIAL SPX™ISA selection of dry white and red wines at a very special price: / g ^1964 Vouvray Dem Sec $2.59 )1964 Chablis Vaillon Premier Cru $2.98 j I V*il1964 Liebfraumilch Cabinet Auslese $2.98 ) imported) from Scotland1964 Schwarze Katz $2.49 (1964 Wehlener Sonnenuhr Spatlese $3.49 I $098 fifth1963 Urziger Schwarzlay Auslese $3.98 /^ 1962 Barsac $1.89 )* ""—- U,a ;[fniT"'"Tir r 1962 Chateau Beaumont $2.98 J„ coffee liqueurll|lg; 1964 Macon Rouge $1.79 (1964 Macron Rouge $1.79 79 f1964 Moulin 'A' Vent $2.79 /1962 Beau Geste Sparkling Burgundy $4.29 (,2 bottles valued at $34.23 \SPECIALLY PRICED INTRODUCTORY OFFER j ™FOR 2 WEEKS ONLY s2829 \ 99°DO US A FAVOR AND SAMPLE ; —<case of 24 12-oi. cansOUR CHEESE! $379Cheese Flavors of the week; (Grape Cheese: Hot Pepper Loaf: J COCA-COLAMade in the Haute-Savoie district of France. The outside A blend of cured cheddar and provolone cheese spiced I -*11111 / __ . .is covered with the black grape skins and seeds from .... . , ... Wm < ? AdHW ) 12-01. DOttleS.1 i * T. . . ... , with imported chile peppers. M1' t w * **w*the local wine pressings. The texture is white and i"“"$2.49 6 -k 39cChristian IX: Cheshire: ^M8j& ) CRUNCHY ROASTEDThe oldest and most popular English cheese. It is a wjm / * "■*»$£ ll[ jtfbA white firm cheese made from partly skimmed cow's firm $harp cheese< b„t i$ creamier, more crumbly, and W W \ MNw / ' ...milk and spiced^ with caraway seeds. It is one of the |ess compact than cheddar. ' ( W*»n SpiCy$] 29 $1.39 j flavor budsper pound - per p°und | 59cCelebrate Wedding Receptions orGraduation Parties with the Best for LessGRANDIN CELEBRATIONThe Champagne of Anjou Sparkling Burgundyr:r 3F0R s 10 $298 FIFTHcase of 12Imported from France .Case ol 12 - $34.98 $33 00The Party MartOpen Daily 10 a.m. -11 p.m. - Sunday 12 Noon - 9 p.m. 2427 E. 72nd12 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 5, 1967