Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary YearVol. 75-No. 56 The University of Chicago Friday, May 12, 1967Lemisch Reads Paper on!A|j AttacksAmer. Revolution in INH WarJesse Lemisch “broughtdiscussion back to scholarship”this week. Lemisch, an assist¬ant professor of history whosefailure to be reappointed this yeartouched off charges of Universitypolitical bias, read his major work,“Jack Tar in the Streets: MerchantSeamen in the American Rev¬olution/’ to an audience of 50 stu¬dents in Ida Noyes Hall. The read¬ing was sponsored by StudentGovernment (SG).Lemisch also discussed with theClark DiscussesCourt at Law Sell. Cheered by 1600by Jeffrey KutaThe United States is in Vietnam today “to kill, kill, and kill some more,” said Muham-not a rabble rouser. You cannot in- mad Ali, former world heavyweight boxing champion and currently an Islam minister, be¬st. tutionahze protest as .f it were fore an above-capacity crowd of 1600 in the Field House Wednesday night.students present his firing from theUC faculty. Concerning the Ma-,roon's editorial reference to him as ian “agitator in residence,” he re-:marked that “I respectfully de-1dined the title with gratitude. I amby Alfred Marcus“The Supreme Court hasbeen controversial throughoutits history,” Associate SupremeCourt Justice Tom Clark toldan overflow crowd at the LawSchool Tuesday afternoon.“At times the Supreme Court isahead of the public and at times itis behind." he observed.CLARK EXPLAINED that al¬though he was strongly opposed toboth the Miranda and Escobedo de-1 exander alone or his armies?”cisions, he feels they have caused Lemisch noted that Americanno disruption of justice. “A bank history has thus far been a historyrobber," said Clark, “is not going from the top down. “I don't thinkto read the Supreme Court decision that looking at the elite is an aecu-beJore he robs a bank. rate way of constructing the wholeClark also observed that while he; group," he said. “Maritime historyfavored the Supreme Court decision has concentrated as little on theon reapportionment in principle.! common seamen as business histo-his opinion differed slightly from ry has on the laborer.”an eccentricity.”“The University can no longercope with disagreement.” he con¬tinued. “Disagreement is seen asdisruption on this campus. Placidi¬ty rather than truth is the highestgoal here.”According to Lemish. he was toldhe was fired because he was notobjective enough. Yet. Lemischcontinued, even conservative histo¬rians praise his work. “What crite¬ria are applied in these matters? Ifnone, any judgement is invalid,” hecharged.“Truth is essential to a radical,”Lemisch stated. “You must knowhow things work in order to changethem.”Lemisch went on to discuss hispaper, which will be part of a bookto be called Jack Tar vs. John Bull.Before actually reading the paper,he recited a poem by BertoltBrecht, in which the followingquestion is asked: “Who built thepyramids? The kings or the workers? Who conquered the world? Al-the majority. He advocated theFederal government system beingapplied to the states rather thanforcing both state houses to be ap-|x>rtioned according to population.(Continued on Page Three) According to Lemisch’s paper,the merchant seaman was a young,adventure-seeking man attractedby high wages. Like his counter¬part on land, the farmer, he wasseeking prosperity.More Women TooClass of '71 Is Biggest, Brightest Everby John MoscowIf it seems that there aremore pretty girls on campusnext fall, it will be becausethere are.In next year’s record-sized fresh¬man class there will be 395 menand 326 women, making up a classof 721 of the “brightest students”ever matriculating, according toDirector of Admissions CharlesO Connell.THE 55%-45%’RATIO of men towomen in next year’s class pre¬sents a considerable contrast to the75%-25% male-female ratio of justa few years ago. According toO’Connell it represents a trendwhich can be attributed to severalfactors.“There is no discrimination by%The election of nextyear's Maroon editor-in- |chief will be held in theMaroon office this after¬noon at 4 pm. All Maroonstaff members are required *to attend........ n.. mm* -r"\ sex in admitting students. We tryto obtain the best possible class . . .Usually the male-female balance inthe group of students accepted re¬flects the proportion of males to fe¬males in the group of applicants.“This means that probably thenumber of female applicationshave gone up over the past three orfour years. This is due to the great¬er desirability of top flight co¬educational schools such as UC,and to the fact that the Hyde Parkneighborhood is no longer as dan¬gerous as it was during the 1950’s,”he went on.Other co-ed schools often havestrict quotas for women and sur¬veys have shown that it is harderfor a female to get into a coedschool than it is for a male.“We were aiming for a class of700,” said O’Connell.” Presently wehave 721 confirmed, but some ofthese may change their minds, inwhich case we would reach into thewaiting-list of 102 students. Thisclass will probably have higher SATscores than previous classes—there’s no reason why theyshouldn’t.”O’Connell attributed the steadyrise in SAT scores to a growing“test-taking ability” on the part of ‘only alternative to the war is justice,” added Ali, who was recently indicted: for refusing induction into the U.S.I Army.HE WAS THE LAST of four per¬sons to speak at a 7:30 pm rally| climaxing Wednesday’s Day of In-I quiry on the War in Vietnam, partof a nation-wide effort by a groupof 300 student body presidents andnewspaper editors to examine thewar in Vietnam and demonstratetheir concern.Didn't LoseResponding to critics of his refus¬al of induction. Ali stated that he“didnt’ lose a thing up to this mo¬ment by not taking that step for¬ward. But I’ve gained a lot.”He said he had gained “peace ofmind, peace of heart, and contentment with almighty God” by refus¬ing to serve in the Army. Heclaimed that the wealth of Ameri¬ca and the friendship of those whosupport the war do not measure upto these.Ali said there was no inherentcontradiction between his condem¬nation of the violence of war on theone hand, and his practice of vio¬lence as a boxer on the other.“There’s one hell of a lot of differ¬ence between fightmg n a ring andgoing to war in Vietnam. In thering, we have a referee to stop thefight if one fighter gets hurl toobadly,”HE CHARGED THE Johnson Ad¬ministration with allowing his “sis¬ters” to be beaten up in his hometown of Louisville. Kentucky, whilesending his “brothers" off to fightin Vietnam.Ali twice asked the crowd, “Whois the heavyweight champion of theworld?” After being overwhelmedwith cheers of “Muhammad Ali!Muhammed Ali!” the Islam minis-i ter tugged his ear lobe, squinted,| and shouted into the microphone,I “Louder, I can’t hear you!”Earlier in the evening rally, theRev. James Bevel, a veteran of; civil rights movements and theSpring Mobilization to End the WarI in Vietnam, sought to equate rac¬ism in the U.S. with the U.S. gov-, ernment’s “program of genocideagainst the Vietnamese people.”Double FoolHe said that “any black man whojoins LBJ’s posse is a doublefool. . . We will not stand by andwatch Muhammad Ali lynched by| the racists of this country.”Rev. Bevel referred to Ali as“one of the great Americans be-: cause he acts out what he preach-| es.” He called himself “a nonvi¬olent man.”He said that if Americans do notdeal with the problem of milita¬rism, then “I’m sure our childrenwill not get a chance to deal withit.” The U.S. should not resort tomurder as an attempt to solve theVietnam problem, he added.SPEAKING CHARISMATICALLYwith frequent outbursts of ethusi-asm from the crowd, Rev. Beveltold a story of how African witchdoctors ordered native women totake their babies to the river andSome of the over 1600 people who crowded into the Fieldhouse,Wednesday night, to hear Muhammad Ali.the students themselves. Lastyear’s class had medium SATscores ol 664 on the verbal sectionand 665 on the math sectionsTHERE WERE SEVERAL indi¬cations that UC is ranking higherthan previously with students.There were between 2400 and 2500applications filed, compared with2300 last year. Of these 1100 wereaccepted, which is less than wereaccepted last year, but more thanthat were expected to come. Ofthose who were accepted, 61% areexpected to matriculate. This com¬pares with a matriculation rate of58% last year, and 48% in 1958.Few NegroesAt least one indicator, however,shows UC is not so highly rated byapplicants. According to O’Connell,there were approximately 150 ap¬plications from Negroes and be¬tween 70 and 75 Negroes were ad¬mitted. At the moment, however,only 17 are sure to come, and up tofive more may come.The reason for this O’Connell as¬serted, was simple. “We took onlythose who could do the work here,which means they could do thework at any school in the country.Since Negro students are the most highly sought after in the country,they had their choice of schools.UC is not first choice for many ofour white students, and for many ofthe Negroes too, apparently.”O’Connell denied the possibilitythat UC had not offered enoughmoney in scholarships.SCHOLARSHIPS WERE also offered to most of the students ac¬cepted in the Grass Roots TalentSearch program. There were 120applications, and approximately54 students accepted under the pro¬gram, from small schools in Mon¬tana, Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan,southern Illinois, and similar re¬gions, according to O’Connell.ErratumHannah Arendt, professor •in the Committee on SocialThought was mistakenly 1listed as one of the faculty |members who signed in sup¬port of the Day of Inquiry.Student Government (SG) and >the Maroon apologize for theerror.(Continued on Pago Nine)SG Invites Russell WarCrimes Tribunal to U.S. After Two Years of ProtestPenn To End CBVt ContractsStudent Government (SG)(SG) last night authorized aninvestigation of political biasin admissions, and invited theBertrand Russell War CrimesTribunal to hold hearings at UC.The War Crimes Tribunal hasbeen meeting in Sweden with theavowed purpose of exposing the“guilt” of the United States in Viet¬nam. According to some SG mem¬bers they have been looking for aforum in the United States. Rep¬resentatives of the U'.S. govern¬ment will also be invited to speak,but their acceptance is doubtful.WITH ONLY 31 of the 50 rep¬resentatives present, a resolutionestablishing a draft aid center waspassed, a ballot box schedule fornext week’s referenda was es¬ tablished and the possibility of SG’shiring a teacher was discussed.Jimmy’s, a popular Hyde Parkpub, was selected as one of the! sites for balloting. It will be openI longer than will the ballot box inBurton-Judson.The admissions resolution calledfor establishing a committee to“request the publication” of alldocuments relating to the recentpolitical bias charges levied at Ad-missions Director CharlesO’Connell. It stated that the Pro¬vost’s committee previouslyappointed by President Beadle wasinadequate.THERE WAS further discussionon the suspension of students forsmoking pot and on the desirabilityof having the students select fac¬ulty members by campus-widevote. No action was taken. I PHILADELPHIA, (CPS) —The trustees of the Universityof Pennsylvania have approvedthe termination or transfer ofPenn’s controversial Spice Rackand Summit Chemical and biologi¬cal warfare contracts as soon aspracticable.Support was also voiced for Pennpresident Gaylord Harnwell’s rec¬ommendation that it would beundesirable for the projects to betransferred to the University CityScience Center (UCSC), a coopera¬tive institution in which the univer¬sity holds a majority of the stock.HARNWELL TOLD a Board ofTrustees meeting, “The universi¬ty’s resources are limited and inorder that its faculty and studentsmake the most effective use ofthem for the primary educationalpurpose for which the university exists, we should not undertakeperipheral technical work whi^hcan as well be done by others, andwhich shows little promise of con¬tributing materially to the corpusof fundamental knowledge.”The Penn president said that “onthis basis, these contracts in ques-.tion are more appropriate to gov¬ernment, or industrial laboratories,or to one of the non-profit corpor¬ations set up for the purpose ofducting problem-solving investiga¬tions.”IT WAS SAID that the decisive factor in the trustees’ decision wasthe appropriateness of this type oiresearch for the university.The trustees* decision appearedto end protests which had corn inued for almost two years, culminating in a sit-in demonstrationagainst the projects two weeks ago.Robert Brand, a leader in the re¬cent actions against the projects,said that the trustees’ action was‘a major step forward and willpave the way for a more thoroughexamination of the role of universeties throughout the country.”Wade Calls Quality of Life in the CityBy-Product of Solely Physical Planningpeople happy.ONE WAY TOThe quality of life in thecity is almost, if not quite, a one way to design programsneglected by-product of plan- ^at be effective is to involve. ° , , ! the city s residents m the processning by city planners who are Qf formulating plans, Wade re¬concerned only with the physical marked. He noted that the Office ofaspects, said Alan D. Wade, Associ- Economic Opportunity has a policyate Professor in the School of So- requiring local poverty boards tocial Service Administration Tues- have “maximum feasible participa-day. tion of the poor.” This policy may jWADE, SPEAKING at a coffee; be honored more in the breach ,hour in Thompson house, comment, than in the observance, he noted,ed that city planners with training however,as architects assume that, if theyprovide better roads and public fa-1cilitaes, the city will automatically Ibecome a better place to live.The present priorities of the Dal-1ey administration, Wade comment- jed, “make you really want to cry ;about our mayor.” They currently jinclude such projects as removingthe Loop “L”, completion of the“L” line along the Dan Ryan ex¬pressway, and construction of acombined sports and cultural cen¬ter.“All those bricks and mortar,"Wade commented, are seen by thecity administration as leading tobetter life in Chicago. Rather thansuch building programs, Wadeurged that city programs concen¬trate on helping find ways to make Student organizationsor prospective organizationswhich will want to be consid¬ered for financial supportfrom the Committee on Recog¬nized Student Organizations(CORSO) must submit pre¬liminary budget estimates byJune 2, and final requests byJune 30. They should be ad¬dressed to Mark Joseph,CORSO chairman, at the Stu¬dent Government office.An organization applying toCORSO for the first timeshould indicate its objectives,activities, and related infor¬mation.>'' Av • -Free 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. ... fun tit* fntui'enee f« • tufe wtfto financial Independence for youand your family.iAe a local Sun life representative, mafI cad upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North USalle Stroof, Chicago 60602FRankUn 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hour* 9 to 5 Monday*,other* by appt.tvti UFI A8SURANCI COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY* i Exffiiisite handcraftedJEWELRYFrom the Sticks and Stones Collection ofMuseum Classics in'Heplica. Four thousand yearsa£o Queen Shub-ad-of-Stimer woredelicate beechleaves as a necklace.The beauty of hernatural “jewelry*has been delicatelyrecreated in thisgoldwashed replica.Every detail of thebeech leaves hasbeen faithfullycaptured endreproduced in thiscurator-selectedmuseum piece. Itwill make anexquisite additionto your accessorywardrobe.ST 90Sumerian Necklace$28.00Jewelry—-Handicrafts—SculptureHARPER COURT—5210 S. HARPER 324-7266Convenient Honrs: Noon to 8 p.m. dailyC H I C A G p ,v MAROON . * I May 196* We’vebeen at it120 yearsBut it still takesover four monthsto brew Carlaberg-the mellow,flavorful beerof Copenhagen.Drink Carlsberg -the mellow, flavorful beer of Copenhagen.6mi« MX kotix* t, MX ('•«*«.. Cop*"*****. SetetMi ■ «x.. M* * «Ot»1 'When you can’t afford to be dullsharpen your witswith NoDozNoDoz keep alert tablets or new chewable mints,safe as coffee, help bring youback to your mental best.. help *you become more alert to thepeople and conditions aroundyou. Non-habit formingWhde studying, or after hours,sharpen your wits with NoDozTablets or new Chewable Mints2 •Mandel Hall "Town Meeting1*Panel Considers Role of Intellectual This Year's NSA Delegates Will ReformAssn. Programs, Structure-Schwartzby Kenneth SimonsonA “town meeting on Viet¬nam” Wednesday afternoondrew a crowd of more than 700in Mandel Hall to hear reportsfrom six workshops. A discussionof “The Role of the Intellectual inthe Present Situation,” and aspeech by Student Government SGpresident Jeffrey Blum.PARTICIPANTS in the four-waydiscussion were Hannah Arendtand Harold Roseniberg, professorsin the committee on social thought;Hans J. Morgenthau, DistinguishedService Professor of political sci¬ence and history; and Paul Sweezy,editor of Monthly Review maga¬zine. Mathematics professor Rich¬ard Lashof Chaired the panel.Miss Arendt maintained that in¬tellectuals have the responsibilityof guiding power to truth. She saidthat they must resist the tendencyof government to try to define theirresponsibility.Morgenthau pointed out thatmany intellectuals who profess tospeak truth to power actually“speak power to the rest of thecoramunit y.” Morgenthau sawthree ways to define the role of theintellectual in the political sphere:he can give his talents to the gov.eminent or act as an advisor; hecan vest a political power structurewith the appearance of truth andjustice; or he can “hold up the mir¬ror of truth to those in power” and“be a kind of institutionalized painin the neck.”Pointless ArgumentRosenberg felt that “the wholeatmosphere in the U.S. today isthat ‘argument about the war ispointless because we are facedwith a fait accompli.' ” He said theresponsibility of the intellectual tohis profession is to say what onethinks, not to follow blindly theevolution of his field.Sweezy distinguished between theintellectual and the “intellect work¬er.” the latter deals only with bisspecialty and cares about nothingelse. By contrast, “the intellectualcares about the whole picture,”Sweezy said. He estimated thatover 90% of the university profes¬sors are intellect workers.SWEEZY BRANDED the currentAmerican environment “one of ter¬rible unreason.” “The Vietnam waris only one aspect of this; he said.The intellectual according toSweezy, must be an advocate ofreason and must find out why theattitude of unreason exists andtake concrete steps to correct it.Miss Arendt disagreed with thisview, “There is a great exaggera¬tion of what the intellectual can doand ought to do. This view containsa certain arrogance with which I Delegates of this year’s na¬tional congress of the NationalStudent Association will beresponsible for reforming the allocate duties for the several kindsof programs the national office nowruns, such as educational reformprojects, services, and communityaffairs. At present, there is one Na-cannot go along,” she said.I She also argued that “it’s not ouri job to explain what our values; ought to be. Learning for learning’sJ sake is the only responsibility ofthe intellectual as an intellectual.We have no right to claim that asintellectuals we are the conscienceof the nation.”No Intellectual CasteAccording to Sweezy, “We’re ac¬customed to talking about intellec¬tuals as if they are a caste. Wedon’t have one in this country andwe’re getting to have it less andless.” He thought that last month’sSpring Mobilization in New Yorkwas a sign that dissatisfaction withthe war is not confined to intellec¬tuals.Morgenthau warned against con-j fusing “the inteUectural searcherafter truth, whatever truth may be,with the intellectual activist.” Lat-! er he added that “truth is notmerely expert knowledge. It is thewhole spectrum of What man canj know.”AT THE BEGINNING of thetown meeting, members of themorning and early afternoon work¬shops summarized what had beendiscussed in their sessions. Thework of the Committee for Inde-i pendent Political Action (CIPA)! was explained at a workshop onelectoral politics. CIPA is “tryingj to bring radical political perspec-| tives to the middle class.” It isdoing this currently, the reportwent on, by handing out leaflets onrail platforms. In the future CIPAintends to publish a newspaper andoffer draft counseling to highschobl students. Its long-term aim Hans J. MorgenthanI is to build a radical grassroots po¬litical movement.Politics for PeaceThe workshop on Politics forPeace indicated that its goals aresimilar. It is seeking to develop aneffective base from which to pres-I sure the government into endingthe war. Currently the UC studentorganization is conducting a door-to-door canvass of South Shore todetermine opinion on the war. Lat¬er it will try to develop indigenousleadership among local activists.Eventually it hopes to conduct con¬crete political action, such as hold¬ing public discussions on the war in(Continued on Page Nine)Ml 3-31135424 $. Klmbarkwe sell the beat,and fix the restforeign car hospital Tom Clark AgainstDemonstrationsThat Break the Law(Continued from Page One)“The Supreme Court always triesto avoid Constitutional questions,”he noted, and further explainedthat conflicts between the branchesof government are usually not set¬tled by the Supreme Court.IN RESPONSE to a questionabout the implications of Dr. Mar¬tin Luther King’s decision to leadthe movement against the war inVietnam, Clark observed that he isagainst any demonstrations thatviolate the law. “People work bet¬ter within the law,” he said. “Thetrouble with some people is thatthey have too much exuberanceand let themselves get carriedaway.”Yo%i won't to put your"wvfog or gtonagg problemwtoxjon movingand storage CO.1MII S. Mr Am•44-4*11 UNIVERSITY 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 association’s programs and struc-i^ona^ Affairs Vice President, withture, according to Ed Schwartz, | responsibility for overseeing aNational Affairs Vice President of; number of staff “desks” in eachNSA, in a phone interview yester- JProgram area, and an Internationalday. Affairs Vice President.There is no lack of ideas for re- 1 • Changes be made in the struc-shaping NSA’s structure, Schwartz i ture and functions of the Nationalnoted, but final decisions must be' Supervisory Board, the panel ofmade by the delegates from the delegates which is elected to for-member schools, not by the nation- j mulate policy when necessary dural officers.REFORM OF NSA is a centralissue in the current debate at UCon whether to disaffiliate from theassociation, which is a federation ^ce> it is felt.ing the year when the national con¬gress of delegates is not in session.Members of this board should be incloser touch with the national of-of over 400 student governments atinstitutions across the country.Several regional meetings, in¬cluding one of the Illinois - Wiscon- The international program becompletely revised, probably byconcentration on promoting discus¬sions and other programs relatedsin region, have been held in recent 1° foreign affairs on local cam-weeks, Schwartz said, to discussproposals for changes. “There is atremendous concern” among mem¬ber schools for bringing about re¬form, he reported. Even though“people don’t know exactly what todo yet, there are many ideas beingthrown out for discussion,” he said.Plenty of ProposalsAmong the proposals that havebeen made, Schwartz reported, aresuggestions that:• Membership in the associationbe on an individual basis, ratherthan through the student govern¬ment of an institution. puses.SCHWARTZ COMMENTED that,if NSA’s activities could be sup¬ported entirely by the contributionsof students themselves, the associa¬tion’s programs could be freelychosen by the students, and moreattention could be given to generalproblems of educational reform. Atpresent, he noted, NSA can operateonly certain programs for which itcan find support, which now comesmainly from private (non-CIA)foundations.Among the recent programs NSAis currently running with founda-• Several new posts be formed on tion or government agency supportthe level of vice-president, to re-1 (Continued on Page Eight)OUR UNIVERSITY SHOPSummer suits and sportwearmade on our exclusive modelsSUITS of Dacron polyester-and-cotton poplinin tan, light olive, slate blue or navy, $50;in Dacron-and-worsted tropicals, jrom $7 5odd jackets oj hand-woven cottonIndia Madras, $45 ; washableVycron polyester-and-cotton, $45yDacron-and-jlaXy $48.50ODD trousers oj color] ul cotton India Madrasplaids, $15; D acron-and - worstedy $23.50;Dacron-and-cotton poplin, $ 11And Bermuda Shorts> sport shirts, etc.Prices slightly higher west of the Rockies.■STAEtlSHCO ISIS||ens {f^ogs furnishings, ff ats echoes74 E. MADISON, NR. MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO, ILL. 60602NEW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANCISCOMaroon InterviewNo Constructive, Safe LSD Uses Seen—Freedman(Editor’s note: Daniel X. Freedmanis chairman of the UC Departmentof Psychiatry and one of the nation’sforemost authorities on LSD. Hewas interviewed for the Maroon bySlade Lander.)Maroon: What factors do youthink influence a student to tryLSD?Freedman: In part, if it hadn’tbeen for the advertisements aboutLSD, (this is a social factor) youwouldn’t have nearly the interest,the problems, or the questionsthat we do now.Maroon: Do you think that thereare any constructive uses thatLSD could be put to?Freedman: No. I doubt it verymuch—not on a large scale. Andthe reason I doubt it is that we’vehad the drug for twenty years,and haven’t come up with anyclear-cut constructive uses. It’stempting, it’s alluring; there’s noquestion that people who aren’tdisturbed see an order of phe¬nomena which they would not or-dinarly see. It’s just too unreli¬able a drug to go around giving topeople. If you’re risking one ortwo bad reactions (even thoughthey’re probably easy to handle)and maybe get into real troublewith one out of a hundred—onewonders whether the risk is worthit. You would have to have a goodand compelling reason to use thedrug. I don’t know that it wouldhelp people at all to achievegreater understanding of philo¬sophical or psychological issues.The drug itself does not provide aguide to these—it merely makesthe mind more fluid and the restdepends on circumstance, expec¬tations and motivation. To under¬stand you have to be able to takethe knowledge, select it, and ap¬ply it. To put together whatyou’ve had in an LSD experiencetakes a lot of time—time to inte¬grate it. In other words, one mayhave an experience, but there isno guarantee that he will learnfrom it, and there is some reason¬able chance he can be deluded orconfused by it. There are a lotbetter gambles in this world thanthat. I say this even though somepeople have found the drug ex¬perience useful—but we simplydon’t know how reliable eventhese effects will turn out to be inthe long run. It seems to me mostrisky when the drug is taken tosolve personal problems and leastEveryone T8 and overInvited to aCOMPUTERMIXERSATURDAY, MAY 13from 8:30 p.m. until 1:00 a.m.in theST. CLAIR HOUSE162 East Ohio StreetEvery guest will receive aquestionnaire. The answerswill be fed into a computer pro¬grammed to select the threepersons of the opposite sexwho to the greatest extent:A—possess the qualities youadmire, andB-admire the qualities youpossess.Everyone will have anopportunity to meet the personwith whom the computer hasmatched them at a partyabout 3 weeks later.CASUAL DRESS <slocks,sweaters, etc,) STAG ORDATE (stag preferred.) TWOGREAT BANDS one in themain room, the other in theBAR.If you need further informationphone 726-3285. risky when it is taken in authenticand structured religious rites—asby Indians in the Native Ameri¬can Church.Really controlled clinical re¬search has been going on only forthe las* two or three years, butthe results aren’t in. Some peoplesay their values have beenchanged, they see things differ¬ently. Yet, a look at their livesdoes not reveal much difference.That value change may be useful;if so, we still have to devise anappropriate test to appraise it. Sothe question is, how does the drugexperience effect behavior andhow does it affect something we’llhave to call internal growth andchange? Even if one developssomething approximating wis¬dom, he may still be a bastardwith his wife and family. So, itdepends on what one values as anoutcome and how we can assessthese outcomes. Now that’s avery hard thing to assess. All I’msaying is that I.haven’t seen anygreat creativity as a product of these drugs. I haven't seen anynativistic culture where thesedrugs are used that have any lesshuman misery than we do.So, if you ask what hopes do wehave for the drug, all I can say isthat it’s alluring, and we stillmust put it to the test. We oughtto keep research alive becausethe drug experience sometimesproduces remark a hie effects andit’s hard to beMeve that somethingthat produces these effectscouldn’t be well used. But if itcan be used, we haven't solidlyworked out a way to do so. iMaroon: Many students who havetaken LSD feel that it is justifia¬ble on these grounds — that it isa significant life experience —and resent the legislation againstthe drug because it is denyingthem this experience.Freedman: Sure. No one wants tobe deprived of what he values,but society wih step in wherethere is too much unreliability.Sometimes people are more excit¬ed about prohibitions that being authoritative about this valubleexperience you refer to. Wouldthey feel the same way about in¬cestuous experiences, a trip to themoon, oar about murder? Thereare many experiences in life to behad. I’m not equating them. Butthis hardly is a specific rationale:I should have any conceivable ex¬perience.Maroon: But students view LSDas an experience which affectsonly themselves.Freedman: Well, of coursethey’re wrong when they say itaffects only themselves. We’vehad twenty emergency room ad¬missions this year. These affectother people.Maroon: But shouldn’t peoplehave the right to do what theylike with their own minds even ifit is to destroy them?Freedman: Well, if they destroyit in private, fine. But if they getthemselves, and those aroundthem, so aggravated that theybring themselves — out of con¬cern ( which they should do) to a doctor — well, look, this hasconsequences. It takes up ourtime and theirs and gives us all ajob of reconstruction to do. Thereare many “rights” we would liketo assert — like exceeding thespeed limits if we so choose. Weshould not be surprised if some ofthem are curbed. The real issueis self control and self assessmentas to the foolishness or wisdom ofdrug experiences. I have nothingagainst Chose who try and fail —I’m simply sorry they didn’t know-better and fare better. The civilrights issue is phoney. Anyonewho wants to flout even an unwiselaw can take consequences — andif he can’t, he shouldn’t try in thefirst place.THRILLING CANOE TRIPSExPlora, fish, relax in the Quetico-Superior Wilderness. Only $8.00 perperson per day, also group rates.Write: BILL ROM, CANOE COUNTRYOUTFITERS, Ely, Minnesota.Summervacationitis.JHow to spot and get rid ofiFluorescent fade-out.(That's from being cooped up all winter.What you need for that sallow palloris some sunshine Vitamin D. There'* awhole lot of it available at SunsetEeach in Acapulco,The good booksThey have the possibility of beinggopd symptoms. That's if youseek summer scholastics. Say irjyMexico City. Or Acapulcq^ Pallid peeper*.There's no sparkle In those baby-blud'eyes. It's been knocked out by oil thos#exams. Get that vitality bock. See whatflood Is still left in the world. Go toJixpo 67, Montreal.,Up dingo.'They're letters from good buddle*oway for the summer. The bestway to ovoid them is not to bethere when they arrive. Be inPuerto Rico instead,Racquet squad.That's the tennis team in yourneighborhood during the summer^Vou'd find snorkeling or scuba divingIn the Bahamas would make playingtennis seem like last summer'!bod sport*College fatigues.That's the uniform you wore all semester.Get rid of those o.d.'s (olive drabs).Break out the white levis. And throw oq,o colorful Mexican serape.„ BLT Down.That's all you've known summerAfter summer. A change of palatewould do you good. In Bermuda ofew savory morsels of Hopping JohrfjWith a sauce of Paw-Pgw Montespotl^aually does the trickyWe want everyone to (1/Notei If symptoms get worse, see your travel ogent or call loiter**• CHICAGO MAROON May 12, 19674Community Relations Session MondayIn keeping with StudentGovernment’s “new look,”SG’s Community RelationsCommittee has announced ameeting 7:30, Monday at IdaNoyes Hall to look into the Univer-sity’s interests in Woodlawn.Ted Krontiris, third-year sto. dentand head of the committee, de¬scribed three specific actions to bediscussed:The formation of a coordinatingoffice. Stemming from a weekendof discussions held on campus fallquarter by the Conference on theCity and the University (CCU), this proposed permanent student centerfor community relations would bein touch with leaders of studentgroups active in the community,plan new programs for student in¬volvement, provide students andfaculty with res each projects, andmake suggestions about the Univer¬sity’s .policies.Establishment of the opportunityfor full time student community in¬volvement. Students who dividetheir time between course workand community action find them¬selves hampered in both, Krontirissaid. He envisions students gettingAnthropologist Washburn To Talk Here academic credit for a year’s workin a Chicago community.The creation of a Woodlawndraft center. Members of We Won’tGo, SG, and the American FriendsService Committee have expressedinterest in establishing a draftcounseling center in Woodlawn, toinform young men of their rightsand to support draft re sisters. Students To Picket Arthur GoldbergThis Afternoon at Pick-Congress HotelAnyone with questions mayKrontiris at 324-6789. call Anyone with the urge to picketcan join Students for a DemocraticSociety and Women for Peace thisafternoon for a demonstration infront of the Pick Congress Hotel inhonor of an address by U.S. Am¬bassador to the United Nations Ar¬thur Goldberg.Interested students should gather at New Dorms by 1:15 pm whererides will be available, or other¬wise be at the Pick-Congress Hotel,at Michigan and Congress, by 2:15.Admission to Goldberg’s speech,which is being sponsored by theState Department and the ChicagoConference on Foreign Relations, isby invitation only.Sherwood L. Washburn, oneof America’s leading physicalanthropologists, will presentthe Monday Lecture on May15, at 8 pm in the Law School audi¬torium.His subject will be “EvolutionaryThoughts on Human Nature.” Dr.Washburn has said that “the talkwill attempt to show that the studyof human evolution, combined withexperience and observations offree-ranging primates, will help usin understanding the nature ofman.”PROFESSOR of Anthropology atthe University of California atBerkeley, Washburn is a formermember of the UC faculty, 1947-59,and was chairman of the Depart¬ment of Anthropology from 1953-55.He is also a member and past pres¬ident of both the American Anthro¬pological Association and of theAmerican Association of PhysicalAnthropologists.Washburn’s lecture is the fourthin the current spring series of Mon¬day Lectures presented by Univer¬ sity Extension. On May 22, “TheTyranny of Progress” will be thesubject of the final lecture, to begiven by Robert Gomer, co-editorof the Bulletin of Atomic Scientistsand professor here in the Depart¬ment of Chemistry and the Insti¬tute for the Study of Metals.These tickets may be obtained,with proper identification, at the ■Information Desk in the Adminis-tration Building and at the Center:for Continuing Education, Room121.UTT SALOMExpertP*rman«nt WavingHair GuttingandTintinga a nr i"Ah, to be young again!To flv Ozark at Vs off!”eFly Ozark Youth Fare and save 33Y3%... with confirmedreservations, tf you’re under 22, write or call Ozark726-4680 for a $10 Youth I.D. Card application.(Travel under plan not applicable during major holiday periods)go-getters goOZARK« « Aiwa# 1967: a new report onthe Velikovsky controversyThe large portals of scienceare slowly but widely opening beforethe non-conformist of yesterday.Over 16 years ago, Worlds inCollision, the first of ImmanuelVelikovsky’s books was published.“There was a response whichfor intensity and hostility was un¬equaled in twentieth century sci¬entific history,’’ writes Robert K.Kirsch, Book Editor, Los AngelesTimes (November 30, 1966).“Yet Dr. Velikovsky persistedagainst massive interdict ... Hehad cut across disciplinary linesseeking synthesis, utilizing myth,ancient history, psychology as wellas geology, physics, astronomy toformulate his cosmology ... Yetthe new Information gathered inrecent space probes has tended tobear out his projections...”David Stove, Senior Lecturer inPhilosophy at Sydney University,writing in The Australian (De¬cember 31, 1966) on “ImmanuelVelikovsky’s theory, its reception,and its subsequent confirmations,’’Says:“There is no more fascinatingstory in this century ... The sci¬entific establishment reacted withunparalleled fury ... So manyhaving made knaves of themselves,it is gratifying that they have madefools of themselves, too . . . Notonly have the professionals failedutterly in their attempts to showthat this kind of theory is impos¬sible; since 1950 many of thethings which Velikovsky’s particu¬lar theory requires, but whichwere totally unexpected on re¬ceived theories, have turned outto be true. Jupiter does suffer ex¬plosions of enormous energy; Ve¬nus is far hotter than anyone elseanticipated; its atmosphere is richin hydrocarbons; its motion isanomalous (the rotation being ret¬rograde) — to mention only a fewconfirmations. Not one of Veli¬kovsky’s predictions, on the otherhand, has turned out false ...”In particular, NASA reports ofthe Mars probe (Mariner IV) andthe Moon probe (Lunar Orbiter)read like transcripts of the sec¬tions on Mars and on the Moon inVelikovsky’s Worlds in Collision. “An intellect too bigto be ignored”'""In response to the current waveof interest in the theories of Dr.Immanuel Velikovsky,” a seminar,“The Works of Immanuel Veli¬kovsky,” was held in January atDartmouth College, under the Ex¬perimental College program. Asthe seminar’s program said, “Veli¬kovsky’s works nave aroused acontroversy of major proportionsinvolving the entire scientific com¬munity.” Dartmouth College pro¬fessors in Astronomy, Physics,Biblical Studies, History, Anthro¬pology, Biology, Geology, Archae¬ology, Psychology, Social Sci¬ences, and History of Science,participated in the seminar onVelikovsky.Yale Scientific Magazine plansa special issue dealing with Veli¬kovsky and his work.In January, 1965, Professor H.H. Hess, Chairman of the Depart¬ment of Geology, Princeton Uni¬versity, initiated and convened thefirst open meeting of the Cosmosand Chronos Study and Discus¬sion Group, devoting it to Veli¬kovsky’s theories, their implica¬tions and reception. Since thensuch groups have come into beingon many campuses.Universities, colleges and stu¬dent organizations request Veli¬kovsky’s appearance. At Oberlinand Swartnmore colleges, at theCarnegie Institute of Technologyand Pittsburgh University, atBrown University (debate at¬tended by an audience of 1,300)at Princeton University’s Grad¬uate College Forum, at PrincetonTheological Seminary, Duke Uni¬versity, Temple, Drew and Kent,Yale and Brandeis Universities,his lectures have been attended byrecord audiences and have left alasting impression.He is scheduled to speak at theUniversity of Kansas, at the invi¬tation of the faculty, and at theUniversity of Chicago, at the in¬vitation of student organizations,to large assemblies. In not a fewuniversities and colleges his booksare required reading. The four books thathave shaken the worldsof science and history:Order them now, from your book¬seller, or use the coupon below.WORLDS IN COLLISION“Harmony or stability in the celes¬tial and terrestrial spheres is thepoint of departure of the presentaay concept of the world as ex¬pressed in the celestial mechanicsof Newton and the theory of evo¬lution of Darwin. If these two menof science are sacrosanct, thisbook is a heresy.” (from Preface)16 large hardcover printingsEARTH IN UPHEAVAL“Here lies the core of the prob¬lem: Did the earth change in aslow process, a year added to ayear and a million years to a mil¬lion, the peaceful ground of na¬ture being the broad arena of thecontest of throngs, in which thefittest survived? Or did it happen,too, that the very arena itself, in¬furiated, rose against the contes¬tants and made an end of theirbattles?” (from Preface) 4 hard-cover printingsAGES IN CHAOS“Ancient history is distorted. Be¬cause of the disruption of syn¬chronism, many figures on thehistorical scene are ‘ghosts’ or‘halves’ and ‘doubles’. Events areoften duplicates; many battles areshadows; many speeches areechoes; many treaties are copies;even some empires are phantoms.”(from Preface) 8 hardcover print¬ingsOEDIPUS AND AKHNATON“. . . a delightful labor of archae¬ological love, spun off like a pieceof chamber music between sym¬phonies . . .” (John C. Wyllie,Richmond News Leader)* 4 hard¬cover printingsORDER COUPONTo your bookseller or toDoubleclay A Company, Inc.Dept. 7-CHI-5Garden City, New York 11531Send me the books of Immanuel Velikovsky I have checkedbelow. □ I’m enclosing my check or money order for thecost of the books and understand you'll pay all postage.□ Please bill me the cost of the books, plus shipping charges.Worlds in Collision • $5.95Aces in Chaos • $5.95........... .Earth in Upheaval • $5.95Oedipus and Akhnaton • $5.95NAME...ADDRESS.STATE .ZIP. •#•<Offer available only tn the U.S. A. and CanadaMsv 12. 1967 CHICAGO MAROONJeffrey KutaThe Ali MeetingBERTRAND RUSSELL ONCE said that in general “the hot¬ter you get, the less you know.” The statement is not widelyquoted and it sounds like a rather odd thought to be comingfrom a man who has just finished trying President Johnsonand half of his Cabinet for war crimes, but it nonetheless is avery perceptive observation.Just how “hot” some people can get was amply dem¬onstrated at the Wednesday night meeting that climaxed theMay 10th Day of Inquiry. Gary Rader, the courageous GreenBeret who burned his draft card in New York last month, toldwhat can safely be called an enthusiastic crowd that, afterreading all about it in Ramparts magazine, he realized “the warin Vietnam is an obscenity.” Paul Sweezy, the evening’s“intellectual,” accused the United States of genocide andtrying to rule the world, and Reverend James Bevel said thatwhite students who sit around discussing psychology andsociology are “house niggers.”Those were some of the highlights, but the rest of the eve¬ning’s discussion was hardly more illuminating. To those whowere able to look on critically, it rapidly became clear that theMay 10th Day of Inquiry was ending on a very uninquiringnote. By the time Muhammad Ali rose to speak, the crowd wasso excited that Ali had to continually signal for silence justso he could finish his brief speech.BY 9 PM WEDNESDAY night, the Day of Inquiry had be¬come a mass rally against the war in Vietnam in which themost thoughtless and extreme remarks elicited the most noisilyenthusiastic response.The steadily mounting enthusiasm became almost ludicrousat the end, when Muhammad Ali decided to change the sub¬ject. It didn’t matter much because a crowd of thousands ofpeople, mostly University of Chicago students, were every bitas willing to tell Ali that he was still the greatest, as they hadbeen to cheer Rev. Bevel when he called General West¬moreland a witch doctor.The rally is over but some disturbing questions remain. Justwhat does it mean when a mass audience of highly intelligentand thoughtful University people proves startlingly willing toretreat from rationality? Is it a dangerous sign when intellec¬tuals prove as willing to tolerate mindless harrangues as anyother revival meeting audience?WE THINK IT IS, and for several reasons. Paul Sweezy,at the town meeting held in Mandel Hall, Wednesday after¬noon, said, “The intellectual must be an advocate of reasonand must find out why the attitude of unreason exists andtake pains to correct it.” Sweezey might have added one ofthe reasons intellectuals must remain the firmest and mostunflinching advocates of reason is that there is really noone else.Only for the intellectual is learning an end in and of itself.For the Johnson administration learning is a means to an endthat may only reflect a perversion of that learning. For a dem¬agogue, rationality is useless except insofar as it may define anultimate goal. The intellectual alone stands steadfastly behindthe orderly and scientific thought process through which hecan learn the truth.When intellectuals desert the tools of their trade, when theyonly select those “obscenities” which will not vitiate theirarguments, they are no longer seekers of truth, and in reality,no longer intellectuals at all.THE TRUTH MAY NOT always be the firmest basis formilitant action. It is, for example, difficult to demand immedi¬ate withdrawal from Vietnam, if one takes into account themassacre that would follow the evacuation of American troops,and it isn’t quite so easy to condemn the United States for warcrimes when one considers the very real butchery that the VietCong has committed against unconverted peasants. But thetruth, nonetheless, is a dangerous thing to desert. Like a beau¬tiful woman who will only be jilted once, the truth becomesprogressively harder to recapture once it is abandoned.We do not believe that the reactions of University people atWednesday night’s meeting signify a permanent collapse oftheir critical faculties, but we do feel that thinking people havea special responsibility not to let themselves lavish approval onarguments that are psychologically reinforcing, when theyshould be applauding only those arguments that areintellectually sound. The Champ Comes To Speak:Sports Returns to the MidwayThey began trickling into thegray expanse of Field House longbefore the rally was to begin. At7:30 pm, most of the 1100-capacitystands were packed. By the timethe program got underway at 7:50pm another 500 or so hadstreamed in, and still more wereyet to show up for the occasion.A half dozen big newsreel cam¬eras topped spindly tripods, thiickblack cables supplying their pow¬er. A score or so of photographersand newsmen occupied strategicpositions on the canvas coveredbasketball court where theChamp would speak. Some wouldget their stories and report themobjectively while others would re¬cord only what their readers andlisteners wanted to hear. Theywere all doing their jobs. Later onin the program the emcee wouldget up and ask the photographersnot to harass the spectators bytaking so many pictures of them.IK YOU WERE in the stands itwas hot—80 degrees at least. To¬night the sweat came from theaudience, not from the players onthe court, but you could smell itin both places. White sweat andNegro sweat: for a fourth of theaudience, the Champ really wasthe Champion. Some were young militants who would lend revivalmeeting flavor to the rally lateron. Most were family types. Al¬most all the whites were Chicagostudents, although some were cu¬riosity-seekers from Hyde Parkand points north.Paul Sweezy gave a run-of-the-mill account of Americaninvolvement in Vietnam and con¬cluded that we must prevent theAdministration from warringagainst the peoples of the worldby seeing to it that the govern¬ment doesn't have the manpower.Gary Rader talked about his in¬volvement in the peace move¬ment, about civil disobedience,and about the need for money. Itwasn’t until the charismatic Rev¬erend James Bevel came beforethe spotlight that the audiencewas turnd on—analogies betweenthe civil rights and peace move¬ments coupled with pot-shots atPresident Johnson from both an¬gles drew a standing ovation fromabout half the seated audience.But the climax had not yetcome, for the Champ had not spo¬ken. Smartly dressed, he rose tothe podium and the cameras be¬gan to whirr. The crowd was inthe mood now. They applaudedevery other sentence. They cheered him for his decision torefuse induction as an Islamminister. They cheered him forthe peace of mind he had attained. And not least of all, theycheered him because he wasHeavyweight Champion of theWorld—he told them so, twice,and asked to hear it from themback.With bright lights, crowds andsweat, excitement and cheering,sports had indeed returned to theUniversity of Chicago.A POSTSCRIPT: The idea behind the Day of Inquiry—“makingdissent respectable,” as the Maroon put it—was a good one. for itnow seems clear that demonstrations like the Spring Mobilizationcan be written off too lightly bythe the Administration and thegeneral public both. But while theappearance of Muhammad Alimay have attracted extra newscoverage, it seems doubtfulwhether it made the peace causeany more respectable to, say, amiddle class Pole in Gage ParkIn order to be heard, StudentGovernment chose a controversialfigure to climax the event; but indoing so, they defeated its pur¬pose.David L. AikenNational Student Union:Don't Let Chance Co ByWhat does UC “get out” of itsmembership in the National Stu¬dent Association? How can itbenefit from continued member¬ship?These are questions currentlybeing asked in the discussion onwhether UC should pull out of theorganization which this Universi¬ty’s students helped establish 20years ago.These questions are related tothat of what kind of organizationNSA is at present, and what itcan be in the future.RIGHT NOW, the easiest bene¬fit of NSA membership to point tois the service aspect. UC studentscan get very cheap insurance, as¬sistance in travel plans, informa¬tion about a number of issues,and other aids through NSA.As is often the case, however,what is less tangible is often moreimportant. As it is presently con¬stituted, the bulk of what is donein the name of NSA is done bystaff and officers based in the na¬tional office in Washington. Thisactivity covers a wide range ofinterests, from research and sem¬inars on “student stress,” to avery active Tutorial AssistanceCenter offering personal help andmaterials to tutoring projects atmany campuses.In addition to extensive effortsto help individual campuses de¬velop programs, the national staffis usually busy representing stu¬dents’ point of view at innumera¬ble panels and legislative hear¬ings, which would probably other¬wise not hear any representativesfrom youth.Such activities are probablyuseful. That is not to say, howev¬er, that NSA should continue toconcentrate on the sorts of activi¬ties it has emphasized so far. Infact, there are already definiteplans to redesign the annual na¬tional conference to put more em¬phasis on planning concrete pro¬grams on campuses, rather thanpassing resolutions on all mannerof issues.IN A WORD, there are alreadyserious moves to reshape the as¬ sociation’s activities and form. Toa significant degree, the NSAleaders who have most influenceon policy recognize the past limi¬tations of the association, and aretaking steps to make NSA moreeffective. Those who know NSApresident Gene Groves know thathe wished to take a leading posi¬tion in the association because hewanted to make it a really effec¬tive force for real change in high¬er education and society. Farfrom playing the CIA’s game, hewas the first NSA president sincethe beginning of the association’stie to the intelligence agency toavoid “foreign entanglements.”The same can be said of mostothers in the NSA leadership—they are not content with thepresent situation of the associa¬tion, and are committed to makeit much more effective. Any whotry to argue that the NSA leader¬ship this year is a protector of thestatus quo argues from ignorance.WHILE THERE are move¬ments afoot at the top of the asso¬ciation’s structure, the real effortmust come from below—from themember schools. What is neededis people with ideas and peoplewith experience. It is not very farout to suggest that people withsuggestions for ways to changeNSA’s programs, or shift its em¬phasis, or revise the structure,will be heard receptively from theother delegates at next August’snational congress.Several ideas have alreadybeen advanced. NSA can producediscussion programs for the Na¬ tional Educational TV network: itcan be much more effective inpromoting student participation incampus affairs, primarily bytraining people who will bringideas back to their campuses andput them into effect. With a num¬ber of revisions and new programs, NSA can come closer tothe goal of an effective nationalunion of students.Delegates from the Universityof Chicago should be at thisyear’s national congress to pushfor such ideas. UC studentsshould not be willing to abandonthe chance of changing NSA, nowthat the opportunity for realchange is greater than ever before. The break with the CIA produced a whole new openness inthe association which will certainly make reform more nearly pos¬sible.THOSE WHO call for withdraw¬al are not well informed on thecurrent programs and people inNSA. Reasoning from a generalpremise that any organizationwhich does not use the same radi¬cal tactics they prefer cannot beworthy of their support, they seekto destroy an organization whichcan work effectively, in its ownway, toward the same goals theyseek, goals of change in educationand society.By working with NSA, studentsat UC can help construct a moreeffective national union of stu¬dents, and share in the benefits ofa true student movement. It is achallenge which this University sstudents should not shirk.,4 - m mSiChicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief David A. Satter |Business Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. Gumpert |6 CHICAGO MAROON • May 12, 1967n ' t '/ ' * *r4j£.Letters to the Editor of the Marooni % mmmrn^mmt 7*: v ■> . •Charges BiasTO THE EDITOR:Your reporting of the incidentat George Williams involving theuse of drugs (May 9) is neitherobjective nor accurate. What isworse, you jump to some prettyhasty conclusions based uponhearsay. If these are youraims—to stir up controversy andcast aspersions without adequate¬ly looking into matters—'then somuch for the quality of yourprinted material.As far as I can see, you areirresponsible if not biased in youraccount of the case; and in thislight it would be demeaning toanswer your charge of showing‘‘favoritism” towards a student.D. A. SHOJAI,RESIDENT HEAD,GEORGE WILLIAMS(Editor's note: The Maroon owesMr. Shojai an apology. We quotedthe four students who were suspend¬ed for drug use as saying that Shojaishowed favoritism, without doublechecking their story with Shojaihimself. We have since gotten bothsides of the story and regret that wegave what was an essentially errone¬ous impression.)Bloom on IMCTO THE EDITOR:A letter in Tuesday’s Maroontook a somewhat critical view ofsome of my actions and viewsconcerning the Inter-House Coun¬cil. Much of the material in theletter was pure slander (I haven’tput my arm around another malesince I was seven and lam not inthe habit of banging my fist), andI shall not lower myself to answerthese portions. The letter did,however, raise some legitimatequestions which I intend toanswer by giving my view ofI.H.C.APPROXIMATELY A year anda half ago the houses of Pierceissued a call for house representa¬tives to meet to form a council todisuss the common problems ofthe dorms. From the start, how¬ever, this new council was boggeddown in parliamentary procedureand petty bureaucracy; my ownhouse and one of two others,therefore, chose not to join. TheAdministration, however, felt thatthe I.H.C. had potential and indi¬cated that it felt I.H.C. resolutionsand views would carry realweight. Then last Fall, the Deanproceeded to give the Councilpower on the issue of House Au¬tonomy; the Council was also pre¬paring to go into the areas ofhouse financial allotments, orien¬tation and a dozen other issueswhich directly concerned all stu¬ dents in the houses. Lower Flinthad a choice: keep out of theLHC. and be left out of importantdecisions affecting us, or join itand become involved in these de¬cisions hoping to change the orga¬nization. We joined. I felt at thattime that it would be beneficialfor I.H.C. and Student Govern¬ment to work somewhat together(rather than in conflict), hence I,a Student Government member,ran for and was elected as thenew Lower Flint I.H.C. represent¬ative.My feelings towards the Councilsoon became mixed. I found cer¬tain things very bad about it andcertain others quite good, and so Iset out to change the bad andstrengthen the good. Specifically,I objected and still object that:1) I.H.C. has no direct contactwith the Houses. I personallytried to alleviate this by puttingI.H.C. news in my own newslet¬ter, but for this I was called inTuesday’s letter preoccupied withpublic relations.2) I.H.C. SOMETIMES interfereswith the private business of thehouses. I believe, for example,that the Council should not be vot¬ing on the inter-visitational rulesof individual houses. The Council,however, has time and againdeemed it desireable to go intothis area. Specifically, on thewomen-in-Pierce issue—the issuereferred to in the letter—it wasclear that the Council wanted ac¬tion and it fell to me as chairmanof the Facilities Committee to in¬vestigate and report on it. I didso, and the Council agreed withmy report which was unfavorableto the interests of Pierce. I madethe motion and supported becauseI felt that if the Council must act,the side I supported should be itsaction even though I was againstthe concept of acting on these is¬sues.On the other hand, there arecertain parts of I.H.C. that I thinkare very good:1) It gives the houses a unifiedvoice. In pre-I.H.C. days, the Ad¬ministration was stymied with in¬action because it didn’t knowwhat the students wanted. Now,with the I.H.C., they at least canget some idea of what a crosssection of students from the var¬ious houses want. The meetingsthat interested I.H.C. members(not the letter writer, unfortunate¬ly) have with the AdministrationJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.3-5986 RA 6-1060NOW! is the time for Box StorageSAFE • INSURED - COLD STORAGE FOR ALL YOURWINTER WOOLENSFURS CLEANED GLAZED & STOREDProtection from Moths - Fire Heat or Theft!FOR BORGANA-OLLEGRO AND ALL FUR-PILE GARMENTSPHT-RENU CUSTOM FUR CLEANINGINSURED PICK-UP & DELIVERYjames Schultz CleanersCUSTOR QUALITY CLEANING1363 East 53rd Street PL 2-966210% Student Discount with I.D. Card once every few weeks have reallygotten a dialogue going on the is¬sues of what sort of things wewant in the dormitories (physicalfacilities, for example).2) IT PROVIDES A forum. Stu¬dents at Chicago (whether livingin dorms or apartments) tend tobecome isolated, and it is ahealthy change for students fromdifferent parts of the campus toget together on a regular basis todiscuss problems.Whatever inconsistencies Iseem to show on I.H.C. are duenot to political expediency but tothe fact that I see the Councilfrom more than one point of view.The basic problem I see in theI.H.C. is how to balance the con¬cept of house individuality withthat of a collective voice, and Ifrankly do not have the solution tothis although I am looking for it.ALAN BLOOMWho Switched Tulips?TO THE EDITOR:You may think this is a verystupid letter. Maybe it is. But Ithink several people may be puz¬zled by the same thing I am. Atleast those who love Nature andwho have looked at the flowers inthe Quadrangles.The red tulips in front of theAdministration Building aresomething traditional by this timeof the year. I am sure I saw redtulips in front of the Administra¬tion Building last week and nowthey are yellow. Is there anybodywho can explain what happened?Or did I have an hallucination?Maybe the explanation is verysimple, but I do not know it. Allthose who admire the springbeauty of the Quadrangles willappreciate an answer.A PUZZLEDFOREIGN STUDENT“IT IS UNLIKELY that the UN willever be taken seriously unless its tripon reality tightens. That it is looserthan ever is suggested by U Thant’sSummer Spectacular: an 'interna¬tional seminar’ in 7'anzania this July‘to focus world attention on racialdiscrimination and colonialism insouthern Africa’ On the guest list are,inter alia, Rev. Martin Luther King,Jean-Paul Sartre, CORE and SNCC.They are thereto catch aWhitey by thetoe.” For f. j. copy of thocurrent iitue of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writ,to Dept. CP-5, 150 E.I 35 St., N.Y..N.Y., 10016 Overdone DefenseTO THE EDITOR:The campaign for the extensionof Mr. Lemisch’s contract has de¬generated into an attack on the as a criticism of Mr. Lemisch. Wefeel, however, that, given the ex¬cesses of some of his admirers, aword should be spoken whichmight spare his colleagues fromfurther unnecessary and unjusti¬fied abuse.integrity and competence of theHistory Departments as a wholeand of some members in particu¬lar. Charlie Smith’s letter in theMaroon of May 2nd stands as themost recent example of this kindof criticism or, more correctly,slander.Mr. Lemisch’s qualities as ateacher and a scholar should pro¬vide the only basis for an appealon his behalf. We object to theattempt to offer praise to oneman through the criticism of an¬other. That kind of approach isdishonest and degrading.Knowing of Mr. Lemisch’sbroad sensitivity to the rights anddignities of other men, we feelconfident that he, too, is dis¬tressed at the malicious tactics ofsome of his supporters. CertainlyMr. Lemisch should not be heldresponsible for the scurrilous andinane tactics of his students. Yet,he might point out to them thedangers of misguided adulation.These remarks are not intended ALBIE BURKEFREDERICA HARRISGLEN HOLTEDWARD MAZURROBERT MORRISTOM PHILPOTTHOWARD RAB1NOW1ZSTANLEY SCHULTZJOEL SCWARTZSELWYN J'ROEN(Graduate students in theDepartment of History.)BOB NELSON MOTOft*Import CentroM G.HondaTriumphComplete RopofcoAnd ServiceVor AH Popular ImputeMidway l-4fMSo f/•♦♦seo tirnvffHEROINand hero alike find favor with ourdigs. Villains will not be served.YOEMMHUSimWhere the time of your life is right under your nose.BANJOS, BEER & B0-DEE-0-D0865 N. STATE 329-0193PLEASE DON'T ASK FOR AN ENCORE ... AND NODANCING IN THE AISLES WHEN YOU SEE OURSALES PRICES. JUST ENJOY.Men's Wear 20% Price ReductionShirts . . . Slacks . . . Ties . . . BeltsPajamas . . . Sweaters . . . Cotton Knit ShirtsWomen's Wear 20% Price ReductionSlips . . . Petticoats . . . Cotton Dress Gloves ... SlippersGirdles . .. Garter Belts . . . Bras . . . Panties . , . ShellsWomen's Blouses 30% Price ReductionWomen's Wear 50% Price ReductionDresses .. . Skirts . . . Slacks . . . Winter GlovesScarfs . .. HatsSpecial Beauty Mist Hosiery Sale $.79 pr.' May 8th thru May 22nd only.GIFT DEPT.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AYE.12 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Called Second Reader's DigestBloom Elected ChairmanOf UC’s NSA DelegationAlan Bloom was electedchairman of the US NSA dele¬gation at a meeting Tuesdaynight. Plans were made for acampus wide fight to keep UC inNSA, with meetings in dorms, acampus-wide poster campaign, andpersonal campaigning planned.The UC delegation came out infavor of radical changes in thepresent structure of NSA, includingthe severing of its international tiesso that the CIA would no longer be interested in the organization.“I view NSA as a national unionof students, where problems of edu¬cational reform can be workedout,” said Jerry Hyman, graduatestudent in anthropology. “This is abad year to pull out. We shouldfirst try internal reform, and if itfails, pull out next fall.”Hyman also explained the fi¬nances of the delegation. Most ofthe CORSO allotment is for travel¬ing expenses, so that financialneed doesn’t keep students from at¬tending the conference, he said.2 Disaffiliations, 21 New NSA Members(Continued from Page Three)are a Tutorial Assistance Program,with $242,000 from the Office ofEconomic Opportunity and an ef¬fort to help arrange programs with¬in college curricula which are re¬lated to community action, under agrant from the Stern Family Fund.NSA is also awaiting confirmationof a grant from the National Insti¬tute of Mental Health for a pro¬gram on drugs on campus.A GREAT DEAL of what NSAdoes is aimed at helping local cam¬ puses develop their own programs,Schwartz pointed out. Examples ofefforts of this sort, he said, are de¬signing course and teacher evalua¬tions, studying problems of studentstress, and operating tutorial pro¬grams among elementary aud highschool youth.While there have been two disaf¬filiations from NSA in recentmonths, at Brandeis and ColoradoState College, Schwartz noted that21 schools have recently affiliatedwith the association.IBM EXECUTIVE TYPEWRITERS*19995FULLY REBUILT NEWLY PAINTED90 days parts & laborGuarantee: 5 years partsWe Rent and SellPortable, Manual, Electric TypewritersTOAD HALL1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500 Campus Magazine Is ShunnedReader’s Digest only de¬serves to be read while waitingill line or sitting on the toilet,preferably the latter,” in theopinion of one prominent journalist.If this is the case, then thepublishers of Reader’s Digest, inconnection with their subsidiary,the National Educational Advertis¬ing Service, have exploited thiscriticism. Realizing that collegestudents are frequently involved inthe above activities, they have an¬nounced publication of a collegenewspaper supplement with the al¬literative title, Campus Courier.THE COURIER WILL not be aregular part of college papers until fall, but on the basis of an Aprilpilot issue several college editors(at UC, Harvard, Michigan, Colum¬bia, Yale) have already declinedthe supplement.The pilot issue contained articlesin the true Digest tradition: somesubdued sex (Margaret Mead on“Student Marriage”), a pinch ofpractical advice (occupations in en¬gineering), and a few vocabularybuilders. The editors give even abetter sketch of the content in theApril edition: “. . .an account of atropical romance between a youngAmerican and a cannibal maiden;a warm reminiscence of his fatherby Vice President Hubert H. Hum¬phrey; a generous quota of jokes..These features, the editors hope,will make the magazine “arresting’interesting, and informative. ’ ’Many college editors disagree. Be¬sides objecting to “bland” content,the editors expressed the fear thatthe supplement would attract thebulk of national advertising andthat the papers themselves wouldlose revenue.THE DISSENTING editors areall from private colleges. Moststate supported universities havedecided to accept the supplementBerkeley will be blessed with thepublication, along with Omaha Uni.versity, Louisiana State University,and the University of AlabamaTHIS WEEKTHE BAROQUEfeaturesTUES., WED., THURS. — U. of C. s OWNJOHN GITTSFRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY NITCSThe Judy Roberts TrioSUNDAY SPECIAL —LIVE ENTERTAINMENT4 pm-1 amcasual clothes, never a cover or minimum, regular pricesLARGE GLASS OF SCHLITZ - 50cCome in to Hyde Park's newest IN PLACE.WE FINALLY HAVE ROOM TO DANCE, DANCE. DANCE1510 E. 53rd PL 2-3547See BREATHLESS Sunday; then see LE PETIT S0LDAT next FridaySunday Mead House will be showing Jean-lue Godard's first film Breathless. Doc Films is proud to be presenting the first showing west of the Hudson of Godard's second film, IE PETIT SOLDAT onFriday May 19 in Mandet Hall at 7:30 and 9:30. LE PETIT SOLDAT, Godard's first film with Anna Karina, was banned for 3 years by the French government, and only recently received its American premiere.MYSTICISM, HUMANISMAND JUDAISMMonday PROFESSOR^ 15 EMIL L. FACKENHEIMo:UU p.m.Philosophy Dept.Admission free University of TorontoBREASTED HALL THE ORIENTAL INSTITUTE 1155 E. 58th ST.The Charles W. Gilkey Lecture—presented annually by Hillel and RockefellerMemorial Chapel in honor of the former dean of the Chapel.LAST FILM OF THE YEARJAPANESE FILM FESTIVALpresents"I WAS BORN, BUT ..DIRECTOR-0ZUMay 13, Saturday 7:15 6 9:30SOC. SCI. 122 754 Spring Term StudyCruise on theMediterraneanUniversity Classes in Architectural I. Art History:Rome, Pompeii, Alexandria,Cairo. Luxor, Baalbek, Ephesus,Istanbul, Athens, Assissi,Crete, Sicily and others.From March 20th to May 19. 1968, learn fromshipboard lectures... then visit the greathistorical sites for maximum appreciation.190 students will study under professors fromAmerican Universities on a newly commissionedfully air conditioned study-cruise ship.Write for complete details and an applicationtoday. Space limited. Sponsored by ForeignLanguage League Schools, a non profit, tax-exempt organization. Prices vary from $1349 to$1489, depending on stateroom. Clip couponbelow and mail today.To: Foreign Language League Schools iP.0. Box 1920Salt Lake City. Utah 84110STATE : ZIPJ9 CHICAGO MAROON • May 12, 1967!• * Tulane To Be Top Opponent AgainUC Plans Tough Basketball Scheduleby Sydney UngerIf the axiom ‘you can judgea man by the company hekeeps’ can be applied to ateam, then UC’s 1967-68 Bas¬ketball Maroons must be judged asone of the best teams that has everrepresented Chicago.Coach Stampf’s Cagers will play17-18 games. Included among UC’sopponents are two teams that aremembers of the Ohio Conference(Denison and Oberlin), one teamfrom the Michigan Conference(Alma) and one Canadian team(Windsor).Assistant Coach Angelus rated I schedules a UC team has ever had i that handed UC its worst loss lastand stateddesigned“progressively rougher.”schedule is printed belowthat the schedule wasso that the games gotTheKendall Dec. 1Alma Dec. 2Rockford Dec. 5Lake Forest Dec. 9Illinois State N Dec. 16Chicago Invit. Dec. 19-30Windsor Jan. 6Illinois Tech. Jan. 10Roosevelt Jan. 19Lake Forest Jan. 20Oberlin Jan. 27Illinois Tech. Feb. 2Grinnell Feb. 3MacMurray Feb, 10Tulane Feb. 17Denison Feb. 24Illinois College Mar. 2 season.Rockford College has a schedulecomparable to UC’s and judginghome (from p.ast Performances shouldhome give Chicago a tough game. (BothHOME "AWAYHOMEHOMEAWAYAWAYHOMEHOMEAWAYHOMEHOMEHOMEAWAYHOMEHOME Skeist's Fine CutIn Bank Sit-In CaseRob Skeist, the Maroon re-1 strators who had already been ar-Alma is in the same conferencethis as being one of the toughest1 as Kalamazoo College—the team UC and Rockford lost to Iowa Wesleyan last season; UC by 2 points,Rockford by 4).Illinois State North won over 80%of its games last year, compiling a15-3 record.Coach Stampf called the schedulea “very good one” and felt that UCcould have a successful season ifthere is enough support from thebench to back up Chicago’s fine‘starting five*.Town Meeting Attracts 700 porter who was arrested inJanuary while covering a sit-down demonstration in frontof the Continental Illinois NationalBank, accepted a lighter fineWednesday on one of the chargesagainst him, and succeeded in hav- rested and were waiting to enter apolice paddy wagon. After his origi¬nal trial last month, in which hepleaded not guilty to charges of“blocking the street” and “disor¬derly conduct,” he was found guiltyand fined $100 on each count..„ .. , . . IN A PRE-TRIAL conferencemg the sentence m another charge Wednesday Skelst>s lawyervacated. ! with prosecutors from the city Cor¬poration Counsel’s office, JudgeMaurice Lee, and a representativeSkeist was arrested along with 23other UC students who were dem¬onstrating against the bank’s policyof making business loans in SouthAfrica. He was taken in custodywhile trying to talk with demon-(Continued from Page Three)the community and possibly puttingup a peace candidate for Congress.Assistant philosophy professorJohn Dolan reported on the draftresistance workshop, which also ex¬plored the problems of gettingpress coverage. He said that nonewspapers had mentioned the factthat a UC professor had burned his draft card at the Spring Mobiliza-i A WORKSHOP conducted by Cita¬tion. Ways of increasing draft re- zens’ Forum discussed difficultiessistance Which he mentioned in-'in reaching the public through ra-plniritfv) etAYwiifiif/ <tAa.rauian!c,JI /Ina.-Ht ! /Ur* Forum h'iS bCfiTl buyeluded sending “caravans” of draftcounsellors to area high schools,staging demonstrations at draftboards, building a pool of men will¬ing to bum their draft cards, and dio. Citizensing advertising time on RadioWNUS. It has found that people“must think you’re respectable” orthey will not listen. The organizaEditor Calls Peace the Only Alternative;War Has No Moral, Legal Justification(Continued from Page One)give them to the alligators becauseit was “necessary.”"And in 1967, witch doctor West¬moreland comes around and tellsyou that ‘once your sons learn tokill and rape people they’ll bringabout peace, tranquility, and de¬mocracy.’“Now I don’t believe in witch¬craft,” Rev. Bevel said. “And whenwitch doctors come to your home,tell them you don’t believe inwitchcraft either.”“House Niggers"lie asserted that “non-white peo¬ple in America are not going tostand by. If we can risk our livesfor the right to buy our houses youcan be sure we’ll risk our lives notto fight in Johnson’s army.”Rev. Bevel reprimanded whitecollege students for “sitting aroundtalking about democracy” whileothers fight the Vietnam war. Hereferred to them as “house nig¬gers” who grin and shuffle, as op¬posed to “field niggers” who do thedirty work.Raul M. Sweezy, editor of theMonthly Review, stated that “there offering consoling in Woodlawn and tion will expand its program thison the West Side. summer to include billboard adver-| Using and a 15-mdnute commercialon WMAQ Radio.! Curtis Hays, director of the Stu¬dent Woodlawn Area ProjectI (SWAP), led a workshop on organ-, , , . .. ! izing the poor. That workshop ques-iS TraL°Vetg&\ J«st?c*‘*>n Cloned the type of organizationfor the United States to be m Viet¬nam today.” He asserted that thereal motive behind U.S. in¬volvement is fear of losing the rich¬es of Southeast Asia.IF PRESIDENT JOHNSON or¬ders an invasion of NorthVietnam, he said, the Viet Congwill probably ask for Red Chinesesupport. Peace is the only al¬ternative to a war between theUnited States and China, he claim¬ed.Sweezy called on the audience to“weaken the capacity of this coun¬try to wage war on the peoples ofthe world.” He called draft resis¬ters “the true heroes of the peacemovement because they are actingin the best interests not only of ourown country but of the peoples ofthe world.”Gary Rader, a former Green Be¬ret who is now facing prosecutionfor burning his draft card duringthe Spring Mobilization, said hewanted to see “every draft boardshut down and every induction cen¬ter infiltrated until they don’t knowwhat they’re doing.” which is most effective and theproblem of organizing around inter¬national as opposed to local issues.It is necessary to create a modelfor action, then try it out andchange it to meet changing reali¬ties of the situation, the workshopdecided.Blum concluded the meeting witha call for action in speech on“Where Do We Go from Here?” Hesaid students must fight restric¬tions on freedom and justice beingimposed on society by its leadersand challenged students to “go tothe Ciceros and Evanstoms andWoodlawns” to develop conscious¬ness about the war.I NEW BOOKS OF CURRENT INTERESTTHE THERAPEUTIC RELATIONSHIP AND IT'S IMPACT:a study of psychotherapy with schizophrenics,by Carl Rogers $12.50 ClothCYTOGENETICS: foundations of modern genetics series,by Carl Swanson $ 3.25 PaperAPPROACHES IN LINGUISTIC METHODOLOGYby I. Rauch & C. Scott $ 6.00 ClothGENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENTThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE 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 • 1:00 A meeting will be heldon Monday, May 22nd, at3:00 P.M. in the Office ofCareer Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club,for University of Chicagostudents who have appoint¬ments as government in¬terns in Washington thissummer.Former student internsand Harold Richman, for¬mer White House Fellow,will be present to answerany questions that internsmay have. Plans for sum¬mer seminars will also bediscussed.Interns who are unableto attend this meetingshould call the Office ofCareer Counseling andPlacement, Extension 3282. of the bank. It was agreed that thedisorderly conduct citation wouldbe vacated, and the fine for theother charge would be reduced to$50. This was the same agreementmade in the cases of the 23 demon¬strators.If Skeist had decided to appealthe charges, expenses may haverun up to as much as $1500. Dona¬tions already received in responseto the Maroon’s appeal for contri¬butions will cover the fine plus feesfor his lawyer.TAI-0CAM-Y6.NCM!NASI . AMIRiCANRESTAURANTCAurromsB jamAMERICAN DISHESM aj*. •• t*vORDtftt TO T*KI OUTIBIS ImR Mp4 9L MU 4-NMSMUSTANGS - TEMPESTS - FORDS - PONTIACSRENT-A-CARBYVolkswagens $4.50 for 12 Hrs.Plus 60 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 3-1715AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW A USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedlos end Cartridges - Tubes - Battaries10% discount to itudont* with ID wrA THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55 th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWNMichelob and Budweiser on Tap!Piano Selections Friday & Saturday eveningsMay 12, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9Theater ReviewClean Fun for Gen. HersheyThe Goodman Theatre’s production of Joan Littlewood’s Oh What A Lovely War is sur¬prisingly well acted. The entire cast with perhaps one exception (Susan Breeze) performsthe play with zest and style. Terry Lomax, the guest star, plays with intelligence and withthe part of the Master of Ceremonies and keeps the acdience in the palms of his small butcapable hands.simply corny. Actors roamingEugenie Ross, Julia Fremon, and Annette Fern as the three womenin Shakespeare's Richard III playing at the University of ChicagoTheatre May 12, 13, 14 at 8:30 pm in Mandel Hall.Culture Calendar-x ArtART INSTITUTE OFCHICAGO—Andrew Wyeth Retrospec¬tive: Thru June 4. Annual ExhibitionSociety for Contemporary AmericanArt: Thru May 21. Rembrandt Etchingsand Drawings from A.I. collection: con¬tinuing. Photographs by Jonas Dovyden-as: May 13-July 9. Japanese ActorPrints by Sharaku: Thru May 28. Ce¬ramics by Marc Hansen, Earl .J Hooks& Tomiya Matsuda: Thru May 14.Wyeth exhibition: Adults, $1.00; Stu¬dents & Children, 50c. Daily, 10-5; Thu,10-9:30; Sun, Noon-5; Wyeth exhibitionopen Tues till 9:30. Michigan & Adams.ConcertsCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA—In their 76th season. Jean Martinon,Music Director and Conductor; IrwinHoffman, Associate Conductor; Margar¬et Hillis, Director, Chicago SymphonyChorus.Twenty-Ninth Week—Thu & Fri, May11 & 12. Jean Martinon, cond: ItzhakPerlman, violin. Mihalovici: “Sympho¬nies pour le Temps Present”. Debussy:“Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun”.Prokofieff: Violin Concerto No. 2 in g,Op. 63. Beethoven: Symphony No. 5 inc, Op. 67.Thirtieth Week—Thu. Fri & Sat, May18-20. Jean Matrinon, cond; BrendaForbes and Harold Robinson, speakers;Teresa Orantes and Peggy Smith, so¬pranos; Betty Allen, mezzo-soprano;Charles Bressler, tenor; John West,bass; Chicago Symphony Chorus. Ho¬negger: “Jeanne d’Arc au Bucher”.Thu-Sat Concerts: Thu, 8:15; Fri, 2;Sat, 8:30. $2.50-$6.50. Fri gallery seatsfor students, $1.50 (available until 1 pmonly). Orchestra Hall Box Office: Daily,9.30-6; later on concert nights. Sun, 1-4.Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michigan HA7-0362; Sun & Hoi after 5: HA 7-0499.CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAJUNE FESTIVAL—Jean Martinon, Mu¬sic Director.Thu, June 1—Jean Martinon, cond;Steven Staryk & Samuel Magad, vio¬lins; Donald Peck, flute; Kenneth Gil¬bert, harpsichord. All-Bach program:Suite No. 1 in c; Flute, Violin & ClavierConcerto in a; Violin Concerto No. 1in a; Suite No. 3 in D.Fri, June 2—Henry Lewis, cond; Mar¬ilyn Horne (Isabella); Teresa Orantes(Elvira); Carol Cornelisen (Zulma);Ken Remo (Lindoro;) Theordor Upp-man (Taddeo); Charles Van Tassel(Haly); Ezio Flagello (Mustafa); Chica¬go Symphony Concert Cho. Rossini:“L’ltaliana in Algeri.”Sat, June 3—Jean Martinon, cond;Donald Peck, flute; Kenneth Gilbert,harpsichord; Steven Staryk & Victor Ai-tay, viblins. All-Bach program: SuiteNo. 2 in b; Clavier Concerto in d; Two-Violin Concerto in d; Shite No. 4 in D.All performances begin at 8:30.$2.00-$4.50. Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michi-gan. HA 7-0362.HARPER THEATRE—Victor Aitay, vio¬lin; Frank Miller, cello; KatherineGlaser, piano. Beethoven: Piano Trio inBb, Op. 97, “Archduke”. Honegger: Vio¬lin & Cello Sonatine. Dvorak: PianoTrio, Op. 90, “DumkyV Mon, May 22 at8:30. Adults, $3.50; Students, $2.00. 5238S. Harper.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO SYMPHO¬NY ORCHESTRA—Richard Wernick,<vfod; James Spikes, piano. Wagner:“Siegfried’s Rhine Journey”. Franck:Symphonic Variations. Stravinsky: “Jeude Cartes”. Sat, May 20 at 8:30. Free.Mandel Hall, 5706 S. University. MI3-0800, ext 3886. ' ' ' jTheatrePROFESSIONALCOME BACK LITTLE SHEBA—JoanBlondell and Kent Smith in WilliamInge’s paly. Thru May 21. Nightly, 8:30: jWed, 2:30 & 8:30; Sat, 6 & 9:30; Sun, 7.Closed Mon. $3.00-$4.00. Ivanhoe Thea¬tre, 3000 N. Clark. 248-6800.FIDDLER ON THE ROOF—The Bock-Harnick musical starring Luther Adlerand Dolores Wilson. Matinee star. PaulLipson. Nightly, 8:30; Matinees Sat &Wed at 2. Closed Sun. Evenings,$3.00-$9.00; Matinees, $2.50-$6.00.McVickers Theatre, Madison nr. State, i782-8230.THE ODD COUPLE—Neil Simon’s newcomedy hit starring Dan Dailey and El- :liot Reed, Mike Nichols, dir. Nightly, I8:30; Wed & Sat Matinee, 2. Closed Sun.Nightly. $2.75-$5.00; Fri & Sat, j$3.50-$5.95. Matinees $2.50-$4.95. Black- jstone Theatre, 60 E. Balbo. CE 6-8240. |OH. WHAT A LOVELY WAR!—StarringTerry Lomax. Patrick Henry, dir. Thefirst musical production in Goodman jTheatre’s history. May 5-28. Tue-Thu &Sun. 7:30; Fri & Sat, 8:30; Thru, May j11 & 18 at 2. Closed Mon. Nightly (andmatinees) $3.50; Fri & Sat, $4.00. Good¬man Theatre, 200 S. Columbus Drive.CE 6-2337.SECOND CITY—24th satirical revue“The Return of the Viper.” Paul Sills, !dir; Fred Kaz, music. Cast includes J. |J. Barry, Martin Harvey Friedberg,Burt Heyman, Sandy Holt, Sid Gross-feld, David Walsh and Penny White.Sun & Tues-Thu, 9; Fri, 8:30 & 11; Sat,8:30, 11 & 1. Closed Mon. Nightly. $2.50;Fri & Sat, $3.00. (1846 N. Wells. DE7-3992. MO 4-4032 after 8:30.WAIT UNTIL DARK—Starring ShirleyJones and Jack Cassidy. May 1-June 3.Call theatre for information. StudebakerTheatre, 410 S. Michigan. 922-2973.COLLEGE AND COMMUNITYHULL HOUSE THEATRE—“The Dev¬ils” by John Whiting. Robert Sickinger,dir. Thru May. Fri & Sat, 8:30; Sun,7:30. Fri & Sat, $3-90; Sun, $3.40. JaneAddams Center, 3212 N. Broadway.348-5622.HULL HOUSE T H E AT R E ATPARKWAY—A twin bill: “The Integra¬tors” by Norman Mark & “Requiem forBroter X” by William WellingtonMackey. Dick Gaffield, dir. Thru May7.“My Sweet Charlie” by David Westh-eimer. Dick Gaffield, dir. May 12-28.Fri & Sat, 8:30; Sun, 7:30. Fri & Sat,$2.50: Sun, $2.00. Students $1.00 Fri &Sun. Parkway Community House, 500 E.67th. 324-5622HULL HOUSE UNDERGROUND THE-ATRE—“If I had a Hammer” by Ger¬ald Wallace. Mr. Wallace, dir. ThruMay. Fri & Sat, 8:30; Sun, 7:30.$1.00-$1.50. Henry Booth House, 2250 S.State. 326-1887.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THE-ATRE—Shakespeare’s “Richard III.”James O’Reilly, dir. Fri-Sun, May 12-14at 8:30. Fri, $2.00; Sat, $2.50; Sun, $1.75.50c discount for students & faculty ofall Chicago area schools. Mandel Hall,5706 S. University. MI 3-0800, ext 3581.SPECIAL EVENT: CHICAGO’S FIRSTBE-IN. Sunday May 14 at p.m. inNorth Avenue Beach (North Ave. andLincoln Park). Lawrence Ferlenghetti,the Siegel-Schwall blues band, and otherbands, singing groups and poets. Bringballoons, flowers, and whatever elseturns you on! For information, call:493-3153. Unfortunately the play has beenbungled by technicians and hokeystaging that only works to thwartthe attempts of the acting companywho struggle to overcome theclumsy and unnecessary ma¬chinery. In this case director Pa¬trick Henry is at fault. Miss Lit¬tlewood’s show simply does notneed the heavy-handled intrusionsthat the machinery, with its deathstatistics and war pictures, keep ontrying to make. The fact is thatmusic hall entertainment (evenwith a purpose) and war are twoincompatible modes of thought andaction. War, as we all know, ishell—not singing and dancing.P AT R I C K HENRY, however, around the auditorium before theShow, people out of costume run¬ning across the stage, and exposedlighting instruments in the middleof the sedate wood paneled Good¬man auditorium do not tell me thatthis is a rehearsal, but only thatHenry thinks that I am stupidenough to think that this is a re¬hearsal. (The performance on May3 supported Henry’s intention whennone of the movie or slide projec¬tors worked properly.)Henry’s idea could be further de¬veloped in this area only by using awooden stick to point out the thingsone may have missed and walkingaround the auditorium and whisprobably felt that “war is hell” is peri,ng in everyone’s ear-“Get it?”,not the point made by Littlewood’s The result of Henry's heavy-handedshow, and so the machines are technique is to turn the audiencesthere evidently to remind us. His | attention to what is entertainingstaging, however, invites the audi-j antl avvay from the blackboardence to watch a series of clever where teacher is holding forth onbits (well done) which lack the . humanity and peace.teeth and depth of good satire. Thedeath statistics, which are flown in“director ex machina”, are merelynumbers to the audience. They donot convey the visual image of menbleeding to death on an unknownfield in a senseless and unneces¬sary war.Furthermore, Henry’s attemptsto imitate Joan Littlewoods idea HERE IS where Littlewood’swhole concept comes into question-“Is it possible to joke about peoplegetting killed and sing songs aboutit full of nostalgia without makinglight of the point which the author,one assumes, is trying to make, ie.war is hell?”If Oh What A Lovely War can be question 'the answer is a definiteno. The entertainment makes usforget “war is hell” and the showgoes riotously on with fake bodieslightly tossed into fake graves, ac¬tors dying doing dance steps inclown suits, and vicious political in-trgue in rag time.War is not hell; war is singingand dancing. Directors are justspoil sports who don’t want to joinin the fun and so drop signs on tothe stage to register meek objec¬tions they don’t dare to make inperson. Again, the signs are mean¬ingless. No one reacts and every¬one has a good time. The show islively and even General Herschevwould enjoy the whole thing.-Goodclean fun. Next year the wholeshow may even be shown to out¬fighting boys in “Veet - nam”, ex-cept, of course, for those signs -which are after all just boring .and a few of the dead numbers.And who could be a better directorfor this Littlewood farce than agood patriot like Patrick Henry.Andrew Harristhat every Show is a rehearsal are i used as an example of the genre in jCalendar of EventsMost Completeon the South SideMODE! CAMERA1542 E. 55 HY 3 9259NSA Discounts RENT A TRUCK$200 Per HourDO-IT-YOURSEIFTRUCK RENTALSO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hour Friday, May 12MOVIE: Cleo from 5 to 7, Doc Films.Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15. 60c.LECTURE: “American Attitudes onForeign Policy: Hawks, Doves, Ostrich¬es, and Chameleons.” Prof. Milton Ro¬senberg, Psychology Dept. 8:30 pm, Hil-lel House.CONCERT: The Episcopal StudentChoir, works by Byrd, Purcell,DesPres, Weelkes, Schutz, Lassus, Vic¬toria, and Vulpius. 8:30, Bond Chapel.TENNIS MEET: Chicago IntercollegiateTennis Tournament, Varsity Courts, 9am.LECTURE: “Das deutsche Drama seit1945,” Peter Spycher, Professor of Ger¬man, Oberlin CoUege. (Given in Ger¬man.) Classics 21, 4 pm.CONCERT: Anthony Braxton Quintet,program of contemporary jazz. LawSchool Auditorium, 8 pm. Admission$1.00 Sponsored by Student MobilizationCommittee.Saturday, May 13DANCE: Speakeasy-Swing Low. Semi-formal dance. CTS. Band, food, drinks.$3.50 couple, $2.00 single. McGlffertLounge, 5751 Woodlawn. 9 pm.MOVIE: Saanj aur Savera, Hindi film.English subtitles, sponsored by IndiaAssociation of UC. Judd Auditorium,58th and Kimbark, 8 pm. Admission $1for members, $1.50 for non-members.LEAFLETTING: Antiwar Leaf letting,starting from New Dorms parking lot,8:30-10:30 assemble. PARTY: 6031 Woodlawn, 8:30 pm. Cont.to Antiwar Leafletting. Donation - 50c.Sunday May 14FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes HaU, 7:30pm. teaching: 9:30—11, dancing.RELIGIOUS SERVICE: “A HappeningAt Jerusalem," Reverend E. SpencerParsons, Dean of the Chapel. Rockefel¬ler Memorial Chapel, 11 am.BE-IN: North Avenue Beach, 1 pm.MEETING: Politics for Peace work¬shop. Ida Noyes, 1 pm. STATIONERYBOOKSGREETING (ARDS■k-kickickTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student DiscountDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 I. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866■YE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent end Feculty Discount THE BEST SOURCE FORArtist's MaterialsAcross 53rd Kimbark PlazeComplete Picture FramingServiceMounting; Matting Non-GlareGlass - School SuppliesBE SURE TO ASK FORWEEKLY SPECIALDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-411110% STUDENT DISCOUNTON $10 OR MORE PIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT CINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANACADEMY AWARDWINNER“A MAN & A WOMAN"Anouk AimeeIn ColorSun-Times * * * *AMERICAN—For anyone whose ever been in loveStudents $1.50 with I.D. card every daybut Saturday.Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. & Sun.open 1:30ZENITHSONYGRUNDIGPORTABLE AND TABLE MODEL RADIOfrom $9.95TOAD HALL1444 E. 57th BU 8-4500Yom Ha'atzmut(ISRAELI INDEPENDENCE DAY)BANDERSNATCH SUNDAY SPECIALIDA NOYES Falafel~lsraeli Salad—Punch 99*MAY 13, 6:00-6:3010 • CHICAGO MAROON May 12, 1967Last UC Chamber Concert SaturdayThe UC Chamber Orchestra, con¬ducted by Musical Director LeonBotstein, will give its final concertof the year this Saturday evening,May 13, at 8:30 pm, in HutchinsonCommons.The program will consist ofFaure Elegie, for Cello and Orches¬ tra, with Nora Lesser as soloist;tiie world premiere of Joseph Ol¬ive’s The Snake, commissioned bythe orchestra, with Charles VanTassel, baritone, as soloist; andconcluding with a complete perfor¬mance of Handel’s Water Music.The concert is open to the publicwithout ticket or charge. Music ReviewCellist Rostropovich SparklesBe-In Set for North Ave. Beach, Sun.Chicago’s most promising be-inwill be out—outside on the sands ofthe North Avenue Beach. The hap-'pening is expected to happen Sun- 'The chairmen and staff ofthe first year humanitiescourses have invited studentsin Hum 105, 106, and 109 todiscuss the course with them |1at 8:30 pm, Tuesday, May 16, 1in the Ida Noyes Theater,room 308. The staff is now |revising the courses for nextyear and would like to hearstudent opinion about thecourses, where they are |strong, where they could beimproved, etc. day at 1 pm and continue untilabout 6 pm.Anyone can come; costumes areencouraged. Three bands are do¬nating their services, some stu¬dents are contributing helium bal¬lons and it is hoped that people willbring “picnics and toys.”The be-in, which was originallyorganized by a student in the LawSchool, will be absolutely free. There is a small class of musicians for whom the traditional musical world seems too cramped. It contains mostlycomposers: Ives, Beethoven, Skryabine. But it also includesMstislav Rostropovich, the cellist (perhaps the instrumentalist)of our age. The extant cello Idtera-ture could hardly absorb Ms ener¬gies; it had to expand to meet Mm.By now, a clump of contemporaryscores (all the more considerable,compared to the scant repertory hebegan with) literally belongs tohim: music written especially forhim, which few others have daredto perform.Hindi Movie SaturdayThe Hindi movie Saanj aur Sav-era will be shown Saturday night at;8 pm in Judd Hall. Presented byithe UC India Association, the mov¬ie will be run with English subti-1ties. Admission is $1 for membersof the association, and $1.50 fornonmembers.gwwiiaw^iiftgaiiiiKiO! m He brought one of his newest ac¬quisitions, the Shostakovich SecondCello Concerto, to Orchestra Halllast week. It was apparently in¬tended to encompass the range ofRostropovich’s strengths—^whichmeans that in forty minutes, thesoloist is called upon to performnearly every act otf which a cellistis capable. Such vaudevilles oftentend to ramble. But Shostakovich,despite his self-imposed exile fromchic avant-garde circles, is a com¬poser of consummate craft. Andwhile the soloist’s virtuosity alwaystakes precedence over musical sub-•: ** . ftgft £ stance, the concerto is very much awhole—due, no doubt, to Shostako¬vich’s uniquely blended style, whichhovers uneasily net ween nearlyflashy wit and almost profoundmournfulness.Rostropovich is the warmest mu¬sician I’ve ever heard. While henever plays up (or down) to hislisteners, he seems to embrace thewhole audience . . . even eachmember of the audience individual¬ly. Few can play as quietly as hecan; yet his tone never fades. Theopening Largo gave him a chanceto demonstrate this pianissimo, in¬terspersed with huge, ear-fillingthrobs which seemed to bear theweight of an entire orchestra, if notthe whole world. The more bois-trous sections often played to theother side of his talent—savage as¬saults on his strings, with opulencereplaced by barbaric frenzy, snailsMaroon Classified AdsPERSONALSTHE (FOR REAL) BE-IN. Sun. NorthAve. Beach. 1 pm. Mark but this: Busesio O'Hare Rides again.Again.John W: Do not darken our doorstep til you are unscrewed.Love, MaroonHymnsing: Saturday, 7 pm, 5564 SWoodlawn Ave. All welcome!! | Gobble the Goodies—Bandersnatch Sun-| day Special: May 13, Israeli Independ-| ence Day Special (Falafel, salad, drink)99c. Ida Noyes. 6-6:30 pm.LECTURE: “American Attitudes onForeign Policy: Hawks, Doves, Ostrich¬es and Chameleons. Prof. Milton Rosen¬berg. Psychology Dept. Friday, 8:30pm. Hillel.share A car with me. Mostly Spain &S E. Europe. June-Sept. Ken HY 3-9832KAMELOT Restaurant. 2160 E. Tlst Stmi c discount for UC students.Register today for National studentAnti-War Conference, noon to midnight,Ida Noyes Hall.Typing, excel., in my home So. ShoreAny kind, reas. Call RE 1-3786Russian translator desires partime em¬ployment beg. June. BU 8-1117, 8-noon.Anthony Braxton Quintet—a program ofContemporary jazz. Tonight, 8 pm LawSchool Auditorium.BE-IN. Be-there. North Ave. Beach.Sun. 1 pm.anycapitalist woman. Frank Rich172-3606 ards,Dave Baker student. Indiana* U graI.John Gilmore DO 3-0734.Great new guitar instructions bookMasters of Instrumental Blue*. Gui¬tar." Rev. Gary Davis, Mississippi JohnHurt. John Fahey, etc. The FRETSHOP.FOUND: Black cat. Green collar. BU8 2292.And if I am good, then what?LOST: Sunday night at Bandersnatch:Beige Jacket with Gr. & Wh. lining.Hitchcock 8.LECTURE: ‘'Mysticism, Humanism.™ Judaism." Prof. Emil Fackenheim,I hilosophy Dept. Univ. of Toronto. An-mial Gilky Lecture. Monday, May 15, 8Pm Breasted Hall. Free.Chicago’s biggest BE-IN? Sunday. Mayl pm, North Avenue Beach. BringRowers, balloons, food—anything thatturns you on!!!KOINONIA: Dinner (75c), 6 pm at'.’aPel House. Move on to Hillel to hearAmerican Attitudes on Foreign Poli-J, Milton J. Rosenberg. | Worried about the Draft? Write for in-| formation on immigration to Canada.;1 Committee to Aid American War Objec-!| tors. Box 4231, Vancouver 9, B C. Cana¬da.Leaflet against war. Sat. May 13, meet8:30-10:30 AM, New Dorms Pk’g lot. jNot still more!Uncle Siam wants your Mother-orAn Eschatalogical EventAt the Bandersnatch soon!MEN—MONEY: If you’re a male un¬dergrad, regular smoker of L&M, Tar-reyton, Marboro, Viceroy, Kent, Win-:ston, or Parliament come to Bus. E. 1rm. 16. Sat, 1 pm. Doing research onbrand loyalty. $1 for 15 min. test &brief ind. follow-up.IHA Tours still open. 1) Detroit-NiagraFalla: 2) Stratford, Conn (Shakespeare)July 21-23; 3) Expo ’67. July 29-Aug. 6.BI 8-0689 and 721-9568.Party: 6031 Woodlawn. Sat. 5/13, 8:30pm. aOc. Cor>t. to antiwar leafletting. |The days of the Maroon’s Jewish dynas¬ty are numbered.SUBLETS4 bdrm, furn. 6027 Wdln. Start 6/15, 3mo. 363-02824‘/2 rms for 2-3 people. Ingleside & 55th,$1)5. BU 8-7662.Newly renovi-ted, 5 rm apt: completely >furn (incl dishwasher) 6/1-10/1. 324-10561eves.NEW YORK sublet. 107th & Amster¬dam. Large 4 rm apt. frun. Oriental low jcamp. 6/15-9/15. $21o/mo. MU 4-3304(Chicago).2‘i rms, 54th & Wdln. June-Oct. $80mo.X4654 or 288-5742Cool courtyard apt. close to campus.4>2 rms. $100/mo. 6/15-7/15. 667-2212, 6-8pm or before noon.Bargain! Aug. 15-Sept. 15 or Oct. 1. 55& Kenwd. 3 rms, furn. BU 8-6610, rm.1210.June 15-Sept. 15. 56 & Kimbark. 3 rms,furn. 752-9501, Neil or Tim. f 2 bdrm. apt, 54 & Wdln, avail, for sum.j Need person to shr. with. 288-5650.3*2 rms. June 15-Sept 15. 54tff & Harper.Furnished. $125/mo. 493-35575 rms. Spacious and bright. $135/mo.June 12-Sept. 30 268-18518 rms, 4 bdrms, 3 baths furn. Near3 rm. apt. completely furnished, mod¬ern kitchen, piano. June 15-Sept. 15. 1or 2 persons. Nr. campus. $125/mo.643-34295 rm. apt, 3 bdrms, 2 blks from cam¬pus. $105/mo. air-cond. 288-3728.4*2 rms, 5425 Wdln, furn, $90, June9-Oct. 1. Bob or Jay, BU 8-76044 rm. apt, 2 baths, 1 blk from campus.$150/mo or best offer. Avail June 15.324-6434 or 955-4768.4 room furnished cottage; private; So.Shore; June 10-Aug. 31. 324-5742. APARTMENTS WANTEDResponsible couple needs 2-bdrm houseor apt by June 30. 667-6416 eves andweekends.IV2-2V2 unfuirn. apt. nr UC, immed oc-cup, x2706 or 768-7642Mont, teacher, NDEA inst-stud. ITT,needs 3 or 4 bdrm. home to rent mid-June to mid-Aug. J.O’Dell, 1230 W.Copper, Butte, Montana.4 or more rm. apt, 1st floor, pref. w.fireplace; rent not nec. an object. OA4-3320 x39 south.ROOMMATES WANTEDFern, rmrmts. Slim. $33/mo. 752-1189.4 rms, semi-furn. bsmt, suitable for 3.$100/mo. Lease avail. Oct. 1. 5522 Ever¬ett. 752-2072.3 rms, So. Shore, 1 blk from Lake & IC.Furn, incl. dishes, etc. Air cond; petsOK. $110/mo incl utils. 374-8426 eves.Garage to sublet nr. 54th and Kimbark.363-7682.Large 6 rm. house, backyard, garage.Beginning June- $150. 363-5797.4*2 rms, 1 bdrm. 60th & Ingleside.6/21-9/26. 493-3153.4 Ig rms. furn, 51st & Harper, avail,6 1-9/25. $125/mo. 493-5750, |8 rms, 4 bdrms, 2 baths. Spacious, fur¬nished. 51st 7 Kimbk. 6/15-9/15. BU 86610, x3328, x?412 or xll07. Leave amessage. jtorrentAvailable June 1, 2VZ rooms, 58th &Bikstn. $100mo. 363-2955.Economical nearby clean quiet unfurn.front apr. 3 rms. Private bath, $89.50up. Free utils and parking, porch, view,shopping. Williams. 6043 Woodlawn.Apt. to shr. Male. 752-6628. Grad stud, seeking 2 mature rmmts. forattract. 6-rm. apt rar campus. Sept. 27.Dave 363-1949, 5-7 pm.2 male rmmts, for lg. cheap, apt. n-r.campus for sum. &/or next yr. 752-2433.Summer rmmts. Can move in now.Large, 6 rooms, Hyde Park. David orJim- 684-4788. of sparks seeming to sear Che at¬mosphere.The intensity of this perfor¬mance, however, was outmatchedhy the elegance of his encore—Bach, of course. His Bach is farfrom austere: he lets his rhythmsswing, and hangs for a momentover favorite phrases. Yet, with hisunstrained tone, refinement ofphrasing, and uncanny sense ofthat delicate line between interpre¬tation and distortion, it never wan¬ders into the nineteenth century.No one else can make Bach soundso much like dance music, ordance music so much like Bach.The rest of the concert was tragi-oal-farcical. After the near-perfectBluebeard's Castle of two weeksago, it was hard to readjust to thetepid tapioca of Martinon’s man¬nerisms. The Schumann SpringSymphony got unsprung in the firstmovement, twitching about patheti¬cally until rt was used up. As forthe traditional tunes from A Mid¬summer Night's Dream: they beganunsteadily, toppled, and crashedinto a wedding march which wouldhave been more suitable in Mea¬sure for Measure.Peter RabinowitzKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items Prom TheOrient and Around Tho World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856SAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"siNce miPICKUP a DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200Fem. to shr. apt, 5407 Univ. Own rm.$82/mo. Must like animals. 752-1335Rmmte for summer. Furnished apt. nrcampus. $36/mo. Rich 752-5383.Fem. rmmt wanted for sum. to shr. aptat 57th & Maryland. $60/mo. for spa- Icious 2-rm apt. 288-8738-Fem. grad, for sum &/or fall opt. Ownrm. newly painted. $60/mo. 493-6415 af- [ter 7 pm.Fem. roommate wanted for summer to 1share 4 room apt. Good location near |I.C., shopping, $55 a month. FA 4-8953. 1“A Laughing. Slashing Show”— N Y.TIMES CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998OPEN SUNDAYS 11-4DIRECT MILL OUTLETOpen Sundays from 11-4Has what you need from a $10 Used 9X12Rug, to a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants A Mill Returns at fractionof the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY2-story brand new townhouse, nr. cam¬pus. 6V2 large rms., 3 bdrms, hugebsmt, completely furnished. Avail.June-October. $175/mo. 538-1027, earlyor on weekends.1*,2 large rms. for summer. 51st & Uni¬versity. Gary, 493-5360 or 643-5541! Spacious 3 bdrm. apt. 5427 Blackstone.363-5780 4*2 rms, lg. front. 2 bdrms, 4 closets,din rm., kitchen, bar. Liv. rm. W/woodfireplc, carpeted, tile bath. Business orprofessional people without animals.MU 4 8222. 5462 Cornell.Attractive, fully furnished home, 5540Kimbark. 8 rms. 2 full baths. 4 bdrms.Full kitchen & laundry. $250/mo. plusutils. 288-8865, 5-7 pm.V2 rms. $105. Spacious. Best for 2. So.Shore nr. Lake 288-4534 aft. 4 pm4 rms. Unfurn. Bedrm air-cond. Avail.June 15. $98.50. 667-1615 eves. Q/f-fWHAT A LOVELY WAIT*******H*******o**** lstarring TERRY LOMAXOpening May 5GOODMAN THEATRE200 S COLUMBUS DRIVE • CE 6 2337 EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student end Faculty DiscountAlfred Hitchcock in person this afternoon at 3:00Mr. Hitchcock will answer questions about his films today at 3:00 in the Law School Auditorium, 60th and Greenwood. If you didn't gef a ticket, come*ar,y and join the Student Standby Line. At 3:00 we will fill any vacancies in the hall with people from the Standby Line. A Doc Films presentation. (Free)Jimmy'sand the University RoomR—tVBO IXCLtWfWLY FOR UNIVURflTY CtffWTBUNky-Wtli mid Wsodsws Avs. JESSELSON’SIfRVIMG HVD* FARM FOR OViR H TRAMWITH THK VERY BIST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2 2870, PL 2-8190, DO 1-9186 1S40 I. 5Sr4 Howard Radest, Exec. Dir.AMERICAN ETHICAL UNION"The TechnicalImagination nMetropolitan Area MeetingChir.agoland Ethical Societiesand Humanists10:45 a.m. t116 South Michigan Ave.May 12, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON 11Headquarters for all party needs1964LIEBFRAUMILCHAUSLESE CABINETST. JOSEFSKELLEKfcl BINGEN/RHEINWINE CELLAR SPECIALA selection of dry white and red wines at a very special price:1964 Vouvray Demi Sec $2.591964 Chablis VaiHon Premier Cru , $2.981964 Liebfraumilch Cabinet Austese ....$2.981964 Schwarze Katz $2.491964 Wehlener Sonnenuhr Spatlese ,...-.$3.491963 Urziger Schwarzlay Auslese $3.981962 Barsac — $1.891964 St. Emilion $1.981962 Chateau Beaumont Red Bordeaux $2.981964 Macon Rouge $1.791964 Moulin A Vent "Beauiolais" Finest ...... $2.791962 Beau Geste Sparkling Burgundy $4.2912 BOTTLES VALUED AT $34.23SPECIALLY PRICED INTRODUCTORY OFFERFOR 2 WEEKS ONLY ONLY $2829 XTRASPECIALSB and LSCOTCHimportedfrom Scotland$2*8 fifthHEUBLEINCOCKTAILS$279Imported dryVermouth99DO US A FAVOR SAMPLEOUR CHEESE! BUDWEISER/case of 24 12-oz. cansCheese Favorites of the week:French Grape Cheese:Made in the Haute-Savoie district of France. The outsideis covered with the black grape skins and seeds fromthe local wine pressings. The texture is white andbuttery, with a mild flavor.$2.49per poundChristian IX: Danish KimmetKaeseA white firm cheese made from partly skimmed cow'smilk and spiced with caraway seeds. It is one of thetastiest Danish cheeses.$1.29per pound Hot Pepper Loaf:A blend of cured cheddar and provolone cheese spicedwith imported chili peppers.79*per poundCheshire:The oldest and most popular English cheese. It is afirm sharp cheese, but is creamier, more crumbly, andless compact than cheddar.$1.39per pound 3COCA-COLA12-oz. bottles6pa,k 39'PIUS DEPOSIT) CRUNCHY ROASTED! PEANUTSwith spicyflavor buds59cCelebrate Wedding Receptions orGraduation Parties with the Best for LessGRANDINThe Champagne of Anjouextra drydemi secpinkImported from FranceCase of 12 - $34.983 fo* *10 CELEBRATIONSparkling BurgundyImported fromFrance $case of 12$33.00 2Party MartOpen Daily 10 a.m. -11 p.m. - Sunday 12 Noon - 9 p.m. 2427 E. 72ndCHICAGO MAROON • May 12, 1967M a —m—mesas -