* Convict Cairo sitters-in; fine each $300CAIRO, Ill. — Seventeen White swimming pool. A number “This isn’t Mississippi. This ispeople were each fined $300 of arrests were made because of Illinois and we’re going to makeaad court costs yesterday for demonstrations at the pool. the laws here stick,’’ said a CN-their roles in recent anti- Although Negro and white fam- Fc leader- <luote quoted in thesegregation demonstrations. They Hies often share the same build- Dai,y Defender- The Cairo groupwere convicted of disturbing the ings here, many places are segre- ^as ^°etl supported by SNCC.j„. in', mob action, and failure to gated. With the support of w hite About 37 per cent of Cairo, lo-withdraw upon icquest ot a police citizens, Cairo’s Negro youth cated at the junction of the Mis-ol'fieer. These chaiges included in- formed the Cairo Nonviolent Free- sissippi and Ohio Rivers, is Negro,(••laments to violence, violence, and dom Committee (CNFCt to eli- Token integragtion of Caii'o’sattempting to control or regulate minate segregation in the city. schools took place immediatelyU,e behavior of others. Nineteenpe.iple were tried yesterday, buttvvo were not found guilty.Those convicted plan to appealto a higher court. This afternoonat 2 pm another group of demon-sji itors will be tried for similar revitalize the program of thecharges. The exact nature of these Laboratory School of the Uni-clurges is not known because they versity of Chicago, 2(> newfaculty members have beenappointed to . the School’sstaff.have reportedly been changed sev¬er,! I times.Former UC student I.inda Perl¬stein is among those to me triedtomorrow. Miss Perlstein is cur¬rently employed by Jewish Com¬munity Centers of Chicago.Fast weekend, she and UC stu¬dents A1 Berger and Terri Raywere among a group which camehere from Chicago to investigateand lend support to the demonst rat ions, supported by the Stu¬dent Non-Violent CoordinatingCommittee (SNCC).SNCC is the national organization which has been working toend segregation. This summer theyhave been conducting negro vot¬er registration drives in Mississippi and Georgia.During the weekend, Cairoyouth, students from nearbySouthern Illinois University andSNCC workers, participated in at¬tempts to integrate Cairo’s all- 26 join Lab School facultyIn an effort to renew and be enhanced rather than retardedby breaking the pattern of coursesand time schedules and substitu¬ting experiences in libraries, lab¬oratories, workshops, and dis¬cussion rooms.”Announcement of the appoint¬ments, which wall become effectivein the Fall Quarter, 1962, wasmade by Francis S. Chase. Deanof the Graduate School of Edu¬cation.The Lab School, which is in-cluded withinthe School ofE d u a t i o n, ex¬tends from nur¬sery schoolthrough highschool. Its totalenrollment isover 1450 pupils.With thesenew appoint¬ments, and theFrances Chase current “out¬standing” faculty, Chase said thathe anticipates a renew-al and re¬vitalization within the Lab Schoolof the excitement in educationalexperimentation which markedthe inception of the School underJohn Dewey in 1896.In a critical look at the futureof the Laboratory schools, he ad¬dl'd: “The hypotheses we need torefine and test include such ex¬citing possibilities as these: The guiding consideration inthe new’ appointments, DeanChase said, is to enable the Lab¬oratory Schools to provide thebest possible education for thechildren and at the same time tocontribute to the advancement ofeducation through the imaginativecontinued on page 4 after the Supreme Court ruledagainst segregation in the schools.The extent of integration has beenreported as increasing since then.Token integration has also takenplace in some motels, hotel,- andrestaurants in the city.Saturday’s swimming pool de¬monstration began when MissPerlstein and a white student fromSIU w'ent to the entrance of thepool and asked for admittance.They were politely told that(white) strangers were usually al¬lowed into the pool, but that thishad been discontinued because ofthe recent ‘trouble’.A few minutes later a group ofeight white and negro youths linedup at the ticket window of thepool. The Chief of Police told thegroup that “you’re on your own;I’m not coming back,” and left. La¬ter local police appeared, thegroup was ordered into police cars,and was escarted to jail. A secondgroup w'as soon formed, and it too,was taken aw'ay.Later, as the third group wraslining up a pool official reversedhis previous stand and gave MissPerlstein admittance to the pool. She asked if she could take herfriends with her. When the of¬ficial realized she was one of thedemonstrators, he said “We’ll getyou yet.” Her group was ta¬ken to jail, About a half hour la¬ter a fourth group appeared at thepool, but the police failed to ar¬rest them.The group arrested refusedbail and was taken to the Alex¬ander County jail. Fourteen, tennegroes and four whites began ahunger strike, saying they wouldnot eat until justice comes about.”Miss Perlstein, one of those on thediet of juice, lost 10 pounds sinceMonday. She told a Maroon re¬porter that she is in a cell byherself because she w'as the onlywhite girl to be jailed. Conditionsin the jail are not good, most ofthe cells lacking mattresses.Blankets were not provided untillast Friday.The 17 convicted at yesterday’strial participated in demonstra¬tions at a local roller skating rinklast Friday. Several demonstra¬tors sat outside of the courthouseduring the trial singing anti-se¬gregation- songs.i a ChicagoM arobnYol. 71 — No. 3 University of Chicago, Friday July 20, 1962 J iU Realty will rent to studentsThe University Realty rented from URM. University cepted for vacancies in these furn-Manag-ement Corporation Real,*v> in order to maintain at ished apartments.(URM) has reversed its pol- least “m,!nimu™ s,andards oc*“1. The educability of children ;cv ancl wiM rpnt _r_* cupancy, will allow no morefrom urban slums and other pov- / unre|.llpd . 1 g °UPS than two students per bedroom oferty-blighted environments can be ' any apartment rented, said New-increased by relatively simple and Warner Wick, Dean of Students, man<inexpensive pre-school experiences, and Janies E. Newman, Assistant URM manages three kinds of The realty agents have notwanted to deal with single stu¬dents, explained Wick, becausesingle students’ “patterns of life”which often encompass late hours,are disturbing to their neighbors.”2. Beginning at early ages, Dean ol Students, announced the housing for the University. The Married students, especially thosechildren can learn the basic concepts in each field of knowledgeand develop systematic modes ofinquiry which will lead them todirect their own learning effect¬ively with decreasing dependenceon others for setting goats andstructuring programs. change this weekURM has been “instructed toprovide every courtesy” to stu¬dents who obtain forms from theOffice of Student Housing certify¬ing that they are registered atthe University, said Mick.In addition, the form must“3. Learning for most students certify the number of students first is primarily for faculty.Students are not accepted for-these apartments unless there arevacancies after the faculty hasbeen taken care of.The second kind consists of afew “commercial” apartments,which are rented on the openmarket and are not reserved ex-beyond the primary stage would who will live in au apartment clusively for students. These with children, often go to bedearly and rise early, in contrastwith single students who are aptto stay up late and sleep duringmorning hours.Complaints about URM’s rentalpolicies centered mainly aboutURM's “commercial apartments.”As a result of the University'srecent taking over many of itsSoc Sci has 2 new programs apartments and those for faculty cornmercial apartments formembers are unfurnished version into student housing, theUp to now, URM did not wish number of “commercial” apai t-to rent apartments in this second ments managed by URM has de¬category to students. As a result clined greatly.of the change in policy, students URM has agreed to try rentingwill be able to apply lor vacan- students the “commercial”and “es- I5e. Professor ^Emeritus of Social The other members of the new cies in these apartments, as they apartments "which it retains. TheTwo steps in “enriching the ton D. Hull Distinguished Serv- committeeupperclass years” and “es- """ c ’tablishing the College as afoui-year institution have omics and in College and a mem- sor Qf Social Sciences in the Col- however that there will be few facultybeen taken by the Social Sciences ber of the Philosophy Department. iege. vacancies occuring, as these apart-The second will be given by Maynard Kreuger, Associate ments are currently occupied.Sciences and Philosophy,” and by committee are as follows:Abram Harris, Professor of Eeon- Cesar Grana, Assistant Profes- majority of its housing is oc-Wick and Newman emphasized, cupied by married students andof Economics in the The third category is furnished tion for apartments. An esti-honors seminars for third andfourth-year students majoring inthe social sciences has beenplanned.Both plans will be fully under- been decided.Roche, recentlyKenneth Rehage, Professor ofEducation and Advisor in theCollege.Joel Seidman, Professor of So- apartments, usually high rise, ef¬ficiency apartments, which havebeen used for married studenthousing. Some buildings in thisclass are the Shelbourne, theChicago Arms, and the Plaisance.Unmarried students will be ac- apartments.Section.A faculty committee has been’John P. Roche, who will be Visit- Professorappointed to create an integrated ing Professor of Political Science College.general studies BA program in the at the University next year. The McKim Marriott, Associate Pro-social sciences, and a series of topic of his seminar has not yet fessor of Anthropology.Gerhard E. O. Meyer, Professorelected presi- of Economics in the College,dent of the Americans for Demo¬cratic Action, will be teachinga civil liberties course in Con¬way in the autumn ot 1963, but stitutional law and a course inthree seminars have been definite- political parties in the political cial Sciences and in the Gradu-ly scheduled for the coming year, science department, in addition ate School of Business,and students who are entering to giving the seminar for the Karl J. Weintraub, Assistant Q. , . , x_ i: :n{y ;ntheir third year will be eligible College. Professor of History in the Col- .in® . S , s.to receive the new general studies ^ie seminars will be held on lege. URlv?rftJ -week nightg in various dormitor- Tax explained that when the scheduled for conversion in-Sol Tax,'Professor of Anthro- ies on campus. Before each sem- current College curriculum was or- to married students housingpology and Head of the Social inar, the participants will have ganized into its present form of should contact the Housing OfficeSciences Section, announced the dinner together in the dormitory, two years of general education in order to avaid being evictinnovations. The projected general studies and two years ot elective and ma- tenants in such buildingsOne of the seminars will begin BA program replaces the three jor field work, the last two years jiave received notices asking them. . . -II mactarc nmcyrflin were "never really reorganized. i „mnet ripn!- Wick explained a reason for thechange was the increased compeli-mated 1100-1200 single studentswant to live in neighborhoodapartments and not in the dor¬mitories, and it was “odd” that theUniversity wouldn’t serve themand they had to go elsewhere lorSingle students movingin the autumn quarter and will year divisional masters program were ’‘never really reorganized,carry over to the winter quarter, in the social sciences, which was I he College tacult> is finallyHeaded by Milton Singer, it will dropped last autumn. In the oldundergraduates spentand firstbe on the “Comparison of Civil- programizattons.” their last two years getting around to the last twoyears,” he said.The seminars will be open tofl(S Singer is Paul Klapper Profes- graduate year taking divisional siudeiits by invitation oi >,r of Social Sciences in the Col- courses. ?aid Jax> thf, invitations will e*e and the Anthropology De- Bert Hoselitz, Professor of So- issued on a rational and impel- to leave. The University must clearbuildings of non-students in orderto benefit from the tax free sta¬tus given to buildings used byeducational institutions for hous¬ing students.sorJSmc"? and SecSy°rf too Chairman of .he sonaV rather than persona, basiscommittee ™ S y General Studies Committee. He They will be sent to a class ot owend by the University will beTwo others will begin in the and Hermit Eby, also Professor students, for example students allowed to retain their apart-winter One will be on “Free En- of Social Sciences and appointed with a certain grade average wno ments, although their buddingsterprise and Democracy ” and will to the new committee, were mem- have taken certain courses as will be converted primarily tolie given by Frank Knight Mor- bers of the old Divisional MA background for the seminar. married students’ housing. The announcement was the re¬sult of the complaint of two so¬ciology students who would havebeen forced to move from theirapartment at 824 East 58th Street.One of them wrote to her de¬partment chairman, inquiring whe¬ther it would be possibly “to movethe powerful landlord.”James E. Newman AssistantDean of Students, in a letter onMonday, explained that the Uni¬versity’s “intention Is that singlestudents living in buildings beingconverted to married student hous-Unmarried students currently ing should be allowed to remainliving in “commercial housing” as tennants ...”“I am sorry for the concernthis has caused you,” he concluded.“The University may be a ‘power¬ful landlord,’ but it does try tobe a fair one . . . ”SNCC deserves supportIn the past few weeks the mitted yesterday as 17 peopleMaroon has devoted much were each fined tor theirspace to the activities of the £ tried and ^,4^ MnvicteclStudent Non-Violent Coordm- today. They were convicted onating Committee (SNCC). SNCC Charges ranging from disturbinghas been working to end segre- the peace to violence and mobgation in Alabama, Tennessee, action. There was neither violenceMississippi, and, most recently, nor mob action, and the only peaceIllinois. disturbed was that of the com-In downstate Cairo SNCC vol- P)acent Cairo property owners andunteers and members of the Cairo officials.Non-violent Freedom Committee Members of the University ofhave started moves to integrate Chicago community have alwaysrestaurants, a skating rink, and supported SNCC generously forCairo’s segregated swimming pool, its activities in the South. TheLast Saturday more than 20 shame and ignomity of segregatedpeople were arrested while try- Cairo affects us more closely;ing to gain admittance to the it is all the more reason to giveswimming pool. They have been again, and give generously,confined since then in jail cells „ ,, ,lacking mattresses and blankets. W1” ** set UP tfm°^Fourteen, including former UC at the New Dormitory and m Cobbstudent Linda Perlstein, have been HalL We must not lgnore thlsfasting in protest. blight on the names of AbrahamA travesty of justice was com- Lincoln and the state of Illinois.What price glory?Fortune magazine's July issue, as centerpiece to the neighbor-in an advertisement for the city hood. Or we might simply ac-of Chicago, offers food for cept the statement as the latestthought. offering in our aims of educationUnder a half-page, full color senes*aerial photo of the campus ap- Why complain about free pub-pears the following caption: licity? Anyway, we’re intellectual-“Great University of Chicago ^ and scientifically "meaningful”,campus on the South Side is the and ,l’s certainly a beautiful shotcenterpiece in one of the country’s °* camPus-urban renewal projects as well as . _ _a meaningful center of intellectual L»lllC3L20 IVxclFOOIl.and scientific ferment. ® 'Editor-in-chief ....... Laura GodofskyWell, we suppose it’s recogni- Mmabteen M «n«*«r Ken Heyltion. After all, were not merely BSY-fJET .W":a part bvit the very center- A*st. Managing Ed. .. . Andrew Steinpiece, of the urban renewal pro- CuL^Jur^U V.V Rota Ro'Sunject. Photo Coordinator A1 BergerStaff for this issue: Betsy Auerbach,Of course we might ask when Marty Rabinowitz, Felicity O’Meara,41,. Carole Horning, Joe Kelly, Anita Man-the primary function of a commu- Ue]| Jean Maclean, Bob Wilson, Jimnity of scholars became serving Byer, Mary Deal, Monica Boyd, RonDorfman, Steve Becker, Barry Bayer, Death for Crump is futile, wastefulOn November 2, a firstnovel by a thirty-two year oldauthor will be published. Al¬though this novel has not yetbeen published, the author hasstarted a second. We would ex¬pect the first novel, and the se¬cond, if the author finishes it, tobe widely read. We would alsoexpect the novels to have somesocial, if not literary, worth, andto be valuable contributions tohuman culture.What we would not expect isthat the Governor of the State ofIllinois would go out of his wayto have the author of these twonovels, Paul Crump, executed.However, this may well be thecase, unless Crump’s clemencyplea is granted by GovernorKerner.Crump has been sentenced todeath in the electric chair forfatally shooting Theodore P. Zuk-owski, 44, chief guard at Libby,McNeill & Libby during a $20,000payroll robbery which took placein 1953.Nine years and fourteen staysClassifiedFor SaleWanted■3 %{Jear (Contact <jCeendesbyOr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th St. HY 3-8372at University Ave. TAhSAM-NfcNCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 AM. to 10:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 SEWING MACHINESERVICERepairs on Americanand ForeignRentals: $6 a monthSpecial Rates for Facultyond StudentsBilly Williams6141 S. GreenwoodBU 8-2083“WHAT’STHE STOCK MARKETALL ABOUT?”Get some answers thisSATURDAY MORNINGJULY 21—-10:30 a.m.at a seminar in our Hyde Park officesin the new Hyde Park shopping centerEVERYONE IS WELCOME IA partner in our firm will discuss the stock market and current economicconditions. Be eure to bring your investment questions. There is nocharge or obligation. A seminar will also be held on July 28.Straus, Blosser & McDowellMembers New York Stock Exchange and other Principal ExchangesHyde Park Office: 1530 East 55th Street • NOrmal 7-0777CHICAGO NEW YORK GRAND RAPIDSDETROIT MT. CLEMENS MILWAUKEE KANSAS CITY of execution later, Crump stillfaces death. On July 30, the Illi¬nois Parole and Pardon Boardwill hear testimony on the pleafor executive clemency. After re¬ceiving the Board’s recommenda¬tion, Kerner will announce hisdecision."Clemency” for Crump wouldmean life imprisonment insteadof death.Crump claims he is not guiltyof the crime for which he isbeing executed. We will neithersupport nor oppose Crump on thispoinl for two reasons. We are notfamiliar enough with the proceed¬ings of Crump’s trial, and we donot consider the point relevant tohis plea.What is relevant is that Crump’splea is based on his "rehabilita¬tion.” There can be no doubt,particularly to those who watchedCrump on the At Random show,that the man scheduled to die isnot the same person who mayhave murdered a payroll guard.As an author, Crump’s influenceon society, or at least on certainelements of it, cannot help but tiebeneficial. We would expect atthe very last some serious think¬ing about our present conceptions of justice and punishment.There is a very serious ques¬tion to be answered as to whetherthe function of our jails shouldbe rehabilitory or purely punitive.An equally vital question is thatof the effectiveness of capitalpunishment. The Maroon submits,as have many others in the past'that there is no useful purposeserved by capital punishment sta¬tutes. Too many reports havebeen prepared attesting to iheinneffectuality of capital punish¬ment as a deterrent to crime. Asa punishment, the death penallyis excessive. Society should de¬finitely be primarily concernedwith rehabilitating its offendeis,and not with ending their lives.However, even if one is willingto accept the value of capitalpunishment, which wc can not anddo not, there is a strong casefor sparing Crump, scheduled todie in two weeks. We would hopethat Governor Kerner, despite hisexpressed unwillingness to he in¬fluenced by the press, considerour plea for Crump along withthe thousands of others whichwe know' he has received in recentweeks. ■ -Big Oak desk, chair, lamp,' $25; oldbut good Royal standard typewriter,$20; kitchen table, two chains, $5.Phone MI 3-1168, before 8 pm.For RentNew two-bedroom house. South ShoreValley area; 8900 South, 1900 Eaet.$135 per month. Plus heat. AvailableSept. I. RE 4-3711. Letters to the MaroonWanted desperately. 5-7 room apart¬ment near UC campus. Call 324-6019.Young female teacher will share 4room apartment with student or tea-eher. Reasonable rate. PL 2-5356.Wanted: Apartment close to campus.Occupancy now or October. 588-1904.MODEL CAMERALeica, Bolex, Nikon,Hasselblad Dealer1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259NSA DISCOUNT Estonian wants UC pen pal(Editors note: The author ofthe following letter wrote to theMaroon because he saw a re-printof an article by Maroon editoremeritus Jay Greenberg %n Kom-somolskaya Pravda, organ of theyouth section of the CommunistParty of the Soinet Union. Thearticle, which appeared tn theMaroon in the autumn, recountedan FBI chase which occured whenGreenberg drox:e Danny Rubin,editor of New Horizons for Youth,to the “El" Station.JTO THE EDITOR:I hope it is possible for you tohelp me get acquainted with aChicago student. . . .I am a young worker fromEstonia. My hobbies are friendlycorrespondence with other peopleall over the world, stamps, andespecially colour postcards.1 have no opportunities to learnabout your country, your citiesand towns. I should like to seehow your cities look.... If you have time, please publish my name and address inyour paper.ULO V. MURAKASMustamae T. 16-2Tallinn - 16Estonia, USSRCorrects Algerian storyTO THE EDITOR:I wish to call your attention*to some errors of fact in theMaroon story of July 8 on theUniversity of Chicago medicalteam being sent to Algiers.There were six, not sevendoctors involved — Dr. MohamedSalem was not of the party . . .The physician who is organizingthe second University of Chicagoteam is Dr. Andrew Thomson, As¬sistant Professor of Medicine, notDr. Richard Thompson, a memberof the Department of Surgery. Thesurgeon’s name is Sayman, notSavman. The hospital in Algierswhere they will work is the Beni-Massous, not Beni Masseus. . .Jessie Burns MacleanHI Executive Secretary,w Medical Alumni AssociationJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife InsuranceProtection135 S. LaSalle SLMl 3-5986 RA 6-1060 THE FRET SHOP3-10 p.m. Weekdays11-5:30 Saturday & SundayInstruments, New, Used, AntiqueGuitars, Banjos, Mandolins, etc.Supplies — RepairsFolk Records at Lowest PricesPhone NO 7-10601551 East 57th St.KANDELL-IIAltPEItSQUAREBeauty and Cosmetic Salon5700 HARPER AVENUE t FA 4-2007Mrs. Billie Treganza, Prop.DR. A. ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONS *PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT DISCOUNT :Jimmy'sand the New University RooniRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave. 4:2 • CHICAGO MAROON • July 20. 1962White Sox landlords accuse UCof being 'South SideSECC director denies octopus/charges7 Rabbi Pekarsky diesRabbi Maurice B. Pekarsky, Director of Hillel Founda¬tion, the University’s Jewish Student Center, died lastWednesday at Michael Reese Hospital. He was stricken witha heart attack Saturday night, July 7.At funeral services held last in 1950, he took a five-yearT T . .. , .tL „ n „ Thursday, eulogies were delivered ]eave £rom his uc duties to estab-Julian Levi, executive director of the South East Chicago Commission (SECC), has the President of Brandeis Uni- lish a Hillel foundation at thedenied that the University of Chicago has launched a gigantic ‘land grab/ versity and by the national di- Hebrew University in Jerusalem.The charge was recently made by R. Patrick Wagner, president of Consolidated reCt°r °f HlUel Foundat,on*Investment Associates (C IA). Speaking in relation to repeated legal actions against hisAnn's 2 buildings, Wagner said, He was ordained in 1933, fromPekarsky, 56, came to the Uni- the Hebrew Union College inversity in 1940, following three Cincinnati."ri,/ University” of Chicago has ««<* the outcome of this situation ceivers for 10 CIA properties “on yea?! a\ director of at In ^ he was awarded an11. y ^ . at this time would be imno<s«ihle ■ . ... .. ... . , Northwestern University. Previ- honorary doctor of divinity degreefor several years been harassing ^ due (o th(? organizedP^ttack the bas,s that the 1,fe and safety ously, from 1933 to 1937, he had by the College. He held a bachelorthrough the City of Chicago ’. University his °f ,he livin« in the Pr°- been director of Hillel at Cornell of arts degree, cum laude, fromBuilding Department, landlords m perties were endangered.- University. the University of Michigan.the general area surrounding the caused our income to be reducedto a trickle and. our expenses in¬creased to a gusher.“All other efforts having failed,we are now in the process of try¬ing to salvage by sale or othermeans any building we can. Thisis difficult since potential buyerspossible by virtue of Ihe fact "*.*"*“ *? fi,sht ,h* %>.* Un!‘tli.il every building in existence is „ ’,y a Ies <>n Chicago,subject to many building viola- Soulh Slde "ke »"University.“The reason for this is to en¬hance the value of the vastamount of land and buildingsdowned by the University and toacquire more of the same. Thisso-called “land-grab” is made Critic Kenner on summer facultytions if a concentrated effort ismade to find them.“It is with this thought in mindthat the University formed an or- powerful tentacles reaching allover the city. Within the nextmonth we will be completelyruined.”Levi feels that organizations by Jim Byer(Editor's note: Hughunit deliver a lecture entitled “ArtIn A Closed Field” at R pmWednesday evening in Social Sci¬ences 122.) careers of the period from 1910 much less rigidly defined patternKenner to 1960. According to Kenner, in than does the academic poetry,the history of literature there oc- and Kenner compares it to the flu-cur certain periods of intense ere- idity of jazz improvisation con¬ative activity accompanied by trasted with Eliot's poetry playedfirst-rate criticism, for example, in the well-defined pattern of aIn a momentary reversal of the the romantic of Wordsworth string quartet,general trend a rioted professor an(* Coleridge, or the eighteenth The role of the critic in thecentury of Pope and Swift. In twentieth century, Kenner says,each of these periods there exists has been prepared by the increas-gani/ation called the South Last such as CIA depend on lax en-Chicago Commission and placed forccment of building codes for of the University of California,Hugh Kenner, has come to Chi¬cago to join the English staff for a cont>nuity °f tradition, a clean- ing self-consciousness of the art.a man named Julian I,evi to act asExecutive Director. The best in¬ survival. He said, “The degrada¬tion of the properties concernedout the cooperation of many elments in our society, all of whomterests ol the University were WOuId have been impossible withsure to be served since JulianLevi is the real estate advisor tothe University and has a brotherwho is Dean of the Law School.”Levi replied, “I am not aware of its laws. Within the past year, theany interest of any kind by the Woodlawn area, in which most ofUniversity of Chicago or for that these properties are located, hasmatter of any else in buying these been the site of 13 serious fires.” the summer.Kenner is an important criticand has written a number ofhooks of literary criticism.He is Canadian born, obtainedhis BA and MA at the University cut relationship among the great The critic is part of the dialoguewriters. between the artist and the public;Each period has been followed be *;s articulate part of theby a slackening of intensity and readiug public,the production of second-rate art In a sense the critics acts as aand second-rate criticism. Kenner middle man or educator, a manassumed that the City either °f Toronto, then his PhD at Yale, believes that another great era who assists the public with ma-would not or could not enforce Since 1950 he has been with the has just drawn to a close, an era terial it would otherwise find diffi-dominated by T. S. Eliot and Ezra "Commenting on the University’sinterest in the properties, Levipointed out that none of the pro¬perties are located within the im¬mediate University community.Only two of the properties lie be-^properties.” Levi also noted thatSECC is a community organiza¬tion not an organ of the Uni¬versity. The University denied♦ hat Levi serves as its real estateadvisor.CIA is an investment syndicate twSen 55 and 61 streets, Cottagethat has some 90 major league Grove and Stony Island.(►baseball players among its stock- The U.S. District Court foundholders. It operated 22 South CIA had engaged in fraudulentSide apartment buildings before and illegal sale of stock, accord- Joyce. Wyndham Lewis, and Carlthe city branded many of its pro- ing to Levi. Also, the Illinois Sec- Samuel Beckett,perties substandard and obtained retary of Statae’s otfiee foundreceivers for 10 of the buildings. CIA had failed to comply withWagner is pessimistic about Illinois law in its stock sales andCIA's future. He said, “To pie- the Circuit Court appointed re- English Department of the University of California at Santa Pound.Parbara and for the previous sixyears has been Chairman of theDepartment.Kenner began writing as agraduate student at Yale andsince then has published ninebooks of criticism devoted almostentirely to twentieth century li¬terature.His works usually concentrateon an individual author, and hisstudies include such figures asT. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, JamesAt the moment he is workingon a book to be entitled ThePound Era which will attempt torelate the important literary The chief feature of the Poundera is academic literature. Poundand Eliot belong to the first gen¬eration of literature as an acade¬mic subject; it has become a focusof detailed awareness, and a cer¬tain amount of learning is re¬quired. Therefore these writersfeel justified in requiring of thereader a great deal of informa¬tion.Kenner also sees an opposingtrend in literature, a trend claim¬ing William Carlos Williams as itsfounding father.This is the vocal or spoken tra¬dition, the poetry arising out ofcommon speech. It follows aLiberal arts college is criticized(Editors note: The Maroon irould welcomecomments from readers on the issues raisedin Mr. Steioart’s remarks, as well as on themore general question i of’the adequacy ofour colleges, •— whether they are educatingJttudents and how wel', the effect of a re¬search function on a teaching institution —and on the future of undergraduate educa¬tion.)“The American lilieral arts college isobsolete and always has been,” accord¬ing to Blair Stewart, President of theAssociated Colleges of Midwest.Stewart, who spoke last Thursday in theEducation School’s lecture series on “CurrentIssues in Education,” outlined prospects forthe future of the independent liberal artscollege in America.lie |H>inte<l to its weakness a.s a researchan<l as a teaching institution and forsaw a-•dichotomy of liberal arts colleges into thosethat would die out because of competitionfrom community colleges and those whichwould continue to exist, serving a rich clien¬tele at higher rates.The first kind of liberal arts college servesstudents from its own community, and iswithout a wide reputation or program. Thea second kind, similar to private New Englandpreparatory schools, serves a more exclusiveStudent body with a broad geographic base.Following his lecture, Stewart said he"suspects” the weaknesses of independentliberal arts colleges to be true of undergra¬duate education in general.Stewart reminded his audience of the twoMeanings of obsolete: out of date and gradual¬ly disappearing. He also defined independenta.s free of a university and free of the taxPayer.After describing ten American indepen¬dent liberal arts colleges with enrollmentsfrom 1(11 students to 2857, and budgets of$257,000 to $4,000,000, Stewart gave some ofyjie history of the liberal arts college inAmerica.He said that the liberal arts college is prettyftwch of a phenomenon of North America,originating in imitation of Oxford’s and Cam¬bridge's colleges. It is a “hybrid betweensecondary schools and the university.”For almost 20 years* the American liberal arts college, which started with Harvard in1636. was the only institution of higher learn¬ing in the United States.Early colleges, which served primarily toeducate ministers and teachers, used a “re¬stricted and limited curriculum,” made upof “classical” studies.The American college was obsolete evenin its early days because its curriculum wasnot “the most appropriate curriculum forAmerican frontier society.”The curriculum also did not enable thestudent to achieve the aims of higher educa¬tion, stated by Stewart as follows:1 i To provide educated people, who. be¬cause of their education, may make a contri¬bution to society.2> To provide educated people, who. be¬cause of their education, may live better,fuller, and richer lives.With a different curriculum, the early lib¬eral arts colleges might have been effective,said Stewart.The classical curriculum failed to fulfill thethe functions of a curriculum: challengingand stimulating the student, and helping theCollege perform its teaching function — de¬veloping “the ability to continue to learn,think creatively and intelligently, and havea passion for doing so.”Stewart pointed out that only 13 of the 39signers of the Constitution were graduatedfrom American liberal arts colleges, andthree others were educated in Europe. Therest had no college training.Those who attended college, he said receivedthe education relevant to their role in theConstitution after graduation.The liberal arts college could not maintainits preeminent position in higher educationbecause of the rise in the 19th century ofthe land grant college and the university.The land grant college didn’t suffer fromcurriculum limitations, said Stewart. Assum¬ing that “nothing can be learned that isn’ttaught,” it taught things “intelligent andwell-motivated people could learn themselves.”The activities of these colleges were respon¬sive to basic social needs, and their contribu¬tion to education was primarily a contri¬bution to American agriculture.The universities developed horizontally andvertically, explained Stewart. Horizontally, it was a complex groupingof professional and vocational schools, com¬peting with liberal arts colleges in the voca¬tional function of teachers. Liberal arts col¬leges are still important in training teachers,said Stewart.With the addition of graduate training, theuniversities expanded vertically. Their func¬tion became the extension, and not merely thetransmission of human knowledge.Universities have not yet adjusted to thissplit in their purpose. The role of the liberalarts college in the university structure isstill being discussed.Research orientation has greatly affectedthe liberal arts college, which does not wantto become a “second class citizen” in the re¬search world.It is difficult for a faculty member toundertake research in a liberal arts collegebecause of a lack of facilities and heavyteaching loads. Often faculty members, lack¬ing PhD’s, have not been trained as re¬search scholars.Stewart acknowledged a correlation be¬tween PhD's and research scholars, but em¬phasized that they are not synonymous.Liberal arts colleges have recruiting prob¬lems because of the universities’ researchorientation. The graduate school or depart¬ment said Stewart, feels that persons withresearch potential should develop their car¬eers in universities or industry; only if theperson has no research potent iial should heconsider teaching in liberal arts colleges.Assuming education aims to develop in¬terests and goals of students, the questionarises of what changes educational experiencescan effect in students.Stewart, said that liberal arts colleges, aswell as many universities, are quite obsoleteas teaching institutions. Catalogs list theircolleges’ ostensible purposes, hut disguise realpurposes.A foreign anthropologist looking at Ameri¬can colleges could well conclude, accordingto Stewart, that there are as many purposesin an institution of higher learning as thereto Stewart, that there are as many purposesof an institution have nothing to do with thedevelopment of the student, but provide ap¬propriate ego discharges for faculty members. cult. The poet states a themefrom the life of the mind; thecritic then re-eXpresses it.Kenner believes the concept ofthe critic as judge to be out¬moded. It is no longer relevant todeclare art either good or bad,for a crude writer can yet be animportant voice. At the presenttime bad writing is merely ig¬nored.The idea that one can definegood art before it exists is archaicand disappeared with provincial¬ism and the development of self-consciousness.The important concern now isvitality and internal coherence.Miller, Stinnetteadded to facultyJames Miller a specialist inAmerican literature, and CharlesRoy Stinnette, Jr., a pastoral the-ologist, have been appointed to thefaculty.Miller will become Professor ofEnglish in the autumn quarter.Stinnette joined the DivinitySchool as Professor of PastoralTheology this quarter. Pastoraltheology is the study of theologyin relation to the psychologicaldisciplines.Miller, who has written on F.Scott Fitzgerald, Walt Whitman,and Herman Melville, is now Chair¬man of the English Department atthe University of Nebraska. He inthe editor of College English. Hereceived his MA and PhD from theUniversity of Chicago.Stinnette was formerly professorof Pastoral Theology at Union The¬ological seminary (UTS> in NewYork city. At UTS, he was alsoassociate director of the programin religion and psychiatry.Chronic diseasespecialist joins UCmedical schoolDr. Rudi Schmid, an out¬standing medical scientist inthe field of metabolic andhereditary diseases, will jointhe faculty next quarter.He has been appointed professorin the Department of Medicineand Director of the University’snew Chronic Disease ResearchLaboratories.A specialist in internal medi¬cine, Schmid. 40, is internationallyknown for his work on basicbiochemical problems of disease.His clinical and laboratory re¬search has centered primarily onthe problems of the metabolic pro¬cesses of the liver and the blood-forming cycle.Schmid has been a member ofthe faculty of the Harvard Medi¬cal school since 1957.July 20, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Law professor appointed Hum department gets $975,000Harry W. Jones, Cardozo said in announcing Jones’appoint- Vpjie Humanities Depart- certainly improve the University’s out by the various participatingProfessor of Jurisprudence at went to the new American Bar , . d a $975 000 " " '* “““ ‘Columbia University has been -f g.t^t tVonr the Ford Foundaappointed Professor of Lawat the University and Director ofResearch of the- American BarFoundation.The appointment was an¬nounced this week by WhitneyNorth Seymour, President of theBar Foundation.“Professor Jones has had a dis¬tinguished record in both legaleducation and research,” SeymourPeace Corps recruitervisits campus this weekHelen G. Trager, Asso¬ciate Chief of the Divisionof College and UniversityAffairs for the Peace Corps,will be on campus next Thursdayand Friday. iShe is especially interested intalking to teachers and prospect¬ive teachers about opportunitiesin the Peace Corps. She will be,;available for eonferenee in JuddMall on Friday. .Inquiries should be made at the lie will be a valued additionto the staff of the foundation and,in the newly created post of Di¬rector of Research, he will exer¬cise a major influence on the deve¬lopment of legal research in theUnited States. His demonstratedcapability and reputation will addgreat strength to the work of thefoundation.”Although Jones’ appointment iseffective immediately, he willserve at Columbia through the1062-63 fall semester. VJones, 51. studied law at Wash¬ington. University,. St.. Louis,w here he was editor in chief ofthe law quarterly. Graduated in1934, he became a Rhodes scholarat Oriel College, Oxford, 1934-35,4and received a masters of law de¬gree from Columbia in 1939.He was admitted to the Mis¬souri bar in 1934 and to t he Cali-;.fornia bar in 1946.He taught law at Washington■University, Berkeley, and, since1947, at Columbia. In 1957, Joneswas named the .Cardozo professorof jurisprudence at Columbia. contact with other schools statedprogram,” Wilt staled.Napier Wilt, Professor of Englishtion for the development of a and Dean 0f the Division of llu-program which will affect 36 manitiesMidwestern colleges and univer- The first group of fifty parti-sit ies.*.|:.-; ' w ~ cipants will arrive at Chicago in. The program is designed to hot- about three years.ter prepare undergraduate stu¬dents majoring in the humanitiesfor their graduate work.The program “may very wellmake Chicago s MA degree thestrongest.in the country, and will Wilt described the program asfollows:During the first two years ofthe program, students in theirjunior year of college and head¬ing towards their MA degree willCalendar of Events out by the various participatainj.faculties iu consultation with tf>«relevant graduate departments'.itChicago. . ^ -Funds from the grant will §§§allocated to the colleges to undi re¬write costs arising from -1®counseling and consultation, Jjfnthe third year, students will yillgat Chicago for four quartos' . nfellowships equal in value /io>Woodrow Wilson stipends <- ipYported partially by the UnheiMtyof Chicago and by 1he Ford FGm-tVdation.Friday, July 20 and July 27Lutheran Religious Service: Koinonia,Luthoi aius.St utlent•-S House, . 6 pm. ■ Tuesday, July 26Christian Science Testimony.: Thorntlike Milton Chapel, 7l tllowship.-iC-hai’tl* Lecture Series: “The Maya: Meeting:5 i«ni.The Or-vani/.ation for Impersonality,” Sol Tax,■> Social Science 122. 8 pm.Friday, July 20 ir Sale: Field House, 10 ant-12 noon;Lecture: “The 1 ill ui e of an O.ir- ' ^ pm. . . ■ ,crowded-World." John Kano,-Chairman \A/_Jrocilnu lult/ 7*5of the Department of Soeiolepy, 'WeaneS«ayi sfUiy ,Not re Dame U nivV.-mI v. , Cros.-road cture. Art in a (losed Vn hi, Hntrh®Si.,d.rit (.lit.I i M * It’m 1 - out I inf.-m ,....1 < I,. , man ofA venue,-4^7 O' pm, donation >.«V. the Department of Enyl.sh, Umv. rs.ty■•■■■ .■ • : <Sunday, July 22 ISeries: W o rid o in 1 h e P a pc vV> a ck Saturday .July 28, ^) „: 0 5 • • I .> ,m. ] j i sV»J s -f^ p0 u piesBe a c * Party , -f;po r iso re d'. T VI»ames^01ubt s*5Street x joint,j ni.' 4.’ali for nia. Santa;I»m. Ha rba ia, Soe ia 1Rad^W-RBMv'jt7.80;v=k ..... ..sio nfe b y.ff ■ Morton•••<Grodains. Prof»-ssorDepartment - c» f' Political Science; oi),^|office of Ernst Giesecke. .Asso- . Ol jurisprudence, at Columbia.^:,- rr^u^e^ourt^ion^haL Sunday. July 29ciate Dean of the Graduate School ¥4 His leaching and writing in re- "'*pi>.oitiotim.m -.may he con-i.t.i.d ,aA Rndio series: .World ..f the T>of Education, Judd 108. ^ cent years have centered on juris- ><o»*r judicial yconeem: ,■ wihimMrs: Trager will also participate prudence, contracts, and legisla-Professor of Education G. Ar- ti’»n* His Publications include:“Materials for Legal Method,“Economic Security f or Ameri¬cans.” and cases and material oncontracts. Feta t i,\ion ,:i4 Hit ttpin Prolessor ofnold Anderson’s workshop onProblems of Education in Deve¬loped and Developing Countries onThursday morning. r ^UNIVERSITY of CHICAGOCOURTTHEATRELAST WEEK!Vprodrious Elizahrthan FarceKNIGHT OF THEBURNING PESTLETHE DYBBUKflw _JIMMIE 5 vg-f"'-;-DRIFTWOODAmerican BalladeerANDGERTRUDE &ROBERT BREENperformingDYLAN THOMAS* Sj§fUNDER MILK WOOD Later this year a si i ies of 4 clures delivered at ; Bar nard . last. 8ft kr., lft pm Dis.-us-!• i ■ ■ .. • ■ i am ' - ■ i \\ .i •• J.il.n * 1 I i . or;-*Sunday, July -22>;and July 2y a&mii:>m. m >.f iiistoi-V: . n l.uh.-ii;-Roman Catholic Masses: (’ah > rt lion <-.w : The Future of American .Politics and373") UniveiMtv mip. I". !'"d Wi..i< i- The Making of the President.:;-.11 am Da ' v Ma-- at 7 • ." air v ■ ■ •Episcopal Communion >rv « i 1 J U0 SOO y, J UI y J ICha | »e-1, ft :3ft «•>> 1 .cture Series* ' I hr Pat'oiral,:;Lutheran Communion Sei\ue- ' al \ iii'-.a- -■ !' -a t u.Tlu- . lay.la v hrr Chattel;: I’m ve 1} .Avi-n I. nd&?.; Sr. -. • r,, . ' - ■- v sti..t, i" am Wednesday, August 1Le.lure Series: “(’uVi t-ntSI-- r>University Religious Service ,if.; fellei Chat'. I, II am „ n I’r Ol' a mnir r | '<• ln-t I III 'I “The co-operation of the ' -ttwo years ol undergraduatewith the first year of grade e.work will provide students \ thexcellent training. In fact, we t.the University of Chicago b< I . c-that this program will make -in- .dents much more acceptable c. n.,;didates for the doctorates * -ithey would be under any ma-i. sprogram.”Robe 11 8tieeter, ProfessorEnglish, will Ije coordinatoi *'lthe program.Milt stated that the projjt.t-nw;ts created to help undergrado -i.students till gaps in their col'.,,program with courses which th. \need for graduate work but off.itneglect. , , ’“The English major, for . r>{4.ample, needs courses in philos?*] U v 'fand; English history amifake two years of two f<Edit- .-languages to he adequateh ‘i >1 he7:3 0i’v\;pared for the scholarship req .ate school.”•••’ II he published nil.li t inr Monday. July-23 : in r,.,dn.('. “Religious l.lhci tv : C'ntlSti- Lecture: I h. | -in'.V I ■■ 'tutioiiiil Dm and Jud.cu.1 JN.- J ’ ' TVice new housing head Per^ wrl,es tr‘bute io Sw‘l!('ha th'- l’i i i a 1 hkim/h illumines mi,I 7 / r inul (')mJames \Y. Vice, Jr. Tuts Tu-en -aiipointiMl Director of . ! n,, r.nmd of lull ami - ih„r, // co»,rm,,i. in-ole the folUrnk,)Student Housing, succeeding - John l’..vvlluntoon, announceti. . . ’ ,!< H" l n ■ < itly ke<>eaaed ^riistee of the Unit*Jumes K. Newman, Assistant Dean of l'nderjrrailu..’- if - iaaikplate was' inscrilMHl: - This book belongs''Students. “ ', IIuk. Id _ 11 ijr^ins Swift and his friends."Huntoon,effective Scthe staff of the. t^ontica if science -Ter- ,Depailment at the University of b°use s\stem'and we will all miss ,North Dakota. />,* ; h,m ’ ‘ ‘to function• |Vice will continue All that;; helU ! . ’I I(Ihusiasm. his money.iff is-inscribed in our minds: “"Htis life w'l.'sHiggins Swift for Ills friend ’had or was or knew. Harold “Swift valuedhis Lakesid.- home, his kruiwlodgo. his quietHe was a truly humble man who grew-gnat% K ' " ' " bolh unde3'■ 1 %| 1 fem-e he belie'., d hi- i< -ponsibilities, not bimseli, wereTmpoitsA genile pi t fection-l. he -[toko soniy lud demanded thf»---i-vJ*TPst,.ol himself, lie served us as the: head of one of America’s’ 11 1 “ '*■" " !•';.! eonipames, one ol the world's great^'.universities, and one <‘ftatlQn- ,,ni vo_unti \\s great lamilie- In ihe lives of countless friend.- ; -idivrvm‘v£v»3'r*^vi i n• 1 iu i n 1 u nnne s h ic? ’4v».rv. « • • i «as".General Advisor l o 1* i * ■.-11; i h i i <i t *■ .r m i . 11 * > •and al.-o as a member of the Mty ni !9.>1 1 h* is .ctinenily nios,Sr K*ia i Science Staff of the Col- w n. d i.l - u I (h-ei- pM.aIlllllllllltl|| M . ■’' PV*i spoof i\‘e , do'fhe 'present, ■hope'' nil'.! Ihe'inim'e=.. ■ Fifty-Seventh at Kenwood | . ( hataeten-iicallv, he w as > concerned, w iih - perpetuatin'-' //| |T = pD doges of ’earning for .others. I know of no other non-educaferft 21 I I I kill SNA I FOOD = ^'|U> h:is. <i<‘So1,<i so lime and thought io ihe problem7U1 UNUjUAL rUUU = pi I' ale education. Yoin,U\ lodav’s and tomorrow's - Unix.mm ■ rvr i ir lit ci 11 i .’ v ' : ' " ’1 ; ■ ■ •. • .-t ■ . u ,L> t LIU n I MJL I ' ' We who knew ibis man and thousand- wh ever be in his (lelrf.ho never knew Inn“ | ' ■ • » ' 1 r !i’l ! h ;ATMOSPHERE | >'<• "nu,-I.-.I n no eulogie* at his memorial se’ “ i He left his . memory as a joy, not a sorrow, yet his friends Vannot ■| dem then gie.a h,- U. a.. grateful that such a man lived.V. k-Z . i \ J CHARLES H. PERCY.^ftiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimminmmnmiiiiiiiiiiiiiRiiiiiiHHtuimmiiiitth.-MULTIFORM SALE CONTINUES -Multiform, the unique wall storage units imported fromNorway, is exclusively at Scandinavian Imports. AllMultiform units now on sale with reductions of 25 °°SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSHOME OF MULTIFORMGj’ S I .'i&fy. 1542 EAST 57th STREETiOpen Daily 12 noon to 8 p.m.'- •’ ‘ h ’ mi, foreign car hospital & clinic■ *■ ■ ■ ' ’4 • : ;• mg• morris• austin• riley• lambretta5340 s. lake parkdo 3-0707service clinic; ? i( f e. 7 ! -,tmi 3 3113bob testerimg psychiatrist Flight payments dueThe deadline for payment fon?acharter flight to Europe is next-'Friday. The flight leaves^{Brussels: on August 29 and retm if- 7from Paris on September 27. /IIpersons who wish to particij aleshould contact F. Schale at N‘>.7-7853 immediately.Flite to Europe via SabenaLv. Hug. 29 for BrusselsRet. Sept. 27 - ParisCost: $392 by July 27th!CALL NO 7-7853ITALIAN FIESTA PIZZERIAspaghetti * beef • sausage and meatballsandwiches • shrimp^ pizza" ■.Free Delivery Over $2.00 vMU 4-1014,1015 1427 East 67th SL BEAUTY SALONExpert gPermanent Waving ~andHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 UNIVERSITY |BARRER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine hoircuttingFour barbers workingLadies* haircuttingShoe shiningFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor4 • CHICAGO MAROON • July 20, 196226 appointed to Lab SchoolThe new laboratory school building on Kenwood (continued from page 1)development and testing of newconcepts, procedures, and mater¬ials.“It is also important that everyappointment be viewed as an op¬portunity to increase the scholar¬ly competence and creativity ofthe faculty.Chase added, “The continuancein the schools of teachers and ad¬ministrators who have provedtheir ability to contribute to theobjectives cited above and thecreation of conditions conduciveto the productivity of these per¬sons are also important consid¬erations.”Chase commented that not allof the appointments were replace¬ ments. A number of new posts Mark M. Krug:, Assistant Profes-have been created in order to sor of Education in History at themeet the increasing problems of University, will become Chairmanthe Lab School.The 20 per cent turnover wastermed “not excessive” as many ofthe women teachers take leavesbecause of pregnancy.Pending the appointment of ageneral director of the LabSchool, Willard J. Congreve, Di¬rector of Secondary Education,will serve as chairman of theadministrative group which willmeet regularly with Dean Chasefor the purpose of planning andpolicy making. of the Social Studies Departmentof the Lab School and will alsoteach.Leopold E. Klopfer has beennamed Assistant Professor ofEducation in the Physical Sciencesand coordinator of the Master ofArts in the Teaching of Chemistryand Physics. He will also teachin University High School.Other new appointments to theEnglish Department of the LabSchool are: Paul VV. O'Dea, HelenP. Barnard, Karen Elson, John P.Marshall, Emily Meyer, and Rich-Lab for scholars; school for childrenby Andrew Stein“The Laboratory Schoolhas two major aims: to be anoutstanding elementary andsecondary school, and to be aUniversity laboratory serving bothas a stimulus and a testing groundfor ideas that give promise of im¬proving pre-collegiate education.”In this way the aims of theLab School were described inMay, 1952 by a committee ap¬pointed by then chancellorKimpton to review the Lab Schooland make recommendations on School was one of the most im¬portant centers for experimenta¬tion in the country in elementaryand secondary education.“Since 1933, when the Schoolof Education was discontinued,the Laboratory School, both edu-eationaly and organizationally,has steadily lost connection withthe University. As it has lost con¬nection with the University,has ceased to he a laboratory car¬rying on e\]>eriments of far-reaching significance.”For this reason the committeerecommended that “steps shouldhow to improve it. The committee be taken immediately toward mak-was chaired by Sol Tax.The committee’s report conti¬nued, “The basic aim of the Lab¬oratory School as an elementaryand secondary school is the co- ing Ihe Laboratory School againa University School.”With the formation of the newSchool of Education the ties be¬tween the University and the Labordinated. development, of. emo- School were renewed. Since 1958tional, social, and intellectual cap¬acities of its students.“This was the basic aim of edu¬cation to those most influential inihe founding of the LaboratorySchool, Col. Francis W. Parkerand John Dewey.”The School, which was foundedin 1896, was placed under theauthority of the old School of Ed¬ucation. It remained under theimmediate jurisdiction of CharlesHubbard Judd until he retiredfrom the University in 1938. Juddbegan as director of the Schoolof Education in 1909 and conti¬nued as chairman of the Depart¬ment of Education until his retire¬ment.Following Judd’s retirement,the School was placed under theauthority of the Dean of the Divi¬sion of Social Science. In 1945he asked that he and his divisionhe relieved of this responsibilitywhich they felt was not based onany close academic relationship.The School was then placed un¬der the authority of an ad hoc or¬ganization until 1958 when thenew Graduate School of Educa¬tion was organized under DeanFrancis S. Chase.According to the 1952 report,“During the first thirty years, the there has been an increased effortto strengthen and improve theSchool.Chase mentioned that sinee theformation of the Graduate Sehoolof Edueation, he has been study¬ing the problems of the LabSchool, but because of the work necessary in establishing theSehool of Education, not until nowhas he been able to place it at“the top of my priority list.”He stated that they were con- the advancement of education,stantly trying to improve the LabSchool. He felt that the standardsof the school should always begetting higher.“The Sehool is not as good asit we would like it to be, but itnever will he.” Chase added. Graduate School ofi an.v institutions sit back on por the past seven years he haseir auies ut ere is always heen Superintendent of Schoolsa need for fresh, creative ideas.”“We have to work fast to keepup with the new demands on edu¬eation. We need a better systemof edueation than any country hasyet developed,” (-base commented.He said that the Lab .Schooltries to form the independent stu¬dent who is able to order thelearning operation on his own.The school is trying to encour¬age creativity on the part of the In the course of the year, re¬view' will be made of policies gov- aid L. Scott.erning admissions, placement, New Social Science teachersgrouping, evaluation, and guid- will be Peter V. Greco, Milton K.ance. Lockwood. Gerald W. Marker, andConsideration also will he given John J. Patrick.1o staff organization and develop- Lydia G. Cochrand and Ida Pop-ment, to curriculum review in col- per will be added to the foreignlaboration with university schol- language staff as will Christinears in the several fields of study, Cloeckler to the Mathematicsand to the ways of encouraging staff.constructive experimentation for Additions to the Primary staffwill be Heather L. Carter, AnneThe following are among the S. Hartz, Kay J. King, and Vir-major appointments; ginia M. Kuhn. Jane Roth, andRobert E. Pruitt will become Imogene Beithold will work in theAssociate Director of Secondary Library.Education. He will also carry the Joseph Dispensa will be a nefv"rank of Assistant Professor in the shop teacher while Mary C. KletoEducation. W*U work in the Reading Clinic,in Forest Park, Illinois.— Robert E. Newman, Jr. has beenappointed Assistant Director ofEarly Childhood Education andwill also hold the rank of Assis¬tant Professor in the School ofEducation. He is presently Assist¬ant Professor of Elementary Edu¬eation ato San Jose State Collegein California.Chris D. Kehas has been namedYou won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORACE CO.1011 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711 faculty in order to test new ideas Director of the counseling andin the advancement of the learn- guidance program in the Labing process. The School is also School. He will also be an As-studying better w;ays of using the sistant Professor in the School ofteacher's time. Education.vvvmwiHARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported ond domesticwines, liquors ond beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONE_ . M — 1233FA 4—131#■ ^ ^— 7699Eye ExaminationFashion EyewearContact lensesDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist1132 E. 55th Streetat University Ave.HYde Park 3-8372. Student and FacultyDiscount *195GRUBY’S RAMBLERThis WeeksStudent Special‘57 ENGLISH FORDPerfect ConditionFully Equipped ....alsoSEE STEVE NOBEL FORYour Own CircularSlide Rule ForCalculatingGas MileageMore Specials'62 RAMBLER CLASSICStation Wagon-..^215057 FORD SKYLINER2 - Tone. Radio,Heater *295NO MONEY DOWNTWO MONTHS BEFORE FIRSTPAYMENTGRUBY'S RAMBLER4555 S. Cottage GroveBO 8-1110Rambler’s New Car SuccessMeans Better Cars For Less! PIZZASFor The Price OfMICKY’S1235 E. 55th NO 7-9063, MU 4-4780WMJKr&rMWjrMWjrmMWjrwmrjrjrjrwjTMjnmrjrjrA\ DON’T MISS1 OUR FIRST SUMMER SALEJ in our new locationsSHIRTS short & long sleeves,sport and dressTHE STORE FOR MENafuuitt attfc dhtmpu*in the New Hyde Park Shopping Center^ 1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 ^ EARLY BIRDSPECIALSFRONT ENDALIGNMENT $9.95BRAKE SPECIALMOST CARSALIGN FRONT ENDBALANCE FRONT WHEELSCHECK BRAKESPACK BEARINGSTAILPIPES $5-95Most CarsSHOCKABSORBERS(Front) 15-95Most CorsSEATBELTS $8-95Reg. SI 0.95 — InstalledSTUDENT SPECIALU S. ROYAL Safe-Wayl0" norm*ToS»n fiv5 {SetS?WmiiU.S. Royal SAFE-WAY TiresDISCOUNTS TOUC STUDENTSAND FACULTYAL SAX TIRE CO.6052 Cottage GroveDOrchester 3-5554July 20, 1962 • CHICAGO MAROONTREMENDOUS BOOK SALE2 WEEKS ONLYDRASTIC REDUCTIONS ON HUNDREDS OF FINE VOLUMES-SAVE UP TO 70°o AND MOREHUNDREDS OF BARGAINSMANY SUBJECTSHISTORICAL STUDIES- I Prints read .to th*si-nm<l Irish Conference of Historians, by Iti-.,, , i, . ,. i; ■ . » ' • >w . . . i ! ' '•w i r • 11. Kng.lish ‘ Ki-fiii m i' i mPnb. st $ ’ .0 Sale $1.49«.-d> VNU -MVM ,N >A V , !• \',1 ON. ,v P,.,.■ ■ • • • ■ • • h i1 i ■ ■ i ibat ' It* in Congress r h * Supi -me Court, and lit,,the recent Kennedy-Ni v,ri > tmpai.jn.T'ib. at $ t f, " ’ ■> Sale $1 -C!e -t TUI i St * > I Hi- ART 1, ft I ! i .• i : i 4 ■ : : - ' . Vi • , ■ | i/5• ■ i .- i - i • ; • ' .I’ . ••> c. 3 1 •» Sale $.(, - Tii.- Mi.U-v-m ■ I \ '■ i >..■ oi i hi i o\c; HOR(-i vitrh urst, is with* J Ov»*r4?mm •jsMu "H. •'.:mu^ ’ pi. x ’ ci\ ilizat ion* ID >■lit'' ''1|C Wi'W.^'NiA ■Hi - 2 croft. Howells. Ft ink"y 1 p l.lo- I \\ ht Mi.I .os.-,Sa u d bn Dos Ph*sIk1 ■ - <n i ti'.*I i - • - i - - t i .*> I*.rher.J Vudubon// Ink*'-.-r ' Joll t-and .Malii'iii I •;' hf i ii tin n ,i ores o( otii i *3' 'V*j£ ','1 I 1 neai ly - 1 >D. I > a* i # i bl > min pat. s I* Ii 5• ' * ;c >". , Sale . j$5 98't,THE ACCIDENT OF BEN JOHNSON S PLAYS, ■MASQUES & ENTERTAINMENTS, by V <Pail rid tee, ■ A bnlliant" m nimur.rominiiiim itJolHiHl * M"l 1 1 - I ' 1 n ill iaid woi d ho lied finin » 1 j et\i-8'*and inmi r ,' al* to v ** i .* Pol. it {l.il Sale SI OSFRESHM \N WRITING . n .to easier," cleaner, better s If*a business "lettor to a no I'l-t* i •Pub. at J-i. i ;■: ■ ...>.Vi r, i ti .it r i b. if • ■ > \ binned sup-pi v it t * • >ROBERT BURNS. Sr John l.iml-..v, \ t ,||r>»!p -$t ♦*TMK-. MOV JSI Bl 11 1 ■ >\ > W-»^V*1 ! I 1 '■ •’ ' V d 1 < ' I I I > 1 I •. "I C< i Vi lilt « > f I , . ; .ma t\^f, 11'< >-Li i • y> i nI’rii'ssia- fr»>m •. X ^ ;V4-:: • ■ . ■' V .wit hes h ' I?us-^iaTi . Ij’berati'on Arrny^untinr (rt'ir-,i it> pp.!' ^.ic $i• 5 1 ' '■■■ ^ 1 - • - ‘ V ■ -■:v ■ ■- r ' - i,* •" 1 . ' ■. i- ,■ ■)>gpm.wth.>t%’£t>iit -. i'ft‘vrr* i ' l)woo«■'rarP'K.-y^\-ipf^roc ordin^.^8 1 j-Jx-1 0 1t \frtrrrut. v 4jv<->( IM'Miv't.'il ^ ’ -.-ti N >i \RHI <)» ! Hf- f/)l I >; \ A f - ] -' f fi> m^ Y-h'Aoi<‘nrir^,h»* Vt nt inent a*'^%-Jkraih oH(i to the i>it‘s rrt, Pala<*«‘ Cars“^^\to^r I it*, h * ^*: ^ n u f f a I & & h u n t *.*’ i <** • I 1 * ■ ■: " " mV* " •. '^ABRAHAM LINCOLN COES * TO NEW YORK, ^t’. ^by.; AmhVw^A*.' FnvmwV*; Th»*', cvriiN^irrr<»j j M (J;iiig\ ■’tr r*j*Km a net tt or"s^iro;idv-v"#ih > °1 ** Coopery(»r<‘at Hal'4Viri ! ^,05^1 N u4^^JVPuii(;i<at\$^.9Sf>,^« "v:-,vSal^ ($l ||t I } N‘ 1 ' \ ) > ( I Kl I i ■ >' f! "• • ) ‘ i -m;-.Ma hithiM-t <> mi puhli*«h*‘(l _rt»<'ontly- ar<^,trt;»*d«F*'S/:fcI>yJ\H'ai;vanljk 'John -*fC**at ton* .sh»'«l'?''s'»r-'4f- - pr i > *i t • <'n> | vh f , ■ »n I h • ;»■••! In * sis’gjgp Uo vriojii ■*,. tho i»oi*tfst«>moNiVintim it^ ' fi icml. /:/y 11 wvn;„Shaw^ * Th♦*; n\ast *■>r\y ran \*<> «n<t 0<i uirk ,A'*iri f M-ilnrLTb'k y-pg-t >f sAh is t pt ovocatiY^k an< i ^ mi’ \ VC hi J i - %ct'titI -ir-tftt <>ry>tvf‘,lh*rps* irtlirii-sionsof'cdnt«‘mi>orarv,’Aniorpun [i'f. i .. I. . . 1 :' ■ ■: ■ ' 4 . A V v t* 'Cpression k J r om .m-1 ? ?* i 4t* Z*3r\‘> f- > ,‘s i< ... .. KM I I * I inks’ Of V i Vi 011! I i . kkfOMice^ oth*»rs^t*i Aifc^hinr.icO.sn,'*^ (*i inp -an«i ritgfi^t udp»s ofsSale '$ Weni'^^James. amt Ed it Vi W )i m rt o,n. xPi;oii -st . ari'l,ViTrurAii n I* «. . ' . I »<► -r * • ' • M 11 < i * i " i , tVzHs i"a. - i mon^oioGHwNLR Pel?,rtrait nf rn,‘>‘M,i!^1 ■' -• n, f * V, s :■ 1 1 ■ • • • ' a . - v HI., . r.- -Mvyi ' l» « H f A K . 1 . l . > ; k ■' 1; ■ ■■4V-' ';X” - kM-,..:- ; ' ' M ■ ',^v -'..V: ; ' •’ v .M ' ' J* ' "M- ” ‘ "i•- ,. a . - i a . l. : m , , !I*"1* *t $1 >•) Sale $198 *V 4 L° 1..P "*r* 1 1 v >, ?* ^ lkS ' ■ .%, > ub at-$ I lb V u* «» ,• jSCvute Sale $1Red China — THE SERPENT AND THE TOR *VVRA^k#kv. M"'mV.run * eT"**^' , w 1TOISE. In K. K: ti I*’, , ■ \ P . M R v< I * > VI \\R IN\> ■ ,■. i i i■, , < . • - • ■■ ■ . ■• : • ^ v •••. - ’.■ I ---I' VI : , . : ■: ,, , " ■ - ’ ' •' ■ ■ vM m - ■ * ■' • -1 • , , : - i V, - . ! ' ' t• ■ - VI i.i i . I ,„ . , , , ■ ' /" 'entry to the UN etc Pub at *1 50 Sale $1 49 * >sQ* U ' i.,"M ^ * , k ;i**.- V - ^ e- SJ * *THF MARVELOUS LIFE OF IMF BflMMIV- J' » ' H I, WR. I I N.. s „ ,„,v I VS , II VP... ' ' - . ■■-,.■ " * ' "> {>,,!> • ,T { , ' , s . ben 'll" Neeio Ml linn sod many m lie,/ , * ’ S'* eT r . 8 f"y Hsp. I I - Ot ; In I lime .n I s >, i tv f, «." '. V RCK-.RVi- * - • :: !• , ■" ■ ■■ ■ ■ .. V ' I ,.., . , ...... .-. . ' of * Queen - ,1. I »Rl V I. i -I. ‘ ■ " " , . ...I, ■ ' ' ' . e ” ‘ " '■ ...i lurin'1 *nioiP-;p\tra.n<1ifirfi v^/than V h-'H /t‘ri' h k ? j’^r ^ P* , +*&„ , \ « * .'4, ,.r| . v>s i "rii * sin i o nn <1 * n • m iwn i n lt t uyi o f h - sj $,#+ ’* v"-'* «, 1 r. p'v .,<s,®.-| at‘u1i&3Z.'(*f3&lfa •-»>v’tS®»b4-;1M ,. ifc.'isewajfSt'. v.,;^si.1-Un#il(fi>!T;a.f'i'oiis#b;esedV:ori;-' ti - r Xii'. I siSi.n'a' ejilb.v'-’®n - " - -.%A- - ,.,,|L * <> iijw.* / **'?s * ^'**r !4.k1 ><• viandsCnia*i;i incei^Ailjpi t%Al\'■4 «'**4,;-r■ f!‘%*. '.* ‘ ' ' s.„-gU-*BERENSON A BIOGRAPHY by 'Sy]v!?SpnKe Essence of Wonder—ROME, NAPLES and/: iiuKiMi . i , , , ,both Bosto,, a him 1% hi/ llioid H m;i,,| * • , ,‘d, bl V*’ u hfetap, slry of-' post-No po Iconic!-, .... . - . .'.. . . . ■ •« - :.; -. . . ' .. ■ ' . :THE PROUDELST DAY^Ybomaa* MaiDonnn^h % | of It iUan ,womeii !,» S< ila ’tyriuns lostunies,1 hi I ilt'U lilinr.lu,, . M \ , ■ 1 • ' ' ‘l.-, ... , •: . ■ X . , • ,, . , lie,. . i ' . X : -I II. odea III II t""■i ■ ■ • -i .... , it ‘ 1 - ' T r' fon ‘Son Take ( h am vet's n m 1 s I 4 decided our *’ l’1*1* at‘ *i “>•" jfvf 1 Sale $2 98^.nition’s fate.- p^ub Sale *$1 49 jgg THE HOLMES ^'LASKI LETTERS t Z Volume*.THI k I V ro" HANDWRI TING ANALYSIS ., > >5 1 • - > - Ed. by Ma >e Wolfe How« I he''• M . 1 . !’|, ' 1 , . , | • I I a • , >i d .1 lie 19 year tiiend*.41 a pholoirist lev ilstwbv our basic per son'i 1P andM oi icspondence between Justue Oliv.!'i , i , a a: , , b VV . I 11 i n I *m I ..Pa -4 own ‘ hand wi itifuTfand e*the\(lse of irra[ih'olo^y JWai oldp.aski, 7->a ‘fasci iih nnif, riehly-i ewaniiny5jJii‘ m u 1 ia£er;(''ouii,e|inir'f7|."sv, hology 'vocal ion i| ^readtiuraj experience reveajujx tbe^ intelle, tual. i | . .... • - ■ J * 'lent 11 nd* 1, a • u 1 bu1 • nt( , ’ s ' . ■ 1 " * ' .-1 <, . 1 , . 1 .1... Vt‘lll|l,| \s|_ V VImu.m' v - ‘7V’.' i ■ . , > I HI, i„ Os it,.- *et'v v: ' - ' v. e ";.iVI11, biilent^andjStr nt1'*JJ •■ ,.??.. , ? \a ht^eycr'*Ii v.-d.,)&« YSTERI A.'-REFLEX AND INSTINCT, by Dr,V 1 , , ‘ . 1 'i . -ii I f. h.. .1 • . i,e. . -.;di 1 nk , a nd ’ d 1 uer* i< t Ismi vidS 1 lluSt 1 at Ions of the mental Conti ibution to |>svi bo/oKy and bio-111 ,,t ’s,4 w 01 k^- in'i ^intimal *s. *4k>4'. ^ loity. Indudi s* -actual and - uiunuaI < ise his-’■ .. "A 's .le ||'H ' - I' 1. . • 1 , Sale $1 toHI 1IIF VM) TIMi \ MOON 1 OR THE MISBEGOTTEN, |j[yy-.lKd,jcr<?Tr<*y•"H T Hf.()DOpII KO') »■VELT.^b y j S t * - f n t »i s^V- /a'' «i o nFand;y[>* kwh iv^di^t'Ki s^'a-ut tV-_|*!a J|rruil£i>V• ■>'ti»i<»!• *y£j‘>ix’ir;i IvMour-ac L^ di.tnu j o(^*iiindn ^ iftl,P§MSillM-k,,; - ttyiflBlfc ;%ku.h'I%r. „t‘i|io,'t?Wit*m'fiaTni 1 ^pjaPURNEY. TO THE ENDSi-OF TIME:-Lost , inBuhSH • •'• • -". D I! U 7 Wood,/.bynSiidi-v,MI-11.;/Sn -.a--"-1 i\ ■. ’ib-;.WZZT^ ' KHb ,vV.".■HKa, .H !, , flf Il,: I"’..' . . "J.-I-11" bi-*:-.s now :.-d v.‘ - aii.l-iwSeanfr ».* mB .. . i.." , lr -i:. I. .1 Vl 1,1 a" III*-' •!«>• ’Hi" i.UU.t-ias „| '.In-■ : ’ 1 ■ Sale $3 98U||fl ’, ’ • * W • 1 VV !■ v' -^C4’"n<1 sIONL t.N rtiRNb D An Almanac oi NnittrjBb1' wm i^a"" -..'teji,i.'®^5s:t I , yA A y ti ,M:: ii. AtfeJ -yTth-y. tniiiiy ii; Ai::'T'.imi.il:* , . ...... -n n™i - V 'A ln(J,v Uv-hl^ i"iMin,i iI«®Murder; Mystety, Mayhem—TRIPLE 'EXPO‘> 4*' II nd jAybo nil,I ,y'y 1 -,p i i i, Ai^: a I ^ SURE, ,,liy .(im,iih Harmon f o n* A* i ,i oinpl, ' e"* 8. " * $1 ’i^lPj&Sfey^ft-Sale $7.9S ,xs;. ,;arid ,t iiilmir hint Mmdmk , as, s in one vol-,LEONARD BERNSTEIN. 'Vv«J?n?nA?BH ijy^A ^'‘-h -woim-n.-. Holly wood urotic, and... I 1 ■ I .,, I. . I , , " 4.- ' 1 b • I .,1 • V . mi*,,.. - i • 1. <£,,•$ 1 1 ' I" ■ ' I I be Glass T 1 , inlor music dll •-• lor« ofr'ih- o'l kt Pin Ilia i '1 ‘JiV -l' ' '* , aMi ■ . i|l| mit'i iiK " and mi u -• b < lot ■ \:',"'1 ,i,"IWf- J’'e-t^A'd ^/Critical Exposition of the Psychology_of Freud; ■' ' " ’ ' S ( ,1 Jung i • 1,1• '*« ' } ^ *1^ 1 Im illi.tnr r • suit V)fir.ini» y< ms’ i r. t ♦*ri.Ni vp 'studyTHE SEC RE I BOOKS OI THE. f M > IM I v Y ;h • a - you how to undvM ^tand * ps.y<vhoh)V! v- an<E; " ■ ' / ' ‘ ■ ' * -( ount-^f^t hi'^xithnV^t ,'y f, finds ifM/E • V^v^pt^^J^rh’blom<-al«, viow points.^ ‘ ‘J >v?w ^ „ J'd-jM- i ■ < , *N «!•* ' $ t ’'■ • ■ V -• -. , , k k' ~ ^ ' M: ' i \ I \' -I HI i'ilfi I /• WIjKi 7 tic Journals.:>aW i m ' ’Kuu l >H3 (61 I l’h • -g >;Sa -k- - '* __j ' ‘ ' ^^raamMp^Jf-nihtk misdon/irvk -slorv <»f his lif<» ifik ('hi\\H.jJjines Joy .* ” kBULOlJ^ k > >. '*i 1 A • • . I k • ; » ' iva ( h * i I v -m... . .' . ■ A-- * I . ,, 4» k( ' - ' ■ I 1 .'*k ■ W_ ‘ ■ : A : ' ... ' , : • ■ .• . ;k::' ".'■ a.;, kkfi" ; ■' kk ■ i'k^k. :. >./■; , 1 ' ■; :■. • - ' ;s Y\:\> 1 . . v. > «■ ' ( 'V^Ka ■. S i, ? M ; noiyiaiu Tt.AKWKJK, hy 'Editor s .ofR^^ 1 r.b'H1 f^A‘ 7.1 j v Td'k, sout c*' w >i L , onk-A .. ' . >P •: ■ ^ .i •;.*•••;kk .THF S \BRFS OF _ PARADISE, by 1-*1.-,,i - 1 * ' I,, ,i-A ? ' _ ' • • - > ,...., .e ' * ,‘llt 11 v l!'l*-l I-s h hllrb-l H 1111 , i the ( H l-> **^i . •' ' si , n M i -11 in I I, s lid b v 'he nil in nr t <1ira ^"SluimP th- V ir." Illus. I*, up-v.AUA Pul, HI', 3„ I. a J, Sale $1-\;k IHI Ml Ml MRS nl I.I M p vl ! *. i R 1 > IAU1lit Mips Im im* , Rujl ii' I t. Siile $1/ " I • IIONXRY OF APHRODIMACS. by If K:• *M i •« »v ,• , T, i ,».> L t V ii _ i kill.... ,* \ .» . - r i* v i!op.-di‘*■^|surv^v;Vt»M^H’jdirod'.jsMscs;:;'Sj?jh.*ii bT»jk*f*Y'i-vH.s. ^Wrh'-aR-i, •*■"'■ VI'I," ft t A '-I I • ‘ I ’ J V • ‘I "I . ■»«»"!. ,‘t\ ? | I *s*' AA’k. /M I "'»» .»*. i fi i d - w i d **. t ,*»o u Y c**a. -and t om * ' m •,; ‘‘ ‘ > d.‘ $ t,v»HAUTOMAT ION, .and" ^SOCIETY? by H B'4kv^;iA .S- kRo'ii-fkA TJj-a-’ rhaHt*nv«‘ of^is'*v\hn -.W**i od^h’y ^ 32 fo\po-rt s at^idy,-. c , . * - q^pippsgppTHE TERRORISTS ’ The’< :Story^of' the^Fa/ Ik* runners of Stalin, ■ J»v||R > k r U;JV« v ri;^|y.sAi^ ty^' ( y * ; •gJ|fe^t«»M <h i«*t <) and/ t hmrjff‘‘ N i 111 i i-NM'.kfk.'i j |/ p/1' *l *' ">-.the' opdycke i exicon or WORD SEI FCaf|d\5mis11ndrrst^od ^ En«rIi >h^word +,|:wit h ^t K•;irijMj:v.-k- " > * ■ • ■ • t - —. > ■'. i .'...- .-i ' •' ’ i *. .. s i *s k -.Mldo M SM > Uii MkG ■ •(y l rtf' J>f> \{LhipJlTkViX'/^M i_r/^^c11ni h k‘ fr om akkhrdfU*r^JfMrh 11 furjf/:' o\,h'il»i i-n mi.’ :»•> -.ir nil-• ■ • "4J-^gfSports Ii I! us i^tedVBOOK.|OF^H ETCH J;T DOORi /i;t i j^^Voi) «4-,rro1-i t j kb u tk 1 11 ek./ikp'. '■••'■’ ■ ■ ■••■. -■ ■ ■ • ■ i • • ' -'k- •A:" '■■:■; ' ■ •:■ ", '■ •* 1 " “bmoudr11 uspl 1 a kos' ,a nki ' sf i.- a r»isp 1 ai n ^Ma nd^Yd **s- ^ ^. i.-i.Uri-i>;u<s]yjf* bound^fe'ii b.^faS JjjllO^j&THE^AST WEtSHARE:/An Illustrated History ^*'V ' Peter QuonnelPandfAJan^Hodure. >w7th 31 I vVare^{ ;^k iUi.sr rat io^is.- v*2 3 «*inj% ricjf^lf u JL/roloik^/Ytutfkyt. I■irieVt Afr adl^Yt he^M^rea t s’ ’Mfr?.<ytj| A\Ct*om wd 1 toT $,-*,C'hipjq|iitiVx>^jhK4hfjitojfo7 |Ei*tvjfci<>wer. ^ J.K^Wl4Cf lb v i s h i jfy. ji rod'd<• ^*d. Jr i "< • v :;■■■■' $ > •k^k'GF.ORGE CATLINf A"vTHE OLD FRONTIER. 'By H i roid M c( ’ra «■ i "i. • ! k • f or»*m ost - :i ii Mi •»-:{. ' i u .' ' .,, . . Sale $9 -.3• '-r AMI RICAN WRITING TODAY, oV by« t'm-"'%> Aniinfl \ n cexh i u-t 11 e study of the U*CS'li-'i A to i 11 y scene Ov.-r jj-50,', ai I tides b v b- id in Xk an' hoi it i-s Pub at J t ">8■'SMP' ■&; Sale |Z 98*-.i>■ A ■/ % ,«a, , EPRINCIPLES OF GENERM.'PSYf HOPATHO-/ 1In'..i.vx ,'t* rpi 1 i nt"*c " I »t In,,, t heor ^ t ti 11, I mu nd 11 m n > i,f .- ..■ """'. 1 " • ; ‘ • . '• i ■ , : , - f- 1 . ‘ i h ;.: , ■• .. f . '•*• 'k'vk. • k- ' • > ’ ' • - ■ ‘ ' . .; • kvii pip ult urW: a |ivi ^ v isale $1 98, : V ’ ' , ' IA ’ . - '•V ' ' 1 ', im i , i n ' ,ii . to and *i i ip*,--, ,»f , i h mil -1., s ’ * ,n ' - 1,1 v' < > 11 * I Ii! rune i * 't h- Ft i bl 'll 111-'. "i;, ,de* " ,‘ I 1 e.i'-iiie Island.” PFut-in-h’s ‘ I.i\. , '*" ’lb.-..: s. :i . !, u . ,. T.. - - ' : 11 1 1.1 . . : , '(* ! "I"'* Mist lubf s” Uuii * Qui\u' e" 1 a ml ~>Z mme .1 b im ■ I 'I J pp .i-MM Pilb.vilt. *3.95: ,v Sale Vl HR - ;>v I ! A. 1 I : ■ ■ V - I ,‘the^|\m<M ican - dream of hb.-ity a1 rn v-jjsauci-lcb 1 u 1 ■ d o' condemned bywi" r s V f 11»rn Kmi'i son * and M-lville1" ■ ;Ai HI A a V . , P ,|, *J|'. 5 1 i .Shelley’s Reputation —FLIGHT OF *I VIA. , / ', . ,His M»«tres« — MISSIB I 1 -EMPEROR, by Simone1 And re ."Mu uroi*s... .-Th*. d rtvnvH» iv a crop h T of t h<»h'' "i "i < il Kf - h •’* om ;i n w h o » cn ■ k.ipolpon*^^^'■11 f'sMmisfe;resNk|.7vpliti^a.r^ally and whose power-*hi'’t > n a P fi a' \ T^Vv s o u r, t >n iiimt h-r.< > n>|a"ol F 1 ance.;, Ulus. "Pub.-at *5 no. Sale $1.98kj/ Merry * MadnessV-KOVARSKY’S WORI.D, car*? <5J°I»iks/Niioh hf''ier kMsuhjee|flv as modern Arabianknights. 'a'rti>ts. mudcl.v Hollywood, much. 4/ • • ' R-ih at . $ Sale $1AC V»;v; - A,- >, Niei^ *' ^ Ap r aia/Mhkk' a jJ^pjPy-.^^Kni«• fCt., A" penet rat in^ study 6f the T>oljtii> • ‘*H I and- M»iii!|i;il roh* assumed by ?ii«* pop*‘Stbeir :reacrions^, ib ' modern /goielire, in-x; ’ rluilintr a r-v.-aIinhioKra(Mhy of I*or»*‘ Pi ta^ Pub at $r,.00 ■ Sale $1.98SEE FACING PACE FOR ADDITIONAL TITLESJuly 20. 1942I.14< p HS students study race problems Committee gets $309,000Fourteen high school stu¬dents are spending this weekat the University while theyinvestigate racial problems inChicago.They are participants inI he ‘Tom pf ret School Interna¬tional Affairs Seminar,” a twomonth program on social prob¬lems, with sessions in Connecti¬cut, Canada, and Mexico.Karlier this week, the studentsmet with representatives of overA dozen groups which work onproblems of the Negro.The representatives includedMilt Davis of the SouthsideChapter of the Congress on Rac¬ial Equality; and the ReverendArthur Brazier of the WoodlawnOrganization.Other groups were the UrbanLeague, the Johnson PublishingCompany (which publishes Ebony,.let, and Negro Digest), the Popu¬lation Research 'Training Centerof the University; the Committeeon Educational Equality; theBureau of Human Relations of theChicago Board of Education; theChicago Commission on HumanRelations; the National Confer¬ence of Christians and Jews; andthe Church Federation.On Tuesday, Jesse Owens, theformer track star, had dinnerwith the seminar participants.On Wednesday, they heard atape of the debate held on campuslast spring between Malcolm X,a Black Muslim, and WilloughbyAbner, a union leader, on ‘‘Segre¬gation or Integration.”This morning the students willvisit the office of Alderman LeonDespres, whose ward includes theUniversity; the Hyde Park Neigh¬borhood Club, to see an integratedrecreation center; and will speakwith a representative of the hu¬man relations detail of the Chi¬cago Police Department, who willexplain efforts being made toprotect property and civil rightsof all citizens.The seminar participants will lunch at Hull House, which theywill later tour.This afternoon the seminar par¬ticipants will visit Hull House,and then will take car tripsthrough various sections of Chi¬cago to view slum streets, newhousing replacing slums, publichousing, skyscrapers, the edge of achanging community, and goodhousing.Mrs. Elizabeth Watson of theHyde Park-Kenwood CommunityConference will dine with the stu¬dents tonight; and at 8 pm.in her home they will dis¬cuss employment problems ofminority groups. Participatingalso will be an Urban League ex¬pert, a vocational teacher, and anacademic teacher.The students will spend most ofthe weekend in recreational act¬ivities, and leave Monday forMexico City, where they will studyproblems of urbanization.Before coming to Chicago, thestudents spent ten days at thePompfret School in Connecticut ina general introduction to socialproblems, and three weeks inWinnipeg, Canada, where theystudied minority and ethnicgroups.The seminar is sponsored byvarious foundations and privatecorporations, and administered bythe Pompfret school. All partici¬pants receive scholarship aid.Two of the members of thisyear’s group attend Pompfret. Therest of the students are fromTeenagers will garden'The youth employment subcom¬mittee of the Hyde Park-KenwoodCommunity Conference has train¬ed over 30 boys, aged 14 to 17, ongardening and other small chores.Due to the critical job shortagethjs summer, the committee en¬courages residents of the HydePark community to hire theseboys. For more information, callPeggy Wireman, BU 8-8343. schools across the country, Mex¬ico, and Canada.The four-year old seminar isrun each year by different mem¬bers of the Pompfret faculty. Thissummer, Norval Rindfleisch, whoteaches English literature atPompfret, and his wife Carol arein charge of the seminar.Robert Havighurst, Professor inthe Department of Education andthe Committee on Human Devel¬opment, cooperated with Rind¬fleisch on the Chicago portion ofthe seminar.Havighurst arranged for MissMary Herrick, who has taughtfor thirty-five years in DuSableHigh School in Chicago, to workwith the group and plan the Chi¬cago program.Previous seminars have broughtparticipants to India and Africato study questions of politicalstructure and nationalism. The Committee on HumanDevelopment has received$300,000 from the NationalInstitute of Mental Health toexpand its research training pro¬gram.This grant will be used over thenext five years to provide spe¬cialized training in research me¬thods to talented graduate stu¬dents interested in studying hu¬man behavior.Robert Hess, Associate Professorand Chairman of the Committee,announced that eight awards co¬vering tuition, fees, and an an¬nual cash stipend ranging from$1800 to $3000 will he given eachyear.Each of these graduate studentswill complete the regular doctoralprogram in human development,speicalizing in such areas as childdevelopment, gerontology, or cul¬ture and personality. In addition, these students willbe involved in a special programof tutorials, seminars, and re¬search experience designed tomake them aware of the problemsinvolved in transforming an ideainto practical research design, andto give them the most moderntechnical skills to carry out thisdesign.David Jackson, coordinator ofthe program, said that the stu¬dents would he instructed in theuse of the computer, with a re¬sulting emphasis on the "initialplanning of the research problem.”The training grant also providesfor additional faculty to give spe-cailized training in research skills.One of the objectives of this pro¬gram is to make available well-trained personnel not only for re¬search, but for teaching functionsas well.UC graduate prevents disasterThe woman doctor who, it was learned earlier this week prevented the marketing1 ofa sedative which causes birth defects is the holder of the first PhD in Pharmacologygranted by the University of Chicago.Frances Kelsey, a medical officer in the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), on herfirst government assignment, refused to approvethe sedative, despite charges that she was beingunduly bureaucratic.The drug, thalidemide, was developed andmarketed in West Germany. In 3960 a UnitedStates drug firm requested FDA clearance tomarket the product in the US.Aided by American and German doctors, Dr.Kelsey began an investigation of the effects ofthe drug.Last November a Hamburg pediatrican discover¬ed that thalidomide, taken by women during thesecond to sixth weeks of pregnancy, caused inmany cases a defect — babies born without armsor legs.Thalidomide has been taken off the market, butits effort has not yet disappeared. It is estimatedthat by the end of August, the total number ofdeformed children born in West Germany will bebetween three and six thousand.Dr. Lllodyd Roth, chairman of the Pharmacology Department sent a telegram to Dr. Kelsey on Mon¬day, praising her actions.It read:"Congratulations on helping safeguard countlessfamilies from potential tragedy. As the receipientof the first doctor of philosophy degree awardedby the Department of Pharmacology at the Uni¬versity of Chicago, the University is proud of thecourage and integrity you have shown.”Dr. Kelsey was at the University in May toparticipate in ceremonies marking the completionof the 100th advanced degree in Pharmacology.The 100th degree was awarded to Dr. John E.Kasik, Assistant Professor of Medicine.Dr. Kelsey came to Chicago in the mid-1930'sfrom McGill University in Canada. She receivedher PhD from the than-new Department of Phar¬macology in 1938, and an MD from the medicalschool in 1950.> PLUS THESE ADDITIONAL TITLES!MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE MEDICINE,by B. L. Gordon, M.D. Over 800 pages and68 illustrations illuminate and document oneof the darkest areas in medical history. 44big chapters range from the 5th through 16lhcenturies, including barber surgeons, the BlackDeath, famous medical reformers, medievalRussian medicine. others. An invaluablesource. Pub. at $10.00. Sale $3 98ROYCE ON THE HUMAN SELF, by J. HarryCotton. The first full study of Josiah Royce’sbold life and thought.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $2.98Civil War Desperadoes—BEEFSTEAK RAID,by Edward Boykin. The shocking documentedstory of a hunger and desperation thatbrought about the greatest but last successfulraid the Gray “Commandos” ever struckagainst Grants Army at Richmond. Ulus.Pub. at $4,95. Sale $1.98SEA DEVIL OF THE CONFEDERACY, byEdward Boykin. The true, startling saga ofJohn Newland Maffitt, the dreaded Confed¬erate sea-raider and blockade runner. Iluus.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $L98MEN AND MORALS: The Story of Ethics,by Woodbridjre Riley. A beautifully organized,lucidly written study of all the schools andall the great teachers of ethics. 16 halftoneplates. Pub. at $6.50. Sale $2.98THE TRAVELS OF MARK TWAIN, ed. byCharles Neider. This wonderful collection ofMark ’Twain’s travel pieces, including manylong unavailable, is also a kind of informalautobiography, full of astringent observationsand amusing ancedotes. Handsome gift edi¬tion. Pub. at $7.50. Sale $3.98Fodor’s Modern Guide to HAWAII, intro, byJames A. Michener. Packed with hundreds ofmoney and time-saving tip*, facts, photos anaup-to-date information. 1961 ed.Pub. at $4.25. S®1* 98F o d o r * a JET AGEGUIDE TO EUROPE.Provide® the moderntraveller with completecoverage of all Euro¬pe, including Iron-Curtain countries. In¬formation on hotels,restaurants, shops, en¬tertainment. Scores ofillustrations and maps.1961 edition. Pub. at$5.95. Sale $1.98Nell Cwynd A Others—ALL THE KING’SLADIES, by J. H. Wilson. The bawdy, bois¬terous story of the fabulous female actressesof England's Restoration stage—their careers,relations with theatre and royal luminaries.Tub. at $3.95. Sale $1.98 GERTRUDE STEIN: Her Life and Work, byElizabeth Sprigge. The definite study of Gert¬rude Stein as writer, critic, wit, expatriot,woman, discoverer of Picasso, and guide toHemingway, Wilder, and many others. Illus.Pub. at $5.00, Sale $2.98SHORT STORY: Volume I. 21 astonishingshort stories by four young masters of thisdifficult and rewarding art—B. L. Barrett.Gina Berriault, Seymour Epstein, RichardYates. Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1Jerome Weidman’s BEFORE YOU GO. Theauthor of “The Enemy Camp” blasts thepolitical snake charmers of our time with abiting portrait of the wild life and destructiveloves of ‘‘Poison Ben” Ivey.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $1KNOW YOUR CAMERA, by Alfred Wagg.Valuable Guide that explains every aspectof photography—from purchase of camera toprinting of picture—by a top cameraman.270 large photos. Pub. at $3.95. Sale $1THE ESQUIRE READER: New Fiction fromthe Magazine for Men. Ten outstandingstories by today's vital writers, includingLeslie Fiedler’s famous “Nude Croquet,” GeorgeP. Elliott’s “Among the Dangs,” others byBourjaily, Roth, Barth, Gold, et al.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $1.49Francois Mauriac’s SECOND THOUGHTS. Allthe emotional eloquence of the Nobel prize¬winning writer leaps to life in these 36 su¬perb essays on sin, history, D. H. Lawrence,success, Greta Garbo, war, pride, Shakespeare,child martyrs, etc. Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1.49Desert of Destiny: SAHARA, by Georg Ger-ster. From the earliest Tassili friezes to thediscovery of oil, here is the entire, strangehistory of this nnbelievably vast piece of sun-struck geography — its camels, caravans,fierce nomadic tribes, desert mystics, soldiers,oil strikes, Moslem culture, and modern pol¬itical upheavals. 30 striking photos.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.98COPEY OF HARVARD, by J. Donald Adams.The warm life story of one of America’sgreatest teachers and a history of literaryHarvard in the mainstream of American litera¬ture. Illus. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.98Story of a Year: 1848, by Raymond Post¬gate. Solid, lively history of that world¬shaking year—republican barricades in Paris,the "Communist Manifesto,” the emergenceof the German state, the first national up¬rising in Italy, the Gold Rush to California,etc. With contemporary cartoons and illus¬trations. Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1.49THE COLLEGE YEARS—A Treasury of Col¬lege Life and Laughter, ed. by A. C. Spec-torsky. College life in all its aspects, re¬flected brilliantly in writings by Chaucer,Swift, Mencken, Thurber and many others.Illustrated with photos, drawings and car¬toons. Pub. at $7.95.THE NEW CHEMOTHERAPY IN MENTALILLNESS: The History, Pharmacology andClinical Experiences With Rauwolfia, Phen-othiazine, Azacyclonol, Mephenesin, HydToxy-zine and Benactyzine Preparations. 167 medi¬cal experts review their multiple experiencesin treating psychiatric disorders with atarac¬tic drugs. Eld. by Hirsch L. Gordon, M.D.Pub. at $15.00. Sale $3.98THE UNIVERSITY OF A HISTORY OF MILITARISM, by AlfredVagts. Important, definitive work on the or¬ganization and maintenance of military estab¬lishments for power and conquest, from feudaltimes to the hot and cold wars of the present.Illus. Over 500 pages, bibliog. and index.Pub. at $7.50. Sale $2.98THE BREAKFAST WAR, by Rupert Furn-eaux. Spell-binding account of the 143-daySiege of Plevna in 1877 — and of the in¬credible war correspondents who , reported theRusso-Turkish War to the breakfast tablesof- the world. Illus.Pub. at $4,50. Sale $1Winning Bridge—THE COMPLETE ITALIANSYSTEM, by E. Kaplan. The “NeapolitanClub” and the “Roman Club” bidding sys¬tems used by the Italian teams in winningthree consecutive world championships. Nu¬merous diagrams. Pub. at $2.95. Sale $1Anatomy of a Scream—THE FROG POND, byJoyce Maclver. Thetrue, terrifying, aston¬ishingly frank confes¬sional of a youngwoman whose strangecompulsion drove herfrom lover to loverand from analyst toanalyst. Published at$4.95. Sale $1.98L’lLLUSTRATION DU XX M SIECLE—1961Christmas Edition. Published in Paris underthe direction of G. di San Lazzaro. Newestnumber of the world-famous French art an¬nual, translated. Informative, perceptive ar¬ticles on the very latest artists and move¬ments, by leading critics. Illustrated Glacinewrapper. , $5.95LOUIS SULLIVAN AS HE LIVED — The Shap¬ing of American Architecture, by Willard Con-nely. The detailed story of the possessed,reckless genius, mentor, employer and friendof Frank Lloyd Wright. With 49 plates,index and bibl. Pub. at $6.50, Sale $2.98NUCLEAR EXPLOSIONS AND THEIR EF¬FECTS. Fwd. by Jawaharlal Nehru. The phy¬sical and biological effects of nuclear testing,the revelant scientific principles and radio¬logical consequences of law and high yieldexplosions. A completely revised, up-to-dateaccount including the Astronaium 90 hazzard.Pub. at $15.00. Sale $3.88RUM ROW—The Story of Bootlegging, byRobert Carse. Racy, colorful saga of booze¬running in the Prohibition days of the Roar¬ing Twenties. Illus. Pub. at $3.95. Sale $1.98Triple Aspects of God — PLOTINUS ANDNEOPLATONISM, An Introductory Study, byProf. P. V. Pistorius. A new interpretationthat lucidly reveals the idealist philosophyof Plotinus. Pub. at $5.25. Sale $1.98 LAWYERS & JUDGES —DAUMIER LITHO¬GRAPHS, edited and with an introduction inEnglish, by Julian Cain. 47 superb full pageplates, 9(4x12(4 inches. The biting, reveal¬ing realism of these satiric drawings createda sensation in the mid-19th century.Pub. at $7.95. Sale $5.88PRACTICAL HAEMATOLOGY, by J. V. Dacie.Lab guide for students, pathologists andtechnicians investigataing haemalological andtransfusion problems. Illus.Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1MEDICAL TREATMENT OF DISEASE, ed. byDr. Henry A. Christian. 80" chapters, 965 pp.Definitive Oxford University compendium ofpost-diagnostic treatments of disease andconditions that concern physicians and in¬ternists. Pub. at $10.00. Sale $1.98CORTISONE THERAPY: Mainly Applied tothe Rheumatic Diseases, by J. H. Glyn, M.D.A thorough review of Cortisone and its as¬sociated drugs for specialists and for generalpractitioners. Special chapters on local ther¬apy, intra-articular and soft tissue injections,steroid therapy. Pub. at $10.00. Sale $1.98THE CEREBRAL CORTEX AND THE INTER¬NAL ORGANS, by K. M. Bykov, trans. byW. Horsley Gantt. Pavlov’s collaborator dis¬closes the ingenious principles controlling hu¬man adaptation to external and internal en¬vironment and shows how the internal- organs,endocrine glands and metabolism are inte¬grated in the nervous systems of both healthyindividuals and pathologicaJ organisms. Illus.Pub. at $15.00. Sale $2.98ATLAS OF GENITO URINARY SURGERY,by P. R. Roen, M.D. Detailed survey; 162pp.; illus. Pub. at $10.00. Sale $1.98THE LIVER AND ITS DISEASES, by H. P.Himsworth, M.D, Valuable contribution. Illus.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1GENERAL DIAGNOSIS AND THERAPY OFSKIN DISEASES, by H. W. Siemens, M.D.The first English edition of this famous textwhich offers a new, lucid approach to der¬matology for physicians and students. 375illustrations. Pub. at $10.00. Sale $1SURGICAL NURSING, by E. L. Eliason, etal. 337 illustrations, 9 in color. The stand¬ard wrok on the principles, methods, appli¬cations and human relationships of the pro¬fession. 754 pp. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1A TREATISE ON GONIOSCOPY, by M. U.Troncoso, M.D. An important study of thisphase of ophthalmology. Detailed anatomy,diagnosis and pathology ©f the region relatedto the sinus. 117 illustrations, 36 in color.Pub. at $10.00. Sale $3.98PHARMACOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTALTHERAPEUTICS, by Anderson, et al. Signi¬ficant studies of applied pharmacology andtoxicology. Pub. at $6.50. Sale $1PSYCHOANALYSIS OF THE PROSTITUTE,by Dr. Maryse Choisy. The former presidentof the French Psychoanalytic Society whohas also, in her motivational research beena maid in a Parisian “house,” carefully an¬alyses the case histories of call girls, streetwalkers, procurers, and their clientele in adeep examination of this “permanent scandalin ail civilizations.”Put), at $4.75. Sale $2.98CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEHours: Moa. thru Fri. — 8 A.U.—5 P.M. Sat. 8 4.M. — 12 NooaJuly 20. 1962 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7 i/ i.i.THEATRE REVIEWS ('uUiirc calendarThe Knob-Lick Upper 10,000, blue-grass trio. Tuesday, July 31, 8 pm,600 North Saint Louis Ave., sponsoredby Chicago Teachers’ Coll-ge north, $1.Purlie Victorious: Playwright - actorOzzie Davis succeeds in his twin goals:he has built a very funny farce aroundthe race problem and he has demon¬strated the poetry in the language ofthe Southern Negro sharecropper. Theplot is irrelevant, the lines are irreve¬rent, and the acting is broad and hi¬larious. Ozzie Davis as the sMf-ordainedeva ngelist plays with a rhythm andbeat that is something to see. At theEdgewater Beach Playhouse throughAugust 4.Carousel: A lively and colorful pro¬duction of the R & H musical. LyleVance and Sally Brooks are both morethan adequate in the leading roles, butthe real stand-out is Ron Graven asMr. Snow. Also, a special nod to thechorus, who dance, sing, smile, andrun with the greatest of enthusiasm.Performance Friday through Sunday,this weekend at the Encore theater,64 1 N. Clark. For ticket pricesand further information, call WH4-8414.Hits of Broadway: Dinner and the showis the deal at the Del Prado. Theseventh revue in the current seriesopened recently with material fromNew Faces, Bells Are Ringing, andother Broadway favorites. Performancestwice nightly, except Monday. For fur¬ther information call Del Prado Hotel.Put It in Writing: If Medium Raredeserved to run two years (which itdidn't) this new production at theHappy Medium deserves to run twentyyears (which it does). The show is fastand funny, with many memorable mo¬ments. Jean Arnold and Tom Williams, who both appeared in the previous ef¬fort, lend their talents to this, alongwith a newcomer to Chicago. Will MacKenzie. Except for Bob Dishy, whotends to overdo much of his material,the rest of the cast is pleasant and un¬offensive. Writing a revue is a trickyjob. especially when you set a themefor the show. As it turns out. some ofthe best skits have little or nothingto do with writing, such as Jean Ar¬nold's song Daisy, a very unusual num¬ber entitled Dacisions and even theshow's closing number Walking Downthe Road. The show should keep Chi¬cago theatre fans and zillions of visit¬ing conventioneers happy for a long,long time. At the Happy Medium. 901N. Rush street. For further informationcall DE 6-1000.Sound of Music: It is impossible todislike nuns and/or children. Or is it TAt the Shubert, 22 W. Monroe. DanceFolk and square dancing. Friday even¬ings in the New Dorm parking lot. 8-11pm. Indoors if it rains. 25c.Folk dances of many nations. Tues¬day Evenings at International House,7-10 pm, 60c.FilmsMonday movies at International House.“The Mouse that Roared” with PeterSellers. Jean Seberg, July 28. “Roman¬off and Juliet” with Peter Ustinov andSandra Dee. July 30. 8 pm. 50c.“The Animated Cartoon from 1880”presented by New University Thoughttonight. Law School Auditorium, 7:15and 9:15. Next Friday. the MarxBrothers in “Duck Soup.” Tickets for 6program series, $3; for 4 programseries, $2.Doc Films will make movie Musicabout life at the University Court Theatre Film Festival, Tuesday,July 24. “Mumu,” based on the storyby Turgenev. July 31, “Love in theCity,” five episodes comprising a "filmjournal about love" directed by a dozenof Italy’s top directors. All performances8:4 5 in the Reynolds Club Theatre:tickets 50c (>er program, $2 for entireseries.Special Summer Film Festival at theClark theatre. Program changes daily.“Last Year at Marienbad” starts to¬day at the Hyde Park. Next Friday,Ingmar Bergman’s Academy Award win¬ning “Through a Glass Darkly."Lectures“Michelangelo’s ‘Moses’ ** by Earl E.Rosenthal. Professor of Art, July 30,part of illustrated summer lecture ser¬ies, “Around Beethoven’s Head.” Mid¬way studios garden, 6016 Tngleside, Noadmission, but bring something to siton. Indoors if rain.A large number of darkwooden chairs with arms,formerly used in readingrooms, will be sold at 80ceach on Tuesday by theBuildings and Ground De¬partment.Chairs can be seen andpurchased between 10 amand noon, and 2 pm to 4pm at the Field House,56th Street and UniversityAvenue. A film documenary of the University will be shot thissummer by the Documentary Film Group, announced Sid¬ney Huttmer of Doc Films.Money for the project has been donated by FairfaxCone, a Tiustee of the Uni- onjv jnformative but alsoversity. “aesthetic.”A shooting script for the “Although we are not com-12-15 minute film is now be- n^ttee to present any par¬ing completed, and prelimi- ticular image of the Univer-nary blocking will be under- sitJ5 he continued, “Warnerway by August 1. Doc Films Wick and Charles 0 Connellestimated that the film be both stressed that theready for viewing by late No- Picture be of high quality,vember. and if it can additionallyTr ,, - serve as a recruiting film, we»uttner ,Doc wil have accomplished whatwe set out to do.”Jerry Temaner, who will be Alpha Delta Ph! record concert, Sun¬day afternoons, chapter house lounge,57 47 University, 2 pm. Free.Ravinia. Elia Fitzgerald sing* thisevening. All Stravinsky program to¬morrow evening, conducted by Stravin¬sky. with Robert Craft. Andre Cluy-tens conducts next week. Next Thurs¬day Joan Sutherland performs. Satur¬day. July 28, pianist Eugene Istominplays an all Beethoven program.Carillon Recitals, “The Carillon in Europe, 1800-1962,” Daniel Robins, Uni¬versity Carillonneur. this Wednesday,August 1, “Tower Music,” with worksof Bach. Pezel, Brofsky, Gabrieli, Pur¬cell. and Reiche. 8 pm.Court Theatre: Jimmie Driftwood,“historian, folklorist, song collector’,’accompanies himself on the mouth bow,guitar, and banjo. July 2 5. On AuguatI. Louis Armstrong appears with hiaAll-stars.Errol Garner. jazz pianist. LondonHouse. Michigan Ave. at Wackerthrough Sunday.Theatre“The Knight of the Burning Pestle”by Beaumont and Fletcher, at CourtTheatre. July 20-22 at 8:45. Tickets$2 for Thursday. Friday, and Sunday:$2.50 Saturday. Call ext. 3246 or visitM andel Hall box office.“The Dybbuk” by Ansky beginsThursday at Court Theatre. Perfor¬mances July 26-29, same time, place,price.“Purlie Victorious,” New York com¬edy hit. at the Edgewater Beach Play¬house through August 5. Performancesnightly. Monday through Friday, at8:30, Saturday. 7 and 10. early Sun¬day curtain at 7. Call LO 1-6308.“The Fantasticks” opens tonight atEncore Theatre for three or four weeks.Curtains 8:30 Friday and Saturday: 7on Sunday. Tickets $1.55 and $2.65641 N. Clark St. WH 4-8141, for in¬formation.LAKEthe /7f*ARK AT(vyde park : N O 7 9 O 7 1theatreFilms was honored to havebeen entrusted with the taskof making a documentary of , . . . „„„the University that would not ,eaf a»/rCjUrseL,.lnArt of the Modern Film,” willRestaurant mooves inby Elsie LaVache“I will bring a mountain to Chicago,” said Cap’n Folger. Iteneglected, however, to bring a good cup ot coffee. But Li’l A1 Temaner,Chicago phonograph record impresario, who bears more resemblanceto a molehill than to a mountain, has done the impossible by not onlybringing a good cup of coffee to Hyde Park but by flying in theface of History and Julian Levi and actually opening up a shopwhen all around him is being redeveloped out of existence. Hip, hip,hooray!Little Al's shop, at the sign of the Cow on 57th near Blackstone,Is being run as a public service by members of the committee onideas and methods and the department of philosophy.Howie Ruttenberg, the manager, hopes someday to be a meta¬physician. “However,” says Howie, “If times get hard and the demandfor metaphysicians slacks off, I can always put my experience as ashort-order cook to good use.”[I. do the script and directionfor the film, and Lloyd Wil¬liams. a film maker withawards from the Cannes Fes¬tival, will act as technical ad¬visor.Doc Films also needs “abevy of unskilled volunteersto help work on the film,”said Huttner.People wishing to volunteertheir services should contactthe Doc Films office at ex¬tension 2898. •«Starts Friday, July 20ALAIN RESNAIS'"LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD1st Prire Venice Film Festival (1941) Awarded The LION D'ORWe Suggest-You See This Film From The BeginningANDAward Winning Short “VERY NICE, VERY NICE"Fri., Sat., Weekdays at 6:30, 8:20, 10:19Sunday Only at 2:45, 4:30, 6:25, 8:15, 10Starts Friday, July 27INGMAR BERGMAN SAcademy Award Winner - Best Foreign Film (19621'THROUGH A GLASS DARKLY •aHARRIET ANOERSSON A MAX von SYDOW A GUNNER BJORNSTRANOANDAcademy Award Cartoon - GERALD McBOING BOINGFri., Sat., Weekdays at 6:45, 8:30, 10:20Sunday Only at 2:45, 4:30, 6:15, 8. 9:55COMING, roger vadim's "Les Liaisons Dangereuses'Free Weekend Patron Parking At 5230 So. Lake Park Ave.Special Student Rates WITH Student ID Cards7kw piacxL.1A New Place ToMeet and GreetLife and DeathDiscussed Daily at: The SandwichesAre So GoodThat It CostsMore For ASecond One At:JtPuL faw1440 E. 57th ]] ! new university thought presentsI CLASSIC COMEDY♦ . ««,I each Friday night through August 24July 20 August 10The art of the car¬toon from 1880 to the present.This program includes Mutt andJeff, Disney’s “Steamboat Willy”and “Mad Dog,” “Moonbird,”Mr, Magoo in “Captain Outra- A lgeous,” and McLaren’s “Begone, AUCJUSt I fDull Care.” W. C. Fields antf"Jack Oakie in “Million DollarLegs.”A program of hil¬arious Mac Sennett Keystonedark theatresummer film festivaldark & madisonfr 2-284550°for college studentsotalltimesfriday 20- “the roof” and“rosemary."Saturday 21- “no love for johnny”and 'Tav ventura”Sunday 22- “la belle americaine”and “marl who waggedhis tail”mondajr 23- “bridges at toko-ri”and “country girl”tuesday 2 4- “black orchid” and“wild is the wrind”wednes. 25- “hut not for me” and“teacher pet” ■ff open 7:30 a.m.late show 3 a.m.A different double feature dailyA Sunday Film GuildA write in for free program guideif little gal-lery for gals only★ every friday is ladies dayall gals admitted for only 25cif Clark parking - 1 door south4 hours 95c after 5 p.m.programthursday 26- "shane” and “cowboy’friday 27- “hatful of rain” and“will success spoilrock hunter?”Saturday 28- “ballad of a soldier”and “last bridge”Sunday 29- “ugetsu” and“golden demon”monday 30- “psycho” anddial “m” for murder” July 27August 3 The Marx Brothersin “Duck Soup.”Seldom seen Char¬lie Chaplin shorts, including ’’TheTramp,” “A Woman,” “TheBank,” and “Police.” comedies.August 24 Laurel and Hardyin “Two Tars,” and RaymondGriffith in “Hands Up,” a satireon Westerns.Plus: each program includes one or more cartoons and chapters fromthe serial “Queen of the Jungle.”air cooledtuesday 31- “ mister roberts” and“operation madbal!” LAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM 7:15 to 9:15 P. M.!6 Program series - $4 general; $3 students4 Program series - $3 general; $2 students•***❖❖*❖£8 CHICAGO MAROON • July 20, 1962