f&aVpI. 70. No. 2 University of Chicago October 9. 1964Student honesty increases, theft decreasesBookstore reports no arrestsNo shoplifting has been detected in the UC bookstores since the opening of theautumn quarter, general manager Eugene Miller told the Maroon this week.Although an accounting will give a more definite indication of loss by theft, if .any,Miller said, “We are confident the incidents of shoplifting have decreased.” He addedthat this is the first time in tive — • —— Dirksen and mother viewthe world with displeasureSenator Everett McKinley Dirksen paid a visit to acapacity crowd at Mandel Hall last night, and tbld hisaudience that his mother would not like everything shesaw if she were living.In an extemporaneous chat 9pon- —1 - —sored by Student Government, the are going with the Alliance for Prog-31 Senator expressed amazement at ress.” A Latin American economist. * gQjyjg of grants that have been told me that Alliance is a decompos¬ing corpse,” Dirksen said. ‘‘Youshould be able to do a pretty goodmade under the foreign aid program.“IMAGINE a little country likeLaos with two million people—'they job of interring any corpse for oneget 328 million dollars of your trillion dollars, he commented,money. Aren’t you glad?” he asked.“I’ve discovered that they havesent 17 tons of bubble gum to Bel- The domestic scene did not seemmuch better to Dirksen.“We must look at the underlyingpast three or four years when no and plainclothes police a complete“arrests” have been made during view of the aisles and shelves.the autumn quarter’s opening weeks, Maier attributed ^ decline -m items stolen most often by students,and noted a steady decline in theft ghoplifting to student awareness of Eidson said-over the past two years. ,. , . ■ . , . , ,precautions being taken by the book- He reported no new precautionaryThe four campus bookstores do stores, and of the strict penalties measures being taken by campussecurity police this year. MillerBooks — paperbacks to $10 vol¬umes — and writing materials are gium, and beer coolers to Italy. So structure of our prosperity. Perhapseven though I have something to do you never thought of it. but you ownwith the birth of the Marshall Plan, the public debt. Banks get dollarsI have gone over to the other side, to buy government bonds from yourI told them if you ever clean up money. Bless you all.” he saidthe program, 111 join again,” he benevolently. “You own the publicsa^d* debt. It’s a qualified kind of prosper¬ity,” he concluded.AFTER GIVING his assessmentUN should support selftheir greatest volume of business imposed for theft by the universityduring registration week and thefirst week of classes, Miller saidThis year's peak was reached Mon¬day, when volume of sales was atleast 12 times as large as on anyoilier normal day. Exact figures onHie total volume of trade are notavailable.Plainclothesmen Quote of the Day"If the Smyrd committee promisesto merqe with the Committee on theGrass, I will promise to rename theAdministration building 'Smyrd Hall.'"—President Beadle speaking toassembled Smyrders after lastweekend's Smyrd Ball.NOTICE:The Committee on Smyrd Grasswill meet in 501 Smyrd at 1:57 amtonight for a grand renaming party.BECAUSE OF the large number ofstudents Ixiying books at this time,Miller said, plainclothes police havebeen on duty in the main bookstore suspension.,” Miller said,and in its three branches. In addi¬tion, one member of the campussecurity ixilice force has been sta¬tioned at each door of the main policeadded, “We cannot divulge everymeasure we (the bookstore manage¬ment) take.”STUDENTS REPORTED by book¬store patrons to be shoplifting areplaced under surveillance when theyre-enter the store, Miller said. Par¬ticular attention is paid to girls car¬rying large purses, which might beused to conceal stolen items. “And then there’s the UN,” Dirk¬sen went on. “By age 20. they ought of the current situation, the Senatorto be in a position to sustain them¬selves, but there are a dozen ooun- said he had two conclusions. First,he said, “It’s about time there wastries that won’t foot their share of a simple pressure ^up caMed Johnthe bill for the expeditionary forces Q. Public, Inc.” Self-seeking eco-to Israel and Cyprus, so I had to nomic groups have too much politicalhelp President Kennedy get a $250 power, lie warned,million bond issue out of Congress.I didn’t wan-t to see it falter, butit’s had a pretty full chance. Howeffective has it been?”“There have been many studies on“The punishment for shoplifting is shoplifting,” Miller said* “and se¬curity officers and the University. , .are well aware of the methodsItems and discipline used.”TONY EIDSON, supervisor of the He said bookstore customers canstore to keep order and guard the campus security office, said students aid security officials by leavingcash register. apprehended for shoplifting are re- notebooks and parcels in, , , ,, . . , „ shelves or in coin-return lockersAnother detecting device, winch ferred to the appropriate deans. He they enter He a]so warnecjMiller said has been in use for sev- said the disciplinary committee then ayainS( students’ trying to attracteral years, is a set of eight to 10 considers the case and any extenuat- the attention of detectives by pre-convex mirrors. These give clerks ing circumstances. tending to steal items. Asks more troopsApologizing for introducing the firstnote of partisanship into his diis-“I don’t know what they did with course, Dirksen suggested that oneway to correct what he said was aniir’ alanee in the Federal Govern¬ment would be to give him a fewmore “troops” with whom to workin the Senate. “It's not easy to hoista banner with only thirty-three troopsagainst sixty-seven,” he quipped.The speech was preceded by adimer at the Quadrangle Club, atwhich Dirksen met with about thirtystudents, faculty, and administratorswho had been invited by StudentGovernment.your money in the Congo,” he said,pointing out that Tshombe still hasthat country in a turmoil.“THEN THERE’S Ben Bella inAlgeria. He’s now running a com¬pletely Communist show. I get tiredof talking about peace and freedom.”Dirksen said, when the US is aidingsuch countries.Unimpressed with AllianceDirksen also commented that heis not impressed with the way thingsProject workers share Miss, experiencesThe idea, according1 to Gov¬ernor Wallace, was not toshoot at them and beat themup, but to laugh at them. Andit was the laughing and insolence andthe race barrier, perhaps more thanbeating? and explosions, that thevarious groups and individuals go¬ing to Mississippi this summer hadto face. Tlie varying intensities ofthese influences, among other fac¬tors. was clearly evident from thestories of experiences told by HeadierTobis and Peter Rabinowitz at ameeting sponsored by POLIT andCORE Sunday evening in Ida NoyesLibrary.Miss Tobis and Rabinowitz hadparticipated in the much publicizedCOFO-SNCC Mississippi Project thissummer. This program was orientedalong two lines, one aimed at voterregistration, the other concerned with“Freedom Schools” intended to pro¬vide a somewhat higher quality, ifnot also quantity, of education forMississippi children.Speaking of voter registration.Rabinowitz pointed out that, afterfilling out a tremendous number ofanswers to objective questions, theprospective registrants in Mississippimust copy a section exactly from theMississippi state constitution and in¬terpret it to the satisfaction of theregistrar. The problem caused isobvious, according to Rabinowitz,since the constitution in question isperliaps the longest in the country—200 odd pages of mutual pontradic-tions — and the registrar may re¬ject a registrant witliout stated rea¬son. Hence, according to Rabinowitz,the formation of the Freedom Demo¬cratic Party, with a Freedom Reg¬istration Form consisting of ninesimple objective questions.Freedom Registration in this fash¬ ion entitled a person to attend Partyconventions and vote in the FreedomDemocratic Party. However, theParty failed to replace the regularDemocratic delegation at the na¬tional convention (Rabinowitz feelsit would have been different had theproblem reached the floor of theconvention), and since its registra¬tion forms are not official in elec¬tions. and not enough people wereofficially registered for the comingelection, most Project efforts in reg¬istration are being directed at futureelections.Many of the Freedom Schools be¬gan by offering to teach studentsanything the students w'anted tolearn, which turned out to be a widerange of academic subjects. In addi¬tion to these, the Freedom Schoolsoffered special courses on the free¬dom movement and the history ofthe Negro in America, both of whichturned out to be very popular.The special courses were con¬cerned with broadening the students’outlook on the whole movement to in¬clude the social and cultural factorsthey would have to fight, rather thanmerely the methods being currentlyused in the struggle. The academicsubjects weren’t always exactly nor¬mal either, Rabinowitz related. Forinstance, his French class ended updoing what he considers an excellentjob in play reading, including suchunlikely writers as Sartre.Rabinowitz feels that those whowent down to Mississippi were notprimarily the standard campus radi¬cals but, to a large extent, theformerly “uninvolved.” No one cansay exactly why they went. Manyof the southern Negroes apparentlyfelt they were coming down in asacrificial context. At any rate, ac¬cording to Miss Tobis, the beatingsand deaths were greatly exaggerated.The main sacrifices were made, she said, in adjusting to daily indigni- deteriorating situation, with no defi¬nes and adverse living conditions, nite end in sight.In the end, the main result of theoperations in Mississippi was to drawthe attention of the country to tivepreviously unheard of situation there,as well as in the rest of the South,and indirectly in the North.Rabinowitz noted that purposes andresults of the Project were dividedbetween project and publicity. Tlieimportance of this publicity wan in¬dicated in an interview of anotherProject participant, Gail Falk, ofPittsburgh and Radcliffe. She relateda visit to a White Citizens’ Council,in which she and her group were toldthat the situation in Mississippi wasremaining relatively calm and non¬violent simply because tlie terrorgroups were restraining themselvesin response to the tremendous amountof attention and publicity being fo¬cussed on the area.The council expressed the convic¬tion that, when the majority of theProject returned to school and thepublicity ceased, things would re¬turn tj normal, with perhaps a re¬taliatory worsening. Miss Falk ex¬pressed a fear of losing the impor¬tant liaison set up by such men asSchwemer and Chaney (who weremurdered early in the summer) andmaintained by the Project partici¬pants, as well as of the increaseddanger to all concerned.As to whether Miss Falk's fearswere appropriate, winter is comingand the Project has dwindled con¬siderably in numbers. The publicityhas gone. And Miss Tobis reportedincreased bombings, arrests, and po¬lice terrorization in the past fewweeks have received no coverage inthe previously sensationalizing press.She read a letter in which a Negroex-policeman described a definitely The Project is now running a $60,-000 deficit, and needs money, people,and, above all, publicity. Miss Tobissuggests such approaches as writingto Senators. Congressmen, the headof the Civil Rights Bureau in Wash¬ington, or tlie President, demandingthat areas such as McComb be de¬clared disaster areas and request¬ing that the FBI be sen in for pro¬tection rather than, as they havebeen, to investigate possible connec¬tion with the New York violence thissummer.Contribution for continued Missis¬sippi work should be sent to theStudent Non-Violent CoordinatingCommittee, 814 Raymond Street, At¬lanta 14, Georgia. All those inter¬ested in volunteering their servicesshould write to the same address.During the meeting, over $150 incash and checks was collected. Itwill be split evenly between theFreedom project center in Cleveland,Mississippi and Robert D. Gilman,a UC student who needs support tobe able to continue working inMississippi.Gilman incurred a debt this sum¬mer due to the expense involved ingoing to Mississippi. He worked ina Freedom School at Canton duringthe summer, and is currently workingon Freedom registration in WestPoint, a town of 12,000 in the north¬east comer of the state.In a phone conversation Sundayevening, Gilman told the Maroon thatin the country he is working in, per¬haps ten Negroes are registered.He reports it is probably one of thesafest areas of the state to workin, since for some reason the localpolice actively damp down on vio¬lence. On the other hand, conditions nearMcComb, Mississippi, known to thevolunteers this summer as one ofthe most notoriously dangerous areasof the state, have steadily dete¬riorated to the point of constant fearand watchfulness on the part oflocal Negro citizens. Since Freedomworkers began their activities therein June, 16 bombings and numerousexamples of other retaliation for anyand all civil rights work have oc¬curred. All those interested in help¬ing in this region, either monetarilyor personally, should contact theMississippi Freedom Project, 1017Lynch Street, Jackson, Mississippi.Shapiros availableA collection of several hun¬dred modern pictures andprints on loan to the univer¬sity from Chicago art patron,Joseph Shapiro, will be on displaynext week Monday throu^i Thursday,Ootober 12th to 15th in Ida NoyesHah.The pictures can be borrowedeach quarter for a 50c insurancecharge by students, faculty andmembers of the administration. Thefirst drawing for selection will be onThursday, October 15th, starting at3:30 pm Numbers can be picked upat Ida Noyes desk from 8:30 to 3:30pm.A few pictures taken out during thespring and summer quarters have notbeen returned because of the diffi¬culty of reaching those who havechanged their address. The StudentActivities Office requests that all pic¬tures be returned so that they can behung for tlie day of the drawing.The Shapiro Collection has an out¬standing and valuable collection ofsuch masters as Goya, Rouault, Cha¬gall, Miro, Picasso, Malta, MaxKahn and other noted artists.EDITOR ML0-Week could use helpProtests Cost of Tickets toSenator DirkseiTs SpeechTO THE EDITOR:After learning that Everett Dirk-sen was to speak this Thursday oncampus and that the admission forpersons other than students wouldbe as high as two dollars, I calledStudent Government to inquire wherethe money collected from this highadmission fee would go. I was toldthat the majority of it would be givento Senator Dirksen as a “speaker'sfee" to use for his own purposes.Taxpayers who already pay Sena¬tor Dirksen’s salary must also paya high fee to hear him speak. Thisis an outrage!IF TIUS MEETING had been in¬tended as a political rally to raisecampaign contributions it shouldhave been advertised as such. AndStudent Government and the Uni¬ versity should have had no part insponsoring it.It is naive to believe that a speechon the issues of the political' cam¬paign delivered less than a monthbefore election day will be a non¬partisan lecture of tlx: sort whichthe University usually sponsors. IfStudent Government did not intendto sponsor a Republican political ral¬ly, they should have offered Dirksenthe opportunity to speak, chargedonly a token admission fee to coverrental of the hall and posters, andoffered Dirksen no speaker's lee.Because I learned of this speechtoo late to get a letter to the Ma¬roon before the meeting occurred,I can only hope that those who feelas I do will let Student Governmentknow their feelings and will alsowrite to Senator Dirksen to tell himwhat they think of his acceptingmoney under these circumstances.JUDITH TORNEYas advertised“‘LIFEBrookfield“Authentic Ivy”3-Piece Worsted SuitThe well-dressed University man, today,wears a vested suit. And for the vestedsuit at its best, he chooses a Brookfield.They’re superfine pure worsted . . .authentic Ivy all the way . . . and tailoredlike far more costly suits. Try one andsee for yourself.Mch &r°' Chicago • Oak ParkOld Orchard • OakbrookWoodmar • Randhurst SG’s defenseTO THE EDITOR:Senator Dirksen was the first of aseries of speakers to be sponsoredby Student Government this year.The series is designed as a studentservice. We promise it will be well-balanced.Since the competition for goodspeakers is great, a speaker's feeis quite necessary. It is customarynot to place a restriction on how thespeaker may spend the money. Anyactual profit made from a speaker'sappearance will revert to a StudentGovernment speaker’s fund and willnot be used to further any singlepolitical view.We hope those who attend StudentGovernment’s first program enjoyedit. We will continue to bring well-known speakers to campus. We willcontinue to assume a certain amountof political sophistication on the partof the campus community.GENE PYSHSTUDENT GOVERNMENTI Editor’s note: Just petore his speechlast niqht. Senator Dirksen refused aspeaker's fee.ICareers AndCollegesRepresentatives of the following in¬dustries and institutions will be inthe office of Career Counseling andPlacement on the dates indicated.For appointments call ext. 3282.October 13 (3:30-5), October 14(10-11:30, 3:30-5)-Alan Carter, Direc¬tor of Television Service, United StatesInformation Agency. He will not behiring individuals directly butwill have information about the For¬eign Service examinations to be heldon December 5, 1964. Applicationdeadline lor the examination is Octo¬ber 19.October 19 — William R Shane, as¬sistant dean. University of I'ennsvl-vania I.aw school, to interview stu¬dents interested in applying.October 20—Henry V. Poor, assistantdean of Yale law school, will inter¬view students interested in applyingfor admission. The annual Orientation Week Isnow history, and that for which tillwere oriented—life and study at theUniversity of Chicago—has begunagain in earnest. But, before theroutine which is sufficiently familiarto returning students and will be¬come so for new students obscuresall freshness and objectivity, we feelthat a re-examination of O-Wcek isnecessary.Basically, Orientation Week is de¬signed to and indeed manages toeffect what its name implies in twoareas: the academic and the extra¬curricular. Students’ high schooltraining is measured in placementtests; and tours, displays, sym¬posiums, and imjiromptu O-Boardperorations are presented in aneffort to provide insight into campusand community life.Somehow, though, O-Week neverseems to come oft completely. Tliestudents, if they are not totallysnowed under by the concentratedseries of placement exams, are lefttotally bored and in the lurch bytheir freedom during the secondweek. A few of them, understand¬ably, want some time to themselvesafter placement tests and are notas Likely to follow the O-Week pro¬gram as rigidly. This phenomenonresulted, for example, in the smallerthan expected turnouts at Mrs.Beadle's lecture and the Minor Sum¬mit meeting, both of which tookplcice late in the second week.What is the problem? It clearlyis not lack of planning, for GenePysh of Student Government andJulia Ashenhurst of the College staffspent the majority of the summerat this. Nor is it lack of interest, forPysh, Mrs. Ashenhurst, and themembers of the O-Board all did theirbest. Instead, we feel the problemis primarily one of organization andsecondarily of outlook.With respect to organization, wesuggest the abandonment of thepresent rigid first-week-placement-tests-second - week-boredom struct urein favor of interspersing academic and extracurricular indoctrination.In this way, O-Week would not bedivided into two distinct parts butwould help to alleviate the frequentdrudgery of placement tests andwould probably increase attendanceat the various programs.With respect to outlook, we wonderif it is not possible to orient gradu¬ate students in all schools along wi hthose entering the College. As itstands, each graduate school con¬ducts its own hasty orientation, oftenunsatisfactorily for all concerned.Obviously, graduate students have noneed for placement tests, but theycould certainly be included in thetours and lectures.Finally, there is the recurrentproblem of College Camp or someequivalent. According to Mrs. Ashen¬hurst, these trips to Williams Bay,Wisconsin were abandoned mostlybecause the food dropped in qualityto the point of being inedible, butalso because several students eachyear would hitchhike into town andg e t roaringly, peace - disturbinglydrunk. Obviously, both problemscould be remedied; the first by goingsomewhere else and the second bya heartfelt appeal to the students’common sense.Besides these problems, however,we feel that College Camp as aninstitution, regardless of where,when, or under what circumstancesit takes place, is definitely desirable.Potentially at least, no other con¬ceivable feature of O-Week couldserve to unify tivc class and createfriendships nearly as well. We hopethat those in charge will investigatethe possibility again.GNOSIS holds firstcaucus Sunday nightGNOSIS, the majority student po¬litical party on campus, is holdingits first caucus this Sunday eveningat 7 p.m. in the Ida Noyes Library.Business pending before the Stu-dent Assembly will be discussed,'live caucus is open to all students,undergraduate and graduate.NICKY'S _RESTAURANT AND PIZZA WNICKY'S TAKE-OUT & DELIVERY MENUfi&e/L and(?hicLRIBSSlabSlabs 4.25Slabs 6.00PIZZAStargeAssortments small mediumC. HFESF 1.25 2.00 2 V0SAUSAGE 1.50 2.25 3.25ANCHOVIE . . 1.50 2.25 3.25ONION 1.30 2.05 3.00PEPPER 1.50 2.25 3.25MUSHROOM 1.60 2.40 3.50BACON 1.50 2.25 3.25HAM 160 2.40 3.50SANDWICHES2.25 Plain or BAR BO Beef .. 70CHICKIE IN THE BOX10 Large Pieces 2.5016 Large Pieces 37520 Large Pieces 475Free Student Delivery Meat Ball 55Sausage 60Above Served with PeppersHAMBURGER 50CHEESEBURGER 60BAKED LASAGNE 1.55FA 4-5340SWEATERSV-NECKS, PULLOVERS.CARDIGANSCables, Bulkies,Fisherman KnitsFashionable Colors and Styles*7°°LUCILLE'S1507 E. 53rd Ml 3-9898FREE PARKING at5219 HARPER Cobeauty salonExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 i. 53rd St. HY 3-8302CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 9, 1964The complete Levi report: College changes galore(Editor's note: for purposes of clarity and historical accuracy, tne at A-ROOM will reprint in two parts thecomplete text of Provost andActing Dean of the College Edwardu Levi's report concerning proposedchanges in the College. The firstpart appears below; the second wiltappear next Friday.)MEMORANDUMTO: College facultyI liope the faculty wuLl considerthe enclosed proposals in die fall.E.H.L.MEMORANDUM TO THCPRESIDENT AND TO THECOLLEGE FACULTYA> has frequently been observed,TV1 University of Chicago did notbegin as a college and grow into auniversity. Conflicts and balance be¬tween teaching and research, as re¬flected jn an empliasis on under¬graduate or graduate work, haveteen with tire University since tiiebeginning. The original Harper planwas criticized because it at tempedto be both a college and a universityin tiie same institution, Harf^er’soriginal emphasis was in favor ofresearch, but he was greatly inter¬ested in general education. He de-veloped the junior college as ttiemain instrument for general educa¬tion and as the means of coordinatingtlie last two years of high schoolwork with the first two years of diecollege. Thirty years later tiie Uni¬versity Senate reflected strains withinCORNELL AVENUEBAPTIST CHURCH8200 S. CORNELLAffiliated with theSouthern baptist Convention\waday Services 11:04 •«; 7:J8 pmTransportation may be arranged5A 1-6070. 10-1 f eve the institution when it announced that“this University can perform its mostdistinguished service to educationtlinough its graduate and professionalschools” and suggested a limitationof undergraduate instruction. DeanBouclier later described that periodas a time wlien ‘‘undergraduate workwas grossly neglected; even worse,tiie College came to be regarded bysonvj members of tiie family as anunwanted, ill-begotten bra* thatshould be disinherited. Nearly allfinally agreed that we had reacheda situation that necessitated a deci¬sion either to abandon the College orto develop it . .THE COLLEGE, of course, wasnot abandoned. Instead PresidentBurton took tiie position that itsdevelopment was ‘‘no less obligatorythan tiie development of the workof the Graduate and Professionalschools.” In his view the Universityhad then reached a stage where un¬dergraduate and graduate educationshould receive that discriminatingattention which each in its own char¬acter demanded. The rationale forgranting equal emphasis was in partthat “tiie University is dominated bytiie idea of research and that suchresearch must be carried on in alltlve social sciences and surely, notleast, in education.” Five years laterPresident Hutchins in his inauguraladdress reaffirmed this position. Herecognized that “tiie emphasis on productive scholarship that has char¬acterized the University from thebegjining and must characterize itto tiie end has naturally led to re¬peated questions as to the place andfuture of our colleges. ... At times,therefore, members of the facultyhave urged that we withdraw fromundergraduate work, or at least fromthe first two years of it. But we donot propose to abandon or dismembertiie colleges. ... If the University’sfunction is to attempt solutions ofdifficult educational problems ... itcannot retreat from the field of un¬dergraduate work ...”The fact is that throughout the his¬tory of the University, and despitethe statements of discontent, whichin themselves are characteristic ofthe restless spirit of this place, un¬dergraduate education has alwaysbeen a principal and honored partof the University's work. In the earlyyears this was in accord with astrong sense of mission to reveal theheritage received from the past. Inlater years the University’s view ofitself as somehow unique compelleda particular concern for the shapeof undergraduate education. The aca¬demic leadership of the Collegethrough deanships or similar postshas been in the hands of such menas James R. Angell, George E. Vin¬cent, David Alan Robertson, ErnestHatch Wilkins, Chauncey Boucher,Aaron J. Brumbaugh, ClarenceFaust, F. Champion Ward, RobertE. Streeter, and Alan Simpson. AnYou won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall u$ today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 almost continuous dialogue has pro¬duced notable steps and experiments.Among these are the junior collegeidea, the integrated first year, theorientation period, the general surveycourses, general education coursesrooted in the Larger dimensions of aparticular subject matter, the em¬phasis on discussion and on theunderstanding of classical materials,the conception of required training inthe major humanistic and scientificdisciplines, the effort to coordinateor unify the last two years of highschool work with the first two yearsof college and to join specializedtraining with graduate work, earlyadmission, accelerated programs, theseparation of examinations fromcourse credits, and the developmentof tutorial studies. In the last fewyears the College has been amongthe leading universities developingout of the intellectual resources ofthe University undergraduate coursesin the study of non-western areas.THE VITALITY OF THE COL¬LEGE has been derived less fromset programs than from the vigor ofboth debate and development. Itseducational philosophy has not beenfrozen. Not all of the changes havebeen permanent; nor were they in¬tended to be, despite the vigor withwhich they were developed and theconviction which they necessarilyrepresented. Since the University asa whole is characterized by livelyinteraction among its ruling bodies and its disciplines, it is not surpris¬ing that the College, which in itselfhas a particular mission to unity,should not be insulated from thestrains and influences of variousaspects of university life. Protectivebarriers, however important, havebeen hard to maintain and wheremaintained too long have been self-defeating. The protection which dieUniversity lias always given to ex¬perimental programs is differentfrom a separatism which wouldreflect a lack of involvement anda lack of concern on the part ol tiieinstitution as a whole. That kind ofseparatism would be contrary to tiiespirit of unifying purpose and com¬munity which lias characterized ourinstitution.Undergraduate education is then amatter of vital concern for ttieentire University. But there aremany problems to be faced.Chief among these problems is theappropriate relationship betweengeneral and specialized educationand tiie relevance of each to liberaleducation. The colleges have a mis¬sion to train citizens, and citizensin some sense are generalists. Ttiecolleges have a mission to carryforward through their students amastery of our culture and, increas¬ingly, an understanding of othersocieties and [her traditions. Maethan the recognition of relevant areasof subject matter is involved.(Continued on page 5)UNIVERSAL ARMY STORELevis — TurtlenecksWinter Jackets — RaincoatsPea coats — Parkas1459 E. 53rd St.Free Coffee FA 4-5856hew TEXT BOOKSSTUDENT SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS—NOTE BOOKS—STATIONERY—LAUNDRYBRIEF CASES—SPORTING GOODS USEDTYPEWRITERS sold — rented — repairedPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57th STREET2 BIOCKg EAST OP HA1HDKL HAULSTORI HOURS: DAILY 8:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. . . . EVENINGS — Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9:00 PJ«LOel. *. 1M4 • CHICAGO MAROON • J:n ads Culture CalendarFOR RENTRENT: 53rd & Cornell, clean 3 rm,apt. $85. Call Mr. Jones, CE 6-5144.UNFURN. charming 1 bedrm. apt.avail. Much natural wood trim, 1stfloor, decorating, 10 min. to UC,couples preferred, reas. 388-6757.MALE roommate to share apt. CallGerold Cohen. DE 2-2121, ext. 6641or 684-8420. Old Town.ROOM $50 month or exchange forbabysitting. 268-9132. TYPING and Editing: Pick up andDeliver. Telephone 453-1847.HELP WANTEDFREE TENANT REFERRAL SERVICEWell-maintained bldgs. Reas, rentals.Eff. $70; lbdrm. $90; 2 bdrms. $125;3 and 4 bdrms. 7 min. to UC. exc-schools. South Shore Commission, NO7-7620.IN SEARCH OF third male to roomwith Tom Garrett and Dick Ganz.Large apartment at 54th and Wood-lawn. 3rd bedroom is newly painted—unfurnished $33.33/month.FOR SALEREM. typewriter and Stand. Exc. cond.Green plastic reclining chair. Best of¬fer^ DO 3-0447.MIMEO, electric AB Dick. Model 92Exc. Cond. $90. GR 6-5500.>! CHEVY? Clean, runs good. $IOO.See Mr. Newcomb at 5110 S. Kenwood,Apt. 805. after 5 p.m.'FLinriON CLEARANCE: Luxurygoeth before tuition. My I960 Peugoeta vivacious and enduring companion^must be sold to the highest bidder.My poverty is real and immediate:consequently the price is extraordi¬narily low and in danger of slippingL'<,'V)e-r„,,Y ease phone during evenings:493-5899. SUBJECTS wanted for perceptual ex¬periments: needed for half-hour tohour periods at rate of $5 per hour.Phone 2737 MWF, 9 am-noon.FOR SALECircumstances conspire to immediatesale of excellent LP collection. 112LP's musical theatre, mostly orig.casts, 36% stereo. $175; 164 LP's pop/jazz vocal, jazz, soundtracks and clas¬sical, 23% Stereo $200. Used onWUCB's American Song; high qualityand condition. Both lots $350. Also,almost new Zenith stereo with weight¬less tonearm, retail $150: $75. Call288-5354.HELP WANTEDHELP WANTED: Pleasant workingconditions with the Hyde Park Herald;good hourly wage plus comm. 4-6hrs. Thurs. and Fri.; Mon. 10 am to5 pm. Call Mrs. Stauffer, MI 3-8533,all day Fri. or Mon. POSTER POSTER. $1.50 per hour CallHillel PL 2-1127.SAVE THE DATE! Nov. 20 for SNCCMississippi Benefit performance. Lang¬ston Hughes, Gwendolyn Brooks, etc.If you are willing to help, PLEASEcall Heather Tobis, 1409 New Dorms.SUBLEASE Furn. Going abroad fora year. Beautifully furn. comp],equipped 1-bdrm. apt. in hi-rise bldg,near lake. All transp. Campus bus.Avail. Nov. Adults. 493-5118 eves, orweekends.FURN. 3 bdrm. corner house in SouthShore: 2 end. porches, yard, garage,lge. bsmt., quiet integrated residen¬tial area. Best schls., 10 min. drive toUC. Gas heat, one-day per mo. clean¬ing lady included. Lease to family orresp. single persons. $300 mo. Considerunfurn. or other offers. Call eves andweekends: 324-8907.RUGBY CLUB practice: Tuesday andThursday. 4 pm on the Midway. Stu¬dents, faculty, etc. welcome.NEED ROOOM in apt. with othergirls. Call MI 3-0800, ext. 3269. ConcertsChicago Symphony Orchestra: JeanMartinon, cond., Schumann, Man I redOverture; Brahms. Sym. no. 3; Schoen¬berg, Variations Op. 31; Bartok, Suitefrom' The Miraculous Mandarin.Orchestra Hall. Oct. 9 at 2 pm. Oct.10 at 8:30. Jean Martinon cond., RayStill oboe; an All-Strauss Concert:Don' Juan; Cone, for Oboe and Orch.;Ein Heldenleben. Orchestra Hall. Oct.15 at 8:30. Tickets to Thurs. and Sat.concerts $2-6.50; student gallery tick¬ets for Fri. concerts $1. HA 7-0362.After 5, HA 7-0499.FilmsBlue Angel: Josef von Sternberg,dir starring Marlene Dietrich. Soc.Sci.’ 122. Oct. 9 at 7:15 and 9:15. 60c;")() series“llenry ' V: with Laurence Olivier.Carnegie Theatre, 1010 Rush. Oct. 9-1 o$1.80. SU 7-8555. .Alexander Nevsky: Sergei Eisen-stein. dir. UC Russian Film Festival.Mandel Hall. Oct. 10 at 7:30 and9:30. $1; students 75c. Series admis¬sion $5; students $3.75.Breakfast at Tiffany’s: with AudreyHepburn. BJ Cinema. BJ Dining Hall.Oct. 11 at 7 and 9. 50c.Dog Star Man. Pt. 2: Stan Brakhage.dir. Hyde Park Art Center. 5236Blackstone. Oct. 11. $1.50; students$1.25. 667-2066.“Julius Caesar”: David Bradley, dir ,SECRETARIAL position available:typing, shorthd., and administrativeskills desirable. Call Student Govern¬ment. ext 3274.FOR SALEAUTO. Stereo phono $22. Mono AM-FM tuner with phono $50. Call ES5-9532.JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK POR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190. DO 3-8190 1340 E. 53rd there is only oneforeign car hospital & clinic, inc.authorized sales and serviceaostin, mg, morris, austin hcaley, triumph Si jaguarand ve fix all other european cars, too5424 South Kimbark Midway 3-3113HEKNOWSII JhsL VYlcuLtBiwolcfo.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERShas served the Campus with Unexcelled Qualityand Service Since 1917 from:1013-17 East 61st Street Phones. Ml 3-7447Across from Burton-Judson Ct. HY 3-6868 CHECK OUR PRICES!AM-FNI Radios from *249sColumbia Record Players $<2Q95with Changers from 0*7Diamond Needles from $395Ask for FREE lap fray withpurchase of radio or phonographService on All We SellHAVILL'S1368 E. 53rd St. PL 2-7800Chicago. III.. 60615Since 1926ATTENTIONSECRETARIESTECHNICIANS TYPISTSBOOKKEEPERSExt. 4442 or 3Ext. 4446 The University of Chicago, the South Side’s largest employer, has interest¬ing full-time positions available in the above areas.We offer good starting salaries and fringe benefits, including three weeks'paid vacation, plus the convenience of working in the neighborhood.For further information call thePersonnel Office956 EAST 58th STREETMidway 3-0800Office PositionsTechnical Positions with Charlton Heston. Art InstituteFullerton Hall. Oct. 15 at 7;30. 75c.CE 6-7080.LecturesToulouse-Lautrec II: Louise Beck.Art Institute Gallery. Oct. 13 at 12:15.Free.What Good Is a Poem?: John Ciardi,poet. North Park College Chapel. Oct.13 at 8. $1.50: students 75c.TheatreA Funny Thing Happened on theWay to the Forum: starring JerryLester. Edward Everett Horton, PaulHartman, Arnold Stang, and ErikRhodes. Shubert Theatre, 22 W. Mon¬roe. Nightly at 8:30, Sun. at 7, Sat.Matinee at 2:30, Mon. dark. $2.50-6.95.CE 6-8240.Threepenny Opera: by RertoldBrecht and Kurt Weill. Hull HouseTheatre, 3212 N. Broadway. Fri. andSat. at 8:30; Sun. at 7:30. Fri. andSun., $1.90 Sat. $2.90. 348-8330You Never Can Tell: by GeorgeBernard Shaw. The Last Stage, 1506E. Hyde Park Blvd. Oct. 9-11. Nightlyat 8:30, Sun. at 7:30. $2.25; students$1.50 (Fri. and Sun.) OA 4-4200.The Balcony: Jean Genet. Old TownGarden Players. Sedgewick at Ever¬green. Weekends ;hrough Oct. 25. Fri.and Sat. at 8:30; Sun. at 7:30. $1 50.WE 5-3650.PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PK. BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICEKE 6-6606 — KE 6-3891CHICKEN - SANDWICHESPIZZA &ITALIAN FOODSAuditions for the position oiConcertmaster oi the Univer¬sity Symphony Orchestra willbe held on October 14 at theDepartment of Music. Violin¬ists who wish to auditionshould register with the sec¬retary of the Department be¬fore October 14. If need isdemonstrated the Concert-master will be eligible forcompensation. For an audi¬tion, call extension 3885.EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LFNSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist53-Kimbark Plaza1200 Eost 53rd StreetHYde Park 3 8372Student ond FacultyDiscountUNION BOARDPRESENTSBALLET 64Oct. 16ESTERHAZYORCHESTRANov. 13PETER NERODec. 4JUDY COLLINSMar. 13IVAN DAVISApr. 3AL HIRTMay 8HERMANN UNIONAUDITORIUM32nd & DearbornILLINOIS INSTITUTE OFTECHNOLOGYSeries tickets are $10.00. availableby mail and at the box office.All seats reserved.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Ocf. 9, 1964College general education as it stands needs work(Continued from page 3) *tt'^^l*^®nknowIedge *rea,ed to be :i'k™ bv the student within a not entirely correct to speak of the not to suggest that this has not beenBecause the students w* be Hut “ « m!m‘ l*« »f time which permits only last two years in this fashion. To do the case but to suggest, as the com¬et,incut and the protectors and in- =PProached as eight courses. These courses ate a so is to neglect such important de- petition for fnculy increases, and per.terpretors of our values and socety, .e«tral or linetal educate. cturent version of a pioneering effort velopments as General Studies m haps as multidisciptay back-coUegets cannot be indifferent to the Because of the special problems to restate ideas in the humanities, the Humanities, Tutorial Studies, grounds become less frequent thatstudent’s recognition of value srtruc- loosed by undergraduate education, social sciences and natural sciences, Special Honors, General Studies in some special inventive measurestures, his appreciation of the works College has sometimes been to interpret institutions and thought the Social Sciences, Advanced Under- may be required. Until these haveoi the mind, his grasp of the richness thought to test the desire of the within a culture, to provide training graduate Research in the Biological been tried, it is not clear whetherof life, his discerning intelligence, University to be something more than in the arts of reading, writing, speak- Sciences, and a somewhat similar thepresentformofthegeneraledu-his compassion, indeed his character, of Sts C ** mathematics> and to give pregram in the Physical Sciences, cation courses can be maintained.Tins com ined emphasis on citizen- liberal education, the interrelation- a certaul amount of instruction in a It neglects also to some extent the Surely the attempt is worthwhile,ship, on the cultural[ values and on ships of knowledge, and the nature foreign la»iguage. Placement exami- expanded influence and jurisdiction relationshir> of Collese andthe growth of the individual student of specialized work exist at many nations taken by all students make of the College and the collaboration , ,has directed the content of general levels within a university. A college it possible for the requirement of ten “"“OB the College, the departments, opartmental appointments has com-tn ,-*r Pvammat,nn which provides a forum for the dis- , , , , . . . , i and the divisions* plicated die situation. The original, • 1 , , , 1 uie uis courses to be reduced to eight be-cuss ion ot evolving theories which . , . , „ , , Tlfir r,,MI rr. memorandum from President Hutch-pn,vmm« tv, .... ♦ cause the students have placed llifc BASIC GENERAL EDCCA- „ ..ZS out,” have come wilhiu a reaible TION courses are staff-taught and M to “'t Unaversrly Senate on U*themes adds greatly to^ Ufe ^f dk?tance of so- or have had have been worked out by them. They reorganized College provided thatthe University and to the reality of rectuirerne,n,ts mitigated. The stu- are not, as has sometimes been sug- “each member of the CoLlege facultythe eommnnitv MiwnnF a deJit who has not “placed out” of gested, unchangeable. They are sub- would be a member of some othermore thin two courses thus has in ject to change and have changed,effect two years of general education Po*r example, three variants arework. While these general edu- offered for a portion of the Biologycation courses need not all be taken Sequence. An experiment is nowin die first two years, the program taking place to relate the Englishreflects a kind of division of the Composition course with the student’sfour years into a general education experience in the general Humanitiesperiod followed by specialized depart- course. The Social Science generalmental courses. I realize that it is courses have been substantiallyeducation to an examination of thegreat works and themes of our [>astatxi to instruction in the arts neces¬sary for comprehending the struc¬tures of human reasoning.FOR MANY REASONS, and inpart because of the nature of thethemes involved, there has been atendency to equate general educationand training for citizenship and indi¬vidual growth with work in tliohumanities alone. The curriculum ofour College protests such a conclu¬sion. But the growth in knowledge, the community. Moreover, it isthrough the College that the Uni ver¬sify may well exercise its greatestinfluence upon future teachers andscholars and their students in col¬leges and universities throughout ourcountry.At the present time the Collegein graduate study, and in the pre- approaches the problem of generalrequisites for graduate study has education with ten basic courseskept alive a question as to the basic (and some alternative modifications)SAVEANY 2for 99c. TIMEandMONEYCleaned and PressedPants, Skirts, Sweaters.LAUNDERETTE & CLEANERSONE-STOP SERVICECoin-op Dry Cleaning & LaunderetteProfessional Dry Cleaning — 1 Hr. ServicePressing AvailableOPEN DAILY7 am-10 pm 1218 E. 53rd493-3320B’NAI iriSSTIBllillel FoilNHfcil ionCLASSES and SEMINARSAutumn Quarter 1964BIBLICAL THOUGHT Wednesdays 4:30 p.m.RABBINIC and MEDIEVAL THOUGHT Wednesdays 4:30 p.m.* FUNDAMENTALS OF JEWISHBELIEF and PRACTICE Mondays 7:00 p.m.• FAITH AND REASONModren Jewish Philosphy Wednesdays 7:00 p.m."\ AND THOU"Close reading of Buber Tuesdays 4:30 p.m.• INTRODUCTORY HEBREW Mondays andThursdays 4:30 p.m.INTRODUCTORY YIDDISH Tuesdays andThursdays 4:30 p.m.THE BIBLICAL STORY OF DAVIDIntermediate Hebrew Mondays 4:30 p.m.* MODERN HEBREW LITERATUREIntermediate Hebrew Wednesdays 7:00 p.m.BEGINNING WEEK OF OCTOBER 12thA All classes meet at Hillel House5715 Woodlawn AvenuePlena 2-1127Call Hillel for full description of study groups. rorgamized, anda whole series of nen-western civilization courses has beenintroduced. To a considerable extentthe courses are interdisciplinary andthey rely heavily on discussion,radio series formerly named Where appropriate, they are builtaround original writings, frequentlyin translation, rather than on textWUCB sets programs“Archives of the Air,”autumn quarter programming.Charles Packer, manager of thecampus radio station, stated thatthe programs, broadcast everyWednesday at 7:30 pm, are drama¬tizations ot “the work of universi¬ties.”According to Packer, “their some¬what pompous style seems out ofplace today, and is sometimes quiteamusing.” The programs cover arange of subjects from the OrientalInstitute to thePepys. division.” There were changes inthat policy. In the last three years,however, there has been a renewedattempt to encourage joint appoint¬ments. In 1963 there were 107 ap¬pointments in the College only, and72 on joint appointment; in 1964, 77appointments in the College only, and102 on joint appointment. Because ofthe scope and orientation of theCollege, which is more akin to thedivisions than to the departments, itis understandable that in some cir¬cumstances a particular departmen-, . . , ... . ,, tal appointment might not be most“The Human Adventure,” aroarid ar;finaJ wrdm&t* toweatly appropriate For such cases> divi_and broadcast by the Mu- Lks^T' X £tual System and CBS in the 30 s come to be regarded as the Chicagoand 40’s, will highlight WUCB’s tradition.In the course of examining thepresent College program, I haveheard discussions on it by most ofthe members of the College faculty;and I have talked with many of theCollege students. In general thestudents are proud of the generaleducation courses. They regard themas Chicago’s unique contribution toliberal education. Praise of the gen¬eral education courses is mixed, asone would expect, with specific criti¬cisms, on which there is less agree-diary of Samuel mcn(; on die conduct of specificcourses or sections. The point wasWUCB’s autumn quarter pro- frequently made that discussiongramming also features a discus- groups of approximately twenty-fivesion show or dramatic production students are no longer regarded byevery Sunday night at 8:30 pm on students as small group discussions;Sunday, October 11, a forum in- there is a desire for more individualeluding John Cawelti, chairman of and tutorial work. There is pride inthe department of humanities and the fact that most instruction is inH. Stanley Bennett, chairman of the the hands of full-time members ofdepartment of biological sciences, the faculty and has not usually beenwill discuss the problem of the “Two given to graduate students. On theCultures,” the conflict between art other hand in those limited areasand science. where graduate students have beenruk*.* used, the students have sometimes, commented favorably. To some ex-OTHER S( HEDLLED presents- tent, 1 assume the reactions of thetions include a harpsichord per- students were based upon what theyformance by Frederick Hammond. have b^ told and their desire toan interview with composer and identify Chicago’s uniqueness. Tlierenew faculty member Ralph Shapev, ^ a certain antipathy to the idea ofand a poetry reading accompanied lecture courses as not beingby classical music. Chicago’s way, and because beingClassical music will occupy a talked at is not as good as discussion . , , , ,, , ., .substantial portion of WUCB’s air or reading for one’s self. There ^owkdge^ whether m or outade thetime. Tuesdays have been desig- seems to be general agreement thatnated as “The Music Director’s the requirement of' some work inNight.” In addition, a portion of common for all students in the hu-programming time on Sundays, manities, social sciences, and natural u,yu^1,L .L , ,n , , , j t wi wav, relationships among various disci-Mondays, Wednesdays, and Thurs- sciences is highly desirable. With *days, will be devoted to “light en- notable exceptions there was lesssatisfaction expressed with the morespecialized work of the last twoyears; there was less enthusiasmand pride in their accomplishmentsin this area of work than might havebeen expected. appointments need be joint.THE LAST TWO YEARS of theundergraduate program suffer fromthe lack of effective responsibilityfor the curriculum and its implemen¬tation. Departments vary greatly intheir assumption of responsibility forundergraduate instruction. The move¬ment in the last few years has beentoward greater responsibility. TheCollege, however, largely becauseof its structure and the size andheterogeneity of its faculty, has notbeen in a position to program asefectively as would be desired forthe entire undergraduate curriculum,and no other faculty has been in aposition to do so. Yet a view of thatcurriculum as a whole is desirableif specialized courses at the under¬graduate level are to perform besttheir function of liberal education.The problem seems to be mainly oneof organizational structure ratherthan a reflection of fundamental dif¬ference in educational philosophy.There are some fears that special¬ized courses will be only prerequisitesfor graduate work or that on thecontrary they will be developed soas to completely fail in that function.There is general recognition that themore specialized courses, just asmuch as the general educationalsequences, should be directed towardthe undergraduate’s intellectual de¬velopment and that in connection■with the masterv of a given field ofstudent's ultimate area of specializa¬tion, the student can be led to abetter understanding of the ways ofthought and of tlie limits and int en¬tertainment.”FRANKLIN FOOD STOREORIENTAL FOODSFAPANESE OUR SPECIALTYCHINAWARE GIFT ITEMS1309 E. 53rd STREETHY 3-5057 THE APPROPRIATE STAFFINGof the general education courses pre- plines. Under present circumstancesthe separation, to the extent it exists,of the College into two divisions hashad a tendency to limit faculty in¬volvement in exi>erimcnts which,without diminishing the College'scentral concern for the organizationof subject matter, would reflect thestrengths and interests of the facultyand of the students. It has tendedComplete LinoOf Pet AndAquarium Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012Your Headquarters ForHousewares,Paint andHardwareCourteous and Prompt ServiceAlways By Capable Personnel.LAKE PARK Hardware1453 East 53rd HY 3-1849 sents very real difficulties for the also to remove from faculty discus-Collcge and for the University. Die sion those issues previously deter-demands made by many of these mined but which must be thoughtcourses ujion the instructors are through again as part of any on-goingheavy. To some extent they are educational program. This separationinterdisciplinary and require a multi- has arisen because of the Undver-disoiplinary background. It ha- been sity’s extraordinary* efforts to solveimportant to the CoLlege to have the the problems of the appropriate rela-same instructor lead the students in tionships between general and spe-his section through all phases «of the cialized education and the relevancecourse sequence. There are obvious of each to liberal education. But theadvantages to this, but it increases continuation of this separation nowthe burden. The w*ork of the general impedes discussion. The University’seducation courses poses difficulties, work in liberal education would bealthough there are some countervail- strengthened if the undergraduateing advantages far the teacher w-lio curriculum could be regarded as anaturally wishes to contribute as a whole.scholar to the knowledge and under¬standing of a particular area. Theseare not new problems, but they arenot less serious on that account. Itis a matter of concern to the Collegeand to the University that the qualityof the University’s faculty, which isits pride, be maintained throughappointments to the College. This is WHATEVER THE ADVANTAGES,the splitting of faculty info thoseteaching the general educationcourses, those who instruct in thelast two years of the undergraduateprogram, and those who lead re¬search at the graduate level has(Continued on page 12)Oct. 9, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5V. A. hospitalto be erectedTv,to new steps in the urban renewal program forWoodlawn were taken yesterday.In his morning press conference, Mayor Richard J.Daley announced that a new Veteran’s Administrationhospital will be recommended aspart of the project area of 60thst. and Cottage Grove ave.THE CITY department of urbanrenewal staff report to the Federalurban renewal board, which willrecommend the designation of thearea as a blighted area, will in¬clude a recommendation to acquireland for construction of the hospital,bo be built by the Federal govern¬ment.Board actsThe urban renewal board yester¬day took action on the request toreserve $11 million, 600 thousandof Federal funds for the clearancephase of the project.The city department of urban re¬newal will complete plans for theproject area providing for the hos¬pital, development of the Univer¬sity’s South Campus, and land forsale for construction of moderately priced housing under section 221-d-3of the national housing act.THE WOODLAWN Organizationand Hie urban renewal project ofthe Kate Maremont Foundationhave announced joint plans to bidfor the land and build a housingdevelopment which would providefor many of the residents to be dis¬placed when the University beginsclearance in South Campus, whichstretches from Cottage Grove ave.to Stony Island ave. between 60thand 61st streets.Costs $24 millionThe VA hospital, which wouldcost an estimated $24 million, wouldbe located between 60th and 61stfrom Cottage Grove to Drexel ave.It would have 750 beds and miscel¬laneous medical facilities in a 14story building.Daley pointed out that the hos¬pital would employ between 1000and 1200 persons.STUDENTS WELCOMEATTHE BOOK NOOK1540 E. 55th ST.10% DISCOUNTON MOST BOOKSORDERS PROMPTLY FILLEDOPENING IN OCTOBERJEWELRY SECTION & WATCH REPAIRINGGOLD. PEARLS. JADEWEDDING RINGS — PIERCED EARRINGSWE'LL BE HAPPY TO SEE YOU ATTHE BOOK NOOK1540 E. 55th ST.Ml 3-7511HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1iw.9 YOLT TRANSISTOR BATTERIES I9c10% discount to students with ID cardsSafes and Serviceon all hi-fi equip¬ment, foreign anddomestic.TAPE RECORDERSPhonographs - AmplifiersPhono Needles and CartridgesTubes - Batteries24 hr. Service' CallsTV—HI-FI $000RADIO O— Telefunken & Zenith —AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORYest. 19291300 E. 53rd Mi 3-9111In the 53rd-Kimbark Plaia Four eye Woodlawn problems“Woodlawn is not a jungle.It is a place where peoplelive, work, and love,” accord¬ing to Alan D. Wade, profes¬sor in ♦he School of Social SeiviceAdministration.Wade’s remarks were made dur¬ing a symposium on the Woodlawnoommnity with Sol Tax, dean ofthe University Extension division,Mrs. Almita Robinson, director ofthe Woodlawn Community ServicesAgency and Bruce Rappaport for¬mer head of UC CORE, last Satur¬day night. The participants allagreed that the outlook elaboratedby Wade is absolutely necessary foreffective cooperation with the Wood¬lawn community.Wade said the people in Woodlawnmust be treated as human beings.They should not be treated as sub¬humans or children. They shouldnot be told what is good or bad forthem or what they must do. Theymust have self-determination.Wade also discussed the failure ofa playground project in Woodlawninstituted by UC students. Heascribed the failure of the projectto the patronizing attitude of the stu¬dents. The students never consultedthe Woodlawn residents about theproject, and consequently did notreceive any cooperation in Wood¬lawn, Wade said.Rappaport, following up Wade'sremarks, analyzed other UC studentprograms in Woodlawn. He declaredthat SWAP (Student Woodlawn AreaProject) succeeded primarily be¬cause tutees from Woodlawn ran theorganization. The recent voter regis¬tration campaigns, he added, suc¬ceeded only because they were con¬ ducted through local organizations inWoodlawn.Tax contributed background ma¬terial on the problem of residentialsegregation in Chicago. He statedthat "the ghetto is not an accidentin history. It is the deliberate choiceof real estate interests in the city.’’He also explained the unusual situ¬ation of Hyde Park-Kenwood wherediscrimination is practiced by classand not color. He remarked that inHyde Park-Kenwood it Ls often saidthat “Negroes and whites areshoulder to shoulder against thepoor.”Mrs. Robinson commented on thecontroversy about tactics of TheAlan D. Wade (I.) andMrs. Almita RobinsonWoodlawn Organization. She statedthat TWO “did a remarkable jobof arrousing discontent of the statusquo. It gave the community a senseof self-determination. The wholetrend now is to unified effort andunifield decisions.’’She cited the outstanding successof the Woodlawn Mental Health Cen¬ter, a product of cooperative efforts of many social service agencies inWoodlawn. “The Woodlawn com¬munity,” she said, “is rebuilding itspride and community spirit.”Name Huntington VeepDavid M. G. Huntington, has beenappointed Executive Assistant to thevice-president for planning and de¬velopment at UC.O’Brien said Huntington would car¬ry out general assignments in Uni¬versity development programs.Huntington, 37, has served as Di¬rector of Placement in the GraduateSchool of Business of the Universitysince May 1, 1959. In 1960, he wasgiven an additional appointment asAssociate Dean of Students in ’heGraduate School of Business.Two do Peace Corpswork in S. AmericaH. Russell Kay and John MannBeal, two UC students, departed forPeace Corps positions in Brazil andColombia respectively at the end ofSeptember.Kay, a student in the College, willteach farm methods, organize 4-Hclubs, and provide nursing servicesand basic instruction in health, nutri¬tion, and home economics. He wasassigned to Mato Grasso, a westernstate bordering Bolivia and Paraguay.Beal, also a student in the College,will help to build bridges, schools,wells, and roads in Colombia, besidesoffering instruction and information onhealth, r.anitation, and agriculture.Kav Is one of 55 new workers inBrazil; Beal is one of 30 in Colombia.S9 ecvo's MR. PIZZAWE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTSHY 3-8282 -FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARK ^fieDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENAlso Ch. Broiled Hamburgers °fcC'cr/SPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For i PartySausage 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Olive 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vi and Vi 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients .50 .50 1.00 1.00 100Pepperoni Pizza 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacon . . . 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pizza 2.50 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00ISousage. Mushrooms and Peppers)- Box of Broasted Chicken20 Pieces, Golden Brown10 Pieces, Golden BrownBAR B-Q RIBSSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGE.MEAT BALL1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 o.m. — Fri. to 3:00 a m.Sot. to 3:00 a.m. — Open 2 p.m. Sundoys1000 TO 2000 WORDS A MINUTEWITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENTIONYou can read 150-200 pages art hour using the ACCELERATED READING method. You’ll learnto read DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute. And retention isexcellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely read every word.You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual material as well asto literature and fiction. The author’s style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, youraccuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased.Consider what this new reading ability will enable you to accomplish — in your required readingand also in the additional reading you want to do.No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READING method.In this way the reader avoids developing any dependence upon external equipment in reading.A class in ACCELERATED READING will be held near the University of Chicago, at the HOTELDEL PRADO, beginning on October 27. This class will meet on TUESDAY evenings.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READING method andsee it applied.BRING A BOOK!Demonstrations will be held at the HOTEL DEL PRADO, located ot 53rd 5t. and Lake Shore Drive,on:MONDAY. October 12 at 7:30 P.M.WEDNESDAY. October 14 at 7:30 P.M.MONDAY. October 19 ot 7:30 P.M.WEDNESDAY. October 21 at 7:30 P.M.NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING, Inc.507 Fifth Avenue New York 17. NXt • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 9, 1M4« i i• 4i t• <• 4• «• «• «• •• •« •• •■ la theater reviewAlbee plays at Hull House: worth seeingTHE AMERICAN DREAMby Edword Alb.-eDoddy Albert SchwartzMommy Lorry YoungMrs. Borker Tedra KleinThe American Dream Doug ElliotGrandma Beatrice FredmonTHE DEATH OF BESSIE SMITHby Edword AlbeeSouthern Fother Robert KidderThe Nurse — Linda WillnerNeqro Orderly Jim Leejack Thomas BradleyIntern Bob StroupBoth plays directed by Bob SickingerAt the Hull House Sheridon Playhouse717 W. Sheridon Rood.With his very first lines, AlbertSchwartz, as Daddy, whips the audi-VALUE PLUSIf you are interested in verymoderate cost housing in a wellmaintained building, please in¬vestigate 6040-2 S. Ingleside Ave.,only 1 2 block from Midway. Oneand two room furnished units arenewly decorated, congenial ten¬ants, friendly and courteous resi¬dent manager. Please call BU 8-2757 for appointment to inspect,and we arc sure you will be verypleased.Silk Screen SuppliesA Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALS,MIMEOGRAPH PAPERAND SUPPLIES(Wholesale Prices in QuantityOnly IDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd ST.HY 3-4111Today'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN$ 1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL enoe into smiling shape for the restof the play. His Daddy is a DonKnotts too mild and resigned to benervous. In the current New Yorkproduction of Hip American Dream,Daddy is less of a comic-strip Mil¬quetoast; he is so gaunt, not sochildish, not quite so bifocalledand ulcer-ridden. Nevertheless Mr.Schwartz justifies the small loss ofrealism in his portrayal by a largegain in comic value. Yet, since Miss Klein’s build is un¬deniable testimony that she was con¬sciously cast to be an enthusiasticsteam-roller, it seems strange thatRobert Sickinger preferred to havetwo brash, bass-voiced women onstage wlien he could have had oneunique character to play off againstanother. she bled to death because she couldnot obtain service from a white hos¬pital. For the most part, however,THE DEATH OF BESSIE SMITHIs engaged not in narrating, but inbuilding the four characters who willreact in their several ways to thisclimactic incident. Stroup, would do better to abandonhis constant weaving and bobbing,and concentrate on building his stat¬ure as a character.Gingham, apple pie,rugged individualism, andthe honest eye—they are allpart of the AmericanDream. Although Albee has con¬tracted the gingham frock into apurple sheath, made the apple pieinto a dreadful sautemes, pummelledthe rugged individualism into a pliantamorphousness, and eclipsed thehonest eye with the body beautiful,surely no one begrudges him thesefew minor alterations. Rather oneapplauds his efforts to update theAmerican image, or one can ap¬plaud it if he chooses Sickinger’s ex¬cellent production of The AmericanDream. Mommy is wefl played by LorryYoung. Miss Young’s Clairol-red hair,done in a flip at her nearest subur¬ban hairdresser, is the perfect top¬ping for a middle-aged dish likeMommy. It is not a lack of consis¬tency but rather in a lack of varietythat her performance is flawed. MissYoung should not allow some of herpunch lines to be drowned in an in-indistinguishable flood of chatter. The girls may find themselvesabashed at agreeing with Grandmathat Doug Elliott is the AmericanDream. He is certainly an aesthe¬tically gratifying experience. So ishis performance.As Mrs. Barker, Tedra Klein isonly adequate. I have seen a Mrs.Barker who did wonders with herpan by adopting an ingenue posture,a Katherine Hepburn dialect, and ahypocritical smile-bet ween-clenched-teeth, Miss Klein abandons suchsubtle weapons for a giant stride, araucous hello, and a slapstick scowl. Best of all though, is Grandma atHull House, Beatrice Fredman. Sheserves every punch line with justenough salt, yet does not neglect tospice her character with a child¬like quality so that she may fit intoher family role as Doddering OldGrandma and make some of thedialogue mere credible. With herhelp, this production turns out to bethe best of the three versions of TheAmerican Dream I have seen. Robert Kidded does a good jobas the Southern Father who wouldlike to believe that the family stillowns a thousand acres. His daughter,Tile Nurse, played by Linda Willner,imagines herself thoroughly practicaland acquainted with “the realities,”but, closer in temperament to herfather than she would want to think,she cannot stand to have her au¬thority challenged. The value of this production, then,is not in its cast. Neither, for thatmatter, is in its direction. As I havesaid, the death of Bessie Smith is thefocal incident in the play, die eventwhich unites the subplots and whichdraws the appropriate philosophicalami social reactions from the “UncleTom,'’ the Southern white, the ordi¬nary Negro, and the idealist whohas unsuccessfully fought his war.While there is too much varietyin the quality of Miss Willner's per¬formance, tJiere is not; eonugh in thesubstance; she does not vary hermoods enough nor make an attemptat altering her almost incessantlysarcastic tone.Sharing the bill with THE AMER¬ICAN DREAM is another Albee play.This one was inspired by the cir¬cumstances under which a famousNegro Blues singer, Bessie Smith,died; the victim of a car accident, Jim Lee as the “Uncle Tom”orderly is fair, and Thomas Bradleyas Jack communicates the image ofan earthy Negro well in his firstscene, but is, like Miss Willner, un¬able to hantUe his more emotionalscenes. Air. Sickinger is, therefore, muchto be blamed for stripping this cen¬tral incident of its dramatic value,first by cutting three of the sixscenes involved in its narration, andthen by ruining one of the remainingthree by visibly retaining extraneousactors on stage. Mrs. Sickinger alsodoes not avail himself of the musicand lighting effects which Albee sug¬gests in the script. The productionis considerably less effectively thanit could have been. Nevertheless, theplay is so intense, and so ripe withmeaning, that even a fair productionsuch as this one is worth seeing.Finally, the idealistic intern, Bob Judy SchavrienWHAT IS THE PLACE OF RELIGION IN 00R LIVES?J—1^“When our relationships to the universe, to non-human life, to other people, ondl to ourselves,are being progressively ordered in accordance with our highest values—we ore being religious."Jack A. Kent, ministerFirst Unitarian Churcha series of five sermons on Sunday mornings at elev/eFirst Unitarian Church57th and WaadlawnWHAT IS THE PLACE OF GOD?“For my own part, the sense of spiritual relief which comes fromrejecting the idea of God as a supernatural being is enormous,I see no other way of bridging the gap between the religiousand the scientific approach to reality.”Julian HuxleySuccessive sermons in the series:What is the Place of Love?October 18What is the Place of Faith?October 25What is the Place of Prayer?November 1What is the Place of Forgiveness?November 6Oct, 9, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7 \ 5,Students should be politically active: summit speakersStudents have the opportunity and duty to he activein political and social campaigns.That was the consensus of the four speakers at lastweek’s “Minor Summit meeting” in the Law SchoolAuditorium, sponsored by the Orien-tatuon Board.THE LEAD SPEAKER was Dr.Howard T. Schomer, president of theChicago Theological Seminary, fol¬lowed by Robert F. Levey, editor-in-chief of the Chicago Maroon. EugeneGroves, president of Student Govern¬ment (SG). and Adlai E. StevensonIII. Democratic candidate for Illinoishouse of representatives.Schomer commented that thetheme of the night’s speeches, thepublic life of college students, indi¬cated the tone o? UC life. On mostoilier campuses, he said, students areinterested only in privacy.There may be three views of theI function of a college, Schomer said.1 One would be a “training ground fortiie establishment'’ of industry andgovernment. Students with this pointof view “accept the social landscapewithout much criticism.” but areinterested only In getting a well-paidjob.ANOTHER POSSIBLE VIEWwould be the university as a “thinkfactory.” The students with this out¬look are different from those withtlie first only because they have al¬ready made it. Some foundation orinstitution has given them a generousgrant, and they are comfortably en¬trenched in a place with pleasanthours and long vacations, and do notcare much about the “outside world,”Schomer commented.Schomer said UC represents auniversity at which many studentshave the outlook that university stu¬dents and faculty can act for “socialSouthern chaplain hereEd King, Methodist chap¬lain and dean of students atTougaloo Southern ChristianCollege in Jackson. Mississip¬pi. will speak at Brent House. 5540Woodknvn, Sunday evening at 7:30P*n on the subject: “Inside theClosed Society.”Chaplain King is a leader in theFreedom Democratic Party of Mis¬sissippi which challenged the Missis¬sippi delegation’s right to representMississippi at the Democratic Con¬vention last summer. Last November,be ran for lieutenant governor onAaron Henry’s ticket in ifti under¬ground “freedom vote” which drew100,000 ballots from Misstiscippi’sdisenfranchised Negroes.His home on the Tougaloo Collegecampus is headquarters for most ofthe civil rights activity in andai Hind Jackson. Here students plantheir strategy which includes visitingsegregated churches, a massive boy¬cott of the downtown businesses, anda cultural boycott which has suc¬ceeded in persuading most visitingartists not to perform before segre¬gated audiences.He has been jailed three times inMississippi and tliree times in Ala¬bama. He was nearly beaten todeath by white prisoners in a Birm¬ingham jail, and is reportedly undercons ant harassment whenever heleaves the college campus.NATIONALGUARDIANa newsweekly that reportsand analyzes the issuesof concern to students:• DANGER ON Tf IERIGHT• THE ELECTIONS . . .AND THEN?• US ABROAD: GIANTIN TROUBLE• AT HOME: RIGHTSAND RIOTS• DISSENT AND PRO¬TEST—HOW YOUNGAMERICANS THINK.AND ACTsubscribe today toNational Guardian197 E. 4 St., N.Y. 10009SI for 10 week*$3.50 for 1 full year(Soecial student rate)enclose name, addresswith remittance and cultural renewal.” The UC “ethoskeeps us aware of what time it is,”he commented.THREE DANGERS he cited thatstudents and professors must helpfight were 1) interference with civilliberties and freedom of thought; 2)refusal of anyone bo give full respectfor tiie full human rights of everyoneregardless of race or religion, and 3)the proliferation of weapons of massdestruction.“All other dangers of mankind,whether polluted water or Goldwater,can be confronted only if we cantliink and speak freely and only ifwe can live in an atmosphere treeof nuclear pollution or catastrophe,”Schomer said.Levey on Campus actionLevey, noting that the current Pres¬idential campaign has not been pri¬marily concerned thus far with clear-cut proposals, stated that there weretwo sides to politics of any kind: apublic relations side and an actionside. UC students, he said, are al¬most always involved in the latter.Yet action, Levey went on, mustbe accompanied with realism and aspirit of compromise, since studentscannot expect the UC administrationto disregard financial and internalsocial stability.THE ADMINISTRATION, Levey asserted, falls somewhere in between“bureaucratic wizards and dodderingincompetents.” Mistakes are admit¬tedly made, he said, but there aresuccesses to offset them.Levey also asked students to parti¬cipate in whatever way they can inthe political community, either theUC community or the “outsideworld.” Students owe this participa¬tion to themselves, Levey believes,since almost all political decisionsaffect them or their rights in someway.The Academic Affairs and CampusAction committees of SG and theLetters to tiie Editor' and Gadflypages of tiie Maroon, Levey said,were the best outlets fox studentpolitical energy with respect to cam¬pus politics.Groves warns scholarsGene Groves of Student Govern¬ment pointed out that even whenstudents or teachers attempt to re¬strict themselves to their studies,they must often deal with their socie¬ty when it encroaches upon theirstudies.For example, he mentioned, theFederal government through its edu¬cational grants can affect what re¬searchers will be attracted to study.In addition, investigations such asthat conducted by Illinois state repre¬sentative Broyles in the early fiftiesinto alleged Communist activity atUC bring the “independent” scholaragainst governmental agencies.STUDENTS ARE IN the best posi¬tion to take active roles in tiie strug-DR. AARON ZIMBLER. OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONS DO 3-6866PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESNTHE ALL NEW MGBA special breed of carrj..for a special breed of man!Here’s the car for the man who wants'the very newest—in style, in power, inengineering / 1798-cc ohv 4-cylindermill / hydraulic disc brakes at front,drums at rear / instant-response rack-and-pinion steering / packaway orattached hood / all-steel mono-con¬struction / English leather upholstery/ four-speed gearbox, with synchro¬mesh on 2nd, 3rd, and top / 17 to 107mph in top gear / wind down windows,lockable doors and trunk / luxuriouslyroomy cockpit. Come in and kick thetires, raise the hood, check the panel,then test drive this new MGB. A realcompetition car—competitively priced!AustinHealeyM.G.Sprite Import Centre Full line on display • new Si used• foreign flC domestic6040 S. Cottage GroveMidway 3-4501 gles for equal human rights, Grovessaid, because youth do not yet havethe ingrained habits and prejudices ofthe world of their parents. They arefree of immediately pressing burdensof job and family, and they can oper¬ate within the university in its func¬tion as an “independent critic ofsociety," Groves said.Stevenson urges involvementIn his remarks as the f*nal speaker,Adlai Stevenson III, son of the U.S.representative to the UN, outlinedtiie problems confronting us, such asunemployment, and commented that“your education is our best liope" ofcoping with them.So far, he w'amed, we have failedto put our great know ledge, such asthe discoveries of scientists, to workfor the benefit of society as much asnecessary. “The best way to rightthe imbalance in our society,” Ste¬venson said, “is to bring balancedmen to positions of leadership.”PERSONS WHO ARE uninvolvedor unconcerned with society’s prob¬lems “fail as human beings,” Steven¬son said.In the question period after theprogram, Stevenson dealt with anumber of questions about the prob¬ lems of reapportionment of the Illi¬nois house of representatives. Be¬cause of the failure to agree on aplan last year, all 177 seats arebeing contested “at large” in tillselection.In answer to a question, Stevensonadmitted that there is a “real dan¬ger” that all 118 Republican candi¬dates may win, leaving the Demo¬crats as a one-third minority, andpreventing any realistic reapportioo-ment in the 10101*6.Stevenson also seemed to think thatDemocratic incumbent Gov. Otto Ker-ner might not be around to veto aGOP-written reapportionment bill.Gilbert White To SpeakOn College ExpectationsGilbert F. White, professor of ge¬ography and a member of the com¬mittee appointed last year to helpselect a new dean of die College,wall speak Monday night at ShoreyCoffee Plus.His topic will be, “What Not toExpect from College.” The talk willbe at 9 pm in the Shorey houselounge, ninth floor of Pierce Tower.1)1FA T1 ... L’homme qul a un programme blen6tabli d’assurance Sun Life est dansune situation enviable. II n’y a per-sonne de mieux pr6par6 A envisagerI’avenir que I’homme qui a pourvu ases ann6es de retraite et A la s6curit6de sa famille, au moyen de I’assurance-vie.En tant que representant local de la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter A un moment devotre choix?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building. Chicago 15, 111.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYLife’s a picnic when you’re refreshed.Coca-Cola, with its cold crisp taste,is always just right,never too sweet... refreshes best.things gObetter,!.-withCokeBottled under the authority of Hie Coca-Cola Company by< The Coca-ColaBettlinq Co. *fChicago, lac.8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 9, 1964Fromm: man needs humanism UC'ers proselytize for LBJI■« I Mankind needs a renais¬sance of humanism, since so¬cialism without humanismresults in an impoverishedmankind, according to Erich Fromm.Fromm, chairman of the Depart¬ment of Psychoanalysis at the Uni¬versity of Mexico, spoke Mondayevening at Mandel Hall. His topicw;ilS “What Is Humanist Socialism?”Fromm stated that the aim ofsocialism should not be to produceletter and more effectively thancapitalist countries, but to producethe optimal amount geared to servea meaningful, creative life. Frommquoted Marx in this regard, whoWwd that “the production of toomany useless tilings results in toomany useless people.”THREE VIEWS of humanism weredistinguished, by Fromm. The firstconsiders humanism to be the move¬ment for the revival of classicalPeace group meets SunThere wild be an organizationalmeeting for ail members of the Uni-versity community interested infunning a campus group devoted topresenting peaceful alternatives tonational ;uxi world social and politicalI cobiems in Ida Noyes Hall, Sunday,October 11, at 4 pm.A campus group of this sort, ac¬cording to its leaders, could possiblyassociate with the Fellowship ofReconciliation, a national organiza¬tion which has been committedsocially and religiously to pacifismand non-violence since 1914. It is alsoj. ssible that members of the Univer¬sity community would prefer toturn an autonomous organization,litis issue will be discussed at Sun¬day's meeting.Hyde ParkAuto ServiceLOTUS TR-4MG CORVETTEBUICK PEUGEOTALFA ROMEOFIAT MORGANFERRARI VWJim Hartman5340 Lake ParkPL 2-0496a newworld ofdiningcharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668"JOHN WILLIAMS h myworthy successor!"Proclaims Andres SegoviaGUITARRA Magaxine andS. Hurok presentJohn WilliamsConcertGuitaristSaturday nightNovember 7,8:30 P.M.McCormickPlaceLittle TheatreReserved Seats $4.50-4.00-3.50Tickets can now be purchased by mail,or in person (make cheeks payableto) at , , .SHERRY-BRENERSpanish Imports. 2nd FloorSpanish Imports, 2nd Floor3145 W. 63rd St.. Chicago—737 1711Hrs. daily lO A.M. to 10 P.M.,Sat. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.P.S. Listen to "GUITARRAPORTRAITS" a weekly FM radioproqram featuring classical andflamenco quitar music . . . EverySunday eveninq at 9:30 P.M.WXFM 105.9 Chicago. learning, language, and literature inthe 15th and 16th centuries. Thisapproach was rejected as being toonarrow. The second view was termedthe “ethical-culture concept.” It ex¬presses the need of human beingsfior certain values, but without relat¬ing them to any god or religion. Thisapproach was also rejected as beingtoo superficial.The last view of humanism thatFromm explained consists of a gen¬eral philosophy of man involving fourbade ooncepts whose spirit has re¬mained the same for the last 2.000years. These concepts are the unityof man, the dignity of man, the de¬sire of man for peace and tolerance,and the pcrfectabiliity of man, Frommdeclared.The history of humanism has shownthat it has arisen and lias beenreinforced by threats to humanity,BERMANSACE HARDWAREOver 25,000 Housewaresitems in stock at oil limes1377-79 E. 53rd St.Hyde Park Commonwealth EdlsoaBulb Agency as during the Renaissance, the 18thand 19th centuries, and today. Thehumanists of the modern world, suchas Einstein, Rus.sel, Shweitzer, andPope John, were reacting to twospecific threats, Fromm believes.THE FIRST is that of the destruc¬tion of man through nuclear war andthe other is the threat to man'sspiritual existence through the grow¬ing power ot the spirit of capitalism,not only in the capitalist countries,but also in the so-called socialistones, both of which are increasinglyworshipping consumption and massproduction per se, Fromm said.The modem situation has beensummed up by Marx, who wrotethat man could be changed by edu¬cation and political adjustment, thatman could also be changed by aneconomic and social re-organization.CHAMBER MUSIC SERIESOctober 16The English Consort of ViolsDecember 4Stuart Can in, riolinistJonuary 22The Contemporary Chamber EnsembleFebruary 19The Lenox QuartetApril 9Aeolian Chamber PlayersApril 30The Kroll QuartetAll concerts, Mandel Hall 8:30 p.m.Series: S10, 38 (faculty),S3 (UC student)Single: $3, SI (student)Tickets at Deptartment of Music,5802 Woodlawnu UC students will be work¬ing for the next four weeksin the South Shore area of thecity to counter the effects ofthe “white backlash” among diver¬gent ethnic and racial group there.Between now and Election Day,they will be talking to the votersabout the candidates and issueswith the object of clarifying manymisconceptions and convincing regis¬tered Republican voters to vote forDemocrat Lyndon Johnson. Thestudents will be working throughthe Independent Voters of Illinois(IVI).UC students working in SouthShore will have the opportunity towork and be responsible for pre¬cincts of their own. They will docanvassing, discussing the forth¬ coming election with the residentsof their area. They will explainsuch current issues as the new CivilRights law, the immigration ques¬tion, and the policies and actions ofRepublican Presidential candidateBarry Goldwater.The same South Shore precinctswill be the responsibility of UC stu¬dents on Election Day itself. Inboth cases, IVI personnel will in¬struct volunteers in techniques ofcanvassing, organization, pollwatch¬ing, and other activities.IVI will be sponsoring a precinctworkers’ instruction session Sundayat 8 pm in the Johnson-IVI cam¬paign office, 1754 E. 55th st., MU-4-6768. Anyone interested in work¬ing in any capacity is urged to con¬tact the 55th st. office or EllisLevin, extension 3272.SAMUEL A. BELL"Buy Shell From Bell"SINCE 19264701 So. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150 HYDE PARK SHOE REBUILDERSServing Hyde Pork for 40 YeorsProfessional DyeingColors MatchedRefinishing of Shoes ondHandbogs1451 E. 57th HY 3-1247Koga Gift Shop MODEL CAMERADistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 MOST COMPLETE PHOTO SHOPON SOUTH SIDENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259'•of theMidway,that i§ZEE BRfHTBANUlf ON ZEELEFrm&We’re on the left bank ofthe campus. We can’t helpthat. But we make it upto the Hyde Park andUniversity people whobank with us. We’re gladthat so many of themcross the midway to enjoythe personal and helpfulbanking service we provide.We are one of the strongestbanks, dollar for dollar, inthe entire Chicago area andwe d like your business.]?t(n feel’s-to tf)eUniversity Community63wLatWoec(Uwi)ot 62^$ UfuwigAhjDl/wct Vcunfenoon SOUTHEASTnationalBANKOct. 9, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 91ORIENTATIONWEEKPhotos bySteve Wofsy and Bill CaffreyJimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.shore drive motel•&fti' FACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chicago Rates. Beautiful Rooms,Free TV, Parking, Courtesy Coffee.Closest Motel to Univ. of Chicago and Museum of Science & Industry.FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTEL56th St. & So. Shore Dr. • Chicago 37. IllinoisCOM) CITY INN*‘A (.aid Mine of Garni Ft tnV*]0/o Student DiscountHYDE PARK’S BEST CANTONESE EOOD5228 HARPERIIY 3-2559Try Our Convenient Take-Out Orders(Eat More For Less)The ESQUIREOAK N I A IN MICHIGANRICHARD PETERBURTON* OTOOLEHAL WALLIS' pECKET PANAVISION*TLCHNICOLOR*Special student rate of $1 00 ineffect during this engagementonly (except Saturday night}. EXCLUSIVE CHICAGOENGAGEMENT; At Our Regular PricesgANDSTEAKIB HOUSE LOUNGElENTERTAINMEFROMP.M. "JJV-TWESKY ’TIL4 A.M.Del PRADO Hotel^5300 South on the Lake IIY3-9600Frank Amorosi Triocomedy — music — songsBILL CURTISsightless keyboard artistDOTTIE BEE TRIOmusical show-stoppersCONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT!*TIL 4 A.M.NO COVER — NO MINIMUMII MidwestGo Goldwater" JamboreeSponsored by Young Americans for Goldwater-MillerMaine Township West High SchoolWolf and Oakton Roads, Des PlainesSaturday October 10: 4:00 p.m.GUESTS OF HONOR:Senator Goldwater's sons, Barry, Jr., and Mike —- Con¬gressman Miller's daughters, Elizabeth and Mary KarenFr«e Food: lorryburgers, Mrs. Miller's Polish Potafoe Solod,Sparkling GoldwaterDonation: $1.00 MAROON ® WEEKEND GUIDEAIR. COWOtTtOKi tDO.CAUCUUdfrSt .oisut5/ t. ST.II AM TO IO PMMI3-3407DlkikJkRS‘3rd SMASH MONTH'SUNDAY MATINEE—4 P.M. \Shows 9 & 11 P.M., Tues.-Sat.Sunday 4 P.M. & 9 P.M.Weekdays $2.65. Fri. & Sat. $2.95"Th.y blow e quit of freth aiinto th* muitcal revue business.—Lesner, No*Theater In the CloudsALLERT0N HOTEL701 N. Michigan Ave.• Reservations: SU 7-4200Colony Room Dinner offer,Show and 6 Course Dinner,$5.50; Frl. & Sai. $5.95.TM-5AM-Y&.NCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inr.VMOMiSli AMIAAlKHKAAl DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 Eost 63rd St. MU 4-1062CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganALBERTO S0RDIMAFIOSO'//i I//The story of a secret mission;a new comedy-drama.STUDENTS $1.00WITH I.D. CARDSevery day but SaturdayWeekdays open 6 P.M.Sot. & Sun. open 1:30TIKI TOPICSVisit Cirals, House of Tiki for aquiet, relaxed evening conducivefor a twosome. Our candlelightsetting is ideal for an intimateconversation, spiced with a choiceof Jumbo Fried Shrimp, Barbe-qued Back Ribs, Fried Chicken.Lobster Tail, Beef Platter, etc.Try Cirals House of Tiki wherethe Hawaiian atmosphere sets thescene for an enjoyable eveningwith the lady in your life. Foran added treat after dinner takein the new show at "The LastStage.” The production is GeorgeBernard Shaw’s "You Never CanTell.” Don’t miss it. "After TheShow” back to Cirals House ofTiki for a delightful HawaiianDrink.Cirals House of Tiki1510 HYDE PARK BLVD.51st ond HARPER AVENUELI 8-7585FOOD SERVED FROM 11 A.M.to 3:00 A.M.Kitchen closed Wednesday CIVIL RIGHTS BENEFITforSNCC FREEDOM HOUSELaurel, MississippiWin Stracke Ella JenkinsIra Rogers — The Outsiders — Dodi KailickThe Second City CompanyFriday, October 9, 8:00 p.m.Little Theatre, McCormick PlaceTickets: $2.50 and $3.00Students: $1.50Tickets available Friday at Box OfficeAIR CONDITIONEDLa Russo’sFINE FOODS AND COCKTAILSNow Open for Lunch 11:30-3:30Phone NOrmal 7-9390 1645 E. 53rd St.CHICAGO, ILLINOISHARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull tine of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4=!KB ”—7699HY 3-6800 See many Interesting pieces of ArtatNORMA'S ANTIQUE STOREGRAND OPENINGFri.-Sat. — Oct. 9-101458 E. 53rd0096'E AH1310H OQVHd 13Q6UI3UDQ—6ujUfa 9UIJSHAay IDOisnjq i|*iadtufcMpeojfl |0 silHftsnoinqoj am aa$ERRATUMSCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS’ hourswere incorrectly given. The hoursare: Daily, 12-9 p.m.; Sunday 12-5 p.m.LAKEthe PARK AT S3 R Dyde park NO 7-9071theatreStarts Friday, Oct. 9—’’WAR OF THE BUTTONS*’ — Adults Only!’A Knotty Problem to Anglo-Saxon Prudery that Might Tickle oneTarget Audience while Burning Off the Ears of Another." —Archer Winsten, N.Y. PostandMichelangelo Antonioni's"IL GRIDO""An Interesting, Arresting Slice of Life" — N.Y. TimesStarts Friday, Oct. 16—Sophia Loren • Marcello Mastroianniin Victorio De Sica's•YESTERDAY, TODAY & TOMORROW*'ComingIngrid Bergman and Anthony Quinn"THE VISIT"FREE PATRON PARKING WITH STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKETOct. 9, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON * 11 1«Less faculty freedom(Continued from page 51unfortunate consequence's. The Uni¬versity’s faculty is marked generallyby the freedom of choice given to it.There has been less freedom for theCollege teacher and fewer ojjiportu-nities. For most, participation solelyin the general education courses overa long period of time has not beenthe best ba-sds for continued intellec¬tual growth. Granted that some dif¬ference in emphasis may be soughtin the general education courses, toomarked a separation in staff, fromspecialized and graduate instructionremoves these faculties and theircourses from the mainstream of theUniversity’s through! and power. Ifthere is a special justification for anundergraduate college within a uni¬versity such as Chicago, it is be¬cause the strength of the Universitythrough its faculties will be broughtto bear on undergraduate programsand instruction and the broadeninginfluence of the College program inturn will have a coordinating asidcontinuing influence upon graduatework. Indeed the strength of Chi¬cago’s present general educationcourses reflects the work of manydivisional faculty members at acrucial earlier period. Hie question, of course, is whethergreater opportunities for specializedwork on the part of College facultyand greater participation in Collegeinstruction from divisional facultycan be obtained only at the cost ofmaking undergraduate education asecondary and incidental part of theUniversity or by modifying the liberalarts focus of the program. Greaterfaculty concern and involvement withthe College imposes a burden uponthe faculty and not all will or shouldbe interested. For these reasons theseparate College organization withits own budget and dean representsan important commit menu by theUniversity. But the University’s in¬terest in undergraduate liberal edu¬cation should be deemed sufficientlystrong to permit somewhat greaterflexibility and interchange. Optimis¬tically there is reason to believe thatat thus stage of the University'sdevelopment there are many mem¬bers of t.h-2 University’s faculties whowould welcome an opportunity todevelop and implement programs atthe undergraduate level. And thiscan be done in such a way as tostrengthen and not diminish the in¬dependent integrity of these programsand the independent integrity of theCollege.first on the court and campus too!• Quick stops and starts with anti-skid molded outsole• Exclusive Posture Foundation rigid wedge.• Hygeen cushion insole with extra-cushioned heel• Protective helmet-type toe cap• Comfortably ventilatedThis is the shoe that helps you play your best! Jack Purcelloxfords are made to take the fast pace of tennis, squash orhandball, yet they’re equally at home on the campus, too.Exclusive P-F Posture Foundation rigid wedge helps take thestrain off foot and leg muscles, keeps you making better power-plays longer! Get your Jack Purcell's today^ *%Q cTHE STORE FOR MENSteMi-©mutt atth g-Ijopin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100RF.GoodrichJack Purcell Oxford withE MADE IN AMERICA THE SCMIEEN SCENEUCinema: this is theweek that will beTonight Doc Films initiates its1964-5 season with BLUE ANGEL,the first in its series. “Love. Death,and the International Cinema," Thevon Sternberg classic will bescreened at Soc Sci .122 at 7:15 and9:15, along with this year's serial(probably Flash Gordon).Now is the time to buy seriestickets for the DFG programs.Series ticket holders get six filmsfar $2.50, a guaranteed seat at everyshow% and copies of Doc Films’original and educative programnotes. Single admissions are 60c.Tomorrow night the Russian FilmFestival opens its current serieswith ALEXANDER NEVSKY atMandel Hall, 7:30 and 9:30. Theseries “The Art of Sergei Eisen-stein,” will feature music bv I*ro-kofieff. Student series tickets for8 films, $3.75. Singles, 75c.On Sunday night B-J Cinema of¬fers BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY’Sin the Burton-Judson DormitoryCafeteria. B-J continues its policyof showing mainline Hollywoodfeatures, beginning with this 1961adaptation of Truman Capote's nov¬el. Audrey Hepburn stars asCapote’s martini - weeny heroine,Holly Golightly, a sort ol AuntieMarne after Slenderella.Also featured are George Pep-pard, Patricia Neal, Buddy (Bever¬ ly Hillbilly) Ebsen. and Henry Man-cini’s “Moon River" score.On Monday night, InternationalHouse continues a series which willalternate foreign attractions withHollywood standards. Last Mon¬day’s NINOTCHKA was enduringlydelightful although the light Lubitchtouch and the witty Wilder dialoguewere somewhat darkened by poorprojection and obscured by badsound.The next attraction will be AD¬VISE AND CONSENT, a melo¬drama of American government byFriday, October 9Motion picture: “The Blue Angel,”Marlene Dietrich. Emil Jannings. dir.Josef Von Sternberg (Doc Films: I.ove,Death, and the International Cinema):Soc Sci 122, 7:15 & 9:15 pm, 00c,series $2.50.Discussion: “Judaism and Christianity:Common Ground and Difference.”Prof. J. Coert Rvlaarsdam. DivinitySchool (Hillel>. 5715 Woodlawn, 8:30pm.Saturday, October 10Meeting: VISA. Old members only,(UC student volunteers go to Chica¬go State Hospital); Woodward Courtparking lot, 12:45 pm.Sunday, October 11Rockefeller Chapel services: Rev. Wil¬liam Graham Cole. Pres.. Lake For¬est College; Rockefeller Chapel, 10am.Discussion: “Democratic Prospects inIllinois,” Marshall Korshak. Trustee.Metropolitan Sanitary District ofGreater Chicago; K.A.M. Temple, 930 producer-director Onto (THE CARDINAL) Preminger, one of our mosicontroversial filmmakers.On Tuesday Doc Films initiatea second scries. “Techniques inTerror,” in cooperation with Sindent Government. Time, place, amiadmission prices are the same asfor the Friday night series. Tin-series is devoted to the works olAlfred Hitchcock and Orson Welle,and will open with Hitchcock's excellent 1938 thriller. THE LAIDVANISHES.F 50th st.. 10:30 am.Organizational meeting: S t u d e n 1interested in a Chicago peace group,possibly to affiliate with Fellowship oiReconciliation; Ida Noyes, 4 pin.Lecture: “Inside the Closed Society "Ed King, Mississippi Democratic Part\(Ecumenical Graduate Program); 5540Woodlawn, 7:30 pm.Cost Supper: Ecumenical GraduahProgram. Brent House; 5540 Woodlawn. 5:30 pm.Evensong: Brent House; 5540 Woodlawn. 7 pm.International Folk Dancing: Teaehinby Steve Sachs and Nahoma Weinpei(Folklore Society); Ida Noyes, 7:3*)-10:45 pm.Monday, October 12Organizational Meeting: UC Studentfor Civil Liberties; Ida Noyes, 7:30pm.Tonight at Tufts: “Hypnosis" Dr. Eric;,Fromm. Department ol Psychology andthe Committee on Social ThoughtTufts House. Pierce Tower. 8:30 pmCoffee Plus: “What Not to Expet ifrom College” Professor Gilbert WhiteDepartment of Geography: Shoreslounge. Pierce Tower, 0 pm.Alfred HitchkahanCalendar of EventsWELCOMEfromTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORESOur clerks will be g3ad to assist you in our:SELF SERVICE DEPARTMENTS(Please use package drops or free lockers).TEXTBOOKS: All required and recommended Texts.GENERAL BOOKS: Over 20,000 titles in a wide range of interests.SCHOOL SUPPLIES: To meat your needs.• STATIONERY & OFFICE SUPPLIES: For work-room cr office.CLERK SERVICE DEPARTMENTS$ TYPEWRITERS: New, used and rentals in standard,portable or eleetde.® TAPE RECORDERS: New, used and rentals.e PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES: Many types, cameras and services.• GIFTS: Many gift suggestions, U. of C. items and cards in color,e MEN'S & WOMEN'S WEAR: A fine selection of accessories.• TOBACCO: A representative assortment of items.• SNACK BAR: Sandwiches, coffee, cold drinks and candy.• MAIN STORE ONLY (Newly lighted and air conditionedfor your convenience and comfort)MAIN STOREHours: Mon. thru FridaySaturdayEDUCATION BRANCHHours. Mon. thru Friday 5802 Ellis8:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.8:30 A.M.-12:30 P.M.5821 Kimbark (In Belfield Hall)8:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M.(Open evenings as necessary to accommodate University eve*ning program students.)DOWNTOWN CENTER BRANCHHours: Mon. thru FridaySaturdayDowntown PROGRAM BRANCHHours: Mon. thru Friday 64 E. Lake St.11:30 A.M.-8:30 P.M.9 A.M.-12 P.M.190 E. Delaware Place5:30 P.M.-8:30 P.M.If you were unahie to fulfill your needs during the big rush —please try us again.12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oc*. 9, 1964