The Levi reportDiversity the goalof area colleges'by Tom HeagyProvost and Acting Dean of the College Edward H. Levidoes not consider his proposed reorganization of the Collegeto he a “great change,” but rather an attempt to achieve inan improved fashion the goals of the present College and tocreate the apparatus for future change from within thecollege.Tlve setting up of area collegesalong the lines of the four divisionsf should, Levi said, encourage greaterparticipation by the graduate divi¬sions in undergraduate education. Oneof bite greatest strengths of the origi¬nal Hutchins College was the par¬ticipation in its creation by the grad¬uate divisions.NOT ONLY WOULD the Collegebenefit from greater participation bythe divisions, but the divisions wouldalso benefit, Levi contended. A ma¬jor problem incurred in specializationis the tendency on the part of thespecialist to become isolated in hasspecialty and lose his perspective fortlie significance of the developmentsin his area, Levi said. Participatingm undergraduate education wouldencourage a graduate faculty mem¬ber to look at his own specialty interms of its place within the lilxralarts as a whole, fie feels.Program control limitedA major problem of the Collegetoday, according to Levi, is that, mpractice, tile College only oontrolshalf of its students’ programs, tlietwo years of general education. Tlielast two years consist of “bits andpieces,” partly from the College andpartly from the divisions, Levi added.Tlie area colleges as Levi con¬ceives them would be dose enoughto he deiiartments to plan specializededucation while still remaining partof the College and being necessarilyconcerned with general educationprograms.Tlie present monolithic nature ofthe College, Levi said, does not suf¬ficiently draw out the interest ofeither tlie students or the faculty.“A university of this type gets itsmost exciting programs when thereis diversity,” he staled.THE COLLEGE reorganizat.onwould encourage the development ofnew programs and tlie improvementot old ones by providing a forum forfaculty discussion and a mechanismfor implementation, Levi feels. Theonly faculty bodies in which thisdialogue can take place now are theFaculty of the College, which is toolarge; the faculties of the sections, (Editor’s note: The Leri report,which this story concerns, was sub¬mitted to President George W.Beadle and the College faculty atthe end of September. It proposedseveral changes for the College,notably an area colleges system, witheach area college corresponding atleast in name to the present divi¬sions, and a College Council, whichwould give the collective faculty amore effective voice in curriculmalterations than the present facultysenate. The MAROON reprinted theentire Levi report in its October 2and October 9 editions.)mici iimni [itiiiiiumiiaiuiHiitinKiiiiiiiniiimiii 11 [[iiiiik miH< miiijiuiuKifiby another college which wantedgeneral education outside its area tobe revised specifically for its ownstudents.In both cases, changes would haveto be approved by the College Coun¬cil, thus assuring a degree of unitywithin the College. The unity of tlieCollege would also be preserved bytlie first year in common, Levi be¬lieves.Levi predicted that the generalstudies college would develop avariety of programs, and would makegreater use of seminar and tutorialtechniques than at present. Someprograms, such as General Studies intlie Humanities, would 2>robabIy existin both the general studies collegeand one of the area colleges (in thiscase the college of humanities), Levisaid.Joint appointmentsFor the past several years, therehas been a tendency for a higher per¬centage of College appointments tobe joint appointments with a gradu¬ate department. According to Levi,tiie College reorganization shouldencourage this trend, although liefeels that it would continue to alesser degree without the reorganiza¬tion. There are no plans at presentwhich would require a departmentalappointment as a requirement for aCollege appointment, Levi noted.THE REORGANIZATION must lieapproved by the College faculty andthen by the Council of the UniversitySenate. Levi predicted that the pro¬posal would be approved. Vol. 70. No. 5 The University of Chicago Tuesday, October 20, 1964 31. * ^TSfrcA# £Scores Percy at K.A.M.Kerner points to party gainby Howard FischmanIntroduced to the audience at KAM Temple last evening as “The Incumbent Cham¬pion,” Otto Kerner, Democrat candidate for Governor of Illinois, defended his administra¬tion’s record while commenting on his opponent Charles Percy, “I don’t like to talk abouthim.”Kemer’s speech served as a rebut-tal to a similar meeting last week counted for the stimulation of capital ponent has criticized sharply, Kernerwhich was addressed by Republican investments. Kerner stated that IlLi- emphasized his support ol increasedcand'date Perc n°is was the only state in 1964 to state funds for public education,’ y' reduce its unemployment tax to especially cultural programs for chil-The bulwark of Kerner’s defense employers by sixteen million dollars, dren from economically deprivedwas in the area of state economy. This was accomplished while pay- homes and increased financial aidThe governor cited the fact that his rnent of funds for unemployment ben- to state universities and junior col-administration now has a gross of efits increased by 19%.Continuing with his emphasis oneconomic policy Kerner said that heplans to reduce the tax in 1965 by$50 million. He also mentioned thefederal unemployment statistics that fa0£ that it was under his administra- subject for a political speech. He dadshowed that statewide unemployment ticn that a Board of Economic De¬fer September 19W was 2.9% as com- velopment was established. He de-pared to 5.5% for September 1963. clared that “making producers outKERNER ALSO mentioned in- of people” is a responsibility of stategovernment. This referred to his pro¬gram for job retraining.Touching on an area which his op- sa/ ™°re ,was ^ SP«* f°Teducation than for any oilier branch$82 million in the bank, while theprevious Republican administrationleft him a $13 million deficit in 1961.He referred to recently publishedstances of how new industries weregrowing rapidly in Illinois. The gen¬eral business climate, he said, ac- leges.He declined, however, to reveal aspecific “target” figure for his pro¬posed educational budget, stating thatthis was a bipartisan program notThe first MAROON Liter¬ary Supplement of the yearwill appear next Friday.UPSETWho cares that the Cards beatthe Yankees? What does it matterthat Yogi Berra got fired? Thesurprise upset in sports this yeartook place right out on the Mid¬way Saturday afternoon, when thetutors for SWAP beat the tutees,12-8. Off the field, SWAP tutorsfrom UC and other Chicago col¬leges help the high-scliool agetutees with their reading or math.On the field, they surprised them¬selves. It was probably only be¬cause two former college footballstars were playing for the tutors,according to Herb Mack, whohelps direct the project. Thegirls did not just sit by andcheer, either — it was a co-edgame. Even Ann Cook, SWAPboss, got in for some action.Shown is John Bradley, a tuteofrom Hyde Park H.S.. getting offone of the better passes of game(scrimmage?) for the tutees’ team(class? ). of the budget.KERNER DEFENDED the Demo¬crats against his opponent's chargesthat it is the “party of crime.” Hestated that the only major crimebills presented in the legislaturewere introduced by Democrats. Heblamed Republicans in House andSenate committees for the defeat ofthese bills. Kerner noted the successof the Liquor Control Commissionand Bureau of Racetrack Police incombating gambling.Throughout his speech Kerner al¬luded to Republican interference withhis administration’s legislative pro¬gram. He expressed hope that theDemocratic Party would be able tosecure a majority in the state Senate.He called for implementation of theU.S. Supreme Court’s “one man, onevote” decision calling for reappor¬tionment of voting districts. He de¬clined to mention political implica¬tions, commenting “This is a govern¬ment of men and laws, not politicalparties.”In his conluding remarks, Kernerblasted Percy for allegedly avoidingdiscussion of the issues. “He’s thethe most adept male ballet dancerI’ve ever seen,” Kerner said of hasopponent.Faculty comment favorably on Levi proposalswhich are too narrow in their concern;and the Council of the UniversitySenate, which has too general a con¬cern (i.e. the entire University).Five separate FacultiesTlie reorganization proposal wouldcreate five area college faculties andthe College Council, all of whichwould be small enough for meaning¬ful discussion. Any proposals for anew program or change would firsthe discussed by the appropriate areacollege faculty, then by the curricu¬lum committee of the College Coun¬cil, and finally by the full CollegeCouncil, Levi related.GENERAL EDUCATION programswould be staffed by the appropriatearea college. While initially theywould be the same as they are now,°hanges could be instituted either bytoe area college staffing a course or (Editor’s note: The following is agroup of critiques of the Levi reportwhich the MAROON solicited byletter a week and a half ago. Presi-dent Beadle, Deans Warner Wickand George Playe, sub-Deans ofthe College Norton Ginsbury and Al¬bert Hayes, and the heads of the Col¬lege sections A. Adrian Albert, PerrinLowrey, McKim Marriott, and RayKoppelman were asked to respondGinsburg and Lowrey asked that theybe permitted to decline because oftheir intimate participation in theformulation of the Levi report andbecause of their desire to remaindisinterested in light of their forth¬coming duties as mediators of thereport. It is hoped that, beside thoseprinted below, the reactions of theothers will appear in the near future.)George BeadlePresident of the UniversityI have participated in many dis¬cussions of the University of ChicagoCollege and have followed with keeninterest the evolution of the set ofproposals Mr. Levi has circulated fordiscussion purposes. I believe theseproposals are important and signifi¬cant in several respects.They retain provision for an ex¬perience in general education thatis common to all undergraduate stu¬dents, and at the same time providefor extending this experience overmore than two years for studentswho so elect.The five different four-year pro¬grams provide for diversity of aca¬ demic interests among students whileretaining a common core of generaleducation.The five programs or “Colleges”in which general education and morespecialized work in specific areaswill be coordinated will bring aboutgreater involvement of divisional fac¬ulties in planning and implementingthe several four-year programs forundergraduates. This I believe to benot only highly desirable but es¬sential for tlie continuing strength ofthe College.I am optimistic that M. Levi’srecommendations will receive widesupport and be put into effect in thenot-too-distant future.Albert M. HayesAssistant dean of the CollegeAs I read Mr. Levi’s memorandumto the Faculty, it is a plan for re¬arranging faculty structures so as toincrease the efficiency with whichcurricular decisions can be madeand to channel the energies andideas of the whole University faculty(i.e. of those who are interested) intothe educational work of the College.It does not guarantee — no plancould — that the curricular decisionswill be wise ones: and only a periodof trial can reveal how many mem¬bers of the University faculty areintelligently concerned about the edu¬cational enterprise and willing towork at it responsibly. Although formally Mr. Levi’s pro¬posals are merely structural, hisargument implies a vision of thekind of undergraduate curricular hewould like to see emerge. Each cur¬riculum would retain the broad scopeof the present general education com¬ponent, and at least one year wouldremain completely common to allcurricula. The major change wouldbe a much more serious effort thanhas yet been made to plan the stu¬dent’s four years as a continuous andcoherent educational experience. Withthese aims I fully agree the exist¬ence of several different curriculamay further imply a kind of free en¬terprise competition on the assump¬tion that students can choose theprogram best suited to their aims,abilities, and interests; curricula thatdo not win adequate numbers ofstudents would presumably be revisedor abandoned.Hie ends intended by these pro¬posals, as I understand them, are inthe best Chicago tradition and de¬serve whole-hearted support. Whetherthe means proposed are adequate toachieve the ends, however, can bedetermined finally only by puttingthis structure into actual operation.My present judgment is that therisk is worth taking, but this judg¬ment is subject to revision after Ihave heard the quality of facultydebate on the plan. For in the endthe potentialities of the Levi planwill be limited by what tlie facultytake it to mean. A. Adrian AlbertActing head,College physical sciencesThe proposed reorganization of theCollege has the potential to provideflexibility for the student, power tomake substantial curricular changesfor the College faculty, and the op¬portunity to become involved in suchcurricular changes for the Divisionalfaculties. Like previous organiza¬tional changes its purpose will notbe achieved without substantial co¬operation by the faculties involved.The Divisional faculties are stronglydedicated to research and to thetraining of students to become com¬petent in research. Their involvementin College curricular matters duringrecent years has been little, but itis my hope that the reorganizationwill result in a real contribution bymy Division to the education of stu¬dents in the College.Significant changes in the generalcourses in my area are really diffi¬cult to achieve. In courses leadingto a degree in a department thegoals and the route are clearly de¬fined. The goals of general coursesin science or mathematics are notso clear, and this leads to manyquestions of curricular content. Itis hoped that, with greater co-opera¬tion between Divisional and Collegefaculties, the excitement in the re¬search environment of the Divisionof the Physical Sciences will findits way also into the general courses.Letters to theV ' ■Finance Comm, ‘benef icial’: GrovesTO THE EDITOR:The Friday Maroon story and edi¬torial about the proposed StudentGovernment Finance Committee pre¬sents an important consideration, butin many respects misinterprets andincorrectly reports the facts about theBoard. Let me first attempt to clarifythe nature of the proposal. There arethree boards proposed:1) A Financial Advisory Board inwhich heads of student organizationscan regularly discuss common finan¬cial problems and can discover waysto combine efforts.2) A student-faculty Communica¬tions Board which: a) submits budgetslor the publications and radio sta¬tions; b) hears all complaints againstfoe Maroon, WUCB, etc. (the Deanol Students presently does this);c) would not have power of removalof heads of publications and radio;but in the case that serious chargesol libel, breach of professional eti¬quette and the like were substanti¬ated by the Board, it would makepublic its official findings and makerecommendations for action by theorganization itself.3) A student-faculty Finance Com¬mittee to distribute tile StudentActivities budget (the Dean of Stu-dens does this now). Thus Committeewould have no pov.’er over internalworkings of any organization. Theproposal not only would open up thebudget to the public, but would in¬volve students more directly in thedecisions about their own affairs.After all, the money in the StudentActivities budget comes ultimatelyfrom our tuition.The Maroon expressed fear thatthe Communications Board might en¬danger the civil liberties of the pub¬lications and of all student organiza¬tions. It is incorrect that any ol theboards would have power to investi¬gate and make recommendationsregarding the heads of any studentorganization. The CommunicationsBoard would have authority only inthe cases of public communicationsmedia, which presently exercise amonopoly in each of the media onthe campus, and are being subsidizedfrom tuition money.The Communications Board wouldhear complaints against the Maroon,WUCB, etc. from the Universityj -== - —ALL VOLk5WAGEKiPEALEJ?S CAW SELLVOU A NEW '65 vwSEPAKJ FOR.*1647OU£ PRICE »5 THESAME. OUR SERVICEIS EXCELLENT,Superb—UNQUESTIONABLYTHE DIFFERENCEthat makesTHE PEAL/ jOUR USED CARSARE GREAT TOO!100°o GUARANTEEPARTS AND LABOR 30 DAYS$1195‘64 SIMCA4-dr. Sedan‘63 VOLKSWAGENSedan‘63 KARMAN GHIAConvertible‘62 VOLKSWAGENSedan‘62 VOLKSWAGENConvertible‘62 KARMAN GHIAConvertible‘62 MERCEDESConvertible 190 SL•62 MERCEDESSedan‘62 TR-3Convertible‘61 VOLKSWAGENSedan‘61 RENAULT4-dr. Sedan•60 VOLKSWAGENSunroof■60 VOLKSWAGENSedan•60 PORSCHEConvertible■59 VOLKSWAGENConvertible $1295$1795$1145$1345$1395$1795$2195$1295$995$595$945$895$2195$995IMPORT MOTORSH) AUTHORIZED VW —PORSCHE DEALERNEW CAR71 Si J, BU 8-4900USED CARSTONY IS.643-4040CLOSED SUNDAY community. As an example, hearings and faculty at the University ofmight well have been held on the Chicago. It is unlikely that the au-charges and counter charges arising thority of the board would be abused,last year concerning the alleged in- as the function of a board dependsterview with an ex-administrator by more upon the spirit of the membersM. Stevens. The “fact” of the ex- than upon the statutory powers givenadministrator’s existence could have to it. If such a board be a threatbeen verified and the controversy rather than a protection to civil liber-resolved. ties, I wonder why the ACLU, thePRESENTLY ALL such complaints AAUP, the USSPA, and the USNSAare handled by the Dean of Students, nil suggest the existence of suchwho has the ultimate power— bodies,whether we like it or not—to remove ELIGENE GROVESthe editor of a publication (as Dean President, Student GovernmentStrozier removed the Maroon editorin 1951). The proposal would estab- Iliish instead a student-faculty board I Irrierfi \which would hear the complaints, | UIULU^U 14.ilhold hearings if necessary, and make Kditor-in-chief Robert F. Leveypublic their official findings. Business Manager ... Harris S. JafieShould it have the same powers Managing Kdi'or , Oaviu L. Aikenas tile Dean ultimately holes? 1 do sharon Goldmannot think that won Id be necessary. Campus News Editor .. Joan Phillips„„ „ , T , T Editor. Chicago Literary ReviewMaroon editor Bob Levey and 1 Martin Miehaelsonagree that any Oiganization should Advertising Manager Jan Paynter, . , / , . . Culture-Feature Editor David Richterhave the right to select and remove Photography co-ordinators Bill Caffreyits own head. • • • ..... ,.st*v*However, if the head or the staff Movie Editor Saul Kahanof a publication or radio station is EdUo^ETe rHus"*8** johnTV williamsfound guilty of continual libel and Slaff: Sandy Lewy, Rick Pollack. Tommisrepresentation, *e board must "“f- Ac*r°L'ehave some authority in order to be Hendrik DeJonp, Betsy Bachman,i. Betsy Weinrob, Howard Rosen, Petereffective. The proposed authority IS Rabinowitz, Charles Dashe. Rheathat of conducting an investigation Robin, Jamie Beth Gale. Mary Mc-j Mullen, Judith Sehavrien. Barbaraand recommending to the organiza- jur g;)I.rv weitz, Marian Schwager,tion corrective action and, ultimately, Dick Ganz. Martha Grossblat, JoanTapper, Dinah Esral, Howard Fisch-publlC disclosure. man, Dick Atlee, David Satter, Wil-I have confidence in the traditions Herzog Alien Adcock Judy., . , . Favia. Ron Pel), Cecilia Hatch, Danof civu liberties among the students Hertzberg.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristNEW IN THEHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERDO 3-7644 1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty DiscountRussia Re-examinedWI L LIAM VMANDEL"I know of no better one-volume description of the SovietUnion in our time . . . The major merit of Russia Re-examinedis that it combines personal observation with a thorough studyof documentary and statistical sources. This procedure is mostilluminating in Mandel’s treatment of schools, religion, theJews, mental health, public opinion and the press.”—FrederickL. Schuman, Woodrow Wilson Prof, of Govt., WilliamsCollege."Lively . . . the feel of first-hand experience . . . The sec¬tions on education and science and the account of formalpolitical structure—including what it is fashionable to call"decision-making”—are excellent . . . Remarkably fair.”—Dr.Stephen Dunn, Institute of Int'l. Studies, Li. of Calif., reviewin San Fran. Chronicle."Extremely stimulating.”—Arthur Hoppe.Paper: $2.00, Cloth: $4.50. At bookstores or, autographed,from author, 233 Lake Drive, Berkely 8, Calif.HILL AND WANG, INC., PUBLISHERS, 141 5th AVE., NYC.Don’tBump the Glump!*u— ^ Or any of i he 40 other fierce andloopy animals captured in lull-color and rhyme by Slid Silversteinin UNCLE SHELBY'S ZOO. Just out.Price $.4.95 in cloth; paper $1.95.Simon and Schuster, Publishers. Profs to discuss how to'teach peace--or warSeveral hundred educators,including several from UC,are expected to attend theChicago Conference on Teach¬ing about Peace and War this Sat¬urday at Chicago Teachers CollegeNorth.John G. Cawelti, assistant pro¬fessor ol humanities and a memberof the committee which plannedthe conference, stated that the pro¬gram will emphasize work whichhas already been done in the class¬room about peace and war.“OIR PURPOSE IS to bringteachers together from differentlevels of education and convincethem to teach about this subject —either directly, through courses likephilosophy, or indirectly, by intro¬ducing the issues in the currentevents discussions,” Cawelti said. James P. Dixon, President of Anti,och College, will open the sessionwith an address on “EducationalPolitical, Philosophical, and MoraiIssues in Teaching About Peaceand War.”Following the speech, discussiongroups will examine such topics asinterdisciplinary approaches toteaching about peace and war; edu¬cation. nationalism and extremism;philosophical and moral issues —peace and the ethical imperatives;psychological and sociological ef¬fects of the Cold War on childrena>nd youth; and the function of theschool in changing national attitudes,A panel discussion on "CurrentPractices and Problems in TeachingAbout Peace and War,” and work¬shops on courses within variousdisciplines will be held during theafternoon.SINAI FORUMpresentsFERRANTE & TEICHERMonday, October 26, 8:15 p.m.atSINAI TEMPLE5350 South Shore DriveSingle Admission $2.50• twinin' •is now on WMAQMusic For The Swinging SetBob Hale’s Music HallSTARTING AT 7:30 P. M.Mondays through Fridays2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 20, 1964?a4 1 MUSICREVIEW OPERA REVIEWStrauss assassinated! Lyrics II Trovatore charming'1 Considering tlie love JeanMartinon lavished even onuneven Brahms in the firstveek of the Chicago Sym¬phony season, the second week’smaltreatment of Strauss seemed likea violation of the First Command¬ment. For, perhaps intending tosabotage the Strauss Centennial, hecast his all-Strauss program withheroic incompetance.First came I>on Juan: and a morebloodless, bored-of-the-bedroom DonJuan you don juan to hear, especial¬ly when backed up with blundering,bored-of-the-baton playing by musi¬cians who felt free to come ami goas they pleased. Martinon exhibiteda singular lack of feeling for Strauss’contrapuntal lines, chopping themup and thus replacing the grand withthe bland, and .sweep with sleep.THE NOVELTY OF the eveningwas the Oboe Concerto, a late workhardly worthy of its composer. Ithas, unfortunately, neither the bril¬liance and thrust of the early mas¬terpieces, nor the profundity andsensitivity of the late ones. Not eventhe virtuosity of Ray S ill was ableto compensate for its super-sac¬charine superficiality. Esj)ecially asMartinon was meanwhile mettle-somely maximizing the mush.Tike program dragged to an imag¬ine ion staggering conclusion withEin Heldenleben. Where was thepompously egocentric yet invincibleHero (Strauss himself) and his his- singly vitriolic Adversaries? Mar-tinon chucked them out, giving usinstead an anemic adolescent anda bunch of grumpy but otherwiseharmless school marms.Need one add that the battlescene was about as exciting as anelementary algebra quiz? This great¬est of all pieces of bombast has beeningeniously conceived so that ifeveryone in the orchestra screams,smashes and screeches at top vol¬ume, the counterpoint emerges withshattering clarity,Martinon not only had the audaci¬ty to try to approach it with sub¬duing subtlety, but also refused topermit the music’s wit to get out.Since there were whole battalionsof the orchestra which weren’t obey¬ing Commander Martinon anyway,the music was even funnier than itis when played right.There is, indeed, reason to sus¬pect that Martinon was secretly sid¬ing with the Adversaries, for, in¬stead of emerging undaunted by thedin, our Hero arrived more thanlittle bedraggled. In fact, he passedout a few times during the conclu¬sion of the piece, along with someof the brass players who missedtheir final entrance.YES, IT WAS an extraordinaryevening. One can just imagine themaestro returning home, hummingto himself, and reciting his favoriteline from Shakespeare: “Alas, poorRichard! I screwed him well. . ,Pete Rabinowitz II TrovatoreMusic by Giuseppe VerdiCount di LunaFerrandoManricoLeonoraConductorAzucenaChorus MasterAt the Lyric Opero. 20 N. WackerSaturday night's perform¬ance of II Trovatore at theLyric Opera was surprisingin a number of ways, most ofthem good. To begin with, the orches¬tra which has in the past beencharacterized by a sour brass ohoirand by playing out of step, was con¬sistently in une and in tempo. Iideed,they even seemed aware of the factthat they were playing music withsome continuity and organization,rather than a mere series of notes,for which Mr. Bartoletii is to be con¬gratulated.Probably the greatest surprise ofthe evening was that the really ex-ctiing performance oame not fromthe more famous cast members,Corelli and Bumbry, but from therather less famous 11 va Ligabue.While her acting ability is indiffer¬ent, she again and again thrilled theaudience with the combined powerand delicacy of her voice. She de¬serves to be better known than shecurrently is.CORELLI WAS in fine voice. Bothhis voice and his acting, however,failed to engross and excite this re¬viewer as much as was to be ex-Lots of labs, lectures, leisure-these slacks still stay pressed!Tailored In 50V« Dacron poIyesler-50®/« Orion acrylic.THEY'RE NEW "DACR0N"®-"0RL0N"®! New, UJiramatfc slacksby Haggar! Even in the rain, they never lose that knife-edgecrease ... always stay in great shape! They won’t bag at theknees... wrinkle behind the knees, at the waist or otherpoints of stress. Wash or dry clean them... they’re beauti¬ful either way. And wear? We wonder if it’s possible to wearthem out. And Haggar Slacks just fit better... naturally. 10.95®Du Pont'i Reg. T.M, U ItramaticBUY HAGGAR ULTRAMATIC SLACKS AT:JACK BERNEYS1517 EAST 53rd STREET peeled from one of his reputation.Corelli did show has full powers inhis solo aria III, ii.; this exhilaratingexperience only made one sorry thathe had not been consistently at ahigh level in his performance.Miss Bumbry’s voice in generalshowed that usual variety in dyna¬mics, range, and tone color whichmakes it particularly expressive. Hervoioe seemed strained in II, i., espe¬cially in the high registers, but thiswas remedied in later acts.Ivo Vinco was another of the eve¬ning’s pleasant surprises, capturingthe audience’s attention at the outsetwith a spirited rendition of Ferrando.The chorus supported the principalsingers with power and precision,suggesting talent and leadership ofhigh caliber.The sets, which were borrowedfrom the Metropolitan Opera produc¬tion, were repetitive and dingy.IL TROVATORE presents Verdi ashis usual charming self, although hismusic is occasionally sweet and deli¬cate when it should be strong andangry. In Act II, he impedes theplot, by delaying the impending ac¬tion with song. Such is early Verdi.As Verdi’s style developed helearned to coordinate music anddrama better.The libretto is, as usual, melodra¬matic, but this does not prevent itsbeing enjoyable. It leaves the opera-goer with a few questions in hismind, such as how a troubador whois the son of a gypsy happened tohave a castle and uniformed troopsat his disposal, but these questionsare obviously irrelevant in an enter¬tainment of the nature of grandopera. And this 11 Trovatore excellentlywell fulfills the role of grand opera;it is a successful artistic whole, andmore importantly, it is entertainmenton a grand soale, one meant to ap¬peal not exclusively to the culturedJew but to the eager masses. If thisperformance of II Trovatore is notthe exception, the Lyric appears tobe producing highly appealing operathis season, and I recommend thatboth the novice and the buff partakeof their superb offering.Charles DasheFolkfest Friday IUC’s Second Annual Inter¬national Folk Festival will beheld in Mandel Hall Friday,October 23. The concert,which will begin at 8:30 pm, is de¬voted to the music and dance ofvarious nationality groups who stillcarry on their cultural traditions inChicago.The Friday concert will be gracedby the presence of a number of per¬formers who until recently wereleading artists in their countries oforigin.Tickets for the concert are $1.50—$1 for students. Ali seats are generaladmission. Tickets may be purchasedat the Mandel Hall box office now,or at the door on the night of theconcert.Miss, vote drivediscussed tonightEYE EXAMINATIONFASH-ION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist53-Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3 8372Student and FacultyDiscountYou won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 Strokely Carmichael, proj¬ect director in the Delta areafor the Mississippi Freedomproject, will speak on themeaning and importance of theMississippi elections at the firstmeeting of the year of UC Friendsof the Student Non-violent Co-ordina-ing Committee (SNCC) tonight.The Mississippi Freedom Demo¬cratic Party began a two-week“Freedom Vote” registration driveamong Negroes to try to get morevoters in their “Freedom Vote” thanin the official balloting.Carmichael will discuss what partstudents can play in the effort.Friends of SNCC will also discussactivities with the Southside Free¬dom Center and other activities forthe year.The meeting will be held at 8pm in the third floor theatre of IdaNoyes.MITZIESFLOWERS1308 E. 53rd 1340 E. 53rdAll phones Ml 3-4020DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS SuddenlyI Lost MyMemory!CHICAGO, ILLINOIS Hyde ParkAuto ServiceLOTUS TR-4MG CORVETTEEU5CK PEUGEOTALFA ROMEOFIAT MORGANFERRARI VW5340 Lake ParkPL 2-0496 A noted publisher in Chicagoreports there is a simple tec h¬nique for acquiring a powerfulmemory which can pay youreal dividends in both businessand social advancement andworks like magic to give youadded poise, necessary self-con¬fidence and greater popularity.According to this publisher,many people do not realize howmuch they could influence oth¬ers simply by rememberingaccurately everything they see,hear, or read. Whether in busi¬ness, at social functions or evenin casual conversations withnew acquaintances, there areways in which you can domi¬nate each situation by yourability to remember.To acquaint the readers ofthis paper with the easy-to-*follow rules for developing skill*in remembering anything youchoose to remember, the pub¬lishers have printed fujll detailsof their self-training method;in a new book, “Adventures inMemory,” which will be mailed!free to anyone who requests it.No obligation. Simply send'your request to: Memory*Studies, 89r> TVversey Park-;way, Dept. C128 > 'hieago, IlLi60(il4. A postcard ./ill do.4YR's watch for fraudIn an attempt to preventelection fraud in Cook Coun¬ty, the Republican Party issponsoring Operation EagleEve, an essentially non-partisan cam¬paign whose sole object is to see thatthe election code of Illinois is fol¬lowed in every precinct.This year Oi>eration Eagle Eye willattempt to put two poll watchers inevery precinct in the city in whichfraud is expected. An organizationmeeting for anyone interested inheli>ing this effort will be held tonight in the east lounge of Ida Noyes Hallat 8 pm. Hie meeting, sponsored bythe UC Young Republican Club, willfeature a discussion of the ways inwhich votes are stolen, ways inwhich poll watchers can prevent it,and arrangements for a training ses¬sion immediately before the election.Anyone who is interested in beinga poll watcher but cannot attend themeeting should contact Tom Heagy,1921 Pierce Tower, 5514 UniversityAve., FA 4-9500.Socialist VP candidate to speakEdward Shaw, vice-presi¬dential candidate of the So¬cialist Workers Party willspeak on “The Dead End ofLesser Evil Politics” Wednesday at7:30 pm in Ida Noyes Hall.Shaw, who is the only candidatein the 1964 election campaign whohas been to Cuba both before andafter the revolution, will speak atvarious local campuses on his na-tial tour. He will also be heard ona number of radio programs.In his talks. Shaw will discuss the validity of independent politicalaction and present some practicalmethods for countering what hefeels is the increasing right winginfluence in this country.Running with DeBerrySIIAW IS THE running mate ofClifton DeBerry, presidential can¬didate of the Socialist Workers Par¬ty-SHAW will also speak on “Why aVote for Johnson and Goldwater isa Vote for War” on TTiursday atDebs Hall, 302 South Canal. Histalk is scheduled for 8 pm. Sex on campus:sneak previewTomorrow night at 8 pm, Metro-Gold wvn-Mayer will hold a specialscreening of its new film, THEYOUNG LOVERS, for UC personnel.The showing will be presented atthe Universal Screening Room, 1234S. Mich. Any UC students, faculty,or employees who wish to attendthis pre-release screening and fillout opinion questionnaires shouldcontact Saul Kalian, Maroon movieeditor, at 493-5882 or leave nameand phone number at the Maroonoffice as soon as possible.MGM is currently conducting anationwide college campaign to bringcollegiate attention to The YOUNGLOVERS, a drama of contemporarysex mores on campus. The producersare anxious to get UC reactions tothe film. ADSPERSONALElection-Night Party at the Alpha Delthouse. Refreshments available.If you don’t want my peaches, Babe,at ieast come and get your T-shirts.The Intrinsically American Ass’n. ofWASP (I am a WASP» hereby with¬draws its support from Sen. Gold-water. for his implied prejudiceagainst fascism. *** STOP ROACHES 1 Dining table and buffet; owner to re¬turn to India—must sell! S. Wofsy752-6852.SHOCKING MANUSCRIPT! AUTO¬BIOGRAPHY OF GOD: “I WAS BORNIN CHAOS AFTER COMPLETION OFEVERYTHING. I WILL GO ANIfNEVER COME BACK AGAIN . . -FREE ALBERT YOU. BOX 51!MSANTA BARBARA, CAL.WANTEDFOR SALEDavid Sachs, professor of philo¬sophy at Cornell Univ., will talkto undergraduate philosophy stu¬dents about Plato's REPUBLICThursday night. The discussion,which is for undergraduates only,will be in Soc Sci 302 at 7:30.Calendar of Events See Chicago’s Sidewinder basketballteam slaughter Stagg Scholars inwheel-chairs. Saturday, October 24. atBartlett Gym. 8 pm.The long-awaited Joan Baez songbookis at the Fret Shop-beautifully illus¬trated. Complete playing instructions,$8.95; shows Miss B. playing 00-15Martin Fret Shop guitar. 1517 E. 53rdSt.Interclub Council will be glad to sellyou a PARALYMPICS ticket in Man-del Corridor from 10 am-2 pm-$1.25.Skirted dressing table with stool Scmirror. Desk set, TV and magazinebench. Call after 6 pm.Co-op Elevator Bldgs., $1,000 down;$100 mo. buys 4-bedrm.. 3 bath apt.Gar. & extras. HY 3-4834.Harper Surf Coffee Hour. Thurs.Oct. 22 9-11 pm. Free coffee and con¬versation. 5426 S. Harper.ASSORTED BOOKS — Shakespeare toSoc. Also frame for dbl. bed. chair,record stand. Call 684-0427 eves.For sale: bass ukele. $20 or best offer.Call Bob, X3265. Mon.-Thurs., or 321-5751. Transmission parts for 3 whl. Harley.Cash. Call 324-1452.LOST AND FOUNDLOST—Bl. Sc White framed reading Scbl framed sunglasses. Reward. CallJudy at HY 3-7639.FOR RENTSUBLEASE. Going abroad for a year.Beautifully furn. compl. equipped 1-bdrm. apt. in hi-rise bldg, near lake.All trans. Campus bus. Avail. Nov.Adults. 493-5188.HELP WANTEDU of C SNCC Mississippi Benefit Nov.20 If vou can give some help pleasecall Heather Tobis. 1400 New Dorms.SITUATIONS WANTEDW\LLS CLEANED? LEAVES RAKED?ODD JOBS? “Jobs for teens’’ HydePark-Kenwood Com. Conf. BU 8-83 Cl.Tuesday, October 20LECTURE SERIES: “Structure andAssembly of Muscle Protiens.'’ Dr.Carolyn Cohen. Harvard MedicalSchool; Abbott 133, 8 am.TRYOUTS: for University Theatre(“Tonight at 8:30“ series i; ReynoldsClub theatre, 3 pm and 7:30 pm.RUGBY PRACTICE: Midway 4 pm.FAITH AND THOUGHT SEMINARS:The Honest to God Debate: An Intro¬duction to Contemporary TheologicalDiscussion, Reverend Thomas Mc¬Donough. Chapel House. 4:30 pm.TECHNIQUES IN TERROR: JourneyInto Fear, (directed by Orson Welles),Social Sciences 122, admission 60c, 7:15and 9:15 pm.SG MEETING: Business East 107,7:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: Israeli Folk Danc¬ing, Hillel Foundation, 5715 WoodlawnAve.. 7:30 pm.POLITICAL MEETING: Poll Watchersorganizational meeting. East Lounge(Second Floor). Ida Noyes Hall, 8 pm.SNCC MEETING: Mississippi Electionsand general planning meeting, thirdfloor (theater) Ida Noyes, 8 pm.FOLK DANCING: Instruction first halffollowed by request session. Interna¬tional House, non-residents 50c, 8-10:30 pm. Wednesday, October 21ORGAN RECITaL: Edward Mondello,Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. Wood-law ave. and 59th St.; admission free,8:30 pm.VARSITY SOCCER GAME: WheatonCollege, Stagg Field. 3 pm.FAR EASTERN ASSOCIATION:Organizational meeting, Ida NoyesHall, second floor East library, 3:30pm.LECTURE & SEMINAR: Mathematics,the Key to Scientific Knowledge. Mar¬shall H. Stone, Professor in the De¬partment of Mathematics and Memberof the Committee on Social Thought;Social Science 302, 1126 E. 59th st.,lecture 3:30-4:30, seminar 5-6:30 pm.FAITH AND THOUGHT SEMINARS:The Gospel of Mark, Reverend HaroldWalker, Calvert House, 4:30 pm.CARILLON RECITAL: RockefellerChapel by Daniel Robins. UniversityCarillonneur. 5 pm.LECTURE: The Dead End of LesserEvil Politics, Edward Shaw, vice-presi¬dential candidate of the SocialistWorkers Party; Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30pm.TRYOUTS: for University Theatre,Reynolds Club theatre. 7:30 pm.DISCUSSION: American Political Elec¬tions; Historical Background. Dr. PaulMalliard of DePaul University; Cross¬roads Student Center, 5621 Blackstone,7:30 pm.1000 TO 2000 WORDS A MINUTEWITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENTIONY,ou «« rea<* 150-200 pages an 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 wellas to literature and fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, youraccuracy and enjoyment is reading will be increased.Consider what this new reading ability will enable you to accomplish — ii< your required readingana also in the additional reading you want to do.No machines, projectors, or appartus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READING method.In this way the reader avoids developing any dependence upon external equipment in reading.Tn READING will be held near the University of Chicago, at the HO-ILL DLL PRADO, beginning on October 27. This class will meet on TUESDAY evenings.3e our guest at a 30-minute public demonstra tion of the ACCELERATED READING method andsee it applied.BRING A BOOK!Demonstrations will be held at the HOTEL DEL PRADO, located at 53rd and Lake Shore Drive,on:WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21 AT 7:30 P.M.NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING, Inc.507 Fifth Avenue New York 17, N.Y.New Books by Campus AuthorsThe Scope of Grace: Essays in Honor of Joseph Siffieredited by Philip J. Hefner — $4.95Ancients and Moderns: Essays on the Tradition ofPolitical Philosophy in Honor of Leo Straussedited by Joseph Cropsey — $10.00BATTERED BOOK SALEContinues thru Thursday, October 22BRUSH STROKE PRINT SALEStarts Friday, October 23The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKMa strong bank"1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C.LECTURE: Photo Control of PlantGrowth. Dr. Lawrence Bogarad. Pro¬fessor of Botany, Ida Noyes Hall, firstfloor West lounge. 8 pm.COUNTRY DANCERS: Beginningdancers welcome, please bring tennisshoes, Ida Noyes Hall. 8 pm.Thursday, October 22LECTURE: Quantum Chemstry ofMuscle, Dr. George Karreman. Uni¬versity of Pennsylvania, Abbott 133,8 am.CONFERENCE; Judicial Ethics. LawSchool, 10 am, 1:30 pm. 3:15 pm. Sc8 pm.RUGBY PRACTICE: On the Midway.4 pm.FAITH AND THOUGHT SEMINARS:Fathers and Heretics, Reverend WayneSaffen, Chapel House. 4:30 pm.DISCUSSION: Plato’s Republic. DavidSachs, Professor of Philosophy, CornellUniversity, undergraduates only. SocialScience 302. 7:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: Intermediate classwith Andor Czompo. Ida Noyes Hall,admission: students $.50, non-students$1.00, 8-10:45 pm.HISTORY CLUB PANEL: Sino-SovietConflict. Thomas Riha Asst. Professorof History and Chairman of RussianCivilization Staff and Robert Dern-berger. Asst. Professor in Departmentof Economics and Social Science; IdaNoyes Library, 8 pm. MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 Hr.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 Any student or faculty memberinterested in joining an Army Re¬serve unit meeting on campus,please call ext. 2774 Tuesday orThursday.Complete LineOf fet AndAquarium Suppliesthe caqe1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012 BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentreAustinHealeyPeugeotCempMt* Repair*And ServiceFor AH Popular Import*Midway 3-45016040 So. Cottage GroveThe Time Is Here!To Order Your PERSONALIZED CHRISTMAS CARDSA Card For Every NeedReligious, General, Gay, Whimsical, TailoredVariety in shape, size and priceCome in and see our wide selectionThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueHours: Mon. thru Fri. 8-5; Sat. 8:30-12:30Chicago Junior Chamber of Commerce PresentsPROJECT PARALYMPICS"International Wheel-chair Olympics"Saturday, October 24, 8:00 p.m.BARTLETT GYM57th and University, $1.25Help send Chicago's Sidewinders to compete in TokyoTickets available Mandel Corridor, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.Sponsored by Interclub CouncilA TRIP TO EUROPE FORLESS THAN $100Switzerland, Oct. 5 — The International Travel Establish¬ment will locate job opportunities in Europe for anyonewho likes the idea of a fun-filled, low cost trip to Europe.Jobs are available in all fields in every European country.Interested students should send $2 to ITE, 68 Herren-gasse, Vaduz, Liechtenstein (Switzerland) for a completedo-it-yourself kit which includes the key to getting a jobin Europe, the largest European job selection available,applications, instructions, money saving tips and informa¬tion guaranteeing you a trip to Europe (including trans¬portation) for less than $100.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 20. 1964