UC faculty finds future of Republican Party in doubttered great surprise at the electionresults. “It raises the question of thesurvival of the Republican Party.The party is in great danger,” Mor-genthau said.Most distressing to Morgenthauwas the tremendous majorities thatthe Democrats will have in theSenate, House of Representatives,and Governor’s mansions.Morgenthau was surprised at themargins of the Democratic victoriesin' the non-Presidential races. Hefelt that they would be much smallerthan they were.On the New York senatorial race.Morgenthau said only that he “wouldhave coted for Kennedy, because weneed a counter-weight to the powerof the President.”Yale BroienYALE BROZEN, professor anddirector of the Research Manage¬ment program in the GraduateSchool of Business and one of Gold-water’s chief economic advisers,said simply that “we lost in thesame way as A1 Smith and AlfLandon.” Landon carried the small¬est number of states in history' (2)when he lost to Franklin DelanoRoosevelt in 1936. Goldwater car¬ried 6, all from the south and south¬west.There was some consolation forBrozen, however. He cited the vic-The outcome of the November 3 elections held few surprises for those membersof the political science and history departments reached for comment by the Maroon. Opin¬ions, however, varied as to how Barry Gold water’s landslide defeat would affect thefuture of the Republican Party.John Hope Franklin ■■■*». - ■ mmm M p "* surpri*ed by ^ resuIls otF . : election. He was, however, slightly■ I think one o( the most impres- f ! puzzled by the Presidential results.<ive aspects is that the RepublicanParty now finds itself in a positionnot very different from the Dixie-crnfs in 1948,” commented JohnHoix; Franklin, professor of Ameri¬can history. At that time, Franklinsaid, the country turned away froma political group that offered littlelo the continued well-being of thenation. He sees the Republican Partyin the same position as of now.In spite of their comparativelyI >o<>r showing, Franklin does notpredict the complete dissolution ofthe Hejaiblican Party. He feels thatGoldwater's 25 million vote totalis “not to be sneezed at.” Never¬theless, he feels that certain changesare necessary in the Party’s leader- of the political science department,ship in order for it to avoid being the Presidential results two-party system.”the US “minority” party. reaffirm the existence of rules in Hans J Mor thFRANKLIN DID NOT feel that American life. “The Republicans ’tl,o senatorial victories ot the Ken- broke afl the ndes and so lost, Michelson anice pn>nedy brothers - Edward and Rob- P'>“*ett commented. fessor departments oi politicalcrt - in Massachusetts and New Pritchett agreed with Franklin that science and history and director ofYork respectively would imperil the death ot the Republican Party the Center for Study of Americanin Georgia, which gave Goldwatera sizeable plurality. “I had thoughtthat Johnson would do better be¬cause of increased Negro registra¬tion,” Johnson said.Johnson saw the main lesson ofthe election as the disaster of run¬ning what he called “a fringe can¬didate.” “Goldwater was a terribledrag on the rest of the Republicanticket,” Johnson said. GovernorGeorge Romney of Michigan, John¬son added, was the lone major sur¬vivor ot the “brutal" Goldwaterundertow.The Republican Party’s future iscut and dried to Johnson. “It’s gotto rebuild,’’ he said. “The rebuildingwill take some time, but we need aPresident Johnson’s present posi- is not at hand. Instead, the immedi-tion as the leader of the Democratic ate effect of the election as PritchettParty, although he admitted this sees it will be an attempt by thewas a possibility in the future. The Republican moderates to redistrib-vietory of the Kennedys, Franklin ute party power in their favor,contended, “demonstrates the pow- “This may take a couple of years,er of the Kennedy name” more than however,” Pritchett said.the magnetic power of the Johnson , .coattails. “Robert Kennedy won be- ALTHOUGH ROBERT Kennedy scause he was Robert Kennedy,” victory in New York will keep himFranklin quipped. in “the forefront,” Prichett doesOn the other hand, Franklin did «ot foresee any immediate chal¬ice! that incumbent Governor Otto lenge to President Johnson’s Dem-Kerner s narrow re-election in Illi- ocratic leadership. He would notJiois was due to the President. “Or- comment on the Kemer victory overdinarily, with another Presidential Percy in Illinois because of Percy’scandidate. I think (Charles) Percy former connections with the depart-would have won,” Franklin de- ment.L .. _ . , Walter JohnsonC. Herman Pnfchetf Walter Johnson. Preston andC. Herman Pritchett, professor Sterling Morton professor of his-ol political science and chairman tory, said that in general he was Foreign and Military Policy, regis-Voi. 70, No. 10 The University of ChicagoAnalyzes Goldwater downfallDouglas sees Friday, November 6, 1964 31LBJ progresstory of Romney in Michigan andnoted that lie was one of many in¬cumbents who won.Jeremy AzraelJeremy Azrael, assistant profes¬sor of political science, stated thatthe lopsided results of the electionmay have a lesser effect than manypeople now suppose. “The fact thatRomney did so well illustrates thatthe Republican Party is not too bad¬ly weakened,” Azrael contended.Azrael did admit, however, thatthe odds of Goldwater or of aGoldwaterite would be slim as far asgaining the 1968 nomination wereconcerned.THE KENNEDY victory in NewYork was viewed by Azrael in muchthe same way as it had been bythe others. He did not think thatthe Kennedy election, at least atpresent, constituted any formidablechailege to President Johnson’ssupremacy within the party.Any student interested inparticipating in an evalua¬tion of the Levi Reportshould contact Ellis Levin,SG Academic Affairs Chair¬man, at extension 3272 orat PL 2-9718.Ginsburg lauds Levi reportby Tom HeagyNorton Ginsburg, associateDean of the College, statedMonday that in competing forthe resources of the Univer¬sity with the Divisions and Profes¬sional Schools, the College has beenmuch less effective than its sizewould merit.Speaking at Shorey House’s week¬ly Coffee Plus, Ginsburg attributedthis lack of effectiveness to the his¬torical accidents which gave theCollege its present structure. Whilein a Division each department isa statutory body (that is, providedfor by the Statutes of the Univer¬sity ) and consequently the headof each Department is appointed bythe President of the University,neither the sections, nor the staffsof the college are statutory bodiesand their chairmen are appointedby the Dean of the College ratherthan by the President.The effect of this, Ginsburg ex¬plained, is that any part of theCollege which desires somethingfrom the administration must gothrough the Dean of the College.Even the College Policy Committee(an eight-man committee elected bythe College faculty, two from eachsection, and chaired by the Deanof the College) has no authorityexcept that delegated by the Deanof the College and can take no ac¬tion except tlxrough him.Goes aloneTHUS, EXPLAINED Ginsburg,“when the Dean of the College goesto the administration, he in effectgoes alone, while when the Deanof a Division goes with the headsof his departments, each of whom is an officer of the University in hisown right.”The recent proposal by ProvostEdward Levi would create six statu¬tory bodies within the College: theCollege Council, and the five Coun¬cils of the area colleges. According toGinsburg, this would greatly increasethe power and effectiveness of theCollege.While giving the College a greatersay within the University, Levi’splan would also give the Division agreater say in undergraduate edu¬cation, Ginsburg added that thiswould not be giving the Divisionsa new area of concern, since theyare already involved in undergrad¬uate education, but it would maketheir responsibilities explicit, whilethey are now for the most part im¬plicit. This should also encouragemore Divisional faculty members toteach in the College, Ginsburg said.Faculty creationThe Levi proposal is not andshould not be a curricular reform,Ginsburg asserted. The curriculumshould be the creation of the faculty,not the Provost. Neither the inten¬tion nor the effect of this proposalwill be to impose curricular changeson the College; rather, the idea isto make it more practical for curric¬ular changes to originate within theCollege, Ginsburg stated.“The proposal offers positive en¬couragement for experimentation,”said Ginsburg. There should develop,if the proposal is accepted, morevariants in the general educationcourses, new general education pro¬grams, and a closer relation betweengeneral education and specializededucation, he concluded. “I look to this new JohnsonAdministration to press forsuch measures as Medicare,anti-poverty and Appalachialegislation, and a new education bill,one that would be of particular helpto the nation's colleges.” said Sena¬tor Paul H. Douglas in a talk hereWednesday.Senator Douglas spoke before acapacity crowd in the Divinity SchoolCommons and told his audience ofDivinity students that “Goldwaterdidn’t understand either emotionallyor intellectually the significance ofnuclear bombs. He (Goldwater)called for defoliation in South VietNam with tactical nuclear weapons,which,” Douglas quipped, “is an in¬teresting way to find out what’sgoing on under those trees.”Douglas felt that this basic lackof understanding was a principalfactor in Goldwater’s defeat. Doug¬las said, “We found that the twomost effectively questions we couldask in campaigning for Johnsonwere: ‘Whose finger do you wantnext to the nuclear button’ and‘When the hotline rings who do youwant to answer it.”Balance neededFor Freedom and peace to bemaintained the United States mustmaintain a delicate balance betweenforce and moderation in its deal¬ings with the Communist world,Douglas pointed out.DOUGLAS POINTED to the ac¬tion of President Kennedy in forcingthe removal of Russian missiles inCuba and the United States retalia¬tion in the Gulf of Tonkin as ex¬amples of successful uses of limitedforce. In both of these instances, Douglas said, “There was resistancebut avoidance ol the ultimateweapon.”Douglas spoke of what lie felt werethe Johnson administrations and thenation’s ultimate goals. “I would callthe first objective the abolition ofpoverty. In America today familiesrepresenting almost forty millionpeople subsist on less than sixtydollars a week. Why in our wealthysociety should people live like this?Now is the time to start adheringto the social principle of Jesus’ teach¬ings.”Cities under-representedDouglas said that Americans to¬day are a primarily urban people,“. . . but” Douglas continued, “urbanmajorities are under-represented instate legislatures all over the coun¬try, including the one in Springfield.The problems of urban people havebeen too long neglected. I look toincreased attention at all levels ofgovernment for the vital urban prob¬lems of sanitation, suitable recrea¬tional facilities,,air and water pollu¬tion, and, of course urban renewal.”Douglas felt that the renewal of theHyde Park-Kenwood area has beena good thing in the over-all analy¬sis.“However,” Douglas said, “I thinka chief failure in urban renewal pro¬grams in Chicago and in other citieshas been the failure of city plannersto realize that segregation in hous¬ing both by race, and by incomegroups is an nudesirable thing.Public housing should be diffusedthroughout the city rather than be¬ing built only in slums. By erectinghousing projects in slum areas itis almost guaranteed that the proj¬ects themselves will soon becomeslums, thus defeating the whole pur¬ pose of the project.’' Douglas saidthat the new more liberal congressshould make the road for urbanlegislation considerably easier.SHIFTING TO foreign affairs,Douglas said that a third ultimateobjective of the Johnson Administra¬tion will be the keeping of the peace.“If,” Douglas said, “Russia andChina turn to Stalinist policies thiswill not be an easy task.”Campaign hateReturning to the campaign. Doug¬las said that he was frightened bythe amount of hate he saw in thecampaign. “This was as vile a cam¬paign as I have ever known. Politicssometimes makes one want to washhis hands. The book, A Texan Looksat Lyndon, was the most viciousthing I have* ever seen. The author(J. Evetts Haley) accuses PresidentJohnson of every ooneievable crimefrom bribery to murder,” Douglassaid.WHEN ASKED TO analyze tlieGoldwater vote of thirty-ei^t percent, Douglas said that most of thepeople who voted for Goldwater didit as a matter of convention. “But,”he added, “we must remember thatthe psychotic vote in this countryprobably amounts to five per centof the electorate.”Douglas concluded with the liopethat the Republican Party will turnto more moderate leadership. “Gold-water,” he said “is actually not abad fellow at all, but I’m afraid thatGoldwaterism serves only as a con¬tinuing poison in the American main¬stream.”Before entering politics, Douglaswas a professor of economics at UC.EDITORIALMiss. Freedom Democratic program worthy of supportWhile the attention of most of thenation was being overpowered by theaimless mudslinging of the campaign,the attention of a few hundred collegestudents and other devoted civilrights workers were building up sup¬port for a different sort of election.In Mississippi, the Freedom Dem¬ocratic Party offered Negro citizensthe only reai “choice” available. Only(5.7 per cent of Mississippi Negroeshave been able to register to vote,in spite of the tremendous obstaclesput in their way by state officials.Those who could vote had the “choice”of the traditionally segregationistDemocrats and the nev.iy active seg¬regationist Republicans,It turned out that the appeal forSenator Goldwater was strong enoughto carry a Democrat-turaed-Republi-can candidate for the House to vic¬tory on his coattails.In the FDP election, however. Gold-water attracted exactly 14 votes outof almost 60,000 ballots cast.While the FDP workers were can¬vassing the Negro community overthe state, they met, as expected, withnumerous harrassments. The jailing of Robert Gilman, a UC student whois on leave and working in Mississippiall this year, was not an isolatedincident. Reports were made all dur¬ing October of bombings, arrests onabsurd, trumped-up charges, andthreats of job firing for anyone whohelped the FDP effort.It is ironic that, while Goldwaterwas spouting off about “violence onthe streets,” he was making a hitin white Mississippi, where civilrights workers were in danger onevery alley and country road.The Freedom Vote has ended. Themore than 170 college students, in¬cluding the two from IT, who wentdown for two weeks to help in theVote have returned. But the effortsof the civil rights organizations con¬tinue. The FDP plans to send adelegation to Washington in Januaryto protest the seating of the regularMississippi legislators, elected in theregular, almost lily-white, voting.This attempt was made necessarywhen the Mississippi secretary ofstate refused to accept petitionssigned by a thousand voters askingthat FDP candidates be placed onthe official ballot. It is to be expected that this efforthas about as much chance of succeed¬ing as the demand by FDP had thatFDP delegates be seated at the Demo¬cratic convention in Atlantic City. Itseems to be too early for MississippiNegroes to exert effective politicalpower on the national scene. TheFreedom movement has just started;Negroes, according to SNCC workers,are still too intimidated to let themovement attract wide support.But the movement has started.The Mississippi Freedom movementmay yet effect the kind of revolutionRobert Moses spoke of in Chicagolast month. Moses, director of COFO,the co-ordinating organization for allcivil rights groups in the state, toldthe founding convention of the Free¬dom Democratic Clubs of Illinois a“revolution” means the strengthen¬ing of people to run their own affairs,to participate in the decisions thataffect the way they live.This is the goal toward which FDPhas started. But will it get there?Not if violence against participantsin the movement is allowed to go unpunished by Federal authorities.Hasn’t SNCC made it clear in itsmany messages to the Justice De¬partment that FBI agents must usethe authority they have to intervenewhen they witness incidents wliichdeprive persons of their civil rights?But other things can be done tohelp. Even the UC students who can¬not take two weeks off to go to Mis¬sissippi themselves have the opportu¬nity, indeed the obligation, to con¬tribute their money. A drive thissummer among UC students raisedsome money, almost $1,000. It wasprobably spent long ago. More isneeded. The address of the COFOoffice in Jackson, Miss., is 1017 Lynchstreet.Money is still being collected tohelp defray the transportation ex¬penses of Dick Atlee and Steve Cold-smith, the two UC students who wentdown for two weeks. Money is stillneeded to help defray the expensesof Robert Gilman, who went downthis summer and is staying untilnext fall. Heather Tobis, 1409 NewDorm, can handle contributions forthese causes.m * *n ,i '■ - , -snb i i"m.-si4-•>*. .. » - v ey$tT©Sr' •>:••••>< •• %The Levi report:2 amendments proposedTO THE EDITOR:In his recent memorandum, Pro¬vost Levi provides us ail with anexcellent background for consideringthe role of the College: its responsi¬bilities to its students’ liberal educa¬tion through the General Studiescourses and the specialized offeringsof the departments, and its respon¬sibilities to the University as a whole.He sees clearly the basic problemsof the College: the split betweengeneral education and specializededucation in terms of faculty andcurriculum co-ordination. The pro¬posals he makes to help the Collegepresent an opportunity for the revi¬talization of the role of the Univer-s i t y in undergraduate educationwhich we must not let slip by.The aim of the College has crystal¬lized in the discussions of the pastmonths: to provide a four-year,liberal curriculum, integrating gen¬eral and special education withoutlosing the peculiar virtues of either.This is a clarion call for a commit¬ment on the part of the entire Uni¬versity to research in the field ofundergraduate education, to in¬creased freedom for individual in¬structors to experiment in the staffcourses, to an eventual reorganiza¬tion of courses and curricula morereflective of the deep bonds betweenknowledge understood as liberal edu¬cation and as part of scholarly en¬deavor.PROVOST LEVI’S proposals areadmittedly only organizational; hewould organize the College into Sec¬tions paralleling the divisions, 1 leadedby a co-ordinating council with re¬sponsibility lor appointments andcurricula overall, but each withresponsibilities for the general studiescourses relevant to its area and theirco-ordination with the specializedcourses. The idea of a fourth yearseminar is also worthy of specialattention.But, I think, the obvious oppor¬tunity here for co-operation betweenthe College Sections and their coun¬terpart Divisions is our real chanceto implement those commitments toundergraduate educational research,just as has been done at Chicagoin the past with such pioneering re¬sults. Several joint Divisional Sec¬tional Committees on Curriculum,arranging also for full use of divi¬sional facilities and faculties in thiseducational research and experimen¬tation, could be a springboard farbringing the University's full re¬sources to bear in this undertaking.The crying need which has broughtabout this re-evaluation has been thegrowing isolation of the generalstudies courses. Hie once dynamicand experimental courses have lost their appeal to the University’s topscholars. The staff instructors wouldwelcome, I hope, the chance to in¬dividualize their sections and dosome experimenting of their own,free from the uniformity which nowaccompanies even change. Trie Uni¬versity is ready, I think, for a periodof trying somehdng new. We seealready the seeds of this tendencyin the areas of biology and English,and the chance to see the Collegeas an integral part of the University—a research forum in the true spiritof creative scholarship—will bring usall new challenges.The intrinsic advantages of anexperimental atmosphere, oi stu¬dents learning with their instructors,wiU bring to Chicago’s tradition newspirit and vigor. We on the insideare often slow to see that vigor pass¬ing away, but ask a few outsiderswhat they think of our “Chicagospirit” and you may be surprisedat what you hear—especially as re¬gards the College. My point is thatthis is the best of all possible timesfor College and divisions to renewthe continuing Great Experimentwhich is the fountadnliead of theChicago tradition.IT HAS BEEN remarked that theProvost’s proposals are perhaps toobroad in their outlines, and justifiablefears have arisen * that the CollegeSections would in reality becomeseparate colleges tending to destroythe present unity and running con¬trary to the growing spirit of inter¬disciplinary co-operation. We would,I hope, never support so drastic adisruption of the scholarly commu¬nity, for rather the whole idea ofthese proposals is to make the Col¬lege organizationally better able toprovide an exciting and stimulatingforum for the whole university, andbring to undergraduate education thesame interdisciplinary freedom underthe Sections that graduate educationand scholarship enjoy under the Di¬visions. On die other hand, suchpossibilities as the joint CurriculumCommittees and others implicit inthe reorganization, such as 1 havementioned, would I hope be enthu¬siastically exploited by the faculty.So let the Provost’s proposals sofar examined be adopted and adoptedwith them the general resolve toDivisional - Sectional co-operation inthe development of new undergradu¬ate courses and curricula aimed ateffectively integrating tlie generalstudies and specialized disciplinesinto a four year liberal education forthe Chicago student.In regard to Provost Levi’s remain-proposals, I would ask but twoAmendments: First, let us not Sim¬per the curriculum committees byrequiring a year of general educa¬tion in common until we see if this would indeed be a wise proposal.Second, while the Fifth College canserve many useful functions as asupplement to the regular four Col¬lege Sections in the areas of inter¬sectional co-ordination and thoseareas not covered by the Sectionsdirectly (such as general educationin philosophy, non-Western civiliza¬tion, perhaps English, etc.), let usnot make the mistake of perpetuatingthe very isolation of the generalstudies which we deplore—by mak¬ing them joint responsibilities andprimarily that of the Fifth College.For the whole plan to be effectivethe Sections and hopefully the jointDivisional-Sectional planners musteach have control of its own relevantcorv.ribution to general education.JAY L. LEMKEUSSPA secretary disputescommuncation board claimTO THE EDITOR:I have heard that Gene Groveshas proposed some sort of publica¬tions board at the University ofChicago. . , .I understand that Groves has saidthat (U.S. Student Press Associa¬tion) policy declares it “unwise” tohave no publications board or otherbody between the dean of studentsand the editors of the newspapers.To my knowledge, this is not USSPApolicy. . . . The Code of Ethicsand the Declaration on the Freedomand Responsibility of the StudentPress (in the USSPA Codification ofPolicy) are both quite clear in theirsuggestions for relationship betweenthe school’s administration and thenewspaper. Briefly, our policy isthat there must be a clearly out¬lined plan by which an editor canbe removed. Our policy doss notstate that this should be through aboard of publications or any othersuch body.My own opinion would be that theMaroon has existed for many yearsas a semi-autonomous newspaperand that there has been very littletrouble created. 1 see no justificationfor changing the arrangement thatnow exists between the Maroon andthe University. . . .TOM DeVRIES,General Secretary.U.S. Student Press Assn.Philadelphia, Pa.EDITOR’S NOTE: The relevantpassage to which DeVries refers inthe declaration on Freedom ami Re¬sponsibility of the Student Pressreads as follows:“Wherever there are seriouscharges of irresponsibility on the partof an editor, the extent of theirvalidity must be ascertained throughdue process. Any subsequent actionshould come from within the in¬ ternal structure of the newspaper,except for the extraordinary powerto remove the editor, wliich shouldreside only in the authority whichappointed him.”The MAROON editor is presentlyelected by a majority vote of thestaff members at a meeting eachspring. 'Ibis system of election wouldnot be changed if the S(» proposalfor a “communications board” wereput into effect. The board wouldhave power to hear complaintsagainst the student communicationsmedia, and make recommendationsto the organizations involved concern¬ing appointments and dismissals.Final action has not yet been takenby the SG assembly on the question.‘Woyzeck’ lesson: itselfTO THE EDITOR:I saw Buchner’s “Woyzeck” at tlieLast Stage as your critic, MichaelKlein, did. I had been amazed bythe choice this team of devoted ama¬teurs made. If nothing more, theyproved to exert a remarkable instinctboth literary and theatrical by de¬ciding to perform this unique play.True, there are mistakes of trans¬lation. True, one may be embar¬rassed by that final recitation of theparable of Jesus and the adultorywoman which the director apparent¬ly meant to indicate this was theplay's lesson — which it definitelyis not. The lesson is tlie play itself:tlie story ot the simple human crea¬ture chased around by his well-meaning superiors, trying to get afoothold in love and family-life but,finally, left to his absolute loneliness— and insanity — at last becominga murderer. It is not a tragedy atall. It is a sad story or, rather, thesad story of man abandoned byheaven and, even by Fate (the Fateof the tragedy). Hie essential toneis set by that fairy tale which“Grandmother” tells the children inone of the last short scenes of theplay, tlie tale of “the poor lonelychild,” which Is, really, the exactreversion and revocation of all fairytales ever told. It is a pity yourcritic did not even mention thepart of Grandma, at all. Miss MegMcGeehan did it masterly, with pre¬cisely that paradoxical voice andattitude of a seer who does notsee the slightest token of salvation.I, for one, had never been movedby this passage so deeply before —•although I have attended a numberof professional performances of theplay, over the years. A visit to theLast Stage, I feel, is highly recom-mendable, were it for this experi¬ence only. Here, the seree of Buch¬ner’s is definitely present.I cannot help feeling that the Ma¬roon’s review was much more disap¬ pointing to me than die Last Stage'sperformance.DOLF STERNBERGERVisiting Professor.Committee on Social ThoughtEisenstein is deeperTO THE EDITOR:In a recent analysis of Eisenstein'are, Mr. Walsh makes the followingcomments about the Soviet direc¬tor’s films: they lack the value ofhuman expression, the plots areodious or dull, and the charactersare superficial. He proceeds with afull resume of tlie director’s specialfilming techniques. He finishes byapplauding the human and poeticaspects of HIE GENERAL LINE,decrying the banality of NEVSKY,and lamenting the overall decline inthe IVANS.But Walsh neglects tlie possibilitythat a seemingly superficial subject -matter, wlien integrated with newtypes of meaning, may actually con¬tribute to a new experience. Eisen-stein works with patterns of lightand dark, with movement, contrast,balance, rhythm, and form. The pat¬terns illuminate, visually and emo¬tionally, tlie subject-matter of thefilms, provoking new combinationsof thoughts and feelings when pre¬sented to us,Walsh’s analysis is woefully in¬complete: lie talks only about poorplot, shallow characters, ami inter¬esting techniques. He neglects toconsider what Eisenstein’s tech¬niques may be able to achieve inilluminating more subtle areas ofhuman experience.STEPHEN LANDERChicago MaroonEditor-in-chief Robert F. LeveyBusiness Manager ... Harris S. JaffeManaging Kdiior David L. AikenAssistant to tlie Editor. ( Sharon GoldmanCampus News Editor ....Joan PhillipsEditor, Chicago Eiterary ReviewMartin MiehaelsonAdvertising Manager Jan PaynterCiiltnre-Eeature Editor David RichterPhotography co-ordinators Bill Caftre.vSteve WofsyRewrite Editor Eve HochwaldMovie Editor Saul KahanCirculation Manager ....Jan GraysonEditor Emeritus .... John T. WilliamsStaff: Sandy Lewy, Rick Pollack. TomHeagy, Carol Gutstein, Steve Ford.Jerry A. Levy, Kenneth Krantz,Hendrik DeJong, Betsy Bachman,Betsy Weinrob, Howard Rosen, PeterRabinowitz, Charles Dashe, RheaRollin, Jamie Beth Gale, Mary Me-Mullen, Judith Schavrien, BarbaraJur, Barry Weitz, Marian Schwager,Dick Ganz. Martha Grossblat, JoanTapper, Dinah Esral, Howard Fish¬man, Dick Atiee, David Satter, Wil¬liam Herzog. Allen Adcock, JudyFavia, Ron Pell, Cecilia Hatch, DanHortzberg. Dorie Solinger, EljisLevin.The Maroon it published Tuesday andFriday mornings by student* at the Uni¬versity of Chicago. Its editorials and lettersto the editor do not indicate Universtypolicy. Officea are in Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E. 59th at., Chicago 60637. Phones: Ml1-0800; extensions 3265, 3266, 3269. Sec¬ond class postage paid at Chicago, III. i2 • CHICAGO MAROON • N*v. 6, 1964 »tevi, Wick, Playe viewpresent UC adviser system“When it works well, it works very, very well.” saysdean of undergradute students George L. Playe of the Col¬lege’s system of advisers.The system is quite complex, according to Playe, because“at any given minute, the advisers —are concerned with 3,000 individuals, students come back into the facultyDue to that number, R would tie for the last two years,” Wick added,unusual if there were no dissatis-factions arising from the system ’* 5ome Pr°»te»"S, . , , Some of the problems in the sys-More than 50 advisers are involved temf according to Playe, arise ' inin the program, now in its sixth “assigning students to the depart-vear ot operation in its present rnent advisers, since over 60 percent of the students change theirAssignment J"‘"ds as to lheir tields-IV advisory system begins when “T,,*S„T®-'R ,N. Pa^cular ti'erewere difficulties with the reportingfirst year and transfer student* are 0[ flie p]acernent test results, butassigned to advisers in their partic- this was beyond the control of theular areas. Registration for die advisory system. Considering everv-resent year is the first task of ad- Lhin£- Uiere ha^ been reasonable Committee to reyiew policyDraft changes expected shortlypiesvu-ier and advisee, while pre-regis¬tration in the spring for die comingyear is the final task.PRIOR TO IIIS second year, eochstudent is assigned to the senioradviser in his department and toone of the administrative advisers success,” Playe said.Wick feels that the main difficultyin the advisory program appearsin the first year, when “the advisersare not always available. They'requite often at one committee meet¬ing or another.”Provost Edward H. Levi, authorof the recent report proposing ain that department who can give reorganization of the College, com-special advice on such topics as mented that his plan would aidgraduate and career opportunities. the advisory program. “Under thesystem of area colleges, the student“In contrast to the first year, the and his adviser would be able toadviser has a changed function in r©late closer to the student s de¬partment,” Levi stated.Students favorabletive second, in which he must masterthe mechanics and answer tihe tech¬nical questions, commented Warner Student reaction to the presentA. Wick, dean of students. “He is adviser system appears to be favor-not chiefly concerned wuli the aca- able, especially among first year,. ,, students. Advisers have been makingdemic questions. , .. „ . ...a dehnite effort this year to getAdvisers in the thud and fourth know their students better. As a. . „ , . , first step toward achieving this,years are principally concerned with ,wq firs( year advisers invited tfleirthe students majors. * Advice m advisees to their homes for dinnergeneral topics withers away, as the earlier in the quarter. By Laura GodofskyCaltegiate Press ServiceWASHINGTON — The out¬come of Tuesday’s electiondid little to change the factthat the Selective Service Actis headed for change during the nextfour years.Suggestions and recommendationsmade during the campaign by bothcandidates will probably give a bi¬partisan spirit to tive work done mthe near future, fn September cam¬paign speeches. Senator Goldwaterpromised that “Republicans will endthe draft altogether, and as soon aspossible.” President Johnson con¬fined himself to promises of re-evaluation. Nonetheless, he tooseems on a course that will lead torevisions.RIGHT NOW a 30 man civilian-military team is at work on a com¬prehensive one-year review of theselective service system. Theirstudy, which was initiated by Presi¬dent Johnson, will be completed inApril. It could be a prelude to newpolicies on manpower procurementfor the armed forces.In a recent press conference.President Johnson said the studywould include the following:• “A thorough evaluation of thefairness of current and alternativedraft selection procedures.• A series of studies aimed attracing the Influence of the draft onemployment, on training, on mar¬riage rales, on education, and soforth.• Surveys and analysis of theplans and attitudes of young menof military service age to assist usin designing ways to increase thenumber of volunteers.• A review of the potential forextending the use of civilians in theplace of military personnel in sup¬port type activities.”There have been two main prob¬lems with the 'draft, as critics rang¬ing from Wisconsin's liberal SenatorGaylord Nelson to Arizona’s conser¬ vative Barry Goldwater agree— un¬fairness of selection procedures andan oversupply of potential man¬power.Only 43 per cent of the 18 26 yearold men who form the current“draft pool” now serve in the armedforces, according to Lt. Col. ErwinBrigham of the Department of De¬fense. Within ten year's, this ooulddecrease to 30 per cent, he said inan interview.THE PROPORTION of eligiblemen who are drafted has declinedbecause the population and conse¬quently the draft pool have con¬tinued to grow while military man¬power needs have remained rela¬tively constant at about 2.7 millionmen.Today there is a pool of 10.6 mil¬lion men to help supply the armedforces. By 1967, this total is expec ted to reach 21.4 million althoughthe size of the armed forces willnot change.Sizeable numbers of eligible menare deferred or exempted from thedraft for reasons including marriage,fatherhood, defense or educationalemployment (including student sta¬tus), and Peace Corps service.Despite increasing numbers of de¬ferrals, there are still more thanenough men available to meet theaverage annual draft calls of 90.0<)0men. One thing tihe current studywould like to determine is whetherthere are enough men available torecruit an additional 90,000 soldiersrather than draft them.BECAUSE OF the deferrals, “alltoo often, draft calls discriminateagainst many of the poor and lesswell-educated—against those whocannot afford the various escapehatches now open.” Senator Gold-water has charged.Along similar lines, Senator Nel¬son has charged that the oversupplyof men has “corrupted the systemto favor those who can afford tostay in college until they are 26,those who marry early, men with criminal records or moral short¬comings, those who are mentally orphysically below standards . . ., andthose whose employers will claimthat they are essential.”COMPOUNDING PROBLEMS ofthe draft’s failure to function equita¬bly have been problems of draftees’failure to function satisfactorily.Many of the specialists the armedservices need require more train¬ing than can be crammed into adraftee’s two-year term. Morale ofdraftees is low and turnover is high.Unfortunately for the men whowill receive degrees this spring andwho are not planning to continue ingraduate school, get married, workNotice To All RegisteredStudent OrganizationsThe Student Activities Office hasreceived the results of the studentcensus card indicating the extra¬curricular interest of all studentsregistered at the University in theFall Quarter. Copier, of these areavailable to all organizations reg¬istered with the CClRSO Commit¬tee of Student Government andStudent Activities. Organizationswhich have not yet registeredshould fill out the forms availableat the Student Activities Office.in a defense industry, or join thePeace Corps, the changes in thedraft do not appear likely to takeplace immediately. The current lawexpires in 1967, and only limited orno action will be taken before then.Senator Gaylor Nelson (D-Wis.),who has been campaigning for theabolition of the draft, would like tohear from students on this issue.The Senator’s administrative as¬sistant told CPS last week that stu¬dents who are among those affectedby draft laws “ought to be com¬municating with their Congressmen.”Students are currently deferredfrom the draft so long as they re-main in college.0 ytt.l. siaujjtr 1964 phtf* if ttitmy hays dalgtt d»t mcsjbeBAR I.E DUC 3 1/4 oz ?VCALVE SAUCE TARTARS 6ftOzSAUCE AIOLI 6ft ozSAUCE TYROLIENNE 6ft oz. .SAUCE BEARNA1SE 6ft oz. . . .SAUCE VERTE 6‘/i oz. . .P&C FILET OE MACKEREL 4% ozP&C FRENCH SARDINES 4ft oz.Rene Beziers PEAS WITH ONION 15 ozFaugier MARKONS IN SYRUP 9 oz. .Legal INSTANT COFFEE 1 3/4 oz. .WHOLE MACKEREL in White Wine 13 1/4 oz.WHOLE HERRING in White Mine 13 1/4ozROSEWATER ft . . .U,MARRONS NATURElMAKRONS in Syrup 14 oz. - y.iv-Faugier WHOLE MARRONS in Vanilla Syrup,9 oz. jars ft" .ft V.Whole CHESTNUTS in Brtnellozw .69$.794.79$.79$.794.794.39$,69c..4941.29...5941.19. .954. .494. .9941.79 pat£ d« FOIE-nof the prohibitively *expensive goose liver pat£, buta very |tasty delicacy indispensable foi snack- |ing 39<1.79. 894 ESCARGOTS (SnaUs) combo . . . , ....ft.CHESTNUT PUREE 15 ozSARDINES Bretone 1/4 oz ft ,LU PETIT BEURRE BISCUITS one lb. tins ......LU CHAMPAGNE BISCUITS one lb. tinsLU PETIT BUERRE BISCUITS 8 oz. ftLU RASPBERRY STRAWS 6 oz. . . . 99$LU MELANGE CHOISI 7 oz 79$LU CREPE DENTICLES 4 oz .794LU BISCUIT ES 1014 ox 69$? 1.89. .594. .4941.791.59.89$raneeaislesM:••• .-**»' ' -"Tout le monde! A l’affaire! a la cart! a la faire a la carte!’ (’Everyone! Go to thefair! Grab your cart! Get the fare of your choice!’) ... at the Aisles de France inthe Co-op. You’ll find a bit of France, partout! Most of these products are in theinternational foods or gourmet departments, but look on the other shelves, too. Younever can tell what you’ll discover, chez co-op. ( V FRENCH SARDINES V. 'ft. 59$Cointreau ORANGE MARMALADE . . . 65$BAR LED UC 65$Old Thymers FRENCH CANDY 4 oz 89$Leonard French White VINEGAR 59$Delicatessen Department: Imported French Cheeses-ROQUEFORT, MUENSTER, CAMEMBERT, PORTSALUT,PONT IV EVEQUE, La FINE BOUCHE, BONBEL, BRIEFrance’s Popular Brand Cigarette at the Coffee Bar,OAULOISES CAPORALCREME DE MARRONS \ .45$MARRONS GLACtiS . . . .... 1.45Maurice LIVER PATE . .39$SNAIL FORKS . ft 59$SNAIL PINCERS . 1.45SNAIL PLATES .... . V. 89$>*economic!gourmandise!co-operation!!j: ■ • /At last, you can tale home a famous ^FRENCH BOUDOIR COOKIE from the fCo-op. They come in a handy packageranOUKI KOUKI are hazelnut biscuitsnamed for the export Irade..... .474U CHAMPAGNE are for nibbling atopening nights of the theatre andother champagne parties .754All these are French-type ladyfingersvvith many uses. Grielles BISCOTTES 10ft oz. . . . . . . .La Vie Candv:FRAMBOlSF.S 2ft oz. . . .PASTILLINES 21, oz. . ... .TART LEMON PETITE 24 oz.MENTHOSKISES 2ft OZ. . . VR EG I. ISS E 2ft oz. .VBLACK CURRANT DROP 2ft ozPATF. (3 pack)CREME DE MARKONS 17 oz. w , ESCARGOTS ( snails). Fhe critters orein the can; the shells in the package.Heat the snails according to the direc¬tions and put them back in the shells.Eat them out of the shells with theseproper accessories.(Ifyou'rebudgety,.29$ you can re-use the shells.) v-.29$.294• 29<.294.294.494.594 Snads and Shells: 51.09, *2.49Iazeran Bed BAR T.F DUC JELLY lft oz. .554Bocquet Dijon MUSTARD 3ft oz. fancy jars . >354Black Unv COCKTAIL OLIVES 7 oz .854 ; DIJON MUSTARD/i! n'y aqueMAILlE,qui m'aille’ ("If it's not MAILLE, it'snot tor me.")vx.r VVv class FLAGEOLET BEANS 14 oz 79$Glass TINY PEAS 14 oz. 79$>V Glass CARROTS 14 oz 79$1 Glass MUSHROOMS 14 oz 1.79V4 Tins ENDIVES 15 oz 65$V White ROQUEFORT DRESSING 49$,.*>!! Red ROQUEFORT DRESSING 69$.. . -. Parizot MUSTARD 69$^JfjMANGE PUFFS 39$Nov. 6, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Public Relations tells UC story to campus, worldby Barbara Jur“We try to tell the sftory of a great University usingmass communication,” states Carl W. Larsen, Director ofthe Public Relations (PR) Office, in explanation of thepurpose of his department.“Our goal is to communicate theassets, good work, and attributes ofthe University to the community,'’Larsen further explained. However,the “community’’ to the PR Ofticemeans not only such external seg¬ments as the United States, or Illi¬nois, or Chicago, or even Hyde Park,but also an internal community com¬prised of over 800 faculty membersand the entire student body.To this end, not only does the staffof the Public Relations Office write,publish, and distribute news releasesto the “external community,’’ butalso publishes a large number ofdescriptive pamphlets, bulletins andmagazines.Bulletins on Robie House, the ar¬chitecture of the University, the facil¬ities, and urban renewal, such asMuriel Beadle s re.ent tional Achievement’ was granted to“The Hvde Park-Kenwood Urban , , ^Renewal'Years, A History to Date,” University by the American Col-are only a few of the aspects covered lege Public Relations Association inby the PR staff. its 1964 National Honors Competition‘for a case study of the year-roundoperation of a news bureau in amajor metropolitan university.’ ”“The award to the University ofUC REPORTS important“THE UNIVERSITY of ChicagoRewits. a magazine which tries tokeep the professors in the variousdepartments in touch with up-to-date Chicago includes a certificate fromhappenings in other Divisions and the ACPRA and a $100 cash prizedepartment, is an important vehicle from the Sears-Roebuck Foundation,”in internal communication,” Larsen Larsen revealed,pointed out. Context, another of thePR magazines, is aimed at the exter¬nal community.Aside from their writing and pub¬lishing activities, the Public Rela¬tions Office also processes speechesand photo acquisitions, conducts Sat¬urday morning tours of the campus,maintains the display cases on thefirst floor of the AdministrationBuilding, coordinated a televised tapesegment for a recent “Today” show,and ran a science Open House forapproximately 1500 high school stu¬dents.These many activities do not gowithout due recognition. This pastsummer, ‘the Certificate of Excep- “Final tabulation of entries re¬ceived from across the country to¬taled 100 individual case studies inERRATAIn Tuesday's Maroon, a printer'serror made it appear that Robert Gil¬man, a UC student on leave who wasarrested while helpinq in the Missis¬sippi Freedom Vote drive lost Satur¬day and released after a niqht injail, had been mistreated. The sen¬tence should have read ". . . he hadNOT been mistreated.'*In lost Friday's issue, the story onthe Maroon pall of students' prefer¬ences in the campaign erroneously in-dicated that Howard Schomer is deanof the UC Divinity school. Schomer ispresident of the Chicaqo TheologicalSeminary; Jerald C. Brouer is theDivinity dean. Brouer also opposedGoldwater, however. the public relations, financial supportprojects and programs, and programmanagement categories, and morethan 800 in the publications cate¬gories,” Kelvin J. Arden of NewYork University, Chairman ofACPRA, said.Talented staffTo achieve the recognition andaccomplish the work, a talented staffis maintained, according to SheldonGarber, Director of Media Services.“The staff, I believe, is character¬ized by a high degree of professionalcompetence and an intellectual curi¬osity that is at home on the campus,”he stated in a recent speech to newseditors of Big Ten universities.THE DIRECTOR, Larsen himself,worked with the Chicago Sun-Times,Time Magazine, United Press Inter¬national, and the United States In¬formation Agency. Sheldon Garberwas formerly stale editor of the Chi¬cago Bureau of the United PressInternational.Seymour Friedman, formerly over¬night manager of the Chicago bureauof the International News Service,and Assistant Editor, World BookEncyclopedia, reports on the UCLaw School, urban affairs, and Cojtv-munity Relations problems.Research in the Biological Sciencesand press releases are the area ofresiponsibdlity of Mrs. Beta Havton,an alumna of the College. Mrs.Felicia Holton, also an alumna, is amanuscript consultant.Robert Hughes, formerly with theChicago Sun-Times and a Pro¬grammed Instruction firm in London,England covers the Physical andSocial Sciences and also maintainsan interest in computers.THE HUMANITIES and copy read¬ing are the responsibility of WilliamJohnston, formerly night editor, Den¬ver Bureau, United Press Interna¬tional, while Sam King, formerlyAssistant City Editor, Chicago DailyNews, is responsible for the coverageof the Graduate School of Businessand the Oriental Institute.The area of responsibility for Mrs.Nancy Newman, formerly with theChicago Daily News, includes the University of Chicago Hospitals and Mrs. Virginia Weissman, formerlyClinics. with Aeronautics Magazine.Mrs. Blossom Porle was formerlywith the Chicago Sun and AdvertisingAge. Her responsibility includescoverage of the Graduate School ofEducation and the National OpinionResearch Center.Aside from working with Friedmanon tile “Today Show.” Mrs. ThelmaReich covers the College of theUniversity and cultural affairs. Shewas previously with the CapitalTimes of Madison, Wisconsin.Special events are in the realmof Mrs. Frances Stutzman, who waswith Encyclopaedia Britannica, and MAROON benefitsNATIONAL AND local news medteare not the only ones to benefit fromthe services of the Public RelationsOffice. “The Maroon often receivesad vance notices aside from the r^-gtvlar press releases,” Larsen pointedexit. “This is because the Maroonan important link in the communica¬tions of the internal community,” hecontinued.Tlie work of the Public Relation/;Oftice is under the ultimate directionof Richard F. O'Brien, Vice Presi¬dent for Planning and Development.Haydon: art unmarketableHarold E. Haydon, associ¬ate professor of Art and direc¬tor of the Midway Studios,declared last Saturday that“art is too important for the marketplace,” where it is treated as acommodity to be bought and sold.Rather, he said, the governmentshould step in and “make art avail¬able to all,” because it is not only“the right of the people to have andenjoy art,” but it is also “a neces¬sary condition of life.”Spe;iking to the Emeritus Club atthe Center of Continuing Education,Haydon stated that what is wrongwith the present art situation isthat the US neglects its art and itsartists. This he attributed to eitherthe US's being too young to reallyappreciate them or to its being toonervous to think of large-scale sub¬sidies for art.ART IN THE US was classified byHaydon as being treated as either“gilt-edge securities, blue-ribbonstock, art-fair bargain opportunities,department store trivia, junk, or out¬right fraud.” In order to live on theincome resulting from the sales oftheir works, artists are pressuredby the galleries, public opinion, andtheir own needs to keep up with thelatest trends while using the de¬grading devices of mass production, promotion, and publicity to producesalable works, he said.Americans, with their long historyof philistinism, according to Haydon,have always depended on others tomake their artistic judgements,mainly because of a failure in theireducation. Part of the solution tothis problem would be the morewidespread knowledge of and parti¬cipation in art by the American peo¬ple, he stated.Haydon said that the other partof the solution would lie in exploit¬ing an^l expanding the examples oJtlx? WPA and PWA projects of thedepression. When the art markethad dried up at that time, artistswere given an opportunity to usetheir skills in behalf of the generalpublic, helping the ordinary citizento attain a full and meaningful life.Haydon advocates the same for thepresent.YSA sets meetingsThe Young Socialist Alliance willbegin a series of classes based onthe fundamentals of Socialism Sun¬day, at 2 p.m., at 1515 East 54thStreet. These classes are open tostudents who are interested in learn¬ing about and studying about social¬ist ideas.ALL VOLKSWAGENPEA10?S CAW SELLYOU A NEW *65 VWSEDAN FOie.*1647OU£ PRICE IS THESAME. OUR SERVICEIS excellent;superb—UNQUESTIONABLYTHE DIFFERENCETHAT MAKESTHE PEAL/ JOUR USED CARSARE GREAT TOO!100% GUARANTEEPARTS AND LABOR 30 DAYS$1195'44 SIMCA4-dr. Sod on'63 VOLKSWAGENSedan*63 KARMAN GI+IAConvertible'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 $129S$1795SI 145S1345$1395$1795$2195$1295$995$595$945$895$2195$995 Rockefeller Chapel 59th St. & Woodiawn Ave.Boch’s MASS IN B MINORRichard Vikstrom, coud; ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIR mem.of CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Teresa Oranies, *op;Charlotte Brent Elsa Charlston, mezzo-sop; Walter Carringer, tenor;Michael Cousins, Bass; Eduard Mondello, organ.SUNDAY — NOVEMBER 15 — 3:30Season Tickets: $16.00; $12.00; UC Stu Staff $8.00Single Concerts: $4.00; $3.00 UC Stu Staff $2.00ON SALE: Chapel House and Bookstore.COMING: Dec. 13 MESSIAH: Jan 17 APPAREBIT, Hindemith,MASS, Stravinsky, MISSA PAPAE MARCELLI, Palestrina; Feb. 14NETHERLANDS CHAMBER CHOIR: Mar. 14 MISSA SOLEMNIS,Beethoven; Apr. 11 ISRAEL IN EGYPT, HandelREMEMBERSOUTHh IMPORT MOTORSAUTHORIZED VW — >PORSCHE DEALER ^NEW CARBU 8-4900 !71st &STONY IS.643-4040USED CAR llCLOSED SUNDAY ) JIvl Wjdol SajooIl Qo. ICLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERSRUSH SERVICEavailable when neededPhones: Ml 3-7447 1013-17 East 61st St.HY 3-6868 Across from B-J Ct.Serving the Campus since 1917 Studies piling up?Pause. Have a Coke.Coca-Cola — with a lively liftand never too sweet, refreshes best.things gObetter,!ar^WlthCokeBottled under Uie Authority of The Coca-Cola Company by< TH# Coca-ColaBottling Co. ofChicago, Me. J4 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 6, 1964Need more spacesUC plans underground garage under MidwayT C, in an effort to alleviate what has come to be aregular campus hazard, will protect the members of itscommunities a bit better from passing automobiles by con¬structing at some time in the future an underground parkingId below the Midway.James Ritterskamp, vice-president Grove ave. between 60th and 61stnistration, told the Maroon J1151 south of WashingtonPark.for adm,hc> undergTO.Und ea*'age would Plarte are too inde£inite however>Ik- built in conjunction with the for any definite statement on theVeteran’s Administration Hospital capacity or the cost of the projxjsedbuilding, to be constructed on Cottage garage, Ritterskamp said.Friedman meets Keyserling(Reprinted from the Amhertt Student)Arguing from the proposi¬tion that “Modern liberals areunwitting and unpaid front¬men for special interestgroups.” Milton Friedman attackedthe Johnson administration anti-poverty bill as a "Phony” on thegrounds that "it has as much rela-t on to the causes and cures of pov-vi y in this country as football hasto a college education. What can aone billion dollar program solvethat those on which the UnitedS ates is already spending $45 billionannually cannot?”Friedman, a Distinguished Serv¬ice Professor in the UC departmentof economics, and Burry Goldwater’seconomic counselor, debated theI roblem of poverty with Leon Key-serling, economic advisor to formerPresident Truman, at Amherst Col¬lege on October 26.Ci ing his frequently printed pro-|x>sition that Government welfareprograms rob tlte poor to supportthe not-so poor, Friedman criticizedeverything from agricultural subsi¬dies and urban renewal to socialsecurity and the Minimum WageAct. For all the government’s gcxxiintentions, Friedman argued that"such programs have been producingno results—or the otiposite resultfrom that intended—for the pastthirty years.”Economic JusticeNot to be dismayed by what helabeled 'The Philosophy of Nihil¬ ism,” Keyserling rebutted with theproposition that economic justice, aswell as the high levels of prosperityand tremendous resources in theL rated States, today, make povertyin any form intolerable."Poverty is not an economic prob¬lem alone. It is a moral and socialproblem which is inseparable fromother problems such as lack of edu¬cational opportunity, substandardhousing, unemployment, and racialprejudice which our society has beenattempting to solve through its ownmost effective agent—the FederalGovernment,”DefinitionKeyserling and Friedman even en¬countered great difficulty in agree¬ing on a definition of poverty. Fried¬man argued that it must be definedin terms which are relative to anumber of different standards. Ad¬mitting that this may be true, Key-scrling however, defended the recentdefinition from the Council of Eco¬nomic Advisors that any familywith an annual income of $5,000 orless should be considered impover¬ished.At only one point in the debate didFriedman attempt to defend theeconomic pronouncements of Sena¬tor Goldwater in the presidentialrace. Ho was immediately squelchedby Keyserling’s remark, "If I hadbeen invited to debate politics Iwould not have come.”Count the Changes in the All •NowHere's a start! New styling, new comfort,new power. Want more? OK go ahead...The MGB's got lots more! Even wind-up \ Bwindows.Count 'em all at..,>COB NELSON MOTORSWe don't advertise be-Import CentraAustin /T\ MS. I,,W C0S* P'1"5 bU'Healey If B/gLNy Sprite compare our deliveredPeugeot VM Triumph prices before you buy!Tull line on display • new A used • foreign A domestic6040 S. Cottage Grove Midway 3-4501DR. AARON ZIMBLER. OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-686*EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty Discountthere is only one\foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.authorized sales and serviceaustin, nig, morris, austin healey, triumph 8c jaguari r- -ii _.i .and we fix all other european cars,5424 South Kimbark Midway 3-3113sL AT PRESENT, there are approxi¬mately 2<XX) spaces for cars in Uni¬versity parking lots. Approximately2200 students own and operate cars.The other cars on campus on anygiven day beolng to visitors, com¬panies making deliveries, and rvon-University neighborhood residents.Beside on-campus parking spaceshortages, problems have also oc¬curred recently in outlying areas ofHyde Park and Woodlawn, particu¬larly on those blocks where thereis married students and faculty hous¬ing. Since these two groups ownconsiderably more cars than the2200 owner! by students, great spaceproblems have been developing.As a solution, Ritterskamp relatedthat the University has alreadyappropriated the money necessaryTalk on East-Westideological split Typically congested scenean Fifty-ninth streetThree recent participants in East-West exchange programs will dis¬cuss the possibilities and difficultiesof crossing ideological barriers atthe Shorey House Coffee Plus nextMonday at 9 pm.Francis Lloyd, director of pne-collegiate education at UC and sub¬ject of a recent Maroon story, at¬tended the Conference of SovietAmerican Citizens in the USSRlast summer. Hal Sehifman, a grad¬uate student in linguistics, spent thesummer of 1963 in Russia and lastsummer in East Germany with anAmerican and British Quaker group.John Cratsley, a second year lawstudent and one of Shorey's assist¬ant resident heads, travelled in Po¬land and the USSR the summer of1963 and spent last summer with agroup of Russian, British and Ameri¬can students in this country.The three will refer to their ex¬periences wi h students and othersfrom Communist controlled coun¬tries. for the construction of one lot innorthern Hyde Park, where themajority of married students’ hous¬ing is found. It is too early far spe¬cifics, however.Construction costsAsked the reasons for the $10 perquarter charge for a space in aUniversity parking lot, Ritterskampstated that charging the occupantsis the only way the University canhope to regain the cost of buildingtlie lot, which sometimes runs ashigh as $1500 per space.IN ADDITION to the initial costof the land, Ritterskamp said, there is tlie cost of constructing the lot,the cost of clearing the land, andthe maintenance expense. Further¬more, there is the necessary outlayof salaries to campus policemen, whokeep off unauthorized cars and main¬tain security for patrons of the lot.Only one step is presently beingtaken by the University to fight thetraffic problem, which is heaviestat 9 am and between 4:45 and 5 pm.Two campus policemen direct trafficat tlie corner of 58th and Ellis, whichis th« most congested corner on ornear campus, during the latter fifteenminute period.HYDE PARK SHOE REBUILDERSServing Hyde Park for 40 YeanProfessional DyeingColon MatchedRefinishing of Shoes oodHandbags1451 E. 57th HY 3-1247FRANKLIN FOOD STOREORIENTAL FOODSJAPANESE OUR SPECIALTYCHINAWARE GIFT ITEMS1309 E. 53rd STREETHY 3-5057TELEPHONE SALESPart-Time for NewspaperAfternoons or EveningsHA 7-2117 Mr. King 9 VOLT TRANSISTOR BATTBKIBS 19c10% discount to students with ID cardsSales and Serviceon all hi-fi equip¬ment, foreign anddomestic.TAPE RECORDERS W»Phonographs - AmplifiersPhono Needles and CartridgesTubes - Batteries24 hr. Service CallsTV—HI-FI SQ00RADIO fO— Telefunken & Zenith —AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORYest. 192?1300 E. 53rdIn the 53rd-Kimbark Plaza 3-9111MR. PIZZAS9 ecv,a\* WE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTSHY 3-8282FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENAlso Ch. Broiled Hamburgers 0 of cPe<%sPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For t PartySausage 2.00 3.06 4.00 5.00Mushroom 1.50 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 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vi and Vi 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients 50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pixxa 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 Pizxa 2.50 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers) RIBSYE STEAKSANDWICHBox of Broasted Chicken10, 16, 20 PiecesSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCIOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGE,MEAT BALL1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — Fri. to 3:00 a.Sat. to 3:00 a.m. — Open 2 p.m. Sundays Now FeaturingST. LOUISSPARE RIBS 1IIMjiIIittfSntII.19ijf-fit INov. 6, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5r.Maybe we shouldn’t care how cold people drink beer ...just so they drink Budweiser. (After all, we’re in business!)But we do care. And if you think that’s unusual, youought to see the care we take to brew the beer. For instance,we could save a lot of time and money if we weren’t sostubborn about our exclusive Beechwood Ageing andnatural carbonation. But we are .. . and we have to paythe price. In fact, we know of no beer produced by anyother brewer that costs so much to brew and age.That’s why, after we go to such fuss to brew all thattaste into Budweiser, we want our customers to get it allout. And this is a fact: chilling beer to near-freezing tem¬peratures hides both taste and aroma.40° is just right.To make it easy for you, we’ve asked all the bartendersto serve Bud at 40°. Also, every refrigerator is designed tocool Bud at 40°.Of course, if you’re on a picnic or something and theBud is on ice and nobody brought a thermometer...oh, well. Things can’t alivays be perfect.Budweiser.that Bud®...that’s beerlANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS . NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPAA modest fantasy on an immodest proposalThe scene opeas on the Universityof Chicago campus. The year is1984. There are no thought police,no Big Brother, assuredly no Anti-Sex League. But the Levi proposalshave been put into effect by the ad¬ministration, and the shape of thingsis decidedly different from what itwas twenty years before.Burton-Judson Courts looks thesame as it always did: a good dealolder, perhaps, in need of tuck-pointing, perhaps, but die same oldBJ. The population is decidedly dif¬ferent. however; there are no fresh¬men having bull sessions in the liouselounges, for there are no freshmenin the houses. BJ is the grounds andcampus of the upperclass Humani¬ties majors. This is not set by ad¬ministration fiat, but by the conven¬tion of the College. Anyone can,theoretically, move in there. Tie reis, in fact, a second-year mathe¬matics major in Linn House. Fewpeople know this, even in his liouseand on his floor, however, for hespends little of his time there. Hecan usually be found at KimptonHall, talking over his introductoryphysics course with his cronies inhis own Area College.He does not dislike tlie men inhis house; but lie finds he has littlein common with them, for the menof Linn are, to a man, fourth-yearstudents majoring in English. He isdivorced from the talk about gradu¬ate schools, recommendations, fel¬lowships, and prizes. He would bevery lonely, he knows, if he stayedat Linn, and he is engaged in draft¬ing a petition to be allowed to moveinto Kimpton Hall next quarter.THERE ARE OTHER unhappypeople in Burton-Judson Courts.There is a third-year student inMead House, for example, who hasfound that in order for him to changehis field of concentration from mu¬sic to mathematics, he will have tostay a fifth year, for he lacks thesecond year courses common to thePhysical Science Area College. Heis lucky, he knows: his parents canafford the extra year’s expenses, buthe hates to waste tiie year. He isthinking about transfering to another University, but he knows that hewould not like the life anywhereelse nearly so well.Beadle Hall, on 55th Street, is amelange of students with various in¬terests; they are the first-year stu¬dents. By the end of the year, how¬ever. each of them will be faced bya decision: which Area Collegeshould I choose? A few of tliem haddecided this long ago, in secondaryschool: their decisions will be easy.Most will not be ready to choose bythe Spring. But choose they will,because choose they must. Some willchoose responsibly, weighing alterna¬tives they favor, dealing with what¬ever considerations their eisrhteen-year-old minds can cone with. Somewill choose lightly. All will choose,blind, ignorant fre.-hmen helpingthemselves and each o*h°r with oneof the most important decisions theywill ever make.But most of the students arc hap¬py. One can be happy dining at arestaurant where the menu is fixed,and where there are no substitutionsallowed, if the food is well prepared,nutritious, and properly served. Sothe students are happy, because thefaculty is as good — and better inmost areas — than it ever wasbefore. And so they enjoy tlveircourse of study prescribed for themfrom above.SOME OF THEM are dissatisfied.Physics majors who wish to takeelectives in the Humanities; philoso¬phy majors who wish to take coursesin biopsychology: pre-meds who wishto learn to compose music. Theyknow they are allowed free electivesfrom their course of study in whichto do these things, but they feelthat it might be unwise. Tnose stu¬dents who stick the closest to theirfield of interest are seen to do Ihebest: they take their electives intheir own field, building up a basisof knowledge which gives them anadvantage in their required courses.Tiev are becoming parochial, inter¬ested in little (except work in theirow'n field), but they are the mostsuccessful. The dissatisfied studentsremember what they’ read in theBulletins about the Old New, New College with nostalgic longing. Per¬haps they will dare to stand counterto the trend: more likely they willnot.The second act takes place in tlieyear 2004. The change begun almostforty years ago is complete. Thefreshman year held in common hasdisappeared, and applicants are nowrequired to state the College oftheir choice at entrance. From theirchoices, the entering students arechanneled off into the proper dormi¬tory, fed tlie proper fcxid, given theproper advisor, and placed in theproper classes. The course of studyin each major is fixed, and nowallows only three electives, to bechosen from within the College.Activities are still important onthe campus, but woe betide thehumanist who attempts to run forStudent Government, and woe be¬tide tlie mathematics major who at¬tempts to join the Theatre. The activities are now used as “labs"for the various disciplines — SGIs an appendage of the political sci¬ence department, UT of the Englishdepartment, and so on.BUT THIS'NEW order is upset.James Voice, the current Presidentof the University dies at the age of79, and tlie dean of the Yale LawSchool is installed as the new Presi¬dent. He spends tlie first few monthsof his administration talking withtlie students about tlie University,about their educations, about topicsof general interest — so he thinks.And lie finds that some of the stu¬dents are interested in physics, somein math, some in medieval Frenchliterature — but that none are in¬terested in education as such, lib¬eral, diversified, general. Tie stu¬dents are as astonished as the newPresident: they wonder why a per¬son interested in physics ought tostudy music and art — what good would that do him later? They feelthat the education offered at theEastern schools is facetious, dilet¬tantish.And so it is over tlie students’vocal protests that the College isagain reorganized and liberal ♦sin-cation reinstituted ait UC. Tie prod¬uct of tlie school is rough for thefirst years: the teachers are nolonger used to teaching courses ofa general nature. Tie entire Physi¬cal Science College must be kickedupstairs and new instructors hired.But ten years later liberal educa¬tion Is holding its own at UC, andthere is talk of abandoning the areacollege system entirely and insti¬tuting a normal four-year liberalarts college. This is, of course, stillunpojxalai-: an undergraduate writesan angry Gadfly in the MAROON,calling the idea a throwback to tin:old Beadle administration.LonginusLaw school fellows namedFive lawyers have been namedBigelow Teaching Fellows and In¬structors by the UC Law School.The 1984-65 Bigelow fellows arePeter Douglas Fischbein, a memberof the New York Bar who receivedan A.B. from Columbia College inI960 and an Ll.B. from ColumbiaLaw School in 1963; William AlfredHillhouse LI., who received an A.B.degree in 1961, and an BI B. in1964, both from Stanford University;Manuel Stuart Klausner, a memberof the New York and California Barswho received an A.B. degree fromthe University of California at LosAngeles in 1959, an Ll.B. in 1962 andan Ll.M. in 1963, both New YorkUniversity; Warren W. Lehman, whoreceived an A.B. degree in 1950 and a J.D. degree in 1964, both fromUC; and Nicholas Velonis, a mem¬ber of the Indiana Bar who receivedhis A.B. in 1957 from Brown Uni¬versity and his J.D. degree in 1960from UC.According to Phil C. Neal, deanof the law school, these appointmentsare awarded annually to law gradu¬ates of high standing. Tie fellowshipshonor Harry A. Bigelow, a memberof the law school faculty from 1904until his death in 1950. The pro¬gram is under the supervision ofDallin H. Oaks, professor of law.Recipients hold the rank of instructorin the law school. They assist firstyear law students in legal researchand writing, and in the moot courtprogram.. . . Lorsqu’un nouveau membre vients’ajouter a la famille, il est grand tempsde penser & augmenter votre porte-feuille d’assurance Sun Life.En tant que repr^sentant local de la SunLife, puis-Je vous visiter & un moment devotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Pork Bonk Building. Chicago IS. Ml.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYNov. 6, 1964CLASSIFIED adsFOR RENTI mis., lovely view of Murray park.$)<>•'». <143-5896.Near UC 4 marr. epls. desired. Shareotir ■>() rm. Victorian mansion. Each,.pl has mst. bedrm., pvt. bath, nat.lirpl A use of entire res. Indr.park fac. Ext. grnds. $125. 637-5529.FOR SALEHappiness is the Sunday edition of theNew York Times delivered right toyour doorstep for the rest of the aca¬demic year just in time for brunch.. Students $14.50 for 26 weeks <55cpit to: Friendship Products, Inc.p o. Box 7083, Chicago.I‘.nit VW station wagon. 9 seater, de¬luxe model. 1500 engine, excellent eon-diton and low price. UC facultyowner. BU 8-8372 ipm) ©r ex. 2746.TYPING AND EDITING: term papers,theses, etc., close to campus. 324-2089.Bargain rates on subs, to New Repub¬lic: lull yr. $5.75, 9 months $4.75;limited time only; call 684-5917 bet.«;-S pm.Introductory Sale — NY Times Sun.,K»:I5 at BJ, New Dorms, & Pierce. Typing-Term papers, theses, etc. Reas.HY 3-2438.ROOMMATE WANTED: Share 6 rm.apt. with fern. grad, student or careerwoman. Own rm. & bath.. $65, 363-2574 or WE 9-3525, x-359.TYPING AND EDITING: Term papers,theses, articles, book manuscripts, cor¬respondence A stenorette transcrip¬tion. Smith-Corona Elec. Call: 667-1508, 1-4 PM only.LOST AND FOUNDLOST: l Silver Hamilton ladies wrist-watch, on campus; reward. Call HY3-0480.A black and white tom cat has adoptedHitchcock House. If you have beendeserted by such an animal pleasecontact MI 3-0800, ext. 260.LOST: Black trench coat. ContactHitcheok 62. Reward.PERSONALCome to a party 7 pm Nov. 8 at 5115Univ., apt. 2, to welcome UC returneesfrom Miss.; entertainment, enjoyablecompany; adm, 50c. Congratulations to Rogers Peters andAnne Lovgren on their engagement.Margie refuses to accept responsibilityfor Namoi’s debts.Congratulations to Roger Peters andKay Boyle on their engagement.Happy Birthday Social Rules Commit¬tee!Congratulations to. Roger Peters andGale Sanger on their engagement.Levi speaks on College Proposal atGNOSIS caucus Sunday in Ida NoyesLibrary at 8 PM.Copies of complete Levi proposal areavailable upon request at the StudentGovernment Office, 2nd floor, IdaNoyes Hall.TWA is now engaged in a nationwideprogram to publicize its services amongthe university community. As TWAcampus rep. for UC, I would bepleased to help you with your travelarrangements. If job interviews or va¬cation plans will be taking you tosuch cities as NYC. Boston, Phil., L.A.,San Francisco, please feel free to con¬tact me for info, or reservations. MikeLavinsky. 745 Linn House, MI 3-6000.Thanks to Diane and St. Mammon forfavors received.PETRONIUS: Meet me at Swift Coffee-shop. Today or Monday, 11:30. •NS A protestsMiss, violencePHILADELPHIA (CPS)—Tne “proliferation of bombings,beatings, and arrests’’ in Mississippilias brought a protest to PresidentJohnson from the President of theUS National Student Association.NSA President Stephen Robbinsnoted that more than 100 studentshad gone to the state to participatein vo.er registration projects and inr.he 1964 Freedom Vote Campaign.He asked the President to “fulfill(the federal government’s) lawfulresponsibility and, through the pres¬ence of sufficient force, insure thesafety and the rights of those whoare working for freedom and equali¬ty in Mississippi.”NSA represents some 350 studentgovernments.New appointmentsGrant Gilmore and Willy Ferdi¬nand Wilferd Madelnug have beenappointed professor of Law and as¬sistant professor of Islamic History,respectively.Assistant professor Madelung re¬ceived his PhD. degree in Islamiesat the University of Gottingen in hasnative Germany.GRANT GILMORE is currently aWilliam K. Townsend Professor ofLaw at Yale University. His areasof specialization are contracts, ad¬miralty, commercial transactions,and negotiable instruments.HIGHLIGHTSfromPAGEANTMAGAZINEarmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmKONE YEAR LATERA Special Report:J.F.K.A Final Tribute By Adlai StevensonHarry Golden • Joseph Alsop • ArtBuchwald • U Thant • James RestoaWHAT WEHAVE LEARNEDby Hubert II. HumphreyHalHOW GOOD ARETHE ’65 CARS?Over 30 rewarding articles includ¬ing features by James Baldwin, BobHope, Cindy Adams and SidneySkolskyPAGEANTmagazineAMERICA'S LIVELIESTLUO VC H T-PR0 VO KIN GMAGAZINE! .(Look for these highlights next month)NOW BN SALt!Let a Smile Be YourUmbrella When You ’ ’ -ranAndes Maincoat *beautifully tailored coat has a stand-up collar, fly front,self yoke, and is made of the very finest cotton. Acomforting feature is the split shoulder with London Fog’sspecial Third Barrier®Construction. It defies the mostdevastating downpour. For perfect temperature control,this easy convertible is equipped with a zip-out warmefmade of 100% orlon pile. Sizes Regular 34-46*Short 36-42, Long 36-46. In natural, olive*black, with black liner. & —•DuPont's reg. t.m. $40.0UTHE STORE FOR MENStout-Stottrn attfc Camptwin the New Hyde Perk Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 Knocks election night TVMinnesota. The image of the Presi-The radio and TV coverageof Election Night reflectedthe entire tenor of the Presi¬dential campaign—the “show”was, by and large, dull. Since veryfew doubted the outcome of thePresidential race, interest centeredon the battle for minor offices among56031)01531 and gubernatorial candi¬dates, and for audience ratingsamong prominent newscasters.An air of calm dignity reigned atCBS where the venerable WalterCrunkite resumed his position asanchorman after having been oustedduring the eorrveotioas. At NBC,Huntley and Brinkley held forth witha supreme confidence worthy ofBrezhnev and Kosygin. ABC’s How¬ard K. Smith functioned as an incon¬sequential third party in the TVpolitical scene.DESPITE THE CONTEST for rat¬ings and some exciting battles forSenate seats, an air of electronicmediocrity pervaded the long night.Cronkite’s fatherly objectivity grewtired, and even Brinkley’s renownedW'it failed him at times. Huntleyexhibited distinct uneasiness when hereceived the news that Huntley, Okla¬homa, had gone for Goldwater. CBSreporters intoned the name of VPA(Vote Profile Analysis) with the regu¬larity of Goldwater mentioning Godor Bobby Kennedy alluding to Jack.As totals and percentages floodedthe airwaves, viewers looked forwardto speeches of concession or victory.Highlights came with the characteris¬tically dignified words of concessionby Senator Keating of NY, flankedby the sad faces of his colleagues,Senator Javits and Gov. Rockefeller.Later, victorious Bobby Kennedycontinued has impersonation of hasbrother, dosing his speech with aliterate quote.Johnson and Humphrey finallyspoke, exhibiting their respectivehomely humor and cheerful gregar¬iousness for audiences in Texas and dent and his wife in Texas withGovernor and Mrs. Connally seemedto give no one uneasy memories ofNovember 22. All through the eve¬ning comparisons were matte betweenvoting tallies racked up by Kennedyand those being scored by Johnson.American politics passed from oneera into another with the smoothpredictability of electronic technology.THE LOSER’S appearance gave usa perfectly calm and unchanged Gold-water, conceding the obvious in thesame lifeless voice with which he haddeclared the impossible and proposedthe inane during the past months.He ended in Phoenix as he hadbegun in San Francisco, with adiatribe against the press. Barry’spleasant personality and personalvirtues were evident, and there wereno signs of sorrow— has face re¬mained as rigid a6 if he had juststepped off Mt. Rushmore. And in asense, thank God, he had.Saul KahanLevi to discussproposal SundayEdward H. Levi, Provost of theUniversity and author of the pro¬posal which would reshape the un¬dergraduate college of UC, will dis¬cuss his plans ait Ida Noyes Library,Sunday evening at 8 pm. An opendiscussion will follow Levi’s initialremarks.'Hie meeting is being sponsoredby GNOSIS, the majority party inStudent Government, with the co¬operation of the Academic AffairsCommittee of SG.At 7:30 pm a regular but briefGNOSIS caucus will be held to dis¬cuss progress being made on theStudent Activities Budget-Commu¬nications Board bill now being re¬worked by a specially created sub¬committee of Student Government.Calendar of EventsFriday, November 6DEBATE TOURNAMENT: Fourth An¬nual UC National Debate Tournament,Ida Noyes, 12 am-9:30 pm,DISCUSSION: reading of “The LastWord” by James Frougliton followedby discussion and exist dinner, ChapelHouse, 6 pm.LECTURE: Teaching Marxism InAmerican Schools, Dr. Richy Kamm,Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.CHICAGO STYLE DEBATE: Resolved:That Prostitution should be legalized,50c, Ida JNoyes, 7:30 pm.SABBATH SERVICES: Hillel, 5715Woodlawn Ave., 7:30 pm.LECTURE: Armchair Travelogue: Isra¬el, International House, 1414 E. 59thst., students 50c, IHA members 75c,others $1, 8:15 pm.FIRESIDE: The Sabbath: SymbolicLanguage, Rabbi Max Ticktin, Hillel,8:30 pm.EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist53-Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3 8372Student and FacultyDiscount SEMI-FORMAL: Autumn Leaves withAi Peters orchestra, InternationalHouse, 9-12 pm.Saturday, November 7DEBATE: Final rounds of UC NationalDebale Tournament, Ida Noyes, 9:15-6pm.VISA: Volunteer work at Chicago StateMental Hospital, New Dorms’ parkinglot. 12:30 pm.RUGBY: UC vs. U of Wisconsin, StaggField. 3 pm.SZO: Annual Cafe’ Tel Aviv, singing,dancing, and oriental food, $1 non¬members, Dolnick Center, 6122 Califor¬nia, 8:30 pm.Sunday, November 8ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL SERVICES:The Reverend J. Edward Dirks, 10 am.CARILLON RECITAL: RockefellerChapel, 12:15 pm.INTERNATIONAL HOUSE DAY: Pro¬gram and candlelight ceremony. As¬sembly Hall. 1414 E. 59th st., 3:30 pm.BRUNCH: Bagel and Lox Brunch-graduate program, “Morality as anElection Issue,” Prof. Marc Galanter,Hillel, 11 am.BRIOGE CLUB: Fifth Annual OpenPairs Championship, Ida Noyes Hall,7:15 pm.Monday, November 9CLOTHING SALE: sponsored bv theUC Laboratory, Sunny Gym, 8:30 am-1:15 pm and 2-6 pm.LECTURE: Northern Renaissance Artin Shakespeare’s Time by Hal N. Op-perman. 108 Godspeed, 8 pm.LECTURE: Pacifism, Jean Lasserrc,Graham Taylor Hall, Theological Semi¬nary, 9 pm.COFFEE PLUS: East Meets West. JohnCratsley, Sliorey House, Ninth floorPierce Tower, 9 pm.BRITISH SCjENTjSTSSenior scientists from Imperial Chemical In¬dustries Limited, England, will be visiting theCampus on Thursday, 12th November.They wish to meet graduates in any scienti¬fic discipline from Britain or the British Common¬wealth who would like to discuss careers withI.C.I. in the United Kingdom. Recent arrivals aswell as those who are considering the possibilityof returning to Britain, are invited to get in touchwith them through:Mr. L. S. CalvinCareer Counseling & Placement,5706 S. University AvenueMOV/E REVIEW MUSIC REVIEWCollege love affair no Xmas gift oh joy! Oh rapture!symphony flies againWell, Hollywood has doneit again. It has taken twoteenagers, added love, mid¬night parties, drive-in moviesand somehow come up with a sup-posedlv ‘‘mature treatment of sexon campus.” Well, that it isn t.However, to be fair, one must saythat THE YOUNG LOVERS is apretty decent dramatization of acollegiate love affair. In most specif¬ics the movie is indeed excellent.Peter Fonda and Sharon Huguenv, in the title roles, portray their partswell. At several points it is evenpossible to believe that they are inlove. The supporting couple, NickAdams and Deborah Walley, actjust as supporting players should,as foils for the more serious ro¬mance.Samuel Goldwyn Jr., in his direc¬torial debut, does adequately andshows a lot of promise. He is care¬ful with the handling of the story,and avoids bad taste throughout.THE ELEMENT that reduces thisSCREEN SCENEOUTCAST OF THE ISLANDS (to¬night) is the 1953 film version ofJoseph Conrad’s novel. Although di¬rector Carol Reed is now in aslump. OUTCAST comes from hisvintage period (TILE THIRD MAN,ODD MAN OUT. FALLEN IDOL).The film features three veteranF> r i t i s h actors, Trevor Howard.Ralph Richardson, and Robert Mor-lcy.NIGHT AND FOG (Sat.) is a.ieloquent film of profound moralsignificance. Alain Resnais, creatorof LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD(at the Hyde Park today) hasachieved one of the few successfulcombinations of color and black-and-white photography in this uniqueand moving documentary. Rich mu¬sic and superb visuals eloquentlywarn that beneath the relative calmof the post-war world, the resur¬gence of Nazi barbarism remainsa possibility to be guarded against.TOBACCO ROAD fSun.) is oneof the many renowned achievementsof the great John Ford, creator ofSTAGECOACH. HOW GREEN WASMY VALLEY, THE INFORMER,and THE QUIET MAN, amongothers. His excellent movie treat¬ment of the Erskine Caldwell novelretains the rural authenticity andearthy humor of the original.REQUIEM FOR A H E A V YWEIGHT (Mon.) is Rod Serling’sadaptation of his award winningteleplay. Anthony Quinn gives one ofhis best performances, as the de¬graded prizefighter. He is well sup-]x>rted by Julie Harris, MickeyRooney, and Jackie Gleason.Doc Films’ birthday tribute toShakespeare begins and ends (Tues.)wilh a showing of Orson Welles’MACBETH. Welles stars with Jean¬ette Noland. Roddy MacDowelland Dan O’Herlihy in a starklystylized work similar to some ofthe Ingmar Bergman films.BUSTER KEATON WILL star ina film by Samuel Beckett. . . .Jean Genet is writing a screenplayfor Marlon Brando. . . . THE OUT¬RAGE. the American version ofPASHOMON, stars Paul Newman,Laurence Harvey, Claire' Bloom, antiEdward G. Robinson. All the starsagree that Akira Kurasawa’s originali. a great film, except Harvey whocomplains about ‘‘all that walkingthrough the woods.” . . . IngmarBergman will take a two-year vaca¬tion from filmmaking. His newest,ALL THESE WOMEN, is colorcomedy getting mixed reactionsfrom the critics. . . . John Ford willHyris ParkAuto ServicsCaslrol OilOunlop TiresRupert Seat Belts STP5340 Lake ParkPL 2-0496 take on a co-director for his nextfilm, THE YOUNG CASSIDY. Hispartner will be Jack Cardiff, agreat cameraman (FANNY) whoalso directed SONS AND LOVERS.. . . Next year’s Academy Awardsmay offer some poetic justice—ifJulie Andrews gets the Best Actressprize for MARY POPPINS overAudrey Hepburn in MY FAIRLADY ... at the LADY press con¬ference, producer Jack L. Warnersaid he prefers to make moviesthat ‘‘look up to the stars ratherthan down to hell.” I guess that forWarner those filmmakers who cre¬ate bv looking around them arecompletely ou, of the picture. . . .Sean KahaneryTHEATRE REVIEW movie from a potentially greatmovie to a fair cne is the script.George Garrett, (an English teachernow at Princeton) is the authorof tile screenplay, and a more banalscript could not be imagined.Normal conversation is admittedlyinane, but Mr. Garrett has some¬how mistaken normal dialogue forthe kind used by Hollywood. There¬fore, the screenplay for THEYOUNG LOVERS is not only inanebut ridiculous as well.In real life, a girl mi.^it say toa boy at Xmas vacation time ‘‘Havea nice Xmas,” and the boy mightreply “Same to you.” But this sortof dialogue shouldn't appear in amovie, especially if the girl happensto be pregnant at the time.Or take the situation of the girlfinally telling the boy that she ispregnant. While I may be undera distinct handicap in analyzingthis sort of scene, l do know thatif a girl told me this bit of dis¬quieting news I could come up withsomething better than “Gee, thingswere going so great up to now.”Oh. come now. Mr. Garrett.TIIE YOUNG LOVERS opemledlast week at the Woods Theatre,downtown. If you have nothing elseto do, I suggest you see it. You cer¬tainly won't be educated by it. Yousurely will not be culturally en¬hanced. But at least you won’t bebored. You might even have your¬self a good laugh. Every not too often (moreor less, depending on your luckand temperament) a concertdissolves beyond the presentinto that vagueness where no tilingand everything is truth or not andvice-versa: where you no longer lis¬ten but arrive within the music,enthralled by opium and Orpheus;where applause and criticismand music itself become superfluous.A mystical experience, or maybethe Great Performance ... or [per¬haps merely a momentary hallucina¬tion . . . indelibly seared into yourmemory.On Saturday evening. Teonid Ko¬gan, Jean Martinon, the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra, and tlie Bee-tlioven Violin Concerto fused intojust such a moment. Kogan’s tone(perhaps the purest in the1 world)acquired that extra tinge of glowingincense, every breath of which wasmirrored by Martinon's unusuallyflexible and responsive orchestra. Theslow tempo achieved that rare quali¬ty of susjjension, where tem|x> sud¬denly has no meaning, as tlie lis¬tener is aware of nothing beyond tlx*immediate experience with which tocompare it.SUCH A performance is above re¬viewing: it lies beyond rational de-Bob Yaspan scription or evaluation, and any »t- tempt to reduce it to intellectualterms distorts tlie experience somuch as to negate it entirely.Tlie first half of tlie program wasless other-wotdly, and hence nioi-eopen to critical scrutiny. The bestpart of it was the performance ofBritten’s Young Person’s Guide tothe Orchestra, in which the virtuosityand the ham of the orchestra weremerged into sheer exhilaration ofyouth. It was as unpretentious, boun¬cy, and joyous as tlie Beethoven wasprofmind, and a better foil for theConcerto could hardly lx* imagined.Tlie concert oiiened with Barber’sFirst Symphony, which might wellhave been subtitled “Young Person’sGuide to Music History.” Drivingsinto Strauss, Sibelius, Holst, andeven Bruckner dominated tlie thickcountcrpoint, and most of the mu¬sic's force was counterbalanced byits air of impersonality. It seemed,all in all, tlie kind of long loud half¬familiar romantic groan wrirth heal¬ing once but hard to swallow thesecond time.IT MIGHT have made a betterimpression had it not been fated t«>appear with sudi illustrious companyAs it was. by tlie time tlie Beetho¬ven was over. Barber’s moans weremerely a distant hiccup.Pete RabinowitzStar, tech crew stand above rest of ChaiilotTHE MADWOMAN OF CHAILLOTbv Jean GiraudouxCast:Madwoman of Chaiilot ... Toe CaldwellMadwoman ot Passy Sue Ann forkMadwoman of St. Sulplce, triqld DuffyIrma, the Waitress Jo IpoolitoPierre James RaqanThe Raaoleker William PappasDirected by James ReichAt the Goodman Theatre,Monroe at Celumbut DriveGoodman Theatre seems tohave defeated its own pur¬poses. It is primarily a schoolof drama which offers thestandard B.F.A. and M.F.A. intheatre, but k is obviously trying tocreate an image of a ‘professional’theatre. Tlie rational is quite ade¬quate—Goodman is blessed with top-notch technical facilities and a loca¬tion—Chicago—starved for profession¬al theater.Grasping the situation, if has hireditself a professional technical staffranging from directors right down tomake-up men, and lias proceeded toengage a series of professional ‘guestartists’ to bolster its level of per¬formance. It becomes obvious duringany given production, however, thatthe student-manned supporting castcannot do justice to either star orslage.In selecting a show like Girau-doux’s Madwoman of Chaiilot, Good¬man has added to its problems.Giraudoux plays are essentiallyworks of language that are markedwith a rich poetic lyricism. Tliecharacters talk more than they move,and a great many of the scenes canlie played sitting down.The dramatic conflict in the Mad¬woman of Chaiilot is presented in terms of highly stylized debates be¬tween the Madwoman and her bandof riffraff which embodies truth and[xiritv, and tlie capitalists, who arethe forces of evil. Because the actorhas to tell us what lie is ratlier tlianshow us what he is. he must createa great deal of tlie drama through hisvoice alone. Although this cons-xlera¬tion is not tlie wliole art of actingGiraudoux, superior voice and verbalexpression are absolutely essential torendering an effective performance.As a whole, tlie Goodman cast lackedthe ability to deal with Giraudoux’*pie try, but fortunately, ‘guest artist’Zoe Caldwell was on IkukI to play tlieMadwoman.TO SAY THAT the difference inlevel of performance sticks out like asore thumb would be an understate¬ment. Watching Miss Caldwell workwith the Goodman cast was like go¬ing to the Art Institute for a showingof Rembrandt and finding the FOTAart competition hung with it. MissCaldwell, who has played Cordeliato Charles Laughton’s Lear at theRoyal Shakespeare Festival, Strat¬ford-on-Avon, is one of the finestyoung actresses around. She isequipped with a beautiful broad Eng¬lish stage voice that combnes abso¬lute precision with mellifluous, re¬laxed resonance. She is in completepossession of every nuance in thebook, and she so skillfully blendsmovement and gesture into her per¬formance that we are scarcely aware of them. Six? has grace, charm, andan unmlitigated vitality that whollyconvinced tlie audience of her ciuir-aoter and her drama.Unfortunately, tlie supporting eastwas afro one die stage. By Good-man’s standards, their performancewas better tlian usual, but the talentgap which separated them from M ssCaldwell made them seem all themore amateurish by comparison.Tlie only players who seemed mi’d-ly convincing next to Miss Caldwellwere John Pappas as the Ragpickerand Sue Ann Park as tlie Madwomanof Passy. Mr. Pappas relied heavilyon rapid gestures and quick nervouspaces to gat across tlie id da of tliemoney worshiping capitalist duringthe mock trial scene in Act 2, andfor a few minutes succeeded increating an excitement all his own.Mrs. Park, who was also featured,did some hilarious vaudeville acting.As the Madwoman presiding overthe Passy district, she played herimaginary dog to tlie Limit. The restof the cast ranged from fair to bad.THE FIRST ACT began rathershakily, as the oast struggled withtheir parts, but picked rp upon tlieMadwoman’s entrance. The restau¬rant set was a not-too-exciling bluedrape-like affair, bit the set for tlieMadwoman's cellar in Act 2 was afascinating collection of si .elves andbric-a-brac that disappeared into theflies some forty feet above the stage.Miss Caldwell carried the bulk of tlie second act, and by tlie end of theplay was in such control of tlx*audience that she could create amood simply by changing her ex¬pression.John Reich’s direction was almo tfaultless. He took advantage of thelimits of tlie oast and omiihaslzed thebroad humor anti vaudeville elementsof the siiow. Reich's most admirablefeat was his cxjiert manipulation cfthe final scene in which the Mad¬woman realizes that romantic lovelias passed for her. Aided by subtlelighting effects, he lends tlie w’h, !estage to Miss Caldwell anti Girau-doux’s beautiful nostaligic lyricism.John LionSecond ’Particle' fa!!;TIi? second “Ten and Taurus Ta’k"sponsored by Particle magazine uinvolve “Complex Nuclear Reac¬tions.” Nathan Sugar man, profess rin the chemistry dept, and the FermiInstitute of Nuclear Studies, ws. oak on this subject for undergrad¬uates Wednesday, Nov. 11, at 8 pmin the Aliha Delt house, 5747 Uni¬versity Ave. Refreshments and aquestion period will follow'.Particle magazine Is a quarterly‘‘by and for science students” pub¬lished at UC and at the Univ. clCalifornia, Berkeley.MODEL CAMERAMOST COMPLETE PHOTO SHOPON SOUTH SIDENS A DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 JESSELSON’Sit*’ iSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd SAMUEL A. BELL'Buy Shell From Bell'SINCE 192*4731 So. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150Silk Screen SuppliesA Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALS,MIMEOGRAPH PAPERAND SUPPLIESI Wholesale Prices in QuantityOnly IDUNCANS1305 E. 53rd ST.HY 3-4111 Co, 'on a StuJicOSPORTRAITS1312 E. 53rd $t.634-7424PassportPhotos C'0BEAUTY SALONJExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-S302 PIZZA1500 HYDE PK. BLVD.DELIVERY &TACLE SERVICEKE 6-6604 — K£ 6-389!CHICKEN - SANDWICHESPIZZASITALIAN FOODS8 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nav. 6, 1764 <film-makers: part twoOrson Welles now a genius more than everJean-Luc Godard has said0f Welles, “tous, toujours, luidevront tout.” And AndrewSan'is has said, “CITIZENKANE ks sfciilil the work which irvfiu-Hn-od the cinema more profoundlytii; m , «n v A met ncao film* since BIRTHOF A NATION.” Bui M. Godard hasal,so said, “ses aaJes de geant em-peehent notre albalros .shakespearien(j(. minrcher sur la vieille Europe”;ami Mr. Sarris has also said, “WellesliS now rT10lI-e than ever, an isolatedgenius, and not nearly as dangerousas his detractors suppose.” TheareJia may be smaller, bu>t thereseems lo be little doubt that OrsonWelles inspires the same sort ofj,v;u.r controversy nowadays that he(i..l in 1941 when Louella Parsonsswept by him in a huff.The reason is plain enough: Wellesis too complex for the masses andn,,; profound enough fir intellectuals.Th,. Old Boy sets us up for a primeintellectual feast with alfl of thepicks of the trade: angles, montage,1:.tiling, script—the works. And thenhe pulls the sort of supreme double-Knff that only someone who hassowed Rita Hayworth in half couldr)o He leaves us hol<ling a cream-putf.Orson WeMes tenrifud New Ycrk,nwi New Jersey into believing thatthe Martians were coming. OrsonWelles ean borrow a dollar hill fromvuu, make it vanish, cut into anorange revealing a lemon, cut intothe lemon, revealing a walnut, crack(,!>cn (lie walnut and bind you backyour own dollar bill from inside thenut. Orson Welles can take two ofSliakespeare’s finest plays and oneof Kafka’s finest novels and usethem as scenarios in the same cava¬lier fashion that he uses Eric Ambleror Booth Tarkington. Orson Welliesh nckes cigars which cost five dollarsapiece. Orson Welles can make aToday'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDANM 995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Safes - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL masterpiece (MACBETH) in twenty-one days for $300,000; anti he cantake out the time to pull faces funnyenough to make Tony Perkins blowhis lines in 48 re-takes of the samesequence. In short, he is a genius.BUT, FROM THE beginning, thisgenius has never given anyone whathe expected. The banal discovery ofwhat “Rosebud” really meant inCITIZEN KANE irritated aesthetesin 1941 almost as much as the dis¬covery that the film was not reallyabout William Randolph Hearst.MACBETH and OTHELLO havealienated more lovers of the Bardthan Asta Neilsen’s HARLET. LADYFROM SHANGHAI presented thepublic with their reigning sex-queenas a horrendous she-monster. TOUCHOF EVIL indicates that CharltonHeston is both impotent and silly.And THE TRIAL does not end theway Kafka’s book does.Welles has had the misfortune tobe one of tile must important singleinfluences that the cinema has everhad. Despite van Sternberg's leader¬ship in the field, it was Welles’CITIZEN KANE, and after it hisTHE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS,that ushered in the era of the Themeas the focus of American movies.These film;, and most of those fol¬lowing, were organized about an idea,not about a plot-line: the public be¬came confused and bitter. WhenWelles added to this by turning melo¬drama into fantasy (LADY FROMSHANGHAI) or allegory (TOUCHOF EVIL), the public became evenmore coni used and bitter. When heatlded impenetrable Scottish dialogueto MACBETH f<m the reasonableassumption that those he was tryingto reach were already familiar withthe play) and brought one of Shake¬speare's most difficult plays to thescreen (OTHELLO), the public be¬came disgusted. And when he finallytopped the whole melange by usingRAINCOATSwith ZIP-INLININGSperfect for changingweatherLUCILLE'S1507 East 53rd St.Free Customer Parkingat 5219 HarperEXCLUSIVE CLEANERS1442 E. 57th 1309 E. 57thMl 3-0607 Ml 3-0602COMPLETE CLEANINGAND LAUNDRYSAME DAY SERVICEAVAILABLE-upFRBr SHOPqnitrumenis — New, Used, Anti<iu>sGUITARS, BANJOS, MANDOLINSBooks and Folk Music Magazine*DISCOUNT ON FOLK RECORDS4.M7 E.SsrASX.ChicagoNO 7-106011:30 to 6, 7:30 to 10 Mon.-Fri.11:30 to 6, Saturday only the theme of Kafka’s novel anddistorting the plot (which was theonly part that most of Jts readerscould make sense of anyway), thepublic became outraged and insulted.Meanwhile, the intellectual criticshad gone to work. When the simple-minded theme of CITIZEN KANEwas finally unravelled by these astuteminds, they began to notice howinfluential Welles’ technical ad¬vances had been. KANE was can¬on iz.ed. But the later films weremore difficult to comprehend—andWelles offered no glaringly new tech¬nical advances. In fact, he began toassimilate what he had already de¬veloped into one of the most readilydistinguished of cinematic styles.Since no one could quite understandhis films, and since he had not in¬vented a whole new set of technicalapparati for each new film, it wasobvious that he was slipping. Besides,someone a little cleverer than therest pointed out, hi.s themes have not changed: he is still talking aboutpower and corruption. He has stag¬nated and is dying.BUT THE FACT is that the CWdBoy is neither stagnant nor dead.From the very first Welles broughtbefore a public primed for miraclesthe greatest miracle of them all. Hehas created cinema. Not filmeddrama, nor recorded action, nortranslated books—but cinema. Everysurprise he has sprung upon the pub¬lic and the critics is designed tomake them aware of this. The shockof seeing MACBETH set in thedesolate landscapes of the Highlandsand hearing it spoken in thick accentsis intended to force the viewer to theconclusion that he is not watching aShakespeare play, but an OrsonWelles film. The convoluted camerawork and the twisted allegory ofTOUCH OF EVIL serve the samepurpose. In Welles’ films, all of theresources at his command are mo¬bilized to a purely cinematic pur¬ pose, to the fusion of sound andmotion in cinematic form, to theevocation of feelings that have noverbal equivalents.It can be justly objected thatWelles has often overreached him¬self in subjecting the works of thosegreater than he to the overridingdictates of Welle&ian cinema. TheShakespearean films offer us no newinsights into the Bard; the Kafkafilm lacks the intimacy of the book.Yet to say this is to ignore the placewherein the genius of Wells trulylies. The Old Boy is the Genius ofDrama, of Effect. His themes arealways those most suited to the harshlighting, the strange angles and therapid montage that he prefers. Hisvisuals abound in stark black andwhite and in the sweeping motion ofgigantic shapes. If you say nothingelse but “Wow!” at the end of anOrson Welles film, you’ve got themessage: you know why only Wellescan ever be the Voice of God.Haki( iililire CalendarConcertsChicago Symphony Orchestra: LouisLane, cond; Georg Sebok, piano; Mo¬zart: Sym. no. 32; Bartok: Piano Con¬certo; Guntther Schuller: Seven Studieson themes of Paul Klee; Sibelius: Sym.no. 5 Nov. 6 at 2 pm. Jean Martinon,cond., Rudolf Serkin. piano. Mozart:Sym. No. 35 (“Haffner”); Brahms:Var. on a theme by Haydn: Reger:Piano Cone. Nov. 12 at 8:15 pm.Tickets $2-6.50; student gallery ticketsto Fri. concerts $1. 220 S. Michigan.HA 7-0362. After 5, HA 7-0409.Roosevelt University Chamber MusicEnsemble: Gomberg, Zlatoff-Mirsky,violins, Kupper, viola; Fruh. cello: Mc¬Dowell, piano. Bloch: Quartet no. 2;Piston: Quintet for Strings and Piano.Nov. 11 at 12:45 pm. Free. Ganz Hall,430 S. Micn'gan.ExhibitsIVAN ALBRIGHT: a retrospectiveexhibition of work. Art Institute,Michigan and Adams. Thru Dec. 11.NORTHERN RENAISSANCE ARTIN SHAKESPEARE'S TIME: 1010 E.50th St. Thru Nov. 14.DORIS MARTINSON AND GREGO¬RY N1ZNIK: an exhibit of oil paint¬ings. University of Chicago Center forContinuing Education, 1307 E. 60thSt. Oct. 25 thru Nov. 27.FilmsALL QUIET ON THE WESTERNFRONT: dir.. Lewis Milestone. WithLew Ayres, Louis Wilhelm. Slim Sum¬merville, and Heine Conklin. De PaulTheater Center, Nov. 9 ait 7:30, 50c.GRAND ILLUSION: dir., Jean Re-UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK"a strong bank"1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C. noir. With Eric von Stroheim andJean Gabin. Hull House Sheridan Play¬house. Nov. 10-12, $1.50MACBETH: dir., Orson Welles. WithOrson Welles, Doc Films, Tues.. Nov.10. 7:15 and 0:15. Soc Sci 122. 60c.MACBETH: dir.. Orson Welles. WithOrson Welles. Fullerton Hall. Michiganand Adams. Nov. 12, 7:30 75c.NIGHT AND FOG plus second fea¬ture: dir., Alain Resnais. Doc Films,Law School Auditorium. Sat., Nov. 7.7:15 and 9:15. 75c.OUTCAST OF THE ISLANDS: dir.,Carol Reed. With Trevor Howard,Ralph Richardson, Robert Morley. DocFilms, Soc Sci 122, Fri., Nov. 6, at7:15 and 0:15. 60c.REQUIEM FOR A HEAVYWEIGHT:dir., Ralph Nelson. With AnthonyQuinn, Julie Harris. Mickey Rooney,Jackie Gleason. Int House AssemblyHall. Mon.. Nov. 0. 8:00. 50c.TOBACCO ROAD: dir., John FordBJ Cinema, BJ Dining Room, Sun.,ov. 8, 7:00 and 9:00. 50c.JazzDIZZY GILLESPIE: London House.360 N. Michigan tru Nov. 8. GeneKrupa Quartet: London House Nov.10-Dec. 16. ighitly 8-4, Fri. & Sat., 8-5.cover Fri. & Sat., only-$l .00.LecturesREFORMATION PAINTING; byLouise Beck. Art Institute, Michiganand Adams. Nov. 13, 12:15. Free.HIDDEN MEANING IN NETHER.l.ANDISH ART OF THE 17th CEN¬TURY; by Julian S. Held of BarnardCollege. McCormick Aud of LakeForest College. Nov. 6, 8:15. Free.STEPHEN SPENDER READINGAND COMMENTING ON POETRY: St.Xavier College. 103rd and CentralPark. Nov. 12, 7 ;30. Free.OperaDON CARLO: with Crespin, Grist,Toscano, Loraine. Seefried. Love, Cox,Unger, Kraus. Schmoor, Kunz, Upp-man, Meredith, Tadeo, Izzo, Smith,Joehum, Bumbry. Nov. 0.LA BOHEME: with Tebaldi, De Sett,Cioni, Kraus. Bruscantini, Cesari, Ma-rangoni, Dervaux. Nov. 7.ARIADNE AUF NAXOS: same cast as above. Nov. 8.LA CENERENTOLA: Berganza. DeSett, Mannion, Castellato, Bruscantini,Tadeo. Cesari, Maragoni, Dervaux.Nov. 0. Nightly at 8 except Sunday at7:30. Opera House, 20 N. Waeker.$3-$U.TheatreA Fiinny 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 BertoldBrecht and Kurt Weill. Hull HouseTheatre, 3212 N. Broadway. Fri. andSat. at 8:30; Sun. at 7:30. Fri. andSun. $1.90 Sat. $2.90. 348-8330.Desire Under The Elms: playby Eugene O'Neil. Presented by theCircle-ln-the-Square company of NewYork. Mandel Hall, 374}6 S. UniversityAve. Nov. 6, 7, 8, at 8:30 pm.Matinees Nov. 7. 8 at 2 pm $2.50-$5,$.50 discount for Chicago students andfaculty. Special: unreserved balconyseats Nov. 3 only, $1 for students.The Madwoman of Chaillot:play by Jean Giraudoux. GoodmanTheater, Monroe and Columbus, ThruNov. 14, Sun.-Thurs 7:30, Fri. and Sat.8:30 pm. $2.50-$3.F’arther Along: Second City Players.1846 N. Wells. Tue. thru Sun., 9 and11. 1 on Fri. and Sat. Improvisationsafter 11 show Thurs. $2, $2.50 week¬ends. DE 7-3992.Six Ages of Man: a comic revuewith music. Allerton Hotel Theatre inthe Clouds, 701 N. Michigan. 9 and11 pm Tues.-Sat., 4 and 9 pm Sun.Weekdays $2.65. Fri. and Sat. $2.95.SU 7-4200.Woyzeck: Last Stage Players, SidPassin, director. Weekends thru Nov.15. 8.30 Fri. and Sat.. 7:30 on Sun.,Fri. and Sat. $2, Sun. $1.50. OA 4-4200.The Conntry Girl: by Clifford Odets.Oak Lawn Theatre Guild. Oak LawnCommunity H. S. Auditorium, 94th andSouthwest Highway. Nov. 6 and 7 at8:15. $1.50. GA 4-6027.SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT’PEARLSSILVERWARERINGSAPPLIANCESDIAMONDSWATCHESJEWELRYDIAMOND PHILLIPS JEWELRY CO. ^ZmondFOR Wholesale Distributors FORJUNE JUNESERVING COLLEGE STUDENTS AT WHOLESALE PRICES FOR THE PAST 30 YEARS“50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDS,ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING RINGS”Watch and Jewelry Repairing, Rm. 1101, 67 E. Madison St., Chicago—DE 2-6508for further Information Call Harris Jaffe — Ext. 3269 or 684-0427CAP & GOWN PREVIEW!SEE REPRESENTATIVE PHOTOSOF 1965 UNIVERSITY YEARBOOKON DISPLAY INMANDEL CORRIDORMON., NOV. 9 TO FRI., NOV. 13ORDERS WILL BE TAKEN ATTHE PRE-PUBLICATIONPRICE OF $4.00FROM 10:00-12:30 and 1:30-4:00NOV. 9 TO NOV. 13 IN MANDEL CORRIDORNov. 6.1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9Holler: BG consisten t, unrealistic F,#r*'al,s“Consistency of ideologywas more important to Gold-water than the real world.’*said Mark Haller, assistantprofessor of history, last nigiht atTufts house.Hatter altribu<ted the of the election U» the fact that Gold-water was a member of what mightbe called a “colt,” or a small butvocal and powerful group of rabidsupporters. Other examples of poli¬tical “cults” that Haller cited werethose around farmer Alabama gover-FOTA 65 underwayClans are in the makingFestival of the Arts (FOTA)Already Shirley Jackson,has accepted an invitation tohave the Contemporary ChamberPlayers and the classical Kroll quar¬tet,FOTA, established in 1954, is heldeach year during the six'iug quartermi an attempt to bring music. art. andliterature together to tlie campus.Has brought manyfn past years, FOTA has broughtpeoole like Norman Mailer. Er-cLeinsdorf, Rolietx Lowell, StephenStiender. and Bn.ce Conrwr oo CC.LAST YEAR’S FOTA apons-xed anart. show of paintings by students andyoung artists.Co-chairmen of FOTA 1065 arestudents Elizabeth Wallace and Le>KiBotstein. They plan to oambuie cam¬pus talent and outstanding outsidegueats in this year's festival.This year's plansAmong the student events that havebeen planned for his year are per¬formances by University TheatreStrolling Players atul the Blackfinarsmusical comedy team. A poetry can-JIMMY’Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHL1TZ ON TAPJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5984 RA 4-1040UNIVERSAL ARMY STORELevis — TorHeaeckiWinter Jackets — Rai-ncoa+1Peacaats — Parkas1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5854Free C »N««PROGRESSIVEPAINT & HARDWARt CO.1441 E. SSth HY 3-384010®. STUDENT DISCOUNTKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around Tihe World.1462 E. 53rd St,Chicago 15, IN-MU 4-6354“Tuft MOST CHIl-LINO CORSE ol themonth was Invoked by a Californiaiirked at the str .tdy needling of Sen¬ator Gold water by Punch: ‘Shouldthe to be the tragedy of a Goldwaierdefeat in our election' he wrote,‘may all the powera that be causeone Harold Wi’srt n to win. yoursarid give you what you so dearlydeset re. And m ay all your Moctsa rid ft ocke c amultiply andyour relief rollssweir.” for the eleventh annual UC, to be held April 24-May 2.the noted short story writer,take part in FOTA 1965, astest and art si sow are also in themaking.THE CO-CHAIRMEN are sendingout more invitations to well-knownpeople in the arts. “We hope to havean unusually exciting array of guestswiio will both speak and participatein seminars,” said Botsteia.The basic financial support forFOTA comes from die Office ofStudent Activities. Certain facultyfunds also contribute money to thefestival.PotentialDirector of Student ActivitiesThomas O’Keefe feels that, “this isan organization which has one of thegreater potentials to make a con¬tribution not only to tt»e campus, butto the community as a whole.”Anyone interested in FOTA 1965should contact die Office of StudentActivities, second floor. Ida NoyesHall. nor George Wallace and former gov¬ernor of Louisiana, Huey Long.Gold water's refusal to make con¬cessions was reflected by lus votingrecord, Hatter said, wnieh opposedalmost alt progressive legislation,which even many oilier Republicanshad voted for. Thus, Haller com¬mented, “Goldwaier had never be¬come involved in decision-makingprocesses taking into account a widevariety of opinions.”“Johnson is the antithesis of Gold-wafer,” Haller continued. Johnson isthe man who “gets laws through,”and is “more concerned with theprocess of polities than ideologyliesaid.“This is not a bad talent, themaking of decision that will try tomake the greatest number of peoplehappy,” Haller commented.In answering a question concern¬ing the meaning of Goldwater s vic¬tory in the deep South, Haller said,‘‘I am very glad Gold water carriedthe five Sou then states. Tlie reasonis not what you might think, butthat it wiH Jiow Republicans thatthey cannot be a national party anda racist party.”One example of tl>e results of suchan attempt can be seen right inIllinois. Haller said, where Republi-oans suffered because of Gold water.“There is no doubt in my mind thathad Scranton won the nomination,Percy would have won Illinois.”Halier had prefaced his remarkswith the comment that he had suim¬ported Johnson, saying he aimed to“attempt to show why Goldwaierlost and should have lost.” of UC employeeThe wife and children of a UCjanitor died Wednesday in a firewhich look four other lives in theDorihester Manor Hotel, 5236 3.Dorchester. Dead are Mrs DixasMae Stevens and John, 16; Dennis.12; Eugene. 4. and Pamela Sue. 4.Contributions to die janitor, Theo¬dore Stevens, may be male in careof Bruno Yurgartes, supervisor ofjanitorial services, at the olfice «»fbuildings and grounds. Stevens hadworked for the Studebaker Corpora¬tion’s South Bend production plantuntil it closed this year.Stevens was in the building whenthe fire broke out. Metal bars acrossthe semi-basement apartment’s win¬dows prevented the family’s escapeand impeded rescuers.Metal fire doors, intended to pre¬vent the spread of fire and smoke,were customarily left open. The firealarm system had not been testedfor years, and fire drills were notheld in the building Probable causeof the fire was faulty wiring m afalse ceiling.Found dead on u|>per floors wereMrs. Sophia Cohen, 69. MaeMoran; and James A Brasher. 62Cause of death was presumablysmoke inhalation. Thursday morningMrs. Harriet Riley, 70 d*ed as a re¬sult of the fire. Representatives of die follow**,rocrontong organizations and gradu,*,schools will visit the Office of Carer*Counseling and Placement during U*week of November 9. Interview jp-pointmenls may be arrayed thnx*^L. S. Calvin, room 200, ReynokfcClub, extension 3264.November !*—Texaco. Inc., BeaconN Y., Houston. Texas, and Port AnthurTexas — will interview Ph D otatis-ticians and geophysicists at S M. andPh D. levelsNovember I—Radio Corporation <,jAmerica. Princeton. N J., and Laoea*.ter. Pa. — wilt speak with Ph D can¬didates in mathematics, physics. andchemistry (inorganic, organic, physi¬cal).November lb—Bureau of the Budget,Washington, DC. — interviewing ad¬vanced degree candidates in politicalscience, economics, and law.November 10—Texaco. Inc. Static ofOklahoma — recruiting men wlu* arcS B and S.M. degree candidates ingeol<>gy. mathematics, and physics.November 10—Radio Corporation ofAmerica, Princeton. N.J, —.S B andS.M. degree candidates in physicsNovember It — Imperial ChemicalIndustries, London. England — inter¬viewing Britii-Oi scientists at graduateand post-doot oral levels in physicalscience.Grad schoolsNovember 9—Columbia Universitylaw School; assistant dean Edward E.Kent will conduct individual inter¬views throughout the day. Cart ext.3282 for an appointmentNovember II—Urban Teacher Prep,oration Program at Syracuse Univer¬sity. Ernest J Milner, the director. w*Mshow slides and describe the purpose,and organization of the program atJ: III pm.O'Connell on boardCharles D. O'Connell, UC's direc¬tor of admissions and aid, was elec¬ted to live Board of Trustees of dieCollege Entrance Examination BoardCEEB) at CEEB’s annual meetingOctober 27 and 28 in New York City.For o free copy ofcurrant i*su« of NA¬TIONAL REVIE W, writ#to Dept CP B, 150 E.35 St.. N. Y. 16 N. Y. “The developmentof managementis essentialto our goal ofgreat growth”At the 1964 stockholders’ meeting, Arjay Miller,President of Ford Motor Company, emphasized theCompany’s far-sighted recruitment program and its accenton developing management talent:“One aspect of our planning is crucial to the success ofeverything else we do. It engages the best thoughts and efforts ofour whole management team, from top to bottom, throughout theworld. I am speaking of the development of management. Theimmediate future of our Company depends heavily upon the abilitiesof the people who are now key members of our management team."In the longer run, our future depends on what we are doing al,the present time to attract and develop the people who willbe making the major decisions 10 to 20 years from now. We aredeveloping management competence in depth in order to attack th«problems that will confront a company of great growth—andgreat growth (both in profits and sales) is exactly the goalwe have established for Ford Motor Company."We are continuing to emphasize recruiting. Last spring, 180 of ourmanagement people devoted part of their time to recruitingoutstanding graduates from colleges and universities throughoutthe U.S. Last year, these efforts resulted in our hiring over1,000 graduates, 220 more than the year before."We are seeking and we are finding young men—and young women,too—with brains and backbone—people who have the ability andthe desire to make room for themselves at the top. We give ourtrainees challenging assignments with as much responsibility asthey can carry. We promote them as fast as they are ready. Thosewho are interested in easy security soon drop out. Those whohave what we want stay with us, and move up quickly to increase**responsibility and the pay that goes with it Thanks to the qualityof the people we are recruiting and developing, I am firmlyconvinced that our outlook is most promising.’*An equal opoorlunfly employe?) MOTOR COMPANYThe Awxtcirt Rm4. Dearborn, MichiganCHICAGO MAROON Noy. 6, 1944at all timesfor collegestudents• op«n from dawn til dawn• • dlllarant double featuredally• •'Llttla Oal-lery" tor gala onlya dark parking ana door aouth... four hours 9Sc after• p.m.fri 6—"caroueal,” "twolover had i.”ut. 7 — "amorous gen¬eral,” "wrong arm ofthe law.”sun * — "lilies of thefield,” "chalk garden.”non. 9 — "master spy,”"fury e« smuggler'sbay.”lues. 10 — thunderroad,” "man in thenet."skI. 11—"road to hongLong” "mating time.”thurs 12 — "comancher-os,” "night passage."dork & modhen a fr 2-2B4I See The Fabulous“Hits Of Broadway”Lavish Musical RevueFine Dining—DancingDEL PRADO HOTELHY 3-9600/'[s enterworld ofdiningpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668AIR CONDITIONEDLa Russo’sFINE FOODS AND COCKTAILSNow Open for Lunch 11:30-3:30Phone NOrmal 7-9390 Jmealb^uNouGOLD CITY INN“.4 Gold Mine of (ohm! FootV'10f/o Student DiscountI HI )K PARK’S BKST CAMONKSE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559Try Our Convenient Take-Out Orders(Fat More For Less)shore drive motel■FACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chicago Rates. Beautiful Rooms,Free TV. Parking, Courtesy Coffee.Ciosesf Motel to Univ. of Chicago and Museum of Science & Industry.FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTEL56th St. A So. Shore Dr. • Chicago 37, IllinoisSTEAK ANDRIB HOUSEns. ''JJV-THE -SKy*^LOUNGElENTERTAINMEtTILATOP Del I'KADO Hoteloo mm ‘ * *■" "Frank Amorosi Triocomedy — music — songsBILL CURTISsightless keyboard artistDOTTIE BEE TRIOmusical show-stoppersCONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT!TIL 4 A.M.NO COVER — NO MINIMUM AUTUMN LEAVESInternational HouseFall DanceAl Peters & OrchestraTONIGHT 9:00 P.M.1414 E. 59 St.$1 per personCouples & singies welcomeDecorations on aMoghul themeCINEMAChicago at MichiganHeld Over 3rd Week!“One of the Best AmericanPictures of the Year"CANNES FILM AWARDIn the tradition of Marty, Davidand Lisa, and Lilies of the Field.SUN-TIMES 3Vi stars// ONE POTATO,TWO POTATO"STUDENTS SI .00with I.D. Cardsevery day but SaturdayWeekdays Open 6 P.M.Sat. & 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¬cued Back Ribs, Fried Chicken,Lobster Tail, Beef Platter, etc. TryCirals House of Tiki where theHawaiian atmosphere sets thescene for an enjoyable eveningwith the lady in your life.For an added treat after dinnertake in the new show at "TheLast Stage"! The Production isthe well - known "Woyzeck" byGeorge Buchner "After theShow” back to Cirals House ofTiki for a delightful Hawaiiandrink.Cirals House of Tiki1510 Hyde Park Blvd.51st and Lake Park Ave.LI 8-7585Food served from11 A.M. to 3:00 A M.Kitchen Closed Wed.JL4RPERTHEATER§k Chicago’sk | newestIf4 legitimate\ % tli eaterii: OPENmNOW§ii»Th. GENE FRANKEL|§|lp PRODUCTION OF Hi|p! En^dCOCT Iwith a professional Uoff-broadway cast •*starring &1 ALVIN EPSTEIN g, Frtductlts deilgn: Oivid Ballou .£BOX OFFICE J§ Ticketsi BOW OPEN 4 on sale UI cIl" ^Dec. 5th &t performances weekly—only 300 t«at opacityeach parformanra sitTuraday, Wednitday LThursday Evas.: S3.00 $; Friday Eva*.: S3.00 teSit. 630 p.m. h 10:19 p m. S3.90 -fcSunday Matlnea; $2.50 SSunday Eva.: *3.30 |*i Croup Rates Available. Mail ||orders accepted . . .f 5230 8. Harper . Chleafa 60615 $s Enelow stamped talf-addraaaad anvalopai Call BU 8-1717 for Ihfarmatlon. jj| HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4-”"B *— 7699HY 3-6800 TAI-5AM-Y&NCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing in(WTOYESE AMIAAIERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062"3rd SMASH MONTH1\ SUNDAY MATINEE—6 P.M.Shows 9 & 11 P.M., Tues.-Sat.Sunday 4 P.M. & 9 P.M.Weekdays $2.65. Fri. & Sat. $2.95into the muileaT revue busineii."—Lesner, NewsTheater In th« CloudsALLERT0N HOTEL701 N. Michigan Ava.Reservations: SU 7-4200Colony Room Dinner offer, jShow and 6 Course Dinner, !| *5.50; Fri. 0 Sat. *5.95. j "JOHN WILLIAMS is myworthy successor!"Proclaims Andres SegoviaGUITARRA Magazine andS. Hurok prese.itJohn WilliamsConcertGuitaristSaturday nightNovember 7,8:30 P.M.McCormickPlaceLittle TheatreReserved Seats S4.50-4.00-3.50Tickets can now be purchased by mail,or in person i make cheeks payableto) at . . .SHERRY-BRENERSpanish Imports, 2nd FloorSpanish Imoorts, 2nd Floor3145 W. 63rd St.. Chicago—737-1711Hrs. doily lO A.M. to 10 P.M..Sat. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.P.S. Listen to "GUITARRAPORTRAITS” a weekly FM radioprogram featuring classical andflamenco quitar music . . . EverySunday evening at 9:30 P.M.WXFM 105.9 Chieogo. .ULLaIO.!Purveryors of Fine Wine, Liquor & Beersince 1933 ZWINE CELLAR FOR GREATER SELECTIONFAMOUS GILL'S BEERDISCOUNT VOLUME SPECIALALL BEER —NO FOAMWON'T GO FLAT BARRELS1/4 bbl. »$g95Vj bbl.$^25 ^TAYS1 MDeliveredSTAYS COLDWITHOUTICE 15 HOURS \COLD '2 DRIVE-IN WINDOWSDiscount prices on all popular brand whiskyGILL a CO.1238 East 47th St. KEnwood 6-6500LAKE /PARK AT SJ R D : N0 7-9071the {Ayde park theatreStarts Friday, November 6DirkBogarde MyleneDemengeotfeatures JamesRobertsonDOCTOR IN DISTRESSandLAST YEAR AT MARIENBADStarts Friday, November 13Cannes Prix Winner—Academy Award WinnerBLACK ORPHEUSandAlex Guinness Dirk BogardeDAMN THE DEFIANTSpecial Saturday and Sunday MatineeNov. 14 & 15 - 1 p.m. & 3 p.m. — All Seats 50cSanta Claus Conquers the MartiansEntertainment Far Entire FamilylFREE WEEKEND PATRON PARKING AT 5230 SOUTH LAKE PARKSPECIAL STUDENT RATES WITH STUDENT I.D. CARDSNov. 6, 1964 1l iM I;; 11•li<l11i!CHICAGO MAROONBOOK CLEARANCE SALESTARTS TODAY AT 8 A.M. Brand new editions from leading publishers at tremendous savings-up to 80%!Come in early for full selection-only limited and unreplaceable quantities in most cases.Friday. Nov. € thru Thursday. Nor. M2$1.00 EACH $1.00 EACH $1.98 EACH $2.98 EACH $.1.08 & UP1.DING'S HALF CENTURY. ByJay N. “Ding” Darling. Americancartoon-journalism at its liveliest—over 175 of the best editorial draw¬ings from the pen and wit of thetwo-time winner of the PulitzerPrize. Pub. at $3.95. Sale $12.THE AMERICAN EVERYDAYDICTIONARY. Based on the world-famous American College Diction¬ary. Orig. $1.95. Sale $13.THE FRENCH POLITICALSYSTEM. By Maurice Duverger.Pub. at $4.00. Sale $14.THE CHEMICALOF BONE MINERAL.man & M. Neuman.Pub. at $5.00. DYNAMICSBy W. Neu-Sale $15.MAKE YOUR OWN COLORPRINTS. By Robert Bagby. Tllus.Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1fi. T II F. RESPONSIBLE CHRIS¬TIAN. By Victor Obenhaus.Pub. at $4.00. Sale $17. SALOON SOCIETY: The DiaryOf A Year Beyond Aspirin. By BillManville. A wild, way out book onthe almost possible world of Green¬wich Village.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $18. Napoleon’s Last Days — ST.HELENA STORY, by Dame MabelBrookes.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $19. A MATTER OF LIFE ANDDEATH. By Virgilia Peterson.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $110. THE ANATOMY OF THEANECDOTE. By Louis Brownlow.Pub. at $3.75. Sale $111. Rothschild's A CASUAL VIEWOF AMERICA. Ed. by SigmundDiamond. A collection of the homeletters written by young Salomonde Rothschild during his Americansojourn. 1859-61.Pub. at $3.75. Sale St12. John P. Marquand—TIMOTHYDEXTER REVISITED. Ulus.Pub. at $6.50. Sale SI13. A CORNER OF CHICAGO. ByRobert Hardy Andrews. Rollickingpersonal chronicle by the greatDaily News reporter.Pub. at $5.95. Sale $114. IT’S A BIG CONTINENT. ByBen Lucien Burman.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $115 Eros and the Arts—DARWINAND THE NAKED LADY. By AlexComfort. Seven provocative essayson the variant role of sex in oursociety. Pub. at $4.00. Sale $116. SVERDRUP’S ARCTIC AD¬VENTURES. Out of print for over50 years, this is a modem adapta¬tion of Otto Sverdrup’s classic “NewLand.” Ed. by T. C. Fairley, withadditional chapters on the greatNorwegian explorer’s life and dis¬coveries. Photos, maps.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $117. THE PEACE RACE. By Prof.Seymour Melman, Columbia Uni¬versity. Pub. at $3.95. Sale $118. A POCKET GUIDE TO THECHESS OPENINGS. By R, C. Grif¬fith & H. Golombek.Pub. at $2.00. Sale $119. On the Canvas — MICKEYWALKER. By Mickey Walker withJoe Reichler.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $120. Etienne Gilson—REASON ANDREVELATION IN THE MIDDLEAGES. Pub. at $2.50. Sale $121. DISCOVERY —Great Momentsin the Lives of Outstanding Na¬turalists. Roger Tory Peterson,Olin Sewall Pettingill. John Kieran.Alexander Sprunt and 32 others.Pub. at $6.50. Sale $122. Cornelia Otis Skinner’s ELE¬GANT WITS AND GRAND HORI¬ZONTALS.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $123. ATLANTIC HIGHWAY’. ByWarren Armstrong. Thrilling storyof the great hundred-year passen¬ger race by sea and air on theworld’s busiest ocean. Includes In¬dex of Ships. Illus.Pub. at $4.75. Sale $124. PAUL CLAUDEL: The ManAnd The Mystic. By Louis Chaigne.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $123. THE CREED OF BUDDHA. ByEdmond Holmes.Orig. $3.00. Sale $1 26. An African’s Story—ON THETIGER'S BACK. By Aderogba Ajao.Incredible account of Russia’s ef¬forts to create dedicated Communistagents from among the newly inde¬pendent African peoples, by a dis¬illusioned young Nigerian “recruit.”Pub. at $3.50. Sale $127. EDITH BOLLING WILSON—First Lady Extraordinary. By AldenHatch. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $128. A Criminal Speaks — THECOURAGE OF HIS CONVICTIONS.By Tony Parker and R. Allerton.Shocking tape-recorded confessionsof an unregenerated criminal whohas spent one-third of his life be¬hind bars.Pub. at $3.95. Sale $129. MATTER AND ANTIMATTER.By M. Duquesne. Dir. Nat'l Scienti¬fic Center, Paris. Photos and draw¬ings. Pub. at $2.25. Sale *130. • THE FIVE - DOLLAR GOLDPIECE. By Orville Prescott. Self-portrait by one of America’s mostinfluential literary men, sparklingwith anecdotal memoirs and causticpersonal opinions.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $131. A CONCISE HISTORY OF THECOMMUNIST PARTY OF THESOVIET UNION. By John S. Reshe-tar, Jr. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $132. NUCLEAR POLICY’ FOR WARAND PEACE. By Thomas E. Mur¬ray, former A.E.C. Commissioner.Pub. at $4.00. Sale $133. Jerome Weidman’s THESOUND OF BOW BELLS.Pub. at $5.95. Sale $134. SIR THOMAS BROWNE — ADoctor’s Life of Science & Faith.By Jeremiah S. Finch. Illus. 18plates. Pub. at $3.50. Sale $t.35. THE DE GAULLE NOBODYKNOWS. By Alden Hatch. 40 photo¬graphs. Pub. at $5.00. Sale SI36.—Their I,amas and Ours—SHE-LA. By Aubrey Menen. A barbedfantasy aimed not only at theabsurdities of the Cold War, but atWestern civilization itself.Pub. at $3.95. Sale $137. SCIENCE AND SALVATION.By Robert S. de Ropp.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $138. World War II PERSONAL EX¬PERIENCE: 1939-46. By the Rt.Hon. Lord Casey. Distinguishedstatesman’s extraordinary memoirsof people and events.Pub. at $5.75. Sale $139. GOETHE AS A SCIENTIST.By Rudolf Magnus. Here we seethe great poet as the founder ofcomparative anatomy, an outstand¬ing botanist, geologist, mineralogistand meteorologist.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $140. Albert D. Lasker—TAKEN ATTHE FLOOD. Illus. 23 photos.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1$1.49 EACH41. THE BLUE AND THE GRAYON THE NILE. By W. B. Hessel-tine & Hazel C. Wolf. The absorb¬ing and little-known story of 50ex-Civil War officers who went toEgypt in the 1870’s to train anddirect the armies of Khedive Ismail.Illus. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.4942. THREE GREEK TRAGEDIESIn Translation. By David Grene.Prometheus Bound, by Aeschylus;Oedipus the King, by Sophocles;and Hippolytus, by Euripides.Pub. at $3.00. Sale $1.4943. OF BULLS AND MEN. By DonLuis de Ascasubi. Unique, fascinat¬ing, professional account of the artand mystique of bull fighting. Plus50 exciting photographs.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1.1944. AMERICAN HUMANISM: ItsMeaning For World Survival. ByHoward Mumford Jones.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1.4945. STUDIES IN ROMAN GOV¬ERNMENT AND LAW. By A H. M.Jones. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $1.4946. ZEN FOR THE WEST. BySohaku Ogata. Professor of ZenPhilosophy at Hanazono University,Japan. Pub. at $3.25. Sale $1.4947. NEW ZEALAND BECOMES APACIFIC POWER. By Bernard K.Gordon. Lucid study of the factsbehind New Zealand’s new role inAsian and world affairs.Pub. at $6.50. Sale $1.49 48. THE SOVIET OF GOVERN¬MENT. By John N. Hazard.Pub. at $4.00. Sale $1.9849. A KNIGHT OF GREAT RE¬NOWN. By Esther R. Clifford Thecolorful careers of Othon De Grand¬son (1238-1328).Pub. at $6.50. Sale $1.9850. A SHORT INTRODUCTION TOANATOMY: Jacopo Berengario DaCarpi. Trans, by L. R. Lind.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.9851. Treasure Ship—MANILA GAL¬LEON. By F. Van Wyck Mason. Asuperlative tale of the sea. basedon the famous 18th century voyageof George Anson, father of themodern Royal Navy. Illus. 495 pages.Pub. at 85.(15. Sale SI.9852. THE PRACTICE OF ZEN. ByChang Chen-Chi.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.9853. ROMANS WITHOUT LAUR¬ELS. By I. Montanelli. Irreverant,witty narrative of Rome's rise andfall. Pub. at $4.95. Sa.e $1.9854. ABRAHAM LINCOLN: A NewPortrait. Ed. by Henry B Kranz.Twenty-two new and important in¬terpretive articles, each writtenfrom a noted Lincoln historian’sown sphere of interest.Pub. at $4.00. -■ Sale $1.9855. THE DESTRUCTION OF LORDRAGLAN. By Christopher Hibbert.Orig. $6.50. Sale $1.9856. COMMUNIC ABI.E DISEASES:A Bibliography Of Internal Medi¬cine. By Arthur L. Bloomfield, M.D.Pub. at $10.00. Sale $1.9857. PRIVATE GRAZING ANDPUBLIC LANDS. By Wesley Calef.A thorough study of the TaylorGrazing Act of 1934 by an expertin land utilization. Illus.Pub. at $9.50. Sale $1.9858. NICHOLAS BIDDLE: Nation¬alist And Public Banker 1786-1844.By Thomas P. Govan.Pub. at $7.50. Sale $1.9859. PETER STUYVESANT ANDHIS NEW YORK. By Henry H.Kessler & Eugene Rachlis.Pub. at $4.75. Sale $1.9860. Fanny & Robert Louis Steven¬son: OUR SAMOAN ADVENTURE.Pub. at $4.00. Sale $1.9861. The Mystery of the Alps—CAMON1CA VALLEY. By Emman¬uel Anati. 71 photographs, 131drawings. Pub. at $5.95. Sale $1.9862. The Gregorian Texts—FROMGLORY TO GLORY. Ed. by J.Danielou & H. Musurillo, S.J.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $1.9863. CONFLICT AND CONCORD:The Anglo-American RelationshipSince 1783. By H. C. Allen. Therevised and enlarged edition of PartI of Prof. Allen's monumentalstandard history, “Great Britainand the United States.”Pub. at $3.75. Sale $1.9864. TURGENEV’S LETTERS — ASelection. By Edgar H. Lehrman.Illus. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.9865. THE DUST OF COMBAT. ByR. B. Martin. Engrossing biographyof Charles Kingsley, paradoxicalchurchman-writer of the Victorianera. Illus. Pub. at $5.95. Sale $1.9866. RUSSIAN-F.NGLISH DICTION¬ARY’. By Lapidus and Shevtosova.Over 10.000 definitions, includingpronunciation guide, grammar ta¬bles, list of suffixes, etc., compiledespecially for English-speaking stu¬dents of the Russian language. Over560 pages, cloth binding.Special Import $1.9867. History of Science — HENRYCAVENDISH. By A. J. Berry. Long-overdue study of the life and work(1731-1830) of one of the greatestscientific minds of all time.Pub. at $7.00. Sale $1.9868. SIX CENTURIES OF WORKAND WAGES. By Thorold Rogers.Classic work on the history of Eng¬lish labor—Middle Ages to the late19th century. 591 pp., with a newpreface by G. D. H. Cole.Pub. at $3.50. Sale $1.9869. TUNISIA: A Personal View.By John Anthony. Sprightly, sophis¬ticated memoirs of a young Ameri¬can with a feel for off-beat placesand fascinating people. Illus.Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1.9870. THE BATHTUB HOAX andOther Blasts. By H. L. Mencken. Acollection of the brilliantly devas¬tating columns—on subjects rang¬ing from human gullibility to liter¬ary censorship)—that appeared inthe Chicago Tribune from 1924 to1927. Ed., with notes, by RobertMcHugh. Pub. at $4.50. Sale $1.9871. THE TRIBE AND ITS SUC¬CESSORS. By William Rayner. Illu¬minating account of European set¬tlement and technology in SouthernRhodesia and how it has affectedthe traditional life and culture ofits primitive tribal societies. Illus.Pub. at $6.75. Sale $1.9872. HEART DISEASE AND IN¬DUSTRY. By Meyer Texon. A com¬prehensive study of the cardiac casein industry with particular refer¬ence to Workmen’s Compensationcases. Pub. at $9.00. Sale $1.9873. John Gunther’s INSIDE EU¬ROPE TODAY’. New, revised edi¬tion of the book Vincent Sheeancalls “indispensable for all Ameri¬cans in the time now coming.”Pub. at $4.95. Sale $1.9874. THE NAME ON THE WALL.By Charles R. Cammell. Delightfulseries of visits to the historic Lon¬don homes of such great Englishliterary and artistic figures as Dry-den, Gainsborough, Sheridan,Blake, Coleridge and Byron. Illus.Pub. at $5.00. Sale SI.9875. RELIGIOUS TOLERATIONAND PERSECUTION IN ANCIENTROME. By Simeon L. Guterman.Pub. at $4.00. Sale $1.98 76. THE PICTURE UNIVFIRSE:U.S. CAMERA 25th ANNIVERSARY.Ed. by Tom Maloney.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $2.9877. Simone de Beauvoir’s THEPRIME OF’ LIF'K. Long-awaited sec¬ond volume of one of the greatautobiographies of our time.Pub. qt $6.95. Sale $2.9878. ABUNDANCE OF CHEMICALELEMENTS. By V. V. Cherdyntsev.Collects and systematizes the datanow available on the occurrenceand distribution of the elements ina wide range of cosmic objects.Pub. at $10.00. Sale $2.9879. CARL SANDBURG. By HarryGolden. Illus.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $2.9880. THE SATURDAY’ REVIEWGALLERY’. From the pages ofAmerica’s leading cultural maga¬zine—the best, the most significant,the most enjoyable articles aboutthe century’s notables — Faulkner.Joybe, Churchill, et al—as recalledby such literary lights as Santayana,Thurber. Ford, others.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.9881. JEAN-JACQUKS ROUSSEAU—Conscience of An Era. By FrancesWinwar. A major biography of theromantic philosopher.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.9882. BETWEEN THE WARS. ByJames Laver. A kind of British“Only Yesterday." only twice asbrilliant, relevant and amusing.Pub. at $6.95. Sale $2.9883. Corsairs and Cutlasses —BRETHREN OF THE COAST. ByP. K. Kemp and C. Lloyd. Theswashbuckling saga of the legendarybuccaneers who plundered the shipsof the Spanish Main in the romanticage of Henry Morgan. Illus. Maps.Pub. at $4.95. Sale S2.9884. “F’ather of Modern Painting”—’MANET. By Henri Perruchot. Re¬markable biography of EdouardManet (1832-83), central figure andleader of the French Impressionists.58 illustrations.Pub. at $6.50. Sale $2.9885. Russia’s Hidden History—F1ASTMINUS WEST=ZERO. By WernerKeller. 150 illustrations.Pub. at $6.95. Sale $2.9886. The Life and Art of CEZANNE.By Henri Perruchot. 57 rare photo¬illustrations of Cezanne and famouscontemporaries.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.9887. ATLAS OF THE UNIVERSE.By Br. Ernst and Tj. E. de Vries.Large, magnificent reference workfor non-specialists, combining 400astounding photographs, diagramsand star charts with a text pre¬sented in the form of an alphabeti¬cally arranged encyclopedia of as¬tronomy. 7 Mi "x 10 M.Pub. at $9.95. Sale $2.9888. THE ORDEAL OF CAPTAINROEDER—Napoleon's Retreat fromMoscow. Ed. by Helen Roeder. Illus.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $2.9889. MYTHS AND MY’THMAKING.Ed. by Henry A. Murray. Illuminat¬ing introduction to the historicaldevelopment of mythology, theoriesof myth-making, Snd the meaningsand uses of myth in art. literature,religion, politics, self-interpreation,etc. Orig. $6.00. Sale $2.98»«. A RUSSIAN REVIEW TEXT.By Kenneth Katzner. New, uniquelyeffective learning aid for studentsand teachers, combining in onemonumental reference volume thefunctions of a dictionary, vocabu¬lary builder, word finder, phrasebook and grammar review. 478 pp.7’xl0". Pub. at $7.50. Sale $2.9891. MAN AND THE MOON. Ed.by Robert S. Richardson Illus. byChesley Bonestell. A scientific guidefor the layman.Pub. at $6.50. Sale $2.9892. TALL SHIPS AND GREATCAPTAINS. By A. B. C. Whipple.Fascinating narrative of famoussailing ships through the ages andthe courageous men who sailed,fought or raced them across theseas. Illus.Pub. at $4.95. Sale $2.9893. THE RAILWAY REVOLUTION.By L. T. C. Rolt. Thrilling, exten¬sively-documented history of therailroad in 19th-century England.Illus. Pub. at $6.50. Sale $2.9894. LARGELY LINCOLN. By Dav¬id Chambers Mearns. Choice col¬lection of Lincolniana by one ofthe greatest scholars in the field.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.9895. Bernard Shaw—LONDON MU¬SIC. The great man’s marvelouslystimulating, penetrating and wittymusical criticism.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $2.9896. THE SACRED SCRIPTURESOF THE JAPANESE. By PostWheeler.Pub. at $10.00. Sale $2.9897. FOLK SONGS OF ENGLAND,IRELAND, SCOTLAND ANDWALES. Ed. by Wm. Cole andnewly arr. for piano and guitar byNorman Monath.Pub. at $7.50. Sale $2.9898. HIGH COUNTRY EMPIRE. ByRobert G. Athearn. Vividly writtenfact-filled book about America’shigh plains and mountain country.Pub. at $6.95. Sale $2.9899. MANUAL OF MYTHOLOGY.By A. B. Murray.Only $2.98109.MODIGLIANI: A Memoir. ByAndre Salmon. 36 reproductions ofhis famous paintings.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $2.98 101. JOHN ADAMS: 1735-1826. ByPage Smith. Monumental two-vol¬ume biography of the second Presi¬dent of the United States. 1,170pages, 32 illustrations; two vols. inslipcase.Pub. at $14.50. Sale $3.98 the set.102.—SCALPS AND TOMAHAWKS:Narratives of Indian Captivity. Ed.by Frederick Diimmer.Pub. at $6.00. Sale $3.98103. FROM SHYLOCK TO SVEN-GALI: Jewish Stereotypes in Eng-lish Fiction. By Edgar Rosenberg.Illus. Pub. at $6.50. Sale $3.98104. THE CONTOURS OF AMEKI-CAN HISTORY. By William A.Williams. 513 pp.Pub. at $7.50. Sale $3.98105.PAUL RAND: His Work from1*48 to 1958. Ed. by Y. Kamekura.Over 150 plates (31 in color), textand captions. 10'-x!l V* ”,Pub. at $13.50. Sale $3.98106. Indian Wars of the WestMASSACRES OF T H E MOUN¬TAINS. By J. P. Dunn, Jr. 669pages. Ulus.Pub. at $6.95. Sale S3.98107. EXPRESSIONISM IN ART—With 210 Illustrations. By SheldonCheney. Pub. at $5.00. Sale *3.98108. Dante’s THE DIVINE COM¬EDY. Tr. by L. G. White. Luxurygift edition with 69 full-page 8*4 "x10Vj" Dore engravings. A magnifi¬cent volume.Pub. at $6.50. Sale *3.98109. THE EGO AND HIS OWN:The Case of the Individual AgainstAuthority. By Max Stimer.Pub. at $0.95. Sale *3.98110. THE STRANGE LIFE DI-OBJECTS—35 Centuries of Art Col¬lecting and Collectors. By MauriceRbeirns. This book tells what hap¬pens to objects of art after theircreation. 15 illustrations.Pub. at $6.95. Sale $3.98111.THE NEW CHEMOTHERAPYIN MENTAL ILLNESS: The History.Pharmacology and Clinical Experi¬ences With Rauwolfia. Phenothia*7.ine, Azacyclonol, Mephenesin. Hy¬droxyzine and Benactyzine Prepara¬tions. Pub. at $15.00. Sale $3.98The New Variorum Shakespeare112. MACBETH. Ed. by H. HFurness and H. H. Furness. Jr.Pub. at $12.50. Sale $1.98113. ROMEO AND JULIET. Edby H. H. Furness and H H.Furness, Jr. Uniform withabove. Limited edition,Pub. at $12.50. Sale $4.98111. EPSTEIN DRAWINGS, withnotes by Lady Epstein. Intro, byRichard Buckle. Jrxll".Pub. at $7.50. Sale $1.98115. CHINESE PAINTING. By-Peter G. Swann. With 60 beautifui,tipped-in color, reproductions fromthe Han. T’ang, Sung, Yuan, andother dynasties from 206 B.C. tothe fall of the Ch’ing (Manchu)dynasty in 191 LSpecial Import $5.95116. ITALIAN PAINTING — FromThe Byzantine Masters to The Ren¬aissance. By Galienne Francastel. 60tipped-in plates in exquisite fullcolor. Special Import $5.95117. GOD’S WILDERNESS: Dis¬coveries in Sinai. By Beno Rothen-berg. With 90 superb photogravureillustrations, 16 maps and plans.Lavishly printed and bound, I0*xl2".Pub. at $15.00, Sale $6.95118. VESALIUS—THE ANATOMYILLUSTRATED. Ed. by J. B. Saun¬ders and C. B. O’Malley. 96 full,9"x 12" page facsimiles of Vesalius’astonishingly beautiful and accuratewoodcuts of the human figure.Pub. at $10.00. ’ Sale $6.95119. Aubrey Menen’s ROME FOROURSELVES. The most compre¬hensive and unusual portrait ofRome that has ever been published.Magnificently printed and bound,10"xl2“. Pub. at $15.00. .Sale $7.95120.. CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI.By Carola Giedion-Welcker. Stun¬ningly - illustrated art biography-critique. with 157 plates picturingBrancusi’s supreme achievements.Pub. at $15.00. Sale $7.95121. INDIAN SCULPTURE: Mas¬terpieces of Indian, Khmer andCham Art. Over 260 large photo¬illustrations by W. and B. Forman,text by M. M. Deneck.Pub. at $13.00. Sale $9.95122. EUROPEAN PAINTING INTHE 15th CENTURY. By R. Chia-relli, et al. Over 100 tipped-in colorplates illustrate this fine study ofQuattrocento art.Pub. at $25.00. Sale $15.95THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORES5802 ELLIS AVENUE © CHICAGO 37 • ILLINOISTEXTBOOKS • GENERAL BOOKS • SCHOOL SUPPLIES • STATIONERY • ^TYPEWRITERS*TAPE RECORDERS • ^PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES • *GIFTS • * At main store only