by David L. AikenPlans for a trailblazing nowexperimental school involvingUC in the problems of ele¬mentary and high school stu¬dents in the inner city were madepublic two weeks ago.A committee of ten facultymembers and administrators hopes!o present next month a proposalto the US commisisoner of edu¬cation asking for money to set upa major new laboratory. It wouldtest promising programs and meth¬ods of working with students fromthe central city, many of whomhave deprived backgrounds.FIRST PUBLIC announcement of the plan was made by JulianH. Levi, executive director of theSouth East Chicago Commission(SECC>, and UC professor of ur¬ban studies. He revealed the planin his annual report on the com¬mission’s activities in rehabilita¬tion of the Hyde Park-Woodlawncommunity. The report was givenJune 9 in the Quadrangle club oncampus.A preliminary draft of the pro¬posals to the government was re¬leased to the Maroon this weekby Roald Campbell, dean of thegraduate school of education andchairman of the faculty committee.Besides Levi and Campbell, oth¬ er members of the committee areAlbert Dorfman, chairman of thepediatrics department and directorof La Rabida - UC institute; Mor¬ris Janowitz and Phillip M. Haus¬er, professors of sociology; RobertD. Hess and Robert J. Havighurst,professors in the department ofeducation and the committee onhuman development; JaekMeltzer,director of the center for urbanstudies; Alton A. Linford, dean ofthe school of social service admin¬istration; and D. Gale Johnson,dean of the division of social sci¬ences.According to Campbell, the of¬fice of education could act on theproposal by October. Full opera- ^ untilland was (MMFfid and a buildingconstructed.THE ULTIMATE goal of theproject is to find ways of closingthe alarming gap in quality be¬tween education in hard-pressedovercrowded central cities andmore affluent areas of the country.It aims to plunge UC into work¬ing on this problem as no otherui'ban university in the countryhas yet done.The prime feature of the proj¬ect is an experimental school,where bright ideas of facultymembers could be put into actualpractice and evaluated. One partof the proposed laboratory would be a secondary school for grade*7-12. Another would deal with pre-school age children. An elementaryschool may also be included, butsome feel the secondary and pre¬school periods offer the most chal¬lenging problems.Secondary school planThe plan for the secondaryschool calls for a heterogeneousstudent body; utilization of volun¬teers; a flexible curriculum to leteach student progress at his ownspeed in each area and to let teach¬ers experiment in materials andmethods; and attempts to combatthe “sense of social isolation whichconfronts classroom teachers”(Continued on page six)Vol. 73 — No. 48 The University of Chicago 31 Friday, June 25, 1965 Levi cites stress on publicservice in convocation speechUC Provost Edward H. Levi called on the University tocontinue its tradition of experimental college education andactive public service in an address at the spring convocationJune 11 and 12.• “There are still quite a fewsacred cows about, not worth thegrass they eat,” he stated, whichplague the University’s currentstructure.THESE MUST be reformed, hesaid, if UC is to avoid “the insidi¬ous and reasonable thought thatmediocrity also has its uses.”Jacobson new bio sci dean. ^ _ , , . .. , . . ... , , , , Levi delivered his talk in Rocke-Leon O. Jacobson, a research specialist in nuclear medicine, will take over as dean of the feller Memorial Chapel as part ofdivision of biological sciences next year. ceremonies at which a total ofThe present dean, H. Stanley Bennett, asked to be relieved of the deanship to go back 1062 degrees were awarded to(o research. He will shoulder a new administrative burden instead of the deanship, however graduating uc students. UC Presi-, Bennett has been named direc¬tor of the newly - establishedlaboratories for cell biology.The shifts will be effective Jan¬uary 1, 1966, it was announcedTuesday.Jacobson has been chairman ofHie department of medicine atlfC since 1961, and has also servedas director of the Argonne cancerresearch hospital since 1951. Hewill continue in his Argonne posi¬tion. at least for a time.Served A-bomb projectIn a series of special appoint¬ments while at UC. Jacobsonserved the early atomic energyprojects conducted here duringWorld War II. He was associatedirector, later director, of healthfor the “plutonium project,”which developed the atomic bomb.Jacobson’s work on blood forma¬tion, diseases of the blood, andprotection against radiation in¬juries has brought him interna¬tional acclaim. In 1963, he received dent George Wells Beadle pre-“SPECIAL EFFORTS will be sided at the two-day convocation.made to create in the laboratories UC influentiala central focus of experts and Lovi cited the University’s earlyinstruments to help maintain the experiments in liberal educationquality of electron microscopy” as being of great importance toat UC, he continued. “The labor- American higher education.atories will serve as an interna¬tional training center for ad¬vanced scholars in cell biology,and as a focus for collaborationwith investigators in clinical dis¬ciplines.”Bennett has also been honored “The fact is that the basicliberal arts programs in most col¬leges have been influenced by theChicago experiment of manyyears ago,” he said.However irritating UC mayhave been to other colleges, hewith an endowed chair, the Robert stated, the standards of educationR. Bensley professorship. It was in “innumerable institutions havecreated by the UC board of trus- been helped by its presence,tees to honor the late professor, THE CURRENT plan to reor-who made important discoveries ganize the College into five divi-about pancreas and thyroid cells si0nal colleges will bring UC’sabout three decades ago. strength into more direct confron-BENNETT HAS made contri- tation with the problems of under-butions by work on the adrenal graduate education, Levi said, andglands, recognition of an internal “should give impetus to the kindsJacobsonhaveleader-known as a snerialist in cellular membrane system in the striated °* experiments w h i c ha special award from the American anatomy and cytochemistry. His muscle, classification of blood characterized Chicago sNuclear society for his work in yvork with the electron microscope capillaries, and recognition of shlP*determining the role of the spleen yielded fundamental new membrane movements in the ac- The new College structure willand blood-forming tissue in pre- knowledge of how human muscles tive transport system of cells. aid in the development of a seriesventing and repairing radiation WOrk. Born 55 years ago while his of “diverse challenging programsdamage. He was the first physi- The new laboratories for cell parents were missionaries in Ja- suited to, the gowth capacity ofcian so honored by this organiza- biology, which he will head, will pan, Bennett received early educa- students,” he said,lion, which is concerned with re- “be equipped and staffed for in- tion in Japan, his BA from Ober- At the same time, Levi sug-search and development in the terdisciplinary studies and for the lin, and his MD from Harvard, gested, the University should re-nuclear sciences. support of work in cell biology After serving with distinction in spond “in a more structured wayIN 1939, Jacobson became the elsewhere in the University,” World War II, he went to MIT, to the desire of students to breakaccording to a statement by Ben¬nett. the University of Washington, and the seven or more years of cx-finally to UC in 1961. pected undergraduate and gradu-hrst scientist to make use ofudioactive isotopes in treatingpatients at UC hospitals by usingradioactive phosphorus 32 to treatsome leukemias and anotherdisease of the blood.He has served as advisor onradiation and health problems to*»uch agencies as the US AtomicEnergy commission and the Na¬tional Research council.Awarded new chairLast week, it was also an- of an IBM 14U1 computer, tney - faculty,bounced that Jacobson will be the are offering love, or at least a All data is then sent to Opera- “Operation Match” was firstdrst man to hold the newly en- reasonable shot at it, for $3 a tion Match, Cambridge, Massachu- tried in New England colleges thisdowed Joseph Regenstein profes- throw. ^ ^ ^ ^ setts, where it is fed into a com- sprjng. with over 8,000 studentssorship of biological and medical TO PARTICIPA1E a wilung puter. The plan is that the com- participating, the experiment’ssciences, effective July 1. This new student has only to obtain a ques- putcr will fit people with the peo- sponsors say it was a huge success,cliair is a gift in memory of the tionnaire from one of the agents pje they want or at least come T h - qllmrnpr the motionrounder of two chemical corpora- of -Operation Match- .currently ?los, nalesLvcE retoed’andZCan a UC student find happiness by machine?Two Harvard undergraduates, counting on what looks like cation to religion, to drinking hab-an unlimited demand, are extending the business of love to its, to sexual experience. Theythe Chicago area. have been formulated with theWorking from a seventy-item questionnaire with the help advice, at least, of the Harvardof an IBM 1401 computer, theytlons, by his wife. Jacobson will stationed in front of the Bookstoreretain the professorship during his and at other key points,tenure as dean. Mutual desireJacobson, 54, is a native of The object is to match a boyNorth Dakota, and got his BS with a girl whose specifications When all matching is complete, operation is moving westward,each participant gets a list of .six Starting July 10, when the match-people ideal for him (or her). es are sent 0ut, people will beTHE ITEMS on the question- getting together in New York,from North Dakota State Univer- lie desires, and a girl to a boy naire are divided into four cat- Boston, Chicago Delroit Laris ng,sity in 1935, followed by the MD whose specifications she desires, egories, but all are related. The Ann Arbor, uioomingdaie, ina.,«n 1939 from UC. He has been at All this is determined through a student has the opportunity to or- Los Angeles, anu i>an rrancisco.UC ever since, and is the first two-part answer sheet. der his match like he might order ACCORDING TO Compatibilityalumnus of the school of medicine A person participating answers his meal, the difference being, of Research Inc. (the official nameto become dean of the division, questions about himself, presum- course, tliat he has to offer some- for “Operation Match”), “We’veBennett-—cell specialist ably as he is, and then goes over thing in return. For two people to taken the blindness out of a blindBennett, who completes the the same questionnaire, filling it get together, they have to want date. If you think you can describeusual five-year term as dean of out as the girl he hopes to meet each other. your ideal dates, we think we candivision this year, is widely would fill it out, The questions range from edu- find them.” Levi—UC as irritantate training with some opportuni¬ty for meaningful service.”Public serviceUC, Levi noted, along with therest of America’s universities, isbeing called upon to take a muchgreater part in public affairs thanin the past.The Chicago MaroonI will publish three more §issues during the summer f|quarter. The publicationdates for these issues willbe July 9, July 23, andAugust 6. The Maroonbusiness office will be fopen to take advertise- |ments from noon to 5 pmon the Tuesday and| Wednesday before each |of these publicationdates. All advertisementsI must be submitted before6 pm of the WednesdayI before publication. Call Iext. 3265, 3266, or 3269.J?- '. a,'.' ;■ ''4&S& ' 'X.“Universities have outpoststhoughout the world, adviseforeign governments, redevelopneighborhoods, run hospitals, andhave become instruments of socialchange,” he said.LEVI URGED UC to take agreater part in public affairs, notby taking an institutional positionon matters of public concern, butby stimulating “disciplined dis¬course” to elevate the understand¬ing of both sides of public issues.As part of this effort, he sug¬gested, the University must re¬evaluate its participation in thetraining of scholar's for publicservice, including the recognitionthat in the areas of internationalstudies and the education of theunderprivileged, greater involve¬ment is required both for trainingand for research.Levi also cited the proposed UCacademy of public affairs, whichwould bring students and facultyinto close contact with importantAmerican and foi'eign public of-ficals, as a step towards greaterinvolvement by the university inpublic affairs.Close involvement planned for UC inPlan research school fo udents<i\smbiii»make their classes enjoyable atthe expense of giving an educa¬tion. On the other hand, thosewho teach their best and whomake their students work hardmight be hurt.* To avoid a blacklist by SG,a professor might lower his stan¬dards and make the course easier.It would be tragic If any profes¬sor has to sacrifice his integrityof his standards to look good inan SG manual. 1 OK HI NT & TO SHAKESG questionnaire attacked NOTICEOriginal Contemporary Art on Jewish 5326-36 Greenwood Awe., unfurn., 4-rmThemes. Exhibition of original paint* apt. Immed. poso. Decorated. See JantIngs, drawings, woodcuts and etchings tor-, WI 5-6368. .by Amtn, Baskin, Gross et. al. on what Sort of Girl Is Jacquelyn Friedloan from the Jewish Museum. N.Y.C. mans She enjoys shai.n? ,,, .. . . ^ ,, 4 rooms, TV, phono. Near campus, busHU lei House, 5 < 15 Woodlawn, June 21 1{-. j ,, 7j jx- mo plus utilthru July 12, Mon.-Fu 9 00 a.m.-5:00 Call 235-7600 (9-51. 667-5854 (7-HH.pjtLt #ua>dsj>i tboi'tii pm. ■Hillel Open House: Cookout, folksing¬ing and dancing; bring Instruments.Sunday, June 27, 6:00 p.m. 5715 S. 175oe AM,STATE .MOTORCYCIJ5. 1057.KX CM COM) . $325 VHI 8 -7041VW '58, good engine, needs body Work,$425. Call 288-1632. ^ 7 /LOOM AVAILABLE FOR MALE FORSUMMER. CALL 288-7961HELP WANTEDLetters to the editorIN A HURRY?RUSH SERVICEAVAILABLE WHENNiEDED.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERS"Unexcelled Qualify Since 1917" LPhoMs: Ml 3-7447 1013-17 tost *!•# HHY 3-6868 Across from B-J Ct.^ Serving the Compel since 1917AAA*TO THE EDITOR:An accused must be able to facehis accusers; for that reasonanonymous reports are usuallynot given much credit in America-and hopefully never at UC. Butthis is just what Student Govern¬ment seems to be allowing in itscourse evaluation questionnaires.While we believe that thesequestionnaires could possibly beof some value, at present theyare subject to misuse and misin¬terpretation for several reasons:• As things now stand, it isimpossible to tell how representa¬tive the questionnaires are. Thosestudents who disliked a courseprobably are most likely to fill outthe questionnaires, and so a com¬plete picture of a professor wouldnot be given.• Since the evaluations areanonymous, students can seek re¬venge by filling out one (or more)exaggerated, bad reports againstan individual teacher.• It allows students to shiftthe blame from themselves totheir professors, by claiming tohave attended 100% of the classesand to have done most of thereadings, While in reality theymay have done poorly because ofinsufficient preparation.• It gives an advantage tothose teachers who are “goodguys” or easy graders, and who Female student to babysit 12 hr. &week in exchange for room with privateAs Dean Booth has pointed bath. 288-4391. _ Chicago MaroonI xtil.ir ill Chief P,„HBusiness Manager. Michael KasseraAssistant t« the Editor. .David l a ,,cCampu, News Editor David B»::erCulture-Feature Editor Jamie Beth Oal.The Maroon Is published by student,»t the t nlver.sity of Chicago, IU edi¬torials and letters to the editor do n„tindicate University policy. Officers areIn Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th st., Chi-cago $0637. Phones: MI 3-0800; Mf.n-sions 3265, 3266, 3269. Second class ix.suage paid at Chicago, Ill.Charter member of Collegiate p,,.^Service,out, one s evaluation of professors secretary; room, board in ex-..rtfV, Grv,rv T— _ CHANGE OCCASIONAL TYPING. ANYmay change with time. In a few rgran 3.-years, what were considered good Calendar of Eventsf , ’ , , ., _ °... STUDENT GOVERNMENT needs a char-teachers may be forgotten, while t4W mght duector (part time) andthe Sunday, June 27‘bad” or hard ones may be secretary (part time) or else a chartersnmvwSatnJ flight director-secretary (full time),appreciates can start anytime from now to Oct, 1.Tt mav he nrnnnsed that stu- Student travelers (and wives thereof)ii may oc proposed rnai sui preferred Write so. 121.2 e. 59 street.dents sign their names to the —^ -——; “miectmmvairee nnH that nrnfec WANTED: Married woman for posi-qut Silonnaues, ana tnai piOICS' tion of general office clerk and business 7;oo am, WAIT, 7:45 pm.RADIO: "From the Midway,” DavidGrene, lecturer for the Committee onSocial Thought, discusses "Hamlet: ThePlay and the Tragic Figure,” WFMF,sors be allowed to answer nega- manager for the Ghic^o Review - RADIO: -The World of the Paperback.”tive evaluations; but even in Hou£. flexible. Co’.mct Leonard Shay- Erich Fromm, psychoanalyst and pro-honest questionnaires, bad judg- kin, ext. 357 or 288-I868. fessor at the National University ofment is a prime danger, for one’s PERSONAL Mexico, discusses his work Beyond theevaluations are necessarily sub- .. —, - —— <—* chains of illusion, wfmf. 8:15 am.SUBLEASEjective and may later be regretted. JlLY4 s^,!?>aff ,^°rTr WAIT’ 7 30 pm-r • ,1 on custom-made sandals to UC students RADIO: "ChicajIn our View, the SG manual could with identification. Offer good untileasily be more detrimental than July 1. Ad Lib studio, 1422 e. 53 St.beneficial to teaching standardsand to the education which UCstudents receive.DAVID FEINGOLDBURTON JONESKENNETH MULLER N. Y. C. SABBATICAL?Sublet 3-room apartment, unfurnished,$110 per month. Aug. 1. 1965 to Sept.1, 1966. Lovely neighborhood across__ _parkway from library, park, botanical Educability,” "Robert~D. Hess, chairmangarden. 15 minute subway to Man-hat- 0f the Committee on Human Developtan. References please. Box 117, Maroon. ment, Judd 126, 7:30 pm.RADIO: “Chicago Dialogue." Philip M.Hauser, professor of sociology, discussesChicago’s technological future, WIND,7 05 pm.RADIO: "NightHne." public discussionshow, WBBM, 10 pm.Tuesday, June 29LECTURE* "Pre-school Experience andWELCOMEFor the Summer QuarterWe'll be glads to see you inTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE HYDE PARK YMCANewly redecoroted student rooms ovoiloble with or without meol plans.Study lounge, private TV room, health, end physical facilities oilovoiloble for student use.Call FA 4-5300The Main Store is newly lighted and air conditioned foryour convenience and comfort and our clerks will beglad to assist you in our;SELF SERVICE DEPARTMENTS(Please use package drops or free coin return lockers.)TEXTBOOKS: All the required and recommended Texts,selected by your instructors.‘GENERAL BOOKS: Over 20,000 titles in a wide rangeof interests. In our limited space some titles maybe difficult to find. See one of our girls wearing theyellow scarves.SCHOOL SUPPLIES: Of every description to meet yourneeds‘STATIONERY & OFFICE SUPPLIES: Fo r work-room oroffice.‘RECORDS: A large selection at popular prices.CLERK SERVICE DEPARTMENTS‘TYPEWRITERS: New, used and rentals in standard,portable or electric.‘TAPE RECORDERS: New, used and rentals.‘PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES: Many types, cameras andservices.‘GIFTS: Many g ift suggestions, U. of C. items and cardsin color.‘MENS & WOMENS WEAR: A fine selection of acces¬sories.‘TOBACCO: A representative assortment of items.‘SNACK BAR: Sandwiches, coffee, cold drinks andcandy.‘Main Store onlyMAIN STOREHours: Monday through FridaySaturday 5802 Ellis8:00 AM.8:30 A M.CLOSED FOR INVENTORY SATURDAY, JUNE 26thEDUCATION BRANCHHours: Monday through FridayDOWNTOWN CENTER BRANCHHours: Monday through FridayDOWNTOWN PROGRAM BRANCHHours: Monday through Friday 582 i Kimbark (In Be I field H alf)8:00 A.M. -4:30 P.M.64 E. Lake St.11:30 A M.-8:30 P.M,190 E. Delaware Place ,- 1 M ' ' I'M ^ CUSTOM MADE SANDALS$9 and UPmany styles and colors tochoose from,we will moke anythingand everything of leather.THE BAG I'M INcontemporary leotherers1250 N. Wells Sr.CHICAGO’S OLD TOWNthe One, the Only-the Originalforeign car hospital & cfnichome of team winkauthorized BMC sales and service5424 s. kimbark aye. mi 3-3113June 29 - July 2CONFERENCE ON READING: "RecentDevelopments in Reading," gr:.< a]sessions. Mandel Hall, Tuesday aidWednesday. 9:30 am, 1:30 and 7:30 pmThursday and Friday. 9 30 am, 1 30 pm’Consult bulletin boards for sectionalmeetings.Sunday, July 4RADIO: "From the Midway," Frank LSleverts, special assistant for p .affairs. Department of State, and HansJ. Morgenthau, director of the Centerfor the Study of American Foreign andMilitary Policy; debate the issue of"United States Policy in Vietnam ••WFMF, 7 00 am. WAIT. 7:45 pmRADIO: "The World of the Papeibae- ••Richard G. Stein, associate prcf<of EngHeh. discusses Selected Poems byE/.ra Pound, WFMF, 8:15 am, WAIT,7:30 pm.RADIO: "Chicago Dialogue.*• Philip MHauser, professor of sociol<>gy, d!sChicago's technological future, WIND,7:05 pm. ..RADIO: "Nlghtllne." public dis<uh.-.,»nshow, WBBM, 10 pm.Sniping from groves of academeProfs escalate Viet war protestsBy Collegiate Press ServiceANN ARBOR. MICH.New organizations to promote* faculty student influence in for¬eign affairs have been formed inthe wake of the teach-in move¬ment.The Inter-University Committee* for a Public Hearing on Viet Nam,the organizer of the nationalteach-in May 15, has been dis¬solved and been replaced by theInter - University Committee forDebate on Foreign Policy'.A communications network tofacilitate contact between variousnational and regional academicforeign policy action or discussiongroups is being developed. It willinclude a bi - weekly newsletterwhere university-based discussiongroups can announce programsO and exchange information.AN AD HOC Universities Com¬mittee for Public Action was alsocreated, to be used in emergencysituations for co-ordinated nation¬al action.The re-organization of the teach-in movement took place at a June5 conference of 45 groups activein Viet Nam protests here. Theconfe>ence heard renorts of vari¬ous Viet Nam projects and cli-vided into workshops aimed atstrengthening the faculty-studentr role in foreign policy making.The foreign policy debate or¬ganization, is designed “to con¬tinue national debate and con¬frontation with the government* and to provide information andother resources to universitygrouns desiring to raise foreignpolicy Issues through means ofpublic debate," its sponsors said.Communications linkThe main feature of the com¬munications network will be theBi-Weekly Information/Action Re-, port < BIAR) which will appearon the 15th and 30th of eachmonth. To be publLshed in De¬troit. BIAR will include a list offoreign policy group projects, or-* ganhatlonal needs and co-ordin¬ ation information. It will also in¬clude statements and analyses sub¬mitted by these groups.The network would also main¬tain a mailing list developed bythe teach-in movement, BIAR andthe Universities' Committee onProblems of War and Peace ofDetroit, which will be availableto foreign policy groups.A six-man committee, Profes¬sors Otto Feinstein of WayneState University, Marshal Sahlinsof the University of Michigan,Anthony Leeds of the Universityof Texas, Banks McDowell of Bos¬ton University and David Cohenof Case Institute of Technologyand law student Peter Steinberg-er of the University of Michigan,have been named to organize thenetwork.THEY HOPE to work throughthe Universities Committte whichhas been attempting peace groupcommunication for several years.The conference heard reports onseveral Viet Nam protest projectsscheduled this year:• A televised debate with Mc-George Bundv, President Lyn¬don B. Johnson’s national securityaide, in place of the confrontationwith academic critics scheduledfor the national teach-in. It washeld June 21.• The National Teach-Out onForeign Policy, tentatively sched¬uled for July 31 in Washington.Proposed by Prof. Harry Wellsof Bloomfield College, the teach-out is planning to present a va¬riety of speakers from the aca¬demic community, clergymen andpublic groups. Lobbying with Con¬gressmen is also planned.Co sponsors of the Teach-Out,which will stress Viet Nam, in¬clude The Metropolitan (NewYork area) Universities Commit¬tee on the Problems of War andPeace; SANE, the Teachers’Committee for Peace in Viet Nam,The Doctor’s Committee for Peacein Viet Nam. Students for aDemocratic Society, Women’s Strike for Peace, the Fellowshipof Reconciliation and the Universi¬ties Committee on the DominicanRepublic.• Prof. Robert S. Browne ofFairleigh-Dickinson University isattempting to send student-facul¬ty groups to the Second Afro-Asian Conference in Algeria, June29, and to the Universities of Sai¬gon and Hue in South Viet Nam.The groups will attempt to ex¬change information and informthe American academic communi¬ty of the thinking of the under¬developed world and South Viet¬namese on the war.• The Women’s Strike forPeace is planning a conferencebetween 12 women from Northand South Viet Nam and 12American women July 14 to 19 inDjakarta, Indonesia.• An International Teach-In onViet Nam and the underdevelopedworld is scheduled for Oct. 15-16at the University of Toronto.THAT GROUP is also attempt¬ing to set up a meeting betweenall Vietnamese factions, on bothsides of the conflict, and majoracademic leaders “to try to re¬solve the crisis directly. Thismeeting could be a breakthroughin the role of intellectuals insettling disputes,’’ its sponsorssaid. No date and place for themeeting have been set althoughBrussells, Montreal, or the UnitedNations are being considered foran early fall conference. EricBockstael of Paris is heading thegroup seeking the meeting withProfessors Richard Mann andMarc Pilisuk of the University ofMichigan serving as United Statescontacts.MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259.VXVN\\VXS\NXV*x\\\>\\\S\V\\N\\\\\\V\\X\\\\V\X\X\XNXX\VXXXXXXXXXXXXXVXXXXX*DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th ST. EYE EXAMINATIONS DO 3-6866—DO 3-7644PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT Cr FACULTY DISCOUNT:<k\\X\\XXXXXXXXXXXXXX\\\XXXX\\XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXNXNWX*'*\*XX\XXXXXXXXXXXV First Catholic prof inUC divinity school namedThe Reverend John L. McKenzie, S.J., a Catholic priest,archeologist, and author, has been appointed for the academicyear 1965-66 as the first Roman Catholic on the faculty of theUC Divinity School.Father McKenzie, on sabbaticalfrom Loyola University in Chi¬cago, will hold the rank of visitingprofessor and be a member of theBiblical field, one of seven fieldsof specialization at the DivinitySchool. He will reside at CalvertHouse, the Roman Catholic studentcenter on campus.“Father McKenzie’s appoint¬ment marks the first time theDivinity faculty has included aRoman Catholic,” said Jerald C.Brauer, Dean of the DivinitySchool.“The appointment reflects ourinterest in and concern for theecumenical movement, and our de¬sire that it become an integralpart of our program,” he added.AUTHOR OF numerous publi¬cations, Father McKenzie will pre¬sent a paper this summer at theInternational Congress of JewishStudies in Jerusalem under agrant from the American Councilof Learned Societies.He is a member of the Societyof Biblical Literature, and a for¬mer vice-president of its midwestsection; The Catholic Biblical As¬sociation, of which he has beenpresident; the American OrientalSociety; and the Chicago Societyof Biblical Research.Father McKenzie entered theComplete LineOf Pei /X «dAqiiarhnn Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012 Society of Jesus in 1928 and wasordained to the priesthood in thelate 1930s. He holds a Litt. B. de¬gree from Xavier University inOhio, and MA degree in classicallanguages from the graduateschool at St. Louis University, andan STD degree from West College,Weston, Massachusetts.He previously has taught at St.John’s College in Toledo and WestBaden College. For the past fiveyears he has been professor ofhistory at Loyola. During a sab¬batical year in 1957-58, FatherMcKenzie was a member of thearchaeological staff of the excava¬tion of Khirbet Tubeiga, Israel,and in 1960 he served on the staffof the excavation of EIJib, Israel.HE IS the author of The Two-Edged Sword, Myths and Realities,The Power and the Wisdom, andhas three publications in process:A Dictionary of the Bible, to ap¬pear in September 1965; a com¬mentary on Joshua and Judges,and a volume on Isaiah II for theAnchor Bible.TYPEWRITERSTO 55% OFF*New-Used-Electric-Office-PortableAll machines (new or used) oreguaranteed for 5 years. 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Includedis an option to protect your futureinsurability guaranteed to be atstandard rates up to $60,000, regard¬less of future health or occupation.Defer premium payments, if you wish!Under this arrangement, my insuranceprogram permits you to postpone thethree months after you graduate.FREDRIC M. OKUNCAMPUS MANAGERNational Life Insurance Company120 South LaSalle Street, ChicagoCall me at: CEntral 6-2500 1000 to 2000 WORDS A MINUTEWITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENSIGNYou can read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCELERATED READING method.You'll learn to read DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words ominute. And retention is excellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely readevery word.You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual materialas well as to literature and fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at thesespeeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased.Consider what this new reading ability will allow you to accomplish — in your requiredreading and also in the additional reading you want to do.No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATEDREADING method. In this way the reader avoids developing any dependence upon externalequipment in reading.A class in ACCELERATED READING will be taught near the University of Chicago atthe HOTEL DEL PRADO. The class will begin in early July and end in mid-Auugst.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READINGmethod and see it applied by students who have recently completed the course.BRING A BOOK!Demonstrations will be held ot the HOTEL DEL PRADO, 53rd St. and Hyde Park Blvd.MONDAY, June 28WEDNESDAY, June 30MONDAY, July 5All demonstrations will begin at 7:30 P.M.NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING, INC.18964 Coyle Street Detroit 35, MichiganJune 25, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3MOVIE REVIEW »? i) i THEATRE REVIEWElijah smoked, guard sausaged Stratford's Shakespeare good,GOLDSTEINProduced. Directed, and Writtenby Benjamin Manaster and PhilipKaufman.Cast:The Old Man andThe Father Lou GilbertThe Sculpter Thomas ErhartJay Benito Cam) t hersSally Ellen MadisonMr. Nice Charles FischerThe Doctor Severn DardenThe Male Nurse ....Anthony HollandWith Jack Burns. Mike Tuito, TonyT-Ram Del, Kudi Brandeau. ViolaSpolin, Del Close, Robert Ruth, FranCollins, Eddie Goldberg, Norma Nis-sensen, George Reinbert, Rose Kauf¬man, and George Green.Winner of the Prix NouvelleCritique, Cannes.At the Carnegie, Rush near Oak.No doubt about it; the sleeperof the season is Goldstein, a wildroller-coaster of a flick made on aminuscule budget by two ex-UCstudents, Benjamin Manaster andPhilip Kaufman.The film, a coniedie noire, haslots of incident, but not much ofplot. It deals with the effect of theappearance of The Old Man (anavatar of the prophet Elijah) ona set of Chicago characters, par¬ticularly a young sculptor, thehero of the film.The Old Man has been drinkingtea from a saucer with great en¬joyment and volubility when he is accosted by an enormous night-watchman from a nearby sausagefactory. The latter is annoyed; hewants to kill the Old Man. Theguard chases Elijah into the fac¬tory, cornel's him behind a rackof salamis, and forces him into asmoking machine, where he is par¬boiled.THE HERO SAVES his life bykilling the guard—he shoves himinto a bratwurst-maker. But theungrateful Old Man merely mut¬ters an enigmatic warning and dis¬appears. The sculptor decides tospend the rest of his life lookingfor the Old Man, and does—at theend or the film we see him joy¬fully running through the forest,the Old Man’s staff in his hand,looking like nothing so much as ayounger version of the old prophet.Our hero’s friends are not aslucky as he. His former girl-friendSally is picked up by a phonyMadison Avenue type, who getsthe pregnant girl an abortion andtakes her under his wing, whereshe will no doubt live miserablyever after. The sculptor’s friendJay steals a credit card and livesan easy life for awhile, but hetoo is unhappy. He sees himselfas a thief, and he would rather beh.i.sPOST-GRADWALK SHORTS- Fit EEDACRON & COTTONBelt Loop Model $5.98Knit Shirt $5.00available atTHE STORE FOR MENme.©mutt anft <Ettmptt&in the I%ew Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 an impoverished wrecker of build¬ings. Each of the major charactersundergoes a major change of role,but only the unworldly sculptorchanges for the better, and findsthe peace and contentment forwhich he had been striving.According to the producer’s lit¬erature, the film is based upon theearly life of Moses. While thesculptor’s sausagification of theguard corresponds to the slayingof the Egyptian taskmaster by Mo¬ses, the allegory is rather sparselyfurnished, and I rather suspect thatthe whole idea was a leg-pull onthe part of Manaster and Kauf¬man pour epater les critiques.Psychologically oriented criticswill make much of the fact thatLou Gilbert plays both the OldMan and the sculptor’s father —which would make the plot intothe sculptor’s .search for the ideal¬ized father. This interpretation isa bit thin, too.PERHAPS IT IS a mistake tolook for the Meaning of GoldsteinIt is tempting to offer an interpre¬tation, and easy to give one whichlooks well in print. But it seemsto me that Goldstein is a film madewith several ideas in mind- bibli¬cal allegory and father-search, aswell as satire, sight gag, and oth¬ers—and as such it cannot besimply explained away. It is toocomplex for such analysis to bepossible, and too delightful for itto be desirable.So don’t worry about the Mean¬ing. Go and watch the good parts,of which there arc an abundance.Like Severn Darden as an art-loving abortionist. Or Nelson Al-gren’s totally irrelevant storyabout Lost Ball Stahouska. Or theOld Man’s dance on the pier. OrJay in the key club. Or the OldMan throwing piece after piece offurniture out of a driverless truck(labeled Goldstein) onto the DanRyan. Or the little scene wherethe garrulous truckdriver bitesinto a lump of guard-sausage andspits it out.The acting is great, all around.So Is the photography (so the filmwill appeal to cinemaddicts as wellas buffs like myself). Go see it.David H. Richter despite Cassius' shoutsThis year’s Stratford, Ontario,Shakespeare festival productionshave as their keynotes realismand excellence. The Stratfordcompany is presenting a diverseprogram; Shakespeare’s HenryIV parts one and two (renamedFalstaff by the powers that be atthe festival) and Julius Caesarform the classical part of therepertoire, while Chekhov’s TheCherry On-hard and Brecht’s Ma-liogonny present a modern con¬trast.This combination of plays Isnecessary according to festivaldirector Douglas Campbell, be¬cause “A diet of Shakespearoalone can tend to form a classicstyle that stagnates by lack ofcomparison. The classical reper-tory can only be better for va¬riety."ONE CAN speak only praiseof the production of the histories.Henry IV part one and Falstaffwere excellently acted, withDouglas Rain outstanding asprince Hal. The transformationof Hal from a young boy to aking during the course of thetwo plays was at the same timesubtle and notable.The production of Julius Caesarwas more controversial than eith¬er of the histories. While thecompany overcame the most dif¬ficult elements of the play—thecrowd scenes and the assassina¬tion of Caesar, they failed ratherbadly at some of the less trouble¬some scenes. The crowds weredynamic and believable, and addedrather than detracted -as crowdsusually do — from the dramaticfeeling of the play. Caesar’s as¬sassination was excellent; ratherthan allowing himself to beslaughtered without a fight, Strat¬ford’s Caesar beat off his assas¬sins with the parchment in hishand, forcing them to wait untilhis back was turned before killinghim.THE MAJOR difficulty with theproduction was in the casting.Mark Antony and Cassius did notixn form in their roles as well asthey could have. Antony was good everywhere except in thefuneral oration; but since this jethe essence of his character, ii jsessential that an actor be ableto convince the audience of hjssincerity in this speech. Every,thing else about the scene wasexcellent; the crowd was prop,erly mesmerized and added a gooddeal to make up for the lark ofdrama and tension exhibited byAntony.Cassius simply resorted t0shouting at people rather thanfuming with anger or holding inhis hatred. He forced Brutus tofollow him on several occasionsinto mere shouting matcheswhere controlled anger wouldhave been far more effective.The total experience of dieplays is well worth the trip toOntario. One really should go tora week or more in order to beable to see all of the plays andhear some excellent music aswell. But even to see two or threeplays is well worth the trip, forwe do not get anything resembi.ing good Shakespeare in Chicago.John SalvanoCultureCalendarConcertsJAMES SCIIULTZ CLEANERSSHIRTS — LINENSRepairs & Alterations 5 Hr. Service1363 East 53rd PL 2-966210% Student Discount with I.D. Curd RAVINIA: June 26-Trevln, cond: JuditARaskin, «. June 29— beiji Ozawa, c«md;Jssac Stern, v. July 3—Ozawa, cond;Stern, v.; Leonard Rose, vc; EugeneIstomin, p. Nightly at 8:30. Adm to thepark, $2. reserved seatt $2-$6. Ti« keU>ST 2-1*696 or 273-3560.GRANT PARK SYMPHONY CON( EK rsJime 26-27—Irwin Hoffman, cond : Mar¬tina Arroyo, s; Florence Kopleff c;George Shirley, t; Justino uaz, b.Beethoven: Sym. No. 1; Sym No. t>Rest of schedule unknown at prut>time. Nightly at 8. Free. Columbus(inner) Drive at llth St.FilmsGOLDSTEIN: A motle made In Chicagoby Chicagoans — a real must At theCarnegie Theater, Rush and Oak Ste.Students $1.50.Art FoirsNINTH ANNUAL EDENS PLAZA ARTSAND CRAFTS FAIR: Works in allmedia by 250 artists and craftsmen.June 26-27 from noon to dusk AtEdens Plaza, Edens Highway and LikeAvenue.TheaterTHE KNACK: Mike Nichols, dir Night,ly 8:30, Sat. 7 10.15, Sun. 2:30 A 7 30.Nightly $3, Sat. & Sun. $3.90. HarperTheater, 5238 Harper Ave. 288-1717SECOND CITY: “The Wrecking Ball.”Nightly 9 & ll; Sat. 9, 11, & 1. Nightly$2. Frl. A Sat. $2 50 1846 N. Weils St.DE 7-3992.Today'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN*1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL4 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 25, 1965 l— EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53 rd StreetHYde Pork 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount CoBEAUTY SALONS ExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302BOOKSPAPERBACKSWATCH REPAIRING14K PIERCEDEARRINGSCKH>OOt>CHCHCH>-THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75001540 E. 55 St.10% Student DiscountUNIVERSALARMY STORE“The universe in studentwear for campus andcamping.**Levis - Tennis ShoesAN OUTFIT FROMTOP TO TOE1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856 You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411rv J Study of innovation in schools to go to WillisUC researchers praise 'non-gradecT Woodlawn schoolby David L. Aiken "the overwhelming majority <74A study by UC sociologists shows that the system of “un- per cent) fell into the lowest ocgraded schools can be applied successfully to elementary cupational cateeorv and 40 nerschools serving ‘ socially disadyantaged” children in the city, cent were in nvo’ non-workingThe finding has significance for those trying to find ways categories, 'unemployed or onof meeting the problems of chil- ' — pension,’ or ‘AE)C or welfare.’ ”haIe the necessity of retaining these The socio - economic status ofi P, ® children, a fate which too many Smith school students was notV i °}\ 1 of them ordinarily have suffered quite as similar to that of Tesla* of leeonimendations earjy 5n thejr sej100j careers » the students as the researchers wouldto the school administration by a ^ have liked) since more Tesla stu.department *** “* ^ *** The Tesla Program was stalled dents than Smith students came0,0fT 1 .. two years before Miss Queeley from Professional or white collarIN THE NEXT month or so, made her study early this year. famiIies, and fewer from ADCa large report based on several r- covers only the first three families. Nevertheless, the schoolsindividual research projects in- grades> when th<> effects of ^ were "highly comparable’’ in av-eluding ihis will be stmt to the “held back’’ can supposedly be orage IQ’s of the children, andj.- _ _t-u “ "nvei’-all tho rlatu cnooccf (hatsuperintendent’s most damaging to a child,office. The studies were doneover the past three years for theadministration by UC’s center forsocial organization studies, di¬rected by Morris Janowitz, pro¬fessor of sociology.The project financed by the over all, the data suggest thatthe two schools were relativelycomparable,” the study reports.Meets expectationsStreet and Miss Queeley set up'Effective innovation'The researchers praised the in¬novation of multi-grading as "ai*elatiively modest — certainly in- . .expensive — innovation” of the a ,st °* things they thought theytype in which "the schools will could exPect to find in TeslaRussell Sage foundation, looked make their main progress much more than in Smith, such as great-into the Chicago school system’s 0f the time,” rather than in the er sensitivity of the teachers toorganizational format, research “dramatic and expensive experi- each students’ needs, more flexi¬bility in groupings within the„ . , , , ,, classroom, and fewer psychology2SS «» <“«*»>«<* for the students. • The multi-grade schoolseemed to have "greater successin arresting and reversing retar¬dation.” Tesla students who weredoing poorly in the first grade gotcloser to grade level in the sec¬ond grade; Smith students whowere doing below - level workstayed there or even fell fartherbehind, the report suggests.• Despite some complicationswhich made it difficult to strictlycompare the performance of stu¬dents in the two schooLs, Streetand Miss Queeley "tentatively”concluded that fewer Tesla stu¬dents had reading test scores be¬low grade level, and slightly morehad scores above grade level. Compare teacher attitudes• More Tesla teachers werefound — by asking their pupils,and principals, and by observingthem in the classroom — to besensitive to individual differencesamong pupils, and know each stu¬dent well.• Tesla teachers also won Inratings of whether they usedimaginative and appropriate teach¬ing methods.• Tesla teachers used more sub¬groupings, where students in oneclassroom are divided up by levelof ability for work on differentskills. This showed that "multi¬grading was working at least toa measurable extent, as it wassupposed to,” the report stated.operations, student mobility, and ment.”other problems confronting theadministration. Schools superin- AS AMATTEROPtendent Benjamin C. Willis agreed J*1 afS* In most cases, their expectationsloots innovation, which he de-to co-operate with the study in aneffort to get the help of soeiologists on the system's problems, veloped by virtue of his "highpersonal commitment.” He had en¬couragement, but no additional were met.Among their major findings:SAMUEL A. BELL“Bun Shell From BelV*SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150according to David Street, assist- w 7 ,h“,°f ,Tei0'S twh0 3S -2E& ‘‘,7, £sra “ripoin‘ °utof "ungraded schools.” ACCORDING TO the leport,THE PLAN studied is called ^school's files on ,he Places ofeither the "multi-graded’ or "con- business of the parents show thattinuous development” structure.The child is allowed to progressat his own speed, without fear ofbeing "kept back” because hedoesn’t read or do arithmetic aswell as the curriculum for hisgrade says he should.Street and Mary Queeley, adoctoral candidate in the depart¬ment of sociology, now teachingat Wayne State University in De¬troit, looked into the multi-gradedprogram at Tesla school, an ele¬mentary school serving predom¬inately Negro Woodlawn. Theyalso collected data at anotherWoodlawn school, which they callin their report the "Smith” school,as a "control” on their Tesla find¬ings. Street credits Miss Queeleywith most of the data-gatheringwork.They aimed to find out whetherthe Tesla program succeeded inits goals of giving the "sociallyand academically underprivilegedchild more time to learn basic andacademic skills, and to eliminate Operation MatchcallCE 6-6000for yourcomputer questionnaire ... ths min who hit a planned SunLife program ie In an enviable position.No one ie better prepared to face thefuture than the man who has providedfor hie retirement years and hisfamily's security through life Insurance.As s local Sun Life representative, may1 call upon you at your eonvenlencaTRalph J. Wood. Jr.. CLUHydo Park Boole toildiaq. Chicago II. M.PAirfax 4-6000 — PR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to I Monday* S Friday*SUN LIFI ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA.A MV.TMAV COMPAQRANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open Evenings — Billie Tregonza, ManageressINTENSIVE DAYCLASSESinGUITAR and BANJOwith Ray Tate, Ted Johnson,John Carbo, Stu RamsoyJuly 6 thru 23T uition — $60.00The Old Town Schoolof Folk Music333 W. North Ave.WH 4-7475 AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111— TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH —Sales and Serviee on all hi-fi equipment.24 HR. SERVICE CALLS —$3.00Tape Recorders — Phonographs — AmplifiersPhono Needles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cordsA Complete Source ofARTISTS* MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES * EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESPICTURE FRAMINGMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhair stylists at5242 Hyde Pork Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-0727t0% Student Discount SCANDINAVIANIMPORTSThey're hard to find but . . .We found them.JUST ARRIVED!!Large Elegant Modern DINING TABLEexpands to 106 inchesvery sturdylinternal steel slide expansion support)quality craftsmanshipTeak or RosewoodAnd, of course, many other high quality,modern design items.1538 E. 53 St. NO 7-404011 A.M. to 10 P.M. Daily — Sunday Noon to 6 P.M. ■BB*THE ALL NEW MGBA special breed of car'for a special breed of man!Here's the car for the man who wantsthe very newest—in style, in power, inengineering / 1798-cc ohv 4-cylindermill / hydraulic disc brakes at front,drums at rear / instant-response rack-and - pinion steering / packaway orattached hood / all - steel mono - con¬struction / English leather upholstery/ four - speed georbox, with synchro¬mesh on 2nd, 3rd, and top / 17 to 107mph in top gear / wind-down windows,lockable doors and trunk / luxuriouslyroomy cockpit. Come in and kick thetires, raise the hood, check the panel,then test drive this new MGB. A reolcompetition car — competitively priced!Austin Import CentreHealeyM.G.Sprite Full line on display • new & used• foreign & domesticBOB NELSON MOTORS6052 S« Cottage GroveMltlway 3-4501June 25, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5UC seeking full community cooperation for school(Continued from page one)with special conference and train¬ing programs. Morris Janovvitzhad primary responsibility formany of the ideas in tins part ofthe proposal.IN THE PRE-SCHOOL area,"Robert Hess and several colleaguesforesee several intriguing objec¬tives of research on the effectsof early experience on a child’ssubsequent school career. The pro¬gram would involve such thingsas studying the relation of chil¬dren with their parents and otherfactors in their environment, theeffects of poor health on a child’sschool work, the possible role ofvolunteers in pre-school education,and any other questions of inter¬est.Hess hopes to establish not onlya nursery school and pre-nurseryschool in the new U C school’sbuilding, but also “sub-stations,”one in a mobile trailer, the otherperhaps in the Robert TaylorHomes public housing project. Hehopes to arrange to follow theprogress of children who went tothe experimental nursery schoolsthrough their careers in city pub¬lic schools.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLite insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle Sr.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 Community co-ordinationAn important aspect of theschool would be its relation to thecommunity from which Its stu¬dents are drawn. A large propor¬tion of the students, at least half,would be Negroes from deprivedhomes, mostly from Woodlawn. Itis hoped to actively engage theparents of the students in theschool’s program, perhaps by run¬ning an adult education programas part of its activities.Co-ordinated with the schoolwould be projects proposed byfaculty members in biology andthe social service administration.One proposal would bring in pedi¬atricians and psychologists to doresearch in problems of mentalretardation, while another ideawould involve social workers di¬rectly with the school in handlingthe problems of its students.THE AIM of such ideas is tobring in the whole range of dis¬ciplines and professional workerswho have anything at all to dowith children in the city. One aimof many educators and others con¬cerned with public schools hasbeen co-operation among the agen¬cies responsible for children—thewelfare agencies, health depart¬ment, social work agencies, andthe police, as well as the school.The preliminary draft of the pro¬posal says “the model school willbe an instrument of public policyin which the total available . . re¬sources are marshaled from theUniversity and the community.”TOWNE HOUSESA CO-OP forBetter LivingforMarriedStudentsand FacultyWithin easy distance of the Campus. Excellent city¬wide transportation via bus, 1C, and Expressway.H 2, 3, AND 4-SPACIOUS BEDROOMSS_EV E N M 0 D E L S TO CHOOSE FROMNO MONEY DOWNFrom$370 MEMBERSHIPDEPOSIT MOVESYOU IN! per month TOTAL MONTHLYPAYMENT INCLUDESPRINCIPAL, INTEREST,TAXES, INSURANCEAND ALLMAINTENANCE.Your co op has: Hotpoint Range, Refrigerator and Disposal! •Lovely Custom Kitchen Cabinets • Storms and Screens • FullBasements • Lavishly Designed Baths • Beautiful Sliding GlassPatio Doors • Ceramic Tile • Extra Large Wardrobe Closets •Full Insulation • Genuine Oak Floors • Lifetime Face Brick •Aluminum Siding • Convenient Gutters and Downspouts • Sound¬proofed for Privacy • Private Rear Yard Areas.Plumbing, Heating, Electrical Repair Bills . . . Complete Care ofLawns and Shrubs . . . Everything is Taken Care of For You asLong as You Live in Beautiful London Towne Houses.FCH Company Inc.Cooperative Representative*101st and Cottage GroveHours: Open Daily & Sunday, 12-8 pmSaturday, 12-6 pm. Closed Thursday6 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 25, 1965 In addition to its function as re¬search lab, the proposed newschool would serve to train a widevariety of workers in educationand social work.Hope for special centerThe experimental school is notall the UC planners have in mind,however.While the proposed new schoolwould be organized and operatedentirely by UC, it is hoped that theChicago public school board maylater collaborate with UC in get¬ting another federal grant for asupplementary educational center,which would be planned jointly bythe board and the university, butoperated by the university itself.The UC planners hope such col¬laboration may develop once theuniversity’s own model school hasgotten off the drawing boards.THE PROPOSAL to the depart¬ment of education for the first step,the experimental research school,takes advantage of Title IV of theElementary and Secondary Educa¬tion Act of 1965. This part of thebill provides money for university-run projects for research, demon¬strations, and dissemination of newtechniques in the education of cul¬turally deprived children.Title III of the same bill pro¬vides funds for social centers toprovide such supplementary serv¬ices as special advanced courses,programs for the mentally retard¬ed, special tutorial assistance afterschool, and ways of tapping cultur¬al and other resources of the com¬munity.Levi pushed provisionThe bill as finally passed pro¬vides under Title III that if theschool board wants money, it mustcollaborate with an institute ofhigher learning in planning thecenters. This provision was pushedstrongly by Julian Levi who,UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“a strong bank*9NEW CAR LOANSS A 00 per hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C.Corona, StudiiojPORTRAITS1312 E. 53rd684-7424PassportPhotosTHFFRET SHOPrjnstrunwoU — New, U»ed, AntiquGUITARS. BANJOS, MANDOLINSBooks and Folk Music Maguiae*DISCOUNT ON FOLK RECORDSSlSfiC*v«:jgoNO 7-106011:30 to 6, 7:30 to 10 Mon.-fri.11:30 to 6, Saturday among other functions, serves asUC’s main lobbyist in Washington.In a MAROON interview thisweek, Levi outlined why a sepa¬rate university-run school is need¬ed for research purposes insteadof a school within the public schoolsystem.O The University will payteachers in the school whatever isnecessary to attract them here;teachers in the public system arcpaid according to a fixed scalewhich does not reward special skillin teaching.o The public school system InChicago lets teachers with mostexperience choose their own as¬signment. They usually pick themiddle-class, mostly white school,leaving the far more serious prob¬lems of schools in slum areas toinexperienced teachers; the Uni¬versity will hire only the mostexperienced teachers.o By state law, teachers in pub¬lic schools must have a certificateshowing they have taken a certainnumber of education courses. Ac¬cording to Levi, the experimentalschool might want to tiy a one-to-one teacher-student ratio, andmight therefore want to use per¬sons who are not fully certified,to conduct small group activitiesand counselling, under the guid¬ance of the regular classroomteacher.THE SIZE of the propo^d mod¬el school has not yet boon de¬cided by the committee. One pro¬posal would make the total studentbody around 700 800; anotherwould make it 1500 2000. Any dis¬cussion of its effects on over¬crowding at the present HydrPark High School is irrelevant,according to Levi and others work¬ing with the committee.Admission to the school wouldaim at a student body as hetero¬geneous as possible. While majoremphasis will be on working withNegroes from deprived back¬grounds, it is intended to offer acollege preparatory curriculum inaddition to the compensatory pro¬gram, so that bright college boundyoungsters of all races and eco¬nomic backgrounds would bestrongly attracted to the school.They would serve as “models” forthe others.While most of the “underprivi¬leged” Negroes would probably come from Woodlawn, the schoolwould try to admit white and Ne¬gro middleclass youngsters fromthe metropolitan area in general,to avoid upsetting the ratio ofraces at HPHS. It currently standsat 89 per cent Negro, nine percent white.Levi stressed that UC’s modelschool will not serve as an alter¬nate or substitute for any newschool or expansion of old schoolsin Hyde Park Woodlawn. Theproblem confronting the schools inthis community cannot have a“brick-and-mortar” solution, hesaid, but can only be alleviatedwith the kind of new, imaginativemethods which might emergefrom the work at the experimentalschool.Experimental school district?In this connection, the UC com¬mittee hopes that, sooner or later,the public school administrationcan be persuaded to set up an ex¬perimental school district in HydePark-Woodlawn. Under such anoperation, a district superintend¬ent with greatly increased auton¬omy could administer all mannerof experimental techniques in theschools, in effect “throwing awavthe rule book” whUh now restrictsadministrators and teachers in thepublic schools to methods stamoedwith the downtown administra¬tion’s approval. UC educators andother researchers would bo veryinterested jn helping the publicschools, but often have difficultyin getting into some schools. Ac¬cording to Bruce McPherson, .sec¬retary to the faculty committee.Superintendent Willis has alreadypromised to try something on iustthis pattern In South-Shore, start¬ing next month.SINCE T1IE University feels astrong necessity to gain supportin the community, according toLevi, contacts have been madewith The Woodlawn Organization(TWO), Hyde Park Kenwood Com¬munity Conference (HPKCCU andother private groups, to invitethem to ro-onorate. SuperintendentBeniamin Willis and district su¬perintendent Curtis Melnick havebeen informed of the plans. Levisaid that TWO has been invited toco-operate in developing plans forthe building which will house thenew school, and has respondedenthusiastically so far.JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2 2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdDATSUNFo, only s1696 “vr,This price includes heater, 2-speed wipers-washers,whitewalls, factory undercoat, padded dash, vinyl interiorand alternator.OPEN SUNDAY 12 to 5 ]Chicagoland DATSUNSALES - SERVICE - PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AVE. in Beverly HillsChicago, Illinois 60620 Phone 239-3770PATRONIZEOURADVERTISERSTIKI TOPICSCIRALSHOUSE OF TIKIIs proud to offer all of ourfriends of Hyde Park andthe surrounding areas a se¬lection of Polynesian dishesas well as our choice Ameri¬can menu. This choice ofPolynesian foods is now partof our regular menu.JUST A SAMPLE OF OURMENU:Shrimp Polynesian; chickenTahitian; lobster Polynesian;beef and tomatoes; egg roll;ono ono kaukau; shrimp deionghe; beef kabob flambe.Try one of our delightfulHawaiian cocktails.CIRALSHOUSE OF TIKI *51st & HARPERFood served 11 A.M. to S A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-7585« HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4=!»‘■ ^ — 7699HY 3-6800"BUDGETWISE"AAA Approved: 24-hourSwitchboard.Maid Service: each roomwith own bath.Special student rates:$180.00/qtr.Special daily, weekly andmonthly rates.BROADVIEW HOTEL5540 Hyde Park Blvd.FA 4-8800TAhSAM-A&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062Patronize Our AdvertisersMR. PIZZAWE DELIVER— CARRY OUTSHY 3-8282DELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENSandwiches and Ch. Broiled HamburgersPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 Far 6 PartySausage 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie .1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fisk or Oliva 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese .1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vi and Vi 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients .50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pizza .2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp .2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacon .2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pizza ....(Sausage, Mushrooms and .2.50Peppers) 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.001465 HYDE PARK BLYD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — Fri. to 3:00 a.m.Sat. to 3:00 a.m. — Open 2 p.m. SundoysJeffery Theatre1952 E. 71st ST. HY 3-3333u STARTS FRIDAY, JUNE 25Exclusive Showing!Academy Award!DIVORCE ITALIAN STYLE''withMarcello Mastroianni* * * *“YESTERDAY, TODAY & TOMORROW”withSophia LorenondMarcello MastroianniSHOW TIMEEvery doy except Sot. — 2:00, 5:50, 9:40Sot.—1:30 5:10, 9:10 MAROON ® WEEKEND GUIDEKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, IILMU 4-6856MR. BIGG'S“Thefriendly restaurant”1440 E. 57th St.Summer School SpecialFREE LARGE COKEORANGE or ROOT DEERWith This AdGood Any Day 11 am till 5pm & 9 pm till midnightValid thru July 2On one of the followingHamburger— Va lb. choiceground beef served onRosen's Sesame Bun, withlettuce, tomato, onions. 45cCheeseburger — Served onRosen's Sesame Bun with allthe trimmings 55cJumbo Sinai 48 Hot Dogserved on Rosen's Poppy¬seed Bun, with all thetrimmings 50c MR. BIGG'S“Thefriendly restaurant”1440 E. 57th St.The only place inHyde ParkservingFROZEN CUSTARDCONES15c & 30cMR. BIGG S“Thefriendly restaurant”1440 E. 57th St.Summer School SpecialIce Cream Special“Two for thePrice of One”2 Sundaes, Sodas, Shakes orMalts for the price of one.With This AdGood every day after 9 pmColossalSundaes . . .All flavors 55cSodas All flavors 40cShakes . . . . All flavors 35cMalts All flavors 40cOVER 300 combinations oftopping and ice creamOffer valid thru July 2 MR. BIGG'S“Thefriendly restaurant”1440 E. 57 th St.Summer School SpecialOffer valid thru July 2FREE MILK SHAKE"Colossal Size"With This AdGood any week day from 1 1am till 12 midnight—Friday& Saturday from 11 am till2 am—Sundays from 9 pmtill 12 midnight.Offer valid thru July 2With the purchaseof one of the following:MR. BIGG'S Burger—14 lb.choice ground beef servedon Rosen's Rye with frenchfries and our own deliciouschef's salad . . $1.35with melted cheese. .$1.45OrPoor Boy Sandwich servedon crusty Gonnella's FrenchBread. Includes Beef, Ham,Cheese, Lettuce, Tomatoes,onions smothered with ourown thousand island dress¬ing $1.25The Eagle is where you meet your friends - - - even if you weren’t planning tococktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snocks.air-conditionedTHE EAGLEBass ale and Schlitz beer on tap5311 Blackstone HY 3-1933COURT THEATRE11th SEASONJULIUS CAESARJuly 9 thru July 25“the lady’s not for burning”by Christopher FryJuly 30 - August 15VOLPONE by Ben JohnsonAugust 20 - September 5”Classic Theatre in aFaculty Discount beautiful outdoor setting"Tickets on Sale Monday at Reynolds Club Desk$2 Saturday50'June 25, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Pablo Calderon, 5454 Blackston*We need you when you need to save.We need you now.It all comes to the same thing.After all, your present need to save is based on your future needs to spend.Chances are, your future needs to spend will exceed your present cash on hand.But why save at the credit union? Why not?We're currently paying you four cents on the dollar to do so.We'll match each dollar saved with a dollar's worth of life insurance.We'll welcome you during business hours, not during bankers' hours.And — perhaps most importantly — we'll respect your efforts even if you fall short of your goalA savings history is one of your best credit references when you find that you need the credit union.