mm 1U.I vmmZ"'•• u'.The University of Chicago 31 Friday, July 9, 1965Lowrey dead in crashPerrin Lowrey, head of the humanities section of the Col¬lege and associate professor of humanities and English, diedJune 25 in an automobile accident on the campus of SweetBriar College, Sweet Briar, Virginia. He was 41 years old.His daughter Anne, 11, was In¬jured in the crash. She was re¬ported in satisfactory condition inLynchburg General Hospital June25. No other members of theLowery family were in the carat the time of the accident.Funeral services for Lowreywere held June 26 at the Ascen¬sion Fpiscopal Church in Amherst,Virginia. Burial took place in Am¬herst Cemetary.The Lowrey family had beenin Virginia to visit friends atSweet Briar College, where Low¬rey served as visiting lecturerduring the 1960-1961 academicyear.Lowrey was the author of num¬erous articles and short stories,including a book entitled TIm*.Great Speckled Bird and OtherStories, published in 1964 by (lieHenry Regnery Press. He was re¬ported to have been working ona novel at the time of his death.Lowrey was born November 20.1923. in Verona. Mississippi. liereceived his AB degree in 1947from University of the South.Sevvanee, Tennessee, and his AMdegree in 1948 and his Ph.O. de- Perrin Lowreygiee in 1956, both from the Uni¬versity of Chicago.He served in the U.S. Navy from1942 to 1946 and was an ensignaboard the U.S.S. Henderson, adestroyer assigned to the Pacifictheater of operations He was as¬sistant gunnery officer on theship.Lowrey was an instructor atVassar College, Poughkeepsie,Gang violence studiedWhy do teenage city gangs suddenly break out into acts ofviolence?A 11C professor and his research associates think they canexplain several things about the behavior of gangs after athree-year study of 16 of Chicago'smost notorious gangs. lent. suddenly go on rampages.Fred L. Strodtbeck, associate The |,ovs have not chosen vio-professor of sociology and psy- a;s a way Gf life in fact,chology, and James F. Short, Jr.. t|,ov cjloose to belong to thedirector of the sociological re- biggest "anR *n their neighbor-search laboratory at Washington Il0O(J so thcy wiil have the leastState University and a visiting 0hance of getting hurt,professor at UC dining the ie- when a gang leader faces asearch period, have pi esc n tec |0 hjs reputation, * he cantheir findings In a new bciok.Group Process and Gang Delin¬quency. It was published lastweek by UC Press.THE BOOK’S principal thesisis that gang violence can l»e ex¬plained as a way gang leaderscan successfully meet threats totheir position and reputation. Theprimary function of the gang it¬self is to provide social supportfor its bewildered members in ahostile world, the book says.Ii is a loose organization, liow-evei. and its members feel freeto quit al any time. Gang leadersare usually the most stable mem successfully meet the threat bvleading his boys into a fight, arobbery, or an act of vandalism.“The foray provides excitement,a heightened need for leadership,and a non-disruptive way for theleader to exercise his aggressiveskills.” the research team reports.A worker with the gangs wasonce warned, “better watch BigJake ... He has to do something. . . He’s got to build that repback. He’s been gone. Now he’sgot to show everybody he’s back.”SELF-RESTRAINT by thepress in reporting juvenile crimeshers, best able to get along with is essential if these boys are tothe others in the gang. be reintegrated with society,When a type of lower - class Strodtbeck said in a press con-child doesn’t get affection and ference in connection with thesupport from his parents, is failed book’s publication. Chicago, hein school, and is troubled by po- said. has«a much better record inlice and other adults, lie may this regard than New York, wherefind comfort in a gang. Gang vio- explicit and hysterical news re-lence is relatively rare in neigh- ports often goad the police intoborhoods where adult leadership, making mass arrests and adopt-whother legitimate or criminal, ing in general a ‘get-tough” atti-exerts authority. tude.The researchers’ findings, Strodtbeck applauded the workSt rod! heck’s book says, contra- of “detached workers” from thediets a theory that delinquent YMCA who lived and worked withgangs are associations of drug the gangs (hat the UC research-addicts or criminals. The research- ers investigated,ers looked hard for a year, and Chicago police, he .said, can alsomanaged to discover only one l»e commended for their co-opera-group whose activities were con- tion with the YMCA workers intered around drugs, and only two preserving the anonymity of ju-gangs which had planned any veniles who break the law.sustained campaign of crime.These plans were smashed by |K»-lice.Tin: KEY QUESTION. Short As an example of this, he notedthat each week the YMCA work¬ers deliver about a dozen gunsto the police, who are quite hap New York, for one year beforebecoming a member of the UCfaculty in 1957. He was appointedBlessed with many impres¬sive talents — in fiction, schol¬arship, music, conversation —>Perrin Lowrey wos first andforemost a splendid Collegeman, whose unfailing, sweet-tempered delight in all thingshuman gave added force, in¬sight, and grace to his remark¬able abilities as teacher andadministrator in the humanities.He was also a valuable, de¬voted, and tireless member ofthe English department, who,despite a crushing load of work,never refused either a colleagueor a student in need of help.His death is a sore loss to theUniversity he cherished andserved so well.Gwin KolbChairman, Dept, of Englishhead of the humanities section ofthe College in 1962.In February, 1965, he wasawarded an Inland Steel-Ryersonfaculty fellowship, which providesfunds for travel and research dur¬ing one quarter of the currentacademic year.Lowrey is survived by hiswidow. Janet; a son, Mike, 9; andhis daughter, Anne. Colleges join in aidingdisadvantaged studentsby Collegiate Press ServiceWASHINGTON — Seventeen colleges have joined iitlaunching the War on Poverty’s newest program, “UpwardBound,” which is designed to help talented but disadvantagedyouth overcome the obstacles in the path to a higher edu¬cation. —— ■A $2.2 million pilot program a & M, the University of Oregon,centering around a series of Columbia, Howard, Moorehouse,special academic projects involv- Texas Southern, Tennessee A & I,ing 2,370 high school and junior Fisk Dillard, LeMoyne, Webster,high school youths will be carried Western Washington State, Newout this summer. An additional Mexico Highlands, Ripon, and the9,900 low-income youths, mainly college of the Ozarks. About halffrom rural areas in Alabama, will are predominantly Negro institu-be aided under a related $420,710 tjonS-tutoring project to be carried out Among the specific programsby 600 Tuskegee Institute students planned for this summer are theparticipating in the work study following:program. • At Columbia, 40 undergradu-THE SUMMER projects range ates will actively participate asfrom curriculum development in counsellors and tutors in teachingcenters at several predominantly jgo ninth graders in an eight-Negro colleges to special math and week on-campus program. TheEnglish courses at Dartmouth and undergraduates will live in dormi-Mount Holyoke colleges for ninth tories with the ninth graders and,graders who will be sent to ex- according to Dean David Truman,elusive private prep schools next their duties will include guidingyear.Many of this summer’s programs are research-oriented and York.”will be seeking to furnish guide¬lines in the areas of selection, cur¬ricular materialevaluation in dealing with disad- the youngsters “through themazes and pleasures of New• At Ripon College. 30 stu¬ff ^ "h dents, mostly of Indian descent,s a ing. an Spend eight weeks in academ-vantaged youth. A number of theconcepts and methods to be used wju a|so b(i ^ tQ H ^however have already been tested acMvities „ makl> ,rl „successfully in several college and cWes deluding Milwaukee. Madeuniversity programs set up last d chi£ Fi(tecn R,summer to bring higher education ,acultv member* have voluntee‘led4- i-v ri v7o n t n r\r\ irAil t h vto disadvantaged youthAs applications for similar pro to work in special counselling as-™ peets of the programgrams started coming into the *; .Office of Economic Opportunitythis year, they were pulled to¬gether into the “Upward Bound”package, reported poverty offici • At the University of Oregon,75 Portland residents, none ofwhom now meet university ad¬mission standards, will be enrolleda Is Similar programs in the fu- in a special eight-week summerture will be organized with the program. Those successfully com-help of a special committee of pleting the course will be enrolledleading educators headed bv for- nex* year as non-mat riculated stu-mer Secretary of Health, Eluca- dents at the University,lion and Welfare Arthur Fleming, • At Western Washingtonwho is currently president of the State College, 50 high schoolUniversity of Oregon. juniors will be enrolled in an in-IN ADDITION to Dartmouth, tensive summer course, and thenand Mount Holyoke, the institu- make periodic return visits to thetions participating in “Upward campus throughout their seniorBound” this summer are Florida year.War on Poverty attackedGray: civil rights not enoughTwo hundred Chicago Negroes gathered in WashingtonPark July 4, but not to celebrate America’s heritage of free¬dom.“The Fourth of July don’t mean nothing to a black manin America today,” Nahaz Rogers - , . ,• to bring a change, not just a re-BUT AMERICAN whites areincapable of bringing about sucha change in the racial situation,he noted, even if left alone by thetold the crowd from a platformthat held a banner reading “BlackFolk Must Control the BlackCommunity.”Rogers, national treasurer ofthe community based civil rights Negroes.organization ACT, was one of the «The only true revolutionaryleaders of the Chicago National jorce jn country is the blackFreedom Reilly wlucli AOT spon* folks/* Orctv s&id.sored Sunday to celebrate it.-> tii^t Gray launched an attack on theanniversary. new national War on Poverty pro-THE CHIEF speaker at the gram, telling his audience that therally was a New Yorker — Jesse US and city governments are notGray, leader of Harlem’s rent going “to give you money to hangstrike movement and a current them.candidate for mayor of New YorkCity. Poverty pay-off‘Anti-poverty buys off your po-Cray called on American Ne- tential leaders.” Gray said. Hegroes to stop trying to get white characterized the War on Povertypeople to like them.“Black people uniting canchange anything in Chicago,” hestated.FIFTY THOUSAND Negroes as an attempt to confuse and de¬lude Negroes.A summer job will do a Negrochild no good, he said, if the childhas to come home every night toa mother on welfare in an apart-®nd Strodtbeck argue, is why py to get them out of circulation,Rang boys, whose behavior is without punishing the boys whoordinarily aggressive but not vio were carrying them, moving down State st., he said, ment full of rats,would be enough to rid the city GRAY ALSO bitterly attackedof Chicago school superintendent the use of police in the US toBenjamin Willis. stiffle Negro aspirations.“You got to serve notice on “The police department is theDaley, the police superintendent, most corrupt arm in this coun-and Willis that they must go,” try,” he said. He called the Chi-Gray told the crowd. He cited cago police department “one ofChicago as the city with the great- the most racist police departmentsest potential for increasing Negro jn the US.”power in the US. Gray . denounced the completeThe Negro struggle for civil autonomy of police departmentsrights in America, Gray claimed, jn the US and the use of Negrois finished. policemen.“You’ve had your sit-in, drank “Black cops,” he told his listen-your coffee, and you're still black ers, “are going to beat your blackand oppressed,” he said. head.”Revolution needed Other speakers at the rallyThe next step in the Negro echoed Gray’s denunciation of thefight, he said, was revolution. police.“Revolution,” Gray stated Nahaz Rogers complained that“means creating an atmosphere the police in Washington Park were not there to protect Negroes^but to keep them in the ghetto.Uncle TomsHE CALLED Negro police“servants” of the system that op¬pressed American Negroes. Thissystem, he said, “breeds UncleToms.”Rogers also assailed the exist¬ing school system for Negroes.It is only rarely, he noted, thatteachers in a Negro school knowhalf as much about the real prol>*lems of the children in theirclasses as the children themselvesknow.“Schools, colleges, and universi¬ties,” he charged “turn out Negrolaokies.”Lawrence Landry, nationalchairman of ACT and a leader inthe Chicago public school boy¬cotts. continued the attack on thewar on poverty.He warned the rally crowd that“the War on Poverty is a war onyou.” The only incomes that itwill raise, he claimed, are thoseof the welfare workers.VISTA, the domesticPeace Corps, will conduct3 recruiting and informa¬tion drive on campusMonday, July 19. A movie- will be shown, and a re¬cruiting table will be set1 “P1LANDRY ALSO denounce!Project Head Start, a summoschool program for pre-school ag<children from low income neighborhoods that is part of the Waion Poverty.This school program, he saiddenies that the failure of Negrichildren in school has anythingto do with school teachers an<superintendents.ers to the editor Prof sues on contractTO THE EDITORLyndon Baines Johnson, crusad¬er for justice, is now part of theState Department battle with theagents of THINK and PRESS,mainly because these subversiveelements have refused to “get onthe team” in Vietnam.In recent years, we have wit¬nessed the development of a new•ubversive movement, the North¬ern Agitator Movement PRESSand THINK are mainly NorthernAgitator groups, as are civil rightsworkers and the Viet Cong. Theconnection is clear and unmistaka¬ble. The groups are united, clearly,and therefore are all either Com¬munist infiltrated, Communist led,“shot through with Communism,”loaded with Communists and Com¬munist sympathizers, Communistcontrolled, "participated in” byCommunists, or Communistfronts. Lyndon has quickly recog¬nized that these are dangeroustimes.THERE ARE, in fact, few peo¬ple who are not suspect. Hence,when someone is found who isnot a Northern Agitator, he is tobe bowed to. Such a rare man wasDiem. Diem not only was on ourteam; he RAN the team, almostuntil the day of his death. Wepermitted this because we knew that Diem was not a NorthernAgitator — he had, in fact, beeninfiltrated from New Jersey,which is not the North in thiscase because we arranged it.But from the beginning of thewar, PRESS and THINK did notget on the team. Diem neglectedto fight the war, (and if anyone isresponsible for its loss, he is theone). PRESS and THINK refusedto believe the cheery official line.In a political war, they thought,inaction is the fastest road todefeatIn fact, they think the war ISlost, because only three of the resi¬dents of the village on the DaNang base tried to warn of theapproach of the Viet Cong, andthose three were summarily ex¬ecuted. The population has mostlyforgotten the "Government.” Thatconsitutes a lost political war, theysay.THEIR PROBLEM is that theyhave not followed the team. Theteam has been one step ahead ofthis situation; as the political warwas lost, the team redefined thewar in terms of a military war,and this sly redefinition will per¬mit us to commit 100,000 lives tothe effort.When Johnson decided in Febru¬ary to manage the full-scale warfrom the White House, he alsodecided to run the campaignTYPEWRITERSTO 55% OFF*New-Used-Elec»ric-OHice-PortoblcAll machines (new or used) oreguaranteed for 5 years. We arean authorized ogency for mostmajor typewriter manufacturers.If any machine we sell can bepurchased elsewhere (within 30days) for less, we will refund thedifference in cosh.* Discounts average 37%Discount Typewriters50 E. Chicago Tel. 664-3552 TAhSAM-AfcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. ta 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062 against PRESS and THINK. Thiswas something new; Dean Rusklies to Congress (e.g., Gulf ofTonkin), and even Stevenson hasbeen reading State Departmenttexts of late. But when the Presi¬dent decides to reshape the war inHis (Our!) own image, and deniesit, and criticizes his critics for in¬sufficient Patriotism, somethingnew has happened.Our newspapers were not su¬spended in July, but LBJ has triedalmost everything else to silencethe critics in PRESS, and also inCongress, because these havegreater prestige and influencethan the “academics” of THINK.BUT IN SPITE of all theseefforts, after four long years,some people still don’t want toget on the team. They say thatit’s a losing team, badly managed,doomed by the French long ago,and operated on a most dubiousreality. Even the doublethink hasfailed on these people: defining"our objective” as a victory and"our policy” as the pursuit of"our objective,” failed to pursuadethem that policy was not changedby escalation.Faced with people who resistso blindly, and the Viet Cong, LBJreacts forcefully and stymies themall with the ringing words whichmay some day become the symbolof his leadership:WHAT WOULD YOU DO IFYOU WERE PRESIDENT?S. C. WOFSY Three parents of Chicagopublic school children, includ¬ing UC professor of history,Walter Johnson, are filing suitin Illinois Circuit Court challeng¬ing the legality of Schools Super¬intendent Benjamin C. Willis’ newcontract.The plaintiffs charge that theBoard acted illegally in givingWillis a 16-month contract, andwant the new contract declaredvoid because the board over¬stepped its statutory authority.Commenting on the suit AlbertA. Raby, convenor of the Coordin¬ating Council of Community Or¬ganizations (CCCO) and a driv¬ing force in the anti-Willis cam¬paign said, “I think the (suit’s)changes are at least possible,even good. I think the courtswill do one of two things; eitherdeclare the contract invalid or thesubcontract invalid.”Johnson has said he thinks theBoard of Education will welcomethe suit since “it has been havinga difficult time since the appoint¬ment.”Part of the "difficult time”Johnson referred to has been sup¬plied by CCCO pickets who havebeen marching daily from GrantPark to City Hall with anti-Daleyand anti-Willis signs.Raby told the Maroon that theprotest against Daley is because “Willis was reappointed becauseDaley wanted him to be. Daleystands like a shield between Willisand the Board. If Daley wantsWillis removed, with his officeand his influence, he can be re¬moved.”Raby said that anti-Willis plansinclude help from Martin LutherKing beginning July 24, "for aslong as we need it.” He also said,“I’d like to extend a general in¬vitation to people from the Uni¬versity of Chicago to come downand join the picket line. We marchevery day and we need all thehelp we can get. UC people havebeen active so far in this fight.Out of the 125 professors whosigned a petition to remove Willis,many of the people were fromthe University. Walter Johnson’ssuit is indicative of continuingsupport for what we’re doing.Anyone wanting to help can callCCCO at HY 3-1800 or come downto the south side office at 6-125S. Cottage Grove Ave.”Turning to the immediate fu¬ture, Raby said, “There’ll be con¬tinuous demonstrations and thedemonstrations will go on untilWillis is removed. The atmospherearound here is one of confidence.We’re going to win this one, Ican taste victory in the air.”cap & GOWNC For one day only—A The New 1965P Cap & Gown&G0WN will be distributedand sold in the/Bursar's OfficeMonday,July 19th. CAP&G0WNCAP & GOWN *is2 TICKETS:rn Thurs*OU Fri.Sun.Saturday50'Student-FacultyStaff Discount COURT THEATRE11th SEASONOPENS TONIGHT!JULIUSCAESARDirected By James O'Reilly"Zestful imaginativeness . . .One of the finest summer theatres in the area . , ,Keeps the torch of fine drama lit . .CHICAGO DAILY NEWS EDITORIAL PAGEJUNE 22, 1965Tickets on Sale Daily at Reynolds Club Desk2 • CHICAGO MAROON • July 9, 1965 TR-4-NEWEST IN A GREAT LINETriumph makes the most popular sports cars in America. Drive the new TR 4 and you’ll see why The too"ipeed is 110. Torque is high at all speeds. It has disc brakes. Wider track. Synchromesh on all'4 gearsRoll-up windows. Rain proof top. Luxury finish. Come in today. FREE TEST DRIVES: Drop in or phone“Southeast Chicago's OnlyAuthorized Triumph Dealer'9BOB NELSON MOTORS6052 S. Cottage Grove Mldwoy 3-4501English comp, reorganizes Grant Park concert scoresby Paul BursteinThe English department will be ‘Taking a chance” in its extensive revision of the English101-2-3 sequence, according to Arthur R. Heiserman, associate professor of English andassociate chairman of the department of English.The content of the revised course will include some “readings pretty ‘heady’ for a firstyear student," said Heiserman, in- —eluding lor some students such time,” said Heiserman, “but we’re jor changes are believed to beworks as Whitehead s Science and determined to do it.” needed and have been made,the Modern World, Aristotle s 4 . _Rhetoric, and works by Plato and Attention getter changing the English“ V ™ ,iMi Heiserman and many of his col- 101'2-3 course< the English depart-Montesquieu. leagues believe that face-to-face ment has revamped the EnglishThe new English composition discussion of papers among peers department advisory system,course will be based on a variant will be an effective device for Two advisorssystem, somewhat like that in the arousing student interest and in- in the past, students majoringBiology 111-112 course. It will be creaSe the attention paid to pa- in English, like all other studentsbased, stated Heiserman, ontmee pers, both in writing them and in in the College, were advised byvariants of the same idea, the idea defending them. Apparently this faculty members their first vearbring that in the West tor two belief was borne out last year in and by ™”Sty emptoyes otthousand years the young woe the sections that made use of the the dean of undergraduate stu-taught how to write, and rather tutorial method. dents during their upperclasssuccessfully so, by what we now rpwo t^e variants will use a years.call the rhetorical tra ltiori. textbook entitled Classical Rhet- “The problem with this system,"tradition was lostonly aboi . or|c for the MtKlorn student by said Heiserman, “was that stu-or 90 years ago. Now people are corbett; this will mark the first dents were never setting to seebecoming more interested in it time a regular textbook has been a faculty member o utside theagain around the country. used jn English 101-2-3. One vari- classroom.”“THE OLD English 101-2-3 ant will be based on close analysis Now, every English student hascourse was using fragments of of a few texts (e.g., Whiteheads two advisors: an “administrativethat tradition,” Heiserman said, book); another variant will use advisor” to ensure that each stu-"The three variants being intro- many different works. dent meets the course require-duced next year, very similar in As at present, the writing as- ments of the college, and a facultymany ways, will give the student signments will become progres- advisor with whom the studenta familiarity with all the essentials sively more complex, and the as- may talk about anything he wants,of the rhetorical tradition, with signment of a long paper spring A teaching faculty member willpractice in writing as well, of quarter will be continued. know more about specialized Eng-course. New field lish courses than can an adminis-Complcte works Heiserman emphasized that the trative advisor, noted Heiserman.“The new course will differ revised course will be more diffi- Thus, for example, if an Eng-from the present course,” said cuit than the old course, but lish student has a choice amongHeiserman, “in that the student should also be far superior. Rather three possible history electives, hiswill read works that are complete, than giving a student a snippet faculty advisor will probablylong, and worthy in their own Gf some work and telling him to know which would be the mostright—including Aristotle and the write, say, a description, the Eng- interesting or best taught,who'e gang.” Basically, the^course lish instructors will be introducing MEETINGS between student,will be a combination of wilting him to a whole new field, rhetoric. d advisor up frooupntand reading of humanist texts.- “WE THINK we have a course ^h derirT^the said. that will teach students to write SfUdent will need his programAll three variants will be organ- better than the present course approved by both advisors beforeized in two-week-long units. The does,” stated Heiserman. “It the registrar will pay any atten-first week will include three hours should be exciting; the teaching tion to itof class, as the course does now, staff is excited. We’re aiming ' twpntv fapultv mem-with discussion of readings and high. There will be very few com- ^ have ^Xred ,/ * ad.alignment of papers. P‘srudent and faculty criticism of visors^When the program is fullyTHE SECOND week wtil in- important factors s,aI1'<*• each . ad'f?r wlU haveelude only one regular class meet- decision to revise it. Also onl>' ,lve or Slx advisees- Two weeks ago Saturday the Chicago Park District Con¬certs opened the season at the Grant Park Bandshell with arather ambitious program: Beethoven’s First and Ninth sym¬phonies. Now, it is a bit unusual to have Beethoven at GrantPark on a Saturday night; usually — *it’s Rodgers and Hart Night then, the best. But I wouldn’t trade theWhat is even more unusual was set for the allegedly superior Walrthe unequivocal triumph scored by ter recording, simply because the, / _ . .f personnel—chorus, orchestra, 99-conductor Irwin Hoffman. loists—make music with an en-Hoffman’s reading of the First thusiasm which is more gratifyingwas light, classical, harking back (and, in a way, truer to the in*to the late Mozart symphonies tentions of the composer) than thewhich are its obvious forebearers, technical superiority of the other.The eighteenth century flavor was newer recordings,quite consistent throughout the THAT WAS WHAT made thework, and it is Quite a legitimate Qrant park Ninth an experience,interpretation, although it is one j don.t mean to imply that com.which is not quite to my taste, was — 0r can be — sacri-Hoffman was forced to play the ficed tQ enthusiasm; i do meansecond movement Andante a bit that one will forgive occasionaltoo fast, diminishing the contrast muddiness of tone and a few clink-between it and the third move- ers the performance has thatment Scherzo which is so charac- unf0rgettable magnetism which in-tenstic of Beethoven. Be this as vojves t^e listener so deeply thatit may, Hoffman kept the usually he can feej just what Beethovenunruly Grant Park Symphony un- had in mind There * a beautyder perfect control, and the first ^ d virtuosity,part of the program was unevent- tT . . .. ,, _ful, but quite enjoyable. , Not that virtuosity itself wa.’ '*... lacking. The two male soloists;The Ninth was something quite tenQr George ShirIey and 5ass.special. It is a bit hard to explain baritone Justino Diaz were simplywhat was so great about it. . . . SUperb; flawless in articulation,I have an old recording of Mah- rich -n tone> they provided th*ler^s Second Symphony, conducted apex 0f an emotional experienceKlei7iperer’ .OI} V16 Vo,x which had begun three quarterslabel. Now, the sound is by mod- of an hour ^fore. Perhaps the*em standards abysmal, and theinterpretation is not considered (Continued on page seven).mg, in which the class wi involved in making the changebroken up into f°ur tu ori was the belief, stated by Heiser-groups. Each of the groups wi man, that “courses have a certainmeet later that week for an hour ... . ...and a half, during which the pa¬pers of the participating studentswill be criticized and analyzedby the instructor and fellow stu¬dents. life of their own, and, therefore,a death.”The contemplated or already en¬acted revisions now taking placein the English department as partof a continuing investigation ofThis tutorial system, which was the BA MA and Ph.D. Englishtried out in some sections last programs. Most department mem-year, is “very expensive for a col- bers f^i that all three degree pro¬tege to run in terms of faculty grams are “pretty good,” accord¬ing to Heiserman, but some ma-HARPERLiQVOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors ond beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4=li]*■ “ _ 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 Bird.FA 4-8800 EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. 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Closed ThursdayJuly 9, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • |From Old to New CollegeThomas' UC career spans evolution of the Collegeby Tom HeagyA career of 40 years of educating students at UC comesto an end this year for Russell Thomas, a long-time exponentof general education.Thomas, professor in the department of English and theCollege humanities section, and | Hhead of the tutorial program, hasreached the University’s manda¬tory retirement age.This will not, however, inter¬rupt his lifelong vacation of teach¬ing. For the coming year, Thomaswill be Visiting Carnegie Profes¬sor of Humanities at the Universi¬ty of Alaska, helping to set up ageneral coui-se in the humanities.Since Thomas came to the Uni¬versity in 1925, the College hasundergone several major reorgan¬izations involving radical innova¬tions in American higher educa¬tion. Thomas was not only a wit- the establishment of an autono-ness to these, but has also mous College. In 1935, the CollegeRussel Thomasachieved some note for works onbroader aspects of general education in this country. was structurally severed from thedivision, and around 1935, thedean of the College received theTracing the development of the power t0 make appointmentscollege leading to its most recent without consulting the other di-revamping, Thomas went back to visions.1931, when he was teaching Eng¬lish in UC’s laboratory highschool.Comps begun In 1942 what is today referredto as the “Old College,” or the"Hutchins College,” was estab¬lished. Mr. Hutchins gave the re-The 1931 reorganization was put forms of 1942 enthusiastic andinto practice under Chancellor decisive support, Thomas said;Robert M. Hutchins. The main but the most forceful individualfeatures of it, however, had been behind the curricular reoi’ganiza-drawn up by a faculty committee tion was Clarence Faust, dean ofbefore Hutchins’ arrival in 1929. the College.Two of the innovations of 1931which were major UC contribu- Gen-edtions to American education, said The central idea of the “OldThomas, were the year-long in- College” was that the functionter disciplinary courses in each of of the College was solely to pro-the four divisions and the com- vide a general education. To ac-prohensive examination. At this complish this the number of gen¬time there were seven “comps.” eral courses and comprehensiveONE MAJOR change of this examinations was increased,period for which Hutchins does eventually to the number of four-deserve credit, Thomas said, was teen, which was equivalent toJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSSHIRTS — LINENSRepairs fir Alterations 5 Hr. Service1363 East 53rd PL 2-966210% Stutlent Discount with V.0. CardKEDS COURT KINGavailable atTHE STORE FOR MEN2fmtw attfc ttttmpua fclptjtin the lilete Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 three and one-half years’ work.Students could enter the Col¬lege after completing two yearsof high school and received theirBachelor’s degree after complet¬ing the general requirements.President Hutchins enthusiastical¬ly supported this innovation.THOMAS recalled the atmos¬phere of excitement and intellec¬tual curiosity among both stu¬dents and faculty which markedthe early years of Mr. Hutchins’regime. Although class attend¬ance was not required either atlectures or in discussion sections,it was not uncommon for Man-del Hall to be crowded for manyof the lectures, Thomas said.Despite the intellectual excite¬ment which followed the refonnsof 1931 and 1942, the College en¬countered many problems afterthe end of World War II and thedecline in the numbers of return¬ing veterans. Mr. Thomas gavehis own interpretation of thecauses for the decline of the “OldCollege.”(1) The “early admission” pro¬gram did not receive widespreadsupport. Other institutions gen¬erally disapproved. Many highschools resented losing their abl¬est students before normal grad¬uation, and advised students notto go to Chicago.(2) The new definition of theBachelor’s degree was not gen¬erally accepted, and students whowished to transfer to other uni¬versities for graduate work some-times encountered difficultieswith admissions officers.f3) Too many students who en¬tered the College after graduatingfrom high school were requiredto take two and a half to threeyears of general courses, as a re¬sult of placement test scores. Forthese students the College pro¬gram did not permit acceleration(as it did for the “early entrants,”SAMUEL A. BELL“Buy Shell From BeIVSINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-SI50Complete LineOf Pet AndAquarium Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012MODEL CAMERALEICA, BOLEX, NIKON, PENTAXZEISS, MAMIYA, OMEGA, DURSTTAPE RECORDERS1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259CoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-83024 • CHICAGO MAROON • July 9, 1965 SOUVENIRS—MOMENTOSFor our summer visi¬tors who might like asouvenir for the folksbaek home or a me¬mento to keep . . •U. of C. Mugs, Ashtrays,Matches, Glassware,Charms, Keychains,Postcards, StationerySweat Shirts and NitiesGift Dept.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. but tended to add a year to theirstudies.(4) Most of the early entrantswere subsidized by scholarshipaid. This proved to be an impos¬sible financial burden.DESPITE the decreasing sizeand financial difficulties of theCollege, the students who didcome received an excellent educa¬tion, said Thomas. While thenucleus of the College faculty(including Thomas) held out aslong as possible, the practicalconsiderations could not be ig¬nored, and in 1954 the Council ofthe Faculty Senate overwhelming¬ly voted to reestablish the regu¬lar four year BA and to limitearly entrants.New hopeThe reorganization proposed by-Edward Levi in 1964, and the ap¬pointment of Wayne Booth asthe new dean of the College hascreated cause for hope that thistrend will be reversed, Thomassaid.According to Thomas, in the“Old College,” faculty memberswore hired who were competentin more than one area and whowere committed primarily to theteaching of general educationcourses. Through the very closecooperation of the staff madepossible by the fact that this wastheir prime activity, the staff be¬came qualified in all areas of thecourse and made the interdisci-plinary theory of the courses areality, Thomas feels.This kind of cooperation Isprobably no longer possible, fortwo main reasons, he said. First,it is more difficult to find peoplewith scholarly training in morethan one area. And while schol¬arly training and ability do notalways produce a good teacher,they are a necessary prerequisite,Thomas said.SECOND, faculty members whoteach “gen-ed” courses now al¬ most all teach and do research intheir specialty. Since it is thissecond role on which their mainenergies are spent, Thomas com¬mented.The forthcoming Levi reorgan¬ization has two main parts. Itdivides the college into four areacolleges (corresponding to thefour divisions) and a fifth “gen¬eral studies” college. It also cre¬ates a forty-member college coun¬cil as a statutory body.CooperationThis may make possible a newkind of interdisciplinary coopera¬tion to replace the kind which hasbeen disappearing since the deathof the “Old College,” and whichthere is little hope for resurrect¬ing. Thomas believes.This kind of interdisciplinaryapproach, he said, is best demon¬strated by the program of generalstudies in the humanities. Eachmember of the committee is aspecialist who teaches In his spe¬cialty. However, the overall pro¬gram of the students Is plannedby t lie entire committee, and eachcourse is influenced by the over¬view. In this way the programas a whole is interdisciplinary.IF THE Levi reorganization isa success, he predicted, it will bebecause the executive committeesof each of the colleges, as well asthe College Council, will havesucceeded in involving widely dif¬fering specialists in the commonproblem of constructing coherentcurricula.Leaving all this for Alaska,Thomas will be responsible forhelping the faculty at the LiberalArts College of the University ofAlaska to set un a general hu¬manities course. He has had con¬siderable correspondence with thefaculty committee he will beworking with, and, according toThomas, they seem to have some¬thing in mind similar to UC’sHum I course.Court Theatre opensWes Sanders, Renee Cappellini in Court Theatre's JuliusCaesar.Court Theatre will open its 1965season at 8:30 tonight with aproduction of William Shakes¬peare’s Julius Caesar.The play, directed by JamesO’Reilly, will be pivsenled in cos¬tumes of the Napoleonic era, de¬signed especially for the Courtrr' Mre production by Virgil Bur¬nett.i. ^iTormanees of Julius Caesar,like those of all Court Theatreproductions, will be held outdoorson a special stage constructed inthe courtyard of Mandel Hall. In event of rain, the production willbe moved inside of Mandel Hall.Julius Caesar will be performedJuly 9-11, 15-18, and 22-25. All per¬formances will begin at 8:30 pm.On Thursday, Friday, and Sun¬day evenings, tickets are $1.50,with a 50c student discount avail¬able. Tickets are $2.00 on Satur¬days.Tickets may be purchased dailyat the theater, or by mail. Specialrates are available for groups andorganizations.White House fellowshipHarold A. Richman, a UC grad¬uate student, has been named asone of 15 White House fellows.Selected from a group of morethan 3,000 applicants, he will serveas an intern in government fora year under the White Housefellow program.Four of the fellows will workon the White House staff, one inthe office of Vice President Hu¬bert Humphrey, and ten in theoffices of cabinet officers. Rich-man has not yet received his spe¬cific assignment.The White House fellowship program is financed by the Carne¬gie Corporation. Each fellow re¬ceives a stipend, ranging from$7,500 to $12,000 depending on hisage, for the year of governmentwork, plus an additional $1,500 ifmarried and $500 for each child.Richman received his BA de¬gree from Harvard College in1959 with honors in history. Hereceived his MA in social serviceadministration from UC in 1961,with honors.He is currently writing hisPh.D. dissertation in social serv¬ice administration.Hess discusses findingsWhen a mother wants to quiet down her young son, does she say, “Shut up!’’ or doesshe say, “Would you keep quiet a minute? I want to talk on the phone’’?The diffeience in style may make an immense difference in the child’s learning ability.This conclusion is one of seven that Robert D. Hess, professor in the committee on hu- Public, private sourcesgive foreign study aidman development, revealed lastweek on the basis ol his researchdone in Chicago comparing “moth¬er-child communication” of dif¬ferent types and their effects onthe child’s ability to learn.HK REPORTED some of theproject’s findings at a lecture injudd Hall June 29, at the firstof a series of talks on develop¬ments in education.“The picture that Is beginning♦o emerge,” Hess said, “is that themeaning of deprivation is a depri-vation of meaning — a cognitiveenvironment which . . . producesa child who relates to authorityrather than to rationale, who, al-through often compliant, Is not re¬flective in his behavior, and forwhom the consequences of an actare largely considered in terms ofimmediate punishment or rewardrather than future effects andJong range goals.”Hess and his associates selected160 Negro mothers and their four-year-old children from four dif¬ferent social status levels: (1)those with college education; (2)blue-collar workers with no morethan high school education; <3)semi-skilled or unskilled workerswith only elementary education;and 14) lower-class mothers receiv¬ing Aid to Dependent ChildreniA1X’> assistance because the fa¬ther was absent.Ask mothers to teachThe UC researchers had eachmother try to teach her child howto perform some simple tasks,sorting toys and blocks. The waythe mother handled the teachingwas related to how easily the childlearned.The major findings were:• MIDDLE-CLASS mothersPhys ed prof honoredby basketball writersJ. Kyle Anderson, professor ofphysical education and assistantdirector of athletics at UC, hasbeen awarded the 1965 GomezSilver Baseball Trophy of the Na¬tional Collegiate Baseball WritersAssociation iNCBWA).The award will be presented toAnderson at the annual conventionof the National Collegiate Ath¬letic Association (NCAA) Janu¬ary 9, 1966, in Washington, D.C.Vernon “Lefty” Gomez, formerNew York Yankee pitcher, willmake the presentation. The awardis made annually by the NCBWAand is sponsored by the WilsonSporting Goods Company .Anderson has been coaching atthe University for 35 years, 33 ofthem as head baseball coach.He graduated from the Univer¬sity in 1928. While an undergradu¬ate he played varsity football andbaseball. He was captain of theMaroon baseball team his senioryear.PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhoir stylists at5242 Hyde Park Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710 % Student DiscountA Complete Source ofARTISTS9 MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESPICTURE FRAMINGMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111 used more words, and the wordsthey used were more often ab¬stract, than mothers in the othergroups. They thus offer more “op¬portunities for labeling, for iden¬tifying objects and feelings,” Hess’report says.When a mother uses expressivelanguage, instead of just a limitedassortment of stock phrases, sheexpands the range and detail ofconcept and Information in thechild’s experience.Thus, the mother who asked herchild to please be quiet for a min¬ute, and told the reason why shewanted silence, gave the childmore information to Ihink aboutthan the mother w'ho just yelled,“Shut up!”In the former, long-winded case,the child must “think of his be¬havior in relation to its effectupon another person.” In the lat¬ter, two-word case, the child “isasked to attend to an uncompli¬cated message and (o make a con¬ditioned response.”As a result of these two stylesof communication, these tw'o chil¬dren "would be expected to de¬velop significantly differently ver¬bal facility and congitive equip¬ment by the time they enter thepublic school system,” Hess said.Personal or status control?• The mothers were askedwhat sort of advice they wouldgive to their child on his firstday in school.The first mother “described theschool situation as one which in¬volves a personal relationship be¬tween the child and the teacher,”and gave the reason for going toschool—to learn. The second justSunday, July 11TV: "The Ecumenical Movement," Jo¬seph Sittler, professor in the divinityschool, and Mrs. Vukosava Mandic dis¬cuss “The Ecumenical Movement, Prot-estanism and Eastern Orthodoxy,"WMAQ-TV (Channel 5), 1pm.RAOIO: "From the Midway," KlausMehnert, professor of political scienceat the Institute of Technology, Aachen,Germany, speaking on "Peking, Moscowand the Western World," WFMF, 7 am,States Policy in Vietnam," WFMF, 7am,WAIT, 7:45 pm,, the issue “UnitedWAIT 7:45 pm.RAIDO: "The World of the Paperback,"Kenneth J. Northcott, associate profes¬sor of Germanic languages and litera¬tures, reviews two plays by HaroldAnderson has been a leader inmany NCAA activities. He is cur¬rently chairman of the group’srules committee and a memberof its national baseball champion¬ship tournament committee. Inaddition, he is a NCAA delegateto the United States Baseball Fed¬eration and a member of the USOlympic Baseball Committee.In 1959 he was manager of theUnited States baseball team whichparticipated in the Pan-AmericanGames.r WHERETHE U. of C.MEETS TO EATGORDON’SRESTAURANT1321 E. 571b7:30 A.M.-I A.M.You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 told her child what he “must” do,namely obey the teacher becausehe represents authority.This illustrates the tendency ofhigher-class parents to speak interms of personal relations morethan "status appeal” in trying tocontrol their children’s behavior.“The person-oriented family al¬lows the child to achieve the beha¬vior rules by presenting them ina specific context for the childand by emphasizing the conse¬quences of alternative actions.Status-oriented families presentthe rules in an assigned manner,where compliance is the only rule¬following possibility,” Hess said.PASSIVE SUBMISSION to au¬thority does not encourage learn¬ing, Hess said. “One possible thingthat Project Head Start may do,”he commented, “would be to teachthe children a variety of ways todeal with authority—even thoughthis may create added problemsfor their teachers in the fall.”Type of grouping• Another test showed thatmost children and parents in thegroups with low income and edu¬cational levels tended to group to¬gether figures on the basis of theirrelation to each other (such as,“These two look like doctor andnurse”), instead of direct descrip¬tion (“These are all children”) orputting them in categories (“Allthese people work for a living”).“Relational responses,” saysHess, indicate “less reflection andevaluating of alternative hypo¬theses” and reflect “a tendency torelate object to personal con¬cerns,” lather t han the other moregeneral and abstract responses.pm.LECTURE: "Renewal of the Church InUrban Society,” Rev. Warner White,Brent House, 5540 Woodlawn, 7 pm.RADIO: "Chicago Dialogue,” BarbaraWrison, head of the department ofmuseum education of the Art Instituteof Chicago, discusses “Chicago’s Culture:Art Institute of Chicago," WIND, 7:05pm.RADIO: "Nightline," public discussionshow, WBBM, 10 pm.Tuesday, July 13FOLK DANCE: International House folkdancing, Ida Noyes Cloister Club, 8-10:45pm.Wednesday, July 14LECTURE: "Adult Education in theCanadian University," James RobbinsKidd, secretary of the Social ScienceResearch Council of Canada, Judd 126,7:30 pm.COUNTRY DANCE: Ida Noyes Hall, 8pm.Friday, July 16FOLK DANCE: Ida Noyes parking lot.7:30-12 pm.nuail folk dancing festival, live music,public participation and exhibitions bySaturday, July 17FOLK DANCE: International House an-national dance groups, admission $1,tennis courts behind InternationalHouse, 8-12 pm. Students may win one year’sstudy in a foreign country forthe academic year 1966-67 throughUS government scholarships pro¬vided for by the Fullbright-HaysAct or through fellowships of¬fered by foreign governments,universities, and private donors,according to Miss Cassandra P.Anderson, Fullbright program ad¬viser.Three types of grants areoffered under the FullbrightHayes Act, Miss Anderson said.Full Grants provide round-triptransportation, language or orien¬tation courses (where appropri¬ate), tuition, books, maintenancefor one academic year in onecountry, and health and accidentinsurance.“The Full-Grant program alsooffers opportunities for graduateresearch fellowships and teachingfellowships and assistantships,”Miss Anderson pointed out.Joint U.S.-Other GovernmentGrants are available for study inPoland, Rumania, and Yugoslavia.The governments of these coun¬tries provide tuition and fullmaintenance awards which aresupplemented by travel providedby the US government.Travel-Only Grants supplementmaintenance and tuition scholar¬ships (which do not include trans¬portation) granted to Americanstudents by providing roundtriptransportation to the countrywhere the student will pursue hisstudies for an academic year.Travel-Only Grants may not beused for any other travel pur¬poses.Fellowship offered by foreigngovernments, universities, andprivate donors are primarily forgraduate study of one year’s dura¬tion, usually beginning in the fall.Since some of the awards offeredby foreign governments and uni¬versities do not cover the entireexpense of the period of foreignstudy, they are in the nature ofgrants-in-aid, and candidates areexpected to be able to pay theirown travel expenses, incidentalexpenses, and a part of mainten¬ance costs, if these are notcovered by the terms of the grant.Fullbright Full Grants are avail¬able for study in: Afghanistan,Argentina, Australia, Austria, Bel¬gium- Luxembourg, Bolivia,Brazil, Ceylon, Chile, Republic ofChina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Den¬mark, Dominican Republic, Ecua¬dor, El Salvador, Finland France, Germany, Greece, Guatemala,Haiti, Honduras, Iceland, India,Iran, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Korea,Malaysia, Mexico, Nepal, Nether¬lands, New Zealand, Nicaragua,Norway, Pakistan, Panama, Par¬aguay, Peru, Philippines, Portu¬gal, Spain, Sweden, Thiland, Tur¬key, United Arab Republic, UnitedKingdom, Uruguay, and Venezue¬la.Travel-Only Grants are offeredfor travel to: Austria, Brazil, Den¬mark, France, Germany, Iceland,Israel, Italy, Netherlands, andSweden.Foreign government fellowshipsw ill provide for study in Austria,Denmark, France, Germany, Ice¬land, Israel, Italy, Mexico, theNetherlands, Sweden, Switzerland,and Tunisia.Generally, the qualification re¬quirements for both foreign studyprograms include: United Statescitizenship by the beginning dateof the grant, bachelor’s degree orequivalent training, a good aca¬demic record and demonstratedcapacity for independent study,and the ability to read, write, andspeak the language of the hostcountry by the date of application.Usually application for studyabroad may be made to only oneparticipating country.“The application deadline forthe 1966-67 academic year will beOctober 22,” Miss Anderson em¬phasized. Further informationmay be obtained in Miss Ander¬son’s office, Adm. 201.Annual Blackfriars'script contest opensBlackfriars, UC’s student musi¬cal-comedy theatrical group, isnow accepting scripts for its an¬nual production in late April, 1966.Only scripts (both book andscore) written by undergraduateor graduate students at the Uni¬versity are eligible for production.A prize of $50 will be awardedfor the winning script.Scripts should be submitted tothe office of the Reynolds ClubTheater on the third floor of Rey¬nolds Club. No scripts will be ac¬cepted after the end of the 1965fall quarter.Music for the script must besubmitted either in the form ofa tape or a written score. Allscripts should be finished earlyso that they may be given carefulconsideration by the board ofBlackfriars.the One, the Only-the Originalhome of team winauthorized BMC sales and service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113The Eagle is where you meet your friends — even if you weren’t planning tococktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks,air-conditionedTHE EAGLEBass ale and Scblitz beer on lap5311 Blackstone HY 3-1933Calendar of EventsPinter, The Dumb Waiter and The Con¬nection, WFMF. 8:15 am, WAIT, 7:30July 9, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5EDITORIALThe university and the public schools—research and actionThe feeling has grown among UC ad¬ministration as well as in the country asa whole, that if public education is inade¬quate to meet the problems of the city’sresidents, all the efforts to build a stable,heterogeneous community, such as HydePark, are jeopardized. As UC professor ofeducation Robert J. Havighurst puts it inhis report on the public schools of Chi¬cago,**. . . the schools help to give the nextgeneration and the present generation . . .the knowledge and the understanding andthe attitudes that make them good, bad,or indifferent citizens, workers, and par¬ents."Second, the program of the schools isthe greatest single factor in the decisionof middle-income people to live in thecentral city or to live in the suburbs. . . .”It is to this problem that UC has ad¬dressed itself in the plan, revealed lastmonth, to build a major research schoolwhere educators, social scientists, socialworkers, psychologists, and health work¬ers can test passible ways of meeting thepeculiar problems of children from under¬privileged, slum homes.The purpose of this school, it is clear,is entirely research. This is not an unim¬ portant reason. Two staff officers of theUS office of education’s division of educa¬tional research, in a Saturday Review ar¬ticle last month, pointed out that, "unlikedefense industry, . . . educational researchis still experiencing a shortage of thebest minds needed for the best possibleresults.”In the critical area of urban educationUC’s proposed center promises to fulfillits creators’ hopes of becoming a magnetfor the most creative minds in the coun¬try. Important results in improved meth¬ods and materials will without doubtbenefit schools in all cities, including thosein the immediate neighborhood of UC.Nevertheless, there is some questionwhether a purely research facility, run bythe University, will be of much immediateeffect in alleviating the critical situationof the neighborhood’s schools now, specifi¬cally at Hyde Park High School. Operatingat 167 per cent of capacity, HPHS cannotpossibly provide the special help neededby the many students from broken andculturally underprivileged homes which itmust serve. Aren’t these the very stu¬dents UC’s research school will deal with?Couldn’t some way be arranged for UCresearchers to inject some innovations into this ready-made lab which faces now the present Murray elementary school atthe kinds of problems researchers hope to 53d and Kenwood.solve eventually? We reiterate our position on this ques-It is, of course, true that many people tion: the problem cannot be solved withfrom the University would love nothing bricks and mortar alone. Nevertheless tobetter than to be allowed into HPHS, but build a school which would serve Hydehave not been able to do any work there ParkdCenwood alone would leave the pres-by a rather bureaucratic city administra- Hyde Park HS totally Negro. Nobodyis arguing that the proposed school onthe Murray site would be all-white. Theargument, which we support, is essential¬ly that segregating Hyde Park-Kenwoodstudents from Woodlawn students andtion.Our appeal, then, is to both the Univer¬sity and the Chicago school administra¬tion. The most productive effort both canmake is to cooperate — now — in tackling consequently the school for Woodlawn asthe problems besetting HPHS and otherinner-city schools.The improvement of techniques andcurriculum is not necessarily dependent onwhere new classrooms are built to housethe overcrowded HPHS students. School all-Negro, would be a step backward inthe fight for high-quality integrated edu¬cation.We still urge the implementation ofthe plan put forth by a parents' committeeof the SWAP tutoring project, that thesuperintendent Willis has now officially present HPHS building he enlarged withasked the school board to approve a new new classrooms built on land immediatelyhigh school in Hyde Park, on the site of next to the present building.CLASSIFIED ADSMorgenthau: fallLondon teach-in a protesthowling vital,disaster NOTICE"It is not true that the London wingers of London showed up in there is very little that the white-man can do in Asia to effectmorale.”Turning to American protestagainst the war in Vietnam, Mor-teach-in was scantily attended. The force,” he said. "They howledhall was full, but the teach-in down anyone presenting a viewwas a disaster anyhow,” according contrary to what they wanted toto Hans J. Morgenthau, Albert A. hear.”Michelson distinguished serviceprofessor of political science. US involvement in Vietnam at two sense in a repeat of the March on"The teach-in was held in a national teach-ins in America, re- Washington. There is nothing thatnuhlie rather than an academic cently returned from England. He the government can do now butpublic rat er than a a c agreed with reports in the British see if we last through the sum- original Contemporary Art on JewishThemes. Exhibition of original paint¬ings, drawings, woodcuts and etchingsby Amen, Baskin, Gross et. al. onloan from the Jewish Museum. N.Y.C.Hillel House. 5715 Woodlawn, June 21thru July 12, Mon.-Frl. 9:00 a.m.-5:00pm, Sundays 1:00-5:00 p.m.STUDENTS FOR DEMOCRATIC SO¬CIETY (s.da.)—Narh Side communityproject needs donations of used tpye-writers: all kinds of athletic equipmentand all kinds of art supplies. If In¬terested in donating contact DanielStem ©43-2492. PLAYBOY Magazine needs graduate atu-deris to do part-time, free-lance re¬search in the fields of sociology, an¬thropology, psychology, history, medi¬cine, law. literature and philosophy. Edi¬torial experience is not necessary, butapplicants must have a sound knowl¬edge of the literature in their areas ofspecialty. Good progressive pay rate,rising in proportion to the amount ofinitiative the student can assume. Maleor Female. Apply between 9:00 a.m. and4:30 p.m. Monday through FYlday to thePersonnel Department. 232 E. Ohio St.Subjects needed for group learning ex¬periment on campus from now throughAugust. Good pay. Ex. 3638 or call 752-8374,ROOMMATESChartered Bus to RAVIN A 4 o'clock Con-Morgenthau, who has opposed genthau said, "There would be no ^'orff^ave^nt^na^ST Housed2 pm. Admission to grounds, reservedseat and round trip bus. all for $2.75.International House Association, 1414E. 59 St. FA 4-8200. SU 7-2055.hall, and the Communists and left an(j American press critical of theLondon teach-in.He also had some observationsfor the Maroon on recent develop-Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle Sr.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 mer offensive.”"When fall comes, if Americantroops are still in Vietnam,” hesaid, "there should be a concerted TYPING Female roommate wanted: call 363-0958.What Sort of Girl Is Jacquelyn Fried¬man’s Roommate? She enjoys sharing4 rooms. TV, phono. Near campus, bus.IC. For $48.75 per mo, plus uttt.Call: 235-7600 (9-5), 067-5854 (7-10).SUBLEASETyping: term papers, manuscripts, etc.,electric typewrier. Call BU 8-3893.TUTORINGTutoring French German—native speak-graduate degree. Will prepare forDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIH THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty Discountments in the Vietnamese war. effort to convince the governmentCommenting on US plans to study to negotiate with the Viet Cong reftdlng exam*- BP s-3751the sources of Viet Cong morale Pressure will become intense on HELP WANTEDwith the intention of destroying the President to extend the war, PeopwTwanted to sell subscriptions tothem, Morgenthau said, "I think and negotiating with the Viet New*' CaU U Mont'Cong is the only alternative togetting deeper and deeperin to thismorass without any way out orpolitical aim in sight.” N. Y. C. SABBATICAL?Sublet 3-room apartment, unfurniahed,$110 per month. Aug. 1, 1965 to Sept.1, 1966. Lovely neighborhood acrossparkway from library, park, botanicalgarden. 15 minute subway to Manhat¬tan. References please. Box 117, Maroon.- WANTED TO RENT OR LEASEWANTED: apt. suitable for one; pref.fum.; begin anytime in Sept., pref. by15th, but Oct. 1 if necessary. Call MI3-6501 eves.JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODFL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd UNIVERSALARMY STORE“The Nitirerie In studentwear for campus andramping.’*Levis - Tennis ShoesAN OUTFIT FROMTOP TO TOE1459 E. 53rd Si. FA 4-5856 FOR WOMEN ONLY!SUMMER BARGAIN BONANZA FOR YOUBlouses, skirts, dresses, shorts, slips, jewelryReductions from 10% to 40%Save dollars while you shopin air-cooled comfortWomen's Weor DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.HYDE PARK AUTO SERVICEHAS A NEWMORE EXCITING PHONE NO.Well,1 st choice2nd choice3rd choice4th choice we tried anyway.RE-4-2787 PEGASUSSO 8-4653 POT HOLESA-1-3227 RACECAR378 6586 DRUNKENBut MOTHER BELL said NO!!!So-o-o-o-o 734-6393 orDial RFHNEXDour number RE-4-6393• CHICAGO MAROON • July 9, 1965 TIKI 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 dejonghe; beef kabob flambe.Try one of our delightfulHawaiian cocktails,CIRALSHOUSE OF TIKI51st & HARPERFood served 11 A.M. to 8 A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-7585 AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111— TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH —Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.24 HR. SERVICE CALLS — $3.00Tape Recorders — Phonographs — AmplifiersPhono Needles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cords9:30 Holy Communion, Bond Chapeljur” Sundays _It Thursdays 1 1 :30 Holy Communion, Bond ChapelS Fridays 7:30 Holy Communion, Billings G106H The Episcopal Church at theUniversity of ChicagoIPs Nu IN GD HA TY S The Church in the Urban EnvironmentJuly 1 1 "Renewal of the Church in UrbanSociety"July 25 "The Night Pastor in the Jazz District"Aug. 8 "Utopian Programs for American Life"7:00 p.m., Brent House, 5540 South WoodlawnAlso: 5:30 Vespers, 6:00 SupperJuly 11, at Brent HouseJuly 25 and Aug. 8 at Calvert House, 5735Universitymmsmrnsmmm. “JISBMSWIstomin fails in Mozart,but revives on Beethoven(Continued from page three)was something about the inte¬grated chorus, the two Negro andTwo Spanish soloists, all singingSchiller’s words, “Alle Menschenwerden Bruder” . . .Last Saturday I attended an¬other rather ambitious concert,this time at Ravinia Park. TheChicago Symphony was conductedby the youthful Seiji Ozawa, andthe soloists were violinist IsaacStern, cellist Leonard Rose, andpianist Eugene Istomin. I had beenlooking forward to hearing threesuch soloists of stature for sometime, which is perhaps why I wasa bit disappointed.THE PROGRAM OPENED withthe Mozart Piano Concerto K. 489(the twentieth, I believe.) In thefirst place, Istomin was terrible.Even reading from the score, hehit a distracting number of wrongnotes, and his heavy-toed pedalwork was tasteless and rather dis¬tressing to listen to. In the secondplace, Ozawa conducted the Mo¬zart as though he thought thepianist was playing Rachmaninoff,which is unforgivable.I am prejudiced against Ozawabecause he conducts in the flam¬boyant manner of Leonard Bern¬stein (with whom he studied),which is, of course, a gross wasteof sweat with an orchestra whichremembers the tiny gestures—andthe impeccable taste—of the lateFritz Reiner. Ozawa kept up thefrenetic direction all evening,swooping down with his baton topick up the most minute effects.The Mozart was the low pointof the program. After Istomin hadbeen sent to the showers and Sternand Rose took their places, theaudience was treated to a gooddeal of string virtuosity whichhad a good many of them sittingup in their camp-s1ools. The piecewas Brahms’ last work for orches¬tra, the Double Concerto for Vio¬lin, Cello and Orchestra (Opus 102or something.) In a word, Stemdid nothing to make anyone doubt that he was the world’s greatestviolinist, and his younger friend,Mr. Rose, demonstrated that thereare other cellists worth speakingof besides Casals and Starker.After the fact, some critics ob¬jected to the fact that Ozawa per¬mitted too much pyrotechnics. Theaudience, however, ate it up, asdid I—we were all in the moodfor some exciting solo work afterthe ten-thumb exercise we had justgone through.The piece de resistance was theBeethoven Triple Concerto, a workcontemporary with the Eroica.Istomin here successfully reas¬serted his claim to play the piano,and left me wondering what hadhappened to him before. The fi¬nale, a rondo alia polacca, wasquite the high point of the mixedevening — beautifully balanced,perfectly Beethoven. It was fol¬lowed by a burst of applausewhich I never hope again to be inthe middle of. We know the soundof two hands clapping, but whatis the sound of eighteen thousandhands clapping like fury?A WORD OR TWO about theaudiences. For some reason, theGrant Park habitues are aboutfive hundred per cent politer thanthe Ravinia-goers. At the Band-shell, the only untoward noise(outside of the planes landing atMeigs Field) is the pardonablegaffe of applause between themovements of a work. At Ravinia,the soi-disant concert-goers yaklike crazy between and during thepieces. Right in the middle of theBrahms some North Shore matronsome seven rows in front of meexclaimed rather volubly, “Look,he’s scratching her back under herbra,” and immediately let out acackle which would have doneWoody the Woodpecker proud.Honestly! You expect people to bedecent because they’ve spent twobucks and up to go to the sym¬phony? Guess again.David H. RichterRANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-C«nditioni«i| — Open Evenings — Billie Tregonxo, MonogeressHYDE PARK YMCANewly redecoroted student rooms available with or without meol plans.Study lounge, private TV room, health, and physical facilities oHavailable far student use.Call FA 4-5300Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty- Fifth *1141 Woodlown Ave.* 4TTTVVTVWVrrrTTVTTTfTTTTTWVTnyVTTfTIN A HURRY?RUSH SERVICEAVAILABLE WHENNEEDED.JhsL yyicVL fijvoolc Qo.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERS"Unexcelled QuoJity Since 1917"Phones: Ml 3-7447 1013-17 East 61st St.NY 3-6868 Across from B-J Ct.Serving Hm Campus since 1417 High quolity citedYerkes to get 40-inch telescopeA modern, 40-inch reflecting telescope for astronomical research will be constructed byUC at Yerkes Observatory on the shores of Lake Geneva in Williams Bay, Wisconsin.The telescope will be built under a $176,000 grant to the University by the National Sci¬ence Foundation.UC already operates a 40-inch changing phenomena in stars,” The polarization of starlight byrefractor telescope the largest Morgan said. "These require fre- particles between the stars, aof its kind in the world and quent, continued observation for phenomena of which Hiltner wasseveral smaller research instru- satisfactory study.” a joint discoverer, is one of thements at Yerkes. Research re- He explained that it usually is basic fields of study at Yerkes.quiring greater telescopic power possible to use the few larger tele- A new 24-inch reflecting telescopeis carried out by members of the scopes in the world for only iso- recently constructed under a grantdepartment of astronomy either at lated, short periods of time. Some from the National Science Founda-the McDonald Observatory, used phenomena, such as variable stars tion is the first telescope in theunder contract with the Universi- and twin stars in motion around world designed especially forty of Texas, or at the Kitt Peak each other, must be observed polarization observation.National Observatory near Tuc- regularly to study variations, he Measure distanceson, Arizona. added. Yerkes Observatory is world“WE ARE happy to announce The engineering design of the famous among astronomers for itsnew 40-inch reflector has been continuing work in the classifica-carried out by W. Albert Hiltner, tion of stars through spectroscopy.this major step in the modernization of Yerkes Observatory,” William W. Morgan, chairman of the director of the Yerkes Observa- This is an important means ofdepartment of astronomy, said. tory, and C. R. O’Dell, assistant measuring the distance of stars to“There is a need in both research professor of astronomy. The the earth,and training for the finest possi- mirror and other optical parts willble telescopes of moderate size. be ground in the Yerkes Ohserva-“Because of technical improve- tory optical shop by Richard Mon The distance to a relativelyclose star can be established bytrigonometry, using the orbit ofments, we will be able to obtain mer» a recent graduate of the the earth as a base line. Such aresults with new 40-inch telescope University. star can be examined by a spectro-which will be comparable with THE NEW telescope will be scope which breaks light from thethose which could be obtained only placed in a dome 30 feet in diame- star into characteristic features,with much larger instruments a ter at Yerkes which previously MORE DISTANT stars withhoused one of the most famous similar spectroscopic characteris¬tics can then be observed, and thestrength of the light that reachesThe reflecting telescope is far the earth from them can be usedearly reflecting telescopes.New scope efficientfew years ago,” Morgan explainedHelp train scientistsThe addition of a high-quality,modern reflecting telescope atYerkes, Morgan said, will help more efficient than the older re- to estimate the distance of theAmerican astronomy' meet its factor telescope housed in a 90- stars. This method was used inmost critical need the training f°ot dome at Yerkes. In a refrac- obtaining the first definite evi-of new scientists. He noted that tor> liSht passes through lenses, ’graduate students at Yerkes re¬ceive detailed experimental train¬ing and have made major contri- down a long tube coming to afocus at the eyepiece, just as itdoes in an ordinary pair of denee that our Milky Way systemis a spiral galaxy, a discoverythat was made at the Yerkes Ob¬servatory 14 years ago by Mor¬gan and two graduate students.butions to astronomical knowl- binoculars,edge while in residence. THIS 20-TON telescope is so Stewart Sharpless and DonaldTHE UC observatory is located delicately balanced that it can be Osterbrock.at Lake Geneva because a tele- moved by hand, or by its original Yerkes Observatory is open toscope is most effective when the e^ectric motors. It will be modern- the public Saturday afternoonssky is not affected by nearby city ized and used primarily for astro- from June 1 to September 30.lights. About 17 graduate students metric research involving precise Lectures are given at 1:30, 2:15,are usually in residence at Wil- measurements of stellar locations, and 3 pmliams Bay, which is 76 miles north- ' " “*west of Chicago. • •“One of the great advantagesof having a fine instrument of thissize at Yerkes is that we will beable to observe some rapidlyKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 mimFAITUNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“m strong bank"NEW CAR LOANSSA 00 gov hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C.TriFFREr SHOP ... La protection financier© que vouadonnez & votre famille aujourd'huidevra lul 6tre procure© d'une autrefacon demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certalnement accomplir cettetflche h votre place.En tant que reprfsentant local de la SunLife, pule-Je voue visiter a un moment devotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood. Jr.. CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, IN.FAirfax 4-4800 — FR 2-2390Office Honrs 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYinstruments — New, Used, AntiqueGUITARS, BANJOS, MANDOLINSBooks and Folk Muaic Magazine*DISCOUNT ON FOLK RECORDSssraft.ChicagoNO 7-106011:30 to 6. 7:30 to 10 Mon.-M.11:30 to 6, Saturday $1,860[WORLD'* MOST EXCITING 4-DR. WAOONJThi* compact wagon combines amazing economywith unmatched luxuiy—and comes fully equippedat a sensationally low price.DAT8UN “Four-Ten’' 4*4r. Station WagonDATSUNOPEN SUNDAY IZto 5Chicagoland DATSUNSALES - SERVICE - PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AVE. in Beverly HillsChicago, Illinois 60620 Phone 239-3770July 9, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7BONANZA BOOK SALE!Originally Published AA $0 O ^ Sale Startsat 2.50 to 25.00 PI W YY TO V.V 3 Friday, July 9Shop in air conditioned comfort for beautiful books to add to your own collection or to give as gifts.Books on art, hobbies, sports — many new titles never before offered at these prices.COMPLETE WORKS OK SHAKESPEARE. Allthe plays, complete and unabridged; all thesonnets and poems Over 1,000 pages, clear,dark type, cloth bound with gold stamping.Pub. at $6.25 Only $2.49SLANG: Today and Yesterday By Eric Par¬tridge. A history of slang from its origins tothe present: American, Cockney, law. medical,military, rhyming and Spoonerisms, elaborateand original vocabularies; a reference workthat is highly useful and eutrertaining.Orig. Pub. at $8.00 Only $3.95FABULOUS CHICAGO. By Emmett Dedmon.With 129 remarkable illustrations, A lusty andmagnificent social history of Chicago from1820 to the present; the plush sporting andsociety life, the great fire, politicians, gang¬sters and the amazing growth of ‘ the bosscity of the universe." , _ ^Pub. at $5.00 Only $1.98THE ANNOTATED UNCLE TOM S CABIN. Ed.with an Introd. by Philip Van Doren Stern.The full original text of this world-famousnovel by Harriet Beecher Stowe in an absorb¬ingly annotated, and illus. edition that revealsthe source material and the fascinating storybehind its publication and reception.Pub. at $7.50 Only $3.9$?HE ROCOCO AGE; Art and Civilization ofhe 18th Century. By Dr Arno Schonberger,>r. Halldor Soehnev, Prof. Theodor Muller.Vith 49 color plates, 332 black A white Ulus,i magnificent presentation of the art formshroughout Europe in the incomparable eight-enth century: paintings, sculpture, ceramics,ilverware, tapestrv, ceremonial objects, indus-rial designs, architecture, music, literature,tc. Beautifully printed and bound, size*ub. at $25.00 0n,y WWINES A SPIRITS. By Wm E Massee. Acomplete buying guide including prices, vin¬tages, food and wine combinations, pronunci¬ations. ordering in restaurants; with charts,maps, vinevards, and full information on allthe great, good, and ordinary wines of the en¬tire world.Pub. at $8.95 Only $2.98THE WARTIME PAPERS OF R. E. LEE. Ed. byClifford Dowdey & Louis H Maiiarin. A monu¬mental contribution to the literature of theCivil War. Over 1,000 pages in this collectionof letters, orders, dispatches and battle reportscomplemented by letters to his family. Fromhis letters emerges the full and human charac¬ter of this legendary man whose devotion tohis cause was complete but totally realistic.Pub. at $15.00 Only $4.95BASIC DRAWING. By Louis Priscilla. A com¬plete course in drawing; perspective, anatomy,movement, landscape composition, etc., withhundreds of illustrations. New, complete edi¬tion.Orig. Pub at $3 95 Only $1.9$RANDMOTHER’S HOUSEHOLD HINTS: Asx>d Today As Yesterday. By Helen Lyonlamson. With 81 drawings by Fred Harsh,it of the nostalgic past and an old NewLgland collection, come these practical andUghtful hints for every imaginable thingound the house; oooking, cleaning, sewing,st aid, painting, gardening, oanning, repair¬s' homes and furniture, etc.lb. at $9 95 Only $3.95> A YOUNG ACTRESS; The Letters of Ber-rd Shaw to Molly Tompkins. Illus withlOtographs. Ed with an In mod by Peter>mpkins. The correspondence between G.B.S.d an American artist from 1921 through19, in a handsome 9!4xl2«4 volume withuiv interesting pictures,*. at $8.50 Only Sl.MMcGraw-Hill ENCYCLOPEDIA OF RUSSIAAND THE SOVIET UNION. Ed by Miohael T.Florinsky, Prof. Eoonomios, Columbia Univ.with Harry Schwartz A Theo. Shabad of TheN.Y. Times, Earl Ubell, Seienoe Ed N.Y. Her¬ald Tribune, John Turkevitbh, Prof. PhysicalChemistry, Princeton Univ Over 3,500 entriesby more than 100 contributors in this completecoverage of the Russian history, politics, sci¬ence, industry, economics, culture and natureof the people from medieval times to the pres¬ent. More than 400 illustrations, maps Acharts. 624 pages, size 834xlM4-Pub. at $23.50 Only $9.95THE BEST IN ARTS. Ed by James R. Mellow.Introd. by Hilton Kramer Illus. with 145Drawings & Photos, 26 iu Full Color. Hand¬some volume containing some of the mostlively and refreshing writings from Arts Maga¬zine— critical essays, reviews, articles andmemoirs.Pub at $7.50 Only $2.98NEW YORK: THE ART WORLD Ed by JamesR Mellow. Illus with 180 Drawings & Photos,24 In Full Colon’. Handsome volume presentinga lively and representative view of the NewYork art world of today — articles, reviews,critical analyses, the auction soene, collectionsof the important museums, etc.Pub. at $7 50 Only $2.9« THE CUSTER MYTH. By Col W. A. Graham.Illus. with over 100 photos, maps and draw¬ings, with The Dustin Bibliography. A docu¬mental source book and colorful acoount ofthe battle of the Little Big Horn and theevents leading up to it and the aftermath, thefamous Benteen lettrs and Indian accountsare included. Handsome volume 734xl0'2 Newcomplete edition.Orig. Pub. at $10.00 Only $3.95COLLECTOR'S LIBRARY OF THE WORLD'SMUSICAL MASTERPIECES. Basic Library ofover 40 complete selections brilliantly per¬formed by the world’s greatest soloists, orches¬tras and conductors including Stokowski,Steinberg, Dixon, Krips, Goossens, etc. Selec¬tions include Beethoven: SYMPH. NO. 5,CHAMBER WORKS: Tchaikovsky: PATHETI-QUE SYMPH NUTCRACKER SUITE, WALTZ¬ES; Bach; COMPLETE VIOLIN CONCERTOS,CHAMBER MUSIC; Strauss: WALTZES; Stra¬vinsky: RITE OF SPRING; Mozart: JUPITER& SYMPH NO. 40. CHAMBER WORKS: Schu¬bert: UNFINISHED SYMPH. Nos. 3 & 4; Dvo¬rak; NEW WORLD SYMPH., etc. All worksare performed in their entirety and arrangedin sequence for automatic record changers.These 16 Stereo records have sold separatelyfor over $80.00.The 16 record set Complete. S-2169 Only $14.95The abovein Monaural Hi-Fi M-2170 Only $14.95BRENDAN BEHAN'S ISLAND. An Irish Sketch-Book. Drawings by Paul Hogarth. A beautifullyprinted and illustrated volume describing thepeople and places of Ireland only the waythe irrepressible Behan could do it enlivenedwith songs, poems and stories.Pub. at $5.95 Only $2.98THE WORLD OF MANKIND. By the Writers.Editors A Photographers of HOLIDAY maga¬zine. With 286 magnificent photographs ofwhich 240 are in full color. A portrait of thepeoples and places of our time throughoutthe world as described by 35 distinguishedwriters like Joyoe Cary. Irwin Shaw. BruceCatton. John Steinbeck, B. De Voto, E. BWhite and 76 outstanding photographers.Handsomely printed and bound volume, size10*4 x11»2.Pub. at $20 00 Only $9.95IDEAS AND OPINIONS. By Albert Einstein.The most definitive collection of Einstein’spopular writings, gathered under his own su¬pervision: such subjects as relativity, atomicwar or peace, religions, science, human rights,economics, government, etc.Pub. at $5.00 Only $2.98THE SAILING-SHIP: 6000 Years of History.By R. A R. C. Anderson. Illus. with 134 draw¬ings A 20 halftones. The best compact accountof the development of the sailing ship fromits Northern European and Mediterranean be¬ginnings to the clipper ships of the 19thcentury.Orig. Pub at $6 95 Only $1.9$THE HISTORY OF PROFESSIONAL FOOT¬BALL: Its Great Teams. Games, Players ACoaches. By Harold (Spike) Claaissen. Illus.with over 100 Photos The most complete andauthentic account of professional football from1895 to the present. Over 500 pages.Pub. at $12.50 Only $3.95GATEWAY TO THE TWENTIETH CENTURY.Ai t and Culture In a Changing World. By JeanCassou. Emil Langui A Nikolaus Pevsner. With52 color plates, 322 black A white illustrationsand in-text drawings. A broad panorama ofthe arts of Europe from the end of the Im¬pressionist movement to World War I, thegestation period of the Modern Movement. Areference work of enduring beauty notable forits beauty of format and printing done inBelgium, bound in Holland. Size 10^x13^.Pub. at $25.00 Only $14 95A SHORT HISTORY OF CULTURE. From Pre¬history to the Renaissance. By J. Lindsay. Over150 illus. An intriguing introduction to archae¬ology. myth, ritual, poetry, literature, and thearts from the Old Stone Age to the 17 thcentury.Pub. at $6 50 Only $2.98ASTRONOMY. By H C King Beautifully illus.with paintings & diagrams by Terry Maloneyas well as photos. The vast science of astron¬omy is presented for the layman: early his¬tory, the development of the telescope, dis¬coveries. the moon, sun, planets, galaxies aswell as artificial satellites and space travel.3:U x 9« *.Pub at $4.95 Only $2.69THE EARTH: Rocks. Minerals A Fossils. ByW. B. Harland. Pictures by P. Chadwick. Thestory of the enormous variety of substanceswhich make up the crust of the earth fromcommon sandstone to diamonds and preciousgents; fossils, rock collecting and the varioustheories about the origin of the continents.Profusely illustrated with drawings and charts,mostly in color. 8*4 x 9*4.Pub. at $4.95 Only $2.69UNDER THE SEA. By Maurioe Burton. Pro¬fusely illus. in color and black & white byMaurice Wilson The life and behavior of theinhabitants of the sea from plants to whales,from prawns to sharks, from the arctic totropical waters, and from the earliest geolog¬ical periods to the modern bathvscape andunder-water photography. 83i x 912.Pub, at $4.95 Only $2.69PERENNIALS IN THE GARDEN FOR LASTINGBEAUTY. Bv Chas. F. Potter. 40 Photos inColor. Comprehensive, indispensable handbookcontaining everything for the beginner, plusa wealth of information based on long pro¬fessional experience to keep him the mostexpert gardener.Pub. at $6.95 Only $2.98TIFFANY TABLE SETTINGS. With 148 beauti¬ful illustrations, 132 in monochrome & 16 inFull Color. A great variety of attractive tablesettings created by America’s foremost host¬esses and designers for Tiffany & Co., thefamous Fifth Avenue jewelers and silversmiths.Tasteful, imaginative arrangements for everyoccasion, formal, informal, buffets, picnics,parties, dinners, suppers, etc 9x12. •Orig. Pub. at $15.00New, complete ed. Only $5.95MAGIC WITH THE COLOUR CAMERA. BvWalter Boje. With 90 colour plates. An albumof magnificent colour shots of Paris, London,Ballet, Woman, Parks, Pattern, etc.Size IOV4 x 12 V*. Special, $4.95 Collector's Item: THROUGH THE LOOKINGGLASS. Read and sung by the inimitable CyrilRitohard, original musical score by AlecWilder, played by the New York WoodwindQuartet — the Lewis Carroll classic completeon four 12" LP records in deluxe full-colorillustrated gift box, plus a facsimile volumeof the rare 1872 first edition of the book!Illustrated by John Tenniel.$25.00 value Only $6.95EARLY CHRISTIAN ART. By W F Volbach.250 Full-Page Ulus., 34 in Full Color. Hand¬some volume. 9*2 x 12V4 containing penetrating,authoritative discussions of individual worksof the late Roman and Byzantine Empiresfrom 3rd to 7th centuries The striking colorsof Illuminated manuscripts and textiles neverhave been more faithfully reproduced, and thebeauty and excellent text make this an im¬portant book for all art lovrs.Pub. at $25.00 Only $14.95ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THEATRE MUSIC. ByR. Lewtne & A. Simon. A comprehensive list¬ing of more than 4.000 songs from Broadwayand Hollywood shows from 1900-1960. Cross-referenced by show, song titles, composers,lyricists, dates, etc.Pub. at $8.95 Only $2.9$ITALIAN COOKING FOR PLEASURE. 100 IUna.& 24 Pages in Color. Hundreds of recipes withfascinating ways of cooking meat, poultry andfish, vegetables, unusual salads, puddings andsumptuous ioe creams, plus a gastronomicmap, a wine map and a section on menus.U>2 x 8‘/4.Pub. at $5.95 Only $2.9$THE LETTERS OK MICHELANGELO. Tran¬slated. Edited & Annotated by E. H. Ramsden.Tlie first complete and unabridged edition ofall the extant letters of Michelangelo; an out¬standing contribution to the history of Ren¬aissance art and literature. The appendicesprovide an outline of the historical, socialand economic background of the period Beau¬tifully illustrated with 60 full-page plates.Large size (9x11*4) handsomely printed andbound 2 volume set in attractive slip oase.Pub. at $45.00 The 2 vol. set $19.95THE NEW EDITION OF THE ENCYCLOPEDIAOF JAZZ. B.v Leonard Feather. Completely re¬vised. enlarged and brought up to date. Over2000 biographies, over 200 photographs withbibliography, critics, social aspects, jazz over¬seas, booking agencies, organizations, tech¬niques of play, records, etc.Orig. Pub.at $15.00 New. complete ed. Only $4.95BIRDS, BIRDS, BIRDS. BIRDS. 180 Photos A24 Pages in Full Color. New, enthralling studyof bird life of every continent, packed withdescr iptions of birds, their nesting and feedinghabits, fascinating chapters on rare birds, mys¬tery of migration, bird watching, and keepingbirds at home. 11 *4 x 83a.Pub. at $5.95 Only $2.9$THE TREASURY OF ANGLING. By L Roller.Hundreds 0/ Full Color Photos by George Silkplus rare prints and drawings. The moat beau¬tiful and one of the most informative bookson fishing. Thousands of tips on technique,life cycles on every important game fish, plusaneodotes and stories.Reg Ed Pub. at $16.95 Only $«.9STHE EPIC OF MEDICINE. By Felix Marti-Ibanez, M.D. Over 270 illustrations with 33pages in full color. A living history of themen of medicine and their achievementsthrough the ages from the magic-governedshamans of the primitive world through thesorcerer-physicians of Egypt, the philosopher-physicians 0/ Ancient Greece, the slave-physi¬cians of Rome, the alchemists of Islam, theartist-physicians in the Renaissanoe to theachievements of today. Size 9'/4 x 12.Pub. at $15.00 Only $5.95THE NINE SYMPHONIES OF BEETHOVENIN SCORE. The scores clearly reproducedwith an original system for simplifying thereading of the scores. Historical and critioalcomment precedes each svmphonv.Pub. at $7.50 Only $2.98uniform with the above:THE SYMPHONIES OFBRAHMS, ANDTCHAIKOVSKY IN SCORE Only $2.98THE SYMPHONIES OF HAYDN,SCHUBERT AND MOZARTIN SCORE, Only $2.98A PRACTICAL DICTIONARY OF RHYMES. ByL. Holofcener. A new method of arrangingwords by sound rather than spelling. A usefulaid for song writers, poets and rhymesters ofall kinds. Contains much practical informa¬tion on rhyme and lyric construction, song-writing and the markets and business of song¬writing.Orig. Pub. at $3.95New, complete edition Only $1.98 M-2383. Beethoven: COMPLETE PIANOCONCERTOS. Classic recordings of the 5concertos ranging in mood from peacefultranquility to turbulent excitement. So¬loists incl. Novaes, Brendel A Blumental.$20.00 value. 4 Records Complete. Only $5.95S-2384. Beethoven: COMPLETE PIANOCONCERTOS. Stereo.$20 00 value. 4 Records Complete, Only $5.95HOGARTH: Marriage a la Mode and Others.Illus. with 44 Full-Page Plates. All the en¬gravings of one of the world's greatest socialsatirists Rake’s Progress, Gin Lane, othersOrig Pub at $5 00 Only $1.98CHARLOTTE. A Diary in Pictures by CharlotteSalomon Comment by Paul Tillich. Illus. with80 gouaches in color A pictorial counterpartto Anne Frank's diary, these paintings withautobiographical notes miraculously survivedher senseless, cruel death at the hands of theNazis. Size 8’4xll.Pub. at $8 50 Only $1.98THE TREASURY OF THE GUN. By Harold L.Peterson. A gorgeous volume with hundredsof magnificent Full Color Photos, rare printsA drawings covering the history of the gunfrom gunpowder to magazine arms. Size8',2 x ll3iPub. at $15 00 Only $7.95VETERAN AND VINTAGE CARS. By PeterRoberts. 300 large photos, with 32 pages inFull Color. A lively history of automobile#from earliest days, the Inventors, drivers, con¬tests, fads, changing models, etc.Pub. at $7.50 Only $2.9$PARIS IN COLOUR. By Peter Cornelius. With109 brilliant colour plates, Les Enfant*. RiveGauche, Seine. Halles Aux Vlns, Montmartreand all the other phases of city life In anunusually handsome 10x12 picture albumSpecial, $4.95SCULPTURE OF JAPAN. By Wm. Watson. Amagnificent collection of 152 Illustrations ofBuddhist statuary from the 5th to the 15thcentury with commentary on the relationshipon the styles and schools. Unusual 9x15 for¬mat.Pub at $15.00 Only $5.95ROUND THE WORLD COOKERY. By Margue¬rite Patten. With 36 photos In color and manyin black A white Hundreds of unusual recipesof the classic dishes from every region of theworld: hors d’oeuvres, soups, meat and fishdishes, desserts, sandwiches, etc. Special $2.98THE STORY OF AMERICAN YACHTING. ByWm. H. Taylor A Stanley Rosenfeld. Told iuPictures. Over 200 magnificent photos by Mor¬ris Rosenfeld, as well as rare old prints anddrawings. The complete story of this thrillingsport with pictures from the collection ofAmerica’s foremost yachting photographer.Everything from the earliest to the most mod¬ern craft including ice-boating, motorboating,surf-boarding, ocean racing and cruising andregatta racing. 9’4Xl2.Orig. Pub at $12.50 Only $4.95PERSPECTIVES ON THE ARTS. Ed by HiltonKramer. Illus. with 150 Drawings A Photos,28 in Full Color. Handsome volume of criticalarticles, memoirs, documents and reproduc¬tions, surveying the recent trends in art,architecture and the film, with fresh insightsinto their historical precedents.Pub at $7.50 Only $2.98A NATURAL HISTORY OF AMERICAN BIRDS.By Edw. Howe Forbush A John Richard May.Illus. in color by Louis Agassiz Fuertes, AllanBrooks & Roger Tory Peterson. A magnificentvolume illustrated with the best set of colorplates in existence — over 500 species ofEastern and Central North America from Flo¬rida to Hudson Bay, all portrayed in fullcolor. A mammoth 8xll>i volume, over 600pages of life histories; complete, accuratedescriptions of the birds and their habits withan index of scientific and common names.Orig. Pub. at $12.50New. complete edition Only $6.95THE FILMS OF GRETA GARBO. Intro, byParker Tyler. With 161 Photos. The screen’smost enigmatic personality as she appearedin the 27 films of her career. A unique pic¬ture album fully documented with casts,synopses, etc.Orig. Pub. at $5.95New. complete edition Only $2.98BOOK OF FINE PRINTS. Bv Carl Zlgrosser.With over 600 illus. Comprehensive work cov¬ering history, techniques, famous print-mak¬ers, collector’s data, etc. on woodcuts, etch¬ings, engravings, etc.Orig. Pub. at $7.50 Only $4.95WILD FLOWERS. By J G Barton. Over 100different flowers described and illustrated ltistriking full color in detail, with much use¬ful informationSize 8'/«" x 10*4". Special, $2.98THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE