Atom memorial plannedUC commissions MooreThe University has commissioned the well-known Britishsculptor Henry Moore to design a work to commemorate thebirth of the atomic age on the UC campus in 1942.Details of Moore’s sculpture, including pictures of a modelof the final work, were released asFri#i*v i 10Moore finished a two-day visit toFriday, October 1, 1965 the University September 25.The final work will be a twelvefoot high nonrepresentationalsculpture cast in bronze. It will besituated on Stagg Field- about 35feet in from the present sign mark-Housing '65: sale, changesby Dinah Esral“The residents of the Beta house never looked like this before,” commented a returning, ing the “birthplace” of atomic en-undergraduate man, upon seeing the new residents of Beta house. And his statement was erg?lcompletely justified.Nineteen first year girls now inhabit “University House,” the former Beta Theta Pi resi¬dence at 5737 S. University avenue,' Pppas the result of UC’s need for in¬creased dormitory space. Thisyear, more students will be livingin university housing than ever be¬fore, requiring the conversion ofthe fraternity house as well as oth¬er changes throughout the campus.JAMES VICE, director of stu¬dent housing and assistant dean ofundergraduate students, reportshis office realized in mid-Augustthat more women’s housing wouldbe necessary in the fall. The needremained even after the third floorof Flint House in Woodward Court,UC’s only coed dorm, was allocat¬ed to women's housing. Thischange, which was tentatively an¬nounced last spring, created 50more spaces for women’s housing,diminishing the number of Wood¬ward's male residents to 100.Exploring several possibilities,the housing office ruled out theidea of altering present facilities,and thus sought a means to accom¬odate 20-30 women. The Commu¬nity and Real Estate Office, head¬ed by Winston Kennedy, then ex¬plored various purchasing pros¬pects.A Natural DeathThe Betas had voted to disbandlast spring, as all present mem¬bers were graduating and no newpledges had been initiated. There-.ore, the three story dwelling wasvacant and available for other use.NEGOTIATIONS for the pur¬chase of the house were conducted>y Kennedy’s office with the Betabeta Pi chapter house associa-on, a corporation whose trusteesare University and fraternityalumni and which owned the building. Kennedy reports the total costof the purchase and consequent ren¬ovation to be approximately $75,- resiaems, wuu w c000. UC’s own maintenance depart- on the basis of their housing app lment performed the bulk of the re¬modeling, with contracts given tooutside workmen for certain jobs.Larger Rooms“Thorough remodeling” waslanned, according to Marilyn Mc- IT WAS on this spot, in a con¬verted squash court under the thenexistent west stands of StaggField, that a team of scientists un¬der the direction of the late UCprofessor and Nobel prize winnerEnrico Fermi initiated the firstself-sustained nuclear chain reac¬tion.This event marked the first con¬trolled release of nuclear energyand paved the way for both theatomic bomb and the peaceful useof atomic energy.Moore made no attempt to ex¬plain what his sculpture symbol¬ized. “You don’t set out with a li¬teral idea,” he told a press confer¬ence. “You make it and the expla¬nations come afterward.”HE SAID that he would leave itto others to decide what his workmeans.The final sculpture may differ id; it will have V* inch thick bronzewalls. “That’s enough to last twoor three thousand years in any cli¬mate,” he said.The actual final bronze statuewill be cast for Moore in a WestBerlin foundry. It will not be fin¬ished for a year.A special University committee,appointed by UC President GeorgeBeadle in 1963, was charged withplanning a memorial to the StaggField scientific achievement.THREE MEMBERS of the com-somewhat from the four foot highworking model which was shown in mittee, William H. McNeil, chair-the pictures released by the Uni- man of the UC history department,versity.^ Moore said that the res- Harold Haydon, associate professorof art, and I. W. Colburn, consult-ponse of a viewer to a twelve foothigh sculpture is different than toa smaller one, and that this maylead to changes in his work as hecreates the final sculpture.Moore said that he will do thesculpture in bronze “becausebronze is in a way the most dura- ing architect to the University, vis¬ited Moore in his studio inHertsfordshire, England, to discussthe memorial.The University is now seekingThe emasculated Beta House• <*}****:•.:', / , ♦- 4' 1Cormack, Director of Women’sHousing. The majority of the19 residents, who were chosencation date, will occupy doublerooms. There is also one single, afew large triples, and one quadru¬ple. Bunk beds will be used in thelatter case. The inside of the house(Continued on page four) ble sculptural material.” All stones sufficient funds for the casting ofbut granite, he stated, do not stand the sculpture and its placement onup as well as bronze under the the Stagg Field,wide range of temperatures in Chi- Secretary of the Interior Stuartcago. Udall declared the Stagg site a re-THE BRONZE will gradually gistered US national historicalturn green in Chicago, he added, landmark last year,rather than black as in New York Moore recently completed a 28and London. foot long statue in bronze for theMoore’s sculpture will not be sol- Lincoln Center in New York City.CV/B cares for LBJ s health;examination to be in CapitalUC’s President George W. Beadlehas been appointed Chairman ofthe White House Conference onHealth by President Lyndon B. JJohnson. The series of meetings,which will be held November 3and 4 in Washington, D.C., will beconcerned with national goals inControversy over HP High plan flaresas school board announces Oct. meetingby David L. AikenThe battle over what to do about Hyde Park High School is the 0f healthreaching a climax with city school board hearings on the Dr. Lowell T. Coggeshall, vice, , , , 0 president for special assignmentsproblem scheduled for October 13. 0£ ^e university, honorary trustee,At its meeting September 22, the board approved a motion an(j former dean of the medicalto hold hearings with testimony school will act as one of three sec-"iom proponents of the two oppos- hS needs help because of the ser- tion chairmen. His work will be ining plans for solving the problems jous overcrowding problem. The medical education section ofof overcrowding at Hyde Park. present main building was erected the conference.The Alternative plans are: in 1914. Normal capacity on the ac-Expand the present high school cepted standard of a nine-periodat the present site, 62 st. and Stony day is estimated at 2450 students.Island ave. Prime movers behind There are now more than 4100 stu-this plan have banded together in dents, each spending nine periodsthe “Unity group.” They have put out of a total of eleven,forth a detailed proposal, drawn up It serves students in district 1 ,by a UC professor in the depart- which takes in both Hyde Park-Ken-ment of education, under which a wood, which is integrated, andschool of about 6000 students would Woodlawn, which is almost tota ybe organized into four sub-units of Negro. Serving both the mid eabout 1500 students each. class Hyde Parkers and the oftenBuild a totally new, separate “deprived” Woodlawn students con-school to serve students from Hyde stitutes a large problem o emp a-Park alone. Proponents of this al- sis anc* resources. #ternative are led by the Hyde Park- Following the pattern m allChi-Kenwood Community Conference cago high schools, Hyde I a(HPKCC), the main civic organi- divides its students among sixnation for Hyde Park. They do not “tracksinsist on any one site. However, city lowest is called the J ’Superintendent of Schools Benjamin for students in nmt gC. Willis has put forth a plan to ability is ^iow the swth grade iev-build such a separate high school el m ^thmetic o “• ...on the site of the present Murray “essential level is telementary school, on 53 st. be- and eighth-grade levels, whileJhetween Kimbark and Kenwood ave- “regular track courses a P t,gnues. at grade level. As a result of manyEveryone agrees that Hyde Park (Continued on pege nineteen) REGISTRATION for return¬ing undergraduates and gradu¬ate students: Sept. 29—Oct. 1,at Bartlett Gym.UNDERGRADUATE PRO¬CEDURE: IBM cards will becompleted at Bartlett Gym.GRADUATE STUDENTPROCEDURE: Programsmust be approved in the stu¬dent’s department office andthen returned to Bartlett Gym.(Biological science studentsturn in cards in the Adminis¬tration Building, room 305.)Students in professionalschools: register in the respec¬tive offices of their deans.APPROVAL: Undergraduateprograms must be approved byOctober 1. Graduate students,by October 8.FEES: All fees must be paidor arranged by October S. The President meets the PresidentThe President, at a preliminarymeeting, urged the nine memberexecutive committee who will workwith Beadle to “set new goalsfor achievement in the field of heal- The fact that Beadle, who is nota medical doctor, was appointedchairman of the conference, maywell imply that the breadth of themeeting exceeds traditional medi-th,” and expressed his hopes that cal boundaries,they would make the forthcoming Dr. Beadle is a distinguished bi¬conference not only a national gath- ologist, winner of the Nobel Prizeering, but an international forum in 1958, winner of the Lasker Awardwhich will call in international ex- of the American Public Health As-perts and deal with world health sociation, 1950, and the Albert Ein-nee(js stein Commemorative Award ofThe conference will strive to sug- 1958. From 1955 to 1960, he servedgest further efforts which may be as President of the American As-taken in the broa-d field of health, sociation for the Advancement ofincluding such subjects as air pol- Science. He has been a member oflution. These new ideas, however, the President’s Science Advisorywill not necessarily be implemented Committee.through legislation but may take He assumed his role as Presi-effect through other channels. dent of the University in 1961.EDITORIALSChanges continue in UC, HP - WoodlawnUC has always been in the habitof being a dynamic place — a univer¬sity where current ideas about educa¬tion, student housing, communityrelations, and many other subjectsare questioned and changes are made.Thus it is not too surprising that anumber of “solid” institutions at UChave changed quite significantly overthe summer. Several of these changesare quite important. But more impor¬tant is the simple fact that these al¬terations are not final, and severalare just indications of more radicalsteps that need to be taken in andaround the University in the future.Certainly the outstanding change inthe University is the transformationtaking place in the chameleon College.Five well qualified, relatively youngprofessors have been appointed as“masters” of the area colleges intowhich the College will be divided inthe autumn quarter of next year un¬der the faculty-approved Levi plan.In preparation for this major change¬over, almost every department in theCollege is re-examining its organiza¬tions and curriculum — for this yearis the “planning year” for the newLevi College. Now is the time whenchanges in the College can and willbe made. Students and faculty who have long complained about certainaspects of the College can do some¬thing constructive about those gripesif they make their voices heard in thenext few months. This chance tochange drastically the course of a partor the whole of the College with rela¬tively little effort is a rare one. Itshould not be wasted by those con¬cerned with the future of the College.Some changes in the College cur¬riculum have already gone into effectthis year. The humanities staff is run¬ning several experimental sections ofHum I in which three different in¬structors, each teaching his own hu¬manities subject area, teach a Hum Isection. This experiement is verynecessary for Hum I, a course whichhas yet to reach that equilibrium point,already achieved by Soc I and WesternCivilization at which its development isgenerally satisfactory to the studentsand faculty of the College. EnglishComposition, long one of the mostboring of the general education cour¬ses, has also revamped its curriculum.Instead of using its old inane syllabimade up of short, unconnectedsnatches from thirty or more books,English Comp will now limit itselfto the study of a few complete, intellec¬tually stimulating works by men like Aristotle, Montesquieu, and White-head. The course will also featuremore intensive use of small tutorialgroup study, a method which will al¬low a student to get from his instruc¬tor more than just a written criticismof his paper. All these innovationspoint toward a revitalized EnglishComp course which may actuallyteach all students, not just those seri¬ously deficient in composition, how toimprove their writing.Nor has the University stagnated inthe social rules area. The long desired,long fought battle for liberalized wo¬men’s hours has come to a peacefulresolution with the central unit ofNew Dorms now considered “offhours” and the elimination of hoursfor third and fourth year residentsThe administration and students whodevised this new system are to be com¬mended.However, a further look must betaken at the final effect of these so¬cial rules. As a secondary result, morewomen may now desire to remainwithin UC’s dorms. But, dormitoriescannot be built overnight Last weekJames Vice, director of student hous¬ing and assistant dean of students,stated that an addition to Pierce Towercould not be ready in the fall of 1%6. Housing must be available for thosewho wish to remain in the dorms orcannot find apartments. Therefore,’as plans are made during the coming]year, students should be kept informedof both proposed and final plans, solthat they, too, may arrange for suit¬able residences without last minute!desperation.The Hyde Park-Woodlawn commun¬ity around the University is also in astate of flux. The future of Hyde ParkHigh School, Hyde Park-Woodlawn'sattempt at good schooling in the inner-city, is very much in doubt. If Chi-d*cago School Superintendent BenjaminWillis’ plan for building a new schoolin Hyde Park is adopted by the schoolboard, Hyde Park High will be cut offfrom Hyde Park, and another link be¬tween H^'de Park and Woodlawn will,have been broken. If the Unity Planfor the renovation and enlarging ofHP High is adopted, there is a chancethat the level of education at theschool may be increased. If good edu¬cation is still worth fighting for, thenthe students and faculty of University,along with the residents of Hyde Parkand Woodlawn, must act now, be¬fore the October 13 school board meet¬ing, to oppose the Willis plan.Welcome entrants as fellow students ! < Hirag« Marmn I Six chamber concerts scheduled for yearSince your arrival on campus last week, you have beenwelcomed, greeted, and acknowledged by streams of Univer¬sity officials. You have encountered more deans than youwill ever meet again in your academic careers. Orientationboard members, house heads, and student housing assistantsall have welcomed you. ***By the time the registrar has counted you, the advisorshave spoken with you, and the bursar has billed you, youshould be fully aware of the fact that you are here.In the light of this, a further word of greeting fromthe Maroon might well strike you as superfluous. Perhapsit is, yet such an infectious practice creates its own tempta¬tions. Moreover, there are a few important things yet to besaid. EMTOft-IN-CMIEF OuMBUSINESS MAHAGEK .... Michael KasseraMANAGING EOlTOft Oman EsrelNEWS EOT TON Dave SailerASSISTANTS TO THE EDI TONSharon GoldmanJean Pill**David L.NEWS EOITON DavidDavid L. AikenCULT UN* EDITON Jamie Be* GateEOITON, CHICAGO LITERANY REVIEWDavid RichterMUSIC EDITOR Peter RabinowitzASSOCIATE MUSIC EOITON ..Ed ChfcefsfcyPOLITICAL EDITON Bruce FreedEDITON EMERITUS Robert F. LeveyStaff: David Gompert, ware PoKemper, Bar¬bara Jur, Tom Heagy, Michael Nemeroff,Paul Satier, Paul Burst*in, Rick Pollack,Eve HockwaId, Dick Ganz. HertzGerg The Chamber Music Series willpresent six concerts on campusthis year, on Friday evenings inMandrel Hall.Following are the programs anddates : October 22, NetherlandsChamber Orchestra with SzymonGoldberg, conductor and violinsoloist: December 3, Andrew Foldi,basso; January 28, Pagnini Quar¬tet; February 25, The MarlboroTrio; April 1, Jakob Gimpel, pian¬ist; and April 22, The Contempor¬ary Chamber Players of the Univ¬ersity of Chicago presenting twochamber operas.Because the CCP will be giving concerts of new music throughoutthe year and the Collegium Music-ura will be presenting concerts ofearly music, the programs in the1965-1966 series will in general fea¬ture works of the 18th, 19th andearly 20th centuries.Series admission to the generalpublic is $10; UC faculty, $8; andUC students, $3. Single admissionwill be $3, general and faculty;$1, UC students. A limited memberof subscription seats stitl remainand may be purchased at the Con¬cert ’Gtfice. 5802 S. Woodlawn,either in person or by mail.We welcome you as fellow students.That is all you need be.Some schools find it necessary to initiate their enteringstudents, to “test” them, to isolate them as “freshmen,” tomake them prove themselves worthy of matriculation.We need no such system here, for all of you have al¬ready been initiated. Even now you are members of thatall to small group which has recognized the profound im¬portance of learning, of education. This alone proves yourworth—much more than beanies, or strange clothes, or over-ly-deferential manners, or shaved heads, or any of the otherstrange rites practiced elsewhere.Besides, the placement examinations are more thanenough of a test for anyone.In the coming year you will learn many things: thatgeneral education courses are to be enjoyed, not tolerated;that civil rights is a basic issue in Chicago, not just in Selma;that faculty members are often interesting people, notjust distant lecturers; that a major part of a good US edu¬cation is learned outside of class, not in it.You will also see many of your cherished ideas disputed,disregarded, or destroyed by those around you. You will findthat many people regard religion, morality, and Americantwo-party politics as being quite useless. And you will learnthat they, too, have not got the answers to all the questions.You yourself may not find many answers at UC, but youmay just learn to be a little more broadminded in your viewsof the ideas of others.And you will study, which is best of all.It will be some time before you are fully acclimatedto the University. It will be a few months before you aresure whether it’s Gordon’s or the T-Hut that’s closed on Mon¬days, whether it’s Goodspeed or Eckhart that has the mathlibrary, whether it’s Ida Noyes or Reynolds Club that hasthe bowling alley, but nevertheless, even now, each one ofyou is already one of us.We welcome you as fellow students—as peers, friends,and eager, sincere scholars. • . -a O CHICAGO MAROON ♦ Oct. 1, 1965 Chicago'* moat complete record store — Every label in our huge inventory always at a discount — Every Recordfactory fresh and fully guaranteed — Large selection of import and hard to get recorda.STUDENTSBRING THIS COUPON TODISCOUNT RECORDS,201 N. LaSalle (Corner Lake)GOODFOR 38^> OFF INC.Regularly NOW •••$5.98 $3.71 •4.98 3.09 ••3.98 2.47 •• >ON ANY ONE TIME PURCHASE from our LARGE INVENTORYClassical • Jazz • Folk Music • Spoken • Show Tunes, Etc.BUY ONE OR A HUNDREDSome labelsincluded:COLUMBIALONDONFOLKWAYSELEKTRARCAPHILLIPSEPICRIVERSIDETRADITIONKAPP, etc. THIS COUPON GOOD FOR38% OFF* ONANY ONE TIME RECORDPURCHASE ATdiscount records, inc.201 N. LaSalle (corner Lake)CE 6-2187MONO OR STEREO Some labelsincluded:ANGELDeutsche-GrammaphoneBACH GUILDVERVEVANGUARDPRESTIGEARCHIVEMERCURYATLANTICCAPITOL, etc.; JUST BRING THIS COUPON!! •2 Browse our budget bins ' 2Z discounts from 50% to 60% 2• labels as VOX • RIVERSIDE • PRESTIGE • SCALA 2• ETERNA • MGM CLASSICS • PEfcldO • URAWA •• MONITOR • ASCO • TAP • COUNTERPOINT •• EVEREST • CONCERT DISC • PRESTIGE FOLK MUSIC 2• ‘Sony, due to manufacture's price policy imported LP's cannot be allowed In this often. •*tM • AMU mmm • »»It MO MSJIIUStt •*** • • saastaaaasaa aaaaaaaatTEXT1TAIN PENS —NOTE BOOKS — STATIONERY — LAUNDRY CASESBRIEF CASES —SPORTING GOODSTYPEWRITERS SOLD — RENTED — REPAIREDRENTAL LIBRARYPOSTAL STATIONBOOKSTOREEAST 57th STRE1311Z BLOCKS BAST OF MA\DEL BALLSTORE HOURS: DAILY 8:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.. •. EVENINGS—Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9:00 PM,, iltlC TOppC- ,of W ‘.4 It , cUC turns 75, ptans big birthday party cpfc vp&i1The University Of Chicago, faculty members Easley Black- ■^■010011 Wk tb* V - V / SwTS |w3lThe University of Chicago,75 years old this January, isfar from sitting back on itshaunches, stroking its beard,and applying for medicare.On the contrary, UC will mark itsthree-quarters of a century of exist¬ence with a gala, year and a halflong celebration, beginning withthe coming winter quarter andrunning through June 1967.Virtually every division and de¬partment in the University will payhomage to the University’s distin¬guished past, changing present,and uncertain but progessive fu¬ture. In addition, students andtheir organizations will do theirpart.Many ways to celebrateThe anniversary celebration willinclude conferences, exhibits, pub-1 i c a t i o n s, meetings, concerts,plays, and even an Amos AlonzoS t a g g Memorial InternationalTrack and Field meet. Under thesupervision of vice-president forpublic affairs Charles U. Daly, hisasistant Judith Reiffel, and pro¬fessor of English Edward Rosen¬heim, Jr., the festivities will runalmost constantly, and admissionto most events will be free ofcharge.Among the more notable pro¬grams currently being planned arethese:* A conference on the minimumwage, sponsored by the school ofsocial service administration;* A conference entitled “TheArts and Their Public,” which willpit artists, painters, and composersagainst critics from the workingpress in a week-long colloquium;* An English Institute for cul¬turally deprived urban youngsters,already in existence, will be great¬ly expanded during the anniver¬sary through the joint efforts of thedepartments of English and educa¬tion;* A poetry reading series spon¬sored by the Chicago Review;* The creation of an originalmusical composition commemorat¬ing the University’s importantbirhday by music department faculty members Easley Blackwood and Ralph Shapey;* An “Education 1991” confer¬ence, sponsored by the departmentof education, will investigate thelikely state of educational prac¬tices and institutions at that time;* A National Conference on Lib¬eral Education, organized bydean of the College Wayne C.Booth, which is set for this Feb¬ruary;* A lecture series on civil de¬fense by Eugene Wigner of Prince¬ton University;A philosophical symposium on“Space and Time in Human Ex¬perience,” which will see scholarsfrom many disciplines discuss timeand space as organizing concepts;* A special series of editions ofthe Chicago Maroon Literary Re¬view, as well as a special Maroonsupplement on the anniversary.The formal theme of the celebra¬tion, first conceived some twoyears ago, will be “Conditions andPurposes of the ModernUniversity.” In announcing the fes¬tivities last April, UC PresidentGeorge Beadle said:“The University will note, duringthe anniversary year, the achieve¬ments of its first three-quarters ofa century, reaffirming the faith ofits founders that where learningtruly flourishes, the whole of life isenriched.“Through its anniversary convo¬cations and other ceremonies, theUniversity will honor those towhom the present state of man’sknowledge owes so much. In its in¬ternational conferences, symposia,publications, artistic enterprises,and similar undertakings duringthe anniversary year, theUniversity will seek to emulate thevision and initiative of those whomit thus honors.”The celebration program is farfrom fixed, however. Suggestionshave been submitted regularlysince the anniversary activitieswere first announced, and sugges¬tions are still encouraged. Theyshould be brought to the attentionof Edward Rosenheim, Classics 44. ‘The first year you're a flyer; the second you’re an experi¬ment; the third you’re an institution,” quips David Richter,editor of the Chicago Literary Review. “Now that the LiteraryReview is an institution,” he went on, “we’re going to beginto take ourselves seriously—and getdown to work in earnest.” a quarter?” he asks. “Because,The Chicago Literary Review, unless I am mistaken, the Chicagostarted two years ago under editor Literary Review provides some-Marc Cogan, is the Maroon special thing which no other campus orsupplement containing reviews of city paper provides: serious aca-current books. For the last two demic literary criticism free of theyears it has been published twice two banes of criticism, receiveda year, but Richter hopes to ex- opinion and prejudice. Here stu-pand both the size and the scope dents can express themselves free-of the publication. ly—and at some length.”There has been enthusiastic re- The bi-weekly New York Reviewsponse to the Review from both stu- of Books acquired an enthusiasticdents and faculty, Richter stated, loyal readership by operating onThis by itself, he said, would justi- those terms, Richter explained. Hefy increasing the number of Liter- hopes to do the same thing on theary Reviews for the coming year, campus level. “We have the aud-But Richter has received strong ience and the ability to expand:encouragement and expects finan- why shouldn’t we?”cial support for the coming year "WE DON'T want to do just morefrom the 75th Anniversary Com- of the same thing,” Richter main-mittee. tains. “We want to do differentTHE NEW EDITOR plans to put things.” He hopes to experimentout two issues a quarter during the with including diverse types ofcoming year, expanded from eight writing along with the reviews:to twelve pages each. “Why two satire, parody, original poetry.“We’re in the market for someonewho can do caricatures and car¬toons, too.”Plans for diversifying includea column, tentatively called “Textsand Contexts,” which would be avehicle for publishing long essays on literary figures and types. In aforthcoming issue, Richter plans topublish an article on the imagina¬tive fiction (“adult fairy tales”)of J.R.R. Tolkein.“We need money, and we needmoral support, but what we needmost is people. We need graduateand undergraduate students whoare serious, but not humorless;bold, but not rash. We need stud¬ents who can read and think andwrite. At UC it would be a shamenot to get them,” Richter conclu¬ded.Those interested in joining thastaff of the Chicago Literary Re¬view should come to the Maroonoffice on the third floor of IdaNoyes Hall tonight. Further staffmeetings will be announced in thaMaroon.14 karat goldpierced studsCalendarFriday, October 1LECTURE: "The Binding of Issac: A Psycho¬logical Religious View," David Bakan, profes¬sor of psychology, Hillel House, 5715 Wood-lawn, 8:30 pm.Monday, October 4LECTURE: "Nuclear Magnetic Resonance .nMolten Salts," Norman Nachtrieb, chairmanof the department of chemisfry, sponsored bythe new Kent Chemical Society, Kent 103,8 pm.Tuesday, October 5LECTURE: "The Meaning of the L.A. Riots.*'Michael Hannon, Los Angeles policeman sus¬pended for participation in CORE and So¬cialist demonstrations, Mandel Hall, 8 pm.Admission SI, students 50c. Sponsored by theDemocratic Socialist Club.LECTURE: Judge Charles D. Breitel, NewVork Supreme Court, Appellate Division Lawschool 8:15 pm. see thelargestselectionon thesouth sideMURPHY.Applications are now avail¬able for those applying forMurphy scholarships. The ap¬plication forms, which aredue no later than October 20,may be secured from the sec¬ond floor of th: Administra¬tion building. available ~in culturedpearl, jadecoral, gold,onyx, opalmany others,rom $4.00SUPREMEJEWELERSHandbags & Jewelryof Distinction1452 East 53rd St.4-960** XtC* '*"• * -yir- T) >*- ^ 1“.Oct, 1, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROONProtest is unsuccessfulHyde Parkers demonstrate for tree green, not concrete grayby David Satter . , . . , .. . .Eieht hundred trees and scores of weary protestors were to no avail and work about to start, tree to tree wrapping t eir arms onc ^‘n ’daenj0nStratorsaS whoBurnham Committee members ga- around the trunks or lying pros- rounded by demonstrators, whothered in the park. “We’ll be out trate in front of bulldozers and moved only when the workmen saidthere where the action is.” Stuart chain saws. But all was in vain, they were going for a coffee break.Chase said, “and we’ll do what we The tree cutting crew would start The marchers felt they were tnck-have to do to let the city know cutting on one side of a tree and, when ihe crcw disembarkedwe’re still in this fight.** when the saws came too close to 500 yards to the south and con-“The Battle of Jackson Park” demonstrators, would move on to tinued sawing,thus began, as demonstrators phy- other trees. In the words of one THE PROTEST lasted all day.the casualties as the “Battle of Jackson Park” drew ignomin-iously to a close last week.A wild melee September 9 was the bulldozer vs. conserva¬tionist culmination of the dispute 'that had been raging for many money and suggesting that themonths over the city's plan to re- funds be used instead to repaveroute Lake Shore Drive through North Lake Shore Drive. _ . . _Jackson Park While the committee awaited an sically tried to block the destruction woman, There were just too many Qne man was injured by a faujngTHE PLAN called tor a straigh- answer, the County Board awarded 01 the *««• Pr0tCSt0rS ra" fr0m ,KeS t0 PCOleCttened, widened, and fhe two construction contracts cov-drive frem 47th street south through . , .the park to 67th street. The project, enng the county share of the drivewhich will cost over 6 million dol- rebuilding expenses. Previously, inlars, has been called essential by an open hearing, the City Planningcity commissioners in terms of con- Commission had spent four hoursvenience. The commissioners have listening t0 opposition testimony,also said that reconstruction of the . . _drive will prevent accidents by end- considered for less t an threeing the bottleneck at the 57th street minutes, and then voted to ap-turnoff into Hyde Park. prove the road plan.But the new drive involved the CHARLES G. STAPLES, a com-dcstruction of hundreds of trees mittee member active in the parkand acres of park and lakefront protest, said he was “still stunnedland. Opponents of the plan called at the speed and callousness withit the “rape of the park,” and the which this (the destruction of theDaniel Burnham Committee was trees in the expressway’s path) wasformed in February to oppose the accomplished.”new “expressway in the park.” Alderman Leon M. Despres of theThe committee’s protests began Hyde Park fifth ward was enragedwith piles of letters and telegrams at the results of the Planning Com-to City Hall from residents of Hyde mittee's meeting, and joined Burn-Park, Kenwood, and South Shore, ham Committee co-chairman Stuart The mark of failure. tree, but the park was being de¬spoiled at the rate of about fortytrees an hour, and there was littlethe Burnham Committee or any¬body else could do.At the end of the day, Charles G.Staples said that the mass destruc¬tion was “the outrage of the OuterDrive.” As dusk fell signs on thetree stumps read: “This is a Daleyreminder,” and “LBJ beauty spot**The irony was apparently lost onthe two Democrats.And the city has been makingnow tjHftis! North Lake Shore Drive. cl qqh f‘‘is. slated for widening, also atthe expense of park land. Thiatime it’s Lincoln Park. A protestMmmmmTbs committee then tried a seriesof legal maneuvers, which includ¬ed ckali-nging the use of city| CTZ f lctr.s convocation |Dr. Fred A. Replogle, partner inr»ohrcr, Hiblar, Chase in carrying the appeal toPresident Johnson.As the date for the beginning ofwork neared, protest mail delugedthe White House (over 2000 lettersand ", committee is being formed.More men remain in dorms (SHE IS OPTIMISTIC, however, idence. The remaining graduateabout the new experiment in small space in Hitchcock was also(Continued from page one)and Replogle, an Committee set up tables outsideinternational firm of professional the Museum of Science and Indus-psychologists, recently returned try on Labor Day in the hope offrom a nine-week world tour, will soliciting eteWramO The Burnham has been completely repainted. So . .. . . , , J J .telegrams). I he ^Burnham ^ ^ whkh has also dorm living, believing it may be opened to undergraduate Housing.been repaired. significant in future plans for new The result of these two changesLinda Thoren. newly appointed dormitories. The campus will be has been an additional 164 under*nough letters to the £esident head of University House, abie vjew the fraternity house graduate places.b3 the speaker at the Chicago President to enlist his intervention.Theological Seminary opening con- “The President is just about ourvocation on October 4 at 8:00 p.m., last hope,’ said Mrs. Stuart Chase proofjng This may complicate the open houseESr-iB wafinThc'pTst’lhc lurned dormi,ory « «« *»• "GRADUATE STUDENTS whoDutch Consulate, has no sound- *ure> as the resident head plans an desired to remain in universityin Graham Taylor Hall, 5757 Uni- at the time.versity Avenue. The Day Of Reckoning availability of “a quiet place tostudy,” according to Miss Thoren, Male Changes housing were able to, however/explains Vice. “Housing was madeavailable to them in the two dormsHis address. “On Becoming a On Thursday, September 9, with a graduate of the College and now men was also a necessity this fallJ’S?* which remain both undergraduateWhole Person,” will be open to the all protests having provengeneral public to be a second year law student.speciallypricedhigh intensitylampFully adjustable, transformerpowered, high intensity lamp,sturdy metal construction.Available in black, ivory,coral, or green.Replacement bulbs 35c eachNow $5.95/accent1437 EAST 53RD STREETMIDWAY 3-7400Open Thurs. Eve. Until 9 HILLELYOM KIPPUR SERVICES"CONSERVATIVE* "ORTHODOX-YAVNEH 'REFORM'TUESDAY, OCT. 5P.M.5:45 6:00 8:30WEDNESDAY, OCT. 69:00 AM.9:30Open Only To Members OvThe University Community5715 S. WOODLAWN AVE. The need arose, Vice states, be¬cause of the size of the enteringclass, as well as the decreased and graduate, 5400 Greenwoodand Burton-Judson.“Concern for the availability ofnumber of returning students who housing for new graduate studentsleft the housing system at the end ted us to rent space in commercialof their one year residence re- buildings during August, so thatquirement. Vice ventures to ex- these places would be open to theplain the latter statement in terms students when they reached cam-of both internal and external fac- pus,” Vice said. “This measuretors. “Better programs had been has been very helpful. Some ofplanned in the past year within the the space is still available, andmale houses,” states Vice. “Stu- those interested can check throughdents have also anticipated the dis- my office.”advantages of apartment dwell Discussion is still underway re-ing, as well as the problem of find- garding “Mrs. Pierce,” the seconding an apartment.” tower in the Pierce complex whichThe solution has involved several would house undergraduate worn-dorms. Snell is now an entirely un- en. “It is now evident that thedergraduate house, in contrast to proposed tower could not be readyits past function as a graduate res- for use in the fall of 1966.”Coin Operated Dry Cleaning• EASY TO OPERATE• INEXPENSIVE• ODOR-FREEMESSING AVAILABLEkimbSkPLAZACOIN-OPERATED LAUNDRY"493-3320OPEN DAILY, 7 AJIIL to 10 P,fS } v . —,. > t . ,4-. m _ CtfifiASQ MABOOH . CM. 1. 1HS SINAI TEMPLE FORUMpresentsTHEODORE BIKEL... in concertSaturday. October 16, 8:15 P.M.atSINAI TEMPLE5350 South Shore DriveSINGLE ADMISSION .....$3.00Season Ticket For Series of Four $7.00Wednesday, Dec. 1 ...........Nathan MilsteinWednesday, Dec. 15—Wm. F. Buckley andvvmvf John P. Roche «>. ,/AtPhone BU 8*1600 For, Further Information |Munpmt mmWUCB nearsby Robert F. LeveyCampus radio station WUCB, long plagued with problemsand red tape over its plans to become an FM station is atlong last nearing the end of its troubles.All that remains for the administration to do to send theproposal to its last stage is to rati- ~ —fy a written report on WUCB’s old music programs and basketballplans which is being prepared by broadcasts will continue.James Turner of President George Klowden and Capp don’t lay anyBeadle’s business office. particular blame on the adminis-Once that is completed, which tration for the delay in their appli-sould be within the next week and cation, which has lasted for over aa half, the WUCB leadership duo of year. “As a matter of fact,” Klow-Todd Capp and Mike Klowden can den said, “once they began to act,carry through the next step: mak- they acted as rapidly as possible.”ing an application to the Federal WUCB had no “hard feelings,”Communications Commission Capp added.(FCC) for a license and for chan- In the interim between now andnel space. If all goes well, com- FM, WUCB will embark on a pro-plete approval on all phases of the ject designed to lessen the sudde-FM plan should be in the station’s ness of the eventual switchover,hands by January and FM broad- They will give new staff memberscasting would begin a year from more and more responsibility, andnow thus expect to have a more exper-“We have every reason to bel- ienced and capable staff thanieve that within the next one or would otherwise have been thetwo weeks we’ll receive official ad¬ministration approval to apply tothe FCC for an FM license,” Klow- case.CAPP AND KLOWDEN arc alsoden. WUCB’s operations coordina- considering the possibility of run-tor, said. “We fully expect the re- ning both an AM station and anport (Turner’s) to be favorable, FM one when the FCC approval fi-and we see no reason why wc can’t nally comes through. The AM sta-get limited broadcast range in the tion would serve solely as a train-Hvde Park area from the FCC.’* ing ground for future FM work.Recruitment and training and w°l,ld continue to be broadcast. , . „„TOO T, . into the dorms on the present9i)ce W1J, ^ closed-circuit channel. FM pro-B/liffnrnnt ntrnrtM ninrfu/ien 77 I n r\r\ , _gramming would be broadcast‘different everythingwise,” Cappsaid. Capp, the station manager,plans first and foremost to recruitenough staff to handle the in¬creased demands of FM. Then,once the staff is on board, Capp, over a normal FM channel, butone with only a five mile radius.Present not like pastThe confidence that Capp and including the MAROON and Capand Gown, the UC yearbook.This idea won little favor withthe MAROON and Cap and Gowneditors, who saw it as nothingmore or less than a useless baby¬sitting service. Nor was the Stu¬dent Government assembly overlyimpressed. As SG debated the pro¬posal, WUCB fretted and work wasat a standstill. But at a mid-winterquarter meeting, SG sent the FMproposal back to dean of studentsWarner A. Wick with the recom¬mendation that the MARCON andCap and Gown be left out.THIS SHOULD have been theend of WUCB’s troubles, since itapparently had a body to hold itslicense. But other problems devel¬oped. First, the administration de¬manded that the station’s manage¬ment rewrite their constitution soas to make the board of trusteesmore receptive to the idea of a sta¬tion which would demand greaterresponsibilities from its operators.But no sooner was this done thanCharles Packer, the station man¬ager through all the trials andtribulations, quit over a disputewith Wick. This left the stationwith a leadership vacuum, whichhas only just now been filled.Willi the battle apparently won,WUCB w'ill start to fill its staff va¬cancies at tonight’s activitiesnight. Auditions for positions asannouncers will be held, and infor¬mation will be passed out at theWUCB booth. Huyrs system dorms liberalizedJames Newman, asiistani dean of students has announcedthe su cension of the hears rule for third and fourth yearwoir.en il.lng in Uniee i:y housing beginning autumn quar¬ter. He also announced a policy change whereby time be¬fore 3 am spent in public areasof dormitories, such as the centralunit of New Dorms, by their rcsi- ernment ar.d the dean of the col¬lege, issued a report calling fordents would not be counted against liberalization of hours in the firsttheir hours allowances.The Newman m "randomnoted however, that girls wouldstill be required to notify the Uni¬versity of their whereabouts. year and the abolition of hours forall women after the first year, un¬less the r parents specifically re¬quested otherwise.In addition, the committee calledfor the creation of student facultyWomen not s’lbject to hours rules committees in each dormitorywill therefore be expected either to to establish a “healthy atmosphere”return by 3 am or to leave a tele- through self-government. The corn-phone number at which they can mittee also asked for numerousbe reached. In addition, any worn- physical improvements on campus,en planning to be out after mid- co-oducationalization of all dormi-night must sign out. tories and reduction of the resi-Last May, the social rules com- dence requirement to one year,mittee, a joint student—faculty The Administration has not yetgroup appointed by Student Gov- officially responded to the report.Classified AdsPERSONALGALA MAROON PARTY (subtitle: HOWELSE DO YOU START THE QUARTER?),1435 East 60th Place, off Blackstone, FREEEVERYTHING, BRING YOUR FRIENDS (es¬pecially -girls), BRING BAIL MONEYEVERYBODY INVITED!FeD uP?!with throw-around show-off folk dancing?with feeling out of the in-group? Then joinus for a free evening of country dancing andgroup feeling each Wednesday at 8. CountryDancers, Ida Noyes.Second Hand Book Sale. Library Clearance.Jewish and non-Jewish subjects. Languages ofthe West and Near East. Most books lessthan $1.00.Hilllel House, 5715 WoodlawnMon-Fri. 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. WANTED: ANTIQUE - LOVER to care fordry-sink cabinet. Keep for academic year.Size: 4'x3'x3'. A classic piece for no charge.For info: 643 5520 after 5:30.Exp. Waitresses wanted full-part-time.634-4320Wanted: Female student to babysit twelvehrs. per week (daytime only) in exchange forroom with private bath. Call 288 4391.Room and board in exchange for babysittingand dinner dishes. Call Cohn FA 4-0329.SLEEPER-Dishes, sitting exchanged for room,board—Lovely home near University. BU 8-5597.Ride needed to N.Y.C. the week of Oct.Call Debbie Cohen, 752-2908. Mr. Biggs is interested in havingsinging group, musical group, drama groupsor individuals to perform on stage at thefamous Mr. Bigg Restaurant on 57th St. Fri.& Sat. Eve. Call or stop by 684-9398 1440 E.57th St.Klowden, and the other senior Klowden are presently exuding is amembers of the WUCB stall will far cry from the situation through-conduct training programs in the out the past year, when a series ofvarious technical and entertain- delays and misunderstandingsmade it seem for a time as ifWUBC FM would never arrive.When the idea of FM was first sug-ment skills that are necessary.PROGRAMMING under FM willbe different from the present inthat faculty and graduate students gested, the administration agreedwill be encouraged to participate to present it to the board of trus-in forunvs and symposia. In addition, students whose primary in¬terest is in other areas will be tees for approval on the conditionthat a communications board,composed of administration andasked to participate in special students, be set up to act as a re¬programs. These programs would sponsible license-holding body,involve such things as having Uni- At the same time, administrationversity Theatre members comment officials suggested the possibilityon drama. Student Government of the communications board handl-members discuss politics, etc. But ing all communications media,’'— Opening strains at UCThe University symphony or¬chestra will have its first rehearsalof the academic year on Wednes¬day, October G, at 7 pm in MandelHall. All former members areurged to attend. Prospective mem¬bers of the Orchestra should ar¬range an audition at the music de¬partment, 5802 Woodlawn, Ext.3885. The program for the fallquarter will feature works byBrahms, Haydn, Copland, andStravinsky. John, I have thought it over and it is OK ifyou'll buy me a Hamburger at the Medici.See yog there I a.m. Saturday.Love ShelleyStudents interested in studying Karate oncampus leave message with Mr. Hass, Bart¬lett Gymnasium or Mr. Kaufman c/o officeBurton Judson Courts.HILLEL OPEN HOUSE. For new and return¬ing students. Sunday afternoon 2:00 p.m.Oct. 3.air-bus-rail-ship-hotels world-wide or local, do-t yourself or escorted quick tours, see us now.MARCO POLO, BU 8-5944.HELP BUILD THE HILLEL SUKKAHSunday, October 3rd, 5715 Woodlawn10:00 a.m.WANTEDPositions available for part time club leaders,asp. males. Work with teenage and youngerchildren evenings and Sunday afternoons. CallRE 1 0444.Tutor wanted one hour a day—mornings—forslightly handicapped five year old boy. DO3 6627. FOR RENT OR FOR SALEStudio apt in former mansion ideal for cpior professional person coppertone stovewd beamed ceiling.5757 S. Jeffery Call 288-6757NO LUCK HOUSE-HUNTING IN HYDEPARK? Live amid acres of green space in asensibly-priced home. A few top-quality housesare available this fall and winter in famousMarynook, the stable inter-racial community15 min. from the U of C. All homes less than10 yrs. old. $18,000 to $26,000 ; 2 to 4 bed¬rooms. For further data. Call SA 1-9084.Furn. and unfurn. V/2-8 rooms 75 8. up? ~8min. to U of C. Free tenant referal service.South Shore Commission. Call NO 7-7630.Furnished room in elevator building near cam¬pus and International House close to 1C sta¬tion. References requested Call: FA 4-0111before 7:30 or between 5 and 6.HELP WANTEDPart time. Must have pleasant speaking voiceand neat appearance. General clerical workat the HYDE PARK HERALD. Typing desir¬able but not essential. Ml 3-8533.the YOUR INVITATION TO VISITWALLERGALLERYWHERE YOU WILL FIND A LARGE SELECTION OF* Original Graphics• Oil Paintings By Contemporary European ArtistsWE ARE SPECIALISTS IN THE FIELD OFFINE CUSTOM FRAMING5300 BLACKSTONE - DO 3-74461 can save you almost $~t09 on a$25,000 Ordinary Life insurance pol¬icy, if you purchase now rather thanwait until you graduate or marry.This may be an important savings,plus protection right away. 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 thepremium payments until three months after you graduate.FREDRIC M. OKUNDIVISION MANAGERNational Ipife Insurance Company,120 South LaSa/ia Street, ChicagoCali me at^ CEntral 6-2500■■ ■ , ' , m i III!II mi ' MM ■ — HYDE PARK - UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO COMMUNITYBOOKSTORESRudolph Van Tellingen,1544 E. 53rd St.GENERAL USED BOOKSOPEN DAILY & EVENINGSStaver, Booksellers,1301 E. 57th St.(Corner of Kimbark)QUALITY CLOTH ANDPAPERBACKS, SOCIAL SC.HUMANITIES, PHYSICAL SC.Reid Michener,5309 S. KimbarkVk.i ’•i.nri* iwkrmii lUSED BOOKSOPEN 6:00 P.M. TO MIDNIGHT The Book Nook,Hyde Park Shopping CenterHARD COVER AND PAPERBACKBOOKS - CARDSGreen Door Bookshop,1450 E. 57th St. 4OPEN 12 TO 12PAPERBACKS, HARDCOVERSFINE CHILDREN'S BOOKSN Y. TIMES ON SUNDAYJoseph O'Gara,1360 E. 53rd St.• a am /m /\r nmu*Ot/kia’ fit lM a w • • i«n«SCHOLARLY BOOKSOPEN 2 P.M. TO 9 P.M.\t. 1, 1965 CHICAGO MAROONNSA Congress down on US Viet policy New masters 1iOp UC SUmmeby Rita DershowitxCollegiate Press Service(Editor's note: The National StudentAssociation (NSA), a nationwidepolitical organization for collegestudents, holds a congress everyyear at a major midwestern uni¬versity to formulate policy onworldwide political issues and onissues that affect students. UC,one of the charter members of NSA,was one of over 200 colleges anduniversities in attendance at thisyear’s session, held at the Uni¬versity of Wisconsin in Madison.The following is a report on thetwo-week series of meetings anddiscussions as prepared by theCollegiate Press Service.)MADISON, Wis.—After atwo-week merry-go-round ofseminars, speakers, and legis¬lative pleanaries, 1,000 repre¬sentatives to the 18th annual Con¬gress of the United States NationalStudent Association returned to♦heir campuses, leaving the asso¬ciation with some of the most far-reaching resolutions and legislationin its history. Highlights from theCongress, held in Madison, Aug. 22• Sept. 2, include:* Endorsement of the studentprotests at Berkeley and a broadermandate to NSA national officersto become more active in support¬ing future campus protests.* A call for ending all U.S.“offensive” military action in Viet¬nam as the first step towards ageneral cease-fire and negotiations,but support for U.S. “presence” inthat country.* Opposition to tax credits forfamilies with children in college.* Unconditionnal condemnationof U.S. intervention in the Domini¬can Republic.* A call for the United Statesto sponsor admission of Red Chinato the United nations.* Support for the concept offree public higher education.♦Endorsement of rentstrikes, school boycotts, and sit-insto oppose slum conditions in theNorth.Civil disobedienceThe Congress sat in judgment ofthe Berkeley rebels and over¬whelmingly voted for acquittal, de¬claring that “the decision by stu¬dents to resort to non-violent pro¬test against unjust administrativepolicy was a legitimate and re¬sponsible course of action to take.”The resolution, passed after threehours of intense debate, also di¬rected NSA to coordinate a fund¬raising campaign to help cover thelegal expenses of demonstratorsarrested in the Sproul Hall sit-ins and to donate a '•symbolic" $100 tothe Free Speech Union DefenseFund.In a separate resolution the Con¬gress gave NSA’s national office aclear mandate to play a more ac¬tive role in future campus proteststhan it did at Berkeley. After urg¬ing student participation in univer¬sity and college policy-making pro¬cesses, the resolution declared,“When all rational and reasonableattempts have been made to se¬cure a forum for student discon¬tent, and have failed, NSA recog¬nizes the need for students to usenon-violent, extraordinary mea¬sures to secure the minimal stan¬dards of student involvement in thecollege community.”THE RESOLUTION arose out ofcriticism from the Liberal Caucusat the Congress that NSA playedno significant role at Berkeley orat other campuses where problemsdeveloped last year. Ed Schwartzof Oberlin College, chairman of theLiberal Caucus, charged that NSA“spent another year rendering it¬self irrelevant to the country, tothe student community, and to itsown ideals.”Not idiots“This association always hasbeen the unheeded prophet of high¬er education. For a decade, wehave warned that a student cannotbe expected to think if he cannotinquire, and that he cannot be ex¬pected to decide if he cannot act.We have warned that a universityw'hich treats its students as some¬thing less than people will discoverthat its students will treat the in¬stitution as something less than auniversity.THE VIETNAM RESOLUTIONtook five hours of debate, but mostof the battling was done in endlesshours of committee drafting ses¬sions. Even after the long debate,the resolution which reached thefloor remained basically unchang¬ed.As finally passed, it criticizedUnited Slates policy for placing“excessive attention on the mili¬tary aspects of the present con¬flict” and for failing “to come toterms with its underlying social,political, and economic aspects.”US should stayThe resolution further declared,however, that *NSA believes thatthe United States’ presence inSouth Vietnam is one of the ele¬ments necessary until guaranteescan be found to assure self-deter¬mination for the South Vietnamesepeople.” The major fight of thefloor debate came over the liber¬als’ attempt to remove this pas¬sage. It failed. Highlighted by the appointment of tho ‘masters of the its enrollment being Negroes fr<~v — -rr - \ K., deprived homes and employ ifive new area colleges, the summer quarter was markka o\ flexibje curiicuium that will alljimportant changes in the College, the graduate divisions, each student to progress at his ojand the Hyde Park-Woodlawn community. spffd in each *re*'J The pre-school program willDean of the College Wayne C. . elude research on the effectsBooth named Ray Koppelman as ^X-inficUon scholarship, mu- *«'.y “ r*master of the biological sciences 5 conversation ... a splendid sequent school career.college, Arthur Heiserman as College man.” .master of the humanities college, The University’s graduate drn^ housing projects and spedRobert Platzman as master „/ the “j'aeobson. a re- ™»ile 'physical sciences college, Donald search specialist in nuclear medi- According to Julian Levi, profiLevine as master of the social cjne> was named dean of the divi- sor of urban studies at UC and clsciences college and James Red- sion of biological sciences. ecutive director of the South Ealfield as master of the new general He is replacing H. Stanley Ben- Chicago Commission, the Univerjstudies “fifth” eolle&e nett, who asked to be relieved of ty will pay salaries high enough. ‘ . . j the deanship to go back to re- attract skilled, experienced teacKoppelman, an asaoca.e proles- „rv, as ers l0 ,he new school.sor of biochemistry, is currently director of the newly-established The first of more than 20head of the College biology section, laboratories for ceil biology, shops run by small craftsmena job equivalent in the current Col- Jacobson has been chairman of artisans opened in Hyde Parklege structure to his new position the department of medicine at UC ing the summer as the HanK. ...... . . since 1961 and has served as direc- Court urban renewal project atas master of the biological sciences ^ ^ ^ Argonn€ cancer research st. and Harper ave. neared corcollege under the Levi College hospital since 1951. pletion.reorganization plan. The University took a step to in- The project, sponsored by tlHeiserman, an associate profes- volve itself in the problems of special Harper Court F oundattolsor of English and humanities, has elementary and high school stu- was initiated to provide few**. , . , dents in Woodlawn this summer business space for small craftsmdbeen serving as. chairman of the wJlh the reiease 0f p]ans for an e*. displaced by other urban renew!College English department. Platz- perjmentai school where faculty projects in Hyde Park and unablman is a senior physicist at the members can put newr educational to meet the higher costs of existiHUC-run Argonne National Labora- ideas into actual practice. shop space in Hyde Park,tory and a professorial lecturer in The plan includes both a •*‘ec®n' Harper Court ^^’ated. . dary school and a pre-school edu completion of the constructionphysics at the University. cational program. The projected the three buildings that makeLevine, who ranks as an asso- secondary school will have a heler- the court with a public ceremoiciate professor of sociology and the ogeneous body with at least half of July 29.social sciences, has been chairmanof Soc II. Redfield is currently anassistant professor in the commit¬tee on social thought and w’as therecipient this year of a Quantrellaward for excellence in undergrad¬uate teaching.The full Levi plan, under whichthe College will be divided into thefive area colleges, is scheduled togo into effect in autumn quarter,1966.The College summer was alsomarked by a tragic event. PerrinLowrey, head of the humanitiessection of the College and associateprofessor of humanities and Eng¬lish, died June 25 in an automo¬bile accident on the campus ofSweet Briar College, Sweet Briar,Virginia. He was 41.Lowrey was the author of num¬erous articles and short stories, in¬cluding a book entitled Th« GreatSpeckled Bird and Other Stories.He was reported to be working ona novel at the time of his death.In a special statement, GwinKolb, chairman of the UC Englishdepartment, described Lowrey as Two health services merge in Billing;The student health service and “We will also try to provide mo:the employee health service have ongoing and continuous medicbeen combined in a new expanded attention to both students and ehealth center in Billings hospital. new quarters for a possible univeThe new center, which occupies Previously, Moy said, the twithe old student health and employee health services had been providihealth corridors on the first floor basically the same medical faciliand in the basement of Billings, ies with all the attendant duplicwill have added facilities including tion and waste. The student healtwo full-time physicians (instead service he said, was very crowdof the previous one), more nurses, with “no place to go up, down,aixd extra examining rooms. about.” Moy said that combininAccording to Richard H. Moy, (be services provides four extrdirector of the student health serv- rooms on the first floor of Billing;ice, the ratio of patients to physi- as well as extra basement facilcians will be decreased for bothservices, and there will be a defi¬nite nursing station, instead of hav¬ing nurses strung out along thefirst floor corridor as they havebeen in the past. ities.The new health center will serwfor five years until the plans foiuarters for a possibly unive!ide health service are comMoy stated.v-.« mwcrJESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARS.WITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHEST% FISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd LAKE PARK HARDWAREAND HOUSEWARES CENTER"The Best Selection of HousewaresIn Hyde Park"1463 EAST 53rd ST.CHICAGO 15, ILLINOISPhone: HY 3-1869md-riESH°pInstruments — New, Used, AnliquCU1TARS, BANJOS, MANDOLINSBooks and Folk Muaic Magazine*DISCOUNT ON FOLK RECORDS5210 HARPER'WcagoNO 7-106011:30 to 6, 7:30 to 10 Mon.-FrL11:30 to 6, Saturday NOW HASKLHStereo Music SystemsIncluding the FamousMODEL ELEVEN PORTABLEWith Built-In Solid StateFM Stereo Tuner5210 S. HarperIn Harper CourtNO 7-1060 RANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open E von Inf* — Billie Trofonso, Monoferoa*BOOKSSTATIONARYGREETING (ARDSTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55 St.10% Student DiscountCOLLEGE:COIN-OP LAUNDERETTEALSO DROP-OFF SERVICEBRAND NEW EQUIPMENT12 LB. G.E. WASHERSGIANT DOUBLE LOADERS TOO!LARGE FLUFF-DRY DRYERSOPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - 7 A.M.-11 P.M.1449 E. 57th ST.CHICAGO MAROON Oct. 1, 1965 wheels*■&m ME 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the rest^foreign cor hospitalRETURNINGSTUDENTSgather to diecusethe past summer., 'V . *.* *$"'■ Photos by:Dick QanzLarry SchwartzDinah EsralFRIENDLY O'BOARDERS await the arrival of newstudents in New Dorms. ,-*** . /ksssgssssscsbwssO-Week SupplementGUITARS ANDSONGS passedtime at a picnicat the Point.PLACEMENT TESTS force students to choosebetween a, b, c, or d, while one student electsa moment of solitude. /4Crad study for professionsSpecialized pre-profession¬al education, long the bane ofgeneral-educated undergradu¬ates, is taught at the Universityof Chicago in seven professionalschools. Future businessmen, min¬isters, educators, librarians, law¬yers, doctors, and social workerscome to the University to learn, asa Business School handbook putsit, “an art, a science, a profes¬sion.”Graduate BusinessSchoolsSix years after the founding of theUniversity in 1898, the first under¬graduate courses in business wereoffered. The school now awards bothmasters and doctors degrees, andadministers three special pro¬grams: executive hospital admin¬istration, research management,and in coo^ration with the Grad¬uate Library School, business li-brarianship.The school continues to empha¬size its approach to business educa¬tion that was established 66 yearsago: “Education for business man¬agement is a lifelong process.”“Universities can make theirgreatest contribution to this processby teaching the disciplines andfields of knowledge that underlie thepractice of business and their appli¬cation to business management.”| Divinity SchoolThe Divinity School has the dis¬tinction of being older than theUniversity of which it is a part.It started in 1866 as the BaptistUnion Theological Seminary, be¬coming the Divinity School of theUniversity in 1892. From 1943 toI960, three other schools—The Chi¬cago Theological Seminary, theDisciples Divinity House, and theMeadville Theological Seminarywere, with the Divinity School,members of a Federated Theologi¬cal faculty, with the Universityawarding all degrees. There arestill interrelations between the schools, but the association hasbeen dissolved.“The primary purpose of the Di¬vinity School,” its bulletin states,“is to engage in disciplined theo¬logical research and inquiry into thenature and task of the Christianfaith. Only in this way can it ade¬quately teach and educate theolo¬gians for the complex and dedicatedprofession of the Christian ministryor for the life of scholarship, teach¬ing, and research.”Graduate SchoolOf EducationFrom the early 1930 until 1958,there was no University division re¬sponsible for the education of teach¬ers. In 1958 the Graduate School ofEducation was reformed to “enlistthe active collaboration in teachereducation and in curriculum studyand revision of various parts of theUniversity,” according to formerDean Francis Chase. It includes theUniversity’s pre-collegiate schools— the Nursery School, the Elemen¬tary School, the University HighSchool, the Orthogenic School, andseveral research, training, and ser¬vice agencies.The objectives of the EducationSchool, Chase has stated, are “toincrease knowledge on how learn¬ing takes place; to prepare teach¬ers who are skillful in expeditinglearning: to improve the content ofinstruction in our schools; to reor¬ganize teaching teams to makemore effective use of specializedtalents.”Established through a grant fromthe Carnegie Corporation in 1928,the Graduate Library School pro¬vides the opportunities for basicadvanced professional study andresearch in library science.GraduateLibrary SchoolThe Graduate Library School seesits purpose as follows: “To offerinstruction in the basic principles7'/-KCfrom our University ShopDISTINCTIVE FALL SPORTWEARstyled by us, in sizes 30 to 44 ^wTweed Sport Jackets in new, unusual coloringsiPlaids, diagonals, herringbones and stripesin greys, browns, olives or blues, from $50Wool Flannel Blazers in navy, $55Odd Trousers (sizes 29 to 37) in worsted-flannel or wool whipcord, $22.50 $in wide-wale cotton corduroy, $14.50$in cotton chino, $ 10.50'Quilted ski or outdoor jackets withnylon shell, contrasting linings, $32.50Warm, practical outerjackets, from $35ESTABLISHED 1BU^<3^£othXS@0Hens 2r $oys' Itonlshinge, flats74 E. MADISON, NR. MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO, ILL.' 60602NEW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANC WOO and practices of library administra¬tion and service; to provide oppor¬tunity for advanced study in specialphases of library science; to trainstudents for the teaching of libraryscience; to train students in themethods of investigating problemswithin the field; to organize andconduct investigations not onlythrough the personnel and studentsof the School but also in cooperationwith students and organizations inthe library and other fields; and topublish the results of such investi¬gations.”Law SchoolA school of law was included inthe original plan for the Universityof Chicago but was not finally open¬ed until ten years later. The LawSchool embodies the ideas of Wil¬liam Rainey Harper, who said in1890: “An education in law impliesa scientific knowledge of law and oflegal and juristic methods. Theseare the crystalization of ages of hu¬man progress. They can’t be under¬stood in their entirety without aclear comprehension of the historicforces which they are the productand of the social environment withwhich they are in living contact. Ascientific study of law involves therelated sciences of history, econom¬ics, philosophy—the whole field ofman as a social being.” Thus, theLaw School was to be and is anintegral part of UC life.Medical SchoolNot until clinical facilities wereconstructed on campus in 1927 didthe University have a MedicalSchool. Established primarily totrain competent physicians, theschool is an integral part of the Di¬vision of Biological Sciences.Dean of Students Joseph Ceithamlhas cited a significant fact that theUC Medical School the only one inthe country with a completely full¬time faculty devoted entirely toteaching medical students, caringfor patients in the University Clin¬ics and engaging in medical re¬search.SocialService AdministrationEducation for social welfare beganat UC when in 1908, the School ofCivics and Philanthropy wasfounded. This became the Schoolof Social Service Administration in1920.The school provides professionaleducation for work with public andprivate social agencies and ad¬vanced work as preparation forteaching, administration and re¬search related to the practice of so¬cial work and publishes a quarterlyjournal: the Social Service Review. BeadleGreetings from UC's PresidentAs a biologist, I recognizeSpring as the season of re¬newal and rebirth, but as anacademician, I always have feltthat Autumn is the time of yearto begin new enterprises. Itis a pleasure and a privilegeagain to welcome students re¬turning to the University ofChicago to continue their work,and to extend special greetingsto the 691 members of the en¬tering class and the 80 transferstudents.Students accepted at the Uni¬versity are a select group.Each has shown evidence ofbeing capable of achieving ex¬cellence. It is a sincere hope of all of us that the Universitywill be able to offer the kind of help, guidance, and inspira¬tion that will lead to the realization of the aspirations andambitions of all students.The University of Chicago is an institution in which im¬portant work is going on in almost every area of humanknowledge. In a real sense, students'Entering this Universityfor the first time are entering a hew phase of life. Workbegins in earnest, and I would remind each of you that theresponsibility for meeting the many challenges is yours. Yourachievements and accomplishments here will affect the patternof your entire life.The distinguished faculty of the University includes manyscholars of world renown. As you work with these men andwomen, you will approach the limits of human knowledge,wisdom, and experience. You all have found pleasure in intel¬lectual pursuits or you would not be here. It is to be hopedthat as you mature and advance in understanding in comingyears, you will find ever increasing excitement in your work.The College of the University of Chicago has a new dean,a distinguished scholar, Wayne Booth. This is his first full yearof service in this post. Since we are constantly seeking waysto improve administration and teaching, important changesare forthcoming. We are sure you will find them challengingand stimulating. Edward Levi, provost of the University, hasalso spent much time in formulating new plans for the Col¬lege, as have Dean of Students Warner Wick and other mem¬bers of the faculty.This is a memorable year in the history of the Universityof Chicago, for it marks the 75th Anniversary of the found¬ing of the University.You have my warmest wishes for. success. As we worktogether in this coming year, may the motto on the coat ofarms of the University of Chicago become a living reality foreach one of us: “Let knowledge grow from more to more; and>0 be human life enriched.”George W. Beadle, presidentDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th ST. EYE EXAMINATIONS DO 3-6866 — DO 3-7644PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES 'STUDENT fir FACULTY DISCOUNT- RIGHT ON CAMPUS -FOR YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS LARGE OR SMALL-AIR, STEAMSHIP, TOURS, RAH-MIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICELOBBY "Ad" BUILDINGTEL Ml 3-0800-EXT. 2301, 2302, 2303NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICES EXCEPTNOMINAL FEE FOR RAIL TICKETSCHICAGO MAROON Oct. j| lypd iHistory of the College: changes throughoutTHE COLLEGE was founded as College south of the Midway withhut one part of the University of its own faculty, budget, deanChicago. Unlike many other buildings, and equipment, and ac-ttniversities, UC was born full cept students after their sopho-grown,”—not just as an undergrad- more year of high school. His planuate college with which graduate was stalemated in debate and itand professional schools later be- was not until Max Mason took overcame affiliated, but as a center of the presidency of the Universitygraduate and under-graduate edu- that it was agreed that the Collegecation. would remain a part of theIn UC’s early days, undergrad- University,uates attended two Colleges: first, Ernest Hatch Wilkins, dean ofa junior college and then a senior the College under Burton, intro-college. The junior college was re- duced UC’s first survey course,garded by UC’s first president, “The Nature of the World and ofWilliam Rainey Harper, as merely Man,” a two-quarter course featur-an extension of secondary school, ing lectures by leading UC scien-Under the somewhat fixed junior tists. Its success prompted othercollege curriculum, all students departments to design similarStudied languages, science, and courses,mathematics; most were required Reorganization proposedto rtudy English,nd history In ,*», . hculty ^mittoeHARPER INTRODUCED the in- chaired by Chauncey Boucher wasnovation of four graduation cere- appointed to study a reorganizationmonies each year because he felt <rf the undergraduate curriculum,the student should “receive his di- The committee’s report would havejplonia not because a certain num- abolished the credit system, underber of years has passed and a which students graduated afterday in June has arrived,certainbut because his work is,P Senior collegefor specializationAs administrators and facultywere loath to allow junior college completing a certain number ofcourse hours.It would have substituted re¬quirements that the student passcomprehensive examinations. Tograduate from the junior college,into «;Zr rcZll eX*mS EngUsh> * forei*n ^studentscourses, the junior college gradualty became regarded merely as aspan between high school and thesenior college, where the studentcould seriously specialize. Harper bachelor’s degree candidate fromfelt a student should know what he the senior college would face anwanted to study when he came to exam ^is major field and anoth¬er in his minor. Robert M. Hutchins, the grandeddy of ut allthe arts of reading, thinking, and ments of our common human na-speaking, together with m a them at- ture.M This course <rf study couldsocial science, and an electivecomprehensive which might in-wirkd would haTb^n r^utred^A ics- #“ bes‘ «Pla1i“r ^ chu!"“ 1k1<* "prep»« the young for intelli-- - reason,” said Hutchins. Such a gent action.. .They will havecurriculum would “endure the ele- learned what has been done in the past and what the greatest menhave thought. They will havelearned to think for themselves. Ifwe wish to lay a basis for advancedstudy, that basis is provided.” Inaddition, the College would serveas a terminus for those studentswho would end their formal educa¬tion in it.GRADUATION FROM the juniorcollege was to be based on thecompletion of seven comprehensiveexams: English composition, biolo¬gy. physical sciences, humanities,social sciences, and two electivesequences which represented asecond full year of work in two ofthe four general subject matter a-reas.Mathematics and a foreign lan¬guage were also required, but theywere submitted by most studentsas having been completed in highschool. Instruction in mathematicswas not even offered in the Col¬lege; students could fulfill the re¬quirement only through the homestudy division.Comp exams introducedUnder this new plan, a stepwhich was to last in some degreeright up to the present was intro¬duced: uniform comprehensive ex¬ams. Under the new system, stu¬dents could proceed at their ownrate and could take an examwhenever they felt ready for it. Allcourses were compulsory exceptEnglish Composition, which(Continued on page ten)the University.* The first Dean of the College,Harry Pratt Judson, succeededHarper as President of theUniversity. Judson envisioned aone-year general education collegefollowed by a three year seniorcollege for specialization. His plan,however, was never enacted.Judson placed more emphasis onvocational training than had Har¬per. Agreeing with Harper thatthere must be “no inflexible baragainst advancement,” Judson The Hutchins collegeTHE DAY BEFORE the facultywas to discuss the committee’s re¬port, however, President Mason re¬signed. Three years later, underChancellor Robert Maynard Hutch¬ins, a “New Plan,” somewhat sim¬ilar to the Boucher committee re¬port, was adopted for the College.The plan was preceded by an ad¬ministrative reorganization of theUniversity, which created five divi- SuMeidy.thought it “quite possible lo obtain s‘ons.:. tte College and the gradu-ate division of biological sciences,a general culture in a Collegecourse and yet . . . plan a goodpart of the work so that it will leaddirectly toward a profession al¬ready chosen.”DURING HIS ADMINISTRA¬TION, there was almost n3'Tacultyconcern for the College. Atten¬dance at College faculty meetingsin the two year period followingWorld War 1 averaged less thanten. The lack of an autonomousCollege hurt teaching standards.Judson, like Harper, considered re¬search of prime importance, and physical sciences, humanities, andsocial sciences.“The College” was given controlonly over the first two years ofwork, formerly the period of the“junior college.” The graduateschools took over from the old“senior college,” and the third-and fourth-year programs weremore closely linked to graduateprograms.A COLLEGE FACULTY, largelyautonomous and divorced from thedivisions, came into being. A staffcame into existence for each Col-so graduate students taught under- jege course an(j planned it. Syllabigraduate courses, and the annual were introduced to encourage inde¬turnover was high. v v jl pendent study. Class attendanceDoldrums during 20's was made voluntary.' In the 1920’s a number of depart- The curriculum applied Hutch,mental courses offered in the first ins’ theory of a universal schemetwo years were taken in many of education: “Education impliescombinations, and produced “no teaching. Teaching implies know!-common foundation of basie gene*- edge. Knowledge is truth. Truth isal education.” *♦. everywhere the same. Hence edu-"Generally students didn’t dis- cation^ should everywhere be thecuss intellectual matters because ‘ , ...they didn’t have anything in com- What everyone should knowmon to talk about," said Aaron The course of study in the Col-Brumbaugh, a former dean of the lege consisted of “the greatestCollege.IT WAS SUGGESTED that theCollege be dropped altogether.Chauncey S. Boucher, dean of theCollege in the late 1920’s, explainedwhy die College continued: it pro¬vided the departments with an op¬portunity to select promising re¬search students; it brought in rev¬enue which helped pay for re¬search and graduate instruction;and it attracted contributions fromits alumni, who were wealthierthan graduate school alumni.Judson*s successor; Ernest De-Witt Burton, wanted to move theLOUIE'S BARBER SHOP books of the Western world, and 'A-A'A' holed publisher in Chireports there is a simple tjnique for acquiring a powerful; memory which can pay youreal dividends in both businessand social advancement aniworks like magic to give youadded poise, necessary self-con¬fidence and greater popularity^1 According to this publisher,many people do not realize howmuch they could influence otK-<ers simply by remembering'accurately everything they see,hear, or read. Whether in busi¬ness, at social functions or eveni in casual conversations withnew acquaintances, there areiways in which you can domi¬nate each situation by your[ability to remember.To acquaint the readers ofI this paper with the easy-to-ifollow rules for developing skillremembering anything you[choose to remember, the pub-have printed full detailstheir self-training method. a new book, “Adventures inletnory,” which will be mailedfree to anyone who requests it.jpbligation, .Simply sendyour request to:Memory Studies, 835 DiverseyParkway; Dept C126, Chicago,I1L 60614. A postcard will do*Please include your Zip Code.1303 E 53 SfrtFor a PERSONALITY haftWt3 Chairs - No WaitigfFA 4-3878 A RABBI'S REPORTON VIET NAMRABBI JACOB J. WEINSTEINK.A.M. TEMPLE. Member of Emergency Clergymen's Mission to'lyiet'ffani Hnder tho auspices of The Fellowshipof Reconciliation. ...Thursday Hillef House40ct 7 - 8:00 P.M. 5715 S. Woodlawn WHYDO ALL LEGSHEAD TOPAR DRUGS?TV RENTALN.Y. TIMESEVERY SUNDAYWALL STREETJOURNAL DAILYPLENTY OFFREE PARKINGComplete Camera Department — Darkroom SuppliesDISCOUNT PRICKKODAK D*20 EXP PLUS X FILM>; 35 MM ti ,85c Listwltii coupon59*JUST WONDERFULHAJRSPRAY49* AdjustableIRONING TABLEReg. 4.87with coupon $3WeH ventilated a!! steel withbaked enamel finish. 1 -35".Pad and Cover $1STEAM & DRY IRONS $6.95w.vTOOTHPASTEReg. 89cwith coupon :■ with coupon 59Open every day9a.rn.-10 p.m.Sales Prices End Oct. 10f. V 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON © 9Death of comps marks Colleger recent past(Continued from page nine)could be avoided by placement.In 1933, jurisdiction over the lasttwo years of the University highschool was transferred to the Col¬lege faculty, but it was not until1937 that the new four year entitywas recognized officially as the“College.”THEN IN 1936, prior to this offi¬cial recognition of the College, afaculty curriculum review recom¬mended further undergraduatechanges. Fifteen comprehensiveswere required for graduation:Three in humanities, three insocial sciences, three in reading,writing and criticism, three yearsof a combination of physical andbiological sciences, one year ofphilosophy, and two years of elec¬tives. In addition, students wereexpected to prove competence in aforeign language and in mathemat¬ics.Then came World War II and agreat decline in enrollment. Facul¬ty members took advantage of thepaucity of students, however, toturn once again to the developmentof undergraduate education. Theresult was another changed Collegein 1942. The two and four year pro¬grams were combined, and the“Hutchins BA” was awarded uponthe completion of the general edu¬cation requirement.Several course changes weremade at this time. Mathematics,history of western civilization andgeneral language study courseswere introduced, and HumanitiesIII was changed so as to accom¬modate work in a foreign lan¬guage. AS A RESULT of this, by 1950the two year BA program found it¬self in trouble. Other colleges,when considering applications forgraduate schools, could not look onthe two year BA as representingmore than two years work. Thus,students who had spent three orfour years at UC were not beinggiven credit for their extra time.Enrollment dropped as a resultIn 1951, amid dropping enroll¬ment and a steadily worseningneighborhood situation, LawrenceA. Kimpton was named chancellor.He commended at the time that theproblem with the UC College wasthat it was not relating to “the to¬tal American educational process.”Furthermore, although he felt thatthe Hutchins BA “was the finestsystem of general education thatthe US had ever seen,” he finallydecided to stop continuing to a-ward it.KIMPTON'S DECISION tookconcrete shape in 1954, when theFilbey Report, composed by thenvice-president Emery T. Filbey,added one year of specialization tothe 14-comp BA program. The BA,according to Filbey’s reportwas to be awarded jointlyby the college and the divisionsthus reducing the College’s autono¬my. The College immediatelycountered with its still-existing tu¬torial studies and professional op¬tion programs.The Filbey Report met with agreat deal of opposition. Through¬out 1954 students demonstrated infront of the administration building,in front of Kimpton’s home, andoutside of faculty senate meetings. Nevertheless, the report was en¬acted, and four years later the Col¬lege was modified still further.The "new" new collegeA committee appointed by Kimp¬ton took over a year (1957-8) tocome up with its recommendation,but the final result has great bear¬ing on the College of today. Thecommittee’s report established theCollege as a complete four year in¬stitution, devoting two years ofwork to general education, oneyear to specialization, and oneyear to “free and guided elec¬tives.” Concentration require¬ments, the report said, could in nocase amount to more than two anda half years of work.PERHAPS MORE important, theCollege faculty was re-empoweredto determine the degree require¬ments for its various programsand to actually award the degrees,thus returning to it the autonomy that it had lost in 1954.Alan Simpson was appointed in1959 to administer this “New NewCollege” program as Dean of theCollege. He said at the time that“we have balanced the claims ofspecialized training against thoseof general education. We haveweighed the claims of individualchoice against an earlier faith inuniformity ...”Simpson cuts compsSimpson's first move was to re¬duce the number of comps to ten.This left two years for each of hu¬manities and social sciences, oneyear for each of foreign language,English composition, mathematics,physical sciences, biologicalsciences, and two quarters of thehistory of western civilization.IN RECENT YEARS, the compsystem has been dying a gradualdeath. The only holdouts are thewestern civ. sequence (which was raised to a three quarter require¬ment in 1962), all romance lan¬guages, and the first year of socialsciences. All the other originalmembers of the ten comp plannow award grades every quarter.The "Levi" collegeThe last major change in theCollege has been the creation of anarea colleges system and a morerepresentative faculty CollegeCouncil, as stipulated in the “LeviReport,” a document preparedlast summer by provost and thenacting dean of the College EdwardH. Levi. College dean, WayneBooth has expressed his support ofit, and several changes should beforthcoming in the near future. Inthe meantime, the College finds it¬self where it has always found it¬self: in a state of change andupheaval, with the final end theproduction in the best possible wayof both scholars and citizens.Grofman extends greetingForFull TimeCollegeStudents Only NT I will not add my voice to themyriad of voices which havesought to explain to you what theUniversity of Chicago is all about.This university is a self-consciouscommunity whose members feelthat no one understands it or them.As a result, the University, and inparticular, the College, is alwaystrying to explain itself to itself—toisolate the features of its unique¬ness and its greatness.Like the university itself, theUniversity of Chicago Student Gov¬ernment considers itself a ratherunique institution. Your most im¬mediate contact with Student Gov¬ernment will probably be via theservices it offers to the Universitycommunity—an extensive charterflight program, discount ticketservice, student loan service, off-campus housing file, extensivespeakers’ program, etc. But theseservices, although important, areonly a minor part of what SG is allabout.Ours is a Student Governmentand not a Student Council. The pri¬mary purpose of Student Govern¬ment, as I conceive it, is to involvestudents in the University decisonmaking process—to improve theintellectual, physical, and socialfacilities of the University commu- SG President Bemie Grofman* mmmm w. tm mmmm mm mi wm mnity of which we are a part. By in¬volving students in the Universitydecision making process, I do notmean merely using students assources of raw data or as consul¬tants for decisions which are reallybeing made by others. I do meanfull participation by students in thedecisions which immediately andFREECHECKINGACCOUNTSERVICE• No minimum balance• No monthly service chargeall you need to do to open an accountis bring us proof of attendance at anycollege-anywhere in the United States.IN CHICAOOFIFTY-THIRD STREET AT LAKE PARK AVENUEI PLAZA 8*4600MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION10 CHICAGO MAROON Oct. 1, 1965 SEE✓ THE NEWDATSUN FOR ,66Check In At Your DATSUN DealerToday-Check Out In A DATSUN✓See the famous “Four-Ten" 4-dr. Sedans & Station Wag¬ons $1666 and $1860, and the fabulous SPL-311 Sports Carscomplete for only $2546. Drive these new DATSUNS and seewhy DATSUN-owners make up the fastest growing importedcar list in America today.(hicagoland DATSUNSALES - SERVICE - PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AVE.CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60620 m Beverly HillsPHONE 239 3770 directly affect their lives.To this end, a number of student-faculty committees have recentlybeen created under SG auspices,and more are in the offing. Thesecommittees have decision makingpowers in such areas as undergrad¬uate orientation activities, socialrules, and budget allocations forstudent activities. In the past sev¬eral months SG organized a seriesof small informal student-facultydiscussions of curriculum in thephysical sciences, of which a dozenhave been held to date. Similardiscussions are being initiated inthe other areas. SG consultantboards will be functioning this yearin such areas as library facilities,Bookstore policy, and StudentHealth services.To members of the committee, asecondary, but still major purposeof Student Government at the Uni¬versity of Chicago is to foster dia¬logue on the educational, social,and political issues which affectstudents as students and as cit¬izens. To this end we are sponsor¬ing a extensive speakers’ program,in addition to issue seminar discus¬sions, and informal student-facultysuppers.Student life on this campus isfragmented to an unfortunate de¬gree. SC^.has tried to serve as aunifying focal point for student ac¬tivity and for student-faculty con¬tact. Student Government cannot,however, function in a vacuum.Please feel free to take advantageof SG’s many services. More im¬portantly, feel free to visit the Stu¬dent Government office to discussany aspect of campus life. TheGovernment Office, Ext. 3272,3,4 at1212 E. 59th Street, is open Mon. -Fri., 10:30-5:30. If you are interest¬ed in participating in SG activities(student-faculty committees, con¬sultant boards, etc.) or interestedjust in talking, please drop by. Alltoo often students, undergraduateas well as graduate, fail to realizethat this, after all, is their univer¬sity.ATTENTION!!-S0METHIN6 NEW-• . . You Don't Have ToTake That Trip AboardTHOMAS IMPORTS& GALLERIES DE MONTMARTREGIFTS - ODD JEWELRYHANDICRAFTFrom Around TheWorld1352 E. 53rd - 684-6370sAUTY SALONExpertPermanent Wavingand is • ■Mafr Cuttingi Tinting1950 I. 53rd SL mr 3-83kims of education.earning must be ongoing,not static processby Wayne C. Booth, dean of the CollegeWhy is it that we never hear anyone complaining about his lack of education? Every manteems to trust his own form of ignorance, and we all assume that the aim of education isto* bring the world up to our level. Perhaps there’s nothing very strange in this. We havejvery human motive especially in a university—to buttress complacency. After all, if Ilow anything at all, it is easy_ find an abundant supply of foolsvho don't know what I know; thoughit may be true that they in turnenow some tunes not in my reper-lma\ those are, fortunately, the^ast beguiling tunes.\ professor told me this week|that nobody can be called reallyeducated unless he knows Latinand Creek; you might guess that|he is an expert in both languages.U student told me that he “got afcrSt class education in his first two* Lears at Chicago.” He said he wasafraid that we might change thegeneral requirements, thus depriv¬ing future generations of what helad been fortunate enough to re-I ceiveUrges pursuitM ^.When education is thought of in%his way as something possessed>v some men and lacked by others, can see education as a process andnot a fixed goal; those who knowwhatever must be known—whetherof facts, of concepts, of skills—totake part in the process; those whorefuse to let what they know getin the way of further learning. Theyoung man who asked, on Mondaynight (Aims of Education, Part I)anyone should require him to learnsomething he does not alreadywant to learn sounded to me likea man in danger. The professorwho told me that there is only oneaim of education that we shouldbother about, and that is to teachstudents to read and write, sound¬ed like a man in danger—he wasso clearly confident that he knewjust exactly how to read and howto write. Both these men seem tome in radical danger of lettingtheir educational past get in theway of their educational future.But is anyone of us safe? Proud ofhaving climbed so high, we turnto enjoy the spectacle of the sweat¬ing climbers below. It is the aimof any educational communitygenuine education becomes impos[ible. Knowledge as a possession Is Boothas inert as greenbacks; it can sup¬port a miserliness and snobbery as . , .solidly as any other worldly poss- There is something in the autjf10" M“calio” is "ot *M»ctMng “m" air (my Hr* Mu worth the name to jog us a bit, inTU we have but something that bigu.Ues intended) that leads me ,hc hope lhal ten years from nowwe pursue, and at the heart of the into this oracular tone. Let me we shall be able to look back downpur-nut lies Ca ch-22: as soon as try now to at,arKjon aphorism and on our present selves and laugh.LTesYaVhe hadn’t irony and say right out what I take None of this gets us very far, ofMost ot us have by now learned our business to be. c™rse' s,nce lhere arc processesjuom ui us» nave uy uow iMintu and processes, some of them lead-that education is something more THE AIM OF EDUCATION is to ing into blind alleys. It is only fairthan a union card. But I am say- produce educated men and women, of me, now, to circle back aroundTnt; that we are in danger, in our Educated men and women are and make myself vulnerable to mysophistication, of turning it into a those men and women who know own charge: here is a brief, frozenpiece of costume jewelry. If you, enough to know that they are not description of what I think thedear reader, have not used any educated (Catch-22 again); who process should include (Lord, Ipart of your education as a pieceof costume jewelry within the lasttwenty four hours (please try to be, honest) the dean’s office will a-"fVard you, on presentation of proofa complete set of The GreatBooks, with Syntopicon. (You mustof course, present proof thatif you so desired; there are noprizes in this contest for those whohave known only a cloistered vir¬tue. never learning the temptationsof learning!)ARE YOU, literate reader of the^Maroon, (hypocrite, lector) areyou educated? On your alfl^'er,(student, teacher, administratori )may depend the possibilities of gen¬uine education at Chicago duringthe time of your stay here. Ofcourse you are educated, by com¬parison with most men in the♦ world. Literate, honored your ver¬ba! and mathematical scores (far,far into the six hundreds, bothverbal and math!), or hired, per¬haps, because of the promisingthesis or the delivered book—ofcourse you are educated, even asthe dean is educated. Most of us* know things about the physicalworld that Einstein, who died tooearly, did not know (poor Einstein,who never heard of quasars or theeight fold way). Most of us knowa great deal of history that Gibbonperforce ignored, and all of us knowplays and poems and novels thatShakespeare, and Yeats and knewand Dickens knew not. We can,most of us cite psychological theor-““vt ^reud had never dreamed thank thee that my theories of ed¬ucation are not as other men’s).Learn to learnIt should be the aim of all edu¬cation—not just of “general edu¬cation”—to learr how to learn. Ayoung man Monday night asked,“What is the use of education iften years from now we will haveforgotten all of what has beentaught us?” James Redfield rightlyreplied by quoting Plato on thekindling of fires that will not goout (you cannot expect me, facedby a Maroon deadline on Tuesdayto go look up the precise quotation!)If what you have “received” fromcollege is inert information, whatyou will have when you have for¬gotten the information is nothing.If you have on the other hand,learned to learn, ten years from nowyou will have learned things thatwill make your meagre four-yeargarnering look pitiful by compari¬son.But how do we learn to learn?By learning how to recapture forourselves what other men havelearned.THE EDUCATED MAN knowshow to learn in conversation. Heknows how to listen actively, howto take in the other man’s point,how to probe his own and othermen’s assertions to discover thetrue grounds of agreement and dis¬agreement. Easy to say, hard todo. (How long has it been sinceyou had a discussion which leftyou a changed man?)The educated man knows how tolearn by by reading. Let me raisemyself to my full height and pom¬pously declare that most students these days never learn to read, ifby reading we mean the discoveryof what is really being said. Showme a BA candidate who can reallyread for himself, and I‘ll show youa man who will be making originalcontributions to the world withinfive years.BIG NEW CONTEST: I herebyoffer a $25.00 prize to any under¬graduate at Chicago who can reada chapter from any major philos¬opher, and then re-state the argu¬ment in a way that might conceiv¬ably satisfy the original author.Decisions of the judge (myself) willbe final. Deadline: December 1,1965.How do we learn? By learninghow to think.The educated man knows how tolearn by trying to communicatein writing. We too often think of“learning to write” as learning totell other people what we alreadyknow. But all writers know thatwriting is a process of discovery,and that in trying to make clearto others what we think we know,we discover how far we are fromthe truth and are thus' forced tothink into new territory. I heardthis week of a young mathematicianwho presented a new and brilliantproof to his mentors; he was toldit would make his internationalreputation and to go write it up.He went to write it up, and cameback a year later having discover¬ed, in the process of writing, flawsin his original proof and elabora¬tions that the mathematics did notreveal. (Don’t ask for proof of this(Continued on page eighteen). . . when there has been an addi¬tion to the family, it's high time tothink of an addition to your SunLife insurance portfolio.Aa a facal Sun Lfte oapreoMtiatfve, mayI aal upon you at row fmrtverPenca?Ralph J. Wood. Jr.. CLUMyda Park Bank laltdfag. Chicago IS. RLFAIrfax 4-6800 — Ht 2-2390OMIoa Moore 9 to 9 Mondays A Fridayslittl Hfl &W«ANC« company fiJF CANADA\A tiUIUAk CQMfAHX/ ' CAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THE THY 3-5300 FA 4-5525PIZZACHEESE Med.1.45 Large2.00SAUSAGE 1.80 2.35PEPPER & ONION 1.65 2.20BACON & ONION 2.15 2.70COMBINATION 2.95MUSHROOM 2.70SHRIMP 2.95THIS COUPON WORTH 35cON ONE PIZZA DELIVERYIN OCTOBERHYDE PARKHEADQUARTERS FOR:• Hardware* Housewares• Point Supplies* Everything NeededFor HomeOVER 35,00* ITEMSIN STOCKFREi Light Bulbs,Commonwealth EdisonBulb AgencyBERMAN'S ACEHARDWARE1377 E. 53rd BU t-2132'tmoan CAP AND GOWNTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO YEARBOOKReserve your copy nowfill out card inRegistration Packetand return to Bursar Only *5.00(*6.00 AfterPublication)f Students interested in working on the Yearbook may moot members of the Cap and Gownstaff on activities night — Friday, Oct. 1 — Ida Noyles HallOMftfllT / j. _r Jftk ,** *rs** ,1 f * Oct. 1, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON ft MHyde Park story: campus and cby David L. AikenCircle the answer (s) that best des¬cribe Hyde Park:(a) Chicago’s version of Green¬wich Viilage;(b) Chicago’s version of suburbia;(c) A state of mind;(d) Dominated by the presence ofthe University of Chicago;(e) Filled with reformers whogive Mayor Daley his biggest head¬aches;(f) The model for urban renewalprojects in residential areas of UScities;(g) All of the above, and more.The answer, of course, is (g).ANOTHER, PERHAPS simplerway of putting the answer is thatHyde Park is a unique community.What makes Hyde Park stand out,not only among neighborhood areaswithin Chicago, but among com¬munities across the country?There is no single answer. Obvi¬ously, not every neighborhood inthe country has a first-rate univer¬sity in its midst. But Hyde Parkwas a little out of the ordinary evenbefore the university came here in1892.At that time, the village of HydePark was inhabited by high-classprofessionals, most of whom had adecidedly liberal bent. The commu¬nity’s own co-operative supermar¬ket, now located in the 55th streetshopping center, is a product ofearly traditions of liberal thought.When Marshall Field gave theland for a new University of Chi¬cago campus in Hyde Park, thenew inil’.:: of faculty, students, andhangers-on set a new tone of even more liberality and intellectualferment.The 1892 World’s Fair (called the“Columbian Exposition”), whichwas held along the Midway area,bequeathed to the neighborhood anarea called the “Art Colony,” whichstood along 57th street betweenStony Island avenue and the ICrailroad tracks. This double row ofm iness or moved to Harper Court, aculture-cum-commerce center open¬ed this summer. It was pushedthrough in the interests of preserv¬ing such small shopkeepers by agroup of public-spirited Hyde Park¬ers led by Muriel Beadle, w'ife ofthe UC president.Craftsmen and public-spirited cit¬izens are examples of the type ofNew townhouses at 53rd and Woodiawnf' <'w*•' * * , ■ 'r-. ’ J i ' /' ~ '’J ' „ < - - , -:small stores, noted for their candy-cotton Gothic decorations, housedat various times such artists andthinkers as Theodore Dreiser, CarlSandburg, Sherwood Anderson, andThorstein Veblen.The small craftsmen who were“urban-renewed” out of the ArtColony have either gone out of bus- person for which Hyde Park is no¬ted. Mostly middle class, the neigh¬borhood is peopled largely by pro¬fessionals, artists, and universitypeople.AMONG HYDE Parkers, you canget up a good demonstration at thedrop of a tree. The frenetic demon¬strations over Mayor Daley’s plot^ ’,'5;^# 0“i(>’ *m 4mz ****A label doesn’t makeA "COHN & STERN" suit . . .It is within the realm of possibility to find one of our labelsand have it sewn into an ordinary suit or shirt.But that wouldn’t make it ours!Because we have — as you probably know — certain stand¬ards of excellence that all our clothing and furnishings mustmeet. Unless it does, we don’t buy it and you don’t get it.Not from us, anyway!Consider our traditionally styled clothing and furnishings.It is all manufactured by firms who are specialists in thisfield, bearers of time-honored names like . . . GANT SHIRT-MAKERS, BASS SHOES, H. FREEMAN & SONS, CAN¬TERBURY BELTS, LONDON FOG MAIN COATS, anda myriad of others.They’re all as finicky as we are. They sell only to storeswith a proper appreciation of correct fashion and outstand¬ing tailoring.And who gets the benefits? You do! With our label, too . . .a label you’ll be proud to have everyone see in your clothes!THE STORE FOR MEN6>&h* StanaTmtnt anil ©smjmsin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 to chop down 800 trees for a widen¬ed Outer Drive indicate the energythat can be called upon from HydeParkers when a vital interest isthreatened. Another example is theactive participation of Hyde Park¬ers in the continuous demonstra¬tions against Chicago school super¬intendent Benjamin C. Willis, whois accused of neglecting the educa¬tion of Negroes. Hyde Parkers wereamong those on the front lines mar¬ching all over the Loop area, inclu¬ding Dick Gregory, comedian-civilrights leader, who lives in Univer¬sity Apartments on 55th street. Athird issue over which Hyde Park¬ers have strong feelings is the pro¬blem of Hyde Park High school(See story on page one.)One way of observing the kind ofpeople who are attracted to HydePark is to attend a form of enter¬tainment called the “Hyde Parkparty.” Only at Hyde Park partiescan you choose among the activ¬ities of twisting, getting stoned,and discussing Plato, birth control,Dostoevski, or urban renewal.THE ATMOSPHERE of liberal¬ism is in evidence in many ways.Politically, Hyde Park has alwaysbeen an ornery corner of indepen¬dence from the city machine. Thepresent Fifth Ward Alderman, LeonM. Despres, continues a long trad¬ition of independent-minded gadflieson the body of the city council.Though Despres, a UC alumnus,is white, he has consistently pushedfor measures for equal Negrorights, such as a strong city openoccupancy ordinance. (Wags have,commented that Despres was the“only Negro on the City Council”until joined by Alderman CharlesChew in support of equal rightsbills. There are really six Negroeson the Council besides Chew, butthey are part of the Democraticmachine and aren’t about to rockthe boat with militant civil rightsdemands.)Despres also espouses such favo¬rite causes of Hyde Parkers aspreserving trees in Jackson Park,getting rid of School SuperintendentWillis, and fighting Mayor Daleywhenever opportunity presents it¬self. One of the best shows in town,for sheer dramatic tension, can beencounters between Despres andDaley's floor manager on the citycouncil, Thomas Keane (47th ward).Since Keane controls the machinebloc of the council, and Despres hasonly one or two consistent allies onthe body, the results of these battlesare usually foregone conclusions.He can put up a pretty good try,though.Despres’ predecessors include SenPaul Douglas and Robert C. Mer-riam who was a staff assistant toPresident Eisenhower, after run¬ning for Mayor as a Republican(an enterprise not likely to suc¬ceed).Community spirit andrehabilitationThe Hyde Park “spirit” featuresa strong sense of community partic¬ipation. Residents here are notedfor their active interest in theirneighborhood, and the dozens ofcommunity organizations they haveformed.THIS SENSE of interest and act¬ion, plus the heterogeneity of thepopulation, was crucial during theperiod of the early 1950’s.At that time, Hyde Park was ex¬periencing a decline in standards ofhousing. During the Second WorldWar, Chicago industry expandedgreatly for the war effort; the av¬ailability of jobs attracted largenumbers of Negroes from the South,and other workers, into the city.Coinciding with this influx wasa decision by the US Supreme Courtin 1947 barring racially restrictivecovenants in sale of real estate.These factors resulted in breaks inthe borders of the “ghetto” area;many Negroes moved into HydePark from the north and west, cros¬sing what had been the “naturalborders” of 47th street and CottageGrove avenue. Many real estate op¬erators, willing to make fast money,converted one-family units into twoOVERPOPULATION strained thecity’s ability to provide services;and three-family flats. conditions of deprivation sprea dlong with resultant crime.Many white residents fled foisuburbs; fear of crime increaIn 1949, some residents met toUHcuss the problem. They agre<&white families should not panicstay in the neighborhood.To dissolve inter-racial te:and to work on problems of upL.eein the neighborhood, such as ill-igconversions and lack of adeq iatjservices, residents formed the E !yPark-Kenwood Community <&i ftence (HPKCC) in February, 195 3Much of the Conference’s v orwas at first done by block cl ub:Tc reduce tensions, Negro fam liemoving into a block were invite d tthe next meeting of the block c!HPKCC THOUGHT of itself \truly “grass roots” organizat ion|and at its peak about one resit terin five was in some way-form :Uljor informally-connected with it.But the Conference could hot njiarshal enough support and resourceto take action against many sfurces of decline, such as the realtate operators. What was nwas the support of the most imtant part of the neighborhood, wAicowned a great amount of land, 'mlployed many residents, had lot; ojmoney—the University of ChicagoUC's early attitudeUC's Chancellor at the tim<* P*bert Maynard Hutchins, could |nobe bothered. When HPKCC leader?arranged a meeting with him i1951, Hutchins is reported to hnvgreeted them cordially and theannounced: “I am sorry to have tbe abrupt but I have another meeting which I’m obliged to atfcro«AAll I can say is that I am person¬ally strongly in favor of a Uni\er-sity policy of raciai non-discrimi¬nation.”According to UC professor of so¬ciology Peter Rossi’s book. ThePolitics of Urban Renewal, JCreal estate officers then indicai e<}clear disagreement with the G in¬ference's aims and policies.Most of UC’s action in the neij h-borhood before 1952, according toRossi, consisted of subsidizing Or¬ganizations concerned with enforce¬ment of housing codes, extensioniofrestrictive convenants and (after1948) “conservation agreement?!."IN 1952, however, LawrenceKimpton succeeded Hutchins MsChancellor, and made saving tpeneighborhood one of his primaryobjectives. '.The problem by then had become ieven more urgent. UC facultymembers were leaving becausethey feared for the safety of theirfamilies. Parents often objccteG UTletting their children attend UC be¬cause of the neighborhood.Community leaders approachedKimpton for help; they scheduled amass meeting in Mandel Hall f>rMarch 27, 1952. The night befo *ethe meeting, an instructor's wjfewas kidnapped; the resultant i*u£licity for the meeting produced anoverflow crowd.UC* arm of renewalAt the meeting, a “Committee <i»fFive” including Kimpton, was cho¬sen to draw up a program. It md-tand proposed a new organization I o*deal with crime and other prol>lems, the South East Chicago Coni-mission (SECC).According to Rossi’s book, anoth¬er organization besides the HPKC 2was thought necessary because theConference had failed to gain thesupport of the businessmen an j pmerchants in the area.SECC WOULD get much of itsmoney from the University; ;twould represent the “political ac ¬tion arm of the University.” A fevmonths after its formation, Julia iLevi was asked by ChancellorKimpton to become SECC’s exe.cu-,tive director. Brother of UC Prc -vost Edward H. Levi, Julian Levjiw'as a corporation lawyer, son ofprominent rabbi, with life-loniroots in Hyde Park.Known as an aggressive admitistrator Levi soon whipped up 4staff, and began an energetic proj.^gram aimed at eliminating violai-tions of housing codes and of per,sonal crimes. SECC was to investigate all such crimes, adding itfcown resources to those of city-12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 1, 1965community, renewal and traditionpread a-1 ioi the•ere a sed., 195>’sten: iion,f upkeepis ill r*galideq latethel !ydeCt/J fer-1.orkk elkibs.familiesavite’d toick c’self i>d, wt iehand,d lotChic ub.s „•nixation.resit tentform ally:h it.hot njiar-esouicesny si sur¬reali?it im‘mK>r-‘m-ofgo.imt* P<*-■ould jnotleathershim into hoveind then> have toer rrn et->i person-i Univer-diserwni-or of so-«k, Th*Ural,ndicaie<)the VC' >n-11of itsty;:al atA fe>yJulia incellorexecuPrLev(i►n offelonydminj-up kc proj.,vioiai->f perlvesti1ng it*city- agencies, and sometimes givingthose agencies a push when need-Don T. Blackiston, a professionalcriminologist, now works forSECC, keeping complete records ofall crimes and code violationscommitted in Hyde Park. He issaid to have data on all persons inthe area who have been arrestedor convicted, and can sometimeshelp police faster than their owninvestigators.The University’s connectionswith insurance companies, banks,and other businesses were used tomake real estate speculators toethe line.UC, SECC make renewal plan;*1953 AND early 1954 were devotedto preliminary planning by theSECC and HPKCC on the commu¬nity’s needs, and to getting supportfor a renewal program from City-Hall. It was agreed that the Uni¬versity and SECC would co-operatewith the Chicago Land Clearance»e neij h-rding toizing ^r-enforce-;nsion|of1 (after:ment.«j.ene<-binsdngprimajrybecome ifacultybecauseof their>ctef» iKTUC bje-roacheduled ala II fjirbefoj-es u ifentced anIittee <|)fas chj>-It motio5 I o*prol>o Com-a not! iipkc :ise th ein then an d ment building at 5472 until recent¬ly remained the lone hold out a-mong the landowners on thatblock. Classroom, library, and ad¬ministrative facilities will be builton the block between Greenwoodand University, while the semi¬nary’s students and faculty will behoused in apartments owned by theseminary on the block from 54thstreet to 54th place, between Uni¬versity and Woodlawn avenues.ANNOUNCEMENT OF the Luth¬erans’ plans to build on this sitestirred quite a fuss last year.Many people, especially studentswho had found apartments in thebuildings purchased by the Luth¬erans, protested that much-neededhousing in a well-integrated areaof Hyde Park would be sacrificed.This would both increase the hous¬ing shortage in the community,and reduce the degree of integra¬tion they argued. UC students wereangry at their administration foragreeing to sell the Lutherans53rd and Lake Park: due for renewal(C L C C), working three buildings which■ >?«&<Commissionclosely with HPKCC, in drawing uprenewal plans.This unusual arrangement gaveduties to these semi-public agen¬cies that have since been assumedby city govermental agencies,which were then still understaffed.Through a $100,000 grant to UCfrom the Marshall Field Founda¬tion in 1954, the SECC set up a full¬time planning unit whose director,Jack Meltzer, had offices on theUniversity campus.To get things done quickly, theUniversity decided to undertakethe responsibility for drawing uprenewal plans, and made a con¬tract for this task with the city, tolet its Planning Unit do the work.Meltzer worked closely with localinstitutions, community organiza¬tions, and private citizens.HPKCC's role has been des¬cribed as mainly a “transmissionwelt from the planners to residents,and, more important from resi¬dents to planners. The conferenceprovided an actively interested po¬pulace away to influence plans inseveral instances.MELTZER was ready threemonths after his appointment witha plan for 55th street, which thenwas lined with seedy-looking apart¬ments with mostly run-down store¬fronts. The first step was to teardown the buildings on the corner of55th and Lake Park Ave., along theIllinois Central tracks.A new shopping center, a high-rise “luxury” apartment develop¬ment, and rows of two-story townhouses were then built in the area.Since then, the complete destruc¬tion of most of the rest of thebuildings fronting 55th street hasproceeded apace; now Pierce Tow¬er stands alone on the south side ofthe street where once the Compasstavern stood as a neighborhoodcultural institution.Current work on the urban rene¬wal program is highly visible,especially along 55th street. A bar¬ren “disaster area” for over ayear since the last building wastorn down, 55th street is now beingwidened to four lanes with a centercurb, and landscaping has beenstarted on the buffer strip whichseparates the main street from theparallel “feeder” street.Between University avenue andGreenwood avenue, demolitioncrews moved in early in Septem¬ber to clear the block north of 55thstreet for the new seminary of theLutheran School of Theology,which is moving here from twocampuses in the suburbs.One co-operatively owned apart- had beenused for married student housing.In meetings with students andresidents, Lutheran seminary rep¬resentatives pointed out that theystrongly wanted a site near theUniversity, but not in “just any oldcorner of Hyde Park,” since a newLutheran church is scheduled to be built near the seminary site. It wasalso pointed out that the seminarywill add to the valued heterogenei¬ty of Hyde Park, since 20 percentof its students are Negro.UC, in supporting the Lutherans’move, promised UC students whohad been living on the affectedblocks that they would be givenpriority in University married stu¬dents housing, or assisted in find¬ing space elsewhere.Housing shortage seriousThe shortage of Hyde Park hous¬ing, both for students and everyoneelse, may be slightly alleviatedwhen the most recent fruits of theurban renewal program are com¬pleted. They are the several newtown house projects scatteredthrough the neighborhood. Thereare units now under constructionat sites including 55th and Ingle-side, Kenwood south of 55th, and53rd and Woodlawn. A long stripof land on the south side of 47th isnow vacant, awaiting action onproposals for town houses, whileconstruction has not yet gotten un¬derway on a town house-plus-medi¬um height apartment complexalong Cottage Grove from 54thstreet to 54th place.TOWN HOUSES are not going tohelp the many students who havetrouble finding Hyde Park apart¬ments, but a plan put forth by aUniversity committee offers somehope. A committee chaired by pro¬fessor of law Walter J. Blum lastspring proposed that the Universitybuild a highly imaginative complexof housing for both undergraduateand married students, plus faculty.Athletic facilities and eating placeswould also be included in this“new area.”The site would be along 55thstreet, from the present Piercetower west to Cottage Grove aven¬ue. A second tower to Pierce wouldbe a high-priority project.The problem with this plan is, ofREXALL L63rd AND ELLISPRESCRIPTION CENTERCHEMISTSNO 7-2777-27781000 E. 63rd St. 8 A M. to 11 P.M.We have the prescription file of STERN'S end will be happyto serve you.We also have two pharmicists on duty at all times. A completeline of cosmetics for men and women.INCLUDING:REVLON .... MAX FACTOR .... RULE iSTEItfJADE EAST .... CANOE .... BRUTE10% student discount with I D. on all drugs and cosmeticsThe Christian Science Monitor— An International Daily Newspaper —• Concise, Reliable Coverage• Feature Pages On Major Topics, IncludingTravel, Sports, Business And Finance• Overnight Mail DeliverySpecial Half Rate Offer toFaculty and Students□ 1 YR. $12 (r«g. $24 per yr.) □ 9 MOS. $9 □ 6 MOS. $6Please send me a subscription to the Monitor for the periodchecked. I enclose $ I am a O student Q faculty mem¬ber atNAMESTREET,CITY STATE „ ZIP CODE,Mail to:The Christian Science Monitor1 Norway StreetBoston, Massachusetts 02115 A continuing project at 55th street, shown here in 1964 fcourse, finding the money. There ishope that truly massive new pushfor private contributions to theUniversity will make this dream areality. Whether it can be complet¬ed soon enough to help alleviatethe immediate Hyde Park housingshortage for those now in school isdoubtful.Where to meet and eatAnother project urged by theBlum committee is to increase thenumber of meeting and eatingspots in the campus area. It isgenerally agreed that the mainthing lacking in UC life is a widevariety of good restaurants andwatering places. As a noted deanof students said a couple of yearsago, “You can’t have a great Uni¬versity without a place to buybeer.”JIMMY'S TAVERN, on 55th be¬ tween Woodlawn and University, isthe last remaining 55th street bar—for that matter, it’s about thelast remaining store on 55th streetfor many, many blocks. It wassaved from demolition for the Lu¬theran seminary only because theLutherans couldn’t buy all the landon the block it stands on, and hadto change to the next block.Even if Hyde Park is a littledrier than it should be, it’s a muchbetter place to live than it was tenand fifteen years ago. The firstmajor urban renewal project in thecountry is almost completed; atleast, most of the urban-renewedsites either have buildings on themor will soon be put up for bids.The Hyde Park story’s phase ofphysical renewal is largely history.The continuing story of "a uniquecommunity has many chapters togo.STUDENT COOP FACULTY SPONSOREDBOOK EXCHANGE(No Connection! With Previous Organisations!)GRAND OPENINGSELL YOUR USED BOOKS ATYOUR OWN PRICE THROUGH USOffice: Reynolds Club BasementHours: 10:30—3:30 M-F(Nights) 8:30—10:00 M-ThuOct. 2 10:00—3:00Oct. 3 10:00—3:00WE NEED YOUR BOOKS!ALL SCHOLARLY READINGS WELCOMEJACKSON PARKBIKE SHOPSPECIAL BUY!'nglish Sfurmey ArcherGears, Hand Brakes$ 41 95COME IN TO SEETHESE SPECIAL SIKES• ROBIN HOOD • DUNELT• RALEIGH • SCHWINN• Other Fine MakesExpert Repoirs on All Mokes and Models(WE SELL THE BEST & REPAIR THE REST)PARTS AND ACCESSORIESDOMESTIC AND FOREIGNN.E. CORNER 55th and CORNELLNO 7-9840 DO 3-7524Oct. 1. 1965 e CHICAGO MAROON • HSymposium views gen ed 691 strong,h:rAAihceKUniVerS,ty °.f Ch}Cfug° learning bv helping students ecru- is more stimulating with its gen-there has been more sustained tho-. cate pach ethpr ” „„„ , . b Aught about general education than jh thef’ Stearns con’ eral education and subsequentin the whole previous history of c uded‘man,” said Warner A. Wick, dean THE MAIN WEAKNESSES inof students. His statement opened are an “over-rigidity” insofar as for lifethe orientation week symposium general education according to himentitled “The Nature of General the sets of courses are concerned, cation at UC in light of the** whol*e t , ,held September 28 in an excessive interest in great university community, in contrast trants> four timesClass of '69 another distinguished bunchIf distinctive statistics imply a successful class, the new Chi-specialization, tends to attract cago undergraduates are on their way to glory,more people into the university Six hundred and ninety-one first year students completetheir orientation program this weekend and will begin classesLEVI EXAMINED general edu- Monday. Twenty-three Negro en- -the previous high schools in Chicago, encourag-Education,the Law School auditorium. ideas rather than facts, and a ten- to earlier speakers. He'noted the number> are included in the group ing qualified applicants to apply,• nrioderated by Wick, dency to completely separate gen- great interest in creativity, the re- as the result of a newly initiated and secondly, informational lettersl^hflnnivcrcik- p',..6!,1' *ra* educat*01* specialization. cognition by all that this is a com- admissions program to interest Ne- were sent to all finalists in the newoi the University, Peter N. Stearns, As an example of how general ed- munity of learning, and the many gro students in the University National Achievement Scholarshipassistant professor in history, Jam- ucation overstresses great ideas, facets of the university as having g students in tbe University. National Achievement fccnoiarsmpes M. Redfield, assistant professor Stearns said, “In studying Karl the greatest influences on the whole Thus’ the class of 1969 1S not on y (NAS) Program for Negroes. Sixof the committee on social thought Marx and the Industrial Revolu- education afforded by the college. 1116 largest since the post World national winners from this pro-and master of the new collegiate tion, too often we will examine He cited the major problem of the War 11 years when there was a he' gram are in this year’s enteringdivision (or “fifth college”), and very closely what Marx had to college to be: giving a specialized avy enrollment of veterans, butNorman H. -1- —'that can be novel in many experi¬ences,” the professor continued.‘This sense involves the core of sity, whU° TT°’ford’s education is dry, it tends todrive people away from the univer-which Jobs for teens: a fruitful summer for 78Nachtrieb, professor say and not find out anything education. “In°short ” Levi said also the most integrated. ’ .. ^and chairman of the department about the Industrial Revolution.” "the university is a very exciting LAST SPRING, the admissions lsts- No admission requirementsof chemistry. In trying to emphasize what he place.” & office received 125 applications were waived in considering any ofSTEARNS, in examining general felt to be the success of general Looking at UC from the position fr°m Negro high school students, these applicants, nor was judgmenteducation at UC, concluded that education at UC, Redfield. the sec- of the department of chemistry, as compared with 30 or 40 in past passed on the basis of a quota sys-here are basic strengths and weak- ond speaker, compared UC to Ox- Nachtrieb emphasized the tradition years. Fifty-three of these appli- rnrtarH tn rarP or «Pn.nesses in the program. “The in- ford. “An Oxford education is con- of good teaching, along with the cants were admitted, or 42 per iem n r . ’ ’ stense often emotional sense of tra- structed on the basis that all who importance of general° education cent. (Total acceptances issued by graphical distribution,dition is a basic strength,” he said, take it will become academic. The for all students. “I would like to the office of admissions numbered THE RESULT of this open-doorThis tradition has helped general UC, on the other hand, says its edu- emphasize,” he said, “that science 1,050, or 46 per cent of the aspiring policy in what is a highly selectiveeducation by assuring full instruc- cation is not preparing the student majors should have a proper back- high school students.) university is an incoming class oftors rather than graduate students for anything. Yet our education ground in the humanities and .so- No Quota System 432 men and 259 women from 44as teachers of general education produces more academics than cial sciences before specializing, or Two steps were taken to increase states and six fore‘£n countries,courses and has also helped main- Oxford’s,” Redfield said. He con- else they will be merely tochni- Negro enrollment: first, meetings Fifty-six P«r cent. of the clas*tain “the sense of experimentation eluded that perhaps because Ox- dans ” were held in predominantly Neero ranked in the toP £ive P®r cent oftheir high school graduating class.The Small School Talent Searchnetted 52 students this year fromrural areas and high schools with atotal enrollment of under 700. Nine-Seventy-eight boys, many of and babysitting on a regular basis teen students are early entrants,them potential high school dro- can be arranged, babysitting jobs students who have qualified forpouts, filled over 700 jobs in Hyde are not accepted as part of the fdll.eg? admisslon a£ the end ofr their junior year of high school andP a r k-Kenwood this summer program. ^gin their college studies at thatthrough the Jobs for Teens pro- Prior to placement, the girls are time. Early decisions were madegram. given a 10-hour orientation and by 69 students at the end of theirDesigned to help prevent high training session which includes job P,mor year; bld who £*nished fourschool dropouts, Jobs for Teens attitudes, child care, elementary ‘ on the Scholastic Aptitude Test,tries to find part-time jobs for first aid, infant care, and house- bane of high school seniors every-neighborhood high school students hold tasks. where, the class averaged 655 onwho lack salable skills and some of Anyone interested in participat- ,he verbaI: and fi7° on the !”at.he*toe discipline necessary for selling i„g i„ the Mothers, Helpers pro- below 'the avenge of uSgram should contact June Graves, year’s entering class, and the mathscore is three points above theclass of '68.Johnson's fellowDon II. Bialostosky, of Gresham,'Graves Ore8°n- *s tbe one US Presidentials scholar in the entering class. He isTeens. Girls participating in the Mrs. Hans Morgenthau, wife of ^ ^"haJeVen deSded^s’program work for one employer a the noted UC political scientist, has university scholars the hhdiist ho-mimraum of six hours per week helped spearhead the Jobs for atEntranceto tteTwo days after the start of a new semester lastSeptember, an open letter by “a former student”called upon students at the University of Califor¬nia at Berkeley to “organize and split this campusWide open” in an “open, fierce, and thoroughgoingrebellion/*What happened at Berkeley during the monthsthat followed was unprecedented in Americanuniversity history. During a series of demonstra¬tions, sit-ins, and riots, one of the world’s largestand most famous centers of learning was broughtto the edge of collapse.In The Berkeley Student Revolt: Facts auu nua -jnetations ($1.95, an Anchor Original publishedon September 3), two eminent teachers at Berke¬ley, a sociologist and a political scientist, have as¬sembled a wide range of significant views fromparticipants on both sides of the dispute andoutside observers. The editors, Seymour MartinLipset and Sheldon S. Wolin, are themselves indisagreement over the meaning of the revolt. Theydo agree, however, that the events at Berkeleyhave an importance that transcends their immedi¬ate local consequences. The University of Califor¬nia has been regarded by many as a prototype ofthe future form of public education. Whatever themerits of the students’ case, their attack againstthe University raises an important and alarmingQuestion about the ability of a fundamental mod¬ern institution to meet the demands of the fu+nrp.The Berkeley Student Revolt includes a detailedchronology that explains what actually took placeduring an often confusing series of events. Thevolume also collects many of the manifestos,broadsides, pamphlets, statements, and releasesdistributed by both sides, which convey a sense ofwhat the participants actually thought and folt.We think it is obvious that the Berkeley studentswere representative of a new generation on col¬lege campuses — politically aware and involved-preoccupied with protest, and sensitive to socialabuses. In The Berkeley Student Revolt, that gen¬eration — your generation, if you are reading thiacolumn in your college newspaper - has its say.For anyone who is part of a college campus thisFan of 1965, it is important and fascinating read-ing. # a job.Most of the 700 jobs were two to ..... . _TT . . . .six hour odd jobs filled for comrau- |ts direc£or> at 8-8343. A jointnity residents. Typical jobs were interview is arranged between thelight painting, wall washing, gar- girl, the employer, and a counselordening, and other lawn work. to determine a work schedule andRecently a Mothers’ Helpers pro- job description. Missgram has been added to Jobs for checks on-the-job progress.The Berkeley Student Revolt it published by thesponsors of this column, Doubleday Anchor Books,177 Perk Avenue, Nsut York Cits and DoublsdaySc Company, Inc., Garden City, New York. You*8find st at om of the best equipped bookseller* UIthe ooettstry — your own oomgeJmShiiMB caring for children and performing Teens program for almost three Collegelight household tasks, such as wat- years. The Hyde Park Neighbor- Fnterim? its seventh vear this"T and,d0i"g diSheS' . . h00d, C|“b and ,he "ydc Park Ke"- proSrTmi ex’Although employers may want to wood Community Conference co- ceptional academic performancehire their helpers as babysitters, operate in the effort. and promise who are invited toparticipate in special programs ofacademic and intellectual interest.SIX OF THE UNIVERSITYSCHOLARS come from Illinois,two from Minnesota, one fromMontana, three from New York,two from Oregon, two from Wash¬ington state, and one from Wash¬ington, D.C. Twenty National Meritscholarship winners are alsoamong the entering students.Financial assistance, based uponneed, has been awarded to 346 ofthe new students. The averageaward this year is $1,289, as com¬pared with $1,225 last year. Trus¬tee scholarships, honoring not onlyoutstanding scholars, but also theirsecondary schools, have beenawarded to nine students. Theclass also included three GeneralMotors scholars, one Procter andGamble scholar, two Stagg scho¬lars, and one American Daughter*of Sweden scholar.Christian Science Organization At U. of C.Welcomes New And ReturningStudents and FacultyTo Weekly MeetingsTuesdays At 7:15 P.M.THORNDIKE HILTON CHAPEL58th And University Ave.BOB NELSON MOTORS 6136 S. COTTAGE GROVI* MIDWAY 3-4500HONDAworld’s biggest setter!ONLY 52 AVAILABLE ON JULY SHIPMENT * ORDER NOW FOR EARLIEST DELIVERYMNM NKIM, M*M HI, •• M. K«w (port nrtloo of th« popular Road* M>AUTHORISED SALJJ & 5ERYJCIFQK MPST POPULAR IMPORT*]U m CHICAGO MAROON * Oct 1. IMS BOI NELSON MOTORS‘MU fii 6136 5ft CPHAfif GBQVl MlfiWAT 3,4300UC brass a diverse crew Co,,ege enters planning year to prepareWhat has two heads, some thirty right arms, boundless energy, and one collective ulcer? for Switch tO fiVC-COllege LOVl StrUCtlireIt might be your friendly neighborhood monster, but it isn’t. Instead, it’s UC’s power „7.4U Al_ Astructure, sometimes inefficient, sometimes the bane of students, sometimes at crosspur- Wlth the appointment of the five area college masters thisposes with itself, but always in the driver’s seat. * summer, the College is now in the midst of a ‘‘planning year’*The twin chauffeurs for today’s p- , . „ ————7 -Richard H. Moy, the director of which will culminate in the full institution of the Levi planlate-model University are UC’s the student Health service is an in- If the laws of the University were in the College in autumn quarter, 1966.T>..nr.irlonf COATCfO W Pna/llo 10 aiA 111 il.. .. . 1 . r,President, George W. Boodle, <ind , . . . strictlv followed none of those’P „ Io . ’ veterate smoker and the head of one y Iouowea> none 01 inosetbe pr0Vu0St’ t' _ar^H^ Levi. They of thfi best such facilities in the mentioned would have the re- man, biological sciences college; stead of keeping them as a specialThe five masters—Ray Koppel-share the overwhelming majority COuntry. As long as they have paid sP°nsi Cities that now confront Arthur Heiserman, humanities col- “treat” for fourth year students,of decision-making responsibility. tuitj students are entitled to them- The board of trustees> which lege; Donald Levine, social scien- The actual degree to which (um , .. ,11 <1 1 m rf ♦ Vv T T m« . POC A A110 (tO • H A hfll'r U lot’7 Tvn XT ^ tutor-everything from sheckups to birth is comP°sed of 42 businessmen, ces coUege; Robert Platzman, phy- -al studies will be used in the newonBeadle, beside being the Univer¬sity’s official spokesman to the out- CQnJoI advice from inn0cldatUjons philanthropists, executives, and ^®J.s^ienceS C°1Iege;. and James College Booth said) will depend _side world, has in recent years be to operations. In addition, the Stu- educators, is technically in charge e ied« general studies college tbe number 0f teachers and stud-come the primary money-finder as dent Health psychiatric clinic, of everything. They have delegated fre now m “^process °f appoint- erds wbo are rea]]y interested inwell. Levi, who is in charge of the headed by John Kramer, prepares tbe „reat majority of their vested *ng tbe »overn^nS committees for such a method of study. “No cen-. • • 1 r* • . 1 JinH TpinfATPPC cftldAnfc’ Vs A Old C f A b * AO aU aaIIai^a -tvol o m ini o ti a ah i m haca if ^hiring and firing of faculty, also and reinforces students’ heads to interests 5ut reserve for them— each colleSe in conjunction with tral administration can impose it.AAtv\nmtYiont IWTait^p i » t a v* unfVi fliAii* * _ - La a+a/1acts as chief administrative psy- u"T:f!ement Moys WOrk Wlth their selves the election of the president Dean of the College Wayne C. he stated.when such a vacancy occurs, the Booth and Provost Edw’ard Levi. The planning year will also leadto a physical reorganization of theresponsible for the execution ofBeadle’s requests and Levi’s brain- bodies.chiatrist, ironing out such problems James Vice, the director of stu- , , , . ... . w a unvaiv.ai icvig«iuauvu was the direction in which the Col- dent housing, is responsible both for fhi^nninvil^f * ™rU ai College- When renovated, Cobb Halllege will go, the kinds of research placing students in dormitories and u appointments and3 the ded faculty College Council and the wiU become the central class andthe University as a whole should curing their continued satisfact- ^0“’ "end™- art, . . „ . . „ . , ion there. He works closely w'lth tnmnr.nw will include a student-faculty loun-undertake, and how to promote .... i „ ment funds. tomorrow. , „. . . ... head of Residence Halls and Com- caidcay roue • ... , ge and a small auditorium,and maintain stable relations be- m0ns Lylas Kay who is responsible v i.?* °f T?e gove/mng c°mmittees> each Eventually, when a new Univer-tween the University and Hyde for run^ng the’University cafete- £"!*’ ™ade ap of ten t0 14 *acultr™e™' sity library is built, Harper LibraryPark. rias most 0f which are in dormi- .tK)ns.m°st successful advertising bers from an area college, will ad- will be made int0 a combinationA BEVY of vice-presidents is t0ries 18 the chairman of the board vise the master of their college on Coiiege administrative and socialof trustees. Other notables on the needed changes. center and undergraduate library,board include Charles Percy, The program changes decided on 5 7storms. The one who works in clos- n *maby’ tJ"l?..!1 defeated Republican gubernatorial by each master and his governing nyamcest touch with the two of them is 1 f,a operate tlie student activities candidate in Illinois last November; committee must in turn be approv- IvaCnilly CXafTIStomes Ritterskamn the vice-ores- °"lce’ which acts as a liaison be- David Rockefeller, of the Rocke- ed by the 40-member College Coun- ^ 1 1 rxcident for administration or more tWjen leaders of student activities feper family that originally en- cil set up las spring. Twenty mem- BIHIOUnCGtl DV ETSplainly the man in charge of the and tbe administration. The two dowed uC; William Benton, former bers of the council are elected bypiirse-s’trin°s. directors are responsible for aiding us Senator and chairman of En- the whole College faculty and 2QOther vice-presidents are in student SrouPs in whatever way cyclopedia Britannica; Ben W. are appointed by UC Presidentcharge of such area-, as scientific they can and for. counseling them Heineman, president of the Chi- George Beadle on the advice ofprograms, budget, fund-raising, and wh°n Problems arise. cago and Northwestern Railway, Levi, Booth and thepublic affairs. They are Lowell The !*ext maJor subdivision of and Qjen ^ Lloyd, one of the top deans.Coggeshall, William B. Harrell. P°wer more on the academic, men at Argonne National Labora- None of the major changes that t,viiWarren C Johnson Richard F lhe administrative, level. The tories, which UC helps to operate, are decided on during the planning prospective teachers are: Decem-O’Brien I eonard K Olsen Charles Univeursity ia divided academically Marshall Field, editor and publish- year will go into effect before next ber 11, 1965 and March 19, July 16,U Dalv’ and James Sheldon Jr into the graduate divisions and the er of two Chicago daily newspa- year. But revisions that were plan- and October 8, 1966. The tests will' professional schools, described in pers and a noted philanthropist, ned early this year, including chan- be given at nearly 500 locationsThe first major subdivision down detail elsewhere in this issue, and was a trustee as well until his ges in English Composition, Hum throughout the United States,the totem pole is the office of the the College. death two weeks ago. I, and the advisor system, will be Results of the National Teacherdean of students. “eaded by WAYNE C. BOOTH, appointed What does it all mean? Essen- introduced this quarter. Examinations are used by manyWarner Arms Wick, who has been dean 0f tbe College last December tially, that things are getting done. According to Booth, “One of the iarge school districts as one of sev-described as “the most harrassed to fill what had been a void for Whether or not one always agrees strong emphases in the planning eral factors in the selection of newman in the University, the office over a year, is the chief adminis- with them, the power structure year will be on getting more tutor- teachers and by several states forhandles a wide variety of more trator and policy-formulator. His under which decisions are made ials and more project work instead certification or licensing of teach-specific tasks. lieutenants include the College at UC is tried and true, and will of exams”. Tutorial studies are erSt Some Colleges also require allCharles O’Connell director of Council, established under the Levi very likely be around for some needed during the first years of seniors preparing to teach to takeadmissions, is responsible both for report, the sub-deans of the Col- time. students in the College, he said, in- the examinations,deciding who gets here and seeing lege, and, to an increasing degree,whether or not they get financial students. Fourth-year College students pre¬paring to teach school may takethe National Teacher Examinationson any of the four different testdivisional dates announced by EducationalTesting Service.New dates set for the testing ofaid. He is assisted by Robert Char- As has been the case tradition-les on the scholarship end of things ally, the College is granted almostand by Margaret Perry on admis- complete autonomy in its decisionsions. making and its planning for the fu-ANITA SANDKE, with the assis- ture. Booth, in keeping with thetance of L.S. Calvin, runs the ca- provisions of the Levi report, isreer counseling and placement of- currently at work turning the “Levifice. Mrs. Sandke and Calvin ar- College’’ into an actuality. TRIANGLE THEATRICAL PRODUCTIONS, INCFranklin Fried, Executive DirectorPresentsrange job interviews for students,offer advice on careers, and provideaid for campus recruiting teams.Registrar Maxine Sullivan, withthe aid of her IBM ally George, hastwo unenviable tasks: getting stu¬dents registered and maintaining,updating, revising, and expandingtheir official records.Walter Hass and his female coun¬terpart Edith Ballwebber (wo)man the athletic programs—varsity,intramural, and instructional—-forthe entire LTniversity. MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTSIS42 E. 55H. HY 3-9259m: PAH'S ,Record ShopPopular - Folk - Jazz1338 E. 53rd363-9896 THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111OPEN HOUSEFOR NEW STUDENTSatTHE B'NAI B'RITHHillel Foundation5715 S. WOODLAWN AVE.ALL WELCOMESUNDAY AFTERNOON 2:00 P.M. OCT. 3 Folk ArtericsJUDY COLLINS October 15 Orchestra HallIAN AND SYLVIA October 29 Orchestra HallROGER MILLER November 12 Orchestra HallBOB DYLAN November 26 Arie Crown TheatreGLENN YARBROUGH December 3 Orchestra HallCARLOS MONTOYA January 21 Orchestra HallPETER, PAUL & MARY Arie Crown TheatreDate To Be AnnouncedPETE SEEGER March 4 Orchestra HallIAURIND0 ALMEIDA March 18 Orchestra HallPrices for each show: $5.00, $4.00, $3.00, $2.00. Series prices reflecting 30%discount per order: $35.00, $28.00, $21.00, $12.00. Performance time on allconcerts 8:30 P.M.Mail orders for all attractions to Triangle Productions, Inc., 156 East SuperiorStreet, Chicago, Illinois 60611. Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope. Add25tf per order to cover the costs of handling and mailing.Oct. 1, 1965 CHICAGO MAROON ISIwl Grad divisions vital in research, educationSince 1892, when t h e to understand the properties of liv- at UC a variety of fields and a “Five disciplines are generally al Relations, Comparative Study ofdreams Of William Rainey ing systems.” Seventeen depart- great many facilities with which to regarded to be the central or core New Nations, and Southern AsianHarper come to fruition, grad- nients and committees, as well as study or pursue research. Argonne social sciences—anthropolgy, eco- Studies.Uate courses have been offer- the University hospitals are essen- National Laboratory, operated by nomics, political science, psycholo- All four divisions, then, beside©d at UC and have played tial to the teaching and research UC for the Atomic Energy Com- gy, and sociology, states Dean D. offering a complete spectrum ofVital roles in research in edu- ProSram of the Medical School, mission, is also available. The ma- Gale Johnson. “History, statistics, courses in their own fields, give, . , ’ says Bennett, and all these are ad- jority of teachers and students in and geography may most appropri- the student an almost unlimited op-cation, and in development ministered by the division. this division are involved in over ately be regarded as providing in- p o r t u n i t y for interdisciplinarySince that time. Neverthleess, strict departmen- 300 programs of research in both formation, tool, and methods of work. H. Stanley Bennett has said,* Basic and applied research in all talization impiied by the existence basic and applied sciences. One of great importance to the social speaking of the Biological Sciencesfour divisions—Biological Sciences, ^ $o many fields, does not exist, the strengths of the division, ac- science disciplines, though aspects in a thought that rings true for allHumanities, Physical Sciences, and aspects 0f biology are so in- cording to Associate Dean Julian of each field may make legitimate the divisions:Social Sciences—has been the most terrdated t h a t sharp separation Goldsmith, lies in the opportunities claim to being both social and “Persons of original intellect, ofIntesive activity of all faculty distinct fidds is impossible to for inter-disciplinary activity. “Re- scientific.” diligence, and of welLmotivatedmembers. Research is certainly achieye and foolish to attempt,” search at the PhD level is fre- The division includes, beside ambition can find splendid oppor-the dominating motive of the dm- gennett says. “For this reason, the quently pursued via an interde- these fields, the department of tunities at the University of Chica-eion,” Dean of Students in the Hu- loose, illogical and overlapping or- partmental route, and in the insti- education and such committees as advance their own careers toinanities George Bobrinskoy has g a n i z a t i o n of the Biological tutes one is exposed to men work- Human Development, Social 8 ’Stated, and it is probable that his Sciences at the University of Chi- ing in a variety of disciplines,” Thought, International Relations, pursue new knowledge, and tocago is nevertheless one in which Goldsmith has said. Far Eastern Civilizations, Industri- serve the welfare of mankind.”almost any kind of biological effortHow SG serves the studentsCounterparts would agree.i Since the function of a graduate can fjnd a congenial baseSchool is to produce competent Art, classics, English, Germanictrained scholars, teaching is con- Language and Literature, History,Sidered no less important than re- Linguistics, Music, New Testa-•earch. The faculty member who is ment> oriental Languages and Li-totally engaged in research and teratures, Philosophy, Romancedoes not teach at least one course Languages, and Slavic Languagesper quarter is definitely rare. _ in short) the subjects that areif Cooperation and intercommuni- traditionally described as the Hu Seven committees are basis of SGThe UC Student Govern¬ment (SG) is fighting the WarNations between the divisions has manities, are included in this divi- On Apathy on six fronts—led to such multi-disciplinary fields sicn whose Dean is Robert Street- some campus, some national.• The Committee on Recognized yea<T,'mittee. Concerned with curriculum nated by Tom Howard. NSA dealsplanning and with student-faculty with general questions of academicrelations, they plan to issue a freedom and civil liberties.Course Evaluation Booklot this Student Government elections,•s Human Development, History of er. ' . Tk. nr , year. which are held in the spring quart-Culture, Far Eastern Civilization, In addition, seven departmental . • Student Services Committee, er> are by the Election andArcheological Studies, Medieval committees, General Studies, Com- student Organizations (CORSO) is under Dave Stameshkin, is re- Rd€g cojnmHte* tinder Bill Lak-Etudies, History, Geography, and parative Languages and Litera- responsible not only for the official sponsible for the better things for . , * . .Bocial Thought. In this way, the di- tures, History of Culture, Ideas existence of all student groups, but better living which assist the great m- ^hese emotions are based on aVisions are not rigidly discreet, but and Methods, Far Eastern Civiliza- als0 due to reCent changes in ad- mai°rity of students on campus ev- combination of electoral unitsCombine the talents of their lead- tions, Archeological Studies, and mini’strative structure, for their fi- ery year. These include (1) the and proportional representation.Ing scholars to enrich the pro- Medieval Studies give the student nancial sustenance chaired by Charter program, which The College, once a single body,grams of these inter-divisional an opportunity for studies in sever- Howard Abrams (CORSO appor- wLl°has been divided into five electoral■ Th? n, *• ,rf al Humanities departments as well tions the Student Activities bud- *'bJses ,°NYc iSuT un.ts-New Dorms, Bukrn Judson,The goal of the Biological as m other divisions. get.) One of CORSO s additional as w*u as misses to in xv, anarmta ’Sciences, according to Dean H. Six departments and three insti- chores is running tonight’s Activi- Delphi a aH. at well below com- Pierce, Fraternities, and OtherStanley Bennett, is to “explain and tutes offer the physical scientists ties Night. mercial air and ground fares. (2) College. Each of the graduate divi-• Campus Action Committee, un- rr*ie Campus Housing File, a gjons ajs0 comprises an electoralder John Bremner, deals with such ^uide to non discriminatory hous- unR^problems as dorm facilities, em- in2 in fhe 1C area. (3) The Ride division nt the PnlWeployment, social rules, and other Exchange Board, which matches ^ division of the College ac-questions close to the life of the drivers and riders to all destina- cording to residence was made tostudent as he relates to the rest of tions. (4) Ticket Sales, a service insure close contact between thethe university. expected to open in the Autumn, representatives and the electorate.• Academic Affairs Committee, providing tickets to the Friday Af- For the convenience of new and re¬led by Peter Nagourney and Mark ternoon concerts of the Chicago turning students, the MaroonJoseph, is the academic counter- Symphony Orchestra, at about prints a list of the College assem-part of the Campus Action Comjames Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS - LINENS - TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. CardJEFFERYCAMPUS SHOP1954 E. 79 St. RE 4-7325There's a new men's shop convenient to thecampus. The JEFFERY CAMPUS SHOP carriesmodern men's fashions worn by the well-dressed collegiate man.SERO Shirts .... HAGGAR pantsSTRATOJAC . .. H.I.S.■i ESQUIRE socks . . . WALES raincoats JWINDBREAKER jackets . . . ARROW shirtssweaters SWEATERS sweatersandEverything else the college man needs.Stop at the Jeffery Campus Shop for personal attention to allyour clothing needs.■ r* • I?. V*10% Student Discount With I.D. Card HYDE PARK1 Auto Service j7646 S. Stony IslandJT' RE 4-6393 r"*f ' Wants To DisplayHopeful Artist's WorkPaintings, Sculpture,Colleges, Etc.ALL FOR SALEPut A Price On ItAnd Bring It DownJIM HARTMANP.S. We Do Grease JobsAnd Oil Changes • New Dorms:• Fraternities:• Pierce:$1.25. (5) Student Loan Service-up to $20 pocket money for a smallservice charge. (6) Student TutorService, a list of available college-level tutors in special subjects. (7)Speaker’s Program, which sponsorsappearances by over a dozen na¬tionally known speakers (last year’slist included Senate Minority Lead¬er Everett Dirksen, Senator WayneMorse, Critic and Novelist LeslieFiedler, and Congressman Richard • OtherBolling.ON THE LEVEL of the neigh¬borhood—the Hyde Park and Wood-lawn areas—SG has organized theCommunity Relations Committee,under Heather Tobis, which dealswith race relations and civil rightsin both campus and communityand with the University’s relationswith the outside community.On the national and internationallevels are the National Student As¬sociation representatives, co-ordi- bly according to the electoral unitfrom which each was elected:• Burton-Judson: Walter SavelandGuy MahaffeyPaul Levin ,Alan BloomHeather TobisKen SheltonDavid StameshkinMark JosephJim Blair £Rusti WoodsAlan SussmanSteve GoldsmithBob LeveyTom SmuckerTom Howard vEllis LevinBernie Grofman• President:(seat at-large)The Student Government office Isin the second floor of Ida NoyesHall, university extensions 3272-3273; office hours are 10:30-4:30Monday—Friday.MR. BIZZA ]SP ecvCHICAGO MAROON Oct. lt WE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTS^ HY 3^282 WFOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDC PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENAlso Ch. Broiled Hamburgers * ‘-v s0ofcVSausage PIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 6 Forty1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Pish or Olive .... 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.003.50 5.00Cheese .. 1.25 2.00 2.50 4.50•A and Vi 1.50 2.00 2 3.00 4.00 5.00Ixtra Ingredients .50 f 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pina 2.00 2.50 7 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp ..... 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacon 2.50 4.00 r 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pina .... 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers) ^—■■■ ,’f, • jr :■ Box of Bro*il*d Chicken20 Piocos, Golden Brown16 Pieces, Golden Brown10 Pieces, Golden BrownAV.- BAR B-9 RIBSSHRIMP. PERCHm SPAGHETTI «?■Tmostaccoli -r ^RAVIOLIj ! Open 1465 HYDE PARK BLVD#J*7 Day. « W«.k —4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a m. — Fri. to Mt'SE*KEF. SAUSAGE,*MEAT BALLSaf. to 3:00 o.m. — Open 2 p.m.m/mmTonight s Activities Night: functions,manias of student groupsActivities Night, an annual dis¬play of the resources, functions,and areas of interest of all studentorganizations, will take place inIda Noyes Hall tonight beginningat 7:30 pm.The display, which is sponsoredby Student Government, will con¬sist of demonstration tablesmanned by officers of the activi¬ ties. In addition, a program con¬sisting of entertainment by theCountry Dancers, Elackfriars, theFolklore Society and the StudentWocdlawn Area Project (SWAP)will begin at 9:45 in the CloisterClub. Throughout the evening the57th Street Chorale will be strollingthrough the halls singing ballads.The major aim of ActivitiesDespresFifth Ward Alderman Leon Desnrsswelcomes studenrs to HP neighborhoodYou are heartily welcometo the Hyde Park-Kenwood-Woodlawn community. As Uni¬versity students, you are partof a permanent body whichhelps give us a unique flavor.Although as individuals youmay consider yourselves atransient part of this commu¬nity, from our standpoint youare part of a group which hasbeen here continuously for 72years.This community is extra¬ordinarily interesting. On thesouth side of the Midway wehave what approximates thefirst stable interracial commu¬nity in Chicago. Imperfect asit is, it is far ahead of any other sizable neighborhood inthe city. •*-*.»■* • -The University of Chicago is our crown jewel. The en¬tire community enjoys its leavening influence but 95% of ourresidents have no direct connection with it.If you have time to familiarize yourself with the HydePark-Kenwood urban renewal area form 59th to 47th Streetsbetween Cottage Grove avenue and Lake Michigan, you willsee a remarkable area in which, since 1955, 20% of theformer dwelling units have been demolished under a care¬fully drafted urban renewal plan, financed principally by thefederal government but carried out by the city. The demoli¬tion areas have been covered with new homes, single fam¬ily residences, townhouses, apartment buildings, commercialbuildings, parking lots, institutional buildings, and, in a fewplaces where we still have open space, by green plants. Theurban renewal plan has caused a prosperity explosion—veryfew apartments and homes are to be had: Hyde Park hasbecome almost fashionable; and lines of people are waitingto be served in each new eating place that opens.In Hyde Park-Kenwood there is more educated, alert, ex¬pressive civic participation than you find almost anywhereelse in Chicago.The south side of the Midway is part of the segregatedNegro ghetto area of Chicago. To those who know Woodlawnwell, it is at least as interesting and exciting as Hyde Park-Kenwood. The human resources are incredible. The tensionsand emotions are extraordinary. The courage of many of theresidents is unbelievable. Woodlawn, too, is undergoing a lit¬tle urban renewal, along 60th Street for the expansion ofthe University and along Cottage Grove Avenue, from 61stto 63rd Streets, for lower middle-income housing. Wood¬lawn is the home of The Woodlawn Organization, which hasattracted more magazine and book space for itself and SaulAlinsky than any community organization I know. Recently,Woodlawn was chosen as the site for the national headquar¬ters of Students for Democratic Society in their search fora promising, big-city poverty area.My aldermanic office is at 1169 E. 63rd Street. It isopen from 9 to 5 and I am there for all constituents, includ¬ing you, Monday and Thursday evenings from 7:30 to 9 andSaturday mornings from 10 to noon.Although you will probably spend most of your timeon studies and directly related activities, I urge you to in¬terest yourselves in the community. You are in the midst ofsignificant sociological activities and changes. I urge that youat least cultivate reading the Hyde Park Herald and the Wood¬lawn Booster, not to admire their journalistic style but tokeep yourselves informed of what goes on around you. Youwould be very embarrassed in years to come when you areasked about what happened in 1965 to 1969: “Yes, I knowthat great events were occurring there while I was a student,but I just didn’t have time to see what was going on aroundme."Leon M. DespresAlderman Fifth Ward Night is to entice students intojoining one or more of the variousorganizations. Afterwards, studentswill have the opportunity to parti¬cipate in the activities of theirchosen groups at organizationalmeetings during the first weeks ofthe quarter.Following is a list of all parti¬cipating organizations, with a briefdescription where necessary.ACREN -a group of studentswho meet periodically to discussand attempt to understand the so¬ciological and political climate ofChicago.AMERICAN SOCIALIST PAR¬TYASTRONOMICAL SOCIETYBLACKFRIARS - a musical-com¬edy theatrical group.BRIDGE CLUBCAP AND GOWN -UC yearbookCALVERT HOUSE - Catholicstudent center.CHICAGO MAROON - UC’sgreatest newspaper.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM -per¬forms vocal music.UC CO-OPCOUNTRY DANCERSDEMOCRATIC SOCIALIST CLUBDOCUMENTARY FILM GROUP-UC film buffs.57th STREET CHORALEFOLKLORE SOCIETYFESTIVAL OF THE ARTS(FOTA)-presents an extensive cul¬ tural program spring quarter.GAZZARRi MODERN MUSICCLUBGNOSIS - campus-oriented SGparty.INDEPENDENT VOTERS OFILLINOIS (IVI)INTERFRATERNITY COUN¬CILINTERCLUB COUNCIL -co-ordi¬nates activities of women’s clubs.FRIENDS OF INTERNATIONALVOLUNTARY SERVICE (IVS)MUSICAL SOCIETYINTERVARSITY CHRISTIANFELLOWSHIPORIENTATION BOARD (O-Board)PARTICLE -scientific magazinePHOENIX -literary magazinePRE-MED CLUBUNDERGRADUATE PSYCHO¬LOGY CLUBRUGBY CLUBRUSSIAN FILM FESTIVALSCRU -Standing Committee forthe Rectification of UnjusticeSTUDENTS FOR A DEMO¬CRATIC SOCIETY (SDS)STUDENT GOVERNMENT (SG)UC FRIENDS OF SNCC -(Stu¬dent Non-Violent Co-ordinatingCommittee)SPAC (Student Political ActionCommittee) - left- wing campuspolitical party which advocates participation in off-campus as wellas campus affairs.STUDENT TUTORS ELEMEN¬TARY PRO JECT -(STEP)STUDENT WOODLAWN AREAPROJECT (SWAP) - tutoring pro¬ject.SOUTHERN WORK PROJECTCOMMITTEE -(SWPC)-went toTennessee’s Black Belt last springto rebuild a burnt-out Negrochurch.UC SYMPHONYUNITED WORLD FEDERAL¬ISTSVISA does volunteer work atChicago State Mental Hospital.WOMEN'S ATHLETIC ASSO¬CIATIONWASH PROM COMMITTEE .sponsors the George WashingtonPromenade, the only all-campusformal social event.WHIG SOCIETYWCUB - campus radio station.YOUNG DEMOCRATSYOUNG REPUBLICANSLate Additions: UNIVERSITYTHEATRE will present a shortplay by George Bernard Shaw,“Passion, Poison, Petrification,”as part of the program to be pre¬sented in Cloister Club.NATTY BUMPPO SOCIETY -social and cultural club.DUBOIS CLUB - a left wingpoiltical group.just call him “Smooth Sam”HE’S WEARING "DACRON”®-“ORLON”®Ultramatic Prest Haggar dress slacks. Evenwhen the humidity hangs hot and heavy,or he’s soaked in a sudden shower, 70%“DACRON” polyester-30% “ORLON” acrylickeeps these fine dress slacks smooth and sharplycreased. They even take repeated washingswithout a wrinkle. And Haggar styling giveshim the trim fit he wants in fine dress slacks. Nowonder the gals go for “Smooth Sam”, 10,95<B>Du Font's Reg. T.M. 4' ‘ . .. A.. J 4. * -WIN A FORD MUSTANG or one of SO other bigprizes. See your Haggar dealer for detailsGet HAGGER SLACKSat your localfine men’s shopOct. 1, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON 17‘-*.4 ft M wBooth: place(Continued from page eleven)story; if ii did not happen, it shouldhave happened.)The educated man knows howto criticize his own ideas by sys¬tematic contrast with other men’sideas. This is not simply anotherway of saying that he knows howto conduct dialogue and to read,though it includes these gifts. Heknows how to ask himself questions•bout his tentative beliefs and as¬sertions, how to formulate alterna¬tive answers (hypotheses), and howfinally to inquire into the evidencethat might prove or disprove thisor that hypothesis.Knowledge firstThis criterion presupposes a gooddeal of what is conventionally cal¬led know-ledge; nobody can criti¬cize his own ideas unless he (a)knows the alternative, and this pre¬supposes a good deal of “learn¬ing” about the subject in hand; (b)knows the appropriate methods ofproof and canons of evidence in agiven discipline, so that he can forma judgement about whether his ownconclusions arc convincing for goodreasons or just because they aredeliciously his own....The Msrocn deadline is upon—*me, and I have said nothing aboutthe cultivation of feelings and atti¬tudes and experiences. Whore domusic and art and literature fit in¬to this picture? Do I not recog¬nize that there is more to educationthan intellectual training? knowledge in a contextYes, I do so recognize; but letus talk of one thing at a time. IfI take my own words seriouslyI must, of course, subject them im¬mediately to radical cross-question¬ing, and when I do so I find themhalf-truths at best. Such brief over¬simplifications do only a little morethan fulfill my promise to theMaroon that I would have some¬thing for them by September 27.But perhaps that “little” is im¬portant. There is so much “know¬ledge” now available that we mustchoose rigorously what knowledgeis really worth having. And I amaruging that no knowledge is worthhaving, as inert “fact” or opin¬ion. Until facts and received opin¬ions are placed into contexts ofideas—until, in other words theybecome part of the process oflearning to learn and of learningto think—they are always anti-educational. They may prove use¬ful to us in many ways, social andpractical, and they may win uspraise for our nice new orna¬ments. Education in the sense ofaccumulated information will al¬ways be the best disguise for theunintelligent. But it will not makean educated man.AS WE NOW EMBARK on a yearof planning for a “new curriculum,”we are sure to find ourselves be¬sieged with an army of subjectmatters, fighting for a place in theprogram. Though no one really be¬lieves that we can give an edu¬ cation by planning a collection ofsubject matters, we shall be temp¬ted to construct a curriculum-by¬compromise: “I'll roll the log ofyour subject if you’ll roll the logof mine.” Unless we swear a self-denying oath at the beginnning, un¬less we promise to reject all pro¬posals—even our own—that are di¬rected at mere coverage ratherthan genuine education, we mightvery well lose more ground thanwe gain.Will you pardon me, now, if Ipause a bit, here on my promon¬tory, to look back down on thesweating, climbing figures below...Tutors wantedSWAP, the UC tutoring or¬ganization which works withhigh school students fromWoodlawn and other areas ofthe south side, has put out an¬other call for tutors. UC stu¬dents who can devote two orthree hours a week to helpinghigh school students with theirstudies, or helping in one ofthe several other activities ofSWAP, should drop by theSWAP office in Ida Noyeshall, or call University exten¬sion 3587. MAROON question: Why are you here?entrants' answers: $, rejections, traditionby Dinah EsralWhy would anyone spend $3,300 a year to cram for compre-hensives, adjust to administrative policy, devour dorm food,and live in half of a grey cinderblock cell? The UC class of ’69expressed some of their opinions shortly after arriving oncampus.“I wanted to attend a school in alarge city,” states Bertha Holliday,Kansas City, Mo. Agreeing withher, Sandy Langsdorf, Palatine,Ill., adds that she also hoped tofind a diverse student body.FAMILY TRADITION was par¬tially responsible for bringing Car¬ol Chave, Detroit, Michigan to UC.Her grandfather and uncle havetaught here, her father attendedschool here, and many familymembers have attended lab school.Peter Ratner, New York City, ex¬plains that he is “a spinelesswretch who has followed in thefootsteps of an older brother.”Many students mentioned Chica¬go’s “reputation” as a factor intheir decisions. One of them. JeffHeilman, Mt. Vernon, N.Y., be¬lieves that the atmosphere in theinitial days of orientation has livedup to his expectations.From Sheraton, Iowa, Jean Bestis a product of the Small SchoolTalent search who has received ascholarship. “Besides,” Jean adds,“my parents wouldn’t let me go toReed.”JAMES VICE, WABASH, INDI¬ANA, is more specific: “I intendedto go into the Phd program in Math-Bio Philosophy, and the onlyautomated program in the countryis here.”Such general reasons as the in¬tellectual atmosphere and the cur¬riculum were cited by Allen Wolt,Cleveland Heights, Ohio, andCourtney Esposito, Trenton, N.J.Joan Mankin, Huntington, N.Y.,cited general education as an in¬fluence. “And it’s out of the East,’*adds Elliot Feldman, Newton,Mass.The first MAROON staffmeeting of the year will beheld a week from today at 4pm in the MAROON office,third floor, Ida Noyes Hall. Allstaff members—new as well asold—are urged to attend.“With its high academic stan¬dards, it’s not a rah-rah school,’*comments Barbara Blair, DesPlaines, Ill. In the same vein, TimEnnis, Wisconsin Dells, Wise., likesthe position of athletics in the uni¬versity with the stress on intramu¬rals. Chris Kennedy, South Bend,Ind., enjoys the diversity of extra-NDONTOWNE HOUSESA CO-OP forBetter Living'forMarriedStudentsand FacultyWithin easy distance of the Campus. Excellent city¬wide transportation via bus, 1C, and Expressway.1, 2, 3, AND 4-SPACI0US BEDROOMSSEVEN MODELS TO CHOOSE FROMNO MONEY DOWNTOTAL MONTHLYPAYMENT INCLUDESPRINCIPAL, INTEREST,TAXES, INSURANCEAND ALLMAINTENANCE.— -Vb Tour co-op has: Hotpoint Range, Refrigerator and Disposal! •Lovely Custom Kitchen Cabinets • Storms and Screens • FuHBasements • Lavishly Designed Baths • Beautiful Sliding GlassPatio Doors • Ceramic Tile • Extra Large Wardrobe Closets • iFu# 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 Bibs . . . Complete Care ofLawn* and Shrubs . . . Everything is Taken Care of For You asLong as You Live in Beautiful London Towne Houses.v f i ~"i "iDAS ItYAN EXPRESSWAYs (TT /§ /* London^ ^« 103R0 STREET // /UtTM STREETf~7 / 1FCH Company Inc.Cooperative Representatives,101st and Cottage Crow,Hcun: Open Daily & Sunday, 12-8 pmjSaturday, 12-6 pm. Closed ThursdayU • CHICAGO MAROON e Oct. 1, 1965. - -- .seen e ■ li , . ,4m Me—.,, .am . ..W I —. ... ■». GOLD CITY INN"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% Student Discour.HYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559Try Our Convenient Take-Out OrdersfEat More For LessJCHANNING-MURRAY CLUB(Unitarian Student Fellowship)The Unitarian Student Fellowship is open to all studentswho would like to come together to discuss their religious,philosophical, and social concerns. Discussion topics will de¬velop as these concerns are expressed by members of thegroup.Meetings are held every Sunday evening in the Unitarianchurch parlor, 1174 East 57th Street. Students drop in forinformal conversation at any time between 6:30 and thescheduled meeting hour of 7:30.For more information call:First Unitarian Church57th and WoodlawnF Air fax 4-4100Faculty Advison Prof, Albert M» Hayes, AA2 3-0300, Ext. 2830 curricular activities.“It’s the only place I could smokea pipe in peace,” states Seoni Baird,Honolulu, Hawaii. (Editor’s note:Seoni in this case applies to thefeminine gender.)SCHOLARSHIPS helped to moti¬vate Aian Rudnick to come herefrom Cleveland Heights, Ohio andto keep Andrew Riedlmayer in hiahometown of Chicago.Accepted by Chicago, rejected byTufts, Dave Halperin, Paterson,N.J.; by Oberlin and Michigan,Bob Schwartz. Columbus, Ohio,both easily made a college choice.“I wasn’t accepted at Bennington.”states Betsy Zanditon Brookline,Mass. When the former statementwas made. Noah Friedkin, alsofrom Brookline was seated next toBetsy. He added that he, too, wasa reject, of the Harvard variety.Perhaps Connie Roud, Boston,Mass., was the most honest. Shesaid, “I’m looking for a husband.**TYPEWRITERSTO 55% OFF*New-Used-Electric-Office-PortableAH mochines (new or used) oreguaranteed for 5 years. We arean authorized agency for mostmajor typewriter manufacturers.If any machine we sell con bepurchased elsewhere (within 30days) for less, we will refund triedifference in cosh.* Discounts average 37%Discount Typewriters50 E. Chicago Tel. 664-3552SAMUEL A. BELL‘■eg Shell From* Bell**SINCE 1924470! S. bare heater Av*Kl.weoW S-IISOUNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK** rtriwy bank**NSWUnify plan calls for Hyde Park HS subunits(Continued from page 1)tive influences which retheir growth, Negro students are advanced, and it should encourage.. . #1 . ’ enng a fu The present building would be estimates and projections, the Uni* searchers would test possible solu-negative infuences which retard >ange of courses from remedial to renovated, and remodeled into two ty organization figures that their fjons to the many dilemmas beset-are advanced, and it should encourage °* the ,“houses>” or wings. Two plan would cost about $4,283,000. .• . .. , ,track innovation These qualifies should WingS would be built on the This is based on “rather generous” J g . uca rs 1 lgcl y sc °°^s*kmake it attractive to most oarent-f f °C,k, t0 ** cleared’ Wlth common allocations of floor space in an ap- Special teachers, social workers,the’- felt. ’ ^C|bties in a fifth wing central to pendix to Thomas’s proposal, esti-~ , others. The plan is labelled an mates of the cost of land, and aThey emphasized that the school Adequate athletic facilities could provision for $1 million in federalshould not be too big in the sense easdy be provided in cooperation funds.that it becomes depersonalized, al- tbe municipal park district by To serve the same number of. . though it should be big enough to budd*nS a Add house, pool, and students by building a new school -t a e courses m the “advanced offer “the variety of educational P^ybig fields across Stony Island in Hyde Park and keeping the old mittee which drew itp plans forplacement” or “double honors” offerings and the facilities which a avenue *n a corner of Jackson Park, school at a reduced size, the Unity this center had planned to apply tolevel. heterogeneous urban population re- Such athletic facilities are called group’s economists estimate it the U.S. office of education forThere were last year about one S™!? bf; ,betwcei,4 61st. ,and. 62nd funds under Title IV of the Ele-* t,t>, streets, between Stony Island ave *more often found in lowerclasses than in the upper levels.Students who are a year or moreahead in a subject are placed in the“honors” track for that subject,while highly qualified students can health specialists, psychologists,and all manner of other personnelwould be associated with the cen¬ter.UC EDUCATORS on the corn-hundred classes at HPHS at one of and the Illinois Central tracks,the top levels. It is commonly ac- IN ITS basic outline, the Unityeepted that students in these upper plan- as des>£ned by Thomas,levels at Hyde Park get an educa- W°Uld bui,d a larger high schot>1lion comparable or superior to °Ut °f the present one- by clearinfithat available anywhere else in the about a block of land just north ofcountry. This fall, as last vear l*)e present building and a smaller*. . ,. y ar’ plot just south. The new blockthere were four sem.-f.nahsts in the would be between 61 and 62 streets,National Merit Scholarship com- between Stony Island ave. and thepetition. Illinois Central tracks.NEVERTHELESS, there are Thomas envisions a school formany problems. A committee of six thousand students, which isparents of Woodlawn students be- about what has been projected asing tutored in the UC SWAP proj- the population of high school ageect last spring formed a committee in the district five years from now.to discuss the problems of HPHS, This great number of studentsand outlined these shortcomings: would be handled in a new way,“Two-thirds of the student body however’ to make sure the school,*„. v. i is no1 “depersonalized.” Theenter and remain in high school . . ,, , . ,. .. school body would be evenly divi-with reading an arithmetic achieve- ded into four sub-units, each withment below grade level. More than its own wing, its own principal,50 per cent of them drop out of and a more or less autonomousschool. Many, who remain in school faculty and student activities.in remedial tracks, never com- House systemplete a required high school course ment ary and Secondary EducationAct of 1965, which provides fundsfor research centers run by publicor private agencies.In a MAROON interview Tues¬day, however, Roald Campbell,dean of the department of educa¬tion and chairman of the graduateschool of education, said that U.S.office of education officers havesuggested that the final proposalshould ask for the money underanother, similar but older, pro¬gram. This is called the co-opera¬tive research program, passed in1954.Campbell explained that therewould be no substantive change inthe University’s proposal, but thatthe federal officials seem to feel auapplication under the older pro¬gram could be handled mornsmoothly from their point of view.In any case, some observers seethe existence of the experimentalschool right next to the expanded.Hyde Park High School; the pillars of controversymm m % mmm. mmmmmmmtmmmmmmdfor by the overall plan for Chica- would cost $6,520,000. The cost of Hyde Park High School as the cri-go’s future development, it has been construction at the new Murray ^cal factor in favor of the Thomaspointed out. site js based on a statement by su- ^aB' • *Students would be identified with Thomas points out that his con- perintendent Willis to the school *C programof study and are allowed to leave a single unit, while having access cePt intended to obtain “better board that he proposed building Campbell and Julian Levi, pro¬school merely because they have to the facilities and some programs education for the same amount of two new high schools in the city, fessor of urban studies at UC andcompleted four years of school which are provided to the school money-through the optimal use of one of them at Murray, for a total director of the South East ChicagoFew are nrenared in tn in as a whole,” the proposal says. space> teachers’ time, and equip- cost of $9 million. Thus the Murray Commission (SECCU UC s arm otp. 10 on 0 n' “Assignment to houses’ (as the ment« and through the concentra- Another figure cited by supportersstitution of higher learning or are sub-units might be called) would ^on °* hooks and equipment in a of the separate school plan re¬prepared to take advantage of job be random—houses would not be sinSle facility (thus permitting duces the costto $3 million,training opportunities. differentiated on the basis of aca- more diversity).” ~~ School is pegged at $4.5 million.“THE CONDITIONS under which demic ability, course selection, or Several federal programs of aid estimate for the separatethey go to school are not conducive race- ’ to secondary education could be school also includes cost of buyingto learning: overcrowded facilities- Students from the “houses” used in both reducing the direct more uncleared land, and the val-limited services, especially gui- would share facilities in a central costs to Chicago taxpayers, and of The presently cleared land community action, both envisioninterchanges of students betweenthe University school and HydePark High School.One school mightdevelop a specialized course whichschool students take courses inpublic schools under the “shared-time” program.MORE FAR-REACHING effectsdance and counselling; little curri- core- Expensive facilities which expanding the realm of possibili- of research done in the Universi-culum planning to help them over- might not be provided for a smaller ties for the proposed plan. Pro- , ^ J £ (nr Z ty’s center could be transmittedcome their special deficiencies in sch°o1 could be economical when grams set up by several pieces of aie Inereading, writing and math; a track used by students from such a large legislation could provide help insystem which allows little Integra- school> Thomas suggests. Elec- planning and program develop-tion of race and economic classes ” tronics labs, physics labs, and fine ment, equipping the school, andTo work out a concrete program arts studios would be used every general purposes,to meet these problems the Unity period of the week- Justifying their A provision of the Economic Op- the Mesent* school’ Thom as and" the al Pr°grams> advanced programs,group asked J. Alan Thomas asso- installation, in such a large school, portunity act would be particularly supporters of Unity pian point extra-curricular programs, etc. Itciate professor in the department Advanced placement and remedial applicable. It is specifically de- out that uc plans to build an im. would be staffed by city schoolof education connected with the de- courses could also be provided ef- signed to aid schools whose districts portant new “educational research P*rsonnel> but planned and operat-partment’s Midwest Administration ficientlv- include a hi*h Proportion of “dis- faciiity” students of all classes ^ close co-operation with one orFOR THE SAME per-pupil ex- advantaged” families. and ajj races would attend this fa- ^norc universities. Talks withOn the basis of a series of rough cility, ..... present building for » .... ... , . ..modern high school (separate but ^/oughout the public schools if an-equal) for 3500 students (if feasi- othcrcenter were built underTiUeble)”, as the Unity group’s esti- of ^ ,1965 act- 11x18 would Px°-mate sheet Duts it V1<k supplementary programs forAs a point in favor of expanding tbe pubIic 8ch00!8' sucb 38 remedi-center, to draw up a plan. He work¬ed with four high school adminis- Pediture: the sch°o1 could be pro-trators who were taking advanced uded WItb a superior library, andwork at the department this sum- a P°°l oI specialized personnel,mer such as a psychologist, and per-Thomas and his associates agreed haps a sociologist or anthropolo-that the school they wanted should £lst (“to assist house principalsbe adapted to the neighborhood it and others in developing healthfulserves and the resources available, inter-personal relationships,” Thom-such as University talent. It should a$ explains).rMEDICAL BOOKSGRE€N DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 E. 57th ST. HY 3-5MRJimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty-Fifth and Woodlawn Ava.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH--NEW & USED-Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to shidonts with ID cord*SERVICE CALLS - $3 at which University re- (Continued on page twenty-one)1AUTUMN SEMINARSPresented by CHAPLAINS TO THE UNIVERSITYopen to oil studentsI. FAITH AND MYTH IN THE NEW TESTAMENT: an introductionLeader: Fr. John McKenzie, Visiting Prof, in the Divinity SchoolFirst Meeting: Monday, October 11, 1965 4:30 p.m. Chapel HouseII. FATHERS AND HERETICS: the early shaping of Christian theologyLeader: Rev. Wayne Saffen, Lutheran Campus PastorFirst meeting: Wed., Oct. 13, 1965, 4:30 p.m. Calvert HouseIII. THE SECULAR CITY: a contemporary "secular" interpretation of the Gospel;text The Secular City, by Harvey CoxLeader: Rev. Phil Drippps, Methodist ChaplainFirst Meeting: Monday, October 11, 1965 4:30 p.m. Calvert HouseIV. SEXUALITY AND THE NEW MORALITYLeaders: Rev. Harold Walker, Jr., Campus Minister for the Porter Foundationwith Fr. Thomas B. McDonough, Roman Catholic ChaplainFirst Meeting: Thursday, October 14, 1965 4:30 p.m. Chapel HouseV. PSYCHOTHERAPY AND CHRISTIAN VIEW OF MANLeaders: Rev. Phil Anderson, Lutheran Campus Pastorwith Ronald Moen, PhD., Clinical PsychologistFirst Meeting: Tuesday, October 12, 1965 4:30 p.m. Chapel HouseSeminars meet once each week for eight weeks.Inquire or register at Chapel House, Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3391or Calvert House, BU 8-2311Oct. 1, 1965 CHICAGO MAROON IfEVERYTHING FOE THECOLLEGE STUDENTAt TheUniversity of Chicago BookstoresOur Clerks will be glad to assist you in our:SELF SERVICE DEPARTMENT(Please use packakge drops or free lockers)TEXTBOOKS: All required and recommended Texts.GENERAL BOOKS: Over 20,000 titles in a wide range of interests.SCHOOL SUPPLIES: To meet your needs.• STATIONERY & OFFICE SUPPLIES: For work-room or office.• RECORDS: A wide choice among hundreds of titles.(Will be back on sales floor, Oct. 7)• NEWSPAPERS & MAGAZINES: Including any of academic andcultural interest.CLERK SERVICE DEPARTMENTS• TYPEWRITERS: New, used and rentals in standard, portable orelectric.• TAPE RECORDERS: New, used and rentals.• PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES: Many types, cameras and ser¬vices.• GIFTS: Many gift suggestions, U. of C. items and cards in color.• MEN'S & WOMEN'S WEAR: A fine selection of accessories.• TOBACCO: A representative assortment of items.• SNACK BAR: Sandwiches, coffee, cold drinks and candy.• MAIN STORE ONLY (Newly lighted and air conditionedfor your convenience and comfort)MAIN STORE 5802 Ellis Ave.Hours: Mon. thru Frl. 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. — Sat. 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.OPEN 8-5 Sat., Oct. 2EDUCATION BRANCH 5821 Kimbark Ave. (In Belfield Hall)Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. (Open Evenings as necessary toaccommodate Evening Program Students).DOWNTOWN CENTER BRANCH: 64 E. Lake St.Hours: Mon thru FrL 11:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. — Sat. 9 a.m. to 12 p.m.DOWNTOWN PROGRAM BRANCH: 190 E. Delaware PlaceHours: Mon. thru Frl. 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.20 4 CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 1, 1965 Wt ObituariesSamuel King Allison, director ofthe Enrico Fermi Institute for Nu¬clear Studies, died in England,September 15. He was 65.A member of the team workingunder Enrico Fermi which a-chieved mankind’s first self-sustain¬ing nuclear chain reaction, hereceived his BS and PhD fromUC. The greater part of his ac¬ademic and scientific career wasspent here.“The untimely death of SamuelK. Allison,” stated UC PresidentGeorge Beadle, “is a loss not onlyto his University and his nation,but to the international commu¬nity of scholars and humanitari¬ans. . . We at the University ofChicago who knew him best as ascientist, a teacher, an admin¬istrator, a public servant, and afriend join his scientific associatesthroughout the world in mourninghis death.”Early in February, 1942, a cen¬tralized laboratory for developinga method for producting plutoni¬um was organized at U.C. underthe code name of the “Metalluri-cal Laboratory.” Mr. Allison wasassociated with this project fromits beginning until 1944, and ser¬ved as d'rector of the laboratoryduring the last year of this period.In November, 1944, Allison wentto the Los Alamos Laboratory of theManhattan Project, where he waschairman of the technical andscheduling committee. He assistedin scheduling the final stages ofthe test of the first atomic bombon July 16, 1945 and it was hewho made the final countdown ina control bunker about 10,000yards from the bomb tower.In 1945. Allison returned toChicago to become the first directorof the hewly formed Enrico FermiInstitute for Nuclear Studies atthe University.Robert Cecil Bald, professor ofEnglish died August 23 of a heartattach He was 64.Bald was an authority on Shake¬speare and edited several volumesof his works. He was also an au¬thority on John Donne and other17th Century poets.Bald earned a BA degree (1922)at the University of Melbourne, anLLB, and MA (both 1930) atCambridge University, and a D.f.itt. (L946) at the University ofAdelaide.He taught at the University ofWestern Australia in 1922 and atthe University of Adelaide from1923 to 1933. From 1933 to 1935, het•’light at the University Collegeof the South-West of England inExeter, and from 1935 to 1937 atthe University of Stellenbosch,South Africa.In 1937, he joined the faculty ofCornell University, where hetaught until 1952, when he cameto the University of Chicago.John Cunliffe Mayfield, associateprofessor emeritus of biology, diedSeptember 3, at age 68, at IllinoisCentra! Hospital after a heart at¬tack.Mayfield received his BS degreefrom Franklin College in 1923 andhis MA degree from UC in 1928. Hetaught biology in the University’slaboratory school from 1926 to 1939,when he transferred to the College,where he continued to teach untilhis retirement in 1962.He received the Quantrell Award,given annually for excellence inundergraduate teaching, in 1949.and was honored as an outstandingalumnus by Franklin College inJune, 1963.Marshall Field, a member of theUniversity’s board of trustees, diedSeptember 18 at the age of 49. Hewas publisher and editor of the Chi¬cago Sun-Times ChicagoDaily News.In a statement UC President Geo¬rge W. Beadle called Field “an im¬portant force in the recent growthof the University of Chicago.”The Field family has been in¬volved with UC throughout theUniversity’s history. Field’s grand¬father imvn the original ten-aemcampus on the Midway for theestablishment of the University in1§90. Field’s father, Marshall FieldIII, was a trustee of the Universityfrom 1937 to 1952.Field served as chairman of thevisiting committee to the social sci¬ences division and vice-chairmanof the board of trustees.O'Keefe turns ItfshKillilea and Landt named new student activities office headsTr ^d8A,dUK!ffiilt,“dehnlS’ Da" ftUdfnt activiUes- Landt "HI be rights groups and participated-rit and A1 Killilea, have re- teaching English composition:tor the College and writing his PL~. jmilcc VO¥vrw, wmcn wentand dissertation in English. Killilea will Tennessee last March to helpLandt in LANDT MAINTAINS that their groups get along with each otherplaced Thomas O’Keefe as director the College and writing ** Southern Work Project Com- office also has a creative function, and bring student leaders togeth-, student activities Landt nnd r ,• g .hs Ph?‘ mittee (SWPC), which went to that of bringing interested students er.” To further this aim the stu-Killilea, with the titles of associate be" a teacher" Junior3 Cot ?'T!eSSee 'aSt March '» >*IP re- together to form an organisation dent activities office sponsored alirprtnrs of student activities have u P Jumor Co1' build a burned-out church. This for which there is a need. He sees student leadership conference Sep-t Readme £*' ,i f 8 8 hD- Candidate “ P0Ut- year Ki,,iIea >* a for the UG as a diversified campus with (ember 27-28.been heading the student activities ical science e* j a . _ . , ... rtt.a c:n-_ aHcmct ■> T, tu T 1 student Woodlawn Area Project diversified needs. The student ac- Beginning this quarter the stu-0. ' oth Landt and Killilea have had (SWAP). tivities office, he says, will try to dent activities office will publish a0 Keefe is currently completing experience in student organizations According to Landt and Killilea, direct student energies to the ex Quarterly calendar of studentwork on his PhD. in English at the at UC. Landt was formerly head of the main functions of their office ....... .. events. It will contain events thatNational University of Dublin. the Russian fi m g"oup W ldea ^f00^ activities a"d be wa“l d“’ are scheduled far in advance, such. j 8 oup’ 1Sk,UUea friendly, cooperative, and help- Another important thing we can as iecture series, on-campus mov-Wlth campus civil ful.” do,’* assertsIN ADDITION to his work with has worked Killilea, “is help ies, and athletic events.Unity plan to be crux of future controversy[Continued from page nineteen) declined to take a stand,board of education persons have SEVERAL STUDENTSalready begun on such on the site.OBSERVERS member of the HPKCC schools is no agreement is the question ofthat committee, claimed that a school in how quickly additions could be builtwho OBSERVERS INDICATEac^d^ng^to11 Jul°ianSLevi3but °ha ve *tr0ngly support Unity proposal Woodlawn representatives feel quite Hyde Park only would have a ratio on the site near the present IIPHSnot progressed very far. ’ ”ave in the past wfek or so made strongly that there must be an inte- of about 35-40 percent white, 60-65 building. HPKCC representativesSupporters of the Unity proposal plans for informational programs grated, improved high school for percent Negro. This sort of ratio claim it might take two years tohope that the University adminis- on the controversy, in the hope that both neighborhoods. The reaction would attract more middle-class get approval from the urban renew-student support can be mobilized to may be quite sharp from Woodlawn people to integrated housing nowprod the administration into a pub- if their needs are not met, some ob- being built in Hyde Park, he said.v- u • . .. servers say. Marriott, a Unity supporter,community affairs committee of No one seems to ^ qu,te sure of argues that talk of racial percent'student government, has arranged how the majority of school board ages, “tipping points” past whicha debate between Mrs. Bernard members view the issue. Most ob- white parents will leave a largelyMeltzer of the HPKCC, speaking for servers feel at least four members Negro area, etc., is irrelevant andthe separate school plan, andtration can be persuaded to expandits commitment to education in thearea by publicly supporting theUnity proposal. This would add atremendous boost to the group’sdrive, because of the University’sgreat prestige and influence with al agencies for clearance funds,another year or two to clear theland and build the additions.Supporters of the Unity plan saythis information is inaccurate. Theschool board, they say, could ac¬quire the land within a few monthsby exercising the right of eminentthe members of the board of edu- George J. Benston, an economist in cou“ted on to supp°rt the dangerous. domain if it chose to do so and* thn ^ Willis plan for a separate school. I am concerned with this fixa- uomain 11 11 cnose to ao so, anathe Unity plan. Date of the discus.- Three or *our will quite likely sup- tion on the business of racial bal- even if the urban renewal processcation. While criticism from sever- the graduate school of business, for sepf rate school,al UC professors has in the pasttended to rankle superintendentWillis, he would also be bound tosit up and take notice by any Uni¬versity action, Unity supportersfeel.For these reasons, Unity planboosters have attempted to get theadministration to take a stand onthe matter, pointing out the impor¬tance of the University’s relationswuth Woodlawn, which unanimous¬ly supports the Unity plan.THIS HAS so far taken the form sion is set for next Thursday after- P01"^ Unity plan while another anc®> h® ^d the Maroon. Inoon four or five are the “swing votes.” don t believe racial ratios ever.... - , They include Mrs. Louis Malis, meant anything to anybody in Hydeunity support on faculty Mrs. Lydon Wild, Bernard Fried- Park until they were made an issueMain boosters of the Unity plan man, and Cyrus H. Adams. by the newspaper and the Confer-on campus are Benston, assistant AT THE most recent meeting of ence It is not true that whiteprofessor in the graduate school the board, on September 22, most families are moving out of theof business, and McKim Marriott, observers from both sides were neighborhood in large numbers; but Quently featuring and editorially fa-professor in the department of an- quite surprised to see the board de- if large numbers of people believed voring the separate school plan,thropology and the College. fer the issue once more, since it this was true, it could have a ser- voring the separate school plan.Benston has served as chairman was thought that Willis was pushing ious effect."of the Unity group during the sum- for an immediate vote. Instead, MARRIOTT CHARGED that, in were followed, it need not takeas long as the HPKCC claims.UNITY SUPPORTERS alsocharge that the Hyde Park Her¬ald has consistently given slightcoverage to their plan, while fre-the separate schoolFor instance, Marriott says theHerald gave front-page coverage tohave children in the public schoolsystem, asking their support forthe plan. The fifty-four such facul¬ty members were called by phoneat the beginning of September. Ofthe 41 who could be reached, threeexpressed opposition to the Unityplan, 29 said they supported it orwere at least favorably inclined,and the rest declined comment.Julian Levi has pointed out sev¬eral serious weaknesses in Willis’sproposal for a Murray site build has never mentioned the existenceof a petition supporting the Unityplan which, he says, has six thou-mer, but will have to return to his hearings with representatives from reporting the figures of school pop- a petition for a new school, butteaching duties. He did cost studies both sides will be held October 13. ulation for the elementary schools l'”'' ——.... . , .. , . of the plan for the educational Tbe main concern of supporters which would feed into any separateof lctte” 10 Isn'Hy members who “rk and marshals fact* and fig- of a separate school is thatmany Hyde Park school, the H.r.ld... . i, r.n i. . ri" «. nniu>es |q the claim of out- "hite and Negro middle-class par- and the Conference left one mostly- sand signatures.standing efficiency of operation. He eids *rom Hyde Park want their Negro elementary school out of the Marriott also points out that thehas a child presently in HPIiS. children to go to a high school calculations. This is Reaviss school, Herald's figures of a 50-50 balanceMarriott savs hr ramr to <umnort which is not overwhelmingly lower- 53rd and Maryland, with about one between whites and Negroes inUtaUnity plan onl^afterthe^Thcu class Negro. thousand students, Hyde Park are wholly inaccurate,mas proposal was drawn up Until A HYDE PARK HERALD editor!- By his calculations, including As far as school-age populationthen, there was no concrete propo- al of December 2, 1964, for in- Reaviss school a separate Hyde goes, the figures are 69.8 percentsal in sie«t which ronld handle the stance, says “...it seems unreason- Park school of the proposed size of Negro, 27.0 percent white, and 3.2increasing numbers of high school abIe to expect that all parents who 1800-2200 would have empty class- percent other,students he told a MAROON inter- send to®*1, children to Hyde Park rooms if only Hyde Park residents Marriott and others also object toviewer Before almost all communi- High will continue to fight what are attended. Since “outsiders” would, what Marriott calls“schoolbusting,ty groups in Woodlawn backed the almost hopeless odds coupled with therefore, have to be brought in, scare editorials.” He cites suchn.u.. i... the critical overcrowding Droblem the proportion of Negroes in such a phrases as, “extremely precarious~ iTnitv nian Marriott «aid ho had the critical overcrowding probleming and cited the imaginativeness pia" J«arn^ sai°* ne Baa in the high school... Why should school would increase, to a mini- racial balance,” “most authoritiesof the Unity plan however, he fore-a ^ n!z white or Negro middle class fami- mum of 81 percent, Marriott says. feel that the number of white stu-sees some difficulties in putting it bmty of clearing a site next to the . . community un_ whether “racial ratios” do hainto effect under the present quite oi£ ^ ZS canummagtnaUye city school admtms- {J ^ th*l^dha5tuliente i„ the we maintain, let alone expand, inte-Roald Campbell of the education Past, The Woodlawn Organization gfat‘°“ ^fisUnThigh^^choolT°b'department has gone on record and °tber.groPps had ,"'slsJed that In the editorial of July 21, the „ - *.*«.*.aw,~ ^..0,0.,supporting the Unity plan on the new housing be available for any- Hera!d on th€ theme: Hyde Parkers about the fact that figures to show that there has beencondition that full support from on« displaced by an urban renew- tl^ we do ^jd another high there are only a few hundredHyde Park is assured. If there is al p(ro^^. , . . - school in Hyde Park-Kenwood, the whites among the Hyde Park Highcontinued dissension, he thinks the Woodlawn s attitude present high school will be totally School students.” Julian Levi, onoverwhelming problem of over- Instead, TWO is one of the most segregated shortly. . .Hyde Park- the other hand, discounts talk thatcrowdedness is urgent enough to ardent backers of the Unity plan Kenwood will become a community racial patterns in the schools are ofrequire another school as soon as for clearing the area. In addition, a cf people too rich to care or too primary, or even very great, im-possible. If a separate school should poll of the residents of the blocks poor to move If we do not have a portance to most people in deciding tjjg school board must decide. Thebe built, it must be “clustered” which would be cleared, conducted high school that more realistically whether to stay or move out of a battle might be ended at the Octo-with the present HPHS, that is, by Woodlawn residents connected reflects this community’s racial neighborhood. . ^ ber 13 meeting, but will more likelythere must be opportunity for trans- with the SWAP tutoring project, balance of approximately 50% Ne- Speed a question r * be deferred yet again, while thefer from one school to the other, showed that practically everyone gro and 50% white.” Another matter over which there battle continues to rage.Campbell told the Maroon. would be quite willing to move in A DEBATE in early Septem-So far, however, the provost and away. They have no affection for ber, Robert Solomon of the Corn-president of the university have the slummy, rat-infested buildings mittee for a New School, and a Whether “racial ratios” do have dents will continue to decline to thea serious effect on parents’ atti- point of total segregation within thetudes toward public schools is a next three to five years,” andmatter of some dispute. Roald “ghettos can be made in less thanCampbell, for instance, says, five years.”“There is real worry among white Both Marriott and Benston citeno big drop in white high schoolpopulation or the desirability ofland in Hyde Park.WHILE THE facts and figuresare still being tossed about, andvarious groups are planning rallies,“R&dle j How can you talt* Or cat Society man froman old foieyf Answer: Aakhim to identify V.S. Or ant!If the anew or it (a Civil Watdonorar he’t a certified oJ.;ft he tayt ‘a federal sub-aldy/ he’aa O. S» fot l«wrr*nt luu* of NA«■ flONAL RSVIBW, writ#*** P«pt. CP I, 1|0 t31 ft., N. Y. II, N. V.PIERRE ANDREIM flatteringFarfefan chi#tenft4* RyA FhKMH R. IM•• IH99%. 9tmSta§ HeKnowsThe Max Brook Co.CI£AK£RS- lAilORS - LAUNDERfRS 'K0 served ffie Camjfct with Unexcelled Qualifyand $ervk« $f$* —1013-17 EMI HAAcross from . Pfiottes: Ml 3-7447HY 3-4848 (Open Dawn to Dawn)Hobby Houise Restaurant1342 E. 53rd St.Featuring:BREAKFAST SPECIAL 49c2 Eggs any style, Hash Brown Potatoes, Toast, Coffeeluncheon specials • • e • • 95cAND ANNOUNCING OUR NEWDINNER MENUfeaturing many new Items such as BB Ribs, Pork Chops,^2L Butt Steaks, Roast Pork, Roast Beef, etc.AT REASONABLE PRICESI J Jv ■•irr,-Tif > gwilWe NEVER CLOSECHICA6Q MARQOtl^ aTheatre reviewCourt Theatre productions not perfect, but exciting, rewardinglacked the necessary tension andexcitement.The big scenes came early. WesSanders was a cold, stoical Brutuswhose pondering of right actionmade up the most brilliantly actedand directed portion of the play.His short scene with Renee Capel¬lini (Portia) showed acting at itsbest. Playing against Tom Keener’slukewarm Cassius, the pace sloweda bit,- but his solos were simpleand elegant.It was an evening for bit parts.I .- -Music review Not only Miss Capellini (whose ac¬complishments are well known toolder UC students) but also JoelCope (Casca) and John Silvano(Caius Ligarius) displayed consid¬erable talent. Charles Geraciplayed Antony as a man who is al¬ways playing a part—an actor’sactor, in other words—and did itvery well indeed.Northcott’s version of The Lady'sNot For Burning by ChristopherFry displayed superb teamwork:author with director, male with female lead, technical with actingcrews. The only annoying questionwhich could possibly occur to any¬one is: “Why Fry?”Well, why not? The play is a bitlight-weight for Court, which isgenerally given over to the old-timeclassics or to problem plays.But The Lady is a witty, giftedcomedy of ideas and an astonish¬ingly mellifluous verse play, quali¬ties which make it play exceeding¬ly well. And if The Lady has thisall-important essence of the dra¬matic, who cares if it lacks “thehigher truth and higher serious¬ness”.Kenneth Northcott, the director,showed great sympathy for Fry,playing up every stagy minute ofthe farce—the two seemed madeSymphony season off on wrong footRelaxing after its fling with The Bard last summer, UC Court Theatre presented a slight¬ly more diversified program this season — and with rather better results. Although none ofthe plays — Julius Caesar, The Lady's Not For Burning, and Volpone — was by any stretchof the will a perfect production, each was, in its way, an exciting and rewarding show, wellworth laying down your shekels tosee in this or any other man’stown.The best spectacle of the seasonwas Jonson’s Volpone, directedwith skill and bizazz by Jim O’¬Reilly. The production sported areal medicine-show wagon, a her¬maphrodite (Hene Tamarkin), thelargest dwarf in the world, and O’¬Reilly himself in the title role.Despite the side-show effects, O’¬Reilly got down to his text to pro¬duce a play faithful to the learnedBen’s message and moral as wellas his boffs.O'REILLY and John Lion (Mos-ca the Gadfly were a bit weak intheir lines—at least they werewhen I saw the play opening night—which is understandably consid-the*others'wer!}hword'perfeet' John a young and now-forgotten poet of Bulgarian extraction depth emerged in Martinon’s two-Silvano (Voltore the Vulture) was once remarked, “If you can’t trust your banker, who can you dimensional performance, how-excellent, especially in the trial trust?” Even he, however, would have admitted that one sel- ever’ wh,ch S(iueezed a11 of theseS .r: “ *>"> -covers apt music criticism in ads for monetary instttu- ^swooping down on his witnesses, tions, and would no doubt havenAUUAT1„„ . cal, incidentally, of all his perform-William Krug (Corbaccio the Ra- been mildly surprised by the cu- t-A DAMNATION probably „ .ven) shone as a rapacious if some- . , relevant naee -monsored bv scans a vaster scope than anY oth‘ e of Berlioz) was motivatedwhat deaf old man. y P s P° ^ er work of music ever written, by a desire to prevent the workWes Sanders (Corvino the Crow) the Continental Bank which graced within about two hours, it sweeps from degenerating into a musicalcame on a bit strong as the mid- the first program book of the Chi- literally from heaven to hell, via super-gideshow a course whichdle-aged merchant whose lust for cago Symphony’s gala 75th season, peasants, soldiers, drunkards, _ ..gold overcame his horror of being “Martha Norman built her busi- sylphs, and will-o’-the-wisps; it erlloz has left wide open for thea cuckold—an over-brutal Punci- ness on eclat, elan, verve, flair, soars from one vast fresco to an- unwary conductor. But Martinon’snello. But morals and manners and brilliance,” it proclaimed, other, often even superimposing efforts were of such low voltagewere less refined under King “How can she pass that on to her contrasting elements. Thus, not that Berlioz’ blinding flashes bare-James, and Sanders’ performance kids?” only is Faust suddenly snatched , «• t ..was certainly well within the limits UNFORTUNATELY, the Conti- from the lyric revery of his invoca- y . ’ .prescribed by Jonson’s stylization, nental neglected to resolve this tion to nature by Mephistopheles’ ^er> “*e ecstatic, the ironic, theTHE SHOW made up in gusto enigma. As a result, we may never sinister revelation that only his vu.‘2ar> the joyous, lovers, pil-What it lacked in polish and if the learn how she may have transmit- signature on the fatal paper can Srims, and infantry were all treat-emotions were sometimes raw, ted these qualities either to her save Marguerite; but further, the ed w‘tfl fuch delicacy and care,they were right for rare Ben Jon- offspring, or, were she more civic chilling exchange during which the ?uca fussiness, that it all mergedson. minded, to conductor Jean Marti- trap is brutally snapped shut is onc tedious ‘‘BALLET OFO’Reilly's other play Julius Cae- non. For if one were to try to pin- heard over the call of remote hunt- THE ^ SYLPHS.” Martinon justsar was not so evidently a labor of point the five most missing in- ing horns, sounds emanating from doesn * seem to realize that LAlove, although there were numer- gredients in his somewhat a world entirely alien to Faust’s DAMNATION without its bite, lyri-ous high points, mostly in the first abridged performance of Berlioz’ nightmare. And the “RIDE TO c,sm> and bombast is like a hothalf of the play. The spectacular gigantic opera-oratorio-choral sym- THE ABYSS” charges right fudge sundae without the iceelement so important for prevent- phony, L A DAMNATION D E through a chorus of peasants cream, cherry, and hot fudgeing anti climax, was too sparingly FAUST, one could hardly improve pleading “Santa Maria,” shatter- sauce. And whipped cream isused to support the action in the upon “eclat, elan, verve, flair and ing it with its violent rhythm of a^°ut as nourishing as Ibert. ItAct V battle scenes, so the finale brilliance.” hoofs. wasn’t until the “RIDE TO THENONE OF this tour de force in ABYSS,” which received a truly for each other. And so did VictorRostow and Eleanor Stuart, whoseteamwork resembled Lunt andFontanne’s. their scenes were likean intricate Pas De Deux; grace¬ful, charming, tightly constructed.WHY IS this Court Theatre sea¬son different from all others? Intwo words, superior acting: withSanders and Geraci, Rostow andStuart, Lion and O’Reilly playingthe leads in the three plays, whatcould really go drastically wrong?And the improvement was not onlyin the principals, but in many mi¬nor roles as well. Resident directorJim O’Reilly can look back withpride to the 1965 season, whenCourt Theatre finally achieved itspotential.David H. RichterHARPER THEATRE5238 S. HARPER BU 8-1717presentsTHE ESTABLISHMENT"England's satirical poke at tH« status quo".THRU OCT. 10th ONLYTUe*., wed., Thurs., 8:30 — Sun. 2:30 and 7: JO ,.... $:f-riday 8:30 — Sat. 7 and 10 P.M $3.MStudent Disc, with I.D. card availableonly on Tues., wed., Thurs., Sun. eve $!.2J You won't Have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if you’call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 terrifying performance, that Marti¬non allowed his forces to unleashanything like the potential withwhich Berlioz had invested them.Few of the supporting perform¬ers were of a calibre to steal theshow from the maestro. RichardVerreau, plagued with a cold, sanghis usual monochromatic Faust.Because the orchestral executionwas so tame, his voice was more audible than it often Is; this, how¬ever, merely emphasized his limit¬ed insight into the part. Whethersinging of the raptures of love, themarvels of nature, or his disgustwith the vulgar world about him,he always sounded like he wascomplaining about too much home-work.«¥ou’d have to slither as fardown the scale as Puccini to find avehicle suitable for his kind of per¬petual sob.MARILYN HORNE, on the otherhand, grasped all the innuendos ofthe text and transmitted them,soaring over the orchestra with¬out a trace of strain or scream. Ifher tone had been a little lessvoluptuous, she would have beena magnificent Marguerite. As itwas, even though she often soun¬ded more vampish than virginal,she was the star of the afternoon.As for Ezio Flagello, he com¬bined the jollity of Santa Clauswith the gruffness of Grandpapa inPETER AND THE WOLF: hardlythe material from which is moldeda memorable Mephistopheles. Andthe Chicago Symphony Chorus,which often outdoes the orchestra,sounded unusually thin and ane¬mic.In fact, besides Miss Horne, theonly bright note of the afternoonwas struck when the ChicagoChildren’s Choir chimed in thefinal measures, naively adding justthat touch of spontaneity whichthe adults lacked. Perhaps theseare the kids to which the Contin¬ental Bank was referring?44 Pete RabinowitzJeffery TheatreFABYAR( in Harper Court)offersBurlap for curtains and dividers, striped Indian throws, home-spun (printed and plain), synthetics, corduroy, quilted cotton, andbasket weaves, bonded jerseys, challis, paisley prints — all inwool. Velveteen, embroidered straps for guitar straps, suade leather elbow patchesand trim, wool braid. Lining material, Shetland yarn in all colors, Irish fishermanyarn, bulky knit, Unger yarns and imported yarns from France and the Netherlands.Vogue, Butterick, and McCall patterns, staghorn, abalone shell andlather buttons. Olive wood buttons too. Thread and notions.MORE10-9 on Thursday10-5:30 Other DaysClosed Sunday 5225 Harper—363-234* 1952 E. 71st ST. HY 3-3333 //Starts FRIDAY, OCT. 1EXCLUSIVE SOUTHEAST SIDESHOWINGLIMITED ENGAGEMENT /* K 1presentsPeter SaHets Peter (HboloHomy SchneiderCepucinePeula Prentissand lead but not la.tWoody Allenand guest starUrsula Andros9Retemd ff* UNITED ARTISTSTECHNICOLOR*' What's NewPussycat?FEATURE TIMES ALL WEEKyi TAl-SAM-'Y5»NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPCN DAILYII A.M. H 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT131 • Em» 63 rd S*. MU 4-1062 MAROONWeekendGuide50’i.Ur €«n*9« itudentiwith Ltf. cord• diitmmt doublefeature i daily• open dawn to• little gal leryM gal* onlyFri. 1—"the moon it blue"man witti tr»* gown arm"Sat. J—"none but the orave","conquered city"Sun. 3—"the world of suzy"flower drum song"Mon. 4—"malamonda","africa adventure"Tues. 5—"berlin express","death of a scoundrel"Wed. 6—"she couldn't say no","stage struck"Thur. 7—"one eyed jacks""the tin star"glfA R fhiftitfgflv MMi ALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.After dinner don't miss the newplay at the Last Stage, “4 by 4”Join us for cocktails at inter¬mission and sandwiches afterthe show.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST A HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 8-7595 For That After-Theater Hunger!visitOLIVER TWISTCOFFEE SHOP53rd & HarperFeaturingHyde Park's Newest InnovationA Charcoal Broiled Sandwich & Dinner(Ice Cream Specialties)THE MEDICIGALLERY and COFFEE HOUSE• coffers CHOCOLATES• FOOD RJD• ITALIAN ICE CREAMS• LOX E RAGCl• SUNDAY MCAKFAST• HYDE PARK'S MOST DELICIOUS HAMBURGERf COMFORTABLE & RELAXING\ REMBRANDT FACSIMILE ETCHINGSHOURS: Weekdays 6-12 P.M., Friday Till 1 A.M.Saturday 12 A.M.-2 A.M, Sunday 10 A.M.-12 P.M.% 1450 E. 57thBehind The GREEN DOOR BOOK SHOPWm MR. BIGGS #'The Friendly Restaurant"1440 E. 57th St.684-9398ALL the SPAGHETTIYOU can eat 'with French Bread & ButterCHICKEN in the BASKETSalad, French Fries, French Bread and Butter99c NICKY'SRESTAURANT AND PIZZANICKY'S TAKE-OUT &DELIVERY MENUdtaafe andRIBS1 Slab .......... 2.502 Slabs 4.75 Pizza Small Medium LargeCHEESE 1.35 2.15 3.20SAUSAGE ... 2.40 3.50ANCHOVIE .. 1.60 2.40 3.50ONION 2.20 3.25PEPPER 2.40 3.50MUSHROOM . 1.60 2.40 3.50BACON 1.60 2.40 3.50HAM 1.60 2.40 3.50CHICKIE IN THE BOX10 Large Pieces . 2.5016 Large Pieces . 3.7520 Large Pieces . 4.75On Sundays no foodIs served in the dormCome to MR. BIGGSWe reach a higher culinary normAn Indian delightl,Chicken Curry and Jambolaya RiceServed at MR. BIGGS $1.25Every Saturday Night. ^Includes soup, lettuce and tomato,bread and butter59c alnt a heck of a lotAll the pancakes you can eatSore hits the spotat MR. BIGGS on SundayOur SPECIALS are fineForeign dishes divineGood food is our ruleAny old time. .Mr. Biggs Burger $1.35n ft. Freshly ground Choice Beef, served on Rosen's Rye, ^ftWKh Fries A Salad with Cheat#.,- #1.45OPEN EVERY DAY EXCEPT WEDNESDAY - Free Stu cr inf DeliveryWITH THIS COUPON4 Pizzas for thePrice of 3On Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs.In OCTOBER SANDWICHESPlain or BAR BQ Beef 75Meat Ball 65Sausage 65Above Served with PeppersHAMBURGER 50CHEESEBURGER 60BAKED LASAGNE 1.75FA 4-5340i Gala Maroon Party!!FREE EVERYTHING!!Saturday Night1435 East 60th Place!!On^Blackstone Avenue!!^Pcj.J, 1N5 A aACHICAgO MAROON a 23i— ~:* ' ; •"' V ’ a v ' - ,r V‘, - 4^~ '-■/> <7 -' > * ' *' *1 7 4 ' ‘ ' 'J'p V r 4 ' ->' '' fr» * ,. ' , , ^If faculty salaries imply qualify, UC's great 4- ‘Just about any way you figure, the UC schedule of facultysalaries comes out near the top in the country.Depending on what criterion is used, average faculty pay atUC could be ranked: tied for first, fourth, second, fifth, ortied for fourteenth.Data on average salary rankingsIs published by the American Asso¬ciation of University Professors Average compensationThe second system of rating isby total average compensation.7s summer *ssue °i hie r|-^e highest ranking school underAAUP Bulletin. this system is Harvard with $17,-In one section of its long report OOO. UC is fourth with $15,113.entitled “The Economic Status of Either of these two systems canthe Profession, 1964-65,” the AAUP distort the picture of an institu-gives a rating to each institution tion’s scale. In the rank-by-rankcovered. For each academic rank, rating, an institution’s position de-the average salary is rated “AA.”' pends not only on how much mon-*‘A” and on down the alphabet to gy jt spends, but also on how many*” persons it hires in each rank.UC'S RATINGS are “AA” for In the overall average compen-Instructor, and for assistant profes- sation rating, a school like Har-sor. “A” for associate professor vard is given a much higher figureand full professor. because a relatively large percentNo institution got a higher set of age of its teaching staff is grad-ratings, although three got equally uate teaching assistants, who aregood ratings. They are Harvard, not included in calculating the av-Hunter College of New York, and erage. A school like Yale, whichCity College of New York. has more undergraduate than grad¬ uate students, and which teachesundergraduates with regular facul¬ty members, will have a large pro¬portion of its faculty in the lowerranks. This will naturally tend todepress the “average” figure.TO OVERCOME these distor¬tions, one can take a composite ofthe two systems. The top ten insti¬tutions in this method of figuringare shown in table 2. Harvard isfirst, UC is second.The overall average compensa¬ by the number of full time students(counting two part-time studentsas one full-time student). Underthis system, the highest-ratedschool is California Institute ofTechnology, with $2,439 per stu¬dent. UC is fifth with $1,607 perstudent, while Harvard shows amere $868 per student.The last rating system brings ina new factor, the minimum com¬pensation, This is the lowest salaryan institution says it pays to any- The University is unique in Itsdegree of flexibility in setting anindividual faculty member’s sal¬ary, Levi said. As a result, therange of salaries here is greaterthan at comparable institutions.Raiding partiesLevi has for some time not beenashamed to admit that UC is will¬ing to pay whatever price is re¬quired to attract the finest availa¬ble faculty members away from:• '-'la-:Table No. 1ft - - -r Assoc. Asst.Prof. Prof. Prof. Inst.U. of Chicago A A AA AA* City College (CUNY) A A AA AA■Be Harvard A A AA AA,4 Hunter (CUNY) A A AA A AAmherst A A A A A■ki Brooklyn College A A AA A| Columbia A A A AAIf MIT A A A AA11 NY St. U(Stony Brook) A A A A ARochester A A A AAWesleyan A A A A ACal. Tech. A A A A? jl Duke A A A A»■ jj Northwestern A A A A!{ U. of Penn. A A A A| Princeton A A A AStanford A A A A-: ■ Yale A A A A Table No. 2Average CompensationCompensation Amount % per student-1964-35 1963-64 Increase Increase equivalent1 Harvard 17,100 16,600 500 3.0 8682 U. of Chicago 15,113 " V339 774 5.4 1.6073 Parsons 15,244 4966 2,278 17.4 3374 MIT 14,43G ,710 726 53 1,5235 Columbia 14,330 ’,470 860 6.4 NR6 Amherst 14,135 \616 519 3.8 1,6857 Cal Tech 15.223 '222 1,003 7.1 2,4398 Rochester 13,614 4000 614 4.7 1,1829 Stanford 15,031 ,385 646 4.5 88310 Cornell 14,496 13,424 972 7.2 NRAverage for tlmse !«n 14,862 13,973 889 6.4 — •note: NR m * " ^ "o availabletion of the 683 institutions reportingcomparable data for both lastacademic year and the year beforewas $10,132 for 1951-35. This rep¬resented an increase of $571, or sixpercent, over 1933-64. The averageincrease in the ten top schools list¬ed in table 2 was $889, or 6.4 per¬cent.The increase at UC was $774. or5.4 percent. These statistics wouldseem to indicate there is no gener¬al trend toward uniformity of sal¬aries among the different schools.THE FOURTH rating systemrelates faculty salaries to the sizeof the institution. The amountspent on faculty salaries is divided one within each rank. Thirteen in¬stitutions have an “A” in both theaverage and the minimum com¬pensations. Five institutions, in¬cluding UC, have on “A” for aver¬age compensation but not for theminimum.According to provost Edward H.Levi, UC dees hot have an “A” inits minimum compensation be¬cause, unlike many instilu.ions. UCdoes not use a pay scale whichspecifies a faculty member’s sal¬ary by rank and length of service.At UC there are no minimums ormaximums for any rank or for anypart of the University.. whatever institutions may now em¬ploy them. It is believed the Uni¬versity’s total faculty is increasingslowly, as more new persons jointhe faculty than leave.Between 1993 and 1963, UC didnot release its average faculty sal¬ary figures to the AAUP. althoughit was usually considered a verywell-paying institution.In the several years before 1963when average salaries were againreleased, the University made aconcerted effort to raise salariesgenerally, with particular empha¬sis on departments which had fal¬len below desired standards.p,1 Last Saturday I watched my youngest son, 16 years old. play his first varsity highschool football game like his 2 "older brothers who played 22 years and 18 years ago.He plays guard. With less than a minute to go, score tied, he threw a key bloc.; anahis team, Fenger High, scored and v/on. „Doctors looking at his record at “Bobs Roberts” for 14 of his 16 years might callthis a miracle.We at SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS are hoping and working for a miracle with thesame determination shown by our youngest son. We are doing all we can to stay inHYDE PARK or return to it. The JUDGE said move October 7 or shortly thereafter.Where to we don’t know as of nowr. So until we move we are selling our stock at lowerprices than ever before. Seven specials this week for MAROON readers.Please refer to this ad or bring it with you when making your purchase.$3721 low back chairs in various fabrics.Open teak ?rvnsformerly $75 to $669 sofas—black exteriors. Skai (inside fabric)76" long—converts to firm sleeper for 1 or 2formerly $280.21 love seats—5 fabrics.Open teak arms.formerly $1?548 TV tables (te*k-size 23'/z" X 15Vi X 20'With or without shelfformerly S?3 t124 teak coffee tables (size-39Vi" X 22" X 19" hiqh)formerly $4718 sets of stacking tables (3)Teakformerly $54 $127hirth)$17$17$37$7716 teak chifforriers.Flip top desk plus 3 drawer chests.Formerly $120CASH AHD CARRY EXCEPT SOFA, LOVE SEAT. AND CHIFFORRIERS****** Free Oeliyery in Hyde ParkOCTOBER 1 is our Seventh Anniversary in the import business.So . . . what should have been said in the first place . . .THANKS A LOTScandinavian Imports1538 E. 53rd St. 11 A.M. ■ 7 P.MMON. & THURS. io 9 P.M. NO 7-4040CHICAGO MAROON Oct. 1, 1965F7‘