Chicago Maroon SUMMERWEEKLYVol. 73 No. 3 Tho University of Chicago Friday, July 8, 1966|-i 1 iiy i*. l*.-The hot 4th of July weekend packed Chicago's beaches with bathers.Here, area kids enjoy the water at the 57th Street beach. SCLC, CCCO Preparingfor Massive Sunday Rallyby David A. SetterThis Sunday's civil rights rally inSoldier's Field will ‘’dramatize thegrand alliance between the op¬pressed people and the forces ofgood will in the community.” ac¬cording to Junius Griffin, the rallyco-ordinator.Griffin told the Maroon that therally will not involve picketing orcivil disobedience but will consistinstead of an afternoon of speechesand entertainment, followed by amarch on City Hall. At City Hall,the Southern Christian LeadershipConference (SCLC1 and the Coordi¬nating Council of Community Or¬ganizations (CCCO) will present aseries of demands to the city ad¬ministration.THE DEMANDS are beingworked out by a special commit¬tee. Griffin said, and will be basedon two working papers which out¬line the goals and demands of theChicago Freedom Movement.Three General GoalsA preliminary draft of the de¬mands states that civil rightsCity-Suburb Exchange UrgedAs Key to School Integrationby Daniel HertzbergA UC sociologist has urged the adoption of a new approach to school integration that wouldInvolve student and teacher exchanges between predominantly Negro city schools and whitesuburban schools.This “social process integration,” advocated by professor of sociology Morris Janowitz in apolicy paper sent to US Commis- forces in Chicago have three gen¬eral goals. The goals are to 1)bring power to the powerless, 2)’open up the major areas ofmetropolitan life (housing, employ¬ment, and education)” and 3)bring equality of opportunity andof results.In order to begin work towardthe Movement’s three generalgoals, civil rights forces will de¬mand that immediate action betaken in a wide range of fields.IN HOUSING, SCLC and CCCOare asking that real estate boardsand brokers immediately make alllistings available on a non-discrim-inatory basis. They are also de¬manding that banks and savingsinstitutions publicly state that theywill follow a nondiscriminatorymortgage policy so that "loans willbe available to any qualified bor¬rower without regard to the racialcomposition of the area, or the ageof the area” (in which the propertyinvolved is located).From the Chicago Housing Au¬thority and the Chicago DwellingsAssociation. SCLC and CCCO areasking for a program to rehabili¬tate public housing. They are alsoasking for a policy of constructingpublic housing outside the bound¬aries of the present Negro com¬munity.Other housing demands includethe enforcement of the Fair Prac¬tices Code against realtors whodiscriminate, the placement of wel¬fare recipients in housing through¬out the city and a saturation pro¬gram of city services for slumareas.Employment DemandsIn employment, civil rights forces will ask for publicationof racial headcounts to be taken inall city departments and all firms[ from which city purchases aremade. They will demand that busi¬ness concerns take radical steps toupgrade and to integrate all de¬partments. at all levels of employ¬ment. In addition they will ask thatlabor unions inaugurate a crashprogram to correct inequities inthe training of apprentices, jour¬neymen, and union staff and offi¬cials.In education, the demands willcall for the immediate desegrega¬tion of facilities in Chicago schoolsduring the academic year 1966-67and the withholding of state aidfrom any high school that doesnet permit open enrollment.SCLC AND CCCO will also callfor reforms in welfare, includingthe recognition of welfare unionsand community organizations asbargaining agents for welfare recip¬ients.In other areas, there will be de¬mands for a civilian review boardto consider charges of police bru¬tality, a demand for the replace¬ment of absentee precinct cap¬tains. and a demand for the directfunding of community organiza¬tions by the federal governmentthrough the Office of EconomicOpportunity.Junius Griffin told the Maroonthat the demands to be presentedare similar to what Martin LutherKing proposed in his plan for anopen city, June 8. He added, how¬ever. that the June 8th proposalsshould not be thought of as King sproposals. "King articulated the(Continued on Page Three)sioner of Education Harold HoweII, would concentrate at first onpromoting educational contactsbetween middle class whites andNegroes, rather than attempting tointegrate numerically inner cityschools populated by lower classfamilies.AT THE center of the proposalare four exchange programs offer- • One-semester or one-year ex¬change programs between city andsuburban schools involving firstteachers, and then selected stu¬dents. ‘‘We already have exchangeprograms between the UnitedStates and foreign countries,” Jan¬owitz writes, “but absurdly, westill do not have urban-suburbanprograms.”Federal EnforcementThese exchanges would be en¬forced by the federal governmentunder the threat of a cut-off of fed¬eral educational funds for thosemetropolitan areas not complying with the program. The federal gov- 'ernment would provide financing,beginning with programs in the tenlargest metropolitan areas in theUS.IN HIS paper Janowitz attackscurrent integration attempts forconcentrating on inner city bound¬ary areas containing lower classNegroes and, often, lower class jwhites. ‘‘The basic national strate- ‘gy has been to place the burden ofsocial change on those groups inthe inner city which are the leastequipped to handle these issues.” j(Continued on Page Seven) Bureaucracy Reshufflingto Streamline Ad Buildingby Miron Straf eling of the administration build-The expansion of campus tele- : ing.phone service and the need for ad- ! In addition to the general reno-ditional offices to house the staff vation of the building, which willfor UC’s $160 million campaign are include air-conditioning all offices,responsible for the current remod- many departments are being relo-— 1 cated.Area Profs Celebrate July 4 with Federal Building TeachoutMorris Janowitzing increasing cross racial con¬tacts:• A regular series of Negroguest lecturers and teachers lorsuburban schools. ‘‘There aremany, many suburban city schoolsystems where pupils go throughthe primary and secondary gradeswithout any teaching contact withNegroes,” Janowitz says in thepolicy paper. These first steps“are so simple and so direc t that itis difficult to comprehend thatsuch steps have not been taken bythe educational system.”• Reciprocal teaching visits bycity and suburban teachers offrom one day to one week inlength. These visiting programswould develop so that teacherscould bring with them groups oftheir students to participate ineducational programs.• Saturday workshop activitiesand summer programs involvingintegrated staffs and student bod¬ies. These would be held both atcity and suburban schools. by Edward P. BirnbaumOver 300 people heard nine speakers denounce the John-;son administration’s action in Vietnam at a July 4 teachoutat the Federal Building.Sponsored by the Midwest Committee on Vietnam, the pro¬gram featured seven professorsamong them Richard Flacks andMilton Rosenberg, both assistantprofessors at UC, who spoke aboutthe dishonesty with which the warhas been reported to the Americanpeople and gave their own versionsof the truth.Marvin Schinbrot, assistant pro¬fessor of mathematics at North¬western University, asserted that,because of the government’s dis¬honesty, ‘‘Democracy is dead!There’s nothing we can do aboutit.” He suggested that, in themeantime, those who opposed thewar should protest as vigorouslyas possible.Richard Flacks said that, wheth¬er or not democracy is actuallydead in America, “We must act asif it is not.” He urged that a move¬ment be built to establish ‘‘a dem¬ocratic and humane common¬wealth in the United States.”Flacks also urged that those whowere opposed to the President'sVietnam policy try to eliminate itssupporters from office, includingSenator Paul Douglas of Illinois. When asked later who he wouldsupport for the Senate in oppositionto Douglas, Flacks told the Maroonthat, although he did not stronglyfavor Douglas’ opponent, ChuckPercy, he wished to “punish”Douglas for his views on foreignpolicy by denying him his usual'liberal support. Flacks consideredClaude Lightfoot, the Communistcandidate, “an unfavorable alter¬native.” despite the latter's sym-pathetic views about the war.Milton Rosenberg, speaking after!Flacks, agreed with Flacks aboutthe need to organize democratical- jly to spread the truth and to “votethe rascals out.” He also namedSenator Douglas as a leading “ras¬cal.”Rosenberg called himself a“Nervous Nellie.” referring to aspeech in which President Johnsondenounced the opponents of hisVietnam policy. Rosenberg saidthat he was nervous both becauseof the President’s policy and be¬cause of his intolerance of dissent.Only two speakers at tho teach¬ out. Robert Swartz, a spokesmanfor Students for Self-determinationfrom Roosevelt University, andClark Kissinger, former SDS na¬tional secretary, were not collegeprofessors.Swartz called on all institutionscf higher learning to repudiate thewar by refusing to give class ranksto draft boards or to permit theuse of their premises for SelectiveService deferment tests.Kissinger speculated on the na¬ture of an imaginary British expla¬nation of the American Revolutionin terms resembling the presentofficial American interpretation ofthe Vietnamese conflict. Such aninterpretation, he said, would havecalled Washington’s armies agentsof French aggression.An SDS spokesman who hadbeen passing out leaflets that sameday at a meeting of the ChicagoHistorical Society announced, afterall the scheduled speakers hadspoken, saying that he and otherswho had handed out leaflets hadbeen arrested and had been bailedout by Chuck Percy, who wasspeaking at the meeting.It was announced at the teachoutthat another will be held at twelvenoon on Monday, July 18 at theFederal Building in the hope that itcan attract attention from themanv na«*Prchv in that aiva The planning and developmentstaff, which was recently enlargedto handle the fund-raising cam¬paign. will be alloted additionalroom on the third floor. Here willalso be the office of W. James At¬kins. director of the campaign.The new telephone equipmentwill service the new Wyler memo¬rial hospital for children, as wellas provide improved sendee forthe entire campus. The equipmentwill occupy almost half of the sixthfloor.MIKKEL HANSEN, assistantuniversity architect, is designingand coordinating all the remodel¬ing. The purpose of the changes,according to Hansen is “to estab¬lish a face of the university, morethan the administration buildinghas been in the past few years.”Offices on the second floor willbe entirely devoted to student af¬fairs. All the university’s deanswill be located there as well as theadmissions office and the office offinancial aid.A reception desk will be placedat the head of the stairs on thatfloor. “This will present the face ofthe university to new students andparents.” said Hansen. He addedthat new facilities are planned toprovide a pleasant environment tointerview students. The presentsight of the myriad desks strewedacross the floor will be eliminated.Remodeling of the second floor is(Continued on Pago Three)y'''THE LIVING HERITAGE OFBruno Walter’s elegance, fire, breadth and passionlive on in these definitive, poetic recordingsby the last great conductor of the Romantic era.SPECfAL LOW-PRICE SETSD3L 344/D3S 744* (A 3 Record Se«) D4L 342/D4S 742* (A 4 Record Set)Mono $7.38 Stereo $8.98 Mono $11.07 Stereo $13.47FREE REHEARSAL LP’s WITH THESE ALBUMSCOMTAfTS J■NO AUER’S WAGNER» its*', ir. t it■)-;afjtr ‘VKr r '-* s. sVASTHE H.VTX, OLTtHMAN0»timREtVAi«4»3B» OVERTtf't4\0N'E.SL’S8EMGM!iSICU'iHENusdN RftELLOfcTtj ACT|yiM- WsrMMi. 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Sen. 12-5Want Some RelaxationSummer Quarter?Visit Air-ConditionedTOAD HALLand choose from our largeselection of transistor radios,hi-fi's, stereos and t.v/sToad Hall 1444 E. 57th St.BU 8-45001 • CHICAGO MAROON • July 8, 1968 Ford Aids SouthNEW YORK (CPS) — In whatit termed a major effort to ad¬vance the quality of higher educa¬tion in the South, the Ford Founda¬tion this week announced grantstotaling $33.5 million to eightsouthern institutions.Since the grants require the in¬stitutions to raise matching funds,the total amount generated will bemore than $160 million.THE RECIPIENTS are threeuniversities—Duke, Emory, andVanderbilt—and five liberal artsinstitutions—Birmingham- South-ern, Furman, Hendrix, Millsaps,and Randolph-Macon Woman’s Col¬lege.All of the institutions are stillpredominantly white, but none aresegregated and all have met thefoundation's absolute requirementthat segregation must be aban¬doned. The eight institutions,moreover, are considered amongthe South’s most liberal, not onlyeducationally but in racial policies.The grants are the latest in a se¬ries known as the Special Programin Education—matching funds thatselected private universities andcolleges may use for whatever pur¬poses will enhance their academicprograms, such as faculty salaries,fellowships, curriculum develop¬ment, and buildings.Under the program, Duke Uni¬versity at Durham, N. C. will get$8 million and will raise $32 millionin matching funds; Emory Uni¬versity at Atlanta will get $6 mil¬lion on the promise of $24 millionin matching funds; Vanderbilt atNashville, Tenn., will get $11 mil¬lion and will raise $44 million; Bir¬mingham-Southern at Birmingham,Ala., will get $2 million and willraise $5 million; Furman in Green¬ville, S. C. $2 million for $6 millionin matching funds; Hendrix Collegein Conway, Ark., $1.5 million for$3.75 million in matching funds;Millsaps in Jackson, Miss., $1.5million for $3.75 million in match-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 newplays at the Last Stage. Join Usfor cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST A HARPERFeed served 11 e.m. to 3 s.m.Kitchen desed Wed.LI I-758S ing funds; and Randolph-Macon inLynchburg, Va., $1.5 million for$3.75 million in matching funds.UNDER THE SAME program,three institutions outside the South—DePauw University in Green-castle, Ind., Dickerson College InCarlisle, Pa., and the University ofRedlands in California—will eachreceive $2. million on a 3-to-lmatching basis.As Ford announced this programit disclosed that it considered itssupport of private liberal arts col¬leges in the South as now nearingits end. The emphasis in futuregrants, a spokesman said, will beon privately-supported, predomi¬nantly Negro colleges.However, the support of majoruniversities in the South, as op¬posed to liberal arts colleges, willbe continued.THE SPECIAL PROGRAM ofthe foundation has included ahandful of Southern schools in thepast. In addition, the Ford Founda¬tion has given a total of $19 millionto Negro higher education, with $6million going to the Negro CollegeFund and $13 million to 13 predom¬inately Negro colleges.“From its beginnings six yearsago, the special program hassought to help build centers of edu¬cational excellence in all parts ofthe country,” said McGeorge Bun¬dy, president of the foundation.He added, “These grants rep¬resent a major effort to help pri¬vate instituions in the South tomore fully attain parity of educa¬tional quality with leading institu¬tions in other regions.”To Award FifteenEducation GrantsFifteen fellowship* to train schol¬ars in education have been estab¬lished at UC through a US Officeof Education grant of $90,000.This autumn, the recipients ofthe fellowships will begin a full¬time, three-year course of studyfor the PhD that will emphasizetraining in disciplines related toeducation and also provide continu¬ing participation in research ineducation.The office ef education grantprovides annual starting stipendsof $2,400 (increasing $200 in each ofthe two succeeding years), $500 for•ach dependent and tuition for fourquarters a year.In announcing the grant for thenew fellowships, Ronald F. Camp¬bell, dean of the Graduate Schoolof Education and chairman of it*department ef education, said:“Our purpose is to produce cre¬ative edueational scholars with thehabit of productive research. Edu¬cation Is a vast and expanding en¬terprise involving tremendous ex¬penditures, and one faced withgreat problems arising out of ourchanginr society. Original and in¬novative answers are required.Only sharply focused and produc¬tive research ean give the answers;we are long past the stage wherethe man who ‘knows’ the answersand is too impatient to study theproblems is of any use.”ASAMATTEROF... Sun Life insurance Is a sure wayto financial independence for youand your family.At a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Peril Beak Building, Chicago If, ifFAlrfax 4-4800— FB 3-2390Office Hovrs 9 te A Meedeyt A FrldeyeSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OP CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY —Rockefeller Foundation Sends QuantrellAward Winner to Teach m PhilippinesElder J. Olson, a professor of English and one of thisyear’s Quantrell Award winners, has been appointed a Rocke¬feller Foundation professor at the University of the Philip¬pines, effective October 1, 1966. The appointment will runthrough September, 1967.Olson, who joined the faculty ofthe University in 1942, previouslytaught at the Armour Institute ofTechnology, Chicago. This year, hewas named one of the four facultywinners of the Llewellyn John andHarriet Manchester QuantrellAwards for Excellence in Under¬graduate Teaching.The Rockefeller program, inwhich Olson will be participating,is designed to strengthen theacademic offerings of selectedforeign universities by providingthem with American scholars.Olson received all his degreesfrom UC and is the author or co¬author of nine books and numerousscholarly articles. He has receivedseveral awards for his writing, in¬cluding the Poetry Society ofAmerica Award and the Academyof American Poets Award. ■ **• Elder J. OlsonRally Impact Hoped for(Continued from Pege One)hopes of the whole community,”Griffin said.Indications from people in theMovement are that the posting ofdemands at City Hall Sunday mayhave broad significance for the at¬titude of Negroes toward theirproblems.Charles Love, a member of theSCLC staff, told the Maroon thatthe authors of Sunday’s declarationare trying to project the idea thatthe only way a man can reallyabridge his rights is by cooperat¬ing with the system in which he isa slave. “People are going to freethemselves by declaring them¬selves free,” he said. Love addedthat it is hoped people will start toact out their new posture. The rally, which is scheduled toceed by Chicago disc jockey Herbbegin at 5:00 pm, will be precededby two hours of entertainment em-Kent from radio station WVON.The afternoon’s entertainers willinclude Harry Belafonte, OscarBrown Jr., blues singer B. B. King,and comedian Dick Gregory.SPEECHES WILL BEGIN at3:00 pm with addresses by EdgarChandler of the Church Federationand Rabbi Robert Marx of the Un¬ion of American Hebrew Congregalions.The main speeches of the after¬noon will be given by A1 Raby ofCCCO, and by Martin Luther King.Other speakers will be James Mer¬edith and possibly Floyd McKissickof the Congress of Racial Equality(CORE)The marchers will leave for CityHall with the conclusion of thespeeches at about 5:00 pm. Wants to Mike Historylllini Student Hopes to Be TrusteeMichael Stavy, a 22-year old stu¬dent at the University of Illinois’Chicago Circle campus hopes to bethe first student in Illinois historyto be elected to the University’sboard of trustees.Stavy plans to run as an inde¬pendent candidate in the Novem¬ber elections, but first, he quicklypoints out, he’s got to get on theballot. This means he must presentthe petition of 25,000 registered Illi¬nois voters to the state board ofelections before August 15th. If thisrequirement is met successfully,he will be certified to run as an in¬dependent candidate.The big job, according to Stavy,is not amassing 25,000 names. It’sseeing that at least 10,000 of themare evenly distributed over 50 ofIllinois’ 102 counties. “Some ofthose counties have more ducksthan people,” he said, “but don’t saythat. I don’t want to lose thosecounties."RIGHT NOW, Stavy is lookingfor volunteers in the Chicago areawho will help him collect signa¬tures before the August 15th dead¬line. Charles Schlesinger, an in¬structor at the University of Illi¬nois’ Urbana campus, is gatheringsignatures for him there. Stavy hasrecruited volunteers on the cam¬puses of both Northern and South¬ern Illinois Universities. “Just get¬ting on the ballot would be a victo¬ry,” he said.Stavy told the Maroon that evenif he doesn’t win, people may startto think of a student trustee as analternative to student pickets anddemonstrations. “The alternativehas not only the advantage ofbeing socially acceptable,” Stavysaid, “but would also effect a per¬manent link between student bodyand administration. The line ofcommunication would be tightenedand formalized. Students would beassured of having both a voice andan ear in decision-making.”Stavy would also like to seesome faculty on the board. (Atpresent this is illegal; no one under Michael Stavycontract to the University can alsobe a trustee.)STAVY THINKS changing theadministrative structure is the bestanswer to the problems created bythe huge “multiversity” in whichstudents, faculty and adminis¬trators have become increasinglyisolated from each other. He is notin favor of putting decision-makingin the hands of faculty and stu¬dents alone. To date, all decisions—both policy and financial—aremade by the board of trustees.Board members, according toStavy, are usually distinguishedalumni who are nominated byeither Democratic or RepublicanParties. Stavy feels they’re likelyto be out of touch with the Uni¬versity, which has changed drastic¬ally since they were part of it.Stavy pointed out that the job istime-consuming and demanding,but unpaid. This, Stavy thinks,may be one reason why the board doesn’t function as dynamically atit might.Students and faculty, however,Stavy declared, have a vested in¬terest in the board’s plans. Thesedecisions may affect their lives di¬rectly. Representing them on theboard might bring about importantchanges, Stavy said.Stavy’s platform includes plansfor a new official similar to theSwedish “Ombudsman.” This offi¬cial would hear all complaintsfrom faculty and students regard¬ing the functioning of the adminis¬tration. He would investigate them,and report his findings to theboard, to whom he would be res¬ponsible. His reports would beopen for all to criticize.ANOTHER OF Stavy s proposalsis that the board of trustees holdopen, rather than closed meetingson ali issues except hiring of per¬sonnel and buying of property. Stu¬dents would then be aware of is¬sues in time to voice opinions be¬fore a decision is taken. At pre¬sent, the board deliberates in pri¬vate and only announces the deci¬sion once it has been made.Stavy would also like to see thata student’s judicial rights are for¬malized. In a disciplinary casewhich could jeopardize his future,Stavy feels the student should begiven due process of law. Heshould be allowed to gather and tocross-examine his own witnesses,for example. Currently there is noset procedure.SUMMING UP his idea of a trus¬tee’s job, Stavy said: “The trus¬tee’s first obligation is to protectthe financial position of the univer¬sity and the second is to protect itsacademic freedom. The boardshould also explain to the publicthat the ideas of the university isnot to reflect the society around it.It is a place where new ideas aromade.” He is very much againstany type of speaker-ban rule.Calendar of Events\UC Revamping Administration Building; Offices Remodeled(Continued from Page One)expected to be completed by Au¬gust.THE PRESIDENT'S OFFICESand his entire executive staff, aawell as the university vice-presi¬dents are on the fifth floor. Theuniversity’s legal department isnow on the north end of that flooras part of the new reorganization.The departments of public rela¬tions and public affairs will bemoved to the south end of the thirdfloor. The expanded offices of plan¬ning and development will be onthe north end.Other than the installation of airconditioning, no changes areplanned for the first and fourthfloors. Additional offices on thenorth end of the basement havebeen built for the admissions staff. UC ANTICIPATED the need foradditional space and remodelingtwo years ago. No plans were de¬signed, however, until this spring,£tt which time the departments ofpurchasing, community real estate,and residence halls and commonsEgyptian UC GuestYusif Idris, a noted Egyptianauthor, will spend six months study¬ing American culture as a guestof the UC Center for Middle East¬ern Studies.Idris is a short story writer,playwright, novelist, journalist andscreen writer whose works havebeen translated into many lan¬guages, including English and Rus¬sian.GOLD CITY INN"t 6<M MiK if 6ood Fill"10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat More For LtssJTry Our Convenient Take-Out Orders were moved to 1166 E. 55th streetto allow for space into which of¬fices within the administrationbuilding could be expanded.All work on the administrationbuilding is expected to be complet¬ed by the autumn quarter.Hansen was pleased with thecooperation workmen receivedfrom the staff even though, hesaid, it appeared that “the admin¬istration building has been remod¬eled since the day it has beenbuilt.” Friday, July 8COURT THEATRE: Saint Joan, by Ber-nard Shaw, Hutchinson Court, 8:30 pm.SUMMER MIXER: 1936 North ClarkStreet. North Park Apartment Hotel.8:30-12:30 pm, $1.75.Saturday, July 9COURT THEATRE: Saint Joan, by Ber¬nard Shaw, Hutchinson Court, 8:30 pm.Sunday, Juluy 10RADIO SERIES: “From the Midway."WFMF, 100.3 me.. 7:00 am “Liberty."Marshall Cohen, Associate Professor,Department of Philosophy. (820 kc.,10 00 am)ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL: WorshipService, 11:00 am.COURT THEATRE: Saint Joan, by Ber¬nard Shaw, Hutchinson Court. 8:30 pm.Monday, July 11OPEN MEETING: Discussion of stu¬dent participation within the University,sponsored by Committee on StudentLife. Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm. Tuesday, July 12SWAP TUTOR ORIENTATION: 7:30pm in library of Ida Noyes Hall.LECTURE: “Bengali Renaissance,”Jyotirmoy Datta, visiting lecturer inBengali, Eckhart 133, 8 pm.Thursday, July 14LECTURE: “Indian Writing in Eng-lish,” M.G. Krishnamurthi, visiting as¬sistant professor of Dravidian, Eckhart133, 8 pm.COURT THEATRE: Saint Joan, by Ber¬nard Shaw, Hutchinson Court, 8:30 pm.PATRONIZEOURADVERTISERSHYDE PARK'S ORIGINAL OLD TYME PUBSmedley’sonHarperFEATURINGITALIAN SPAGHETTI & MEAT SAUCE - *1.00FULL 67 oz. PITCHERS OFSCHLITZ ON DRAUGHTKEEP COOL"5239 S. Harper NO 7-5546July I, 1966 • CHICAGO MAKOON • •f ■■£I ■\!j' v» -'iV' *C'WiiHllPO IjffilP!1) x f\ ... " ' • W V«'\» Point and 57th St. BeachJuly 8, 1966 ■ y*'/. j$f v W.’<^ijPhotos byJean Raisler.. .4; •• «*-•»;' :. i- - '', ebhmripi >< vmiMRiii^iiii w® $$ ^ ***" *■ —rLetters to the Editor of the MaroonI*ACE's Draft SupportTO THE EDITOR:A recent prominently displayedarticle in the Msroon is headlined•ACE Affirms Support for Draftvoices the opinion of the faculty inibis matter. We believe such anImpression would be extremelymisleading for the following rea-•ons.The American Council on Educa¬tion begins its discussion by statingthat it was made ‘out of concernfor an adequate supply of qualifiedmanpower for both the civilian andthe military needs of the country.’This statement aroused our detec¬tive instincts; faculty simply do »*«.**- • jgpsMODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 MILDEVELOPINGBtPMT PHOTO ADVICIMSA DISCOUNTSf!4t L J5H. HY 1-9259 not talk this way. The discussionson ranking we have had with otherfaculty members generally raisethe questions of the effect of rank-Procedures’. This might give riseto the impression that the ACEing on the quality of higher educa¬tion and the dangers attending thegreat governmental interferencewith the academic world. One seesno indication in the ACE statementthat these concerns are felt.We have discovered, admittedlyby word of mouth inquiry alone,the following facts about the ACE.(Our apoliogies to the ACE for anyinaccuracies, but really theyshould have let us know them¬selves exactly who they are, and inwhat sense they represent th? uni-Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 R A 6-1060 BOB RELSOE MOTORSImport CantraComplete RepairsAnd Service iff{Per AR Popular Import*Midway 1-45016052 So. Cottage GroveSOUTH & SOUTH EASTBOB NELSON MOTORS*134 S COTTAGE GROVE SEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES • SERVICE • PARTSe PICK UP 4 DELIVERYe EASY FINANCINGe LOW INSURANCE RATESMl 3-4500CHICAGO'S LARGEST &JUST AROUND THE CORNERSa« tha MAROON clattifiad for your campus tala* representativeJames Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING13*3 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-96*2SHIRTS - LINENS - TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. CardFor the Convenience and Needs of the University,VOLKSWAGENS 3.95 for 12 hrs. plus 6c mi.Mustangs — Tempests — Fords — PontiacsAlso AvailableKING RENT A CAR1330 E. 53 rd ST.DAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYIf you require a rental car for business, pleasure, or while yourcar is being repaired call us atMl 3-1715COURT HOUSERESTAURANT(HARPER COURT)CONTINENTAL ATMOSPHERE LUNCHDINNERSAFTER DINNERopen daily until 2 amAir ConditionedAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111— TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH —— NEW l USED -Seles end Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to Btudanta with ID card* versities.)The individual members of theACE are paid appointees of the ad¬ministration, (not of the faculty) ofthe universities whose intereststhey represent. Not only are theynot appointed by the faculty, butmost of them do not teach. This istrue, for example, of Mr. Morse,whom many will remember as rep¬resenting the position of the ACE,and defending the present SelectiveService policy, in debates at theUniversity of Chicago about amonth ago. (Note, by the way, thatthis was the same policy rep¬resented in the ‘special’ release tothe Meroon; which makes onequestion hew much debate is goingon in the ACE. Their ‘special’ re-Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856BOOKSSTATIONERYGREETING (ARDS"k-k-k-k-k-kTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student DiscountMARRIAGE end PREGNANCYsiTTESTSt. i 6 $ £ -t - Blood Typing A Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICECamp Iota Lab EKG A BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM • 10 PM lease is about as newsworthy orsurprising as a statement fromSDS at this time condemning rank¬ing would be; it represents nochange in policy.) This adminis¬trative, rather than educational,slant is reflected in the ACE state¬ment to the Maroon, which seesthe ranking issue solely in terms ofhow most efficiently to processmanpower—when the problem isviewed in these terms, one won¬ders why so many people haveraised such a fuss!The ACE serves the useful pur¬pose of representing many inter¬ests of the university community inWashington and elsewhere. How¬ever, if the above factors are cor¬rect, their “special release” is mis¬leading on two counts.First, the ACE have absolutelySAMUAL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE 192*PICKUP A DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake ParkHY 3-5200THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMOUNTING; MATTING;NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESB« Sura toAsk for Weekly SpecialDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111HYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3-2000 no right (o publicize their old posi¬tion as newsworthy or as rep¬resenting the position of the aca¬demic community. We suggest thatthe Maroon assume its responsibil¬ity of looking into the above mat¬ters in order to clarify exactlywhat the facts are.JACOB TOWBERASSISTANT PROFESSOROF MATHDE PAUL UNIVERSITYWILLIAM HOWARDASSOCIATE PROFESSOROF MATHUNIVERSITY OF ILL.CIRCLE CAMPUS(Editor's note: This view of theAmerican Council on Education'smakeup is appreciated. It should hemade clear, however, that the storyappearing in the Maroon was a newsstory only, intended to report theofficial position of an organizationthat many feel represents a large por»lion of the nation's educators. Thestory was not meant to interpret theirposition on the draft or the degreeto which they speak for differentgroups.)Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweat¬shirts, "Levis," rain parkas, ten¬nis shoes, underwear, jackets,camping equipment, wash pants,etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Student discount with adPIZZA PLATTER1508 Hyde Park Blvd.KE 6-6606 KE 6-3891Delivery .35TABLE SERVICEPIZZA AND ITALIAN FOODSANDWICHESVi FRIED CHICKENFRENCH FRIES COLE SLAWROLL * BUTTER$1.50Office Space AvailableNEAR THE UNIVERSITYhas Conference Room, Reception Room, and three private offices. Total2600 square feet.55th AT THE LAKE on South Shore Drive.Private entrance. N. T. NorbertPI 2-1000Who is your ideal date? Thousands use Central Control and its high-speedcomputer for a live, flesh-and-blood answer to this question.Your ideal date - such a person exists, of course.But how to get acquainted? 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Sohurry and send your $3.00 for your questionnaire.CENTRAL CONTROL, Inc.22 Park Avenue • Oklahoma City, OklahomaJuly 8, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • iTheatre Review Movfe ReviewI; 'Summer'—Great Evening FareCast: Summer in the CitySandra Sowell, Andrew “Coco”Robinson, Dean Nocera, JaneSteele, Shelley Fisher. KentForeman, Gloria Lewis, WarrenBurton, Gavin Wright, AnneHart. Spanky McFarlane. OrBach and Fred Williams.Summer in the City is a close toperfect summer night’s entertain¬ment: it is an enjoyable, some¬times poignant, collection of songs,poems and short skits, staged con¬ventionally well, and performed bya generally captivating cast. If thelyrics to some of the songs and thewords to the poems are not freshand vital, at least the sentimentswhich are expressed are genuineand moving.Oscar Brown's sor.gs are alltuneful, but several are real stand¬outs. In the first act, “Me Oh&Iy,” about a young girl’s excite¬ment over her first bikini is a goodhumorous satire pointed at some oftoday’s precocious adolescents. Inthe satirical vein, but less success¬ful, are “Cutthroat Competition,”about the misfortune of being awealthy businessman and “LuckyGuy” about the troubles of an ap¬parent Cassanova. Both “CutthroatCompetition” and Lucky Guy" arecleverly juxtaposed with a janitor'slament that instead of being a ty¬coon or a great lover he is “OnlyHe.”The two songs in the first actthat most impress are “Watermel¬on Man” and “From My Win¬dow.” Both songs are exceptionallywell sung, by Andrew “Coco" Rob¬inson, Sandra Sowell and SpankyMcFarlane, both have memorablemelodies, and both deal with realhuman feelings and situations.‘‘Watermelon Man” is sung by apushcart watermelon dealer mak¬ing his daily rounds selling, andEnding the day with a lover.*‘From My Window” is an effectiverendering of the thoughts of a lonewoman looking from her secondfloor window at her city neighbor¬hood.t “World of Trouble,” a purelycomical treatment of an adulteroussituation is very funny and excep¬tionally well sung by Shelley Fish¬er. The humorous reactions olKent Foreman, who also acts asnarrator of the revue, add much totho merriment of the number. Three songs in the second act,“Brown Baby,” “I’ll Be Back,”and “Plain Black Boy,” are partic¬ularly good. “Brown Baby,” sungas a lullaby, expresses a Negromother’s hope that her little childwill grow into a strong and goodman. “I’ll Be Back” is the affirm¬ative statement of a son to hismother as he leaves for the war,unsure that he really wi’l return.The last song of the trio is “PlainBlack Boy,” which reveals grieffor the boy who never does return.The poignancy of these songs isheightened by the strong deliveryof Gloria Lewis, Gavin Wright, andShelley Fisher. The arrangementof the songs is also effective; in¬stead of being strictly sequential,in between “I’ll Be Back” and“Plain Black Boy” there are sev¬eral frivolous songs and the plain¬tive “Buddy, Can You Spare aDime.”Oscar Brown’s staging, like Rob¬inson’s choreography, is enjoya¬ble to watch although it rarely isoriginal. The band provides a won¬derful background for the cast.The set by Jim Hayes is excellent,as is the lighting by Phil Hyde andAllan Harris. The best voices inthe company are Anne Hart, Shel¬ley Fisher, and Spanky McFarlane.Miss McFarlane’s group, Spankyand Our Gang, (which also in¬cludes Oz Bach and Fred Wil¬liams), is also excellent. KentForeman, the narrator, is adequatethough at times difficult to hear.Sandra Sowell is lithe and attrac¬tive, “Coco” Robinson a good sing¬er and dancer, Gavin Wright agood actor and singer, Gloria Lew¬is a competent singer and appeal¬ing performer, and Warren Burtonengaging on the stage. Dean No¬cera is most effective with songslike “Summer in the City” inwhich his voice, rather than hisacting, is most demanding; attimes his more emotional delivery(of songs like “Lucky Guy”) is ir¬ritating. Jane Steele, an exception¬ally attractive young performer,has tremendous stage presence,and is most suited for spoofingsongs like “Me Oh My” in whichshe can be frantic, clumsy andoverstaged. Unlike the other per-ormers in the cast, she works bestllone, and is not so compatible with the group, especially when itis to provide a choral background.She is a bit too aware of herself tocooperate fully in these efforts.Summer in the City closes, notwith the poem “Chicago” whichexpresses a love of the city despitethe troubles which it makes forsome of its citizens, but w’ith thelight and positive song “City Bythe Lake.” The revue emphasizesthe light and enjoyable, but alsoincludes sentimental and thought-provoking statements about theproblems which concern all people,and especially those in the city.The remarkable fact is that itscomments on integration and tol¬eration are so unobtrusive, soquiet, that they blend well with thehumor of the program.Mark Rosin Morgan! Worth Ita new British film, di-by Karel Reisz, whichOne of the current “good”things in life that the Play¬boy Empire offers us is “Morgan!,”rectedshould run at the Playboy Theatrefor several more weeks.Even without the bunnies, Itwould be well worth seeing. That’sbecause Morgan! strikingly upsetsthe usual British statement oncomedy, craziness, and social criti¬cism: that the alienated exist onlyas critics of the status quo.MORGAN (David Warner) is apeculiar blend of devout Trotskyiteand animal lover (with a particularattachment to gorillas). He has re¬turned to London from a sojourn inGreece during which his lovely wife Leonie (lovely Vanessa Red¬grave), finalized a divorce fromhim, and became engaged to amuch more “respectable” manthan Morgan. But Morgan, like agood, jealous, loving ape, cannotstand to see his wife sharing herbed with another and wants hisplace back.He is occasionally able to seduceher by pounding on his chest andmumbling in gorilla talk.He watches her every move bycamping out underneath her bed¬room window; he tries to scare offher fiancee by threatening him atwork with gun, knife, and brassknuckles; he upsets their carnalanticipations by bugging the bed¬room with jungle noises; he leaves(Continued on Page Seven)Culture CalendarArtART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO—Worksby Rene Magritte: Thru July 3. Winter-botham Collection: July 8—Aug. 8. '"trieArt of Living Exhibition”: Thru July 31.Recent Accessions of 20th CenturyDrawings and Prints. Prints, Drawingsand Watercolors from the collection.Photographs from the permanent collec¬tion. Free. Daily. 10-5; Thu. 10-9:30;Sun, 12-3. Michigan 8c Adams.ConcertsRAVINIA FESTIVAL—CHICAGO SYM-PHONY ORCHESTRA; Seiji Ozawa.Ravinia Music Director and ResidentConductor. Programs were not availa¬ble at press time.Third Week—Tue Sc Thu. July 12-14—Sixten Ehrling. eond.; Henryk Szeryng,v (on 14tht. Sat. July 16—Ehrling. cond;Szeryng. v.Fourth Week—Tue 8c Thu, July 19 *1—Josef Krips. cond.Fifth Week—Tue Be Thu. July 26-28—Seijt Ozawa, cond; Byron Janis. p.Works by Rachmaninoff for Piano AOroh. Sat. July 3t»—'William Steinburg.cond. Mahler: Sym No. 2 (Reserrec-tion) with soloists to be announced.Sixth Week—Tue, Aug 2—WilliamSteinberg, cond. Verdi: Requiem withsoloists to be announced.Nightly. 8:30. Adm to the park, $2.00.Reserved seats an additional chargeranging from $2.00 to $6.00. Tickets: Ra-vinia Festival Assoc. 22 W. Monroe.Daily, 9-5. Closed Sat 8c Sun. ST 2-9696.Ravinia Park. Highland Park 273-3500.GRANT PARK - CONCERTS — IrwinHoffman. Principal Conductor.Fri, July 8—Irwin Hoffman, cond; Don¬ald Peck, f; Edward Druzinsky, h All-Mozart Program. Sym No. 31; Cone. K.299 (for Flute and Harpl; Sym No. 41.Sat & Sun, July 9-10—James DePreist,cond; Marian Anderson, c. A Tribute tothe United Nations. Copland: Preamble for a Solemn Occasion (Marian Ander-son. narrator). Dvorak: Sym No. 7. Ha¬vel: Daphnis et Chios” Suite No. 2.Spirituals. .Wed July 13—Irwin Hoffman, cond;Florence Kopleff. c. All-Mahler Pro¬gram. Four Songs for Contralto; Songsof a Wayfarer: Sym No- LFri July 15—Irwin Hoffman, cond;Florence Kopleff. c: Grant Park SymCho; Thomas Peck. dir. All-BrahmsPrograms Academic Festival Overt:Song of the Fates for Cho 8c Orch; AltoRhapsodie, Op. 53. Sym No. 2.Sat & Sun. July 16-17—Martin Rich,cond: Judith Raskin, s. Haydn: SymNo. 102. Mozart Arias (Sat only): L'am-ero. saro costante from 11 Re Pastore;Batti. batti from Don Giovanni; Zef-fiertti Lusinghtere from Idomeneo;VVelche Wonne, weiche Lust from TheAbduction from the Seraglio. Bach:Cantata, No. 51 Jauehzet Gott in alienLanden (Sun only). Barber: Adagio forStrings. Op. 11; Knoxville: Summer of1915 for Soprano 8c Orch. Strauss; TillEulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks.Wed. July 20—Julius Rudel. cond;Paul Olefsky, vc. Mozart: Sym No. 25Haydn. Cone in D. Schubert: Sym No. 9in C.Fri, July 22—Julius Rudel, cond: Jef¬frey Siegel, p. Prokofieff: LieutenantKije Suite. Shostakovitch: Cone No. 1,Op. 35. Tchaikowsky: Sym No. 6.Sat 8c Sun, July 23-24—Julius Rudel.cond: Martina Arroyo, s; BeverlyWolff, ms; Michele Molese, t; RaymondMichalski. b; Grant Park Sym Cho,Thomas Peck, dir. All-Rossini Program.Excerpts from La Cenerentola; StabatMater.Wed July 27—Irwin Hoffman, cond;Samue’. Ashkenasi, v. All-Brahms Pro¬gram. Haydn Variations, Op. 56a; SymNo. 3; Violin Cone.TheatreWILL READINGTHE NEWREPUBLICmake you an authority on every timely topic?No, but if you read this news making magazine—you'll be way ahead of the game.The New Republic made news in advance:I THE NEWREPUBLIC IBe ahead of the newtwith well-informed opinions (10-WEEK TRIAL $1FOR ONLY 100 • About General Motors' efforts to silenceRalph Nader • About the growing criticismof our Vietnam policy (George F. Kennan'sfull testimony on Vietnam before the Ful-bright Committee appeared only in The NewRepublic) • About Government snooping in¬to its employees' private lives • Drug testing• Water pollution • What the spokesmenfor the ''New Left” were thinking and plan¬ning • The “revolt of the poor'' against thewar on poverty • The current debate overU.5. policy toward China and the American •position in the Far East. Also: Fresh features,book reviews, comments: “T.R.B.'' (pipelinefrom Washington), Robert Osborn, BillMauldin, Jules Feiffer (cartoons), RobertBrustein (drama), Frank Getlein (art), 8. H.Haggin (new recordings), reviews of the newAmerican and foreign films.CUP AND MAIL COUPON TODAYPlease add my*name to the growing list of informed peoplewho subscribe io The New Republic. I enclose $1 (or the next10 issues since I understand that the extra expense of billingme would make this bargain offer impossible.TO: THn NEW REPUBLIC BokCH1Z44 Nineteenth St., N.W., Washington, D C. 20014 ProfessionalHEI.I.O DOLLY!—David Merrick’sBroadway production starring Fve Ar-den; Gower Champion, dir. Nightly.8:30; Wed 8c Sat Matinees, 2 ClosedSun. Nightly, $3 50-S9.00; Matinees.$3.50 *6.00. Shubert Theatre, 22 W. Mon-roe. CE 6-8240.HITS OF BROADWAY—A show of mu¬sical comedy hits, changing monthly.Tue-Thu, 7:30, 9 & 10:30; Fri 8c Sat. 8,10. 11:30; Sun 4:30. 7:30 8c 9. ClosedMon. Nightly. $7.45-$8.45 (price includesdinner and show). Imperial Room. DelPrado Hotel, 5307 S. Hyde Park. HY 3-9600HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESSWITHOUT REALLY TRYING—The Pul-itzej^ prize-winning musical comedystarring Michael Arquette; William Pul.linsi, dir. Nightly. 8:30; Sat. 6 & 10:45;Sur, 7:30. Dinner is served 2 hours be.fore curtain time. $3.95 to $5.95 (in¬cludes dinner and show). 5620 S. Har-lem. Summit. GL 8-7373.JOY ’66—A musical revue by OscarBrown, Jr.; starring Oscar Brown Jr.Luis Henrique, Jean Pace, Rita Lerner,Glenn Scipio and the Floyd Morris Triowith bassist Ernest McCarty and drum¬mer Curtis Boyd. Nightly. 9; Fri & Sun9 8c 11:30; Sat. 8. 11. 1:30. Nightly, $2 95& $3 50; Fri. $3.50 8c $3 95; Sat. $3.95 8c$4.50. Happy Medium, 901 N. Rush. DE7-1000. THE ODD COUPLE—Neil Simon’s newcomedy hit starring Dan Dailey andRichard Benjamin: Mike Nichols, dir.Nightly. 8:30; Wed 8c Sat Matinee, 2.Nightly, $2 75-S5.00; Fri / Sat. $3 50-$5 95; Matinees. $2.50-$4 50. Blackston*Theatre, 60 E. Balbo. CE 6-8240.SECOND CITY—The title of the new22nd revue is “When the Owi Screams.”Sheldon Patinkin. dir. Starring Bob Cur¬ry. Sid Grossfeld. Sandy Holt. JonShank David alsh and Penny White.Nightly. 9. Fri. 9 8c 11; Sat. 9. 11 8c 1.$2.50; Fri 8t Sat, $3 00. Special Impro¬visations Sun. Tue-Thu at 11: $1.00. 1848N. Wells. DE 7-3992; MO 4-4032 after7:30.SHADY LANE FARM SUMMERTHEATER—A resident company ofEquity actors; Louis Tanno. dir. “YesMy Darling Daughter”? Thru July 3.“Right Bed-Wrong Husband”: July 5-17.“Me and Thee": July 19-31. Nightly.8:45: Sat. 7 8c 10; Sun. 8:15. Matinees.Wed 8c Tbu at 2 Closed Mon. Nightly,$3.20; Sat. $3 50; Matinees. $2.25 3miles west of Marengo on US 20(Northwest tollway to US 20). 815-S68-7218.College A CommunityCOURT THEATRE OF THE UNIVER¬SITY OF CHICAGO—Shaw’s ”St.Joan"; James O’Reilly, dir: July R, 9,10. 14. 15, 16. 17, 21. 22. 23. 24 at 8:30.Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night"; Har¬vey Landa, dir: July 29 . 30, 31 8c Aug 4.5, 6. 7, 11, 12. 13. 14 at 8:30. Thu 8c Sun.$1.75; students, $125 Fri. $2 00; stu¬dents, $150. Sat, $2 50 Courtyard tie-hind Mandel Hall, 57th 8c University. MI3-0800. ext 3581.ENCORE THEATRE—Lionel Bart’4musical "Oliver": Every Fri-Sun thruJuly. Fri. 8 30; Sat, 8: Sun, 7. $2 00 8c$300“Showstoppers." special revue pro-grams consisting of 45 minutes of enter¬taining production numbers and solo*from more than 36 well-known Rroad-way and off-Broadway shows. Wed 8cThu. R 8c 11; Fri «c Sat. 11 8c 12; Sun. 3Sc 4 $1.00. 1419 N Wells 664-5533.HULL HOUSE THEATER—PaulShyre’s “The Child Buyer.” based onJohn Hersey’s novel. Every Fri-Sun. Fri& Sat. 8.30; Sun. 7:30. Fri 8c Sat. $3.90;Sun. $3 40 .1212 N. Broadway. 348-5622HULL HOUSE THEATER AT PARK¬WAY—Stringberg’s "Miss Julie" andLeRoi Jones’ ‘"nie Slave”; Every Fri-Sun thru July 10.James Baldwin’s "Amen Corner”:Every Fri-Sun beginning July 15. Fri 3eSat. 8:30: Sun. 7:30. Fri 8c Sat. $2.50;Sun. $2.00. 500 E. 67th. 324-3880NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY DRY.MA FESTIVAL—A repertory of 3 plays.Jean Anouith’s unique charade “RingRound the Moon’’; Robert Schneide-man. dir: July 7, 10, 16, 20, 22, 28, 28, 318c Aug 6.Sheridan’s classic comedy “TheSchool for Scandal"; Jerome Landfield,dir: July 8. 12. 14. 17, 23, 27, 29 & Aug 2.4.Bernard Shaw’s “The Devil's Disci¬ple": July 9, 13. 15, 19, 21, 24, 30 8c Aug3 5'Nightly, 8 30 Nightly, $2 00; Fri 8cSat, $3.00. Garden Theatre, School ofSpeech (in ease of rain, the indoor audi¬torium), 1905 Sheridan, Evanston. 492-7282.TYPEWRITERSWe rent portable, standard and electric typewriters toUniversity Faculty, Students and Staff.Inquire about the application of 3 months rental feestoward the purchase price.For a short time only and at no extra charge we willinclude a typewriter table with certain typewriters youpurchase.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.PHOTOGRAPHYInquire about our selection of chemical* necessary toprocess your films and prints.Try our 24 hour processing service on color slides.i<( The University of Chicago Bookstore5602 Ellis Ave.t • CHICAGO MAROON • July 8, I960Janowitz—Integration of Schools Must Include the Suburbs(Continued from Page One)Due to such policies, Janowitzn rites, "In no major central city()f (he United States has plannedntegration of the public schoolsystem been decisive enough tomodify racial composition and pre¬vent the continued exodus of thewhite population.”Successful integration, he de¬clares, can only be achieved byprograms encompassing entiremetropolitan areas, where the totalpercentage of Negroes is not high,and utilizing teachers and pupilsfrom highly educated and profes¬sionally oriented middle classgroups, "who are most prone toaccept integration.”Contacts PromotedUtilizing these two factors, socialprocess integration focuses on pro¬ducing sustained inter-racial con¬tacts. "If the task of school inte¬gration is to make it possible forthe Negro youngster to enter themainstream of American society,school integration becomes in onesense a reality whenever there arecross-racial contacts for a pupil,”Janowitz states. AT THE same time, the programprovides suburban white childrenwith a chance to broaden the scopeof their social relationships. “Itraises fundamental questions ofwho is culturally deprived, for itpoints to the fact that youngstersraised in a suburban system with¬out social, cultural and inter-groupcontacts with racial minorities areliving in an artificial educationalenvironment, without adequatepreparation for life in ♦V worldcommunity.”While social process integrationwould start with Negroes andwhites from higher social statuses,it would later be expanded to in¬clude lower class Negroes andwhites. Initially, the emphasiswould be on the high school level,but the program "would rapidly beextended downward in grade, andbroadened in scope.”Advantages CitedJanowitz points out in his paperthat social process integration hasthe advantage of building new in¬stitutional arrangements withoutfundamentally altering the local¬ism and autonomy of the publicschool system. The program would also promoteresidential integration, he says, bybroadening the acquaintance of theNegro with suburban areas and en¬couraging the feeling that theirpresence will not be the basis for aracial confrontation.TO PROMOTE social process in¬tegration, Janowitz proposes thatthe President of the United Statesappoint ten persons, one in each ofthe ten largest metropolitan cen¬ters of the US, whose duty wouldbe to organize metropolitan coun¬cils on social process integration.These ten areas contain 22 per centof the school age population inAmerica.The activities of these councilsand their staffs would be subsid¬ized by federal funds administeredby the US Office of Education.Janowitz is also co-author, alongwith assistant professor of sociolo¬gy David P. Street, of a study onthe administrative structure of theChicago public school system re¬leased last fall. The report citedthe system’s organizational struc¬ture as a barrier to continuous andeffective innovation.Classified AdsPersonalsChartered bus to Stratford Theatre Fes-tival. Canada. Wkend July 15-17. DonGiovanni, Henry VT. 11th Nifht, Nicho¬las Romanov Sym., Iturdi. TicketsW 50-5.50 Sleeping accom. nerved Rnd.tip bus fare $30. 1-House Assoc. 324-0079 & FA 44SOO.BOOKS, jobs, baby-sitting. Student Co¬op. Reynolds Basement. X3581DISABLED fem. grad. stu. seeks room¬mate to share apt. in bldg, with eleva¬tor Vicinity of Chi. Univ. Assistanceneeded for stairs and long walks. Willpay part of helper's rent for the schoolyear. Call WH 3-2485 after 5. Ask forLynne.DISCUSSION group on Interdiscipli¬nary topics: report on “The Folk-NrbanContinuum Thure 8 pm at 5640 Wood-lawn Call Weber 643-2417 nights.For SaleDELMONICO refrigerator. 21,,xSl”xl9”Value new $100. ‘a year old $75. Bronzefinish 403-3870 after 8.63 JAWA 50 CC Motor Scooter. »150.752-8975 after 8 pm.59 FORD-Falrline 500. 4 dr. sed.. gd.condition. $875 or beat offer. 490-1806.Co-Op Apartment for Salo6 KM. apt., immed. occup.. 5537 Unlver-sity. Spacious, light lvg-dng. room,EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptemetrint53 Kimbark Plaza1300 East 53rd Street-HYd. Parle 3-8372Student and Faculty Discuunt woodbmg-firepl., kitchen w/washer, 2bedrms, study (or 3rd bedrm). Excel¬lent location, nbhd. bldg, maint., prkg,public transp. $10,700, terms. $07 assess¬ment. Willnot rent or lease. 643-9693,FR 2-8966.For Rent1 NICE furnished rm. kiteh. privileges.Available from Aug. 10-Oet. 10 HarperAve. Call HY 3-7443.HOTEL SHOR.ELANDSpecial student rates Hotel rms. withprivate baths, 2 students/rm. $46 stu¬dent per mo. Complete Hotel ServiceAsk for Mr. N. T. Norbert, 5464 S. ShoreDrive.3 BIG rms., ktch A bath. Furnished.Available Sept, l, '56 Harper Ave. CallHY 3-7443. WantedCOMPACT Car, ‘62-64. Up to $1,000.Prefer Dart or Valiant. 643-6466.Rider WantedGIRL or couple to share camping tripto Los Angeles with student’s wife.Leaving Aug. 3. Call 667 6886.TO Wash , DC area. Leaving SUn.,July 17. Call 475-8634.Lo$tFEMALE Siamese cat. Reward. Pleasecall 363-0602.Rentals—Camping EquipmentCAMPING equipment: tents, stoves,sleeping bags, & lanterns. X2381.TAhSAM-NfcNQURBI . AMENCAMRESTAURANTAMERICAN MIIMOEM DAILYf 1 AM. «e tfM MLORDERS TO TAKE OUTlltl Beat EMM MO E-IDO UNIVERSITYNATIONALRANKas low as3^5 D»13f4 IA3T 55th STREETMU 4-1200Jimmy’sand the University RoomMKRVBD EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNtVRtlTY Morgan! “Hurt of the Alienated Ones"(Continued from Page Six)his “identity” branded on therugs: & hammer and sickle sign,and these tactics don’t fail to im¬press. Leonie wavers. Fianceefumes. Upper class mother-in-lawis in shock. But you have to kind oflike Morgan for all this.FOR, SO FAR, Morgan is comic,social critic, lover, and hero; scar¬ing hell out of the complacent “se¬cure” people; and charming thebeautiful woman. This is reminis¬cent of other British films like Sat¬urday Night and Sunday Morning(also by Reisz) and Th* Lonelinessof the Long Distance Runner. TheHeroes in these films are also wit¬ty, charming, and competent socialantagonists; the Villains are every¬one else in the System—dull, hu¬morless, simple minded. Morganis, then, another Hero. Leone’sfiancee and her mother are theVillains. It all fits.But the movie goes on, and Mor¬gan’s efforts to regain Leonie be¬come more outrageous, until Leoniefinally gets fed up. She has decidedto marry her fiancee. Morgan,with his emotional back to thewall, is determined to stop themarriage. He gets it into his headthat he will crash Leonie’s uppercrust wedding as King-Kong,smash up the party, and carry offthe girl. But King-Kong only man¬ages to break a few dishes and getchased off with his gorilla costumeon fire. Leonie has r#ally given upon Morgan, and Morgan has lostwhat he felt was the only thing inlife that was better than his fanta¬sies of animals and Revolution.AND SOMETHING has shifted ...You no longer care about social criticism and “black humor.” Mor¬gan, our charming apeman, ishurting very much. And he isforced to run for bis life into aworld of terrifying fantasies. TheHero, part-human, part-gcrilla, haslost his hold. And for several an¬guished minutes, Morgan is allgorilla, whether he likes it or not.Morgan is in real pain. And nowyou feel bad you enjoyed the be¬ginning, because, you see, Morganhas been crazy all along. Our “pro-alienated” bias -prevented us fromrealizing it, or caring about it.And ultimately, that’s the specialthing about “Morgan 1“ Morgan,the objoct of laughter and admira¬tion has become the subject ofcompassion. And that makes it ahard movie. We don’t like to seeour heroes and funny men reallysuffer. Morgan ne longer fits theimage of the competent rebel; andyou end up wondering about boththe dreary life of Most People, andthe hurt of the Alienated Ones.Marc LublnPIERRE ANDREflatteringParisian chicSen akMedhdr stylists ot9142 Hyde Fork BivA2221 I. ?!st SLDO 1-071710% UTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingtwo K. ltd ft. NT 2-0901Ml 3-31125434 S. Kimbarkw# sell the best,and fix the restfareifn car hospitalDR. 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ARNOLDproprietor 1 THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Heeling Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:Southern Pried ChickenIn a Basket... $1.50Generous Order Every Sunday Night You can have a steaktoo, or the biggeststeokburger In town.Don Hamilfon Now Playing For Your Pleasure and DancingMASTERS DRAWINGS SALE* S eachSTARTS TODAY! FRIDAY, JULY 8OLD MASTERS, IMPRESSIONISTS, MODERNS.Fine art reproductions with maximum fidelity to the originals; Each drawing comes completely matted, with a die-cut opening to fit thepicture area.FRAMES TO FIT—$2.95 AND UP.Size 14x18 — (V)-Vertical (H)-HorizontalDR 101. Rubens: Young Womanwith Crossed Hands (V)DR 103. Botticelli: Abundance,or Autumn (V)DR 107. Gainsborough:A Woodland Valley (H)DR 109. Kuhn: A PleasantEvening (H)DR110. Li T'Ang: The Return ofDuke Wen of Chin (H)DR112. Lorrain: CampagnaLandscape (V)DR114. Maillol: Two FemaleNudes (V)DR118. Rubens: Study fora River God (H)DR120. 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Chinese Flower WatercolorsFrom Mustardseed GardenII (H)DR304. Chinese Flower WatercolorsFrom Mustardseed GardenIII (H)DR305. Chinese Flower WatercolorsFrom Mustardseed GardenIV (H)DR306. Piranesi: Santa MariaMaggiore (H)DR307. Piranesi: Saint John Lateran(H)DR309. Russell: The Alarm (H)DR310. Russell: Fight Between theBlackfeet and the Pidgeons(H)DR311. Klee: At the Beginning of aFeast (H)DR312. Marin: Deer Isle, Maine (H)DR313. Remington: A Sioux Chief(V)DR314. Remington: An ArmyPacker (V)DR315. Remington: A Breed (V)DR316. Remington: A. Trapper (V)DR317. Nolde: Portrait of a YoungMan (V)DR318. Nolde-. Portrait of a YoungGirl (V)DR319. An loway Chief (V)DR320. Chief of the Musquakees (V)DR321. A Pawnee Brave (V)DR323. Picasso: PierrotDR324. Picasso: Head of a Boy (blue)DR325. Rouault: Mother and ChildDR326. Rouault: The ClownTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORES5802 ELLIS AVENUE • CHICAGO 37 • ILLINOIS