75th Anniversary YearVol. 75-No. 9 The University of Chicago Friday, September 30, 1966UC To Begin New ProgramsSG Urges Open RevoltAgainst Women’s HoursAT THE END of his speech Hea¬gy insisted that he did “not seethis as a threat, much less an ulti¬matum to the administration.Rather it will be a collective deci¬sion that no further obedience canbe paid to the sham and hypocrisyof a double standard.”Commenting on Heagy’s speech,Warner A. Wick, dean of students,said that the issue of women’shours was one of several consid¬ered by a student-faculty commit¬tee on social rules which made rec-(Continued on Page 34)by Joan Phillips“Women’s hours will be abolished effective the beginningof w inter quarter,” announced Student Government (SG) presi¬dent Tom Heagy at an informational meeting for first yearstudents in Mandel Hall Tuesday morning.Heagy warned that unless theAdministration abolishes hours forfirst and second year women, SGwould “unilaterally” do so.The only reason women's hoursexist, Heagy maintained, is becausethe women think they do. “If ev¬eryone suddenly stopped obeyingthem, they would cease to existand there would be nothing thatcould realistically be done aboutit.”SPEAKING OF tactics, Heagyurged every girl who is willing tocommit a major violation of thehours regulation to do so duringthe first two weeks of winterquarter as part of an organizedcampaign. He suggested that atthe end of the two weeks they com¬mit a second violation by “attend¬ing history’s biggest and most in¬credible Hyde Park party, spon¬sored by SG, which will double asa victory party.”Heagy pointed out that if enoughwomen commit two violations, theAdministration would not have the“out” of merely sending repre-mandng letters while claiming thatthe hours restrictions remained inforce.“It is necessary, however, that amajority of women to whom hoursare applied participate,” he said.He asserted that “no matter what,it is not possible to expel half thepopulation of New Dorms.”'Indignity to Students'Heagy explained that by begin¬ning in winter quarter “we have afull quarter to organize, and weare lalowed—if those participatingdesire it—the compromise of re¬taining hours for first quarter, firstyear women.”Noting that the hours regulationsare sufficiently liberal and can beeasily violated without detection,Heagy stated that if the regula¬tions are to be opposed it cannotbe on the basis of their actual abil¬ity to restrict women’s hours.“Rather, they should be opposedbecause they are an indignity towhich no University of Chicagostudent should be subjected,” hedeclared.Heagy rejected a defense of wo¬men’s hours on the ground thatfirst and second year women arenot sufficiently mature to regulatetheir own lives. He said that if thiswere the true reason for hours, thelack of similar restrictions on firstand second year men implies thatwomen are two years less maturethan men of the same age.Instead, Heagy suggested thatthe regulations exist “as a sop foran ignorant public. They are noth¬ing but a vestige of the Victoriandouble standard,” he declared. by David L. AikenThe newest of the New Colleges, three years in the making, will open its intellectualdoors Monday.Four students entering the College this year, vast arrays of brand new programs andcourses are in various stages of development.Returning students will find that,while their own pattern of coursesmay not be changed very much,there are several newly designedcourses and programs to choose.They will also find that thespirit of innovation and trailblazingevident for the past couple of yearsis even more intense.General education for enteringstudents in the College is the pri¬mary focus of attention this year,as first-year students enter the“year in common.” The plan is forall students to share similar exper¬iences this first year, even thoughthey may take courses which pro¬ vision and two more outside theirspecial field.In the third tier, students willfulfill requirements for their majorprograms (about one year’s worth)and take electives. The “tiers” willfor most students overlap to somedegree, but students will normallycomplete the first tier no laterthan the end of the second year.Students entering this year willnot be asked to declare which ofthe five Collegiate divisions theywant to work in until the end ofthis year.The divisions, as established lastvide these experiences in different year are biology> humanities, phys-ways.Second Stage in the WorksWhile new students begin thisfirst tier of the new College curric¬ulum, faculty in each of the fiveCollegiate divisions are hard atwork designing programs for thesecond tier, consisting of four gen¬eral courses, at least two fromoutside their chosen Collegiate Di¬ signed to fit into the second tier,the year of non-specialized studyset by each division for its stu¬dents, are already prepared, butmost are still being designed.Course requirements and programsfor the third stage are still quitetentative, in most cases, since theywill not be in effect until two yearsfrom now.The “year in common” will con¬sist of four year-long courses, oneeach in humanities, socialsciences, physical sciences, andj biology. However, students will nottake the biology course until theirsecond year, after they have com¬pleted the physical sciences re¬quirements. As the fourth course intheir first year, therefore, moststudents will be able to choose anyical sciences, social sciences, andthe “New Collegiate Division”(NCD, often known as the “FifthCollege.”). . , , , AThe masters and staff of each course from the second quartetcollegiate division were set in full-year courses. These will becharge of planning for each of the courses which, in some cases, cov-three tiers. They have completed er, matenal from several fields:plans for the first tier, the “year in , whether they are continuations ofcommon.” Many programs de- (Continued on page 32)Beadle Picks Panel To Study Draftby Michael SeidmanUC President George Beadle has appointed a new student-faculty committee to investigateUniversity policy towards the Selective Service.The committee, chaired by Professor of Psychology Donald Fiske, and consisting offive faculty members and five students, will follow up the report of the Dunham committee1on the University and the draft is¬sued this summer held its firstmeeting this August, and has hadseveral meetings since then.The new student-faculty commit¬tee is part of the University’s con¬tinuing effort to deal with the con¬troversial question of Universitycooperation with the SelectiveService.Other Draft DevelopmentsOn other fronts there are thesedevelopments:e In a memorandum sent to theacademic deans on September 9,Beadle called on each dean to holdspecial meetings of faculty in hisarea to discuss student rankingand the Selective Service.• A special student-faculty com¬mittee on student participation un¬der the chairmanship of Dr. Rob¬ert Page, associate professor ofmedicine, has been formed. Thecommittee will discuss all aspectsof student participation in Univer¬sity decision making, including therole of students in formulating Uni¬versity draft policy.• Plans for an international con¬ference to study American draftpolicy are being formulated by a faculty committee. The Conferencewill meet December 4 through 6 atthe Center for Continuing Educa¬tion. Two noted congressmen aswell as a number of well known so¬ciologists, military experts, andgovernment figures have promisedto attend and serve as panel mem¬bers. In addition, 487 campusesand a number of national studentorganizations have been asked torecommend student participants.All fifty of the panelists as well asthe invited audience of eighty toone hundred will remain on cam¬ pus throughout the conference. OnDecember 7, the panel will make apublic report on its meetings, pos¬sibly to be covered by live radioand television.THERE APPEARS to be littlequestion that despite Universitydisclaimers, all this activity comesas a direct result of the student sit-in last spring. Even Fiske admitsthat although “other kinds of pre¬sentations could have led to thesame results, certainly a contribut¬ing factor to the University’s con¬cern was the fact that a sizable number of students were stronglymotivated to express their opinionson this issue.”Policy Chang* DoubtfulYet despite these indications ofUniversity concern over studentunrest, it seems doubtful that theUniversity will significantly changeits posture towards the selectiveservice.Fiske says that it is “possible”that his committee will come upwith recommendations for achange in University policy, butthat “we wouldn’t want to do it un¬less we have a great deal of unani¬mity.” Moreover, he adds, even ifthe committee does recommend re¬form “we have no way of knowing(Continued on Page 34)-v >\ ' « - ' ' v . ' 'The Maroon will holdits first staff meeting ofI the year on Sunday at 4 || pm. All new and return- ging students interested inworking on the paper are |urged to attend duringwhich plans for the yearwill be discussed. To Be Built at 55th and EllisWick Reveals Plan for Dorm Complexby Jeffrey KutaAlthough the University’s housing shortage will probably not be eliminated in the nearfuture, extensive progress is now being made.Dean of Students Warner Arms Wick, while calling the elimination of the shortage “aten-year project,” this week told of plans for an 800-student dormitory complex to be con¬structed within the next two orand athletic fields are , students is to be made up of onewm three years at Ellis Ave. and 55thSt.In sections of two to six storieshigh, the diamond-shaped mainstructure is to include singlerooms, doubles, and suites of threeto four single rooms adjoining acommon lounge. A planted courtwill occupy the center.Facilities for the Music Depart¬ment, possibly together with anarts center, will be constructed tothe east of the 14-house complex.Married student and faculty apart¬ mentsplanned for the area directly to the low-rise section and half of onewest.BESIDES ADJACENT loungeand recreation rooms in each low¬er-level house, plans call for exten¬sive basement facilities and sec¬ond-floor patio tennis courts.All single and double rooms areto be contained in the two-storysections, while suites will occupyall floors of the seven tower exten¬sions. Each of approximately 50 tower.Wick emphasized that doublerooms would be the exception, notthe rule, and that they would belarger than those at Pierce Hall orWoodward Court.Blum Recommendations“It was a simple matter of fol¬lowing the Blum committee’ssuggestions,” Wick said of the plan(Continued on Pag* 34)Genetics Gathering DUR Approves South Campus PlanDraws Nearly 1000by David E. GumpertNearly 1000 scientists fromover 30 countries gatheredhere for the third Internation¬al Congress of Human Genet¬ics September 5 through 10.“This was a very productivegathering, both from a scientificviewpoint and from the Universi¬ty’s viewpoint,” said David M.Locke, assistant director of publicrelations for the division of biologi¬cal affairs. others. Henry Gershowitz, a assis¬tant professor of human geneticsat the University of Michigan med¬ical school reported that parentswith a certain combination of bloodtypes apparently are less likely tohave a baby in the springtime thanany other time.ANOTHER STUDY, by RichardE. Stafford, associate director ofthe child development unit of theUniversity of Louisville School ofMedicine, presented evidence thatproficiency in certain abilities suchas verbal reasoning, spatial visual¬ization, and mathematical reason¬ing many be under the influence ofhereditary factors controlled bycertain genes. This study raisedthe possibility that the traits men¬tioned are either present in full ornot at all, rather than partiallypresent. —~Research Toldman of the general organizingcommittee of the Genetics Con¬ference held here.? s'' ;v' ' , nt: iTHE CONGRESS heard reportson a variety of subjects includingcomputer studies, genetic factorsin human diseases, and related re¬search. There were more than 40major addresses by specially invit¬ed speakers at two evening work¬shops and eight morning symposi¬um sessions.First in U.S.This was the first of the Interna¬tional Congresses of Human Genet¬ics to be held in the United States.Previous Congresses were held inCopenhagen (1956) and in Rome(1961). Of the many reports tocome out of the Congress, somewere more “spectacular” than The results of more extensive re¬search to verify the fact that leu¬kemia in an individual can bepredicted through the examinationof chromosomes was revealed byDr. Janet D. Rowley of UC’s de¬partment of medicine and ArgonneCancer Research Hospital, and Dr.Richard K. Blaisdell, assistant pro¬fessor of the department of medi¬cine and Argonne Cancer ResearchHospital.Also, that one twin is often lesslikely to contract both contagiousviral disease and cancer than theother was disclosed by Universityof Wisconsin researcher RichardH. Osborne.OTHER REPORTS concernedthemselves with an unsuspectedrelationship of a trace metal to ablood clotting factor, with the factthat children born to the survivorsof Japan’s atomic bombings ap¬pear no more likely to die youngthan other Japanese children, withthe extent of breakage caffeine caninduce in human chromosomes,and with the relation between leadpoisoning and the fall of Rome. South campus, looking East along the midwayHousing in the strip ofland between 60th and 61ststreets and Stoney Island andCottage Grove Avenues will betorn down and replaced with newUC facilities in the next severalyears. The Department of UrbanRenewal has approved plans forpurchase by UC of about 24 acres,or a million square feet of land fora total cost of about $1.16 million.PLANS FOR construction of aSocial Service Center and an Ur-Mime Troupe Due TomorrowThe Maroon will bring wide open San Francisco style entertainment to Hyde Park tomor¬row night in the form of the San Francisco Mime Troupe. They will play for a single per¬formance in Mandel Hall at 8 pm.“A Minstrel Show: Or Civil Rights in a Cracker Barrel” . . . which utilizes the traditionalAmerican minstrel show form to ban Education Center and expand¬ed facilities for the 1313 Public Ad¬ministration Center and the Ameri¬can Bar Center were mentioned byProfessor of Urban Studies JulianLevi, executive director of theSouth-East Chicago Commission,(SECC), the universitys chief armfor urban renewal activities. Pro¬posals for UC apartments housingin the area are being considered.Early OwnershipJohn D. Rockefeller purchasedparcels of this strip of land as ear¬ly as 1902, and ever since UC hasbought additional land as it has be¬come available. Now that the en¬tire strip of land is available forUC use, construction of the majorstructures described above will bestarted. the west side of Cottage Grovtnorth of 61st, according to the publication of Chicago’s Department olUrban Renewal. Residents of th<condemned area will have the option of moving into this new areacurrently occupied by deterioratingcommercial property.The new housing will be built under the 221 (d) (3) financing program, which involves governmentsubsidized interest rates. Thenwould be “a down payment of icouple of hundred dollars, then <monthly charge not more than th<rent the involved people are novpaying,” Levi emphasized.Demolition and construction willbe phased over several years, dueto consideration for the present Unemployment a ProblemUnemployment among about onethird of the residents of the 60thCottage Grove area will present iproblem, Levi said, since stead?income is a prerequisite for livinjin federal projects. With this iiWe can’t just present conclusionshistory of the oppression of thatto the audience. They have to | sad vegetable, the watermelon,make up their own minds, individ-mercilessly examine Uncle Tom,white Liberals, the hippies, themiddle-class Negro, Martin LutherKing, Jr., the Watts riots and theBlack Muslims, has been stirringup controversy wherever they haveplayed. A recent performance atSt. Martins’ College in Olympia,Washington was closed midway bythe school because of “embarrass¬ment” and because it brought cer¬tain investigations of sex “a littletoo close to home.”THE MIME TROUPE has an in¬terracial cast of six yukking, tam¬bourine-jangling minstrels in blackface and sky-blue satin tails, aninterlocutor and two old-timey ban¬jo players. It begins gaily enoughwith songs and dances, broad“darky” jokes and Stephen Fosterburlesques before it shifts into atight structured frieze of incidentsand becomes a weapon of brash,caustic satire aimed at all phasesof the Civil Rights movement andthe dishonesty and pretence onboth sides of the color line*Not Really ObsceneResponding to charges of obscen-itl, troupe director and co-authorof the show R. G. Davis says, “Theshow bothers everyone, even theperformers. We want to deal withhypocrisy in America, to show it. ually and collectively. If you areshowing something that happens onthe street, you have to show it theway it would happen, and that waymight include ofur letter words.But to delete those words and talkabout what’s happening instead ofshowing it, is not theater, that’s in¬tellectual discussion.”When asked why the tour hasbeen centered around colleges in¬stead of local theaters, Davis re¬plied, “In the first place these stu¬dents are going to be the votersand populace of tomorrow. Ourmost immediate hope for change.Secondly, and maybe most impor¬tant, students are more open-mind¬ed. They are constantly being chal¬lenged by new ideas and attitudesand are at leas t willing to hearthem out. Because they have lessof a vested interest in the societyyet, they see things more clearlyanu are willing to admit they seethem. They are exciting audiencestio play to.” ' * * ■THE SHOW REACHES heightsof irony as the audience joins insinging a prelude to a ten-minutecolor film by prize-winning cinema¬tographer Robert Nelson on the Critical AcclaimDespite the furor, critical ac¬claim has been high. The SanFrancisco Chronicle reported:“Beyond its success as pure enter¬tainment, which is prodigious, thestrength of “A Minstrel Show” isdifficult to assess. It is intelligent,perceptive and humorous, giving avivid expression to many of ourcivil wrongs,” The Nation said, onMarch 7, 1966, that the MimeTroupe is “in the middle of what’sreally happening in the San Fran¬cisco scene.” And San Franciscocritic and noted columnist RalphGleason has said that all this “haskept the Mime Troupe the mostconsistently exciting and fascinat¬ing theatrical group in San Fran¬cisco.”When asked if they had run intoany trouble, one of the minstrelsreplied, “Yes, A lot of girls havetold us that they want to see theshow but that their dates are em¬barrassed td take them. Makes youwonder, doesn’t it? At least itmakes me wonder.” - • '}TOMORROW NIGHT will beyour one and only chance to seethis show in Chicago. Don’t miss it.Tickets will be on sale at the door. residents. UC is cooperating withthe SECC and The Woodlawn Or¬ganization (TWO) in helping thepredominantly Negro population ofthe present South Campus areafind new homes."EVERYONE AGREES that theliving conditions in the 60th-Cot-tage Grove area are perfectly mis¬erable, and that something has tobe done,” said Levi. The federalgovernment will construct newhousing on nine acres of land onboth sides of Cottage Grove Ave.between 61st and 63rd Sts., and onThe boys will be where thegirls are more than ever thisyear.Visiting hours have beennearly doubled, according to Direc¬tor of Student Housing EdwardTurkington. Boys and girls will beallowed to socialize in dorm roomsfrom 4 pm to 1 am on Friday, 1pm to 1 am on Saturday, and 1 pmto 10 pm on Sunday.Although the Administration willpermit inter-house visitation inboth boys’ and girls’ dorms during mind, a Manpower Training Centeiis being planned by The WoodlawiOrganization and UC. Th<Veterans Administration, which i:planning a $24 million hospital iithe area has pledged to give neighborhood residents preference »employment.ASKED ABOUT opposition t<these plans, Levi described a publie hearing at which UC chose noto testify, and at which 60 are;residents testified in favor of them“There is no opposition,” he said.any of the new hours, in past yeanindividual houses, especially ugirls’ dorms, have voted to restrictheir hours more rigidly.The new hours result from negotiations held last year betweeiDean of Students Warner A. Wicland Richard Stone, President oInter-House Council. They represent a net increase of 14 hour.1over last year.As in the past, they will not apply to house lounges which ar<open every bight until 1:00 am unless individual house councils vot<to close them earlier.Of Boys and Girls2 • CHICAGO MAROON • - September 30, 1966UC to Renovate Hutchinson, ReynoldsFor Some Semblance of Student Union Arrested in CiceroUC may have some semb¬lance of a student union bythe beginning of winter quar¬ter, according to Dean of Stu¬dents Warner A. Wick.Hutchinson Commons and theReynolds Club will not be convert¬ed to headquarters for the musicdepartment as originally plannedlast year, but instead, the Com¬mons is being completely rehabili¬tated and air conditioned. “Itshould be in full operation as anall-campus eating facility and civiccenter by the beginning of winterquarter,” says Wick.IN ADDITION, Wick said a newgrill in Ida Noyes hall is now un¬der construction and should be inoperation under student manage¬ment sometime during the autumnquarter. Although its hours havenot as yet been determined it willbe, according to Wick, “primarilya night spot.”The Ida Noyes cafeteria wasfirst scheduled to be opened in thefall of 1964. In the spring of 1964,however, said Wick, when it wasdecided that Woodward cafeteriawould.be opened on a cash basis,plans for the cafeteria “just kindof languished and did not pick upspeed until this year.”Jeff Blum, a student member ofthe committee planning the reno¬vation of eating facilities on cam¬pus, sees the situation differently,however. “How could a primarilynight-time facility seating ninetypeople and having only a smallgrill be balanced against the behe¬moth of New Dorms Cafeteria?”he fairly shouted.THE MAIN HALL of the Com¬mons should be open and usable bythe end of October. While its ownfood service will be delayed, it willbe connected with the adjoining C-shop where some hot food will beavailable by the beginning of thequarter, says Wick.Stouffer’s Food Service will caterto both the C-shop and the Com¬mons. The Commons will be car¬peted and air-conditioned, and willalso contain new furniture. Oncethe catering service is ready in theC-shop, the vending machines willbe removed.The C-shop will serve breakfast,lunch, and dinner. Its tentativehours are 7 am to midnight, Mon¬day thru Friday; 8 am to 11 pm onSaturday; and 4 pm to 8 pm onSunday.THE COMMONS cafeteria willbe open initially only for lunch, 11am to 2 pm, Monday through Fri¬day, with no weekend service. This service may be expanded, howev¬er, if there is sufficient demand,according to Eugene L. Milller,business manager for campusoperations. Also, says Miller theUniversity is subsidizing the opera¬tions by maintaining the buildingrent-free and is also furnishingutilities.The new food services for thecampus are the result of a studymade by a special student-faeultycommittee headed by James Red-field, master of the new collegiatedivision.Tentative MenusAccording to tentative menussubmitted by Stouffer’s Food Serv¬ice, the commons cafeteria willfeature entrees priced between 65cto 90c, salads for 15c or 20c anddesserts from 15c to 25c.A breakfast special at the C-shopwill offer two eggs, three strips ofbacon, juice, toast, and coffee for75c. Items may also be ordered in¬dividually.A C-shop luncheon special mayrun around $1, and a typical dinnerspecial (eg. Chicken a la Kingwith French Fries, salad, dessert,and coffee) for $1.25.A “grill and pancake hour” dur¬ing the evening will offer for ex¬ample. Ham Steak and TahitianPancakes ($1.00) and CheeseBlintzes with Sour Cream (75c) aswell as the ubiquitous hamburgerand hot dog. Editors Have Day in CourtBy David E. GumpertDisorderly conduct charges against Maroon editor David A. Satter and former Maroon edi¬tor Robert F. Levey were dismissed in Cicero Circuit Court Monday. The charges grew out ofan attempt by Satter and Levey to interview Cicero residents immediately preceding a sche¬duled civil rights march into the racially sensitive Chicago suburb.According to Levey, who re¬ceived his bachelors degree fromUC last June and is presentlyworking for the Alburquerque,N.M. Tribune, the two went intoCicero on the afternoon of August25 hoping to “find out what theman on the street felt” about openHH housing for a possible magazinestory. This was three days beforethe scheduled open housing marchinto Cicero by civil rights forces.THE MARCH was cancelled atthe last minute when King re¬ceived assurances from MayorDaley and community leaders thatevery possible step would be takento establish open housing in andSATTER AND LEVEY, (I. and r.) with their lawyer, Irving L. Block,outside Cicero Circuit Court, 4932 W. 25th PI., Monday.Booth Tells Students How toFight Machine-like UniversityCoffee Shop a WhileIn Coming: WalterWalter, the legendary UCveteran who manages IdaNoyes Hall, doesn’t think thatthe University is making prog¬ress in constructing the proposedIda Noyes Coffee Shop.“They took out the old stuff realfast, like they meant business,”Walter said. “But since May theplumber has been taking his ownsweet time. They won’t finish thisyear.”Plans call for a snack bar at IdaNoyes to begin operation in mid-November. Construction has beenvery slow, however, and the open¬ing may be delayed as long as sixmonths. Lester Miller, Campus op¬erations chief, has stated that con¬struction will be finished by secondquarter. Walter has a differentopinion. Only time will prove oneof them right. Dean of the College WayneC. Booth dipped back into lit¬erary antiquity last week toexplain to entering studentshow to fight the “machine-like”University.In the annual Aims of Educationlecture, given last Tuesday inMandel Hall, Booth chose C. S.Lewis’ Screwtape as an allegoricalmodel of how pressures to makestudents’ thinking serve a specificend can be a negative influence ontoday’s University.In an imaginary correspondencebetween Screwtape and Dr. HarleyP. Sellout, vice president of Surro¬gate University — ghost-written byBooth — the dean railed againstsuch encroachments as nothingbeing done in Universities for itsown sake, unrealistic ivory tower-ism, and reading for non-coursepurposes."YOUR GOAL should be to mul¬tiply professors like that one atNorthwestern who, when askedwhether he had read a book, said‘read it, I haven’t even lectured onit yet,”’ Screwtape- Booth writes toSellout.“We triumph ... by metamor¬phosing (the university) into thebusy service of an indefinitely post-poneable and meaningless future,”Screwtape-Booth adds.Booth qua BoothIn an earlier and more familiarrole, Booth had told the class of 1970 that he had three concerns inhis speech.“My first point 'vill be that thoseof you who feel guilty about beingin college when you should beworking in Mississippi don’t needto feel guilty because you can suf¬fer just as much here as there,”Booth said."MY SECOND point will be thatthose of you who have come to theuniversity with the intention of re¬forming it by turning all its effortsto political goals are up against apassion that is bigger than you are— namely, the love my colleaguesand, I feel, that you will share forlearning for its own sake.”“My third point will be that youwill find at the university far moreinteresting scramblings of usefuland useless (education), far moreinteresting transformations of yourcurrent ideas of what is worthknowing, than you now dream of,”Booth said.Returning to his literary incarna¬tion, Screwtape-Booth had somesarcastic salvos for those who re¬fuse to think out problems indepth.Watchwords of Mind-rot“There are four slogans to re¬peat on all occasions,” Screwtape-Booth writes to Sellout.“♦Each man is entitled to hisown opinion, so why bother todiscuss it or read about it?♦All ideas can be exeplained inpractical terms as filling psycholog¬ical needs in their originators, soWUCB-FM Still Has A Long Way to GoWUCB, the hardluck campus ra¬dio station, will only be able tostart FM broadcasting this year ifit can raise an additional $14,000over and above its usual sources offunds.$19,000 is needed to start FMbroadcasting, according to ChuckMetalitz, WUCB station manager.Of this total, $2,000 has alreadybeen spent on a new console sys¬tem for the station and the Univer¬sity has committed an additional$3,000, but there remains a total of $14,000 yet to be raised.If the money can be gotten,WUCB will start broadcasting onboth AM and FM bands. The AMstation will be used primarily totrain people for the FM station.The FM station will broadcast overa radius of three to five milesbeaming taped campus events,WUCB news, and classical and folkmusic. As part of the expansion ofexisting WUCB facilties, AM trans¬mitters are being installed in Snell-Hitchcock, George Williams and5400 Greenwood. Wayne C. Boothwhy bother about them as ideas?♦Every thinker has been refutedby some other thinker, so whybother about him as a thinker?♦What the world needs is menof passionate commitment tocauses. The effort to think a prob¬lem through, or to think at all, is away of putting off action.”SCREWTAPE-BOOTH amplifiedhis comments by a d a i n g that“praiseworthy persistence in mak¬ing soul-grinding duty the sole prin¬ciple of their lives sets an exampleto faculty and students that couldnot be bettered.”Futurism and “repudiation ofnow” are the basic goods, Screw¬tape-Booth said. Depth and pureintellectuality are the basic evils.UC "Clean"As far as UC is concerned, Boothwas convinced that Screwtape’sdogmas did not hold.“But even so, I found that Icould not easily run down a list offaculty and students and adminis¬trators and categorically labelthem as belonging either to theEnemy or to Screwtape,” Boothsaid.TO MAKE this easier, Booth’sprediction to the audience was thathe and they faced ‘‘a continuingbattle, a battle of both thought andaction, in determining whether(UC) is to fall under the domina¬tion of old Screwtape.” W around Chicago. Over 2000 Illinoislillip National Guard troops had beencalled up to protect the marcherswhen King called the demonstra¬tion off.Charges FiledThe disorderly conduct chargeswere filed when a school storeowner, Mrs. Adele Novy, com¬plained to police after she was in¬terviewed by the pair. Accordingto the official complaintthey”. . .did make statements andask questions concerning an up¬coming civil demonstration, anddid thereby instill fear and alarmin Mrs. Adele Novy. . .”Both Levey and Satter, however,contended that they had no indica¬tion that Mrs. Novy was upset untilthey were stopped by Cicero policeabout an hour after they left theschool store. “She wasn’t very talk¬ative when we asked her ques¬tions, but she didn’t appear espe¬cially concerned either,” saidLevey.THE TWO were warned by po¬lice of their right to remain silentuntil they had obtained councel,noted Satter, but since “we hadnothing to hide,” they agreed toanswer questions.Police PrejudiceSatter a third year student in theCollege thought he sensed someprejudice on the part of the Ciceropolice. “The attitutde of the manwho interrogated me was as if hewas playing cat and mouse. He al¬ternated between artificial sinceri¬ty and syrupy sarcasm,” said Sat¬ter.Satter also told of being con¬fronted with a file of some articleshe and Levey had written for theMaroon that were kept on file byCicero police. “They showed me astory I had written earlier in thesummer predicting riots on theWest Side and asked me ‘Howcould you be so sure that therewould be riots before they hap¬pened?’ The whole idea of themhaving a file on me before arrest¬ing me is sort of disturbing,” saidSatter.AT THE TRAIL, prosecuting at¬torney Robert Zadek told Leveyand Satter before the judge, “Youguys are so intelligent but you arenot intelligent enough to realizewhat you are doing to this poorlady.”llie attorney representing Satterand Levey, Irving L. Block of 134S. LaSalle St. entered a plea of notguilty, contending that the two“merely made statements andasked questions.”After listening to both sides inthe case, magistrate Daniel J.White dismissed the case. Both Le¬vey and Satter expressed relief atthe decision and added that theyhad given thought to suing forfalse arrest.September 30, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Exclusive Maroon Interview with Dean of StudentsWick Rejects Formal Student Decision RoleEditor’s Note:This interview with Dean of Stu¬dents Warner A. Wick is the firstof a series of interviews with admin¬istrators that will be published inthe Maroon during the coming year.Maroon: Would you outline spe¬cifically what role you play in theUniversity hierarchy?Wick: The statutes of the Univer¬sity say, “under the supervision ofthe Provost, the Dean of Studentsof the University coordinates theUniversity’s relations with stu¬dents, including admissions, re¬cording and reporting, health serv¬ice, physical education and athlet¬ics, the educational and social su¬pervision of residence halls andclub houses, the direction of socialaffairs, the control of student or¬ganizations and publications, voca¬tional guidance and placement,student aid, the administration offellowships and scholarships, andof the service function of the Officeof Examinations, and of the stu¬dent advisory service in the Col¬lege, the Divisions, and theSchools. He is an ex officio mem¬ber of all committees on the curri¬culum in the College, the Divisionsand the Schools.” That’s a big or¬der!Maroon: From that description,you have a lot of power. What isyour reaction to the argument,then, that the decision-making proc¬ess as it now stands is basicallyundemocratic and should be mademore democratic?Wick: I don’t think there’s much init. Your remark indicates a misun¬derstanding of what my powersare, because they are not verygreat. The statutes use the expres¬sion "coordinates the University’srelations with students.” On thematter of admissions, for example,I never decide whether to admit astudent. Admissions in the Collegeare in the hands of a committeewhich includes members of the fac¬ulty and members of the staff ofthe office of Admissions who haveactually talked with the candi¬dates. If it’s scholarships, thesame general description applies.In the graduate divisions and inthe schools, questions about admis¬sion and aid are decided entirelyby faculty members in the particu¬lar areas. So I don’t have much todo with most matters directly, ex¬cept that I am ultimately responsi¬ble for seeing that they get done.Now that’s an important differ¬ence. The same thing could be saidalmost all along the line. I am thecoordinator; I am supposed to ar¬range for and facilitate the proce¬dures under which many, manythings are done. But I don’t dothem.Maroon: Suppose we change thequestion to read the decision-mak¬ing process in the sense that theadministration makes the big deci¬sions and the students are left outof it, not in the sense that you arethe one person with all the power.Wick: All right, it would be truethat in many of the matters thatare of concern, the students haveno formal role in the decision-mak¬ing process; but it is very impor¬tant fftat everyone realize that theadministration plays a relativelysmall' role in most decisions. Thisis a University that is very largelyrun by its faculty. And we verylargely do things as we do becausethat’s the way the faculty wantsthem-fdone. Not to bring up an un¬pleasant subject, but in the recentcontroversy about the use ofgrades and rank the basic, policywas : slt by the faculty exercisingits jj^sponsibility for academicgrading policy. The administration,i.e. the-^egiislrar’s Office, and"!too, were simply "carrying ouf thepolicy which had been set by thefaculty.Maroon: The faculty meets as a question in connection with this is¬sue, because my understanding ofit is that, regardless of the viewyou take of what ought to be doneabout ranking for selective servicepurposes, neither side believes thatit’s the sort of question that shouldbe settled by a public opinion poll.Certainly the students I know inthe SAR say that no matter whatthe majority think it would be students who indulge in such tac¬tics be subjected to disciplinaryprocedures “not excluding expul¬sion.” I can’t think of anythingmore official than that.Maroon: Do you anticipate thatthis would be the course of actionthe administration would follow ifsomething similar to last May’ssit in took place again?Wick: I think that’s a silly ques¬tion.Dean of Students Warner Arms Wick\ •• /S' | vwhole once a year for the mostpart. How do they make theirviews known if they meet togetheronly once a year?Wick: The whole faculty nevermeets as a deliberative body. Itnormally meets only to hear an an¬nual report by the President. Theconstitution of the University, thatis the statutes, divide the Universi- have had more say in making thatdecision, or would you have want¬ed to see a situation where stu¬dents had more say in that deci¬sion?ty into a number of separate “rul¬ing bodies,” as we call them. TheCollege is a ruling body, each ofthe four graduate divisions is aruling body, and each of the profes¬sional schools. Now these are bod¬ies of the faculty, with theirdeans as presiding officers, andthey are responsible for all aca¬demic policies that are limited totheir particular areas; and if thereare questions of academic policythat extend beyond one particularruling body, then we have a spe¬cial representative agency thatdeals with the significance of suchquestions for the University as awhole. That is the Council of theUniversity Senate.The whole faculty of this Universi¬ty is too large and diverse to en¬gage in meaningful discussion ordeliberation about most of theseissues. This is why we have theCouncil of the Senate as an electedbody to represent a faculty ofmore than 1,000 members. TheCouncil has 51 members, and it isreally the final academic authori¬ty; the final legislative academicauthority. *Maroon: Do you think thereshould be some means by whichstudents as -a whole could havemore say in the decision-makingprocess?Wick: I think this’is a questionwhich is very often confused.There’s a great difference betweenformal student representation in,say, one of these ruling bodies, andthe use of-d variety hf other de¬vices by which student sentinjent^orstudent opinion is made availableto influence what is done. I thinkthese two’ things are confused whenpeople think that if students do nothave a decisive vote on academici**tters they therefoite Have rid irir~fluence. That's Sihaply1 hotTfrn:e. ~Maroon: What about the recentsituation on ranking? Do you seeany means by which students could Wick: The question that’s worthdiscussing is whether the assump¬tion is true that students didn’thave any influence on the policy. Ithink that’s very questionable. Myunderstanding is that the vast ma¬jority of the male students in theUniversity thought the University’spractice which, incidentally, datesfrom 1951 or so with a short breakafter 1963,—the vast majority ofour students thought it was correct.This is very different from the as¬sumption that we don’t have stu¬dent influence unless we do thingsthe way a minority of the studentswant them done.Maroon: Well, how could youknow that a vast majority of thestudents wanted this when therewasn’t a poll taken beforehand,and the only poll taken was afterthe sit-in, which in itself was not avery accurate sampling?Wick: Beforehand, to be sure, itwas a matter of judgment—not awild guess—as to what the majorityof the students preferred. Butgranted that the referendum wasafter the fact, it did confirm ourjudgment; and also the behavior ofthe students during the summer inasking that their ranks be sentwas a pretty good indication. Wedo think, however, that it would bea mistake to assume that studentsdidn’t have an . effect even earlierbecause, contrary to the mythologythat has been current for a longtime, there was a great-deal of dis¬cussion among students, betweenstudents and the faculty, andamong students and faculty andmembers of the administration,from some time late last Februaryuntil tire whofe thing blew yp inMay. The fact that the Council ofthe Senate do£s its deliberating inclosed session^—Jor good- ma*sons—does hot mean that these dis¬cussions were not going on all thetime. They were. . ’ 5% • *:Maroon: But were these discus¬sions enough to warrant a decisionas ^important as the one'on ranking?"SncuId there"perhaps biTsbmeother means of finding out studentopinion?Wick: That’s a very interesting wrong to do it. And a great manypeople on the other side would saythat no matter what the majoritythink, those students—however few—who wish to make use of theirrights under the law to obtain edu¬cational deferments ought to be al¬lowed to do so. So I don’t think thisis such a good issue to use in orderto discuss the influence of majorityopinions.Maroon: It seems, however, youstill haven’t answered the questionput before, about whether thereshould be some means for studentsto have more say in making deci¬sions that will effect them as stu¬dents.Wick: I can’t give a direct answerto that because it’s not a clearquestion. Everything depends onwhat one means by students havinga say. I happen myself not tobelieve that students should havevotes in the Council or in any othercouncil concerned with these mat¬ters because to do so, to give themsuch a position would, I think,“politicize” almost every issue ofimportance. And the issues wouldthen tend to be decided not accord¬ing to their merits, not accordingto whether someone had a goodidea or not. but according to howmany votes he had, how many bat¬talions he had, or what his constit¬uency was. This in my view de¬stroys the whole idea of a universi¬ty. It’s like saying that since a ma¬jority think that 2 plus 2. is 5 that’swhat it ought to be.Maroon: In other words you don’tthink the University should be runthe way the country is run.Wick: No, I don’t. It’s not just an¬other kind of civil society. It’s aspecial king of institution that ex¬ists for a special kind of purpose.Maroon: Then do you see the sit¬uation remaining pretty much as itis now regarding students’ say inthings that will affect them?Wick: No, that doesn’t follow atall. One of the things that theCouncil has done has been tocreate a student-faculty committeeto explore just the question that weare discussing; and I would expectthat committee to come up withspecific proposals about a numberof old and new ways in which stu¬dent opinions o»n a variety of dif¬ferent kinds of issues can makethemselves felt. I can endorse withenthusiasm the idea of such a com¬mittee without thinking that allquestions should be settled bypressure groups.Maroon: Do you anticipate anychange in the University’s policyon ranking?Wick: I’m not any better as aprophet than you are. The impor¬tant thing to remember is that allof the separate faculties have beenasked to discuss just that questionat faculty meetings this fall. Andthey have also been asked to dis¬cuss, the question With their respec¬tive students. So nobody can tellwhat’s going to happen.Maroon: What would the Univer-sity’se-position be in the event ofanother sit-in similar to the onelast May?Wick: The official word on that isthe resolution voted in the specialM^y meeting of. the Senate; Whichin the first place commended theadnjini§trgti.on. ferJts-jestraint^inhandling the §it-in; "in 'the secondplace condemned the sit-in as animproper means of communicatinga protest; and in the third placerecommended that in the future Maroon: What is your feelingabout the unilateral abolition of so¬cial rules by Student Governmentas announced by Tom Heagy Tues¬day?Wick: I won’t believe it until I seeit. I am not aware that Tom Heagyhas the right to do that, or thepower.Maroon: What I’m saying is,would the University take anysteps should rules about women’shours be ignored?Wick: That’s obviously a questionthat I won’t answer now. The ap¬propriate thing to say at this pointis that procedures are already inmotion to deal with that questionin an orderly fashion, including, Imight say, a direct request to thewomen in the women’s houses totell us what they think about theissue. And until the house councilsand a special committee of housecouncil presidents have been heardfrom, it’s a little premature to spec¬ulate about hypothetical events. Iwould just like to remind everyonethat a faculty^student committeeon social rules made recommenda¬tions on this topic in the spring of1965; that as a direct response toone of that committee’s recom¬mendations we abolished hours reg¬ulations for third and fourth yearwomen last autumn quarter; thatwe also made certain other modifi¬cations in rules in the light of whatthe committee recommended; thatwe said further that last year’schange was not to be consideredfinal, but that since the committeehad not directly consulted the resi¬dents of either the men’s or thewomen’s houses we would not doanything further that involvedtheir interests until we .had ascer¬tained their own views. Last springa recommendation by the inter¬house council about visiting hourswas approved. We have not had arecommendation from the women’shouses specifically about women’shours. Consequently, late this sum¬mer we appointed a special com¬mittee of women house, presidentsand said that we really do want toknow what they think; we reallywish they would give us recom¬mendations. They are about to getto work.Maroon: Why has the housing sit¬uation been allowed to get as tightas it presently is? And do youthink the housing demonstrationlast spring did anything towardgiving impetus to any program theUniversity had or has?Wick: The answer to the secondquestion is no. The answer to thefirst question is that we’re short ofmoney. It takes money to build,and we don’t happen to have thatkind of money for that kind of pur¬pose, but money for housing is animportant goal of the 75th Anniver¬sary Campaign. j4XMaroon: Does the Umfcfebsity pres¬it buildiiently own apartment buildings mHyde Park that are not; being usedby students? . v-.fiWick: Yes, there are Some thatare used by faculty an<l staff, butvery few.Maroon: Are there any others thatare used just by Hyde1 IPark resi¬dents without regard to whether-they’re students of facility mem¬bers? tWic|c:. Not to./my knowledge. Imight be wrong;'Some years agowe owned quite a few, and it’s myunderstanding that we graduallyeither converted them to marriedstudent use or got rid of them.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • September 30, 1966Named Over SummerrI. Eleven New Faculty Members Appointed to University FacultyEleven new faculty mem¬bers, including a reknownedsociologist and a noted scholarof American reform politics,were appointed to the Universityfaculty over the summer.Daniel Bell, a specialist in urbansociology has been appointed a vis¬iting professor of sociology. Bell isa professor of sociology at Colum¬bia University.AT UC he will hold a joint ap¬pointment in the College and theGraduate Department of Sociology,and will teach both undergraduateand graduate courses.Bell is the author of The End ofIdeology a collection of essayswhich scrutinize some of the socialand political changes which haveoccurred in the United States sinceWorld War II.Writes on Gen. Ed. CenterIn his latest book. The Reform¬ing of General Education, Bellcomments on the present state ofgeneral education, particularly Co¬lumbia’s interdisciplinary coursesin contemporary civilizationand humanities. He also deals withgeneral education at UC and Har¬vard. In the book, Bell, defendsgeneral education courses that aredesigned to provide undergra¬duates with a broad understandingof Western culture and aimed atpreventing intellectual fragmenta¬tion.Arthur Mann, a student of Amer¬ican reform politics, has been ap¬pointed professor of American his¬tory. Since 1963, Mann has been pro¬fessor of history at Smith College,Northampton, Massachusetts.MANN'S TEACHING and writinghave centered on American urbanhistory, liberalism, social reform,religion, and immigration.In 1959 Mann published La Guar-dia: A Fighter Against His Times,1882-1933. This was followed in 1965by La Guardia Comes to Power:1933.In addition to the LaGuardiabooks, he has written Yankee Re¬formers in the Urban Age, Growthand Achievement: Temple Israel,1854-1954, and The ProgressiveEra: Liberal Renaissance or Li¬beral Failure?Casper AppointedIn other appointments, GerhardCasper, a comparative law scho¬lar, was named associate professorof law at the UC law school.Since 1964, Casper has been amember of the faculties of law andpolitical science at the Universityof California at Berkeley. He hasserved as a lecturer in compara¬tive law and assistant professor ofpolitical science.David Atlas, one of the world’sleaders in the field of radar meteo¬rology, has been appointed profes¬sor of meteorology in the depart¬ment of geophysical sciences.Atlas had been chief of theWeather Radar Branch, Geophy¬sics Research Directorate, AirForce Cambridge Research La¬boratories, Cambridge, Massachu¬setts since 1948. WILLIAM D. PATTISON was ap¬pointed an associate professor ofeducation and of geography.Pattison previously was an asso¬ciate professor of geography atSan Fernando Valley State College,Northridge, California.Pattison is chairman of the JointCommittee on Education of the As¬sociation of American Geographersand National Council for Geogra¬phic Education.He also is a member of theSteering Committee of the HighSchool Geography Project, a na¬tional curriculum revision organi¬zation sponsored by the NationalScience Foundation.Med. AppointmentsIn the Medical School, four newfaculty members were appointed.Dr. Michael Newton, the incomingdirector of the American College ofObstetricians and Gynecologists,was named clinical professor ofobstetrics and gynecology.The American College of Ob¬stetricians and Gynecologists, aprofessional medical society whichrepresents all obstetricians andgynecologists in America, is locat¬ed in Chicago.Newton formerly professor andchairman of the department of ob¬stetrics and gynecology at the Uni¬versity of Mississippi School ofMedicine, is an authority on cancerof the reproductive organs.At the University he will be onthe staff of Chicago Lying-in Hos¬pital.Newton is an active member ofseveral medical societies and is the author of more than 75 articlesin medical journals.DR. ALBERT B. LORINCZ, anauthority on metabolic aspects ofmalignancy and reproductive phy¬siology, was named professor ofobstetrics and gynecology.Since 1961, Lorincz had been pro¬fessor of obstetrics and gynecologyand chairman of the department atthe Creighton University School ofMedicine, Omaha, Nebraska.While at Creighton University,Lorincz also was on the staff ofseveral Omaha hospitals. He is amember of more than 25 medicaland scientific societies, and is theauthor or co-author of over 20 arti¬cles in medical publications.Elam NamedDr. James O. Elam, an authorityon techniques of cardiopulmonaryresuscitation, was named professorof anesthesiology.Elam has been professor andchairman of the department of an¬esthesiology of the University ofMissouri at Kansas City. He is co¬author of the book, Fundamentalsof Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation.In 1964, Elam became the firstchairman of the department of an¬esthesiology at the newly formedUniversity of Missouri School ofMedicine at Kansas City.Harry A. Fozzard, an authorityin the field of cardiac electrophy¬siology, was named associate pro¬fessor of medicine.SINCE 1962, FOZZARD has beena member of the faculty of the Washington University School ofMedicine in St. Louis.In the Department of Physiology,Constantine S. Spyropoulos, an au¬thority on electrophysiology, wasappointed professor of physiology.Genoa Co-DirectionSpyropoulos has been co-directorof the Department of Biophysicsand Cybernetics at the Universityof Genoa (Italy)’. He is now divid¬ing this time between the UC cam¬pus and the Atomic Energy Re¬search Center in Athens, Greece,where he conducts part of his re¬search.Spyropoulos is a member of theMarine Biological Laboratory,Woods Hole, Massachusetts; theAmerican Physiological Society,the Biophysical Society, and SigmaXi. He is the author of more than25 published research papers.mmLITERATI!The Chicago Literary Review,UC’s fastest-growing studentpublication, needs you. Editor¬ial jobs of all kinds are nowopen. If you’ve had editorialexperience, or never have butthink you’d be good at it, youare invited to apply.Come up and get acquainted.We’re located in the Maroonoffices, third floor Ida Noyes.Stop in any day after noon.£: ' ••• , •• WNEW TEXT BOOKS ■IKEDSTUDENT SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS— NOTE BOOKS — STATIONERY—ATTACHE & BRIEF CASESSPORTING GOODS —STUDY LAMPS—GRAPH PAPERS — NY TIMES — MAGAZINES— GIFT ITEMSTYPEWRITERS SOLD—RENTED—REPAIREDV11I (i POSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57«h STREET•TOM HOUMt DAILY l:M AM to MB PM Sunday 10 AM to 4:00 PMx » -,t ■ Soptombor 30, I960 • CHICAOO MAROON • SSocial Rules Problems mm ■m ii IP Fare Increased, Tonn-iichecks. ;Hea>|y e'ite^ihis “situation as typ’real of Communication problems in■- the -f iew**^f^strc'Eal . Tfe-aboli-f> v ^tro.n * of ^room qh<e<yc|^ was reborn1 Jrferidbd’ by ’iftfl. social "***'„ jrmtee lrf'jfs repo’rt Wsued iMHM'g§T Viewed 4Ke fsTfc^wjfSdCnt-facuity eo'm'.mitt'ee;.> 1 * ?FHe - com mittee feGonT*me'n<Ml/• that: . .v.• All dorm complexes“co educational ’’• No house be made tomod'ate more than sixty students.• AM new housing pl'ari.ssmall buildings arrangeders w-nth provisio‘nsk fbr>> apartment in ;ea‘chrh&fs.eif •• Assistant resident h:ead;s not tft,; 5; required to submit routine reportsaboift each student.•■m ' * Ida Noyes .be developed $|1 eowmunity e-enter open late■ night.• A .number of informal gather‘ing places for students and facultybe established at convenient spots<. throughout the campus.. , ‘ * House Me rules be decided bk each house.• A faculty-student committee beestablished, with power to. change house has gained theoretical•IF sodfeiaii a^ntu^ffeKafifi^I'rwmx '■ ‘ji-m ?mtiQohfQf$ir-’ 1, .... * . F . :Cleaners •• taunderers1013-17 E. 61st STREET Ml 3-7447• ■r->-. . •; .1174 E. 55th - FA 4-3500For Over Fifty Years .. .FINE DRY CLEANING ‘dd' S'.w. nhaike :he I n< < k ,11 poin$|)lex( instead of- the house. /Run.sA ki concession was mad*;rp ’ill* i ndal ion I * »r p* i mis.'^sion* t-uSi n'cheih-'x*? I i's rt I'n^Ri'ciuhsJESSEtSON'Sh' 3,.' • ... ■ - Hr:JCR VING HYMFARKFOR OVIR IO TiAR*WITH JHl WRY BIST AND FRKSHCfjTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2 2870, PL 2-8190, DO.5-9186 1140 I. SM 1 I 1 ill u ( fluffs RTorpsiiiV-n■ ■ . •■ i\ ■<"■!■ *• '■ • mV salaries- a;s ’fe&kwdtlffuis •tihtFvS-tesu^gMqrh.ru.' i«S; .paid s. i <- certificates. Trim-paidearn te-.i^hVrC>.'£*5*:'. 352 tv! m . • ■ l-> * , » . ^HIS OF CHICAGO YEARBOOK T ./-.<§QM:R;EN;SATt.QN( orpsmen ri'e* \e has broughtstlong opposition frp.m' Ropiest nlatfve Green;: shapinfmpst' educati.ohal legisfatipn lhc;■ 0|n'gg,e's:sworh;an: bswangiied that .the ^nancial benefitsre^e.iye^"by. p|rpsiSen|| c.bjnbinedipi f^e is^eSaif /atteritibn, ,<atnd re:(Ineed tea:chingwlbalfsRthev receivelfisx^B|hafte':^Va:Mii^t^^aJ school''teachers and lowers . ^morale atCthgitlsclmog!. ^ ~ ^SSk-■ ,L ffl " . ' L'® V'e - -■v ■% WReserve your copy now.Fill out card obtained hr I9md return to Bursar.m,t,#f activities alsht.■■ :r~.'cWi^b-' M-A ST^ir”/v F ALOHA,..’"' 1 ■ * ' ’■ ■'■ ' Vv • ::$SS:?>\ • ’A -hearty greeting from TIKIJin®..Riiffiphr' of^AtfUcaeiM Strcm thef of your; favorite i AMElilCANran tid mra*'%w>usucdishmAOnd Oae Xaokau. aad Kgl BoB,■agSfciB-'MuTdMBa-oA.^f*- * "•• rt ..-•- A. , '■iS'/'SSrS* .Zz ‘Broadview, Stevenson Memorial Top NewsThe purchase of the Broadview ftoitel and t*he establishmern on campus of the officialmemorial to Adlal E. Stevenson werfe the biggest campuster:'^>';~'. %, r 'f fofVvVfoii?! news stories of the summer quar-The Broadview, which contains almost 200 rooms, will be used primarily as a residencefor graduate men. An original planto house first year undergraduatesin the hotel was scrapped on therecommendation of a student-facul¬ty committee which found the hotelto be “unlivable” for first yearstudents because of the difficultyof bringing women visitors to a lo¬cation so far from campus. TheHotel is located at 5540 S. HydePark Blvd.THE ROOMS AT the Broadvieware all furnished singles with pri¬vate baths. Occupancy will beginthis quarter and the building willbe open on a year round basis. Thepurchase of the Broadview was an¬nounced July 29.Stevenson MemorialRobie House will serve as theheadquarters for the StevensonMemorial which will be a new in¬ternational affairs institute.The institute, according to Hern¬don D. Smith, the president of theStevenson Memorial Fund, “willprovide a center in which theworld's most distinguished states¬men, scholars, government offi¬cials and practical men of affairscan meet to study problems affect¬ing international peace."The directors of the Memorialfund selected the U€ campus be¬cause of the University's librariesand other specialized academic re¬sources. The institute will be au¬tonomous but will work riooelywith the University.- The official name of the institutewiH be the Adlai E. Stevenson In¬stitute of International Affairs andits governing body, as well as itsfellows and staff will be drawnfrom all over the world. The insti¬tute will thus be the only perma¬nent organization of its kind whichwill be explicitly internationalfrom its inception.ALSO IN THE news over thesummer were the activities of thestudent-faculty committee on stu¬dent life. The committee, whichconsisted of six faculty and eightstudent members met throughoutthe quarter and considered ques¬tions relevant to improving thequality of student life at UC. Twoopen forums were held by the com¬mittee, one on June 31 at whichDean of Students Warner A. Wickannounced plans for new dining fa¬cilities in the C shop, Ida Noyes,and Hutchinson Commons, and oneon July 27 dealing with the Maroonand ways to improve it.New TrusteesThree new trustees were appoint¬ed over the summer. One of theappointees, University Provost Ed¬ward H. Levi, is one of the few fac¬ulty members in the University’shistory ever to be elected as trus¬tee. The other two appointees areChristopher W. Wilson and Em¬mett Dedmon. Wilson is the execu¬tive vice president of the First Na¬tional Bank of Chicago. Dedmon isa UC alumnus, and former editorof the Maroon. He is now the edi¬tor of the Chicago Sun-Times.“ On June 7, at the very end of the’spring quarter, the tepbrt of a spe-'daUsftideht-f acuity committee on'raitkmg wa? released. The reportdetailed what the * coihmitteethpjugbl the practical consid¬erations ot the University’s partic¬ipation laxthef ^Selective Servicesystem. riJlN "ITS tankingcodimittee' r£({ngriizeq a basic di*lemfha iitt&tVed 'lib issue, ffranking b^ ^onkfdifrfng the effeftof the usd bf 'grafts b^‘ the; Selec¬tive Service on the educational proc¬ess. -fihe repef^ also consideredtrie qufestidft' 6t Whether the Univer¬sity is obligated to comply with re-questVof information from the Se-.^etive;5qrvifle. It makes no recom¬mendations however, as to whatcourse of action the Universityshould take. The winners of the QuantrellAward, a prize given to four facul¬ty members every year for excel¬lence in undergraduate teaching,were announced at the Spring Con¬vocation. The four are; Arunas Li-ulevicius, associate professor ofmathematics; Elder J. Olson, pro¬fessor of English; David E. Orlin-sky, assistant professor of socialscience; and Nathan Sugarman,professor of chemistry.Vietnam Protest*UC students and faculty mem¬bers played an active part in a se¬ries of protests against the war inVietnam over the summer. On Thursday, June 31* an estimated100 persons, including 30 UC stu¬dents took part in a protest againstthe bombings of Hanoi and Hai¬phong. On July 4th over 300 peopleheard 9 speakers, including 2 UCfaculty members, denouce the warin Vietnam at the first of a seriesof teachouts that were held at theFederal Building over the summerby the Mid-West faculty committeeon Vietnam. A Hyde Park Commit¬tee to End the War in Vietnamsponsored a smaller version of thedowntown teachouts at the 55thStreet Point July 17.Plans for an international confer¬ ence to study American draft poli¬cy December 4-6 at the Center forContinuing Education were an¬nounced during July.i Sol Tax, pro¬fessor of anthropology and a mem¬ber of the faculty committee cur¬rently working out the preliminaryplanning for the meeting, said thatthe purpose of the conference willbe to study, “the problem of con¬scription and of military manpow¬er and how this issue relates toeducation.”ON AUGUST 1, members of theUC Students Against the Rank(SAR) picketed the administrationbuilding to protest the University’sdecision to issue class ranks todraft boards.The Maroon subsequentlylearned that most undergraduate males have elected to send theirclass ranks to their draft boards..Out of a total of 1314 undergrad¬uate males, almost 1,000, as ofAugust 12, had requested that theyreceive their class rank and 800 ofthese had asked that their rank besent directly to their draft board.Three new student faculty com¬mittees were established over thesummer. They include a perma¬nent advisory committee on thebookstore, a committee with abroad mandate to consider student-faculty relations, and a committeeon ranking. The purpose of theranking committee will be to ad¬vise President George W. Beadleon the re-examination of Universi¬ty policy toward ranking scheduledto take place during fall quarter.Members of the University CommunityWelcome to Hyde Park,We too are gladto be backamong your well-known facesScandinavian Imports Inc,Formerly of:1542 E. 57th St.1548 E. 57th St.1538 E. 53rd St.1725 S. Michigan1801 S. MichiganNOW AT 5300 LAKE PARK AVENUE11 Here To Stay! rrSet of 3 stacking tables — TEAKCash and Carry — Special Price $2920 low-back chairs just arrived fromNorway Teak finish — in gold, brown,v^bliie, rust, olive...First come, First served^Cash and Carry $36; , v ; .* f*;V. Scandinavian Imports Inc.5300 LAKE PARK _ Bank of Hyde Park Buildingf "v- mmes* w* m wAHtwr <eHours: Mon. - Sat. 11 a.m. - 9 p.m. - Sun. 12 Noon - 6 p.m.NO 7-4040V-:* .. ^September 30, 4 966 • CHICAGO MA R O ON • 7Former SG Head Elected To Lead NSAby Michael SeidmanThe University of Chicago was not the only school repre¬sented by the 650 delegates to the U.S. National Student Asso¬ciation (N.S.A.) Congress in Champaign-Urbana, Illinois thissummer. But this handicap in no way prevented UC delegates UC Dedicates New Children’s HospitalThe newest children’s hospital in the United States, the Silvain and Arma Wyler Chdren’s Hospital, at 59th and Maryland Ave., was dedicated with six days of ceremonies Agust 28 thru September 2.The six-story structure cost $7,800,000 and, according to Nancy B. Newman of the hospitsPhilip Hauser Named ASA PresidentUC Professor of Sociology Philip M. Hauser has been namedpresident-elect of the American Sociological Association.Hauser was elected earlier this year by the Association’s10,000 members and will serve as president-elect until 1967.and alumni from playing a dispro¬portionate role in the nineteenthannual talk-fest.The congress, which passed reso¬lutions on civil rights, Vietnam,drugs on the campus, and Univer¬sity reform, reached a climax,when tired delegates elected form¬er UC student government headEugene Groves president. Groves,a Rhodes scholar who left Oxfordafter the first of two years, easilydefeated conservative UC delegateDanny Boggs for the top post.IN A MUCH tighter race, RickStearns of Stanford was elected In¬ternational Affairs Vice Presidentonly after UC’s Howard Abramsannounced that he would under nocircumstances accept the post. IAbrams had already collected jnearly 100 votes at the time of his |withdrawal, despite previous indi- jcations that he was not a candi¬date.Civil Rights ReconsideredEarlier, Abrams was able toforce reconsideration by the con¬gress of the civil rights resolutionwhich it had just passed. The reso¬lution declared “that because theprimary source of discriminationin this country lies in the whitecommunity, white students shoulddirect their efforts to workingwithin that community to reformthe attitudes and institutions whichperpetuate discrimination.”In a topsy-turvy debate, whichsaw Southern whites arguing for“black power” and moderate Ne¬groes pressing for restraint, astrong positive stand was includedin the resolution on the develop¬ment of “political and economicindependence and power in minori¬ty groups.”REACHED IN his Washingtonoffice, Groves indicated that hewas satisfied with the work of theconvention. “We passed a muchThe planned renovation and re¬furnishing of George Williams, anew University male dormitory,was not completed before studentresidents arrived on campus. Resi¬dents of the dorm were housed inPierce Tower during orientationweek.Because of the inconvenienceDean of Students Warner Wick hasannounced a $15 reduction in au¬tumn quarter housing rates for thestudents living in George Williams.The dorm, located at 53rd st. andDrexel avenue, had been paintedbefore it was open for occupancy,and most room furniture had beenplaced in student rooms. However,additional room furniture as wellas lounge furnishings will not ar¬rive until sometime in October.A major problem for arrivingresidents has been that of meals.The planned community kitchenwith facilities for the residents tocook their own meals will not beready until the end of October.Upperclassmen are those mostaffected by the uncompleted cook¬ing facilities, as entering studentsin George Williams have a re¬quired dinner contract at Piercefor the autumn quarter. Arrange¬ments have been made, however,to offer upperclass residents short¬term meal contracts at Pierce tow¬er until the kitchen has been com¬pleted. stronger Vietnam resolution thanlast year,” he said. “Our positionnow is essentially the one U Thanttakes. Columbia University has al¬ready planned to hold hearings onour resolution, and we will getcity-wide if not nation-wide publici¬ty.”Vietnam CondemnedThe Congress condemned theVietnam war as part of “a seriesof misjudgments and miscalcula¬tions.” The resolution, in finalform, urges the following action bythe United States:• An immediate cessation ofbombing and the “termination ofoffensive military operations.”• Recognition by the U.S. that theNational Liberation Front must beincluded in any negotiations andAmerican pressure on the Saigongovernment to recognize the same.• Disassociation with Saigon if it“continues to regard peace effortsby its citizens as treasonable.”• Establishment of an interimcoalition government, includingrepresentatives of the NLF, withfree elections to be held as soonas possible.• A U.S. pledge of assistance tothe interim coalition for economicand social reconstruction.THE CONGRESS also opposed“in principle” any system offorced service to the government,and called for the gradual abolitionof the draft. The students recom¬mended that alternative service inthe Peace Corps, in teaching or insocial service work be made avail¬able to draftees and urged immedi¬ate reform through the abolition ofthe “undemocratic” 2-S student de¬ferments. Students also voted toorganize and support legal resist¬ance to the present Selective Serv¬ice System.selected to succeed HumanitiesMaster Arthur R. Heiserman.Heiserman, an associate professorof English, resigned his position asMaster in order to devote full-timeto ti aching.BEMESDERFER TOLD the Ma¬roon that his job is “a little like abowl of alphabet soup.” “I domore or less what Wayne Boothwants done in the office in the wayof daily drudgeries, and I helpWayne and the masters work ouitplans for he development of theCollege,” he said.According to Bemesderfer, “Themain purpose of my job is to takethe load of administration partly His term of office as 58th presidentends in 1988.AS PRESIDENT-ELECT, Hauserwill be on the executive committeeand the council of the association.off Dean Booth’s shoulders so thathe has more time to devote toworking on his plans for the Coblege. At the same time, however, Iwork with him on those plans.”TAVE SAID that he had no im¬mediate plans for the humanitiesdivision and not many generalplans but added that he hoped tobring students more into the actionof the division for criticism andchanges of curriculum.He also said that he wanted toset up a series of panel discussionswith audience participation, forstudents and faculty. The council is the legislative bodyof the association. “There is a fulltime, paid executive to run most ofthe administration so I will onlyhave a certain amount of adminis¬trative duties,” said Hauser. “Itwill cut into my research to someextent, by not my teaching.”Hauser, a UC professor for thelast 19 years, was the chairman ofthe Advisory Panel on Integrationfor the Chicago Public Schools.The controversial findings of hisinvestigations, were published inthe “Hauser Report” in March,1964.ONE OF THE main tenets ofthis report was that the clusterplan be adopted. “The cluster planprovides freedom of choice withina larger district which would in¬clude two or more elementary andthree or more high schools,” Hau¬ser said. and clinics, contains the most svanced facilities for the diagno:and treatment of children’s deases.A five day symposium devotedhealth and welfare problemschildren lasting until Septemberfollowed the official dedicaticeremonies August 28.The structure was dedicatedan uncompleted building and paiof it should be ready for occupanin the very near future accordito hospital spokesmen.Half of the building will be usfor patient care and half forsearch and medical departmentfices. All research will be directtoward childhood abnormalitiand diseases.According to Charles R. Goulsuperintendent of the Hospitals aClinics, “The building consolidaiall the child care facilities of tUniversity medical center into ofacility, which is in itself a 1achievement. The need for tbuilding was perceived by mapeople, and financing wa a jopublic-private effort.”The hospital is named in horof the late Silvain S. Wyler and Iwidow, Arma, of Chicago. A foidation established after Mr. Wer’s death in 1963 provided furfor the construction of a childreihospital. 'ITiese funds, togetlwith a personal gift from MWyler, were granted to the Univisity in 1964.Other major contributors to tnew children’s hospital are:• The Home for Destitute Cldren• The Country Home for Convescent Children, established in 1!and merged with the University1928• The Joseph P. Kennedy, JFoundation• The Chicago Community Tr• The federal Hill-Burton >for hospital construction assistar• The National InstitutesHealth under their Health 1search Facilities Program.Appoint AndersorGretchen Anderson has been ;pointed supervisor of records aresearch in the Office of Planniand Development. Since 1964, MAnderson has been employedWashington, D.C., as a foreilanguage translator for the fedegovernment.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN ft ZENITH -- NEW ft USED -Salas and Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders - Phones - AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes - Batteries10% tm with IP i«(A FREE DELIVERY1 FREE PEPSI with each PIZZAby mentioning edCAFE ENRICOACROSS PROM Tie THY 14300 FA 44S2SPIZZAOSSNMNOMOOOOMNOO#CHEESESAUSAGE m.mmwomPEPPER A ONIONBACON & ONION...COMBINATIONMUSHROOMSHRIMP MPMMMa.Mttm.HIIHIIMtmUt MED. LARGE1.55 2.101.90 2.451.75 2.302.25 2.802.50 3.052.25 2.802.50 3.05Geo. Williams Unready , Administrators Appointed Over SummerFor Students; Rent Cut Bemesderfer, Asst. Dean; Tave, MasterTwo new administrators have been appointed over the sum¬mer.Karl J. Bemesderfer, a former president of the orientationboard and member of SG. has been named assistant dean ofthe College and professor of English Stuart M. Tave has been• • CHICAGO MAROON • September 30, 19664r» University's Foreign Students AdvisorSays There Is No Brain Drain Here Woodlawn Center PlannedTalk of a “brain drain” offoreign students who study inthe U S. and do not return totheir native countries is “anemotionally inflated issue”, ac¬cording to Jack Kerridge, foreignstudent advisor at UC.A recent report from the Col¬legiate Press Service indicates acrisis in the student exchange pro¬grams, which are bring thousandsof foreign students to the UnitedStates and not returning many ofthem.THIS IS especially true with re¬gard to underdeveloped countries,where skilled and educated man¬power is so desperately deficient.The CPS article shows that “From1962 to 1964, 8,151 students fromAsia. Africa, and Latin Americaadjusted their visas for permanentU.S. residency.”Kerridge has been the foreign jstudent advisor at UC for elevenyears, is a member of the National!Association for Foreign Affairs andhas studied the problem with acommittee which worked with theState Dept.Small PercentageKerridge says while it may betrue that over 8,000 students ap- .plied for permanent status this fig-1ure only represents about four per- jcent of the foreign students in theU.S. during this period.Moreover, most foreign students !come into this country on exchangevisitor visas which require the re- jturn of the student to his owncountry for at least two years. Sothe critical “’brain drain” whichthe CPS article and figures imply,does not exist, according to Ker¬ridge.Kerridge cited two main reasonswhy some foreign students remainin this country. First, of course,many students are sure they will •achieve much greater success intheir particular field here thanthey could in their own countries.The second reason could be anySenior DanforthFellowship ready,Apply before Nov. 1Danforth Graduate Fellowshipsare being offered by the DanforthFoundation of St. Louis, Missourito men and women who are seniorsor recent graduates of accreditedcolleges in the United States andplan to teach college or study for aPh D. in a field common to the un¬dergraduate college.Applicants may be single ormarried, but must be less thanthirty years of age at the time ofapplication, and may not have un¬dertaken any graduate or profes¬sional study beyond the baccalau¬reate.Approximately 120 Fellowshipswill be awarded in March, 1967.Candidates must be nominated byLiaison Officers by their undergrad¬uate institutions by November 1,1966. The Foundation does not ac¬cept direct applications.Danforth Graduate Fellows areeligible for four years of financialassistance, with a maximum an¬nual living stipend of $2400 for sin¬gle Fellows and $2950 for marriedFellows, plus tuition and fees. De¬pendence scholarships are avail¬able. Financial need is not a condi¬tion for consideration. DanforthFellows may hold other fellowshipsconcurrently, and will be DanforthFellows without stipend until theother awards lapse.All inquiries should be addressedto Prof. Gerhard E. O. Meyer,Gates - Blake 431. number of things, but quite ofteninvolves marriage to an American.THE SITUATION AT UC is thevery antithesis of any “braindrain”, in that 92-95 per cent offoreign students from 70 countriesreturn to their own country afterleaving the University.Almost all (99 per cent) of UCforeign students are graduates,and their average age is about 27years. Most of them are alreadysettled in their own country andmany have positions waiting forthem upon return. Among the for¬eign students are about fifty medi¬cal personnel in Billings hospital,who must leave the U.S. after fiveyears.UC ProjectsUC, according to Kerridge, di¬rectly combats any loss of skilledmanpower from underdevelopedcountries through several Universi¬ty-sponsored projects. The econom¬ics department develops students |from Chile specifically to returnand work with the Chilean govern¬ment on the economical situationin that country, which in turn af¬fects all of Latin America. Theeducation department sponsors afive million dollar project to traineducational administrators in andfor Pakistan.Kerridge spoke disparagingly ofthe whole issue, claiming, “Theproblem of any ‘brain drain’ is notthe responsibility of any Universi¬ty. The only real purpose of theUniversity is to develop the personto his capabilities, regardless ofwhat he is going to do with hiseducation or where he is going todo it.” The City of Chicago has ap¬proved and sent to the U.S. De¬partment of Housing and Ur¬ban Development an applica¬tion on behalf of both the city andThe University of Chicago forfunds to establish a Social ServiceCenter at 61st and Ingleside.According to the application,which is expected to be approvedby January 1, 1967, the federalgovernment would provide $1.3million toward the new Center, theUniversity supplying the remain¬der of about $500,000.The Center will be owned by theUniversity and operated by theSchool of Social Service Adminis¬tration under the direction of Pro¬fessor Donald Breiland. It will bestaffed by members of existingwelfare and community programsboth within Woodlawn and fromoutside the area.Breiland said that the Center isdesigned to provide “more efficientI patterns of service” in the Wood-i lawn area, as well as to train per-; sonnel in the social service field.He described it as comparable tothe teaching hospital idea in themedical field, though on the orderof an outpatient clinic rather thanas a residential treatment center.Including plans for a day carecenter, a well-baby program, andmaternal and child health care, theproposed programs will be heavilyoriented toward family and childcare. Agencies which have ex¬pressed an interest in cooperatingwith the Center include the IllinoisDepartment of Children and Fami¬ly Services, the Cook County De¬partment of Public Aid, the Chica¬ go Board of Health, The WoodlawnOrganization, and several otherWoodlawn organizations.Breiland pointed out that priorattempts to establish a day carecenter in Woodlawn had failed be¬cause of a lack of adequate facili¬ties which would meet fire andsafety regulations.The Center will provide serviceto Woodlawn residents on bothwalk-in and referral bases, includ¬ing families on relief as well asthose not receiving welfare.A committee of Woodlawn resi-Dedication of the new campusbulletin board.* - mmf, " m ' m dents will be formed to act in anadvisory capacity to the programand to participate in determiningthe needs of the community.Plans have received endorse¬ment from The Woodlawn Organi¬zation, and the Woodlawn Commu¬nity Service Agency.)y S ' ' •>"!■ ,,; ', y’New CampusBulletin BoardA new, large, all-weather cen¬tral bulletin board for UC an¬nouncements will aid in coordi¬nating campus communicationthis year. Erected in front ofthe UC bookstore, official Uni-''versify announcements, studentactivity bulletins and a weeklycalendar of events will be post-*ed.Constructed at the expense ofthe bookstore, announcementswill include maps, bus sched-|;ules, scholarship information,and a listing of places to eat oncampus.All student organizations areurged to announce any pro¬grams and meetings on the bul¬letin board. Notices of events|should be sent to: Central’!Schedules, administration build¬ing 605, ext. 4428. Forms forisubmitting information can beobtained from Mary Collins inithe Student Government office,second floor Ida Noyes.TOAD HALL WELCOMES new and returningstudents and faculty,andTOAD HALL WISHES ALL a successfulscholastic year.•TOAD HALL SERVES both your academic andpleasurable pursuits.TOAD HALL RENTSSELLS ANDSERVICES High Fidelity ComponentsTypewriters (new and rebuilt)Tape Recorders and TV Sets(Battery and A.C. Operated)Phonographs — AM-FM Radios.TOAD HALL GUARANTEES its prices for 30 days.TOAD, i ** ■} HALL> 'y" . f ’ " •> f DISPLAYSBUT a rhinoceros, . • ?it's not for sale.kn " • ; _1444 E . 57th ST. ;BE #-4500. • • •September 30, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON * 9Students and Their UniversityThe class of 1970 has come to theUniversity of Chicago at a good time.They may have an opportunity in theyear ahead to take part in one of themost significant movements in thehistory of American education—themovement for a truly democraticuniversity.The question of student participa¬tion in university decision-makinghas never been seriously consideredby most college administrators for avariety of reasons. Perhaps the mostbasic reason is the fact that collegeadministrators, like many othergroups in a position of inordinatepower, are subject to a mild form ofthe anti-democratic bias so prevalentin American society today. It’s thekind of bias that says, they wouldn’tknow how to make the decisions thatimportantly affect their lives and thekind of thinking that’s alwayscouched in terms of “us” and how topacify “them.”This anti democratic bias wasmanifested in an extreme form inthe resistance to the American labormovement. Even some of the argu¬ments are the same: “If you don’tlike the way we do things here, youcan go work someplace else.”There’s a lot to it of course, butundemocratic elements are legiti¬mized in their own eyes by the nast.Working men never demanded high¬er wages, Southern Negroes neverdemanded the right to vote and, stu¬dents never demanded a role in mak¬ing the university policy that mayalter their lives. The anti-democrathas always looked after the needs ofthe disenfranchised segment, (a“them” to be bought off and pacifiedbut never admitted as an equal—as apart of “us”).It’s ironic to remember that thepositions of dominance held by somegroups in society, were all, to vary¬ing degrees, usurped. In the very be¬ginning there was only “us”.Universities are a good example.The first universities were nothingmore than teachers and students whogathered together for the purpose oflearning—each from the other. Astime went on and the budding insti¬tutions grew, it became necessary forthe students and teachers to hiresomeone to cut the lawn regularly,someone else to purchase supplies,and someone else to take care of themany small tasks which were too un¬important to take up the scholar’stime. These first gardeners, errandboys, and garbage men are thepredecessors of today’s modern ad¬ministrators.Bureaucracy has a staying powerall its own and there can be littlequestion that someone is needed tomake sure that a university remainseven though its students and itsteachers come and go. At the sametime, however, relentless bureaucrat¬ic growth should not be a sufficientlegitimation of power, and the needfor maintaining an organization should not be used as an excuse forstopping those working toward mak¬ing it an organization worth maintain¬ing.It is inaccurate and unfair to saythat an undemocratic situation existsat UC. At the University of Illinois,infractions of outrageous rules thatare nothing but unwarranted im¬pingements on individual rights maybe cause for expulsion. UC is not theUniversity of Illinois. Here, almosteverybody concerned, including ALLthe key administrators who we havecontact with, would like to see thisuniversity as fair to the people whoare a part of it as possible. At thesame time, however, they are ham¬strung by tradition and they are justas subject to the anti-democratic biasas any other human beings in theirpositions would undoubtedly be.At UC, this conflict between sin¬cere intentions and the countervail¬ing influences of tradition and anti¬democracy, have produced a situa¬tion that is neither democratic, nortotally undemocratic. The effect agiven proposal will have on studentsis an item of serious concern and stu¬dent consultation is given great im¬portance in order to maintain a sit¬uation where administrators willcontinue to make the decisions.A policy, like that of the UC ad¬ministration might usually be ex¬pected to have one of two possibleeffects. It could satisfy student de¬mands if only because the needs andindividual rights of students arecarefully attended to, or it could leadstudents to question the whole struc¬ture of authority. At UC, the ques¬tioning of the structure of adminis¬trative authority has been going onfor some time. This is part of thereason why the class of 1970 is luckyto be here at this time.The University of Chicago is twen¬ty years ahead of the rest of thecountry and what is happening herewill have importance for universitiesall over the world and for years tocome.The University’s stubborn standon behalf of a draft policy that hadbeen formulated without the partic¬ipation of students was enough toalmost close down the College. Manyfeel that the majority of students oncampus would have supported theUniversity’s draft position but thefact remains that no students weregiven a chance to take part in formu¬lating policy and those who sat in theadministration building would nothave done so had the decision torank students been made democratically. It is a reasonably safe guessthat the administration will thinktwice before it makes a decision onan issue likely to arouse fierce oppo¬sition—even from relatively few. Itwill become far easier to make thedecision in such a way that it will bedeemed legitimate, even by thosewho oppose it. This legitimacy canonly really be given to a decisionthat is made democratically, a deci¬ sion that is made, to a very signifi¬cant extent, by students.Student Government, in its mostconstructive action in anyone’s re¬cent memory, has announced that itplans to abolish women’s hours uni¬laterally. If SG should succeed ingetting first and second year womento ignore their curfews, the adminis¬tration will be faced with a difficultdecision. The provisions for parietalhours are one of the last social rulesthat still impose any hardship on stu¬dents. Their abolition is probably in¬evitable and trying to enforce parie¬tal hours in the face of widespreadstudent disobedience would be farmore trouble than it is worth. A newdemocratic university might be bornbecause the old un-democratic struc¬ture collapsed of its own weight. Orif the administration should decideto make a last stand against the rightof students to declare anything un¬ilaterally, the chaos that might ensuecould force the university to eitherclose down or democratize.One possibility is that the Universi¬ty administration, good fellows thatthey are, will use the opportunity todeclare a new concept for Americaneducation—the idea of the democra¬tic university. The University of Chi¬cago has always been a forerunnerand ideas implemented here are, andwill be, carefully watched. The Uni¬versity would also be fulfilling animportant function.There are two trends in Americaneducation that student participationin university decision-making wouldtend to counteract. First is the trendtoward large impersonal multiversi¬ties like the University of Illinoisand other state schools. The anonym¬ity of the individual multi-versity student and his isolation from the ad¬ministrators who make important de¬cisions about his education is almosttotal. Democratizing the multiversi¬ties would almost inevitably reversethis trend and make the large stateschools more like communities andless like factories.The second trend that democrati¬zation would tend to counteract isthe trend toward increasing govern¬ment infringements on the sanctityof the universities. At UC, the mostobvious example was the class rankformulated for the Selective Service,at other schools, this government in¬fringement may involve an unhealthydependence on government contracts,especially defense contracts.This infringement can be given aspart of the reason for the increasingorientation toward research in theuniversities, too often at the expenseof excellence in teaching and ameaningful educational experiencefor undergraduates and graduatesalike. Student participation wouldwork to bring about universities thatcared far more about the welfare ofall their students than about defensecontracts from the federal govern¬ment.Universities are important to theirsocieties because they bring enlight¬ening influences and broader hor¬izons to more than those who takepart directly in them. A democraticuniversity is a force against the un¬democratic bias and the people whothink in terms of “us” and “them”.A nation of democratic universitiescan do a lot toward making Americaa democratic nation UC, this year,may have somethingito do with mak¬ing this a nation of democratic uni¬versities.■< .r »Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editor David L. AikenAssistants to the Editor Peter RabkiowitzDavid H. RichterDinah EsralJoan PhillipsNews Editors Jeffrey KulaMichael SeidmanFeature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors .......Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyPolitical Editor John BremnerEditor Emeritus Daniel HertsbergEditorial Staff—John Beal, Robert Herta, Kenneth Simonson,Eleanor Kaplan, Slade Lander, Gary Christiana, Paul Burstein,Ellis Levin, Richard Rabens.Nows Staff—-John Moscow, Elaine Hyams, Harold Sheridan,Angela DeVito, Sue Alexandre, Robert Skeist, Ronald McGuire,David Chandler, Ina Smith, Seth Masia, Vivian Goodman,Cathy Sullivan, Jeffrey Blum, David P. Israel.Photographers—Jean Raisler, Bern Myers, Charles Packer, H.David Alley.Staff Artist—Belita Lewis.The Chicago Maroon, founded 1802, issued every Tuesday and Fridaythroughout the University of Chicago school year, except .during thetenth week of the academic quarter and during examination periods,and weekly for eight weeks during the summer, by students at theUniversity of Chicago. Located in rooms 30B, 304, 305 Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637, Distributed without chargeon campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood. Subscriptions by mail2# per year. Charter member, United States Student PressPublishers of the Collegiate Press Service. Ha10 CHICAGO MAROON • September 30, 1966*Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary Year 0-Week,1966Vol. 75-No. 9 , The University of Chicago Friday, September 30, 1966largest Class in University History Enters College» »e0 Each year’s entering class is;told that it is the brightestclass ever, and this year’s wasno exception.According to Director of Admis- jsions Charles O’Connell, the Class ,of 1970 carries with it the most im-:pressive array of statistics of any !class in the history of the College. |“Everyone finds what he wants tofind in the entering class. Theseare a good, strong, diversified bunch of people,” O’Connell said.The statislics'bear out his view.THERE ARE CO valedictoriansand 40 salutatorians among the 710entering students who comprise thelargest class ever enrolled here.Twenty-seven members of theclass are National Merit Scholars,and almost 40 percent were semi-!finalists in the Merit competition.There are fifteen Universityscholars, but only four NationalAchievement scholars, as opposed to six last year. More than half theclass, or 59 percent, were graduat¬ed in the top five percent of theirsecondary school classes, andmore than 90 percent finished inthe top fifth.Compare FavorablyThe statistics compare favorablywith those of eight years ago. Only56 percent of the Class of 1962 were jgraduated in the top ten percent of jtheir secondary school classes, as jopposed to 82 percent of the Class jUC College Has a LongAnd Distinguished HistoryJOHN D. ROCKEFELLER and William Rainey Harper at the dedication of Hitchcock Hall in 1901g - /. \ ' ^ ' i , ' ■ 'MSSlW. ' ■ V • . > .if'■■The City White hath fled theearth,But where the azure waters lie,A nobler city hath its birth,The City Gray that ne’er shalldie.**. . .even as the author of the‘Alma Mater’ called the Universitya city, he slipped into the meta¬phor of living things. A universityhad been born rather than con¬structed, and in the course of itshistory it was to escape deathrather than the disintegration thatlevels deserted cities.” So writesRichard J. Storrr associate profes¬sor of history, in his recent bookHarper's University.But even before the birth of thepresent University an earlier insti¬tution, now known as the Old Uni¬versity, had been born, hadbreathed, and had died. Incorpo¬rated in 1857 and located on a sitedonated by Sen. Stephen A. Doug¬las on Cottage Grove Ave. near35th St., it granted a total of 312degrees before it was forced by fi-nancial difficulties to close in 1886.THE AMERICAN Baptist Educa¬tion Society resolved in 1889 to aidin the establishment of a new col¬legiate institution in Chicago, and John D. Rockefeller subscribed$600,000 on condition that $400,000more should be pledged within ayear. Eventually he would contrib¬ute nearly $35 million to the ven¬ture.Under the leadership oi ThomasW. Goodspeed, president of theBaptist Theological Seminary, andFrederick T. Gates, secretary ofthe Education Society, the neces¬sary pledges were obtained. Mar¬shall Field presented a tract ofland as a site, and the Universityof Chicago was incorporated. Thephoenix on its coat of arms rep¬resents the rebirth of the Old Uni¬versity as the new one.A Precarious ExperimentWilliam Rainey Harper, profes¬sor of Hebrew at Yale Universitywho had received his Ph.D. thereat eighteen, was appointed by theBoard of Trustees as Chicago’sfirst president. His insistence thatthe institution be envisaged as areal university, with a faculty andfacilities adequate not only for un¬dergraduate teaching but for thepursuit of advanced studies and re¬search, placed the venture in thecategory of a precarious experi¬ment. Assuming his duties at the Uni¬versity in 1891, Harper devoted ayear to assembling a faculty ofbrilliant investigators attracted byhis conception of a university andby salaries that were then consid¬ered astonishing, developing edu¬cational and architectural plans,and completing the first budding,Cobb Lecture Hall. On October 1,1892, the doors were opened to stu-dents.^THUS THE College was foundedas but one part of the University.Unlike many other universities,Chicago was born “full grown,”not just as an undergraduate col¬lege with which graduate andprofessional schools later becameaffiliated, but as a center of grad¬uate and undergraduate education.In the University’s early days,undergraduates attended two col¬leges: first, a junior college andthen a senior college. The juniorcollege was regarded by Harper asmerely an extension of secondaryschool. Under the somewhat fixedjunior college curriculum, all stu¬dents studied languages, science,(Continued m page 17) of 1970. In 1958 the entering classhad median SAT scores of 623 onthe verbal and 615 on the mathe¬matics tests. This year the enter¬ing class had median scores of 664and 665 respectively.O’Connell said he was mostpleased by what he feels is an up¬grading of the College’s reputationin the eyes of students all over thecountry. In 1958 there were only1481 applications to the College; ofthese, 1006 were accepted, and 481,or 48 percent, matriculated.This year Chicago was the onlymajor school to witness increasesin both applications and percen¬tage of students matriculating. Of2300 applicants, 1231 were acceptedand 710, or 58 percent, elected tocome.ONE EIGHTH OF the class wereadmitted early, while two percententered at the close of their junioryears in secondary school. Eightpercent of the class enteredthrough the Small Schools TalentSearch ProgramThere are 558 secondary schoolsrepresented, from 44 states and sixforeign countries. Illinois leads inboth applications and admissions,with about one fourth of each. NewYork is second, and Pennsylvaniathird. Maryland, Massachusetts, | New Jersey, Oregon, California,Montana, and Ohio also rank high.Several applicants come from| less densely populated states as a, result of the small schools pro-I gram.No Geographic QuotasAccording to O’Connell, there areno geographic quotas, and the rep¬resentations of many states havevaried from year to year. Howev¬er. h* added, an applicant from anon-Eastern small town environ¬ment would be given preference toone from an Eastern big city lo¬cale, if they had similar qualifica¬tions, because fewer people applyfrom the former.THE ENTERING CLASS is heav¬ily represented in e x t r a-currieu-lar activities, but O’Connell wasnot inclined to trust the exact fig¬ures too much because of what hecalled a propensity on the part ofhigh school seniors to claim thatthey are members of organizationsthey have only the vaguest connec¬tion with.Fifty-three members of the classwere school or class presidents.There were 145 debaters, 215 jour¬nalists, and 164 varsity lettermen.Also, 248 members of the classwere in orchestras or bands.Student Poll ShowsClass of '70 Liberalby Harold Sheridanand Ronald McGuireThe Class of 1970 looks likea bunch of liberals in the UCtradition, according to a Ma¬roon poll conducted this week.And, in keeping with just about ev¬erybody’s stereotype, the girlsseem to be more liberal than theirmale counterparts.The poll, conducted at randomamong 273 students asked the fol¬lowing questions:• “Have you heard about theanti-rank sit-in on campus lastfall?”• “Do you approve of the partic¬ipating students’ action?”• “Do you favor using rank inclass as a criterion for the draft?”• “If you were asked to join anorganization, which of the follow¬ing would you be most likely tochoose: a) Students for a Demo¬cratic Society (SDS), b) YoungDemocrats or Young Republicans,oi* c) Young American for Free¬dom (yaf)?” ; ' ' -• Would you take part in a dem¬onstration similar to last spring’ssit-in over an issue about whichyou felt strongly?”Over 95 percent of the respon¬dents said they had heard of theanti-rank sit-in conducted here lastfall. About half (51 percent) ofthem said they approved of theprotest, 38 percent said they didnot approve, and twelve percentwere undecided. Two thirds of the entering classindicated that they were opposedto the use of class rank as a criter¬ion for the draft, about one fourth(24 percent) said they favoredranking, and nine percent were un¬decided.(Continued on Page 25)For 75 years this has beenand I am sure will continue tobe an exciting University. Thisyear’s freshmen will be pi¬oneers in a newly-reorganizedfour-year College curriculum.The new College will be dividedinto five academic divisions,each under the supervision of aMaster. Several other changeshave been made in the structureand course offerings of the Col¬lege, which should result in asounder College program and(Continuod on Pago 23)w * * September 30, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11$64 Million in Campaign Fund Now;Atkins Is "Well Satisfied" with ProgressOver $64,000,000 has beenraised by the “Campaign forChicago,” the University’sfund raising drive, now enter¬ing its second year. Director W.James Atkins says he is “well sat¬isfied” with the Campaign’s pro¬gress to date.Atkins told Maroon, that “a fund¬raising drive such as Chicago isconducting gives impetus to ahigher level of annual support aft¬er the initial phase of the cam¬paign is over.”This would mean that if the cam¬paign’s three-year goal of $160 mil¬lion is achieved, the additional goalof $360 million over a ten-year pe¬riod can more easily be reached.ACCORDING TO ATKINS, whowas appointed Campaign directorin June, most of the money raisedso far is restricted to certain uses,mainly building construction, butlarge amounts of money are stillneeded for scholarships and facultysalaries. Goals for the Campaign,NOW SERVING THEU OF C COMMUNITY . . .the book center“in Harper Court"5211 S. HARPER AVENUECHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615Ml 3-1880 Ml 3-1881• CITY LIGHTS, SAN FRANCISCO,PUBLICATIONS• POETRY• DRAMA• FICTION• PSYCHOLOGY• PHILOSOPHY• SCIENCE FICTION•)MYSTERIESWE'RE NEW.We're Anxious to Please.Browse-in.Help Us Become AGreat Bookstore.Open 7 Days 'til Midnight which was inaugurated last fall,include $88.2 million for buildingconstruction; $52.3 million for pro¬gram support, i. e. scholarshipsand salaries; and $19.5 million forendowment.With such large amounts of mon¬ey restricted to building onstruc-tion, progress in this area is rapid¬ly being made. Buildings alreadystarted or about to be started arethe Searle Chemistry Building, ageophysics building, and a surgerybuilding next to Billings Hospital.Cobb Hall is being renovated,and construction on new athleticfacilities to replace Stagg Field,which will be demolished in lateNovember to make room for theRegenstein Library, will beginabout March, according to somesources.BECAUSE THE ATHLETIC De¬partment wants new facilities builtbefore the old ones are demolished,the dates of construction for theLibrary and the new Stagg Fieldconflict. Neither is definite, al¬though money is available to startconstruction.The Campaign is being conduct¬ed in three phases, according toAtkins:• In the first phase, major giftsof more than $100,000 are sought.This phase, which was to occupythe first year of the drive, is al¬most completed.• The second phase, concentrat¬ing on gifts of between $10,000 and$100,000, will occupy the secondyear of the Campaign.• The general gifts phase, forgifts of less than $10,000, will occu¬py the third year. U C’s Brass Always in Driver’s Seatby Robert F. Levey(Editor’s note: Robert F. Levey was the editor of the Maroon for 1964-65. He is currently working as a reporterfor the Albuquerque Tribune, Albuquerque, New Mexico.)What has two heads, some thirty right arms, boundless energy, and one collective ulcer?It might be your friendly neighborhood monster, but it isn t. Instead, it s UC s powerstructure, sometimes inefficient, sometimes the bane of students, sometimes at cross¬purposes with itself, but always in the driver’s seat.The twin chauffeurs for today’slate-model University are UC’sPresident, George W. Beadle, andthe Provost, Edward H. Levi. Theyshare the overwhelming majorityof decision-making responsibility.Beadle, beside being the Universi¬ty’s official spokesman to the out¬side world, has in recent years be¬come the primary money-finder aswell. Levi, who is in charge of thehiring and firing of faculty, alsoacts as chief administrative psy¬chiatrist, ironing out such prob¬lems as the direction in which theCollege will go, the kinds of re¬search the University as a wholeshould undertake, and how to pro¬mote and maintain stable relationsbetween the University and HydePark.A BEVY of vice-presidents isresponsible for the execution ofBeadle’s requests and Levi’s brain¬storms. The one who works in clos¬est touch with the two of them isWilliam B. Harrell, the acting vice-president for administration, or,more plainly, the man in charge ofthe purse strings. Harrell replacedJames Ritterskamp, who resignedApril 1, to assume a post at%VassarCollege.Other PostsOther vice-presidents are inYou’re under 25but you drive like an expert.Why should you have to payextra for your car insurance?Sentry says you maynot have to. A simplequestionnaire could saveyou up to $50 or more.Call the Sentry manfor fast facts.Jim Crano8124 Woodlawn Ave.3744)350AtggSENTRY TTInSURANCETHE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWN - $1.00Michelob and Budweiser on Tap!Don Hamilton How Playing For Your Pleasure and Dancing charge of such areas as scientificprograms, budget, fund-raising,and public affairs. They are LowellCoggeshall, Warren C. Johnson,Richard F. O’Brien, Leonard K.Olsen, Charles U. Daly, and JamesSheldon Jr.The first major subdivision downthe totem pole is the Office of theDean of Students. Headed by War¬ner Arms Wick, who has been de¬scribed as “the most harrassedman in the University,” the officehandles a wide variety of morespecific tasks.CHARLES O'CONNELL directorof admissions, is responsible bothfor deciding who gets here andseeing whether or not they get fi¬nancial aid. He is assisted by Rob¬ert Charles on the scholarship endof things and by Margaret Perryon admissions.Career CounselingAnita Sandke, with the assis¬tance of L. S. Calvin, runs the ca¬reer counseling and placement of¬fice. Mrs. Sandke and Calvin ar¬range job interviews for students,offer advice on careers, and pro¬vide aid for campus recruitingteams. The next major subdivision ofpower is more on the academic,not the administrative, level. TheUniversity is divided academicallyinto the graduate divisions and theprofessional schools, described indetail elsewhere in this issue, andthe College.WAYNE C. BOOTH, appointeddean of the College last Decemberto fill what had been a void forover a year, is the chief adminis¬trator and policy-formulator. Hislieutenants include the CollegeCouncil, established under the Levireport, the sub-deans of the Col¬lege, and, to increasing degree,students.As has been the case traditional¬ly, the College is granted almostcomplete autonomy in its decisionmaking and its planning for the fu¬ture. Booth, in keeping with theprovisions of the Levi report, iscurrently at work turning the“Levi College” into an actuality.The Levi plan involves dividingthe College into five area units,each with its own Master.The BoardIf the laws of the Universitywere strictly followed, none ofRegistrar Maxine Sullivan, with | those mentioned would have thethe aid of her IBM ally George,has two unenviable tasks: gettingstudents registered and maintain¬ing, updating, revising, and ex¬panding their official records.Walter Hass and his femalecounterpart Edith Ballwebber (wo)-man the athletic programs—var¬sity intramural and instructional—for the entire University.RICHARD H. MOY, the directorof the Student Health Service, is aninveterate smoker and the head ofone of the best such facilities inthe country. As long as they havepaid tuition, students are entitledto everything from checkups tobirth control advice, from innocu-lations to operations. In addition,the Student Health psychiatric clin¬ic, headed by John Kramer, pre¬pares and reinforces students’heads to complement Moy’s workwith their bodies.James Vice, the director of stu¬dent housing, is responsible bothfor placing students in dormitoriesand assuring their continued satis¬faction there. He works closelywith head of Residence Halls andCommons Lylas Kay, who is re¬sponsible for running the Univer¬sity cafeterias, most of which arein dormitories.Student ActivitiesFinally, Skip Landt and Sue Mu-naker operate the student activitiesoffice, which acts as a liaison be¬tween leaders of student activitiesand the administration. The twodirectors are responsible for aidingstudent groups in whatever waythey can and for counseling themwhen problems arise. responsibilities that now confrontthem. The board of trustees, whichis composed of 42 businessmen,philanthropists, executives, andeducators, is technically in chargeof everything. They have delegatedthe great majority of their vestedinterests, but reserve for them¬selves the election of the presidentwhen such a vacancy occurs, theapproval of major administrative,appointments, and the decisions asto how to invest endowment funds.FAIRFAX CONE, the head ofFoote, Cone, and Belding, the na¬tion’s most successful advertisingfirm, is the chairman of the boardof trustees. Other notables on theboard include Charles Percy, de¬feated Republican gubernatorialcandidate in Illinois last November;David Rockefeller, of the Rocke¬feller family that originally en¬dowed UC; William Benton, formerUS Senator and chairman of Ency¬clopedia Britannica; Ben W.Heineman, president of the Chica¬go and Northwestern Railway; andGlen A. Lloyd, one of the top menat Argonne National Laboratories,which UC helps to operate. Mar¬shall Field, editor and publisher oftwo Chicago daily newspapers anda noted philanthropist, was a trus¬tee as well until his death lastsummer. In the last three months,three new trustees have been ap¬pointed, including University Pro¬vost Edward H. Levi.What does it all mean? Essenti¬ally, that things are getting done.Whether or not one always agreeswith them, the power structure un¬der which decisions are made atUC is tried and true, and will verylikely be around for some time.OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SHORELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivoPRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-100012 • CHICAGO MAROON • September 30, 1966A Maroon Guide to Hyde Park GastronomesThrough the Alimentary Canalwith Gun and Camera, or: theModest Maroon Guide to Res¬taurants in Hyde Park and otherAreas.In its retrenchment policy, theUniversity has this year ceased tohand out with its freshman-paks a“starter” package of Arm andHammer Bicarbonate of Soda. Thisomission, were it not for the goodworks of the Maroon ad hoc com¬mittee on Chicago cuisine, wouldhave caused the early decimationof the entering class from numer¬ous , gastrointestinal disordersknown only to the physicians atDelhi, Lambarene, and BillingsHospitals. Be ye fore warned, then,if not fore-armedThe following guide uses the Mi-chelin rating system, although nocomparisons are intended, ofcourse, between a Maroon and aMichelin four-star restaurant.63rd StreetTai Sam Yon, 1318 E. 63rd St.The decor is unpretentious, evenfor grubby Hyde Park, but this un-der-the-el-tracks restaurant nev¬ertheless has some of the best Can¬tonese food to be found in theseparts. Best of all, you can have agorge for under $3 apiece. Try theshrimp with black bean sauce, beefkow, moo goo gai pan, sweet andsour pork. Come down in parties ofsix to pass the goodies around (andfor protection on the way). (3 Stars)White's French Fried ShrimpsInc., 540 E. 63rd. These peppery,greasy morsels represent nativecookery at its best. Unlikeany fried shrimp you’ve ever eat¬en. Use lots of hot sauce, drinklots of beer. Ahhhhh 1 Not for timidsouls.1 (Vi Star)/’61 at StreetO'Neill's, 1001 E. 61st 9treetOld-timers at the University willtell you about Stern's, which stoodat the identical spot, giving at thesame time a convincing imitationof the dry heaves. To these O’¬Neills seems better than it is,merely because it is cleaner. Butthe standard hamburger-jernt cui¬sine remains, sans the entertain¬ment of the waitresses (“Wotl yuztwo have to-day?”) or of watchingPapa Stern butt tables at busylunch times. (Vi Star).57th StreetGordon's Restaurant, 1321 E.57th Street. Gordon’s, anotherh.-j. distinguishable from O’Neill’sonly because its menues aremore fly-spotted, and lacks thenostalgie a la boue of its location.Its chief virtue used to be that itwas open when the T-hut wasclosed, but now that the TropicalHut has removed to the greenerpastures at 95th Street, its onlyclaim to individuality is a waitresswho will order for you if you aren’tcareful. Caveat emptor, my chil¬dren. (Vi Star).Campus Certified Foods,1327 E. 57th Street. While notstrictly a restaurant, the best ham-and-cheese sandwich on campus(ditto roast beef, ditto corned beef,etc.) can be bought in a deli coun¬ter in the back of this grocerystore. Only open lunchtimes (de¬fined broadly). (V4 Star).The Medici Coffee House, 1450E. 57th Street. Behind the GreenDoor Bookstore, where you canbuy the New York Times Sundayedition the day it comes out,stands Hyde Park’s answer to theVillage. Specialties of the house in¬clude Vi lb. hamburgers, cold sand¬wiches, shish-ka-bob and its vari¬ants (only certain days); plus ascore or so different varieties ofcoffee and chocolate. Service isslow, but who’s in a hurry? A verypleasant coffee-house. (2 Stars).53rd StreetNicky's Pinaria, 1206 E. 53rdStreet, Not saying much to caBNicky’s the best pizzeria in HydePark, but it is. Mostly standard Italian fare, slightly overpriced,but the owner’s Special Pizza,made with real, whole tomatoesand special cheese, is a treat and abargain, even at Nicky’s tariffs.The lasagna isn’t bad, either.(2 Stars).Brent's Grill, Kenwood and53rd. Atmosphere is everything atBrent’s. Walk past of a week- endevening and inhale the aroma offrying greaseeburgers. The quaintBedford-Stuyvesant metier comesalive some nights and (thrills!)you may get a wine-bottle bouncedoff your bowler. A must for thejaded. (2 Stars).Hobby House, 1342 E. 53rdStreet. An open-all-night drivewith curiously enough, excellentCanadian bacon and swiss cheesesandwiches (grilled). (Vi Star).Enrico's Restaurant, 1411 E.53rd Street. Nicky’s is an over¬ priced pizzeria; Enrico’s is anoverpriced Nicky’s. The extra val¬ue you get for your money comesmainly in its dark, quiet intimacy.The veal (scallopini, parmigiana,and saltimbocca) is very trustwor¬thy, and the pizza—different fromany other in the city— is heavy butdelightful. But make sure the wait¬er gives you clean silverware. (2Stars).Oliver Twist Snack Shop, 1500E. 53rd Street. Lacks the atmos¬phere of the Medici, serves gianthamburgers, chil, other h.-j. speciaties. Open all night. (Incidental¬ly, those who are wondering whereto find Old Stern’s waitressesmight try the OT)Unique Delicatessen and Res¬taurant, 1501 E. 53rd Street. As theonly deli in Hyde Park (save thatin the Certified), the Unique hassuccessfully managed to fend offvisits from the Better Business Bu¬ reau (on acc’t of its high prices),and from the Board of Health (lastmonth we got food poisoning fromeither their corned beef or theirkishke). It’s the hutzpah withwhich they enforce their monopolyon the knish that got us though.(1 Star).Valois Cafeteria. 1518 E. 53rdStreet. It’s not the food, but the at¬mosphere at Valois. The counter¬man will ask you whether “yawant gravy or jooz wit yer meat.”The clientele is a delight for con¬firmed people watchers. (2 Stars).The Eagle Bar & Restaurant,5311 S. Blackstone. Standard, rela¬tively appetizing bar food—brat-wurst. hamburger etc. (1 Star).The Court House, in HarperCourt, 53rd and Harper. Much bet¬ter when it first opened, the CourtHouse is still Hyde Park’s second-best restaurant. Specialty of thehouse is boeuf fondue bourgui- nonne, a delicious do-it-yourselfsteak. Also, excellent beef stroga-noff, trout amadine. A fair winelist. Prices are moderate—$3-5.(3 Stars).51st StreetStation JBD, 1455 E. 51st Street.Superb steaks and chops are thespecialty, but try the chicken Kiev.The decor is warm, and the place,though large, somehow remains in¬timate. (3 Stars).Ciral's House of Tiki, 1510 E.51st Street. With the Tropical Hutgone, Tiki is now the campiest res¬taurant in Hyde Park. Good drinksand fair Polynesian CantoneseAmerican food. (1 Star).Out of the AreaThe Bakery, 2218 N. Lincoln.One of the best continental restau¬rants in the Midwest. The $6 prixfixe gives you an appetizer (usual¬ly their superb pate de fois gras),(Continued on Page 28)The Religious Revolution of Our Timethe function of the church in a time of social change and ethical ambiguitySermon by the Minister 'Sunday, October 2STUDENTS ARE CORDIALLY INVITEDto the introductory meeting ofStudent Religious Liberalsin the church parlor(entrance at 1174 E. 57th Street)THIS SUNDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 2at 7:30Time and Place of Future Meetings to be AnnouncedHenry Wienhoff, SRL chairmantelephone 684-8480Faith and Works: the Church at the CrossroadsG. Peter Fleck, Unitarian layman who frequently occupies pulpits in andaround New York CitySunday, October 9A History of Heresythe Unitarian church: origins and developmentMany people have expressed the desire to know where Unitarianism fits intothe history of Christianity and Judaism. In this series of sermons the ministerwill outline the historical roots of Unitarianism.From the Gospels to the CreedsRebellion Against the CreedsUnitarianism in Poland and TransylvaniaUnitarianism in England and AmericaUnitarianism TodayFirst Unitarian ChurchOctober 16October 23October 30November 6November 13Jock A. Kent, minister57th and Woodlawn FAirfax 4-4100Sunday Mornings at 11 o'clockSeptember 30, 1066 • CHICAGO MAftOOM • 13S..V' ’ ?! ? O uThe Sit-In: Three Days That Made- UC Historyby Jeffrey BlumLast spring’s sit-in began with apetition. Before it ended, the sit-inhad made headlines across thecountry, had threatened to closedown the College, and had provid¬ed a base for profound changes inUniversity life.A full-page ad in the May 3Maroon signed by 484 students andfaculty members, including 245 un¬dergraduate males, asked the Uni¬versity not to formulate a maleclass rank for use by the SelectiveService. On. the night of May 4,more than 300 of the signers votedoverwhelmingly to stage a protestin the Administration Building, ifthe University did not publicly an¬nounce its intention not to form amale class rank.AFTER A WEEK of fruitless ne¬gotiations between members of thegroup, which had adopted thename Students Against the Rank(SAR), and key administrationmembers, the protestors enteredthe building on May 11. Over 450students and several faculty mem¬bers took part.SAR Takes . OverOnce in the building, the demon¬strators spread out on. all floors,occupying every available roomand passageway. The Registrar’sOffice became “action central”;the Comptroller’s Office was setaside as a study and sleepingarea; the waiting rooms for the Of¬fices of Admissions, the HousingOffice, and the Public RelationsOffice were all general purposeareas. Food was served in theDean of Students’ Office, and a.shower was hooked up in one ofthe lavatories. The demonstratorsoccupied themselves with almostevery possible kind of academicand extra-curricular activity: thir¬teen phones in the Registrar’s Of¬fice were going constantly, as wasthe mimeograph machine; mem¬bers of University Theater did apreview of Measure for Measure;and a number of teachers gaveclasses in the building.On Thursday night, the groupheld a teach-in, at which facultymembers were divided on the ad¬visability of remaining in the build¬ing. Dick Gregory climaxed thenight with a speech urging SARnot to leave until the Universitytook some action on its demands,and promised to sit in with thegroup if it was still in the biuldingafter the next Tuesday.DURING THE SIT-IN, negotia¬tions continued with important Ad¬ministration officials, but therewas no more success in reachingagreement than there had been theweek before. Students and faculty members canvassed professors andgot about 100 faculty signatures ona petition supporting the demandfor postponement of ranking untilthe fall.MeetingsThe most constant activity at thesit-in, however, was attendingmeetings. SAR held general meet¬ings every day, culminating with athirteen hour marathon lastingfrom 7 in the morning until 8 atnight on Friday, May 13. Meetingsfollowed the daily blocking of thedoors. Those demonstrators whoslept at all were roused at 6:30am, given breakfast (manyneighborhood stores and restau¬rants donated food), and wentdownstairs to meet any secretariesand administrators, who showed up.The meetings, where SAR madepolicy, were very parliamentaryaffairs chaired by Jackie Gold¬berg, a graduate student in educa¬tion who was a leader of the FreeSpeech Movement at Berkeley.After a long debate on Friday,SAR approved a resolution (witheleven amendments) to leave thebuilding as a group, march to thehome of UC president George W.Beadle and present a set af de¬mands. The resolution also calledfor a campaign to see every facul¬ty member and explain SAR’s posi¬tion, and it called for leaving aninformation table in the foyer ofthe building twenty-four hours aday.The table, however, was destinedto cause trouble. Members of theadministration maintained that thepresence of the table was tanta¬mount to a continued presence ofSAR in the building and as suchconstituted continued coercion.Coercion was a word used fre¬quently by the administration dur¬ing the sit-in.MEANWHILE the campus wasresponding to the demonstration.Students for a Free Choice, deplor¬ing the sit-in as preventing everystudent from expressing himseifequally on this issue, gathered 350signatures on a petition. StudentGovernment (SG) voted to hold areferendum on ranking. Ten per¬cent of the University Senate, whichcomprises over three fourths of thefaculty, petitioned the President tohold an extraordinary meeting ofthe Senate, the first in it’s history.The Committee of the Council ofthe Senate appointed a student-fac¬ulty committee to study the fac¬tual considerations involved inpostponing the decision to rank un¬til the fall, which was SAR’s maindemand. fTHE SCENE in the lobby of the administration building during one of the meetings held by protest¬ing students during last spring's sit-in.mm i«iM8i«iewHiiiiii:iiWM»iiw mmmm m imimmmpnmmiwmmmkSG VoteIn the SG referendum, May 25,which SAR boycotted, nearly twen¬ty percent of the student body vo¬ted three to one to support ranking,however, they also voted two toone to reconsider the question inthe fall. The following day the Col¬lege Faculty voted heavily for aresolution that both supported theUniversity position on ranking andcalled for increased discussionwith students and reconsiderationin the fall. On May 27, the FacultySenate, in a meeting protested bymany participants as undemocrat¬ic, overwhelmingly approved ad¬ministration policy and authorizedpunitive action, including expul¬sion, for “disruptive acts” in thefuture. Finally, on June 7, theCouncil of the Faculty Senateagain upheld the administration.BY THE TIME IT was over, thesit-in had generated more discus¬sion than any event in anyone’s re¬cent memory. For days, every con¬versation in the dormitories, on thequadrangles, and in the adminis¬tration building and faculty clubcentered on or eventually turned tothe issues raised by the sit-in.SAR had its own idea of whatquestions were involved in theirdemonstration. There was, mostobviously, the issue of ranking it¬self. SAR argued that the Univer¬sity should not cooperate with the Selective Service system, and, byimplication, the war in Viet¬nam. They maintained that theeducational process was being cor¬rupted by ranking, in that the Uni¬versity, by ranking its male stu¬dents, became a part of the Selec¬tive Service. SAR took the positionthat ranking by the Universitycould eventually lead to greatercooperation with the War effort andthus cause such distortions as“gut” courses and cut-throat competition for grades among studentsfaced with conscription. SAR in¬sisted that “grades should not be ameasure of human expendability.”The organization, in keeping withthis position, took a stand againstthe 2-S deferment."May Not Disobey"To these arguments the adminis¬tration responded that the Univer¬sity cannot and should not divorceitself from society. UC Provost,Edward H. Levi, stated that whilethe University may work to changea law, it may not disobey it and inthe process, endanger its students.The administration disagreed withSAR’s claim that computing a male class rank-was a significantdeparture from previous practice.The University had compiled arank during the Korean War. Theadministration insisted that form¬ing a rank in no way allowed theSelective Service to “run” the Uni¬versity.Some of the debate that followedthe sit-in shifted in focus from is¬sues to tactics. The administrationargued that the sit-in was an at¬tempt to coerce the University.SAR replied that the Universitywas coerced by the Selective Serv¬ice and that they had no way tomake their voice heard other thandrastic action.ONE OF THE administration'smost frequent arguments in favorof ranking and in opposition to thesit-in was that a student’s rank isan individual matter, and the Uni¬versity has no right to deny it tohim. SAR claimed that ranking isa composite of everyone’s gradesand necessarily implicates every¬one in its formation. Thus, SARreasoned, everyone must decide ifthere is to be a rank.The night before the sit-in, SAR(Continued on Page 27)STUDENTS OCCUPY the desks in an administration building office during the sit-in.5 - .-'Mmss. . J "a*;,,/- A SECRETARY appears undismayed by the protestors occupyingthe floor of her office in the early hours of the sit-in.14 •t ^MA.^OON S*Pterp!??r 3P'P.S.Take this ad to your college store or favorite retailer C>get 25* off on Ting Aerosol.Mr. S**l*f: WTS ftiarmKraft, Inc. win redeem this coupe* for 25< pies 2t h*ndlio| it jrou received it a*row *M* *f ft**. fw#»yme*t, msll to WTS PharmeenR. I*c., P.0. *•( 1112. Rochester, N.Y. Invoke pravtnfpurchase of toHIcieot Tint to cover coupons presented far redemption must be show* on request. Cosh Value1/29 of 1*. Good only I* U.S.A. This coupon it void I* any state or municipality whore toned, prohibited orrestricted by law. WTS Pharmacraft, Inc., Rochester. N. V. Otter expires Dec. si, 1966.SWAP to Implement New Plans for this YearThe Student Woodlawn Area Project (SWAP), UC’s tutoring project for high school stu¬dents with disadvantaged backgrounds, will expand its tutoring program in the coming year,while beginning new projects to encourage dropouts to return to school and to encourageparents to work with school administrators.SINCE ITS founding in 1963,SWAP has grown into one of thelargest and most active of themany tutorial projects in the coun¬try run by college students. Atfirst, there were 90 UC students tu¬toring an equal number of pupilsfrom Hyde Park High School intheir school subjects.At last count, there were about400 tutees receiving instructionfrom 400 tutors, and almost as many other high school studentsparticipating in the projects manyother activities. These includesports, clubs, special remedialreading classes, a college and vo¬cational counselling service, spe¬cial seminars, etc.The tutors are now recruitedfrom several oth<*r Chicago col¬leges. although the great bulk oftutors still come from UC. Also. many tutees now come from otherSouth Side high schools besidesHyde Park high.Need for SWAPSWAP’S aid is needed byhundreds of students from theSouth Side because of several fac¬tors. One of the most important isthe inadequacy of the schools.Most high schools served by SWAPare predominately Negro, greatly overcrowded, understaffed, andover-bureaucratic.In addition, students who are al¬ready behind are often kept evenfarther behind the rest of the stu¬dents, because of the “track sys¬tem” as it is applied in many highschools. In this system, pupils aregrouped together according to theirscores on standardized achieve¬ment tests, as well as other factorssuch as previous records and teach¬er recommendations.THOSE who are judged to be twoyears or more behind their gridelevel are required bo go through the“basic” track, which is supposedly remedial. Basie students have inthe past not been allowed to takeforeign languages, on the assump¬tion that they need to concentrateon English firstMany basic students complainthat they are given “busy work” insome classes, or that it is some¬times difficult to gain a teacher’sattention if the student wants tomove up to the next track.SOME OF SWAP's tutees feel| alien and unwanted in the school,; and need somebody who seems to! care about them to help them see] the imoortance of learning. Others(Continued on Page 19)Refilloble purse-site too.YOURFAVORITEBOOKSTOREIS ALWAYS THEBEST PLACE TO BUY FORSERVICE AND DEPENDABILITY.Woodworth’s BookstoreTheTingfoot odor test: is hair spraygone naturalIt’s the new, nude, no-spraylook and feel of Respond ProteinHair Spray. Hair is protein.Respond has protein. Respond Ugood to your hair, naturally.1 Take off your right shoe.2 Okay — who do you know who could use a footdeodorant? (One guess).3 Now spray your feet with Tingf Test is over. Sois foot odor. Ting is loaded with hexachlorophene. Itkills odor causing germs by the millions. This won¬derfully cooling powder helps keep your feet dry andodorless. All day.If yon don't woor shoos you don't nood Ting Fighttextbooksquint.Get a Tensor* high-intensity lamp.Want a dean, white, bright light ? Want to see words etchedon the page sharp and clear? Want to come away from thoseheavy assignments without squinting and eyestrain ? Want a lampthat gets in close without getting in your way? Want to burnthe midnight oil without burning up your roommate? Want aconcentrated light that lets you concentrate?Then what you need is a Tensor high-intensity lamp. Whatdo you mean you can't afford our $12.93 or $14.95 or $17.50or $19.95 prices ? Didn't you know you can get aTensor for $9.95 ?So stop squinting. Get a Tensor high-intensity lamp. Andwho knows, your grades might even get a little better this term.tserroonIt kelps you see better*September 30, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15Interdisciplinary Approach in Grad DivisionsMembers of the physical sciences division inspect newly-installedcyclotron.Interdisciplinary coopera¬tion is the key to the Universi¬ty of Chicago’s concept of grad¬uate programs of instructionand research, a concept thathas, in the University’s pi¬oneering tradition, invitedboth praise and indifference.More than any other majorschool in the country, the Uni¬versity has introduced inter-1disciplinary fields that havedestroyed barriers betweenthe biological sciences, the hu-m a n i t i e s, the physicalsciences, and the socialsciences, heretofore rigidlysegregated. Although suchprograms are described byscholars throughout the coun¬try as the wave of the future, arecent report by the AmericanCouncil on Education (A. C. E.)gave virtually no consid¬eration to them when assess¬ing the quality and rank ofgraduate schools in 28 academ¬ic disciplines.If the numerical scores ofdepartments that are ratedeither distinguished or strongin the A. C. E. survey are to¬talled, Chicago is ranked fifthin the nation. Excluding M. I. T.and Caltech, which are nottrue universities, the leadersin the survey and their com¬bined scores are California(Berkeley), 127.2; Harvard,110.7; Michigan, 100.2; Wis¬consin, 98.2; Chicago, 90.7; Yale, 90.3; Stanford, 89.2;Columbia, 87.3; Princeton,82.0; and Cornell, 81.4.CHICAGO WAS rated dis¬tinguished in six social sciencedepartments and strong in theremainder of 16 selected bythe A. C. E. for rating in itssurvey, but was not rated dis¬tinguished in physics, chemis¬try, or geology, in any of thebiological sciences, or in anyof the humanities. Althoughprofessors here agree withwidespread criticism of thereport as being unscientificand out of date in many areas,most object to it because theysay it is simply not relevant tothe University’s Idea of grad¬ uate education.Biological SciencesRichard C. Lewontin, associatedean of the biological sciences di¬vision, feels that the A.C.E. reportis not grossly unfair to the tradi¬tional departments in the biologicalsciences at Chicago, but that “theacademic pie here is not cut thatway.”“All aspects of biology are so in¬terrelated that sharp separationinto distinct fields is impossible toachieve and foolish to attempt,” H.Stanley Bennett, former dean ofthe biological sciences division, hassaid. “For this reason, the loose,illogical and overlapping organiza¬tion at Chicago is nevertheless onein which almost any kind of biolog¬ical effort can find a congenialbase.”Besides the integrated depart¬ments of biochemistry and biophys¬ics, interdepartmental committeeson genetics, mathematical biology,and virology, and an interdivision-al program in paleozoology, thebiological sciences division in¬cludes several other more tradi¬tionally defined departments, andadministers the University hospi¬tals and clinics.Humanities“Research is certainly the domi¬nating motive of the humanities di¬vision,” according to GeorgeBobrinskoy, dean of students in thedivision,” and much research isdone in interdisciplinary fields. Inthis way, departments—even otherdivisions—combine the talents oftheir leading scholars.Such fields as general studies,comparative languages and litera¬tures, history of culture, ideas andmethods, far Eastern civilization,archeological studies, and medie¬val studies give the student an op¬portunity for studies in several Hu¬manities departments as well as inother divisions. None of these wasrated by the A.C.E.Recently, the division’s work innon-Westem studies was recog¬nized by the Ford Foundation,which awarded it an $8.5 milliondollar grant.According to Robert E. Streeter,dean of the division, a high percent¬age of humanities students go onto teach in colleges and universi¬ties.Physical Sciences“We are concerned with theearth, the oceans, the atmosphere,and at least those regions of outerspace that interact with our planet,states Dr. Julian R. Goldsmith, as¬sociate dean of the physicalsciences division. “The earth is amember of our solar system, soplanetary responses to solar activi¬ty are in our bailiwick.”“It seems logical that the re¬search and teaching programsshould reflect the circumstancethat all of these things are interre¬lated and should be studied joint-JACKSON PARKBIKE SHOPSPECIAL BUY!English Sturmey ArcherGears, Hand Brakes$4195COME IN TO SEETHESE SPECIAL BIKES• ROBIN HOOD • RALEIGH • SCHWINNExpert Repairs on All Makes and Models(WE SELL THE BEST AND REPAIR THE REST)PARTS AND ACCESSORIESDOMESTIC AND FOREIGNN.E. CORNER 55fh and CORNELLDO 3-7524 “research at the Ph.D. level is fre¬quently pursued via an interde¬partmental route.”Interdisciplinary operations inthe division include the institutefor computer research, the insti¬tute for the study of metals, andthe Enrico Fermi institute for nu¬clear studies.Currently, the division is en¬gaged in a major building pro¬gram, financed in part by the Uni¬versity’s campaign for Chicago,that will integrate existing and! new teaching and research facilitiesand facilitate interdisciplinary ties.Social Sciences“The division of the socialsciences is oriented mainly to¬wards research with some empha¬sis on teaching,” according to D.Gale Johnson, dean of the division.“When we try to attract teachersfrom other institutions we are pri- ; marily interested in what theyto produce. Some weight is givenj to how good they are in teaching,| primarily in helping students pre¬pare dissertations.”Although five disciplines—an-j thropology, economics, politicalscience, psychology, and sociology| —are considered to be the core of! the social sciences, Johnson be¬lieves history, statistics, and geog¬raphy provide methods of greatimportance to the disciplines,though aspects of each field maymake legitimate claim to beingboth social and scientific.The division includes, besidesthese fields, the department ofeducation and such committeesas Human Development, SocialThought, International Relations,Far Eastern Civilizations, Industri¬al Relations, Comparative Study ofNew Nations, and Southern AsianStudies.New College First-year Curriculum aCompromise, but More Change in Sightby David L. AikenIt is a toss-up whether the newly revised College curricu¬lum represents a major change, a temporary adjustment onthe way to bigger changes, or a minor revision in an estab¬lished structure.Most likely, this year will turnout to be a year of testing new for¬mulas and planning more revi¬sions. With some notable excep¬tions, mainly the experiment la¬belled Liberal Arts I, the programsthat will be in operation this forfirst-year students amount to theold courses re-shuffled.INSTEAD OF requiring ten gen¬eral education courses, (of whichonly eight could actually be takenby any student), the committee onthe College Curriculum last springdevised a new set of requirementsfor all students, the quartet ofcourses that students will take "incommon.”This change results only in sim¬pler schedule-making, by itself.The actual content of most of thecourses has undergone only theamount of revision that normallytakes place each year, although afew have been altered in importantways. Among these is the newthird quarter of social sciences,which will attempt to be relevantto both Soc I and Soc II.As far as the first-year curricu¬lum goes, then the really new thingis Liberal Arts I. This was the planwhich Dean Booth and the fivemasters of the Collegiate divisionsdesigned a year ago. According tosome of the masters who parti¬cipated in the (dan, the group be¬came inspired with the breathtak¬ing newness of this plan, and feltsure everyone would see its superiority over what had been done be¬fore.Their inspiration evidently wasnot contagious, as it happened.They ran into questions from manyfaculty over whether such a radi¬cally new way of designing acourse for first-year students wasreally necessary. Many peoplethought, and presumably may stillthink, that the old design is best,with a number of courses whichpresent a certain set of topicswithin each broad field. LiberalArts I is different from this design,since it aims at developing the bas¬ic skills of inquiry and analysiswith materials from several fields,not just social science or just hu¬manities, but aspects of both.IN ADDITION to the originalplan from Booth and the masters,there were a few other proposalssubmitted, and several schools ofthought in reaction to the masters’plan. Nows AnalysisOKSMMagMMMNMMNMNMMMMMKMIMMMMHMniOne of the alternative proposalswas devised by Richard C. Lewon¬tin, professor of zoology. He pro¬posed that students begin by con¬sidering a few concrete topics, per¬haps historical. All aspects of thesetopics could then be examined, inthat way letting each student ex¬perience how the various disci¬plines, such as history, socialsciences the humanities, etc., goabout looking at the same set offacts.The major issues around whichfaculty discussion centered were:• Whether courses should be de¬signed by the entire staff thatteaches them, or designed by eachinstructor, and• Whether one or two coursesshould be offered as the sole treat*ment of each field, or whether stu¬dents should be able to choosefrom among several courses ineach field.Some of the faculty expresseddissatisfaction with staff-taughtcourses. These were notably theyounger faculty who gained mostof their training at universities of¬fering individually-designed, elec¬tive courses in each field.THE CURRICULUM committeewhich finally presented the planwhich is being put into effect thisyear, stated in its report that the“traditional” division of studiesinto four broad fields has “merit. . .as well as convenience.” The re¬port thus combined recommenda¬tions which proved more-or-less sat¬isfactory to both sides, those push¬ing for inter-disciplinary courses,and those who liked the old way ofdividing things.In at least one sense, then, thenew curriculum is a compromise.The important feature of thisyear’s program, however, is that itis only the beginning of a wholenew effort to design programsrelevant to the needs and interestsof the kind of stduent UC attracts.He is academically oriented to alarge extent, and is very likely togo to graduate school.The attempt to combine thespecialized preparation for furtherstudy with a liberal selection oftraining in all fields will bewatched with great interest by oth¬er institutions. The Chicago tradi¬tion of experiment and change willalways be with us, even if the pre¬sent curriculum passes.16 • CHICAGO MAROON • September 30, 1966AN EARLY view of the Quadrangles ROBERT MAYNARD HUTCHINSWILLIAM RAINEY HARPERCollege History Marked by Experimentation(Continued from Page 11)dents studied languages, science,and mathematics; most were re¬quired to study English and histo¬ry.Harper introduced the innovationof four graduation ceremonies eachyear because he felt the studentshould “receive his diploma notbecause a certain number of yearshas passed and « certain day inJune has arrived, but because hiswork is finished.”College SpecializationAs administrators and facultywere loath to allow junior collegestudents into senior collegecourses, the junior college gradual¬ly became regarded merely as aspan between high school and thesenior college, where the studentcould seriously specialize. Harperfelt a student should know what hewanted to study when he came tothe University.The first dean of the college,Harry Pratt Judson, succeededHarper as president of the Univer¬sity. Judson envisioned a one-yeargeneral education college followedby a three year senior college forspecialization. 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,” Judsonthought it “quite possible to obtaina general culture in a collegecourse and yet. . . plan a good partof the work so that it will lead di¬rectly toward a profession alreadychosen.” DURING HIS administration,there was almost no faculty con¬cern for the College. Attendance atCollege faculty meetings in the twoyear period following World War Iaveraged less than ten. The lack ofan autonomous College hurt teach¬ing standards. Judson, like Harper,considered research of prime im¬portance, and so graduate studentstaught undergraduate courses, andthe annual turnover was high.Doldrums During 20'sIn the 1920’s a number of depart¬mental courses offered in the firsttwo years were taken in manycombinations, and produced “nocommon foundation of basic gener¬al education.”“Generally students didn’t dis¬cuss intellectual matters becausethey didn’t have anything in com¬mon to talk about,” said AaronBrumbaugh, a former dean of theCollege.IT WAS SUGGESTED that theCollege be dropped altogether.Chauncey S. Boucher, dean of theCollege in the late 1920’s, explainedwhy the 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;it attracted contributions fromits alumni, who were wealthierthan graduate school alumni.Judson’s successor, Ernest De-Witt Burton, wanted to move theCollege south of the Midway withits own faculty, budget, d^#n,buildings, and equipment, and ac¬ cept students after their sopho¬more year of high school. His planwas stalemated in debate and itwas not until Max Mason took overthe presidency of the Universitythat it was agreed that the Collegewould remain a part of the Univer¬sity.Ernest Hatch Wilkins, dean ofthe College under Burton, intro¬duced Chicago’s first surveycourse, “The Nature of the Worldand of Man,” a two-quarter coursefeaturing lectures by leading scien¬tists. Its success prompted otherdepartments to design similarcourses.Reorganization ProposedIn 1928, a faculty committeechaired by Boucher was appointedto study a reorganization of the un¬dergraduate curriculum. The com¬mittee’s report would have abol¬ished the credit system, underwhich students graduated aftercompleting a certain number ofcourse hours.It would have substituted re¬quirements that the student passcomprehensive examinations. Tograduate from the junior college,exams in English, a foreign lan¬guage, natural science and math,social science, and an electivecomprehensive which might in-elude preliminary specializedwork, would have been required. Abachelor’s degree candidate fromthe senior college would face anexam in his major field and anoth¬er in his minor.The Hutchins CollegeThe day before the faculty wasto discuss the committee’s report,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¬sions: the College, and the grad¬uate division of biological sciences,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 andfourth-year programs were moreclosely linked to graduate pro¬grams.A COLLEGE FACULTY, largelyautonomous and divorced from thedivisions, came into being. A staffcame into existence for each Col¬lege course and planned it. Syllabiwere introduced to encourage inde¬pendent study. Class attendancewas made voluntary.The curriculum applied Hutch¬ins’ theory of a universal schemeof education: “Education impliesteaching. Teaching implies knowl¬edge. Knowledge is truth. Truth iseverywhere the same. Hence edu¬cation should everywhere be thesame.”What Should Bo KnownThe course of study in the Col¬lege consisted of “the greatestbooks of the Western world, andthe arts of reading, thinking, andspeaking, together with mathemat¬ics, the best explainer of humanreason,” said Hutchins. Such acurriculum would “endure the ele¬ments of our common human na¬ture.” This course of study couldhelp “prepare the young for intelli¬gent action. . . . They will havelearned what has been done in thepast and what the greatest menhave thought. They will havelearned to think for themselves. Ifwe wish to lay a basis for ad¬vanced study, that basis is provid¬ed.” In addition, the College wouldserve as a terminus for those stu¬dents who would end their formaleducation 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 matterareas.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 exceptfor English Composition, whichcould 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 1934, 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 in so¬cial 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 B.A.” was awarded uponthe completion of the general edu¬cation requirement.Post-War ProblemsSeveral 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 1950 thetwo year B.A. program found itselfin trouble. Other colleges, whenconsidering applications for grad¬uate schools, could not look on thetwo year B.A. as representingmore than two years work. Thus,students who had spent three orfour years at Chicago were notbeing given credit for their extratime. Enrollment dropped as a re¬sult.In 1951, amid dropping enroll¬ment and a. steadily worseningneighborhood situation, Lawrence *•A. Kimpton was named chancellor.He commented at the time thatthe problem with the College wasthat it was not relating to “the to¬tal American educational process.”Furthermore, although he felt thatthe Hutchins B.A. “was the finestsystem of general education thatthe U.S. had ever seen,” he finallydecided to stop continuing toaward it.(Continued on Page 23)September 30, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • fiProfessor Calls Them Giant Gastropods Michael SeidmanProf Sights Monsterby Vivian GoodmanRoy Mackal, assistant pro¬fessor of biochemistry, cannotas a scientist believe in thepopular myth of the Loch Nessmonster, but he does strongly be- jlicve in giant gastropods. monster. Mackal has met withsome discouragement from senti¬mental Scots. However, the situa¬tion is not likely to result in an up¬rising of the “Home Rule forScotland” faction unless Mackal isserious about dropping a hot plateinto the Loch, forcing Nessie tosurface.Last week Mackal and his co-di¬rectors of the Loch Ness Phenome¬na Investigation Bureau, head¬quarters at Urquart Castle, Inver¬ness, Scotland, quite de-glamorizedthe legendary monster, affection¬ately and unscientifically known asNessie, by denouncing her as anovergrown sea slug.This name-calling has offendedmany of Nessie’s staunch admir¬ers. The monster has done noharm to anyone who lived to tellthe tale and has done considerablegood to Inverness in attracting thetourist trade. Watchers have pa¬trolled the loch for five summers,and 12,000 hours of sentry dutyhave so far yielded no conclusiveevidence.Unsubstantiated claims doabound, especially from impres¬sionable tourists who pay goodmoney and withstand the uncom¬fortable climate to see a real livePost Office ReopensOpportunity ProgramThe Chicago post office has an¬nounced that they are reopeningPresident Johnson’s youth Oppor¬tunity back-to-sehool drive.The program is designed to givefinancial help to students who musthave it in order to stay in school.Recruitment is being made fromall colleges and junior colleges inthe Chicago area. These needy stu¬dents will be employed in thecapacity of postal assistant?(clerks) for up to 16 hours a weekat a rate of pay of approximately$2.44 per hour. Mackal’s sea slug theory hasbeen more seriously attacked bysome biologists, who contend thatthe largest sea slug, or “sea cu¬cumber,” is merely three feet longand about fourteen inches wide,with 500 pseudopodic legs. Thishighly unique sea slug can crawlalong the sea bottom, but it cannotswim, probably not even if subject¬ed to extreme heat.Mackal said Monday that hisstatement about Nessie being a seaslug was merely conjecture basedon his confirmed belief in “the pres¬ence of a living phenomenom” inthe Loch. An actual sighting oc¬curred Tuesday when the monsterpopped up thirty yards from theshore and began to cavort and frol¬ic before the bureau’s cameras.“It appeared to be basking witha great hump sticking 14 feet outof the water,” said Mackal. “Thenit sank, creating a great vortexabout 20 feet across.”Unfortunately the monster wastoo close to be photographed. Thecameras could not be tilted lowenough on their mountings. Onetechnician almost saved the daywith a hand camera, but in his ex¬citement he forgot to remove histelephoto lens. All that came of itwas a lovely picture of the otherside of the loch.Mackal will probably return nextweek. There is no cause for alarmas his technicians in the biochem¬istry department say that he hasbrought along a good supply ofcopper acetate, a repellent of seaslugs. Johnson Bounces BackReports of Lyndon Johnson’s politicaldemise appear to be somewhat prema¬ture. Although the Johnson mystique hasbeen severely damaged by a number ofrecent failures on the domestic front, thePresident’s ability to line up congressionalsupport for his foreign policy remains al¬most entirely unimpaired. Professors andjournalists continue to register their vocif¬erous objections to the most ambiguouswar in our history, but with the exceptionof a small band of articulate but impotentSenators, Congress has grudgingly accept¬ed continued escalation.INDEED, THE possibility that the Sen¬ate Foreign Relations Committee couldgenerate enough pressure to forct a rever¬sal of our Vietnam policy—which ap¬peared briefly during its dramatic hear¬ings last spring—has now become littlemore than a figment of Senator Full-bright’s imagination. Senators Morse,Gruening, Church, and Fullbright have re¬duced their activity to occasional snipingattacks on the Administration, and themost perceptive of Vietnam critics can elic¬it little more than a whimper of proteston the House side. Even Senator Full-bright himself was forced last week tovoice his approval of the latest peace of¬fensive initiated by Ambassador Gold¬berg’s speech to the U. N. General Assem¬bly.THERE ARE a number of factors whichpreclude a legislative revolt against ourpolicy in Southeast Asia, not all of whichrelate to the President’s political prowess.The very structure of Congress makes ef¬fective opposition to Presidential foreignpolicy difficult. Decisions relating to for¬eign affairs must be made on a day-to-day—indeed, sometime minute to minute—ba¬sis, and it is inconceivable that two un-wieldly bodies, composed of 535 strong-willed men, each representing his ownnarrow constituency, could play an impor¬tant role in formulating those decisions. Inrecognition of this reality. Congress in ef¬fect relinquished its constitutional authori¬ty to issue a declaration of war during the Korean “police action,” and reaffirmedthat decision by granting to the Presidentthe right to do anything in the national in¬terest during the Gulf of Tonkin crisis.MOREOVER, the simple fact is thatmany Senators and almost all Congress¬men by their own admission care littleand know less about foreign affairs. TheForeign Affairs Committee of the Househas long been among the least popularamong freshmen congressman seeking ap¬pointments to the most influential commit¬tees, and its chairman, the quiet and schol¬arly Dr. Thomas Morgan—is widely res¬pected, but virtually powerless.Yet, given all these handicaps, it is stilltrue that Congress, with its access to newsmedia and ability to dramatize issuesthrough committee hearings, could serveas the rallying point for angry public op¬position to the war. But the problem isthat there is precious little public opposi¬tion to rally.FOR DESPITE surveys showing voteruncertainty about the course of the war,peace candidates from New Jersey toCalifornia have been singularly unsuccess¬ful in bucking the Administration on elec¬tion day. Lyndon Johnson still has the po¬litical muscle to back up his policy withvotes, and this fact has not been lost onpotential Congressional critics, whatevertheir private reservations. As one suchCongressman said recently, “You can onlyget hurt by this Vietnam thing. I considerit my greatest political triumph that in arecent survey, 90 percent of the voters inmy district said they didn’t know what myposition on Vietnam was.”Clearly, if Congress is to be an effectiveforce in shifting our Vietnam policy, thepolitical climate will have to change con¬siderably. Yet as long as potential criticscontinue to sit on the fence, the meansavailable for changing that climate aresharply limited. It is a vicious circle, withthe President standing in the middle,calmly manipulating the political whirl¬winds to his own advantage as he has doneso often in the past.UC Hosts Industrial Relations Conference International GroupDiscuss Arts, SciencesThe industrial relations associa- Arnold Weber, professor in the“THE STUDENTS who attemptto take advantage of this opportu-; |fnity should have a more than satis- 'factory scholastic record so that' ^their studies will not be hurt byworking,” according to a post of¬fice official.There will be no examination;appointments, therefore, will bemade in order of receipt. Studentsmust be over 16 and under 22years of age, and no son or daugh¬ter of an employee of the Postalservice (in any locality) is eligible.Application forms may be ob¬tained in the office of Career Coun¬seling and Placement, ReynoldsClub, room 202. ' mm mm t. m m mm m m tJesse Lemisch of the |History department hasannounced that the roomslisted in the time sched-I Mules for his classes this |I quarter are incorrect. |! :: History 446, listed for I- Business East 17, will |■'i meet in Botany 106. Noplace was listed for His- |I tory 274; it will meet in I1 Eckhart 305. tion of Chicago and the Universi¬ty’s graduate school of businesswill hold the 32nd Annual MidwestConference on Industrial Relations,beginning Tuesday at the Centerfor Continuing Education.Questions raised will include,“Will white collar workers increas¬ingly follow blue collar workersinto labor unions as automationalso changes their work patterns?”and “In the tightest labor marketsince the Korean War, will employ¬ers be forced to lower their hiringrequirements?” graduate school of business, haspointed out that during the recentlabor surplus, employers weremuch more stringent in regard tohiring requirements. He feels thatj these standards won’t be able to be; maintained in today’s full employ¬ment situation.“Chicago is experiencing a greatDoom in employment and this of¬fers a highly favorable opportunityfor minorities to penetrate newsectors of the labor market,” hesaid.Private telephones in stu¬dents' rooms are presentlyavailable in University resi¬dence halls for the first time.For the basic rate of $5.60monthly and a connectioncharge of $6.00, the student isallowed 80 units for calls withinChicago and to the suburbs inthe metropolitan calling areawithin Illinois.Students desiring phone serv¬ice must now make private ar¬rangements with the telephonecompany for installation.PIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3*072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT-RIGHT ON CAMPUS-FOR YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS LARGE OR SMALL-AIR, STEAMSHIP, TOURS, RAIL-MIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICELOBBY MAd" BUILDINGTEL. Ml 3-0800-EXT. 2301, 2302, 2303NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICES EXCEPTNOMINAL FEE FOR RAIL TICKETS An international group of 23 emi¬nent scholars, businessmen, anddiplomats will discuss the role ofthe arts and sciences in advancinghuman understanding at a confer¬ence from Wedneday, October 5,through Friday, October 7, here.Sessions will be held each dayfrom 10 am to 12:30 pm. The con¬ference, entitled “Toward WorldCommunity,” will be sponsored bythe Committee on Social Thoughtand the Center for Human Under¬standing and will be held in theCenter for Continuing Education.John U. Nef, UC professor ofeconomics and founder of the Cen¬ter for Human Understanding, willpreside at the Conference.Nef hopes that the conferencewill achieve a better understandingof factors which could contributetoward world community.<UC Victory over AlbionUC’s cross country !team startedoff on the right foot with a victoryover Albion College at Albion,Michigan.Pete Hildebrand sparked thevarsity’s win with a first place fin¬ish, while Chuck Stanberry camein fourth and Bob LaRoque fifth.Bob Chaffee and Ted Terpstrarounded out UC’s top five finisherscoming in seventh and eighth re¬spectively. The final score was UC25, Albion 30 (low score wins).Coach Ted Haydon’s team won 8and lost 2 last year and has fivereturning lettermen this year.It • CHIC AGO MAR O O N • September 30, 2*66SWAP Philosophy To Involve Tutees in Their Own Problems(Continued from Page 15)are quite able, but need extra helpwhich the schools, with the acuteshortage of teachers, cannot pro¬vide. Still others are attracted toSWAP only by the non-academicactivities, such as athletics andfield trips.THE SWAP PHILOSOPHY is toencourage a close personal rela¬tionship of tutors with tutees. Staffmembers are then able to conveythe idea to these students that theyare important in the planning andoperating of all programs, accord¬ing to Neal Allen, SWAP advisor.A “Tutee Advisory Board” whosemembers represent all SWAPclubs and special activity groups,was set up to make specific plansfor involving tutees in the SWAPprogram.Parents Advise TooParents are also called upon toadvise in SWAP decision making.The Parents’ Steering Committeegrew out of small group meetingswhich discussed SWAP and its fu¬ture. One of the programs favoredby SWAP parents was one whichsought better high school counsel¬ing. Many reports on and criti¬cisms of high school counseling bythis committee brought about sig¬nificant changes in area highschools. Hyde Park High’s guid¬ance counseling was revised tosuit the individual rather thangroups, a special reading programwas instituted, and students in low¬er tracks were able to study aforeign language. Such changeswould not have been made withoutthe pressure exerted on school au¬thorities by such a committee ac¬cording to Allen.Under former schools Superin¬tendent Benjamin C. Willis, theproject was not carried out as par¬ents and SWAP staff memberswould have liked, said Allen. Wil¬lis’ successor, James Redmond,however, has approved SWAP’splan and Allen expressed hope thatthe parents’ role in working in theschools will be clarified in the nearfuture.ALSO PART of the parents’committee report, which was re¬leased in June, 1965, was a propo¬sal to expand the old, overcrowdedHyde Park High by building newwings. This and other suggestionsfor the old school’s improvementwere the basis for a full-scale planto remake HPHS into an educationpark. This plan had the strong sup¬port of a number of communitygroups from both Hyde Park andWoodlawn, but was rejected lastJanuary by the Chicago Board ofEducation in favor of a plan for aseparate new school in Hyde Park.Counseling ProgramAnother important factor whichspurred the high school to instituteits own individual counseling pro¬gram was the example SWAP setwith a large counseling program,begun last year. In SWAP’s pro¬gram, U*C students, mostly grad¬uate students in such fields aseducation and psychology, were re¬cruited to provide individual ad¬vice to high school students onplans for college study or futurecareers.Staff for the program, led byCollege student Mike Zigmond,prepared a sizeable booklet con¬taining practically all the informa¬tion a student would want abouthow to get into college—what highschool courses are needed, how toapply, what tests are required,how to get financial aid, etc.INDIVIDUAL SESSIONS with acounselor then helped many stu¬dents define their own goals, anddiscover how to go about reachingthem. The high school studentsalso heard talks from experts fromUC, the Chicago school administra¬tion, and even the test-makerssuch as the College Entrance Ex¬amination Board. SWAP’s program, according toZigmond, last year helped thirtystudents enter four-year collegeswho would probably not have goneotherwise, and saw many othersenter city junior colleges. Thereare also about one hundred stu¬dents who were juniors last yearand are now “well on their way to¬ward applications for next year,”Zigmond said.Seminars In SummerAs part of its attempt to involvetutees in thinking about their ownproblems, SWAP held numerousseminars for the tutees in thespring of 1965. These placed theemphasis on education in the ghet¬tos and attempted to answer suchquestions as what constitutes agood high school or a good instruc¬tor. After each seminar, the stu¬dents evaluated the respectiveroles of student and lecturer in thediscussion. Visiting speakers in¬cluded A1 Raby of the CoordinatingCouncil of Community Organiza¬tion (CCCO), Nahaz Rogers ofACT, and Mrs. Bosky of Motherson the MOVE (MOM), a conserva¬tive educational group from theNorth Side, and Warren Bacon,member of Board of Education. ITHIS PAST SUMMER each tuteereceived a bulletin on which each II was to indicate his or her choice of |a summer project. The three pro¬jects sponsored were a leadershiptraining conference, a bio-medicalcareers seminar, and a programdesigned to train the SWAP’ers inthe use of IBM machines. SWAPworked in conjunction with Chica¬go YMCA’s JOBS NOW programby recommending project mem¬bers for various employment op¬portunities.Discussions of everyday happen¬ings and evaluations of relatedquestions constituted the core ofthe leadership training program.The students also visited lawyers,public housing administrators,teachers, and police stations in aneffort to enable these persons tohelp the students answer theirquestions.Students ParticipateFifteen students participated inthe bio-medical careers seminar,during which they toured hospitalsand medical centers. In addition,there was a course in computerprogramming which made use ofUC’s machines. Under Josh Yeidelof SWAP, the project became sopopular that the students requestedextra sessions.SWAP'S SPECIAL reading clin¬ic, a special program for studentswith serious reading problems, willcontinue this year as a supplementto the individual tutoring. The clin¬ic brings together seven or eightpupils to work with two instructorson the difficulties that preventthem from reading adequately.Different students may readpoorly for different reasons. Onemay not be able to see the wordcorrectly, while another may seeevery word, but not comprehendthe over all meaning of what hesees. For this reason, the SWAPclinic will test each pupil in theprogram to determine where histrouble lies, and assign him to agroup which will concentrate onone particular kind of problem.Pupils will, of course, be able toget help in as many different prob¬lems as they need.Parents te InstructDon Abel, third year College stu¬dent who is running the clinic, hasannounced that he hopes to use onetrained UC student and one parentas instructors for each readinggroup, in keeping with SWAP’s ef¬forts to involve parents. All in¬structors will receive advice andhelp from SWAP's reading consul¬tant, Mirs Elizabeth Davey, read¬ing clinic director for Chicagoschool district 14, which coversHyde Park and Woodlawn. The instructors will use such ma¬terials as newspapers, comicbooks, tape recordings, and ma¬terials prepared by SWAP tuteesthemselves. By letting tutees relatestories and personal experienceson a tape recording and transcrib¬ing the recordings, SWAP hascompiled a number of reading ma¬terials which are directly relevantto the everyday lives of its tutees.In. previous years, pupils in¬structed in SWAP’s reading clinichave raised their reading abilityby as much as four grade levels.Money TroublesAll these activities are supportedby donations from supporters inthe neighborhood, by money-rais¬ing activities sponsored by the Tu¬tee Advisory Board, and by grantsfrom the Chicago Commission onUrban Opportunity, (CCUO) the lo¬ cal community action agency inthe war on poverty program, underthe Office of Economic Opportuni¬ty.THE FINANCIAL picture at themoment is somewhat clouded,however. The CCUO had originallyapproved a grant to SWAP forabout $44,000, to cover the periodfrom last April to this December.Around June, however, membersof CCUO’s inspection team lookedinto SWAP, and were dissatisfiedwith the project’s bookkeeping ar¬rangements. They then decided tocut off SWAP’s funds until auditingarrangements were improved.With the help of one of the mem¬bers of SWAP’s board of directors,Anderson and Company the larg >stauditing firm in the midwest hascarefully gone over every jot and tittle of SWAP’s books. When theaudit is completed, SWAP will re¬apply to the CCUO for funds.Rand makes them... but you’ve made them classics!If there are All-American college classicsin men's shoes, they include the styles!roure looking at: the long-wing brogue,rom $16-$25, and the handsewn-vampTrujuns, from $15-$ 18. A wardrobe with¬out them is hardly a wardrobe, especiallyon campus. (Take it from Rand! ) Rand.ROWLEY'S SHOES, INC.M3 S. Franklin, Michigan City, ind.SOUTH SHORE SHOES2134 East 7Ut St., Chicago, HI. CHAROLD'S SHOES9531 South Joffory Ave., Chicago, III.SHAPIRO SHOE STORESCroater-south SMo • Chicago andSutoorts DUANE'S SHOESWinston Fork Plaxa, Melrose Pk., IN.H. GOLD SHOE CO.12 N. Walls, Chicago, IN.September 30; 1906 • CHICAGO MAROON • V9Or: "What Money and a Bulldozer Can Po*‘Hyde Park: UC's Unique Neighborhood...BEFORE AND AFTER: (Left) The view down 55th St. from Lake Park Ave. as itlooked in the mid-1950's. (Right) That same view after urban renewal. No bars, ', , < 'V >jf $ < *' " tfew muggings, a nice middle class community. A monument to Julian Levi, orsomething like that.By David L. AikenWhat makes Hyde Park standout, not only among neighborhood areas within Chicago, butamong communities across thecountry?There is no single answer. Ob¬viously, not every neighborhoodin the country has a first-rateuniversity in its midst. But HydePark was a little out of the ordi¬nary even before the universitycame here in 1892.- AT THAT TIME the village ofHyde Park was inhabited by upper class professionals, most ofwhom had a decidedly liberalbent. The community’s own co¬operative supermarket, now lo¬cated in the 55th street shoppingcenter, is a product of early tra¬ditions of liberal thought.UC's EffectWhen Marshall Field gave the land for a new University of Chi¬cago campus in Hyde Park, theinflux of faculty, students, andhangers-on set a new tone ofeven more liberality and intellec¬tual ferment.The 1892 World’s Fair (calledthe “Columbian Exposition”),which was held along the Mid¬way area, bequeathed to theneighborhood an area called the“Art Colony,*' which stood along57th street between Stony Islandavenue and the IC railroadtracks. This double row of smallstores, noted for their candy-cot-ton Gothic decorations, housed atvarious times such artists andthinkers as Theodore Dreiser,Carl Sandburg, Sherwood Ander¬son, and Thorstein Veblen.THE SMALL CRAFTSMENwho were “urban-renewed” out ofthe Art Colony have either goneout of business or moved to Har¬ per Court, a culture-cum-com-merce center opened last sum¬mer. It was pushed through inthe interests of preserving suchsmall shopkeepers by a group ofpublic-spirited Hyde Parkers ledby Muriel Beadle, wife of the UCpresident.Craftsmen and public-spiritedcitizens are examples of the typeof person for which Hyde Park isnoted. Mostly middle class, theneighborhood is composed large¬ly of professionals, artists, anduniversity people.The Hyde Park ParlyOne way of observing the kindof people who are attracted toHyde Park is to attend a form ofentertainment called the “HydePark party.” Only at Hyde Parkparties can you choose amongthe activities of twisting, gettingstoned, and discussing Plato,birth control, Dostoevski, or ur¬ban renewal.THE ATMOSPHERE of liberal¬ism is in evidence in many ways.Politically, Hyde Park has alwaysbeen an ornery corner of inde¬pendence from the city machine.The present Fifth Ward Aider-man, Leon M. Despres, continuesa long tradition of independent-minded gadflies on the body ofthe city council.The Only NegroThough Despres, a UC alum¬nus. is white, he has consistentlypushed for measures for equalNegro rights, such as a strongcity open occupancy ordinance.(Wags have commented thatDespres was the “only Negro onthe City Council” until joined byAlderman Charles Chew in sup-rort of equal rights billsv There are really six Negroes on theCouncil besides Chew, but theyare part of the Democratic ma¬chine and they do not make mili¬tant civil rights demands.)Despres also espouses such fa¬vorite causes of Hyde Parkers aspreserving trees in JacksonPark, getting rid of School Su¬perintendent Willis, and fightingMayor Daley whenever the op¬portunity presents itself. One ofthe best shows in town, for sheerdramatic tension, can be encounters between Despres and Dal¬ey’s floor manager on the CityCouncil. Thomas Keane (47thward). Since Keane controls themachine bloc of the council, andDespres has only one or two con¬sistent allies on the body, the re¬sults of these battles are usuallyforegone conclusions. He can putup a pretty good try, though.DESPRES' PREDECESSOR'Sinclude Sen. Paul Douglas andRobert C. Merriam who was astaff assistant to PresidentEisenhower, after running forMayor as a Republican (an en¬terprise not likely to succeed).Community SpiritThe Hyde Park "spirit” fea¬tures a strong sense of communi¬ty participation. Residents hereare noted for their active interestin their neighborhood, and thedozens of community organiza¬tions they have formed.THIS SENSE of interest andaction, plus the heterogeneity ofthe population, was crucial dur¬ing the period of the early 1590’s.At that time, Hyde Park wasexperiencing a decline in stan¬dards of housing. During the Sec¬ond World-War, Chicago industryexpanded greatly for the war ef¬ fort; the availability of jobs at¬tracted large numbers of Ne¬groes from the South, and otherworkers into the city.Coinciding with this influx wasa decision by the US SupremeCourt in 1947 barring raciallyrestrictive covenants in sale ofreal estate. These factors result¬ed in breaks in the borders of the“ghetto” area; many Negroesmoved into Hyde Park from thenorth and west, crossing whathad been the “riatural borders”of 47th street and Cottage Groveavenue.Many white residents fled forthe suburbs; fear of crime increased. In 1949, some residentsmet to discuss the problem. Theyagreed that white families shouldnot panic, but stay in the neighborhood.To dissolve inter-racial tension,and to work on problems of up¬keep in the neighborhood, suchas illegal conversions and lack ofadequate services, residentsformed the Hyde Park-KenwoodCommunity Conference(HPKCC) in February, 1950.Much of the Conference’s workwas at first done by block clubs.To reduce tensions, Negro fami¬lies moving into a block were in¬vited to the next meeting of theblock club.HPKCC THOUGHT of itself asa truly “grass roots” organiza¬tion, and at its peak about oneresident in five was in someway—formally or informally—connected with it.But the Conference could notmarshal enough support and resources to take action againstmany sources of decline. Whatwas needed was the support ofthe most important part of theneighborhood which owned agreat amount of land, employedmany residents, had lots of mon¬ey—the University of Chicago.UC's Early AttitudeUC’s Chancellor at the time,Robert Maynard Hutchins, couldnot be bothered. When HPKCCleaders arranged a meeting withhim in 1951, Hutchins is reportedto have greeted them cordiallyand then announced “I am sorryto have to be abrupt but Ihave another meeting which I’mobliged to attend. All I can say isthat I am personally strongly infavor of a University policy ofracial non-discrimination.”According to UC professor ofsociology Peter Rossi’s book, ThePolitics of Urban Renewal, UCreal estate officers then indicat¬ed clear disagreement with the(Continued on Pago 26)AMERICAN AUTO PARTS7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3614MUFF' FR HE*DOUARTERSAs Advertised ie LIFE oed POSTaa MAITM6ITAKES OMtTIS MHHITESI GUARANTEED * Writing AgainstBLOW OUT, RUST, EVERYTHING?Fsr As L**t| « Tss 0v« Tssr CsH |Installed Free While You WaitComplete Line of Auto Partsfor Do-It-Yourself MechanicsBrakes Installed SHOCK absorbersFACTORYAUTHORIZEDSERVICE *1995 ALL FOURWHEELSliatm§ £> Leber—Ferd 6 Chevy SR ANDFOR MOSTCARS *7“ SERotuilodTUNE-UP SPECIALIncludes Chempien A.C., Auto-Lite Spark Plugs, Feints, Roter,Condenser. Adfttsf aj oiipCarbureter end f 1Timing While You I LWeit.AR 4-cyl. ears 1*41 *e 1*62 REAR SPRINGSINSTALLEDWHILE YOU WAIT*12??American Auto Parts7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3614 Hyde Park Medical LaboratoryOpen 9 am-9 pm, 6 days a week5240 S. Harper 493-2000(Corner 1400 E. 53rd St.)(OPEN DAWN TO DAWN)Hobby House Restaurant1342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER"The Best of All Foods''Sfi -t20 • CHICAGO MAROON • September 30, 1966- Squafor at the University's DoorstepWood I awn: What Hyde Park Might Have BeenThe story of Woodlawn, the University’sneighbor south of the Midway—is the storyof many city neighborhoods—too manyslums, too many people receiving publicwelfare, and a high crime rate.Ths story of Woodlawn also carries hope,however-- hope that arises from self helpefforts by many groups in the community.East Woodlawn’s northern boundary is60th street. It runs to about 70th street,between Cottage Grove Ave. to the west,and Stony Ave. to the east. (“West Wood-lawn,” from Cottage Grove to StateStreet, is not as overcrowded as EastWoodlawn.) Eighty-six per cent of EastWoodlawn’s 60,000 residents are Negro,and three per cent are Puerto Ricans.WOODLAWN RESIDENTS suffer fromall the ills of a Negro slum—a high pro¬portion of dilapidated, unhealthy and over¬crowded housing, inadequate schools, lackof fair job opportunities, and infectionfrom vandals prostitutes, and other crimi¬nal elements.Beset with ProblemsBetween 1950 and 1960, Woodlawn popu¬lation underwent a massive exchange ofNegro and white population; just under 40,-000 whites left, and were replaced by al¬most 40,500 non-whites. With this changecame a much higher proportion of chil¬dren, putting a tremendous strain on theneighborhood’s schools.In East Woodlawn, 12.2 per cent of thenon-white male population were unem¬ployed, compared to 3.8 per cent of themale white labor force in Chicago. Esti¬mates of unemployment among Negroyouths in areas such as Woodlawn run ashigh as 50 per cent for high school grad¬uates and 70 per cent for dropouts.WHILE THE BULK of Woodlawn resi¬dents are law-abiding, the Woodlawn com¬munity ranks as one of the highest arrestrate areas in Chicago. Most adult crimi¬nals from Woodlawn have had very, littleeducation, and some may, in desperation,turn to shoplifting, burglary, or pettyracketeering.The notorious “sin strip” of bars andbrothels along the eastern end of 63rdstreet harbors numerous prostitutes anddope addicts. Though most of the crime inthe area is attacks on property, this areais not the best place for a late eveningstroll.The most obvious problem to the eye inWoodlawn is the overcrowded housing.Virtually half of the housing units are di¬lapidated, deteriorated, or lack basicplumbing, compared to less than onequarter of the units in the city as a whole.The average rent ranges from $26 to $33per room in Woodlawn, compared to $22.43in the rest of the city.UCs' InvolvementAlong 60th street are several apartmenthouses in liveable condition. The Universi¬ty has long had several buildings on 60thstreet, the “other side of the Midway.” Inthe past several years, a number of largenew buildings have gone up there, such asthe new Law School, the Center for Con¬tinuing Education, and the new home forthe School of Social Services Administra¬tion, now being built.IN JULY, 1960, the University submittedto the Chicago Land Clearance Commis¬sion plans to buy up the entire strip bet¬ween 60th and 61st streets, stretching onemile between Cottage Grove Ave. and Sto¬ny Island Ave.After city condemnation and purchase ofthe area, UC would buy up the 26.5 acresof land in the South Campus strip that itdid not already own (John D. Rockefellerhad donated many acres of land in thearea to UC around the turn of the century,and UC has had buildings there since the30’s.).This will give UC a “land bank” whichshould be adequate for future expansionfor many years. Without this land, accord¬ing to administrators, UC would havebeen hemmed in, with no room to put thelaboratories and other buildings it willhave to have in the future.IN SEPTEMBER of that year, theSouth-East Chicago Commission, the Uni¬versity’s arm of urban renewal led byJulian Levi, invited several pastors in theWoodlawn community to join a new pro¬gram of community organization, spon¬sored by the University, the Field Founda¬tion, and the Lutheran Church. An organi¬zational structure and a detailed budgethad already been drawn up.The pastors soon became wary of such an “artificial” plan for the community’sorganization, and declined the invitation.They realized, however, that communityunity was needed. In October, therefore,they informally asked the Industrial AreasFoundation to study their community, findout what various groups were interestedin, and help develop a community rehabil¬itation.Pastors Protest PlanOn December 14, 1960, the pastors foundthat an ordinance would be introduced inChicago Plan Commission the next day,attempting to gain preliminary official ap¬proval for the South Campus plan immedi¬ately.The federal urban renewal agency couldnot approve grants to a city for projectswhich had been begun by a private institu¬tion until these projects received the city’sapproval, it was said. Approval had to bemade before ground was broken for theCenter for Continuing Education, on 60thstreet, according to Julian Levi.The Woodlawn pastors, businessmen,and Fifth Ward Alderman Leon M.Despres, whose ward encompasses bothHyde Park and most of Woodlawn, disput¬ed this. They put up enough of a fight tobe successful in getting the Plan Commis¬sion to defer action on the proposed ordi¬nance.THEIR DEMAND WAS that action ap¬proving the South Campus plan had to betied to an over-all urban renewal plan forthe entire community.They explained that Negroes had beenpushed out of urban renewal areas threetimes already and demanded assurancethat Woodlawn would not be next in thepath of the bulldozers.The Woodlawnites’ effort showed themthe success of united action. The five or¬ganizations which had cooperated insquashing the ordinance (the WoodlawnBusinessmen’s Association, the Block ClubCouncil, the United Woodlawn onfer-ence, the Knights of St. John, and the Pa-tors’ Alliance) decided to meet together,and organized the “Temporary WoodlawnOrganization for Community Planning andRehabilitation.” The Industrial AreasFoundation was asked to be “technicalconsultant” for the TWO.THE SOUTH EAST Chicago Commissiondecided to ignore the new TWO. SECCwanted to consider Woodlawn’s problems,it said, but only by discussing them withindividual leaders, not with TWO as rep¬resentative organization.The University and SECC felt that TWOshould not be recognized as the sole rep¬resentative of the community, since therewere several other organizations. Alinskyand his associates, however, felt that, togain effective influence, TWO had to belooked upon as the strongest and most rep¬resentative group, and had to attract allelements of the community.BOTH UC and TWO leaders acknowl¬edge that there was never any disagree¬ment over the ultimate goal in Woodlawn.As Saul Alinsky, TWO’s organizer, put it,“The whole affair was a very odd thing,since basically the goals of the two sideswere compatible—a decent, law-abidingenvironment in Woodlawn.“Evidently,” Alinsky continued “UCsaw only three ways to achieve this goal:saturating the area with police; movingeverything out; or making sure it re¬mained a ghetto. Apparently UC inclinedtoward the second and third alternatives.”Alimsky pointed out that Woodlawn resi¬dents had unhappy memories of previousurban renewal projects in Chicago, includ¬ing the Hyde Park p'roject. PredominatelyNegro areas were selected for clearance,but the new housing built on the sites wasnot in the price range of the evicted resi¬dents.UC AT ONE point had also suggestedthat a depressed super highway be builtparallel to the Midway, effectively cuttingoff Woodlawn from the UC campus, Alin-skyIt is likely that UC and SECC did notentirely approve of the tactics that the In¬dustrial Areas Foundation and its con¬troversial captain, Saul Alinsky, had usedin previous community organization en¬deavors. |The AKnsfcy ConceptThe guiding theory under which Wood¬lawn was organized has been called theAlinsky concept after Saul Alinsky, thehead of the Industrial Areas Foundation(IAF). The Alinsky concept involves the No matter how you look at Woodlawn, it's discouraging. Here, an aerialview of some of the tenements.theory that in order to effectuate change,the poor must be organized in such a waythat they have the power to force reformsin the social, political and economic con¬ditions under which they live.The Alinsky concept presupposes,among other things, what some peoplecall “the power structure.” By this theymean the connivance of political powerwith the vested interests of the communityin an unholy alliance that works to subju¬gate the disenfranchised—the power-poor.THE GAINING of power through organi¬zation may be done in many ways. Butcrucial to organization is the task of giv¬ing a community something to organizearound. The story is told of an Alinsky or¬ganizer who went into a slum in KansasCity and tried unsuccessfully to do a littleorganizing. Despairing for a way to stirup the apathetic slum dwellers he calledup the city administration and demandedthat the city locate a mental hospital inthe Negro section. The city consented andthe organizer went back to the communityand told the people, “They’re trying to puta bunch of nuts down here, we gotta stop’em.”TWO was faced in Woodlawn with thesame problem that confronted the organiz¬er in Kansas City. They had to find waysof exciting the residents of Woodlawn andmaking them want to organize.The method that TWO came up withwas an interpretation of slums as the re¬sult of exploitation. According to this theo¬ry, the forces that create the slums (i.e.the exploiters) are eradicated (or some¬how forced to mend their ways) the slumswill disappear.IF THE TWO interpretation seems a lit¬tle simple minded, there is no reason tobelieve that TWO staffers really believeeverything they tell Woodlawn residents.There is also no reason to believe thatAlinsky, the man responsible for TWO,takes a lot of the things his charges sayseriously. Alinsky, a man widely known asa cynic, has often said that he has fewscruples about organizing for power.In keeping with Alinsky’s “organize anyway yoh cap” ideology, TWO has adopteda tough talking, rough tactics treatmentfor Woodlaiwn’s merchants, politicians, ,and landlords. These tactics include pick¬eting and harrassment, that make thelives of TWO targets miserable and arestartlingly effective in bringing out thetroops.-^ j* ‘ *TWO ActivitiesTWO has also played an important partin the efforts by civil rights and othergroups to pressure the Chicago Board of -Education to improve schools, especially inghetto slum areas; and, as part of thiseffort, to counter the present pattern ofinferior, wholly segregated “neighbor¬hood” schools.TWO leaders do not hesitate to point outthat TWO led the first picket of Board ofEducation offices over the issue of segre¬gation, more than, two years before the. b " ■ --- *} , -two school boycotts of 1963. The boycotts,in November and February, both demand¬ed the ouster of School SuperintendentBenjamin Willis, whose consistent defenseof the “neighborhood school’’ system hasbeen severely criticized for ignoring theproblems of ghetto schools.CHARLES E. SILBERMAN, in his bookCrisis in Black and White, has high praisefor the effectiveness of TWO’s efforts toweld Woodlawn into a community withpower over its own affairs, and a powerfulvoice in the city as a whole. One of themost dramatic moves hy TWO in itsformative period was to send forty-six bus¬loads of Woodlawn residents to City Hallto register to vote.This, combined with the other efforts oftheir leaders, gave the people the feel?ing that City Hall bosses were finallytaking notice of their existence. Silbermansays, echoing a basic tenet of Alinsky’sphilosophy, “What is crucial, in short, isnot what the Woodlawn residents win,but that they are winning it; and thismakes them see themselves ... as menand women of substance and worth.”One landmark in TWO’s battle for rec¬ognition came in spring, -1962, when MayorDaley decided to accept the organization’simportance and spoke at their second an¬nual convention.TO MAKE SURE the organizationshe has organized are able to standon their own feet, Alinsky makes ita policy to withdraw from activeparticipation in the organization, leavingpolicy and tactics to the organization’sown leaders.A sizeable part of its income formerlycame from the IAF with contributionsfrom the Lutheran Church, the ChicagoArchdiocese, and the Schwartzhaupt foun¬dation of New York. In the past few years,TWO has shouldered the task of raisingits entire budget by its own efforts.ACCORDING TO Rev. Arthur Brazier,pastor of Woodlawn’s Apostolic Church W*God, and TWO’s president these successeshave made TWO “the strongest, indeedthe only Negro community organization inthe nation. It is a beacon of light for oth¬ers.” ’. r> Tactics Have Changed. TWO has now passed out of its earlystage when it needed to attract support andprove its strength. According to Saul Alin¬sky, “There is a difference between thetactics of a mass organization and astruggling organization. We no longerhave to ask for favors; our position is es¬tablished.”In July, 1963, the controversy over theSouth Campus plans was settled betweenthe University, TWO, and the city, at ameeting in the Mayor’s office. UC got itsSouth Campus land.In return, Woodlawn residents gainedassurance that a project to house familiesdisplaced from the South Campus areawould be ready before the area is cleared.(Continued on Page 22)September 30, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 21*t * C * & OGang ThreatensWoodlawn(Continued from page 21)Since 1964, Woodlawn has been plaguedwith the additional problem of teen agegang violence which has this past springand summer reached extremely seriousproportions.YOUTH GANGS have been present inWoodlawn since the community becamesignificantly Negro, but 1 has only been inthe last two years that they have achievedtheir largest growth—and created theirmost violence.A feud between the Blackstone Rangersand their bitter rivals, the Disciples, hasresulted in over 100 shootings with tendeaths in the last eight months. In addi¬tion, there have been numerous incidentsof extortion and beatings attributed togang conflicts.“These incidents have caused a lot ofgood families to move out of Woodlawn,”complained Hyde Park High School Hu¬man Relations Coordinator Robert Weit-zel.THE RANGERS, who control most ofeast Woodlawn, have anywhere from 300to 2000 members, depending on whetheryou accept police or gang leader esti¬mates. Regardless, the gang can now verylikely rightfully claim to be Chicago’slargest and most powerful teen gang. The situation has reached the pointwhere parents are scared to let their chil¬dren walk the streets and children feelcompelled to join a gang for fear of beingseverely hurt. “They woulda kicked myass if I hadn’t joined a gang,” one new re¬cruit explained.While the extent of the gang’s organiza¬tion is questionable, that the leadershipexercises significant authority over mem¬bers is generally accepted by those famil¬iar with the gang. Police have been con¬centrating their efforts on trying to keepRanger leaders off the streets by watchingthem closely and arresting them wheneverpossible. “As for the leaders, I think in¬carceration is the best thing for them,”says Sgt. Garland D. Davis of the ChicagoPolice Department’s youth division.THE FIRST PRESBYTERIANCHURCH of Woodlawn also recognizes theimportant role the leaders play in thegang’s operation, but sees the gang in bet¬ter light than police. According to thechurch’s Associate Pastor, Harold Walker,the church has posted bond for gang lead¬ers in the belief that the leaders can be agood influence in the community. “We rec¬ognize the integrity of the gang and itsleaders,” says Walker.Regardless of the church’s good inten¬tions, the violence continues, and rep¬resents a real threat to any progress indealing with Woodlawn’s many problems. Fifteen DesignatedFifteen first-year students havebeen designated University Schol*ars. Appointment, which is basedon outstanding high school academ¬ic and cultural achievement, rep¬resents the highest honor that canbe granted any entering student.The University Scholars are in¬vited each year to participate in aninformal program of academic andintellectual orientation.THIS YEAR new UniversityScholars have been extended aspecial invitation to participate in University Scholarsa newly organized tutorial pro¬gram in the liberal arts. Eachscholar will be substituting a spec¬ial tutorial program for the regularhumanities and social sciencescourses.The program will feature specialcourses combining history, philoso¬phy, rhetoric, and the socialsciences. Each section of eachcourse is under the direction of asenior member of the faculty andan assistant tutor.student owned and managedTHE CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWREACHING MORE THAN 50,000 IN THE GREATERCHICAGO AREA,Invites You to Join A Growing StaffGOOD PEOPLE ARE NEEDED INTHE FOLLOWING AREAS:Circulation and marketingproduction and office workreviewing and art workCONTACT Ted Hearne, Bryan Dunlap, or Boruch GlasgowMl 34ft00-Ext. 3265FIRST YEAR STUDENTS taking placement exams in Bartlett Gym, about 20 years ago.New Era Ahead for the College UC Undergoing ''Intensive Examination"Of Goals, Says Beadle in Message(Continued from page 17)KIMPTON'S DECISION took conCrete shape in 1954, when the Fil-bey Report, composed by then VicePresident, Emery T. Filbey, addedone year of specialization to the 14-comp B.A. program. The B.A. ac¬cording to Filbey’s report wasto be awarded jointly by the Col¬lege and the divisions thus re¬ducing the College’s autonomy. TheCollege immediately counteredwith its still-existing tutorial stud¬ies and professional option pro¬grams.The Filbey Report met with agreat deal of opposition. Through¬out 1954 students demonstrated infront of the administration build¬ing, in front of Kimpton’s home,and outside of faculty senate meet¬ings. Nevertheless, the report wasenacted, and four years later theCollege 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¬tive s.” 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 autonomythat it has 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.Two years ago, however, Simp¬son resigned to take up a new postas president of Vassar College inPoughkeepsie, N.Y. A successorwas not immediately named, butProvost Edward Levi took on theadded duty of acting dean of theCollege. HIS MAIN task was to meet withfaculty, students, and other admin¬istrators, to sound them out ontheir opinions of the College at Chi¬cago.AS A RESULT of his delibera¬tions, Levi proposed a reorganiza¬tion of the decision-making machi¬nery of the College. The major sin¬gle revision was breaking up thecollege into five “collegiate divi¬sions,” each under its own “mas-«er.” This change was aimed atproviding a way for students’ pro¬grams in the College to be moreclosely related to graduate pro¬grams.Levi always felt there must beclose integration between generaland specialized education. Hewanted to provide a structure inwhich this integration would beeasy, and in which faculty who hadtaught only graduate level courseswould be attracted to undergrad¬uate courses.Wayne C. BoothWith help from a faculty com¬mittee, Levi found a new dean ofthe college—Wayne C. Booth, whohad been professor of Englishsince 1962 and had won some famewith his award-winning book, TheRhetoric of Fiction.Levi and Booth then appointedmasters of the collegiate divisions,and all set about to design a newcurriculum which would meet thegoal of greater integration betweenspecialized and general education.The first task of the curriculum-planners was designing a new gen¬eral education sequence. The LeviPlan called for “a year in com¬mon,” to ensure that all studentsshared some common core of ex¬periences, but did not specify justwhat should be common. BOOTH AND THE masters cameup with a rather radical plan, call¬ing for all students to take some¬thing to be called “Liberal Arts I”in their first year. While the basictypes of learnings that the studentshould acquire in the course wouldbe specified, the instructors wouldhave broad latitude in the materi¬als to be covered and the teachingmethods to be used.This proposal ran into trouble. Itwas submitted last December, justa few weeks before the CollegeCouncil, the policy-making body ofthe College faculty, was scheduledto meet and act upon it. It wasalso too radical for many facultymembers. A number said that theold curriculum wasn’t really allthat bad, the more they reallythought about it.Eventually, the decision waspostponed until the spring. A Col¬lege-wide conference on liberaleducation in late January inter¬vened, during which students andfaculty got together to discussideas on what a College educationshould be and do. Finally, the Col¬lege Council, in effect, reached acompromise based largely on thestatus quo.The College TodayFour courses —social sciences,humanities, biological sciences,and physical sciences— are to berequired of entering students, be- iginning with this year’s entrants.The collegiate division in charge ofeach of these courses would havethe task of deciding what coursewould be offered. In most cases,little change was made from pre-v i o u s courses. The physicalsciences course, for example, re¬mains essentially unchanged. Forhumanities and social sciences, en¬tering students will be given achoice between courses that veryclosely resemble the old Humani¬ties I and II and Social Sciences Iand II.However, a relic of the radicalBooth proposal remains. LiberalArts I will be taught as an experi¬ment, to a group of entering stu¬dents randomly selected from thegeneral population who receivedinvitations to take the course. Ifthis experiment seems successful,presumably it will be a strong con¬tender for permanent status.ALL IS STILL in flux with re¬gard to the programs of the Colle¬giate divisions past the first year,however. Planning will presumablyprogress at a furious clip this year,as the second year of study ap¬proaches for the students newlyentered into the brave new experi¬ment in curriculum designing.Whatever new programs are de¬signed, however, one thing is cer¬tain—they will be changed again,sooner or later. (Continued from Page 11)closer faculty-student relation¬ships.This reorganization is the prod¬uct of an intensive three-yearexamination of the goals of theundergraduate program, carriedon under the direction of Provost Edward H. Levi and DeanWayne C. Booth. It is in keepingwith Chicago’s traditional roleas an innovator in education.Self ExaminationThe University continues toexamine itself in other ways asweell. For example, a number ofF a c u 11 y-Student committeeshave been appointed during thesummer. Among them are com¬mittees on the continuing issueof academic ranking, govern¬ment scholarships and loans,the University Bookstore, andfaculty-student relationships.THIS PROCESS of self-exami¬nation is, of course, equally im¬portant to you as students. Andas the new academic year be¬gins, I welcome those of youwho are returning to the Uni¬versity of Chicago to continuetheir work, and I extend specialgreetings to the 709 members ofthe entering class and to thetransfer studentsIn this seventy-fifth anniver¬sary year of the University,many special events are jplanned. Some, such as the ded¬ication of the new Silvain andArma Wyler Hospital and the jNew Seminar OfferedThe New Collegiate Division willoffer a three-quarter seminar enti¬tled “Religion in the IntellectualLife.” Henry Rago will be thechairman of the discussions. Thetopic for fall quarter will be “Reli¬gion and the Present State of Poet¬ry” and will be held in SocialScience 108, Wednesday, 8-10 pm.The first meeting is October 12.The seminar may be taken forcredit as NCD 205 or Divinity TL305, and is also open on a non-cred¬it basis to all members of the Uni¬versity. Third International Congress ofHuman Genetics, have alreadybeen held. Others in which wehope you will participate arescheduled for the remainder ofthe year.High Ideals, Clear PurposeDuring the past three-quartersof a century about 350,000 stu¬dents have come to this Univer¬sity because of its outstandingfaculty, library, and other re¬sources. It is the sincere hope ofall of us that the University willcontinue to offer to each of youthe educational opportunitiesthat will lead to the fullest real¬ization of your potential. In theearly days of this University,President Harper wrote that“the chief characteristics of thestudent body have been steadi¬ness, sturdiness, strength, stongindividuality, high ideals, andclear purpose.” I believe thatstatement is equally true today.YOU HAVE my warmestwishes for success, not only forthis year, but for all the yearswhich lie ahead.George W. BeadleUNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKitrmng tnnft**NEW CAR LOANSas low as$^50|«r hundred1354 EAST 55H« STREETMU 4-1200■amber F.D.LCKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMOUNTING; MATTINGNON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESBE SURE TO ASK FOR WEEKLY SPECIALDIIWA^S1305 E. 53rd HY 3.411110% Student Discount on $10 or Morem... La protection fmancldre que vousdonnez & votre famllle aujourd’huidevra lui §tre procure d’une autrefa<?on demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certainement accomplir cettetflche a votre place.En tant que repr6sentant local de la BunLife, puls-je vous visiter k un moment devotre choix?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays t FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYSeptember‘3b, 1966 ♦ CHIC A VO M AR DON • 55FUTURE SOCIAL WORKERS in the School of Social Service.Excellence and InnovationThe Story of U C's Professional Schoolsby Sue AlexandreThe University’s Graduate Schools are distinguished by comprehensive and highly integrat¬ed programs drawing upon many disciplines. Seven schools prepare students for professionalwork in business, divinity, education, law, library science, medicine, and social service.The Law School ~The UC Law School, according toits bulletin, “seeks to impart thesystematic knowledge of tradition¬al and modern fields of the lawand the intellectual discipline thatare a necessary foundation for thepractice of law with distinction.”THE LAW SCHOOL is distin¬guished by the close student-facul¬ty relations that result from smallsize, a varied student bodyand an interdisciplinary curricu¬lum which emphasizes the rela¬tions between law, society and thefederal system of government.The Law School publishes, for ex¬ample, the only professional jour¬nal in law and economics in thecountry.One feature of the curriculumconsidered especially advantageousto the students is the concentrationof all required courses in the firstyear of study, leaving the secondand third years open for electivework. There are also various op¬portunities for students to do out¬side practical work in the EdwinF. Mandel Legal Aid Clinic headedby Henry J. Kaganiec, the publicdefender’s offices, and throughbrief writing in criminal cases. ..RESEARCH opportunities areprovided by the Center for Crim¬inal Studies now being establishedby a Ford Foundation grant andthe Comparative Law ResearchCenter, which is devoted to thefield of international legal relationsand comparative private law.A breakdown of figures on lastyear’s graduating class showedthat a little less than half the grad¬uates went into private law firms,with the balance being divided upamong judicial clerkships, federal,state, and local governments', cor¬porations, teaching or furtherstudy, military service, and thePeace Corps. Dean of StudentsJames C. Hormel estimated thatless than 70% and possibly lessthan 65% of the school’s alumniwere practicing law at present.The Medical SchoolThe UC Medical School, estab¬lished in 1927, is unique in severalrespects,First, it is the only medicalschool in the U.S. which has acompletely full time clinical staff.All faculty members practice med¬icine entirely within the Universi¬ ty’s Hospitals and Clinics with nooutside practices. This is particu¬larly useful to the students as itmakes the staff readily availablefor help and consultation.SECONDLY. THE medical schoolis unique in that it is an integralpart of the Division of BiologicalSciences and is administeredthrough this division. This enablesstudents to engage easily in grad¬uate studies in related biologicalsciences.The medical school is also one ofa small number of medical schoolsin which all the hospitals and clin¬ics are owned and operated exclu¬sively by the university. Thus, theentire medical program is inte¬grated with the teaching programand every patient admitted to aUniversity Hospital or Clinic maybe seen by medical students.EACH ENTERING CLASS inthe medical school for the last 10years has been limited to 72 mem¬bers, though this number will beexpanded to 79 in 1967. The smallsize of the class has made it possi¬ble for students to receive morepersonal attention and to receiveapprenticelike training through as¬signment to a physician for actualmedical experience.According to Dean of StudentsJoseph J. Ceithaml, the medicalschool endeavors to train “medicalscientists”. This includes teaching,research, and administration aswell as patient care. Many of thegraduates of the school involvethemselves in academic aspects ofmedicine.The School ofSocial ServiceThe School of Social Service Ad¬ministration became part of theUniVersify in 1920. It endeavors totrain' professional social workersthrough classroom theory and fieldwork, the latter being particularlyemphasized through actual exper¬iences in agencies in Chicago twoor three days per week under closefaculty supervision.STUDENTS OBTAIN an M.A.degree upon completion of a twoyear program, after which manystudents go into casework andgroupwork agencies. There hasalso recently been a greater at¬tempt to prepare students for workin federal poverty programs andother similar projects.A new 2 year course of study isbeing introduced for the first time this year called the CommunityWork sequence, involving 20 stu¬dents. In addition to providingtraining in casework and group-work, the program is designed toeducate students to work withincommunities with members of thecommunity.In addition to this recent interestin community work there has beena continuing orientation among thestudents toward psychiatric socialwork where the second year isspent in a psychiatric field setting.THIS YEAR'S entering class islarger than any previous class,showing an increase of about 30students over last year’s class ofabout 157. Mrs. Margaret B. Stroz-ier, dean of students, stressedthat, even with this increase, thereis a much greater demand for so¬cial workers than there is man¬power to meet this need, and shedeplored a situation which makesit necessary for some agencies tohire inadequately prepared people.One current study grew out of anall day conference organized bySSA students and held last year atthe Law School on the guaranteedminimum income. Work has con¬tinued on this throughout the sum¬mer and has resulted in a publica¬tion called GAIN.The School ofEducationThe Graduate School of Educa¬tion was established in its presentform in 1958, after more than 50years of experimentation. Theschool offers a Master of Arts inTeaching upon completion of a two year program including one yearof classroom preparation and prac¬tice teaching and one year of in¬ternship, often in an urban schoolsituation.KEVIN RYAN, the new directorof the MAT program, who came toUC this year from Stanford Uni¬versity, described the dual goal ofthe program as the production of“scholar-teachers” and the ad¬vancement of knowledge in thefield of teacher education. Hestressed that the school attemptsto equip its graduates for continualstudy in their chosen academicfields and for a continuing exami¬nation of the learning process.As Keith Elkins, lecturer in edu¬cational psychology and assistantdirector of the MAT program put it,“We strive for incomplete perfec¬tion rather than complete imper¬fection.”There has been increasing inter¬est on the part of the students andmore emphasis within the MATprogram on training for urbanschool situations. Last year 40 percent of the second year studentsserved their internships in innercity schools, and it is expected thatfirst year practice teaching in ur¬ban schools will expand also. Ryanattributed some of this new inter¬est and emergence of a “PeaceCorps” type of student to thegrowth of the Civil Rights Move¬ment and the poverty programs.AT PRESENT THE MAT pro¬gram is the major source of quali¬fied teachers from UC. Since thecertification course for undergrad¬uates is gradually being phased(Continued on Page 25)JUDD HALL, home of the School of Education., mmm * * wm m ***> s MMHiii mm24?.£J.» • UC's Professional SchoolsBUSINESS EAST: the home of UC's School of Business.(Continued from Page 24)out. In comparison with certifica¬tion-prepared teachers, more MATgraduates assume leadership posi¬tions within schools such as de¬partment heads, curriculum coor¬dinators and active members anderganizers of teacher’s unions. Alsomore MAT graduates than certifi¬cation-prepared teachers actuallydo go into teaching, and they tendto stay longer in the profession.This year 24 of the school’s 80entering students obtained teachingfellowships from the U.S. Office ofEducation. It is the first time thatMAT students have received mon¬ey from this source and UC re¬ceived a very substantial propor¬tion of the total U.S. allotment.The School ofBusinessThe Graduate School of Business,founded in 1898 as the second old¬est business school in the ocuntry,is described by Dean of studentsHarold Metcalf as one that “edu¬cates for business management,providing its students with the per¬spective and analytical tools to de¬fine and solve new kinds of prob¬lems.”Its graduates, he says, are pre¬paring for a continuing lifelongprocess of learning and are lookingforward to a long career in busi¬ness.THE SCHOOL has always em¬phasized the scientific approach,drawing upon the disciplines of thephysical and social sciences and ismore thoroughly integrated withthe rest of the University than isthe case in many other businessschools throughout the country.There are particularly close rela¬tions with the Economics, Sociolo¬gy, and Geography Departments,and students are encouraged to re¬gard themselves as graduate stu¬dents in the University, not as“prisoners of the business school.”One example of this sort of inte¬gration is provided by GeorgeStigler, who is on the faculty ofthe Economics Department as wellas the business school and is presi¬dent of the American EconomicAssociation, a position unusual fora member of a business schoolfacultv.THERE ARE about 90 facultymembers and 600 students in thegraduate school, of which about 100are Ph.D. candidates and about 500are M.B.A. candidates. Most of theformer involve themselves inacademics and research, while thelatter generally go into business.According to Metcalf, the facultyare “quite research-oriented andare scholars rather than business¬men.”Metcalf added that this year’sentering class is better qualifiedthan any previous entering class.In addition, the growth rate in thenumber of applications each yearis larger than in other businessschool in the country.Most of the entrants come direct¬ly from college, whereas in othergraduate business schools the en¬ trants have often been out ofschool for some years.One current research program isthe Center for Research in Securi¬ty Prices, headed by Professor ofBusiness Administration JamesLorie and Associate Professor ofFinance Lawrence Fisher, whichhas compiled computerized infor¬mation concerning the stock mar¬ket. The Institute for ProfessionalAccounting, headed by ArthurYoung Professor of AccountingSidney Davidson, rather uniquelycombines the study of accountingwith the study of behavioralscience.The Divinity SchoolThe Divinity School has the dis¬tinction of having founded the Uni¬versity of Chicago and of havingeducated two of the first threepresidents of the University, in¬cluding William Rainey Harper. Itproduces more professors than oth¬er divinity schools in the country,and, in the last 30-40 years, haseducated more professors, writers,and scholars than ministers. TheSchool is also noted as having oneof the strongest History of Reli¬gions Sections in the world.RECENTLY THE Doctor ofDivinity degree was discontinuedand the first professional doctoralprogram for the training of minis¬ters in the United States was estab-lif.hed. fThe program awards aD.Mn. degree after 4Vi years. TheDivinity School today also has thelargest Ph.D. program of all theprofessional schools in the Univer¬sity.This year marks the 100th anniv¬ersary of the Divinity School. Partof the centennial celebration willinclude a series of six conferencesat which alumni who have obtainedM.A.’s and Ph.D’s will presentpapers. These will be compiled intoan eight volume work called E*-says in Divinity.Dean Jerald C. Brauer describedthis year’s entering class as havinga higher proportion of RomanCatholics than any previous class,and he added that the UC DivinitySchool probably has the highestproportion of Roman Catholics ofany Protestant institution. The in¬flux of Roman Catholic degree stu¬dents is a comparatively recentphenomenon, according to Brauer.THE DIVINITY SCHOOL basvery close relations with the restof the University, particularly theHistory Department and the rest ofthe social science faculty. Brauerdescribed the faculty as quite ac¬tive in publication, “even withoutour asking them.”One of the school’s current proj¬ects is the preparation of the Chi¬cago Encyclopedia of Religion andTheology, expected to take about 8years to complete. The first $50,000for this work was obtained fromthe West German Government.The Library SchoolThe Graduate Library School,according to a recent article byDean Don R. Swanson, probably has a longer and more demandingdegree program than any other li¬brary school in the country.The program required to obtaina masters degree, which includes athesis, normally takes two years tocomplete.The school was the first graduatelibrary school in the country toward the Ph. D. degree."ABOVE AND beyond teachingthe ‘vocational’ skills of librarian-ship,” the school “seeks to preparestudents for responsible roles inplanning libraries and informationservices of the future.” Nearly onethird of the present deans or direc¬tors of accredited library schoolsn the United States and Canadahave received training in the Gra¬duate Library School.The faculty of the school isdrawn from many different fields.The dean is a physicist by training,while other members work infields such as philosophy, classics,sociology, linguistics, and mathe¬matics.PARTICULAR EMPHASIS atpresent is being placed on the roleof technology and the increaseduse of computers in such areas asdata processing, systems analysis,information retrieval, cataloguing,and mechanical translation of lan¬guages. Several National ScienceFoundation grants have been re¬ceived supporting research in theseareas. These projects enable theschool to offer a substantial num¬ber of research assistantships tostudents so that they may pursue afull time academic program with¬out diverting their efforts to out¬side work.Most of the graduates becomeprofessional librarians, either incolleges, public libraries, researchinstitutions, or industrial settings.Breul AppointedSSA Asst. DeanFrank R. Breul, a professor inthe School of Social Service Ad¬ministration (SSA), has beennamed Associate Dean of thatschool.Breul, a specialist in the historyand theory of social welfare hastaught at UC since 1960.As assistant dean, Breul will beconcerned with faculty and curri¬culum development, and with re¬cruiting new teachers.Breul has one main program forthe coming year. He said, “Thisyear we plan a thorough review ofthe curriculum and faculty in or¬der to see if it fits today’s needs.”Breul replaces Rachel Marks,who has taken a leave of absenceto serve as consultant to schools ofsocial work in Columbia. B« 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 0:30 1:00Sfvdaat discount with odYou won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow If yewcell mPETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.IMf B 8. »u»T Am#44-4411MUSTANGS - TEMPESTS • FORDS - PONTIACSRENT-A-CARBYoJL^-Volkswagen; $3.95 for .12 Hrs.Plus 6$ per Mi.Includes Gas and InsuranceRent A Volkswagon For That Special Date Tonite.Cheaper Than A Honda And A Heck Of A LotMore Comfortable.LOCATED AT:HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd Ml 3-1715Maroon Poll ShowsMore Liberal than(Continued from Page 11)A plurality of those polled chosethe Young Democrats or YoungRepublicans as the organizationthey would be most likely to join ifasked. More than one fourth (28percent) chose SDS, while only sixpercent said they would join YAF.One fourth of the respondents wereundecided.Almost two thirds (66 percent) ofthe entering class claimed theywould take part in a demonstrationsimilar to last spring’s sit-in overan issue about which they feltstrongly. More than one fourth (26percent) said they would not, andseven percent were undecided.Interestingly, the poll showedthat, in most categories of ques¬tions, first-year women are moreliberal than entering men.Almost twice as many men (28percent) as women (15 percent)said they were in favOr of usingclass rank as a draft criterion, al¬though the response was more con¬sistent in the negative. Threequarters of the women said theywere opposed to the class rank cri¬terion, compared to 65 percent ofthe men.More than half of the womenrespondents (55 percent) indicatedtheir agreement with the protest¬ers’ action and only 31 percentwere against them, while menwere almost equally divided on theissue.A majority of students who com¬mented on the poll asked why acategory was made of "YoungDemocrats or Young Republi- First Year WomenFirst Year Mencans,” considering that their aimsare so far apart. As one of the pri¬mary aims of the poll was to de¬termine the percentage of first-yearstudents that are “radical,” thecategory was included as a moremoderate alternative to the SDSand YAF choices.Again, men showed a more mod¬erate attitude than women. Lessthan one fourth (24 percent) offirst-year men said they wouldhave joined SDS, as opposed to 35percent of entering women: n~dmore than half of the men (51 per¬cent) said they would have choseneither Young Democrats or YoungRepublicans, as opposed to r/ per¬cent of the women.Men and worn n o .s vj .. simi¬larly however, when asked whetherthey would take part in a :-emon-stration over an issue about whichthey felt strongly. Almost twothirds of both men and women saidyes, while 30 percent of the menand one fourth of the women saidno.LENSINEby MURINF.EXCLUSIVE!Free removable carryingease! Provides hygienic,This one solutiondoes all three!t. WETS. Lensine’s special prepertieeassure a smoother, non-irritating lenssurface when inserting your "contacts.”fust e drop will do it.t. CLEANS. When used lor cleaning,lensine’s unique formula helps retardbuildup of contaminants end foreigndeposits on lenses.S. SOAKS. Lensine is seif-steriKzing andantiseptic. Ideal for wet storage or "soabing” of lenses. Reduces harmful bacteriacontamination.• • •CARRYING CASE. Exclusive removablecarrying case free with every bottle ofLensine The scientific—and convenient—way to protect your contacts.LENSINE fromThe Murine Company, Inc.••• aya cars apacialtst for 34 yaaraSeptember 30, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 25The Hyde Park Neighborhood Success StoryHYDE PARK TOWNHOUSES: They aren't vary pretty, but they sureas Hell are expensive. Te live in one, you've got to have money,not like the buildings that were there before.(Continued from Page 20)Conference’s aims and policies.Most of UC’s action in theneighborhood before 1052, ac¬cording to Rossi, consisted ofsubsidizing organizations con¬cerned with enforcement of hous¬ing codes, extension of restric¬tive convenants and (after 1948)“conservation agreements.”IN 1952, HOWEVER, LawrenceA. Kimpton succeeded Hutchinsas Chancellor, and made savingthe neighborhood one of his pri¬mary objectives.The problem by then had be¬come urgent. UC faculty mem¬bers were leaving because theyfeared for the safety of theirfamilies. Parents often objectedto letting their children attendUC because of the neighborhood.Community leaders ap¬proached Kimpton for help; theyscheduled a mass meeting inMandel Hall for March 27. 1952.The night before the meeting, aninstructor’s wife was kidnapped;the resultant publicity for themeeting produced an overflowcrowd.UCs Renewal ArmAt the meeting, a “Committeeof Five" including Kimpton, waschosen to draw up a program. Itmet and proposed a new organi¬zation to deal with crime andother problems, the South EastChicago Commission (SECC).According to Rossi’s book, an¬other organization besides theHPKCC was thought necessarybecause the Conference hadfailed to gain the support of thebusinessmen and merchants inthe area.SECC WOULD get much of itsmoney from the University; itwould represent the “politicalaction arm of the University.” Afew months after its formation,Julian Levi was asked by Chan¬cellor Kimpton to become S-ECC’s executive director. Broth¬er of UC Provost Edward H.Levi, Julian Levi was a corpora¬tion lawyer, son of a prominentrabbi, with life-long roots inHyde Park.Known as an aggressive ad¬ministrator Levi soon whippedup a staff, and began an energet¬ic program aimed at eliminatingcode violations and personalcrimes. SECC was to investigateall such crimes, adding its ownresources to those of city agen¬cies, and sometimes giving thoseagencies a push when needed.DON T. BLACKISTON, aprofessional criminologist, nowworks for SECC, keeping com¬plete records of all crimes andcode violations in Hyde Park. Heis said to have data on all per¬sons in the area who have beenarrested or convicted, and cansometimes help police fasterthan their own investigators.The University’s connectionswith insurance companies, banks,and other businesses were usedto make real estate speculatorstoe the line.Make Renewal Plans1953 and early 1954 were de¬voted to preliminary planning bythe SECC and HPKCC on thecommunity’s needs, and to get¬ting support for a renewal pro¬gram from City Hall. It wasagreed that the University andSECC would co-operate with theChicago Land Clearance Com¬mission (CLCC), working closelywith HPKCC, In drawing up re¬newal plans.This unusual arrangementgave duties to these semi-publicagencies that have since been as¬sumed by city governmental agen¬cies, which were then still under-staffedTHROUGH A $100,090 grant toUC from the Marshall FieldFoundation in 1954, the SECC setup a full-time planning unitwhose director. Jack Meltzer hadoffices on the University campus.To get things done quickly, the University decided to undertakethe responsibility for drawing uprenewal plans, and made a con¬tract for this task with the city,to let its Planning Unit do thework. Meltzer worked closelywith local institutions, communi¬ty organizations, and private cit¬izens.Transmission BeltHPKCC’s role has been de¬scribed as mainly a “transmissionbelt from the planners to resi¬dents, and, more important fromresidents to planners. The con¬ference provided an actively in¬terested populace a way to in¬fluence plans in several in¬stances.MELTZER was ready threemonths after his appointmentwith a plan for 55th street, whichthen was lined with seedy-lookingapartments with mostly run¬down store fronts. The first stepwas to tear down the buildingson the corner of 55th and LakePark avenue along the IllinoisCentral tracks.A new shopping center, a high-rise “luxury” apartment de¬velopment, and rows of two-storytown houses were then built inthe area. Since then, the com¬plete destruction of most of therest of the buildings fronting 55thstreet has proceeded apace; nowPierce Tower stands alone on thesouth side of the street whereonce the Compass tavern stoodas a neighborhood cultural insti¬tution.Curreot work on the urban re¬newal program is highly visible,especially along 55th street. Abarren “disaster area” for over ayear since the last building wastorn down, 55th street has beenwidened to four lanes with acenter curb, and landscaping hasbeen started on the buffer stripwhich separates the main streetfrom the parallel “feeder” street.While the urban renewal pro¬gram has been successful inreaching its goals of a stableneighborhood, success was notachieved without costs.One of the problems of urbanrenewal in Hyde Park issummed up by the phrase ofcomedian Mike Nichols, an oldUCer: “Hyde Park—white andNegro, shoulder to shoulderagainst the lower classes.” Inthe process of renewing theneighborhood, the substandardhousing was cleared, of course.The buildings that sooner or la¬ter replaced the cleared build¬ings. however, were almost uni¬formly designed for occupancyby middle or upper income fami¬lies, not the low-income familiesthat had been cleared out.Hundreds of Negro families wereforced back to the ghetto, espe¬cially to Woodlawn just to thesouth.The resentment against theUniversity caused by this move¬ment came back to trouble Uni¬versity planners when theymoved to acquire more land inSouth Campus. This is a mile-long, block wide stretch of landbetween 60th and 61st streets,from Stony Island to CottageGrove avenues. Several Universi¬ty buildings have been on sites inthis land for many years, butmore will be needed in the fu¬ture, and University plannerssaw South Campus as the mostconvenient area for expansion.THEY CHOSE a rather high¬handed way of trying to acquirethe land however. One morningin 1960, the newspapers carriedstories announcing that UC hadasked the City Council for per¬mission to go ahead and buyland for urban renewal purposes.Under a federal urban renewalprogram, two dollars of federalmoney go to city urban renewalcoffers for every dollar a privateuniversity or hospital expends aspart of an urban renewal pro¬gram, but only if the privately sponsored renewal is approvedby the city’s officials. (Much ofthe federal urban renewal leg¬islation, incidentally, was draftedin accordance with the views ofJulian Levi, tin University’schief mover and shaker in leg¬islative halls.)Unfortunately, the Universitydid not consult remdeRts of Wood-lawn about plans to take over agreat deal of Woodlawn real es¬tate. This provided the issuearound which The Woodlawn Or¬ganization (TWO) was organized.TWO has since grown into oneof the strongest community or¬ganizations in the city, and issaid by many to be the strongestand largest Negro community or¬ganization in the nation. Guidingspirit for the early stages ofTWO organization was Saul Alin-sky, a UC alumnus and HydePark resident noted for his mili¬tant, radical philosophy of how toorganize a community. One ofhis basic tactics is to find an is¬sue around which people couldunite, an “enemy” to fight whichbuilds community unity. UC pro¬vided the enemy.AFTER THE original furor,however, TWO began to feelstrong enough that it no longerneeded an enemy, and UC evi¬dently began to realize it couldno longer ignore TWO. In 1963,UC, TWO, and Mayor Daley metin City Hall and hammered out aagreement whereby the Universi¬ty will take over South Campus,but will not evict any residentsuntil a new, modern town housecomplex is completed in the areaaround 63rd street and CottageGrove avenue. This developmentis making good progress towardcompletion, and tempers are nowsomewhat soothed on both sides,but there is still, no doubt, a re¬sidue of antagonism amongmany Woodlawn residents to¬ward the University.Hyde Park’s new middle-classlook, coming, to some extent, atthe expense of Woodlawn, didnothing to change the communi¬ty’s liberal atmosphere.Mors Streets and RoadsAmong Hyde Parkers, you canget up a good demonstration atthe drop of a tree, or the fall of asuperintendent. A year ago, thebig issue was the rape of Jack-son Park by a crew of tree-cut¬ters, in preparation for the wid¬ening and straightening of LakeShore Drive. For several daysvaliant bands of Hyde Parkersstood guard around lake sidetrees, in a vain effort to protectthem from the Woodsmen. Theyorganized the Daniel BurnhamCommittee, named in honor ofthe designer of Chicago’s systemat Monumental parks. Their lackof success is attested by the pre¬sent width of Lake Shore Drive between 47th and about 53dstreets.NOT ALL hope of saving someof the park land is gone, how¬ever. Whoa the noise became tooloud from protesters, plans werequietly laid aside to extend thewidening of the road through therest of the pork, past the Museumof Science and Industry at 57thstreet and down to 67 th street.Instead the city hired a firm oflandscape architects to make an¬other study of the area whichlast July came up with an imagi¬native plan to renew and ex¬pand Jackson Park.The plan, by the Ann Arbor.Michigan firm of Johnson, John¬son, and Roy, envisions extend¬ing the park into Lake Michiganwith landfill, developing a seriesof “parks within a park,” anddepressing Lake Shore Drive tocut down on noise and traffic ha¬zards. The plan was widely ac-claimes by those who had beenpicketing, and its execution iscurrently under study.Politics and PickotsBesides parks, Hyde Parkerstake their politics seriously, too.Last spring, friend stopped talking to friend over the issue ofwhich of two highly qualifiedcandidates, both, with good liber¬al credentials, should be nomi¬nated as Democratic candidatefor U.S. Representative from the2nd Congressional district.Abner J. Mikva, a young, ag¬gressive liberal with experiencein the Illinois House of Represen¬tatives, was challenging BarrattO’Hara, 86-year-old incumbent(and Spanish-American War vet¬eran) with over a dozen years ofservice in the House. Mikva’smain issue whether explicit ornot, was, understandably, theage of the incumbent. O’Hara,however, argued he was still infine shape.The voters seemingly did notwant to turn the older man out,and gave him a 2,000-vote mar¬gin across the district, which in¬cludes South Shore, South Chica¬go, and some southern suburbs.Mikva took Hyde Park by a sur¬prisingly slim margin.HYDE PARK ALSO takes itsschools very seriously. The com¬munity is still rent by factionswhich formed last year during ahard-fought battle over where toprovide new facilities to easeovercrowding at Hyde Park HighSchool, 9220 S. Stony Island ave¬nue.Hyde Park High serves bothHyde Park, which is evenly splitbetween Negroes and whites, andWoodlawn, which is almost en¬tirely Negro. Fears of manyHyde Park residents for theirchildrens’ safety, and fears forthe quality of education at HydePark High, led many people to push for a new, separate highschool somewhere in Hyde Park.This side was led by the HydePark- Kenwood CommunityCouncil and the Hydo Park Hor-•Id.ON THE OTHER side was abroad coalition of Woodlawn resi¬dents and Hyde Parkers who be¬lieved in the possibility of pres¬erving a good school to serveboth neighborhoods at the pre¬sent site of Hyde Park H:gh. Thelatter group promoted a highlyimaginative plan, drawn up by J.Allen Thomas of the UC depart¬ment of education, to build an“educational park,” or “schoolswithin a school,” to provideenough room for more studentswhile keeping smaller individualunits.Both sides carried on a vigo¬rous campaign. The ChicagoBoard of Education was caughtin the middle, and delayed a de¬cision for many months until itcould delay no longer. Finally,last January, the Board voted toapprove a new school on the siteof the old Kenwood elementaryschool, at 50th and Blackstone.One Fight WonKenwood high school, a* it itcalled, opened September 6,with over 500 ninth graders, whowould otherwise have attendedHyde Park high. The new schoolis serving only children fromHyde Park. Meanwhile the oldHyde Park high school is under¬going extensive renovation, andmany classes are meeting in mo¬bile classrooms while the mainbuilding is renewed.Not all controversy over thenew school was immediately set¬tled. however. Several businessesstill occupied buildings that theschool board wanted for theschool's expansion. By all indica¬tions, though, Ciral’s House ofTiki restaurant, the Last Stagetheatre, and other shops in thebuilding on 51st street will againhave to move.One aspect of the school situa¬tion is definitely less controversi¬al now than last year, however.After a great deal of kicking andscreaming by his opponents,“Big Bad Ben” Willis is no long¬er with us as superintendent ofschools. In the past three yearsor so, many community groupshad rallied to seek his ouster,charging that his administrationwas giving a raw deal to schoolsin predominately Negro areas.Some parents in white areas ral¬lied to his defense, and the de¬fense of the “neighborhoodschools" plan.WHEN HIS CONTRACT cameup for renewal last spring,many school board members de¬cided that there had been toomuch community dissension overWillis. Rather than forthrightlythrow him out, however, theyworked out a “compromise”whereby he was re-appointed, of¬ficially for a full four-year term,but he in turn promised (more orless) to quit when he reached re¬tirement age of 65, this Decem¬ber. For reasons of his own, helater announced his resignationeffective August 31.After an extensive search, ledby a committee chaired by UCeducation department chairmanRoald Campbell, the schoolboard selected James F. Red¬mond as the new superintendent.Redmond’s latest post has beensuperintendent of schools inSyosset, New York, but he haspreviously served as assistant toW i 11 i s ’$ predecessor, HeroldHunt, later as superintendent ofschools in New Orleans. Mostgroups in the community decidedto “wait and see” what Redmondwill be like. He will not be ableto take over duties full-time untilDecember, so Thaddeus Lubera,who has served as associate su¬perintendent, is now the actingsuperintendent.26 • CHICAGO MAROON • Sojstombor 90, 1t66Student Participation Key Issue(Continued from Page 14)changed its demand from no rankto postponement of the rank deci¬sion until fall quarter. The protestors hoped that by fall quarterthere would be an opportunity forfull discussion of the all of the is¬sues and provision for democraticdecision making. Democratic deci¬sion making, for SAR, involved theparticipation of students.Student ParticipationStudent participation was a lessobvious, but extremely importantissue in the sit-in. SAR said thatthe sit-in was a means of openingchannels of communication whichthey claimed were essentiallyclosed to students. The object ofthe sit-in became more than justgetting the University not to rankmale students. The object becameto gain a postponent of the decisionon ranking until that decision couldbe made democratically (i.e. withsignificant student participation).SAR hoped that a democratic deci¬sion would also be a decision op¬posing ranking.The democracy question hasbroadened substantially, and is oneon which surface agreement existsamong many students and facultymembers who think that thereshould be increased communica¬tion between students and adminis¬trative decision-makers. However,some people* including SAR, wantan institutionalized student voioe inthe decision-making process, thismight include measures like, hav¬ing students on the faculty Senateand on the College Councils, alsohouse self-government, and a realvoice for student government. Thisarea is widely considered the onemost likely to see University actionthis fall.PROPONENTS OF democratiza¬tion say that students are best suit¬ed to deal with those aspects ofUniversity life which directly af¬fect their lives and are at leastsomewhat entitled to a say in Uni¬versity affairs in general, by virtueof being a part of the University.Advocates maintain that democra¬tization would be very importantfor University relations. In thefirst place, they say, students arenow only “half people” who canask for help and not give any,whose opinions are merely pleasfor action. Thus, they reason, noreal dialogue is possible because theparticipants are not equals. Final¬ly, proponents of student rightsargue that a liberal institutionshould be educating its students fordemocracy - this education wouldlogically include the practice of de¬mocracy."Temporary Members"Opponents of such plans claimthat students do not have the ex¬perience faculty have, and are onlytemporary members of the Univer-"Disarmament talks recessedin Geneva after seven monthsof fruitless negotiation. Disarm¬ament months recessed in fruit¬less after seven talks of Genevanegotiation. Negotiation dis¬armed to talk less and sevenfruits were recessed in Geneva.And every¬body renewedtheir leasesfor January.” For a free copy of tH#current issue of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writ*to Dept. CP-1, 150 E.I 35 St., N.Y., N.Y. 10016PIERRE ANDREfoci flatteringParisian chicten skHledheir stylists atSS42 Hyde Perk Blvd.2111 I. 71st St.DO 1-072710 % Student Discount * * ..~'v .» t r Jrsity and so cannot make wise, long-range decisions. The University isfor study, they argue, and theteachers are necessarily placedabove the students. Moreover, it ismaintained that students shouldnot be burdened with time-consum¬ing decisions.ONE OTHER POINT that issometimes made is that at UC ad¬ministrators are responsive to stu¬dent desires and decisions are usu¬ally made informally and largelyby consultation. During the summer, little hashappened to change the alignmentsof the different sides on these ques¬tions. It seems probable that therewill be some kind of reconsidera¬tion of the rank decision but theform of such reconsideration is en¬tirely undecided. Beyond that, fewpeople intimately connected withthe problems are even willing topredict what’s coming next, butthere’s general agreement that theissues raised by last spring’s sit-inare far from dead.Allow SAR To Hold Ida Noyes MeetingStudents Against the Hank(SAR) was allowed to have ameeting in Ida Noyes duringO-Week, after all.Several weeks ago, however, thequestion of whether they, and othergroups, could hold meetings inUniversity facilities was verymuch up in the air. A long stand¬ing University policy prohibited the use of Ida Noyes, and the ReynoldsClub for open meetings during Ori¬entation week that were outsidethe official orientation program.The policy was reversed twoweeks ago on the basis of a deci¬sion made last May by the Student-Faculty Committee on Orientationthat “other groups” that is, groupsother than the Orientation Commit¬tee, would be allowed to "supple¬ment the official program.” STUDENTS AND FACULTY discuss some of the many issues raisedby their action.A ONE STOP SERVICE• PROFESSIONAL CLEANING' (1 hr. service, 7 days a week)'■ . - J *.■ it.' ■ ' ,,• COIN-OPERATED DRY CLEANING(All clothes are pre-spotted and pressing available)• COIN-OPERATED LAUNDERETTE(9x12 shag rugs; soft water always)493-33201218 E. 53rd ST.Open Daily, 7 am - 10 pm Student CoopBOOKS: BOUGHT/SOLD; RECORDS, TOOBABYSITTINGOFF-CAMPUS JOBSBULLETIN BOARDS-RIDES BOARDBASEMENT REYNOLDS CLUB5706 UNIVERSITY X 3561OPEN 10-5 MON.-FRI.Reynold’s Club7 BarbersOnly Shop on Campusn’ • ’ ■” * • --1. *■ ** .APPOINTMENTS IF DESIREDREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT57th and UNIVERSITY. EXT. 3573M-F 8 am-5 pm, Sat. 8 am-1 pm KARATE CLUB/top-level, on campus instructionat low, low pricesmen/womenXJS61Lehnhoff School of Music and DanceAnnounces special classes and courses to coincide with U of C school calendarfor University students.MUSIC STUDYOutstanding faculty,' composed of members from the Chicago Symphony; GrantPark, and Lyric Opera Orchestras.Private lessons; clarinet, flute, trumpet, recorder, french horn.Class lessons; recorder, theory and harmony.DANCEEvening classes and late Sat. afternoon modern dance — labanotation — com¬position. _Plahned curriculum for children also in music and dance.BU 8-4347 1438 E. 57th St.Septe«herYq|0,4946.-♦ C H*Q A<%<* iM A MV*Njn • 07Potpourri of Student Activities Set for TonightStudent Activities Night, the annual bacchanalia where first year students are introducedto UC’s motley collection of student activities will take place tonight at 7:30 pm in Ida NoyesHall.A list of the organizations participating and the places where their booths can be foundfollows. | ■ “ TiMAIN LOBBYVISA is the Volunteer Institution¬al Service Activities, and attemptsto provide recreational therapy formental patients at Chicago StateHospital. They try to establish aone-to-one relationship between thestudent and patient in order to givea sense of meaning to the patient’slives.SWAP, the Student WoodlawnArea Project is a tutoring programfor the students of South Side highschools. SWAP tries to establishclose relationships between Collegestudent tutors and this time withhigh school tutees. Tutoring ses¬sions are generally for an hour andare held twice a week.STEP is similar to SWAP. STEPtutors elementary school children.Student Tutors Elementary Projectalso includes enrichment excur¬sions to museums and places of in¬terest in the Chicago area.O-Board works on campus dru-ing Orientation Week to co-ordinatethe activities of incoming students.CLOISTER CLUBBlackfriars, an organization ded¬icated to the production of originalmusical comedy was founded in1904. Their shows are producedin April during the Festival of theArts (FOTA). Production meet¬ings and tryouts are usually heldin the Winter Quarter and inter¬ested underclassmen and graduatestudents are invited to attend. vTho . Folk loro Society'spurpose is the enjoyment and pro¬motion of folk music. The Societysponsors concerts and a regularprogram of folk dancing.The Country Dancers SDecializein English and Welsh dances. Theyhave meetings in Ida Noyes Halland beginners are welcome.Folkdancers do folk dances fromall over the world for enjoymentand edification. UC Symphony Orchestra givesstudent musicians an opportunityto play symphonic works. Publicconcerts are presented quarterlyand there are weekly rehearsals.The Collegium Musicum performsmedieval, Renaissance, and Bar¬oque music for singers and instru-perform with the ensemble.The 57th Street Chorale is anoratorio society and glee club.It represents a new approach tochoral music for both experiencedsingers and those that lack that ex¬perience and discipline.TV ROOMThe Forensic Association spon-sois intercollegiate debates andspeech activities to undergraduates.UC hosts a National Debate Tour¬nament on campus in November.LOUNGEStudents Against The Rank (SAR)was founded last May inprotest against the University’sdecision to rank male undergrad¬uates for the Selective Service.SAR has since taken stands oppos¬ing student deferments and theWar in Vietnam. The organizationwill work for a greater studentvoice in University decision-mak¬ing this year.Ad Hoc Committee lor o LibraryCoffee Shop is working for a snackand coffee bar in the library.The Young Republican Club of¬fers a program of speakers and ac-t i v i t i e s presenting Republicanpoints of view to the campus.The Young Democrats promotethe principles and program of theDemocratic Party.The Student Political ActionCommittee (SPAC) is an associa¬tion that promotes a society whereall men can participate in the sig¬nificant decisions that affect theirlives.The Independent Voters of Illi¬nois endorse candidates who areMaroon Decides That Sports Do Existby Syd UngerIn the past, sports at UC have received about as much pub¬licity as a cellist in a topless a go go club. After years of look¬ing without seeing, the Maroon has decided that sports doexist here and with such support, sports will undoubtedly re¬turn to the apex they held duringthe “Stagg” era.THERE ARE eleven intercolle¬giate teams at UC and a twelfthteam which for some odd reasonhas been given the title of “class.”The first teams to begin intercolle¬giate competition are the soccerteam and the cross country trackteam. With exception of these twoteams and the football class, varsi¬ty practices will not begin until Oc¬tober 15.The basketball team (with a ‘65-‘66 record of 12 wins and 4 losses)and the swimming team (6 and 4last year) will also see action inthe fall quarter.Most of the varsity teams’ re¬turning lettermen, but as in thepast, incoming students will bevery important.Last year six of the UC teamshad winning records and the out¬look is even brighter for the up¬coming season.WALTER HASS UC’s director ofathletics, said that over twentyfirst year students showed interestin joining the football class. “Morefreshmen have shown a desire tocompete this year than in any pre¬vious year. This follows a trendthat has gone hack several years,”said Hass.This increasing interest hasstrengthened UC teams, and thenumber of award winners hassteadily increased from 140 win¬ ners in 1962-63 to 177 winners in1965-66.The reason many UC studentsgive for not participating in varsityathletics is that their grades willsuffer due to the loss of “study”hours, according to Hass. Hassnoted however, that a survey hemade of the grade point averagesof those competing in sports thatshowed that the average for ath¬letes is almost always identical,to the all-campus grade point average.The sports program at UC is notlimited to inter-collegiate competi¬tion. There are twenty-two areas ofintramural competition. This, ac¬cording to Hass, furthers the Ath¬letic Department’s aim, which is“the hope that every student, re¬gardless of his ability, will get anopportunity to participate in somesport(s).”UNDER THE direction of ChetMcGraw, who joined the staff in1958, UC has one of the most high¬ly organized intramural programsin the country. In recent years Mc¬Graw has been helped in his ef¬forts by soccer coach Bill Vendland Tim Bachmeyer, a graduatestudent in theology.Varsity athletes are preventedfrom entering IM competition be¬cause, according to Mr. Hass,“they might prevent others fromgetting a chance to play.”* running for political office andwork for their election.The Students for Stevenson IIIare campaigning for the election ofAdlai Stevenson III, the Democrat¬ic candidate for state treasurerthis year.Students for a Democratic Socie¬ty (SDS) has as its aim, educationand action for a more democraticsocial order.AC REN is organized to meet theproblems of a changing student lifeby means of a flexible student or¬ganization which preserves theAmerican ideals of life, liberty,and the pursuit of happiness.The Documentary Film Groupstudies movies in an aesthetic, his¬torical, and social perspective.They bring films of interest tocampus.UC Friends ef SNCC was formedto aid the Student Non-violentCoordinating Committee and thecivil rights movement. They takepart in “teach-ins”, discussions,and marches on Washington.SECOND FLOORWUCB, the student radio station,broadcasts on closed circuit 640kilocycles. They have varied pro¬grams ranging from classical mu¬sic to jazz, to interviews andlectures. Students work m announc¬ing, writing, electronics, andbusiness management.Tho Rugby FootbaM Club pro¬motes participation in rugby at UCand in the Midwest. The team hasorganized a tournament for 22teams. All students, alumni, facul¬ty, and others may take part.The Cheerleaders engender spiritand enthusiasm among UC athleticfans and provide support for theteams.The Karate Club is self evident.The Student Coop provides Stu¬dent Services and provides oppor¬tunity for increased student parti¬cipation in the functioning andadministration of UC.The Self Defense group is inter¬ested in the manly art of self de¬fense.EAST LOUNGEThe Inter-Varsity Christion Fel lowship (IVCF) is affiliated withthe nation wide IVCF. It is an in¬terdenominational, evangelical or¬ganization. Its aims are to evan¬gelize in colleges by preaching theGospel and to provide opportunitiesfor Christians to join for prayer,fellowship, Bible studies, lectures,and discussions.Calvert House is the CatholicStudent Center at UC. It providesreligious, intellectual, and socialopportunities for the students. Cal¬vert House collaborates with otherreligious groups on the campus inthe Ecumencial Program.The Christian Science Organiza¬tion promotes the spiritual growthof those interested. It also presentsfree public lectures on ChristianScience.Quadranglers is a women’s clubwhich provides cultural and socialactivities for members.The Washington PromenadeCommittee, makes the plans forthe year’s biggest and only dance.The Committee also makes plansfor the crowning of Miss. Universityof Chicago.FATE promotes social activitiesprimarily for the benefit of the ac¬tive members.The Pre-Medical Club is an un¬dergraduate organization that pre¬sents a program for pre-med stu¬ dents and students in the biologicalsciences. Lab facilities are provid¬ed for the members.The Astronomical Society has asits purpose the furthering of inter¬est in astronomy. The Society hasaccess to a six-inch telescope andan optical shop on campus.The Chess Club plays chess andparticipates in tournaments.The Psychology Club is a groupof students interested in psycholo¬gy.The Woodlawn Methodist Churchprovides fellowship and spiritualactivities for students.THIRD FLOORTHE CHICAGO MAROON is thecampus newspaper published twicea week, on Tuesdays and Fridays.THE CHICAGO REVIEW is astudent-run, quarterly publicationwith articles, fiction, poetry, dra¬ma, and book reviews by students,faculty members, and others.PARTICLE is a student journalof science and mathematics. It ispublished quarterly in conjunctionwith Berkeley students. Its mainpurpose is to print results of origi¬nal research but it also includesnon technical editorials and fea¬tures of a more general interest.CAP AND GOWN, the Universityyearbook, records events of theyear.The Maroon's Connoissuer at Large(Continued from page 13)soup, salad, home-baked frenchbread, the entree with potatoesand vegetable, dessert, and coffee.All Hems but the entree and thedessert are served to evaryone thatnight; the entree and the dessertmay be selected from a list ofabout half a dozen. This stiff ar¬rangement could only work wherethe chef was supremely capable—as Louis Szermathy is. We admitto a little hesitation when cream ofkohlrabi soup was ladled onto ourplate, which was dispelled as soonas we tasted it. Bring your ownwines. Reservations a must, esp.for week-ends. (4 Stars).The Berghoff, 17 W. Adams. Anenormous American Continentalrestaurant with leanings towardsthe German. You can lunch here on sauerbraten, spaetzeln, red cab¬bage, compote, strudel, and darkbeer for about $2. Dinners averageabout )1.50 higher. The Germancuisine is delicious, the seafood su¬perb. Perhaps the best bargain infood in Chicago. (3 Stars).Dun, 619 N. Wabash. The bestpizza in Chicago is served here andat Uno, its sister-restaurant ablock south. On week-end eveningsprepare for a wait, but the 3/4”thick pizza—mostly sausage andcheese—is well worth it. An experi¬ence. Michelob on tap. Prices run$1.25-31.75 per person.Don thn Beachcomber, 101 E.Walton Place. MagnificentPolynesian Cantonese food, amm-moth drinks. A fun place to go.Prices about $5 per person. (3Stars).SG to Represent Students this YearUC’s Student Government (SG) hopes to forget the past and“more actively represent the student body” this year, accord¬ing to its president, Tom Heagy.“Now that SG has created a strong collection of studentsservices and established effectiveand extensive contacts with the ad¬ministration, it has layed thegroundwork for concentrating onits true purpose that of represent¬ing students,” said Heagy.HEAGY CONTENDS that SGshould be able to carry out its pur¬pose this year mainly because ofwhat he feels to be the organiza¬tion’s two distinct advantages overany other student organization.“First, it has legitimacy by virtueof the fact that its members aredemocratically elected,” he said.Secondly, Heagy cites SG’s “sta¬bility and permanence. It now hasa true bureaucracy upon which tobuild.”Bureaucracy fMiulitianSG's bureaucracy begins with anAssembly of 49 members electedeach Spring to represent the stu¬dent body.The College has 14 seats, deter¬mined by residence units. The re¬maining 35 seats are filled bygraduate students according teacademic units.SB tS further organized intostanding committees. These in¬clude the campus action committee (CAC), the academic affairs com¬mittee (AAC), the committee onrecognized student organizations(CORSO), and the election andrules committee (EAR). There isalso an executive committee whichis chaired by Tom Heagy. It in¬cludes the chairmen of the otherstanding committees, and the vicepresident, treasurer, and secretaryof SG.The CAC, chaired by JerryLipsch, deals with such problemsas dormitory and eating facilities,student employment, and socialrules.Jack Kolb heads the AAC. Thiscommittee concerns itself with cur¬riculum planning, student • facultyrelations, and is working on acourse evaluation booklet.CORSO, under Paid Levin, isresponsible for the disbursement ofthe $30,099 Student Activities bud¬get, the main financial source ofUniversity student organizations.The committee is also the sourceef official recognition for studentorganizations. * •'EAR, chaired by Danny Boggs, runs the SG elections in the Spring.It also runs any by-elections, andreferenda which may be neces¬sary during the year.Other SG officers include SteveSilver (Vice-president), MikeYesner (Treasurer), and PeterSharfman (Secreatary).Silver, Yesner, Sharfman, andBoggs are graduate students. Theother members of the executivecommittee are students in the Col¬lege.Out of the intricate bureaucracy,one program that has emerged hasbeen the Speaker’s Program. Thisyear it is being co-sponsored bythe 75th Anniversary Committee.Among the speakers this year willbe Aaron Copland, David Riesman,Timothy Leary, Talcott Parsons,Stokley Carmichael, Justice Tho¬mas Clark, Allen Ginsberg, RalphBunche, Herman Kahn, and Fried¬rich Hayek.In addition, SG sponsors a varie¬ty of student services, the largestof which has - been the CharterFlight program. Last year therewere flights to Europe, Boston,New York, and the West Coast,saving students and faculty a totalof $115,000.SG al$o lends up to $25 to reg¬istered students for a three weekperiod for a 25c service charge.2B • CHICAGO MAROON • September 30, 1904‘ * & n» £* V A# .3 A : •• i ;•* >.EWIHING FOR.THECOLLEGE STMAt TheUniversity of Chicago BookstoresOqr Clerks will be glad to assist you in our:SELF SERVICE DEPARTMENTAND RED CARPET AREA(Please use package drops or free lockers)TEXTBOOKS: All required and recommended Texts.GENERAL BOOKS: Follow the Red Carpet to over 23,000 titles ina 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 services.• 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 conditioned foryour convenience and comfort)MAIN STORE: 5802 Ellis Ave.Hours: Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. — Saturday 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.OPEN 8-5 Saturday, October 1EDUCATION BRANCH: 5821 Kimbark Ave. (In Belfield Hall)Hours: Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. (Open Evenings as necessary toaccommodate Evening Program Students).DOWNTOWN CENTER BRANCH: 65 E. So. Water St.Hours: Monday thru Friday 11:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.190 E. DELAWARE BRANCH: 190 E. Delaware PlaceHours: Monday thru Friday 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. UTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingVRfO *. fid 9k. UY 3-9101Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospitolr Now Open InHarper CourtAllO S.HARPERA new galleryand! craft ntiopFor tb. first time, an exciting col¬lection of handcrafted Import,from over 4t nation.—African,Latin American and Asian.See ingenious designs inexotic woods, leather, metalsand stones. Select from awide variety of exquisitejewelry . . . fine servingbowls and trays . . . delicatewood carvings • . . realanimal skins ... and rareartifacts.Most are one of a kindEverything'* (omethlngvery special.A delightful place toShop — Explore — BrowseSTICKS & STONES5210 S. Harper324-7266Hours! 1 to * p.m. dally,^ doted Monday. JMOST COMPLETEPHOTO SHOPON SOUTH SIDE19411. IlHi 81 NT MillUNIVERSITY DISCOUNTJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualUfa Insuranca Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060September 30. 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 29The Maroon staff in the 1920's.The Maroon is looking for people who like to write. A newspaper,like any organization, is only as good as the people who make it up.But unlike some organizations, a newspaper offers unique opportunitiesfor people who are willing and able to take advantage of them. Theseopportunities include the opportunity to say something and to say it toa relevant audience. If you like to write and you think you have some¬thing to say, why not come up to the Maroon office and talk to the edi¬tors tonight. We're looking for people who are willing to learn, and thereare positions open on all staffs.i>«• • CHICAGO MAftOOtl * feptomtor*t, IfM t?aThe Culture Vulture GuideWhooooosh!!!! The CultureVulture has returned to spotthe places to—zipppp!—go inChicago. This old (creak!) fea¬ture which formerly flapped itsfurry wings in the pages of the(zip!) Maroon has agreed toalight once again for the bene¬fit of newcomers to the Chica¬go scene.After a quick flight aroundthe city, the bird dropped itsreport through the Maroonwindow. Here is what it said:As the sun sets over Cicero,Illinois, thousands of paintedwomen take their places underthe Chicago mercury vaporlamps lying in wait for a farmboy to lure. Nowadays, how¬ever, even the farm boys havebeen caught up in the cultureexplosion (whatever that is),and are to be found in other,posher fleshpots, the Maroonguide to which fellows.ArtThere’s nothing much in the pri¬vate galleries this time of year,but the Art Institute has a showworth going to: the 16th AnnualAmerican Artists’ Exhibition,which runs through the 16th. If youdon’t like contemporary stuff, goupstairs and stare at Picasso’sBlue Guitarist awhile. The paint isrotting away at a tremendous rate, Iso you’d better hurry. The place isopen from 10 to 5 daily, and admis¬sion is free. Adams and Michigan(get off the IC at Van Buren andwalk north).Drinking and People-WatchingJimmie’s University Room is thede rigeur place to drink as it getsgrubbier and grubbier. Meet yourfriends, enemies, profs, and assort¬ed local denizens (55th at Wood-lawn). Smedley’s, the bar withthe most interesting facade inHyde Park, is the place for artiertypes. Good hamburgers (Harperat 53rd). The newest addition tothe saloon-scene in the neighbor¬hood is Chances R South, in Harp¬er Court. A little more expensivethan some of the other places, butyou get free peanuts and you canthrow the shells on the floor if youcare for that sort of thing.INCIDENT!.Y, the place to buyyour bottled booze on the southside is the Party Mart, at 72nd andExchange. Prices are standard tolow on spirits, and there is a fan¬tastic selection of wines and oldbrandies. If you can’t go that farfor a drink, try Kimbark Liquors,in the 53rd and Kimbark shoppingcenter, which is a more-than-ade-quate package store.Out of the area, try the Cafe deMelvin, on Rush and Cedar in theGold Coast. AM the more outreRush Street types will pass beforeyour sidewalk seat while you im¬bibe beer or stronger stuff. Thebest people-watching site west ofthe Village Gate.The indoor place to drink in thesame area is Pat Haran’s, at aboutElm and Rush. Good food anddrink at reasonable prices. ThePlayboy Club (der original one) isin roughly the same neck of thewoods. Be sure to go if you have akey or a friend with one: my re¬ports have it that it is a fine placeto spend an evening—or would beif it weren’t for the Bunnies andthe titty pictures on the walls.MuskYou can still get into the ChicagoSymphony for a buck and a quar¬ter, which is one of the better bar¬gains to be found in entertainment.The Friday afternoon (1 pm) con¬certs open the gallery to studentsfor cheap. Buy your tickets a dayor so in advance or get downtownbefore 11 am. Today's concert fea¬ tures the Beethoven Consecrationof the Houso Overture plus his andNilsson’s Fourth Symphonies. Nextweek, thrill to the TschaikovskyFirst Piano Concerto (plunked byJohn Browning) plus Schumann’sSecond Symphony and the Schoen¬berg Five Pieces for Orchestra.Concerts this and the next threeweeks are conducted by the resi¬dent music director, Jean Marti-non. Orchestra Hall is at 210 S.Michigan Avenue, a short walkrfom the Jackson-Van Buren ICStation.AUTUMN IS opera season inChi-town, when the Lyric Operapresents its ten-week season. Tick¬ets are hard to get, even at theirrevolting ($3-12) prices. The grandopening is next Friday, with Mus¬sorgsky’s Boris Godunov (Nik¬olai Ghiaurov sings the title role).Later in the season you get to seeVerdi’s Othello with Jon Vickersand Tito Gobbi as the antagonists;other operas in the series includeLa Gioconda (Ponchielli); La Gi-ara (Casella) in a twin bill withCavalleria Rusticana (Mascagni);L'lncoronazione di Poppea (Mon¬teverdi); Die Zauberfloete (Mo¬zart); Ar*ge de Fee (Prokofiev),and several more. Write in fast fortickets, because the Lyric is usual¬ly 99 percent sold out. 20 N. Wack-er Drive—just west of the Loop.Two weeks from today is the ]first concert in the UC ChamberMusic series. On the 14th ArthurBalsam, William Kroll, and BenarHeifetz (Jascha’s brother) willplay the Beethoven Variations on"Ich bin der Schneider", the RavelTrio for Violin, Cello, and Piano,and the Schubert Trio Op. 99. Tick¬ets (at $3) are available from theMusic Department, ext. 3886.LATER IN the quarter, watchfor the Fine Arts Quartet, who givetheir first concerts of the seasonOct. 31 and Nov. 1 at the GoodmanTheatre and the Howard SchoolAuditorium respectively. The pro¬gram includes the Ives Quartet No.2, the Haydn B-flat and the Beetho¬ven Quartet in C major (one of theRasoumovskies, I think). Call 446-3831 for tickets.For people who like that sort ofthing, Martha Schlamme is givinga one-mam show at the HarperTheatre beginning Oct. 4. Entitled“Love Is Not Enough” the showwill consist of international songs,including some by Brecht-Weill.Call the theatre at BU 8-1717 fortimes and prices.NEXT FRIDAY and Saturday,Paul Revere and the Raiders willswivel at the Arie Crown Theatrein McCormick Place. When, twoweeks later, the place has recov¬ered, the Righteous Brothers andthe Ramsey Lewis Trio will takethe stage. Tickets, priced at $2.50to $5.50, can be reserved by callingTriangle Productions at 787-7585.Nightclubs featuring entertain¬ment unfortunately don’t dispenseadvance booking information, butthe places to watch are Big John’s(1638 N. Wells in Old Town; be 23yrs old), London House (with Earl“Fatha” Hines after Saturday;Frank Sinatra from the 25th; ($1.50cover) at Michigan Avenue and theChicago River, Mother Blues (1305 N. Wells; featuring folk-rock atnon-alcoholic sessions for the bene¬fit of minors), The Other Side (inHyde Park on 53rd east of the ICtracks, with folk-singers, madrigals,recitals, etc.), the Plugged Nickel(1321 N. Wells; the only place tohear big-name jazz), and Poor Rich¬ard’s (1363 N. Sedgwick; jug-bandand folk-rock). Call up or read thenewspapers to find out about cur¬rent entertainment at most of theseplaces.TheatreSaturday at 8 the San FranciscoMime Troupe will present “ThatMinstrel Show, or: Civil Rights ina Cracker Barrell”. Buy your tick¬ets ($2.50 for students) at the Man-del Hall door. Includes an experi¬mental film, “O Dem Watermel¬ons.”Tonight, tomorrow and Sunday,the ACT (American ConservatoryTheatre) will be doing its stuff in! Highland Park. If you missed it, !| you missed something. Try to gettickets to their productions of Un¬cle Vanya, Six Characters, Beyondthe Fringe, Tiny Alice. They are atthe Murray Theatre at Ravinia inHighland Park. If you can’t get upto see them, you have a fifteen jmonth wait till they return to theCivic Opera House. Call for reser¬vations at ID 2-1236.New shows opening soon down¬town: Marat/Sade will be at theGoodman Theatre in its ChicagoPremiere from Oct. 21 to Nov. 13.Jerome Kilty and Donald Davisstar. Tickets can be got by callingCE 6-2337 and by paying $3.50 and$4 apiece for them. Goodman alsohas minor student discounts. TheMad Show, written by Larry Siegeland Stan Hart opens at the HappyMedium, 901 N. Rush, next Friday.“Entire production conceived byAlfred E. Neuman,” according totheir press releases. Call DE 7-1000for reservations. Second City isover the hill, but if you want totake a chance on their new review,which opens on the 12th, call theirreservation service at DE 7-3992.Tickets are $3 and $2.50.I * |Fall Intramurals will start pfwith touch football. Entries 1are due October 6 andplay starts October 12. En-I try blanks for graduate and| unorganized houses may1 be secured from IM Of- Ii fice.I The early fall schedulefor Intramural play is as £follows: touch football,i squash, and tennis.The following are de- |I fending touch football |champions for the 1965 1m m:;i| season:Mead—College HouseI Psi Upsilon—FraternityI Psi Upsilon B— B LeagueC T S—DivisionalMead—All Universitym i s !University Symphony Orchestra1966-67 SEASONOPENINGS IN ALL SECTIONS1 st Rehearsal Wed. Oct. 5, Mandel Hall — 7 PMAuditions at Music Department, 5802 WoodlawnSEE OUR BOOTH AT ACTIVITIES NIGHT Wind Ensemble to Perform at RockefellerOn Sunday, October 2nd, UC stu¬dents will be treated to a concertby the noted Renaissance WindEnsemble, of the New York ProMusica.At 3, 5, and 8 pm at RockefellerChapel, students may hear perform¬ances by some of the world’sfinest historical musicians on suchauthentic renaissance instrumentsas the “sackbut” and the “trebleshawn”—or if one prefers, on the“alto shawn” or the “tenorshawn”.The concert will mark the open¬ing of a permanent exhibition ofliturgical banners to be found inRockefeller Chapel. These bannersare the work of Norman Laliberte,who also designed the banners forthe Vatican Pavilion of the NewYork World’s Fair; they are of ab¬ stract design, overflowing withdeep, brilliant colors. The bannerscovering one of the chapel wallswill depict the events of the Pen-tecoste; the other wall will portrayvarious religious episodes.According to the ReverendSpencer Parsons, dean of Rocke¬feller Chapel, the banners displayexcellent workmanship — he alsonotes that they contain a dryhumor; as in the parable whereChrist instructs the cripple ofBethsadia to “take up thy bed andwalk.”Parsons added, “The Chapelfeels fortunate in receiving thisgift. The subject matter is entirelyj appropriate, and certainly the ban¬ners will offer color and warmth toi Rockefeller.”j The banners are a gift of UC’sI trustee, Earle Ludgin, in memory' of his wife, Mary Ludgin.While he was writing it, John Barth described his newnovel, Giles Goat-Boy as "a longish story about ayoung man who is raised as a goat, later learns he’shuman and commits himself to the heroic project ofdiscovering the secret of things.”When Giles Goat-Boy was published last month, thecritics displayed none of Barth’s restraint. GilesGoat-Boy has become one of the most celebrated liter¬ary events of the new publishing season, and JohnBarth has been variously described as:“the most prodigally gifted comic novelist writing inEnglish today ... Who else but Barth would dare create a herowho was sired by a computer out of a virgin ? . . .“No summary, no excerpting can possibly convey the fantasticrichness of the novel, its profligate bounty. Barth could have cutit by a third (though one would hate to see a line of it go) andmade the reputation of a dozen novelists by distributing thepieces among them.” —Newsweek Magazine“clearly a genius...“What is one to do about John Barth? Is he — as so many peopleinterested in original, funny, creative, and brilliant writingagree he is — the most original, funny, creative, and brilliantwriter working in the English language today? Or merely, asthese same people hasten to add, the most impertinent and long-winded? Is Giles Goat-Boy the great American novel, come atlast into being, or just a long, though expert, shaggy-goat story ?And if so — or indeed, if not so, or both — whose beard is beingpulled? Mr. Barth is clearly a genius . . . but what does thatmean? Intoxicated by Giles Goat-Boy, I would suggest it ap¬plies to someone who by force of will and wild connections in themind, intoxicates ...“What is one to do about John Barth? Well, first of all, partake,eat, quaff, enjoy. Whatever the doubts and recriminations, theywill keep till morning; I’m not sure they matter in the slightest.”—eliot fremont-smith, New York Times“like Mephistopheles — or perhaps Batman.“(Giles Goat-Boy is) a gothic fun-house fantasy of theology,sociology, and sex, leaping across great tracts of human history. . . Prodigious . . . Reading Giles Goat-Boy, and debating itsmeaning, will be one of the most bracing literary exercises of1966 and beyond. It is a satire of major import.”—rime Magazine“a rarity among American novelists i„ having a bril¬liant mind ... a mind that invents ideas only to flout them .. .“With this fourth novel, John Barth at 36 increases the likeli¬hood that the years since World War II are among the mostrewarding in the history of American fiction.”—RICHARD poirier,» Washington Pest Beok Week“the best writer of fiction we have at present and oneof the best we have ever had ...“His audience must be that same audience whose capacities havebeen extended and prepared by Joyce, Proust, Mann and Faulhner.“For some time we have been wondering what to de with thetraining given us by those giants of modern fiction . . . Theanswer now seems clear. The difference between competence andgenius can hardly be made clearer. And Barth is a comic genius•f the highest order.” -rosert scholes,/rent page New Yerk Times Beak ReviewGILES GOAT-BOY is published by Doubledog S Cempeng,/ns.. Garden City, New York, which usually devotes this col¬umn to Anchor Books, but felt that plugging this particularhard-cover novel was irresistible. GILES GOAT-BOY is |I.Mat one of the beet-equipped booksellers in the country — sourcollege store.September 30, 1966 • CHICAGO MAIOOI*r V I.' i ! Hi}New College Curriculum Set for Monday(Continued from page 1)great general education coursesfrom the past, like Western Civili¬zation in newly desired courses,they will be designed not as intro¬ductions to special fields but asself-justifying experiences in liber¬al education.Liberal Arts I—a New ExperimentBy far the most important of thechanges in the first-year courses^isthe brave new experiment with acourse called “Liberal Arts I,”which will take the place of boththe Soc and Hum choices for an in-vited'group of 61 students.Dean of the College Wayne C.Booth and the five masters of theCollegiate divisions, originally de¬signed this course last year, in anattempt to find a basic structure inwhich students could learn the ba¬sic skills of inquiry and analysisthey will need in further study.MATERIAL with which theseskills could be developed couldcome from a wide range of the tra¬ditional disciplines, and differentinstructors could use the basic pat-: mosTrelevant.tern and suit it to their own tastes.The proposal to make Liberal observer of a group’s activities be-i istry and physics by examiningcomes an active part of these ac-1 them as they occur during a sys-tivities, and how the report dealswith this problem.Among the other works to be ex¬amined in the first quarter will beBook I of Thucydides, Book I ofHerodotus Histories, Plato’s Apolo¬gy and Crito, The Prince by Ma-chiavelli, and Measure for Mea¬sure by Shakespeare. The naturalsciences will be represented tosome extent with a book called TheESP Controversy, which will bringup the problem of the observer inthe sciences.STUDENTS IN the second quarter of Liberal Arts I will examinehow men with different systems ofanalysis deal with two problemsthat have confronted all philoso¬phers— the parts of the soul, andthe function of art. Works by Pla- tematic exposition of the geophysi¬cal and astronomical sciences,”according to Platzman.The other choice for non-majorsin a physical science course will be- and consequences of stratificationa new variant of the old PhySci105-6-7, similar in most respectsexcept that it will not attempt tocover all the physical sciences. In¬stead, only physics and chemistrywill be dealt with.THE STAFF for this third vari¬ant includes some of the most il¬lustrious researchers in physicalsciences at the University. Theyinclude Roger Hildebrand, profes¬sor of physics; Mark G. Inghram,chairman of the physics depart¬ment; Norman Nachtrieb, chairmanof the chemistry department andto. Aristotle, Freud, Nietzsche, and Robert Gomer’ Professor of chemis-Kierkegaard will be compared.The spring quarter will be very try.According to Platzman, this rep-flexible. A few works will be dis- resents a highly significant in-cussed, such as Othello, Tocque- crease in participation in generalville, Euclid, and The Possessed by education courses of scientists whoDostoevsky. Students and instruc- j have previously stuck to their re-tors will be free to discuss whatev- search and work with graduateer aspects of these works seems and upper-level undergraduate stu¬dents.Only “Pass" or "Fail"a * r *i. v i . .. | The only grades to be given to1Arts I the basic general education | J the course, accordingcourse was not accepted by manyCollege faculty, partly because it Hum Offers Choicewas announced last November,only a few weeks before the Col¬lege Council was due to meet andconsider the proposal.Even after the decision was de¬layed, however, there was consid¬erable opposition from those whothought the proposal from Boothand the masters was too radical achange to come in the middle of ageneral upheaval of the College’sstructure.IN ANY event, those who sup¬ported the new idea proposed thatit be tried as an experiment witha limited number of students, andthat is its current status.Six faculty members, includingmost of the masters, will teachsmall sections of the course. Thestaff chairman of the course isJames Redfield, master of the New • The humanities division askedto Redfield, will be “Pass” or entering first-year students to“Fail.” Evaluation of students’ choose between a sequence in mu-progress will be done in class dis¬cussion and with the papers eachstudent will prepare.A limited number of studentswere invited to take the course ina letter from Redfield over thesummer. The 17 University Schol¬ars were among those invited,but the others were selected atrandom from a list of entering stu¬dents.IF LIBERAL Arts I proves suc¬cessful, according to Booth, “anopportunity will be given to otherfaculty to join the group” teachingthe course. He did not, however,predict that the course will bemade the sole general educationcomponent in social sciences andhumanities.The main problem in teachingevery student in such a course isCollegiate Division and assistant the need for an extremely low stu-professor on the committee on so¬cial thought. dent- faculty ratio. At present,there are six full faculty members,and each of them, except Playe,has one assistant. Each team oftwo instructors has eleven students.To extend this to all 710 stu¬dents in each entering class wouldcall for several times the numberHe will teach one section witheleven students, as will WayneBooth, dean of the College: DonaldLevine, master of the socialsciences collegiate division, Her-SSr“ «* availalbeSchwab, who is William RaineyHarper professor of naturalsciences in the College and professor in the department of educationGeorge Playe, dean of undergraduate students and assistant professor of French, will teach a halfsection of five students.EACH FACULTY member ex¬cept Playe will be assisted with agraduate student. The division ofresponsibilities between the facultyinstructor and his assistant will beworked out as the year proceeds,but the graduate assistants willteach at least some meetings ofthe section, and work with studentsindividually.“One of the most exciting thingsabout this course,” said Redfield,“We’ll be watching these assist¬ants. They should really bloom inthis atmosphere.”The course itself will use materi¬al from both the humanities andthe social sciences, and will carrya double credit.The first quarter will help stu¬dents learn “how to take a workapart,” according to Redfield, andtry to show the relation between anauthor, who is an observer, andthe subject he observes. The firstreading of the course, for example,will be William F. Whyte’s StreetCorner Society, which will be ex- In addition, every instructorwould have to be able to “teacheverything,” since the course cov¬ers such a wide range of materi¬als.The staff for the course uniform¬ly look forwad to the experience,but otherwise each man has hisown ideas about the methods andvariations he wants to use.In Other Divisions —More Innovations and ChangeWhile this imaginative new ex¬periment is in progress, a greatmany innovations are being triedby the other collegiate divisions fortheir own first-year courses.For the “year in common”courses, or the “first quartet” ofcourses as they are also called, thefour divisions are offering coursesvery similar to the old generaleducation courses in these fields.There are, however, several im¬portant changes.PhySci Offers Variants• The physical sciences divisionis aghin offering PhySci 105-6-7, al¬though the course has been modi¬fied somewhat and uses a differenttext, according to Robert L. Platz¬man, master of the physci division.Two alternative courses will beopen to non-physical science ma¬jors, however. One is a brand newsequence, PhySci 108-9-10, whichamined to show how a sociological will “teach the principles of chem- sic, art, and literature (like the oldHum I course), and a sequencewith literature, history, and phil¬osophy (similar to Hum II of old).A rather important change in thehumanities offerings is the elimi¬nation of the first-year Englishcomposition course. Instead, in¬structors in the general educationcourses in humanities and socialsciences will be asked to pay closeattention to each student’s writingability, and, if possible, help cor¬rect difficulties.This will be made easier with theextensive use of the tutorial meth¬od in these courses, in which in¬structors meet with small groupsof students who discuss each oth¬er’s papers.WHEN AN instructor sees thata student needs intensive guidancein writing, he will refer the studentto a new “writing committee’’ ofEnglish instructors. The committeemembers may advise a student totake one of the special writingcourses which will be offered asthe need arises, or will give somestudents special tutoring.All students entering this yearand after will be required to pass acompetency exam in writing to betaken before the end of the secondyear. Such an exam was to be re¬quired of all students as early astwo years ago, but the requirementwas not enforced because at thattime the entire curriculum revisionwas being started.This year, the committee onwriting includes English depart¬ment members Robert C. Albrecht,Merlin Bowen, Daniel Fuchs, Don¬ald C. Green, Paul D. Herring,and Michael J. Murrin. William J.Farrell is chairman.Soc Designs New CourseThe Social Sciences division alsoasked students to choose betweencourses which are basically pat¬terned after the old Soc I (“Free¬dom and Order”) and Soc II(“Character and Society”). Fairlyextensive revisions have beenmade in each course, however,with new books and new organiza¬tion for the sequence of readings.Each of the two Soc courses willbe only two quarters. In the springquarter, almost all first-year stu¬dents will take a specially designedcourse to be taught by members ofboth the Soc I and Soc II staffs.This course, numbered SocSci 125and named “Democracy in Ameri¬ca,” will consider “the conver¬gence of the traditions and con¬cerns represented by” the two se¬quences, “namely, the study of so¬ ciety and the design and justifica- sciences master Levine.tion of civil institutions,” accordingto the Soc division’s announce¬ment.Students will analyze variousconceptions of equality, the naturein an urban, industrial society, andthe organization of politics in theU.S. They will then “examine thesituation of the American Negro inthese perspectives.”ACCORDING TO Donald N. Le¬vine, master of the social sciencesdivision, planning for this third-quarter course has brought togeth¬er faculty from both Soc I and SocII staffs who had formerly hadvery little contact with each other.They are meeting under the chair¬manship of Marc Galanter, assist¬ant professor of social sciences andchairman of the Indian Civ.course. Levine called this course“an exciting experiment for all ofus.”In addition to this primary third-quarter soc course, also, there willbe an alternative available to stu¬dents completing their Soc I re¬quirements under the old system,and to a few first-year studeents.This variant, Soc. Sci. 113, is called“Democracy in Ni neteenth CenturyAmerica.”At The Upper Levels—New Programs, More ChoicesWhile there has been the usualamount of change and innovationin content of most first-year gen¬eral education courses, the pictureof courses and major programsfor students in the upper yearsfeatures a number of bright newattractions.In the social sciences division,there are several new develop¬ments. The most important ofthese is, perhaps, the start of anentire new major program in pub¬lic affairs.Public AffairsThe program in public affairs isdesigned to prepare students intel¬lectually for careers in government,business, and other administrativeand non-academic areas. It is anti¬cipated that many of the studentswho choose this program will bethose who prefer to enter a careerright after college, and will proba¬bly not go to graduate school.The new director of this pro¬gram, recently announced, is Gil¬bert F. White, professor of geogra¬phy and chairman of the commit¬tee on African studies. White, anexpert on water conservation anduse, has gained note from a planhe had designed to share the watersof the Mekong River among thecountries of Southeast Asia forpeaceful purposes. He was former¬ly president of Haverford College,and has been prominently associat¬ed with public service work withthe American Friends Servicecommittee.THE PUBLIC affairs program’sfirst course is being offered thisquarter by Theodore Lowi at thepolitical science department. It isPublic Affairs 210, “The Politics ofPublic Policy.”One of the most noteworthy pub¬lic affairs courses on tap for laterthis year will be “Introduction toLegal Institutions and Theory.”This will be the first undergrad¬uate course in law offered by thisCollege. It will be taught by Ger¬hard Casper, a new addition to theLaw school staff from Berkeley.Courses will be offered in theareas of international relations, na¬tional affairs, and metropolitan af¬fairs. Students who wish to concen¬trate in metropolitan affairs willbe given the opportunity to workwith the University’s Center forUrban Studies on individual re¬search projects.ALL STUDENTS in the programwill be able to do field research aspart of their study. Foundationsupport is now being sought to pro¬vide assistance for such “extern-ship” work, according to social Levine also announced that thedivision has begun an effort to at¬tract bright young anthropologiststo UC who have completed field re¬search and want to start writingtheir dissertations. UC will offerthem two-year appointments, andask them to teach for half of theirtime.This, said Levine, is a way of“getting fresh people into theteaching program and training newgeneral education teachers” whowill be used to teaching in a staff-designed course.Many faculty members at othercolleges are accustomed to teachonly their own courses, while theUC general education programasks them to teach courses thathave been jointly designed by theentire course staff.New Language CenterAn important revision in the general education requirements thataffects all students is the elimina¬tion of requirements for all stu¬dents in foreign languages andmath. Now, courses in these sub¬jects may be required of studentsin some collegiate divisions, butnot all.The social sciences division, forexample, permits students to takesix quarters of math, six quartersof a foreign language or a demon¬stration of equivalent skill, or acombination of the two. The biolo¬gy and physic divisions on the oth¬er hand, have not yet specifiedwhat language competency theywill require. They will decide whenthe new program in languages usin shape.Students in the humanities divi¬sion will be required to show com¬petency equal to that ordinarilygained after two years of foreignlanguage study, to take another ex¬ample, while those concentratingin Far Eastern studies within thesocial sciences division will be re¬quired to take three quarters ofChinese or Japanese.THESE REQUIREMENTS willbe met under a new, more flexiblesystem, organized into a “languagecenter,” co-ordinated by the hu¬manities division, by Ruth Webber,associate professor of Romancelanguages, will direct the center.Instead of requiring a particularthree-quarter course, the new sys¬tem will place each student intowhatever course or sequence isbest suited to his level. Thecourses are now defined accordingto “levels.” Level I is approxi¬mately what most students reachafter one year of instruction, andis usually enough for most studentswho want to pass Ph.D. readingexams in most languages.“Levels II and III,” according tothe humanities division announce¬ments, “generally can be reachedwithin a maximum of three morequarters. Level III competencymakes the student eligible forcourses which form part of theprogram for majors in each ofthese (foreign language) depart¬ments.”According to Stuart M. Tave,master of the humanities collegiatedivision, the new flexibility willmake it possible for students tomove as fast as they can, perhapseven skipping from one quarter’swork to the next in the middle ofthe quarter.ANOTHER innovation in foreignlanguage study is the socialscience divisions expanded pro¬gram of courses on social sciencesubjects using readings completelyin a foreign language. For example,Gerhard Meyer, professor of eco¬nomics, will teach a course entitled“Individual and Society: Readingsin Social Thought in French” thisspring. Seven courses will be of¬fered in French, four in German,(Continhed on page 33)32 C,A M A * O OX • September 3Q, 1966New Curriculum Is More Flexible(Continued from page 32)three in Italian, and one each inRussian and Spanish.The New Collegiate Division-Brainchild Emerges Full-blownWhile most of the collegiate divi¬sions needed only to revise andbuild up on already existing pro¬grams, James Redfield and hisNew Collegiate Division had tostart from scratch.According to Booth, this divisionis “a special home for experimentsin education.” Students who enterthe NCD will be involved in a con¬tinuing process of curricular crea¬tion and reform, as programs aredeveloped each year.The New Collegiate Division willprovide an opportunity for inde¬pendent study, in which studentswork under the guidance of a fac¬ulty member. Students may at points prepare regular weekly pa¬pers for their tutors, or informallyreport about their readings, or auditinteresting courses, or seek advicefrom other faculty members. To¬ward the end of the program, eachtutorial student will prepare a ma¬jor paper, probably carrying on theresearch for several quarters.Special Programs StartedIN CONJUNCTION with his topicfor independent study, each stu¬dent will enter one of the New Di¬vision’s special programs. Three ofthese are already functioning, anda fourth will get under way nextfall.At present, the division offers:• Civilizational studies, directedby Milton Singer, professor of so¬cial sciences and anthropology,which will offer programs intro¬ducing both western and non west¬ ern civilizations, and will seek tohelp student compare them.• History and Philosophy ofScience, chaired by Dudley Shap-ere, assistant professor of philoso¬phy, covering the history of scien¬tific development, scientific inno¬vation, and science related to thegeneral culture.• Philosophical Psychology, head¬ed by Eugene Gendlin, assistantprofessor in the departments ofphilosophy and psychology. Thisprogram will cover a wide rangeof outlooks giving perspective fromeach angle.Next year, the division will offera program in the history and philos¬ophy of religion, designed by Her¬man L. Sinaiko, assistant professorof humanities in the College. Thiswill bring together faculty fromanthropology, psychology, history,divinity, and elsewhere. 'Arts and Public7 Analyzes Critic's RoleAs Mediator Between Audience, ArtistClass of '70 “Places in it “The Arts and the Public,”a conference aimed at analyz¬ing the role of the critic as amediator between the artistand his audience will be held atthe Center for Continuing Educa¬tion, October 16 - 21.The symposium will be the firstin a series of annual conferencesplanned to facilitate discussionamong individuals interested in thedifferent arts.PAUL D. HERRING, conferenceco-ordinator and assistant profes¬sor of English at UC, said that theconference committee deliberatelyinvited people of different back¬grounds and tastes. The Commit-ite, he said, hopes that the partic¬ipants can reach some kind ofconclusion about the part whichacademic and journalistic criticsshould play in the relationship be-A new battery of placement testswas given to the Class of 1970 lastweek with the accent on ‘‘placingin” rather than placing out.“The new tests are a direct re¬sult of the new curriculum,” saidAlbert Hayes, College examiner.“However, where the requirementsare the same the tests are thesame.”IN PAST YEARS, Orientationweek included a placement test forevery general education course. Inpast years, students who made su¬perior scores on a placement testwere excused from the require¬ment to take the course.Okf Form UsedThe old form of testing was usedthis year for placement tests in thebiological sciences, the physicalsciences, math and foreign ianguages.In the humanities and the socialsciences, however, there was a“preference test” which is, in fact,just that an expression of choice.During the spring quarter, thehumanities department sent outrepresentative syllabi for each“track” to the members of thefirst year class.Track I includes readings in mu¬sic, art, and literature, and trackII includes readings in history, lit¬erature and philosophy.Students were given an opportun¬ity to indicate which track theypreferred and how strong theirpreference was, on the basis of thesyllabi. Those entering studentswho expressed a strong preferencehad their choice granted.Dean of the College, Wayne C.Booth said that inequalities between the number of students ineach track were adjusted by plac¬ing those who indicated they didnot have a strong preference arbi¬trarily in the less popular track.Biology ScreamedTHE SYLLABI FOR the socialsciences were not ready until sum¬mer quarter, and were not sentout to the first year dass until themiddle of August. As a result, firstyear students were not asked to in¬dicate a preference for a socialscience track until the social sci¬ence preference test, September 21.Students were also asked to explaintheir preference in an essay at thetest.The essay will also be used bythe English department as a writ¬ing sample.Since almost two-thirds of thestudents chose the second variantof Social Sciences (the old “soctwo”), many students will have totake the other variant, because ofthe limited number of Soc Two fac¬ulty.Hayes explained the rationale forthe new tests. It is possible toplace out of the physical sciencesand biological sciences, he said,because there are some studentswho have had sufficient high school preparation in these subjects.In the social sciences and human¬ities, however, Hayes said, the ad¬ministration felt that high schoolpreparation could not be adeqaute.Experience, Hayes added, show¬ed that those students who werecompetent enough to place out ofthese courses are usually the oneswho benefit most from them, sinceaccording to Hayes, the level ofthese courses rises to the student.There was usually little duplica¬tion of reading material, he said.Biology ScreenedHAYES AND Booth told the Me-roon that there was a screeningtest in the biological sciences be¬cause the faculty felt that the num¬ber of students who were qualifiedto place out of biology was sosmall that it was unfair to make the others sit through a three hourtest.The screening test will still givethe faculty in the biologicalsciences division an idea of howmany students have some back¬ground in basic biology and bio¬chemistry, according to Hayes.There was no screening test in thephysical sciences simply becausethere are more students qualifiedto place out of the course, he add¬ed.COMMENTING ON the newplacement tests, Booth said, “It’sstill too early to say, of course, butsuggestions would be helpful andconsidered. It’s not likely that nextyear’s testis will be the same,though, since improvements arealways made, the system is alwayschanging.” Music Dept. AnnouncesChamber Music DetailsThe music department has an- jnounced the dates and soloists forthis year's Chamber Music Seriesto be held in Mandel Hall on Fri¬day evenings at 8:30 p.m.:October 14, Balsam-Kroll-B. Hei¬fetz trio; November 4, Early MusicQuartet; January 14, Janos Stark¬er; February 10, Quartetto Italia-no; March 31, Milton and PeggySalkind; and April 21, New YorkString Sextet.Due to an unprecedented demandfor tickets for this popular series,there are a limited number of sub¬scriptions remaining. Subscriptionprices are General: $11; UC facul¬ty: $9; UC students: $4.Tickets and information may beobtained at the music department,5802 S. Woodlawn ave., or by call¬ing ext. 3886. tweer the arts and their audiences.According to Herring, “the artistmay or may not think that criticalinterpretation is necessary. In anycase, the critics themselves feelthat there is a serious necessity fortheir work.” Herring said thatthere are several central questionswith which the participants will beconcerned:• “Is the critic to interpret thearts for the public or help themembers of the public to interpretfor themselves?• Can this distinction even bemade?• How does the critic interpret?• In what ways does the criticism--itself a kind of creation, a prod¬uct of the critic’s own sensitivityand values—alter the public’s im¬pression of a work of art?”Saul Bellow, novelist and profes¬sor in the Committee of SocialThought, will be the keynotespeaker at the Conference.WILLIAM ARROWSMITH, pro¬fessor of art and humanities at theUniversity of Texas, will be the of¬ficial observer for the proceedingsand, at the final meeting, willevaluate what has been said.Heiring stressed the importanceof this critical summary to theConference. He said he hoped thatexchanges between individual art¬ists and their critics will provevaluable when they are applied toan analysis of the major problem;what the Conference Committeedescribes as “the failure of muchof American society to share in theillumination and satisfaction pro¬vided by the serious arts.”The conference schedule includesplenary sessions open to the stu¬dent body and the public, andclosed coHoquia composed only ofthe artists and critics in the three1 respective fields.Despitefiendish torturedynamic BiC Duowrites first time,every time!BIC MrtJum Point mUC Fin* Point mBiC’a rugged pair of stick ponewine in unending war againstbail-point skip, clog and smearlDespite horrible punishment by mad research•dentists, SIC still writes first time, every time. And nowonder. Bic's “Dyamite" Ball is the hardest metalBlade, encased in « solid brass nose cone. Will not skip,•log or smear no matter what devilish abuse is devised for them by sadistic students.Get both bics at your campus store now. The moMedium Point for lecture notes, sneak exams andeveryday use. The me Fine Point for reallyimportant documents.. .like writing home for cash.WATIMMII-MC Ff N CMP.HILFtM, CONN.September 30, 1966 • CHICAGO MAtOON • 33frwith additional outlets in each(Continued from page 1)for the development. *‘In' someways it’s like BJ, only more flexi¬ble and adaptable in design.”Headed by Professor of LawWalter J. Blum, the Faculty Advi¬sory Committee on Student Resi¬dences and Facilities issued itsmajor report last autumn. Thereport urged ‘‘that the physicalsetting for student life be as dis¬tinguished in its way as the intel¬lectual life of the University is inits sphere.”Specifically, it recommended ahighly imaginative complex ofhousing for both undergraduateand married students, plus faculty,to be constructed at the Ellis Ave,and 55th St. site.”1 RECENTLY looked at twelveto 15 student housing developmentsthroughout the country,” Blum toldthe Maroon, ‘‘but have seen no oth¬er one as exciting as this one.”He added that circumstanceshave prevented some of the lessimportant recommendations of hiscommittee from being initiated,but that “in the new complex, themajor goals of the committee willbe achieved.”Director of Student Housing Ed¬ward Turkington said that “theconcept behind the new develop¬ment will make it a considerableimprovement over present dormi¬tory facilities at Woodward andPierce.”Student Government (SG) Presi¬dent Tom Heagy called the planfor the new dormitory complex"an exciting one.”“The progress that’s been madesince the construction of Pierceand Woodward, in terms of theUniversity’s attitude toward dormfacilities, is admirable.”Heagy agreed that the plan in¬corporates many of the best ideasin the Blum report, but cited whathe called one major defect, a de¬fect also of the Blum report. live-in doubles,” Heagy asserted.1“The Blum report advocated eightpeople to five rooms, where itshould have been five people toeight rooms.”Pierce II TentativeIn the way of dormitory housingWick said that the new complex“is where we’re putting our chipsat the moment. Pierce II is still onice, and at any rate will not bebuilt very soon.”According to Wick, many stu¬dents are opposed to a secondPierce tower because of dissatis¬faction with present Pierce facili?ties. However, he pointed out, thenew design includes manychanges.The recommendations of theBlum committee, along with thoseof the Student-Faculty Committeeon Social Rules headed by Profes¬sor of Law Soia Mentschikoff, Wicksaid, have been followed in areasother than the new dormitory com¬plex.HE CITED THESE changesmade this summer, many as a di¬rect result of recommendations bythe committees:• In Pierce, twenty doublerooms—five in each house—havebeen converted from doubles tolarge singles which have alreadybeen offered to returning studentswho had arranged for rooms inPierce.Also, all corridors have beencarpeted, following an overwhelm¬ing preference by last year’s resi¬dents for the carpets over a newpaint job.• In Woodward, new loungeshave been built at the center of ev¬ery floor by the conversion of 16double rooms.• In Blackstone Hall, most ofthe old and leaky steel casementwindows have been replaced andthe others are being reglazed. Theentire building has been rewired, room, and a paint job is in pro¬gress:Wick also pointed to last year’scarpeting of corridors and mainlounges in Woodward and the as¬signing of rooms at Snell Hall towomen as direct results of thecommittee reports.Changes Were ExpensiveHe said that the changes inPierce and Woodward will be ex¬pensive in lost income, and “thedecisions to make the changeswere not taken lightly in a yearwhen the University budget is ex¬pected to produce a $4 million defi¬cit.”“These steps were taken be¬cause, in the judgment of every¬one concerned, including students,the objectives to be achieved wereso important that we couldn’t af¬ford to delay doing somethingabout them,” he added.Wick also said that the Universi¬ty plans to build several newapartment buildings close to thecampus by next fall.ALTHOUGH SEVERAL marriedstudent apartments, along with thegraduate women’s apartments at5518 S. Ellis Ave. will be demol¬ished to make room for the newdormitory complex, he claimedthat there would be a net increasein accomodations.In the past year, Wick eited, theUniversity has found housing acco¬modations for about 500 additionalstudents. This, however, includesplaces in hotels, apartment build¬ings, and the Hyde Park YMCA.Also, he said, the University haspurchased in the past year a smallnumber of townhouses and rowhouses, together with the GeorgeWilliams College building and theBroadview Hotel.Grads at the BroadviewOriginally purchased in Augustas a dormitory for first year stu¬dents, the Broadview is now a year-roun,d residencoffor graduatemen. A student-fadulfy committeehad found the hotel to be “unliv-able” for entering men beer use ofthe difficulty students would havein bringing women to their dormi¬tory.Rooms in the Broadview are allfurnished singles with privatebaths, and there is a lounge oneach of the hotel’s six floors. Whenpresent tenants are relocated, thehotel will accommodate nearly 200students.Currently, the George Williamsbuilding is occupied almost entire¬ly by undergraduate men, aboutone third of whom are first-yearstudents.THESE TWO purchases wereconsidered major steps in alleviat¬ing housing shortages for under¬graduate and graduate men.But the housing situation re¬mains tight. As Wick put it, “theonly way we can accommodate in¬creasing numbers of entering first-year students is to throw the gradstudents out.”If second-year women had notbeen released from housing res¬trictions, he admitted, there wouldnot have been room in Woodwardfor entering women.This scarcity of housing is notconfined withing the walls of Uni¬versity dormitories, nor does it endwith University-owned or leasedaccommodations. Since the massiverenewal. program of the early1950’s, the Hyde Park neighbor¬hood has been an increasingly at¬tractive place to live.HslgHborhaod ApartmentsScarceLast spring, a Maroon poll ofHyde Park real estate revealedthat not only is the general housingsituation in the neighborhood tight,but that unmarried undergraduatesstand a slim chance of obtainingan apartment at all.“Our apartments never stay available fbr i aj long length oftln)e,” according to E. T. Water¬ford of Baird*and Warner, 1348 W.55th Street. “There’s always some¬one to take them.”The realtors said that ownerscomplain of neglect of property bythe transient students.“THEY PREFER to rent to fam¬ily units than to groups of under¬graduates,” stated a spokesmanfor Parker-Holsman, 1431 E. 57thStreet. “Neglect of property justwouldn’t happen in the case of afamily renting for several years.”Yet realtors cited increases ofstudent applications of up to 50percent over the last five years.And a Student Government hous¬ing poll conducted last spring indi¬cated that a majority of undergrad¬uate dormitory residents wouldprefer to live in apartments if suit¬able apartments were available.Townhouse Support, TooOf 403 respondents to the poll—170 women and 233 men—74 per¬cent of the women and 67 percentof the men said they would ratherlive in apa:imenta than in theirpresent accommodations, werethey available.The survey also showed studentsupport for townhouses and dislikefor living in South Shore, a com¬munity about two miles southeastof the Hyde Park which now con¬tains more than 5C0 University stu¬dents and is accessible by thecampus bus.On the basis of the poll, Chair¬man of SG’s housing committeeDave Rosenberg claimed that “atleast 1200 apartment spaces ereneeded.”WICK AGREED that moreapartments are needed, and saidthat “plans are going forward,”but cautioned that the Universitystill needs funds which can bemade available for this purpose.“I think we will have the short¬age for some time,” he stated.Heagy Calls for an End to Women’s Hours(Continued from page 1)ommendations about the issue ina report in 1965.Wick pointed out that last yearthe Administration abolished hoursfor third and fourth year students“as a first step.” “We wanted tohear from the women’s housecouncils,” Wick said. The socialrules committee had not consultedthem as such, Wick explained. House Councils AskedLast October the Administrationsent copies of the social rules com¬mittee’s report to all the housecouncils and asked for their opi¬nions on all of the issues involved.Wick said that the InterhouseCouncil first took up the issue ofvisiting privileges in the dorms,and its recommendations were re¬ported and approved. However, noFaculty, Student Panel To Study Draft(Continued from page 1)what changes the University willeventually make in its policy.”FISKE SEES the role of hiscommittee as one of supplementingthe Dunham report. “Since thatexcellent report was released,” hepoints out, “some of the problemsinvolved with ranking have becomemore explicit and perhaps somenew ones have appeared. Mr.Beadwle appointed this committeebecause he wants the facts to havean informed discussion on this, sub¬ject.”SIMILARLY, Page says that hiscommittee will undoubtedly discusssuch issues as University decision¬making on questions concerningthe. draft, and the possibility of stu¬dent 'representation in the FacultySenate, but he refuses to commenton whether his committee willmake specific recommendations.Like the Fiske committee, thePage committee has no power tomake binding recommendations.“Committees Take Forever”Members of the Students Againstthe Rank (SAR) are becoming in¬creasingly impatient with the wayy*- in which these committees operate. “There’s a good chance that thesecommittees will take forever,”said Jeff Blum, official spokesmanfor SAR and a member of thePage Committee. “My committeedoesn’t meet until next week, andfrom my knowledge of the wayfaculty attend meetings, it won’thave anything to. say relative tothe fall quarter.” ." " " *. "THp DUNHAM;RE PORT was £lie,” Blum continued, “life wholething was a hoax. The* co«U»itteenever held 'open -meetings, and itstheir meeting*. Jfiif odm^jb^ftidi ti*the Fiske committee SOip'etfhaffalser, bqt I’jn iiot>vdptlfnislfee: -abbut the -results^ehxjg significant¬ly different.”Blum indicated that SAR had nodefinite plans for more demonstra¬tions at this time, but that newprotests had not been ruled out.“We don’t know what we’re doingnow,” he said. “We’ll know betterafter our first general meeting, butit will depend generally on howbad the war gets and how muchsupport we have.” recommendations concerning hourswere made by the house councils.Because of this, Wick said, acommittee of past and present wo¬men’s house council presidents wasappointed by the Administrationlate this summer. They were askedto meet as soon as possible andsubmit their recommendations."We really want to know whatthey think,” Wick stated.“In view of all this, Tom Hea-gy’s gesture is a little premature,”Wick declared.ASSISTANT DEAN of StudentsJames E. Newman asserted thatthe most important thing now is forthe committee appointed to investi¬gate the issue be free to proceedcalmly and rationaly without pres¬sure. He pointed out that the com¬ mittee was appointed before theissue was raised to forcefully.“It should be made clear that weare not responding to pressure onthe part of Student Government,”Newman said.George Playe, dean of undergrad¬uate students, said that hethought “the proper starting placewas with the customers, the girlsinvolved.” He said that he hasheard both dissent and agreementwith women’s hours and that theissue should first be considered bythe committee.No Reason for DelayCommenting on the new commit¬tee, Heagy told the Maroon thatthis is the third committee in re¬cent years which was to consider women’s hours. He said the firstwas the social rules committee andthe second was the student lifecommittee, formed last year toconsider many facets of campuslife, including hours.“It is always possible to appointan infinite series of committees. Idon’t think this committee’s exis¬tence is any reason for postponingaction,” Heagy said.”1 AM COMPLETELY confidentthat the SG Assembly will pass aresolution abolishing hours, if it isnot done by the Administrationfirst. One way or another, eitherthrough action by SG, the commit¬tee, or the Administration, therewill be no hours for women thiswinter quarter,” Heagy declared.(Continued from page 8)The NSA International AffairsVice President was ordered to urgeuniversities to refrain from enter¬ing defense contracts whichaid war effort and to organize apublic dialogue, regional pro-rqppi^ was released to the- Counsel, granta, and community educationof ..the.,Faculty ^enate after projects on the war.NSA Approves Drug Billsstirring up a lot of controversy ineducational organizations with ourproposals for reform.” *"IN THE AREA of selectiveservice reform,” Qrovep continued,“we are in a position toTiave con-siderable influence on (he selectiveservice advisory committee.’I’vealready had several conferenceswith Burke Marshall (Chief oLbmlrights^IB *tfie Justice department),and I am confident that we -'canidake’an impact with out position.. Groyes^jse sUj^i that NSA:>hadmade ‘‘fairly good inroads” in theOffice of Economic Opportunity. “Iam fiopeful that our tutorial ‘proj*ects wiH make' an impact for us inthis area a$ well,” he stated.NSA is under coStracf with OEOto operate ffie Tutorial AssistanceCenter,- -which provides informa¬tion, assistance, and materials totutorial projects.Dri/g URt* Approved___ r a blanket re¬peal*-of the: - STgaT^restrictions onLSD subject only to such regula¬tions as are now put on alcohol, aDrugs on Campus bill emergedfrom the plenary session recom¬mending that the Food and DriigAdministration sponsor the estab¬lishment of an independentprofessional organization whichwould give competent researchersauthority over screening, dosagecontrol, and supervision of subjectsundergoing the LSD experience. THE MARIJUANA provision,calling for reconsideration and re¬vision of federal legislation as wellas repeal of all state laws whichprohibit its possession and use,passed easily. *Association officers were orderedto seek funding, for a Drug StudiesDesk in the national office to sur¬vey student usage and ks effectson academic and personal well-being.Groves indicated that he plannedan active year's!* NSA.- “Lookingoverall, our main thrust will be inthe areas of experimental educa¬tion and educational reform. Weplan to develop soiSie kind ofmechanism to: dr3ft. guidelines forexperimental campuses throughoutthe country .'We also plan pilot proj¬ects in teacher evaluation and aprogram in international educa¬tion. We have already succeeded in34 • CHICAGO MAROON * September 30, 1966SG Backs DiscussionOn UC Life, ActivitiesStudents should have a role in university decision making.This was the clear consensus of the Student Government-sponsored panel discussion held on Friday, September 23, atthe Reynolds Club. The specific kind of role students shouldhave was not so clear.THE UNIVERSITY'S corporatenature, social life, and educationallife were defined, criticized, anddefended before an audience ofabout two hundred, including manyfirst year students. Jerry Lipsch ofthe SG Campus Action Committeewas the moderator."Three Realities"Richard Flacks, assistant profes¬sor of sociology, described what hecalled the “three realities of a uni¬versity.” First he said, it is a cor¬porate institution—a financial en¬terprise with important links to in¬dustry, government, foundations,and individual donors. It exists toserve these groups as a “knowl¬edge factory.”• The university is also a “total in¬stitution,” with control of aspectsof student life such as food, sleep,and social life. In this. respect,Flacks noted, it might be com¬pared to a prison or a mental insti¬tution.Education,' he added, is a thirdaspect of a university.FLACKS WAS particularly con¬vinced that' students should partic¬ipate in: corporate-type decisions.When universities do work for ther Central Intelligence Agency orsearch for effective chemical andbiological weapons, Students shouldbecome its “conscience” and callfor change:Students already have a signifi¬cant role in decision making here,according to Mark Haller, assist¬ant professor of history and resi¬dent head of Henderson House.Many decisions, particularly thoseof an educational nature, areworked through informal facultyand faculty-student discussions.Haller said he preferred conversa¬tions to sit-ins and suggested thatgreater interest and participationin house government and SG wouldhelp bring the orderly solution ofmany problems.Redfield on ResponsibilityBesides a responsibility to its fi¬nancial supporters, a universityhas responsiblities to its facultyand students, emphasized JamesRedfield, associate professor oflogical thought and master of thefifth collegiate division. When stu¬dents make known their satisfac¬tion or dissatisfaction, the facultyand administration should welcometheir opinion as a vital evaluationof the university’s work, he ex¬plained.Redfield was pessimistic aboutthe value of SG. He did not think itrepresented actual student opinionor that it would be effective in in¬fluencing administration decisions.SG President Tom Heagy cameto its defense as a forum for edu¬cated, high quality student discus¬sion. Last year’s sit-in by St intentAgainst the Rank (SAR), he said,only annoyed the administration,while intelligent discussion wouldhave influenced kSOMETIMES DISCUSSION is in¬effective, Heagy conceded. When auniversity acta aa a "sop to socie¬ ty”, deciding such issues as dormregulations by public opinion andnot by their true merits, he said hewould approve of civil disobedi¬ence.Steve Kindred, a fourth year stu¬dent and member of Students for aDemocratic Society who has oftencriticized administration policy, de¬fended the validity of student dem¬onstrations. Concurring withFlacks on the need for a “studentconscience,” he implied that issuessuch as the rank should be decidedby student referendum, with noveto reserved for the faculty or ad¬ministration.Defends Sit-InKindred called the SAR sit-in aforce that brought together studentopposition and forced recognitionof a vital disagreement with the-University’s position. He said thatthe demonstration followed repeat¬ed disappointment with attempts toreason with the administration.Students should be more intellec¬tual in their criticism, according toLynn Vogel, member of the nowdefunct Students for a Free Choice,toe said that the “Dunham Re¬port,” available at the SG office, isa careful evaluation of the sit-in,but that many students with strongopinions on. the subject haven’tbothered to read it.NEAR THE CLOSE of discussion, a student in the audienceasked what specific, recommenda¬tions memhers of the panel had foran improved student voice in uni¬versity decision making. Interestin issues, awareness of facts, partic¬ipation in formal and informaldiscussions, and demonstrationswere all mentioned, though noblueprint of action was presented.University Installs NewRecording EquipmentFor Use by the BlindThe educational program of tap¬ing textbooks for the blind will re¬ceive renewed support from theUC campus this fall.The installation of a soundproofrecording booth in Ryerson hallwill enable interested UC facultymembers and students to operatean educational service for the visu¬ally handicapped by providingthem with recorded books, com¬parable in accuracy and quality toprinted copy.Pioneers in this endeavor at theUniversity have been making tapesfor the blind in the past, and thosesuch as Mark lnghram. Professorand Chairman of the Departmentof Physics, who made available thespace for the booth, hope that thenew convenient location wffl in¬crease the number ot participantreaders. University sources claimthat an encouraging number havealready volunteered.Volunteers, should eontaet theprogram office during the firstweek in October in Room Mb Ryer¬son Hall or phone 999-4162.Saadoy, Oct. t 10:41 mmmcrmrci inuiAMKiLE wwwwn^WUawwww^Fl^ll ElAN oral RELIGION TOR AN 0TCN CITY"Speaker: Walter LawtonGt the Sunday MctNwp of the Chicago Ethical SatietyMe e Ewgi era bold at Em My da Park Neighborhood Ckik,S4E6 f. Kenwood (Six blocks from fho Quadrangle}A'SpscWl Wehema te At Students SAR States Its Position on Draft, Vietnam and DemocracyAn estimated 250 returning andprospective members of StudentsAgainst the Rank (SAR) heardstagers of last spring’s sit-in talkabout the organization's position onranking, the draft, the war in Viet¬nam, and democracy in the Uni¬versity at an informational meet¬ing Tuesday night at Ida NoyesHall.After third-year student BrentKramer recounted events sur¬rounding the Administration Build¬ing takeover, third-year studentJeff Blum and fourth-year studentKen Krich reviewed the two mainarguments of the organization,those concerning the war in Viet¬nam and alleged inequities inAmerican society. They said the University shouldnot allow its main purpoee—intel¬lectual development—4© be corrupt¬ed by what they called an anti¬intellectual institution Hke theAraft and by the war in Vietnam.Furthermore, they maintained, theUniversity should not allow itselfto be broken into competing groupsbecause of the draft.Krich stated that if the war inVietnam were widely supported inthe University, people would over¬look the undemocratic and unintel¬lectual aspects of the draft, be¬cause people would be willing tosacrifice for a cause they believedin. He called the draft a means fordiscriminating against people whocannot afford to go to college. JtiTy Lipsch, third-year stu¬dent, suggested that people whobelieve that there is anything suchas knowledge for its own sake for¬get that all knowledge is pursuedbecause the seeker takes pleasurein what be is doing.The floor discussion which fol¬lowed revealed a split within SARbetween members who advocatedconcentration on the war in Viet¬nam and on other issues externalto the University which they calledimportant to ranking, and thosewho said they wanted to concen¬trate on ranking alone.SAR will hold its first policy¬making meeting of the yearWednesday night at 7 p.m. in theCloister Club.of tha Amvicaa, H.V.The leg strapson thisGleneaglesraincoat are useless,unless you ride a horse^drive a sports car,straddle a motorcycleor just wantto look as if you do.Our “Paddock” coat has • wed *** *9+*. *.»*» 'W °» J' trav«H«g roam. Buttons ntvw on.[lahlteSIlSSie!. About *42.50. At yew 0 <V ITheatre Review Music Review'Odd Couple' Hits MarriageThe Odd Couple is one of those shows not likely to appeal to students. It’s plainly designedfor the over-35 set. This lot, after all has the cash to support big-budget theater; and it has,to all appearances, already kept this play running for nearly half a year at the Blackstone.What’s it all about? Well, what would most middle-aged theatergoers enjoy seeing satir- Music Forms Linkized? Marriage, naturally. And sowe have Oscar Madison (Dan Dail¬ey), a divorced sports writer livingin untidy independence, the envy ofhis Friday night poker partners(all of whom are married). Sud¬denly the word comes that FelixUngar (Elliott Reid), has walkedout on his wife with suicide on hismind. Panic. How will the pokercrowd save their notoriously meekbut now evidently unhinged friend?NO FEAR: FELIX shows up at Os¬car’s, moves in, and immediatelybegins making life hell for thehighlivers with his fussiness andmultiple infirmities. It turns outhis wife objected not so much tohis sinus trouble, bursitis and al¬lergies as to his uncanny nack forkeeping house better than shecould. This bothers Oscar, too. Hisidea of bachelor life is TV Dinnersand wild women; Felix goes forhome-cooked meals and purifiedair. Something is bound to give,and right around the second act itstarts. Oscar’s buddies can’t playcards with Felix hovering fastidi¬ously over them. Oscar gets edgyat the constant sounds of cookingand cleaning, and finally blows hisstack when Felix ruins a cheerydinner party with two enlightenedEnglish secretaries by weeping co¬piously over his wife and kids. Thewomen, sympathizing, cry too, andinstead of hot-eyed lechery Oscar is surrounded by moist-eyed nostalgia.BUT FELIX HITS it off so wellwith the two ladies that, when Os¬car at last kicks him out, he movesin with them. Suicide now seemsthe furthest thing from Felix’smind, and Oscar wins back hissloppy apartment at the cost oflosing the women.It’s a pretty thin plot. At leasthalf the dialogue consists of jokeson and complaints about Felix—thewifely husband. The rest has to dowith marriage in general, save foroccasional swipes at modern life(“I write the news for CBS.” ‘‘Oh,where do you get the ideasfrom?”)And when the material isn’t fun¬ny, the syntax (more or less) is.By bending around ordinary sen¬tences to give them the ring ofNew York-colloquial and by fallingback on stock argument situationsFelix & Oscar parody the old hus¬band and wife exchange: (“Wherehave you been?” “At the office.”“I called the office and you weren’tthere” etc. etc.) Neil Simon, theplaywright, keeps things rolling.But unless you’re of a mind to ap¬preciate that sort of thing, theevening can be tiresome.The Odd Couple, in fact, fallssomewhere between television sit¬uation comedy and soap opera. Itappeals to the same middle-aged audience with the same kinds ofsubject matter. Who says theaterand TV have to be rivals? Here, atleast, the one has learned from theother.EVEN SO, THE play has twotraditional advantages over itstelevised counterparts; it’s live,and you see better acting. Alengthy run has worn some of thepolish off the acting, and it’s doubt¬ful that even in its prime the pro¬duction (bound as it is by dialoguethat seems best designed forcanned laughter) sparkled. But thepace is fast, and the Oscar-Felixscenes—a good half the play—arebrought off neatly by the very evi¬dent professional skill of Messrs.Dailey and Ried. Other perform¬ances vary from good to weak.Peter Boyle stands head andshoulders above his colleagues ofthe poker table. (William Pierson,R.K. Colitti and Harry Eno) AndDiane Aubrey makes an appealing,all too brief appearance as one ofthe Englishwomen.The Odd Couple is a good playfor the middle-aged at heart. Tosee it is, at the very least, betterthan sitting at home in front of theTV. And at most when you go, youcast a vote for live theater withoutbeing obliged to suffer throughanything unexpected. With the two Chicago Sym-jphony Orchestra concerts in<Mandel Hall last week, featur- jing somewhat off-beat twen¬tieth century repertoire, it is ob- jvious that an important link has1been forged between the Orches¬tra and the UC music department.The concerts of Monday and lastThursday evenings mark the thirdseason in which the Chicago Sym¬phony has appeared on campus toperform modern music. Unlike thefirst two, which were underwrittenby grants in a continuing programby the Rockefeller Foundation, jthese particular concerts were in¬dependently presented by the Or¬chestral Association in conjunctionwith the music department.THE BENEFITS of such a liai¬son for all parties involved hardlyrequire enumeration. For the Chi- jcago Symphony, it provides an op¬portunity not normally providedduring the regular season to inves¬tigate new trends of contemporarycomposers.It permits them to give this mu¬sic a suitable public hearing sothat the general musical public issimilarly given a chance to hearcomplex new compositions. This is jespecially important because it issad but true that there probablyhas never been quite the gap be¬tween composer and listener asthere has been in the twentiethcentury.Musicians Conservative, TooSimilarly, it is not as easy as itmight appear to get musicians toperform new music. It’s nice andconvenient to play Beethoven orMozart five hundred times, but tohave one’s intellect and virtuositychallenged anew by the unfamiliarand demanding works of Schoen¬berg, Webern, and their succes¬sors, who don’t have such immedi¬ate appeal, well, that’s another sto¬ry. Don’t think for one minute thatit isn’t often as difficult to get mu¬sicians to “take their medicine”and play modern works as it is foraudiences. Often, it’s even harder.UC’s music department has prid¬ed itself, for good reason, on itsadvocacy of the latest twentiethcentury musical trends, with itssponsorship of the post-graduateperforming organization, the Con¬temporary Players. This new pro¬gram provides an added base fromwhich it may spread its influenceover a larger scale, with the avail¬ability of a great orchestra to per¬form this music. Truly, this newprogram has the affect of puttingUC on the map among the world¬wide centers for the propogationof twentieth century composition.Selection DifficultSince the deaths of Wagner andMahler, musical styles and schoolshave proliferated, and split intovarious camps: the aleatoric, theVarese-ian, the electronic, themathematical, not to mention themyriad paths and cross-relationsderived from the Vienna School. Itwas then, no easy task to selecttwo programs representative oftheir various genres.The music was not of consistent¬ly high quality—some of it wasdownright poor—but Monday’s con¬cert, under the direction of guestconductor Lukas Foss, providedmuch greater variety and insightinto the “dilemma” and orientation of new music than did the rathertepid program chosen by music di¬rector Jean Martinon on Thursday.HERE, AGAIN, one was immedi¬ately struck by the two perfectexamples of differing approachesto the new repertoire among con¬ductor-. Lukas Foss is an old handat this kind of programming, andwhen accorded free reign in his se-i lection, something which he is notallowed completely with the Buffa¬lo Philharmonic, of which he ismusic director, his choice showsimagination and variety, if not al¬ways the best of taste.Jean Martinon, on the otherhand, barely succeeded in keepinghis listeners awake with a trite se¬lection that was spiced up by onlyone “thorny” work, Schoenberg’sFive Pieces for Orchestra, op. 16,a work that is some 51 years old!Foss Work Made HitAppropriately enough, the show-, stopper of Foss’s concert was hisown work. Time Cycle, composedin I960. Set to literary texts by Au¬den, Housman, Kafka, and Niet-; zsche, the work’s four sectionsportray various aspects of time:the ringing clock, justling bells,along with the pure concept oftime and motion.Having made ample use of serialJ procedures, Foss has still managedto adhere rather closely to theWebemite ideal of compressionand minaturization, while still infu¬sing his score with a great varietyof textures and reliefs. BethanyBeardslee sang the soprano role,and, what else need be said aboutthis work which is so rapidly be¬coming a classic—it brought downthe house.MORE PURELY Webero-orient-ed. and far less winning, was Foss’Elytres, a rather ephemeral composition which employs severalsolo instruments plus a battalion of“distant” violins and percussion atthe rear of the stage. While notchance music, (of twelve possibleversions, two were chosen before¬hand by the conductor), the workproved for its short length to be atotally elusive quantity, providinglittle that was novel and too muchthat was strictly pedantic fawningat the throne of the old Viennesepointillist.The most solid and traditionalwork came, surprisingly enough,from Honk Badings, the Dutchcomposer who, along with Babbittand Ussachevsky, has been amongthe leaders of the ultra-modernistelectronic school. Badings’ Cencar-to for Two Violin*, however, was acompletely traditional work, writ¬ten in 1954, which, while certainlythe most conservative piece on theprogram, was the least gimmickyand had the solidest workmanship.For all Badings’ experimentation,his concerto possesses very littledissonance or coarseness, but,then, this is no crime.Wojciech Kilar’s Riff 42, on theother band, made the most noise,but provided the least substance.The listener was alternately pum¬melled by huge masses of sound,string tremolos revving up like air¬plane motors, (surely a page out ofthe book of Antheil), and severalmoments of relief provided bybleating jazz saxophones. While ex¬citing for its duration, and deafen¬ing to those sitting too close, it isdoubtful that it would hold up un¬der closer scrutiny.Bryan R. DunlapUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO-Hyde Park CommunityBookstoresTHE BOOK (ENTER5211 S. HARPER COURTSERVES ALL YOUR READING NEEDSForeign A Domestic PeriodicalsA NewspapersSTAYER, BOOKSELLERS1301 E. 57th ST.Quality Cloth and Paperbacks,Social Sc., Humanities, Physical Sc.RUDOLPH VAN TELLINGM5225 5. HARPER COURTGeneral Used BooksOPEN DAILY A EVENINGS GREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 E. 57th ST.OPEN 12 to 12Paperbacks, Hardcovers, Medical Books,N.Y. Times on SundayTHE BOOK NOOKHYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERHard Cover A PaperbackBooks — CardsJOSEPH O'OARA1340 E. 53rd ST.Used end Out ef PrintScholarly BooksOPEN 2 PM te 9 PMREID MKHENER530* S. KIMRARKfcirs d * jkmiawW^Mef WW ^ev^ReVVyOPEN 6:00 PM te MIDMIOMY Ed ChikefskyDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristHI yinNEW HVDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1110 C. SMi ». -*9*4* * DO 3-666M IXAMINATIONS . • \CONTACT UNSIIT imiMO m ftAMMI ftciky Mmie34 • CHICAGO MAROON • September 30, 1946 4 ‘ V, *. 'iMR. PIZZA’SFamous PizzaCALL HY 3 - 8282DELIVERY SERVICECARRY-OUTS1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.HRS. Open 7 Days - 4:00 P.M. to 2:00 A.M.Friday and Saturday 4:00 P.M. to 3:00 A.M.Sunday-2:00 P.M. to 2:00 A.M.MR. PIZZAFive Sizes of Pizzas to Choose FromALL OUR PIZZAS HAVE A TOMATO AND CHEESE BASECalifornia Vine Ripened Tomatoesserves2 serves3 serves serves serves4 « PARTY1.501.501.501.501.501.501.25 2.002.002.002.002.002.001.75 3.003.003.003.00 4.004.004.004.003.00 4.003.00 4.002.50 3.50V~\" : • 5.005.005.005.005.005.004.50s' ; v..- * -r« . ‘ ‘ ' *s.'t, r -• ■‘■•sv . *r,!: * v > • ' it.. . ,v. v t ■■■ SAUSAGEA Gourmet's DelightDelicately SpicedGREEN PEPPERSelected GardenFresh Bell PeppersMUSHROOMFrench ImportGARLICRich & Pure Cloves, finelyground & sprinkled evenlyONION or TUNAEach an American BeautyANCHOVYImported From PortugalCHEESE /• A pure- Mozzarella Cheesewith that^Jull creamy flavor. .HALF & HALF 150' OLIVE. . . : : 1.50Imported from Spair^ ; ..... .....***** foR TH'OSE WHO LIKE SOMETHING DIFFERENT•' - CONEY7 RWND 1 2.50 3.00: 7.00-t •-*fiziA "•*’■*: '." ^i|hro6ml, Green F*eppers? ‘ ' PEPPER ON I ?!jiFor those who like ,, .... „ ... i,, the spicy things in life •;* " ' rv SHRIMP V;The last word—fresh *«teUyBACON ^ r r, |{r 2.00v Crisp, yet tender 4 ‘• *>■ BACW EXTRA ADDED INGRED. 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Lake Perch 1.50Italian dinner FestivalsSPAGHETTI, homemade meat- sauce- w..-. «... -90with Meat Balls, Sausage or Mushrooms 1-25RAVIOLI, with meat sauce 90with Meat Balls, .Saysage or Mushrooms .....1.25MOSTACCIOLI, with miat sauce - .90with Meat Balls or Mushrooms 1-25' r. *Sandw ch StandoutsMEAT BALL (incl. green pepper)’v..?....'f..7„'.r..:....r.'.:! 60ITALIAN BEEF (incl. green pepper) 70SAUSAGE (incl. green pepper) 604.00 5.004.00 5.00 6.006.00 Accessories, French Fries (erd^r)Broasted Potatoes (order)V *; • Salaa’fgarfit .dr Ifri) pitt4 ,25c Cole Slaw (pint) 50c35c Onion Rings (order) .... 50c50c Peppers (order) 50c•g Refreshers85c Cannoli.SBVC*?** P'"») ••SOFT DRINKS AND COFFEEDelivery change *' minimum order —$1.50September 30,1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 37 '. ...■ '■ : : m 'MAROON WEEKEND GUIDE, '• 'vHARPER THEATER 5238 s. HelperMARTHASCHLAMMETWO WEEKS ONLY OCT 4 - 16SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTtEIFOIMANCE AND PRICESf «tro !©• Weekdoy Pr.ce »3 00SUN SUN ruts v*o THUtSMAT EVE EVE EVE EVE230 7:30 SOD 8:00 8:00SPECIAL 'EALYAND LATESNOW ONSATURDAY WEEK END ONLY <3.40EllEVE830 SATEAKYEVE700 SATTATEEVE1040 Fabric from the Tiers MondeFROM AFRICA - Batik (Gold Coast),2 Panel Khangas - FROM INDIA -Rajah Cloth (hand woven, blockprinted), Tie Dye Sari, KalamKari Sari, Ikat Fabric, KhadiCotton, Bed Spreads (stripes,plains, checks, block prints),Shifts - INDONESIAN Batik,Manufactured Batiks made forS.E. ASIA - FROM MEXICO - MantaCloth and Open-weave Cotton,Bothcher Aprons.FABYAR 5225 Harper363-2349SAVEUP TO 50% $3X0 S™DN\NYTS $1.50WEEKDAYFRI ttrfn STUDENTS „A SAT *3*° ONLY $2.00Harper Theater Bex Office Open Now-6 PM DailyGreen Door Book ShopANDMedici Gallery & Coffee House1459 E. 57th(Chicago's Oldest Coffee House)For Discriminating Taste in Food, Books& Pleasant Atmosphere• SUNDAY NY TIMES & SUNDAY BRUNCH• SHISHKEBOB• COFFEES, CHOCOLATES, ICE CREAM• HYDE PARK'S MOST DESIRED HAMBURGER• WIDE SELECTION OF PAPERBACKS• MEDICAL TEXTS GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559I Eat More For Less ITry Our Convenient Take-Out Orders* * WELCOME BACKSMEDLEY’S PUBNOW ON T APEnglish Bass Ale and Guinness StoutSIT AROUND AND GABWITH A BITE AND A PITCHER OF BREW5239 S. HARPER NO 7-5546 ARIE CROWN THEATRE • McCormick PUcoIN PERSON! SEPT. 30. OCT. 1 & 25 PERFORMANCES ONLYFri. & Sat. Evenings at 8:30Sun. Eve. (Early Curtain) 7:30Sat. & Sun. Matinees at 2:30The World’s GreatestEntertainerSAMMYDAVIS...that’s all!Seats Now at Box Office ARIE CROWNTHEATREALSO AT TICKET CCNTRAL, 211 N. MICHIGAN AVE.Sat. a Sun. Mat. a Eva. Price*: 4.50, 5.J0, 4.J0, 3.5#SAVE 1 STUDENT DISCOUNTGood Only for Sat.& Sun. Mats. Oct. 1 & 2STUDENTS! CLIP THIS COUPON. It is peed far a discount ef $1.0©en each ticket at any price for either matinee whan presented et the•ex Office at ARIE CROWN THEATRE at any time up te ene heerbefore shew time.Seats A Is* Available tor Sat. a Sun. Eves, at Reeular Prices38 • CHICAGO MAROON • September 30, 1966Movie Review!'Dear John’ a Realistic,Unpretentious Love StoryCharlie Chaplin does a bit in which he is passing by the[window of an antique store and a nude statue on display[catches his eye. At first he continues to walk by nonchalantly,[until the statue’s presence registers in his mind. He stops,[does a double-take, and then quick¬ly jolts his head back into place,2-front. He begins to move for-|ward and ends up stepping back-[ward toward the statue. He sticks[his thumb out and, with the air of[a connoisseur, directs it at objects(to the right of the statue, to the[left of it. But his eyes keep slip¬ping loose of their place above the[thumb-tip and sliding over to the[statue and up and down until his[moustache begins to twitch, and[his eyes jump back to their place[over the thumb-tip.Though Dear John is a filmibout sex, the frequent tittering inthe audience may be compared tothe response evoked by Chaplin’sNot titillation is relevant, butrecognition. It is as if someoneraught us too looking at such an¬tiques; and so we laugh when John[played by Jarl Kulle) checks hisDhysique in the mirror, or Anna(Christina Schollin), who is at thetoo with John, much desiring andlesired by him, but only newly ac¬quainted, realizes that the mon-ceys are copulating, quickly turnsler head away in embarrassment,»nd then suddenly breaks out in a>rin. The film is neither a glorifi¬cation nor a sordid expose of sex,for that matter, of humans. It isjly realistic, presenting peoplest as they are moreover; like the)egas paintings of a woman step¬ping out of the bath, it caln catchthem at mundane or even awk¬ward moments and find themjautiful.Sex is realistically associatedwith human insecurities as well asjiopes. Both Anna and John, whoBleep with each other after only aJay’s acquaintance, suspect thatMiey are being used as instrumentsof pleasure. Anna, who had pre¬viously been jilted by her lovervhile pregnant with his child, fearst John is just the smooth sailor„ port. John, who divorced hisvife when he found her with a lov¬er, is afraid that Anna is just aloose woman. Even the audience,_vhen it knows only that they arepeeping together after a day’s ac¬quaintance, is skeptical, or at leastHolds its judgment in abeyance.Khat is all important is the con-.... of their love-making, much ofvhich both they and the audiencejiearn only gradually.Being cautious people, they areguarded about showing their feel¬ings during the earlier times ofieir day together. Only when theymore intimate do they explainvhat the thoughts were that ac¬companied their behavior (e.g.when Anna asks John why he|hrew stones at her window, he re¬plies that it was not out of disre¬spect but desire). There is no falsi- fication of reality to let the au¬dience know what would normallyremain hidden. Instead a techniquewhich is neither chronological norflashback, but a-chronological,makes it possible for the intimaterevelation scenes from later in theday to be placed early in the mov¬ie, or in the middle, to be repeat¬ed if necessary or put whereverthe context for a different sceneneeds filling in.The word to sum up Dear Johnis not merely “realistic” but “un¬pretentious.” It is best enjoyedminute by minute: the excellentacting, gesture by gesture; and thelovely presentation, which is, bythe way in black and white butgets many of its effect through softgreys and through the rediscoveryof familiar beauties, is best appre¬ciated frame by frame. It is awonderful love story for those who,like the heroine Anna, know thatlife is “not all roses” but can stillbelieve in “love and a happy end.”Judy Schavrien CLR Begins Expansion PlanThe Chicago Literary Review starts its fourth year with big plans for expansion and a newcorporate status.The Review, or the “CLR,” was begun by the Maroon in 1962, and has been published ev¬ery year since. It contains book reviews, drawings, and occasional poems by students.THE FIRST issue this year willappear Friday October 28, co-ed¬itors Bryan Dunlap and Ted Hearnehave announced. There will be twoissues every quarter this year.For the first two years, underReview editors Marc Cogan andMartin Michaelson, the publicationwas distributed only in the Ma-room, w i t h a press run of 10,000copies. Last year, under editor Dav¬id H. Richter, the circulation wasboosted when The Valparaiso Uni¬versity Torch and the RooseveltUniversity Torch began carryingthe review.New OutletsThis year, DePaul Universityand Loyola University of Chicagowill join in circulating the supple¬ment. This will bring circulationup to at least 35,000.In addition, co-editors, Dunlapand Hearne have announced thatthey hope to add to this list severalmore campus newspapers. Theyhave made preliminary negotia- tions with editors at the Universityof Michigan, the University of Wis¬consin, Northwestern University,University of Illinois at ChicagoCircle, Northern Illinois Universi¬ty, Purdue University, and NotreDame University.THE UNITED States StudentPress Association, (USSPA) a fed¬eration of campus newspapers, hasalso announced that its CollegiatePress Service will carry selectedreviews from the CLR in its week¬ly feature service.The review will also begin to runadvertisements from book publish¬ers and bookstores, starting withthe first issue.New CorporationAs a result of these plans for dis¬tribution on other campuses, theLiterary Review editors have tak¬en steps to incorporate it separate¬ly. This will be necessary because,if a University-connected publica¬tion accepts advertising and distrib¬utes on other campuses, the In- ternal Revenue Service would lookupon it as a business enterpriseunrelated to the educational pur¬poses of the tax-exempt University.The University’s legal counselsuggested that separate incorpora¬tion is the answer, and preliminarysteps have been taken. The newcorporation will have a board oftrustees composed of three stu¬dents (including the two co-edi¬tors), one faculty member and oneadministration representative.THE FIRST twelve-page issuewill include reviews of the latestnovels, such as Giles Goat-Boy, byJohn Barth; books of current inter¬est such as One in Seven-Drugs onCampus; and criticism and poetry,such as Roethke’s Collected Poems.It will be distributed free ofcharge with the regular issue of theMaroon, as will the other five is¬sues this year. In addition, thosewho wish to subscribe to the Re¬view alone may send $2.50 to B.Edward Glasgow, business manag¬er, at 1212 E. 59th street, Chicago,Ill. 60615.Classified Advertisements“I sold my soul through Chicago Ma¬roon people-grabber classifieds,” saysDr. Irying Faustus. YOU TOO can sellwhat you want, or let your needs beknown through the Maroon. CALL MI 3-0800, ext. 3285. Ask for Lee, our helpful,friendly ad-taker. Special rates for stu¬dents—50 cents per line first time, 40ceach repeat; others, 75c first, 60c re¬peat. Call 10-4 Mon-Fri. Deadline: 11am day before first insertion.PERSONALSOPEN HOUSE for new and returningstudents—Israeli folk dancing & singing—information avail, about programs &study groups—Sunday, Oct. 2, 7:30 pm.Hillel, 5715 WoodlawnTwo films by a tough lady: PEYOTEQUEEN and GOODBY IN THE MIR-ROR by Storm De Hirsch at the HarperTheater 5348 S Harper Mon., Oct. 3, at8:30 pm.Art exhibit of large photo-murals “Con¬temporary Art from the Synagogue”through Oct. 20th Hillel House 5715Woodlawn open daytime &. eves. Mon-Fri.Karate—for greater self-confidence.THE OTHER SIDE Coffee House—Livefolk & baroque music—open every night’til 2 am. 1603 E. 53rd.Karate—for greater safety.Want to Babysit? See Student Co-op.Karate—a mental and physical disci¬pline.Need a ride or rider? See Student Co¬op.Can you afford not to know Karate?Want to buy or sell books? See StudentCo-op belbre going broke in the Book¬store.Need an off-campus job? See StudentCo-op.Neat responsible roommate (male), 8rm apt, 850 684-3940 Wanted Fem. Grad. Student to shareIrg. 3rd floor pad W/same. 52nd andDorchester Call Sandra aft’s rm. 325643-5030Female needs roommate(s) to find orshare an apt. Call Lee MI 3-0800 x3265days or 684-7586 nights.KAMELOT Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC studentsPop Art Movie posters $1. At the BookCenter, 5211 S. Harper. They’re Great!Open 7 days a wk til midnight.Buy your N.Y. Times daily & Sunday atthe Book Center in Harper Court. Opentil midnight, 7 days a wk.Writer’s Workshop PL 2-8377Female roommate wanted, six rm. apt.grad, student, close to campus. 684-7545Female grad, student wants to share3',i rm. apt. w same. $62.50 878-7178752-3570Performers! The owner of a Porter,Indiana Coffee House is looking fortalented folksingers, musicians etc., toentertain in his establishment. WriteDavid Sander, 212 Lincoln Ave., Porter,Ind., or call 219 - 929-4300.JOBS OFFEREDAssistant advertising manager for HydePk.-Kenwood Voices. Commission only.DO 3-2485.Waiters Quadrangle Club lunch or din¬ner call Dora 3696ESP-DISK, recording company of thenew music and the FUGS, wants cam¬pus reps for surveys and public rela¬tions assignments. Contact immediatelyB. Stollman ESP, 156 5th Ave., NewYork 10010Receptionists 8t genr’l office—pm onlymature person, good salary. LehnhoffSchool of Music & Dance BU 8-4347 FA4-0067ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANYWE'RE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE . . .• NOW, private telephone service IS available to University of Chicago studentsliving in dormitories and university apartments.•. The University ARRANGED facilities within each building to permit IllinoisBoll Telephone Company to connect a one-party line to each dormitory room.You can enjoy the convenience and privacy of an individual line for a basicmonthly charge of $5.60 (plus tax) and a connection charge of $6.00. The basicrate includes 80 units which can be used for calls within Chicago and to thesuburbs ip the Metropolitan calling area, within Illinois.TO ORDER YOUR PHONECALL 734-9100 : i * ", miAd space salesman, perm pos., for local HARPSICHORDS, by Sabathil. Beauti-and regional publications, $150 salary &bonus. Average man earn. $14,000. Co.Benefits. 372-5914.Good typist needed for Dr's, office to dosecretarial work, M-Th. either part orfull time 873-4700FEMALE HELP WANTED RECEP¬TIONIST Lt. Steno, 37 Va hrs/wk forSavings & Loan Assoc. MU 4-6000Maroon delivery. Good pay. Must havecar of adequate size to tote 10M papers.Tues, Fri. am. Call Penelope at the Ma¬roon office. MI 3-0800 ext. 3265.EARN FREE TRIP TO EUROPE Oneof the largest and oldest firms dealingin European car travel seeks campusrepresentative. Must be serious, enter¬prising; preferably married graduatestudent, Europen travelled. Send re¬sume and reasons for applying. CAR-TOURS IN EUROPE, INC.555 5th Ave. N.Y. 17. (212)PL 1-3560YMJC YOUTH CENTER 76th & PhillipsNeed inst’s in Wdshop, Photo, Judo, Tu-tor-Spvsr, & Grp Leaders Call J. West-dorp RE 1-0444Married couple interested in workingw/small group of mentally ill patientsin half-way house in settlement houseas resident house parents. Excell, op¬portunity for gaining invaluable exper.in milieu and group therapy. Meals &furnished 2 bdrm. apt. provided in set¬tlement house & grant of $45,000 per yr.depend, on exper. & educ. level. Call di¬rector, Guy Tardi YA 7-4340; McDowellSettlement HouseSettlement 4630 S. McDowell locatednear 47th and S. Ashland.Family in Kenwood wants responsiblebabysitter—male or female for 2 chil¬dren ages 3 & 4. Mon. 11-3:30 Sc Fri 11-2:30. Will pay $1.50/hr. Call Mrs. Ka¬gan WA 4-4166. ful instruments at reas. prices. 324-6796& 752-8251.TO RENTFurnished room in elevator building,close to campus. International Houseand Illinois Central. Call before 8 am.FA 4-0111 or after 5:00 pm. Referencesnecessary.Free room and board for one or twostudents to assist convalescent wife. S.Shore area. 375-2238 or 493-7509.U of C STUDENTS-FACULTY TENANTREFERRAL SERVICE, reason, rentals,desir. apts, campus bus direct to U ofC. eff. $80, 1 bdrm. $100 and up. Alsolarge deluxe apartments. NO 7-7620South Shore Commission a non profitcommunity organ.Economical, nearby, newly dec. unfurn.apt. Students or Faculty. Quiet bldg.Owned by U of C. Grad. 2-3 rms. $77.50up incl. free gas, electricity, parking.Private bath. Elec. Refrig. Selected ten¬ants. Open housing.See Williams - 6045 WoodlawnHOMES FOR SALESOUTH SHORE VALLEY ’The Suburbin the City” 87-93 Stony Jeffery. Freehome referral service. Listings of newerhomes from $17,000 • $70,000. Excellenttrans., schools, churches, synagogues,shopping, & swimming pool facilitiesMOSTLY SOLD DIRECT BY OWNER.Call for information. 675-8242.CO-OP APTS FOR SALE67th st. overlooking lake; 6 rms. 2baths lrg. master bedrm; plenty ofcloset space. Priced to sell. Owner 752-0973.CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWFOR SALEELECTRIC TYPEWRITER Remington1958 full size office model. $75. Call 285-0825 evenings.DELMONICO refrigerator. 21"x21”xl9”Value new $100. \'2 year old $75. Bronzefinish. 493-3870 after 6.UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST,FIVE BARBERS ,WORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor Editorial experience? The Chicago Lit¬erary Review needs you. Call 285-0825or 643-9894.WRITERS' NEEDED in all fields forbook review magazine. Call Bryan Dun¬lap or Ted Hearne at Extension 3266 or3269.SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTSAnnual Fall Sale. All leather & suedetote bag* $9.50 & up-belts from $3-san-dais 10-20% discount-1 wk only leather& suede capes, panchos, jackets, vest,slacks, & coats made to order. Ad LibStudio 5056 Lake Pk. 268-6910.63rd and Ellis. Prescription Center-Wecarry a complete line of cosmetics,drags, anti tobacco; school supplies andsundries. 10% discount to students withIDsRecorder classes start at the Fret ShopTues. the 4th-7:30 PM.KLII $79.95 for new Model 21 FM radio.The Fret Shop.D’AngeiiCo Guitar Strings in stock. TheFret Shop.Folk-guitar clashes begin Oct. 6th.PM. Beginner. NO 7-1060. 8 wks. $20.The Fret Shop for best in Folk, Folk-Blues & Baroque Records. 5210 S. Har¬per.FISHER 440-T"3 wks. old $250. 463-3585& 521-0460.September 30, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 39twmmmm m * -' ^ ■ -V J, ^... ,MAROON WEEKEND GUIDE& y ,. ^Sfc '' ' *- ~HARPER THEATER 5238 S. HarperMARTHASCHLAMMETWO WEEKS ONLY OCT 4 - 16PERFORMANCE AND PUCESEttfOlOw Weekday Pf.ca »3 00SUN SUN TUES V*D mutsMAT EVE EVE EVE EVE130 730 8:00 8:00 8:00SPECIAL 'EAIYANO tATESHOW ONSATURDAY WEEK END ONLY >3 90FRI SAT SATEVE early LATE8 30 EVE EVE700 1000 Fabric from the Tiers MondeFROM AFRICA - Batik (Gold Coast),2 Panel Khangas - FROM INDIA -Rajah Cloth (hand woven, blockprinted), Tie Dye Sari, KalamKari Sari, Ikat Fabric, KhadiCotton, Bed Spreads (stripes,plains, checks, block prints),Shifts - INDONESIAN Batik,Manufactured Batiks made forS.E. ASIA - FROM MEXICO - MantaCloth and Open-weave Cotton,Bothcher Aprons.FABYAR 5225 Harper363-2349SAVEUP TO SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT*3X0050% WEEKDAYFRI& SAT $3*0 STUDENTS ,nONLY *,:>USTUDENTSONLY $2.00HorpT Theater Box Offico Opon Now-6 PM DailyGreen Door Book ShopANDMedici Gallery & Coffee House1459 E. 57th(Chicago's Oldest Coffee House)For Discriminating Taste in Food, Books& Pleasant Atmosphere• SUNDAY NY TIMES & SUNDAY BRUNCH• SHISHKEBOB• COFFEES, CHOCOLATES, ICE CREAM• HYDE PARK'S MOST DESIRED HAMBURGER• WIDE SELECTION OF PAPERBACKS• MEDICAL TEXTS GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food”10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559I Eat More For Less ITry Our Convenient Take-Out Orders^ * WELCOME BACKSMEDLEY’S PUBNOW ON TAPEnglish Bass Ale and Guinness StoutSIT AROUND AND GABWITH A BITE AND A PITCHER OF BREW5239 S. HARPER NO 7-5546 ARIE CROWN THEATRE • McCormick PlaceIN PERSON! SEPT. 30. OCT. 1 & 25 PERFORMANCES ONLYFri. & Sat. Evenings at 8:30Sun. Eve. (Early Curtain) 7:30Sat. & Sun. Matinees at 2:30The World’s GreatestEntertainerSAMMYDAVIS...that's all!Seats Now at Box Office ARIE CROWNTHEATREALSO AT TICKET CENTRAL, 211 N. MICHIGAN AVE.Sat. a Sun. Mat. a Eva. ericas: *.», s.SO, AM, 3.50SAVE 1 STUDENT DISCOUNTGood Only for Sat.& Sun. Mats. Oct. 1 & 2STUDENTS! CUP THIS COUPON. It is gs*d far a discount af $1.00•n each tickat at any prica far aithar matinee whan presented at tha•#x Office at ARIE CROWN THEATRE at any time up to an* heuraI befera thaw time,Seats Alta Available for Sat. A Sun. Evat, at Reeular Prices38 • CHICAGO MAROON • September 30, 1966LMovie Review‘Dear John’ a Realistic,Unpretentious Love StoryCharlie Chaplin does a bit in which he is passing by thewindow of an antique store and a nude statue on displaycatches his eye. At first he continues to walk by nonchalantly,until the statue’s presence registers in his mind. He stops,does a double-take, and then quick¬ly jolts his head back into place,face-front. He begins to move for¬ward and ends up stepping back¬ward toward the statue. He stickshis thumb out and, with the air ofa connoisseur, directs it at objectsto the right of the statue, to theleft of it. But his eyes keep slip¬ping loose of their place above thethumb-tip and sliding over to thestatue and up and down until hismoustache begins to twitch, andhis eyes jump back to their placeover the thumb-tip.Though Dear John is a filmabout sex, the frequent tittering inthe audience may be compared tothe response evoked by Chaplin’sbit. Not titillation is relevant, butrecognition. It is as if someonecaught us too looking at such an¬tiques; and so we laugh when John(played by Jarl Kulle) checks hisphysique in the mirror, or Anna(Christina Schollin), who is at thezoo with John, much desiring anddesired by him, but only newly ac¬quainted, realizes that the mon¬keys are copulating, quickly turnsher head away in embarrassment,and then suddenly breaks out in agrin. The film is neither a glorifi¬cation nor a sordid expose of sex,or for that matter, of humans. It istruly realistic, presenting peoplejust as they are moreover, like theDegas paintings of a woman step¬ping out of the bath, it caYi catchthem at mundane or even awk¬ward moments and find thembeautiful.Sex is realistically associatedwith human insecurities as well ashopes. Both Anna and John, whosleep with each other after only aday’s acquaintance, suspect thatWiey are being used as instrumentsof pleasure. Anna, who had pre¬viously been jilted by her loverwhile pregnant with his child, fearsthat John is just the smooth sailorin port. John, who divorced hiswife when he found her with a lov¬er, is afraid that Anna is just aloose woman. Even the audience,when it knows only that they aresleeping together after a day’s ac¬quaintance, is skeptical, or at leastholds its judgment in abeyance.What is all important is the con¬text of their love-making, much ofwhich both they and the audiencelearn only gradually.Being cautious people, they areguarded about showing their feel¬ings during the earlier times oftheir day together. Only when theyare more intimate do they explainwhat the thoughts were that ac¬companied their behavior (e.g-when Anna asks John why hethrew stones at her window, he re¬plies that it was not out of disre¬spect but desire). There is no falsi¬ fication of reality to let the au¬dience know what would normallyremain hidden. Instead a techniquewhich is neither chronological norflashback, but a-chronological,makes it possible for the intimaterevelation scenes from later in theday to be placed early in the mov¬ie, or in the middle, to be repeat¬ed if necessary or put whereverthe context for a different sceneneeds filling in.The word to sum up Dear Johnis not merely “realistic” but “un¬pretentious.” It is best enjoyedminute by minute: the excellentacting, gesture by gesture; and thelovely presentation, which is, bythe way in black and white butgets many of its effect through softgreys and through the rediscoveryof familiar beauties, is best appre¬ciated frame by frame. It is awonderful love story for those who,like the heroine Anna, know thatlife is “not all roses” but can stillbelieve in “love and a happy end.”Judy Schavrien CLR Begins Expansion PlanThe Chicago Literary Review starts its fourth year with big plans for expansion and a newcorporate status.The Review, or the “CLR,” was begun by the Maroon in 1962, and has been published ev¬ery year since. It contains book reviews, drawings, and occasional poems by students.THE FIRST issue this year will iappear Friday October 28, co-ed- jt,ons with editors at the Universityitors Bryan Dunlap and Ted Hearne of Michigan' the University of Wis-consin, Northwestern University,have announced. There will be twoissues every quarter this year.For the first two years, underReview editors Marc Cogan andMartin Michaelson, the publicationwas distributed only in the Ma-room, w i t h a press run of 10,000copies. Last year, under editor Dav¬id H. Richter, the circulation wasboosted when The Valparaiso Uni¬versity Torch and the RooseveltUniversity Torch began carryingthe review.New OutletsThis year, DePaul Universityand Loyola University of Chicagowill join in circulating the supple¬ment. This will bring circulationup to at least 35,000.In addition, co-editors, Dunlapand Hearne have announced thatthey hope to add to this list severalmore campus newspapers. Theyhave made preliminary negotia- University of Illinois at ChicagoCircle, Northern Illinois Universi¬ty, Purdue University, and NotreDame University.THE UNITED States StudentPress Association, (USSPA) a fed¬eration of campus newspapers, hasalso announced that its CollegiatePress Service will carry selectedreviews from the CLR in its week¬ly feature service.The review will also begin to runadvertisements from book publish¬ers and bookstores, starting withthe first issue.New CorporationAs a result of these plans for dis¬tribution on other campuses, theLiterary Review editors have tak¬en steps to incorporate it separate¬ly. This will be necessary because,if a University-connected publica¬tion accepts advertising and distrib¬utes on other campuses, the In¬ ternal Revenue Service would lookupon it as a business enterpriseunrelated to the educational pur¬poses of the tax-exempt University.The University’s legal counselsuggested that separate incorpora¬tion is the answer, and preliminarysteps have been taken. The newcorporation will have a board oftrustees composed of three stu¬dents (including the two co-edi¬tors), one faculty member and oneadministration representative.THE FIRST twelve-page issuewill include reviews of the latestnovels, such as Giles Goat-Boy, byJohn Barth; books of current inter¬est such as One in Seven-Drugs onCampus; and criticism and poetry,such as Roethke’s Collected Poems.It will be distributed free ofcharge with the regular issue of theMaroon, as will the othef five is¬sues this year. In addition, thosewho wish to subscribe to the Re¬view alone may send $2.50 to B.Edward Glasgow, business manag¬er, at 1212 E. 59th street, Chicago,Ill. 60615.t , * S ' T r \Classified Advertisements‘I sold my soul through Chicago Ma¬roon people-grabber classifieds, saysDr. Irving Faustus. YOU TOO can sellwhat you wknt, or let your needs beknown through the Maroon. CALL MI 3-0600, ext. 3265. Ask for Lee, our helpful,friendly ad-taker. Special rates for stu¬dents—50 cents per line first time, 40ceach repeat; others, 75c first, 60c re¬peat. Cali 10-4 Mon-Fri. Deadline: 11am day before first insertion. Wanted Fem. Grad. Student to sharelrg. 3rd floor pad W/same. 52nd andDorchester Call Sandra aft’s rm. 325643-5030Female needs roommate(s) to find orshare an apt. Call Lee MI 3-0800 x3265days or 684-7566 nights.KAMELOT Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC studentsPERSONALSOPEN HOUSE for new and returningstudents—Israeli folk dancing Sc singing—information avail, about programs £study groups—Sunday, Oct. 2, 7:30 pm.Hillel, 5715 WoodiawnTwo films by a tough lady: PEYOTEQUEEN and GOODBY IN THE MIR¬ROR by Storm De Hirsch at the HarperTheater 5348 S Harper Mon., Oct. 3, at8:30 pm.Art exhibit of large photo-murals “Con¬temporary Art from the Synagogue”through Oct. 20th Hillel House 5715Woodlawn open daytime Sc eves. Mon-Fri.Karate—for greater self-confidence.THE OTHER SIDE Coffee House—Livefolk Sc baroque music—open every night’til 2 am. 1603 E. 53rd.Karate—for greater safety.Want to Babysit? See Student Co-op.Karate—a mental and physical disci¬pline.Need a ride or rider? See Student Co-op.Can you afford not to know Karate?Want to buy or sell books? See StudentCo-op before going broke in the Book¬store.Need an off-campus job? See StudentCo-op. Pop Art Movie posters $1. At the BookCenter, 5211 S. Harper. They’re Great!Open 7 days a wk til midnight.Buy your N.Y. Times daily Sc Sunday atthe Book Center in Harper Court. Opentil midnight, 7 days a wk. Ad space salesman, perm pos for local HARPSICHORDS, by Sabathil. Beauti-and regional publications, $150 salary &bonus. Average man earn. $14,000. Co.Benefits. 372-5914.Good typist needed for Dr's, office to dosecretarial work, M-Th. either part orfull time 873-4700FEMALE HELP WANTED RECEP¬TIONIST Lt. Steno, 37 Va hrs/wk forSavings & Loan Assoc. MU 4-6000 ful instruments at reas. prices. 324-6796& 752-8251.TO RENTFurnished room in elevator building,close to campus. International Houseand Illinois Central. Call before 8 am.FA 4-0111 or after 5:00 pm. Referencesnecessary.Writer’s Workshop PL 2-8377Female roommate wanted, six rm. apt.grad, student, close to campus. 684-7545Female grad, student wants to share3>,i rm. apt w same. $62.50 878-7178752-3570Neat responsible roommate (male), 8rm apt, $50 684-3940 Performers! The owner of a Porter,Indiana Coffee House is looking fortalented folksingers, musicians etc., toentertain in his establishment. WriteDavid Sander, 212 Lincoln Ave., Porter,Ind., or call 219 - 929-4300.JOBS OFFEREDAssistant advertising manager for HydePk.-Kenwood Voices. Commission only.DO 3-2485.Waiters Quadrangle Club lunch or din¬ner call Dora 3696ESP-DISK, recording company of thenew music and the FUGS, wants cam¬pus reps for surveys and public rela¬tions assignments. Contact immediatelyB. Stollman ESP, 156 5th Ave., NewYork 10010Receptionists Sc genr’l office—pm onlymature person, good salary. LehnhoffSchool of Music & Dance BU 8-4347 FA4-0057ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANYWE'ftE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE . . .• NOW, private telephone service IS available to University of Chicago studentsliving in dormitories and university apartments.The University ARRANGED facilities within each building to permit IllinoisBell Telephone Company to connect e one-party line to each dormitory room.You can enjoy the convenience and privacy of an individual line for a basicmonthly charge of $5.60 (plus tax) and a connection charge; of $6.00. The basicrate includes 80 units which can be used for calls within Chicago and to thesuburbs ip the Metropolitan calling area* within Illinois. iVTO ORDER YOUR PHONE734-9100 Maroon delivery. Good pay. Must havecar of adequate size to tote 10M papers.Tues, Fri. am. Call Penelope at the Ma¬roon office. MI 3-0600 ext. 3265. Free room and board for one or twostudents to assist convalescent wife. S. 'Shore area. 375-2238 or 493-7509.EARN FREE TRIP TO EUROPE Oneof the largest and oldest firms dealingin European car travel seeks campusrepresentative. Must be serious, enter¬prising; preferably married graduatestudent, Europen travelled. Send re¬sume and reasons for applying. CAR-TOURS IN EUROPE, INC.565 5th Ave. N.Y. 17. (212)PL 1-3560YMJC YOUTH CENTER 76th & PhillipsNeed inst’s in Wdshop, Photo, Judo, Tu-tor-Spvsr, & Grp Leaders Call J. West-dorp RE 1-0444Married couple interested in workingw/small group of mentally ill patientsin half-way house in settlement houseas resident house parents. Excell, op¬portunity for gaining invaluable exper.in milieu and group therapy. Meals Scfurnished 2 bdrm. apt. provided in set¬tlement house & grant of $45,000 per yr.depend, on exper. Sc educ. level. Call di¬rector. Guy Tardi YA 7-4340; McDowellSettlement HouseSettlement 4630 S. McDowell locatednear 47th and S. Ashland.Family in Kenwood wants responsiblebabysitter—-male or female for 2 chil-diren ages 3 & 4. Mon. 11-3:30 Sc Fri 11-2:30. Will pay $1.50/hr. Call Mrs. Ka¬gan WA 4-4166. U of C STUDENTS-FACULTY TENANTREFERRAL SERVICE, reason, rentals,desir. apts, campus bus direct to U ofC. eff. $80, 1 bdrm. $100 and up. Alsolarge deluxe apartments. NO 7-7620South Shore Commission a non-profitcommunity organ.Economical, nearby, newly dec. unfurn.apt. Students or Faculty. Quiet bldg.Owned by U of C. Grad. 2-3 rms. $77.50up incl. free gas, electricity, parkingPrivate bath. Elec. Refrig. Selected ten¬ants. Open housing.See Williams - 6045 WoodlawnHOMES FOR SALESOUTH SHORE VALLEY "The Suburbin the City” 87-93 Stony Jeffery. Freehome referral service. Listings of newerhomes from $17,000 - $70,000. Excellenttrans., schools, churches, synagogues,shopping, Sc swimming pool facilitiesMOSTLY SOLD DIRECT BY OWNER.Call for information. 675-6242.CO-OP APTS FOR SALE67th st. overlooking lake; 6 rms. 2baths lrg. master bedrm; plenty ofcloset space. Priced to sell. Owner 752-0973.CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWFOR SALEELECTRIC TYPEWRITER Remington1958 full size office model. $75. Call 285-0825 evenings.DELMONICO refrigerator. 21 ”x2r’xl9’’Value new $100. Vx year old $75. Bronzefinish. 493-3870 after 6.UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST,(FIVE BARBERS .WORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor Editorial experience? The Chicago Lit¬erary Review needs you. Call 285-0825or 643-9894.WRITERS NEEDED in all fields forbook review magazine. Call Bryan Dun¬lap or Ted Hearne at Extension 3265 or3269.SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTSAnnual Fall Sale. All leather & suedetote bag® $9.50 & up-belts from $3-san-dals 10-20 % discount-1 wk only leatherSc suede capes, panchos, jackets, vest,slacks, & coats made to order. Ad LibStudio 5056 Lake Pk. 268-6910.63rd and Ellis. Prescription Center-Wecarry a complete line of cosmetics,drags, pnd tobacco; school supplies andsundries. 10% discount to student® withID’sRecorder classes start at the Fret ShopTues. the 4th-7:30 PM.KLH $79.95 for new Model 21 FM radio.The Fret Shop.D’AngeiiCo Guitar Strings in stock. TheFret Shop.Folk-guitar classes begin Oct. 6th.PM. Beginner. NO 7-1060. 8 wks. $20.The Fret Shop for best in Folk, Folk-Blues & Baroque Records. 5210 S. Har¬per.FISHER 440-T 3 wks. old $250. 463-3585& 521-0460.September 30, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 39on their way to off-broadway u f * JTHE SANInvades Mandel HallWith Their Minstrel Show For The 60 s“Civil Rights in a Cracker Barrel”The Mime Troupe on set at home—the Encore Theatre, Mason Street, San Francisco“A Warning for the squeamish .. it is scatological, bawdy — and irreverent.” SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER“Pure entertainment... intelligent, perceptive and humorous.” SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE“They deal with American Culture in aciduous terms, without mincing words or cottoning to moss-overlaidconventions... 99 SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCE“One of the greatest things in the show is a short, prize winning pop-art film called “Dem Watermelons”in which the watermelon is shown as something to be kicked, smashed, chased, cut, disemboweled and evencrushed by a big construction machine but keeps turning up at places like the U.N. and eventually ends bychasing its pursuers.” SACRAMENTO BEE"Obscene and lewd." DENVER POLICE DEPT.(see story on page two)Tomorrow night, Sat., Oct. 1,8 pm, Mandel Hall (57th & University)tickets at the door: $3.00 Gen. Adm., $2.50 StudentsChick-stud scene from Cracker Barrel40 • CHICAGO MAROON • September 30, 1966