Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary Year MID-WEEKEDITIONVol. 75 No. 10 The University of ChicagoApathetic Response To Heagy ProposalFew Seek To End HoursReaction has been mixed toSG President Tom Heagy’sspeech last Tuesday in whichhe demanded the abolition ofwomen’s hours by winter quarter.Most administrators, Heagy said,have given a “no comment” reac¬tion to him on his speech. “Stu¬dents appear to feel that it’s tooextreme,” he continued, “butwhat could be more extreme thana ‘Freedom Soon’ movement?”DEAN OF THE College, WayneC. Booth, said that he is puzzledabout the speech and is inclined towatch and wait. “We ought to talklong and hard and come to a suita¬ble conclusion.'I can see no use ina show of unilateral force.“Student attitude seems too apa¬thetic, but I’m getting a biased re¬action,” said Booth.SG New Dorms representativeAlan Bloom, said that student re¬action to Heagy’s speech is hardto divine, but that many studentsare against it because of the priorexistence of the social rules com¬mittee and student life committee,both of which can deal with wom¬en’s hours.“Some first-year students areconfused about the issue, but manyolder girls think it’s great that SGis finally coming along and doingsomething,” Bloom stated.SG is making gradual prepara¬tions for a campaign to promotewholesale violation of women’shours, but nothing much will hap¬pen before the winter quarter, ac¬cording to Heagy.“Perhaps there will be somechange in women’s hours beforewinter quarter, but I'm not sure. "WE WILL make arrangementsfor a study center of some sort, oran evening at the Clark,” he de¬clared, to provide for organizednoncompliance.“Now -that we have brought upthe question of women’s hours, andthe works of the two committees—the Administration never likes torefer to the student-faculty com¬mittee—we should study the issue,and we will proceed with our oth¬er projects until the end of thequarter, allowing talk and givingthe Administration time to act.”Last year, all the houses inWoodward Court, including Upperand Lower Wallace, Rickert, andUpper Flint, limited their hours tofrom 2 to 8 pm on Sunday.Two Houses VoteMaximum HoursAt least two women’s dormshave voted to allot the maxi¬mum number of hours formen’s visits and a third dras¬tically liberalized its visiting poli¬cy. in house meetings Sunday.Harper Surf and Blackstone Hallvoted to allow visiting in dormrooms for the maximum number ofhours now permitted. These arefrom 4 pm to 1 am on Friday,from 1 pm to 1 am on Saturday,and from 1 pm to 10 pm on Sun¬day.Several women’s dorms, includ¬ing Upper Wallace, Rickert, andUpper Flint have not yet voted onhours, but will do so this week.Sen. Douglas, DaleyRededicate Fountainby Michael SeidmanMonday was a day , tor contemplating the “transience ofman and the eternity of time” at Washington Park.In a wind-swept ceremony before a small crowd at the westend of the Midway, Senator Paul Douglas, Chicago MayorRichard Daley, and UC President |George Beadle rededicated The jFountain of Time—what many jconsider to be the greatest sculp¬ture by the late Lorado Taft.Victim of TimeThe Fountain, itself a victim oftime, has in recent years becomediscolored and eroded. In a cam-,paign to preserve the monument$14,200 was spent to relandscape,light, waterproof, and repair it.Douglas, who is Taft’s son-in-law. stated that he was “sure Mr.Taft would be overjoyed to see thisstatue returned to its originalbeauty.”"FOR MANY years, it was oneof the great and noble beauties ofour city,” Douglas continued.“Then the iron sulfate in the airdiscolored the figures, and it be¬came a hideous blot on the cityrather than an addition to it.”The 120 foot long statue original¬ly dedicated on November 15, 1922,depicts a procession of some 90men, women, and children passingin review before the immovablefigure of time. It consists of 4,500 pieces in all, and is made from amixture of poured concrete andcrushed quartz rock which has de¬teriorated badly over the lasttwenty years. An inscription at itsbase reads: “Time goes you say,/Ah no;/ Alas time stays./We go.”Wider and Deeper MeaningDouglas, standing stiffly duringhis short speech, sought to link themonument deterioration to otherurban problems. Pointing to theproblems of air and water pollu¬tion, the need for more park land,and the battle to preserve naturallandmarks, he called for a contin¬ued effort to “save our nationalheritage.“There is wider and deepermeaning to this ceremony thismorning than mere restoration of apiece of sculpture, as noble as thatis,” he stated."PART OF Mr. Taft’s dreamwas crystalized,” Douglas contin¬ued, “and it is a joy to see it savedfrom the eroding and corroding in¬fluence of time.” Booth Sets GoalsFor Fact FindingPanel , on Gradesby Jeffrey KutaA fact-finding committee ongrading in the College, consist¬ing of four faculty members,: has been organized by Wayne| C. Booth, dean of the College.The purpose of the committeewill be to investigate grading prac¬tices currently employed and toseek feasible alternatives to them.Appointed by Booth as membersof the committee were BenjaminBloom, professor of education;Richard Flacks, assistant professorof sociology; Jacob Getzels, profes¬sor of education and psychology;and David Williams, professor ofEnglish. They will meet late thisj week and choose a chairman fromamong themselves.ALSO, THE question of studentrepresentation on the committeej and ways of obtaining studentopinion will be discussed at the! first meeting.| Booth cited two major goals jwhich he said he hopes the group i| will achieve:• Investigation of alleged disad-, vantages and inconsistencies—thatj students here are graded on a low-; er level than students in other ma-j jor colleges; that students major-1 ing in certain areas are graded| higher than others; that students| in their third and fourth years ex¬perience tougher grading practicesthan first and second year stu¬dents.• Investigation of alternatives—whether any would be an improve¬ment over the present system; re¬sults of various systems else¬where; whether a no-grade systemwould inhibit students’ chances fori acceptance by graduate andprofessional schools.Ivy League SystemAccording to Booth, there are ru¬mors that Harvard and Yale stu¬dents, for instance, are graded ona higher level than students here.If they are true, he pointed out,Chicago graduates are penalizedwhen they seek acceptance bygraduate and professional schools.“I’d like to find—and I’m sureothers would as well—a way of re¬ducing the influence of grades onwhat students do,” stated Booth.Although the new committee hasbeen organized on a fact-findingbasis, Booth indicated that it willprobably lead to a later policy con¬sideration of grades.He said he welcomed studentswho have rumors or facts concern¬ing the College’s grading system toarrange with him to present theinformation to the committee.GETZELS SAID he believes| “enormous differences” exist be¬tween the grading system here andthose at other schools. “No one hasrecently compared the various sys¬tems. and I believe it’s a .good ideaj to do so.”According to Flacks, no definiteoutcome of the committee’s workis yet envisioned.“There will probably be minorexperiments with new methods ofevaluation, but I don’t believe| that the College as a whole will! change its system, and I don’tknow if it would even be desira¬ble,” he stated.Flacks claimed that the commit¬tee was formed as a result of thetype of ideas which circulated dur¬ing last year’s Liberal Arts Confer¬ence. Tuesday, October 4, 1966LEDGEND ON the old Cobb Hall bulletin board before the 1962visit of Robert Maynard Hutchins to his old stomping grounds.Boy WonderRobert Maynard Hutchins,'Chancellor of the Universityfrom 1929 to 1951, will returnto UC October 12 to speak atthe dedication of the Laird BellLaw Quadrangle.The Law Quadrangle will be ded- Jicated to Laird Bell, who was aprominent attorney and a trustee '■of the University from 1929 untilhis death in 1965.HUTCHINS, FIFTH Chancellorof the University, is now Presi-!dent of the Center for the Study |of Democratic Institutions, SantaBarbara, California. To ReturnHis last visit to UC was in April,1962, when he spoke at RockefellerChapel, on “The Limits of LiberalEducation.” His speech was char¬acterized as “disappointing by theMaroon.Other speakers at the dedicationwill be Glen A. Lloyd, Bell’s lawpartner, life trustee of the Univer¬sity and former chairman of theBoard of Trustees; George W. Bea¬dle, President of the University;and Edward H. Levi, Provost ofthe University and former dean ofthe Law School. Phil C. Neal, thepresent dean of the Law School,will preside.Student and Community Leaders DiscussUniversity Responsibility in WoodlawnMore than 20 representativesfrom UC’s student organiza¬tions discussed the Univer¬sity’s responsibility to the sur¬rounding community—with specialreference to Woodlawn—at a twoday conference, sponsored by theOffice of Student Activities.“Really basic things came out ofthe conference,” according to Su-!san Munaker, assistant director ofstudent activities. “The students ifelt they knew a lot of what was Igoing on in Woodlawn, but ques¬tions were raised which they hadnever thought about.”IN ADDITION TO the heads ofstudent organizations, representa¬tives of community organizationslike JOIN and TWO, and facultymembers, were invited to speak ondifferent approaches to communityservice at the two day conference. !“We started with the university’s ,perspective on the community andended with the community's per- jspective on the university,” saidSkip Landt, director of student ac- Jtivities.Newman CommentsJames Newman, assistant deanof students, commented on the two-day conference by saying it is im¬possible for the university to takean official stand on specific topics, but added that the university ismade up of sub-divisions which cantake action and formulate policies.There was a general consensusamong student conference parti-(Continued on Page Three)Committee StudiesUC Policy MakingStudent participation in Uni¬versity decision making andways and means to improvestudent-faculty relations werediscussed at the first meeting ofthe committee on student-facultyrelations last night.The group decided for its majoremphasis to discuss the nature ofdecision making in the University.The committee decided to also con¬sider the desirability and conse¬quences of various changes in thatdecision making process.The question of University deci¬sion making was brought up bycommittee member Jeff Blum andbecame the focus of the meeting.A list of the committee membersand where they can be reached forsuggestions and discussion will ap¬pear in Friday’s Maroon.Adlai Stevenson IIIAsserts OppositionTo Draft Systemby John BremnerAdlai Stevenson III, son olthe late UN Ambassador andthe Democratic candidate forState Treasurer, called for ageneral upgrading of the level ofstate government in Illinois at apress conference for college edi¬tors, Saturday.Stevenson expressed disappoint¬ment that many of his bills, (in¬cluding two dealing with conflict ofinterest and lobbying regulation)were killed in the Illinois StateSenate. The Senate is controlled byRepublicans.TURNING TO OTHER questions,Stevenson said he opposed the pres¬ent selective service system andsupported lowering the Illinois vot¬ing age to 19. Both of these issueshave been played down by otherDemocrats on the ticket.Stevenson expressed concernwith the “super patriots” who vo¬cally support the fight for “free¬dom” abroad, at the same timethey try to suppress it at home.In addition to establishing him¬self on issues of general interest,Stevenson also did some hard corecampaigning for the specific officehe is seeking. He vigorously reject¬ed as “highly restrictive and re¬gressive” the proposed Illinois Rev¬enue Article, and he outlined a planfor the State Treasurer’s Office toassist local communities in sellingbond issues in order to improve thefinancial situation in some of thosecommunities. Stevenson made clearthat his program would be com¬pletely voluntary.THE PRESS conference itselfwas arranged by the Youth ForAdlai Committee.The Guaranteed Annual In¬come Newsletter was startedlast year and will be contin¬ued this year as a monthlypublication, published by agroup of Social Service Ad¬ministration students at UCThe Newsletter focuses onthe controversial idea of aguaranteed income for everyAmerican, seminars, andother related activities.Yearly subscriptions are$3.00 and should be ad¬dressed to:G.A.I.N., SCHOOL OF SO¬CIAL SERVICE ADMINIS¬TRATION, 969 EAST 60thSTREET, CHICAGO, ILL.60637.BOB NELSON MOTORSImport Centro6052 So. Cottaqe GroveMl 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospital mm\m meCOLLEGE'STUDEUTAt TheUniversity of Chicago BookstoresOur Clerks will be glad lo assist you la our:SELF SERVICE DEPARTMENTAND RED CARPET AREA .(Please use package drops or free lackers)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. *EDUCATION 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.2 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 4, 1966Heavily Attended Student Activities NiteKickoff for Programs of UC ActivitiesA heavily attended StudentActivities Night was the kick¬off for the programs of mostof UC’s student organizations.Skip Landt, who surveyed thisyear’s student activities picture forthe Maroon, noted that the serviceclubs on campus have been steadi¬ly increasing in membership overthe past several years with a cor¬responding decline in political or¬ganization activity. Despite the rel¬atively large participation in Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society(SDS), the majority of extra-cur¬ricular activity has involved thetwo large service projects—theStudent Tutoring Elementary Proj¬ect (STEP) and the Student Wood-lawn Area Project (SWAP) accord¬ing to Landt.THE STUDENT activity budgetof $30,000 has not yet been alloca¬ted to those student organizationsrequesting money but Landt be¬lieves that the Committee On Rec¬ognized Student Organizations(CORSO) will do so within thecoming week.Groups, such as the ChicagoFree Press, a second campusnewspaper, who are not asking fora CORSO allotment and who arenew to UC, will most likely rely onadvertisers as their sole support,according to Landt.Exhibits in Ida Noyes Hall onStudent Activities Night indicatedKARATEORGANIZATIONAL MEETINGWednesday, Oct. 58 PM, Ida Noyes Hall the great diversity of UC activities.While the Society for the Preserva¬tion of Beer Cans is no longerfunctioning, UC does have its chap¬ter of the American Society for theAdvancement of Alexander Skrya-bine.PROGRAMS, scneffuled for theyear, said Landt, include the An¬nual Folklore Concert, the FourthInternational Folk Dance Festivalin November, speakers very tenta¬tively scheduled by SG,—includingStokely Carmichael, ThomasLeary, and Aaron Copland andthe appearance of Jean-Luc Go¬dard scheduled by Doc Films.Panel To ContinueCommunity Dialog(Continued from Page One)cipants that openly or inadvertent¬ly the University does make deci¬sions which influence a large num¬ber of people so the institutionmust be aware of its powers.AN OUTGROWTH of the Conference will be the “Continuing Con¬ference on The City in the Univer¬sity,” according to Miss Munaker.This group will, in effect, act as acoordinating council to gather in¬formation about the Universitycommunity though it will not takedirect action. Panel discussions arenow being planned by the Continu¬ing Conference for Thursday eve¬nings.Speaking at a conference panel,Wayne C. Booth, dean of the Col¬lege, warned of the dangers of uni¬versity involvement in Social ques¬tions. He maintained that a loss offreedom occurs when the universi¬ty takes a stand on specific issues. New Committee Will Prepare Data for UC Policy ReconsiderationDraft Group Plans Closed SessionsThe newly formed student-faculty committee on draft pol¬icy will be meeting in closedsession for the rest of the au¬tumn quarter.The purpose of the committee isto expand and bring up to date thefindings of the Dunham Report andprepare material for a re-examina¬tion of the University’s draft poli¬cy. The Dunham Report was astudy of the relationship betweenthe University and the SelectiveService prepared by a special stu¬dent-faculty committee.The faculty members of theCommittee are, professor of psy¬chology, Donald W. Fiske, asso¬ciate professor of history, BernardS. Cohn, professor of physics, Hell-mut Fritzche, associate professorShorey Will HostNuclear ResearcherDan Kessler, a research as¬sociate in the Enrico Fermi In¬stitute for Nuclear Studies,will be Shorey House’s firstguest resident head.” Kessler willlive at the house for the week ofOctober 2-8.The guest resident program pro¬vides for having faculty membersliving in the house for short peri¬ods of time.Although the schedule for therest of the year is uncertain, deanof undergraduate students GeorgeL. Playe, Collegiate Master JamesM. Redfield and associate profes¬sor of humanities Herman L. Sinai-ko have agreed to reside. of biology Ray Koppleman, andprofessor of education Benjamin S.Bloom. The other members of thecommittee Danny Boggs, JerryLipsch, Jim Powell, Peter Rabi-nowitz, “and Lynn Vogel are stu¬dents from both the graduate andundergraduate divisions.As part of its research, the Com¬mittee is going to send a question¬naire to a representative sample ofundergraduates as soon as possi¬ble. The specific items on thequestionnaire have not yet beendecided, but they will include ques¬tions on the student’s draft status, his rank in class, his score on theSelective Service examination, andhis views on what the University’sdraft policy should be.To help in its investigation, theCommittee is requesting that allindividuals and groups send themwritten comments on the DunhamReport including views on thepresent UC position. The full textof the report will be published inthis Friday’s Maroon.Comments should be sent to thechairmen of the Committee. Don¬ald W. Fiske, Green 314, by Oc¬tober 17.FREE DELIVERY1 FREE PEPSI with each PIZZAby mentioning adCAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THI THY 3-5300 FA 4-5525PIZZAMED LARGECHEESESAUSAGE tOOOOOmOOMOOMOOMMOOOHOOMOOPEPPER ft ONIONBACON ft ONIONCOMBINATIONMUSHROOMSHRIMP • •••••INOOMOOO•••NOOMOOMONM9#HOHOOMOOOOOOOOOONOOO 1.551.901.752.252.502.252.50 2.102.452.302.803.052.803.05Worship According to the Several TraditionsBAPTISTSundays11:00 A M —ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL11:00 A M —FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, 935 E. 50th Street11:00 A M —HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH, 5600 Woodlawn Avenue11:00 A M —WOODLAWN BAPTIST CHURCH, 6207 University AvenueCHRISTIAN SCIENCESundays10:45 A.M.—TENTH CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST, 5640 BlackstoneDISCIPLES OF CHRISTSundays11:00 A M.—UNIVERSITY CHURCH, 5655 University AvenueEPISCOPALSundays9:30 A M —SUNG EUCHARIST at JOSEPH BOND CHAPEL, adjacent toSwift Hall, (Breakfast following)Wednesdays7:30 A M —HOLY COMMUNION, BRENT HOUSE, 5540 Woodlawn Ave.(Breakfast following)Thursdays12:00 M. —HOLY COMMUNION, JOSEPH BOND CHAPELGREEK ORTHODOXSundays10:30 A M., 12:00 P.M.—THE DIVINE LITURGY, SS Constantine andHelen Greek Orthodox Church, 7351 South StonyIsland AvenueHoly Days9:00 A M., 11:00 A M —THE DIVINE LITURGYJEWISHSabbath Services at Hillel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn AvenueFridaysSundown—Orthodox7:30 P.M.—Reform7:30 P.M.—ConservativeSaturdays9:00 A.M.—Orthodox9:30 A.M.—ConservativeLUTHERANSundays1100 AM—ST. GREGORY of NYSSA CAMPUS PARISH (MISSOURISYNOD), COMMUNION at GRAHAM TAYLOR CHAPEL,58th Street and Univeisity Avenue (Dinner following)Liberal 11:00 A M—AUGUSTANA LUTHERAN CHURCH of HYDE PARK(L.C.A.), JOSEPH BOND CHAPEL (Refreshments following)Wednesdays7:45 A M —COMMUNION in the ‘UPPER ROOM” at CHAPEL HOUSE,5810 Woodlawn Avenue (Breakfast following)Fridays12:00 M. —SERVICE at JOSEPH BOND CHAPELMETHODISTSundays11:00 A M —HYDE PARK METHODIST CHURCH, 54th Street and Black-stone Avenue11:00 A M.—ST. JAMES METHODIST CHURCH. 4611 Ellis Avenue11:00 A M.—WOODLAWN METHODIST CHURCH, 64th Street and Wood¬lawn AvenuePRESBYTERIANSundays11:00 A.M.—FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. 6400 Kimbark Avenue11:00 AM—UNITED CHURCH of HYDE PARK, 53rd Street and Black-stone Avenue11:00 A M.—SIXTH UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. 1210 E. 62ndROMAN CATHOLICMASSES at CALVERT HOUSE, 5735 University AvenueSundays8:30 A.M., Calvert House; 10:30 A.M. and 12 00 M, Breasted Hall;5:00 P.M., Bond ChapelDaily7:30 A.M., 12:00 M., and 5:00 P.M. at Calvert HouseMondays 12:00 M (Joseph Bond Chapel)SOCIETY OF FRIENDSSundays11:00 A.M.—57th STREET MEETING HOUSE, 5615 Woodlawn Avenue12 NOON—Conversation, singing or forum12:45 P.M.—“Potluck” LunchUNITARIANSundays11:00 A.M.—FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH, 5650 Woodlawn AvenueUNITED CHURCH OF CHRISTSundays11:00 A M.—UNITED CHURCH of HYDE PARK, 53rd Street and Black-stone Avenue11:00 A M.—HYDE PARK UNION CHURCH, 5600 Woodlawn Avenue11:00 A M.—KENWOOD UNITED CHURCH of CHRIST, 4608 Green¬wood AvenueSponsored by The UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS COUNSELORSOctober 4, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3f§ I1. ?■**■? ■»Letters to the Editor of the Maroon' ' - 'A*.'Congratulations . . .TO THE EDITOR:Congratulations on last Friday's“new” Maroon. I realize that thebusiness of rejuvenating a newspa¬per is difficult, however you areoff to a fine start. Keep up thegood work, and if you get achance, do the shopping on Satur¬day afternoon (but not if it will in¬terfere with your Maroon work,which is obviously more impor¬tant). Best of luck.ELLIOT A. MEDRICHWas Editorial B.S.?TO THE EDITOR:The (presumed) editorial onpage ten of the September 30 issueof the Maroon is a masterpiece ofgeneral education. After mention¬ing a “truly democratic universi¬ty” it progresses to: 1) summarizethe apologists of historical powergroups, 2) give a brief history ofuniversities (why use details whena generalization will cover the en¬tire subject), 3) present the philos¬ophy of bureaucracy, 4) state thaLU of C is not U of I, and 5) give asolution to all the problems of |higher education in modern Ameri¬ca.All this could have been stated inone sentence: we think a demo- jcratic university is most likely toproduce what is generally consid-!ered an educated person and ademocratic country. This has the jdrawback of revealing that certainassumptions are being made andwould not successfully conceal thevagueness of the author, or au-!thors, unknown.There are questionable state¬ments. First: “This legitimacy canonly really be given to a decisionthat is made democratically.” Con- jsider: A country has a very clearlydefined minority of ten per cent.There is a referendum on whetherthey should be exterminated. It is passed by a sixty-forty margin. Itis all very legitimate, then, andwhat obviously is better, democrat¬ic.Second, there are two claims fordemocracy: 1) it would counteractthe trend toward large, impersonalschools, and 2) counteract increas¬ing government infringements onthe sanctity of the universities. Iam not convinced, particularly asno arguments are advanced (aconcession to our minds whicheven the Radical Right grants).Further, I believe this country islargely a democracy already (de¬mocracy does not equal freedom),writh its associated evils, one ofwhich is a leaning toward completeequality, which by removing indi¬viduals’ peculiarities (skin color,dissenting opinions, etc. . . .) tendsto reduce everyone to an equiva¬lent cipher.If the Maroon staff wishes itseditorials to be considered otherthan as space fillers and b.s. prac¬tice sheets, it would be useful forthem to think about what they wishto say, to eliminate irrelevantflourishes, and desist from bandy¬ing words like democracy, equali¬ty, capitalism, and student govern¬ment. These terms have been de¬void of meaning for many years,thus statements leaning on themwithout further clarification areequally meaningless.R. W. LYMNPolitics SubordinateTO THE EDITOR:Is it possible for there to be ademocratic University of Chicago? jI don’t know, but I think the ques¬tion merits more considerationthan it has been given or can, in jone letter, be given. Let me begin jmy discussion of the question bypresenting my credentials.I am a fourth year student in theCollege whose first visit to the!campus was during the Cuba tele- ■gram affair, whose first year sawthe Football Sit-In, second saw the |emergence of SDS in the New YorkTimes and Time and hence on the ■national scene and the contem- i porary change of Polit to SPAC,whose third was the year of the; rained-out Sleep-Out and the inter¬minable Sit-In. In all this time Ihave been a politician; I have hadthree years of policy statement,decision making, speech making,and execution in the HendersonHouse Council. Such actions taketime; my grades last year will wit¬ness my claim. None but he who isinvolved in the continuing life of anadministration can suspect the ef¬fort spent in such a political life. Ifmy assertion seems extreme, ex¬amine it in your own experience orconsult a former SG member.But at the University of Chicago,students spend most of their timestudying. That comment is not soredundant as it may appear—in¬quire of your friends at otherschools and discover a surprisingdisparity. At Berkeley (alter ego ofUC) students live a far less aca¬demic life than we do. This raisesa conflict that I, at least, havebeen unable to resolve. The attrac-l tions of politics are not easily for¬gone.Now, my experience has been ona small scale, and I would expecteffort to be increased as the\opera-tions of politics increase in scope.Yet, that has been untrue of themore spectacular events on cam¬pus. Campus-wide movementshave been simply that: beginningin the general exchange of opinionsand proposals they move throughsome sort of mass happening totheir end (regardless of the even-tuation of the protest) in the dis¬persal of the group. It is the clas¬sic pattern of demagoguery; byplaying on the opinions and psy¬chologies of their peers, some menrise to leadership and then dis¬charge the accumulated socialforce into some model catharsis.Perhaps it is the futility of suchmovements which attracts so fewpeople to them. Anyway, the great—maybe the only—achievement ofSAR was to break the old pattern,to gather a group of students morethan a meagre fraction of thewhole, to unite somewhere between10% and 20% of it (through a com¬mon experience in the Ad Build¬Guard rmg$ in eighteenkarat gold ancf enamel,may be worn in pairs,or singly. Pole green, darkgreen, royal blue, turquoise,j!: red, white or black.*40. the pair or $20. each.Tiffany&Co. Merritt Willeyloves goodconversation.All he needsis an opener. ing) into a political entity, a possi¬ble source of action. For a trulypolitical life is not one of move¬ment after movement, but offorces directed beyond the successor failure of one or another socialpurgation. Hence politics requirestime; I have noted the problemthereby created.Thus the issue appears. Can stu¬dents bring themselves to work atpolitics? Will they conserve theirforce for action or spend it innova-like outbursts? This school isdedicated to excellence, second-rate solutions won’t do. If students| so decide they can (I think) makeUC a “democracy”—but can they,doing so. remain students? If not,we should value the more highlythe permanent administration ofour community as a delegation ofresponsibility we regretfully de¬cline. If anyone here is not first astudent, let him not invade for al-I ien ends these University pre¬cincts. The city and the nationneed his efforts, let him not squan¬der them where politics must besubordinate.MIKE SIEMONA False DichotomyTO THE EDITOR:Dean of the College WayneBooth, in a speech to incoming stu¬dents, used false rhetoric which; seems to cloud an issue in need ofclarity and distinctness at this mo¬ment, not the frivilous treatment; that it received at his hands. Theissue is the position of the studentqua seeker after truth and knowl¬edge in the University communityand qua citizen in the iarger politi¬cal community. The relevant por¬tion of the speech follows:My second point will be thatthose of you who have come tothe university with the inten¬tion of reforming it by turningall of its efforts to politicalgoals are up against a passionthat is bigger than you are—namely, the love my colleaguesand I feel, and that you willshare, for learning for its ownsake.Dean Booth is considering whathe thinks an important problem.This is the second of only threeconcerns in his speech. However,determining exactly what the prob¬lem is becomes difficult because ofBooth’s formulation. This is an at¬tempt to point out the confusingquality of his words by analyzingtheir content. Booth talks of two715 NORTH MICHIGAN AVE.CHICAGOPHONE 9A4-7500for Illinois deliveryplease add 4% Stale sales tax r. KING OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC.. LOUIS . NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON kinds of people 1) “Those of you”who want to reform the Universityby turning all of its efforts to polit¬ical problems (his italics) and 2)my colleagues and I who lovelearning for its own sake (my ital¬ics). There is a dichotomy here; itis a false dichotomy. He opposestwo groups: the politicos and theintellectuals. The construction ofsuch a dichotomy allows the listen¬er, or reader to weigh two possi¬ble types and easily reject one.The politicos are bad; the intellec¬tuals are good. Certainly, no stu¬dent at the University of Chicagowants all of its efforts turned topolitical goals, and, just as certain¬ly, each student has a love oflearning for its own sake. Simplyby applying to the U of C the stu¬dent has opted for membership inthe group of intellectuals describedby Dean Booth.The question, then, is: To Whomis Mr. Booth’s rhetoric addressed?The politicos who are attacked inthe speech are straw men whosedefenses are not only down, butnon-existent. If the formulation ofthe issue as presented in the firstparagraph is correct; i.e. whatshould the position of the studentbe in deciding the relationship be¬tween knowledge par se and poli¬tics, then nothing has been saidwhich contributes to an answer ofthis question. This is possibly rhe¬toric for its own sake. Socrates’admonition to Phaedrus in the Pla¬tonic dialogue is apt:... to all of them (the rhetori¬cians) we are to say that iftheir compositions are basedon knowledge of the truth . . .then they are to be called . . .a higher name, befitting theserious pursuit of their life.Phaedrus, The Works of Plato,p.327.Talking about a problem of generalconcern in terms which have norelationship to truth is no way touncover a knowledge of the true.It will be helpful to make an at¬tempt to talk about real studentswho can easily be found in thisUniversity. The student body isknown for its political interest. Atthe same time, it is well known forsharing this passion for knowledgeDean Booth only talked about asbeing that of “my colleagues”(The “us” which he opposes to“those of you”). The politicos onthis campus are also intellectuals.The also take very seriously thestatement made so often that oneof the ends of education is to de¬velop good citizens as well as(Continued on Page Five)OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SHORELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000CUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCALI MRS. BLIXT AT 782-2118FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES. INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. 60602CHICAGO MAROON October 4, 196611 Students As Politicos(Continued from Page Pour)educated men (the formulation istrite but expresses a great deal oftruth). The student does not see hispolitical activity as destroying hiscapacity for or even interfering inany way with his intellectual activ-FOR BETTER GRADES GETTHE STUDENT'S HANDBOOKLearn effective techniques for handlingreport & speech presentation, memorizingof material, and problem-solving. Tech¬niques explained simply and briefly.Price: ‘ $1.00. Free details. Write to:Walter Golbsch lager, Dept. M-10, 279East Houston Street, New York, N.Y.10002 ity. The most recent example ofpolitical activity on this campuswas an attempt by students to pre¬serve the capacity of the Universi¬ty to act independently of the polit¬ical goals of the surrounding socie¬ty. Students Against the Rank wantto prevent the use of grades and: ranking, at best inaccurate indica¬tors of intellectual activity, for po¬litical purposes, i.e. deciding whois drafted into the war effort andwho is not. Real students are morecomplicated than rhetorical fig¬ures. Political activity itself is an; expression of one aspect of the stu¬dent’s search for knowledge and| truth.BRUCE D. MANNMost likely to succeedwith witand 4Orion" IFree instructions!The poor boy never had it so rich!This one you can knit yourself shows skinny ribsand a large helping of fashion's newestpeek-a-boo rage. All it takes iswonderfully washable, shape-keeping "Nantuk" yarnof 100% Orion® acrylic . . . and you!Send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to:Room 1806CN, National Hand KnittingYam Association, Inc,,15 East 26 St., New York, N. Y. 10010.• D* Foul t«r«d T.M,The University of Chicago ChapterOFInter-Varsity Christian FellowshipPRESENTS A NON-CREDIT COURSE INThe Philosophies of History in a Christian PerspectiveThe lecturer will be Dr. John Warwick Montgomery (A.B. Cornell;B.L.S., M.A. Berkeley; B.D., S.T.M. Wittenberg,- Ph.Q. Universityof Chicago).All interested persons of all religious or irreligious persuasionsare welcome every Friday starting October 7th, 7:30 p.m. in IdaNoyes Hall.The-course will be concerned with the interpretation of the his¬torical process, with reference to the historical philosophies ofthe great Western thinkers, both Christian and non-Christian: forinstance the text book discusses such views as those of Herodo¬tus, Thucydides, the Biblical writers, Augustine, philosophers ofthe “Enlightenment,” the 19th-century Positivists, Spengler,Toynbee, Croce, Barth, Bultmann, and Tillich. Classified Ads"I sold my soul through Chicago Ma¬roon people-grabber classifieds,” saysDr. Irving Faustus. YOU TOO can sellwhat you want, or let your needs beknown through the Maroon. CALLMl 3-0800, ext. 3265. Ask for Lee, ourhelpful, friendly ad-taker. Special ratesfor students—50 cents per line firsttime, 40c each repeat: others, 75c first,60c repeat. Call 10-4 Mon-Fri. Deadline:11 am day before first insertion.PERSONALSCongratulations to Sandy Koufax from [the Maroon staff.Art exhibit of large photo-murals“Contemporary Art from the Syna¬gogue” through Oct. 20th Hillel House5715 Woodlawn open daytime & eves.Mon-Fri.THE OTHER SIDE Coffee House—Livefolk & baroque music—open every night’til 2 am. 1603 E. 63rd.Writers Workshop PL 2-8377Pop Art Movie Posters $1. At the BookCenter, 5211 S. Harper. They're Great!Open 7 days a wk. til midnight.Euy your N.Y. Times daily & Sundayat the Book Center in Harper Court.Open til midnight, 7 days a wk.KAMELOT Restaurant. 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC studentsPerformers! The owner of a Porter,Indiana Coffee House is looking for !talented folksingers, musicians etc., toentertain in his establishment. Write jDavid Sander, 212 Lincoln Ave., Porter, 1Ind., or call 219 • 929-4300CONTACTWEARERS!This one solutiondoes all three! Will share expenses of ride to Bostonany weekend. 697-3224Dave Satter & Dave Gum pert—whatHappened?Smyrd Ball Sat. (8:15) Ida NoyesA.R.N.O R.* is coming!Male rm-mate wanted Rent $25. Willtrade for your rm. 667-7345Wanted to rent: One garage in the vi¬cinity of 53rd and Drexel Phone Mr.Wayne at 684-4181 and if not in leavemessage.CO-OP APTS. FOR SALE67th St. overlooking lake; 6 rms. 2baths Irg. master bedrm; plenty of clo¬set space. Priced to sell. Owner 752-0973LAKE" VIEW3 bdrm. 2 bath low assessment Boardapproval call Mrs. Pobuda 667-2062 orDOrchester 3-6563.BROWNE & STORCHINCORPORATEDCHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWWRITERS NEEDED in all fields forbook review magazine. Call Bryan Dun¬lap or Ted Hearne at Extension 3266 or3269.Editorial experience? The ChicagoLitarary Review needs you. Call 285-0825 or 643-9894Advertising agent needed for risingmagazine in the Chicago area. Parttime work only. Commission. Perfectfor graduate student in business whoplans a career in publishing or advertis¬ing. Call Ted at 285-0825 or MI 3-0800Ext. 3265SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS63rd and Ellis. Prescription Center -We carry a complete line of cosmetics,drugs, and tobacco; school supplies andsundries 10% discount to students withIDs.FISHER 440-T 3 wks. old $250." 463-3585& 521-0460HOUSES FOR SALE8;2 Rm. tri-level, 2Va baths, 7 yrs. old.SO 8-8328TO RENTU 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. un-furn. apt. Students or Faculty. Quietbldg. Owned by U. of C. Grad. 2-3 rms.$77.50 up incl. free gas, electricity,parking. Private bath. Elec. Refrig. Se¬lected tenants. Openhousing.See Williams 6046 Woodlawn5118 Dorchester Avenue Newly dec.turn, & unfurn. apts. for rent- l'/2 &2’j rms. all w/private batfh & kit. Rent¬als $115-$130 mo. No children CallMU 4-1469Furnished room in elevator building,close to campus. International Houseand Illinois Central. Call before''*! am.FA 4-0111 or after 5:00 pm. Referencesnecessary. Nicely fum. rm. for empl. gent, orolder male student. 1 blk. from U of CCampus & I.C. Avail now. Call 288-4389,7-9:00 AMJOBS OFFEREDRM. & bath in exch-max of 20 hr.-wk.babysitting- cooking facilities avail-Mustenjoy small children 643-4401Good typist needed for Dr's, office todo secretarial work, M-Th. either partof full time. 873-4700Ad space salesman, perm, pos., for lo¬cal and regional publication $150 salary& bonus. Average man earn. $14,000.Co. Benefits. 372-5914EARN FREE TRIP TO EUROPE Oneof the largest and oldest firms dealingin European car travel seeks campusrepresentative. Must be serious, enter¬prising; preferably married graduatestudent, European travelled. Sendresume and reasons for applying.TOURS IN EUROPE. INC.555 5th Ave. N.Y. 17 (212)PL 1-3550Grad Students—3 wk. Travellnig assgn.,interviewing in Illinois outside Chgo. Op¬portunity to make $370. $270 is guaran¬teed. Expenses paid. For interviewndg,Write Box H48 Chgo. SUN TIMES, 401N. Wabash.FOR SALECHEAP FURNITURE CHEAPOne double bed, poor cond., free; onenon-bed (mattress and spring), free.More-or-less easy chair, $2. Call DaveAiken, 288-7961 or x. 3265.HARPSICHORDS, by Sabathil. Beauti¬ful instruments at reas. prices. 384-6796& 752-8251'60 VW-Body fair Engine good—$450 orbest offer 667-0757HARPSICHORD - 2 manual Sperrhake 7years old. Robert Legler, 6830 W. WellsSt. Milwaukee, Wis. 53213.Underwood Elec. Typewriter, stan¬dard ofc. model $180 Perf. cond. CallBA 1-2166 eves. UC ext. 4425 days.m m*' 4 - < a -Julius Caesar will be pre- i■ sented by the Wilson Drama4 Guild October 19. 20, and 21I in five performances. Therewill be matinee performances; Wednesday, Thursday, and1 Friday at 3:15 pm and even- :ing performances on Thurs-and Friday at 8:30 pm.The productions will be I!| presented at Wilson CollegeI Theater, 6800 S. Stewart. f|: Tickets are $1 and can be| reserved by calling 488-0900,ext. 61 or AB 4-5243.A ONE STOP SERVICE• PROFESSIONAL CLEANING(1 hr. service, 7 days a week)# COIN-OPERATED DRY CLEANING(All clothes are pre-spotted and pressing available)o COIN-OPERATED LAUNDERETTE(9x12 shag rugs; soft water always)1. WETS. lensine’s special propertiesassure a smoother, non-irritating lenssurface when inserting your "contacts.”Just a drop will do it.2. CLEANS. When used for cleaning,Lensine’s unique formula helps retardbuildup of contaminants and foreigndeposits on lenses.3. SOAKS. Lensine is self-sterilizing andantiseptic. Ideal for wet storage or "soak¬ing” of lenses. Reduces harmful bacteriacontamination. 493-3320• • • iCARRYING CASE. Exclusive removablecarrying case free with every bottle of (Lensine. The scientific-and convenient—way to protect your contacts.LENSINE fromThe Murine Company, Inc. •...oyo cor* tpocialiat for 70 year* J 1218 E. 53rd ST.Open Daily, 7 am -10 pmOctober 4, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Music ReviewMartinon Lights UpGlorioskies!! to quote comicdom’s 47 year old waif withthe pupilless eyeballs. No more coronaries are ever againto be incurred scaling the dizzying heights to the Galleryin Orchestra Hall on Friday afternoons. No more nose bleedsupon arriving up top. The ChicagoSymphony Orchestral Associationhas just invested two million dol¬lars in a massive renovation of thehall, and along with the elevators,plush carpeting, and velvet-lined,padded seats (now about as com¬fortable as those in any decent sec¬ond-run movie house), the refur-j> # ,bishing was aimed at improvingcertain acoustical problems thathave plagued the musicians andaudiences for years.AS A RESULT, the concert stagehas been enlarged so that, with allof the newly-acquired rugs andother sound-absorbent materialsthroughout the hall, the string sec¬tion has a fuller and richer tone.Who knows, we may yet be able tohear it through those massive tuttipassages in which the trombonesand t"’ja let fly with such vocifer¬ous abandon.In addition, Orchestra Hall has anew coat of paint “appropriatelyand for all times” (so said the pro¬gram notes) named Orchestra 66.But Friday afternoon, it didn’treally make any difference wheth¬er the hall was painted off-white orfuschia; music director Jean Mar-tinon lit the place like a romancandle with his blazing, white-hotreading of Carl Nielsen’s Sympho¬ny no. 4 "The Inextinguishable".The music of the Danish compos¬er Nielsen (1865-1931) has neverbeen basic repertoire in any sense,and one cannot help but be mysti¬ fied that he has never caught onwith the musical public. Nielsen’smajor creative span, during theteens of this century, encompassedthe great symphonic tradition ofthe nineteenth century Germans,and he can best be characterized,as far as I’m concerned, as thelogical successor to the Schubert-Mendelssohn - Schumann - Brahmstradition.Although he’s as fluent at spin¬ning out long and convoluting mel¬odies or building a powerful dec¬lamatory utterances for full or¬chestra as the best of them, Niel¬sen’s greatest preoccupation, (andthis undoubtedly stems from thefact that he was a twentieth centu¬ry composer,) was his peculiarharmonic bent and his consistentuse of progressive tonalities andthe like.ALL OF HIS music is of the old-fashioned romantic school at itsbest with clear-cut planning in hissymphonic development and a cer- '■tainderseness of speech which nev¬er abuses his listener’s stayingpower.The Fourth Symphony is decid¬edly not Nielsen’s best or mosttypical. It is probably his mostderivative work, and as such, itmade a good choice for those whoare unfamiliar with his idiom. Tothose of us who are, however, oneglaring fact stood out: Jean Marti¬non has a positive genius for Niel- Concertsen’s music and his performancewas quite possibly as close to per¬fection as one could ever hope for.Rhythm is the keynote to conduct¬ing Nielsen, and Martinon’s drivingpropulsion positively mesmerizedboth orchestra and audience withthe spirit of the thing.All this, plus his surprisinglymoving account of Beethoven’sConsecration of the House Over¬ture (what else!) and his interpre-tively unremarkable but spiritedperformance of Beethoven’s FourthSymphony suggests that, leapin*lizards, we may have quite anattractive season ahead of us downat old (new) Orchestra Hall.Ed Chikofsky57th Street ChoraleOpens New SeasonThe 57th Street Chorale starts itsfourth season tonight with a re¬hearsal open to all interested sing¬ers.Preparation of the Mozart Re¬quiem for a November “OpenSing” to be led by Chicago Sym¬phony Chorus Director MargaretHillis is the first project.Works by Bach, Handel, andStravinsky are also on the Choralerepertoire list. The director, Chris¬topher Moore, will be available at4 pm today in the Chorale office at1174 East 57 Street for auditionsand further audition times will beannounced at rehearsal.Chorale participation is open tothe University community. Rockefeller Displays Liturgical BanneAt Pro Musica Renaissance ConcertAn estimated 3000 people attend¬ed three Sunday concerts given bythe Renaissance Wind Ensemble ofthe New York Pro Musica markingthe formal opening of an exhibitionof 44 liturgical banners at Rocke¬feller Chapel.Earle Ludgin, a University trus¬tee and Chicago advertising execu¬tive, donated the 44 liturgical ban¬ners to the University in memoryof his wife.THE BANNERS created by Nor¬man Laliberte for the Vatican Pa-villion, at the New York World’sFair, will be known as the MaryMacDonald Ludgin Memorial Col¬lection.The banners were exhibited inthe Shrine of the Immaculate Con¬ception in Washington D.C. after1 the Fair, and were permitted tcmain for the wedding of ]Baines Johnson and Patrickgent because of what Ludgin febe their great beauty.The general consensus, accing to the Reverend E. SpeiParsons, dean of Rockefeller cel was that the banners wereexciting and colorful additiorRockefeller chapeLTHE BANNERS depict the liiChrist, saints, and events fromNew Testament. The banners aage five by fifteen feet andmade from a variety of fab:They were cut by the artist,sewn by hand and machine.They are, said Parsons, anteresting blend of classical liti1 cal and contemporary art.”Lehnhoff School of Music and DanceAnnounce* special classes and courses to coincide with U of C school calendafor University students.MUSIC STUDYOutstanding faculty, composed of members from the Chicago Symphony, GranPark, 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 — conrposition.Planned curriculum for children also in music and dance.BU 8-4347 1438 E. 57th StNEW TENT BOOKS USEDSTUDINT SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS —NOTE BOOKS — STATIONERY—ATTACHE & BRIEF CASESSPORTING GOODS —STUDY LAMPS—GRAPH PAPERS — NY TIMES — MAGAZINES— GIFT ITEMSTYPEWRITERS SOLD—RENTED—REPAIREDPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORE1311 EAST S7tli STREETIT0M HOURSi DAILY 0iOO AM te 4i00 PM » Sunday 10 AM to 4:00 PM* • CHICAGO MAROON • October 4, 1966*Ii*i* By popular rtijucsi...Illinois Bell Telephone and WTTW repeat a television seriesThe Spread of the Eagle“The Spread of the Eagle” is acorrelation of three Shakespeareandramas which recount the violentstruggles accompanying the rise ofthe Roman Empire.The series began on September13 and is continuing each Tuesdayevening at 8:30 p.m. over WTTW/Channel 11. It consists of threetragedies — Coriolanus, JuliusCaesar, and Antony and Cleopatra. “Spread of the Eagle” was pro¬duced for the British BroadcastingCorporation by Peter Dews (Whogave us “An Age of Kings”) andnarrated by Emlyn Williams, notedplaywright and actor.Below, you’ll find a complete pro¬gram for the reshowing of this dis¬tinguished series. Keep it at handand join us each week as the sagaof ancient Rome unfolds.PROGRAM FOR THE SPREAD OF THE EAGLEWTTW CH. 11 8:30-9:30 p.m. TuesdaysCoriolanus shown in SeptemberJulius CaesarThe Colossus Acts One and Two Oct. 4The Fifteenth Acts Two, Three, Four Oct. 11The Revenge Acts Four and Five Oct. 18Antony and CleopatraThe Serpent Acts One and Two Oct. 25The Alliance Acts Two, Three, Four Nov. 1The Monument Acts Four and Five Nov. 8Illinois Bell TelephonePart of tho Nitionwid* BoH Systom Triangle Theatrical Productions - Franklin Fried Presents1966-67 CONCERT SEASON HIGHLIGHTSTHE RIGHTEOUS BROTHERSRAMSEY LEWIS TRIOOctober 21 & 22 — 8:30 PM — Arie Crown TheatreTHE MAMAS & THE PAPASOctober 30 — 8:30 PM — Arie Crown TheatreIAN & SYLVIANovember 4 — 8:30 PM — Orchestra Hall~~FRANCE'S FOREMOST POPULAR SINGERCHARLES AZNAVOURNovember 10, 11, 12 — 8:30 PM — Orchestra Hall$6.50, $5.50, $4.50, $3.50THE LOVIN’ SPOONFULNovember 23 — 8:30 PM — Arie Crown TheatreJOHNNY MATHISNov. 25 & 26-8:30 PM - Nov. 27-3 PM^ Arie Crown TheatreStockholm Marionette Theatre of FantasyTHREEPENNY OPERA(in English)Nov. 18, 19, 23, 24, 25, 26 - 8:30 PM - Little Theatre$4.50, $3.50Unless otharwisn specified tickets are $5.50, $4.50, $3.50, $2.50. To orderby mail send a check or money order to Trianglo, Dept. C, 211 E. ChicagoAve., Chicago, IN. 40611. Enclose a self addressed stamped envelope and25< per order for handling.Tickets at Ticket Centra, 212 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago and all MontgomeryWard and Crawford Stores.for Service on Groups of 20 or More Contact Miss Block 787-8862.TAMCAM-YWNAMERICANRMVAURAMTM AM H 9*9 PMOK OCRS TO TAM OUT1»18 Boat Med R. MU 4-1 M2 “Ho HUM. A km weeks ago V Thantannounced he would not aeek anotherterm as #1 Boy at the UN. Oh, so sadit was/The weeping and wailing couldbe heard all the way to 2nd Avenue.Now Usee urn, now U don’t. Last weekthe world’a greatest Thant announcedthat he would serve the UN until asuitable successor is found. Who, hum,is suitabler than U? Will the 117 Na¬tions Oi The W or Id allow their Organ-l7fl/fVin ?iA Wo.For o free copy of ikecurrant itsue of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writeto Dept. CP-2, 150 E.35 St.. N. r. 16, N. y.PERGAMON PRESSScientific Publishersseeks students with science background at either the senioror first year graduate level to work as part-time field editorsat The University of Chicago.To Apply Contact: J. F. Highsmith,Pergamon Press122 East 55th Street,New York City, 10022« Paul CiinMtProductionMidwest Premiere Stoarts Wednesday, October 5“RESERVED SEATS AT BOX-OFFICE OR BY MAIL!""RMlBMaWj ML M mMARGOTFONTEYNROYAL nureyevBALLETEXCLUSIVE SHOWtm'INESTAGE ]180 N. DEARBORN STREETmmm 372-0971 ■RUMJBfJUWiBrRWPm0RCHL ME27. MIC.Sunday Am Thursday Eva*... .$2 80 $2.80 $2.20Friday and Saturday £*•*.....$356 $350 $250Friday and Saturday t*n.WrSWEO, SAT. I SIM « 1M Mlfar Thaatra Parties ar Oraup Saba lafarnatieaCall Narriat Watt at 372 0971 ar 332 0949 HARPER THEATER 5238 S. HarperMARTHASCHLAMMETWO WEEKS ONLY OCT 4 - 16SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTfrtroto- We»kdoy P'.te '3 00SUNMATZ30 SUNEVE7:30 TUESEVE.8 00 WOEVE8.00 THUtSEVE800rurOIMANCE AND PUCESWEXEN0 0NIY >3 90f«1EVE830 SATEAtiVEVE700 SATLATEEVE1000 SAVEUP TO 50% WEEK « STUDENTS tl cnDAY Oni y 51.50ONLY$$40 STUDENTSFRI& sat * only' j $2.00Hqrpcr Theater Box Office Open Now-6 PM DailyILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANYWE'RE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE . . .9 NOW, private telephone service IS available to University of Chicago studentsliving in dormitories and university apartments.9 The University ARRANGED facilities within each building to permit IllinoisBell 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 in the Metropolitan calling area, within Illinois.TO ORDER YOUR PHONECALL 734-9100October 4, 1966 9 CHICAGO MAROON 9 7by popular demand, return engagementTHE SAN FRANCISCO MIME TROUPBACK THIS THURSDAYafter playing to a full house Saturday“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 CHRONICLEThey deal with American Culture in aciduous terms, without mincing words or cottoning to moss-overlaidSEATTLE POST-INTELLIGEconventions *..“One of the greatest things in the show is a short, prize winning pop-art film called “Dem Watermelons”in ivhich 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"Obscene and lewd." DENVER POLICE DEPT."Epic" STEVE KINDREDTHURSDAY. OCTOBER 68 pm. MANDEL HALL (57th & University)Tickets at the door, Reynold's Club Desk& Maroon Office.$3 Gen. Ad., $2 Students.Chick-stud scene from Cracker Barrel8 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 4. 1966