Chicago Maroon WEEKENDEDITION75th Anniversary YearVol. 75 No. 23 The University of Chicago Friday, November 18, 1966Ann Arbor StudentsDecisively Reject aFormation of RankANN ARBOR, Mich. — TheUniversity of Michigan stud¬ent body voted overwhelminglyWednesday against continua¬tion of a class rank for use by theSelective Service.Out of n/*07 votes cast in the re¬ferendum, 6.389 students, or64.5 per cent, opposed the rank.Men voted against the rank. 3.347 Members of the Page Committee at the start of yesterday's opento 2.754. Women cast 3,042 ballots meeting. (Photo by Bern Meyers)against the rank, and 764 in favor. . . ’ ■ :...v .. .. .54.9 per cent of the men and 79.9 ofthe women voted to abolish therank.SO FAR, THE Michigan adminis¬tration has refused comment on thereferendum results.There has been little studentreaction reported yet, but HarveyWasserman, editorial chairman ofthe Michigan Daily, reported thatmost students were “elated.”Students for a Democratic Soci¬ety had tentatively scheduled a sit-in on the draft, to be held earlynext week. A meeting was called jfor tonight to decide whether to;hold the sit-in. Earlier this week,the administration issued a ban onsuch demonstrations.OTHER QUESTIONS on the ref¬erendum asked what kinds of de¬ferments should be granted by theSelective Service and what kinds ofservice should be required, i Page Committee Meetsby Roger BlackIn a two-hour open meeting yesterday afternoon, the PageCommittee on student-faculty relations tackled the complexquestion of exactly where students should stand in the deci¬sion-making process of the University.The committee agreed that students should have some voice, thatstudent opinion should somehow beexercised, and that the present roleof students in Universitydecision-making is unsatisfactory.Properly called the Student-Faculty Committee on Student-Faculty Relations, the committee isreferred to after its chairman. Dr.Robert G. Page, associate dean ofthe Biological Science Division.Presiding in absence of Dr. Pagewas Manely H Thompson, Jr., pro-Udall To Discuss Congressional ReformRepresentative Morris K. Udall. (D-Ariz.) will discuss re¬cent efforts to reform and reorganize Congress on Monday,November 21, as the guest of the University’s Center for fessor of philosophy. Yesterday’smeeting—the second open meetingthe committee has held—attractedfew more than a dozen people.The meeting opened with a consid¬eration of why the present systemof representation of student opinionis inadequate. Lack of respect orinterest for Student Government,together with its apparent ineffec¬tiveness, was cited.Turning to the discussion of“government by consulta¬tion’’—that is, with no direct stu¬dent voice, but instead direct chan¬nels to the administration, the com-(Continued on Page Five) Students OrganizingNo-Draft Conferenceby Jeffrey KutaA group of 32 students here, “unitedvin their determinationto refuse military service in Vietnam,” are organizing a DraftResistance Conference to be held Sunday, December 4.The date corresponds to the opening day of the InternationalConference on the Draft, sponsored \by the University, which will bringtogether 125 students, scholars, andexperts for a four-day discussion ofpossible alternatives to the currentdraft system.LIKE STUDENTS Against theRank (SAR), which has refused tonominate a delegate to the Univer¬sity’s conference, organizers of thestudent conference charge that theUniversity’s conference will notconsider what they call the mostimportant issue, the Vietnam war.“The University-sponsored con¬ference has been called to discussnot the war in Vietnam but the bestmethod of tapping the country'smanpower reserve to support thatwar,” stated Guy Twyman, third-year student in the College and oneof the student organizers.“There is little evidence thatmuch attention will be paid to therole of individual conscience in thedecision of killing other humanbeings.”All Signed StatementThe students have all signed astatement making public their op¬position to serving in Vietnam. Thetext of the statement, which ap¬peared along with a list of signa¬tures in the Maroon Friday, No¬vember 11, reads:“The undersigned men of draftage are united in their determina¬ tion to refuse military service inVietnam, and urge others of likemind to join them.”TWYMAN NOTED that the sec¬ond part of the statement leavessigners open to prosecution for dis¬seminating information to avoid thedraft, but claimed that this wouldbe unlikely.The Draft Resistance Conferencecomes as a result of meetings heldby the draft resisters on the lasttwo Monday evenings in Ida NoyesHall. Twyman disclaimed any con¬nection of the students with SAR.Speakers InvitedRepresentatives of various ap¬proaches to draft resistance havebeen invited to the resisters’ con¬ference, according to Twyman.They include Arlo Tatum, of theCentral Committee for Conscien¬ces Objectors; Charlie Cobb, ofthe Student Nonviolent Coordinat¬ing Committee; Staughton Lynd. aprofessor at Yale University; andDavid Mitchell, a convicted draft| resister who is currently appealinghis case in New York.Twyman further attacked theUniversity’s conference as being “aclosed conference with few draft-age men which will be able to suc¬cessfully ignore individuals." He(Continued on Page Five)2 to 3 Year Renewal ProjectPolicy Study.Udall will speak on “Congression¬al Reform” at a lecture-seminar at4 pm in Room 122 of the SocialScience Research Building.AN ADVOCATE of CongressionalPresident Beadle To FaceStudents Today at MandelPresident George Beadle willface the students today whenbe delivers his “special re¬port to students on the state ofthe University” at 3:30 pm inMandel Hall.No advanced text of Beadle’saddress was made available, butit was learned that the talkwould be similar to, but not thesame as, his speech to the FacultySenate early this month. Thespeech will lie followed by a ques¬tion period.Although a Presidential addressto the student body is unprecedent¬ed, administrators sought to em¬phasize yesterday that there wasno special reason for Beadle’sspeech.“He’s delivering the speech be¬cause he decided that it might be away to give his thoughts on theUniversity’s problems and submitthem to some give and take.” saidone high administration official.In the past, Beadle has been al¬most entirely inaccessible to stu¬dents. He rarely makes publicstatements directed to students,seldom meets with student leaders,and virtually never grants inter¬views with student press media. and election reforms, Udall favorsthe revision of the seniority systemin Congress, and has sponsored abill which would increase the termsof representatives from two yearsto four years.SPEAKING OF the need forCongressional reform in his latestnewsletter to constituents, Udallsaid:“The failure of our national par¬liament to revise its antiquatedprocedures and machinery is, inmy judgment, a loaded gun pointedat American democracy itself. Justa few years ago, the people ofFrance, in disgust with their inef¬fective Parliament, re-wrote theircountry’s constitution to give theexecutive, President Charles deGaulle, nearly unlimited power,“Our situation is not yet that badbut it is steadily becoming worse.If our congressional paralysis con¬tinues. we too may awake someday to find a strong executive com¬pletely overriding a weak and di¬vided legislature.”After his speech, Udall will bethe dinner guest of the Fellows ofthe Center for Policy Study. Dry Woodlawn Awaits RehabilitationWilliam Vaughn MoodyCommittee will present Yev¬geny Yevtushenko readingfrom his own poems on Tues¬day, Dec. 6, at 8:30 pm inMandel Hall. Tickets will bedistributed free beginningMonday, Nov. 21, at the Rey¬nolds Club Desk. by Harold KletnickA five block area on 63rd:Street between KenwoodAvenue and the Illinos Centraltracks, which recently lostmost of its taverns and liquorstores in a prohibition referendum,has gained a rehabiliation pro¬gram announced this week by theDepartment of Urban Renewal(DUR).Middle-income housing for 46families and 24 individuals willtake the place of the 36 buildings,presently in the area, of which 32are termed “blighted” by DUR.The renewal will be carried outbetween the IC tracks on the eastand Kenwood avenue and the alleywest of Dorchester on the west,from an alley north of 63rd streetto 64th street.The stretch along 63rd from Ken-wood to Dorchester was voted dry jin a referendum November 8.ALTHOUGH a redeveloper hasnot yet been assigned to the pro¬ject. it is expected to be completedwithin 2-3 years-The project, which is still in theelementary stages of planning be¬cause the property has yet be beacquired, is viewed optimisticallyby Woodlawn leaders. Rev. Arthur jBrazier, President of the WoodlawnOrganization, said “the project willhave a tremendous stablizing influ¬ence on the area.”Will Cost $3.6 MillionThe gross cost of the project is i Looking east along 63rd St. and "Baby Skid Row," soon to bethe scene of urban renewal. (Photo by Charles Packer)expected to be about S3.6 millionwith the majority of the money icoming from the Federal Govern¬ment. The Department of Urban !Renewal is asking the Federal Gov¬ernment for $2.8 million, which it,intends to couple with City of Chi-cago funds of $857,000. This money. ;however, is not yet appropriated.ALTHOUGH A redeveloper hasyet to be chosen to build the proj¬ect, several requirements havebeen placed on the housing. Theproject will not be%a high rise like the Robert Taylor Homes project,but something like townhouses, orsingle homes.The homes will be designed formiddle income ($4,500 to $9,000)people and will be rented apart¬ments at about $95 to $125 permonth for the average family. Bra¬zier, although pleased however,said he would like to see the pricego down to $80 for a two bedroomapartment. “I do realize though,that there may not be sufficient(Continued on Page Two)Profs Form CommitteeAid for Italy Asked Woodiawn Advance: Newell is AwardedThe Stritch MedalUlrich Middledorf, formerchairman of the UC art depart¬ment, and ah international com¬mittee of art historians havevoiced an urgent appeal for aid inrestoring works of art damaged inCharles H. Swift DiesOf Heart Attack Here the floods of Northern and Centrali Italy on November 4.IAs a result of this appeal, a na¬tional Committee to Rescue Italian| Art (CRIA) has been established,j CRIA is working to raise funds for! recovery of monuments, docu¬ments, and works of art. The com¬mittee is chaired by professorBates Lowry of Brown University.Mrs. John F. Kennedy is honorary| president.TWO ART HISTORIANS, FredHart of the University of Pennsyl¬vania and Fred Licht from Brown,made a personal report on thedamage. They estimated that $150million worth of damage occurred,and that it may take 30 years torepair.Charles H. Swift, associate pro¬fessor emeritus of anatomy, diedearly yesterday at the age of 85.Swift passed away shortly afterhe had been brought to the emer¬gency room of Billings Hospital.The cause of death was attributedto a heart attack.He was one of the oldest mem- ] According to Hart and Licht, anbers of the University community j oily film, caused by destruction ofstill living. Before his retirement in fuel tanks, has disfigured many of1948. Swift had been associated | the works. In addition, mud, gar-with the University for more than bage, sewage, and other debris has47 years. piled up in many buildings.Swift enrolled here in the 1890'safter hearing William Rainey Har¬per speak in Louisville, Kentucky.While at the University he receivedfour degrees—a B.A. in 1903. a B.S.in 1906, and M.D. in 1910, and aPh.D. in anatomy in 1913.He was born August 17. 1881, inHenry County, Kentucky. He was amember of the American Associa¬tion for the Advancement of Sci¬ence and the American Associationof Anatomists.Swift and his wife. JuliannaStreid. resided at 5725 S. KimbarkAve. Services are being arranged.SKIXMAS in COLORADOII09#LEAVE CHI. DEC. 17*»i «:J0 PMARRIVE BACK IN CHI. DEC. 24ttiIncludes all train & bus transportation,all lodging & tow tickets.NORTHWESTERN UNIV. SKI GROUPCall Marge Abrams between6:00 pm & 10:00 pm at 328-2068STUDENTS—Part Time Jobsavailable now. Call at thePersonnel Office956 E. 58th StreetMEET YOURPERFECTDATE!You too can be amongst thethousands of satisfied adults.Let Dateline Electronics com¬puters programmed for womenages 18 to 45 and men 18 to55. Take the guess work out ofdating.Continuous matching with anew expanded program with en¬rollment fees reduced to $3.00for adults ages 18 to 27, and$5.00 for adults over 27.For quick results send for your question¬naire today. No obligation. Strictly coivfldential.NameAddressCityDATELINE ELECTRONICRESEARCH INC. CMP. O. Box 349, Chicago, IIL40*45For Add. Info Call 371-3133 i Works by Cimabue, Giotto, Bru-I nelleschi, Michelangelo, and An¬drea del Sarto figure prominently| in the list of art-works damaged.Also. 300,000 volumes in the Nation¬al Library were ruined or dam¬aged. Those which can be salvagedmust be dried in special ovens.Other collections of ancient arms,musical instruments, and docu¬ments, were also harmed.THE UNIVERSITY of ChicagoArt Students’ Association is seekingthe support of other students andfaculty on campus. Thq ASA needsclerical help, individual contribu¬tions, and assistance in fund¬raising. Contributions, which aretax-deductible, may be sent to theart department, and made out toCRIA, Incorporated. People wish¬ing to lend assistance are asked tocontact the secretary of the art de¬partment, in Goodspeed Hall, ext.3879. (Continued from Page One)funds to make this possible,” headded.To Aid RelocationWhile the project is being builtthe Department intends to provideinformation on certified housing tothe residents of the buildings thatare to be demolished “We’re notgoing to tell these people where tolive, but we will make every at¬tempt to get them into standardhousing,” commented Ronald Wos,administrative assistant to the De¬partment of Urban Renewal.PROPERTY for the 63rd andDorchester project will begin earlynext year, and work might beginon clearance and construction bynext October or November, Wossaid. He cautioned that delays of¬ten occur in renewal programs, butthis project may be finished in twoto three years.When told of the proposed lengthof time that the project would take.Rev. Brazier stated “You knowhow it is with urban renewal inChicago. I do think, though thatthis will help Woodlawn quite abit.” Brazier also expects there tobe more urban renewal work donein Woodlawn in the near future. Another UC scientist has re¬ceived an award for excellencein his field.Dr. Frank W. Newell, re¬nowned researcher in eye diseasesand chairman of the ophthalmologysection of the University, has beennamed to receive the 1966 Stritchaward medal from Loyola Univer¬sity.DR. NEWELL, a member of the* tiMoliere's greatest comedy"Tartuffe”k starring EROME KILTYwith OGAR DANIELSOpening Nov. 25CONTINUING THRU DEC. 18GOODMAN THEATRECOLUMBUS DR. A MONROE ST.. CE 6-2338^SUNDAY. NOV. 20 2:PMA Reading of HENRIK IBSEN'S Last PlayWHEN WE DEAD AWAKENPresented in the series of weekly Sunday afternoon readingsbyREADERS FROMTHE OTHER SIDE1603 EAST 53rd STREETAdmission FreeAH you need toknow about Europein 3 words.1.Trans2. World3. AirlinesSend the coupon and we’ll tell you all about Europe. Study tours, fun tours,independent and group tours. We’ve got the dope on car rental or purchase.Youth hosteling and camping. And we’ve got the 1WA 50/50 Club forhalf-fare flights in the U S. Remember, TWA has direct service from majorU.S. cities to the big vacation centers in Europe, Africa and Asia.Send for details now ITrans World Airlines, Inc., P.O. Box 25,Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10017Please tell me about Student Travel to Europe.NameSchool.Address.City .State. .Zip Code class of 1939 of the Stritch School 0|Medicine of Loyola, will be honoredat the school’s annual award din-ner November 22, in the ConradHilton hotel. More than 1200 Chica¬go business and professional lead¬ers are expected to attend.Dr. Newell is a Bathe of StPaul, Minnesota. After receivin«his medical degree from Loyola, heearned a master of science degreein ophthalmology from the Univer¬sity of Minnesota.‘UTY salonExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingendTintingmo L IM It. WV 1-8103LENSIHEbvMUKjNE 'EXCLUSIVE!Free removable carryinfcase! Provides hygienic,convenient caretor yourlenses.One solution forcomplete lens careLensine's special propoit***•saure a smoother, nerv-irFitatinglens surface when inserting your“contacts.” Just a drop orwill do it. When used tor cleaning,a unique Lensine formula help*retard buildup of contaminantsand foreign deposits on tb*lenses. It’s self-sterWam* andantiseptic. Ideal for wet sterag*or “soaking" of lenses, tensinereduces harmful bacteria con¬tamination.seeFREE CARRYING CASE.removable carrying case withevery bottle of Lensine. Tt**"scientific—and convenient—wayto protect your contacts.LENSINE frtmThe Murine Company, b*-M,ty« care specialist for 70 ye**«2 • CHICAGO MAROON • , November 18, 1966Surprise MoveWick Asks House Autonomy TalksIn a complete reversal Of the arrival of what Wick termedQtnHpntQ! “positive autonomy.” This he de-past policy, Dean of^ ^ j fined as self-regulation rather thanWarner A. Wick has invitedthe Inter-House Council (IHC)to meet with him and three otherdeans to discuss ‘‘house autono¬my.”In a memorandum to the IHC,Wick said that his group consistingof himself, Dean of the CollegeWayne Booth. Spencer Parsons,dean of Rockefeller Chapel, andGeorge Schultz, dean of the Gradu¬ate School of Business, welcomed■'.'vv--W--V' lack of regulation, which he called“negative autonomy.”Wick was writing in answer toIHC discussions, with members ofthe administration that began sev¬eral weeks ago on the issue ofhouse autonomy. As the proposalwas written by the IHC, it was sug¬gested that “social rules becomethe province of the individualhouses, social rules being definedas’ any rules that are legal and af- feet only the house and its visi¬tors, subject to University veto.”One question that has arisen hasbeen whether all houses are inter¬ested in gaining such autonomy.Most of the apartment dorms anddorms with singles appear willingand eager to assume responsibilityaccording to IHC secretary JohnMoscow. The women’s houses atWoodward, however, are not at allsure that they want autonomy, andthe IHC is waiting to see how thewomen’s houses will finally vote onthe matter, he said.Text of Wick's Statement to Inter-House Council MembersI understand that the Inter-House can be accomplished for the wel- 1 University TrusteesApprove Apartmentsby Gloria Weissman I construct Pierce II, other construe-The University Board of' wlu be ione th' ?<?*J I Park area. He contended that theTrustees has voted to approve, chief reason Pierce II has not beenthe advance plans for a student decided on is that students claimapartment building a. 57th and' “£Dorchester. ment” and said that if people wereThe final decision on the building ;to consider the design more care-fare of the University as well as ofthe individual residents. On the oth¬er hand, prospects for house auton¬omy in the negative sense aloneare meagre, for the University asan educational institution necessar-Council has been discussing “autonomy” for the Houses and forgroups of Houses. This is goodnews. While the Inter-House Coun¬cil has been meeting, anothergroup, consisting of Wayne Booth,Dean of the College; Spencer Par ily has a profound interest, which itsons. Dean of the Chapel; George cannot abdicate, in the style of lifeShultz,School of Business; and I have happens in the house system canbeen meeting at the request of the not help affecting for good or ill the I “‘•"lu—*“ lulc‘-«wuse councilProvost to consider the | values as well as the more narrow-! 7 n r?Presentatives of the OfficeUniversity’s broad interest in the ly academic achievements of those K®su?ence IIalls and Commons,regulation and the gaulity of life who live in it. I Bus,ness Manager for Campusin .h. house system. Our discus-: We believe that autonomy in the| wlTf, will not be made until workingdrawings have been submitted bythe architect and bids accepted forthe contract, but according to Deanof Students Warner A. Wick, everyeffort is being made to ready thebuilding for occupancy by next fall.Wick noted that the original planwas to build simple student apart¬ments as cheaply as possible, but itwas found that these would cost asmuch per capita as Pierce Tower.The building planned for this fall isto be an experiment to see whetherthis concept has enough promise towarrant further building.“In order to make the cost to theand have invited several thoughtfuland well-informed members of theUniversity neighborhood to discussthese problems with them. Also,the presidents of the women s . 1M urucr it> matte me cost 10 meouses_ have been meeting regular-i student comparable to presenty, as has the Inter-House Council, j dorm rates, we would have to sub-Further, apart from questions of sidize them about as much as weie cnapei; ueu.ge cam.m auuicaie, in me style ot me | rules, we are glad that arrange. j ^ the dorms,” said Wick.Dean of the Graduate ; that prevails on its campus. What ments have 5een made for regufar ’meetings of the Inter-House Council The basic apartment unit in the57th and Dorchester building willconsist of one very large bedroom,two smaller bedrooms, a livingroom, a bathroom, a storage andtrunk room, a kitchen, and a diningroom which will close off from the fully, they mightminds about it. change theirNew Reynolds ClubHours Now ApplyNew, extended hours for the Rey¬nolds Club lounge and pool roomwent into effect this week.The new schedule shows an in¬crease of 16 hours a week. TheReynolds Club is now open Mondaythrough Friday, 9:30 am to 11:30pm. Saturday, 12:30 pm to 11:30pm, and Sunday, 4 to 8 pm., .1 ^ ... * j ...VIlIMViO vfi UIC UliltX UIsions have also focussed on the positive sense can grow best at the the Dean of Students and the Of 11; . . . , ... • .r ..... I i », _ ... _ ana me ut-1 living room to be used as a fourthtopic of autonomy in the Houses, level of the individual Houses, per-1 fice of the Dean of the College Be-We wonder how closely parallel haps with the help of faculty as- cause many separate authoritiesour two sets of discussions have with all other kinds of policy are concerned with food servicebeen. Clearly, the best way to sociates. It is not the sort of thing and the physical conditions in thefind out would be to meet to¬gether.Before sketching the direction inwhich we four deans have beengoing in our thinking—it involves aconsiderable shift in our habits—Ishould like to make a few remarksabout the meaning of autonomy Ject l<> veto by a superior body-inthat may reflect the perspective of ^his ease, by a Court Council, by aa professor of philosophy. i Council representing the women sas usage, is a condition in which .. ¥T . _ .. * / ... . .lives bv rules that he sets for 1 the University wh<> are ultimatelylives by rules mat ne sets lor | responsible to the Board o{ Trust.ees. Still, there is a very importantdifference between regarding alower-level decision as final unlessit is set aside by a higher authorityand the contrary habit—to whichwe have been too muchthat can be distributed from the top house system, it has been extraor-downwards. At the same time, as dinarily hard to bring grievances tomaking bodies in the University, the attention of those who are in jrules adopted by one may affect the best position to correct them1the interests of others and of the quickly. Regular meeting of allUniversity as a whole. To the ex- concerned should go far toward re¬tent that they do, they may be sub- solving these difficulties.Warner A. Wickonehimself. But this may be conceivedeither positively, with emphasis onself-regulation, or negatively, withemphasis on the absence of exter¬nal restraints. Both the positiveand the negative concepts of auton¬omy can apply to the same situa¬tion. as in the case of the tradition¬al ideal of the wise man who. asmaster of himself, has no need ofexternal regulations; for whetherthey existed or not he would contin¬ue to live according to the samerational pattern. Far from beinglawless, he is a law to himself. Butwhere the negative concept of au¬tonomy applies, the positive one addicted—of placing the initiative :at the higher levels so that the indi- jvidual Houses could make decisions ;only within limits set in advance !for the whole system. We shouldlike to encourage a shift to the for-;mer method of dealing with our1problems.We are pleased to note that prog-!ress is already being made. Somemay not; for a brute or a brutal-: <>f the women’s Houses have beenized man lives by no rules what¬ever. As Thomas Hobbes describedhim, his life is solitary, nasty, brut¬ish and short.If, as I am confident, you werethinking of autonomy in the posi¬tive sense, we agree that we needmore of it than we have. It is verymuch to be desired. If the Housesand groups of related Houses suchas the Woodward Court Council,the Burton-Judson and Pierce Tow¬er Councils, the women’s Houseswith their special interests, and theInter-House Council itself are pre¬pared to undertake the responsibili¬ties of positive autonomy, much taking an active interest in theproblems of their community life VERY GOOD PAYWOKK IN HYDE PA«KFACULTY WIVES-STUDENT WIVES4 to 40 Hr*. For WooVFlexible SchedulePart Time — Full TimePhone Extension 3284 to ArrangePersonal Interview on Nov. 23rd bedroom. With four students toeach apartment costs would runconsiderably more than the dorms,said Wick, while with five students,the rent approximate present dormrates.The leases for these apartmentswill be a year-round basis. Studentswill, however, be able to subletthem during the summer.Wick also said that before anydecision is made about whether to WOMEN'SCLOTHESDISCOUNTEDSalesmen's sample jackets,slacks, skirts, blouses, overblouses and sweaters.sizes 7-12HRS: SAT. 8. SUN. UNTIL XMASEVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT8481 SO. CONSTANCE 3T5-M28CUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSING/KEY PUNCHINGCALL MRS. BLIXT AT 782-2118FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. 60602EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Klmbark Plaza1200 East S3rd StreetKYda Park 3-8372ftvddirt sad Faculty Diccaunt l:/\! I,illl | BRENDAN BEHAN'STHE HOSTAGEDirected by James O'ReillyMANDEL HALL - 8:30 PMNOVEMBER 18-19-20FRIDAY - $2.00SATURDAY - $2.50SUNDAY - $1.75Student-Faculty Discount 50*TICKETS: REYNOLDS CLUB DESKUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATREINFORMATION: PHONE EXT. 3581November 18, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Slum Housing BasisFor Legal Actionby Richard RabensStudents and specialists in urban housing law yesterdayheard tenant unions praised as a way to stable communities,!in the opening session of a conference on tenant-landlordrelations at the law school. iOver 250 persons are attending ble, terrible problem of supply of!the program, which ends today. It low-income housing.”was organized by a group of I ....... .. . ,third-vear UC law students who MANN STATED that law must;are. thev sav. “not particularly in- j balance mterests-offering econora-terested in corporation law, but Ilc ,nc*?t,.ves to landlords to im-1rather in law as applied to social Pr°ve, the,ir Property as well as di-.and political areas.” feet legal action to tenants. Withj the reapportionment of state legis-1; latures, he commented, state gov-j At Wednesday Assembly MeetingRosenberg Elected SG Vice Presidentby Joan Phillips jdent code’ and the student biU of The recommendations of the re-Student Government (SG) at| Elected to two-year court terms j store space to provide*rnor*its assembly meeting Wednes- were Marylyn Ireland, a first year for books by removing the doth0™day night elected David Rosen-!}a''r1ft“d®“t’ a"d foan hI’hd^P*, a sectioD- a. suggestion that one "?J ° : fourth year student in the College, more copies of ev#»rv urberg, (GNOSIS), a third year Heathcote Woolsey (Pete) Wales, a quired or recommendedstudent in the College, its new , second year law student, was elect- lists be stocked in the general^n^Tenant Unions LaudedGilbert Cornfield, a Chicago at¬torney who has worked with var¬ious tenant unions, said tenantuntons are a mechanism forchange—for achieving “stable, inte¬grated communities instead of seg¬regated slums.” Slum-dwellers’sense of lack of control of theircommunity has been relieved insome measure by such unions,which can meet with landlords toexplore grievances, he said.CHANGES IN law, he explained,will only occur if the “expectationsof the participants change. Theseunions help people become effec¬tive participants.”He added, “After all, there is not ernments can proceed to supplement federal programs in theseareas.Third Student ConferenceThis conference marks the thirdstudent-planned forum at UC, withthe Law School’s conference onconsumer credit and the poor andSocial Service’s conference on theguaranteed minimum income aslast year's precedents.The subject, according to Berna-dine Dohrn, co-chairman of theplanning committee, proved to beeven more “timely” than originallyplanned last spring, with the arriv-enough profit in rents to rehabili- al of Dr. Martin Luther King intate buildings but certainly enough Chicago during the summer. Philipto make them safe and livable.” j Hablutzel, another co-chairman,Call for Public Housing pointed out that the topic has be-Nancy E. LeBlanc, assistant di- come a significant basis for “legalrector of the legal services unit of action, political action, and justMobilization for Youth, New York, plain action.spoke on public housing. “Privateownership of low income housing isno longer practical,” she said.“There is a need for public or sub¬sidized, non-profit association own¬ership of housing.”The lack of enough living unrts inpublic housing has led to greatproblems in admission and eviction vice-president. Former vice-presi¬dent Steve Silver, (GNOSIS, re¬signed upon leaving school ear¬lier this quarter.Rosenberg overwhelmingly de-feated Peter Ratner,(Independent), a second year stu¬dent Steve Silver, (GNOSIS), de¬feated Peter Ratner, (Indepen¬dent), a second year student inthe College, and a representa¬tive from Pierce Tower, by avote of 15-3. Also nominated for thevice-presidency was Alan Bloom.(Independent), a fourth year Col- section, and institution of a proce¬dure by which overall bookstorepolicy would be set and eo-1 ordinated by an academic body.I Bloom introduced a resolution re¬questing the administration to rec¬ognize football as an intercollegi-1T„Kor,,N c,„. ate sport, “provided it is treated inIllinois (Champagnestudent the same sPirit as other sP°rts thatdent Senate committee on stuaem ]ed to a one-year term.Other measures passed by the as¬sembly include a resolution ex¬pressing support of the Universityof Illinois (Chicago Circle) StudentGovernment committee on academ¬ic freedom and the University ofrights in their fights against speak¬er bans on their campuses.The assembly also passed billssetting up a folk concert program,establishing several group andcharter flights and calling for alege student and representative balance sheet of the charter flightChamber Concert HereThe UC Chamber Orchestra, un¬der the direction of Leon Botsteinwill perform a concert on Saturdayevening, November 19, in Hutchin,— ... ~ son Commons, at 8:30 pm. The pro-!of tenants, she pointed out. Her of- J gram will consist of Haydn’s Sym-fice tires to protect tenants and ap- phony no. 44 "Trauer", Leon Kirch-plicants against arbitrary deci- ner’s Toccata, conducted by Thom-sions, based on the standard of as Rosenwein, and the Rameau“desirability,” by housing officials, 1 Suite, Les Indes Galantes. The conshe saidMann on LegislatureIllinois state representative Rob¬ert E. Mann spoke of possible legis- ilative remedies. The Illinois Gener- jal Assembly, he commented, “Is!reputed to have some of the great¬est minds of the eleventh centu-:ry.” Due to the huge gap betweenurban and rural interests, he said,urban administrators run to Wash¬ington. “Aid from mal-apportionedstate governments is simply notforthcoming.” he said.Mann, who represents the UC,anea, also cited the difficulty of the !“dual housing market—one white :and one nonwhite”—and the “terri- cert is open to the public withoutcharge. from New Dorms. Bloom declinedthe nomination in favor of the“most qualified man.” When askedwho this was. Bloom declared“you'll soon find out.” Bloom thenvoted for Rosenberg.A resolution calling for five stu¬dent members on the undergradu¬ate disciplinary committee barelypassed in the assembly. SG presi-1dent Tom Heagy broke a tie by vot¬ing in favor of the resolution. .Presently there are two student jobservers on the disciplinary com¬mittee, along with five facultymembers, one from each collegiatedivision. A student brought beforethe committee may request thatthe student observers be excludedfrom the hearing.The SG resolution calls for fullmembership on the committee fora student from each of the five col¬legiate divisions with the provisionthat a student brought before thecommittee may exclude the studentmembers from his hearing.Also at Wednesday’s meeting, theassembly elected students for three jof the four student vacancies on thestudent - faculty - administrationcourt, which hears cases arisingout of disputes concerning the SGconstitution and by-laws, the stu- are currently recognized.” The billwas tabled until the next meeting.Heagy announced the existenceof assembly vacancies in the grad¬uate departments of humanitiesand social sciences, and the gradu¬ate school of social service admin¬istration. Students in these depart¬ments who are interested in serv¬ing in SG should call x3274. Thevacancies will be filled by the exec¬utive committee.program for the past three years tobe presented to the assembly, andmodifying SG’s Orchestra Hall tick¬et service.Under the new procedure, a serv¬ice charge of 15c per ticket for theFriday afternoon student ticketsand 25c per ticket for all other tick¬ets, with a maximum of 40c on anyone order, will be charged. For¬merly the rate w'as 10% of the costof the order.In addition, a resolution enablingSG to hire a part-time director of Soviet Jewry—And What of the Fu-special projects to run the speakers ture?” at Hillel House at 7:30 pmHillel Talk Tonight OnSlate of Soviet JewryRabbi George B. Laeberman tRe-form) of the Central Synagogue ofNassau County, New York, willspeak on “The Present Status ofand the folk concert programs waspassed “to insure efficient opera¬tion of these programs.”Another resolution which waspassed endorsed the report of theSG consultant board on the book¬store, mandated the campus actioncommittee chairman to communi¬cate the text of the report to thestudent-faculty committee on thebookstore, and urged the immedi¬ate implementation of the report’srecommendations. ; this Sunday.As one of the leaders of a study; mission to Russia last summersponsored by the Central Confer¬ence of American Rabbis, RabbiLieberman became the first West-’emer permitted to address RussianJews in their own synagogue.Rabbi Lieberman’s talk is beingsponsored by Hillel and the JewishReform congregations in HydePark. His report is open to thepublic.OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SH0RELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000JESSELSOrSSERVING HYD* PARK POt OVER 10 YUMWITH THK YKRY BIST AND PRRSHUTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 1-9188 1940 E. ISrtfNotice About Autumn TextbooksOn Friday November 25th, it will be necessary for the Text¬books Department of the Bookstore to begin removingAutumn Quarter textbooks from its sales-floor shelves, inorder to provide space for incoming Winter Quarter books.Before November 25th please try to purchase any AutumnQuarter texts which you may still require.Textbook DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue @3ivy YOU CAN SHOPRIGHT AT YOURDOOR STEP FOR- i < 'Breakfast orLunch at . . .WALGREENFOR PRESCRIPTIONSWORLD FAMOUSWIMPY GRILLSYOUR MONEY S WORTH ATWOOLWORTH'SCHICAGO MAROON • November 18, 1966*Draft Resisters Organize Anti-DraftConference, Tax Defends UC Parley(Continued from Page One) I age to democracy or individualsaid the student conference not ] conscience, while providing the!meet behind closed doors, and minimum that the military needs.”:would deal with the war and the CLAIMED he thought theindividual. idea draft resistence behind the"SOL TAX, dean of the Univer- j student conference—a completelysitv Extension and coordinator of different premise—was a good one.the University conference, denied * d very much like to hear theTwyman’s charges. j discussion myself,” he said.He claimed that ten to 20 percent j Conference Purposesof the delegates to the University | According to Tom Gusherts, aconference would be students of: third-year student in the Collegedraft age, and that all views— ! and another of the student organi-including those of consciencious ob zers, there are two purposes behindjectors—would be represented. j the student conference:‘ Even though the Quackers and • “To make it widely known andpacifists object to the Vietnam ] accepted that many persons are re¬war. they’re still coming to the fusing to fight in Vietnam.Conference. They’ll be taking part j • “To publicize a new draft svs-,in discussion on how to minimize j tern whereby persons may be clas-;the injustice of the present system. ; sified as conciencious objectors on“The only people who won’t be at j moral as well as politicalthe Conference are the ones who j grounds.”say, T don’t want to talk about; RICHARD FLACKS, an assistantanything/ or who would lie in professor of sociology, is the first jfront of a troop train.” j to agree to speak before the stu- :Premises Different | dent conference.Tax agreed that the basic prem-! He praised the student organizers |ises behind the two conferences are j for starting “a new kind of aboli-different. but defended the value of tionism, parallel to the abolitionism ;the University conference. j that led to the realization that slav- i“Our Conference is on the draft, ; ery was illegitimate in our soci- inot on the morality of Vietnam ! ety.”service. We’ve always had an army' He pointed out that the,studentssince the country was founded, and are not draft-dodgers, but are pre- jwe must assume for the Conference pared to take the consequences ofdial we’ll have one in the future. j their actions. This, he reasoned, is“So the problem is to sit down the only way a widespread move-and figure out what kind of draft ment for the abolition of the draft jsystem would cause the least dam- 1 could be started.Page Committee Considers Student Role(Continued from Page One)mittee said that going to the ad¬ministration is now about the onlyway of getting anything done.Jerry Lipsch, chairman of the SGcampus action committee, said thatthis works well enough for faculty,but that students have a hard timegetting themselves heard.Gerhard Meyer, a committeemember and professor of econom¬ics, agreed. “I have never been aparticular intimate of administra¬tion, but I know that in any case itis faculty-based and even faculty-controlled.“There are, of course, as there ( are in any bureaucracy—areaswhere faculty interests are com- ]mon with student interests. But theemphasis is on the faculty.”The committee then consideredreasons why faculty have an easier ■time influencing administration.!One factor mentioned was that;there are simply fewer of them; |another, that it is harder to keep !good faculty members than goodstudents.Warren Coates a graduate stu¬dent in economics and also a mem¬ber of the committee, said there issuch a diversity of student opinionthat it is often difficult to definet. Calls Party Action PurgeSimon Says His Dumping Hurt Demsby Ellis LevinOutgoing Cook County Board President Seymour Simon said in a Maroon interview Wed¬nesday that the defeat of the Democratic Party locally stemmed, at least in part, from theparty’s failure to reslate him.Simon was “dumped” last Spring by the Regular Democratic Organization when, in a sur¬prise move, the Party nominatedHarry Semrow, former Postmasterof Chicago to run for County BoardPresident. Previously, Simon hadbeen considered by many to have apromising future that might haveincluded running for Mayor ofChicago or Governor of Illinois.Semrow was defeated in theNovember election by RepublicanSheriff Richard Ogilvie.. “MANY PRECINCT workershave told me that if I had been thecandidate for Board President, wewould have won and carried the of¬fice of Sheriff to victory,” Simondeclared. “There has to be a conse¬quence to a purge, that was whatDemocratic Party did. It was anact of raw political power and thevoters don’t like this.”Hurt Semrow's ChancesThe Democrats’ failure to reslatehim hurt Harry Semrow, the Par¬ty's nominee, according to Simon, j“Semrow made no attempt to cam¬paign on the record of achievementof my administration. If he had, hewould have been asked why he wasrunning instead of me. He didn’tcampaign on issues relevant to theBoard. His campaign was dominat¬ed by personality-exposure. This,was a serious election, and the peo¬ple were interested in the issues,not in personalities. The tone ofSemrow’s campaign was that if thepeople were to hire a corporatepresident, they should hire him in¬stead of Ogilvie, but they were nothiring a corporate president, they jwere electing the President of the |Cook County Board of Commission¬ers.”Referring to his “purge” by theDemocrats, Simon said, “In a tensesituation, it is a political blunder to‘rock the boat’ and that is exactlywhat they did, they ‘rocked the Seymour Simon„ >•;> ■ ■ *■ • • • •' *'S-y.y ■-sboat’ and I say those who partici¬pated in it blundered.”Simon pointed to the low turnoutamong Negro voters as furtherproof. “Of all the Democratic of¬fice-holders, I have stood most forimproving the lot of the Negro,through making improvements inthe public aid system and in Coun¬ty Hospital.” Simon also pointed tothe defection of the Jewish votefrom the Democratic Party andwhat he saw as the ambivalence ofthe Polish community,TURNING TO the Novemberelection results in general, Simonsaid, the war in Vietnam, inflation,the scandals in the Sanitary Dis¬trict, and the ages of some of theDemocratic candidates all figuredin the Democratic defeat in Chica¬go. In addition, Simon saw, “insome areas a concern over openoccupancy, and in other areas, afeeling that the commitment madeby Democratic office-holders toopen occupancy was not a seriousone.”Speaking of State Rep’resentatives Abner J. Mikva, Adlai E. Stev¬enson III, and Anthony Scariano“Young Turks” who have bucked the Democratic Organization. Si¬mon declared that the party neededmen of their type “who would givethe party vigor, strength, and hopefor the future. These men willbring more votes than a lot of oldwar horses . . . than some of theI bullv-type leadership I could: name.”No-Shcw MeteorsCause No DismayI The largest meteor shower in 130j years, open hours for women untildawn, and roasted marshmallowsdrew clusters of diligent students toI the point on the lake at 53rd streetj Thursday morning.; From 1 to 5 am they crouched; against the concrete slabs, clam-! bered among the rocks, and, in the! case of one embarrassed boy, felli in the water. Part of the entertain¬ment was arguing about Nietzsche! beneath the advance-warning radar' installation.They seemed so completely en-i grossed in natural phenomena thatalthough the sky was so overcastj that not even permanent, let alone! falling, stars were visible, no one! seemed to care.—Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbark! we sell the best,and fix the restPIZZA, PIZZA, PIZZA.Nicky’s Pizza And Restaurant"ROYAL PIZZA BY NICKY THE UNCROWNED PIZZA KING"Fast Delivery Hot from the Oven 1208 EAST 53RD STREET%V/AAV.V.V,W.V.,.VAV.,AMWA\VA\W.%V.V/.VVM,.VA,,W.,.V.,.V.V.VA,.WJ,(jNICKY'S TAKE-OUT MENUAssortments Small Medium LargeCHEESE 1.40 2.20 3.20SAUSAGE 1.65 2.50 3.50ANCHOVIE 1 65 2 50 3.50ONION 1.50 2.30 3.30PEPPER 1.65 2.50 3.50MUSHROOM 1.65 2.50 3.50BACON 1.75 2.60 3.60HAM 1.75 2.60 3.60CHICKEN LIVERS 1.75 2.60 3.60PEPPERONI 1 85 2.85 3.85SHRIMP 2.00 3 00 4.00GROUND BEEF 1.65 2.50 3.50COMBINATION 2.50 3.75 5.00EXTRAS ADDED 35 .50 .75RIPE OLIVES EXTRA 35 .50 .75ONIONS EXTRA 15 .25 .35We Put Cheese on All Our PizzasWe serve Royal Crown Cola, Diet-Rite Cola and Nehi flavors. CallFA 4-5340November 18, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5UC Should HoldRank ReferendumReconsidering University draft policy really involvesdeciding on two separate questions. They are: 1.) what is theright policy for the University to assume morally and or prac¬tically, and 2.) who should decide what is the right policy.Clearly the first question is complex, and just as clearlythe answer to the second is self-evident. The people whoshould decide what the right policy are those people mostaffected by it — the students whose class standing may bea factor in their being sent to war.At the University of Michigan students have voted inrecord numbers against ranking and there may be a sit-inat the Ann Arbor campus early next week if the Universityadministration ignores the results of the voting and continuesits present draft policy.The voting at Michigan — no matter how the Universityadministration reacts — is still a far more important steptoward reconsidering draft policy than anything that has hap¬pened here thus far this fall. It is important because a voteby students is a vote by a relevant constituency, as opposedto the votes takers in the UC divisions among faculty membersw ho are only peripherally involved. David L AikenSegal Decision a Threat to DissentJeffrey Segal, a student atneighboring Roosevelt Universityand formerly a full-time memberof the national staff of Studentsfor a Democratic Society, hasbeen sentenced to four years inprison for failing to report for in¬duction in the army.Segal did not burn his draftcard. He did not sit in at any Se¬lective Service office. These “of¬fenses” have recently beenenough to send other students inNew York and Michigan, to jailfor a couple of years.His offense was, seemingly,working for SDS in New Yorkduring 1965. and failing to respondto a notice from his Chicago draftboard during this time. He saysthis was on the verbal advice of aclerk in the New York SelectiveService office, since he was hop¬ing to appeal the notice. Segal hasfiled an application for Conscien¬tious Objector status, but this wasnot considered in his trial.In any case, Segal’s arrest onhis return to Chicago in spring1965, came while he was actingettoreiarv SnS Tl nnlitipal IpaHprc nnnnsed to thecame after his participation inmany student protests againstUS. involvement in wars, theChase-Manhattan bank’s aid toSouth Africa, and a variety of oth¬er matters, both important andminor.In announcing Segal's sentence,federal district court judge JamesParsons admitted that he wasmaking the sentence heavier thanthe formerly customary two-yearterm for draft cases, presumablyto make Segal an example forothers who might think of tryingto exercise their First Amend¬ment rights of free speech andassembly by protesting the draftof U.S. war policy.Even if Segal is legally guilty,it is clear that the stringency ofhis sentence is related to his partactivity in protests. As a state¬ment from the Roosevelt Commit¬tee to Defend Jeffrey Segal putsit, “He is the first full-time organ¬izer in opposition to the war to besent to the penitentiary. Hence, aprecedent has been set in thelength of the term, and student war must now fear prosecutionfor their beliefs.” This may berhetorical exaggeration, but theincreased stringency in sentencesfor draft violations does give onepause.An appeal is now in process. Ifyou wish to help meet the ex¬penses of the legal actions, youmay send your contribution to theJeffrey Segal Defense Committee,care of the Roosevelt Torch, 43oS. Michigan Ave., Chicago. Only asmall amount has so far been col¬lected in the few days since theappeal has been made at Roose¬velt. More help is needed beforethe sentence begins, scheduled forDecember 1.(A postscript to the FBI person incharge of dipping this column forinsertion in my “security file”: Pleasespell my name right. You might alsohe interested that I have known Segolfor about four years, through hisconnection with the Roosevelt Torah,and have great respect for him as aperceptive critic of U.S. policies.Give my regards to i. Edgar nexttime you see him.)We propose that the University schedule a binding studentreferendum on the question of ranking for the middle ofWinter Quarter. This is the only way in which a fair andan honest policy can be established.The weeks before the vote can and will, if a great enough ^ Aff//Veffort is made, become a period of exhaustive discussion of m m David H. RichterCynic Disappearingthe issues involved and their ramifications.The weeks preceding the vote can also provide an op¬portunity for groups like the Page Committee to publish theirfindings and an opportunity for partisans to reiterate anddocument their arguments. To this end the Maroon pledgesits full cooperation.Up until the vote, the administration can express itsviews — and there may be more than one administrationview — the faculty can express its views, through voting inthe divisions and other means, and all other concerned partiescan state their case. The final decision could then be madeby the people who must make it — the students.It hardly needs pointing out that other schools have takenmore decisive action on the ranking question than has theUniversity of Chicago. The situation is in a kind of limbohere as faculty members at a faculty-run University takevotes on draft policy and the long awaited “reconsiderationof draft policy” is dragged out month after month withoutstudents being involved in any real sense.A carefully planned campus wide referendum can providea decision that, even if not liked by all those involved, canstill be accepted by them. A referendum, after all, is asclose to democratic legitimation of University draft policy asanyone is going to get.But besides being democratic, a referendum has consider¬able symbolic value. For one thing it reserves the University’sright to refuse to comply with the requests of the SelectiveService. This is important because the action of a large,prestigious University like this one could make it easier forother schools to change their policies. Perhaps even moreimportant, the University’s action in allowing a binding stu¬dent referendum can be used as an example by students oncampuses across the country who want a voice in this andother decisions.A referendum is not a penect instrument. The issues arevery involved and the worst thing that could happen would bea vote based on a dialogue based on cliche’s and oversimplifi¬cations. The most important part of the referendum will haveto be the weeks that precede it. That will be the time whenall of those concerned will have to make an extra effort tocut through the worn-out arguments and hackneyed rejoindersand look instead for the complex answers to complex questions.Last spring’s sit-in if it did nothing else, generated atremendous consideration of the issue of University participa¬tion in the Selective Service System. Almost no one couldremain aloof under the circumstances and the campus isfamiliar with the arguments for and against ranking. In ad¬dition to having been exposed to arguments about ranking,the University community has an important interest in seeingthat 4he issue is settled and the issue of ranking will neverreally be settled as long as students do not make the finaldecision. The American cynic is a vanish¬ing breed, and, indeed, he wasnever a terribly numerous crea¬ture in the first place. The opti¬mistic and unpolemical climatenurtures him poorly, and strangeto say, his survival has poorerodds here than the Europeanvariety, as witnessed by the com¬parative popularity of La Roche¬foucauld and Shaw.Can anything live in this freenation unless it garbs itself inrobes of sable earnestness? One istempted to hope so, until the ludi¬crous spectacle of Hugh Hefnerhoning human hoggishness into aphilosophy (or Timothy Learyputting oh the mana of a priest todispense lysergic acid com¬pounds) is forced into one’s con¬sciousness.All of which brings me to tworecent American cynics, onedead, the other moribund so faras their influence upon the spiri¬tual life of this country is con¬cerned. The corpse is JamesBranch Cabell; the incurable withrisu mortis already grinning fromhis warty face is Henry LouisMencken.What is curious is not that Cab¬ell is dead but that Mencken isstill if barely alive. Curious, hell:it is almost unbelievable. His es¬say “On Being an American”should alone have sent the lynchmob to his door. How dare he tellthe truth about American poli¬tics? Consider, he invites us, acampaign for the Presidency.“Would it be possible to imag¬ine anything more uproariouslyidiotic—a deafening, nerve-wracking battle to the death be- gtween Tweedledum and Tweedle-dee, Harlequin and Sganarelle, §iGobbo and Dr. Cook—the un¬speakable, with fearful snorts, §jjgradually swallowing the incon- 1ceivable? I defy anyone to matchit elsewhere on this earth. In oth¬er lands, at worst, there are at pleast intelligible issues, coherent |ideas, salient personalities. Some- fjbody says something, and some- ||body replies. Here, having per¬fected democracy, we lift thewhole combat to symbolism, to ||transcendentalism, to metaphys¬ics. Here we load a pair of palpa- ||bly tin cannon with blank car- *1tridges loaded with talcum pow¬der, and so let fly.”Can anybody read this (which |happens to about the Harding-Coxelection) and still take seriously |Percy’s campaign for senator in fthis fair state, or Reagan’s cam¬paign for governor in California?Can anybody read this, and notfeel (by hindsight, at least) thathis satisfaction at seeing Goldwa-ter defeated two years ago wasutter bamboozlement? (HowMencken would have howled!)As he gloried in the completedestruction of sense and sanity inthis country, surviving Harding,Coolidge, Prohibition, and theNew Deal, his laughter rang forthlike a demon out of hell. Perhapsit was his very devilishness thatkeeps him alive today, Cabell’ssin was laughter too, but his wasthe laughter of the gods . . . .Mencken, a bourgeois, was hearti¬ly contemptuous of the Americanscene, but Cabell, the Southernaristocrat, was always tolerant ofus, and just a little sad.“Man alone of animals playsthe ape to his dreams. Romanceit is undoubtedly who whispers toevery man that life is not a blindand aimless business, not all a hopeless waste and confusion;and that his existence is a pag¬eant (appreciatively observed bydivine spectators), and that he isstrong and excellent and wise.The things of which romance as¬sures him are very far from true:yet it is solely by believing him¬self a creature but little lowerthan the cherubim that man hasby interminable small degrees be¬come, upon the whole, distinctlysuperior to the chimpanzee.”It is true, incontestably so, thatyour true-love is a whore, thatyour life’s-work is a more or lessinteresting dance performed onthe way to the grave, that yourhigh-minded ideas are the ravingsof a creature blind to the truthsince birth, but all that is no matter. We shall continue to dream ofpurity, of lasting values, of seeingclearly “things as they are." Andfor Cabell, these illusions are theonly things of any value if life—because tl*?re is, really, nothingelse.Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief ..David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsNews Editors '. .Jeffrey KutaMichael Seidm^nFeature Editor Mark Ros.nBook Review Editors > Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edw’ard ChikofskyPolitical Editor John BremnerEditor Emeritus Daniel HertzbergEditorial Staff—Kenneth Simonson, Slade Lander, Ellis Levin,Richard Rabens, Joe Lubenow.News Staff—John Moscow, Harold Sheridan, Angela DeVito,Robert Skeist, Ina Smith, Seth Masia, Vivian Goodman,Cathy Sullivan, Jeffrey Blum, Leanne Star, Maxine Miska,Alfred Marcus, Marge Pearson, Leslie Recht, Helen Schary,Ann Garfield, John Welch, T. C. Fox, Gloria Weissman,Marlene Proviser, Ilene Kantrov, Roger Black, LarryHendel, Anita Grossman, Larry Struck, Lynn McKeever,Sanford Rockow’itz, Peter Stone, Susan Loewy, David Jacob¬son, Sydney Unger, Michael Krauss, David F. Israel.Photographors—Jean Raisler, Bern Myers, Charles Packer, HDavid Alley.Staff Artist—Belita Lewis.• i to • CHICAGO MAROON • November 18, 1966 I 1 1>x ' * y I & SSI^jW-Wxll '.V - V- ■-:. S :'. :V-’-"- .Letters to the Editor of the Maroon;Imagine Thai!TO THE EDITOR:The November 11 issue of theChicago Maroon is reminiscent ofthe Daily Worker.None of us want war—neverhave, but the statements of someof your students border on “trea¬son”. The type of advertisementscontained therein can only giveaid, comfort and encouragementto the enemy.It is simple to discern the typeof students who control the Ma¬roon. It is my fervent hope thatsome of these “beatniks” shallwake up to the fact that they arelacking in common, every-dayhorse-sense. Could it be a sense ofguilt that compels them to face ofthe “left” side because of theirparents’ unlimited resources?My son was gifted with a highI.Q. and is a superior student—probably could meet yourV? '5'< ,V:?-CVY IM ■ • SWW& > entrance requirements—but I’drather see him begging with a tincup than being brain washed byyour left-wing professors as hap¬pened to my friend’s son. Isn’t itabout time for a change?DISGUSTED CHICAGOANLivernash RepliesTO THE EDITOR:Yes, some of the examples Igave of SG finance pertain to pastyears. This emphasis was deliber¬ate. I hoped that Messrs.Grofman and Heagy would bewilling to admit that since irregu¬larities had occurred before, im¬proved control is called for. In¬stead they have chosen to claimthat everything I said was dishon¬est. This leaves me no choice butto document and update the alle¬gations.There is insufficient space to gointo details in this letter, so I have given what evidence I pos¬sess to the Maroon. I trust theywill report their findings in a fewweeks.In response to criticism, SG hasnow announced a “you name it,we’ll fly there” policy. Some cau¬tion is in order. Group flights ex¬ist only on certain competitiveroutes. It’s too late to get primespace on January 2, and probablyalways will be if one waits foreveryone to apply before reserv¬ing space.The right approach is for SG toinvestigate the possibilities andannounce flights wherever thereis a reasonable probability of suc¬cess.The Maroon printed two inter¬views in the form of a debate; thecontext of some of my remarkswas lost. Suffice it to say that nolegal conclusions should be drawnfrom such a fragmentary discus¬sion.STEVE LIVERNASH Other Side ReadingTO THE EDITOR:I would like to call the attentionof the readers of the Maroon tothe Reading Group from the Oth¬er Side coffee house. The studentsin the group are among the mosttalented actors and directors oncampus, and their staged read¬ings at the Other Side are excel¬lent and stimulating perfor-CareersRecruiting representatives of the fol¬lowing organizations will visit the Officeof Career counseling and Placementduring the week of November 21. Inter¬view appointments for 1966-67 graduatesmay be arranged through Mr. L. S.Calvin, room 200, Reynolds Club, Exten¬sion 3284.Nov. 21 Pittsburgh Plate Glass Com¬pany, Pittsburgh, Pa.—S.M. and Ph D.candidates in Organic Chemistry.U.S. Treasury Department, Office ofthe Assistant Secretary for InternationalAffairs, Washington, D.C.—AM. andPh.D. candidates in Economics with in¬terest in international economics, finan¬cial, and monetary affairs.t ' 'X' AT" >Classified Adyertisment' -A ' ■"I sold out through Chicago MaroonPeople-Grabber classified s,” says |Thomas Uncle.If you have something you want to ’sell, give us a ring. We re in the busi¬ness of helping people seU out. Call our ;helpful, friendly, courteous, kind girlad-grabber, Lee Hunt, for informationat MI 3-0800 ext. 3265. Send in your adwith payment so it reaches us no Katerthan the day before publication. (Wepublish Tuesdays and Fridays often. Noissue next Friday—it’s Thanksgiving, iwe hear.)Our address: 1212 E. 59 St . Chicago•0637 (It’s a nice place to live, but we 'wouldn't want to work there.)PERSONALSWord is out that Pete is in. ■VKAMLEOT Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St10% discount for UC students.Writer’s Workshop PL 2-8377’DIRTY JUNK!” says Archer, See andjudge for yourself at THE LASTSTAGE 1506 E. 51st Street. James Red-field’s new play VLACH, plus 2nd adultfeature (French) Fri, Sat. 8:30—$2. Sun,7:30—$1.50 Reservations OA 4-4200.Here at last! CHICAGO DAYS: A Con¬ference on the Crisis in the City. To¬night 7:36 and tomorrow 9:30-5 at IDANOYES.Quaker Student Fellowship pot-luck sup¬per Sc discussion. Sunday. Nov. 20. 5:30PM. Quaker House. 5615 Woodlawn.Thpic: "The New Political Context”.Everyone welcome.Need a room-mate? Call FA 4-8000,leave a message for Henry, room 607.Lecture: The Contemporary Religious!situation in Japan. Professor Joseph M. jKitagawa, Divinity School. 8:30 pm.Hdtel House, 5715 Woodlawn. Tdhight ILecture: "Present Status of Soviet Jew¬ry—and What of the Future?” Rabbi jGeorge B Lieberman, Central Syna¬gogue of Nassau County. Long Island. |leader of the Central Conference ofAm. Rabbis study mission to Russia.7:30 pm. Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn.Sunday, Nov. 20.RUSSIAN by qualified, experienced na¬tive: rapid method. Call 236-1423 . 9AM-5 PM. Trial lesson no charge.6:00 pm. Sunday, supper and conversa¬tion 75c Brent House, 5540 S. WoodlawnAve.KOINON1A: Tonight. 5 :45 at ChapelHouse. Dinner (75c). (Panel discussion:up against it in Chicago) *Two films on Vietnam war first timeshown in Chicago "Land of Fire”, pro¬duced by the National Liberation Front& “Time of the Locust” Friday, No¬vember 18, 8 pm, 302 .‘V'ufch Canal St.,Donation 50c. Auspices: Friday NightSocialist Forum.Guarantee handsome price for GaryCollins Dick/Butkus pictures from-Standard Oil contest: write Dick Le¬vine, 4621 Cooper, Lincoln, Nebraska.Proof Reading and Re-typing of com¬pleted MA Degree Thesis. Social Sci¬ence background and help in Englishgrammar, spelling, and construction re¬quired. Thesis 75 pages long and paynegotiable. Immediate. Call after 6 pm.784-8632 or 288-0492 SKI COLORADODec. 17-24. $119.90 incl. round trip trainto Denver, round trip bus to Vail, lodg¬ing for 5 days & 6 nights—tow ticketsfor 5 days. Call Marge Abrams 6 pm-11pm at 328-2368Wanted: People who want good time;Ida Noyes, Sat, 8 pmLive Sc In Person, direct from the Copa-cabana on Roosevelt. Ro-Magic Sam &Shakey Jake, Twist party for theBrave; Ida Noyes, Sat, 8 pmThrasimachus—Get out of the Cave!see M. S. & S. J., et al.Pedicabo vos et irrumbo Ai*reli pathiceet cinaede Fi*riFOR SALE TO RENTROOM MATE WANTED TO SHARE AFIVE BEDROOM APT. WITH THREEOTHER GIRLS. CALL EVES: 684-7586Wanted: to share apt. with male grad.student(s). To begin Jan. 1, 1967. Cali684-0302 or 324-2237.Available Dec. 28. Modern 5 room apt. 2bedrooms. $158, 7818 South Luella. After5. 721-6917Sleeping rooms for male grad, students:Furnished, $30 per month, near Cam¬pus. Please call only after 6 PM,BU 8-5229. WANTED TO RENTStudio Space—Must be heated-Comm.Artist—X3753—Barry.RIDE WANTEDDetroit, Thanksgiving. Call David Vigo-da 363 3336 5-7 PMFOUNDCamera—in Hutchinson Commons-752-1174CO-OP ft CONDOMINIUMS5 large rooms, natural wood burningfireplace, 2 large bedrooms, 4 clothesclosets, pantry, linen closet. Near shop¬ping center, “I’C”, CTA and lake. Suita¬ble for business or professional people$175.00 per month MU 4-8222Comfortable 5 rm. apt. in S. Shore 1blk. from IC $135/month. Call MI 3-0606or 667-5560Wanted: Two people outside UC housingto assume contract for 3V2 room apt. at5400 Greenwood starting January 1, Call684-3991 Well located Co-ops & Condominiums inHyde Pk. 5-7 rms, low assessments,reasonably priced. Call Mr. Rogers atDO 3-6204T R 4—6700Phone 288-2487. mi. Estate sacrifices.Ford station wagon, 1960—Good Condition, Automatic, $175.00. BU 8-9106 aft6.Ply. Wag. 4 dr. 8. $250, nice 2 s. t,MI 3-5105 (Flook)Gibson—small banjo $25. BU 8-2718FENDER Music Master Electric Guitar$75, MI 3-6000’57 Olds $125 Good Cond. Call ext. 2438or MU 4-5760To see the doncaster collection of cus¬tom made suits and dresses, call 324-8907 *JOBS OFFEREDSleep Lab needs a few more subjects.Poor sleepers as well as good sleepersX2353 PAYS.Babysitter u'anted, exchange room Scboard, 667-6097 eves.Golden opp. for 3 mature men to act ascomforters. Must be willing to travel toUz. Background in theology a must.Salary open. Call Job, Maroon box 666. CINEMAChicago at MichiganGreatest suspense classic everfilmed!SIMONE SIGNORET INDIABOUQUEStudents $1.25 every day but Sat.with I.D. cerd.Wkdeys open 6 pmSat. & Sun. open 1:30UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKNBW CAM LOANS$450„IM4 (AST 55th STRUTMU 4-1200WAUL C’EST... La protection financier* qua vouadonnez A votre famllla •ujourd’huldevra lul ttra procurta d’una autrafapon demain. L’aasuranca Sun Ufapeut certainement accompllr aattatlche A votra placa.En tant qua reprlsentant local da la SunLife, pula-je voua vialter A un moment davotra cholx?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 80602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hour* 9 te 5 Monday*,ethers by appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY Ciral'sHouse of TikiOpen Thanksgiving Day,Thursday, November 24. Inaddition to our regular menu,we offer a complete dinnerof Roast Turkey and Dressingor Baked Ham $2.25Ciral's House of Tiki51st and HarperLI 8-7585 CHICAGO DAYSA Conference on the Crisis in theCityFriday November 18, 7:39 P.M.UP AGAINST IT IN CHICAGO. . astold by those who have beenSTUDS TERKEL, WFMT. moderatorAL RABY, leader of the ChicagoFreedom MovementLUCILLE DICKERSON,Side resident A WestCLARK KISSINGER. CIPAFLORENCE 9CALA, leader in thefigh( to save the Harrison Halstedarea from Urban Renewal and afilm, GOODBYE SOCRATES on thetakeover of this area for urbanrenewal.Saturday, November 19, 9:30-5Panels on GROWING UP INCHICAGO9:30 The Chicago School System11:00 Education in the Ghetto1:30 Youth in the Ghettoand on HOUSING IN CHICAGO9:30 Urban Renewal or NegroRemoval?11:00 Consequences of ResidentialSegregation1:30 The Politics of Fighting SlumsWORKSHOPS from 3:00-5IDA NOYES 1212 E. 59th Streetmmances. Everyone should attendwho is interested in the theatre,or who wants to see plays theyhave read or studied performedby actors who have a great dealof style and understand themthoroughly. I am sure that theirreading Sunday at 2:00 pm of Ib¬sen’s “When We Dead Awaken”will be as exciting as all theirprevious readings have been.DAVID STRAUSSResearch Analysis Corporation,McLean, Va. (Washington, D.C. suburb)Master’s and Doctor's candidates inEconomics, Mathematics, and Statistics.Schedule permitting will interview grad¬uate students in these departments forsummer work.Nov. 22 Union Cairbide CorporationPaducah, Ky.—ail degree levels inBiology, Physics, Mathematics. Statis¬tics, and Chemistry (analytical, kvxrg-andc, physical).Nov. 22 Army Biological Laboratories,Nuclear Division, Oak Ridge, Tenn. andFort Detrick, Md. - Ph.D. candidates inmicrobiology. Mathematics, and Statis¬tics.Unilever, Ltd., England - citizens ofthe United Kingdom who are candidatesfor the Ph D. in Physics or Chemistryor who are doing post-doctoral work inthese departments.Come Back AfricaA FULL-LENGTH DOCUMENTARY ON "SOUTH AFRICA"A MASTERFUL ACHIEVEMENT"-the TimesSAT., NOV. 19th, 7:30 - 9:30IDA NOYES HALL 50*Sponsored by S.D.S.November 18, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Have Deceived Me!” (which hesang with Helen Bailey, who alsohas a very good voice). ‘‘Oh, IsThere Not One Maiden Breast” and‘‘Oh, Here is Love.”As Mabel. Joyce Heinrikson de¬served the tremendous ovation withwhich the audience greeted herfirst song, “Poor Wandering One.”Her clear soprano voice is delight¬ful. and she knows how to use it forthe best comic effect. She appearsto sing effortlessly, and to singleout any of her songs as the bestwould be merely to pick out the onewith the largest range. The castingof Arnett and Miss Heinrickson wasinspirated. Not only were theywell-matched vocally, but theymade a truly comical couple: theywere equally tall, and he was stiff,expressionless and child like, whileshe was gracefull. exuberant andmature.David Kaufman was properly bad on the outside and good under¬neath as the Pirate King, and hesang ‘‘Oh, Better Far to Live andDie” with a well-directed gusto. AsMajor-General Stanley, David Cur-rey did well with the most famoussong from the operetta, “I Am theVery Model.” but he did not seemold enough or tired enough to be aMajor-General and the father ofover twenty dancing and singingdaughters.Many productions which are pos¬thumously reviewed pass awaywithout regret. At least I have theconsolation that the Gilbert &. Sulli¬van Opera Company will revive an¬other operetta next year, and(judging from their previous recordof success) I shall be able to re¬gret, again, that I could not com¬mend it in my review before itclosed. Please consider this recom¬mendation for next year.Mark RosinCan UC's Women Be “Relevant"?Operetta ReviewThe Pirates Sail In And OutLast weekend the Gilbert & Sullivan Opera Company’s production of Pirates of Penzance(aporoi riatelv by Gilbert and Sullivan) sailed into Mandel Hall for a brief stay of four perfor¬min' es. I wish that the Pirates could be in our port for another weekend so that their specialbrand of villainy could be enjoyed by a larger number of willing victims.Under directors Ruth Stack andJerome H. Loeb, the large castwisely plaved the operetta broadly.They emphasized the abundant hu¬mor of the characters (the naivete,propriety, and ridiculous sense ofdutv of Frederic, the hero), theirsituations (Frederic’s being ap¬prenticed as a pirate instead of apilot because his nurse was hard ofhear ng and the discovery that because of his leap year birth hecould not be released from appren¬ticeship for another sixty-fouryears) and the complexity, tricksand coincidences which complicateand finally resolve the action.The first act, in which Fredericis released from his apprenticeship(because his peculiar birthday isnot yet known), disillusioned withhis nurse who has told him that ata dowdy forty-seven she is still abeauty, and introduced to Mabel,the heroine, and her father, theMajor General, is swiftly paced.It is only at the beginning of thesecond act that the production fal¬ters. and this is only temporary.When Frederic learns that he isduty-bound to return to the pirates,that he cannot lead his police forceagainst them, and then rather stol¬idly stands by as he watches theirbrief clash and the eventual returnto peace (since ,the pirates arereally patriotic peers who love theQueen and have only gone astraybut once), no sloppy choreographyor hackneyed staging could destroythe inherent humor of the plot.The players were at their bestwhen they were singing, and sincePirates is an operetta this wrasoften. Although the chorus wasalways audible and usually com¬prehensible. it was the individualperformers who were most suc¬cessful in song and comedy. Thediverse comic styles of the chorusmembers, shown best in theirgestures, often reduced the poten¬tial humor, and the lack of syn¬chronization in the dance numbers,always expected in non-profession¬al companies, is still annoying.The lack of co-ordination of theMajor-General’s many daughters(in their dancing and expressionsof mock horror, fear, and passion)is a good case in point. But even atits worst, the Pirates could stillsteal your heart! No matter whatthe lovely daughters did, it wasGilbert and Sullivan, and they werewell-costumed (by Joan Lonergan),in good voice, and lovely.Ernest Arnett played Fredericwith a hilariously straight face, aface so dead-pan that it seemed tobe immobile. Whether giving ad¬vice or warning to the pirates,singing of passionate love or senseof duty, Arnett’s solemn pose wasmaintained to wonderfully humor¬ous effect. His voice and range areimpressive, and he scored particu¬larly well with “Oh False One, You “Hostage” Weekend ShowThe news an the radio occupies the attention of everybody inthe house in this scene from Brendan Behan's The Hostage, whichwill be presented by University Theatre in Mandel Hall November18, 19, and 20 at 8:30 pm. The featured players in the cast areJulia Fremon, left, as Meg Dillon and Pat O'Gara, seated, as PatThe Hostage is a wild musical play full of life, humor, pathos, ri¬baldry, and social comment, according to director James O'Reilly.Jack Hickey, business manager for UT, says that this production hashad the biggest advance sale in UT's history. This is also the firstproduction in UT's first ''announced'' season. In case you are a bag¬pipe music connoisseur, they even have some of that.An organization of UC wo¬men looking for ways andmeans to be politically relevantwill hold its first meeting Mon¬day, November 21 at 9:00 pm inthe New Dorms Central Unit.According to Heather Tobis, oneof the group’s organizers, thoseforming the organization feel that“Rather than wait for boys to bepicked up for refusing to go to Viet¬nam and then arguing about what we would do in their position if wewere boys, we realize that we aregirls, interested in radical alterna¬tives to this war. As such we wantto organize.SAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"since in*PICKUP A DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200Hyde Park Medical LaboratoryOpen 9 am-9 pm, 6 days a week5240 S. Harper 493-2000(Corner 1400 E. 53rd St.)Koga Gift ShopDistinctly* Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856Life InsuranceSeniors & grad, students have lifeinsurance protection now. Pay yourfirst premium four years later. Forinformation call collect The Instituteof Insurance Planning Lake Forest.CE 4-8858 AMERICAN AUTO PARTS7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3614MUFFLER HEADQUARTERSTGolden SilenceMUFFLERSAs Advertised In LIFE and POSTLew as[$065 PAs Advertised in LIFE and rObis »###*+**++*******; |<;GUARANTEED in Writing Against!;!' n, aui ntiT DUCT FVFRYTH1NG !:NO WAITING!TAKES ONLYIS MINUTESI <: BLOW-OUT, RUST, EVERYTHINGFsr A* Long ts You Owo Your Csd !;wwwtrInstalled Free While You WaitComplete Line of Auto Partsfor Do-It-Yourself MechanicsBrakes Installed SHOCK ABSORBERSFACTORY u aqc ALL FOURAUTHORIZED WHEELSsaavica | a#Kefsf 6 Labor—Ford 6 Chevy NEWFOR MOST lestofleOCAR* ” FreeTUNE-UP SPECIALlochidM Champion A.C., Auto-Lit* Spark Plugs, Points, Rotor,Condenser. Adjust *4 eACCarburetor and Vl flowTiming While You | dllWait.1 AH 4-evt. ears 1*42 to 1**2 1 REAR SPRINGSINSTALLEDWHILE YOU WAIT **12”American Auto Parts7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3614 ATTENTION!MEN UNDER 25Sentry reports good news (atlast) about car insurance savingsfor men under 25. Call today tofind out how 20 minutes of yourtime may save you up to $50 ormaybe even more.JIM CRANE8124 S. WOODLAWN 374-035043;~7J INSSENTRY71 INSURANCEthe t-ia'Owri'A Mutual OrganizationThechARleybnowNWoolrichl A “must” forcampus, tnis fleece-lined^CPO wool shirt warms like ajacket... features snap closurefront and snap-down patchpockets. Neat piaids and solids.Men’s sizes. S.M.L.XL, Boys’sizes 12-20. $00y£BjLSTORE NAME(Mn y SteHMCSham 3c (Eampuain the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-81008 • CHICAGO MA ROOM • November 18, 1966Calendar of Events 6mmmFriday, November 18LECTURE: "The Ancient and MedievalBackground of Copernican Astronomy,”William D. Stahlman, Professor of His¬tory of Science, University of Wisconsin.Classics 10, 2:30 pm.LECTURE: ."When God Died—OneHundred Years Ago,” Martin E. Marty, |Professor, Divinity School, 65 E. SoothWater Street, 8 pm.LECTURE: Katherine Anne Porter.W D. Snodgrass, and Anthony Hechtreading from their works, Law SchooiAuditorium, 8:30 pm.THEATER: THE HOSTAGE by Bren¬dan Behan, University Theater, MandelHall, 8:30 pm. Adm. $2. $1.50 for stu¬dents and faculty.LECTURE: ‘'The Contemporary Reli¬gious Situation in Japan,” Prof. JosephM Kitagawa, Divinity School. Hillel jHouse, 5715 S. Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.FILM: the original TARZAN AND THEAPES with Johnny Weismuller and oth- |er assorted primates; beer 25c Admis- |sion 50c, free popcorn. SSA, 969 E. 00thSt.LECTURE: “An Evening with LeRoiJones,” $2, Dunbar High School Audito¬rium, 2900 South Parkway at 8 pm.SERVICES: Yavneh in Hillel, HillelBasement, 5715 S. Woodlawn, 4 pm.Dinner; Adat Sholom Shabbat Meals, jIda Noyes, 3rd floor, 5:30.LECTURE: “The Christian Answer” byIn H.Dr John W. Montgomery. I.V.C.F. 7:30.KOINONIA: Dinner (75c) and PanelDiscussion: “Up against it in Chicago.” jCONCERT: “Music for Lute andVoice,” David Rhodes, lute, and Kath- ileen Hallman, mezzo-soprano, Music byElizabethan composers, Bond Chapel,8 :30 pm.Saturday, November 19CONFERENCE: “The City and TheUniversity,” "Growing Up in Chicago,”and "Housing in Chicago,” 9:30 am-12 :30 pm and 1:30-5:00 pm.TOUR: Guided walking tour of theguadrianzles leaves Ida Noyes Hall at10 am.ATHLETICS: N.A.A.U. Junior 10,000meter, cross country meet, WashingtonPark. 1:30 pm.FILM: “Fires on the Plain.” Ichikawa,7:15 and 9:15 pm. Social Sciences 122CONCERT: University Chamber Or- jchestra: Haydn, Rameau, Kirchner, iHutchinson Commons, 8:30 pmTHEATRE: THE HOSTAGE, by Bren¬dan Behan, University Theatre. MandelHall, 8:30 pm. Tickets at Reynolds ClubDesk—$2 50; $2.00 for students and fac- ;utty.FILM: “Door Gaganki Chhaon Me”India Assoc, of UC. $1 for members,$1.50 for non-members, Judd Hall Audi¬torium, 7:30 pm.FILM: “Come Back Afcrica”, a full:length documentary on South Africa,Ida Noyes Theater, 7:30 and 9:30, 50c.MEETING: SAR steering committee,C-Shop, 1:30 pm.SERVICES: Yavneh in Hillel. HillelBasement, 4 pm, followed by ShoioshLunch: Adat Snlom Shabbat Meals, IdaNoyes, 3rd floor. Noon.SERVICES: Yavneh in Hillel. HillelBasement, 4 pin, followed by SholashSeudos. - <> i ■ : si ■Sunday, November 20J*181 PARTY with Magic Sam andShakey Jake, et al. Ida Noyes HaU apm, adm. 50c (Folklore Society).RADIO SERIES: W FMF. From theMidway, 100,3mc, 7 am, “The Citiesan°, tiie States; The unfinished Agen¬da, Terry Sanford, Director, Study ofAmerican States, Duke University.vvcmwi°? ,ES„: Faith of Fathers,WGM, 720 kc., 8:30 am. The Rev. Wil¬liam Graham Cole, President, LakeForest College, delivers the sermon.TELEVISION SERIES: Read Me a Sto¬ry-. fading and Discussion ofchildren's books with primary schoolstudents from the lab school. Channel15, 8:30 am.LECTURE: "The Present Status of Sto¬gie! Jewry—and What of the Future?”Rabbi George B. Lieberman, CentralSynagogue of Nassau County, Long Is¬land. Hillel House, 5715 S. Woodlawn7:30 pm.THEATRE: THE HOSTAGE, by Bren¬dan Behan, 8:30 pm Mandel Hall, Tick¬ets at Reynolds Club Desk—$1.75- $i 25for students and faculty.RADIO SERIES: Nightline, WBBM, 780kc. 10:30 pm. A public forum for thediscussion of current issues.FOLK DANCING: Teaching 7:30-9:30pm, followed by request session til 11,Ida Noyes Dance Room.MEETING: SDS steering committee,Hitchcock 28, 4 pm.POETRY READING: at Jimmy’s 1168E. 55th. 7:30 pm.LECTURE: R. Stetler on “BertrandRussell's War Crimes Tribunal,” 2 pmHillel House, 5715 Woodlawn.PLAY READING: Ibsen's WHEN WEDEAD AWAKEN, at the Other Side,1603 E. 53rd. 2 pm.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICEThe Reverend E. Spencer Parsons,Dean of the Chapel, ‘‘Strangers to theDay of Feasting,” Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 11 am.Monday, November 21MEETING: SDS insurrectionary pressmeeting, 3:30, Ida Noyes.LECTURE: "Congressional Reform,”Morris Udall, United States Represen¬tative from Arizona, 9oc. Sc. 122,4 pm.LECTURE: “Excavations at Assyria,Ninirud and Its Remains.’ MEL.MaDowar, Fellow of All Souls College,Oxford Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.You won't have to put yourmoving er storage problemoff untW tomorrow if youcoN ms today.PKTERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.IMfl t. Daty Am044.4411What about saltin besr?We have nothing against salt.On radishes. Or french fries.But not in beer.Putting salt in your beer,some say, perks up the head... or livens up the taste ... or makesthe beer “drier.” With Budweiser,though, all salt can do is make it salty.Budweiser is complete ... a ready-to-drink beer if there ever was one.Wonderful clarity. Real beer aroma. Ateste and a smoothness we know of inno other beer.So save the salt for the popcorn. Weput heart, soul and our exclusiveBeechwood Ageing into Budweiser. Allyou need to enjoy it is a glass... anda taste for the real thing.Budweiser.KING OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. * ST. LOINSNEWARK ♦ LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • MOtiATo**Hi "Business is forthe birds!"Who says so?Lots of people do. Some right on yourcampus. And for rationale, they point anaccusing finger at business and say it lacks“social commitment.”Social commitment? We wish they couldvisit our Kearny, N. J. plant, where wemake cable and apparatus for your Belltelephone company. But we have time forother thoughts, other talents.Like the situation in nearby Newark.With civic and business leaders, we be¬gan buzzing with ideas. “Let’s teach higherskills to some of the un-employed andunder-employed. Say, machine shop prac¬tice, They could qualify for jobs that aregoing begging — and help themselves aswell.”We lent our tool-and-die shop, eve¬nings. We found volunteer instructors, Ai community group screened applicants.4 \ Another supplied hand tools. The Boys Club donated classroom facilities. Anothercompany sent more instructors.Some 70 trainees enrolled. Their incen¬tive? Self-improvement. Results to date?New people at better jobs. Happier.And this is only one of dozens of social-minded projects at Western Electric plantsacross the country, where our first job ismaking communications equipment for theBell System.So, you don’t give up ideals when yougraduate. If anything, at a company like,say, Western Electric, you add to them.And it’s not just a theory. It’s practice.Satisfying. Come on and find out. Andwatch a feathered cliche flyout the window.Jn Western Electricrry MANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEMNovember 18, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9mV '.MMJg £ — gpi — , | ■■■' <”Closer to Cod'To etymologists and mosicologtsl^ tfce German word “Hammerklavier” means, basically,grand piano, or, more property, She kind of piano to which we are accustomed today, butwhich was a relative rarity in Beethoven's time. To concert-pianists, however, the word sug¬gests but one thing: Beethoven's mammoth Sonata no. 29 in B-flat, op. 106, and the meremention of it is usually enough toscare the living daylights out ofany of them.In his late piano sonatas andquartets, Beethoven abandonnedthe traditional rhetoric that hadcharacterized his middle period,and plunged headlong into themetaphysical problems of personal j other "special” composer. FranzSchubert, revealing the disarminglyricism of the A-Major Sonata, op.120 and the Four Impromptus, op.142, as always, playing the piano asif passionately in love with the mu¬sic. This, of course, is one of Ser-kin’s special qualities; that in toidentitv that had forever plagued day s era of grey-flannel-suitedhim and which, at long last, com- busmessmen-musicians, there stiltmanded utterance, remains a man carrying the torch, ,, . , ' for his art.This was one reason why his late fperiod produced only two large- But the Hammerklavier is anoth-seale orchestral works, the Ninth er matter. Those of us who worriedSymphony and the Missa Solemnis; j were instantly put in our place, aswhen one is speaking in intimate j Serkin hurled those opening de¬terms of one's soul, it is always clamatory octaves like thunder-better to do it without bombast or bolts. From that moment on. tech-hoopla. This was a concept that es- nical considerations vanished, aseaped the Romantics, but neverBeethoven. Indeed, if one were topoint up a reason for the transcend¬ent serenity that marks his lastsonatas, op. 109, 110, and 111, it isquite probably due to the kindlingof his passionate, emotional firesfor one final, grandiose blaze—theHammerklavior Sonata; it is somespectacle. One cannot even con- he enmeshed us inextricably intothe web of Beethoven's inner tur¬moil. Serkin's Beethoven has always been of the ardent, impas¬sioned kind, with tempos a littlequicker than everyone else's. buthere was a new Serkin. more deep¬ly reflective than before, not afraidto dwell on a phrase, or toy with anew idea that strikes him. Aboveceive of the utter personal hell that j all, there was electrical spontaneityBeethoven must have gone through j to his playing.during its creationAnd yet, as difficult as it musthave been to create, and to listento, nothing can approach the prob¬lems faced by the pianist coura¬geous enough to attempt it. I say"attempt” because however longthis sonata will be with us. it isdoubtful that one human being canever unravel it all or do it justice.It remains as Everest, formidable,unconquerable, and fiercely defiantof those who try.It was with all of this in mindthat Rudolf Serkin strode briskly, ifa little nervously, onto the stage ofOrchestra Hall last Sunday, and satdown to slay the dragon with theeighty-eight gleaming teeth thatwas waiting to devour him. Serkinhas been esteemed as the greatestliving exponent in our generation ofthe piano music of Beethoven, andall of his resources were put to thetest in the Hammerklavier. Whileits purely technical demands areexceeded by the keyboard writingof such pianistie wild men as Alkanand Scriabin, the Hammerklavierrequires of its interpreter the ut¬most erudition and humility, andunlike the aforementioned duo,mere facile technique is notenough. But, then, neither is purityof intention alone. The ultimate ofboth is required and it is a sadcommentary that by the time apianist has matured enough tocome to grips with the Sonata, hisfingers are usually no longer ableto stand the gaff.Would Serkin be able to hold up?He had already played a most ar¬duous half-concert devoted to his And it all came to a full boil irthat extraordinary Adagio Sostenuid, an expression of grief so tragicas to render one immobile in ii§.,presence. Serkin's eloquence wil'remain one of tht- most moving exJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-59R6 RA 6-1060NELSON MOTORSImport CentroCompleteAnd SendeePer A.H PopulwMidway I-4S046052 So. Cottage Grove JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAP pertenees of my life. Running thegamut from heaven-storming,fist-shaking pathos to ‘‘benumbed,tearless resignation'^, as Von Bu-lcnv was always so fond of saying,Beethoven’s soul was seen literal¬ly torn to shreds, and then, onewould like to say, redeemed. Butthis was not to beBeethoven was never redeemedin his own mind, and as a result,he ends the Sonata with a hair-raising Fuga a Tra Voci so defiantthat it has been the grave yard ofmore pianists than I care to re¬member. It’s one of the damnedestthings to listen to, and Serkin didn’tmake it any easier on us or on him¬self. He works hard playing the pi¬ano, and often, exuberance gets thebetter of technique. But when thatfinal B-flat chord came crashingdown, forty-five minutes after hebegan, there was a momentary si¬lence. and then a shaken audiencearose almost as one to acknowl¬edge the profundity of what it hadjust witnessed. . tWas Rudolf Serkin’s performancethe Hammerklavier for the ages?Phis is impossible to answer, with>o profound and complex a workhat has puzzled scholars for 156years, But this much is certain: for’laving heard Serkin, those of uswho were there today feel a littleCloser to God. CapturesMost intellectuals don’t rate Charles Aznavour very highlyBut girls are still girls—even at the University of ChicagoAnd despite UC women’s intellectual reputation, any one ofthem hearing Aznavour in concert last weekend would havebeen as susceptible as any run-of-the-mill high school dropoutAznavour has been on the Frenchmusical scene for the last twentyyears, writing and singing his ownsongs. His close association withthe late Edith Piaf influenced hisstyle and gave a great boost to hiscareer The French singer’s annualtour of the US brought him to Or¬chestra Hall last week, where heperformed for three nights.Charles Aznavour sings with akind of electric emotion. Itisthemes are simple and true: most¬ly about the intense joys and fre¬quent sorrows of love and everydaylife. His voice carries an appeal tothe senses. Although most of thelyrics are in French, one can getthe feeling of his songs without un lasrt year’s. Although one realizesthat Aznavour is a professionalsinger whose nightly repetitionmust detract from his sincerityone is nevertheless irresistiblydrawn to listen and believe him—you become convinced that he issinging only to you.An actor as well as a singer.Aznavour is a master of the gesta.He loses much on a record—especially in songs such as Les Co-mediens (The Actors). Each songis a small true story of life: theregret of a man who wasted hisyouth and now finds he has nothing(Hier encore), the emptiness of acity where one’s love has died (Qu«e'est triste Venise, Peris au moild'Aout), the plea of a man for hisderstanding a word of them. Apd it jover t0 stay with him although heEd ChikofakyMost Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 g. 55 NY 3-9259NSA Discounts0R. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. , \DO 3-7644 do 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FUICO CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Discount in the feeling conveyed in Aznavourwhich is paramount—the universal-j ity of emotions.? Aznavour is not a big man nor anespecially handsome one. Yet themoment he walks on stage one isaware of his tremendous magnet¬ism. Accompanied by a five pieceband, he carries bis one-man showfor two hours, never losing the vi¬tal communication with his audi¬ence. Song follows song, inter¬spersed with a few English com¬ments for the benefit of the Ameri¬can audience, The only point atwhich the level of the performancecan be said to drop is when hesings English translations of hissongs. The words are adequatelytransposed, but the feeling of thesounds and1 the moods are nottransmitted in English.Aznavour’s show last Thursdayevening was essentially the sameas the one 1 had seen a year ago inNew York, Aznavour’s musical rep-etoire at American concerts isfairly consistent, and some of thejokes he made were identical with realizes the impossibility of it(Rests), the feeling of losing one’slove to another (Moj dam mo*coin), the man who plans to leavehis mistress and yet knows he willnever have the strength to breakaway (St pourtant), the giddy ec¬stasy of falling head-over heels (J'-ai perdu la fata), the importance ofkeeping your dignity at the end ofan affair (II faut savoir), and finally, the promise of love (J* te r«cHaufftrai).AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E, 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN A ZENITH- NEW A USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V/s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos ~ AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% dt*«eo«f to •tucUnf* with 10 «ar*HONDA - Fantastic Savings& Best BargainsSEE ALL MODELS$0 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES - SERVICE - PARTS• PICK UP & DELIVERY• EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESCALLMl 3*4500Chicago's Largest and Just Around The CornerBOB KELSON MOTORS6136 S. COTTAGE GROVE When Aznavour sings, he singswith his whole body, with 1m wholesoul. He can touch every person nomatter who they were before theystart listening to him. It is people’shumanity that Charles Aznavour isconcerned with, and he can reacheveryone because he is so honestabout the sad-joyfulness of love, AsJean Cocteau said, ‘‘The true suc¬cess of Charles Aznavour is that besings more with his heart than withhis voice.”Helen ScharyB'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATIONFriday, Nov. 18 8:30 pm j Sunday, Nov. 20 7:30 pm. . . THE PRESENT STATUS OfThe Contemporary Religious SOViet jewry-and whatSituation In Japan OF THE FUTURE?PROP. JOSEPH M. KITAGAWAU.C, tMvMhr School '*-■ RABBI GEORGE B. LtEBERMANCmimi Synagogue of Nassau County.Long Island." Leafier of Roform Rabbis StudyMission To Russia.5715 SOUTH WOODIAWNRESERVED SEATS NOW AT BOX-OFFICE OR BY MAILniuMHmnffiiKvtains ihsmkpMMt ' NOW PLAYINGsi#; WITH AN INTERNATIONAL ALL-STAR CAST * PANAVISION*Mn. Ffr. A Mm.. Bala.BVCCa Mon; thruThwre„'«un. UN $120|V««a FrU Bat A - 'Hob 0m. $3.80 $2.50U Monctbru Sat $2.30 $1.80i Bun. A Hold. $2.80 $2.20 A season THIATA1nfcJBfWUSrPhoni: 372-0971CHICAGO MAROON • November 18, 1966• m mmm mM mm v m mm • . mmmmm wm m wmmmmm w >::• IMaroon Weekend Guide-*5 ' '■ £Y»i >!.>S ’« ' ' I*'- *~<WM xt '*$THE 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 Now Playing For Your Pleasure and DancingHAMILTON THEATRE2150 E. 71st ST. HY 3-1121NOW PLAYINGEXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENTi WINNER Of 6 ACADEMY. AWARDSI«wm»wM»Y0i-»»Ao«oPCMffloaic«iNDAVID LEAN'S FILM OFBOflSMSrEBMCSDOCTOR ZHfiAGOM MNWWOr WO Ml TROCOIO.FEATURE TIMES — ALL WEEK1:30 - 5:00 - 8:30MEET THE GANG ATSMEDLEY’S PUB"Home of English Ate & Guinness Stout on top.*WORLD'S BEST CHILI, Lge. 12 oz. bowlSPAGHETTIS, Meat Sauce & Garlic BreadFancy Choice STEAKBURGER, Lettuce & Tomato 75°Lge. 67 oz. PITCHER SCHLITZ on Tap ...... $135SEE YOU SOON . . . OK?5239 S. HARPER AVE. HO 7-554660°*110 (OPEN DAWN TO DAWN)Hobby House Restaurant1342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER"The Best of All Foods "| Carribean Room Chicago Poets\ Coilitiil lounge at the( SHERRY HOTEL Aplon • Carroll • Hunt) opening unoer new management. READING AT JIMMY'S' AN football games televised/ in color. SUNDAY, NOV. 20th, 7 30 PM( Entertainment nightly./ 1725 E. 53rd ST. Open to Everyone^ ! i "The Union Board Concerts of l.l.T. presents Miss Victoria delos Angeles, a lyric soprano who is internationally recognizedas one of the greatest of living singers. Miss de los Angeles willappear on November 19, 1966, at 8:30 P.M. in the HermanUnion Building, 40 West 33rd Street on the l.l.T. campus. Ticketsare $3.00." . '[“YOU ARE GOING TO ENJOY ‘ALFIE’ VERY MUCH.”PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents'MMFreqonmended for mature auoiences~^B TECHNICOLORS]a waltrn praor theatre I"Ike ESQUIRE[OAK N I A R > MtCHICAN |Japan Film Festival^, Presents! id* . • a I •FIRES ON THE PLAINICHIKAWA—Directorit SOC. SCI. 122—NOV. 19£ 7:15 A 9:30• | Admission - Serves Memr. a Ticket • Single Admission .75MUSTANGS • TEMPESTS - FORDS - PONTIACSRENT-A-CARBYs\LlYolkswagens $3.95 for 12 Hrs.Plus 6< per Mi.Includes Gas and InsurancePont 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 3-1715November 18, 196 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11BONANZA BOOK SALELAST SALE OF THE YEAR. GREAT SAVINGS ON VOLUMES ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED AT MUCH HIGHER PRICES. BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING.BOOKS FOR BOYS AND GIRLSTHE GOLDEN ENGLISH-FRENCH DICTIONARY. Morethan 1000 words, 1500 pictures in jfull color, 3000 easy to learn jsentences, pronunciation. A live- jly picture-dictionary for chil- jdren. Size 10 x 13. Pub. at$3.99. Only 1.98 Collection of Bawdy Folksongs. An¬cient & Modern: THE MERRYMUSES OF CALEDONIA. By Rob¬ert Burns. Ed. by J. Barke & S. G.Smith. This is the first unexpurgat¬ed, most authentic edition of Burns’tests available-delightful, amusing,important literary contribution andscholarly accurate. Orig. Pub. at$5.00 New, complete ed. Only 1.98THE BALLAD BOOK OF JOHNJACOB NILES. Illus. More thanthan 100 of the best American bal-ads from English and Scottishsources collected in the Appala¬chian mountains by America'sgreatest authority; with words andmusic simply arranged for pianoand guitar size 8% x 11%. Orig.Pub. at $10.00 New, completed.Only 3.95 GONE ARE THE DAYS. An Illus¬trated History of the Old South. ByHarnett T. Kane. With 500 prints,paintings, engravings, photos &drawings. The whole South in allits flavor from the days of Poncede Leon to the end of the Civil Warin this memorable volume of pic¬ture and text. Here are the colo¬nies, the Indians, pioneers of Ken¬tucky and Tennessee, the lore ofthe Mississippi River and its cities,Charleston society, cotton and to¬bacco, the colorful personalities ofpolitics, industry and the militarywith a long section on the Confed¬eracy. 8% x 11%. Orig. Pub. at$12.50. New, complete ed Only 3.95 JACQUES LIPCHITZ: His Sculp¬ture. By A.M. Hammacher. Intro,by Jacques Lipschitz. Illus. with161 Drawings & Sculptures. 9 x 11-%. The career of the great sculp¬tor whose diverse work has pro¬vided inspiration for world sculp¬ture. Pub. at $15.00. Only 8.95THE MERRY ADVENTURESOF ROBIN HOOD. Told by How¬ard Pyle. Illus. by Benvenuti. Abig, beautifully illustrated edi¬tion mostly in brilliant color forboys and girls of all ages. 7% x10%. Pub. at $5.00. 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Pub. at $5.00.Only 2.98Pub. at $15.00 New, completed.Only 5.95AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL: InThe Words of John F. Kennedy.With 90 photos, 49 in full color. Pre¬face by Lyndon B. Johnson. Introd. jby Stewart L. Udall. Large, hand- jsomely pictured volume depictingthe varied beauty of America in itsrivers, valleys, mountains, deserts, inational parks and man-made'structures with appropriate text by,JFK. A section of pictures ofJFK’s career and family make this'a memorable tribute to the late |President as well as a remarkable jsouvenir of America’s beautiful:views. 9 x 12%. Pub. at $5.00.Only 2.98 BIRD: THE LEGEND OF CHAR¬LIE PARKER. By Robt. GeorgeReisner. Over 50 pictures. The fab¬ulous story of America’s greatestjazz artist, told by the musicians heplayed with, his family and closefriends. Pub. at $4.95. Only 2.98THE ANNOTATED MOTHERGOOSE. Introd. & Notes by Wm. S.& Ceil Baring-Gould. Over 200 illus.by Caldecott, Crane, Greenaway,Rackham, Parrish & HistoricalWoodcuts. 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Special 14.95KATACHI: Japanese Pattern andDesign in Wood, Paper, and Clay.179 illustrations. 14 in Full Color byTakeji Iwamiya. Introductory es¬say by Donald Richie. Handsomelarge volume, 10% x 14%, contain¬ing magnificent photographs by oneof Japan’s foremost professionalphotographers of objects made ofwood, paper, and clay—a history ofJapanese design from the eighthcentury. Pub. at $30.00 Only 17.95 A TREASURY OF SCANDINA¬VIAN DESIGN. Ed. by Erik Zahle.With 500 fully captioned pictures,188 in color. The standard authorityon Scandinavian designed furniture,textiles, glass, ceramics, and metalin a magnificently illustrated vol¬ume. 9 x 11%. Pub. at $14.95Only 7.95A DIRECTOR OF ANTIQUE FURNITURE. By F. Lewis Hinckley.With 1100 illus. The classificationof European and American designs—precisely as to period—arrangedby the leading furniture technolo¬gist in the U.S. Orig. Pub. ‘at$10.00. New, complete ed.Only 4.95KING ARTHUR AND THEKNIGHTS OF THE ROUND TA¬BLE. With 45 pages of beautifulfull color illustrations by GustafTenggren. A handsome editionof a children’s version of thisgreat classic. 7% x 10%. Pub.at $5.00. Only 2.98CHINESE ART. By Judith &thur H. Burling. With 248 illus., £color. A well-illustrated and ciprehensive history on all phasincluding: pottery and porcelasculpture in wood, stone and ivoJ gold, silver, jewelry and ironwopainting, textiles, architecture, cj tume, embroidery, cloissonne, cpets, etc. Orig. Pub. at $10New, complete ed. Only 4A HISTORY OF ART. From P! historic Times to the Present.Germain Bazin. With 668 IllMonochrome and color. Ma! achievements in painting and! chitecture from the cave painlirof the Paleolithic age to the pres<in concise authoritative detail wa wealth of pictures from putand private collections. Orig. Piat $9.00. New complete ed.Only 3THE MAGIC BUTTERFLAND OTHER FAIRY TALEOF CENTRAL EUROPE. SiTHE WORLD’S GREATEST FIG¬URE DRAWINGS. By J. HarrisonRoswell. With 120 plates, A pano¬rama of great art from the time ofMichelangelo and Raphael to thepresent. Hogarth, Delacroix, Durer,Rodin, Rembrandt, Rubens, Goya,Degas and others equally famousin magnificent full-page reproduc¬tions of their works with accompa¬nying notes. 10% x 13%. Pub. at$25.00.THE LIFE OF CHRIST IN MAS¬TERPIECES OF ART, And TheWords of The New Testament. Il¬lus. with 44 Plates in Full Color. Adeluxe (10% x 12%) volume por¬traying the life of Christ by thegreatest masters of art in paintingsby Breugel, Memling, El Greco,Botticelli, Leonardo, Titian andothers in mediums like mosiac,enamel, sculpture, manuscript il¬lumination, stained glass, etc. Pub.at $10.00. Only 5.95ENCYCLOPEDIA OF EUROPEANCOOKING. Over 2000 recipes fromevery country in Europe - outstand¬ing dishes for everyday as well asfestive occasions. Illus. Pub. at$8.75. Only 2.98PLANET EARTH. By G. Ames& R. Wyler. Unique blending oftext and illustration helps theyoung reader understand theplanet on which we live. Also ex¬plains the work of geophysicistsin the laboratory and in thefield. Fascinating information onwinds and weather, ocean tidesand currents, magnetism, gravi¬ty, etc. Over 100 Full Color Illus.by C. De Witt. Pub. at $3.95.Only 1.98 long-time favorites enchanting!retold. Over 50 Full Color painings. Size 10% x 14%. Pub. £$3.95. Only 1.9AN ILLUSTRATED HISTORY <FURNISHING From The Renasance to the 20th Century. By $rio Praz. 411 illustrations, aboutin color. A lively and informatihistory of home interiors througlcenturies magnificently illustraiwith hundreds of paintings, draings and prints, many in full cot9u x 12%. Pub. at $25.00.Only 14CLASSICS OF THE SILE?SCREEN. A Pictorial Treasury. 1Joe Franklin. With over 400 raphotos. A nostalgic look backwaat great films and glittering P<sonalities of filmdom’s silent atOrig. Pub. at $6.95. New, Compked. Only 2.(GENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENTThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.