Kmvri* l' Give 1143 degrees at2-part ConvocationUC will award 745 advanced degrees and 398 bachelorsdegrees at its 306th Convocation, to be held in two sessions(3 pm today and at 10 am tomorrow) in Rockefeller Chapei,59th and Woodlawn.UC President George Wells Beadle will preside at bothsessions and will deliver the Convocation address: “What’sSimpson deanship: changes, innovationsAlan Simpson will soon turnfrom Puritans and prigs toPoughkeepsie and the task ofmaking the girls at Vassarmore fully endowed.The British-born Simpson, who hasbeen Dean of the College since 1959and a member of the history de¬partment since 1946, will leave theUniversity at the end of this monthto assume his responsibilities as theThis is tii* iasr MAROONof the spring quarter. Pub¬lication will resume withthe Orientation Week issuein late September. All stu¬dents interested in joiningor rejoining the staff maydo so officially at thattime. However, all studentsinterested in preparing ar¬ticles during the summerare asked to contact Rob¬ert F. Levey, editor - in -chief, at the MAROON of¬fice, third floor Ida NoyesHall. seventh President of Vassar College.Simpson returned to campus a fewdays ago to perform his final dutieshere. He spent most of the quarterstudying education for women in vari¬ous European countries and the So¬viet Union, on a Carnegie Founda¬tion grant.He recently told Vassar’s graduat¬ing class that his trip left him ‘‘withthe impression that the brains andenergy of women is our most neg¬lected national asset.”In a speech at Vassar’s commence¬ment, he told American women toclaim their “rights in the profes¬sions,” ‘‘scale the heights.”‘‘There is much about the lot ofWestern Women that a Soviet wom¬an might envy,” he said, “but shecan’t be reproached for not using hereducation . . .”‘‘There are countries today in■which women play a far more con¬spicuous part in the national lifeand national dialogue than they doin ours . . .“There is nothing in the natureof things, except centuries of maledominance, to sanction the genial in¬equality which we witness in theUnited States today,” he said as he urged women not to be “content tooccupy the lower echelon jobs.”Simpson advised women who areplanning to become housewives notto let their education rust, and “tokeep the lamp of learning burningthrough the dark ages of domesti¬city.”He suggested they try “to fortifyand embellish the home as a schoolof values.”Simpson’s concern with educationfor women predates his appointmentto the Vassar presidency, howevei.In 1959 when his appointment to theCollege deanship was announced, hegained nationwide attention for pub¬licly inviting “the ordinary Ameri¬can girl, who wants a husband aswell as a diploma,” to UC.Simpson said at another time thathe was “far from believeing thatQuote of the Day101. 102, 103. ELEMENTARYSPANISH 1. II, 111This special accelerated coursegives the student a completeyear of college Spanish (10 semesterhours credit) during theSummer Quarter. Its principalobiective is a fluent and accuratereading knowledge of standardSpanish. The course prepares Uni¬versity of Chicago degreee studentsfor the Collegecomprehensive examinationin French.—from Downtown Centercatalog, Summer 1964Departing Doan of the College Alan Simpson co-educational schools” were the bestway to get an education.-He said, “We have asked our¬selves if beauty and brawn do notdeserve a place on our campus aswell as brains. The idea is not tolower our standards, but to attracta greater variety of Americans whoare qualified to meet them.“The ordinary American boy, whowill only make a million in later life,the ordinary American girl, whowants a husband as well as diploma,are as welcome here as the quizkid.”He reasserted his welcome tothese students last year when heattacked the “prigs, eunuchs, andmaggoty-minded monks” within thestudent body for their opposition tothe creation of the Amos AlonzoStagg scholarships for “scholar-ath¬letes.”Simpson became dean of the Col¬lege when the College was reorgan¬ized to include divisional as well asgeneral education faculty membersand was given full control over thefour-year BA. His first task wasto weld the faculty with a sense ofunity and purpose appropriate to itsnew charge of responsibility.Simpson has also worked to im-(Continued on page 16) A convocation of days of yoreDescribe new Cloister Clubby Bob LeveyPlans for the Cloister Club,a surrogate C-Shop to be con¬structed in Ida Noyes Hallsometime in the near future,were unveiled by University Archi¬tect J. Lee Jones in a meeting withstudent leaders two weeks ago.The actual date on which construc¬tion will be started is not known,however. James Ritterskamp, vice-president for administration, told theMaroon that the end of June or earlyJuly would be the earliest his office,which will give the final go-ahead,would know anything specific aboutconstruction dates.In any case, Jones, blueprints inhand, told the student leaders thatthe new Cloister Club will seat 133people (approximately as many asthe C-Shop now holds)* that its billof fare will consist mostly of coldfood but that there would be a cen¬trally located grill which will providehamburgers, hot dogs, and othershort order hot food; that the Club’sdesign will be “Jacobin style” — acolor scheme consisting mostly ofreds and browns, with captains’chairs, heavy stained waxed tables,and a ceramic tile floor; that “somewalls” will have to be knocked outbut that all permanent foundationswill remain; and that the entireproject, after Jones gets the go-aheadfrom Ritterskamp, will cost in theneighborhood of $75,000.Tables and chairs in the club, Jonessaid, will be located around theperiphery of the layout. Most tableswill be “two person” tables, but theycan be moved at will. In addition,there will be six or eight “eight per¬son” tables.The entrance to the renovated clubwill be through an open door in theIda Noyes lobby, near the stairs thatlead up to the SWAP office and nearthe door that leads to the parkinglot between Ida Noyes and NewDorm.Specifically, the centrally locatedS'.u "Hi ,[||«| MtMK on two sides of it. In the center areawill be two cooks, who will be RH&Cemployees and who, according toJones, will be able to turn out upto 30 hamburgers at a time. Althoughseveral of the student leadersthought that 30 hamburgers at a timewould be insufficient and that greatervariety of hot food should be pro¬vided, Jones pointed out that theClub was “never intended to be afull dining room.”Cold food, which will consist of thestandard array of ice cream, milk,coke, pastry, and coffee machines(Jones would not comment onwhether the coffee would be cold),will be dispensed in the back of theClub.Commenting on the design of theClub, Jones called it “quite flexible.”He stressed especially the “distinctiveshields” which will be placed alongthe north wall approximately six feetapart. Lamps, Jones said, will beplaced next to the shields, and willbe suspended at angles from the wallby links of chain. Hie overall light¬ing effect, he said, will be soft.Amber and blue colored bulbs willprobably be used.In response to a question, Jonesadded that, if the seating capacityof 133 turns out to be insufficient,there is always the possibility of ex¬tending the Club into the existing IdaNoyes ballroom. Hie addition, if itis necessary, would be walled offfrom the ballroom and would con¬sume, in terms of space, approxi¬mately a third of itThe area at the back of the Club,according to the plans, would be usedfor preparation, cold storage, bulkstorage, and dishwashing facilities.Beside the two cooks at the grill, adishwasher must also be hired beforethe Club can begin operations.Jones said that he had not beenaware of the major student objectionto the location of the Club—that it wastoo far from the center of campus.However, calling *he Club “quite acharming place,” he guessed that1500 Alumni invade campusApproximately 1500 UC alumni will return to their old stamping grounds thisweekend for the 72nd Annual Alumni Reunion.The reunion, which started last Thursday, will conclude tomorrow with threeimportant meetings. ;The first of these will be a round- *!ie.e.til!1g1 wiIl also confer the dude: A breakfast for new graduates* ki a- 1064 election is- Aumni Medal and the Alumni Cita- at the Quadrangle Club at 8 am,table discussion on 1964 election is- ,iMS for ]9t4. whlc!l wffl ^ by ^ ofsues. Hie title of this discussion is Qn gaturcjay arfternoon there will Students Warner Wick; a walking“A Stale New Deal and a Warm be “An Apres-Midi Concert of Con- tour of Harper Library, which willCold War.” Participants will include temporary Music.” Pianist Easley leave from the Reynolds Club LoungeRobert E. Merriam, ’39, A.M. ’40, Blackwood will play the world pre- at 3 pm; a walking tour of UC’sas moderator, and Professors Her- rnier of Caprice, by John Perkins of architectural highlights, which willman Finer, Harry Kalven, Jr., Albert the UC music department. He will also start from the Reynolds ClubRees. Peter Rossi, and Richard C. also perform Emerson, by Charles Lounge at 3 pm; a walking tourWade.The panelists, each an expert onsome of the various issues of the1964 election, will discuss the forth¬coming election under Merriam’sknowledgeable lead. This meetingwill be held at The Center for Con¬tinuing Education at 12:15 pm.Also to be held at 12:15 on Satur¬day is the 24th Alumni Honors As¬sembly. This meeting to be held atthe Quadrangle Club, will be ad- Scheduie of events forthe Alumni Reunion appearson page 15 of today'sMAROON. which will visit the various centersfor the fine arts on campus, andwhich will leave from the lobby ofThe Center for Continuing Educationat 3 pm; a reception and cocktailparty at President George WellsBeadle’s house at 4 pm for theIves, and Suite Op. 25 by Aronld 1964 Alumni Medalist Citees and theirSchonberg. The ooncert will also be families.held at The Center for Continuing Tbe program wH1 conclude with theEducation at 4 pm. 54th edition of the traditional Inter-Other events on Saturday sponsored fraternity Sing, which will be held at In The Mind?’'60 PhD’s, 179 Masters of Arts, 2Masters of Fine Arts, 9 Masters ofScience, 63 Doctors of Medicine,118 Masters of Business Adminis¬tration, 16 Masters of Arts in Teach¬ing, 13 Bachelors of Divinity, 118Doctors of Law, one Doctor ofJurisprudence, 3 Masters of Law,and 14 Masters of Comparative Law,will be awarded today, while 16PhD’s, 33 Masters of Science, 100Masters of Arts, 306 Bachelors ofArts, 6 Bachelors of Fine Arts, and86 Bachelors of Science will beawarded Saturday.Beside the regular degrees, twohonorary degrees of Doctor of Lawwill be presented today to HerbertA. Simon, professor of administra¬tion and psychology in the Graduateschool of Industrial Administration,Carnegie Institute of Technology;and Henri Theil, professor of econo¬metrics, Netherlands School of Eco¬ nomics, Rotterdam, and currentFord Foundation Visiting Professorof Econometrics and ManagementScience in the UC Graduate Schoolof Business.In addition, the RosenbergerMedal, awarded annually by UC inrecognition of distinguished achieve¬ment in the advancement of learn¬ing or for notably great service inthe promotion of human welfare,will be presented to three scientistscurrently at the Argonne NationalLaboratories, which is operated byUC for the US Atomic Energy Com¬mission.The three recipients are: HowardHubert Claassen, professor of phy¬sics at Wheaton College and ResidentResearch Associate at Argonne;John Gunnar Malm, associatechemist at Argonne; and HenrySelig, also associate chemist at Ar¬gonne.dressed by UC Provost Edward Levi, by the Alumni Association will in- 8:30 pm at Hutchinson Court.5;-. mSmucker states position sizing that I could not deny what Iknew to be true. As does Sargent... ^on Psi U question Since the original statement hadbeen initiated by Dean Playe, sinceit had been partially invalidated byThe Thursday after Gene Sargent’s the removal of my signature, and TO THE EDITOR:TO THE EDITOR:/ letter appeared in the Maroon Sarg- since I had repeated and clarifiedent and I were called into Dean my position to Mr. O’Keefe, I as-:f Playe’s office. We repeated our sumed that further action would bedescription of the incident of May initiated by Dean Playe. The MA-8 and agreed 1) neither of us had ROON knew that I had withdrawnbeen physically injured although we my signature and I assumed the_ believed violence could have occured statement as it existed would not be. f if we hadn t been as meek as possi- printed.■ ble, 2) I had completely agreed • ~with the facts as stated in Sargent’s I received no calls from Dean; letter when it was composed only Playe when I was in my room on'a few hours after the incident took Thursday. I checked my mailbox inplace; but by the time of our inter- Pierce Tower at least four timesvS view with Dean Playe I could no during the day and found no notes7 longer remember if I had been from the desk saying that Dean77; bounced between the fraternity Playe had called,members or merely crowded by''them, 3) we did not know that one 4:30 T was shocked when the./ of our attackers, Larry Kaplan, was me ^ said that Mr.not a fraternity member, which seems ^ Keefe, had told them that Dean, to have little significance, 4) that as Playe demanded that the statementk an imp^tial judge with no impartial be P^ted, as I understood it, withi! witnesses Dean Playe could not rov signature. I immediately called If one reads Dean Playe's letterobjectively (which I have tried to do)with a knowledge of the facts (whichI have), then one cannot help but bestruck by the similarity between whatDean Play’s letter is and what hecharges mine to be.Taking his statement from the be¬ginning, it is remarkable that DeanPlaye could say that the incident de¬scribed in my letter (“if true”) wasan indictment of Psi U and a reflec- me). That Smucker and I were “par¬ticularly and gratuitously vindictivetoward the fraternity system” is com¬plete fantasy. Except for the im¬plications of my first paragraph ofthe original letter with (which, if true,Dean Playe says that he is now inagreement ) and the facts that Smuck¬er did not inform the fraternitymembers about his reservations andthat I thought the incident would nothave happened if the location wouldhave been Pierce Tower instead ofPsi IT, we at no time discussed fra¬ternities. Office of our willingness to devoteag much broadcast time as would benecessary to present a balanced de¬tailing and argument of the issue.We did not specify that a representa¬tive of the Federal Governmentnecessarily need participate.tion upon the entire fraternity sys¬tem, for Smucker and I had cen¬sured again and again in Dean Playe’soffice for having implied that everything in the first paragraph of myoriginal letter. The incident, we weretold, was one of individuals only(“Don’t you think that the same thingwould have happened if it would havebeen Pierce Tower instead of PsiU?”). . This matter has inconveniencedSmucker and me. It has inconven¬ienced Dean Playe, Mr. O’Keefe,Kaplan, Sterz, Claridge, and appar¬ently Dean Wick too. Apologies areindeed “indicated,” but I doubt thatthey should be from Smucker andme to the campus. Second, and again by unanimousagreement, it was decided that theRadio Office would hold the originaltape until they could obtain additionalmaterial to make the program abalanced one. As with all programsin the “News Perspectives” series,the Radio Office originated the onewith the Sharp-Zagri discussion, andthey wished to complete the projectthey had started. This finished tapehas not been made as yet, to ourknowledge, and we were dismayedto find, upon reading the informationin the Maroon, that the original tape—which was to have been held—hasbeen released to WUCB for broadcast.GENE SARGENT NORMAN PELLEGRINIWFMT Program Directorchoose between our story and the one ^ean Playe and asked him about7 fabricated by our three assailants, v fhis and apologized once more forAt the meeting of May 19 which having to bother him. He seemed toDean Playe mentions in his letter a^Pt my apologies and said that heboth sides repeated their stories did 001 have time to see me until. !••« and Dean Playe quickly came to an Friday, and did _ not want my letter7 1 impasse from lack of impartial wit-’ ^ pushed. I had no intentionnesses. He suggested a letter, jo.ntly of doingsigned, to resolve the issue in the No spec:he.orders were given aboutMaroon, since the effect of Sargent’s the. Letter to the Editor but I gotletter seemed a major concern. the impression that nothing was toThat I diu not have an infallible * published in the Maroon I called- memory and was not willing to lieto create an air-tight story did notreveal that “exaggeration and sen¬sationalism had been basic ingre¬dients in Mr. Sargent’s letter.” It back the Maroon and told them thisbut emphasized that they should con¬firm it with Dean Playe. This wasnever done.The following Tuesday the MA-was our impression when we signed ROON staff member involved and Ithe statement that Dean Playe held met with Mr. O’Keefe and DeanP§ the same opinion.As soon as the statement wassigned I had reservations about it.-xM I had been willing to overlook these> 7 < Playe. When relating his version ofthe story the MAROON staff memberomitted the fact that I had told him tocall Dean Playe. Like a bewilderedass I did not cross-examine him. Sincev during the meeting because of the Dejm Playe did not know of my orderwgassrfltmncnnorv*. of tpniinn arwr*? Avnanc^ , . . ,. .. , \ . , ...he is justified n thinking I misinter¬preted his remarks over the phone.But it does not justify questioningatmosphere of tension and exhausition that existed. I considered! thissituation the rest of Tuesday after-;' noon and all of . Tuesdayii.,pv*>niner . . T1 . J ,. .h'-foro deciding, to send a letter to ” ra‘ •Dc.'ir, Pluy<'. What are the “facts” that forceT . , , 7 . At _ • v'7 the conclusions in the final paragraphMaroon Dean of Dean playe’s letter? They are 1)■ ^ ^ ’ tec^lcal 1 could no longer remember whetherreservations. about the letter of May j was ^ced ^ aUacker at_J9„ arid omit5 the fact That with- tacker, although I supported Sargent’screw my signaure from the letter letter m% when written and ^v;'W1hat was supporsed tp-appear in the ^ Playe-S o£fice; 2) LarryMaroon. I began my letter by saying Kaplan does not belong to Psi U; 3)7,1 feel rmself compelled to retract j withdrew my signature from a£fnature from the Letter to statement written by Dean Playethe udilor written in your office that he admits satisfied none of the1 Tuesday afternoon and continued a signatories; and 4) through the omis-- i few lines farther .'-“I was willing to sion of fact by a third party Deanm.ike concessions; that on further Playe was ied to believe that I mis-, , >, examinations I cannot accept in good interpreted his remarks, although it7 '7c: . is clear that I never disobeyed them. 'l! Why the about-face? The only ap¬parent explanation is that Dean Playewanted to build the incident intosomething greater than he actuallythought it Mas in order to make uslook as bad as possible when be fi¬nally tore it down.That “exaggeration and sensation¬alism had been basic ingredients ofMr. Sargent’s letter” is a prettylarge indictment. What exactly Playemeans by this he does not say. Theonly hint we are given is that LarryKaplan is not a frat man; hardly a“basic ingredient.” What was re¬vealed at the meeting of “Partici¬pants” in Dean Playe’s office wasour admission that one significantthing in my letter may have beenexaggerated or false (and that atno fault of mine). This fact wasSmucker’s getting ”roughed-up,” thedetails of which he could no longercompletely remember. They mayhave merely crowded around himand not butted him as the letter in¬tended to imply (Dean Playe saysthat he got the impression thatSmucker had been pushed back andfourth considerable distances. If that WFMT boss clarifiesSharp-Zagri issuesTO THE EDITOR: Tickets now availablefor 64-65 music seriesThis letter is in regard to recentMaroon articles which referred to thetape of a discussion between Univer¬sity of Chicago Professor MalcolmSharp and Teamsters’ Union CounselSydney Zagri. The tape was producedby the University of Chicago RadioOffice for the University-WFMTseries “News Perspectives,” and isconcerned with alleged improprietiesby the Federal Government in theJames Hoffa trial in Chattanooga. Tickets are now available for the1964-65 UC Chamber Music Series,the Music Department announced lastweek.Present seat locations will be heldonly until June 26. If a change ofseat is desired, the request will behandled in the order of its receipt.Tickets for the Series are availableat the Music Department building,5802 Woodlawn.,41. 1 iLMr.Wdb Uie ^eiiCidl mipi CTOIUHI, taui uivletter was indeed misleading, thoughnot deliberately so)- -conscienceMy. letter made it clear that 1) Do?s lhis to discreditt our motiveslli apologized for being forced to act and ,filw , >““? S™fds fo.r ?™«gafterStheSstatement was signed, 2) <«*“*•-> the ,nc,denl lhat But that's ail the meeting re¬vealed! From that it was concludedthat exaggeration and sensationalismwere ingredients in my letter.It is true that we all signed DeanPlaye’s original statement. Therewas, however, an implied promise:'that the incident would then be con¬sidered closed, and there would beno more meetings about it. We hadto study; our stories had. reached animpasse (indeed Smucker’s vague¬ness about the “bouncing” was evenmaking ours look worse); we weremeeting with people we didn’t like,and were hearing stories whichturned out stomachs. Both of your articles spoke of theprogram as one which “WFMT re¬fused to air,” and both stated thatWFMT is holding the tape until itacquires further material to representthe other side of the argument. WeMould like to clarify points in thosestatements uhich, as they stand,could lead to incorrect assumptions.First, WFMT did refuse to broad¬cast that tape by itself, but we didnot refuse to broadcast a programon die subject, a program whichcould include that tape. We did insistthat other viewpoints on the issuewere not represented in the tapewhich was given to us by the RadioOffice, and we feel that other view¬points are essential in light of themagnitude of the charges madeagainst the Government. .w Chicago MaroonActing CVEditois David I.. Aiken,Robert W. l.cvejrEditorinChief John T. WilliamsBusiness Manager Harris S. JaffeCulture-Feature EditorSharon GoldmaaAssistant to the Editor, Robin KaufmanEditor, Chicago Literary ReviewMarc Cons .It was a unanimous Radio Office-WFMT decision that the originaltape should be held until either acounter-view point could be added toit or a new tape could be made con¬sisting of a discussion of all view¬points in the issue. And because wefeel the issue is of such vast im¬portance, we informed the Radio Photo Coordinator Bill CaffrryExecutive SecretaryMarvella AlthcimerCirculation Manager Jan Grays®*Business Staff.... Jan Paynler,. John Culp, Dennis Toni a sell®,Dick Rosenberg, Howie Kosrn,Sue llerschBusiness Associates... .Andrew Stein,Bob Jaffe, Steve KleinStaff: Elli* Levin, Howard Grecnwald,Kick Pollack, Paul Aronson,Mike Silverman, Dirk Atlee,Karen Justin, Dorie Solinger,Martha Grossblat, Sol Kahan,Pete Kabinowitz, David Kichter,David Curley, Sandy I.ewy,Ernie Marraccini, Eve Hoch-Maid. Dick Ganz, David Gordon,Steve Uofsy, John Beal, BobSibebr, David Gollub, BetsyBarhman, Tom Heagy, EarlCholdin, Steve Ford, MatthewJoseph, llendrik De Jung, Joan. 7 Phillips. |fmMM1SISis*|l had’ agreed to sign it under condi- appene .lionsTbf tension that had existed,’ Except for the ct7 although they had not been created tinned above the incident as relatedcorrections men-, . by Dean Playe, 3) my reservations in Sargent’s original letter is true.^Sltlwere ones conscience, because since there were no impartial wit--Mppthe-statement implied the negation nesses it was impossible to prove orof Sargent’s letter while I knew Sarg- DISPROVE to Dean Playe sectionsent’s letter was true. of the incident—that I was swung, . . , at, that various obscenities wereI am sorry if Dean Playe inferred hurled ^ ^ ^ we were forcedfrom my letter that I was to meet ^ apok)gize for being • queer- a„dhim aF5:00 pm. My letter never lm- * dumbshit” to avoid possible vio-plied this. Wliat I said was lenceMr Sargent had to rush home im-, , _ . .• mediately after the meeting Tues- But even to Dean Playe certainday Consequently, I have - not been ..facts were conclusively verified. Psiable to discuss this matter with him. , . ,7 ,„ i spoke to him for a few minutes; U had made their, pledges chase pe-., 77 over the phone before handing this destrians while barking and running7 77.7- letter to you. He agreed that I ... ~ ., .. ,;^j-. should submit this letter and wants on all fours. Our three attackers did.7' to meet with you before the Ma- admjt, that they chased us and that"7-c roon is published Friday. He wiUV return at 5 00 pm. : We signed the statement immedi¬ately after it was written. From ourpoint of view the statement was notgood, but by their story it couldhave been much worse. There wasno brutality, but we didn’t think theincident could be summed up “child¬ish horseplay,” and we definitelythought it had been unexcusable. Lar¬ry Kaplan w'as indeed not a fra¬ternity man, and Smucker may nothave been bounced (and was nottossed). The statement, deliberatelyvague, could be read many ways..It might have created doubt about-all the facts in my letter and castaspersions on the integrity of itsauthor. Upon reflection, I decidedthat aspersions were better than meet¬ings; Smucker decided the opposite. Hillel to hold reception for gradsIlillel House will hold a re¬ception for graduating stu¬dents and their families todayand tomorrow, Rabbi RichardW. Winograd, Hillel director, an¬nounced this week.The receptions will be held or. Fri¬day from 10 am to 5 pm and onSaturday from 1 pm to 5 pm. UC’s306th convocation will be held in twosessions, the first Friday at 3 pm andthe second Saturday at 10 am.Hillel will also present a specialmemorial service for Rabbi Mau¬ rice Pekarsky, the founder of UCHillel, on June 18 at 8 pm. June 18is the second anniversary of Pekar¬sky’s death.The Pekarsky program will be thelast UC Hillel program directed byWinograd, who succeeded Pekarskyin 1962. Winograd will assume thedirectorship of Hillel at the Univer¬sity of Wisconsin on August 1.Hillel folk dancing and sabbathprograms will continue through thesummer. Interested persons areasked to call Hillel for further in¬formation.Sargent was spat at.tr *->7 Instead of establishing this by say-.1C Later that afternoon Mr. O Keefe what had happened and what7 ran into me by the ditto machine could ^ ^ proven> Dean Piaye■> Student Activities. Dean Playe oreated a letler that implied that in-had informed him ol my letter and Gf the importance and occur-he invited me into his office. We cnce of the incident. when I opposed; -discussed the situation for about an ^b;s> Dean Playe attacked the repu-hour. He tried to convince me that tatjons of Sargent and myself, de-the statement to the Maroon should stroying the importance of the event,be accepted because neither our Doing this was so important that itstory nor theirs could be proven, and was done not on]y m the Maroon,because something was needed to tjyt on bulletin boards across cam-balance out the harmful effect of pus>Sargent’s letter. I affirmed my posi¬tion as stated in my letter, empha- TOM SMUCKER Tom’s letter •: gives sufficient -replyto Playe’s next-to-last paragraph. Idon’t know what Dean Playe expectsto accomplish by all the waiting, ap¬pearing, and phoning he includes in it.He perhaps thinks that we were fry¬ing to confuse him by saying wewould meet him and then not com:and then deliberately avoid his phonecalls? Frankly, I was expecting himto call us : and arrange a meetingor at least lake some further action. UC faculty aids Indiana studentsMost of the “facts” that forcedDean Playe’s conclusion are irrele¬vant or erroneous tor unknown to ,7 The UC faculty has contributed$400 of a total donation of $3000 tothe Committee to Aid the Blooming¬ton Students, a spokesman announcedthis week.100 members of theAcuity contributed to the Commit¬tee, v.h:ch was organized to enlistsupport for three students at theUniversity of Indiana who had beenindicted under an Indiana seditionstatute.The students were freed when alocal court threw out the indictmentsand declared the statute unconstitut¬ ional. Although prosecution has ap¬pealed to the State Supreme Court,the Committee believes that publicawareness and support played animportant role in the favorable de¬cision.The Committee gave credit toHarry Kalven, Jr., professor of law;*Leonard Meyer, professor of music;!and Joseph Sittler, porfessor in theDivinity School for writing the let¬ter to the faculty requesting support,and to Dean of Students WarnerWick for advice and cooperation.June 12, 1964» 2 • * CHICAG OMAR OON •1-*vIA Apprehension, tension about Mississippi project riseby ft. D. GilmanThe state of Mississippi ex¬pects with certainty the arri¬val of some 1,000 persons towork in the COFO (Council ofFederated Organizations, composedof SNCC, CORE, SCLC, and theNAACP) Mississippi Summer Proj¬ect; however, no one is sure whatto expect once the project begins.As planned, the project will dothe most extensive voter registra¬tion work yet in the state and willselect a Freedom Democratic delega¬tion to the Democratic conventionin August, where the legitimacy otthe regular Mississippi delegationwill be challenged. Along with thevoter registration work, FreedomSchools and Community Centers areplanned. A White Communities Proj¬ect (to be led by a former segrega¬tionist from Tennessee) will do re¬search in white Mississippi.The state of Mississippi, however,has reacted strongly to the plannedproject. Sheafs of bills have beenpassed in preparation for the sum¬mer; all kinds of demonstrationshave been outlawed; the FreedomSchools too have been declared il¬legal. Police departments are add¬ing men and equipment. There arearrangements for transporting jailoverflows to the state penitentiary.Parchman. Mississippi. A bill tosterilize parents who have a secondillegitimate child, admittedly aimedat Mississippi's Negroes, was defeat¬ed narrowly in die state Senate afterhaving easily passed the house.The project is foremost in theminds of Mississippians. Storiesabout it apt>ear daily in the frontpages of the impers. People recentlyreported throughout the state that itis the prime conversational topic. ACBS newsman in Mississippi tapinginterviews to be broadcast overWBBM radio this summer, recentlygave the somewhat encouraging re¬port that white Mississippians * ex¬pressed, off the record, an expecta¬tion of corning integration in Missis¬sippi. However, with the project fastTake a closer lookat one of thebest made carsin the world^PEUGEOT(Say Pooj-oh) approaching, there has recently beena bombing in the Canton, Miss.,SNCC office, and at the Jacksonoffice, bricks were hurled throughthe windows from a passing car.Much apprehensionThere is thus a great deal of ap¬prehension about the summer. Civilrights, heretofore, has been markedby brutal intimidation, many beat¬ings, and some killings. All volun¬teers are warned that jail is verylikely and to have bond moneyready. Tire danger from violencehas been pointed out. In light ofthe threatening situation, attemptshave been made to secure the prom¬ise of federal protection for theworkers. President Johnson has beenconferred with, but wiil not makea delinite commitment.Voter registration work in Missis¬sippi is now about four years old.Of the state's approximately 900,-000 Negroes (42% of the population),25,000 are registered to vote. Regis¬trars refuse to register Negroes, andthe attempt to register has beenmet with violence and intimidation.Several methods are used to pre¬vent registration. Applicants are toldthat the forms are not then avail¬able or that the registrar is busyor out. If they succeed in getting aform, applications arc rejected fortrivial mistakes in the filling out. Ifthere are no such mistakes, thereis yet another way. To register, anapplicant must interpret a section ofthe state constitution assigned bythe registrar and write an explana¬tion of the rights and duties of thecitizen. Whites are given simpleconstitutional passages, and inade¬quate answers are allowed to pass.Negroes, however, are assigned ab¬struse passages, and any answer isarbitrarily rejected.Last year. COFO registered votersitself and conducted a Freedom votefor Governor and Lieutenant Gov¬ernor. Aaron Henry, chairman of thestate NAACP, and Ed King, chap¬lain at Tougaloo college, polled 80.-000 votes in this election as opposed to the 125.000 votes that electedthe current Governor, GovernorJohnson. In the June 2nd Democraticprimary just finished. Freedom can¬didates ran for Congressman in thesecond, third, and fourth districts,and for Senator.The selection of delegates to theDemocratic National Convention pro¬ceeds thus in Mississippi: all regis¬tered voters in a precinct may at¬tend a convention, which selectsdelegates to a county convention,which selects delegates to a districtconvention. The five district conven¬tions select some oi the delegatesto the National Convention and alsoselect delegates to a state conven¬tion, which selects the remainingdelegates to the national convention.COFO will runfreedom registrationCOFO, in addition to trying to getNegroes officially registered, willconduct a freedom registration witha simplified form of the state appli¬cation. COFO aims to freedom reg¬ister 300,000 to 400.000 people. Then,the regular pyramid of conventionswill be followed by those freedomregistered (and those officially reg¬istered who want to participate), anda freedom delegation to the NationalConvention will be selected. Voterregistration workers will do can¬vassing, teach how to fill out thestate forms, and carry out the Free¬dom registration program. Work isbeing done in the North to get sup¬port for seating the Freedom dele¬gation in Atlantic City.The Freedom Schools will beaimed at Negro high school students.There will be day schools held inchurches, homes, yards, etc. withfrom 5-15 teachers and 25-50 stu¬dents. Supplies are being raised inthe North. Books have been collectedaround Chicago, and publishers havebeen solicited. Teachers are askedto bring with them what suppliesthey can raise.The program of the FreedomSchools will be divided into three areas: academic work, recreationand cultural activities, and leader¬ship development. Students and per¬haps teachers too are expected to beengaged in voter registration workalong with the school work. Remedi¬al academic subjects will be taught,since Mississippi education, especial¬ly Negro education, is atrocious.Other material will focus on the stu¬dent’s situation in Mississippi, on thesituation of the Negro in the North,on the “myths and inconsistencies”in the dominant white culture, on thepower structure in Mississippi andthe role of the DixieeraLs in Congress,on a comparison of the plight of theNegro and the poor white, and onthe “Movement.”Community Centers will be aimedat the older part of the communityand will be run in the manner ofsettlement houses. Two are alreadyoperating in Mississippi! one in Me¬ridian, where operations have gonefairly smoothly, and one in Green¬wood, where there has been diffi¬culty. The National Council ofChurches is contributing money to support the Community Centers pro¬gram.A health and sanitation programis also planned. People will, wherepossible, be guided to the use ofpublic facilities. However, COFO it¬self plans to run tests for diabetesand anemia. Workers are being in¬structed by doctors and nurses onthe techniques in running these sim¬ple tests.Also planned is the showing of afilm used by the United States In¬formation Agency in underdevelopedcountries on how to dig sanitarywells. Attempts will also be madeto test water supplies around thestate.The project will bring together avariety of people. Many are collegestudents; many are graduate stu¬dents; some are school teachers, so¬cial workers and nurses going down,and other people with yet otherbackgrounds. All workers will gothrough a training session before go¬ing to Mississippi. In two differentsessions at Western College forWomen in Oxford. Ohio, volunteerswill be intensively prepared for thework they are to do.DR. AAROK ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONS DO 3-6866PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES403; Judged one of the 7 bestlhade cars in the world by JohnBond, Publisher of Road & Track.404: Designed to beeven better than the 403. 1)0 NT MS5INVENTORY ✓CLEARANCE SALESIBooks; Many on the sales table athuge reductions.404 Station Wagon:Roomy, comfortable, durable.ROB NELSONMOTORSIMPORT CENTREPuli Mm an display • nw & used6040 $. Cottage GroveMidway 3-4501 Stationery Items: See the bargainson the special sale table.Clothing: See the bargains such as:Men’s #3.95 sport shirts now $2.00Women’s #3.95 blouses now $2.00Women’s #1.75 scuffs now $1.00Other lingerie itemsat reduced pricesThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Hours: 8-5 Mon. thru Fri.; 8:30-12:30 Sat.Special Hours Alumni Day, Sat., June 13, 8:30-5:00 receive your diploma in styleCRISP-LOOKING SUITSbyGot a whim to look neat and trimon Graduation Day? You’ll findour young-in-build suits havemajored in fashion and come offthe designing tables takingtop honors. See them all herenow with shoulders naturalto give you thatPhi Beta Kappa look.FromSAE00Sfomtt atth ©atttjm*la the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100Open Daily 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.Thursday and Friday 9 a.m.-9 p.m.<!«*• 12, 1t64 • CHICAGO MAROON • 8Football, civil rights, bookstore highlight SG yearby Ellis LevinFootball, curriculum evalu¬ation, civil rights, and thebookstore mark some of theareas in which Student Gov¬ernment has been active this pastyear.SG began the year seeking toachieve greater student involvementjn the University decision makingprocess. It was felt that the Disci¬plinary Committe, which allows astudent observer to attend its meet¬ings, was inadequate. The commit¬tee, now made up only of facultymembers, judges students who havebeen charged with violating socialrules, shoplifting in the Universitybookstore, violations of registra¬ tions for University housing, andsimilar acts.SG proposed that a new commit¬tee on social rules be set up includ¬ing students, administrators andfaculty members which would beempowered to make new rules andjudge violators.Other proposals included student-administration committees to studypolicies in admissions, scholarships,and curriculum.In March agreement was finallyreached on a compromise socialrules committee. Jointly establishedby the Dean of Students’ Office andSG, the committee, including sixstudents, was to explore the possibili¬ty of changing existing rules andexisting ways of making and enforc¬ ing them. The committee is pres¬ently setting guidelines for changes.In another area, Tom Heagy, Cam¬pus Action chairman was involvedin a study of criteria for admissionswith Charles O'Connell, director ofAdmissions. A report from this com¬mittee will probably be concludednext fall.Gets promise on footballThe SG Assembly supported thegoals of the football sit-in last Novem¬ber, and called upon the administra¬tion to limit the athletic programand make the athletic departmentbudget “available for inspection byresponsible student, administrationand faculty groups.”Dean of Students Warner Wick re¬plied to the resolution tlie nextHow to while away the summer...Contrary to popular belief,the Chicago scene does notturn precisely into a vast cul¬tural wasteland between Juneand September. True enough,the Chicago Symphony is outof town; true enough, legiti¬mate theatre does turn into apumpkin until October: butsome events during the sum¬mer months are worth goingto and, worth planning aheadfor.The nearest thing to a summer fes¬tival in Cook County is Ravinia. Theregular concerts are not so wellmanned as they once were, unfor¬tunately: several of the concerts willbe conducted by the syrupy Kos-telanetz and the equally mushyPrevin. On the other hand, there willbe such seasoned, dependable con¬ductors as Pierre Monteu (withLeonard Rose and Ruggiero Ricci),William Van Otterloo, and Igor Stra¬vinsky. Soloists will include, in addi¬tion to Rose and Ricci, sopranosAnna Moffo and Phyllis Curtin, andpianists Eugene Istomin and I .eonFleisher.In addition to Ravinia’s classical'and, apparently, semi-classical) con¬ certs, there will be chamber musicby the New York Pro Musica. Jazzand folk music fans will be interestedto learn that folk singers Rob Dylan,Miriam Makeba, and the NewChristy Minstrels, and jazz musicians1 xxiIs Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, andThelonius Monk will also be mi to giveconcerts between the middle of Juneand the end of July.In early August, the New YorkCity Ballet will give six perform¬ances. From the middle of Augustthrough September, the Ravinia fes¬tival will be given over to the cele¬bration of the 400th anniversary ofthe birth of William Shakespeare,Henry V, Twelfth Night, and Hamletwill be performed by a company ofBritish actors directed by PeterDews. Anyone interested in these cul¬tural events would do well to bringmoney: it costs from four to sixdollars to spend an evening atRavinia Park.Die CTA, needless to say. does notoperate that far up the Nor th Shore:Ravinia can be reached by motor-carby following the Dan Ryan and Edensexpressways to Highland Park; if youdon’t have access to a car, but stillwant to go, you can take the Chicagoand North Western train (which youcatch at Canal and Madison down¬town) all the way up there. Discount February. He asserted that the ad¬ministration had “no plans concerninga change in the status of football.”“We have no plans to join anyexisting athletic conference, and wecannot imagine a conference inwhich our membership would be bothdesirable and feasible.” Wick said.Wick’s letter also promised that ifany change in policy concerning foot¬ball were ever seriously considered“tlie fact would be made known sothat the wisdom of the proposalsmight be examined by students andfaculty alike.Curriculum study progressesIn connection with the AcademicAffairs Committe of SG (formerly“SFRC”) a number of student com¬mittees undertook studies of generaleducation courses, curricula of fieldsof concentration, and tutorial pro¬grams.Die committee on course evalua¬tion met with tlie chairmen of thegeneral education courses to ascertainthe objective of the courses and thenheld a series of open discussions heldin Ajjril and May at which studentswere invited to criticize and makesuggestions.Die discussion of Physical Sciences105 6-7 was followed by the distri¬bution of questionnaires to studentstaking the course. A retx>rt of theresults will be made during the sum¬mer. It is hoped that similar studiesresulting in recommendde changescan be made for other courses as well.A second committee concernedwith the curriculum of tlie fields ofconcentration also used the question¬naire to explore the feelings of tliestudent body. A third committee ontutorial programs recommendedmore extended use of senior tutorials.Bookstore discountappeal failsSG’s attempt to negotiate a discountfor students at the bookstore metwith complete failure. D,e Adminis¬tration declared that bookstore pro¬fits were used to pay for the deficitsincurred in operating Universityhousing rates must do up. Despite therates remain on the same level orliousing rates must go up Despite tliefailure to gain a discount dorm rateswent up nevertheless.Cooperation with CCCO OK'dAnd then there’s always the Hyde In other actions the Student Gov-Park. . . eminent this past year voted to co¬coupon books are available, allowinga saving of 25%.Free concerts nearer to Hyde Parkare also available. Wednesday, Fri¬day, Saturday, and Sunday nights inJuly and August there are not-ter-ribly-great concerts at the GrantPark Bandshell, just north of theField Museum. Take the IC to Roose¬velt. And just behind the Museum ofScience and Industry, Dieter Koberconducts the Chicago Chamber Or¬chestra, Sunday afternoon at 3:30.Between July and August individualtickets to the Lyric Opera go on sale.These are sold on a first-come-first-served basis, am* it is possible to ob¬tain substantially better seats byordering tickets early. If you intendto go to the opera fall quarter, itmight be wise to begin planning now.Legitimate theatre, as I remarkedbefore, turns into a pumpkin over tliesummer. In the suburbs, north, south,and west, you can see old musicalsperformed. Tills is called "summertheatre.” In the city, the cabarettheatres, Second City and the HappyMedium, will still be oiien. The lasthold-out of serious drama in the citywill be UC Court Dieatre, which w illpresent three plays by Shake.-peare:The Taming of the Shrew, Romeoand Juliet, and The Tempest. operate with the Coordinating Councilof Community Organizations, (CCCO)and to support the two city-wides-iiool boycotts and Civil Rights Ral¬ly to be held June 21.GNOSIS weak in CollegeIn the spring elections, GNOSIS,the majority parly, met with a sur¬prising defeat in the College winningonly three of 16 seats. POLIT won)0, and three independents were alsoelected.In the graduate schools, however,GNOSIS maintained most of its seatsgiving it a precarious plurality intlie new government. While thisplurality was enough to elect nineGNOSIS members to the execu¬tive committee, - a conservative de¬fection gave the Campus Affairs postto an independent. The remainingposition went to a POLIT representa¬tive.Gene Groves, president of the newgovernment hopes that SG can bemore vigorous and active in the coin¬ing year. He looks forward to an in¬vestigation of how to get studentsrepresented on the administration1»1 icy—making bodies which decideissues most directly affecting stu¬dents: a group to work for the inter¬ests of the graduate student, includ¬ing married student housing andscholarship policy; greater participa-tion by non-SG members in govern¬ment activities; and lively floorfights in tlie Assembly.Lemisch receives $1310for study of seamenJesse Lemisch, assistant professorof history, has received a $1310 grantenabling him to continue his researchon the role of seamen in the life ofthe American colonies.“I hope to examine, in greater de¬tail, the role played by seamen incolonial society, with special refer¬ence to the politics of the 1760’s and70’s—the period leading up to theAmerican Revolution,” Lemisch said.Lemisch joined the UC faculty lastyear after receiving his PhD fromYale University. Lemlsch’s grant isfrom the American Council ofI ^earned Societies.You won't have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORACE CO.101 1 East 55th StreetBUtterfield 8-6711 Silk Screen SuppliesA Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALS,MIMEOGRAPH PAPERAND SUPPLIES(Wholesale Prices in QuantityOnlylDUNCANS1305 E. 53rd ST.HY 3-4111Co^BEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 NEW CAR LOANS$4 per hundredUNIVERSITYNATIONAL BANK1354 East 55th St.MU 4-1200Member: P.D.I.C. PRINTS OR SLIDESPlace your order in our Photo Department for any of thebeautiful pictures now on exhibit in our display window.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Hours: 8-5 Mon. thru Fri. 8:30-12:30 Sat.Special Hours Alumni Day, Sat., June 13, 8:30 thru 5NOW Storage Special!You can have Ample Closet Space byusing our Safe Storage Facilities foryour Out Of Season Garments. Fullprotection against . . .FIRE • THEFT • HEAT • MOTHSAsk about our Sensational Thrifty BoxStorage...A Real Money Saving Value!THE VYlwc (Shook.CLEANERS • LAUNDERERS1013-17 E. 61st STREETMl 3-7447 - HY 3-^ co.For Over Fifty Years . . .FINE DRY CLEANING 9 VOIT TKANSISTOK 8ATTCHICS 19c10% discount to students with ID cardsSales and Serviceon all hi-fi equip-jment, foreign anddomestic.TAPE RECORDERSPhonographs - AmplifiersPhono Needles and CartridgesTubes - Batteries24 hr. Service CallsTd? 5300— Telefunken & Zenith —AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORYest. 19291300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111In the 53rd-Kimbarh Plaza4 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 12, 1964Clillkjk ADS1*y *.1- FOP SALEBEAUTIFUL Triumph station wagon(with crank>, very cheap. BU 8-1455.’57 BUICK, 4-door, auto, trans., radio,heater, good condition, newly washed,call Harry, 493-5882 soon. Best price.KENT a 14-foot travel trailer. Haseveryth i.ng for economy and comfort.Sleeps 5. RESERVE NOW! GR 6-5500.WEBCOR phonograph, daybed, smallbookcase, small oriental rug, misc.Very cheap PL 2-8683.HELP WANTED FOURTH OF JULY weekend at CirclePines Centers, Dclton. Michigan, adults:$10, children under 8, $5. Call DO 3-5253for information, reservations, and routeto camp.LOST: silver ID bracelet, inscribedFRED, reward, 30 Hitchcock.FOR the difference in food and enter¬tainment. it’s the ARABIAN SANDS,8827 Stony Island. 374-4493.WHAT better after exams than, —strawberries? 39 consecutive years ofstrawberries at Phi Sig, last all-campussocial event. Strawberry Festival! SPACIOUS Apts., studio, 1 or 2 bed-rmS., furn. or semi-furn., in quietbldg., near Midway, grad, students,Co-op Board Approval, call eves, be¬fore 9, FA 4-3768 or 467-1941.FOR RENT: 5 room apart., availablenow and next year, 53rd & Greenwood.288-6116.SUMMER Sublet, 2'2 rm. bsmt. apt.,new kitchen, bath, $75. 363-5162.WANTED CHEMISTRY MAJORSHave you had organic chemistry? Areyou interested in a permanent positionin industrial chemistry? Do you likethe idea of tuition reimbursement? Ifyour answer is yes to all these ques¬tions call Howard Rubin at ParkerPersonnel (HA 7-2882. Our business atParker is placing people.) This is NOTfor summer employment only.OFFICE POSITION in Hyde Park k7-oellent opportunity for person wantingposition that will grow with fast grow¬ing, progressive Hyde Park Federal.Receptionist. typing. shorthand. InHyde Park Shopping Center. Con¬venient Pleasant. Call Mrs. Petersen,BU 81122WANTED: English majors with B A.’sneeded as theme readers in ChicagoHigh Schools. $1.50 hr., 10 hrs. a week.Write James Stamper, Dept. Cur¬riculum, Chicago Board of Education,228 North La Salle.STUDENT to babysit in exchange forroom and kitchen privileges. BU 8-4391.BABYST1TKR: in exchange privateroom and bath, flexible hrs., 57th andBlackstone. PL 2-1382. FURN Bedrm. in large apt. for sum¬mer, $50/mo. NO 7-1683.ONE RM apt. available June 15-Sept.15. furn., t.v. Sc stereo, directly acrossfrom Point, no kitchen, $65, mo. Ml3-3268.ONE RM. studio apt., unfum., avail.July 1. 493 5171.2‘i RM. studio apt., unfurn., by lake,avail. June 15. 493-5171.HOUSE FOR SALE, 4 bedrms.. 2'ibaths, air eond.. 3 yr. old townhousenear 56th and Harper, outstanding lo¬cation, many extras, upper $30’s. DO3-2856.SUMMER Sublet, 4!i light rooms, 2bedrms., 2 baths, completely furn.,mod. kitchen, reasonable rent. PL2-2190.CORNER Townhouse, 5 yrs. old, 3bedrms., study, 1‘2 baths, finished base¬ment, laundry, workshop, appliances,patio. MI 3-2785.SUBLEASE 3*2 rm. mod. apt. in H P , 6 RM APT. July-Aug, 667-7826,bld*La*f«anmJ,Vh- RENT «■ sublet 2V2 rms. $77.50, closebidjf. $145 month. 1st month s rent pamrrns nine 643-7197free. Call FI 6-4835, between 9-5. 10 campUS’ nm€‘ nvl'HEY, OLD GRAD! Are you an astutebusinessman, the other 364 days of theyear? Then save this ad for tomorrow!It tells you where to get fast, top-notch service at a fair price for youroffice dictating equipment (and yourown pro rec’d’g gear, too).ELECTRONIC SERVICES OO.ES 5-5524PART TIME WORK OPP’TYEXTRE1MELY LIBERAL COMMISSIONOF 25% ON SALES OF ADVERTISINGSPACE IN EXCITING CIVIL RIGHTSMAGAZINE. MINIMUM OF 10 HOURSPER WEEK EXPERIENCE DESIREDBUT NOT NECESSARYEDITORIAL AND WRITING POSI¬TIONS OPEN TOO. Contact S. B.Lansky, MU 4-3416, evenings. APT. to rent. 5*i rms., $111, immed.occupancy. 752-2615.SITUATIONS WANTEDEXPERIENCED dental assistant de¬sires part-time work. No eves. CallRE 1-4095.EXPERIENCED lady would like tocare foe children during vacation ofparents. MI 3-9257.WANTEDRIDERS to Minneapolis for June 15and 21. $6.00. Dennis Nordmoe, PL2-9815. SEEK girl grad to share nicely furn¬ished apartment. June 20-Oct. 1. 5559University Own bedroom. $53. Calleves., after 10:30. Ann, WH 4-4380,room 702, Or call eves, after June 1,Sharon, AL 1-4590.COMPLETE camping equipment forman and wife. 624-5142.FOR RENT, ROOMS, APTS., ETC. MALE Roommate, $40 per month. DO3-7443.FEMALE to share apartment. ED3-7974 eves.ROOMMATE (male) wanted for sum¬mer Available immediately, relativelyinexpensive. Corner of 57th and Mary¬land. Near bus, campus, hospital.363-8333.FEMALE to share 3'2 room apartmentfor summer quarter. Furnished, newlyredecorated, 1 block from Point. $45(negotiable) per month. Paula, 363-9294. GIMME stingbean. I’m hungry, man.I want a bureau in good condition, acouch, easy chairs, lamps, air condi¬tioner. other stuff. Call today by 3.667-4635 or 667-734S. Dick Gantz.IMMEDIATELY, Summer Sublet, 3-4rooms $90-100. Rent now through mid-September. Married Couple. Mr. orMrs. Johnston, c/o Cowan, NO 7-5651.3 or 4 ROOMS furn.. sublet from profor grad, student going on sabbaticalfrom Oct. 1-June Write or call collectMargrit Meyer, 805 S. Cedar, Urbana,Illinois. 367-2653.SERVICESTUTORING: math (through calculus),German, Russian. At your convenience.924-3254.ALTERATIONS, plain sewing, mending.Kay Witherspoon, DO 3-1686.PERSONALSFOR the difference in enjoyment, it’sthe ARABIAN SANDS, 8827 Stony Is¬land. 374-4493. WANT a place to stay during summer SUMMER Sublet, 4 rm. furn. apt,, cool,quarter? Call the Phi Sigs Phi Sigma daylight basement, near campus, $85/Delta, 5625 Woodlawn. PL 2-9477. mo. 5627 S. Maryland.SUMMER Sublet, option for next year, STUDIO apt available, for sale or2'2 rms., $94/mo., inc. util. 5728 Black- rent, very reasonable, 3 rms., onstone, 288 3757. campus. HY 3-3721.EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist53-Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Facultydiscount“There is no question but that thahistoric Christian faith does not havethe hold on people that one mightwish. But the solution is not to de¬molish the faith, so that there willbe nothing to which twentieth-cen¬tury man can object, but to recog¬nize, with Pmlt^sor Walter Thorsonof M I T., that ‘If historic Christian¬ity is in conflict with the twentiethcentury, something is wrongwith the twen¬tieth century',” for a free copy of tkocurrent issue of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writ#to Dept. CP-9, 150 E.35 St., H. Y. 16, N. Y. THE BEAGH HOUSE On Lake Michigan500 ft.privatebeachpatiospaciouslawnsheart ofresortsectionrestaurantand loungenearbyFOR THE YOUNG IN SPIRIT AND MEANS$25-$35 Per Week Per Person—Inquire Abwiil Croup RatesFOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS WRITETHE BEACH HOUSE 111 North Shore DriveSouth Haven, Michigan 2 Hri. From Chicago STUDENTS WELCOMEAT/ THE BOOK NOOK \1540 E. 55th ST. \/ 10% DISCOUNT \> ON BOOKS. ^If it's not on our shelves,we'll gladly order it for you(and you STILL save 10%)WE'LL BE HAPPY TO SEE YOU ATTHE BOOK NOOK1540 E. 55th ST.HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERV* Today's ■AssignmentCOMETCUSTOMLIMITED>1882Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL URBANITE RESTAURANT & LOUNGEModern Jazx FeaturingRHETTA AND TENNISONSensational Singing DuoNightly except Mon. & Tues.no admission charge75th and Michigan (block east of Dan Ryan) Jimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.Welcome AlumniVisit our store and see the many thousands oftitles we carry in our Book Departments. Youmight also like to see our U. of C. post cards incolor or select a souvenir from our display of U.of C. gift items.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802^EI!is AvenueHours: 8-5 Mon. thru Fri.; 8 30-12:30 Sat.Special Hours Alumni Day, Sat., June 13, 8:30 - 5 I HALLETT& SONSEXPERT MOVERS, INC.LOCAL • INTERSTATE - WORLDWIDESTORAGEWhen You Have a Moving ProblemLarge or SmallCALLTOM HALLETTBILL HALLETTJACK HALLETTHALLETTOffice & Warehouse10 E. 70thPHONE VI 6-1015AGENT FORNATIONALVAN t- I NE - — 'June 12, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROONUS aid heads education yr.by Citizen KahanTo “celebrate” the 20th an¬niversary of D-Day, DarrylZanuck has rereleased hisslick'iy-nyide “The LongestDay,” one of the most notable Anli-Peace films ever produced If youliked World War II, you’ll love “TheLongest Day.”. . Italian producerDino de Laurentis is now filming theBible. Originally several directorswere going to handle various partsof the story, but now the whole jobhas been handeci to John Huston—an appropog assignment for the direc¬tor of “Beat the Devil” and "TheRoots of Heaven.” . . On the brighterside, Stanley Ki.brick, co-writer, pro¬ducer, and director of “Dr. Strange-love,” is now “thinking about” a newfilm or extra-terrestrial life. . . .Ingmar Bergman's newest will be acomedy in color.The NabesA sumptuous cinematic summer isin store for Chicago film fans, atvarious local theatres. The HydePark Theatre tonight plays IngmarBergman’s newest stunning additionto the school of CryptogramAtticDrama, “The Silence,” a powerfulstudy with splendid performances byIngrid Tnulin and Gunnel Lindblum.Other summer attractions at the HydePark will include “To Bed or Not ToBed,” Elia Kazan’s “AmericaAmerica” with the Academy Award¬winning satirical short “The Critic,”“The Chalk Garden,” a drama star¬ring Deborah Kerr, John Mills, andHayley Mills, Peter Sellers in “TheWorld of Henry Orient” with SidneyPoitier in “Lilies of the Field.”“Cleopatra” still reigns at the Jef¬fery Theatre. She will be followedon June 26th by James Bond, thehero of “From Russia with Love.”Subsequent features will include “TheWorld of Henry Orient,” “The ChalkGarden,” and “Bedtime Story.”The Clark Theatre, downtown, isnow presenting its annual SummerFilm Festival on its usual two-a-daypolicy. The excellent lineup of 115films tonight features two MarxBrothers classics “A Day at theRaces” and “A Night at the Opera.”Future highlights include: Bunuel’sgreat “Viridiana” (June 14), “Roomat the Top” with “Sons and Lovers”“The Balcony” (July 13), Brigette(June 15) two British shiHips in spy-ual deviation “The Victim” and “TieMark” (June 1(5), “Pride and Preju¬dice” starring Lawrence Olivier andGreer Garson (June 19), Pabst’s ex¬cellent study of Hitler “The Last TenDaj's” (June 20), two Kurosawa hits,“The Bad Sleep Well” and “Sanjuro”(June 21), “Great expectations” and“David Copperfield” (June 27),“Electra ’ and Antigone” (June 28),Kubrick’s outstanding vitriolic warfilm “Paths of Glory (July 3), “BlackOrpheus” (July 5), the Japanese“Magnificent 7” with the American “Magnificent 7” (on July 7, ofcourse), Resnais* renowned “Hiro¬shima Mon Amour” with, of allthings, Stanley Kramer’s “Judgmentat Nuremberg” ( July 10), two Frenchclassics “The Italian Straw Hat” and“A Nous La Liberte” (July 12),Sartre’s “Dirty Hands” with Genet’sBardot in Cluzot’s “The Truth” (July17), Jean Renior’s famous master¬piece “Rules of the Game” (July19), Chabrol's stylized version of aBluebeard case, “Landru” (July 25),the recent Polish hit “Knife in theWater” with Godard’s brilliant “VivreSa Vie” (July 26), Truffaut’s popularand highly-praised “The 400 Blows” (July 29), Visconti’s elegant ‘TieLeopard” with DeSica’s Neo-Realistclassic “Bicycle Thief” (July 30), andthe Aiec Guiness comedy classic“Kind Hearts and Coronets” (July31).Other noteworthy features includedin this Festival wi 1 be “StreetcarNamed Desire,” “Two Women,”“Saturday Night and Sunday Morn¬ing,” “Studs Lonigan,” "The SweetSmell of Success,” “The Red and theBlaek,” “The Manchurian Candi¬date.” “To Catch a Thief,” and “FortApache.” For addit'onal informationsee the Festival program availablefrom the Clark Theatre.Large gifts helpUniversity buildingsThe University’s currentbuilding campaigns were aid¬ed by a number of large giftsduring the year.Tlie first major gift toward the con¬struction of the planned new centrallibrary, a check for $500,000, was pre¬sented to the University in Januaryby the Harriet Pullman Sehermer-hom Trust. Tie new structure, whichwill cost $15 million, will replace 62year-old Harper LibraryThe family of Ernest E. Quantrellgave the university $325,000 to launcha campaign to raise $1.5 million forthe internal renovation of Cobb Hall.New classrooms, eating rooms, andoffices will be constructed to makeCobb Hall the "enter of undergrad¬uate activities.Tie National Science Foundation gave the University $1 million tobe used in the construction of a $4.5million chemistry building on the eastside of the 5700 block of Ellis Ave¬nue. Another $1 million will be spentto complete the modem ization ofJones and Kent Chemical Laborato¬ries.The Joseph Kennedy Foundationgave the University $2.2 million to es¬tablish a retarded children’s ward inits new Children's Hospital. Tie Hos¬pital will cost $7.8 million.A final imrversity building project,for which the University has not re¬ceived any specific gift, is the re¬modelling of two apartment hotels,the Fairfax and the Chicago Arms.The two buildings will be convertedinto married students housing. by Laura GodofskyTn a down-to-the-wire finishlast year, Congress gave UScolleges and universities Thefirst direct facilities aid sincethe Land Grant College Act of 18(52.It also extended the popular Na¬tional Defense Education Act, passeda medical school aid bill, .and startedan investigation of federal researchexpenditures.Tie facilities aid came in theHigher Education Facilities Act. TheAct provides both public and privatecolleges with 1$.2 billion over thefirst three years of a five year-pro¬gram to build more classrooms.Unfortunately, the House recentlyrefused to make available $239 mil¬lion authorized for fiscal 1964 underthe act. It did, however, approvepractically all of the 1965 funds for(he program. All but $25 million of(lie “lost” 1964 authorization can becarried over to future years.The Higher Education FacilitiesAct had been held up in the Senatepending a joint conference commit ieeresolution of a dispute over a hugevocational aid bill, which includedprovisions for the extension of theNDEA and aid to schools in imixictedareas.Apparently some phone calls byPresident Johnson to key Congres¬sional negotiators broke the dead¬lock . and the Vocational EducationActs were passed in rapid successionIn December.Tie Vocational Education Act ex¬tended the NDEA for two years antiaugmented its college student loanfunds.The medical scliool aid bill willprovide $205.7 million in grants and loans for medical facilities and stu¬dents.The Vocational Aid Bill, the High¬er Education Facilities Act, and theMedical Scliool Aid hill originallywere part of the $5.7 billion 24 pointomnibus education bill submitted toCongress by President Kennedy aiJanuary, 1963.When it became apparent thatfights over aiding parochial schoolswould prevent the passage of anybill providing aid to public elemen¬tary ;md secondary schools, the om¬nibus bill was broken up into moremanageable parcels.Ironically, ft took President Ken¬nedy's death to bring about action onso many of ihe provisions ow theomnibus bill.On September 11, the House cre¬ated by resolution a nine- man com-mitee to probe tie fedenil govern¬ment's multi-billion dollar researchprograms. The Committee's firstprogress report, released in Febru¬ary, outlined a series of ten detailedstudies that will be undertaken on thenature, scope, ai:d administration offederal reach.Legislation affectinghigher educationNo major legislation affecting high¬er education has been passed underPresident Johnson since tlie Decem¬ber spurt.Some measures that can be ex¬pected to come up in tlie future arethe creation of a domestic peacecorps; student aid programs, includ¬ing federal scholarship, work-study,and tax-credits; the creation of aNational Humanities Foundation;and the expansion and extension ofalmost all existing educat on aid pro¬grams.KOGA GIFT SHOPDistinctive gifts for graduates, fathers, friends, and yourselffrom a fine and fascinating collection from the Orient andaround the World.1462 53rd St.. Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856mFt ITServing the University o!Chicago Campus Since 1921SAM MALATTBARBER SHOPBUtterfield 8-09501011 East 61st StreetChicago 37, Illinois ... Un jour, votre famille aura besoind’argent lorsqu’elle n'aura plus votresalaire, ou bien vous aurez vous-memebesoin d’un revenu pour votre retraite.L’assurance Sun Life peut vous pro¬curer les deux.En tant que reprtaentant local de la SunLife, puls-je vous visiter & un moment devotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood, Jr.( CLUHyde Park Bonk Building, Chicago 15, ill.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 fa 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY § NEwj>u/jj>rarOv-tA. rtc arved*' iSNELLING &SNELLING17 north State Street Chicago346-8322Career Jobswith notion’s blue chip firmsSALESTECHNICALADMINISTRATIVEFIELDScall or come inSNELLING &SNELLING17 north State Street Chicago346-8322120 offices coast to coastnafion’s largest personnel system JEFFERY THEATRE1952 E. 71st ST. HY 3-3333SUMMER SCHEDULEJuly 3EXCLUSIVEHayley Mills • John Mills - Deborah KerrTHE CHALK GARDENplusPeter SellersTHE WORLD OF HENRY ORIENTJuly 17PREMIERE SHOWING IN CHICAGONo Loop RunMerlon BrandoTHE BEDTIME STORYAugust 21EXCLUSIVETHE CARPETBAGGERS Breathtaking, beautiful and yoursAll the surging beauty, the exciting mystery of thesea itself seems captured in this newest engage¬ment ring from Artcarved. See the distinctly new,yet timeless, design of Surf Star at your ArtcarvedJeweler. Priced from $180. For more information,plus helpful suggestions on wedding etiquette,send 25C for Wedding Guide to J. R. Wood uSons, Inc., 216 E. 45th Street, New York 17, NewYork, Department C. •TRA0£M»*kSee Surf Star only at these Authorized Artcarved JewelersChicagoCOLE & YOUNG9144 Commercial AvenueChicagoFARMER JEWELERS3153 W. 63rd StreetChicagoLOIIIS FPIEO6007 Irving Park Blvd. ChicagoROMAN KOSINSKI5754 W. Belmont AvenueChicagoR. L. SEIDELMANN2615 S. Pulaski RoadOak ParkHAYWARD JEWELERS111 N. Marion StreetZionASHLAND JEWELERS2716 Sheridan Road6 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 12.1964\ ...Gen ed, College changes, sit-in head campus yearby Bob B!ackGeneral education and thechanging image of the Col¬lege were the major issuesdebated on campus v/hile the50-yard line confrontationand the New Dorm boardcontract boycott were thetwo biggest and best-publi¬cized examples of mass ac¬tion during the past year.The contention over the extent ofintercollegiate football, which cul¬minated with the 50-yard Line andtin? subsequent Student Government(SG) resolutions, began as early asOctober 8, when GNOSIS, the major¬ity party in SG, established a specialcommittee to investigate possibleparty action against football at UC.At the same time, there was an un¬official SG vote of 10 to 1 against thepresent University policy on football.Meanwhile, the football class(team?,) launched its season (semes¬ter?) by losing to North CentralCollege, 29-7 (North Central returnedthe opening kickoff 80 yards for atouchdown). The class, led by foot¬ball coach (instructor?) Sid Stein,also lost their second contest, hutwere victorious by a score of 21-0in their third game (examination?)against the Junior Varsity squad oftlie University of Illinois in Chicago(Navy Pier).But the efforts of Stein and hiswarriors to even up their record onNovember was thwarted by the pres¬ence of the now-legendary 200 demon¬strators, who seated themselves onthe 50-yard line at the time the kick¬off was to occur. The sit-in was pro-voked by the announcement tike nightbefore the game that CBS Televisionwould send news cameras to tapeparts of the game for showing on anewscast that evening.Several SG members originallyorganized the protest, not attendingfor it to be a sit-in but ratlver a meredemonstration. The entire demonstra¬tion lasted approximately two hours,during which time Dean of StudentsWarner Wick, assistant Dean of Stu-rlAnic NcV.'Hlun Director ofStudent Activities Thomas O’Keefe,Director of Physical Education Wal¬ter Hass, and SG President DonCongdon all implored the demonstra¬tors to leave the field so that thegame could proceed.Their efforts succeeded in remov¬ing approximately 150 of tike originalprotestors, and Wick finally gave theorder to city police who had beenstanding by to remove the rest of thedemonstrators forcibly from t h efield, despite an earlier statement byNewman that, in accordance withUniversity policy, the demonstratorswould not be removed forcibly underany circumstances.As the police moved in to dispersethe demonstrators, they carried offthe field three students who continuedto protest, causing the demonstrationto erupt into a near riot. During theensuing confusion, another studentwas “arrested” far trying to preventthe paddy wagon from leaving thefield. All four of those “arrested”were later released. No charges werepressed.As a result of the sit-in, UC Presi¬dent George Beadle made a statementin the Sunday Chicago papers sayingthat the demonstrators could betterexpress their discontent “by with¬drawing from the University.”On November 12, the Tuesdayfollowing the demonstration, the SGAssembly passed a resolution dis-1 approving of the Stagg Field sit-in,and deploring Beadle’s subsequentstatement. Also, the Assembly man¬dated the Executive Council to “takeappropriate action to seek to imple¬ment guarantees that football at theUniversity of Chicago should beplaced under positive control.”Wick delayed reply to this resolu¬tion for three months until February28, in order to “let things quiet downso that the problem’’ oould be han¬dled “with some objectivity.” Hestated that the University had noplans for a change in the status of football, “but if it were to be madean official part of the athletic pro¬gram, it would be for the sameobectives, and would be handled inthe same spirit, as our other inter¬collegiate sports.”“We have no plans to join anyexisting athletic conference, and wecannot imagine a conference in whichour membership would be either fea¬sible or desirable,” Wick wrote.“Should definite proposals abouteither the official recognition of foot¬ball or membership in an athleticconference come under serious con¬sideration,” Wick continued, “the factwould be made known, so that thewisdom of the proposals might beexamined by students and facultyalike,”Tuition raiseAn overwhelming majority of stu¬dents polled on October 17 statedthat they were categorically opposedto the tuition rais^(to $1750 per yearin the College) for the academic year1964-65, which had been announcedshortly before. The increase was theseventh since the academic year1956-57, when tuition was $690. Thehike was also the second largest inthe history of the University.James Ritterskamp, Jr.,recently-appointed vice-president for administra¬tion. New Dorm might go on contract.Newman told the Maroon that a boardcontract for New Dorm was beingconsidered because of heavy finan¬cial losses, and that students will benotified of any changes before thesign-up period during spring quarterfor next year’s housing.Then, on March 30, Wick informedthe Maroon that residence for second-year men and third and fourth yearundergraduate women would be sus¬pended as of next year. Wick saidthat lack of enough university hous¬ing to accommodate everyone cov¬ered by the rule was one of thereasons for the suspension. But heemphasized that the over-all policyof a residential college remains.Then, at the beginning of April,the University announced officiallythat New Dorm would go on boardcontract next Autumn. At an openmeeting of the Inter-Court Councilon April 1, comments were over¬whelmingly against the board con¬tract. In response to an inquiry,Newman stated that students werenot consulted before the reinstitutionof the board conract was announcedbecause “there was no point askingwhat you think,” since the decisionwas the only possible one on thebasis of the figures (a loss of approx¬imately $72,000 on the dormitorybuilding as a whole).At the meeting, a plan to openthe cafeteria on a cash basis forlunch with a contract for dinner wasoverwhelmingly approved, but New¬man said that only if the plan isfound to be economically feasiblewould there be an official determina¬tion of student opinion.Then, after the administration re¬jection of the compromise proposal,a boycott was called for the weekendof April 17 to protest the board con¬tract which will be instituted therestarting next fall. The boycott fol¬lowed a week of negotiations with UCadministrators, who were adamantto proposed modifications in the orig¬inal board contract announcement.Even alter the administration ex¬pressed the firm conviction that itwas too late for open discussion of Students wave placards and chant at the height ofthe April New Dorm cafeteria boycott. The boycott, or¬ganized by several campus groups, was 91% successful,but a board contract will nevertheless be in effect nextfall.the issue, student negotiators re¬mained hopeful that the authoritiescould still be convinced to modifytheir views. At one point a petitionsigned by over 80% of the residentsof New Dorm was presented to theadministration. But Wick in effectrejected all compromise plans byrefusing to postpone the New Dormsignup date for rooms for next year.The resulting boycott was 91%effective, as only 100 people crossedthe picket line. The boycott wassponsored and organized by theWoodward Court Council, Studentsfor Better Living Conditions. StudentGovernment, GNOSIS, POLIT, THECHICAGO MAROON, and the Stand¬ing Committee to Rectify Unjustice(SCRU).As a result of the numerical suc¬cess of the boycott, dfiiTiwIwiiaiwiaplanned to meet with Wick to try toreopen negotiations on the possibility of the compromise proposal. TheBoycott had press coverage from theChicago Sun-Times and the ChicagoTribune and television coverage byABC and NBC television.On Friday evening, after the Cafe¬teria had closed, the demonstratorsmarced on President Beadle’s homeat 5855 University. Beadle, his wife,and his dinner guest, author JohnGunther, came out to face the dem¬onstrators. Beadle was asked byJudy Magidson, Boycott Boss, wheth¬er he would agree to negotiate on theboard contract matter. “I’m verysorry,” Beadle replied, “but I’m notauthorized to negotiate; however,I’m glad you came here to makeyour position clear.”Finally, Administrators ruled outany possibility of a compromise con¬tract in New Dorm for next yearin a meeting the following Wednes¬day.Simpson, Ray Brown top casualtiesMany students thought that the tui¬tion raise would make their financialplans for next year considerably moredifficult. As a result, SG passed aresolution on October 29, stating that“the University of Chicago StudentGovernment urges administrativeofficials of the ^University to informpublicly the students of the Univer¬sity, with facts and figures, of thereason for the recent rise and itseffect on the individual student. Weregret the action of tike Universityof Chicago in not publicly releasingsuch figures as a matter of course.”Wick replied to the resolution bystating that there has always beenavailable publicly a large body offacts and figures, namely the Comp¬troller’s annual report. These indi¬cate, he said, that despite the tuitionincreases, student fees have covereda constant share of the cost sincethe opening of the University.Cafeteria boycottAs early as October 4, a petitionprotesting the “poor quality of theNew Dorm cafeteria food, the everincreasing prices, and the deaf andoften discourteous ear . . . to . . .complaints” circulated in New Dorm.A student committee was also formedprotesting the policies of the onlycash-cafeteria operated by the Officeof Residence Halls and Commons.There had been some talk of aboycott of the cafeteria, but the groupdecided not to take any such actionuntil it had exhausted all other pos¬sibilities. On March 6, James New¬man, assistant Dean of Students, instating that some Dorm rates willincrease next year, mentioned that by Ernie MarracciniThe change in university personnel that will probablyhave the most profound effect upon the College wasthe resignation of Alan Simpson, Dean of the College,during the summer before the present academic year.Simpson will leave his UC poet to become presidentof Vassar College in July. He was named Dean ofthe College in 1959 and since last year has been leadinga study of proposals for “multiple colleges,” a planto divide the college into several smaller units, eachcentered around a different curriculum or purpose.As a result of his resignation a five-man committeehas been named by the College faculty to make rec¬ommendations for a new Dean. The members of thecommittee are Lloyd Faliers, professor of anthropology;James Moulder, professor and chairman, departmentof microbiology; Norman Nachtrieb, professor andchairman, department of chemistry; Stuart Tave, as¬sociate professor of English and chairman, CollegeEnglish staff; and Gilbert White, professor of geog¬raphy.The problems thal the committee will have to solveinvolve not only a development of a systematic wayof searching for a new Dean but also a rethinking ofthe whole College and its future structure and goals.This issue is connected with whom the new dean is,since he must have a chance to express his creativityin these matters.Another summer change was the appointment ofSol Tax, professor of anthropology, as dean of theUniversity Extension, which provides courses to thegeneral public, coordinates radio and TV activities,and coordinates conferences at the Center for Continu¬ing Education.According to Tax, the Extension program is beingredefined as “a reflection of the oentral functions ofthe University with subst antial feedback . . providingmeans to offer the oentral functions of the facultyopportunities for wider and additional exposure.One of the early changes during the year was theappointment of Francis S. Chase, Dean of UC’s Gradu¬ate School of Education, by the late President Ken¬nedy to chair the Committee on Higher Public Edu¬ cation in the District of Columbia. In February, RonaldF. Campbell was by President Beadle to succeed Chase.Chase had asked to be relieved of his administrativeduties in order to devote his time to research and as¬sessment of educational problems and processes. Heremains a Professor of Education on the faculty.Administrative changesThe most important administrative change duringthe year was the departure of Ray Brown, vice-presi¬dent for administration, on March 1 to direct the grad¬uate degree program in hospital administration atDuke University. As yioe-president for administration,Brown was the third highest ranking executive officer.In explaining his reasons for leaving to the Maroon,Brown said he is interested in doing considerablewriting on administration and this is impossible whilemaintaining a full-time administrative post. In addi¬tion, he said he would rather teach than hold an ad¬ministrative post.James J. Ritterskamp, Jr. was named as his suc¬cessor. His appointment took effect on April 1. Rit¬terskamp had been Vioe President and Treasurer ofIllinois Institute of Technology and Treasurer of theHT Research Institute since February, 1961. Generally,he will coordinate the business and non-academicactivities of the University.During the year a general discussion has been heldconcerning the feasibility of the university faculty hold¬ing joint-position in the College and in the divisions.Discussion was brought to a head by the announce¬ment of plans for combining the English departmentfaculty and College staffs.Robert Streeter, dean of the Humanities division, towhich the English department belongs, said that hewould not recommend similar action for the entiredivision because of the great range of fields in the de¬partments.Gale Johnson, dean of the Social Sciences division,said that the mergers of faculties is advisable onlyif both sides are happy about it. The number of joint-appointments has been steadily increasing in the pastfew years and now most College faculty membershold joint-appointments in the departments.J«»# 12, 1W4 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7'64: The year the co-op diedby David L. Aiken1964 was the year the co-opbookstore died.The student-run enterprise,started in 1960 as part of aneffort to get the University Bookstoreto sell students books at a discount,went out of business this quarter.The UC coop had its birth fouryears ago during an organized boy¬cott and demonstrations against theUC Bookstore. Students and facultymembers at the time joined in pro¬testing Bookstore prices and facil¬ities. Student Government (SG)leaders proposed to University offi¬cials that there be discounts, at leaston required readings for courses.When the proposal was not ac¬cepted, SG found $500 and set up abook-ordering service in the MandelHall corridor. (Facilities were latermoved to the basement of ReynoldsClub, shared with billiard tables anda discount laundry service. Discountswere offered on all books ordered.)According to students connectedwith the co-op, Dempster Passmore,late manager of the UC Bookstoreat the time, sent letters to all bookpublishers asking them not to sendbooks to the SG co-op, terming it “unfair competition.”To circumvent this difficulty, SGin Winter 1961 incorporated its co-opas the International Student Co-oper¬ative Union (ISCU), and got a down¬town office. Several other Chicago-area colleges joined in the corpora¬tion, and service was given to themby mail.At the time of ISCU’s formation,its organizers tried to interest theNational Student Associaion (NSA)in backing the venture, but they de¬clined. Last spring, NSA changed itsmind and decided to buy the ISCU.Over the summer, however, theyexperienced many difficulties in rais¬ing sufficient capital. They announcedtheir intention to pull out last Fall,and the sale took place November30.The NSA co-op was organized asa separate corporation, which ranbranch stores at UC, the University ofIllinois Champagne campus, and theUniversity of Michigan in Ann Arbor.It offered ordering services to stu¬dents at all NSA members schools.Co-op leaders were not able to raiseenough capital to completely financethe Illinois and Michigan branches,however, and lost most of their invest¬ment during the half year of opera¬tion.The now defunct student co-op during better days When NSA sold out, students whohad run the old ISCU re-organized,calling the new enterprise the Con¬tinental Student Co-operative Union(CSCU). They attempted to raisemoney to cover the NSA’s debts andbuy stock, but were only partiallysuccessful. NSA donated money topay for discount rebates owed stu¬dents who bought books while theco-op was under NSA operation, eventhough it had already sold out.During Winter quarter, the neworganization attempted to revampits set-up and expand its stock, butit was not able to recoup the previouslosses. By March, the decision hadto be made to go out of business.In its April 2 meeting, the UC SGAssembly voted to appropriate moneyto pay money owed to UC studentswho had invested in the co-op.The Assembly made it clear it hasno legal responsibility for the co-op,but wanted to protect students fromloss as much as possible. Money willcome from a reserve fund for theSG charter flight operation, plus someincome on the flights. SG presidentGene Groves estimated that up to50% and possibly more of the inves¬tors’ money could be returned by theend of the summer.The co-op operators will not knowhow much it can repay students untilit straightens out financial matterswith its other creditors and withNSA, which agreed to take the pur¬chase price of the co-op from CSCUin installments.The student loan service, whichwas formerly operated by the co-opunder contract from SG, has beentransferred to the SG office in IdaNoyes.The co-op effort was never success¬ful in its original purpose of gettingBookstore discounts. The Assemblypassed yet another resolution callingfor a non-profit operation for booksales, and a committee to institutesuch a non-profit policy, last October.The Administration has explainedthat the profits of the Bookstore areused to help pay for the losses in¬curred in the University housing sys¬tem. There are no prospects of achange in this policy. Nothing new on new Deanby Tom HeagyEdward H. Levi, UC Pro¬vost and acting dean of theCollege, told the Maroon thisweek that he cannot predictwhen a new Dean will be appointed,but said there has been “considerableprogress” in determining what kindof Dean should be chosen.Levi has been acting Dean for thepast three months. During this timehe has been engaging in an intensivediscussion with students and facultyin the College about its strengths andweaknesses, and in what direction theCollege should be headed.Levi’s main reason for serving asacting Dean, he said, is to facilitatehis decision on whom to recommendto replace former Dean of the Col¬lege Alan Simpson.Simpson, who announced his resig¬nation last summer, has just re¬turned from a trip studying women’seducation in Europe to prepare him¬self for his new position as Presidentof Vassar College. He will take overat Vassar this fall.In an interview last week, Levi ex¬plained that a second important rea¬son is to increase his overall knowl¬edge of the College. As Provost, hehas general responsibility for theacademic affairs of the entire Uni¬versity including the College.Levi expressed the hope that anew Dean could be selected “in asshort a time as possible.” He alsosaid that he did not expect to beacting Dean a year from now.The discussion of the future of theCollege within the administration hasto some extent crystallized into spe¬cific alternatives, but he refused to di¬vulge them. To do so, he said, woulddecrease the intellectual level of thediscussion in the College at large andmake it more of a political contestto see which alternative could get themost “votes.”He did say, however, that a prime goal behind all of them was taachieve a greater integration betweengeneral and specialized education.According to Levi, it is a mistake tothink of education in the liberal artsas solely the concern of undergrad¬uate general education. Graduate andspecialized courses should also ad¬vance the liberal arts.Levi de-emphasized the long-rangeimportance of the impending decision,saying that the College is a livingorganism which can’t be dictated toor planned for. Furthermore, he ex¬pects the new dean to be a strongdean with ideas of his own who willhimself play the role in shaping theCollege.C" 1 HMiinaHiHHnHiniiummimutiHimnnuiumiMiHiiH >i. fRepresentatives of stu-1dent organisations who.i wish to participate in Stu¬dent Activities Night during iO-Week this fall should so iindicate to Gene Pysh,chairman of the Student: Government Committee on 1| Recognized Student Organ-1| izations. before leaving for.. >he summer.f iiHmiiiimiiiiiiHHUimiiwuiKiiii.iHiimii.'Hi •IfTHE GEORGE SGLLITTCONSTRUCTION CO.BUILDERSforTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOIncludingArgonne Cancer Research Hospital58th Street and Ellis AvenueWomen’s Residence Hall59th Street and Woodlawn AvenueWomen’s Residence Dining HallSouth of Women’s Residence Hall Pierce Hall55th Street and University AvenueHigh School5830 Kenwood AvenueNational Opinion Research Center5720 South Woodlawn AvenueTelephone RAndolph 6-5330SUITE 1301 * 109 NORTH DEARBORN STREET 9 CHICAGO 2, ILLINOISzezezezezerezezezezezezezezezezezezerezezezerezezezezezezezorererezezezezezezezezozezezezezezdzerezszezezezezezozozezesell8 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 12.1964J*T Progress in Hyde Park renewal highlights city yearby Hendrik De JongProgress in the renewal andimprovement of Hyde Parkand Woodlawn made news inthe University neighborhoodthis year. In the rest of the city, thestruggle for equal opportunity injobs, housing, and education broughtimportant new developments with twoschool boycotts and new efforts atelecting reform candidates.Hyde Park renewal sitesapprovedThe Department of Urban Renewal(DUR) announced May 28 the saleof thirteen low density sites to fourcontractors. The announcement hasstirred up much protest in the HydePark-Kenwoood area, since in onlyfour of the thirteen sites did DURfollow the recommendations of com¬munity organizations, for which DURhad specifically asked.Plans call for construction of townhouses oh several sites near the Uni¬versity, including a plot just southof 55th St. between Kenwood andKimbark, and on both sides of 53rdSt. just west of Woodlawn Ave.The preferences of area residentswere expressed before the decisionat meetings called by the DUR andin recommendations of the HydePark - Kenwood Community Confer¬ence. In the final decision, however,the DUR took the advice of a panelof professional architects on all sites.TWO moves on housing, jobsThe Woodlawn Organization, cre¬ated three years ago and now com¬prising some ninety community or¬ganizations and clubs in the Wood¬lawn area, has announced plans toconstruct low cost housing for mostof the 3000 persons who will be dis¬placed by the construction of the UCSouth Campus project, which wasfirst announced in December, 1960.TWO, then called the TemporaryWoodlawn Organization, put pressureon the University and the City Coun¬cil to hold up plans until a plan en¬compassing the entire Woodlawn areawas made. The proposed housingproject is part of this overall plan, and is the direct result of the agree¬ment reached between TWO and theUniversity last June.The plan, which will be designedfor moderate-income families, will becarried out by TWO and the KateMaremont Urban Renewal programwith a low-interest Federal loan assoon as funds are appropriated.Last month, TWO received a laborretaining grant from the FederalGovernment. The grant provides foran experimental program under theprovisions of which 200 unemployedheads of families who do not havethe academic qualifications to entercurrent programs will be retrained.A UC Committee is to study theprogress of the program.If the program successfully trainsthe men selected, according to Uni¬versity faculty members, it willresult in important changes in theover-all Federal program’s methodof selecting trainees.Boycotts for integrationThe civil rights movement in Chi¬cago was highlighted by two schoolboycotts, held on October 22 andFebruary 25. Organized and directedby the Coordinating Council of Com¬munity Organizations, both boycottswere highly successful in terms ofthe number of children kept out ofschool, though the direct aim, theremoval of Benjamin C. Willis, Su¬perintendent of Schools, has not beenachieved.Forty to forty-five per cent of thecity’s school children took part in theOctober protest. In February, about80 per cent of that number partici¬pated in the boycott, despite strongopposition from the City’s Democraticmachine, the Urban League and theNAACP, and the Chicago Maroon.In April, the report of PhilipHauser, UC professor of sociology,was made public. Hauser headed acommittee which studied school seg¬regation and suggested changes inthe present school boundaries tocounteract it. One of the primarysuggestions was to allow parents tosend their children to any' of severalschools in their area, instead of a certain one. It has received strongsupport from community civil rightsgroups, and the Board has promisedto implement its suggestions, thoughperhaps with revisions.Hillel starts program inSouth ShoreHillel House announced plans inJanuary for a project designed tostabilize the South Shore area, a mid¬dle-class Jewish community directlysouth of the UC campus. Negroes aremoving into South Shore, and whitesare moving out. The Hillel Groupproposes to reshape attitudes of thelatter so that they will not only notleave, but like it as well. The pro¬gram is now under way.Defeats for reformcandidates Two significant electoral campaignswere waged during the last year. Onewas Florence Scala’s attempt to de¬feat the Democratic machine in thealdermanic elections in the FirstWard. The other, A. A. Rayner’sattempt to unseat Democratic Con¬gressman William Dawson in theFirst Congressional district primary.Both attempts were unsuccessful, yetboth of the defeated candidates werenot unhappy with the results of theelections because in each case themachine plurality declined consider-abiy, a statistic which leads someobservers to hope that within the nextfew years significant changes willoccur.State elections causedisruption The October elections for the StateHouse of Representatives are to beat large, a development which isblamed by the Independent Voters ofIllinois (IVI) and the Better Govern¬ment Association (BGA) on the in¬efficacy of Mayor Daley and Gover¬nor Kerner. IVI and BGA recentlyannounced withdrawal of plans for athird slate of “blue-ribbon” candi¬dates, which the two organizationshad proposed earlier in the year.The new development was a directresult, according to IVI and BGA, ofthe “Percy Purge,” in which sixRepublican representatives, membersof the “West Side Bloc,” were purgedfrom the party. Both parties havemade efforts to find “blue ribbon”candidates, such as prominent busi¬nessmen and civic leaders.Civil rights top national news year4. CAP AND GOWNLast chance to pick up yearbooks. Yearbookswill be available today at the Student Activ¬ities Office, and at the Alumni Office begin¬ning June 15. Books already ordered maybe picked up. Books are also available forpurchase.33S2SXS by Howard P. GreenwaldCivil rights and civil liber¬ties were the main areas ofstudent activity and thoughtthroughout the past academicyear. The right of the Ameri¬can college student to expresshis opinion both directly andthrough group membershipmet several serious threats,while most student activityhas centered around the issueof racial equality.Much interest was aroused by anIndiana County prosecutor’s legalaction against the Young SocialistAlliance (YSA) at the University ofIndiana.The prosecutor, Thomas Hoadley,indicted three of the group’s lead¬ers for violation of the Indiana Anti-Communist Act. They were initiallycharged with attempting “violentoverthrow of the government of theUnited States and of Indiana” amonth after YSA sponsored an ad¬dress by Negro civil rights leaderLeroy McRae.A grand jury subsequently ques¬tioned the University Deans, police,and YSA officers. Hoadley person¬ally urged the University to expellYSA from its campus.After numerous protests by theNational Student Association (NSA)and a fund-raising campaign by theCommittee to Aid the BloomingtonStudents, a state circuit court judgecleared the students, ruling the Indi¬ana Anti-Communist Act unconstitu¬tional. IJC law professor Harry Kal-vcn stated that the acquital shoulddiscourage violations of student civilliberties elsewhere, but has not legal¬ly tested America’s anti-seditionlaws. Hoadley plans appeals to high¬er courts.Expulsion of a student version ofthe International Workers of theWorld (IWW) from Roosevelt Uni¬versity recently ended in reinstate¬ment of the group. The Roosevelt“Wobblies” were reinstated after violent protest by students tnd fac¬ulty members.Dean of Students Arthur E. Hoov¬er withdrew a proposal which statedthat student groups which apply forrecognition or which are already inexistence and have “acknowledgedconnections with an organization thatappears on the US Attorney Gener¬al’s ‘subversive list’ will not be per¬mitted to register.” “Wobblies” lead¬ers at Roosevelt say they are notconnected with the IWW. Hoover ex¬pelled the group after they sponsoredthe appearance of an “anarcho-paci-fist” who burned several flags.NSA topics of debateMajor topics of debate at thissummer’s meeting of the 18th Na¬tional Student Congress will be civilrights, poverty, and the draft.Many liberal student delegates havealready commented that “presentplans for the war on poveily do notamount to anything more than a skir¬mish.” a good many are also con¬cerned with possible defeat or dilu¬tion of the civil rights bill.An attempt by liberal delegates topass a resolution backing the useof the demonstration and non-violentaction to gain civil rights seems like¬ly. This could result in a vigorousdiscussion between Northern andSouthern delegations on what shouldbe discussed at the NSA Congress.The Southern colleges appear tohave resolved, as did the ColumbiaUniversity Student Council recently,that delegates should only considerisues having “a direct causal rela¬tionship to matters of concern to thestudents and their educational or so¬cial milieu.” Yale and Dartmouth,two important NSA members, havevoted to disaffiliate, among severalothers.Other colleges like Antioch andVanderbilt have already voted towithdraw from NSA because theassociation has been “ignoring itswatchword of academic freedom andthe democratic process.”Civil rights struggleNumerous independent student groups plan action in the civil rightsstruggle this summer. COFO (Councilof Federated Organizations), whichincludes SNCC and CORE, hasplanned a massive project of voterregistration in Mississippi. The groupis sending technical experts, student-teachers, and people to help Negroesregister.Plans for this summer follow sub¬stantial assistance by college stu¬dents in the school boycotts that oc¬curred in many northern citiesduring the year. In New York andBoston as well as Chicago, studentgroups such as CORE providedteachers for “freedom schools” setup on the boycott days.Civil liberties activistsStudent protest and pressure froman NSA fact-finding committee re¬sulted in the reinstatement last monthof Wolf Metzger, editor of The Oak¬land Observer, the student newspaperof Oakland University in Rochester,Michigan. Chancellor Durward B.Varner fired Metzger after he hadpublished a survey he had conductedof the sex lives of men and womenin the University.Varner ordered all copies of the is¬sue of the Observer with the surveyfindings destroyed; the same actionwas taken for a subsequent issuethat carried an editorial protestingthe Chancellor’s initial action. Varnerhad charged Metzger with abusingeditorial freedom “for the sake ofsensationalism without regard forthe students of the University.”The student editor at University ofMiami was not so lucky. Elayne Gil¬bert, editor of “The Hurricane,” wasdismissed last fall after publishingan editorial requesting fraternitiesto end discriminatory pledge poli¬cies and greater participation ofNegroes in interscholastic athletics.Miami’s vice president explained thatMiss Gilbert had been dismissed be¬cause she was not carrying the fuEcourse load required of student edi¬tors at the University.i studentgroupsABROAD IWide Variety of Toursplanned for students onlySORBONNE STUDY TOUR70 days, $1388Including England, Holland, Belgium,France, Spain, PortugalDISCOVERY ADVENTURETOUR OF EUROPE71 days, $1295Many ithar Student Tour* featuringEurope, Intel, Greece and USSR.or Form your Own Group Qj.Jr0° &*VAsk for Plans and ProfitableOrganizer ArrangementsSPECIALISTS INSTUDENT TRAVELSINCE 1926for folders a*nd details —SEE YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENTor writeUNIVERSITY TRAVEL COMPANYCambridge 38, Mass. iii 1538 E. 53rd We haven’t been happy since we left the ArtColony. So we’re closing our doors at 53rd Street.We’d like you to help us in our CLOSING SALE.Open 12-8 p.m. — Sunday 12-6 p,m,SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSFREE PARKING IN REAR NO 7-4040 t ..June 12, 19M • CHICAGO MAROON *. V»** I VS needs more volunteers Four receive 1964 < luantrellsiVolunteers are needed forthe eight summer workcampsto be sponsored by the Inter¬national Voluntary Service(IVS) this summer in Chi¬cago, Cleveland, New York,Tennesee, and Florida.IVS, with headquarters in HydePark, is the American Group ofService Civil International (SCI), aninternational voluntary workcampingorganization that seeks to find a“moral equivalent” to war which wasfounded by a Swiss Quaker in 1920.Summer workcamps in the UnitedStates will consist of both educationaland social work and physical labor.Each camp will have about fifteenvolunteers; their average length isabout three weeks, and most campswill include longterm Euro{>ean vol¬unteers from SCI.Volunteers applying to these campsmust be at least eighteen years old,and must be willing to live at thesite of the camp. IVS will providefood and housing, but volunteers mustpay their own transportation costs.IVS also sponsors local work proj¬ects throughout the year. This springthey have been working to clean andrepair a house designed by LouisSullivan, at 45th and Lake Park, tobe made into a community center.Anyone interested in die programshould contact IVS, 5220 S. Harper,Chicago 15, or Joyce Klein, MU4-4830.The following is a list of the camps:Chicago, Illinois (3 workcamps)June 14-July 11. July 12-August 8,August 9-September 12. These campswill involve wrork with deprivedchildren, aged two to fourteen. Thesite is the Kenwood-EUis CommunityChurch, 46th and Greenwood, wherea year-round children’s center is runentirely by volunteers. The main con¬cern of this camp is to provide atten¬tion for the children—helping themwith reading, planning trips, andorganizing games and classes. In ad¬dition, volunteers will be assigned toneighborhood organizations or to IVSseveral mornings a week to do vari¬ ous kinds of office work.Tivoli, New York (June 21-July 11)The Catholic Worker, an independ¬ent pacifist service organization, ismoving into a country farm outsideNew York City. The farm will beused as a meeting place and recre¬ation center, and also to raise vege¬tables for the Catholic Worker House,located in the Bowery which feedsand houses Bowery residents.Work will consist of cleaning and re¬pairing the house and working in thefields and vegetable garden. Thiscamp gives volunteers an opportunityto learn about the Catholic WorkerMovement and its principles of volun¬tary self-poverty, pacifism, and agrar¬ian philosophy.Cleveland, Ohio (July 12-August 8)The main project here will be tobuild playgrounds in the area aroundBell Neighborhood Center. The peo¬ple in this neighborhood have alreadybeen involved in clean-up campaignsand neighborhood improvement organ¬izations. They are still very active,but they need support, in terms ofboth labor and morale. The camp isbeing organized by a past chairman ofthe SCI group in New Delhi, India.I,argo, Florida (July 12-August 8)The work here is construction andsanitation work in a Negro communi¬ty cut off from the surrounding area.The Community Service Foundationin Largo will conduct a short, dailytraining program in community devel¬opment. Only men or married coupleswill be accepted for this camp, be¬cause of the nature of the work andthe temper of the area.Maryville, Tennesee (August 2-August 22)Highlander Center in Maryville hasattempted to run a North-South in¬terracial summer camp. It wasburned to the ground in 1963. Thework here will consist of buildingreservoirs, repairing roads, and clear¬ing land. The racial situation in thearea has become calmer, and neitherviolence nor trouble with the sheriffare expected, but volunteers mustrealize that these are possibilities. The Quantrell Award forExcellence in UndergraduateTeaching, the nation's oldestprize for outstanding collegeinstruction, has been present¬ed to four assistant profes¬sors.Sylvain Bromberger, assistant pro¬fessor in the department of philoso¬phy and of physical sciences, JohnG. Cawelti, assistant professor ofEnglish and of humanities, Frank M.Child, assistant professor in the de¬partment of zoology, and Ralph M.Lemer, assistant professor of socialsciences, are this year’s recipientsof the award. They will each receive$1000 with their awards.Bromberger, who came to UC in1961 after six years as a philosophyinstructor at Princeton, has concen¬trated his research on the conceptof explanation and the nature ofscientific theory.Bromberger’s citation says in part:“Mr. Bromberger’s students haveprofited immensely from his dual roleas a teacher of science and philoso¬phy^ The students in his undergrad¬uate physical sciences course grate¬fully appreciate his ability to pene¬trate to the heart of their difficultiesin understanding science; whereasthe students in his philosophy coursesrecognize in ^Mr. Bromberger theuniquely valuable combination of afirst-rate philosophic mind in closetouch with real scientific problems.” community in the national arena,”reads his citation.Lemer, who received his AB, AM,and PhD degrees from UC, joinedthe College faculty in 1957. He waspromoted to assistant professor in1958.Lerner’s citation reads; “Deeplyschooled in the classics of politicalthought in the West, Mr. Lerner isan expert scholar in the politicalphilosophy of medieval Judaism. He has made origimd contributions to thecomparison of the medieval politicalphilosophies of the Judaic, Christian,and Islamic traditions. Both to hisstudents and to his oolleagues, Mr.Lemer has exemplified a masteryof and an enthusiasm for Socraticmethods of discussion.”The Quantrell awards were estab¬lished in 1938 by the late UC trusteeErnest Eugene Quantrell in honor ofhis parents Lewellyn John and Har¬riet Manchester Quantrell.NSF gives $39,300The National Science Foundationhas made a grant of $39,300 to sup¬port two years of research at UCaimed at improving methods formeasuring personality traits.The research will be conducted byDonald W. Fiske, professor.of psy¬chology and associate chairman of thedepartment of psychology.In previous research, supported bythe National Institute of MentalHealth, Fiske developed a set ofcriteria for adequate personality measurement, and sampled reactionsto psychological tests.Under the National Science Foun¬dation grant, he will use the interviewtechnique to find out in detail whatpeople think about while consideringhow to answer typical items whichmight be found in psychological testsdesigned to measure personality.With this information, and using thecriteria for measurement he de¬veloped earlier, iFske then will seekto develop better personality meas¬urement tests, he said.Cawelti, who holds AM and PhDdegrees in American Civilization andEnglish from the State University ofIowa, has taught at UC since 1957.He has just completed a book,Mobility and Democracy: Studies inthe Expression of the AmericanDream.UC Court Theatre presentsthree Shakesperian works Cawelti’s citation states: “His de¬votion to his task a$ teacher, his in¬sistence on a rigorous examination ofthe subject matter at hand and onthe proper formulation of the prob¬lems within a discipline, together withhis lively sense of what the discussionmethod involves, have made hisclasses outstanding. . . By precept andexample he has communicated tostudents and colleagues, and to mem¬bers of the community in which helives, what it means to be ahumanist.” 1.1 ve decided on the kind of jobI want when 1 graduate.Knowing you, I’d guessit to be something modest -like Secretary of Statewor President of CE. 2. I hadn’t thought of thosespecifically. What I had inmind was a job where they giveyou a lot of assistants. 1 thinkthat would be nice.Very nice. Maybe theycould start you off ata hundred grand a ycar. 'Court Theatre, a perennialsummer drama festival spon¬sored by UC, will honor the400th anniversary of the birthof William Shakespeare bypresenting three of his works,THE TAMING OF THESHREW, THE TEMPEST,and ROMEO AND JULIETduring the Summer quarter.The productions, which will bepresented in the Hutchinson Court¬yard, will be presented by 41 actors,ranging in age from 17 to 50, and inexperience from none to more than20 years of prefessional and semi-professional acting.THE TAMING OF THE SHREWThursday, Friday, Saturday, andwill open on July 3 and will run onSunday nights for the following threeweeks. THE TEMPEST will openJuly 24 and will run three weeks.ROMEO AND JULIET will closethe season with its three-week runbeginning August 14.Tickets to all three productionswill be available at the MandelHall box office this Saturday andSunday from 10 am to 4 pm.A special offer is being made toall alumni this weekend only: ticketsto all three plays wilt be availableon a season coupon for $3.50 forany Thursday, Friday, or Sundayevenings, or $5 for Saturday eve¬nings. Admission is usually $1.50and $2 per show.All alumni are also cordially in¬vited to attend rehearsals of THETAMING OF THE SHREW in theCourtyard between 1 and 5 pm onboth Saturday and Sunday after¬noons.Since Court Theatre’s founding in1954, it has played to over 100,000people. The 1963 season, widely ac¬ claimed by Chicago newspapercritics, attracted a larger audiencethan any other theatre, professionalor amateur, in Chicago.During the ten years of the Court’sexistence, emphasis has been onclassical presentations, especiallythe plays of Moliere and Shake¬speare, but modem plays have oc¬casionally been produced. The Courtdid the first American production ofMichel de Ghelderode’s PANTA-GLEIZE, and the first midwestproduction of James Joyce’s ULY¬SSES IN NIGHTTOWN. Child,' who has been a memberof the College biology section since itwas first organized in 1959, is amember of the National Commissionon Undergraduate Education in theBiological Sciences, which is engagedin evaluating the impact of “recentscientific achievements on under¬graduate education in biology and inrecommending policy for curricularimprovements.”“Mr. Child combines in his workand teaching the knowledge of (heprofessional biologist who is con¬tributing to research, the dedicationof the teacher who is the interpreterof the science, and the responsibilityof the citizen who takes time fromhis private duties to serve the larger 8. Well, I did run an extremelysuccessful Nickel-a-Pickle sals.Don t forget to demandplenty of stock options. 4. You think maybe I should lowermy sights a little.I’m afraid to tell you“'hat I think.CAFEENRICOOpening WednesdayThe Creative Talent ofJazz Pianist and Singer 5. I'd be willing to settle for 'a vice-presidency.SHELLY LITTFor reservations:HY 3-5300 Look —why don’t you see'if you can qualify for on« fof Equitable’s executive /training programs. /The work is interesting, |the pay is good. And lif you prove you have theability, you may very 'well end up with a titleand a couple of assistant!,'} 8. You really have a way of 1seeing through a problem.!Rooming with you has)taught me a lot. *•«*4.Jno increose in prices10 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 12, 1964. . • *» < , /• (> . :t i ,4 'j lit? It SPfitSchool boycotts begin freedom movementby Bob FrankelN«w York correspondentIn the same way one might say that theNegro revolution in the South began with theMontgomery bus bovqptt in 1956, one mightalso maintain that the Chicago and New Yorkschool boycotts this past winter mark the be¬ginning of the freedom movement in theNorth. The element that ties these threeevents together is that in each case theyrepresent mass support from the Negro popu¬lations, as opposed to small scale demonstra¬tions on ♦!:“ part of a handful of activists.Tliese mass protests are important because,the extent that they involve die average Ne¬gro worker and parent, they constitute theembryo of a significant social revolution.Like Chicago, New York City has experi¬enced two sulkool boycotts so f;ir thus year.The first, which oceured on February 3rd,saw almost 45% of all New York school chil¬dren absent, and was hailed as a magificentsuccess by the city’s civil rights leaders. Thesecond attempt, damaged badly by a splitjn the local integration leadership, found onlyhalf as many children out of school.New York City has over one million schoolchildren, out of which nearly 45% are Negroor Puerto Rican. Largely because of de factosegregation in housing, 165 of the city’s 860public schools are almost totally non-white. Itis difficult to ascertain how much of the defacto school segregation is the result of hous¬ing patterns, and liow much is due to dis¬criminatory zoning regulations in the schoolsystem, yet no one denies a problem docsexist.The demands of New York’s integrationleaders are based on the premise that "bet¬ter education,” newer schools, and finer teach¬ers are by no means unwanted, but that theseimprovements must not be offered as sub¬stitutes for integration. As June Shagaloff,the NAACP’s special assistant for education,puts it, "If the Savannah, Georgia, Board ofeducation proposed a program to raise stand¬ards — no matter how badly needed — inlieu of plans for desegregation, this would becalled ‘separate but equal.’ ”She is, ot course, alluding to the 1954 Su-pi-cme Court decision which maintained thatseparate schools are inherently unequal, since. . to seperate (children) from others ofsimilar age and qualifications solely becauseof race generates a feeling of inferiority asto their status in the community that mayaffect their hearts and minds in a way un¬likely ever to be undone . .It is for this reason that one of the de¬mands of the civil rights groups in NewYork is that all plans tor the constructionof new schools be temporarily halted untilthese plans can be included within tlie con¬text of a city-wide integration plan.In addition to the demands for one or moreof several plans, along with a timetable forits implimentation, the civil rights leadershave insisted on: a city-wide plan, not onethat is "piecemeal’’ (this means, especially,that tlie deep slum areas are included, notmerely the "fringe4 areas”); desegregation ofall junior high and senior high schools bySeptember, 1964; revision of textbooks toportray, without distortion and bias, the his¬tory and contributions to America of Ne¬groes and Puerto Ricans; more Negro teach¬ers in white schools; and a Puerto Rican ap¬pointment to the New York Board of Edu¬cation.BOYCOTTS AND BUSSINGFor the past six months two key words,"boycott” and "bussing,” could be heard onevery street corner, at every woman’s clubtea, and in every office building in NewNew York. Those two concepts became THEbig issues in the controversy.TTie “bussing” question centers around thefear which parents harbor; that any city¬wide desegregation plan would necessarily in¬volve the transportation of large numbers ofchildren to schools very far from their neigh¬borhoods. These parents maintain that "cross¬bussing,” as it has become commonly known,is dangerous, time consuming, injurious toeducation, unconstitutional, and will destroythe concept of the "neighborhood school.”On May 4th the United States Supreme Court announced that It was refusing at thistime, to hear a case that, had it been ac¬cepted by the Court, would have settled quitea few debates about "bussing” and "neigh¬borhood schools.” The case would have testedthe NAACP’s thesis that the 1954 School De¬segregation Decision makes it mandatory forschool boards to correct racial imbalance inthe public schools, even when that imbalanceis caused by de facto housing segregation, andis not basicctlly the fault of school zoning laws.This opinion is bitterly protested by various"parents and taxpayers” groups. As ot nowthis question has not been conclusively settled;in fact there have been conflicting court rul¬ings on tike issue, and it is likely to go un¬settled until the Supreme Court finally doesrule on such a case.Groups like the Parents and Taxpayers ofUpper Manhattan, the Parents and TaxpayersCoordinating Council, and the United ParentsAssociation have sprung up all over the city,brandishing threats to go to court to preventany plans which would change the neighbor¬hood school pattern. Harry Clark, Chairmanof the Parents and Taxpayers Council, inspeaking of ihe bussing klea, said, "There issomething smacking here that is contary tothe American heritage.”In a recent interview with this reporter,June Shagaloff. the special education assistantat the NAACP, countered Mr. Clark’s pointof view. She stated that pupil transportationby bus is hardly a new concept in Americanpublic school systems, that hundreds of all-white school systems all over the UnitedStates uses buses to transport children toschool, and that the school bus is very mucha part of the “.American heritage” (to useMr. Clark’s phrase). It is her view that"bussing” Is NOT the issue, but that it hasbeen used and missued to justify the statusof school segregation.One criticism of the integration plans whichinvolve bussing is less easily answered thanthose of the "parents and taxpayers” groups.It is that these plans, if put into operation,will hasten the trend of middle class whitefiunilies moving to the suburbs, or removingtheir children from the public schools andenrolling them in private schools. Many whiteliberals sincerely feel that the school inte¬gration moves will cause a mass exodus ofwhites from the city, leaving the schools lessintegrated than before. However, it is prob¬able that these reports and fears are ex¬aggerated, and also that they are playedupon by the anti-integration farces, in addi¬tion to those who are sincerely concerned withthe crisis in New York City’s school system.BOARD ACTION TOO SLOWLast August, in response to a request fromthe New York State Commissioner of Educa¬tion, the New York City Board of Educationsubmitted to the Commissioner a report pro¬posing a school desegregation plan whichcalled for free transfers for all students volun¬tarily wishing to leave their present segre¬gated schools, and attend one that is moreintegrated.The civil rights leadership had repeatedlyvoiced objections to this “voluntary, free trans¬fer” concept, maintaining that it is a methodby which the Board evades its responsibility,places the burden of integration upon the stu¬dent and his parents, and in no way changesthe basic pattern of segregation in the schools.In an effort to elicit a stronger desegre¬gation move from the Board, the Corrdinat-ing City-Wide Committee for IntegratedSchools, madeup of the local civil rightsgroups (including CORE, the NAACP, and theUrban League, and others) and headed by theRev. Milton Galamison, threatened a schoolboycott for the first day of classes in Sep¬tember.That boycott, however, was averted by anagreement reached between the civil rightsgroups and the Board during last minutenegotiations on September 5, 1964. The agree¬ment included a commitment from the Boardthat by .December 1, 1963, they would comeup with a tentative plan, for "a substantial,realistic and working program of integrationin every school district in September, 1964.” In the eves of all New York civil rightsleaders and most objective o!>scrvers, theSeptember 5th commitment was not met.On December 9th, the Board issued an "Interim Report” which did not appear to bemore than a progress report of their previous"free transfer” plan. It did not provide theqity-wide desegregation plan and timetablewhich had been promised. Therefore, on Jan¬uary 5th the Coordinating Committee for In¬tegrated Schools announced that a boycottwould be held on February 3rd.The month-long debate which raged on theadvisability and appropriateness of the boycottwas fraught with highly charged emotional¬ism. Strongest attackers of the demonstra¬tion were the members of the School Board,who, led by Board President James B. Dono¬van, waged an all-out attack.On a television debate with James Fannerof CORE the night before the boycott, Dono¬van said he would hold Galamison “personallyand criminally responsible” if any child wasinjured during the boycott. (Farmer madethe point that, "Perhaps some of the op¬position will show up and will try to generateviolance.”)Dr John Fischer, President of TeachersCollege, called the demonstration, "an effortto force a situation that by its very nature,is not subject to the use of force.” Integra¬tion leaders rejoined with exactly the op¬posite view: that the Board would not reactat all, except under this kind of pressure.Almost all of New York’s major newspaperseditorially opposed the boycott. (It may benoted that the civil rights leaders in NewYork are very distraught over poor*, sensa-tionalistic, and often slanted coverage in mostof the city’s dailies.)In addition, the use of the method of boy¬cott was also criticized by a number of or¬ganizations devoted to the cause of inte¬gration, including the Catholic InterracialCouncil, the National Scholarship and ServiceFund for Negro Students, and the AmericanJewish Congress.Despite this heavy opposition, hundreds ofteachers, ministers, civil rights leaders, andNegro and white citizens were behind theproject. One of the most moving statementson the boycott was made by Rabbi MaxSchenk, President of the I' cw York Board ofRabbis, who said, "They’ve been waiting nowone hundred years, and now we’re askingthem to wait a little longer . . . (My) per¬sonal sympathies are with the people . . .and their impatience with the slowness ofintegration.”fn a last-ditch effort to avert the boycottthe School Board announced a desegregationplan on January 29th. It called for the im¬plementation of the Princeton Plan in thecase of twenty of New York’s 134 segregatedelementary schools and ten of thirty-one jun¬ior high schools. Under the Princeton plan,children in the same grade from severalneighboring areas go to the same school.The combination of several areas leads tointegration.'In addition, there would be mandatorytransfer of many Negro pupils out of over¬crowded schools, and various other innova¬tions. The Board announced that due to segre¬gated housing patterns, the school system,"could not possibly produce racial balancein all schools without wholesale shifts inschool population,” and that such shifts would"inevitably result in educational chaos.”♦This plan was quickly denounced by Galami-son and the entire City-wide Committee. Theydeclared that the plan: (1) was not a city¬wide plan; (2) would take care of only 20of 134 segregated elementary schools; (3)effected "only isolated pairs,” rather than"large groups of schools”; (4) did not allow forthe transportation of any white children; (5;was not drawn up with the consultation ofcivil rights leaders, and (6) in Galamison’swords, "completely fails to provide for sub¬stantial and meaningful school desegregationthroughout the city.” Galamison announcedtherefore, that the boycott would be held asscheduled.The February 3rd boycott was hailed asan overwhelming success. 464,362 of the city’s1,037,000 students stayed out of school — 300,-000 more than would have been out on anormal day due to absence, and 200;000 moreJune 12, 1964 • C than had been predicated by some civilrights leaders themselves, (It topped theMarch on Washington by more than 200,000people). Tike Rev. Galamison proclaimed, "Itwas the greatest civil rights demonstrationin the history of the country!”Donovan called the event a "fizzle.** Hemaintained that tike demonstration, showedthat parents could be frightened into keepingtheir children home by a campaign of in¬timidation and threats of possible violence.-’RIFT IN THE MOVEMENTBetween the first and second boycotts aserious rift developed in the New York civilrights movement, a rift which became evenmore sharply evident during the recentWorld’s Fair stall-in controversy. By the timethe second boycott occurred, the NAACP,CORE, the Urban League, and the NationalAssociation for Puerto Rican Civil Rightshad all quit the Coordinating Committee, ledby the Rev. Milton Galamison, leaving onlythe Harlem Parents Committee and the Work¬shop for Equality in New York City schools.(Galamison’s own group). The reason whichthese groups gave for their withdrawal wasthat the city-wide committee had been set upas a coordinating body of autonomous organi¬zations joining together to meet a common-problem. but it had become, in the publicmind, a separate organization.The groups tried to make it clear that theywere not leaving because of any disagree¬ment with Galamison on tactics, objectives,or opposition to a second boycott, (althoughthey did feel that the quick announcement ofa second boycott was ill-timed, since theeffectiveness of the first one had not yetbeen fully tested). It was evident, in addi¬tion to the other reasons they gave publicly,that relations between Galamison and themore established civil rights leaders wereconsiderably strained, and that many of themfelt he had been making arbritrary state¬ments in their name, without proper con¬sultation.Galamison, embittered and depressed byhis major loss of support, continued his callfor a second bovcott. counting on grass rootssupport for such a demonstration among theparents in New York’s Negro ghettos.While not actively supported by the NAACP,National CORE, the Urban League, the Puer¬to Rican group, Bayard Rustin, and otherestablished leaders, the second boycott diddraw the support of the same CORE chap¬ters (Brooklyn and Bronx CORE) whichlater broke with National CORE’s standagainst the stall-in at the World’s Fair. Inaddition, Galamison’s efforts were backed byrent-strike organizer Jesse Gray, Congress¬man Adam Clayton Powell, and Black Na¬tionalist leader, Malcom X.Since the March 16th boycott, which man¬aged to keep only half as many pupils outof school as stayed out on February 3rd,very little progress has been made in re¬establishing lines of communication betweenGalamison and the CORE and NAACP leader¬ship. Urged by some to accept a lesser rolein the local integration movement, Galami¬son replied, "If unity envolves sacrificingour pace, than unity will have to be sacri¬ficed.”In the latest development, the NY su¬perintendent of schools announced May 28a plan to shift a total of almost 10,000 sixthand ninth graders to achieve integration.Thirty-six high schools would receive 4500ninth graders from predominantly Negrojunior highs, and 5800 sixth graders wouldbe moved to fill the vacancies in the juniorhighs.In addition, four predominantly non-whileelementary schools would be "paired” witha neighboring school that is largely white,involving bus transportation for 1,000 pupils.The plan has run into considerable opposi¬tion from white parents’ groups. Rev. Galami¬son’s immediate reaction was, "We’re happyto see some signs of motion at the Board ofEducation.”Superintendent Gross announced the planwith hopes of putting it into effect this fall.It is “just a beginning,” he said. "Hundredsof thousands of children will come in con¬tact with one another who have not in thepast,” he said, but admitted it will not sub¬stantially reduce the number of predominantlyNegro and Puerto Rican schools.HICAOO MAROON • 11THEATER REVIEWPlaye issues statementon fraternity incidentGeorge Playe, dean of un¬dergraduate students, issueda statement last week ques¬tioning the truthfulness oftwo students who said they had beenchased and manhandled by threemembers of Psi Upsilon fraternitylast month.In a letter to the Maroon, GeneSargent said tlie frat men chasedhim and another first year student,Tom Smucker, from the Psi U houseat 5639 University Ave. to the en¬trance to Mandel Hall.Hiere, the letter said, “the fratmen started to roughup Smucker byIxHiiH'ing him between them.” Oneof them spit in Sargent's face, theletter continued, and also swung atSmucker.The letter concluded,The high point o£ the evening hadcome earlier when, while holding(Sargent) by the collar, one of theboys had said, “It’s you kind of guysthat keep the good guys from cominghere.’’ Some time before that, however,we had begun to wonder if perhapsmore people than they thought thatwas true.’’After the letter appeared, DeanPlaye called the students involvedto a meeting with him and TomO'Keefe, director of student activi¬ties.At the meeting, the studentssigned a statement for publicationin tiie Maroon, which is included inPlaye’s message. Subsequent¬ly, Smucker wished to withdraw hissignature from the statement, andwrote a note to Playe.In a telephone conversation withPlaye the next day, according toSmucker, a misunderstanding arose,and Smucker inferred that the state¬ment would not be printed. He toldtills to MAROON co-editor DavidAiken, who accepted his word. Thestatement was not printed.Playe’s statement was mimeo¬graphed and posted on many bulle¬tin boards on campus last week. Re¬plies to Playe from Smucker andSargent are printed on page two.The text of Playe's statement fol¬lows :Some weeks ago, a letter ; ipearedin tiie pages of the Maroon (seeissue of May 1?), signe^ by GeneSargent. That letter described an in¬cident w’hich, if true, would havebeen a serious indictment of the re-SixjnsiLility of the Psi Upsion frater-ternity system, and certainly a dis¬credit to our campus. The allegedattackers formally objected to thefacts, as slated, in Mr. Sargent’sletter. At Dean Wick’s request, Iinvited all participants to meet withme and with Mr. O’Keefe, Directorof Student Activities, in an attemptto sift out the facts of the matter.Titc meeting was held in my of¬fice on Tuesday, May 19, and itsoon became clear that, since therewere no uninvolved witnesses, thefacts would remain muddy. How¬ever, the discussion did reveal thatexag .oration ami sensationalism hailbeen basic ingredients in Mr. Sar-g-nt’s letter. In response to my pro¬ posal, all five students agreed volun¬tarily, without threats or promises,expressed or implied to sign thefollowing letter. (I think that I shouldadd that none of the participants andsignatories was entirely satisfiedthat his, or their, version of the in¬cident was completely explicated orvindicated by the letter.)STATEMENT FOR RELEASETO THE MAROONTO THE EDITOR:We the undersigned, after mutualdiscussion of the incident reported inGene Sargent's letter (see MaroonMay 12), wish to subscribe to the fol¬lowing statement to the campus.1. The letter gave an impressionthat acts of brutality were perpetrated;all parties how agree that there wasindeed childish horseplay—perhaps in¬excusable—, but definitely there wasno physical brutality during the in¬cident.2. Certain facts were either exag¬gerated or stated from misinformation(e.g., one of the men involved, notablyLarry Kaplan, was not a fraternityman).3. All of the under-igned agree thatan apology to the campus is indicatedand we all are sorry that the incidenthas been blown out of proportion. Weagree—and hope all others will agree—that the incident is now closed.GENE SARGENTLARRY KAPLANRICHARD STERZTOM SMUCKERJ. WEST CLARIDGETlie above letter was delivered tothe Maroon inmmediately followingthe meeting, but it was not publishedin the issue of May 22, the last oneuntil June 12.The following day Mr. TomSmucker informed me by letter thathe had technical reservations aboutthe letter. He implied that Mr. Sar¬gent and he would see me about thisat 5:00 p.m. on Wednesday. I wait¬ed; they did not appear. I phonedMr. Smucker but was unable toreach him. On Thursday, after manymore attempts on my part to reachhim, Mr. Smucker finally phoned meand, to be brief, it was my under¬standing that he had done nothing toprevent the publication of he letter.Later, I learned that lie had told theMaroon editors that I had agreed theletter was not to be published. Thatwas not true. Further, at no timewere the fraternity members in¬formed of Mr. Smucker’s reserva¬tions and activities to prevent publi¬cation of tiie letter.The facts force me to concludethat Mr. Smucker and Mr. Sargentare more willing to indict the fra¬ternity than to admit and exposethe truth. I have found their be¬havior in this entire matter to bepeculiarly and gratuitously vindic¬tive towards the fraternity system.Mr. Smucker awl Mr. Sargent havegiven me little grounds for givinggreat credence to their report of theoriginal incident. I regret the factthat the campus has been inconven¬ienced by their actions in this matter.DEAN OF UNDERGRADUATESTUDENTS Predict brief run for 'Luther';Play 'dramatically ridiculous7LUTHER, by John OsbornoCast List:Martin Luther—J >hn HeffernanHans Luther—Georqe MothewsJohn Tetxei—Michael EqaaStaupit*—Frank ! helleyCaietan—Huqh FtanklinPope Lea X—Stan DworkinKniqht—Alan BerqmannDirected by Tony RichardsonAt the Blackstone TheatreJohn Osborne’s play Lutheris both a success and a failure.It is successful in its presen¬tation of the controversies indoctrine and in polities which weresired by Luther’s teachings; fromthe sublime exposition of these con¬troversies it swiftly descends to adramatically (and, it would seem,factually) ridiculous explanation ofthe cause of Luther’s break withtraditional dogma. The productionof Osborne’s play at the Blackstoneis a worth while dramatic experi¬ence, on the whole: well directedand performed. I should much doubt,however, if the play is worth thefuss it caused in New York.The script traces the developmentof the young Martin Luther fromhis entrance into the Augustiniancloister in Erfurt until the birth ofhis first son. We see his dissatisfac¬tion with the doctrine of justificationby works grow from doubts andhesitancies in 1507 to outsjiokenpreaching and the posting of theninety-five theses on the door of theWittenberg Castle Church in 1517,and from here to his obstinate re¬fusal to recant at the Diet of Worms;“Here I stand: May God help me,for I can do no more.”In his presentation of these devel¬opments Osborne is both clear andsubtle. It is in his attempt to evokethe psychological roots of Luther’sdissatisfactions with the Church ofRome that he foils. Osborne hasapparently paid assiduous attentionto Erik Erikson’s book on Luther’syouth, for he accepts and dramatizesErikson’s now discredited theory ofLuther’s break with the Church asa result of anal fixations.We are treated not only to a viewof the progression of Luther’sthought, but also to running commen¬tary on the state of the man’s bow¬els. It was on the toilet, while he was relieving himself, Luther tellsus, that it was revealed to him thatjustification is by faith alone.Luther’s disagreement with theportion of the Credo of the Masswhich deals with the forgiveness ofsins has an objective correlative, itwould seem, in Luther’s constipation.Erikson’s ideas are no longer infavor, and his book is now consid¬ered an unsuccessful attempt toapply Freudian psychology to his¬torical events, but even were thisnot the case, Osborne’s adoption ofErikson is dramatically unsound.Luther’s struggles become ridiculousand obscene when viewed from thepers|ieetive, as it were, of the man’sanus. His newly learned tendernessfor his infant son takes on a path¬ological quality a- fe observe Luthertell his sleeping child to bare hisarse whenever he sees th"> devil,and “let him have it.” Thro 'ghthese ludicrous digressions, tin finefocus of the young monk's dramabecomes dissipated and tlie playloses much of its potential force.The ca 1 was generally go » l in itssupport of John lleffernr.n’s e\c fnitportrayal of the vorng I vlb r. Es¬pecial.y impressive were M: heelEgan’s Tetzel anil Frank Shfl'ey’sStaup’tz. George Mathews was rf‘h-er less good as Luther’s father. Hetended to shout all his lines with amonotonously flat tone, which tendedto detract from the tense drama ofof the first act. Tony Richardson'sdirection left nothing to he desired,either in the presentation of theinter-personal clashes, or in high¬lighting Luther’s internal conflicts.It is difficult to make any flatstatement as to the quality of Luther:it is an exciting play, as fascinating as it is informative, but its occasion¬al descents from drama to psycho-pathology cause it to be an unevenplay as well. I am not sure howemphatically I ought to recommendit, but its stay in own will not bea long one, and anyone who has beeninterested by the description woulddo well to phone in for tickets rathersoon.David RichterProspective Rhodesiansmust see Playe soonAll students interested in RhodesScholarships for study at Oxford Uni¬versity in England were asked thisweek to contact Dean of Undergrad¬uate S.udents George Playe beforeleaving campus for tiie summer.In order to qualify for a Scholar-s flip, students must be 1) Male citi¬zens of the United States; 2) Unmar¬ried; 3) Between the ages of 18 and21 on October 1, 1964; and 4) at leastin the third year of residence in 1964-(>5.Rho !es Scholarships carry a stipendof nine hundred poinds per year. Theappointment is for a two-year period,with a third year available to somesuccessful candidates.Beside seeing Playe, all studentsmust submit their completed applica¬tions by October 15, 1964.READ THEMAROON•*OWA-e*t»»« A«N» "Mxi" A»t •r®i*Tf*eo T»*OfWHICH lOCNTiry ONLY Tnt P»OOUCT Of Tm* COCA COt* COMDawJ.EANDELL BEAUTY SALONAIR CONDITIONINGOPEN EVENINGS57CD HARPcR ave. FA 4-2007MRS. BILLIE TREGANZA. PROP.JESSELSOH’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPI 2-2870, PI 2-8190, DO 3-8190 1340 E. 53rdhaving service problems?** ' foreign car hospital and clinic, inc.authorized safes and service foraustin, mg, mr-rris, austin healey, triumph 8C jaguarand we fix all other european cars, too5424 south kimbark avenue mi 3-3113 ATTENTIONMAROONS15 $1,000SCHOLARSHIPSIf you would like to faceadventure every day in thesummer, and compete for 15$1,000 scholarships for nextsemester and also an 8 daytrip through Holland, Ger¬many, France, and Switzerland,then our executive trainingprogram is designed for you.We will pay you $120 eachand every week of the summerwhile training you in the manyfacets of business and corpor¬ate management such as hiringprocedures, training methods,public speaking, finance, salesand office management. Youwill work with college menfrom all over the country.For a personalinterview callMr. MajesticST 2-4362 Life s a picnic when you’re refreshed.Coca-Cola, with its cold crisp taste,is always just right,never too sweet... refreshes best.things gObetter,!^withCokeBotued under tne authority of The Coca-Cola Company by: "The Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Chicago, Inc.Grants, awards, recognition given 250 UC studentsMore than 250 studentshave been honored this quar¬ter for their academic andextra-curricular achieve-ments. At the University’s8th annual Honors AwardsAssembly on May 28, manyof them were accorded for¬mal recognition.Heading the list are seventeenstudents w1k> were elected to PhiBeta Kappa. The students, who wereinitiated at a dinner Wednesday night,are: Simon Aronson, Myrna Bell,l>aura Cahoon, John Crolhers, Mar¬tha Crowe, Gary Feldman, DavidGolber, Ovaries Anthony Gordon,Jack Jacobs, Joseph Kleins, MaryMayhew, Sharon Murphy, MarilynWishaj’d, Melvin Edelstein, MaryParmer, Adrian Schnall, and MichaelSilverman.Phi Beta Kappa follows no quotasystem. To be eligible for member¬ship, the student must have a R-plusaverage, which is about 3.5, and musthave been in resident at the Univer¬sity for at least two years.Alumni awardsTen graduating students were se¬lected by the Dean of Students Officeand the Alumna Association to behonored for their contribution to ex¬tracurricular activities. Each studentwas given $100 and a student achieve¬ment medal as part of the HowellMur ray-Alumni Association Awards.The four women and six men whowon the awards are Joe Taylor Ford,who worked on University Theater;1 .aura Ruth Godofsky, former Ma¬roon editor-in-chief; Gerald F. Hy¬man, former Student Governmentvioe-jvresident; Belleruth Krepon ofBlack friars; Richard Mandel of mani¬fold histrionic fame; John WilliamMcConnell of manifold fraternityfame; Pam Procuniar of SG and theWoodiawn Tutoring Project; BruceRappaport, former SG member andformer president of UC CORE;Pamela Smith, former Miss UC,president of Nu Pi Sigma, and main¬stay of the Russian Choir; andMichael Wollan, former SG vice-president, former SG observer on theDisciplinary Committee, and formerleft-wing-back of the Flying Bolshe¬viks.Original worksStudents lionored for their originalwork included:Jonathan Aaron, who won firstprize in both the Academy of Ameri¬can Poets and the John Billings FiskePoetry contests; Tamara Diabes,who won tiie first Slvorey house prizefor literature for her poem “Abe¬lard”; Richard Lee and Darel Gro-thaus, who won Milo P. JewettPrizes for excellence in Bible rend¬ing; William Hanley, David Paulsen,Douglas Costle, and Harry Crandall,who won Hinton Moot Court Compe¬ tition Awards for advancing the artof briefwriting and oral argument.Others included Deborah Shilling,Susan Horowitz, Henry Hardy, andRodney Phillips, who won FlorenceJane Adams Prizes for excellence inartistic reading; Alice Norman, whowen the Baroque Studies Prize forher essay “Rembrandt’s ‘Young Girlat an Open Ha If-Door1 RichardYanul, who won the graduate studentversion of the same prize for hisessay ‘‘The Iconographical Back¬ground of Pigalle's ‘L’enfant a lacage;” and Alfonso Ortiz, who wonthe Roy D. Albert Prize for outstand¬ing work in the anthropology depart¬ment for his paper ‘‘A ProcessualAnalysis of a .Social Movement in theRio Grande Pueblos.”Still other winners Included MarkHealy Naftalin, who won an honoraryaward from the Olga and Paul MerniFoundation for an original musicalcomposition; Margaret Payne, whowon the Susan Colver RosenbergerPrize lor constructive study and origi¬nal research in the education depart¬ment for her dissertation on “TheUse of Data in Curricular Decisions;”and Gordon Harper, who won thenewly established John Rogers Snow-day Memorial Prize for original workin the field of literary criticism forhis essay “Morality in Fiction: TheTheory of Henry James.”Academic honorsAcademic honors were awarded tostudents in the humanities, sciences,and graduate schools. Myrna GailBell won the Theodore Lee NeffPrize for excellence in the study ofFrench Language and Literature.Outstanding students in German, win¬ning the Goethe Prizes, were TerryLyons, Paul Zucker, Jennifer Dohm,and Joseph Nedsendorfer.Karl Fldckinger and Louise Rosswon the Frances R. Friedman Prizes,for excellence in Fine Arts.Excellent ~ research in chemistrywon the Elizabeth R. Norton Prizefor Frank Baker. Tlve Department ofPhysiology awaixled its Henry Gins-burg Manorial Prize to James Cas¬tles.Ralph H. Meerbote won the Hamil¬ton Watch Award as the senior can¬didate for the bachelor of sciencedegree who has most successfullycombined proficiency in bis majorfield with achievements in the hu¬manities or social sciences.The Sclvool of Social Service Ad¬ministration gave awards to two de¬gree candidates, Alan Green andBarbara Lapp, for their outstandingwork in the first year and promiseof future achievement.George Javaras won tlve Lawyer'sTitle Award as the student in thelaw school who excelled in the fieldof property.Athletic awardsTwo awards for athletic achieve¬ment were awarded this year. John Beal won the William Bond Medalas the varsity track athlete scoringthe greatest number of points duringthe season. The Amos Alonzo SlaggMedal, to live senior athlete withthe best all-around record for ath¬letics, scholarship, and character wasawarded to Clifford Cox, Jr.Members of the faculty and ad¬ministration choose a number ofundergraduate students each year tobelong to the University’s servicehonoraries, Maroon Key Society, andthe Student Aides. Those newlyelected to Maroon Key include Mar¬cia Batchsller, Sydney Branch, JackCatiin, Marcia Earlenbaugh, KathrynEdwards, Chris Flory, Carol Green-feld, Sandra Hindman, Carl Hedel,and Deidre Holloway.Also selected were Judyth Klotz,Ross Lence, Judith Magidson, DavidMidland, Mary Pugh, Arthur Robins,Joel Shapiro, Beverly Splane, andElizabeth Wallace.Honorary societiesMany students were elected to themen and women’s honorary societiesthis year. Men chosen for Owl & Ser¬pent were Marc Cogan, Stephen Ege,Richard Goldstone, Eugene Groves,Arthur Kaufman, Richard Neuge-bauer, Peter Rabinowitz, LawrenceRock wood, David Straus, and JolinWilliams.Iron Mask chose Albert Carter,Harvey Golomb, Eugene Groves,John Hendrickson, Ken Richards,Charles Schauf, Richard Schmitt,Leonard Shaykin, Stephen Shuchter,Frank Smith, Edward Stevenson, andDavid Straus.New members of Nu Pi Sigma,the women’s honor society, are SusanAlport, Katherine Bailey, BarbaraCaress, Sally Cook, Mary Dingman,Susan Goldberg, Sharon Goldman,Mary Gottschalk, R a y e Havens,Robin Kaufman, Judyth Klotz, An¬tigone I^efteris, linda Irvine, JudithMagidson, Mary Mayhew, JoannNojiri, Mary Parmer, Teresa Peter¬son, Sandra Roos, Vicky Shiefman,Beverly Splane, Naomi Stemfeld,June Takafuji, Linda Thoren, DonnaWilson, and Miriam Zieger.Sigma Xi, the scientific honorarysociety, elected Robert Axelrod,David Golber, Stephanie Gordon,Dale Jolmson, Devra Kleiman, Ed¬ward McDaid, Ralph Meerbote, Fred¬erick Meins, Jr., Sharon Murphy,Richard Olson, and Reinhard Schultz.FellowshipsAs evidence of greater numbersof students attending graduate schooland their better preparation, UCgraduates and undergraduates wonmany fellowships.Students winning foreign languagesgrants were Peter Haddad (AllianceFrancai.se Fellowship), LawrenceGow, and Arthur NeLsberg, (both wonFrench Government Fellowships).Dankstipendien of the Federal Re¬ public of Germany went to StephenBailey and Paul Souers.Joseph Gray won the GermanisticSociety Award. Exchange Fellow¬ships between UC and Germany wentto Jon Amstutz and Diana Loercher.Fulbright Grants for study inforeign lands went to Karen Blu(Australia), Robert Fink (France),Irene Gilbert (India), Robert Hard-grave (India), Tieh-Sun King (India),John Morearty (Germany), JoelNewman (Philippines), Donald Niemi(Sweden), John Rinaldo (Italy),Howard Spodek (India), CharlesWhite (India), and George Young(Chile).Inter - University Committee onTravel Grants Fellowships for studyin the Soviet Union were awardedto Albert Leong, William Lincoln,and Echeal Sigan.Summer study grants went to LindaBowdoin and Jeffrey Ruprecht, whowill travel to Germany, and Kather¬ine Bailey and Marc Cogan, who willbe at Oxford, England.General Fellowships included threeKent fellowships, for John Flynn,Roscoe Hill, and John Morearty.Bruce Rappaport won a Dan forthfellowship and Pamela Smith wasawarded an Illinois English SpeakingUnion Fellowship.Fannie and John Hertz Fellowshipswent to David Fryberger, WilliamGlaberson, and David Young.Science awardsAwards given to graduate scien¬tists included the National Aero¬nautics and Space AdministrationFellowships. These went to Joel Ap-pelbaum (physics), Ronald Arendt(chemistry), William Boo (chemis¬try), Gary Borisy (biophysics), Mer¬rill Gassman (botany), Richard Lar-rabee (chemistry), Janet Lesh (as¬tronomy), John Sinclair (zoology),David Smith (physics), Todd" Tucker(mathematics), and Albert Whitcomb(mathematics).National Science Foundation Co¬operative Fellowships have beenawaixled to Aaron Bloch, David De-Rosier, Robert Evenson, Daniel Fife,Donald Goldhamer, David Greenberg,Barton Hacker, Joseph Kleins, Nel¬son Lipshutz, Donald Martin, JanetMather, Richard Morton, Scott Nor¬man, Ann Parker, Jacob Raab, Mur-r a y Sehacher, Reinhard Schultz,Robert Silbey, Lance Small, ThomasTyler, Martin Urberg, and StephenWebber.NSF grantsWinners of the National ScienceFoundation Summer Fellowships forGraduate Teaching Assistants areAllan Abramson, Joel Appelbaum,Walter Dauni, Zalman Gaibel, GaryGoldstein, David Greenterg, DavidHandel, David Mayers, John Polking,Janies Schafer, Howard A. Stewart, Martin Urbero, and Richard Whee-den.Holders of National Science Foun¬dation Graduate Fellowships includeMarshall Ash, Roberta Ash, AlanBennett, John Burroughs, Keith Carl¬son, Wentworth Claphma, Jr., Jere¬miah Cronin, Larry Dornhoif, DallasEdwards, John Fanselow, Gary Feld¬man, Paula Fozzy, and David Fry¬berger.Other winners are Zalman Gaibel,David Golber, Stephanie Gordon,Braylon Gray, Frank Grosshuns, Al¬lan Hanson, John Harper, James Hill,Kirby Klump, Susan Langreth, Rich¬ard Larson, Daniel Levine, GeneLewis, Patricia Linck, William MaierII, Daniel McMahon, James McNa¬mara, Frederick Meins, Jr., DavidMertz, Don Miller, and Paul Moore.Also noted were Steven Murov,Sliaron Murphy, Alexandra Navroi-sky, Michael Parkinson, NicholasPassed, Robert Paul, Philip Pechu-kas, Richard Powers, Eugene Pysh,Richard Reno, Stephen Reno, StuartSchiegel, Richard Shaker, BruceSherwood, Elizabeth Sloan, EdwardSpitznagel, Jr., Philip Stevenson,Paul Stoven, David Tanner, DianaTaylor, and Donald Treiman.William Cruce and Frederick MeinsJr won Rockefeller Institute Fellow¬ships for graduate study in biology.Maria DeJong and Dinah boiomonwon UC Humanities Fellowships.Winners of Woodrow Wilson Fel¬lowships and their fields are RobertAxelrod (Sociology), Jack Bloom(Political Science), Norman Diamond(Political Science), Vernon Edgar(Philosophy of Science), Gary Feld¬man (Physics), Daniel Gross (Phi¬losophy), Harold Jacobs (Sociology),Naiane Jacobs (Philosophy), Sam¬uel Leuihardt (Sociology), Roger Le¬vin (Political Science), and BruceMcKellips (Economics).Other winners of Wilson fellowshipsare Ralph Meerbote (Phioiosophy),Frederick Meins Jr. (Biochemistry),Robert Odess (Anthropology), BruceRappaport (Political Science), EllenRoss (History), Robert St. Clair(English), Richard Senneit (Ameri¬can Studies), David Smigeiskis (Phi¬losophy), Harriet Snyder (English),Dinah Solomon (English), MarilynWishard (English), and Sylvia Wood-by (International Relations).American Foundation gives$10,000 to Robie fundThe American Foundation has con¬tributed $10,000 to the Robie HouseRestoration Fund, bringing the totalamount contributed so far to $53,000.The Robie House, located at 58 andWoodiawn and built in 1909, is anoutstanding example of Wright’s mid-western home architecture. It be¬came the forerunner of the ranchstyle house of today.a 3Nnr -jlvs90S uoissjuipv..♦U3A3 |op<»S snduio3-||v *sdt aijx.. >™. •*. ■*< 6uis d-l »Hi Buimoiioj NMVIdOOM S SZ9Sh ai.i.s:ij Ami:i}i uvii.i.spnuuv q*6£ a41 s*uasajd D{.|3Q 011161$ iqjSUMMER CLASSES2000 WORDS A MINUTE CAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THE THY 3-5300 FA 4-5525WITH EXCELLENT COMPREHENSION AND RETENTIONYOU CAN READ 150-200 PAGES AN HOUR using the ACCELERATED READING technique.You'll learn to read smoothly DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute.And retention is excellent. This is not a skimming method; you definitely read every word.You can effectively apply the ACCELERATED READING technique to textbooks and factual mate¬rial, as well as to literature and fiction. The author’s style is not lost when you read at these speeds. Infact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased. No machines or apparatus are used in/earning the ACCELERATED READING technique.An evening class in ACCELERATED READ1N G will be held at the HOTEL SHERRY beginningin early July. It’s wonderful to be able to read a boo k in one sitting, and see it as a whole.Be ir guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READING technique on:Wednesday, June 24 at 7:30 p.m.; Tuesday, June 30at 7:30 p.m.; Thursday, July 2 at 7:30 p.nt.BRING A BOOK!Demonstrations will be held at the HOTEL SHERRY(53rd St. and Lake Shore Drive)NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING INC.I 507 Fifth Avenue, New York 17, N. Y.\ PIZZAMed. LargeCHEESE 1.45 2.00SAUSAGE 1.80 2.35PEPPER & ONION 1.65 2.20BACON & ONION 2.15 2.70COMBINATION 2.40 2.95MUSHROOM 2.70SHRIMP 2.95I THIS COUPON WORTH 50c 'I ON ANY PIZZA DELIVERYI 1 IN JUNE ,SJune 12. 19A4 • CHICAGO MAR OON • 13They love us because our members have always been able to rely on usfor fast, convenient, low-cost vacation loans. Who can say how many ofour members would have forsaken their travel plans .... or how manytravel agents would now be hungry and walking the streets .... if weweren’t quite so adept at solving the problems of financing vacationsand travel ?Why don’t you drop in soon and find out about a vacation loan foryourself! Chances are you’ll end up loving us too.THEATER REVIEWCawelti hails ’excellent' UT performance of AlheeEDITOR S NOTE:The following review is.regrettably, outdated byapproximately two weeksdue to a conflict betweenMAROON publicationdates and the performanceof the Tonight at 8:30 pro*gram. John Cawelti is as*sistant professor of human*ities, chairman of the Hu¬manities I sequence, andthe recent recipient of aQuantrell Award for excel*I e n c e in undergraduateteaching. a congenitally low threslihold for Sa-royanish whimsy. Since there is notmuch else to be said for the play. I hard Enoto create theatrical niove-NIGHT AT 8:30’s offerings. Despite ject a highly poetic language without pleasure which I received whileimaginative efforts by Director Rich- looking silly and to get them all to watching UI s fledgling directors tryTin's quarter’s version of Tonight at8:30, number 4 in a series of pro- am obviously the wrong person toattempt an objective review.I found the play a period piece,reflecting attitudes toward society,art, and the like which were rathergenerally in fashion a couple of dec¬ades ago, but which now seem drearyand a little bit embarrassing. Thequasi-Huckleberry Finnish little boywith his poet father living in honestand sincere poverty; the old actorwhose heart is in the highlands; thecrusty but kind-hearted storekeeper.Fap! These are the ingredients ofmusical comedy, not of theatre.Ibe UT production, despite excel¬lent individual performances by Sue ment, the play remains a series ofset pieces which is likely to overcomeall but the finest actors and. thoughone wants to give UT all due credit,that they don’t have.Thus, there were moments of “OnBaile’s Strand” which w'ere beautifulindeed, but the production as a wliolewas a matter of biting off more thancould be chewed. To begin with thepositive, the set, lighting, costumesand choreographic aspects of tlie pro¬duction were very imaginativelythought out. I did feel that the di¬rector often overcompensated for thestatic quality of the play by encour¬aging his actors to do a good deal ofgrams of sliort plays directed by stu- Horowitz and Jim O’Reilly, did little rather meaningless jumping about. Ondents, was, inevitably, not wholly suc¬cessful. But there was certainlyenough in the way of good actingand competent stagecraft to makeme glad I had come out, despite cli¬matic conditions bad enough to driveone way from the Old Vic.All three plays certainly showedlarge quantities of the old school try.Everybody was well rehearsed findknew more or less what he wassupposed to be doing. Everybodyknew his lines and, with the excep¬tion of a few moments in the Yeatsplay, delivered them with full audi¬bility and clarity.Thus, whatever reservations onehas to make, these were amateurtheatricals presented with a profes¬sional seriousness that, in my opinion,makes up for a lot. Indeed, thoughone could hardly claim that all tlireeplays were staged and acted withmaximum effectiveness, at leastsome ot the shortcomings of Tonightat 8:30 must be laid at the door olthe playwrights.By far the best of the three pro¬ductions was the first: Albee’s “HieAmerican Dream.” Pace, tone, andrhythm in this performance were ex¬cellent, and the acting was the out¬standing treat of the evening.First, the actors were selected witha tine eye to their fulfillment of thestereotypes which Albee plays with inthe play, though I suspect that San¬dra Baxter was rather more attrac¬tive a Mrs. Barker than Albee hadin mind. Then, the actors played toeach other very nicely. Their mutualreactions and gestures were remark¬ably well planned and executed toenhance the broad and bawdy verbalhumor of the play. -The broadness of the acting stylew’as the right choice, I thought, thoughsome Albee fans might claim thata subtler approach would have cov¬ered up the gaping discrepancies oftone that otten afflict the endings ofAlbee plays. I think not. Albee is notreally a subtle playwright, but he ismagnificently theatrical. His gesturesin the direction of philosophical com¬plexity and profound seriousness arered herrings; they seem thrown into distract the attention of those whowant some deep life-affirming mes¬sage with their theater rather thanintegral to the plays he writes.But Albee can create superb dra¬matic humor and theatrical melodra¬ma. “The American Dream” is aboveall a broadly amusing verbal farcewhich, like many traditional come¬dies, dejjencls on the misunderstand¬ings, errors, and incapacities ot agroup of limited stereotypical charac¬ters, and this aspect of the play wasalways central in UT’s excellent pro¬duction.Finally, though all of the act4irs didtheir parts with competence andverve, Kdrene Furman as the saltyold Grandma should be singled outfor a really stunning performance.In most respects, the least satis¬factory of the three performancesmaking up Tonight at 8:30 was Sa¬royan’s “The Miin with the Heart intile Highlands,” though the failureshere should largely be laid at tlie1 daywright’s door. I must confess to to overcame the limitations of thematerial. By taking it too seriously.Director Andy Kaplan allowed theessential triviality of the play to shineforth. It is possible that a lighter,faster-paced production might havesalvaged something, but I doubt it.I fear it must be said that thereason we do not more often sec theplays of the greatest twentieth cen¬tury" poet is that, despite the greatbeauty of their language, they arenot very theatrical. This is certainlythe case with Yeats’ “On Baile’sStrand” which was the third of TO- such a hot night I felt truly sorry fortlie Fool, who must have been utterlydissolved in sweat by the time theplay was over.But at other times the stagingworked very well. The scene of Cu-chulain’s oath with the two womenchanting contrapuntally against therecitation of the king was very ef¬fective. So was tlie scene where Cu-chulain discovers that tlie championhe has just slain was his son.Perhaps the greatest problems ofa director in a rather static, lyricalplay are to train liis actors to pro- act in more or less the same way,witli the same kind and degree ofstylization. This is the kind of thingthat requires long years of trainingwhich the cast of “On Baile’s Strand”did not have.Some of the actors dkl pretty wellconsidering the difficulties. JudithShaverin as the Fool had a number ofmoments where she rose to thepoetry of her part. Peter Bose as theBlind Man handled his role with moreuniform power and made whatseemed to me the best use of a strongand expressive voice. Cuchulain,played by Andrew Harris, had moredifficulty with a harder, more com¬plex role. He pounded it out wellenough, but with rather more volumethan flaxibility and expressiveness.Others simply failed to project andhad trouble not looking ill at easewhile the main characters had theirsay. The problem of differences inacting style was particularly apjxirentin the confrontation between Cuchu¬lain and his son. Cuchulain playedthe conventional oratorical style; hisson seemed to be modelling his per¬formance after James Dean. The re¬sult was inevitably a temporary des¬truction of the tone and atmosphereof the play.But it w'ould be false to the real their hands to end on a note of criti¬cism. For all the shortcomings Ihave pointed out, tht level of en¬thusiasm and seriousness in all threeproductions was high, and much of thedirection and acting was surprisinglygood. I would urge anyone interestedin an enjoyable evening of theater,even at ninety degrees, to invest inTonight at 8:30.John CaweltiBinder replaces Pritchettas pol sci chairmanLeonard Binder will succeed C.Herman Pritchett as chairman of thepolitical science department on Oc¬tober 1.Binder, an associate professor ofpolitical science, is a specialist in thesocial, cultural, and political develop¬ment of new nations, particularlythose of the Middle East.Pritchett, an authority on constitu¬tional development and theory andpolitical influences on the SupremeCourt, will devote his full time toscholarly research and teaching. H>-is President of the American PoliticalScience Association.14 • CHICAGO MAROON • . June 12,1944LAKE /PARK AT S3RD : N O 7 • 90 7 1the tvyde park theatreStarts Friday, June 12 —INGMAR BERGMAN'S“THE SILENCE"Short — "Love Me, Love Me, Love Me**Starts Friday, June 19 —ALBERTO SORDI in“TO BED —- OR NOT TO BED""Devilish aid Darling! A Gam of a Film!" — CrowtharShort — "NOCTURNE PARTY"Starts Friday, June 26 —ACADEMY AWARD WINNER!“AMERICA, AMERICA"Academy Award Short — "THE CRITIC"Starts Friday, July 3 —"THE CHALK GARDEN"Starts Fridav, July 10 —ACADEMY AWARD WINNER — SIDNEY POITIER“LILIES OF THE FIELD"and PETER SELLERS in“THE WORLD OF HENRY ORIENT"July 17 — "THE DOLL" and "THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO"Coming Soon — "THE SERVANT" A "THE ORGANIZER""POINT OF ORDER" "IL GRIDO"Morton’s RestaurantChicago' Most FabulousRestaurantFavorite of Faculty, Students, AlumsLake Michigan and the Outer Drive,on 56th StreetRESERVATIONS: CALL BU 8-7400shore drive motehFACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chicago Rates. Beautiful Rooms,Free TV. Parking, Courtesy Coffee.Closest Motel to Univ. of Chicago and Museum of Science A Industry.FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTEL56th St. A So. Shore Dr. e Chicago 37, IllinoisGOLD CITY INNTREAT YOUR DATE TO THE BEST CANTONESEDINNER IN HYDE PARK THIS WEEKEND70% discount to student with this adSpecial: Fried Wonton Free5228 HARPER ST.HY 3-2559 SAMUEL A. BELL'Buy Shell From Bell'SINCE 192*4701 So. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8 3150rm tii irr» CTLRLCAL. Y aiil couornoMtoCoisutV law t. 53" ST.- y II AM TO 10 PMM13-3A07WC DLllVEtt.a**wOi let Otdim ncjp I«■ a sun-charcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668AdvertisementLast week I had a delightfulexperience in Hyde Park.After hearingabout the delicious FriedChicken at CIRALS, HOUSEOF TIKI, 1510 Hyde Pk. Blvd.I decided to cheek forni) self. The first pleasantsurprise was enteringCIRALS, HOUSE OF TIKI!!Lovely Hawaiian BlackLight murals, bamboo, &soft lights greeted me.Dinner consisted ofappetizer, salad, FriedChicken, potato, roll & hatterand was concluded withcoffee & sherbet. Icouldn't believe the costof $1.95.P.S. Since then I’ve been backto try the Beef, Ham, FriedShrimp, & Filet of SoleDinners at the same $1.95 price.Unfortunately the kitchen isclosed every Wed. Food isserved from 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Alumni ReunionProgramFriday, June 12th:Class of '14, 6:00 p.m., Center for ContinuingEducation.Class of '18, 6:00 p.m., private dining room,Quadrangle Club.Class of '24, 6:00 p.m., Center for ContinuingEducation.Class of '39, 6:00 p.m., cocktails, library; 7:30 p.m.,dinner, main dining room, Quadrangle Club.Saturday, June 13th:Hospitality Centers are open 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p m"in the Reynolds Club Lounge and main floorconference room, Center for Continuing Educa¬tion.New Graduates Breakfast, 8:00 a.m., QuadrangleClub.Emeritus Club Reception, 10:00 a.m., ReynoldsClub Lounge.The 24th Alumni Honors Assembly, luncheon12:15 p.m., Quadrangle Club. — Tickets $4.25.A Roundtable on 1964 Election Issues, “A StaleNew Deal and a Warm Cold War,” luncheon,12:15 p.m., Center for Continuing Education —Tickets $4.25.Class of '14 Tour of Pierce Tower, tour forms atReynolds Club Lounge, 3:00 p.m.Walking Tour, Harper Memorial Library, forms atReynolds Club Lounge, 3:00 p.m.Walking Tour, Architectural Highlights forms atReynolds Club Lounge, 3:00 p.m.Walking Tour, Fine Arts, forms in the lobby, Centerfor Continuing Education, 3:00 p.m.An Apres-Midi Concert of Contemporary Music,4:00 p.m., Concert Hall. The Center for Con¬tinuing Education. Easley Blackwood, pianist. —Tickets $2.20.Eighth Annual Communication Dinyier, 6:30 p.m.,Quadrangle Club. By invitation.The 54th Annual Inter fraternity Sing, 8:30 p.m.,Hutchinson Court.The University of Chicago Alumni Association,Alumni House, 5733 University Ave., Ext. 3241dark theatresummer film festivaldark & madison fr 2-2843 • open 7:30 am—late show 3 am• different double feature daily• 50c for students with i.d.• little gal-lery for gals only• dark parking—1 door south4 hours 95c after 5 pm JUNE-JULY6/14—"young Athe dammed""viridiana" 6/15—"room atthe top""sons andlovers" */H_"thevictim""the mork" 6/17—"adviseand consent""no lovefor johnny"6/21—"the bodsleep well""sanjuro" 6/22—"murder,inc.""9 hours torama" 6/23—"the younglions""the men" 6/24—"brotherskaramozov""the idiot"/6/28—"electro""ontigone" 6/29—"theunforgiven""list otadrianmessenger" 6/30—"the greatescape""the old noilA the sec" 7/1—"thedefiantones""pressurepoint”7/5—"fugitivekind""blackorpheus" 7/6—"studslenigan""sweet smellef success" 7/7—"magnificent7” (japanesei"magnificent7" (americanadaptation) 7/8—"i want tolive""inherit thewind"7/12—"Italianstraw hat""a nous laliberte"•. i - ■ i 7-13—"thebalcony""dirty hands" 7/14—"the redand theblock""kim" 7/15—"4 bagsfull""counterfeittraitor" */1l I—"th® lostbridge""two women" 6/12—"a night otthe opera""a day ofthe races"6/19—"pride Aprejudice""the goodearth"6/25—"streetcarnamed desire"sweet birdof youth"7/2—"manchuriancandidate""youngsavages"7/9—"love in theafterneon""one, two,three"7/16—"ask onygirl""the ratrace" TAhSAM-'Y&NCHINESE • AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANIIAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY13 11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUTIB Eo»( 43rd St. MU 4-1062RENT-A-CARPER D(AY5C PER MilPER MILEWEEKEND SPECIAL RATEFRIDAY 4 P.M.TO MONDAY 18 A.M.fATOMIC CAPRENTALS, INC7057 Stony IslandMl 3-5155Simpson considered "multiple colleges' system(Continued from page one)prove College faculty salaries andthe physical facilities of the Col¬lege. He has enabled College teachersto teach more advanced courses, andhas provided the teachers with bet¬ter research facilities.In addition, Simpson tried to mo¬bilize the resources of the Univer¬sity community for the benefit ofthe College. An example of this kindof effort was his leadership in dis¬cussions of the last two years aboutanother reorganization of undergradu¬ate education.Simpson displayed a great dealof interest in the institution of asystem of “multiple colleges” at UC.Under this system, the College wouldbe divided into several smaller units,according to curriculum or purpose.Currently, no decision has beenreached about the nature of futureundergraduate education at the Uni¬versity of Chicago. Provast EdwardLevi has joined in the discussionsamong faculty and students, how¬ever, in an attempt to determinewhat should be done and who shouldbe chosen ‘o head the College afterSimpson.When Simpson’s resignation wasannounced. President Beadle andLevi issued a joint statement whichincluded a list of Simpson accom¬plishments. “important steps ... tofacilitate further cooperative effortsamong the divisional and college fac¬ulties.”Beadle and Levi also noted thatduring Simpson’s administration “thebasic program has been extendedthrough individualized and tutorialwork in the humanities and scien¬tific areas. The quality of the stu¬dent body has increased steadily.”Simpson initiated the “My LifeJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 and Yours Lecture Series” as well.Under this series various well-knownscholars, writers, and governmentofficials met with limited numbersof undergraduates for an evening oflecture and discussion.Perhaps the best known of Simp¬son’s innovations involving studentlife, however, was the I960 residencerule requiring all undergraduatewomen and men in their first twoyears to live in University housing.After generating much controversy among students and faculty mem¬bers and a large number of stu¬dent petitions seeking exemptions,the rule was modified this year.As a teacher, Simpson was hon¬ored in 1951 with a Quantrell Awardfor excellence in undergraduateteaching.As a scholar, his field of interestis Puritan history. He has writtentwo books in his field. Puritanismin Old and New England, publishedin 1955, won the book prize of the Institute of Early American Histox-yand Culture for that year.His second Book, THE WEALTHOF THE CENTURY, 1540- 1660:EAST ANGLICAN STUDIES, waspublished in 1961. Among its re¬viewers was a Vassar ProfessorEmeritus of History, Mildren Camp¬bell, who called it “a significantbook . . ., bound to be of immensehelp to scholars who follow him.”Simpson’s career as an author al¬so includes the co-editorship of The People Shall Judge: Readings in theFormation of American Policy. Thistwo volume anthology of source read¬ings in American history has beenused in the College general eduea- ^tion Social Sciences I course.As for the Vassar girls’ endow¬ment, a recent statement from Vas¬sar College claimed “consolidated investment with a market value ofover $50 million.P.S. Among Simpson’s going away *presents was a copy of Sex and theCollege Girl.O'Connell pleased with incoming class of 1968Admitting that “furtherdescription is buried in thebowels of the IBM machines,”Charles O’Connell, director ofadmissions, went on to givewhat he termed a “hand-count” list of figures concern¬ing the newly - formulatedClass of 1968.First of all, O’Connell said, thenumber of applications has increased.While about 1800 students appliedlast year, this year the amount l'oseto 2000. Also, thirty students morethan last year’s total of 1020 wereadmitted from his 2000.From these 1050 admitted stu¬dents, 675 accepted, as comparedwith last year’s 585. This, O’Connellexplained, is the “embarrassing”part, for the over-acceptance ratecreates complications as to whereto house them.A waiting list still exists, for afew who have accepted drop outevery week. “We are not dippinginto this list, however, for there is nowhere to put them,” O’Connellcommented.Next year’s class is the largestsince 1947, which consisted of 900students, mainly drawn from warveterans.Although the Office of Admissions“does not have those vital statis¬tics” relating to the quality of thestudents admitted, O’Connell wasable to give a few facts along theselines.He noted, for example, that fromthe group composed of applicantswhich the admissions committeefeels are most academically attrac¬tive, 55% of those who were ac¬cepted decided to come here. Lastyear, only 35% of those in thisgroup who were accepted came.From the group of second-most de¬sirable students, 60% are coming,while last year only 55% did so.The Class of ’68 will contain twen¬ty-four Merit Scholars, while that of’67 contains seventeen of them.The ratio of girls to boys has alsochanged, with the result that the“girls are creeping up,” O’ConnellUniversalArmy Store1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5854CampingEquipment*10% Off On All PurchasesWith This Coupon*Except Fair Trade Items said. The proportion is now two girlsto every three boys, while in thepast it has been one girl to every twoboys.O’Connell's statements concerninggeographical distribution are, he ob¬served, “only surface impressions.”A few remarks he did make, whichhe “thinks are true,” are that: Cali¬fornia is down, New Jersey is “quiteup,” Washington DC is “stxxjngly up,”Montana is “out of all proportion tocommon sense” (about eighteen),Minnesota is down, and Illinois isthe same. This sort of thing, how¬ever, “varies from year to year,”and thus is not representative of anytrend, O'Connell related.There are 45 students chosen fromthe Small Town Talent Seaich; this isthe same amount as last year.On the whole “we’re pleased,”O’Connell stated. “The facts showthat a larger number of students wantus.” There is, though, “no way of accounting for the increase” whichmanifested itself in a “flood of ‘yes’replies” that had not been predicted.Aristotle Schwartz,spokesman for the Old Col¬lege, reacts to incomingfreshman class.“SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT’DIAMOND PHILLIPS JEWELRY CO. LAYA*ANY0FOR Wholesale Distributors FORJUNE DIAMONDS • WATCHES • JEWELRY JUNEPEARLS • SILVERWARE • RINGS • APPLIANCESSERVING COLLEGE STUDENTS AT WHOLESALE PRICES FOR THE PAST 30 YEARSHi■50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDS,ENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS”Watch and Jewelry Repairing, Rm. 1101, 67 E. Madison St.. Chicago-For Further Information Call Harris Jaffe — Ext. 3269 -DE 2-6501 UNIVERSITY .OF CHICAGONICKY'SRESTAURANT AND PIZZANICKY'S TAKE-OUT & DELIVERY MENU(BaafL andP&cl PIZZASAssortments smallCHEESE 1.20SAUSAGE 1.40ANCHOVIEONIONPEPPERMUSHROOMBACONHAM 1.401.251.401.601.401.60 medium1.902.152.151.952.152.402.152.40 'arge2.903.253.253.003.253.503.253.50RIBS1 Slab 2.002 Slabs 3-753 Slabs 5.50CHICKIE IN THE BOX10 Large Pieces 2.5016 Large Pieces 3.7520 Large Pieces 4.75 SANDWICHESPlain or BAR BQ Beef 60Meat Ball 55SAUSAGE 55Above Served with PeppersHAMBURGER 50CHEESEBURGER 60Free Student Delivery FA 4-5 GOutdoor Festival10th ANNIVERSARYTAMINGOF THE SHREWJuly 3 thru 19THE TEMPESTJuly 24 thru August %ROMEO AND JULIETAugust 14 thru 30Tickets now on sale at Mandel HallBox Office This WeekendSingle Admission $1.50;Student & Faculty $1.00; Saturday $2.00June 12, 1964 16 • CHICAGO MAROON •