Hauser on Negroes' plightBetter schools imperativeby David L Aikenyol. 70, No. 4 The University of Chicago Friday, October 16, 1964 31Would distribute student activities money, hear complaintsSG proposes Finance CommitteeA Student Government (SG) proposal to establish a two-part Finance Committee,composed of a Financial Advisory Board and a Communications Board, to distribute theStudent Activities budget and hear complaints against University student publications,radio, and television was revealed recently by SG President Gene Groves.Brought into focus by a Federal “ ' —Gwnmunioations Board requirement favorably” at a recent leadership of the Maroon and Cap and Gown,that a campus radio station such as Conference where, according to serving one year terms, and theWUCB he supervised by a policy- Groves, student reaction was mixed, president of Student Government, andmaking group to be granted an FM “Because we presented tlie proposal two students serving two-year terms,broadcasting license, die proposed in a rough form,” said Groves, “there elected by the SG Assembly. Editorsboard s lowers have been expanded ^ room for improvement. We invite of all other publications and theb> SG to encompass ail student woricat>ie suggestions.” managers of the student radio andorganizations.... . , , , television stations would serve onCommittee views budgets (Editor's note: This is the second part in a series on Hyde Park andWoodlawn. The first part, which appeared in the October 2 issue, dealtwith urban renewal in and the history of the two areas.)Is The Wood lawn Organization as effective as it*s madeout to be ?Philip M. Hauser, chairman of the UC department ofsociology and a noted writer in many fields of sociologicalstudy, doesn’t think so. -—. The Woodlawn Organization (TWO) among Negroes that continued dem-is a community organization which on9trations might “boomerang” andcovers the mile-square area south that the “hot-heads” in the civilof the Midway. Called the most im- righte movement might at someportant Negro community organi- pojnt ‘‘generate superior force”zation in the country by many, TWO against themselves.is active in fighting slumlords andimproving Woodlawn residences, Hauser estimated that perhapshelping unemployed Woodlawn resi- two-thirds to three-quarters of thedents find jobs and training, and country 4eel there should be moreprotesting school segregation and in¬adequacies. ntegration, but are not as “emotion¬ally charged” in favor of civil rightsas those who are willing to “over¬look” riots in Negro ghetto areas“THE AMERICAN Civil LibertiesUnion, the American Association of the Board without voting power.Specifically, the proposal asks thatUniversity Professors, tl»e United a finance committee be instituted to Has Power to hear complaintsStates Student Press Association, .. id - ^^ { A11 h o u g h the Communicationsand the United States National Stu- 00“siaer me DuflSet proposed would have no authority, todent Association have all declared eac" organization in detail, taking consider editorial policy of any pub-that it is unwise to have no inter- into consideration the reoommenda- lication, radio, or television staff, itmediary body between the dean of tions of the Financial Advisory would have tlie power to hear allstudents and the managers of student Board.” The board would be com- complaints of libel, misrepresenta-organizations and publications,” the posed of the president or present tion, and/or breach of professionalirojiasal states. UC, it noted, is one head of each campus organization, etiquette, and to make recommenda-ot an ever-diminishing number of excluding publications, radio, and lions concerning appointments andinstitutions which do not allow their television, one faculty member ap- dismissals.students to appropriate their own pointed by the dean of students, the “The Communications Board wouldjictivties budgets. director of student activities, and the serve as a catch-all for the com-president, treasurer and finance com- plaints now handled by Dean Wick’sIncrease campus interest mittee chairman of the Student Gov- office.” explained director of Student“Placing a greater responsibility ernment. Activities Thomas O Keefe.u|xn the Student Government will Members of the communications WHILE THE Administration,inspire campus merest in the actn- board would include faculty mem- O’Keefe said, is concerned that fi-ities of the^ representative student in College, the Graduate nancial apportionment may becomegovernment, added Groves.. School of Business, and the Human- politically accented. Groves sees noDean of Students Warner Wick ities division, all serving three year possibility of political overtones play-roportedly “examined the proposal terms, the immediate former editors ing a part in the proposal. It was formed in 1961 after UCannounced plans for clearing the ;n the cities.buildings not already owned by theUniversity in the South Campus area THIS MASS OF’ people might bebetween 60th and 61st streets from pushed too hard if protests by civilCottage Grove to Stony Island ave. rights groups infringe on the peaceand order of society. They are notnecessarily swayed by the “prop¬erty rights come before civil rights”argument, but they do think “stall-At that time, TWO demanded that way 0ff (he deep end,” Haus-anv clearance in the South Campus erIts organizer was Saul Alinskyand his Industrial Areas Founda¬tion.area be connected with plans for “Because of the nature of ouran over-all renewal program for , ... . ,Woodlawn. Much of toe support TWO , for one fM, ,here „ „ev„ a juaB.gained ,n the community during (Ication for any w to jeopardizerb first organizational stage was (unctioning , don-i give a damnas a result of the fear and resent-ment aroused over UC s expansion empiiasized"Enemy" concept for rights“The ‘enemy’ concept is still ap-Percy tells strategy at K.A.M‘Tm going to talk aboutthe major issues I’ve foundin Illinois in the last seven¬teen months,” said CharlesPercy, Republican candidate forgovernor, Monday night.Percy thereby added the audienceat K.A.M. Temple to his “6<X»,000speaking-and-handshaking acquaint¬ances,” who heard his side of ’thisyear’s gubernatorial issues.HE EXPLAINED THAT lie hastried to carry out the true responsi¬bilities of anyone seeking publicoffice. For example, he has pre¬sented a constructive positive iiro-gram in order to solve problems.He has also constructively criti¬cized his opponent, Governor Otto Kerner. He then followed this planas an outline thoughout his talk.Progressive RepublicanismThe program he presented was, inhis own words, one to develop a“progressive Republican party witha responsible role.”Percy began by noting. “I find itextremely interesting that both par¬ties in Illinois find that the CityHall machine organization of Chi¬cago exerts too much influence onstate politics. It is difficult to holdthe governorship and be your ownman and responsible only to theelectorate.” He noted, however, thatin 1963, three bills on voting reformwere all defeated because they didnot receive one Democratic vote.Percy’s second topic was educa-Bloch, ex-UC'er: NobelThe list of Nobel prize-winners who have studied ortaught at UC got its 24th entry yesterday, when a biochemistwho spent eight years here was named co-winner of the 1964award for.medicine.Konrad E. Bloch, now at Harvarduniversity, did research on Metabo friend of Bloch instrumental in bring-lLsm during his stay here, from 1946 mg him to Chicago, was very ex-to 1954.He and Feodor Lynen of die MaxPlanck institute in Munich were lion-ored for discoveries on the mecha¬nism and regulation of cholesteroland other fats and proteins.EXCESSIVE ACCUMULATION of cal mportance' and ^ characterizedcholesterol in the human body is as¬sociated with diseases as gallstonesfurther may ^ .a from Chicago including such menhirt“lUlriLrS^?,ng as h0W to as Enrico Fermi. Robert A. Mil-best treat these diseases. iikan. Edward A. Doisy, JamesSari A. Evans, head of tlie depart- Dewey Watson and of course UC’snient of biochemistry here and a President, George Wells Beadle.cited over the news.“That’s wonderful,” said Evans.“He’s a fine scientist and a closefriend of mine.”EVANS ALSO commented that“his work is of tlie greatest biologi-in its execution by elegant preci¬sion.”Bloch now joins the ranks of other tion, which he strongly emphasized.He complained that the five hundredschool administrators have askedKerner to meet with them to noavail. He believes that, because ofKerner’s inadaquacies in this field,90% of these men will be voting forPercy.IN ILLINOIS, only 20% of thefunds required for education havecome from the state, thereby undulyburdening local taxation. Percy hasfound that Kerner has cut off allpossible sources of funds, so thattlie legislature could not earmarkthe needed amounts. Meanwhile, headded. “Kerner boasts of a surplusin the treasury.”Will purge West-SidersHe also “pledged to purge theRepublican party” of West Sideblocks, in an attempt to combat anti¬crime legislation.Sjieaking of civil rights, Percyexplained how he fought for the fed¬eral employment practices act fromwithin business, while he convincedhis Senator to work for it in Con¬gress. Percy also testified for thebill in the Senate. While he ad¬mitted that the Republicans are“unprogressive in some fields, hefeels that this is not so in the areaof civil rights.IN THE FUTURE, Percy wouldhope to find ways to implement thenew laws on the federal level. Hebelieves in open occupancy legisla¬tion, but sees a difficulty in it. Hewonders just what can be accom¬plished by it, and asked if it wasreally worth the trouble (did it ac¬tually change patterns?)Turning to a discussion of taxa¬tion, Percy stated, “I think this ad¬ministration has tried to give the(Continued on page 12) plans.IT TOOK UNTIL July, 1963. foran agreement to be reached thatlets UC have its South Campus and plicable to the civil rights struggleTWO have land along Cottage Grove in parts of the country, such as,ave. for a privately-sponsored hous- of course, Mississippi and certaining project. parts of southwest Chicago.” HauserIt was the TWO’s “labor union” concluded, “but the trouble withtactics of organizing that should be some people is that they ignore theblamed, at least in part, for delay- r°fr °* consensus.”ing action on South Campus, Hauser EVEN ,F CIVIL rights demon-teeis. strators got all their demands met.Labor union tactics he insicjts> “the faot wih still re-“I agree with TWO’s goal of com- main that 78 per cent of Americanmunity self-determination, but I’m Negroes have not finished highquestioning these labor-union tac- school: half of them live in poortics.” he told the Maroon last week, housing: they will still face unem-“Thev’ve been effective in getting Payment, and will still have to re-TWO organized, but their effect has main on welfare roles. Not evenbeen to frighten off sonae help they this sprung s civil rights bill hasmight have had.”Hauser pointed out that the citycommissioner of urban renewal, IraJ. Bach, had all along tried to make changed any of this.”Better schools demandedWhat is needed, Hauser feels, isit clear that nobody would be moved to make sure Negroes go ti> decentout of the South Campus area be- schools. This is whei e political pres-fore adequate housing was avail- sure can an fr^portant part,able elsewhere. much more important than con¬tinued demonstrations.ALINSKY S CONCEPTION of pow- jn Chicago, such pressure haser is what Hauser disagrees with featured demands from many quar-mainly. This strategy, as Hauser ex- ters that the Chicago school boardplained it, assumes that if an or- move faster to implement the rec-ganization makes it too costly for ommendations of the “Hauser re-its “adversary” — in this case the delivered to the board lastwhite politicians or employers to spring after a study of the effectscontinue tlie struggle, they will have of de facto segregation and dis-to concede. crimination in Chicago publicIn TWO’s case, it has used such schools,tactics as pickets, and other demon- „„„„„ , „strations against the school board, THE PANEL WHICH wrote theand publicity against the Univer- report recommended many changessity, to help attain its goals. 10 board P°lic>' and man>' new P«>-“There’s a difference betweentlie Negro’s attempt to get full rightsand labor union strike tactics,”Hauser said. Strikers go back towork only after their demands havebeen satisfied, he said, but theschool boycotts of last year, for in¬stance, did not immediately achievetheir objective of alleviating de factosegregation.____ * ___ w.. , . grams to improve education inTHE GAINS MADE in winning schools, many of which wouldfuller rights for Negroes in recent ^ admittedly quite costly,years have not come because this Hauser was chairman of the corn-ten per cent minority group has inittee> which included many civicforced concessions through its pow- ieaders and educators. It was formeder, Hauser insisted. Rather, there ^ parj. 0f ^ settlement of a suithave been changes in the attitudes against tlie school boardof most Americans on the issues ^ a group of Negro parents, whoinvolved in the civil rights fight charged their children were receiv-since tlie end of the war. ing inferior education as a result ofWhites have been ready to con- the pattern of segregated schoolscede many of the Negro’s demands in the city.because they have had “pangs of One effect of all the “hullaballoo”conscience” and have become more over the report, Hauser feels, wassensitive to the questions of morali- that important parts of tlie cityThe first Student Gov¬ernment assembly meetingwill be held Tuesday nightat 7:30 pm in Business East103. All students are in¬vited to observe.ty involved, he said.Demonstrations might"boomerang"Turning to the national scene,Hauser felt there is growing feeling “power structure” now accept theview that they cain't afford not toincrease the expenditures for publiceducation.A consensus is being ar,T,;ev°d. he(Continued on page 12)Levi proposes 'area colleges' EDITORIAL(Editor’s note: the following isthe second of two installments ofthe complete report written by pro¬vost and Acting Dean of the Col¬lege Edward H. Levi concerningproposed changes in the structureand aims of the College. The firstpart, which appeared last Friday,consisted mainly of background ma¬terial on the College and an ex¬amination of its present state. Inthe second part, Mr. Levi puts forthseveral proposals for the College’sfuture.)To secure greater participation bythe faculty as a whole and at thesame time to preserve the integrityof the programs of the College andto focus attention upon them, twosteps should be taken. First, greaterreality and effectiveness should begiven to the College faculty as aruling body. The College faculty isnow too large and amorphous to beeffective as an originating and affir¬mative body. It numbers 280. ofwliioh 101 have appointments solelyin the divisions, having been desig¬nated for College voting membershipon the concurrent recommendationsof the Dean of the College, the Deanof the Division and the Dean of theFaculties.This latter statutory category wascreated in an effort to secure greaterparticipation by the faculties as awhole in the undergraduate pro¬grams. The College faculty has beendivided into four sections patternedafter the divisions, although withoutstatutory authority. In addition theCollege faculty has an executive com¬mittee and a policy committee. Theseagencies, while useful, have not beensufficient to provide the kind of forumneeded for meaningful faculty dis¬cussion and work on curriculum.Recommendations for faculty ap¬pointments coming from the Collegesuffer because to some extent theyoriginate from ad hoc or administra¬tive committees and do not havethat independent affirmation whichcan be given by a standing facultycommittee appropriately representa¬tive of an entire faculty when discus¬sion and decision by the entire facul¬ty are not possible.Second, the present sectional struc¬ture of the College should be builtupon and modified in order to en¬compass responsibility for the entirefour years of undergraduate workand to reflect the University’s inter¬est in undergraduate instruction. Theexperience at Chicago with the divi¬sional structures, cutting across de¬partmental lines while preservingtheir integrity, should be of consider¬able help in the evolution of newundergraduate programs.The similarities and interrelation¬ships among subject matters withinthese areas should make it possibleto have faculties that can respondto curriculum problems and carrythrough needed innovations. It is with¬in these areas that both ct the Col¬lege and divisional levels the facul¬ties are most accustomed to workingtogether. THE ORGANIZATION OF thesubject matter is closest to that nowrepresented by the general educationcourses. It is within these areas thatmany of the problems concerninggeneralized and specialized ap¬proaches must be understood andworked upon. If the emphasis andobjectives of the programs are keptclearly in mind, this use of the areasections should facilitate renewedefforts to restate and exemplify thebasic concepts and modes of thoughtof the major disciplines. At the veryleast the use of the area sectionsas organizing structures for under¬graduate education should result inan improvement in the specializedwork of the undergraduate curricu¬lum.It is therefore proposed:• First, in order to give greatereffectiveness to the College facultyas a ruling body, that a College Coun¬cil should be created with delegatedpowers, numbering forty in member¬ship, half elected by the Collegefaculty and half appointed by thePresident of the University. Subjectto the usual statutory provisions, theDean of the College would be thepresiding officer of the College Coun¬cil. The President, the Provost, theDean of Students, and the four Divi¬sional Deans will be members ex-oficio. live College Council shouldelect a Policy Committee of twelvefrom its membership. The Dean ofthe College should appoint standingcurriculum and faculty appointmentcommittees responsible to the Col¬lege Council.• Second, in order to secure great¬er faculty participation in the under¬graduate curriculum, while at thesame time preserving the integrityof the College programs and extend¬ing the scope of effective concernover the entire four year undergradu¬ate period, that four area collegesor sections should be authorized,subordinate to the College Council,each with a governing committee oftwelve members appointed by thePresident of the University, andheaded by an Associate Dean orChairmaifappointed by the President.Three of the governing membersshould be from outside the disciplineof the particular area.SUBJECT TO THE authority ofthe College Council, each of the areacolleges or sections would have afourfold responsibility. Each woulddevelop general education and othercourses to be available to all studentsincluding students not members ofthat college or section. Each woulddevelop special programs to be re¬quired or offered to their own stu¬dents. Each would determine theover-all required or permitted pro¬grams for their own students in thework of other colleges or sections.And each might offer in the fourthyear of the undergraduate’s work ayear long seminar to give opportunityfor individual work and an integratingview of the field. It is to be hopedthat the colleges or sections willdeliberately foster some joint pro¬grams. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR facul¬ty appointments or curriculum changeswould move from within the areaCollege or section to its governingcommittee and associate dean orchairman, and then to the CollegeCouncil. When organized, the CollegeCouncil should set guide lines as towhat type of appointments recom¬mended by the area colleges or sec¬tions should be passed upon by theCollege Council appointments com¬mittee and what kinds of curriculumchanges are regarded as sufficientlyimportant to be brought before theCollege Council curriculum commit¬tee.Within the framework of certainrequirements, although there shouldbe discussion and consultation, diver¬sity and innovation should be encour¬aged. Yet some coordination amongtlie separate colleges or sections isdesirable. Some mechanism must bepresent to speak for the College asa whole as the programs evolve. TheCollege Council should be that me¬chanism.The division of the College intoarea colleges or sections builds uponthe present College structure and theexperience of the University with itsdivisions. It thus adopts for its or¬ganization particular distinctionsamong fields of knowledge. But thesedistinctions, while providing much ofthe present framework for the gen¬eral education courses, may not bein fact the best preparation for somespecialized work. They may not betl>e best preparation either for anunderstanding of the basic values ofour society in discharge of the Col¬lege’s duty to train public citizens.OTHER PATTERNS OF organiza¬tion are useful to students and facul¬ty. This is reflected in the numerousinterdisciplinary area committees,sometimes between divisions, whichexist at the graduate level. It is re¬flected also in the approach of manyof the professional schools. In themodem world the training of a pub¬lic citizen requires not only the spe¬cialized training which can be givenin the professional schools, such aslaw, or in the graduate departments,such as economics, but also a broadliberal arts base, with languageskills, an understanding of culturalvalues in western and non-westerncivilization, an appreciation of sci¬ence, and skills in persuasion andanalysis. The liberal arts educationof students to be trained either forcareers in the public service or asinformed citizens should challengethe best efforts of the College. Pres¬sures for particular curriculum ar¬rangements set with other goals inmind should not impede this effort.It is therefore proposed:Third, to give emphasis to theresponsibility of the College to trainpublic citizens and to provide ap¬proaches which can complement thearea colleges, that there shall be afifth coordinate college or sectionknown as General Studies, which will(Continued on page 7) %Finance Committee proposalonly partially a good ideaThe recently revealed Stu¬dent Government FinanceCommittee proposal is, wefeel, nothing’ too terribly dif¬ferent from the point of viewof the budgets of the campusorganizations, but somethingwhich is potentially highlydangerous with respect to civ¬il liberties, academic freedom,and censorship.The first sub-board of theFinance Committee — theFinancial Advisory Board —would be the body responsiblefor distributing student activ¬ities funds. This part of theproposal is comparativelyharmless, for organizationswould get their money wheth¬er a student-faculty board orthe Dean of Students officegives it to them.In addition, we feel it isquite a good idea to audit theproposed budgets of studentorganizations, both for thesake of general honesty andfor the benefit of other or¬ganizations who might needmoney more desperately. Withauditing, fudging of figureswill certainly be at a mini¬mum, and the regrettably in¬flexible student activities bud¬get could be more equitablyand more efficiently distrib¬uted. for even the slightest suggestion of supervision beforewhy is there such a need nowWe are encouraged, however, that the proposed Finance Committee could servto meet Federal Communications Commission regulationfor FM broadcast. For campus radio station WUCB, aFM license would be the biggest shot in the arm possibl*The problem in the past ithis regard had been that nexisting University body waeligible to hold an FM licensebut the Finance Committebrings a solution at least intthe realm of possibility.Finally, we only partial]agree with SC President GenGroves’ statement that thFinance Committee would iicrease Student Government'stature and responsibility ithe eyes of the student bod\Unquestionably, any propos;that increases the possibilitfor SG responsibility is ben<ficial, but it will take the inplementation of more than onproposal to accomplish a nlasting benefit. It seems to uthat this particular propos:will serve to elevate SG onlin the eyes of the leaders <campus organizations, not t!student body at large.We are disturbed, howTever,at the suggestion, slight as itmay be at present, that anyboard would have the powerto make recommendations asto dismissing or approvingheads of student organiza¬tions. It is altogether too easyto move from making recom¬mendations to making Olympi¬an pronouncements. Clearly,however, total dictatorialpowers are not written intothe proposal as it now stands,but we wish to insure thatthey never will be. Bluntlyput, if there has been no need Sst women's club rustTlx- first women's dub rush furxtion this quarter will be held Sund;October 18 at 3 pm in Ida Noyes lbDue to a change in interdub’s nrregulations, this function will be <>ixfor only second, third and fourth yeaand transfer women. Rush for firsyear women will be during whitequarter.Sunday’s event, entitled “ThMOQU,” will be an informal part;sponsored by the Interclub CouncilAll women interested in finding ouabout women's dubs are cordial!invited.NICKY'SRESTAURANT AND PIZZANICKY'S TAKE-OUT & DELIVERY MENUficeA. and(PQ&L' fizzasAssortments small mediumCHEESE 2.002 25SAUSAGEANCHOVIE 2.252.052.252.402.252.40ONIONPEPPERMUSHROOMBACONHAM targe2.903.253.253.003.253.503.253.50RIBS1 Slab 2.252 Slabs 4.253 Slabs 6.00CHICKIE IN THE BOX10 Large Pieces 2.5016 Large Pieces 3-7520 Large Pieces 4.75 SANDWICHESPlain or BAR BQ Beef 70Meat Ball 55Sausage ,60Above Served with PeppersHAMBURGER 50CHEESEBURGER 60BAKED LASAGNE 1.55Free Student Delivery FA 4-5340 slide rulesfor the professional!All-metal accuracy and stabilityGreatest number and range of scalesAll American made—Lifetime guaranteeA model for every needPRICED FROM $1.95 to $29.95WOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORE1311 East 57th StreetDaily: 8-6; Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9 p.m.2 • C H I C A G O M A R O O N • Oct. 16, 1964God andJACK KENT UG: Theologians speak outMAX TICKTINA church can no longerafford to ignore current is¬sues of vital importance tothe community it serves, ac¬cording to Reverend JackKent of the First Unitarian.Church on campus.In an interview with the Maroonlast week, Rev. Kent expressed hisconviction that the church holds miimportant position in a predominant¬ly secular university community.Tlu? function of the church, is, hesays, to introduce to the communitythose values which give man hisdignity.SUCH VALUES AS love and jus¬tice are of little consequence unlessintegrated with day-to-day life, Kentfeels. Thus the church has a respon¬sibility to concern itself WLth thepractical applications of those valuestaught by religion.Church gives emotional tiesKent stressed that emotional, asopposed to intellectual commitment,to these values comes from thechurch and not from any university.As an example, he cited the forma¬tion oL the Hyde Park-KenwoodReverend Jack Kent Community Conference, which de¬veloped a program of urban re¬newal, increased police protection,and enforcement of building codesat a time when Hyde Park wasrapidly becoming a slum area. TheConference was organized by thesynagogues and churches of thearea, and not the University. TheUniversity was at the time, in fact,considering moving from the neigh¬borhood.“THE BASIC PUSH for civilrights and civil liberties has comefrom the church, also,” he added.“The First Unitarian Church has avery active social action commit¬tee.” Members of the church wereinstrumental in the formation ofthe Hyde Park Federal Savings andLoan Corporation, Kent said, whichwon a human relations award forits work in the are of Negro-whiterelations.Commenting on the interrelation¬ship of church and university, Kentstated that the two institutions arein no way in competition. In a com¬munity in which the removal ofman’s ignorance is paramount, theteachings of the church must neverconflict with current scientificknowledge, lie believes.Religion: orderedrelationshipsKent sees his personal role withinthe church as one of helping people“to order their relationships withthe universe, with non-human life,with other human beings, and withthemselves in accordance with theirhighest values.” This process ofordering is, in fact, religion, he be¬lieves. Kent’s sermons for theperiod October 11 through November8 will delve more deeply into thequestion of the place of religion inour lives.BESIDES THE 11 am Sundayservice, other church-sponsored ac¬tivities of interest to UC studentsare the college group, meeting Sun¬day evenings at 7:30; the adult dis¬cussion group, meeting Sundaymornings at 10 am, and the SocialAction Committee, which supportsthe work of such organizations asCORE and SNCC. “I'm not a theologian,”declares Rabbi Max Tickin,newly-apointed director ofthe B’nai Brith Hillel Foun¬dation. “That name implies thatone has, as his central occupation,the teaching of theology. And I findthat is only part of religion. I be¬lieve the current term for my postis University Religious Counselor,and that is how I think of myself.”Although he has been here onlya few weeks. Ticktin is no strangerto his job. Besides spending sixteenyears at the University of Wisconsinat a similar post, lie also workedpart-time at New York Universityand Columbia while a student.“I RELIEVE MY main task isto be involved in the University’s in¬tellectual and spiritual life,” die Rab¬bi continued. “First, I try to knowwhich way the intellectual windsare blowing, which courses, teach¬ers, and philosophies are currentlyhaving an effect on the students.It’s also im[»rtant that I know theUniversity’s idea of a good educa¬tion, though I don’t pretend to passjudgment on Dean Levi’s ‘Report ontlie College.’ ”Urges religious criticism“I believe students must developa post critical view of religion andreligious loyalties. Too often theycome to the Foundation with a pre¬conceived idea of what they are go¬ing to find here, a precritical view¬point. Students should strive for in¬tellectual honesty, find out aboutother religions and what tliey teach,”Ticktin feels.Hie Rabbi stressed that he is nothere to push one religion at the ex¬pense of others. It is more im¬portant to him that students testthemselves in new situations andadopt a set of beliefs. He emphasizedthat students should try to find re¬ligious tones in the interpersonal re¬lationships in their life, whether itconcerns friendship, courtship, orsex.“These things can be aecom-plislied first and foremost throughinformal conversations with che stu¬dents,” Ticktin feels. “Another ap-Now Exclusively Ours on Chicago's South SideThe Number One Shoe on CampusTRUE HANDSEWNMOCCASINS$16.95THE STORE FOR MENJSmn atth CamjutJi $1^In the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 proach is through semi-arranged bull-sessions in the dorms, at specificcampus groups, or here at die Foun¬dation. Or students can make useof informal teaching — classes andseminars here.”Promotes contact“ONE OF THE more importantfacets of my role is to sponsor thefaculty-student oontaot that fosterswhat I’ve been talking about. Lec¬tures should be given here at Hillelto keep up the intellectual ferment.”“Of course, part of my job is toaid students in the actual observanceof the teachings of religion, by wor¬ship, personal meditation, and hc/i-day observance,” Ticktin adds.Ticktin also commented on (he ad¬vantages of the UC campus for re¬ligion. “I would say it’s a favorableplace for religious search to takeplace, because the University itselfis so concerned with intellectualgrowth. There are fewer extra-curric¬ular frills here, and my work can only be done where people takeideas seriously,” he believes.No religion declineTicktin drew no conclusions abouta movement toward less religion,especially in Judaism. “I don’tthink that the trends are at allclear. Thinking students are goingto consider all forms of religiousexpression, and I am hopefull thatgreater numbers will follow theteachings of Judaism. Ultimately,this would develop an even greaterresponsible, intellectual Jewish lead¬ership,” he states.“WHEN A STUDENT goes awayfrom the home, he tends to rejectthose things that come from home,such as religion. But that doesn’tnecessarily have any effect on whathis religious community will be likeas an adult.”“Students are looking for individ¬ual meaning,” Ticktin asserts. Thatincludes real searching into unortho¬dox as well as orthodox Judaism.However, there do seem to be more(Continued on page 4)HOWARD SCHOMER“If there were no God, Iwouldn’t be so liberal,” saysDr. Howard Schomer. Presi¬dent of the Chicago Theologi¬cal Seminary, who has throughouthis career as a theologian activelylived by his credo.Schomer, when studying on a Har¬vard Fellowship in pre-war Germany,became interested in theology as avital sociological force after observ¬ing that “the people who had thedeepest and most universal groundof resistance to the depersonaliza¬tion and totalitarianism of Nazismin Germany were frequently Chris¬tian theologians. Tliey impressedme.”At the Chicago Theological Semi¬nary, where he studied for two years,Schomer was further impressed withtheology as a strong tie between thereligious leaders in the United Statesand those embattled and besieged inwam-tom Europe. Americans, deeplyinvolved in socially responsible Chris¬tianity, followed the New Englandpuritan view that “God is redeemerof peoples as well as persons.”Simultaneous studyUNTIL THE OUTBREAK of WorldWar II Schomer studied simultane¬ously for a Bachelor of Divinity de¬gree at the Chicago TheologicalSeminary and a PhD in History ofAmerican at Harvard.“Total war was to be resisted asa concept no matter who waged it,”said Schomer. “But, since I belongedin the Christian Protestant tradition— one which maintained unity ofthe ministers and laymen — I couldnot accept a draft exemption as con¬scientious objector.” Instead Schom¬er went into the alternative Quaker Civilian Service for the next fouryears.Tlie task of organizing Europeanrelief, reconstruction, and church re¬newal under the auspices of theEcumenical Mission in Europe waxSchomer’s responsibility after thewar. As head of the mission, heworked for the next thirteen yearsin Le Chambon, France.THE DEATH OF STALIN en¬couraged the World Council ofChurches to reach Christians in tinecaptive countries of Eastern Europe.After three years of intensive visitsto church institutions in Hungary,Poland, Czechoslovakia, and EastGermany, tlie Council, under Dr.Schomer’s leadership, was able toestablish an effective network ofEast-West human relations and amulti-million dollar relief program.Difficult decisionHis decision early in 1959 to re¬turn to his alma mater as Presidentof the Chicago Theological Seminary,he said, was a difficult one, butSchomer has tried to carry out hiscommitments in Europe by servingas consultant to the Third Assemblyof the Council at New Delhi in 1961.The political-religious climate atthe University of Chicago shows, toSchomer, “extraordinary fermentwith regard to ultimate questions.There is at least as much intellec¬tual concern on philosophical ques¬tions here as there ever has beeo.Religious activities on the Quad¬rangles provide the most favorableframework for significant conversa¬tional reflection on urgent, life ordeath political problems as well a*(Continued on page 4) |MM. .MOPurveryors of Fine Wine, Liquor & Beersince 1933WINE CELLAR FOR GREATER SELECTIONFAMOUS GILL'S BEERDISCOUNT VOLUME SPECIALVz-GAL. - GAL.beert thatWON'TGO fiftTf -■ -2. uGallon35Vi Gal,67cALL BEER —NO FOAMWON'T GO FLAT BARRELS4 x*1/4 bbl.$895Vi bbl.$1725DeliveredSTAYS COLOWITHOUTICE IS HOURSDiscount prices on all popular brand whiskyGIIXaHL p<»1»,1 i<►1»«►<►<»p1»<►«►<►' ►• ►' k2 DRIVE-IN WINDOWS1238 East 47th St. KEnwood 6-6500Oct. 16, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Grad fellowships available Schomer: race problems deludeGraduate students in thehumanities and science mayapply for several fellowshipgrants, it was announcedrecently.Fifteen University of Chicago Hu¬manities Fellowships will be awardedannually beginning- this year. Tliebasic stipend will be $4,250 and anextra allowance of $1,000 for de¬pendents. The awards, which maybe renewed, are available to menand women who have their BA de¬gree. Applications may be obtainedfrom Room 201, Ad building; andmust be filed by February.THE AMERICAN ACADEMY inRome offers fellowship grants of$3000 in architecture, musical compo¬sition, painting, sculpture, history ofart and classical studies, and alsoin political, economic cultural andchurch history. Applications andquestions should be addressed toMiss Mary T. Williams, executivesecretary, 101 Park Ave., N.Y. 17,by December 31, 1964.THE NATIONAL SCIENC E Foun¬dation (NSF) offers awards of $2400in the first year of the fellowship .ni he sciences and the social sciences.They include:• The Cooperative Graduate Fel¬lowship. Application must be madeto the student’s department afterbeing counseled to do so by his ad¬visor. by Nov. 2. File application inthe Fellowship office, Adm. 201.• The Graduate Fellow.-hip, or“Regular’’ NSF Fellowship. Applica¬tion is made directly to the NSF inWashington, D.C. The closing dateis Dec. 11, 1964.There are also Summer fellowshipsavailable to students who have beenteaching assistants in the previousyear. Applications are available fromdepartments and due by Dec. 4.THE NATIONAL INSTITUTES ofHealth (NIH) offers fellowships inthe medical sciences (not for M.D.degree) and health-oriented fields,similar to the NSF grants.THE NATIONAL AERONAUTICSand Space Administration (NASA) offers traineeships for students inter¬ested in space-oriented fields. Appli¬cation should be made by Jan. 15 inAdm. 201.Foreign study awardsOpportunities for foreign study in¬clude :FULBRIGIIT Scholarships. TheU.S. government, under provision ofthe Fulbright-Havs Act. sponsorscompetitive awards for study abroad.Full and partial grants are availableto U.S. citizens holding the bachelorsdegree. Applications may be ob¬tained from the campus Fulbrightadviser, Miss Cassandra P. Ander¬son, Administration 201. extension3236. The deadline for filing applica¬tions is October 29.Several scholarship grants will beawarded for study in the United King¬dom during 1965-66. These include:ENGLISH SPEAKING Union Stholarship. One $2500 award for graduatestudy will be granted next year toa resident of Illinois. Contact MissAnderson.MARSHALL Scholarships. Twenty-four scholarships are offered for twoyears study at any British university.Deadline is October 19. Contact MissAnderson.RHODES Scholarships. Men be¬tween the ages of 18 and 24 mayapply for a two year fellowship toOxford University. Deadline is today.Contact George PI aye, dean of un¬dergraduate students, Gates - Blake132.CHARLES AND Julia Henry Fund.Four fellowships for study at Oxfordand Cambridge are open to unmar¬ried American citizens. Applicationsare available by writing the Office ofthe Secretary of Yale University,New Haven, Connecticut; or the Of¬fice of the Secretary to the Corpora¬tion of Harvard University, Cam¬bridge. Massachusets.Exchange fellowships: Informationon grants for study at Univ. ofParis, Univ. of Frankfurt and otherWest German institutions is availablefrom Miss Anderson.Stresses need for values(Continued from page 3)students who openly identify them¬selves as orthodox than formerly ata place like Chicago. But that maybe simply because they didn't cometo places like the U of C in formeryears.”Jewish students must actTicktin also observed that theJewish student had an obligation tounderstand anti to act on his under¬standing of the Jewish people, in¬cluding the Jewish communities ofboth the United States and Israel.“He should know where they’regrowing together, and where they’rebreaking apart,” Ticktin feels.ALTHOUGH THE ECUMENICALCouncil and the Movement toward Ecumenism hinge more directly onChristian philosophy, the Rabbi pre¬dicts that Jews will see how honesttheological differences can be ex¬pressed in a more liberal setting.“However, the trend will have noeffect here on campus because wealready have that liberal setting.”Ticktin concluded by once morestressing the importance of religionin a student’s university life. “Hemust consider its place, not only inregard to the family from whichhe’s come, but also to the familywhich he's about to organize. Thestudent must move both toward ac¬ceptance of people with differentvalues and total commitment to aset of beliefs himself.” (Continued from page 3)more fundamental questions, he feels.The close connection establishedbetween theology and significant so¬cial problems does not surpriseSchomer. “I am not a career the¬ologian. My twin intellectual passionshave always been to study the natureof the good and the limitations ofthe possible,” he said.‘‘EARLY I BECAME convinced,”says Schomer, “that it is preciselythe depth of our understanding orignorance of the good which is thesingle most influential factor in de¬termining the limits of our moralachievement.”“I came to believe that more ofthe good can be known than therelativists said, and that the limitsof that which is morally possible forthe individual or for society are notfixed but dynamic.”Fellowship PresidentSchemer’s long-term commitmentto peace has been fulfilled by hisservice as President of the Interna¬tional Fellowship of Reconciliation,the oldest interdenominational peacemovement in existence, and as co-chairman for four years of the Chi¬cago Committee for a SANE NuclearPolicy.ALTHOUGH SCHOMER HAS par¬ticipated in local civil rights move¬ments as a sponsor of the ChicagoFriends of SNCC and the IllinoisCivil Rights Rally, he believes that“the racial problem is today one ofthe great false problems requiringmajor energy to resolve. Tlie ex¬istence of such a problem,” he says,“is simply not in the nature of man— it is, rather, a ‘parochial psy¬chological delusion.’ ”Racial tension and racism in theUnited States has put a good port ofAmerican society in a psychiatricward, believes Schomer. Wfiile inthe hospital we may conquer onedilemma, but when released fromthe hospital, we will have to facethe real problems of man’s place insociety and in the world, he con¬tends.Rights sofufion for off“We are,” he .says, “far fromresolving the problems of civil rightsand equality, but the most usefulthing for civil rights workers tothink about is the kind of moral andspiritual questions which will de¬mand attention the clay after thewhole of society is integrated.”The nomination of Barry Goldwateras the Republican presidential can¬didate has suet grave implications toSchomer that, althought usually silenton political affairs, he energeticallystates his views:“EVERY RESPONSIBLE CHRIS¬TIAN council has indicated that the Christian faith not only permits butrequires the most vigorous possiblepursuit of inter-racial, internationalclass solidarity.”Any political movement in anycountry which reveals itself as fun¬damentally nationalist or in anymeasurer segregationist, or at allinsensitive to the economic plight oflarge segments of the populationmust on Christian grounds be opposedand defeated.”“If, in addition, such a politicalmovement shows great impatiencewith governmental action on behalfof inter-racial and international con¬ciliation and even challenges thepropriety of judicial action to pro¬tect tiie underprivileged and thosesuffering from discrimination, thenI do think that that political move¬ment amounts to an assault uponthe whole concept of constitutionalgovernment and progressive socialdemocracy.”“For the first time in this centurythe nation is confronted with a con¬fused but nevertheless determinedmovement of this type of which thepresent and probably very transientfacade is Barry Goldwater.”"Anti” populationIN EVERY NATION, there existsa rather large element of the popula¬tion which is perpetually “anti”—opposed to the general social consen¬sus upon which the nation over longperiods evolves its goals and itsstyle of life, Schomer believes. Why on tlie present American scene thereshould be a considerable minorityof people who are backward-looking,disgruntled with the complex econo¬mic forces which have created ouraffluence initiated by egalitarian so¬cial legislation and court decisionswhich are creating an ever moretruly open society for' all citizens,regardless of color, and who arehysterically embittered by the pro¬gross of lour successive presidentialadministrations in relaxing East Westtensions and promoting minimalmeasures oi nuclear arms control, jssubject matter for a psychiatrist, nota theologian, he feels.“I am of the opinion,” Schomeirsaid, “that if this disgruntled andembattled element should actuallytake power in any one of the throeblanches of chit government, tlieconsequence would tlie deepest divi¬sion in our domestic life since 1865.”“Tlie consequence in internationalrelations would be the destruction oftiie East-West tacit agreement toavoid further nuclear confrontations,with great encouragement to theEuropean Communist parties to joinforces with tiie hard line inevitablewar elements in Red China.“TIIE CHURCH HAS AN absolute¬ly overwhelming obligation to analyzetlie potential implications lor humani¬ty of any kind of power for tinscurious Goldwater party and to callt.he shots as it sees them.”Hold theological seminarsTheological questions of in¬terest to all Christians will bethe subjects of a four sessionweekly seminar course to be¬gin meeting this week.Tlie UC chaplains feel that thisis the first such experiment in com¬mon theology to be attempted at anyuniversity and report that the pro¬gram reflects a common agreementon scholarship and tlie sources ofChristian belief.Professor Huffman of tlie ChicagoTheological Seminary will discussthe book of Genesis at Calvert House,the Catholic center, each Mondaythroughout tlie Fall Quarter. Tlie“Honest to God” debate will be heldby Father Thomas McDonough.Catholic chaplain, on Tuesday atclarkftheatre Chapel House, the Protestant stu¬dent center.Reverend Harold Walker, Presby¬terian chaplain, will oiler a discus¬sion of the emergence of tiie Chris¬tian movement with attention to tlvegospel of Mark on Wednesdays, Lu¬theran pastor, Wayne Suffer willlead a seminar on early Fathersand lie reties on Thursdays at ChajielHouse. The seminars will meet at4:30 pm.Tlie seminars are exl ra-curriculorand a series for each quarter hasbeen planned. The common programis part of a larger effort by the vari¬ous Christian chaplains that includessludy of the forms of worship oftlie various Christian groups andunited Christian social action.r* there is only oneforeign car hospital & clinic, inc.authorized sales and serviceaustin, mg, morris, austin healey, triumph & jaguarand we fix all other european cars, too5424 South Kimbork Midway 3-3113 HARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFuil line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4=iHY 3-6800 50SINAI FORUMpresentsFERRANTE & TEICHERMonday, October 26, 8:15 p.m.atSINAI TEMPLE5350 South Shore DriveSingle Admission $2.50 What’s New?For Both Men and WomenFOR WOMENBeautiful Assortment of Wo¬men’s Sweaters with co-ordi¬nated Skirts to match TurtleNeck Dickies — Scarfs —Blouses — ShellsFOR MENStay Prest Levis — Wash andwear Shirts — Striped or Plain— Socks — TiesGIFT DEPARTMENTUniversity of ChicagoEcokstore5902 Ellis Ave.Hours: Mon. thru eri. 8-5Sot. 8:30-12:30 ot all timesfor collegestudents• open from dawn til dawn• a different double featuredaily• "Little Gel lery" for gait only• Clark parking ona door south... four hours 95c after5 p.m.fri., 16 - ''showboat,’1 "maytime.’*sat., 17 - "bediime atory,”"wild and wonderful. ”sun., 18 - "war of the but¬tons," "ladies who do.”mon., 19 - "the big w'ave,”"stane to thunder rock.”tues., 20 - "rio bravo,” "manwtfh a gun.”wed ,21 - "sapphire,” "storyof 3 loves.”thurs., 22 • "walk on thewild side,” "hack street.” NATIONALGUARDIANa newsweekly that reportsand analyzes the issuesof concern to students:• DANGER ON THERIGHT• THE ELECTIONS . . .AND THEN?• US. ABROAD: GIANTIN TROUBLE• AT HOME: RIGHTSAND RIOTS• DISSENT AND PRO¬TEST—HOW YOUNGAMERICANS THINKAND ACTnubscribe today toNational Guardian197 E. 4 St„ N.Y. 10009$1 for 10 weeks$3.50 for 1 full year(Soecial student rate)enclose name, addresswith remittanceGREEN DOOR BOOKSHOP1450 E. 57th ST. HY 3-5829QUALITY PAPERBACKS, SELECTED HARDCOVERSSUNDAY NEW YORK TIMES ON SUNDAYOPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL MIDNIGHTDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty Discount ,CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 16, 1964Calendar of Events Waive english competency test:riday, October 16FUTURE SERIES: “Physical Chemls-ry of Contractile Protiens,” E. W.'aylor, Abbott 133. 8 am.KMINAR: “Growth and Variation inmgle Cell Clones of Plant Tissues.”, c Hildebrandt. Room 480, Researchastilutes, 5010 Ellis Ave., 4 pm.ItOGRESSIVE SUPPER: Koinonia.Impel House. 5810 Woodlawn, 5:30m LOVE. DEATH AND THE INTER-ATIONAL CINEMA: Social ScienceI'l, 7:15 and 9:15 pm. “The Ladyrotn Shanghai” (directed by OrsonMies starring Orson Welles and Rita.ayworth); admission 60c.\BB.\TH SERVICES: Hillel Founda-on, 5715 Woodlawn Ave.. 7:45 pm.HAMPER MUSIC CONCERT. Then.elish Consort of Viols. 17th centurynisic for viols, including works byjbbons. Ward. Locke. Purcell and[tiers, tickets at Music Department,■itrj Woodlawn. Adimission $3; stu-•■nts $1. Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.ECTl RE: “Sciences, Mysticism, andsychoanalysis” with David Bakan.rof. Department of Psychology andallege. Hillel Foundation. 5715 Wood-wn Ave., 8:30 pm.aturday, October 17EN’EEIT PERFORMANCE: “Winnieie Pooh” by A. A. Milne, benefit forobs Roberts Hospital; Goodmanliea* re. Monroe St. and Columbusr., 10:30 am.ARSITV CROSS COUNTRY MEET:heaton College Invitational, Wheaton,linois, 11 am.ARSITY SOCCER GAME: AuroraMice. Aurora. Illinois. 1:30 pmrsstAN FILM FESTIVAL: Risen-rut's "Strike” and “Potemkin.” Ad-t sion SI; students $.75. Mandel Hall,and 9 pm.9NCERT: Fredereik Hammond, harp-■hordist: works bv Bvrd, de Cabe-n. and Scarlatti. Bond Chapel, 8:30Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15. III.MU 4-6856Coybeauty SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302all VolkswagenPEA10?S CAN SELLyou A NEW '65 vwSEPAN FOR.*1647OU£ PRICE IS "THESAME. OUR SERVICEIS excellent;Superb—UNQUESTIONABLYTHE DIFFERENCETHAT MAKESTHE PEAL/ )OUR USED CARSARE GREAT TOO!100% GUARANTEEPARTS AND LABOR 30 DAYS$117564 SIMCA7-dr. Sedan•63 VOLKSWAGENSedan•63 FARMAN GHIAConvertible•62 VOLKSWAGENSedan'62 VOLKSWAGENConvertible62 KARMAN GHIAConvertible*62 MERCEDESConvertible 190 SL*62 MERCEDESSedan62 TR-3Convertible‘61 VOLKSWAGENSedan*61 RENAULT4-dr. Sedan*60 VOLKSWAGENSunroof60 VOLKSWAGENSedan*60 PORSCHEConvertible*59 VOLKSWAGENConvert ible $1 295SI 795$1145$1345$1395S179S$2195$1295$995$595$945$•95$2195$995PORSCHE DEALERNEW CAR71st & Sunday, October 18RADIO SERIES: "Review of Constitu¬tional Problems Dealing with Religionand Education” by Philip B. Kurlandprofessor of Law and “A Special Kindof Courage” by Joseph Sittler, Profes¬sor, the Divinity School: WFMF at100.3 me and WAIT at 820 kc 7 amROCKEFELLER CHAPEL SERVICE:Service by The Reverend Edgar H.S.Chandler, Executive Director ChurchFederation of Greater Chicago 10 am.DISCUSSION: “Local and State Issues,the I904 Campaign” by GeorgeWatson. Professor of Political Science,Roosevelt University, R.A.M. Temple,.Ml E. 50th st., admission free, 10:30am.COST SUPPER: Ecuminical GraduateProgram, Brent House, 5540 Wood¬lawn, 0:30 pm.t OST SUPPER: “Conversation with aTheologian on Faith and Doubt” byProf. Haroutunian. Divinity School,Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn, UnitedChristian Fellowship, 5:30 pm.LECTURE: “How Does God Act?” byProf. Ronald Gregor Smith, translatorof Martin Buber's I and Thou. BrentHouse, 5540 Woodlawn, 7:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: beginners to ad¬vanced class with Steve Sachs andNahoma Weinper, Ida Noyes Hall,7:30 to 10:45 pm.IVS MEETING: Organizational meet¬ing of International Voluntary Serviceat the apartment of John Zurbrigg,1L»9 E. 54th St.. 9 pm.RADIO SERIES: Chicago Dialogue,“Urban Maintenance.” Philip M. Haus¬er. Chairman, Dept, of Sociology,WIND at 560 ke. 7:05 pm.CORE MEETING: First meeting of UCCORE, Library Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.Monday, October T9SEMINAR: “The Book of Genesis,’*Prof. Herbert Hoffman, Calvert House,4:30 pm.INFORMAL DISCUSSION: Five UCgraduate students on their experiencesin Miss., Shorey Lounge, ninth floorPierce Tower 9 pm.STUDENTS FOR CIVIL LIBERTIES:Organizational meeting, Ida Noyes, 8pm. A required English com¬petency test to be given tostudents beginning with theclass of 1968 has beenwaived, it has been learned.The competency exam was to havetaken the place of the English Com¬position course. Two years ago. ac¬cording to Perrin Lowrey, associateprofessor of the Humanities, theabolition of this course was proposedat a faculty meeting.Instead of Uie English Compositioncourse, the students would be re¬quired to pass an English Compe¬tency exam at the end of theirsecond year. It was presumed thatwith two y ears of College experiencebehind them, the students would beable to pass the test easily.Change impracticalHOWEVER, IT WAS found im¬practical to implement the changethis year as had been planned, solast spring the faculty waived therequirement for the competencyexam. The faculty legislation requir¬ing the exam will possibly be com¬pletely rescinded in the spring. Low¬rey said.Last year, a course combiningEnglish Composition and Humanities121-2-3 was introduced as an experi¬ment. This course was a two yearsequence, and was viewed as apossible substitute for English Com¬position and second-year Humanities. The first year of the sequence wasnot offered again this year becausethe faculty does not know liow thecourse worked out. It may or maynot bi offered in the future.The competence exam requirementwas announced only in the Collegecatalog for 1964-65, which was printedlast Spring. On page 24, in a discus¬sion of the College program, the cata¬log says, “The College places suchemphasis on English composition thata competence examination is re¬quired of all students late in thesecond year or early in the thirdyear, regardless of whether or notthey were excused from instructionin English by the placement test.”Lowrey explained that the facultyfelt the exam should not replace theEnglish composition course while theywere still experimenting with thecombined English-Hum sequence.Eng. staff will decideTIIE ENGLISH STAFF will prob¬ably decide what courses will be of¬fered next year during the winterquarter, Lowrey said. There areseveral alternatives open, he ex¬plained. Both English oomjxjsdtion andthe English-Hum sequence could con¬tinue, or only one.“Most people connected with theexperimental course,” Lowrey said,“are very satisfied with it . . . evenproud of it. It’s rather expensive because of the tutorial sessions witheach student, but both students andthe faculty like it.”Lowrey pointed out that the futureof the experimental course may betied up with the response to the pro¬posals of Provost Edward H. Levi.He called for establishment of five“area colleges” which would be di¬vided according to the divisions ofSocial sciences, biological sciences,physical sciences, and humanities,and a “general studies” college.Could fit area collegesLOWREY SAID THE experimentalcourse might turn out to be one ofseveral variants which would betailored for the various “area col¬leges.”LOWREY SPECULATED that, ifLevi’s proposals are approved, theprovision for a “common first year”curriculum may result in someamount of shifting of the presentgeneral education courses, althoughno one can presently foresee whatwill actually be changed.Levi had asked for curriculumdiversity on the part of the variousstaffs in his report.As to the immediate future ofEnglish 107-8-9 and 117-18-19, Lowreysaid he “suspected” that, after facul¬ty debate, the Hum II and English Istaffs would decide to make it per¬manent, either with or without thepresent English composition courseas an alternative.||II1II Sunday morning serieseleven o'clockWHAT IS THE PLACE OF RELIGION IN OUR LIVES?FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH57th and WoodlawnRev. Jack A. Kent, ministerOctober 18 ... THE PLACE OF LOVE?“He who knows nothing, loves nothing. He who can do nothing, understands nothing. He who un¬derstands nothing is worthless. But he who understands also loves, notices, sees .ParacelsusIMPORT MOTORS j&BAUTHORIZED VW —IfBU 8-4900USED CARSTONY IS.643-4040CLOSED SUNDAY J October 25 ... THE PLACE OF FAITH?“Faith is an extension of belief. Faith is sufficient confidence in our beliefs to trust ourselves to themby actions upon them.Duncan E. LittlefairOlllltlWtlWttlliiWiilitlWIIIItllWWHMWIWIMMimWIHIIHHIIIIIIItllWIIIlWIIIItWMIlllimWIIIIHHBWii'tliltlWI*November 1 ... THE PLACE OF PRAYER?“Nowhere do the creative forces of the universe more fully reveal their power than in the soul ofthe man who can say. ‘Nothing exterior shall ever take command of me.’ ”E. Burdette BackusNovember 8 ... THE PLACE OF FORGIVENESS“Man must he lenient with his soul in his weakness and imperfections and suffer his failings ashe suffers those of others, hut he must become idle, and must encourage himself to better things.”St. Seraphim of Sarov 'PLAYBOY REVIEWPlayboy's best not good enough IVS announces workcampsThere is an old joke aboutthe critic who went to a movieso bad that he had to reviewthe popcorn. Well, they didn’tserve popcorn at the opening of thePlayboy Theatre; they gave outChicago Maroon |Editor-in-chief . Robert F. LeveyBusiness Manager Harris S. JaffeManaging Editor ... David L. AikenAssistant to the EditorSharon GoldmanCampus News Editor .. Joan PhillipsEditor, Chirago Literary ReviewMartin MichaelsonAdvertising Manager . . Jan PaynterCulture-Feature Editor David RichterRewrite Editor Eve HochwaldMovie Editor Saul KahanCirculation Manager . . Jan GraysonEditor Emeritus John T. WilliamsStaff: Sandy Lewy, Rick Pollack, TomHeagy, Carol Gutstein, Steve Ford,Jerry A. Levy, Kenneth Krantz,Hendrik DeJong, Betsv Bachman,Betsy Weinrob, Howard Rosen, PeterRabinowitz, Charles Dashe, RheaRollin, Jamie Beth Gale, Mary Mc¬Mullen, Judith Schavrien, BarbaraJur. Barry Weitz, Marian Schwager,Dick Ganz. Martha Grossblat, JoanTapper, Dinah Esral, Howard Fisch-man, Dick Atlee, David Satter, Wil¬liam Herzog, Allen Adcock, JudyFavia, Ron Pell.Published Tuesdays and Fridays at IdaNoyes Hall, 1212 E. 59 St., Chicago,Hi., 60037. Phones: editorial office,MI 3-OSOrt, ext. .3205, 3200; businessoffice, 3209. Charter member of Col¬legiate Press Service (CPS). champagne. One hates to complainto such generous hosts who provideroses, closed-circuit TV, bountifulbunnies, and a good Dudley DoRightcartoon in one evening. But they alsogave us a new British film calledNOTHING BUT THE BEST, whichwas aptly titled for the occasion,but poorly made for the discerningmembers of the audience.Struggling against this disjointedscenario, uneven dialogue, gauchecolor photography, and unnecessarynarration, the cast quickly wins aplace in the annals of mediocrity.The one pleasant exception is Den¬holm Elliot, who plays a wealthyrake giving the hero lessons in sue-LETTERS TO THE EDITORKennedy Library trusteethanks UC for gifts tions made in the article about ur¬ban renewal in Hyde Park andWoodlawn which appeared in theOctober 2 edition of the Maroon.DEAR STUDENTS:In behalf of the trustees of theJohn Fitzgerald Kennedy Libraryand the Kennedy family, may Iexpress their deep appreciation forthe generous contribution of $282.29from the students of The Universityof Chicago.It was the President’s fondestwish that some day a Library wouldbe built and he had planned to de¬vote much of his future time to it.Now, through such thoughtful giftsas yours we shall do that for him.I can assure you that it will betruly the finest Presidential Libra¬ry, and one in which students fromall over the world can take greatpride for their part in making it areality. The plans for urban renewal sitesalong 47th Street which were sub¬mitted by Kenwood Town HomesCompany (which is not, by the way,incorporated), and approved by theDepartment of Urban Renewal,have indeed met with considerableopposition, including that from theUniversity. This opposition, how¬ever, has been directed at the lowcost of the proposed homes and not,as you imply, because Negroes whocannot afford them will be excluded.Those opposed to the plans haveargued that it will be impossible tointegrate the project because peoplein the “middle-income” groups arereluctant to live in integrated neigh¬borhoods.The John Fitzgerald KennedyLibrary will serve as a memorialto the President. We are most grate¬ful to you, the students and faculty,for your support of a cause thatwas uppermost in the President’smind.EUGENE R. BLACKCHAIRMAN OF TRUSTEES This is the basic reason for theopposition to Kenwood Town HomesCompany’s proposal, and underliesthe insistence upon a “wide range”of prices (not rentals, for the homesare to be financed as cooperativesunder section 221-d-3 of the NationalHousing Act). Opponents of the pro¬posal want a substantially higherpriced range of homes.Corrects article on47th street projectTO THE EDITOR:I feel compelled to write thisnote to correct several observa- Builders of 221-d-3 projectsthroughout the nation have met withsimilar opposition, but a recentstudy of such projects made by thePeoples Gas, Light and Coke Co.,indicates that there is no foundationto the supposition that they cannotbe integrated.WILLIAM A. POMERANTZPark Forest, IllinoisJESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd‘SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT’DIAMONDSWATCHESJEWELRY PEARLSSILVERWARERINGSAPPLIANCESDIAMOND PHILLIPS JEWELRY CO. VMmonoFOR Wholesale Distributors FORJUNE JUNESERVING COLLEGE STUDENTS AT WHOLESALE PRICES FOR THE PAST 30 YEARS“50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDS,ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING RINGS’*Watch end Jewelry Repairing, Rm. 1101, 67 E. Madison St., Chicago—DE 2-6508For Further Information Call Harris Jaffe — Ext. 3269 or~684-0427i r* i a » r\ sj • n-* ia 19A4 cess ful wastrelship. The satire pre¬sented in this seminar on socialskills is soon lost somewhere in thatgrey area between script and screen,but Elliot’s characterization of astylish upper class rascal stands outmemorably as by far the best tilingin NOTHING BUT THE BEST.SK Chicago needs the help ofUC students.The Chicago branch of Interna¬tional Voluntary Service is sponsor¬ing several Saturday workcamps thisfall, and volunteer help is verymuch needed. Each project requiresonly eight hours and provides anexcellent opportunity for communitysendee. ami discipline and should be able towork efficiently in co-operation wilbothers.RehabilitationUnfortunately, Mumm is not theword for NOTHING BUT THEBEST. (Glum perhaps, or humdrum,would be apt.) Mississippi workers THE THREE PROJECTS nowto speak at ShoreyTHE STORY OF “an ambitiousjob,” determined to succeed at Brit¬ish business by really trying, rollsalong fairly innocuously for about 45minutes, then detours without prep¬aration into a quasi-Hitchcockianmurder motif. Tie change is muchtoo abrupt, and neither the film northe audience quite weathers the fastswitch from Horatio Algernon toDoom at the Top. Five UC graduate students will dis¬cuss their experiences with the Mis¬sissippi Summer Project at ShoreyCoffee Plus Monday night.Len Edwards, a seoond-year lawschool student; Chuck McDew, whowas the first chairman of the Stu¬dent Non-violent Co-ordinating Com¬mittee when it was founded in Atlan¬ta and is now a law student; PaulCowan, on the committee on socialthought; Rachael Brown, in theschool of Social Service Administra¬tion; apd John Woodford, with thecommittee on Human Development,will appear.Tie program will be in the ShoreyHouse lounge, ninth floor PierceTower, at 9 pm. scheduled are concerned with therehabilitation of a local communitycenter, the building of a dining halladdition at a Chicago children'scamp, and the general clean-up ofa community center on the SouthSide. INTERNATIONAL VOLUNTARYService is the American organizationof the Service Civil International,an international voluntary serviceorganization with branches in 22countries. IVS has been sponsoringservice projects since 1956, and usesvolunteers from all over the world.Experiencer workcampers are oftensent overseas on summer project as¬signments.Organized in 1961The aim of these work camps Isto meet a specific and immediatecommunity need through the use ofvolunteer labor. Tie work may in¬volve physical labor as in the threepresently scheduled projects, or itmay involve service work, whichrequires direct contact with the peo¬ple of the community. Tie Chicago branch of IVS wasorganized in 1961 when volunteerswere used to help clear wreakageleft when a tornado struck the SouthSide. Tie one-day workcamps areused to stretch the budgets of com¬munity agencies by providing labor '■on projects which they could other¬wise not afford.Funds are also raised to aid indevelopment work and health serv¬ices in North Africa, Greece, andIndia.Each project entails eight hoursof supervised work on a Saturday;lunch is provided by the agency us¬ing the team. Volunteers should bewilling to accept project leadership Any students interested in workingfor IVS can get more informationby writing to IVS, c/o Gaebler 5009S. Dorchester, Chicago 15, or cal)WO 4 0872.OfHr... don’t pour it down the side?(We'd rather you wouldn’t)Of course, a lot of people do pour beer down the side ofthe glass. They say it keeps the head down.It sure does. And we think that’s a shame.Maybe it sounds silly, but we spend more dollars onjust the bubbles than any other brewery in America. In¬stead of pumping them in mechanically, we let Budweisercreate its own bubbles with our exclusive Beechwood Age¬ing and natural carbonation. It takes a lot longer to doit this way. But it’s worth it.When those bubbles get together at the top of yourglass you’ve got a better head, a cleaner taste, a smoother,more drinkable beer. Budweiser even smells better (really. .. just take a sniff next time you pour).So let that Budweiser fall right down the center ofyour glass. Let it splash around and froth and foam. Wewent to a whale of a lot of trouble brewing the finest beeron earth, and we’d hate to think you’d missed even onelittle bubble.Budweiser.that Bud®...that’s beer!ANHEUSER BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA «*> <flC*_ 1Levi proposes program for all freshmen(Continued from pdge 2)have ite own governing committeeand associate dean or chairman.This organization of the College intoseparate colleges or sections willhave to meet certain problems. Oneproblem relates to tJie student whois uncommitted when he enters un¬dergraduate work, or if committed,changes that commitment, as somany do, after a certain period ofwork. It is to be assumed that trans¬fers will be permitted from oneCollege or section to another. Butafter a certain point this undoubtedlywill and should entail a loess of stu¬dent time.There are advantages in having thefirst year of the student’s work ingeneral a year in common with otherfirst-year students. Such a first yearin common is not a new idea. Itwas suggested many years ago forChicago by Dean Angell; it has beentried elsewhere. When linked to theGeneral Studies and area colleges orsections it seems to provide a neededfunction.ALL OF THE STUDENTS, then,would take a portion of their generaleducation studies in the first year.A student who is regarded as par¬ticularly qualified to do so might bepermitted to defer one such year-longcourse in order to begin specializedwork. There will be problems of vari¬ations in programs among students.There are such problems now. Therewill be students who “place out”through examination from some of(he general education courses; it maybe that more advanced work shouldbe required of them rather than anexcase from the field.In general, the first year shouldprovide a distributed portion of thecore curriculum required of all. Theemphasis here is on “a part,” sincea division between one year of gen¬eral education followed by threeyears of specialization is not in¬tended. The Dean of the College mayfind it desirable to have an AssociateDean and a special committee, par¬tially representative of the colleges<r sections, particularly concernedwith the first year of the College.AC AMATTEROF A second problem relates to thecommon requirements which wouldbe adopted by all of the area collegesor sections and General Studies. Itseems wise to begin with the require¬ments as they now are. Thus, onewould begin with the requirementsfor specialization which actually ex¬ist and with the general educationcourses as they now are. This wouldmean, for example, that beyond thefirst year, one-third of the coursestaken would be general educationcourses. Basic modifications of theamount of work required outside ofthe field of concentration and sub¬stantial deviations in the offering orrequirement of general educationcourses should be passed upon bythe curriculum committee of theCollege Council. It should be madedear that in the development of thecurriculum, the colleges or sectionsare expected, and encouraged, if theyso desire, to develop alternative pro¬grams.It is proposed:• Fourth, that the first year ofthe undergraduate curriculum shouldin general be a year in common ofgeneral education courses for allstudents, but with students particu¬larly qualified permitted to defer onegeneral education course in favor ofspecialized work.• FIFTH, THAT INITIALLY therequirements for general educationcourses and for specialization shouldbe as they now are but with the col¬leges or sections encouraged to de¬velop new programs. Substantialmodifications of the present require¬ments should be passed upon by theCollege Council and its curriculumcommittee.The organization of the College intocoordinate units will aid in solvinganother problem which exists on adifferent level. This is the problemof the educational organization ofundergraduate student life. The Col¬lege at Chicago with approximately2300 students is relatively small.Some significance may attach to thefact that it is usually not known tobe that small. Chicago has an ex¬traordinarily high faculty to student... when there has been an additionAto the family, it’s high time to think ofan addition to your Sun Life insuranceportfolio.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood. Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & Fridays ratio, and at the College as well asthe graduate level. Clidcago shouldhave the singular advantages whichcome within a university when a par¬ticular faculty group can know andwork with the students in its charge.This is indeed the case in most ofthe professional schools and often atthe graduate level, but it has notsufficiently existed within the presentCollege framework.The system of advisers and othersteps which have been taken havenot made up for the difficulties pre¬sented by a lack of smaller unitsrelated to educational programs. Thesuccess of some of the special pro¬grams, such as General Studies inthe Humanities, perhaps can beattributed in aprt to this designationof a small group. The organization ofthe College which is proposed willdesignate viable student communities.This will greatly assist the educa¬tional programs. Student life, facultyand student relationships, and theuse of academic and residentialfacilities now available or to be builtwill be greatly improved by thisorganization.New approaches to undergraduateeducation made possible through thegreater participation of the facultiesand a more effective organization ofthe College faculty can be enormous¬ly important to Chicago and to liberaleducation generally. They have beenin the past. The proposals made here¬in are mostly matters of organization.They rely on the interested facultiesto take the next steps, building onthe considerable although unevenprogress which the College has madethrough many years. They have thestrength of opening up to facultydiscussion the amount and natureof general requirements, includingthe distribution and type of courses,which will hold together the Chicagoprogram and yet permit a consider¬able amount of diversity. This iswhere such matters ought to bediscussed. The program will requireconsiderable support from the facultyas a whole and from the administra¬tion of the University.THIS IS BOTH A pressing andfortunate period in which to reex-amine undergraduate education.There has been an enormous growthin knowledge. Many high schoolprograms have been greatly im¬proved. The percentage of ChicagoCollege students going on to do pro¬fessional or graduate work haschanged in the last thirty years fromless than twenty per cent to some¬thing on the order of seventy toeighty per cent.From these facts there is no reasonto conclude that the liberal arts col¬lege should be pinched out of exist¬ence ; rather its opportunities aregreater anti different. In a commu¬nity where everyone is on his wayto becoming a specialist, including,for example, a specialist in the newprofession of business, the need tounderstand the interrelationshipsamong fields of knowledge and toappreciate the competition amongand limitations upon the disciplines is all the more important, and inpart so that one's own disciplinemay be understood.In a world of specialization, univer¬sities must work with the materialsat hand, both at the undergraduateand graduate levels, to reveal thegeneral and the basic. In a world ofseparate professions, universitiesthrough their colleges must aid in the development of citizens of wis¬dom, capable of leadership. Chicagowith its high proportion erf studentswho not only will lead research andthe professions, but who will do somuch to determine the shape of un-dregraduate teaching in other insti¬tutions has a particularly heavyresponsibility,Edward H. LeviNew IF twist parties;Frats stage puberty ritesAll Hail! The return of con¬fusion and chaos is at hand.Tonight marks the night ofthe first Twist Party of theyear. Sponsored by the Interfrater¬nity Council, it will be held in IdaNoyes Hall tonight at 9- pm.The origin of the Twist Parties isuncertain. Some old timers claimthey began as the aftermath of theWednesday night coffee hours inNew Dorms in 1961, while othersinsist they were an evolved formof a nightly gang war on the Mid¬way which somehow got moved partand parcel into the New Dorm lobby.After this rather ignominious be¬ginning, the fame of the Twist Par¬ties began to spread — in fact, itspread all over northeastern Illinois.They became a phenomenon whichthe paper thin walls of New Dormsjust could not contain, so that thewhole affair was moved to moresuitable surroundings in Ida Noyes.In addition, the record player wasreplaced by a string of severalbands.Selective admissionORIGINALLY, EVERYONE wasadmitted, but very quickly admis¬sion had to be limited to Chicagoarea college students to preventIda Noyes from being rather pain¬fully dismembered by the pressinghordes of Hyde Parkers.Since no one had bothered to countthe number of Chicago area colleges,this rule again had to be revised,for as many as 80 different collegeIDs were being presented at thedoor. Finally, the Twist Parties were0}>ened only to UC students.Director of Student ActivitiesThomas O'Keefe corroborated boththe history and the particular con¬fusion of past Twist Parties. Noisethat disturbed more academicallyinclined students and several inci¬dents of stolen coats and purseswere the major reasons for thedecision last year, he said.Student Union ran themAt that time, the now defunctStudent Union was in charge ofrunning the Twist Parties, but theysuccumbed to the incidents and tothe impending danger of insanityresulting from admitting ex-convicts, ID card forgers, and liquor bo tieleavers.O’KEEFE ADDED THAT it washis office which was solely respon¬sible for the decision to reinstatethe Parties.The Twist Parties are sui generis— they are not exactly culturalin nature, nor can they be said tobe academically enlightening, but acertain amount of athletic prowessmay come in handy.The Twist Parlies have never beena date affair; rather, everyone justcomes — and voila — a Twist party.In short, the Twist parties are tun— they offer to the students a formof legalized rioting — the perfectend to a long week of studying.Music events scheduledThe English Consort of Viols, ona return American tour, will givethe first concert of the Universityof Chicago Chamber Music Seriestonight in Mandel Hall.Included on the program will beworks of the seventeenth centuryby Gibbons, Ward, Locke, Purcell,and others.The concert begins at 8:30. Tick¬ets are $3, $1 for students. Seriestickets for the entire series of sixconcerts are still available at theMusic Department, 5802 Woodl awn.Series tickets are $10 for generaladmission; $8 for UC faculty; and$3 for students* * •FREDERICK H A M M O N D. amember of the faculty of the De¬partment of Music, will give aharpsichord recital in Bond Chapelon Saturday evening, October 17.Included will be compositions byByrd, Antonio de Cabezon, andDomenico Scarlatti.The concert begins at 8:30; thereis no admission charge.» * *AUDITIONS FOR principal rolesin the Collegium Musicum produc¬tion of Purcell's Dido and Aeneasduring the winter quarter are beingheld now until October 21. Anyonewishing to audition should contactHoward Brown at the Music De¬partment 5802 Woodlawn, for anappointment.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYBATTERED BOOK SALE!Soiled and Shelf-worn titlesHard bound and PaperbacksReductions up to 50% and moreALL SUBJECTS:fiction, non-fiction,art, science, biography..Sale begins Friday, October 16One week onlyTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 8-5 — Sat. 8:30-12:30 1000 TO 2000 WORDS A MINUTEWITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENTIONYou can read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCELERATED READING method. You’ll learnto read DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute. And retention isexcellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely read every word.You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual material as well asto literature and fiction. The author’s style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, youraccuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased.Consider what this new reading ability will enable you to accomplish — in your required readingand also in the additional reading you want to do.No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READING method.In this way the reader avoids developing any dependence upon external equipment in reading.A class in ACCELERATED READING will be held near the University of Chicago, at the HOTELDEL PRADO, beginning on OctoLr 27. This class will meet on TUESDAY evenings.Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READING method andsee it applied.BRING A BOOK!Demonstrotions will be held of the HOTEL DEL PRADO, located at 53rd St. and Lake Shore Drive,on:MONDAY, October 19 at 7:30 P.M.WEDNESDAY, October 21 at 7:30 P.M.NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING, Inc.507 Fifth Avenue New York 17. N.Y.ft-f»' THEATER REVIEWSuper-brothel scene highlights new 'Balcony'THt BALCONY by JEAN GENETBishop: Richard HerlonIrma: Lorraine ZelmonskiJudqe: Gil PodoSnerChief of Police: Jack CarrollMark: Will NjnnollyGeorqet-te: Noel MareeRoqer: Pof ConwayDirected by Arthur Mond'erOld Town Garden Players1300 N. Sedqwick at EvergreenPrepare yourself to see abrothel where the clientsare judges, generals, priests,and saints. Even Jesus Christmakes his appearance. JeanGenet draws his tale of fantasy andreality, brothel of illusions and realworld of revolutions, with a pendipped in the magic ink of the absurd.The Grand Balcony is a brothelwhere frustrated men coroe to realizetheir dreams by playing the parts ofgreat men or great ideals. Theyignore the world outside, where arevolution rages.Tile Old Town Garden Players areExhibitsIVAN AI.BKKillT: a retrospectiveexhibition of work. Art Institute,Michigan and Adams. Thru Dec. It.NORTHERN RENAISSANCE ARTIN SHAKESPEARE’S TIME: 1010 E.59th St. Thru Nov. 14.OILS BY HILTON BROWN: TheCres Gallery. 150 E. Ontario. ThruOct. 20.ConcertsChicago Symphony Orchestra: JeanMartinon. cond., Ray Still, oboe: anAll-Strauss concert: Don Juan; Cone,lor Oboe and Oreh.; Ein Heldenleben.Orchestra Hall, Oct. 10 at 2 pm. JeanMartinon, cond.: Haydn: Sym Jt99:Lees: Sym #2; Moussorgsky: Picturesat an Exhibition (Ravel orch’n).Orchestra Hall. Oct. 22 at 8:50 pm.Tickets $2-6.50; student gallery tick¬ets to Fri. concerts. $1. 220 S. Michi¬gan. HA 7-0362. After 5, HA 7-0490.English Consort of Viols: music byGibbons, Ward, Deering. Locke, Pur¬cell, u.s.w. Mandel Hall, Oct. 16 at8:30, $3. Series Admission 76 concerts)$10. Tickets: Concert Office. 5802Woodlawn. MI 3-0800, ext. 3885.Harpsichord Recital: Frederick Ham¬mond; works by Byrd. Scarlatti, andde Cabezon. Bond Chapel, Oct. 17,8:30 pm. Free. a community theater group under theprofessional direction of Arthur Han¬dler, who directed die group lastyear in Dylan Thomas' “Under Milk-wood.” “The Balcony.” (he group'sfirst production of the season, re¬quired far more exacting work onthe parts of both the director andthe actors, most of whom seem tohave only limited experience in toetheater. Unfortunately, the scenes inwhich I was able to forget that thegroup is indeed amateur were fewand far between,THE FANTASY SC ENES requiregreat versatility on the parts of theactors, so that the audience is awarethat only part of what the charactersays is reality, while tlte rest is pureillusion.11 ie most disappointing of thesecharacters was the judge.Having never seen the play before, I had difficulty at first in decidingwhether or not the judge was sup¬posed to be a comic-relief character.He had trouble stepping out of him¬self long enough to present a pictureof toe frustrated little man who longsfor the grandeur and prestige enjoyedby a judge; instead, his judge wasa kibbitzing uncle who was makingfun of himself although he was sup¬posed to evoke mixed feelings ofpity and contempt from the audience.Bichard Herlan did a far moreconvincing job with his characteriza¬tion of the bishop. He let us knowwhen he put on his bishop's miterby assuming a Latin intonation anddropping the almost continual flowof profanity which marks his “real”ixirt, that of a gas man. I was alittle uneasy when he assumed hisreal identity, however; he was moreconvincing as a bishop than as agas man. Perhaps that is another manifestation of the playwright’sphilosophy; that there is little dis¬tinction between illusion and reality,THE CHARACTERS WHO comestraight from Genet's world of re¬ality—the revolutionaries—are com¬petently though not quite convincing¬ly played by Will Nunn ally, NoelMaree, and Pat Conway, Their lineswore well delivered but without thebitterness and anger which wouldhave seemed natural in the leadershipof the revolution, Nunnally comescloser to the revolutionary imagethan Miss Maree or Mr. Conway; infact he missed by only very littlethe realistic quality which ought tocharacterize his role.By far the most gratifying per¬formances of tile evening came fromLorraine Zelmaaska (Madame Irma,owner of the Grand Balcony) andJack Carroll (the chief of police).Miss Zelmanski plays a hard-boiledmadam who is contemptuous of herCulture CalendarBloom, Ralph Richardson. Art InstituteFullerton Hall. Oct. 22 at 775cSABOTAGE: dir. Alfred Hitchcock.With Sylvia Sidney, and Oscat Homul-ka. Oct. 21 at 7:30. Roosevelt Univer¬sity Slnha Hall. Series admission only;$3.50.STRIKE: dir. Sergei Fisenstein. Man-del Hall. Oct. 17 at 7:30. See POTEM¬KIN notice for further information.THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI: dirOrson Welles. Doc Films Fri, Nightseries. Soc Sci 122. Oct. 16 at 7:15and 9:15. 60c, series $2.50.TO PARIS WITH LOVE: lilt HouseCinema. Assembly Hall. Oct. 19 at 8.50e.YESTERDAY, TODAY. AND TO¬MORROW’: dir, Di Sica. With Lorenand Mastroianni. The Hyde ParkTheatre, 53 and Lake Park. StartingOct. 16. 90c. students 65c. 20 at 12:15 pm. Art Institute. Free.PERSPECTIVES IN TWENTIETHCENTURY MUSIC: Howard Hanson,composer. Mon., Oct. 19 at 8. Free.7400 Augusta Blvd., River Forest.PR 1-8300. ext. 242.It. TROVATOitE: With Ligahue.Bumbry. Mannion, Corelli, Schmoor,Zanasi. Vinco, Nelson; Bartoletti, condOct. 17 and 19 at 8.LA FAVORITA: With Cossotto. De-Sett, Kraus, Deis. Bruscantini. Vinco;Cillaria, cond. Oct. 16 and 21 at 8Both at the Opera House, 20 N.W’acker. $3-$3ft. FI 6-6111.TheatreA Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum: starring JerryLester, Edward Everett Horton, PaulHartman. Arnold Stang, and ErikRhodes. Shubert Theatre, 22 W Mon¬roe. Nightly at 8:30, Sun. at 7, Sat.Matinee at 2:30, Mon. dark. $2.50-6.95.CE 6-8240.Threepenny Opera: by BertoldBrecht and Kurt Weill. Hull HouseTheatre, 3212 N. Broadway. Fri, andSat. at 8:30; Sun. at 7:30. Fri. andSun. $1.90 Sat. $2.90. 348-8330.The Balcony: Jean Genet. O'd TownGarden Players. Sedgewick at Ever- visitors’ needs while recognizing herdependence on them.The prize of the evening was toecliief of police, played by Jack Car¬rol, Carrol presents a delightfullysinister portrait of a frustrated hem,complete with 2 days’ stubble andan everpresent cigar betweenclenched teeth. He stalks majestical¬ly around tie stage when pleased,and glowers, barks, and swears likea UC student registering for toe firsttime when upset.Tlte Garden Players had a difficultjob to fx>rform when they chose toperform The Balcony. Under theexcellent direction of Arthur Mandler,they put across the fantasy-realityidea to toe audience with as littleconfusion as could be expected. TheBalcony is an ambitious productionfor any group, and the Garden Play¬ers did a job that was well worthseeing.Jamie Beth Gategreen Weekends through Oct. 25. Fri.and Sat. at 8:30; Sun. at 7:30, $1.50.WE 5-3650.Farther Along: Second City Flayers1846 N. Wells. Tue. thru Sun,, 9 andII, 1 on Fri. and Sat. Improvisationsafter 11 show Thurs. $2, $2.50 week¬ends, DE 7-3992.Six Ages of Man: a comic revuewith music. Allerton Hotel Theatre inthe Clouds, 701 N- Michigan. 9 and11 pm Tue,s.-Sat., 4. and 9 pm Sun.Weekdays $2.65, Fri. and Sat. $2.95.SU 7-1200.Doc Films gives SWAP 50 TicketsFolk MusicCLANCY BROTHERS AND TOMMYMAKEM: Triangle productions con¬certs. Orchestra Hall. Tickets: TriangleTheatrical Productions. 156 F Simeri-or, SU 7-7585: Oet, 16 at 8:30. $2*5.LecturesCHARDIN: Mama Fergestad, Oct.FilmsAl l. THE KING’S MEN: dir. RobertRossen. BJ Cinema. BJ dining hall.Oct. 18 at 7 and 9. 50c.JOURNEY-INTO FEAR: dir OrsonWelles. With Welles and Joseph Gotten,Soc Sci 122. Oct. 20 at 7:15 and 9:15.60c series $2.50.JULIUS CAESAR: With MarlonBrando and James Mason. CarnegieTheatre (Rush and Oak), starting Oet.36. $1.80.POTEMKIN: dir. Sergei Eisenstein,Russian Film Festival. Maud?! Hall.Oct. 17 at 9:30. $1. students 75c;series $5. students $3.75.RICHARD III: dir. Laurence Olivier.With Olivier, John Gielgud, Claire CORNELL AVENUEBAPTIST CHURCH8200 S. CORNELLAffiliated with theSouthern Baptist Lonveiuit.nSunday Services 11:08 am: 7:30 pmTransported ion may be arrangedSA 1-6070, 10-11 am PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PK. BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICERE 6-6606 — RE 6-389?CHICKEN - SANDWICHESPIZZA &ITALIAN FOODS The students of SWAP will betreated to a showing of two MarxBrothers films on October 31 by DocFilms.Fifty tickets were presented toSWAP by Doc Films and will bedistributed to the high school tuleesas a gift from both organizations.Presented to SWAP Chairman AnnCook by Hick Thompson, Doc FilmsChairman ami Kenneth Krantz, Vice-chairman and Director of Special Ac¬ tivities, the tickets are an expressionof Doe Films admiration for thework SWAP is doing.The two films, COCONUTS andMONKEY BUSINESS. wiU be shownin the Law Setxxil auditorium at 7:38pm.In addition, Doc Films has offereda film, Charile Chaikin’s short TOEFLOORWALKER, for use in drama'classes conducted by the SWAPtutoring project.RANDELL - HARPER SQUAREBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air Conditioning Open Evening# Billie Trrgon/.aINTERCLUB COUNCILpresentsthe First AnnualMOQUThe first fall rush functionfor 2nd, 3rd, 4th yrM andtransfer women interestedin ioin’ng a woman's club.SUNDAY, OCT. 18 — 3 p.m.Ida NoyesFood, entertainment, information.Informal National Review offers ...SPECIAL STUDENT RATE:89ONLY 3$2..lar 3I Afor the OAcademicYear(you save $2.35 over theregular rate)SUBSCRIBE NOW?Don t mtss another I vi.w, o*Pr. c# 7. is«exciting issue. | t 35 st., N.r. is, N.r, SLACKSSTRETCHand non-stretchLUCILLES1507 E. 53rdMl 3-9898FREE PARKING AT 5219 HARPER Jimmy’sand the University RoamRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty Fifth and Woodlawn Ave.DON'T RE COMPLACENT!Work for a massive LBJ-HHH landslide with theUniversity of Chicago YoungDemocrats Club.Precinct work, office work, pollwatching and Campaigning onSaturdays in the last three heatedcampaign weeks. Interested?Call druce Freed. 416 BJ,Ml 3-6000, or MariannaBrown, HY 3-8081. ilk Screen SuppliesA Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALS,MIMEOGRAPH PAPERAMD SUPPLIESf Wholesale Prices in QuantifyOnly lDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd ST.HY 3-4111 EXCLUSIVE CLEANERS1442 E. 57th 1309 E. 57thMl 3-0607 Ml 3-0602COMPLETE CLEANINGAND LAUNDRYSAME DAY SERVICEAVAILABLETONIGHTTWIST PARTYIDA NOYES HALL — 9:00 P.M.SPONSORED BY INTERFRATERNITY COUNCILADMISSION 25c PLUS U.C. IDENTIFICATION Columbia Record Playerswith Changers IronCHECK OUR PRICES!AM-FM Radios from *2495$3995Diamond Needles from$395Ask for FREE lap fray withpurchase of radio or phonographService on All We SellHAVILL’RI ■ mm W I mm mm 4^r1368 E. 53 rd St. PL 2-7800Chicago, III., 60615Since 1926 ’ fl'♦;s;: ft-THE SCREEN SCENEDue Films regrets that a distribu¬tor’s error made it impossible to.show THE LADY VANISHES Tues¬day, Luckily, Hitchcok’s excellentNOTORIUS was available. THELADY VANISHES will be shown inits place on Oct. 27.This is Orson Welles Week atDoc Films. Of course every week is,but, ibis time DFG gives tangibletribute with two outstanding featurescreated by and starring the awesomeOrson.THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI(Fri.) was a distinguished financialflap that almost destroyed Welles’.status with the big Hollywood studios.Its additional virtues are describedby Peter Noble in his book on Welles.THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI, saysNoble, “with its curious photography,high-speed cross-cutting, and eccen¬tric characterizations, could hardlybe labelled family entertainment.”THE 1946 FILM stars Welles andhis then wife, Rita Hayworth, withEverett Sloane, who first gainedprominence in Welles’ CITIZENKANE. 'Hie Acapulco scenes wereshot aboard the yacht of Errol FlynnUNIVERSAL ARMY STORELevis —- TurtlenecksWinter dockets — RaincoatsPeocoats — Parkas1459 E. 53rd 5*. FA 4-5856free Coffee who served officially as technicaladvisor and unofficially as “orgy-arranger.”JOURNEY INTO FEAR, (Tues.)though signed by one Norman Faster,is a Wellesian creation from 1942.If also stars Everett Sloane andfeatures Joseph Cotton as the be¬fuddled hero who stumbles throughthe intrigues and obstacles of theEric Ambler political mystery.Unfortunately, B.J Cinema has, forsome reason, scheduled its nextfeature, ALL THE KING S MEN,opposite LADY FROM SHANGHAI,on Friday night. ALL THE KING'SMEN, a political drama based on thenovel by Robert Penn Warren, isdirected by Robert Has sen, who didTHE HUSTLER.Rossen’s new film, LILITH, willbe sneak previewed Saturday nightat the Roosevelt Theatre downtown.The psychological drama stars War¬ren Beatty, Jean Seberg. Peter Fon¬da, and Kim Hunter. It will playwith the regular Roosevelt feature,Fred Zinnemarm’s BEHOLD A PALEHORSE, an adventure drama of theSpanish Civil War which has receivedmixed reviews.METRO-GOLDVVYN-MAYER willhold a special downtown screeningof its new film THE YOUNG LOV¬ERS for a group of campus person¬nel. After a very successful tour ofpre-release college screenings, MGMis anxious to introduce this frankstudy of modern college sex life toall college people across the country. The Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. productionis from a screenplay by Universityof Virginia English Professor GeorgeGarrett. It opens in Chicago in abouttwo weeks.Film ClipsFollowing the example of DFG’sMidwest Film Festival, the Dart¬mouth Film Society will soon presenta festival of films by Josef vonSternberg, featuring a guest appear¬ance by “the Leonardo of the screen”himself. . . , Karl Malden, nowserving as instructor in Acting atKansas State Teacher’s College, isencouraging the Screen Actors’ Guildto participate similarly in educativeactivities. . . , Shirley Clarke’s THECOOL WORLD has opened in Paris.Of course, it hasn't reached Chicagoyet. Or maybe it was hijacked bythe Chicagoans for Dull Cinema so¬ciety. . . . Jeanne Moreau will playMata Hari in a script by FrancoisTruffaut. . . . IT’S A MAD, MAD,MAD, MAD WORLD proved thevalidity of its title by staying in thetop five box-office ratings for over40 weeks. . . . Yes, they will makea movie out of CANDY, directed by,of all people, Frank (DAVID ANDLISA) Perry. . . . Tcny Richardson,director of TOM JONES, TerryS o u t h e r n, co-author of DR.STRANGELOVE, and Haskell Wex-ler, cinematographer of AMERICA,AMERICA, have teamed up to filmEvelyn Waugh’s THE LOVED ONE.Luchino VisKahanti CLASSIFIED ADSHELP WANTEDCashier, part time, experienced; towork at Nicky’s restaurant. 1208 E.53rd st.Help wanted: female, mature, under¬standing adults to work with teengirls’ groups in So. Shore. Salary $2.50—$3.50 per hour. Call Mrs, Waldo orMrs. Rosenfeld. RE 1-0444.Receptionist for Sat., 9-12, 1-4. CallFA 4-0745.STUDENTS: Wanted 2 days cleaningor laundry. Ref. if necess. HU 3-7103.•WALLS CLEANED? LEAVES RAKED?ODD JOBS? “jobs for teens’’ HydePark-Ken wood Com, Conf. BU 8-8343.MAROON secertary wanted. Good job,good pay. All Mori., Thurs. afts. SomeTues., Wed. Call MI 3-0800, ext. 3269or 684-0427, eves.FOR RENTFurnished 3-bedroom house SouthShore. Fireplace, enclosed porches,yard, garage. Ten minute drive to UC.Lease $228/mo. Call 324-8907.Apt. avail, immed. -share with twogirls-$27/mo. FA 4-6953.SUBLEASE. Going abroad for a year.Beautifully furn. compl. equipped 1-bdrm. apt. in hi-rise bldg, near lake.All trans. Campus bus. Avail. Nov.Adults. 493-5118 eves, or weekends.Apt. to share. Business woman wishesto share her furnished apt.-54th Cor¬nell, with female student $55/mo. CallMI 3-1921 after 6 pm. Near UC. 6 rm. newly decorated, furn.coach hse.; parking, spacious grounds,$150; lge. master bedrm., nat. fire¬place, private bath, kit. priv. plus useof our 20 rm. Victorian residence-$75.637-5529.Unfurn. 3 rm. apt. Exc. location $85.CALL DO 3-8116.PERSONALFor information concerning new mira¬cle roach killer, call Dr, Thomas Quin¬cy Howard, WASP. at 752-6852.Hurry, while supply lasts!All those who stuffed MAROONS onOct. 1 pick up checks, 3rd fir., IdaNoyes, between 2-5 pm Friday.FOR SALEPROJECT PARALYMPICS Saturday,October 24, Bartlett Gym, 8 pm. Helpsend Chicago wheelchair basketballteam to Tokyo.Now. therefore, I, Richard J. Daley,Mayor of the city of Chicago, do here¬by proclaim the day of October 24,1964, as PARALYMPICS DAY andsincerely urge all citizens to takecognizance of the honors bestowedand the special events arranged forthis time.The long-awaited Joan Baez songbookis at the Fret Shop—beautifully illus¬trated. complete playing instructions,$3.95; shows Miss B. playing 00-45.Martin Fret Shop guitar. 1547 E 53rdSt.Used 5-string Kay banjo. $57 new,$35 now. Call Alan. 752-2853.For sale: bass ukelele, $20 or best of¬fer. Call Bob, X3265, Mon.-Thurs., or324-5751.U. of C. SNCC MISSISSIPPI BenefitNOV. 20. If you can give some helpplease call Heather Tobis, 1409 NewDorms.PROGRESSIVEPAINT & HARDWARE CO.1641 E. 55th HY 3-384010*o STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDC PARK SHOE REBUILDERSServing Hyde fork for 40 YearsProfesitonol DyeingColors Mote bedRvfiimhing of Shoes endHo nd bogsT451 E. 57th HY 3-1247TypewritersandTape RecordersRent with anoption to buyThree months rentalcharges applicable topurchase price,Photo and TypewriterDeportmentUniversity of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Hours: Mon. thru Fri, 8-5Sot. 8:30-12:40 the personal and helpfulbanking service we provide.We are one of the strongestbanks, dollar for dollar, inthe entire C hicago area andwe d like your business. fcoftheMidway,thatZEE B,'(?HT ^BftNfelf ON ZEEWe re on the left bank ofthe campus. We can’t helpthat. But we make it upto the Hyde Park andUniversity people whobank with us. We’re gladthat so many of themcross the midway to enjoymlikely to tf]eUniversity Cbrm>iHhfty63 nAj at WovtijUmot 624S Uw\s&igiUjEnjtjicLn&enoonGet. 16, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9MAROON Gadfly contest winnersIs Barry a real conservative? A Goldwater anthologyGoldwater has long been pro¬claimed the bastion of conservatism.Yet is he really a conservative, orjust a radical who's ideas tendtowards the conservative camp?According to Goldwater, one ofthe strongest doctrines of conserva¬tism is “the means justifies the end,”or as long as we follow the goodold Amerioan Way the results mustbe good. As he expresses it on page23 of his Conscience of a Conserva¬tive, “[a candidate should] not at¬tempt to discover whether legislationis needed before [he has] first deter-auned whether it is ... permissible.”Does Goldwater actually follow thisdogma, or just follow his distortedview of it? I believe that it is dielatter, and there are several exam¬ples of his own views which backme up.IT CAN BE SEEN in his attitudetoward Viet Nam. It has long beendie American Way that the Americanfighting man is the best in theworld—he has the most up-to-dateequipment and the best backing nec¬ essary to win the war he is fighting.Goldwater over simplifies tills state¬ment by dropping tlie Last clause.Thus he deplores the fact that OurBoys are forced to use “antiquated,obsolete World War II equipment.”Yet anyone who is in touch withthe situation in Viet Nam realizesthe pure absurdity of this idea.Imagine what would happen if OurBoys were fitted out with the mostmodern jet fighters. It is strangethat Sen. Goldwater, an Air Forceman himself, cannot see the prob¬lems that would arise. Can youpicture the difficulty of flying a planeat tree top level going 1,500 milesan hour? Trying to strafe a group ofthree men? Yet because Goldwaterdistorts “the best for the job” into“the best,” he would add this diffi¬culty.It has also long been a principlethat the main duties of the govern¬ment should be placed in die handsof those most responsive to the peo¬ple. Goldwater feels, despite the ad¬vances in communication, that theMorgenthau: split over BC‘The split in die Republican Party,which has arisen over the Goldwatercampaign, will lead to a diminishingof American democracy and eventu¬ally to a one-party system,” Distin¬guished Service Professor of PoliticalScience Hans J. Morgenthau statedlast night in a lecture sponsored bythe Independent Voters of Illinois.Morgenthau warned that Gold-water would do just what he says hewould do if elected, and this couldlead to a situation as chaotic as thatin some of the southern states.Morgenthau, in answer to a ques¬tion after the talk, said that the re-See The Fabulous“Hits Of Broadway”Lavish MusicoI RevueFine Dining—DancingDEL PRADO HOTELHY ‘3-9600Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protectioa135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 moval of Khruschev from power inthe Soviet Union oannot have any ef¬fect on the campaign. He foresees nodrastic change in Russian-US rela¬tions, but says that a change waspredictable.The change in leadership wasprobably designed to insure that tlieSoviet Union did not lose leadershipof the Communist countries to RedChina. “I wouldn't be surprised if thestruggle with China was one of thereasons for the change,” Morgen¬thau said.Personality choiceMorgenthau, in deploring die lowintellectual level of this campaign,said that we are not offered a choiceof policies but a choice of personali¬ties. Neitlier candidate has com¬mented on domestic issues, helamented. “Peace and prosperity arehere, but automation poses a problemof distributing excess goods, despitewhat Adam Smith’s supporters say.”MORGENTHAU PRAISED Presi¬dent Johnson’s prodigious vitality,his handling of senators, and said thatJohnson wanted to go down in historyas a man wlio helped his country¬men.Today'sAssignment1965COMET2-D00R SEDAN*1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE G&OVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN • MERCURYCONTINENTAL MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 Hr.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259WALL WASHING?LEAF RAKING?ODD JOBS?PHONE BU 8-8343’■jobs-for-teens”Supervised by UCgrad studentHyde Park-KenwoodCommunity Conference*°P M world of’diningpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668 most responsive body must somehowbe the nearest geographically. There¬fore, he recommends that we bakeaway power from a body maderesponsive and responsible by anelaborate checks and balances sys¬tem and give it to the states withoutany checks.IS THIS ENTIRELY logical, toassume that the most responsivegovernment is the one in wliich tliemachine government and megalo¬maniac are most likely to reside, theformer because it lacks the organiza¬tion to go higher and the latterbecause he lacks the ability?Another glaring application of thistwisted outlook is in the area ofForeign Aid. Here Goldwater distorts“the American Way is good forAmerica” to “the American Way isgood for the world.” On page 101of his Conscience of a Conservative,Goldwater states: “We Americansbelieve . . . that the way to build astrong economy is to encourage tliefree play of . . . free capital, freelabor, a free market. Yet every oneof the neutral countries we are aid¬ing is committed to a program ofSbate Socialism. ... For this reasonalone, we should eliminate all gov-emment-to-government aid.”In other words, free enterprisewith no government oontrol is theOnly Way for all the world, despitesuch notable exceptions to this “rule”as England, Sweden, Norway, Den¬mark, and India.The final, and most patent, misuseof this credo can be recognized inGoldwater s attitude towards welfare.He dismisses welfare as nothingmore than public dole, and thereforean affront to die American Ideal ofSelf-Reliance and Personal Initiative.IN THIS GROSS oversimplification,Goldwater completely ignores theother duties of a good welfare sys¬tem; welfare not only provides basicsubsistence, but also provides therapyand training. It is only when a per¬son has these three things—tlie secu¬rity that he will not starve to death,the sound mental outlook given bytherapy, and tlie knowledge tiiat hehas the skills to gain the job he wants—that he loses the apathy whichstifles self-reliance. Thus, Gold-water’s stand is not for the supportof personal initiative, but rather infavor of personal initiative for a for¬tunate few.Thus, one can see that Goldwaterdoes not ajiply tlie central credo ofconservatism, but rather an over¬simplified, misinterpreted version ofit. If this is the best that conserva¬tism has to offer, it is due for aquick, sad demise in the near future.Jim Smuland In every society and during allhistorical periods, there are groupsand organizations which seek sim¬ple solutions to complex problems. Inthe early nineteenth century die Na¬tive Americans or Know-Nothingsthough that American “integrity andprosperity” could be restored sim¬ply by barring naturalized citizensfrom holding public office. In dif¬ferent periods, die White CitizensCouncils and the KKK symbolizedthe belief that the South would pros¬per if only it could avoid die evils ofintegration and miscegenation.Today a notiler group is posing thesolutions for complex problems interms of “either-or” choices. ThusBarry Goldwater asserts: “The onlyalternative to victory is obviously de¬feat ... We must remain strong.”THE BELIEF THAT awesomeweapons deter attack is, of course,historically false. After AlfredNobel invented dynamite, he op-lomistically predicted that the greatdestructive power of modern weapons(dynamite?) wrould prevent futureattacks on tlie western European na¬tions. Contemporary politicians likeSenator Goldwater still repeat No¬bel’s mistake. Tlie Arizona senator,in his search for simple solutionsto cold war conflicts, bases his strat¬egy on a revised version of tlie Gold¬en Rule: “We must do unto theoilier fellow as he would do to us,but do k first.” (paraphrasing ofRobert Gordis).The complexities of nuclear agediplomacy and tlie continuous inter¬national conflict since 1945 have frus¬trated many. For those who resentthe limitations which have beenplaced on American unilateral ac¬tion bv international agreements 3ndflnti-B. G. picket todayDisenfranchised Republicans, anti-Barryites, and all-purpose agitatorswill have their chance to vent theirpolitical fury this afternoon againstRepublican nominee for President,Barry Goldwater.Goldwater, who appears in Giicagotoday for a campaign speech, will bepicketed between 5 and 7:30 pm infront of tlie Conrad Hilton Hotel, 720South Michigan ave.THE PICKET IS sponsored byPOLIT.This will probably be tlie la<kchance for Chicagoans to demonstrateagainst Goldwater, since today’sspeech is his Last scheduled one hereduring the campaign.For further ixiforonaibion, contactBarbara Caress at the StudentGovernment office, 2nd floor IdaNoyes Hall, ext. 3272.Sonnet on Barry G.Barry thou art, and to bury thou art bent,And most unbending is thy conserving will.How can men brave this so impolitic intentIn times so wrought with Bomb and overkill?Bury in deed and bury in speech it seems:For meaning's buried in Barry’s words indeed.Buried thoughts are often ill-conceived extremes.Where sport in explanation lies. But Barry heed;Thy childlike councils by base despair are nursed.Suckling at the dug of slavish fear;Their dam is ignorance, their site hate accursed.Their fruit is better gloom in future now unclear.Conservative, conserve thy gross intent:Serve not the Right to be our President.S. KadishAugust, 1964UNIVERSITY THEATRETRYOUTS!TONIGHT AT 8:30GIRAUDOUXsupplement to the voyage of captain cookDE GHELDERODEescurialJARRYubu roiMONDAY. TUESDAY, WEDNESDAYOctober 19, 20, 21 — 7:30-9:31TUESDAY — 3 p.m.REYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE3rd Floor Reynolds Club covenants, Barry Goldwater offersthe simple solution. Disregarding mrobligations under international law,the junior senator from Arizona bald¬ly asserts that “we must be pie-pared to undertake military opera¬tions against vulnerable oommumstregimes.” In an age of nuclear weap¬ons, Goldwater has no compunction*about stating that American foreignpolicy “should not be afraid otwar.”Questions concerning domestic po¬licy elicit equally glib responsesfrom the Republican presidentialnominee. Senator Goldwater dis¬misses most pleas for federal aidwith tlie words: “My aina is not topass new laws to repeal old ones.”What’s his remedy for over¬crowded schools? “If we get backto readin’, writin’, and ’rithmetic andan occasional little whack where itwill help then I think our educationalsystem will take care of itself.” Th»Arizona legislator disapproves otfederal aid to education, wliich is"blatantly unconstitutional.” Ofcourse, tlie Federal Government hasbeen providing direct federal assist¬ance in this area for more than acentury. The Morrell Acts of 18G2and 1892 established a system ofland grant colleges. Direct federalaid to vocational schools lias boonin effect since the passage of theSmith-Hughes Act of 1917. Maybethese are tlie laws which Mr. Gold-water wishes to repeal.WHEN SENATOR GOLDWATERis not able to solve a contemporarydilemma by promising to repeal ex¬isting laws, lie employs the CalCoolidge technique to show that thereis no need to solve the problem intlie first place. When Silent Cal wasasked about his solution for the agri¬cultural crisis of the 1920’s he re¬plied: “Farmers never make muchmoney. I don’t think there is muchwe can do about it.” In a similarmanner. Senator Goldwater dismissesthe plight of the poor who inhabitMichael Harrington’s “other Ameri¬ca" with the comment: “. . . wheth¬er we like it or not we’re going tohave poverty with us until the endof time.” How comforting to tlieeight million families with annualincomes of less than $2,500.Gold water’s strong statements onpork barrel (“I think TVA shouldbe turned over to private enterpriseeven if tiiey could only get one dollarfor it.”) suggest that he is unalter¬ably opposed to such expenditures.Yet the largest single public worksappropriation passed by the 88th Con¬gress ($1.2 billion for an Arizonawater development project resem¬bling TVA) was sponsored by U»ejunior senator from Arizona.In addition, candidate Goldwater’splea for inactivity at home andjingoism abroad has resulted in otherinteresting contradictions. From tliesenator’s assertion that “the wholehistory of freedom has been simplythe history of resistance to the con¬centration of power in government.”may we conclude that the centraliza¬tion in tlie Weimar Republic wasresponsible for Hitler’s rise to pow¬er or that Lenin's ascension topower in Russia was due to an au¬tocratic Kerensky regime?Aside from the historical Inac¬curacy of the statement, SenatorGoldwater fails to realize that thiscentralization results from the war¬fare state, not the welfare state.More than one-half of the total fed¬eral budget for 1964 went directly tothe armed forces. A large proportionof the remainder subsidizes otheraspects of the warfare state: pay¬ments to veterans, interest paymentson war debts, military assistance toallies and allocations for the CIA.In short, Goldwater promises tobalance the budget, abolish the grad¬uated income tax (calls it a “con¬fiscatory tax” in Conscience of aConservative) and increase defenseexpenditures. In addition to these in¬consistencies, Mr. Goldwater exhibitsa lack of interest in world affairs(“I turn right to tlie sports pagebut then I reluctantly thumb to thefront of the paper.”) and a basicmisunderstanding of the constitutionalsystem of government (“I do notthink any decision of tlie SupremeCourt is necessarily the law of theland”).“He looks like a modem butsmells of the museum.” GertrudeStein’s description of Ernest Hem¬ingway could certainly be applied totlie junior senator from Arizona.David Worstell• CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 16, 1964shore drive motelFACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chicago Rates. Beautiful Rooms,Free TV. Parking, Courtesy Coffee.Closest Motel to Univ. of Chicago and Museum of Science & IndustryFOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTEL54th St. ft So. Shore Dr. • Chicago 37, IllinoisJEFFERY THEATRE1052 E. 71st HY 3-3333SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18EXCLUSIVECHICAGO BEAR-DETROIT LIONFOOTBALL GAMEStraight from Wrigley FieldClosed-Circuit TVon large screenTickets on sale at box office from 10 a.m. onAll Tickets $5.00No Seats Reserved WEEKEND GUIDEiiiMiniiiutHiiiiHHiHimHimiiiiHHiiiHiiiiHiumiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiHHHiHtminiiiiiiiHmHftHmimHimuiiiiiiiusFifty-Seventh at Kenwood j|UNUSUAL FOOD 1DELIGHTFULATMOSPHERE fPOPULAR |PRICES 1BitniHnnmimwKiiinmmtiniiiiWHmHimiwwimiiiiiimittiiiiwtmmwiiiHHiwimwiNtwiHtimHtitDitiuMireDOSouth on the Lake.mHY34§0gFrank Amorosi Triocomedy — music — songsBILL CURTISsightless keyboard artistDOTTIE BEE TRIOmusical show-stoppersCONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT!•TIL 4 A.M.NO COVER — NO MINIMUMGOLD CITY INN“A Gold Mine of Good Food”10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK’S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559Try Our Convenient Take-Out Orders[(Eat More For Less)A ■3rd SMASH MONTH1SUNDAY MATINEE—4 P.M. |Show* 9 & 11 P.M., Tuei.-Sat.Sunday 4 P.M. & 9 P.M.Weekday* $2.65. Fri. & Sat. $2.95"They blow a quit of frath airInto the musical ravua business."—Lamar, NewiTheater In the CloudsALLERT0N HOTEL701 N. Michigan Ava.Reservations: SU 7-4200Colony Room Dinner offer.Show and 6 Course Dinner, I*5.50; Frl. 6 Sat. *5.95. ^[TAl-SAM-\fcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd Sf. MU 4-1062CINEMAChicogo Ave. at MichiganALBERTO S0RDI"MAFIOSO"The story of a secret mission;a new comedy-drama.STUDENTS $1.00WITH I.D. CARDSevery day but SaturdayWeekdays open 6 P.M.Sat. & Sun. open 1:30TIKI TOPICSVisit Cirals, House of Tiki for aquiet, relaxed evening conducivefor a twosome. Our candlelightsetting is ideal for an intimateconversation, spiced with a choiceof Jumbo Fried Shrimp, Barbe-qued Back Ribs, Fried Chicken,Lobster Tail, Beef Platter, etc.Try Cirals House of Tiki wherethe Hawaiian atmosphere sets thescene for an enjoyable eveningwith die lady in your life. Foran added treat after dinner takein the new show at "The LastStage.” The production is GeorgeBernard Shaw’s "You Never CanTell.” Don’t miss it. "After TheShow” back to Cirals House ofTiki for a delightful HawaiianDrink.Cirals House of Tiki1510 HYDE PARK BLVD.51 sf and HARPER AVENUELi 8-7585FOOO SERVED FROM 11 A.M.to 3:00 A.M.Kitchen closed Wednesday NOW APPEARINGCAFE ENRICOTOMA’SFLAMENCO GUITARISTTUES.-SUN.For Reservations HY 3-5300J3ECKETSpecial student rate of $1.00 ineffect during this engagementonly (except Saturday night). EXCLUSIVE CHICAGOENGAGEMENTAt Our Regular Prices,AIR CONDITIONEDLa Russo’sFINE FOODS AND COCKTAILSNow Open for Lunch 11:30-3:30Phene NOrntal 7-9390 chkIgo.uun™A R K NO 7 9 0 7 1L A K E /? P A R K A T R ° : N O 7 ■ 9 O 7 1the (A-yde park theatreStarts Friday, Oct, 16—Sophia Loren • Marcello Masfroianniin Victorio De Sica's■YESTERDAY, TODAY & TOMORROW’*Starts Friday, Oct. 30Ingrid Bergman — Anthony Quinn"THE VISIT*4andJack Lemon — Lee Remick"DAYS OF WINE & ROSES'4Starts Friday, Nov. 6Dirk Bogarde — James Robertson Justice■ DOCTOR IN DISTRESS"and Alain Resnais'"LAST YEAR AT MARIEN6AD"Yesterday, Today & TomorrowFREE WEEKEND PATRON PARKING AT 5230 SOUTH LAKE PARKSPECIAL STUDENT RATES WITH STUDENT I D. CARDSOct. 16. 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Percy anti-minimun wage HciUSGr knocks SilbertTIOn book(Continued from page one)impression that they haven’t raisedtaxes.” The sales tax alone, how¬ever, has gone up 16%.Illinois no SpartaPercy held that Kerner is at¬tempting to convey the idea thathe has run the state under a Spar¬tan-like economy. ‘'Sparta.” he re¬marked, ‘‘was never like tins.” Thestate i>ayrolls are up 34%, and publicaid is up 32%. Percy termed thepresent administration one charac¬terized by ‘‘extravagance andwaste.”As far as employment goes. Percyfeels that relief and a state payrollare “not the way to build a greatstate.” He thinks that ‘‘most peopleuTant to get off relief and want toget on their own two feet.” It isfor this reason that he ‘‘stronglyemphasizes rehabilitation.” would be to carry out the edict ofthe Supreme Court, and I respectits right to issue a judgment,” com¬mented Percy, in refernoe to thereapportionment plan. ‘‘But I don’tknow how they are going to imple¬ment it,” he added. Therefore, hewould support an amendment tohave a “little federal” arrangement,with only one liouse based on popu¬lation.PERCY'S straightforward conclu¬sion was admittedly calculated tocapture the vote. “I have nevermade a promise I ever knew of thatI have broken, and I hope I don’tstart now in public office. I wantto deal with issues, not with person¬alities. for this is the way we getat the truth.” (Continued from page 1)feels, that Illinois must spend moreon its schools. He pointed out thatthis state ranks seventh among thefifty states in terms of the amountof wealth available per school-agechild, but 47th in the amount ofwealth per child actually spent oneducation.WHILE GOVERNOR KERNERhas said that Illinois is second tonone in the area of mental healthprograms. Percy claimed that sucha statement merely showed thatKerner is a “dreamer, not a doer.”Although $150 million is available forthe program, authoritative reportsindicate that we have slipped to34th. 32nd, and 44th places in variouscategories investigated, Percy re¬lated.Percy is not in favor of a generalminimum wage law, which he called“preposterous.” He explained thatthis forces industries out of work. Particle plans series RETURNING TO TWO specifical¬ly, Hauser took issue with manyof the points made by Charles E.Silberman in his recent book. Crisisin Black and White.Silberman. an editor of Fortunemagazine and a lecturer in econom¬ics at Columbia University, devotesan entire chapter in his book toWoodlawn and TWO. It is, he says,an example of “The Revolt AgainstWelfare Colonialism.”Much of Hauser’s cirticism of thebook is disagreement with Silber-man’s acceptance of the Alinsky“line.” concerning conflict tacticsand the history of the feud overSouth Campus. slum dwellers — Negroes or whites— from poverty or degradation.”Hauser replies, “Each of us is en¬titled to our own judgment on mat¬ters of this sort, but I submit thatthis statement tells us more aboutMr. Silberman and the scholarshipwith which his book was writtenthan about Mr. Alinsky to whom hestates he is ‘particularly indebted.’Its relation to reality I leave to bedetermined by those who know Chi¬cago and the general situation vis-a-vis the Negro in the United States. Silberman’s failure to note state¬ments in the same article in whichHauser points out the difference is“especially incomprehensible,’’Hauser comments. If Silberman hadwanted, he could have found manyoccasions on which Hauser madeit clear that he does not think “timeand history will solve every thing”as Silberman says he does.Hard to implementreappointment plan“My responsibility as Governor Particle magazine announced thisweek that it is planning a series ofcampus science lectures for under¬graduates interested in many fieldsof scientific research.The series, to be known as Tea andTaurus Lectures since tea, coffee anddoughnuts will be available, will be¬gin on Wednesday, October 21, at 8pm, in the Ida Noyes West Lounge.Lawrence Bogorad of the depart¬ment of botany will speak on photo-control of plant growth at that time.Chemistry' geophysics and mathema¬tics lectures are being planned forfuture weeks. THE OTHER ELEMENT that hequestions, however, is Silberman'sclaim to “scholarship.”Hauser has written a reply toSilberman, pointing out several casesof misquotation, quoting out of con¬text, and otherwise misrepresentingHauser’s true views.When he gets time to work on afinal draft, Hauser says, he willtry to get it published in some jour¬nal. BUT THAT’S NOT ALL Hauserhas to complain about Silber-man’s scholarship).Silberman has set him up as a“straw man,” Hauser says. He isattacked, along with sociologists Os¬car Handlin of Harvard and PaulYlvisaker of the Ford Foundation,for proposing "acculturation” as a“panacea” to the Negro’s problems.“Rarely has a straw man beenso clumsily created to suit the pur¬pose of a writer,” Hauser commentsin his pap)er. Silberman nicely quot¬ed from those p>arts of an articlein which Hauser px>inted out thesimilarities between the problems ofimmigrants and those of Negroesmigrating from the South. WHAT’S MORE. Hauser says,Silberman obviously doesn't evenknow what acculturation means“One wonders what pxirpose, otherthan ‘journalistic’ in its worst sense,was served by Silberman's vitriolicattack upon me and upon the ‘ac¬culturation theory,’ ” Hauser writes.He px>int« out that Silberman “final¬ly” states that “Negroes do needhelp. When all is said and done,they cannot go it alone all the timein every circumstance.”“It is a futile and misleading ex¬ercise to present ‘acculturation’ and‘power’ as alternatives to the Negrocommunity” as Silberman does,Hauser says. “For the process ofacculturation, among other things,effects changes in the economic,social, and political order — andthus in the real power position ofthe group.”To induct Simpson at Vassari:HEKNOWS| JhsL Vyicocfi/woLfo. |CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERS Ihas served the Campus with Unexcelled Qualityand Service Since 1917 from:I 1013-17 East 61st Street Phones: Ml 3-7447 ;iHY 3-6868 ::Across from Burton-Judson Ct. PART OF SILBERMAN’S problem. Hauser says is that he has“swallowed whole” the ideas andattitudes of Alinsky and the TWOleaders. All that TWO does is finewith Silberman, Hauser commented,and he even credits TWO for thingsthey haven't done.For example, Hauser noted thatSilberman praises TWO for bring¬ing a child day-care center to theneighborhood, where in reality sucha center has not yet been built,and it has been the Woodlawn Com¬munity Services Agency, not TWO,which has been working hardestto get it. (Stringent building codeson fire prevention measures forschool buildings make renovation ofpresent Woodlawn buildings too ex¬pensive.) Alan Simpson, the British-born expert on the Puritanswho was Dean of UC’s Collegefor six years, will be inductedas president of Vassar College thisafternoon.He succeeds Sarah Gibson Blood¬ing, who gained note for her re¬strictions on Vassar girls’ morals. professor. He became an Americancitizen and associate professor in1954, and Thomas E. Donnelly pro¬fessor and dean in 1959.Bakan speaks todaySILBERMAN AND TWO, in linewitli Alinsky’s tradition of laborunion tactics, look for “victories,preferably ‘great victories’ ” intheir organization work, according toHauser. “The recounting of these‘victories’ by Silberman constitutessome of the errors of a fact” inthe treatment of TWO, he continues. TAKING PART IN the ceremonywill be George Beadle, president ofthe UC, and W. Allen Wallis, presi¬dent of the University of Rochesterand former dean of the GraduateSchool of Business here.Simpson, in his inauguration ad¬dress, will say that “We are still inthe midst of an unfinished revolutionin the status of women ... a revo¬lution which has shattered the oldimage — of the man striding for¬ward to conquer while the womantrudges behind with the baby in herantis — without replacing it witha new one. And it leaves, like allrevolutions, a trail of frustration inits wake.”Hauser’s paper quotes Silbermanas writing, “Certainly no one inrecent memory has had as greatan impact as Alinsky on the Cityof Chicago, and no one in the UnitedStates has proposed a program ofaction better calculated to rescue Following his graduation from Ox¬ford in 1933 with first-class Honorsin History and his studies for theMA degree at Merton College,Simpson was a Commonwealth Fel¬low at Harvard from 1935 to 1937.Following service in the RoyalArtillery in World War II, Simpsoncame to UC in 1946 as assistant The Hillel Fireside will presentProfessor David Bakan of the De¬partment of Psychology speaking onthe topic: Science, Mysticism amiPsychoanlysis.The discussion will take place to¬night at Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn,at 8:30 pirn and is open to the ent ireUC community,Bakan, wIk) joined the UC facultytwo years ago, is primarily con¬cerned with the history of psychology.Last year he spoke at a Hillel Fire¬side and discussed the roots ofFreudian Psychology in The Jewishmystical and messianic traditions.BAKAN’S CURRENT RESEARCH¬ES lie in the history of Americanpsychology. Working from a conceptof American psychology as embeddedin this country’s culture, he is study¬ing the influence of factors such asimigration, industrialization, urbaningaction, and religious history in fash¬ioning the interests ol American psy¬chologists.In tonight’s talk, Bakan will con¬tinue his exploration of this subject. with a discussion of the sdmiliaritie.sand differences between psychoanalysis and the scientific and religiousenterprises.9 VOLT TRANSISTOR BATTERIES I9e10% discouni io students with ID cardsSales and Serviceon all hi-fi equip¬ment, foreign anddomestic.TAPE RECORDERSPhonographs - AmplifiersPhono Needles and CartridgesTubes - Batteries24 hr. Service Calls’ta? *300Telefunken & Zenith —AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORYesf. 192?1300 E. 53rdIn the 53rd-Kimbark Plaza Ml 3-9111 MR. PIZZAS9 ecv WE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTSHY 3-8282FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENAlso Ch. Broiled HamburgersPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 6 PartySausage 2.00 3.06 4.00 5.00Mushroom 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Olive 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vi and Vi 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pixzo 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacon 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pina 2.50(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers) 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00 RIBEYE STEAKSANDWICHBox of Broasted Chicken10. 16, 20 PiecesSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCIOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGE,MEAT BALL1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — Fri. to 3:00 a.Sat. to 3:00 a.m. — Open 2 p.m. Sundays Now FeaturingST. LOUISSPARE RIBSo rU~*• CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 16, 1964■■■■I