Vol. 70, No. 14 The University of Chicago Friday, November 20, 1964Refers proposal to committee Bosses shakeup at Argonneby Howard FishmanArgonne National Laboratory, the atomic energy re¬search center closely associated with UC since its establish¬ment in 1946, is the target of a major reorganization thatwould give an association of Midwest universities a muchstronger voice in the management *of the lab. oonxration of Midwestern universi-The US Atomic Energy Commis- delegated the power tosion (AEC) has already approved formulate, approve, and reviewin principle the plans drawn up by the laboratory,s program. No indica-an ad hoc committee of representa- ^lon *s §’vei1 as 1° ^ow such a bal-tives from Associated Midwest Uni- anoe °1 functions can be achieved.SG nixes Communication BoardThe Student Government Assembly put itself on record at its Tuesday night meet¬ing as favoring the establishment of a communications board for WUCB to insure itscompliance with FCC regulations, but against any such board for the Maroon or Cap and versities (AMU), Midwestern Uni-versities Research Association(MURA), Argonne National Labora¬tory, and UC. UC is a member ofboth AMU and MURA.Three-part rule The reasons for the proposed con¬tract change are not immediatelyapparent. The prepared statementsof the various committee membersare careful to emphasize that UChas been handling Argonne’s man¬agement to their satisfaction. Thedown.They concludedthat such a boardwould serve nouseful purpose andthat no need hasbeen demon¬strated for itsestablishment.This movecame after a pro¬posal setting up aSG board with veryPresident minima! powersGroves over all threecampus mediawas turned down by Dean of Stu¬dents. Warner A. Wick. In I960, thethen Dean of Students, John Netiher-ton. was instrumental in defeating a-unilar FM license request byWUCB.BKKNIE GROFMAN. StudentGovernment vice president, assertedthat the compromise proposal prob¬ably went as far as it could withoutthere arising the possibility ot inter¬ference with the independence at theMaroon and Cap and Gown, and thatgranting die board any additional|X>wers might lie perhaps dangerous.The proposed rejected by the Deanof Students as insufficient would haveset up a communications board WUCB studio: soon to be FM ?Due to the Thanksgivingholiday, the deadlines fornext Friday's MAROON oreas follows: advertising,Tuesday by 2 pm; copy,Wednesday by 2 pm. which, in addition to insuring WUCBcompliance with FCC regulations,would have had the power to “hearcomplaints of libel anti of misrepre¬sentation of any individual if thatindividual was denied publicationspace or air tame by the oommmund-oations media involved.Rejection MondayThe rejection by Wick came ait ameeting he held Monday afternoonwith Gene Groves, SG President.Wick felt that the proposal would sorestrict the scope ot the board as torender it meaningless.The main concern of SG in pro¬posing the Communications Boardhas been to make it possible forWUCB to obtain an FM license, ac¬cording to Grotman. The establish¬ ment of a Communication Board forthe radio station was intended tomake it more likely that the Uni¬versity Board of Trustees, who le¬gally would have to hold any stationlicense, would feel that there was aresponsible agency which would in¬sure compliance with FCC regula¬tions.Such supervision would be to as¬sure compliance with the FCC code,which is mainly concerned withtechnical aspects such as wattage,how the engineer is hired, etc.,Grotman said. In addition, the sta¬tion would fall under the equal timeprovision for candidates for publicoffice.The Board of Trustees is not in(Continued on page seven)B & G fells removal methodsSnow not a joy to everyoneYesterday’s snowfall mayhave been nothing but a re¬minder that winter’s on itsway to most people, but toRichard H. Wade, UC groundssuiiervLsor, it was an onion that hardwork is on its way.“Snow removal is a necessaryevil,” Wade said. “It’s a waste oftime, men and money, but it’s some-thing that hits to be done."Wade said that the Building andGrounds Department has all itsequipment in readiness for the win¬ter. ‘“Our basic equipment includessnowblowers and tractors withbrushes and plows," he said.The sandstone campus walks," Wade said, get different treatmentthan tiie concrete walks and drive¬ways. “We use a snowblower on thesandstone or even ignore it whensnow is light, but the concrete walksand drives usually require a tractor,especially when the snow occurs inthe daytime and is packed down bystudents going to class," he related.In general, the grounds crew canclean up a moderate snow in a day,said Wade. He felt, however, thatthe students were an important fac¬tor in slowing down the whole pro¬cess. “The students," Wade said,“often just won’t get out of theway of the plow. This makes theman driving the plow stop and waitfor the walk to clear of students.Buildings and Grounds* secret weapon This can become a real problem,especially between classes."Few complaintsWADE SAID THAT there havebeen few complaints about the snowremoval process. He did, however,remember one incident.“It was before I became super¬visor and it involved one of the pro¬fessors here. It seems it was aftera heavy snow and one of the menwas driving a tractor with a brushattachment. The teacher was com¬ing down the walk toward the tractorand the snow from the brush par¬tially blinded the driver. The teach¬er stepped back but he must nothave stepped back far enough. Thesnow from the brush almost com¬pletely covered him. To make mat¬ters worse, the men on the tractorstarted to laugh, which was a mis¬take. The teacher filed a complaint.I don’t remember if they took anyreal action, though," Wade said.Turning to some of tlie compli¬cating factors that can make snowremoval more difficult, Wade saidthat “the weather during the snow¬fall is important and so is the time.The weather will determine whetherthe snow is wet or dry. If it’s warmand the snow is wet, it becomesmuch more difficult to handle."“Last year was an easy year forthe most part, ’ ’ he feels. “The snowwas light and for the most partdry, and if it had only snowed moreat night, our work would have beenvery easy. The trouble was that itsnowed almost entirely during theday and often it was packed downby people’s feet before we hand achance to get out the equipment andstart work on it." The new plan would in essenceestablish a tripartite contract, thethree parties being the Atomic En¬ergy Commission, UC and a non¬profit corporation to be organizedby a group of midwestern universi¬ties. It is intended that the reorgani¬zation promote an increased partici¬pation of midwestern academic in¬stitutions^ in the work of Argonne.The proposed program comes as apossible answer to complaints that,the federal government has not beenproviding adequate funds for high-energy physics in the Midwest re¬gion.IN A MEETING last January,Argonne’s policy advisory boardrecommended to UC PresidentGeorge W. Beadle that UC cooperatein the establishment of a high-levelcommittee consisting of three repre¬sentatives from MURA, two repre¬sentatives from AMU, one represen¬tative from UC, and one represen¬tative from Argonne. UC was repre¬sented by its vice-president, WarrenJohnson. Albert V. Crewe, directorof Argonne since 1961, also servedon the seven-man committee. Crewe,in addition to his responsibilities atArgonne, is an associate professorof physics ait UC.According to a report of the com¬mittee issued in October, delibera¬tions fell into two major categories.These two areas of concern werethe strengthening of laboratory facili¬ties and the organization and man¬agement at Argonne.The committee proposed threepossible improvemets in laboratoryfacilities that would establish Ar¬gonne as a “first-class center of highenergy research." These included anexpansion of the experimental areaaround the Zero-Grade Synchrotron(ZGS) atom smasher; the construc¬tion of a very large liquid hydrogenbubble chamber; and the replace¬ment of the 50 million electron voltlinear accelerator that now operateswith the ZGS by a new proton in¬jector capable ot boosting the syn¬chrotrons intensity to four or fivetimes its present level.UC remains operatorWHILE THE COMMITTEEdrafted six recommendations forthe formation of a three-way agree¬ment, it remains unclear as to whatpowers are to be delegated to eachtripartite member. The report sti¬pulates only that, UC’s function willbe to operate Argonne NationalLaboratory “in a manner respon¬sive to the policies approved by thenew corporation." The non-profit stated principle, however, is to per¬mit the regional universities to par¬ticipate more fully in AEC-supportedresearch.IN HIS PUBLISHED statement,Beadle described the new plan as“unique and creative." He said thatthe tripartite contract would stimu¬late continued growth of Argonne’sficilities, and would enable the uni¬versities of the Midwest to developtheir own programs more efficiently.Started with atom labThe history of Argonne dates backto the beginnings of organized atomicresearch in the United States. Theimmediate forerunner of the lab wasthe UC Metallurgical Laboratorywhere, on December 2. 1942, scien¬tists achieved the first controllednuclear chain reaction.With die establishment of the USAtomic Energy Commission in 1946,the wartime research center becamea permanent national laboratory.Between 1946 and 1953. all laboratoryfacilities were moved to the presentsite in Argonne. Illinois, 27 milesSouthwest of Chicago.ARGONNE IS ONE of the nation'smost important research establish¬ments, representing a capital in¬vestment from the government ofmore than $35 million. It employsa staff of 5,200 at its main facilitiesat Argonne and testing station nearIdaho Falls, Idaho.Despite its military function dur¬ing the war. the laboratory devotesnearly its entire program to thepeacetime applications of atomic en¬ergy. The work is divided aboutequally between basic research inthe biological and physical sciences,and applied programs conoerned pri¬marily with reactor development.Famous firstsDuring the present partnership be¬tween UC and the Atomic EnergyCommission, Argonne has made along list of contributions to the sci¬entific community. These includesuch achievements as the first suc¬cessful breeder reactor, the first pro¬duction of electrical power fromatomic energy, and die first reactorusing heavy water- as moderator andcoolant.Argonne has pioneered in thepreparation ot fluorine and com¬pounds of oxygen and the noblegases. Argonne's ZGS produces thehighest beam intensify of theworld’s major atom smashers.One of the devices at ArgonneEDITORIALSG’s action sensible,but more work neededFreedom Fast actions'#^?| SflB ft pjHj jlgpflifSIf '** |M| | )' | ,TO THE F.DITOR:'if MMb p , , - Y l“»SSfw^T-wis extremely ^ d-smaved tlut y, »donate a mere 50c1 perjstudent for the349 “ studenis >. who, ha\ e vagreed' to go without tLnner on the19th of November. t \ 1 ‘~ Hast year, even v. ithout the f nan-pal see ix tv offered by J>l> year’sboard contract. RjH & C was ableto- donate." SI 60 per .studenJ/Natural-.-lyjtfiese"students,signed the pledge' ^with theruhcJerstandmg'that'asj.mudvtv^ „ | ^ r , ,” 'i. h'c T vv\ t-- o':. • • 1 . - ' '*. - v •:m V'.V.l XT i. // happenasked for another'portion• V 1 ■ ■-ly tl7o,/whCreW/if/RH & Chadtpii'W^^howd.good grace m the, ■ •. ' / ,, //collected. TTls" is a„-substantial dif- placement portion.^,I was, a, bi( ah-■■■>■. " i ■sissppij coupled with ’he' fact'" that/1, ^received ' a second replacementR H &C no longer has. to fsustain/ser>angj,,and the’matter w.is men-1 - V'.without meal contracts makes kh s supervisor on duty. ’ frm- MilEither the cafeteria spends only omelet contained eggshell! yVk ii ' ’ .....forrwhich“studenh, pay approximate- complished underfeircu stances,whichb’ 85'; or they are making an die- assure some degree of randomnessg.t. nia;e pro!.; of SI.35 on eachpledge signed., I would certainly ap- ^ ~ m . . - j ,p;> this" ■ One might be tempted to string out the laudatory/;i<]-egg- jectives for Student Government’s action in referring, h ,oxuig Communications Board portion of the Finance Commjtteelo’he proposal to an executive sub-committee for redrafting/but\-only, one, we feel,.is appropriate and accurate: sensible/rn^t; y' -' SC’s realization that a publications clause in the Com¬munications' Board resolution would be both unnecessary’SER and dangerous is nothing, more or less than this. Theydui^t*IC ES .. seen the light, for which we are thankful, and the ,unam-g^^mous vote with‘which they approved the referral to ‘com¬mittee is all the more reassuring. ** '• , - ’*■p f «% >. ju " ^Problems still remain, however! and they are not. toHallsmbe .minimized.-nJust-because SC has squelched a publicationsclause for the time being does not mean that such; a<claiisVwill not bej forced back into the complete proposal byxtfieknowledge administration or by the board of trustees. The question nowdown to whether the administration,— and ultimatelywill accept a communicationsiboard proposalwhich, would supervise only WUCB, The indications are Thai:, ,i v. v i ,jl. r , tliev will not.shells. 1- could well U‘ th - ■ ;server was changed/,-; y, >, ^ ” Although no one really knows,/since prevailing opinion<-[-in t .. y from a laxly . as amorphous a as .the?.board oljust uant rxpl.tin h.w could trustees is hard to determine, it is nevertheless probablehappen to one person three^times, that the trustees would want a” blanket communicationshut I am reriu.nlv n«• . i • board - one that would control c\ erv student, organizationl>e is mistaken.' v ^ y f/jf and not just one — in order to minimize bother for ’thVm-|“We have spoken to the cook and selves. In this way, it is not as if the ^Communications Itqai <1,hoix> tha’ til..- w.il.noi liapjvn ag,. • proposal must meet the requirements of ..the.Federal ('ommiinications..'....Commission for an FM license for UTrBsfflpt?f II l_ * rather that it must meet the requirements of the board <15 TOHOV^SmIOS trustee’s. Furthermore, it looks as iJ' \\'l ( It is going t«caught in the middle, which i> 'grettalde in view os ,. ,■ i ■ ■■/• . ■ - ■ . . ■ availaliu .e • ^ ■ ■. 'Emissions officer, admintsb'^ion matcly *300 plus tuition and1 two of Tile solution, obv iously,' is to convince the trustees to. ■ • ■ ■ • < ■ ' '.idi ■ ' , ‘ ■j ' ://'Vi',,pul 'I - ■. , , • , • . ’ ' 1 ' i/ bo made to realized i-v”" " : ‘| wm fe . ' •" dei-.smmretlo,’/ , , prevailing campus "pinion and tftfil it would be botn t<»ol:-.t’.d ini list to act nmt i ai .• / ' : :; y ■: ■' y . ,V ■o’ ■ A> P' ne\l -top. tliei n S(. to in. way set this across to the tnmtoo-. pm haps bv a lt;« pl.m;‘lX t'-JJigT a Mi;g adminmt i. , > ., . : 1 ' 'mii * > : ime protecting th< of the Maroon and of Capoc-w-.iv. " 1 ' and <. >\v n. I j ey/havecertainly cloiie:>o i»\ t heir ;u i i n I;. 1 ■,'!‘! " ' ■ ■. ■ : • 1, i n .111 <i< 11 ve 1 orm is imi w ea lh (1 f< ir. ,Ftr<r Yshein fnn vminp7 an ^ n nd m matu-rs <>egg v sneii j 100 young . ;i iu!_ , ftvl iVlllin th;il ,ht.o.urit.uilv YO THE EDITOR: ludl bronkin- wiil i-cmove Ins 14 * - % % ' I ygloves - ; . . in re'-pon.-e to a r■>. Rexvntly 1 h<»d (x\-a.--ion to -jx'j'd ‘-of job s«\-vir ‘' $1.35 for a lunch in the dinng hall ^ ,:oI BurtavJudson Courts. ^ . Sonic .noos-ii'T of'■consiiled in purl of eBfi bo you.ffi. ■,,r!U'd- When thehiceompanying dishes were - - ROLIAND K HAconsiderwta-I • felt it-to be‘.a g<xxf / ' „/ a PHYSICAL SC IF :v alue. y ■ *,' y/, si-» ^ 1 y? % ^ / l T y H.t 1, „ *. - 1 ' ** n H i * * ’ <fl " St *■{%. i*- ¥- ~ - * -Lylas Kay respondsf§$sl||| yr-Lylas Kay! head of Residenceand Qxnimons ( RU&C),>, commentedon Mr. Hauser's letter as follows:’"a '/“No one else to ‘ our’complained abexit egg shells.. Neither boil;t the fixxi server nor the supervisor tile trustees.knew that Mr/Hauser hail returnedhis p!ate three times because of eggforeign car hospital & clinic, inc.w .authorized »ale< and tervue ! ” 'mg. morns, aiistm healev, triumph &. jaguarand He. fix all other european iar», tooorona// :AWARDS \RK VlX> u •the Institute oL " English Speakjig\. ... s . w 54241 South Kim bark Midway 3-3113FRANKLIN FOOD STOREOkfl M M I OOI )SI VI* \M SI Ol U SPI ( I M nCHINAWARE GIFT ITEMS1309 E. 53rd STREET ;y HY 3-5057 . *HYDE PARK SHOE REBUILDERSServinq Hyde Park for 40 Year*Professional Oyeinq ,Colors MafchedRefinisHinq of. Shoes ond.Handbaqs1451 E. 57th HY 3-1247 PORTRAITS1312 E. 53rd St684-7424;. PassportPhotos Purveyors of Fine Wine. Liquor & Beersince 1933WINE CELLAR FOR GREATER SELECTIONFAMOUS GILL'S BEERDISCOUNT VOLUME SPECIAL j!V>GAL. - GAL. BARRELS— Gallon 14 bbl. .Ah S435 S095^ T -rrr-serving hyde park for over 30 yearsWITH THE VERY JEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 li<vvn \i. sti m;\T niscoiMh:\bi.sSNAKKW mmRIN(;SAPPLIANCKSLAYAWAYDIAMONDDIAMONDS\\ m HESJI W ELRY I' >1 !' • fkDeliveredSTAYS COL®s/r WITHOUTICE IS HOURS;: 2 DRIVE-IN WINDOWS,Discount prices on all popular, brand whiskyCt II Mb invjo-- vi v.Npol |Ns : ALL BEER —# NO FOAMWON’T GO FLAT'Books to\k Mu>ic MagazinesDIAMOND PHILLIPS qlEWELRTFOR Wholesale DistributorsJUNE JUNESERVING COLLEGE STUDENTS AT WHOLESALE PRICES FOR THE PAST 30 TEARS/'><>/ Ol I ON M l III\MOM)S1 M/\G) Mh VI \\|> VU IIIIIV, KING/'Watch<and Jewelry Repolrinq. Rm.1301, 47 E. Madison St., Chicoqo—DE 2-6S08; For; Further Information Call Harris Jeffe — Ext. 3269 or 684-0427 DISi'01 M ON FOI K Rff ORPS(.11.1 .v COKEnwood 6-650011:30 to 6. 7:30 to 10 Man -FrL ii 1238 East 47th Sf^ ^ *30.. to 6, Soturday - y '' COLD'MtmcMStrodtbeck runs school tutors local mothersby Barry WeitiReaders of the Havighurst report on Chicago schoolsand the problems of how to deal with deprived slum childrenf,ity be interested in the work of a UC professor and hisnursery school, and a group tutoring slum mothers.Fred L. Strodtbeck, associate pro- —schooLs are expected to modify theirtraditional methods. But is it self-evident that we know what modifica¬tions to make?”Strodtbeck seems to feel that thesemodifications cannot be determineduntil one is more familiar with thehome situation. The way a mothertreats her child will tremendouslyaffect his behavior and receptivenessto learning.FOR EXAMPLE, IF an ADC childmakes noise, his mother typicallytells him: “Shut up.” This admoni¬tion would ‘‘not necessarily lead thechild to conclude that he wasn’tloved,” Strodtbeck’s report states.“The child might reason that themother was feeling bad. However, hecould hardly conclude that theremight be some situation in which hecould legitimately make noise. Hewould more than likely conclude thatthere were some persons with whomhe might get away with it.’’On the other hand a middle classmother would quite often say some¬thing like “Johnny dear, motherwould prefer that you not make thatnoise just now.” This second versionmaeks it clear that “the motherregarded Johnny as a good person,that she wanted him to stop butrecognized that he might not ifmaking noise were really importantto him, and that making loud noisesmight be allowable at some othertime than the present,” Strodtbeckcontends.Different commands,different behaviorThese two examples make it quiteobvious that these two children willbehave quite differently if a teacherwould give them a command. Thus,fes.><>r of education, is trying to findflrim factors cause the seeminglyendless cycle of ignorance and pover¬ty-Hu? problem is illustrated in thesetig1'ares:• Two-thirds of aH fiamiiies in asample of 5,398 Aid to De|>endentChildren (ADC) cases earned lessht*«i $60 per month;• 47 per cent of ADC childrenwere either educationally regardedir >ut of school between the ages ofII ind 17;• And only 25 per cent had com¬pleted high school by the age of 18.These are the statistics reported& a recent national sociological■jUidy, statistics which reflect thesituation existing in the South Sideof Chicago and the Woodlawn com¬munity as well.MODI’BECK FEELS (hat unlessa better understanding of the problemcan be reached, most attempts todo anything about it will accomplishvery little. In his report, "The HiddenCurriculum in the Middle ClassHome,” he writes; “Given the mul¬tiple handicaps of being fatherless,por. and Negro, it scarcely seemsnecessary to call in a social scientistto see precisely why dependency re-suTs. Yet direct attacks on housingmi supplementation of low incomehave not improved the situation.”What can the schools do?Mmv people of course hope thatsomething can be done through theschools, yet Strodtbeck goes on tosay: “The schools have admittedlydone [joorly with the population inquestion, so why is it believed hatthey will be able to launch a morefundamental attack uf»n heir prob¬lem* The current answer is that theduring the Thanksgiving holidaysplan to visit our comprehensiveUNIVERSITY SHOPYou’ll find a wide choice of suits, tweedsport jackets, topcoats and warm outer-*wear in sizes 35 to 42...all with our dis-*tinctive styling and taste. Also furnish*ings, skiwear and other items.Our 3-piece Suits, $75 to $85Tweed Sport Jackets, $ 5 5Topcoats, $35 * Polo Coats, from $ 100Tropical Worsted Tuxedos, $80Outerwear, from $32.50Prices slightly higher West of the Rockies,CSTABUSHCD ltuBjfims irPoya fVirnishings, ^$hor*74 E. MADISON, NR. MICHICAN AVE.,CHICAGO, ILL. 60602NEW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • LOS ANCELES • SAN FRANCISCO the language a child is exposed to inthe home will not only have a greateffect on the ease with which he canacquire academic skills such as read¬ing, but it will also have a greateffect on his attitude towards learn¬ing in general.HOWEVER. IT IS MORE thanlanguage which affects the child'sattitude towards learning; it is thestrictness of the mother as well.“The ADC mother’s training tech¬nique involves more physical punish¬ment and little use of praise, posi¬tive models and reasoning.”Strodtbeck goes on to say that “amiddle class mother would be sur¬prised by the amount of the NegroADC mother’s energies which go intoadmonishing the child to ‘be good’instead of rewarding and punishingfor acts freely entered into. In thecontext of an overcrowded livingspace, ‘being good’ means beingphysically inactive, verbally nonpar-ticipative and non-observant.”It is not very difficult, then, toimagine the difference in curiosity,and receptivity between a middleclass child and one whose mother ison ADC.Study of special schoolStrodtbeck's study of the problemis being continued through the opera¬tion of a nursery school for pre-schoolage ADC children under his guid¬ance. About a dozen children partici¬pate in the nursery school, whichmeets at 5555 Ellis and runs for ses¬sions lasting 13 weeks.CAREFUL STUDIES of previousgroups of children have been made,and noticeable improvements on IQtests have been observed as a resultof these sessions.However, the main measure ofsuccess is determined by whether ornot there has been improvement inthe way the child behaves in beingpart of a group. Though the studyhas not yet been completed and noreal definite conclusions have as yetbeen reached, Abel Torro, the in¬structor for the children, stated thatthere have been many favorablereports about the nursery school chil¬dren from kindergarten teachers.Strodtbeck’s studies have also beensupplemented through numerous in¬terviews with ADC mothers. Theseinterviews, probably better than any¬thing else, make one aware of whatit means to be on ADC.ADC mothers talkFor example, a woman describesthe conditions under which her hus¬band left her. “He was coming home,and left and walked off, steady eat¬ing that Polish (sausage), and Iasked him wasn't he ashamed ofhimself with the kids at home thathadn’t nothing to eat, and that man,lie just walked off, and said he wascoming home and that’s the last Isaw of him.”Another woman describes why she is on ADC rattier than working, “Ilike to work, but I want to wait untilthe young ones is going to school,because another reason why is thatI don’t have no kind of trade, andno high school diploma, and if I gota job it would probably be in afactory. So I wouldn’t make but $1.25per hour maximum. That would bejust $42. Then I have to pay a baby¬sitter, and have carfare, and thenby working in the daytime, you eatmore, and different foods. ... Iwouldn’t be making enough moneyto pay a babysitter, and I wouldn’tbe gaining but maybe $10 or $15 alterexpenses for working,”'Whupping don't mean nothing'ANOTHER EXAMPLE illustratesthe difficulty the ADC mother has inraising her child, “I ’member onetime, I whipped Albert, and. uh,when he stayed up about eleveno’clock, I was out looking for him.And, uh, he told me that he wasgoing to leave home. Says, he wasgoing to stay with his daddy.”(laughs)“I say, ‘Why you do this to, me?I worry about you, ain’t know’ whereyou were,’ I says. ‘Don’t you dothat no more.’ And, ugh, so he says,to us, ‘I was out there playing.’ Isays, ‘Aw, you wern’t out there play¬ing.’ I say, ‘Whupping don’t do youno good, do it?’ I—he says, ‘No.’ I says, ‘You going to do what youwant to do anyway.’ He says, ‘Yeah.’See. And, ugh, I told him, see. Says.‘Yeah, I want to do what I want dodo anyhow.’ See. Whupping don’tmean nothing.”Group tutorsADC mothersThough the main purpose of thenursery is primarily for research,there is a group on campus, TheTutoring Project for Mothers, whichis attempting to do something imme¬diate about the ADC home environ¬ment.This group, however, worksthrough the mothers rather than di¬rectly through the children. They aretrying to teach illiterate ADC mothersin the Woodlawn area how to read,and hope that as a result of theirefforts, the mother will be able tohelp her child during his early schoolyears and give him encouragement.Instruction takes place on Thurs¬day mornings between 9:30 and 11:30am at Christ Episcopal Church at65th and Woodlawn. There is a babysitting service for the mothers andoften instructors who also have chil¬dren bring them along and havethem play together with the ADCchildren.ANYONE INTERESTED in beingan instructor should contact Mrs.Gertrude Poreus, FA 4-7241,Six on faculty discusshigh school participationSix members of the UC faculty, along with buildingsprincipals from district 14 (Hyde Park, Kenwood, Wood¬lawn, and part of South Shore) and other Chicago schooldistrict superintendents, are currently participating indiscussions concerning the strength- —ening of relationships between the (particularly Hyde Park Hi^i)public schools and the UC faculty. through classroom lectures and dis-The specific objectives of the dis- cussi°os-cuss-ions are to assist in the con- Faculty participantstinuing improvement of instruction itr UC FACULTY members on thepublic schools, as well as to facilitate discussion group include Ronaldopportunities for research and ex- Campbell, dean of the graduateperimentabwn in the schools by UC school of education; Willard Con-facuky. greve, principal of the lab school;Four of the group’s proposals are Robert Hess, chairman of the oom-expected to be implemented in the mittee on human development; Mor-near future. They are 1) the place- ris Janowitz, professor of sociolo.-ment of Masters of Arts in Teaching and chairman of the center for socidegree candidates in urban schools organiaztion studies; Dan Lortae cfor observation and actual teaching the Midwest Administration Center;experience; 2) the transportation of and Jack Meltzer, director of thedistrict 14 high school students to center for urban studies.UC to attend musical events and to Campbell and Curtis Melnick,see laboratories and exhibits; 3) the superintendent of the district 14establishment of a seminar for Chi- schools, are chairmen of the group,cago public school principals, sched- Further information on the disous-uled tentatively for early in 1965; and sions or the “exchange” program4) the establishment of a program may be gotten from Maryl Levinewhich would allow UC faculty to con- (extension 3137) or Bruce MoPher-tribube directly to the high schools son (extension 3837),THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATRE-71 HERTS' WORKSHOP SERIEStonight at 8:30NOV. 20, 21, 22 27, 28, 2957 th & University $1.50 Students: $1.00 - /. /OL*/jyUBU ROITickeh on sale at Reynolds Club, at the dooi, oi by mailNov. 20. 19*4 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Vr Wick speaks on Leri reportLevi report discussion needs clarifyingI have delayed responding to yourinvitation to comment on the Levireport until the discussion had hadtime to develop. It is now evidentthat two main kinds of misconcep¬tions are pretty widespread. Al¬though Mr. Levi himself dealt withthem at the meeting arranged byGNOSIS on Sunday, November 8. thenumber present was not large andthe Maroon’s report of his remarkswas very’ brief. I should like, there¬fore, to deal first with the miscon¬ceptions that have arisen from read¬ing into the report what isn’t there,and second, to ventilate those thatresult from overlooking what thereport does say, as well as miscon¬ceptions of the way the Universitymakes and implements its education¬al policies.There seems to be a notion, asprevalent as it is ill-founded, that theproposal to give statutory powers tothe four “sections or colleges,” aswell as to a fifth which wouldsupervise experimental programs un¬der the heading of “General Stud¬ies,” is somehow intended to segre¬gate students bv academic areas toa greater degree than they are now.This myth is a prominent feature ofAbe Aamidar’s ill-informed and ill-tempered letter to the Maroon onOctober 23 (which also jumped atseveral groundless conclusions). Itis also present in the Gadfly articlesigned by “Longinus,” who saw thispresumed aim intensified by resi¬dential segregation as well. It iseven present in the Maroon editorialof October 23, which spoke of “theclause that would have students ad¬mitted to one area College instead ofto the College at large.” There isno clause, either stated or implied,in Mr. Levi’s document; and al¬though last Tuesday’s Maroon articleaccurately reported Mr. Levi’s assur¬ance that he had no segregationistidea in mind, I should like to em¬phasize the point once more.EVERYTHING THAT MR. Levi'sreport says about the difficulty of“transfer” from one “section orcollege” is true right now: a studentwho decides in his second or third Warner A. Wickwithout clear ideas of their ultimateacademic aims, and we assume thatthey will continue to do so. At leasthalf of our graduates change theirintended “majors” at least once, andany organization of the College notonly must allow for this fact of lifebut should help a student explorepossibilities before finding his properniche. Moreover, the College hasbeen distinctive for its success ingiving all its students an understand¬ing of the inter-relations of the vari¬ous intellectual disciplines.Mir. Levi is well aware of this, and wishes to reinforce such understand¬ing. As he says, “In a communitywhere everyone is on his way tobecoming a specialist, including farexample a specialist in the new pro¬fession of Business, the need tounderstand the inter-relationshipsamong fields of knowledge and toappreciate the competition amongand the limitations upon the disci¬plines is all the more important, andin part so that one’s own disciplinemay be understood.”It may help to clarify some of theother common misunderstandings bypointing out that Mr. Levi’s approachto our problem is “constitutional ”rather than “utopian.” The utopianapproach to these matters is wellexemplified by Plato’s Republic andby the ideologues of the FrenchRevolution. They provided a “blue¬print” of what they wished toachieve, but had little to say aboutthe institutional mechanisms forrealizing their aims. The “constitu¬tional” approach is illustrated by thefarmers of the United States Consti¬tution and by that famous commen¬tary upon it, the Federalist Papers.The constitutionalist typically doesnot emphasize his particular visionof the happiness which is to be pur¬sued (or of the Ideal Curriculum)but focuses his attention upon themechanisms of deliberation Mid action whereby all persons con¬cerned may pursue their heart’sdesire.IF I MAY NOW' apply this distinc¬tion, it seems to me that manysudents have suspected that Mr. Levi(and perhaps others in the admin¬istration) have in mind some covertutopia, already decided upon, forwhich Mr. Levi’s constitutional pro¬posals prepare the way. If Mr. Levaor anyone else thinks he can bringabout his private utopia in such away, he is mistaken; and studentswho think some such aim must liein the background simply fail tounderstand how a University likeours makes its decisions.Whatever is done must be workedout by many members of the faculty,in the light of circumstances at thetime. If was so even in the ways ofMr. Hutchins, now enshrined inmythology: the “Hutchins College”did not spring full-blown from hisclassic brow. It evolved over a num¬ber of years, the work of manypeople who were in a position todeliberate together and make effec¬tive decisions whose outcome no onecould foresee.The essential point is that the Col¬lege faculty as if is presently organ¬ized does not function well eitheras a deliberative body or as anagency with power to carry out academic policy. It is too diffuse-and perhaps more important Millneither it nor its subdivisions havethe statutory power to plan and con¬trol the entire span of a student’sprogram from his first year onwardto his Bachelor’s degree. Becausethere tire no effective centers «fdeliberation or of education, nothingis happening. If important things areto happen they must first be madepossib|e.There is, therefore, an important.sense in which the Maroon editorialof October 23 is right in saying thatthe “Levi Report is incomplete asif stands at present.” It can iecompleted only by the faculty throughits deliberations and subsequent ac¬tions. If the faculty deliberates fool¬ishly and acts half-heartedly, thingscould be very bad. But if the faculv isunable to deliberate about the pres¬ent-day problems of the College andis unable to act decisively, things willbe much worse.IF THE COLLEGE faculty is tomeet its corporate responsibilities, itmust possess the agencies and thepowers necessary for its work. It isthese that Mr. Levi’s recommenda¬tions are designed to provide.Warner A. WickDean of StudentsMAROON election analysisUS Campuses apathetic toward LBJby Bruce FreedAmerica’s quadrennialplunge into Alice in Wonder¬land has finally concluded andthe leading characters, LBJand BMG,- as well as the partici¬pants, are readjusting to their pre¬campaign daily routines.The political pundits’ forecasts ofGoldwater’s and the GOP’s massivedefeat have been vindicated, and onlytime will bear out their predictionson the future of the RepublicanParty.But in the midst of all the copyyear that he would like to specialize turned out, few columnists and eom-in the sciences is faced with con¬siderable “loss of time” if he hasfailed to fake mathematics at leastthrough calculus or has neglected ele¬mentary chemistry, which in turnpresupposes high school physics. OnIhe other hand, a student decidinglate to take up some of the areas inthe humanities is in the same fix ifhe has not had the foresight to equip mentators considered the presiden¬tial campaign and the college cam¬puses.Feeling of disgustTHE GENERAL APATHY thatpervaded student bodies during thecampaign has only been accentuatedby the feeling of disgust expressedby those who followed the candi-himself with foreign languages, not dates’ verbiage,only in his first two yeans of college Hardly a positive reinark is heardbut even in high school. about LBJ, Barry Goldwater, orMany students arrive in college Bill Miller. The most common criti¬ cisms of the President are of hiscominess and platitudes; ot Gold-water, that he is either a fool or themost naively honest man running forthe White House since Henry Wallacein 1948; and of Bill Miller: no oneknew of him before San Franciscoand when they saw him in the cam¬paign, they wished they had neverheard of him.Only ebullient Humphrey, LBJ'snew idea man, could get an en¬thusiastic campus turnout during thecampaign and can get students ex¬cited about him now.The change from the campus en¬thusiasm for JFK in 1960 to campusapathy for LBJ four years later isrooted in the personalities of thetwo men as well as in their admin¬istrations.While Kennedy generated collegi¬ate enthusiasm because of hi.s vitali¬ty and appeal to youth and idealism,Johnson purposely avoided that im¬age.Great Society hollowJOHNSON’S AIM OF highlightingevey thing his opponent was not has the excitement President Kennedydid.Perhaps, if the YDs and YRs be¬gan to explore seriously in this post-election period the issues facingtheir parties and the country, smallinroads could begin to be made incampus apathy.New Ford $$ to UCbe seen. But until then, most cam¬puses will view LB^ as a craftier,more intelligent Eisenhower.Problems compoundedCampus apathy, heightened by thecampaign, hits hardest the YoungS9 ecvoW MR. PIZZAWE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTSHY 3-8282 .FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKEN °'<C,OAAlso Ch. Broiled HamburgersPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For * PartySausage 2.00 3.00 4 00 5.00Mushroom 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anthovie 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.S0 3.50 4.50Vi ond Va 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients .50 1 00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pina 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 BLYD.Open 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.nt. — Fri. to 3:00 a.m.Sat. to 3:00 a.m. —• Open 2 p.m. Sundays Now FeaturingST. LOUISSPARE RIBS tional party and the thorough dLscrediting of their n>enlar. Gold-water. And the YDs suffer from theproblem that LBJ does not generate of Education.JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAPUNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK/"a strong bank"1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C.CHICAGO MAROON « Nov. 20, 1964 left college students cold, his vi¬sions of the Great Society had ahollow ring, according to some, whileothers quipped that his fatherly ap¬pearance and approach could neverappeal to them.Ihe Kennedy campaign, offeringthe American electorate a new, be¬ginning after eight years of Eisen¬hower, attracted .students lookingfor intellectual ferment and crea¬tivity in Washington. But with John¬son’s administration already having UC has been awarded a Fordfunctioned a year before the elec- Foundation grant of $375,000 to «■na¬tion and having carried out the Ken- tinue development of educationalnedy Program, no real interest has sendees in Pakistan.been stirred. .p, _ , w „ .The new grant brings to almostWeather this dull feeling will $6 million the amount the Founda-chamge after the President unveils tion has given the University to sup-his new programs and proposals be- port its Pakistan Project. The an-ing planned by his Task Forces in nouncement was made in New Yorkhis State of the Union Message and Sunday by the Foundation.Inaugural Address in January is to Almost 40 Pakistanis have re¬ceived advanced training at IK’ aspart of the program. Most of themnow hold teaching or administra¬tive positions with provincial de¬partments of education in Pakistan.Kenneth J. Rehage, professor ofRepublican and Young Democrat education, is director of the Ihii-organizatiuns and only compounds the vorsily’s Pakistan Education Proj-problems already bunfaning them. ©ct. He is now on his fourth visit, , . .. to Pakistan, conferring with theTilt YKS ARE placed by the Univer^ys R^tfent Field Con-schizophrenic .deputy ot their na- slUtant Harold Anderson, Professor)espres speaks his mind TWO retraining program a hitby Kenneth Krich“The TTavighurst report is excellent. Now Willisve to go,” according to 5th Ward Alderman I'spres.In an interview with the Maroon, Despres saident.v released Havigivurst l'cport, f . Wtvw.wwwoae*v^MVAV.-Aw.v.rwy.y.v.»>W-»j:.»»j.»rs the greatest promise for thejprovement of Chicago’s school';.» rei)ort shows that “Integration1 quality of education are tied inether,” Despres said.[lie process here is the same asMississippi, Despres said, but notbad. “Tile unspoken policy of die■sent administration is to give toadv;mtaged schools and skimpthe disadvantaged schools. What> been done in the Negro sclioolscriminal,” he feels. “There is aatical mle based on ‘anti-Negro;otry.’ The present policy is stran-ng tlie schools. TIvey are Iveadingtetantly toward mediocrity,”spi es stated.Low priceie $.'>1 million indicated as theco for implementing die reixx-t is,cording to Despres, a very lowice to pay for a first rate schoolstem.DESPRES ALSO SEES signs ofbstantial expansion in urban re-wal. “Urban renewal,” he said,> at a turning point.” The city islling a number of pieces for de»Iopment. There are many develop-ents in the cards in Hyde Park,ic plans liave been released for thei tiie ran Seminary at 55tii andoodlawn (in place of Jimmy’s),vo institutional buildings are to beill at 57th and Stony Island ave.k' bids for Harper Court will soonin.Despres spoke particularly of thefeet that the urban renewal boom11 have on the South Campus. Itli change to a great extent theea south of 60th street. The Mid-»y will become tlie center of thempus. he predicted. Demolition ofe old buildings in the area is notl>ec!ed to begin for at least a year.Election a mandateCommenting on tile national elec->n of two weeks ago, Despres inter¬ preted the Fifh Ward vote for John¬son as a mandate in favor of “civilrights, a moderate wolf are-orientedgovernment, and a policy of accom¬modation and progress in a complexworld.” Johnson carried the 5th Wardwith 26,715 votes to Barry Gold-water’s 3,280.DESPRES SAID THAT the God-water campaign leaves a strength¬ened John Birch Society. “Manypotential members became arousedand proselytized during the period ofthe campaign, and we are going tohear from them for a while,” he said.Despres has lived in Hyde Parksince he was three years old. Aftergraduating from the College and theLaw Sc!tool of UC, he entered prac¬tice. specializing in labor and civilrights eases.When Robert Merriam ran formayor, leaving the Fifdi Ward Alder-manic seat open, the IVI attemptedto select a candidate. Despres wason the committee appointed to makethis selection. When no candidatecould he found. Despres was askedto run and did. He has now beenon the Council for nine years. by David Rynderswill Progress in the Manpower^eon Retraining Program of TheWoodlawn Organizationthat the (TWO) can be measured sofar only in rough terms; but withonly half of the 15 month programgone, only six men have droppedout of the original group of well over200 trainees.TWO was contracted last Mayto screen and place Illinois Stateemployment training programs aminimum of 200 “hard-core” un¬employed. Out of 2.000 original ap¬plicants, TWO selected 232 men w!w>they felt would profit most by theexperience.THE MANPOWER Retraining Pro¬gram is an experimental programdesigned to test whether screeningby counseling and interviewing canbe more successful than the aptitudeand intelligance tests which thegovernment administers.Requirements for applicants are:1) that the applicant be 21 years ofage, head of a household and re¬sponsible for 51% of the support, and2) indicate motivation.Freedom of choiceWhen elioosing a trade, the appli¬cant has complete freedom of choice,except when advice is necessary tokeep him from entering into a pro¬fession for which he is entirely un¬suited.Men are trained in dispersed plantsthroughout the city. The type andplace of training depends on thetrade involved. The Illinois StateEmployment Agency does the ac¬tual training of the men and jobplacing, and also pays $40 per weekwith a $10 bonus every 30 days.FREQUENTLY, SAID ReverendArthur Stevenson, president of TWO,the checks do not come on timeand trainees have to borrow moneyfrom TWO to get to work. ReverendStevenson is directly in charge ofthe program, and has about 12 peo¬ple working under him.TWO has also been trying to initi¬ate an on the job training programfor some of the 2000 applicants whoweren’t screened for the state'straining program. This type oftraining, Stevenson emphasized,would give the maximum assuranceof having a job, since trainees areALL VOLKSWAGENPEAIEJ?S CAW SELLYOU A NEW ’65 vvvSEDAN FOR.*1647OU£ PRICE IS THESAME. OUR SERVICEIS excellent;superb—UNQUESTIONABLYTHE DIFFERENCETHAT MAKESTHE PEAL/ )OUR USED CARSARE GREAT T00I100% GUARANTEEPARTS AND LABOR 30 DAYSSI 195'54 SIMCA4-dr. Sedan63 VOLKSWAGENSedan'63 KARMAN Gt+tAConvertible'62 VOLKSWAGENSedan‘62 VOLKSWAGENConvertible'62 KARMAN GHIAConvertible'62 MERCEDESConvertible 190 SA‘62 MERCEDESSedan‘62 TR-3Convertible'61 VOLKSWAGENSedan'61 RENAULT4-dr. Sedan'60 VOLKSWAGENSunroof'60 VOLKSWAGENSedan*60 PORSCHEConvertible■59 VOLKSWAGENConvertible $1295$1795$114$$1345S139SSI 795$219$SI 295$995S59SS94SS89S52195$995 taught on the job by the same com¬panies that employ them.Just a beginningThe attempt to begin such an onthe job braining program points outvery well tlie extreme difficulty ofdealing with the vast numbers ofunemployed today. Two hundred menin an experimental screening pro¬gram is ju.'ft a beginning in com¬parison with the thousands whoneed this help. Other and biggermeasures are needed. It is signifi¬cant to note tliat TWO recognizesthis and is making every effort itcan with tlie facilities at its dis¬posal.THE RESULTS OF the Manpowerprogram can partially be valuated interms of people who rejoin the com¬munity after being totally alienatedfrom their society. Persons who hadlost nope of ever being useful orresponsible citizens are able to re¬turn and help others in similiar pre¬dicaments. Rev. Stevenson pointedout that an unusually large numberof people who are placed in securejobs come back to TWO for workin the neighborhood.TWO is a south side civil rightsorganization which has, since its be¬ginning in 1960, worked to alleviateproblems of poverty, poor housing,relief, and employment in the Wood-lawn area, which extends roughlyfrom Stony Island ave. to the DanRyan Expressway, and from 59th sitto the middle 70’s,Originally begun to combat thesouth campus expansion programof UC, TWO was organized by SaulAlinsky, who brought a number ofneighborhood groups together tofight the threat of bulldozing by UCplanners. By uniting a common enemy, Alinsky was able to solidify thevarious factions thorouglily in thelocal. Today, there are over 90 or¬ganizations compromising TWO, in¬cluding 15 churches of various de¬nominations.Program a firstRev. Stevenson noted that TWOis tiie first example of a “grassroots” organization, organized andrun by members living in the com¬munity, being given this kind of re¬sponsibility; thait is, the screeningof unemployed men of job trainingSOUTHA7X; IMPORT MOTORSWW AUTHORIZED VW —t- PORSCHE DEALER i %sIf NEW CAR V! 71st & BU 8-4900USED CAR; STONY IS.643-4040CLOSED SUNDAY j PROGRESSIVEPAINT & HARDWARE CO.1641 E. 55th HY 3-384010% STUDENT DISCOUNT&yBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302Silk Screen SuppliesA Complete Source ofARTISTS' MATERIALS,MIMEOGRAPH PAPERAND SUPPLIESI Wholesale Prices in QuantifyOnlyIDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd ST.HY 3-4111 in an experimental program.ROBERT D. HESS, chairman ofthe UC Committee on Human De¬velopment, also heads a UC programwhich was instituted to study TWO’sprogress and evaluate their resultsin comparison with the results of theregular Illinois State EmploymentAgency’s method of screening appli¬cants. These results will be com¬pared orv the basis of how many mencomplete the program, how manyget secure jobs, and wliat ratingstrainees get. All trainees are in reg¬ular training programs, the onlyvariation being that the TWO menwere screened by counseling andinterviewing.Hess told the Maroon that 90 bo95% of the men are turned awayby the screening devices of the gov¬ernment. TWO aims to be able tohelp this large percentage who areunable to qualify under existing test¬ing processes.Gevirtz at HillelStanley Gevirtz, assistant profes¬sor in the department of OrientalLanguages, will speak at the HillelFireside tonight at 8:30 pm. Hissubject will be Archetypal Rivalry:Jacob and Esau.Gervirtz received his degree fromthe Oriental Institute and has spe¬cialized in Biblical studies. His mostrecent book is “Patterns in tlx*Early Poetry of Israel.” Gevirtz willgive a literary and historical analy¬sis of the Biblical story of Jacob andEsau tonight, with special attentionto the poetry of Isaacs’ blessing. Hewill show how this story representsthe archetypal form of rivalry be¬tween Israel and her neighbors.Tiie lecture is o;)en to the en¬tire UC community and will takeplace at Hillel, 5715 Woodlawn ave.Mackauer at ShoreyChristian A. Mackauer, WilliamRainey Harper professor emeritus ofhistory in the College and the depart¬ment of history, will speak at ShoreyHouse, ninth floor of Pierce Tower,on Monday.His topic wild be “The World crHerodotus.” The talk will begin a9 pm.TAh5AM-\&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1311 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062I(studentGROUPSEUROPE• CRIMSON SeriesGrand Tour * Continental TourFavorite Tour * Fiesta TourComprehensive TourIsrael Adventure TourHoliday Tour * Panorama Tour■r STEAMER OR AIR $7*1A*39 TO 75 DAY* from I IV• DISCOVERY SeriesDiscovery Tour * Explorer TourPrep & High School Swiss CampBY STEAMER OR AIR $4QC*42 TO 68 DAYS from *IO«J• excluding trans-Atlantic transportationor Form your Own GroupAsk for Plans and ProfitableOrganizer ArrangementsSPECIALISTS INSTUDENT TRAVELSINCE 3926for folders and detailsSEE YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENTor write UNIVERSITY TRAVEL COMPANYCambridge 38. Mass.itable IillRtrah IIIImi£ » 'i! >1INov. 20. 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5CIJ IDSPERSONALZ. B. T.SUE and D. VV. ONLY YOUR HAIR¬DRESSER KNOWS FOR SURE— LEE &R L.HELP destitute American Indians!DELTA SIGMA sponsors clothingdrive. Collection boxes in dorm, lob¬bies, B-J office, Nov. 23-Dr. 7.B B. B AT Z. B. T. TONIGHT!Young Socialist Alliance educationalmeeting. Sun., Nov. 22, at 11:110 pm inIDA NOYES HALL. E. Lounge: “Doesthe Marxist Theory apply to the U.S.”B B B. IS NOT THE BETTERBUSINESS BURSAR! HEATER: Automatic thermostat: fan.EXCELLENT CONDITION $12. Call324-5751.1 yr. Span. GUITAR, case. $00 or bestoffer. Orig. value $100. Call 493-2300.FOR RENTMarried Students: 214 rms. turn. Viewof city from 9th floor. Inch util.,$92.50. Hyde Park area. 324-5200.Furn. Rm. for employed gentlemanor older student (male). l4 blk. fromCampus. IC and 2 bus lines. AVAIL¬ABLE NOW AT BLACKSTONE &00th PLACE. BU S-4329.S.G. Group Flights to NEW YORK$70 Jet. Absolute deadline Monday,23rd November. SO 1-5. Greyhoundbus to N.Y. $35, leaving from Campus.Call ext. 3272, Monday thru Friday.The will of Savron overrides all.Elderly Kitten (9 months) looking forroommates. If you want a lovable greycompanion, call 667-7345. 5402 Cornell: 0 lge. rms.; nat. firepl.;4 big closets, bookcases, linen closets,pantrv, mod kitchen porch, newlydec. Suit, for bus. or prof, people.Gar. $10 extra. Near IC. CTA. Shop,ping Center, park. Lake. MU 4-.H222.ROOMMATE WANTEDTo share apt. with 3 girls. Good loc.and trans. Contact Carlene Coen. PL2-0444, ext. 49, days/493-2120 eves.MISCELLANEOUSTUTORINGSTUDENT needs TUTORItalian Grammar. 288-6638. in beg. List of theatres, nite-clubs. restau¬rants in NEW YORK CITY that offerstudent discounts, available FREE inSG Office.TYPINGTyping and editing: term papers, the¬ses. etc. Close to Campus. 324-2089.After office hours and weekends. Tele¬phone answer service: mimeo: pre¬typed stencils run while u wait. 684-2450.TYPING AND EDITING: Term papers,theses, articles, book manuscripts, cor¬respondence and stenorette transcrip¬tion. Smith-Corona Elec. Call 667-1508: 1-4 pm only.WANTEDGrad. Student to share. rent. Com¬pletely furn. 5 rm. apt. near CampusNewly dec., carpeted Steinway Grand.2 bedrms., shower. HY 3-3187. NOWor Dec. 1 st.Apt. near Campus with 2-3 bedrms.from Dec. 1st or Jan. Call 684-1727,between 5-0 pm.LOSTGREEN AND WHITE PLAID PARKA.REWARD. 084-9608.ONE SOCIAL RULES COMMITTEESITUATIONS VACANTPref. attr. foreign girls with out exp.Full pan time. Cocktail waitress. InOld Town (Nth.). New Business. Goodprospects. Interviewing between 5-9pm 943-3373.S.G. SECRETARY WANTED. Week¬day afternoons: 8-15 hrs. wk. Gd. pay.F. E. Manuensis. Ideal applicant forresearch assistant position. Shouldwrite w'ell and like tabulating thingslike stock-market prices. Pay $2.50per hr. at applicant's leisure. If inter¬ested Call V. Neid, 084-5908.PART-TIME TYPIST We are in needof a young woman skilled as a typistto handle general office duties 15-20hrs. per.wk. Qualified person maychoose the days and hours (bet. 9 &5 pm i they prefer. Salary $2 per hr.Call Personnel, Playboy Magazine, MI2-1000.WANTED DESPERATELYRide to BOSTON or NEW YORK. 2of us, 1 of whom drives. Want toleave Monday or Tuesday, return Sat¬urday or Sunday. Will pay gas etcSharon. 324-5026.FOR SALE OR RENTTOWNHOUSE: 3 bedrms.; 144 baths:radiant healing, patio, huge yard. Pio¬neer Coop, 5437 Dorchester. 643-8325.FOR SALENEW TOWNHOUSES: 52nd & Dor¬chester. 4 bedrms.; 2’zj baths: centralair-conditioning; R C A Whirlpoolkitchen; separate dining rm.; paraquetfir. thru.; reception rm. Campus bus5*®P;S *n *ront °f door. Prices from$32,950. HA 7-4017.THE WORD FROM THE BIRD:QUALITYJhsL VYlcoc (BjwoIl Qd.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERS"Unexcelled Quality Since 1917"Phones: Ml 3-7447 1013-17 East 61st St.HY 3-6868 Across from B-J Ct.Serving the Campus since 1917 THE SCREEN SCENEJob opportunitiesThe following recruiting organiza¬tions will visit the Office of CareerCounseling and Placement duringthe week of November 23. Interviewappointments may be arrangedthrough L. S. Calvin, room 200,Reynolds Club, extension 3284.November 23Union Carbide Corporation NuelearDivision. Oak Ridge, Tenn. — will in¬terview prospective graduates at alldegree levels in mathematics, physics,statistics, and chemistry (except or¬ganic). Summer application forms areavailable to students in above disci¬plines who will have completed aminimum of three years of academicwork by June, 1965.November 23Unilever, Ltd., London England —will speak to British physical scien¬tists at post-doctoral level. Schedulepermitting will also interview prospec¬tive Ph.D candidates in science.November 23 and 24Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory.Los Alamos, New Mexico — interview¬ing students at all degree levels inmathematics, physics, and chemistry(inorganic, physical) for staff posi¬tions. Ph.D. candidates are also eligi¬ble for post-doctoral appointments ofone to two years. Will also speak withstudents in above disciplines for sum¬mer work who will be at the S.B.level or beyond by June, 1965.November 24Naval Propellant Plant. IndianaHead. Md. — will speak with S. B.and S. M. chemists (all specialties)and S. B. and S. M. candidates inmathematics and physics.Prospective teachersNovember 24University of Akron; George W.Knepper, dean, will be in the Rey¬nolds Club office from 9 am to 4pm to interview Ph.D. candidatesfor teaching positions. He is inter¬ested in seeing students in the follow¬ing fields:BotanyChemistry (Organic andPhysical)EconomicsEnglishGeologyMathematicsPhilosophyPhysicsPolitical SciencePsychology (Experimentaland Industrial)Sociology (Criminal and orAnthropology) RusFilms, in keeping withtheir series theme of showingmost hut not all of Eisen-stein’s films, will show one ofthe' three assemblages of footage heand Tisse shot in Mexico, TIME INTHE SUN, with shorts by that ac¬complished Muscovite, Charlie Chap¬lin. TIME is the aborted result ofEisensiein’s collaboration with UptonSinclair and Hollywood; when Sin¬clair found out ELsen stein was photo¬graphing naked men. women, andboys, he withdrew his support in themiddle of shooting. Three versionsof the footage were assembled byvarious editors long after the shoot¬ing — and, unfortunately, withoutEisenstein’s direction.Process-shot lovers will rejoice atB-J’s showing of WHEN WORLDSCOLLIDE, from the Philip Wylienovel. The director succeeds in flood¬ing New' York City and accomplishingsundry other destructive miracles,none of them involving the plot, alas.If you missed BREAKFAST ATTIFFANY’S at B-J weeks ago andstill want to see it, International House will show it Monday. The du¬plication involved is another wastefulexample of the lack of co-ordinationbetween film societies on campus;other incidents; Henderson House’sshowing ON THE WATERFRONTwhich B-J scheduled for Decemberscreening, and the multitude ofHitchcock films available from bothB-J and Ekx-filrrus this quarter.Docfilms will conclude its Hitch-cock-Welles series, structured to ex¬plore 6ad contrast the styles of thetwo directors, with Welles’ TOUCHOF EVIL. TIio film is typical ofWelles’ visual genius, and providesa sinful set;ing for Marlene Dietrich,Weiiles, Joseph Cot ten. Char lot on Hes¬ton, Janet Leigh, and -gulp- MercedesMeCambridge.There is still time for all you hackmovie critics to win fame end mate¬rial prizes by wriling the best—oreven the second or third best—articleon THE YOUNG LOVERS, currentlyat the Woods. MGM sponsors thecontest, which will be judged by JohnCawelti of the Humanities staff andGerald Temaner, instructor in cinsma Tlio Hyde Park, to alone for ilrecent programming sins, will showa relatively new feature, PietroGermi’s Italian grubby spiritualismflick, SEDUCED AND ABANDON ED. Germi, director of D|VORCE ITALIAN STYLE, retainedthe services of the enchanting starlelof that picture, Stephania Snadrelli.for this exposition of the individual’ssubjection to society.Sunday, the Clark Theatre willshow a double bill by expatriateAmerican director Joseph LosevOne of the Hollywood Ten, Looey'swork in Britain has justified him ;»sone of the outstanding modem sly!ists. EVA, with Stanley Blacker andJeanne Moreau as a super-b., is anun-British reflection of the FrenchNew Wave through the mirror ofWelles’ visual structures. GYPSYAND THE GENTLEMAN, less oensored than EVA, is a haunting Melina(NEVER ON . . .) Mercouri vehicleSenator McCarthy’s loss can be yourgain.NW and ArchieERRATUMJhe . MAROON has learned that theprice given to lost year's Fast tor Free¬dom by Residence Halls and CommonsIRH0CI was 61c not $1.60 as stated InTuesday's MAROON.Lylas Ray, head of RH&C, explainedthat 50c per student is being given tothe Fast for Freedom this year becausethe meal falls on a Thursday. The 61cgiven last year is the cost of the spe¬cial Wednesday night dinners.The reason guest tickets for the dinnersare 11.85 is that that price includes theoverhead costs, whereas the 50c is theactual food cost. 9—mi*oi... 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 ®...thatk beer!ANHEUSER BUSCH, INC. • ST LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20. 1964SG OKs Finance Committee, passes RU(Continued from page one)I* isiiion to exercise such s uper-slon directly, since it meets in-equently. It was fell by a few As-unbly members that perhaps t^ieelusion of publications in the juris-dional scope of the board wouldalcc it more likely that the com-unieations board propasal would beeeptable to the Board of Trustees.Packer impatientCHARLES HACKER, manager ofUCB, expressed his hope to ihe;st*nbly that the station could goV1 by the fall Quarter next year.? urged SG to “establish a boardL-eptable to the administration forIJCB as rapidly as possible,” sojl the application could be decidedon by the Trustees and processedthe EOC.Asked about the importance ofiok action, Packet* retried that he1 not know how long the channelDt to WUCB would remainatlable. It is likely, he added, that? station would have to go oo-;unnel. In that event, the stationmid share the channel with anotherution which would also have amted range. “This is undesirable,”icker said. In any case, he added.ICB-FM would have a broadcastiius of five miles.in other actions, the Assembly passed the Finance Committee pro¬posal. Thus proposal, it approved bythe Student body in a spring refer¬endum, would establish the Commit¬tee on Recognized Student Organi¬zations (CORSO) as an intermediarybetween the administration and stu¬dent anaganzations in the allocationotf budget requests.Such a plan would give students agreater voice 'and responsibility overmoney given to student organiza¬tions. Hearings would be open andbudget allocations would be pub¬lished, something not now done.In addition, the criteria for al¬location would be known. Severalcheeks would exist on the commit¬tee, however, to insure fair andequitable decisions. The membershipof CORSO would be changed to fivestudents and three faculty members,an addition of one faculty representa¬tive. Election of the student mem¬bers would be by a % vote of theAssembly, and from its member¬ship the chairman would then bechosen by a majority vote. Sinceno party in SG has a 2a majority,this would help prevent partisan orfactional appointments.AT PRESENT, student justices ofthe S t u d e n t - Facuity- Adm in strati onCourt are elected in this manner andit has worked out equitably. In ad¬dition, tile new CORSO would be constitutionally forbidden to initiatemajor changes in the budget detri¬mental to any organization. As isthe case now, no political or religiousgroup would be able to receive funds.A % vote of the Assembly would benecessary to make any changes mthe budget. Thus, no party having amajority in the Assembly could con¬trol the dispensation of the budget.Roosevelt resolutionIn another resolution, the Assemblyexpressed its concern for protectionof freedom of the press of the Roose¬velt Torch in the current controversyover the alleged firing of the presi¬dent of that University. It approvedof the Roosevelt’s Student Activities Board in rejecting the suggestion ofthe Dean of Students that the editorsbe suspended, and recommendedthat a complete and thorough inves¬tigation be conducted before anyfurther action is taken in this matteragainst the Torch or its editors.Two seats on the Executive Boardof SG were also filled by the Assem¬bly. Steve Livemash, a GNOSISmember from the business school,was elected treasurer, and SallyCook, a POL1T member in the Col¬lege, became NSA coordinator. Sevennew Assembly members also tooktheir seats.In other actions, the Assembly ap¬proved SG sponsorship otf the Na-Havighurst advises onthe diamond that dreams are made on Robert J. Havighurst, UCprofessor of education, cau¬tioned civil rights leaders lastnight that transferring Ne¬groes to mostly white schools isnot effective in promoting “stableintegration.”What is needed, Havighurst saidat a conference held by the Citizens’Schools Committee in the MorrisonHotel, is an intensive effort to pro¬mote stable integration such as theproposal in his recent report onthe Chicago public school system.The proposal would set up threeareas otf the city, including theSoutheast side, for special effort inkeeping the stable integration whichnow exists in those areas.Multifarious confabHAVIGHURST WAS MAIN speak¬er at the closing session of an allday conference on the problems ofChicago public schools. Earlier pan¬el discussions brought out proposalsfrom legislators, school board mem¬bers, and educators. Problems offinancing public schools, establish¬ing special programs for deprivedchildren, and establishing closer re¬lations between the schools and theircommunities were discussed.Citizens must watch for politicianswho may use the school system’sproblems for their own political ad¬vantage, Havighurst also warned.Some politicians, he said, may tryto appeal to either Negroes or toanti-Negro sentiment in connectionwith the current effort to increaseschool integration.Havighurst outlined three condi¬tions which could be called schoolintegration. The first, he said, re¬sults from residential integration.This type of stable integration isnot gaining in Chicago, Havighurstpointed out. Only 29 elementaryschools retained integrated studentbodies between last year and this.AU other elementary schools eitherremained mostly segregated or be¬came more heavily Negro.INTEGRATION EFFORTS whichinvolve introducing Negro pupils in¬to mostly white schools have notbrought about a significant increase in total integration where they havebeen attempted, Havighurst said.New York City’s “open enrollmentprogram” has increased total in¬tegration by only six per cent inthe six or seven years it has beenin effect, he pointed out.The only answer to the problem,Havighurst concluded, is for publicschools to help in the process ofkeeping neighborhoods stably inte¬grated by keeping white parentssatisfied with their children’s schools.In a related talk yesterday morn¬ing at the conference, .school boardmember Cyrus H. Adams III com¬plained of “the horrendous amountof misinformation and unfoundedfear” about the board's integrationplans. He promised that “no moneyis going to be spent for the solepurpose of integration,” althoughtransfers may still be used to allevi¬ate overcrowding and other conditionsaffecting the quality of education.Adams admitted, however, that theboard had “started too late andmoved too slowly” in many areasincluding integration. Havighurstagi-eed in his talk with this commento>f Adams.Demands that the school admin¬istration be more receptive to sug¬gestions from the community re¬sounded at yesterday morning's ses¬sion of the conference.Rev. Arthur M. Brazier, formerpresident of The Wood! awn Organi¬zation, charged that the schools now“exist as islands sunounded by thecommunity,” rather than as inte¬gral parts of their communities.FT A dominationEven some PTA’s are sometimes“dominated by the principal or byleaders who want to gain the prin-eipal s favor,” Brazier said.IF THE ADMINISTRATION wouldallow other persons and activitiesin the community to take a part mthe school’s activities, Brazier sug¬gested, such problems as high drop¬out rates might be alleviated withoutside assistance.Brazier also criticized the opera¬tion otf marry Chicago trade schools,Here's a brilliant beginning for all your hopes andjoys. Artcarved's newest engagement ring sparkleswith a million flickering lights. Why not know thebeauty of Nocturne Star forever?See Nocturne Star and other Style Star rings atyourArtcarved Jeweler. Priced from $90. Ask aboutthe Permanent Value Plan. For a free illustratedfolder, write to Artcarved, Dept. C, 216 East 45thStreet. New York, N.Y. 10017.See Nocturne Star only at these Authorized Artcarved Jewelers— Chicago —Cole & Young9144 Commercial Ave.— Chicago —Farmer Jewelers3153 W. 63rd Street— Zion —-Ashland Jewelers2716 Sheridan Road — Chicago —Roman Kosinski5754 W. Belmont Ave.— Chicago —R. L. Seidelmann2615 5. Pulaski Rood— Oak Pork —Hayward Jewelers111 N. Morion Street 9 VOLT TRANSISTOR BATTERIES 19c10% discount to students with ID cardsSales and Serviceon all hi-fi equip¬ment, foreign anddomestic.TAPE RECORDERSPhonographs - AmplifiersPhono Needles and CartridgesTubes - Batteries24 hr. Service CallsTV—HI-FI $Q00RADIO O”— Telefunken & Zenith —AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORYest. 19291300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111In the 53rd-Kimbark Plaza measuretional Student Association InsuranceTrust life insurance policy, whichwould provide a $10,000 policy for$20 per year, the1 lowest cost insur¬ance available to students.The Assembly also mandated theSG Secretary to compile facts aboutthe W. E. DuBois Clubs, a nationalstudent political organization, andabout J. Edgar Hoover’s statementabout these clubs. These clubs havebeen alleged by Hoover in a letterto law enforcement officers to bea “Communist Spawn.” This club’sprivileges were revoked in a numberof college campuses solely on thebasis of this letter.civil rightsto which, he charged, many poor oraverage students are “shunted'without opportunity to follow aliberal arts course.Paul Jans, director of Hull House,seconded Brazier’s criticism of thetrack' schools. The school systemshould “take the lead” in a casesuch as the Washburn TradeSchool, he said, where colored per¬sons are discriminated against be¬cause ot policies made by the man¬ufacturers which administer thetraining program. “Chicago's schoolsystem should have nothing to dowith this sort of situation,” he said.Jans also oalied tor better com¬munication between the school andcommunity. Those neighborhoodswhere good communications alreadyexist are those in which the parentsand principals already agree. Hecited the instance of a Far Northside school district in which whiteparents were able to get the districtto gerrymander school boundaries sothat children “all from one socio¬economic class’ attended one school.In the afternoon session, it wasagreed that the only way to improveeducation » Chicago is by raisingtaxes.Frank M. Whiston. chairman of theChicago board of education, pointedout that the budget for this year isten million dollars under estimatedneeds. Casts have risen, and publicschool enrollment is up 200,000 com¬pared to 1964, Whist on said. Moreaid from the state is needed to helpthe school system out of its “precar¬ious position,”TWO STATE LEGISLATORSagreed with Wbuston, and pointed outthat new tax revenues can be found.Favor state taxAbner J. Mikva and Esther Saper-stein both said that they favoredeither a state income tax or othermeans of taxation to increase stateaid to schools,Mikva said: “There is nothingsacrilegious about using money fromthe gas tax or revenue from the statetax on horse racing bets for publiceducation purposes.”Mikva complained that voters havenot expressed enough interest inincreasing aid to public education.“I got more letters from the ChicagoMotor Club about raising gas taxesthan from citizens otf Chicago onimproving the schools.”John M. Fawkes, president of theChicago Teachers Union, joined thecry for a state income tax. He alsoendorsed a proposal to appoint a citi¬zen’s committee to find ways of newmoney. He cautioned, however, thatmembers of any such committeeshould include representatives fromorganizations such as the CitizensSchools Committee and labor unions,besides those groups which haveconsistently opposed new' taxes.Hyde ParkAuto ServiceCostrol OilDunlop TiresRupert Seat Belts STPJim Hartman5340 Lake ParkPL 2-0496Nov. 20. 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Temporarily suspended from student activitiesRoosevelt Torch editorial board given bootSix members of the editori¬al board of the RooseveltTorch, student newspaper atChicago’s Roosevelt Univer¬sity (RU), were “temporarily sus¬pended’’ Wednesday morning fromfurther participation in nil organizedstudent activities at the University.RU President Robert J. Pitchell’saction was the latest development ina furor which began last week whenthe Torch published an article quot¬ing sources as saying Pitched had“unofficially been fired."Tile issue of the Torch containingthe article was seized by order ofthe Administrative Council when itappeared on the distribution standsin the downtown university buildingStudent play discountsavailable this weekStudent discount coupons for ticketsto Frank Gilroy’s “Who'll Save thePLowboy” at the Hull House Sheri¬dan Theatre and Pirandello’s “En¬rico IV” at the Harper Theatre areavailable in the Student ActivitiesOffice, 2nd floor. Ida Noyes Hall.Coupons for “Who'Ll Save the Plow-boy'’ enable students to purchasetickets for regular $3.40 seats for$2. Tlie play will be presented Fri¬day and Saturday nights at 8:30 pmfrom now through November 28.Coupons for “Enrico IV" are goodfor tiie month of November. Thesecoupons enable students to purchaseSI tickets for $2.25 on Tuesdays,Wednesdays, and Thursdays, $3.90tickets for $3.25 on Fridays andSaturdays, and $3.30 tickets for$2.50 on Sundays. Saturday. The Administrative Councilis made 114) of the university’s deans.IN AN INTERVIEW Tuesday,Pitchell told the Maroon that he hadnot personally ordered the seizure ofthe copies, and had “never officiallyapproved’’ the council’s order.After tiie suspension. Torch editorJudi Halprin and Pitchell agreed thatthe issues would be distributed witha printed one-page insert giving thereplies of Pitchell. of Board of Trus¬tees chairman Lyle M. Spencer, andof tlie Administrative Council.In a development yesterday, MissHalprin refused to reveal to a sixman inquiry committee the sourceof the news article saying thatPitchell had been “unofficially fired.”“I couldn’t give them the namesof my sources," she said. “Althoughthe Canons of Journalism at Roose¬velt require me to name my sourcesin a closed session such as this, Iam bound by a higher standard ofethics.”Inserts also unacceptableWhen the inserts were deliveredto the University Tuesday morning,tliree explanatory paragraphs thathad not been approved by the ad¬ministration appeared above thestatements. One of these sentencessaid that the Administrative Council“impounded” the Torches because itobjected to the original story onPitchell's “firing."Neither the original issue nor theinserts were distributed.ON TUESDAY afternoon, a meet¬ing was held of the Student ActivitiesBoard (SAB), an official body whichappoints and may dismiss the Torcheditor. The board is made up of sixfaculty members and six students.Tliree students on this year’s boardWHYWECARRYGx\r^i~rThere’s more than fabric superiority In Gant. In addi¬tion, “needled-into the warp and woof of every Gantshirt" — there’s flair-fit show — three vital i.nher-ents that make all the difference when a man wearsa Gant.We chose Gant because they take Shirt making seri¬ously. They’re hard to please (like we are) when itcomes to fit of collar, its roll, its profile—how muchit shows above the suit collar. They’re fastidiousabout the way the body of the shirt drapes and folds.All must integrate to achieve that viable ingredientwhich gives comfort and aplomb. In substance, Gantshirts are keyed to the discerning tastes of wellgroomed men who appreciate quality. These men areour customers.THE STORE FOR MENbblvSfo*<3mun atth (HampuaIn the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100INC8 • CHICAGO MAROON . Noy. 20. 1944MWMHMI arc connected with the Torch.The SAB set up an investigatorysubcommittee to determine the “mo¬tivations" of the editors in printingthe original story, their source, theway in which the story (printed inthe form of a “bulletin”) was in¬cluded in the issue, and how muchchecking the editors did on the story.Tlie SAB defeated motions on thepart of the dean of students that theeditors be “suspended" from theireditorial positions.New editionOn Wednesday morning, a newedibon of the Torch appeared, in¬cluding news of tlie SAB’s actionsalong with the original issue. Afterthis edition hit the stands, Pitchelldecided to suspend the six becausethey had violated an article of tlie“canons of journalism" establishedfor the Torch by tlie SAB.The six are editor Halprin, assist¬ant editor Jeffrey Segal, managingeditor Richard Monet, copy editorJohn Dovard, national news editor Steven Bookshester, and editor emer¬itus Lyn Cole.This article says that “tlie editorsof the Torch shall meet with thefaculty advisors of the Torch at leastonce before each issue of the paper,to discuss the coming issue and hearwhatever advice the advisors mayoffer. This advice is NOT bindingon tlie editors.”PITCHELL SAID THE susjiensionof the editors is “temjiorary,” andthat “final action” will be madeonly after tlie SAB investigatingcommittee makes its report and afterthe dean of students proposes action.“This action is an extremely mildform of discipline,” Pitchell said.“We have enough evidence alreadyto warrant this action.”It has been pointed out that, sinceSegal is also Roosevelt eo-ordinatorfor the National Student Association,Roosevelt will not be able to partici¬pate in the NSA’s Fast for Freedom.Assistant objectedIt was also learned that PresidentPitchell's chief assistant, Sidney Kraus, sent a confidential memo totlie administrative council objectingto the original seizure of live Totelies“BECAUSE OF MY professionaland scholarly interests in tie fieldof mass communications, I want togo on record as objecting to theseizure and confiscation of issues ofthe Roosevelt Torch which we re¬placed in the lobby on Saturday, November 14,” Kraus said, “I havebeen informed that this was an actionof the Administrative Council. If itis true, I object to that action andstrongly urge that the issues be re¬turned to their distribution outlet.“While T do not agree with theirresponsible action of live editorialboard of the Torch in tlie publicationof 'he bulletin ... I do not feelthat we serve any purpose in com¬pounding the initial action with oneof equal irresponsibility,” Kraus riedared. “I am amazed that thisaction could have been carried out,lei alone contemplated, at RooseveltUniversity.”JOIN in N. Side surveyJobs or Income N O w munity itself. JOIN interviewers will the maximum feasible participation(JOIN), the organizing proj¬ect of Students for a Demo¬cratic Society on the NorthSide, is undertaking a comprehen¬sive survey of the expressed needsof the residents of the North Side.The uptown area, which will be asite for “War on Poverty” programs,is made up of an amalgam ofMexican, American Indian, SoutlvemAppalachian, and Chicago povertystricken and working people.The JOIN survey will be conductedby about thirty teams, each con¬sisting of one student volunteer andone JOIN member from the com-Take a closer lookat one of thebest made carsin the world^PEUGEOT investigate problems in education,housing, employment, cultural tran¬sition, finance, and child care. Theywill atfcengrt to discover whetherthere is need for tuloria] programs,day care centers, folk schools, play¬grounds, etc. After the survey,JOIN will build its own programaround attempts to satisfy theseneeds, whether through the Waron Poverty or otlierwise.THE SURVEY WAS inspired byopposition to the questionable struc¬ture of War on Poverty planning inChicago. Tlie bill passed by Con¬gress (Economic Opportunity Art of1964) explicitly requires that prefer¬ence for federal funds be given toprograms which are “developed,conducted, and administered withSee The Fabulous“Hits Of Broadway”Lavish Musical RevueFine Dining—DancingDEL PRADO HOTELHT 3-9400 of residents of the areas and mem¬bers of the (poverty stricken)groups.”Yet the planning in Chicago forpoverty programs is being done by acommission appointed by MayorRichard J. Daley which does notinclude a single poor person or asingle refiresentative of communityorganizations which include po<jrI»eople.A workshop for tlie interviewersis being held on Saturday, Novumber 21, at noon in Ida Noyes Hall.About 20 students and 20 JOINmembers from the North Side an'expected to attend. Role playing insimulated interview situations willbe the primary focus of the workshop.UNIVERSAL ARMY STORELevi* — TurtlenecksWinter Jackets —- RaincoatsPeacoats — Parkas1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856Free Coffee(Say Poo/oh)403: Judged one of the 7 bestmade cars in the world by John. Bond, Publisher of Road & Track.404: Designed to beeven better than the 403.404 Station Wagon:Roomy, comfortable, durable.BOB NELSONMOTORSIMPORT CENTREAustinHealeyPeugeot MGSpriteTriumphFull line on display • new 6 used6040 S. Cottage GroveMidway 3-4501 SPECIAL PRE-CHRISTMAS OFFERSFROM OUR PHOTOGRAPHIC DEPARTMENTB.C. Bouncing Flash Guns . . were 4.95 NOW $3.95Sliile Boxes were 2.95 NOW $1.98Complete Camera Kits .... were 8.50 NOW $6.45Many OthersSee our window display. We'll be glad to quote pricesThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueANOTHER STUDENT GOVERNMENT SERVICECHRISTMAS CHARTERSBY POPULAR DEMANDNEW YORK JETPLANE$20 DEPOSIT DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 20NEW YORK greyhoundBUS$10 DEPOSIT DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 20 ‘35LEAVES FROMCAMPUSurktheatre reviewBeckett double header: taxing Calendar of EventsTwo plays by Samuel BeckettENDGAMEdov - - Wes SandersHamm Bob BenedeftiNaqq - - Leo KrugHell Connie MatheiuDirected by Bob BenedeftiPLATW2 ... Elizabeth MoisantMan Don MarstonWl Beartice FredmanDirected by Bob SickinqerAt the Hull House Theatre,3212 N. BroadwayGoing to a play by SamuelBeckett is an experience, nota n entertainment. Althoughboth Waiting for Godot andEndgame bristle with slapstick andquips, few plays are as powerful,as capable of bringing the viewer toa confrontation with his own mind’s“cliffs of fall/ Frightful, sheer,nomanfat homed.”Whereas Waiting for Godot takesplace on life’s open road, Endgameis enacted in death’s dark, closedroom. Some apocalyptic event hasdestroyed all life outside the room,or so its inhabitants believe, butlife within has gone on for manyyears. Life goes on because the in¬habitants are a pair of complemen¬tary personalities, like Lucky andPozzo in Godot. Hamm is the mas¬ter. Clov the servant:Hamm is blindand cannot walk, Clov can see, butcannot sit down; Hamm is sensualand untidy, Clove has a mania fororder. Most important, Hamm ownsthe only store of food in the world,so that Clov would die if he lefthim; but Hamm needs someone tofeed him, or else he too woulddie.Clov wants to leave Hamm, butMUSIC REVIEW he knows that if he does, he will becommitting suicide as well as mur¬dering Hamm. The problem ofwhether Clov will actually leaveprovides the most important sourceof dramatic tension in the play.DURING THE PLAY, however, itis seen that Hamm’s supplies arerunning out — the sugar-plums forNagg and Nell, Hamm’s leglessparents, the flour, Hamm’s pain¬killer. Ibis game of dependence, in¬dependence, and interdependence,therefore, is as Martin Esslin putit, “the final game in the hour ofdeath.”I can give Robert Benedetti nogreater compliment than by simplysaying that his direction did justiceto a fine and difficult play. He man¬aged to bring out — I cannot quitesee how — the dual nature of End¬game: as a drama between inter¬dependent characters, and as amonodrama taking place betweenthe rational and the appetitive sidesof a single personality. His portrayalof Hamm left little to be desired:he balanced very neatly the childish¬ness, the cruelty, the sensuality ofhis character.When I saw Wes Sanders atCourt Theatre this summer, I thoughtlie could act; now, I am sure of it.He made convincing the contradic¬tions in Clov's character — that hehates Hamm, but continues to servehim; that he wants to leave, andcannot bring himself to leave; thathe is optimistic, and at the same time realizes the futility of his life.His skill is a quiet one: that ofbeing precise, of saying the righttiling with the right shade of mean¬ing. Sanders does not carry theplay upon his back, but , his per¬formance was Curiously impressive,all the same.MR. KRUG and Miss Mathieuhave little to say in the courseof the play, but I would not slightthem for that reason. Their function— setting off the character of Hamm— is important, and they did itwell.I wonder at Sickinger’s wisdomin preceding Endgame with a cur¬tain-raiser by the same author.Beckett’s theatre is too heady aconcoction to take very much of ata time, and the result was an eve¬ning a Little wearing on one’s sensi¬bilities.The play itself, entitled Play, is awell thought-out piece, depicting thetorments of the members of theEternal 1 Triangle. The charactersspeak, each in his turn, from hugeurns, in which they are encased,and each tells his own side of thebanal story to a God who has for¬gotten them. Of the three, BeatriceFredman comes off the best, buteach of them is quite good.In small, the double bill at HullHouse is a very worthwhile dramat¬ic experience. But don’t go to beamused. Aou are more likely tobe changed. Friday, November 20LECTURE: Comparative Physiology ofMuscle. Abbott 133, 8 am.SABBATH SERVICES: Yavneh, Hillel.4:05 pm.KOINONIA: Conversations on War &Peace; Charles Malik and HowardSchomer, 1104 E. 58th st.. 7 pm.SABBATH SERVICES: regular Sab¬bath Services. Hillel, 7:30 pm.DISCUSSION: A Christian Philosophyof Higher Education. Dr. ArthurHolmes, Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.DRAMA: “A Thurber Carnival,” Bel-field Hall, 58th and Kimbark, room342, 8 pm.TONIGHT AT 8:30: Escurial, Ubu RolCaptain Cook, Mandel Hall, students$1. 8:30 pm.FIRESIDE: Jacob and Esau. Hillel,8:30 pm.Saturday, November 21SABBATH SERVICES: Hillel, 9 am.VISA: Volunteer work at ChicagoState Mental Hospital, meet at NewDorms parking lot, 12:30 pm.SABBATH SERVICES: Hillel, 3:50 pm.FILM: Time in the Sun. Eisenstein.Mandel Hall, students V5c, 7:30 and9:30 pm.CHICAGO SYMPHONY: OrchestraHall. 8:30 pm.DRAMA: "A Thurber Carnival,” Bel-field Hall, room 342 8:30 pm.TONIGHT AT 8:30: Mandel Hall, stu¬dents $1. 8 310 pm.BLUES CONCERT: Son House andMUSIC REVIEW Big Joe Williams, Ida Noyes, stu¬dent^ $1, 8:30 pm.SYMPOSIUM: The Negro Movementin the US; Morning panel: The Ne¬gro and the Metropolis; Scott Greer,Richard Wade. St. Clair Drake, FredStrodtbeck, 9:30 am. Afternoon panel:Forms of Negro Protest: Peter Rossi,August Meier. Charles McDew, 12:30pm. Last panel: The Negro in Poli¬tics: Morris Janowitz, Herbert Stor¬ing, Tim Black, 3:30 pm. All in SocialSciences 122.Sunday, November 22ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL: PrincipalRussell Chandran, 10 am.CARILLON RECITAL: RockefellerChapel, 12:15 pm.COFFEE HOUR: Major Trends in Con¬temporary Israeli Literature, Hillel,2 pm.BRIDGE: Club Master-Point game,Ida Noyes, 7:15 pm.MEETING: Polit-SDS War on Povertyplans, Ida Noyes Library, 7:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: beginner-interme¬diate class. Andor Czompo, IdaNoyes, 8-10:45 pm.RADIO BROADCAST: •‘Tonight at8:30,” live from Reynolds Club. 8:30pm.Monday, November 23COFFEE HOUR: Law School Lounge,3:30 pm.PANEL: “Now What?” sponsored byNu Pi Sigma, Quaker House, 5015W'oodlawn, 7:30 pm. -Symphony concert inspired'David RichterBach B Minor Mass unemotionalSunday’s performance ofBach’s “Mass in K Minor” bythe Rockefeller Chapel Choir,under the direction of RichardVikstrom, was mocked by brilliant'technical treatment but a certainlack of emotional involvement.Viksbxm coordinated singers andorchestra well!, maintained a goodtempo, and was aware of technicalsubtleties. However, he seemed un¬able to control the excellent singersentirely, who were somehow atlimes not integrated. The singersconveyed an impression of indi¬vidually skilled performers enjoyingIheir singing, although no section wasdominated by any particular voice.The lack of emotional concentrationwas certainly balanced by full aware¬ness of technical point* on their part.Lines were clear, entrances perfect,and control effortless.THE “KYRIE” OPENED withgood tempo but orchestral discon¬nectedness, which fortunately sub¬sided in the accompaniment. In the“Christe Eleison” duet, the instru¬ments were dynamically uniform,Init in that respect not coordinatedwith the singers and often over-;lowering the mezzo-soprano. Vocalclarity was initially good and con¬ sistently reached new levels of pre¬cision.In the second “Eyrie” a tendencyby tire singers became noticeableand later recurred: rather rapidalternation between very regular,almost metronomically accentedsinging and a sudden shift to a morelyrical approach. The “Gloria” re¬vealed another vocal trend, towardpreoccupation with and uniformityof sound and rich tone, sometimesto the detriment of the subtlety offeeling necessary for Bach.Sopranos were especially accurateand clear in the “Gratias Agimus,”which was a little mechanical butwell coordinated. Tempo was par¬ticularly appropriate in the “DomineDeus,” the tenor being more sensi¬tive than the soprano. The orchestrashowed much improvement; theflutes were especially beautiful.Suddenly a great deal of choral feel¬ing and excellent sectional balanceappeared in “Qui Tollis.”ELSA CHARLESTON gave a controlled and beautiful performance in“Qui Sedes,” ami again in the“Agnus Dei.” Her singing was veryexpressive, especially in comparisonwith the sudden orchestral deteriora¬tion evident in the fuzzy trumpet sec¬tion. The trumpets became increas¬ ingly hesitant, demonstrating con¬siderable unfamiliarity with themusic.Hie exciting entrance in the “CumSancto Spiritu,” gave rise to a feel¬ing of inspiration, which was main¬tained through “Et Resurrexit.”Emotional unity and involvement be¬came really noticeable for the firsttime in "Et Incamatus,” which wasa shade too fast but sung exquisitely.“Oucifixus” was in perfect tempo,and magnificent, indicating that thechoir was capable of adequate emo¬tional concentration. “Et Resurrexit”was notable fur the constant feelingof sympathetic apprehension for thetrumpets in the interludes.MICHAEL COUSINS sang withgreat sensitivity in “Et in SpiritumSanctum.” His control was verystrong, and his diction especiallygood. The women’s entrance in “Con¬ti teor” was beautiful and dear, andthe “Sanctus’’ was superb. Slingingwas exciting in the “Osama,” andthe orchestra improved.A stirring condusion to the masswas provided by Walter Cairinger’svery moving performance of the“Benedictus,” and of the choir’s“Dona Nobis Pacem.”Do Your Christmas |j Shopping Early 1i £ nI Today our tremendous assortment of ^FINE CHILDREN’S BOOKS || goes on display. i| Also see our new, beautiful art books, g$ engagement calendars andadult games. gStCome in now while our selection is complete |1The University of Chicago Bookstore |„ 5802 Ellis Avenue $ On Saturday evening:, theChicago Symphony Orchestragave what must be consideredone of its most inspired per¬formances in recent memory. Thereason for this extraordinary meta¬morphosis seemed to be the pres¬ence of the eminent pianist RuddfSerkin on the program. As his ve¬hicle, Mr. Serkin performed thePiano Concerto in F-minor of MaxReger, a rarely-heard work that hasbeen one of his specialties for manyyears. The music of Max Reger, aGerman romantic at the turn ofthis century, has never been popu¬lar among conductors and audiences.Reger, one of the great contrapuntalscholars, was never interested inprogram music and, although he ismusically similar to Brahms, hiscompositions have never had muchsuccess,Mr. Serkin. however, has been anardent proponent of Roger’s pianoconcerto for some time, having givenits American premiere nineteenyears ago. One could sense the greatlove he has for this concerto fromhis performance. Always an emotion¬al pianist, he seemed to put forthsomething extra on the concerto’sbehalf. It was more intense thanemotional involvement, it was hisearnest desire to communicate thetrue greatness of the concerto toeveryone present.TO AT LEAST ONE member ofthe audience, he has succeeded. Cer¬tainly the Reger concerto may notbe as melodic as a Brahms con¬certo, for example, but it does havea great many merits in its ownrights. The intensity of the openingmovement has rarely been equalledamong contemporary concertos. Thelyrical Largo has been called oneof the most beautiful passages inReger literature, and the finale isa fascinating encounter due toReger’s use of iugato form.Rhea Rollin I believe that the Reger concertoChicago Crilirs on Kp*lein'sperformance: “. . . a quirk-silver actor with a dancer'sbrilliance of movement, andhe has a trenchant powerwhen he underplavs.” ClaudiaCassidy. Tribune. . . actorof stunning virtuosity, whoilluminates the tortured titlerole with both intelligenceand passion.” Sydney J.Harris. News. . . hauntingperformance.” Glenna Syse,Sun-Times.TheGENE FRANKSl production ofPIRANDELLO'S•t.m.s ALVIN EPSTEINMAIL ORDERS ACCEPTEDStudents Price Tues.. Wed., Thurs *2-25Reg. Price 3.00$3.25Reg. Price 3.90Friday 8:30 p.m. * Sat. 6:30 p.mSunday 8:30 p.m. $2.50Reg. Price 3.30 does not deserve the anonymity thatit has heretofore received, .and cer¬tainly Mr. Serkin’s performance dida great deal to convince me of this.In the few times that I have heardhim perform in the past, he wasnever as intensely dedicated as hewas on Saturday. Without doubt,Jean Martinon sensed the greatnessof the moment and the orchestralaccompaniment was beautifully in¬tegrated and on an equally highlevel as Mr. Serkin’s performance.Mr. Martinon’s inspiration seemedto carry over into his performanceof Mozart’s “Haffner” Symphony ashe gave it a lucid and exciting per¬formance, which evoked some crispand well-executed playing from theorchestra. Benjamin Lees’ Second-Symphony struck me as being ratherbanal and unimaginative in its melo¬dic and contrapuntal devices; typi¬cal of the works of many neo-roman¬tic composers: nothing particularlyoffensive, and yet nothing of whichto take special note.But whatever else was on the pro¬gram was almost immaterial, forthe evening was Rudolf Serkin’s. Inwhat must have been one of hisgreatest performances in manyyears. Serkin was absolutely blind¬ing in his brilliance.Edward ChikofskySuddenlyI Lost MyMemory!A noted publisher in Chicagoreports there is a simple tech¬nique for acquiring a powerfulmemory which can pay youreal dividends in both businessand social advancement andworks like magic to give youadded poise, necessary self-con-j fidence and greater popularity, jj According to this publisher,!many people do not realize howi| much they could influence oth-jers simply by rememberingaccurately everything they see,jhear, or read. Whether in busi-iness, at social functions or evenin casual conversations withnew acquaintances, there areways in which you can domi¬nate each situation by yourability to remember.To acquaint the readers ofthis paper with the easy-to-follow rules for developing skillin remembering anything youchoose to remember, the pub¬lishers have printed fuR detailsof their self-training methodin a new book, “Adventures inMemory,” which will be mailedfree to anyone who requests it.No obligation. Simply sendyour request to: MemoryStudies, 835 Diversey Park¬way, Dept. C128 Chicago, 111.60614. A postcard vail do.Nov. 20, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROONOPERETTA REVIEW'Mikado an overwhelming success Culture CalendarTHE MIKADO, orTHE TOWN Of TITIPyLibretto by Sir Wm. S. GilbertMusic by Sir Arthur SullivanKo-Ko. Lord High ExecutionerBar LufcwayNanki-Poo. a WanderingMinstrel Ernest ArnettThe Mikade, Emperor oiJapan William RandlemanTurn-Turn ... Helen BaileyKatisha Joyce HeinriksonPooh-Bah Lord HighEverything Else David CurrieProducer-DirectorNancy Lorie and Roeh StackMusical Director Roland J. BaileyLast weekend the Parents’Association of the Universityof Chicago Laboratory Schoolspresented their annual Gilbertand Sullivan operetta, this time un¬der die guise of the recently incor¬porated “Gilbert and Sullivan OperaCompany.” To further delude theinnocent public, they clothed die per¬formance in talent, ebullient mirth,and wit worthy of professionals. Andso. in spite of an orchestra that al¬ternated between committing crimesagainst the listening public andplaying excellently, in spite of aNanki-Poo who went on and off keyjust as he went in and out of char¬acter, in spite of occasional slap¬stick stage business which distractedduring some of the best lines in theplay, The Mikado was an enormous,brilliant success.Nearly all of the principals wereexcellent. Ray Lubway was superb:his voice and physique were perfectfor tile part bf the cheap tailor whowas elevated to the exalted rankof lord High Executioner of Titipu.His dance during die song “Here’sa How-de-do” was dashed off ingreat style. Perhaps his greatesttalent is his comic timing with whichhe brought the house down on sev¬eral occasions merely by the inflec¬tion of his voice. David Currie,nearly relegated to the rank of LordHigh Nothing at All because hisname was omitted from die pro¬gram. also proved to be an excel¬lent comedian, delivering die roleof Pooh-Bah to die greatest effectin this reviewer’s memory.Joyce Heinrikson showed herselfto be an excellent singer and aneven better actress. Slie displayedcommendable devotion to clear enun¬ciation. managing to make herselfunderstood during the finale of thefirst act in what are probably themost difficult arias of die piece. Shehad an awareness of the dramaticand the comic in the work. Her re¬sponses to die Mikado’s verses when he introduces himself to thethrong for the first time seemedlike the irritating interruptions ofthe overbearing daughter-in-lawelect. She really wept sloppy tearswhen Ko-Ko courted her with die“Tit-Willow” song. And she chargedafter Ko-Ko with reai violence wiienshe discovered dial he had fooledher into marrying him. In short, shedisplayed authentic, energetic emo¬tion at all the appropriate places,thereby making die performancecome alive.THE DIRECTORS WERE partic¬ularly original in their stage tech¬nique: at several points in the show,a coolie stood atop a stool and heldout a wooden branch at arms lengthso as to impersonate a tree. Suchcoolies acted as the tree from whichNanki-Poo proposed to hang him¬ self, that beneath which Nanki-Pookissed Yum-Yum, and dial fromwhich the tom-tit plunged to his bil¬lowy grave. This latter use of thetechnique was particularly note¬worthy for die finesse with whichthe coolie acted as the tree andmimed the actions of the bird.Both Hie gentlemen’s and ladies’choral parts were sung well, and,more important, they articulated sowell that they could be understoodeven in the balcony. The set wasbright and finished with professionalskill.IN SHORT, THE play was well-performed, jolly, funny, and engros-singly enjoyable: all that a Gilbertand Sullivan performance should be.To paraphrase Nanki-Poo. it was anevening of unmodified rapture.Charles DasheExpose Illinois U. pot plotCHAMPAIGN" (CPS) —Three University of Illinoisstudents face possible sen¬tences of from two to 10years in the penitentiary for illegalpossession of marijuana.The trio was arrested by statenarcotics agents, university policeand Champaign police officials, whofound 15 to 25 grams of marijuanaand a marijuana cigarette.CHARGED BY Charles Moore,state narcotics agent, were AndreaRubinoff, junior; Gail Mae Pritikin,sophomore; and Ira Stanley Kamin,sophomore.Kamin was released on a $5,000bond. Miss Pritikin and Miss Rubin¬off are free on $2,000 bond.Kamin made a motion Mondaybefore Magistrate G. Richard Skill-man to have the charge dismissed.The motion was set for a hearingat 2 pm, Nov. 24.Concealed in carThe two girls were arrested to¬gether by Moore and a universitysecurity officer. The bulk marijuanawas found concealed in their car.Kamin was implicated by the girlsduring the course of questioning andwas arrested at his residence. Asmall quantity of marijuana andthe marijuana cigarette were foundhidden in Kamin’s room, accordingto officials.AN APPEARANCE BEFOREMagistrate Skiliman was continuedto Nov. 24.In an interview with the DailySAMUEL A. BELL"Buy Shell From Bell"SINCE 19264701 So. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150 MODEL CAMERALEICA, B0LEX, NIKON, PENTAXZEISS, MAMIYA, OMEGA, DURSTTAPE RECORDERS1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259 Iliini, student newspaper at the uni¬versity, Josejih Healy, superintend¬ent of the state division of narcotics,said he felt the arrests were indi¬vidual incidents and “not extensive.”Healy said the “$64 question" waswhere the trio obtained the nar¬cotics. He offered the possibility itwas purchased in Chicago.Two to ten yearsPenalty for conviction on thecharge of illegal possession of nar¬cotics is two to ten years in apenitentiary, Healy said. “They willbe prosecuted by a state’s attorneyand probably will be held over fora grand jury,” he said.THE INCIDENT CAME less thana year after a “dope scare” whichled campus police to investigatethe possibility of marijuana smok¬ing at jazz sessions in the Uni¬versity of Illinois student union. Thatinvestigation burned up nothing.Last year, students at the Univer¬sities of Wisconsin and Coloradowere arrested on charges of usingmarijuana. The Colorado cases,which involved 11 students, werethrown out of court last April ongrounds that marijuana is not anaddictive drug and therefore does notcome under the state narcotics code,and on grounds that sections of thecode relating to marijuana violatedthe state constitution.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 ConcertsChicago Sympony Orchestra: JeanMartinon cond.; Frank Miller vc.,Steven Staryk v. Constant: 24 Pre¬ludes; Shostakovitch, Sym. No. 1;Brahms: Double Concerto. Nov. 20 at2 pm. “Pops'' concert: Skitch Hender¬son, cond. Sarah Vaughn, soloist, inall-Gershwin concert. Nov. 21 at 8:30.Jean Martinon cond.; Frances Bibleand Saramae Endich s's. FlorenceKoplet'f c. Chicago Sym. Orch. Cho.Vivaldi: Gloria. Debussy: Nocturnes(complete.) Ravel: excerpts from Da-phnis Sc Chloe. Nov. 2ti at 8: 15pm. Tickets $2-0.50: student gallerytickets to Fri. concerts $1. 220 S.Michigan. HA 7-0:*>G2. After 5. HA 7-0409.ExhibitsIVAN ALBRIGHT: a retrospectiveexhibition of work. Art Institute.Michigan and Adams. Thru Dec. 11.BORIS MARTINSON ANI) GREGO¬RY NIZNIK: an exhibit of oil paint¬ings. University of Chicago Center forContinuing Education, 1307 E. tlOthSt. Thru Nov. 27-I.E GARAGE: original oils bv morethan 400 artists. 70 E. Walton, Chi¬cago.FilmsCAPTAIN NEWMAN: with GregoryPeck. Angie Dickenson. Chicago His¬torical Society. Clark and North, Chi¬cago. Nov. 22 at 2:15. 25c.THE CRUCIBLE: Sartre's adaptationof Miller's play. With Yves Montand.Simone Signoret :trd UnitarianChurch, 301 N. Mayfield. Nov. 20 at8. 75c.SEDUCED AND ABANDONED: withSavo Urzi, and Stefania SandrielliHyde Park Theater. Consult local list¬ing for times and prices.TIME IN THE SUN: dir Eisenstein.Russian Films. Mandel Hall. 57th andUniversity. Nov. 21 at 7:30 and 9:30.Tickets SI Students 75c.TOUCH OF EVIL: dir Orson WellesDoc Films. Soc Sci. 122, Nov. 24 at7:15 and 9:15. GOc. DON GIOVANNI: (same cast asabove). Nov. 23. 25.Nightly at 8 except Sunday at 7 {<)Opera House. 20 N. Wacker. $3-$| iTheatreA Funny Thing Happened on theWay to the Forum: starring JerryLester. Edward Everett Horton. p.luHartman. Arnold Stang. and* ErikRhodes Shubert Theatre. 22 W Mon¬roe. Nightly at 8:30, Sun. at 7 SatMatinee at 2:30. Mon. dark. $2.50-0'*,CE 0-8240.The Madwoman of Chaill.xplay by Jean Giraudoux. GoodmanTheater. Monroe and Columbus. ThruNov. 14. Sun.-Thurs 7:30, Fri. and Sat8:30 pm. $2.50-$3.Farther Along: Second City Players1840 N. Wells. Tue. thru Sun . » and11. 1 on Fri. and Sat. Improvisation^after 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 Tues.-Sat., 4 and 9 pm SunWeekdays $2.60. Fri. and Sat. $■•■*.SU 7-4200.Enrico IV: by Luigi Pirandello Dirbv Gene Frankel. Harper Theater 5 • -iS Harper. Tues -Fri. at 8:30. Sat it0:30 & 10:15. Sun. at 2:;50 Sc HTues-Thurs. $3; Fri. Sc Sat. $:t anSun. mat. $2.50. Sun. Eve. $3.30 Bb3-1717.Endgame: Samuel Beckett Dir byRobert Benedette of UC. With W •.Sanders. Robert Benedetti. Hull Hmi^Theater, 3212 N. Broadway, ChicagoNov. 20-Jan. 2. Fri. Sc Sat. at s :nSun. at 7:30. Tickets Fri. & Sun$1.90-2.90. Sat. $2 40-$3.40.Tonight At 8:30: Captain Cook byGiraudoux, Escurial by Ghelderodeand I’bu Rol by Jarry. ChamberTheater. 3rd floor Reynolds Club. Nnv19-22, at 8:30. Tickets $1.50, students$1.Folk MusicBOB DYLAN: at Orchestra Hall 216S. Michigan Nov. 20 at 8:30. Tickets$2-$5.HENRI MANCINI AND THE CHRIS¬TIE MINSTRELS: at Arie CrownTheater. McCormick Place. Nov. 20-28 at 8:30. Tickets $2.50-$5.50.JazzGene Krupa Quartet: at the LondonHouse. 300 N Michigan. Nov. 10-Dec.10. Nightly 8-1. Fri. & Sat. 8-3Cover. Fri. Sc Sat. on!y-$lMiles Davis: at The Plugged Nickel,1321 N Wells St Tru Nov. 22. Phone337-9813. NO MINORS. $2 covercharge.OperaDON GIOVANNI: with Stich-Ran-dall, Curtin, Panni, Kraus. Upnian,Ghiaurov, Kunz, Maragoni, Krips, Nov.20.LA CENERENTOI.A: Berganza. DeSett. Mannion, Castellato. Bruscantim,Tadeo, Cesari. Maragoni, Dervaux.Nov. 21. 22. Blues concert Sat.Eddie “Son” House and Bit? JoeWilliams, both Mississippi IV' tblues singers, will be; featured a tconcert Saturday night sponsored bytiie Folklore Society.Tile concert, which begins at 3 3')pm, will be held in Ida Noyes HailHouse, who will be making his fir.-tChicago appearance, is one of severalrecent rediscoveries in the blues fieldHe lias long been considered one *>fdie foremost blues singers in diebusiness.Wiliams, who plays an unustnlnine-string guitar, has appeared twiceat (last UC Folk Festivals.Admission to the concert is $1 50for the general public and $1 for >!i:dents.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONS DO 3-6866PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudeat & Faculty Discount"’rliNFI IT ... La protection flnanciftre que vou#donnez & votre famille aujourd’huidevra lui etre procure d’une autrefagon demain. L'assurance Sun Lifepeut certalnement accomplir cettetUche ci votre place.En tant que repr&sentant local de la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter 6 un moment devotre choix?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CIUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15. III.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY Today'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN*1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGF GROVEHY 3-3445Sales • Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL Singing goes better refreshed.And Coca-Cola — with that special zingbut never too sweet —refreshes best.things gObetter,!~withCokeBottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company byi The Coca-ColaBottKnq Co. ofChicago, lac.10 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20, 1964MAROON WEEKEND GUIDEHARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetPud line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices. FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA1 * —1318HY 3-6800 H-t AL \ AIQ. COWOlTtOVltD'"oisutv' 1316 t. 53” 5T.II AM TO IO PMMI3-34-07WE DELIVERshore drive motel-FACING LAKE MICHIGANSpecial University of Chicago Rates. Beautiful Rooms,Free TV, Parking, Courtesy Coffee.Closest Motel to Univ. of Chicago and Museum of Science ft Industry.FOR INFORMATION OR RESERVATIONSWRITE OR CALL Ml 3-2300SHORE DRIVE MOTEL54th St. ft So. Shore Dr. a Chicago 37, IllinoisGOLD CITY INN“A Gold Mine of Goo<l FoodH10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK’S BEST CANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559Try Oiir Convenient Take-Out Orders(Fat More For Less)TIKI TOPICSHAUOLI MAHALO (HOW-OH-LEE-MAH-HA-LO)Happy Thanksgiving To All Our FriendsHOUSE OF TIKIis proud to offer all of our friends of Hyde Park and thesorounding areas a selection of Polynesian Dishes as well asour choice American menu. This choice of Polynesian foodsis now part of our regular menu.Just A Sum/Jo Of Our Menu:TER I YAKI STEAKShrimp Polynesian Chicken TahitianLobster Polynesian Beef anti TomatoesEgg Roll Ono Ono KaukauShrimp de Jonglie Beef-Kabob-FlambeOPEN FOR THANKSGIVING DINNERInclude one of our delightful Hawaiian cocktailsSEE YOU THENCIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51st Street and Harper Ave. LI 8-7585Del PRADO Hote|300 South on the Lake IIY3-9600Frank Amorosl Triocomedy — music — songsBILL CURTISsightless keyboard artistDOTTIE BEE TRIOmusical show-stoppersCONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT!TIL 4 A.M.NO COVER — NO MINIMUM PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PK. BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICEKE 6-6606 — KE 6-3891CHICKEN - SANDWICHESPIZZA &ITALIAN FOODS— 4th SMASH MONTH —Chicago’* Longest Running MusicalThey blow a gust of fresh air into themusical revue business."—Lesner, News"The keynote is literacy by Univ. otChicago Cosmopolites." Bartel, Amer.Te»»., Wed.. Thun 9 P.M : Frl. I 4. II;Sat. t:30, 10:30. 12:30: Sun. 7:30 I. 9 30Weekdays $2.65, Fri. ft Sat. $2.95Thuter In thi CloudsALLERT0N HOTEL701 N. Michigan Ave.Reservations: SU 7-4200memvews mvuMColony Room Dinnerikon end t Course15.50; frl. 6 Sot. mswwr offer, JDinner, £MM *UHm 50* n■m at ail times ■m for college ■m students Hm • apan from dawn til dawn Bm • a dlffareot doubla faaturadally mu • "llttla Gal lary" for gal* only m■ • dark parking on# dour »outh... four hour* 95c aftarf p.m. mfri. 20 - "serenade,” "luckyme."eat. 21 - "under the yumyum tree," "pope’s deli¬cate condition."sun. 22 - "eva," "the gypsyand the gentleman."non. 25 • "the george raftetory," "king of theroaring 20’s.”tues. 24 - "the organizer,""no tove for johnny."wed. 25 • "55 daya atpoking," "no place tohide.”thurs. 26 - "what a way togo,” "they all died laugh¬ing ”JEFFERY THEATRE1952 E. 71st HY 3-3334EXCLUSIVEFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20thI-W H-G-M presentsS’ A LAWRENCEJ/kLa weingarten> lllC PRODUCTIONV/isM?WBROW!HAMOIDS PiHARVE-pm'ision MfiPOCOiOR—Feature Times:SAT. ft WED.1:10—3:25—5:40—8:00—10:15FRI., SUN., MON., TUES., THURS.2:15—4:45—7:30—9:45 i'liiiiiiiiiiimiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiimiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiimmii'-IA BACCHANALIA PARTY 11 AT ALPHA DELT II TONIGHT! I| 5747 University Ave. |ALL STUDENTS WELCOME |111 i 111111111111111111111 i i i 111111 i 111111 ii 11111111111111 m 11111 i i i i 1111111111111111 i 11111111 r1CINEMAChicago at MichiganHeld Over 5th Week!Could be the 1965Academy Award Winner"One of the Best AmericanPictures of the Year"CANNES FILM AWARDin the tradition of Marty, Davidand Lisa, and Lilies of the Field.SUN-TIMES 3Vs stars"ONE POTATO,TWO POTATO"STUDENTS $1.00with I.D. Cardsevery day but SaturdayThanksgiving Day Matineaot 1:30 p.m.Weekdays Open 6 P.M.Sat. ft Sun. Ope,. 1:30 charcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668AIR CONDITIONEDLa Russo’sFINE FOODS AND COCKTAILSNow Open for Lunch 11:30-3:30Phone NOrmal 7-9390ZBTOPEN PARTYAll first year men invifedBANDBOOZEBROADSTONIGHT — 9:005554 Woodlawn - corner of 56thLAKE ithe I^ P A R K AT S3RD>yde park : N O 7 • 9 O 7 1theatreMl STARTS FRIDAY, NOV. 20CANNES PRIX ACTOR — SARO URZI inSEDUCED & ABANDONED 1andAward Short — "COUNTERFEIT LUNCH"Daily—6 - 8:05 - 10:30; Sun.—2:45 - 5:10 - 7:35 - 10Starts Friday, Nov. 27Jean-Paul Belmondo ^ Claudia Cardinale"CARTOUCHE"Award Short — "THAT’S ME"II Starts Friday, Dec. 4"DIMKA"CARRY ON REGARDLESS"FREE WEEKEND PATRON PARKING AT 5230 SOUTH LAKE PARKSPECIAL STUDENT RATES WITH STUDENT I.D. CARDSNov. 20, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11More speech freedomdemonstrations at CalBERKELEY (CPS) — NewDemonstrations flared on theUniversity of California cam¬pus as student groups opi>osedto the university’s decision to banpolitical activity from die campusended what they termed a “self-imposed moratorium un political ac¬tivity.”University officials retaliated bydissolving the student-faculty ad¬ministration Committee on CampusPolitical Activity, which had beenreviewing the university’s policiesgoverning' political action on campussince early October. The uni¬versity administration also threat¬ened to take disciplinary actionagainst the students and organizationsviolating the ban.The Free Speech Movement(FSM), the federation of studentorganizations protesting the ban, is¬sued a statement saying it was re¬suming demonstrations because ne¬gotiations in the Committee haddeadlocked and appeared headed“for a long series of radical disagree¬ments.”“WE MUST EXERCISE our rightsso that the University is not per¬mitted to deny us those rights forany long period and so that ourpolitical organizations can functionto their maximum capacity,” tlieFSM statement said.Demonstrations continueDemonstrations resumed Monday,November 9, and continued through¬out the week. Members of the FreeSpeech Movement set up tables onthe steps of Sproul Hall, the uni¬versity administration building whichwas the scene of an all-night sit-inlast Oct., and began soliciting mem¬bership and funds m violation ofuniversity rules. The next day theywere joined by a number of gradu¬ate teaching assistants who stageda sympathy demansferafion.University officials took the namesof about 75 students involved in Mon¬day’s protest, and in a statementissued that evening by UniversityPresident Clark Kerr and BerkeleyChancellor Edward Strong said “stu¬dents participating in violation ofrules will be subject to ipenaltiestiirough established procedures.”They did not spell out what “estab¬lished procedures” were, but eightstudents involved in similar activi¬ties last Oct. 2 were placed on in¬definite suspension. An agreementending the Oct. 2 demonstrationsstipulated in part that their casewould be reviewed by the academicsenate. A specially formed commit¬tee is presently doing so.In their statement, Kerr and Strongsaid the FSM “has abrogated theagreement of October 2 and by rea¬son of the abrogation the Committee on Campus Political Activity is dis¬solved.”THEY SAID THAT in the futurethey “would seek advice on rolesgoverning political action on campus”from the student senate and thefaculty senate as both groups “havecalled for the use of peaceful andorderly procedures in settling dis¬putes.”“We welcome proposals from allinterested groups,” they said."Devoted to discussion"The statement said the Universityof California “is devoted to rationaldiscussion, to law and order, and tofreedom lor students and facultymatched with responsibility in theuse of this freedom.”In response, the FSM called thedissolution of the committee the“destruction of one more line olcommunication between the studentsand the administration. ... It makesthe possibility of ultimate settle¬ment even more remote.”The FSM received support in itsstand from about 200 graduateteaching assistants, who on Tuesday,November 10, set up tables on tl>eSproul Hall steps and solicited moneyand new members for the movementin violation of the roles,The present dispute over campuspolitical activity started last Sep¬tember when the university toldpolitical organizations that theycould no longer distribute literature,recruit membership or solicit fundsat the Bancroft-Telegraph entranceto the campus, a place where suchactivity had taken place for sometime.A series of demonstrations pro¬testing the action were staged inearly Oct., culminating with a 32hour sit-in around a police car whichattracted several thousand spectatorsand moved nervous university of¬ficials to call out nearly 400 riotpolice.THE DEMONSTRATION wasaxled by a six-point agreement that,among other things, set up thestudy committee and pledged theFree Speech Movement to a mora¬torium on demonstrations.The Student Non-ViolentCoordinating Committeewill hold a tenement in¬vestigation session this Sun¬day at 2:30 pm. The objectis to see if various apart¬ment houses meet the Chi¬cago building code. Allthose interested shouldmeet at 42nd and CottageGrove to be given assign¬ments. Further informationcan be gotten from SfeveGable in New Oorm.NICKY'SRESTAURANTAND PIZZAFine FoodAnd DrinksFor Your DiningPleasurePIZZA OURSPECIALTYFREE STUDENT DELIVERY53 - KIMBARK PLAZA FA 4-534012 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 20, 196< Rights success up to studentsBy Laura OodofskyCollegiate Press ServiceWASHINGTON — The fed¬eral government is countingon colleges and universities—especially schools of education— for much assistance in carryingout the Civil Rights Act of 1964.In an interview with CPS. DavidSeeley, who is directing the USOffice of Education's civil rights ac¬tivities, outlined higher education’sthreefold role in new federal civilrights activities.First, a number of colleges anduniversities will contract to run in¬stitutes for public school teachers,guidance counselors, and administra¬tors to help them cope with the taskof desegregating their schools.Second, faculty members will beasked to help develop new curric¬ulum materials and teacher trainingmethods lor use with desegregating schools. Methods and materials willbe developed in both Hie remedialand intergroup relations fields.Third, higher education is ex¬pected to provide leadership in stir¬ring local communities to action insolving desegregation problems.“Higher education people by andlarge have not led any crusades inthis direction,” Seeley said.THE US OFFICE of Educationhas been given $8 million to financethese and other education-relatedcivil rights activities during the cur¬rent fiscal year.Title IV of the Civil Rights Actautliorizes the activities in whichhigher education will be the mostinvolved. The title states that theCommissioner of Education maygive technical and financial assist¬ance to school districts requestinghelp in solving desegregation prob¬lems..Other Title IV civil rights activi¬ties the Office of Education is plan¬ ning to carry out tliis year include-• Development of new ways toorganize schools and classrooms forinstruction quality in desegregatedschool systems.• Commencement of a two-yea-survey of the availability of educa¬tional opportunities within the USpublic schools. The survey could lx*used as the basis for further studiesand action.• Expansion of guidance andcounselling aids to give more atten¬tion to individual student needs mdesegregating schools.• Provision of consultative serv-ices and informational materials.Field experts will be sent out whererequested. Publications, films, andresearch reports will be distributed.Since so much of tlie Office ofEducation’s civil rights aid will !*channeled into poverty areas, theOffice will merge its poverty andcivil rights staff in some cases.Seeley said.Seeks new humanities billWASHINGTON (CPS) —Congressman William Moor¬head (D-Pa.) has asked thenation’s academic communityfor help in revising his bill to createa National Humanities Foundation.In an address Monday to gradu¬ate school deans of the Associationof State Universities and Land GrantColleges, Moorhead said lie intro-Summer in Wash.?students now eligibleUC students will have theopportunity to spend the sum¬mer in Washington workingfor federal agencies or in Con¬gressional offices under the Univer¬sity of Chicago in Government Serv¬ice program.The program is under the jointsponsorshi^of the Alumni Associa¬tion and the office of Career Coun¬seling and Placement.APPLICATIONS FOR tlie programshould be m;ide to the placementoffice. Reynolds Club 200, extension3282. Students from all parts of theUniversity are eligible. Those select¬ed will be compensated at regular[jay levels for the jobs they fill.Tlie deadline for applications isDecember l. and students have beenencouraged by Mrs. Anita Sandke,director of the placement office, totake the Federal Service EntranceExamination., since FSEE eligibili¬ty is ofen a criterion for acceptanceto the government posts. The dead¬line for applications tor the FSEEexam is December 17. The examwill be given on January 16.Further information on the pro¬gram may be gotten from Mrs.Sandke. dueed tlie bill “knowing that therecould be no action on it in the 88tliCongress, but with tlie hope it wouldbe used by the friends of the human¬ities as a vehicle for discussion anddebate.”“It is my lujpe that from die aca¬demic community I will receive cri¬ticisms and suggestions so that animproved bill can be introduced onthe opening day ol the 89th Con¬gress,” he said.Asks bipartisan aidMoorhead added dial between nowand die opening of Congress he in¬tends “to solicit bi-partisan supportin botli the House and the Senate”for a humanities foundation bill.“It would be of great help if mem¬bers of the academic communitywould communicate with their ownSenators and their own Representa¬tives to enlirt their support for dieNational Humanities Foundation,” hecontinued.AS OR I G I N A 1.1. Y introduced,Moorhead’s bill embodied the rec¬ommendations of a report Issued inJune by the National Commission c»ithe Hunanities.Tlie Commission was formed inthe spring of 1963 under the auspicesof the American Council of LearnedSocieties (ACLS), the Council olGraduate School.-, in the UnitedStates, and the United Chapters ofPhi Beta Kappa.Report cites aid neededThe 20-member Commission con¬cluded that the humanities in Ameri¬ca — the arts as well as the rele¬vant academic disciplines — are inneed of additional massive support,coming largely from tlie federal gov¬ernment. Tlie Commission recom¬mended that an independent NationalHumanities Foundation similar tothe National Science Foundation be created to administer federal |«r>-grarrvs for tlie humanities.At the American Council on Edu¬cation's fall conference. FederickBurckhardt, President of tlie ACLS.described the enthusiastic responsethat the report received:“IN THE FIRST month after pub¬lication . . . the ACLS receivedrequests for more than 6.000 copiesof tlie Report. The total first [Mint¬ing of 25,IKK) copies, which we hidimagined would be sufficient to meetany conceivable demand, lias beenexhausted.“Newspaper coverage and edi¬torial supjmrt throughout the countryhave also exceeded our most opti¬mistic estimates. Expressions ot in¬terest and offers of assistance havecome from superintendents of edu¬cations, from college aixi universitypresidents and deans, from teachersand professors, from members olthe Natkinal Science Board andmembers of Congress, from educa¬tional and artistic organizations, amfrom businessmen and private cmzens,” Burckhardt said.Women’s club solicitsclothes for IndiansDuring the coming week, DeltaSigma women's club will sponsor aclothing drive for tlie American Indian Center on North Sheridan RoadCollection boxes will be placed intiie lobbies of New Dorm and PieroTower and in the office ol BurtonJudson Court.Tlie purpose of the American Indian Center is to help tlie Indian-who come, destitute, to Chicagofrom tiieir reservations. It findsthem jobs and living quarters andhelps them adjust to city life uigeneral. Particularly needed arechildren’s clothes and bedding, butany contribution will be appreciatedKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicaqa IS. IK.MU 4-6856ANCHOR CAMERA1523 E. 53rd ST.PL 2-2228FAST PHOTOFINISHING SERVICESELL — RENT — TRADETRY BEFORE YOU BUYEYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDr. Kurt RosenbaumOptometrist53-Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscountMULL HOUSESHERIDAN THEATRE"Who'll Save The Plowboy?"FRIDAY AND SATURDAY EVENING — Curtain 8:30ON DECEMBER 3"The Blood Knot"Professional Equity cast from New York717 West Sheridan Road281-5872