Philbrick and Schwarz also hereProtest against HUAC investigation mushroomsThe House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC)will have a large and unappreciative counterpart to meet itwhen it visits Chicago beginning Monday.According to Tom Howard, Student Government’s NationalSludent Association coordinator,four separate protest activities areplanned. There will be a massmeeting Sunday night, a campusrally and a forum Monday, andpickets beginning Tuesday andlasting until Thursday at the fed¬eral building downtown.IM ADDITION, A petition tobe sent to the House of Repre¬sentatives and other highly placedofficials has been making therounds on campus. It asks forthe abolition of HUAC on thegrounds that it serves “no usefullegislative function” and that itscontinued existence displays “anultimate lack of faith in a demo¬cratic society.” Over 500 peoplehad signed the petition as ofThursday afternoon, among themsome 150 faculty members. 4 speakers featuredHUAC will spend three days intown beginning Tuesday investi¬gating 16 Chicago citizens whoare suspected of having com¬munist leanings and/or sympath¬ies. It is not known whether thoseinvestigated will be formallycharged or what the purpose ofthe hearings will be.The Sunday meeting, to be heldat the First Congregational church,1613 W. Washington, beginning at7 pm, will feature talks by JamesForman, executive director ofSNCC; Donna Allen, legislativechairman of the Women’s Inter¬national League for Peace andFreedom; Rennie Davis of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society, and Fred Shuttlesworth of the South¬ern Christian Leadership Confer¬ence.At 12:30 pm Monday, Studentsfor Civil Liberties will stage arally' in front of Cobb Hall atwhich two of those subpenaedby HUAC will appear, along withothers.AT 4 PM THE same day, How¬ard has organized a panel on“Subversion and Legislative In¬vestigations.” Participants includeGeorge Anastaplo, professor ofhistory Walter Johnson, associateprofessor of economics GerhardMeyer, law professor MalcolmSharp, professor on the commit¬tee on social thought EdwardShils, law professor Harry Kal-ven, and assistant professor ofphilosophy Fred Siegler. Theforum is intended to be a broaddiscussion of the issues and prob¬lems surrounding legislative in¬vestigations. Little worry over copsThe three-day protest in frontof the federal building, Howardsaid, is being coordinated by theChicago Committee to Defend theBill of Rights. There is littleworry over the prospect of trou¬ble from the police, Howard said,but just the same, the Bill ofRights committee has gone onrecord as unwilling to participatein non-violent activities.Current plans for the federalbuilding demonstration call fora constant picket and perhaps “an‘In White America’ sort of thing,”which would involve the readingsof some of the recoi’ds of HU AC’spast meetings in dramatic form,Howard said.Bus service may also be providedfor demonstrators not only fromall the other Chicago-area schools, Howard said, but this Is contlit*gentgent on how much moneycan be raised. Money is also need*ed for possible ads in the citynewspapers on Tuesday, he added.At the same time HUAC is intown, the Greater Chicago Schoolof Anti-Communism will hold afour-day series of seminars on thethreat that communism presents.The series is a part of the Chris¬tian Anti-Communism Crusade,and will feature Fred Schwarz;president of the Crusade, and Her¬bert Philbrick, author of I LedThree Lives. The sessions will beheld at the Edgewater BeachHotel. No protest action againstthe Crusade is planned.All those interested in obtain*lng further Information on theanti-HUAC activities should callHoward at 667-0475. Contributionsmay be sent either to Howard orto the Bill of Rights committee.Asks larger voice for studentsSocial rules committee reportsTo as great an extent as possible, student should be responsible for making the decisionsthat will affect their day to day lives in the dorms, according to the long-awaited report ofthe social rules committee which was released Wednesday.The report, the product of a stu¬dent-faculty committee which wasestablished to review social regu¬lations and the whole environ¬ment of the College, has beenthree months in the making.There are no guarantees that thereport will be implemented, butthe administration has indicatedthat it will be seriously considered.MORE SPECIFICALLY, the re¬port advocates the establish¬ment of student-facuty commit¬tees in each dorm house in orderto help create a “healthy atmos¬phere.” The roles and activitiesof each of these committees wouldbe left up to the individual mem¬bers of each house, but all thecommittees will be expected tostay within a certain generalframework. 'Besides the Individual housecommittees, there would also bea blanket student-faculty commit¬tee which will conduct a continu¬ing revision and re-examinationof UC’s environment. Constantrevision and re-examination areemphasized repeatedly in the re¬port, the full text of which fol¬lows:Make all dorms co-edOther specific recommendationsinclude the immediate “co-educa-tionalizing” of all dormitories, con¬struction of suites in dormitoriesthat are already built, reductionof residence requirement after1965-6 to one year for both menand women, liberalization of hoursfor first year women, and aboli¬tion of hours for all women abovethe first year unless they or theirparents specifically request them.THE IDEA BEHIND all theproposed dorm changes, the re¬port says, is to make dorms desir¬able enough places so that peoplewill want to live in them insteadof deserting them at the eailiestopportunity.Although older students, fac¬ulty, and administration are im¬plicated for the current bad situ¬ation on campus, the report pointsout that one of the major causesof the trouble is that students arenot given enough responsibility|n decision-making. This resultsin apathy and an unhealthy cli¬mate, the report says. Following is the full text ofthe committee’s report.THE MEMBERS of the SocialRules Committee are professor ofpsychology David Bakan, profes¬sor of law Soia Mentschikoff, as¬sistant professor of sociologyRichard Flacks, assistant profes¬ sor of romance languages RuthWebber, associate professor ofeconomics, Gerhard Meyer, assist¬ant professor of education CharlesBidwell, and students Peter Ra-binowitz, Judy Magidson, SandraBaxter, Barbara Rhine, Davidstraus, and Mark Joseph.Cobb reconstructionis almost contractedby Robert F. LeveyThe long-awaited reconstruction of Cobb Hall may beginin the next two or three weeks if the University can con¬vince the contractors who have bid for the job that theirprices are too high, according to James Ritterskamp, vice presi¬dent for administration. * 'The bids for the reconstructionthat the University has receivedare “way the heck over our esti¬mates,” Ritterskamp said. “Thecontractors’ estimates are as muchas 40% above the architect’sestimate,” he said.RITTERSKAMP WOULD notdivulge the actual figures involved,but he did say that the discrepancyis on the order of half a milliondollars.Chances pretty goodBut Ritterskamp called thechances “pretty good” that the con¬tractors’ asking price can be re¬ duced. “If we can get them tobring it down,” he said, “Con¬struction can start right away.”Cobb, the University’s oldestbuilding, has been completelydeserted since early in the winterquarter, when its last tenants, theschool of social service adminis¬tration, moved to their new quar¬ters across the Midway. No under¬graduate classes have bt*en held inCobb since last summer on theorders of Chicago’s fire commis¬sioner, who failed to find Cobb’swooden staiiways and floors and(Continued on page four) UC raises marriedstudents rents againRental rates in most married student housing buildings willbe raised five per cent when new leases are signed, assistantdean of students James E. Newman told the Maroon yes¬terday.Rising expenses, especiallywages for maintenance men and complete list of which buildingsother employees, necessitated the will and will not be affected byraise, Newman said. He pointed - early next week, Newman sai<iout that the last increase for mar¬ried students housing was in July,1963.STUDENTS PRESENTLY liv-lng in the system will feel theeffects of the increased rents inOctober, when everybody’s leasesare renewed. Those who come in¬to the system for the first timethis summer will be charged thenew rates immediately, however.But still a bargainNewman also pointed out thatthe University’s married studenthousing rentals are still from 10to 25 per cent below commercialrates for comparable facilities inHyde Park. No increases will bemore than five per cent, whilesome might be less, he said.The increases will not apply toa few buildings which are in lessdesirable locations or which areolder than most other facilities,Newman said. The married stu¬dent housing office will have a The office is at 834 E. 58th street,752-3644.THE CURRENT schedule of“characteristic” rates as given byNewman, and a rough computa¬This is the next to lastMAROON of the springquarter. The last issue willappear a week from today.Classified and calendardeadlines are noon Thurs¬day.tion of new rates after five percent has been added, is as follows:1. One bedroom, unfurnished apts. inwalk-up bldgs. — old rate $87.50, mo.;new rate $91.87.2. One bedrm., unfurn., elevator bldg,old $100/mo.; new $105.3. Two-bedrm., unfurn., walk-up —old $100; new $105.4. Two-bedrm., unfurn., elev. — old$117.50; new $123.37.5. Two-room (no bedrm.) furnished,elev. bldg. — old $87.50; new $91.87.6. Three and a half rooms (1 bedrm.).furn., elev. bldg. — old $117.50: new$123.87.Greene presents hismovie on Red ChinaThree student organizations and the University adminis¬tration are co-operating in sponsoring the appearance of FelixGreene and the showing of the movie he made on Red Chinathis weekend.Greene traveled widely in main¬land China on his British pass¬port in the past three years, film¬ing about twelve hours of filmon Chinese life for the commercialBritish television company. Thefootage has been condensed intoa one hour color film with sound,called “CHINA!”The National Student Associa¬tion Committee of Student Gov¬ernment, the UC chapter of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society,and DocFilms are sponsoring thisweekend’s showings.Greene will give his first-handexperiences at a lecture tonightin the law school auditorium at8, followed by a showing of themovie. Tomorrow, the film willbe shown in Judd at 8, 9, and 10pm, and on Sunday at 7, 8, 9, and10 pm in SocSci 122.Admission charges will be 50cents for students, $1 for adults,and 25 cents for SWAP tutees.Greene is a British-born busi¬nessman now living in Californiawhere he directs an importingcompany. Twice in the past threeyears he has traveled widely overthe mainland of China to bringback a “report-in-depth” of whatChina is really like today, a re¬port detailed at length in Ills newbook, Awakened China. Greene, s > 'He made an intensive study ofall sides of Communist life, tiavel-ing on his British passport (withthe full knowledge of both theBritish and United States govern¬ments). He visited many com¬munes in scattered areas; inspect¬ed hospitals, schools, colleges, pris¬ons, and courts of law. He spokewith writers and editors; saw thepoorest of slums and the best ofnew housing. He worked withpeasants in the fields and ate withthem in commune dining halls.EDITORIALSSocial rules committee report reflectsThe report of the social rules com¬mittee, released Wednesday, repre¬sents a notable step in the directionof involving students in the decision¬making process. In urging that stu¬dent-faculty committees be set up ineach of the dorms and that hours andresidence requirements be furtherliberalized, the report offers sensible— as well as feasible — suggestionsfor the improvement of what it callsthe current “unhealthy” atmosphereat UC.We emphatically second the report’smotions. The situation at present, notonly in the dorms but also in that oldsore spot of faculty-student relations,is more than unhealthy — it is alsounpleasant. The causes, as the reportindicates, are lack of initiative on thepart of students and bad planning andexperimentation by the dean of stu¬dents’ office. What this has amountedto is a strange social and intellectualAlphonse and Gaston routine — theadministration waits for students tomake suggestions so that they can dis¬agree, the students despair of gettinganything done so they stop suggest¬ing, and the administration thenmakes suggestions — usually bad sug¬gestions — because they think the students are interested in helping tomake decisions.The fact is that students are vitallyinterested in these decisions, particu¬larly since most of the outcomes willaffect them and their lives directly.For the past several years, in theirbattles to improve the student condi¬tion, students have run up against anadministration which believes that ithas been strong and equitable. In fact,it has been monolithic and, while ithas been willing to listen, it has beenunwilling to act.Examples of this attitude are quitenumerous. It was only after extendednegotiations and pleadings that a com¬promise board contract proposal wasratified last year and even then thefinal package represented quite a con¬cession by students to the adminis¬tration. The administration’s positionon the communications board debatethis past fall was one which made itquite clear that students were not tobe trusted. Students were given hear¬ings, to be sure, but no action onWUCB’s FM plans has been takeneven nowr.The student-faculty committees inthe dorm houses, along with what willhopefully be a standing and on-goingsocial rules committee, should help tosolve some of the problems. The com¬ mittee system will return some of thedecision-making power to the studentsthemselves, not just to Student Gov¬ernment. It is not unreasonable toenvision a regular dialogue about thefundamental problems of student life,and it is quite reasonable to expectthat faculty members will careenough to offer their opinions andservices.But there is a point w here dialoguecan turn into diatribe, where the bestof intentions can become quite hollow.That point is reached when discu.ssiondoes not yield concrete results. It isall very well to discuss women’s horn'sad infinitum, but if nothing is everdone about them, the discussion ispointless. Clearly, the discussions —and the whole system that the socialrules committee report suggests —will stand or fall with the administra¬tion’s reaction. We can only hope thatthe administration’s recalcitrant atti¬tude of the recent past will be re¬placed by a receptive, reasonable atti¬tude. There is no reason not to acceptthe present social rules committee re¬port and to write into lawT, and, withfaculty and students acting as a checkon each other in future committeemeetings, there should be no reasonnot to accept further reports. consensusWe would suggest by way of fodderfor future discussions something thatthe present report did not touch on:the purely social side to faculty-stu¬dent relations. We wonder how manytimes the average student has beenwith his professors in other than aca¬demic situations. We also wonder how-many times most faculty membershave been invited to the dorms justfor dinner and informal discussion,not for a lecture or a somewhat stiffcoffee hour. The blame for this lackof social contact lies with both sides.We cannot and should not have an in¬tellectual community which keepsoffice hours only during the daylighthours Monday through Friday. Thecommunity must extend itself, bothsocially and intellectually. Towardthat end, we ask future committeesto examine the possibility of resur¬recting the old system of havingfaculty “patrons,” perhaps more thanone, for each dorm, beside the moreobvious measure of encouraging fac¬ulty to invite students to their homes.And we ask the administration, parti¬cularly the dean of students’ office, tospare us whatever petty objectionsthey might have to the present report.The University consensus is in that re¬port; it should not be resisted.HUAC investigations cause for general concernThe House Un-American ActivitiesCommittee’s (HUAC) visit to Chicagothis coming week will certainly notwin them any friends among theliberal wing of this city, to say noth¬ing of the UC community. Beside thefact that the purpose and justificationfor their visit is quite questionable (itseems to be witch-hunting merely forthe sake of witch-hunting), the pur¬pose and justification of their veryexistence Is again being examined.But we would like to examine stillanother aspect of the HUAC visit: itsimplications for the future.It is certainly not unreasonable toassume that the HUAC Chicago hear¬ings will serve as a prelude to a full-scale investigation of such civil rights groups as the Student Non-ViolentCoordinating Committee and the Con¬gress of Racial Equality. Perhaps thefeeling among HUAC members is that“after they’ve gotten the commies inthe Klan, it’s time to get the commieson the other side.” Nothing could bemore unfair than to lump all pressuregroups into one ball, and nothingcould be more un-American than tolock and perhaps squelch the impor¬tant, functioning, positive civil rightsgroups. It seems that HUAC is inter¬ested merely in tranquility and theattachment of labels rather than in aconstructive examination of moraland political purposes.Another implication for the futureis the curious leak of the names of 11 of the 16 citizens that HUAC sub-penaed. If this is to become a prece¬dent, it will mean that HUAC will lx?attempting to set up its victims fordeliberate public scorn rather thanattempting to guarantee the anonym¬ity and civil liberties of those it ex¬amines. Furthermore, a standingpolicy of releasing names beforehandmight be an attempt by HUAC todeter “would-be communists” from in¬creasing their activities. We can onlyhope that the folly of such an attemptwould be obvious to HUAC personnel.But, for the future, what is therelevance of the upcoming IIUAC in¬vestigations to the UC community?Simply, one does not know whereIIUAC will draw the line. It is not completely far-fetched to foresee aninvestigation of faculty or studentsbecause of their activities, political orotherwise. If the grounds for such aninvestigation were as tenuous as thoseof other probes, the investigationwould be an outrage not only to thoseinvestigated but also to those mem¬bers of the University communitywho care in the slightest about civilliberties.For these reasons, we ask UC stu¬dents and faculty to make themselvesheard when the HUAC contingentcomes to town. The demonstration atthe federal building can use unlimitedpicketers, and a good turnout at thevarious rallies would demonstrateconcern. Funds are also needed.NEWS MUSETeach-in clarifies Vietnamby Bruce FreedLast Saturday’s marathonnational teach-in probing theVietnam quagmire brought arational, unemotional, andhighly revealing academic analysisof the grave alternatives facingthe United States for the first time.After observing the earlier,amateurish teach-ins at variouscampuses that quickly degeneratedinto diatribes against administra¬tion policy, the all-day debate,which featured articulate andscholarly defenders of both posi¬tions, proved very refreshing andimportant.The affair’s main contributionwas to clarify the complexity ofthe Vietnam problem and under¬line the point that there is nosimple way out. As Arthur Schles-inger, the former Kennedy stafferand Harvard professor, aptly ob¬served: “We cannot go back to1954 and begin again. We mustface the situation in 1965.”CONSIDERING THE plausibleoptions possible for the US is aconfusing and distraught experi¬ence. But weighing the argumentsof professors Scalopino, Brezinskiand Schlesinger against those ofKahin, Morgenthau, and Wright isan even harder and almost impossi¬ble task.Should the US commit its fullTesources to containing Chinamilitarily? Can the US checkChinese expansion? Does the cur¬rent problem call for the samecontainment policy used againstthe USSR 15 years ago? What about Asian nationalism? Doesthe US national interest extend asfar as South Vietnam? Ls Vietnamcrucial for the protection of thePhilippines, Thailand, and Malay¬sia?More questions can be asked andthe seeming answers lead evenfui'thcr into doubt. Like the manin the pitch-black room trying tofind his bearings, the concernedquestioner of US Vietnam policydoes not really know where toturn.The moralistic polemics of SDSand the legalistic pleas of SenatorMorse are unsatisfying. The moralapproach to Vietnam holds littlewater. Since both sides have beenoutdoing the other in committingimmoral acts, it is hard to accusethe US of being the worst trans¬gressor. A plague should be wishedon both the US and Vietconghouses.Also, pure morality is not asound basis for conducting foreignrelations, as George Kennan haspointed out. A dash of realismmust be added to come up witha sound policy. Morgenthau rightlydescribed the US effort as a meansto contain China. SDS should takethat into account.On the legal ai’guments, whenthe Chinese and the US have re-the North and South Vietnamese,peatedly violated the 1954 Genevaaccord, one side cannot then beexpected to decide suddenly touphold it while the other continueto disregard it. The Vietnam con¬flict is being fought over power,not legal scruples. Law meanssomething only when it is observed2 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 21, 1965 problems Letters to the editorby all, which certainly is not thecase in Indo-China.As the national teach-in brought Marriott chidesSWAP parents school, much more than the sug¬gested continued division betweeneighth and ninth grades.6-3-3 HAS OTHER known ad-out so well, the historical andespecially the political argumentshold the most weight. They arefounded on the realities of thecrisis. Asian nationalism must beconsidered seriously as a factorin the war as must the loomingand lengthening shadow of China.SCHLESINGER WAS rightwhen he asserted that the USshould never have involved itself inthe Southeast Asian quicksand in1954, but now that it is there,sound contingencies based on thecurrent situation must be consid¬ered. Certainly the war is danger¬ous and holds great risks, but theimmediate withdrawal of UStroops Ls not going to occur. Norwill free elections in Vietnam pro¬bably ever be allowed.The debate boils down to thepositions of Morgenthau andBrzezinski-Scalopino: does the UShave the long-range capability tocheck China; must it contain thestirring giant?It is a hard point to answer, butfor myself, I tend to hew a middleline between Morgenthau andBrzezinski-Scalopino and close toSchlesinger. The former historydon feels that the war should belimited to South Vietnam, ex¬panded there, and should be aimedat achieving a negotiated politicalsolution.Extricatirrg the US is going tolead to agorrizing moments, but asSchlesinger remarked: “Perhapsthis is not very satisfactory, butlife is not very satisfactory.” TO THE EDITOR:The SWAP Parents Committeemay take great pride in havingswung the center of communityconcer n back to questions of educa¬tional program. At the well-at¬tended May 11 meeting of theHyde Park High School PTA theyhave also shown their capactiyto bring forth a large body ofthinking citiznes to act on some ofour most vital problems of urbandevelopment. One can only wishthat this levelheaded body ofparents will grow and flourish,and that it will follow up its think¬ing on curriculum with supportfor an effective program of build¬ing.Approval of the thirty or moreSWAP Parents Committee propos¬als on a last-minute motion atthe late end of a confused PTAmeeting is not likely to terminatediscussion of those proposals, how¬ever. While there is much amongthe eleven pages of proposals thatLs of self-eviderrt value and is un-versally approved, there are alsoseveral evident questions to beraised:1. What is the evidence for theeducational desirability of a 4-4-4(lower-middle-upper) division ofgrades among schools? Such aplan has only recently been an¬nounced in New York City, butnot yet tried. The country as awhole has been moving for severalyears toward a 6-3-3 (junior-seniorhigh school) plan; accumulated ex¬perience with it shows that it hasdone much to hold students in vantages: it would help to d<'cen¬tralize the overly large four-yearhigh schools, which would other-wist be built; by including ninthgrade with seventh and eighth, itwould help to raise the standardsof these grades through the pres¬ent legal requirements of betterstaffing and facilities, and throughdepartmentalization of instruction.6-3-3 would bring new, Improvedconstruction, while the promised(Continued on page three)Chicago MaroonEditor-In-Chief Robert F. LeveyBusiness Manager. .Michael KasseraManaging Editor David L AiKenAssistants to the Editor, Sharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsCampus News Editor Dan HertzbergAssistant Campus NewsEditor Dinah EsralEditor, Chicago LiteraryReview. Martin MichaelsonCulture-Feature Editor. .David H. RichterPhotoCo-ordinators.BUI Caffrey, Steve WofsyRewrite Editor Eve Hochwa.dMovie Editor Kenneth Krant^Music Editor Peter RablnowiizScience Editor.... Ed SternPolitical Editor Bruce FreedEditor Emeritus John T. WilliamsSTAFF: David Satter, Dorie Solinger,Barry Salins, Ellis Levin, Barbara JurBarry Weitz, Joan Tapper, HowardFishman, Matt Joseph, Paul Burstein.Jack Catlin, Hugh Letiche, JamieBeth Gale, Edward Chikofsky, CharlesDashe, Dick Ganz, Steve Ford, Wil¬liam Herzog.The Maroon is published Tuesday andFriday mornings by students at tneUniversity of Chicago. Its editorials andletters to the editor do not indicateUniversity policy. Offices are inNoyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th st., Chicago60637. Phones: MI 3-0800; extensions3265, 3266. 3269. Second class postagepaid at Chicago, Ill. , _Charter member of Collegiate Pres*Service,Marriott on HPHS(Continued from page two)44-4 alternative — pairing of ex¬isting elementary schools — wouldmean longer walks for everyoneto the same old and inadequatebuildings.2. What is to be done to alleviatethe crowding and inadequacy of theWoodlawn elementary schools?The SWAP parents’ proposals aresilent on this question; the Cohlerproposal, rejected by them, wouldhave provided more than 2,000seats in the Woodlawn elementaryschools, room in which to providesome of the many additional speci¬al classes and services which aredesired. If not in the Cohler form,then some other form of 6-3-3would again be of great assistanceto Woodlawn’s elementary schoolneeds, since it would withdraw theseventh and eighth graders toother sites.3. While the provision of radical¬ly improved prekindergarten andkindergarten for all children is anurgent need, how necessary is thephysical consolidation of all thesevery young children of District 14into one new building? WereSWAP parents aware that thereare now 1825 kindergarteners, thatdoubling this with prekindergar¬teners means 3650 students to bebussed daily from as far as 47thStreet, that a new building of thescale of the present Hyde ParkHigh School would be needed tocontain them? Is there no otherway to gain the advantages ofaccess to information?4. For how long can we ignorethe existence of the large amountof cleared land in the north of Di¬strict 14 when the needs for newelementary, intermediate, and highschool construction are so great?At 53rd-54th-Dorchester (the Mur¬ray site*, the Board of Educationnow controls nearly nine emptyacres; near the Kenwood School,fourteen acres are open and avail¬able. (Compare this with the 2.5acres ont which the present HydePark High School stands, or the5 acres which its doubling mightbring.) In the north, along 47thStreet, 1,500 new housing units aresoon to be constructed, bringingmany new children. If the Murrayor Kenwood sites are not to con¬tain a new senior high school forWoodlawn’s students, then whyshould one of them not contain ajunior high school for the northernpart of District 14?AS A DWELLER along theeastern Midway and a parent ofthree children in Hyde Park HighSchool, I would be delighted to seethat illustrious institution improveas SWAP desires. But if Woodlawnparents oppose any northwardgrowth of the Hyde Park campus,and any new school developmentin Kenwood or northern HydePark, I wonder how long we canexpect parents in the north of Di-trict 14 to continue their supportfor expansion on 63rd Street?In response to parochial Wood¬lawn views of the needs of District14, a strong, new separatist highschool movement is about to beginamong parents in Hyde Park—a movement which could easilydefeat all the idealism whichmoves the thought of SWAP. Forthe moment, the SWAP Parents Committee finds Itself in a strangealliance with the propertied inter¬ests of the 53rd Street merchantsand the University, and with theTWO (which is privately negotiat¬ing Woodlawn toward a separate,all-Negro high school on the south¬west). I suggest that the onlynatural allies of the SWAP ParentsCommittee are the mass of public-school parents in Hyde Park-Ken-wood and urge on the Maroon aswell a wider-than-Woodlawn con¬ception of educational problems inthis area.McKIM MARRIOTTProf. Yang pointsout Lemke’s errorsTO THE EDITOR:The article by Mr. Lemke on“Calls for Involving Division Morein General Education Sciences” inlast Friday’s Maroon was basedon either a misrepresentation offacts, incompetence, the lack offactual information or a combina¬tion of these. I called Mr. Lemkeand requested him to meet me todiscuss his article. After an hourof conversation with him, I amhappy to say that his criticismwas mainly due to the lack of fac¬tual information.The college had made a seriouseffort to improve the teaching ofPhysical Sciences by appointingProfessor Melba Phillips to be incharge of this course. ProfessorPhillips holds the rank of full pro¬fessor in both Department ofPhysics and in College and is awell-known physicist and an excel¬lent teacher. The Physical Sciencecourse has undergone a great dealof changes since Professor Phillipsbecame in charge and there hasbeen a continuous process of im¬provement.THE LECTURES in PhysicalScience courses are given by Pro¬fessor Phillips and a tenure mem¬ber of the Department of Chemis¬try plus invited lectures bymembers of the Division. Profes¬sor Sugarman was on this assign¬ment from the Department ofChemistry last year and ProfessorMeyer this year.In current explosive growth ofboth physical and biological sci¬ences, there is an increasing needfor better understanding of fun¬damental sciences, i.e., physics,chemistry and mathematics. Thecurrent Physical Science course inCollege consist of mainly physicsand chemistry. Essentially theseinformations will be covered ingeneral chemistry (Chemistry 105-6-7 or 131-2-3) and general physics(Physics 121-2 3 or 131-2-3). Gen¬ eral chemistry and general physicsare the basic physical sciencecourses for science majors. Sincethey are treated more rigorously,they are taught over a two-yearperiod. Current cost of educationbeing high and students’ time in¬valuable, it would be unjustifiedfor the College to require generalPhysical Science for science ma¬jors. I wish to emphasize the factthat the College graduates about10-18 chemistry majors (includ¬ing several premeds) a year whilethe general chemistry is taken byabout 300 students.I wish to take this opportunityto comment on the undergraduateteaching in chemistry. The under¬graduate courses in chemistry aregenerally taught by tenure mem¬bers or experienced members ofthe Department. Over the years,Professors H. C. Urey, W. F. Lib¬by and others had participated inteaching general chemistry. Cur¬rently, our chairman, ProfessorNachtrieb, participates in teachinggeneral chemistry. The major por¬tion of general chemistry this yearwas taught by Professor Sugar-man and I consider ProfessorSugarman as one of the best teach¬ers anywhere. Similar high qualityteaching has been provided byProfessors Nachtrieb, Wharton,Hutchison, Stock and many others.No education system will be per¬fect or even suit every student ina given college. I may assure thereaders that all members of De¬partment of Chemistry who par¬ticipated in undergraduate teach¬ing are conscientious and compe¬tent teachers.DURING MY conversation withMr. Lemke, I asked him for aconcrete suggestion to improvethe current physical sciences edu¬cation in College. He wished to“upgrade” it by including morerigorous treatment of quantumtheory, theory of relativity, un¬certainty principle, etc. This isidealistic and impractical and hadbeen tried without success. It isINTENSIVE DAYCLASSESinGUITAR ond BANJOwith Ray Tate, Ted Johnson,John Carbo, Stu RamsayJuly 6 thru 23T uition — $60.00The Old Town Schoolof Folk Music333 W. North Are.WH 4-7475AM£f?/CA/V (®sA/RUA/ES VS/SHIPPING BAGGAGE HOME?Have if there when you arrive by sending itAirfreight. Charges comparable to Rail Express.Call American Airlines Airfreightfor information and rates.686-4100 unfortunate that Mr. Lemke didnot take general chemistry in thisCollege although he did not placeout of chemistry and he had nopersonal experience to judge thesecourses.In conclusion, I do not considerthat our current education systemdoes not need improvement. Im¬provement can only be madethrough concrete and logical pro¬posals followed by a period oftrial. Mr. Lemke’s article does notachieve this purpose.N. C. YANGPROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY ANDA MEMBER OF THE COLLEGELauds admissions officeTO THE EDITOR:May I, through the Maroon,commend the University and theCollege admissions officers fortheir new policy on Negro students.According to the Maroon, theCollege this year has accepted andwill enroll a considerably largenumber of Negroes than previous¬ly, even though it Is understoodthat some will be deficient in theeducational background necessaryfor college study. Mr. O’Connellforesees some sort of tutoringprogram to enable these students,intelligent but unprepared, to catchup.UC could certainly have takengreater number of able white ap- greater number of able white ap-plicants and fewer Negroes andwould have saved itself the prob¬lem of any extra assistance pro¬gram: but it chose not to do this.Too often an owner is fully willingto desegregate his store — if itwon’t hurt business, a man is verydesirous for Negroes to have goodhousing — as long as it’s not inhis block, people want everythingfor the Negro which he deserves—as long as they don’t have to putforth any effort, just so they don’tgo to any trouble. My praise goesout to the University for takingthat trouble and accepting a shareof the responsibility which allwhites have to our Negro country¬men.MYRON G. FRANKAll graduate and under¬graduate students who areinterested in applying forpositions on the MAROONstaff for the year 1965-6should visit the MAROONoffice, third floor Ida Noyes,or call the MAROON at3265, 3266, or 3269 andleave their name, phonenumber, and address.TOWNE HOUSESA CO-OP forBetter LivingforMarriedStudentsand FacultyWithin easy distance of the Campus. Excellent city¬wide transportation via bus, 1C, and Expressway.1, 2, 3, AND 4-SPACI0US BEDROOMSSEVEN MODELS TO CHOOSE FROMNO MONEY DOWNTOTAL MONTHLYPAYMENT INCLUDESPRINCIPAL, INTEREST,TAXES, INSURANCEAND ALLMAINTENANCE.Your co-op has: Hotpoint Range, Refrigerator and Disposall •Lovely Custom Kitchen Cabinets • Storms and Screens • Full,Basements • Lavishly Designed Baths • Beautiful Sliding GlassPatio Doors • Ceramic Tile • Extra Large Wardrobe Closets •Full Insulation • Genuine Oak Floors • Lifetime Face Brick •Aluminum Siding • Convenient Gutters and Downspouts • Sound¬proofed for Privacy • Private Rear Yard Areas.SAMUEL A. BELL‘Biii/ Shell From Bell**SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150A Complete Source ofARTISTS* MATERIALSOILS-WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES ’ EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESPICTURE FRAMINGMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111 HYDE PARK AUTO SERVICEIS MOVINGWe Would Like to Stay inHYDE PARK. But . . .Our Building Will Be Demolished SOON.Our new address will be 7646 S. Stony Island Ave.MOVING DAY ABOUT MAY 22We specialize in removing tiger hairs from carburetors.JIM HARTMAN5340 Lake Park PL 2-0496 Plumbing, Heating, Electrical Repair Bills . . . Complete Care ofLawns and Shrubs . . . Everything is Taken Care of For You asLong as You Live in Beautiful London Towne Houses.May 21, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Turn Toward Peace has programPeace group trains grads Build new NORC centerTurn Toward Peace, a national effort to increase publicUnderstanding of alternatives to war, is launching a campaignto find 50 qualified people across the country to participateIn its work and study program next fall.The program, undeiway forthree years in New England and (i.e. a religious denomination, aCalifornia and for two years in labor union, etc.)Chicago, consists of two parts: THE PARTICIPANTS in the• An on going seminar delving program, caUed interns, should beInto the problems of war, peace, college graduates (young or old)social change, conflict, and free- with leadership potential, capacityfor learning, and an interest in• A field assignment in a com- more than money. They must bemunify oeace center, a Turn prepared to devote full or pailToward Peace regional office, or time for one year to the program,a major voluntary organization Past interns from all walksPast interns have been recentcollege graduates, young house-The committee on generalstudies in the social sciencesis now receiving applicationsfrom interested second yearstudents. Application formscan be obtained from, andshould be returned beforeJune 5 to, Gerhard Meyer,Gates-Blake 431. wives with children now in school,retired teachers, graduate stu¬dents, and people beginningcareero in peace movements.Turn To wal'd Peace is a co¬operative effort of some 70 reli¬gious, labor, public affairs, andpeace organizations to involvemany individuals and groups in asearch for alternatives to war thatdo not involve the surrender ofdemocratic values.To apply, interested personsshould contact the Midwest Re¬gional Office, 116 S. Michigan,room 1005, 332-0998, for applica¬tions and further information.Selections of interns will be madeby June 30.Plan additions on south campus(Continued from page one)thin plasterboard walls to hisliking.When and if Cobb’s reconstruc¬tion is begun, Ritterskamp saidthat the original architect’s planswill still hold. The plans entail suchStudent to work in TennesseA UC student appealed forfinancial aid this week in or¬der 1o work for a new civilrights group in Tennessee thiscoming summer.Devorah Cohen, a second yearstudent in the College, plans towork for the Western TennesseeVoters Project, a new groupwhich will concentrate on fourwestern Tennessee counties.Among the counties is Fayette,where a UC group worked overthe spring interim.THE PROJECT WILL be runmostly by students from CornellUniversity, most of whom workedin Fayette county last summer.Miss Cohen would be working inHaywood county, which, alongwith Fayette, are part of theblack belt, a strip of area thatcuts across four states and isamong the poorest sections of thenation.The budget for the entiro four-county project is $10,000, MissCohen said. She did not say how much she personally would needin order to participate.Obtain right to voteThe four-county project plansto concentrate on obtaining forlocal Negroes the right to voteand the right to partake of publicfacilities. In addition, work willbe done to obtain for the Negroessome representation in appropri¬ate labor unions. Forty studentswill be involved altogether in thework."We hope to find issues to workon from within the community,”Miss Cohen told the Maroon. Bythe end of the summer, she said,the group hopes to leave somekind of permanent political struc¬ture through which Negroes cancontinue the work that will bedone this summer.All contributions, both for theproject and for Miss Cohen her¬self, should be sent to room 208,Blackstone Hall. Checks shouldbe made out to the Western Ten¬nessee Voters Project.NOV/ IN CHICAGODATSUNDotsun SPL-310 1500leads the fieldAhead of its competition in price and value,the Datsun SPL-310 1500 is the most exciting packagein sports car history. Price includes:Racing Steering Wheel; Tachometer; Tonneau Cover;Transistor Radio; Heating/Ventilating System;Plush Pile Carpets; Roll-up Windows;Back-up Lights/4-Speed Stick-shift; Windshield Washer—and The Most Fun For The Moneyin The Automotive World. Price: $2,465.Fully Equipped — No Extras To BuyBank Terms — Up To 36 Mos.Chicogoland DATSUNSALES - SERVICE - PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AYE. in Beverly HillsChicago, Illinois 60620 Phone 239-3770 luxury features as a cafeteria,spacious lounges, and newly dec¬orated classrooms. But no workwill be done on the exterior ofCobb, Ritterskamp said.COBB’S RENOVATION willshare top priority on Ritter-skamp’s calendar with the con¬struction of a new chemist lybuilding where Jones Hal] present¬ly stands. Plans for the chemistrybuilding, Ritterskamp said, arestill quite indefinite. In addition,the necessary funds for bolh Cobband the chemistry building arestill missing, he added.Long-range construction plansinclude several additions to southcampus and a hopefully quick solu¬tion to the woes of the musicdepartment. The musicians hasbeen told as early as last springthat all of Hutchinson Commonswould be theirs to set up newheadquarter's (they are presentlyhoused in an outmoded little build¬ing at 5802 Woodlawn). Therehave been delays, however, as wellas much objection to the closingof the C-shop, w’hich would benecessary if the department tookover.Musicians to moveBut plans for the music depart¬ment’s move are finally proceed¬ing, Ritterskamp said. “We aregoing ahead with the architect’sdrawings and hope to have thedepartment in there as soon as wecan,” he added.Beside constructing new build¬ings and renovating already exist¬ing ones, Ritterskamp still mustworry about the general upkeepof the University’s physical plant. Ground was broken Wednes¬day for a new headquarters ofthe National Opinion ResearchCenter at 6030 S. Ellis avenue.The National Science Founda¬tion made a grant of $400,000 tohelp finance construction of thebuilding. Total cast of construc¬tion is estimated to be about$1,000,000.THE BUILDING just to the rearof the new school of social serv¬ice administration on 60th street,will be of pre-cast concrete andglass construction. It will havetwo stories and basement contain¬ing 33,000 square feet of space.The building will include officesand a data processing center andstorage bank. The structure to bebuilt around an interior gardencourt, is expected to be ready inApril, 1966.NORC is a non-profit, tax-ex¬ empt organiation. It was Incor¬porated in 1941 and has been af¬filiated with UC since 1947.The NORC conducts surveys inthe social sciences. It also par¬ticipates in the training of UCgraduate students in the socialsciences. Many NORC staff mem¬bers hold joint appointments inthe division of social sciences andother academic areas.Participating in the ground¬breaking ceremony will be:George W. Beadle, UC presi¬dent; Peter H. Rossi, professor ofsociology in the University’s de¬partment of sociology and direc¬tor of NORC; D. Gale Johnson,dean, the division of the socialsciences; and chairman of theboard of trustees of NORC; andMurray Aborn, program directorfor special projects, division ofsocial- sciences, the National Sci¬ence Foundation.Calendar of Events4 • CHICAGO MAROON May 21, 1965 TheMonterey Instituteof Foreign Studies10 Week Summer SessionJUNE 21 to AUGUST 287 Week SessionFor Graduates OnlyJULY 12 to AUGUST 28LANGUAGES AND CIVILIZA¬TIONS of Chino, Fronce, Germony,Italy, Japan, Russia ond Spain(native instructors).Elementary and intermediatecourses, 16 units. Intermediateand advanced courses, 12 units.Upper division courses, 12 units.Graduate courses, 8 units.POLITICAL ARTS. Comprehensiveprograms combining fundamentalcourses with area studies on West¬ern Europe, Russia ond EasternEurope, Far East, Near East, ondLotin America.Bachelor of Arts and Master ofArts in languages and civilizationsond in political arts.1965-66 Academic YearFall Semester September 25, 1965,to Jan. 29, 1966. Spring SemesterFeb. 5, 1966, to May 28, 1966.Accredited by the Western Asso¬ciation of Schools and Colleges oso Liberal Arts Institution.For information write to:Office of AdmissionsTHE MONTEREY INSTITUTEOF FOREIGN STUDIESPost Office Box 710Monterey, California, 93942Telephone 373-4779Area Code 408 Fridoy, May 21DEMONSTRATION: to end the war inVietnam, sponsored by Students tor aDemocratic Society, starts at Congressand Michigan, 2 pmLECTURE: “Machiavellian Aspects ofPost-Renaissance Ideology." John G. A.Pocock, department of political science.University of Canterbury, Christ, church.New Zealand, im 2, law school. 3:30 pm.SEMINAR: "The Effect of Polycyclic Aro¬matic Hydrocarbons on Virus Replica¬tion,” Samuel B. Weiss, professor of bio¬chemistry. Research Institutes 480. 4 pm.FOLK DANCE WORKSHOP: With AndorCzompo. Ida Noves Hall, 7:30 pm.LECTURE SERIES: “The Greatest Ser¬mon for the Smallest Crowd.” John J.Kiwiet, associate professor of churchhisory, Northern Baptist Theological sem¬inary. Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.SABBATH SERVICES: Hlllel. 8 pmHASIDIC SIIABBAT: “Encounter WithHabad,” Hlllel, 9 pm.MOVIE: Felix Greene's “China 1,” stu¬dents 50c, law school, 8 pm.Saturday, May 22LECTURE: “Experiment*! Studies in Hyp¬notic Age Regression,” Herbert Spiegel,assistant professor of psychiary. Colum¬bia University. Billings P-117. 9:30 am.LECTURE SERIES: “Heme Proteins.""Oxygen-Carrying Heme Proteins.” Ema¬nuel Margoliash. professorial lecturer, de¬partment of biochemistry, Abbott 101,10 am.CONFERENCE: Illinois conference onfree elections, sponsored by MississippiFreedom Democratic Party. Good Shep¬herd Congregational Church, 5700 S.Prairie.- 10 am.VARSITV TRACK MEET: UC vs Brad-lev University. Stagg Field. 1 pm.MOVIE: "‘Cyrano de Bergerac.” withJose Ferrer. Mala Powers, Billings P-117,admission 50c, 7:30 pm.MOVIE: Felix Greene's “China!,” stu¬dents 50, Judd Hall, 8, 9, 10 pm.Sunday, Moy 23RADIO: “From the Midway,” A. P .Thorn¬ton, professor of history at the Univer¬sity of Toronto, speaks on “The Indict¬ments of Imperialism,” WFMF, 7 am.RADIO: “The World of the Paperback,Herman L. Sinaiko, assistant professor ofhumanities, and Robert C. Albrecht, as¬sistant professor of English, discuss Da¬vid Riesman's Constrain and Variety inAmerican Education. WFMF. 8:15 am.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins.University Cariilonneur, RockefellerChapel. 12:15 pm.OPEN HOUSE: Tours of Hyde Park-Ken-wood houses and descriptions of theGet Your Copy Now!Chicago's Famous Buildings:A Photographic Guide. Thecity's architectural land¬marks and other notablebuildings.Paperbound $1.00p Clothbound $2.95The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. neighborhood. Baptist Students’ Center,4901 Ellis, donation $1, 1 pm.MOVIE: Felix Greene's “China!,” stu¬dent 50c. Soc Sci 122. 7, 8. 9, 10 pmDISCUSSION: “Religion in the CollegeCurriculum.” with Wayne C. Booth deanof the College, Ida Noyes library. 7 pm.RADIO: "Chicago Dialogue,” Philip MHauser, professor of sociology, discussesChicago's technological future, WIND,7 :05 pm.BRIDGE: Ida Noyes Hall. 7:15 pmFOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes Hail. 7.70pm.AFRICAN HIGHLIGHT DANCE NIGHTa program of African and Latin Ameri¬can calypso, admission 50c, InternationalHouse. 7 30 pm.RADIO: "Nightline,” public discussion fo.rum, WBBM, )0 pm.Monday, Moy 24LECTURE: “The Life of Cajal, ClementA Fox. professor of anatomy, MarquetteUniversity, Billings P-117, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: "Machiavellian Aspect* otPoet-Renaissance Ideology,” John G. APocock. department of policial science.University of Canterbury Christ-church,New Zealand, room 2, law school. 3 30pm.FORUM: “Subversion and Legislative in-vestigaion, a forum on HUAC's visit toChicago, with George Anasaplo. WaiterJohnson. Gerhard E. O. Meyer, MalcolmSharp Edward Shils, and others, Reyn¬olds Club lounge, 4 pm.Tuesday, May 25DEMONSTRATION: protect againstHUAC’s Chicago investigations, federalbuilding, all day.LECTURE SERIES: “Utopia and Revolu¬tion.” “The Utopian Dream.” .Melvin J.Lasky, editor. Encounter magazine.Breasted Hall, 4 pm.REHEARSAL: 57h Street Chorale Wool-man Hall, 7:30 pm.LECTURE SERIES: "The Music of In¬dia,” Rajeshwari Datta, lecturer, depart¬ment of music. Ida Noyes Hall, 7 30 pro.DEBATE: "United States Policy in Viet¬nam.” Hans Morgenthau, distinguishedservice protestor of history and politicalscience, vs. Frank Sieverts of the statedepartment, sponsored by ACRES’. Man-del Hall, 8 pm,Wednesday, May 26DEMONSTRATION: protest againstHUAC’s Chicago investigation, federalbuilding, all day.LECTURE: “Machiavellian Aspects ofPost-Renaissance Ideology,” John G. A.Pocock, deparment of political science.University of Canterbury, Christ-church,New Zealand, room 2, law school, 3 30pm.LECTURE SERIES: “Utopia and Revolu¬tion,” “Revolutionary Commitmen,” Mel¬vin J. Lasky. editor. Encounter maga¬zine, Breasted Hall, 4 pm.Thursday, May 27DEMONSTRATION: protest againstHUAC's Chicago investigations, federalbuilding, all day.LECTURE: “Tire Philosophy of DavidHume.” William O’Meara, professor ofphilosophy, Mandel Hall, 10 30 amLECTURE: “The City Government as anAgent of Change,” Leon Despres. fifthward alderman, Mandel Hall. 11 30 am.LECTURE: “Environmental Stimulationand the Development of he Child s So¬cial Response,” Jacob Gewirtz. profes¬sor of psychology, Kent 103, 1 30 proLECTURE SERIES: “Utopia and Revolu¬tion,” "Principles and Heresy,” “MelvinJ. Lasky, editor. Encounter magazine,Breasted Hail, 4 pm.mFAIT ... La protection flnancl&ro que vouadonnez a votre famille aujourd'huidevra lu) dire procure d'une autreta^on domain. L'assurance Sun Lifepeut certalnement accompli! cettetdche & votra place.En tant que reprOseniant local de la SunLife, pul6-je voua visiter A un moment devotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood. Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building. Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 fo 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYStanding committee grows -ast in Mon<toy >ecturesout of Sat teach-in Redfield tells condition of manWASHINGTON fCPS) Tn adrlitinn t« Man s future has a historical side to it in the sense that ress. However, a golden age is amonths of ^teach-ins^ at ab^ut 50 ^m^ses throughout Z h° a pattern which at least su^ests precedent transitory thing, and contains with.h°ughout the for the future, said James Redfield Monday in itself the seeds of dissolution,with major policy issues ... ;l'' 'dst ln a senes of can develop his ecellence best in dissolution was the idea that ifA a press conference following ?,t,ng h,m 0 hclP fulf,U thal£u"c- le<;tures sP«nsored by the anthro- hut private world," Redfield said the state was an artificial contriv.e^'lG-hour marathon^four*0! its ?".2.*2?“ 3 ESS. &252L-'3&~ “SLSHFZL . ... ... •»» <» nature, morality.thedents and faculty, to continue the yietnanL nor "hi it be restricteddebate and discussions started by *.° toac. *.ns a* hs only forumthe teach-ins. The sponsors of the *or actvvuty. lheve can be noWashington teach-in, which was doubt, however, that the teach-in,faculty sponsors announced plans Wide television debate- amined “the condition of content- HESIOD REPRESENTS the oli- the'conventions binding mento establish an on-going organ- f°h°w up group will not l*)rar.V ™a1}. *r<?.m t ,e standpoint garchic tradition, the tradition of gether in a society was also ani/ation consisting of both stu- conhne itself to the problem of °: ®uch disciplines as biology, society as litigation, in which men artificial creation. From Plato’s" !n iJ- 1 physics, and the various social strive for their private gain idea that man fighting nature is asceinces. through legal means, Redfield dehumanizing idea because itIN HIS LECTURE, which he said. Solon, living about 5S0 B.C. stresses the animal in him to thecalled a historical view of the represents the beginnings of the ideas of the sophists, whom, Red-broadcast on a nation-wide tele- a urdcIue institution which re- sonse °* crisis, Redfield called reform tradition, though, Redfield field termed radicals, was a shortnhone hook-UD to some 100 cam- ^ects the characteristics peculiar uPon figures from ancient Greece contended. Whereas Hesiod was a and easy step.ulsS also reissue^Their Invita- *> Us faculty inventors, Ls now a £ help him He first examined moralist Solon is a lawgiver who The s^hists ^ sodet ^lion to their principal speaker. t*™1"*"' part of the university “T1 *21 ™ i ^ n with things mcre artlfiee. They regarded manMefieorge Bundy, who pleaded community. Homer in about 750 B.C. Homers as they were to the public and as basical, animal b^a his.1 .1 j .. „ * F . . . . .... dominant social idea was the ex- asked for change. Solon s ideal was x, rf- i. _ •.other duties as his excase for A statement published by the altation of the principle of ttiemis, eunomia (good government). Eu-tailing to appear for the sched- Inter-University Committee for nAn«sAu nK, JS Jr — * * U* was to be lived according touled debate. « ui. tt • ... . for Redfield said. This primarily politi- nomia was an attempt to realize „„ OTa;™QlPublic Heanngs on Vietnam, the cai ;,]ea stressed the imnortance Homer's themLs Redfield <wid *he ldea f“af man was an animal.The confrontation between Bun- teach-ins rather loosely-organized 0f cultivated puWic actionThe difference between 7inomia wh°se duty was to satisfy hisdy, who Is a major architect of sponsoring groups, said that the °S* hfghest hma goodTis and S that a natura .impulf5: and obey social‘lie Administration’s current Viet- teach-ins represent not simply a 5, ™JSSf’♦? ™J convention only insofar as it wasspontaneous way of living, eu- convjenientnomia an artificial attempt to _. ' . ,establish Hiemls ideals bv imposed ,TI’IS a t,luQf P'^m-ed a senseconvention, Redfield said. Thus, ?*, df P?,r’ 01 cns“’ ln the ln‘the state becomes a product of ,e“s' men who were eon-artifice, a work of art to be tink- cerned for the future good, suchrepresent not simply a attainable by men working to-nam policy and a former Harvard protest against the conduct of „ether and can be determinedprofessor, and professor George foreign policy in Vietnam, but also only b’v social tehaViorKahin of Cornell was to have been a protest against “the way policy J *the highlight of the day’s events, has been made, in private con- Themis demonstratedSince the primary purpose of the sels beyond the reach of public Homer, writing fiction, couldteach-in was to promote a public debate in either Congress or else- ignore the realities of the facts of ^od wi’th and hrmrovodThp ctate as plato> Sophods and Euripides,dialogue, particularly between the where; and the way consensus has life and treat only the relations in tj1js view as ^ artificial pro- R<?dfield related. These men hadgovernment and its increasingly been demanded, a.s an unquestion- among men, Redfield said. In Han- duot .g reall’y a tool not an ^nowhere to go, for they could notvocal critics on the campus, its ing acquiescence to higher au- nah Arendt’s phrase, tiiemis, the -t ^ thp «pottor>s wjiee] not retreat from society as Hesiod had.sponsors telegrammed Bundy in- thority.’’ Homeric ideal, could only be shown t „ 1— 1—A u"—— *—in the “si>ace of appearance,” that p ’social action in which men couldprove and show their excellence.Where the ideal of thernis prevails,the aim of all men is personal ex-Summer quarterplans announcedAs the weather gets warm- Ing, sensitive appreciation, ander, the fancies of numerous the effective written communica-students lightly turn to tion o£ a^dyses and judgments. -thoughts of summer quarter. THE SCHOOL of social serviceThought must turn to action administration will offer two in-some time between June 1 and stitutes for social workers, eachJune 10 for most currently-regis- ‘wo weeks long. Students will be primacy. Hesiod saw the introduc- Public disorder had become toopervasive to be avoided. Nor couldthese men accept the denial ofsocial values preached by the radi¬cals, which was the furthest exten¬sion of the earlier idea that thetered students, when they mustpre-register for the courses beingoffered on the quadrangles.UC has offered full-quartercourses and special acceleratedcourses ever since its foundingusing the four-quarter calendar.A< usual, several two or three-quarter general education se- offered a choice of eleven semi¬nars in each period, from June 21to July 2, and from July 12 toJuly 23. Nature and techniqueIn the Solonic view of things,nature became a stimulus to inven¬tion, Redfield said. The fittingcellence and participation in public nature to mans needs; resulted state an^ morality were artifice,affairs. Competition for self-inter- the growth of technique, the denial had removed theest is a misuse of the public arena, attempt to create a satisfactory balancing point from society, Red-environment. “In one sense, tech-nique moves away from nature—in another it moves toward nature Redfield concluded his talk withas it is constantly being tested a h^toncal analogy, a dangerousagainst the grounds of nature and ldea,” he said. In Western society,is creating a second nature. This nature has come to be regarded ascreating of a new world is called imPortant. Nature is easily conprogress,” Redfield said.Solon’s ideals achieved their full¬est development i n PerideanAthens, whose social ideals areRedfield contended.The next figure Redfield men¬tioned was the poet Hesiod, rough¬ly a contemporary of Homer.Hesiod dealt with the facts; eco¬nomic activity, though regardedas a necessary evil, attains ation of trader’s values as the ruinof public life, Redfield said. Nature, by which is meant both man’soriginal environment and quered, we feel, by technologicaladvance, Redfield said.Students who are now in resi- changes he is able to introducethe Siven their best exposition in Per-icle’s Funeral Oration, Redfielddence must pre-register accordingto the following schedule: into his environment by his tech¬nological genius, becomes recalci-College June t-June 10Bio Scl Dlv. June 1-June 4PhySciDlr. June 1-June 4quences will be packed into one juSe 7-june loby meeting frequently for long Educ. sch. June l-June 4periods. Many other courses will gJJ- ££; ,Iune 7./^ £Ik1 offered on the normal, more Library Sch. June 1-June 4 Harper E65leisurely eleven-week basis. SSA„ . June 3-June 4Several of the graduate divi* h°urs are ^rom ^ tosions will offer sepecial programs am and 1 to 4 pm.for brushing up rusty profession¬als. For instance, the departmentand graduate school of educationare planning programs for teach¬ers and other educators who wantto improve themselves. went on. The social standard wasone of action again, in contrast toCobb no ZSTZ human' ^ety 'b^omi Hes“d’s. «‘reat Into his privategob» no vicious bemuse of tte disappear- world- A new kmd of silenceCobb i io anceJudd 121 and tiie substitution for it of theAd 305 practical trader’s ethic. Therefore,Bus. E. f rT , was admired and emulated, that ofof themts as a practical .deal (he ^ By crea„ng '3^^Periclean Athens created history,a sense of coming to something int‘uu 7‘Tvrc the future, Redfield noted,the idea that life with other For pe wasmen has a pattern to be emulated. was regarded as maUeable,Hesiod lost confidence in society,inRedfield assertedFor the Homeric ideal of themLs,which brought men together inclose social association, Hesiod, and history inevitably meant prog- "BUDGETWISE"AAA Approved: 24-hourSwitchboard.Maid Service: each roomwith own bath.Special student rates:$180.00/qtr.Special daily, weekly andmonthly rates.BROADVIEW HOTEL5540 Hyde Park Bird.FA 4-8800Housing plansHousing for single students willbe provided this summer in 5400 discontented with society, intro-Greenwood for men, and 5748 duced the ideal of dike (justice).M„.llloclww. Blackstone for women. Accord- This is an inherently restrainingiv « cpF/'iat cfanArato nrn ing to James E. Newman, assist- principle, which isolates each man-ram VrTy Chicago Shers of a"t dean of students, Snell and from his fellows, Redfield ex-English will take six weeks of Hitchcock halls will not be open plained. "Society is a feral entity,special training to help them teach this summer so necessary repairs which men should avoid; each manreading and writing more effec- and renovation can be made. TTnstively to culturally deprived and ‘s the _ first ‘irne in years thatunderachieving high school stu- Snell-Hitchcock has been closed,Newman said.They will attend a summer in- Married students can find hous-stitute, June 28 through August ing through the married student6, 1965, directed by Gwin J. Kolb, housing office, 834 E. 58th street,professor and chairman of the International House will also bedepartment of English. open for grads and upperclass-The Institute will be financed men.by a $42,000 grant from the US Rentals in Blackstone Hall aver-Office of Education, under the age $67.50 per month for doubles,provisions of Title XI of the ex- $80 for singles. In 5400 Green-tended National Defense Educa- wood, the rooms are all doublestion Act. and range from $44.50 to $64.50The intensive program of study per month per person,for institute participants will in-elude courses in literature and theteaching of literature, demonstra¬tion classroom work, and analysisof appropriate teaching tech¬niques. The literature courses willemphasize development in the stu¬dent of capacities for critical read- TRAVELING?Get Nearly FreeTRANSPORTATIONBy Driving a Car to California,Salt Lake, EastArizona, Seattle,ALL CITIESMinimum age 31ME 9-3361AUTO DRIVEAWAY CO.343 S. DEARBORN ST.BOOKSPAPERBACKSWATCH REPAIRING14K PIERCEDEARRINGSTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75001540 E. 55 St.10% Student Discount THE BAG I'M INCONTEMPORARY LEATHERERSCustom Leather Goods,Sandals, Handbags, Belts, Upholstery,Etc.1250 N. WELLS STREETCHICAGO'S OLD TOWN SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTSThanksALL THOSE WHOHAVE SIGNED THE“STAY-W-HYDE PARK REGISTER”andWRITTEN TO URBAN RENEWALIN OUR BEHALFWe Are Stil] Here!Stop in and see us at1538 E. 53rd St. NO 7-404011 am - 10 pm Daily — Sunday Noon - 6 pmMay 21, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • SFull social rules committee reportPropose changes in dorm living conditionsSECTION IOBJECTIVES ANDFINDINGSThe student-faculty committeeon social rules, believing thatrules have meaning and vitalityonly as they serve ends thoughtdesirable in the relevant commu¬nity, started its deliberations withan inquiry into the conditions ofstudent life in the College com¬munity. Midway in its delibera¬tions it reached agreement on sev¬eral policy objectives:1. The purpose of education atthe College level is to stimulateundergraduates into commitmentto the acquisition of knowledgeconcerning our intellectual herit¬age, to foster independent think¬ing, and to enhance awareness ofthe world outside and engagementin its problems.2. The existing heterogeneity ofAhe student body is a necessarycondition to the achievement ofthis purpose and placement ofstudents in houses should encour¬age contact among students withdiffering social-economic back¬grounds.3. Dormitory life should be sogeared as to permit both privacyand community. “Community,” asused in this report, has no conno¬tation of conformity to a singdeway of life. We view the Collegecommunity as one involving com¬mitment to education and toler¬ ance of and respect for differentways of life.4. An important university re¬sponsibility is to aid the individualstudent in making the personaladjustments necessary to achievemaximal benefits from academicopportunities by fostering andsupporting an atmosphere inwhich students can operate effec¬tively with responsible freedom ofchoice.The factual picture which hasemerged from the committee’sinquiry 4pes not seem to it to bemaximally conducive to the reali¬zation of these policy objectives.The most significant overall factis the absence of a college commu¬nity with which students can iden¬tify with consequent individualand clique isolation of students.(The dropout rate and the agelevel of students seeking assist¬ance from student mental healthsuggest, as one would expect, thatindividual student problems ofadjustment are at their highestpeak in the first two years withno significant difference betweenthe first and second years and nosignificant difference betweenmen and women.)Attempts to create house com¬munities in the College have ap¬parently failed in fair part becauseof the deficiencies in the physicalplants of the existing dormitorieswhich have subjected students toloss of privacy and dignity. Wc donot believe that the University ofJksL Vlflooc (BadoIl Qo.CLEANERS • LAUNDERERS1013-17 East 61st St.Aerw.s.s from B-J Ct.For Call fir DeliveryMIDWAY 3-7447ALL YOUR VALUABLE WEAR¬ING APPAREL WILL BE SAFEAND WELL CARED FOR ALLSUMMER LONG.THRiFtYPU-*a*B«16stORattoFOR YOURWINTERWOOLENSNO NEED TO STORE BULKY WINTERWOOLENS IN YOUR CLOSET . . . THISHUGE BAG HOLDS UP TO 40 GAR¬MENTS OR MORE, SO MAKE ROOMNOW FOR YOUR LOVELY SUMMERGARMENTS.HIGH FASHION 095PlusCleaningChargesInsured for $200Addl. Ins. at 2%UMBRELLA&££/ONE UMBRELLA FREE WITH EVERY BOX STORAGE ORDERCONTAINING A MINIMUM OF $15 IN DRY CLEANINGAvailable in a variety of colors and styles to choose from. Chicago’s problem in this respectis more acute than the problemat comparable colleges, but wedo not find the fact that otheisare in similar trouble a justifica¬tion for doing nothing. It is ourbelief that the absence of meansof ready identification with theCollege community or any portionthereof is an important negativefactor in the accompishment ofour policy objectives. We believethat:1. Enlisting student member¬ship in the College community isan appropriate subject matter offaculty responsibility and con¬cern and that the faculty as awhole has not manifested suchresponsibility or concern;2. Similarly, older students whoshould be equally responsible andconcerned about this matter haveequally defaulted in this area; and3. A consequent vacuum has re¬sulted which the dean of students’administrative complex has soughtto fill by uncoordinated and un¬imaginative forays into odd seg¬ments of student life.We believe that the prevailingstudent apathy and combined de¬pendence upon and revolt againstthe “administration” are in largepart a product of the habit of notentrusting students with substan¬tial responsibility for rule makingand for maintenance of an intel¬lectual and social community.SECTION IIPROPOSED ACTIONWe believe that it is essentialthat the trend to isolation of stu-Cobeauty salonExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGOSOPHOMORES—JUNIORSThe International School of Amer¬ica offers o unique educationalexperience. Twenty students and3 professors spehd 8 months(Oct.-June) traveling together byoir around the world. While at¬tending courses — Sociology Eco¬nomics, and Philosophy—studentslive with native families for 4weeks in each of the followingcities: Tokyo, Hong Kong, Delhi,Cairo, Istanbul, Rome, Berlin,Warsaw, and Stockholm. This isone of the most challenging anddemanding of international experi¬ences, now in its 6th year.For further information, call DavidNewby, 667-5521 (evenings); orwrite Mr. Korl Jocoer (ExecutiveDirector, ISA) P.O. Box 244,Columbus, Ohio. dents and their concomitant with¬drawal from participation in thelife of the university communitybe arrested. We further believethat this can only be done bycombined faculty-student actiondirected toward responsibility andconcern for the creation of a Col¬lege community. We think thatcertain basic institutional devicescan be set up at once to amelioratethe situation. We, therefore, urgethat the following five proposalsbe accepted:1. To the maximum extent feas¬ible—a. Community meeting roomsshould be scat teredthroughout the campusin locations making themaccessible to both facultyand students;b. Ida Noyes be further de-* veloped as a communitycenter. In this connection,we strongly recommendthe installation of a“Rathskellar.”c. Low cost taxi transporta¬tion for students shouldbe made available after11:00 p.m.2. Rule making affecting lifein the houses should be entrustedto the various houses subject tothe limits set forth in section IIIof this report. Dormitory complexcouncils should have responsibili¬ty for the overall well-being ofthe complex and for rules relatingto study hours in cafeterias,guests in common rooms and thelike.3. Dormitor ies should be madeattractive enough to retain olderstudents and next year, in parti¬cular, to the maximum extentfeasible—a. Dormitory houses for un¬dergraduates should be setup with an approximateratio of 45% freshmen,30% sophomores and 25%juniors and seniors;b. Each existing complex ofhouses should includehouses for men and forwomen and, if pissible, forgraduate students;C. Individual houses shouldbe limited to not morethan 60 students;d. Allocation of not less thanfive rooms for eight stu¬dents should be set up inexisting houses, thus per¬mitting a separate livingroom for each eight stu¬dents; student attempts atdecorating individualrooms should be encour¬aged by the provision ofpicture molding in all ofthe existing rooms;e. New housing should aimat small buildings arranged inclusters with provisions for a fac¬ulty apratment in each house andconference rooms for educationaland social purposes and the useof non-resident students;4. The selection and training ofthe housing staff should be orient¬ed toward their assuming a posi¬tive role in the house, and theirsurveillance function should be re¬placed by one of resporrsible con¬cern. Assistant house heads shouldnot be requir ed to submit routinereports about each student, but should feel free to communicatewith faculty members or othersconcerning individual problems(the faculty, it is hoped, will feelsimilar freedom to communicatewith housing staff). Assistantsshould not be rigidly excludedfrom participation in the activitiesof the house or of the rest of theUniversity community; on thecontrary, they should be chosenpartly because of their acquaintance with both.5. A six man faculty-studemcommittee on social rules ami ac¬tivities should be set up for eachundergraduate house, the threefaculty members to be appointedby the dean of the College afterconsultation with the house; thethree student members to be selected in such manner as cactihouse may from time to time determine. Such a committee wouldhave the following functions:a. Discussion and evaluation ofliving conditions with a view tomaximizing the educational andinterpersonal qualities of dormi¬tory living. The criteria for tirecommitti'c would centrally includean emphasis on the achievememof community and privacy in tirehouse system. These functionswould, of course, Involve consultation with the housing staff;b. act as a review committeefor student grievances includingmatters of rule enforcement, ac¬tivity of housing staff, administra¬tive practices as to living condi¬tions and the like;c. such other functions as thehouse may wish to delegate.6. An all-College faculty-studentcommit toe on social rules andactivity should be established withpower to recommend changes inthe constitutional framework ofrules and act as a board of appealfrom action taken by individualhouse faculty-student committeesand with responsibility for theover all maintenance of a collegecommunity. This committeeshould consist of six faculty andsix student members plus twomembers of the administrativestaff. The faculty members shouldbe appointed by the dean of theCollege and the student membersshould he selected as student gov¬ernment may decide. There shouldbe no bar to having people serveboth on a house committee andon the all-college committee. Careshould be taken to see that thestudent members include non¬dormitory residents.SECTION IIIALL COLLEGE RULESWe suggest that in connectionwith dormitory life there be uni¬form rules for the College onlyto the following extent, otherrules to lx* delineated by the hous¬es or dormitories:1. Re»ident requirement:For the year 1966-67 we rec¬ommend to the all-Collegefaculty • student committeethat it adopt the following:To promote the assimilationof incoming students into theCollege community, and tocapitalize on the educational(Continued on page seven)HYDE PARK YMCANewly redecoroted student rooms ovoiloble with or without meal plans.Study lounge, private TV room, health, and physical facilities oilavailable for student use.Call FA 4-5300AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111—-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH —Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.24 HR. SERVICE CALLS — $3.00Tape Recorders — Phonographs — AmplifiersPhono Needles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsRuth Webber hasdisagreement on hours The pot bubblesDrug crisis on college campuses(Continued from page six)benefits of dormitory living,all students should live inuniversity houses during(heir first year. Hopefully,improvement of existing dor¬mitories, construction ofmore desirable ones, and stu¬dent involvement in house ac¬tivities and administrationwill induce older students toremain in the houses withoutneed of further residence re¬quirements.•». Hours requirement:For first year students, hoursfor the first and second quar¬ters shall continue as present¬ly constituted as to time, theouter limit in the third quar¬ter shall be increased to sixhours a week, computed aft¬er 12 p.m.The present system of ac¬counting for hours obviouslyprovides maximum freedomof individual choice and themajority of the committeerecommends to the dormi¬tory complex that it be con¬tinued, but each dormitorycomplex may set up its ownsystem including that of cur¬few in lieu of accounting. Wealso suggest that entry intothe complex, rather than thehouse, would be a suitableplace at which to computetime, but that, too, is a mat¬ter for the particular com¬plex to decide,Women beyond the freshmanyear shall have no hours re¬quirements unless they ortheir parents so request. TheUniversity shall notify par¬ents of the possibility of mak¬ing such a request.:t. Notification responsibility:For safety and emergencypurposes, every student whois away from the dormitoriesafter 9 p.m. should leaveword as to where he or shemay be reached. Telephonenumbers, without furtheridentification, are obviouslysufficient. Students who donot expect to be at a partic¬ular place should sign outand call in in the course ofthe evening.I. Overnight privileges:Shall continue as presentlyconstituted, without the needfor approval by the assistanthouse head. (But of course,with adequate check on theexistence of parental permis¬sion in cases in which it isnow required.)Visiting hours shall be nogreater than from 1 pm to1 am four days a week. Westrongly recommend the dis¬continuance of room “checks”but we do believe that thereshould be adequate provisionagainst unescorted guests.CONCLUSIONThe ideas and proposals of thiscommittee are not for all time.We claim no premium on eitherwisdom or ingenuity, and we hopewe have no monopoly on concern.We think our proposals set an in¬stitutional frame for continuedresponsible consideration of theideals, the problems and the prac¬tices of the College community.The essence of our position isthat improvement is, and can be,only a product of on-going co¬ operation between faculty andstudents. By this we demonstrateour confidence in the intelligenceintegrity and ability to progressof the students and faculty inhab¬iting the campus. We hope thatyou share our confidence and will,therefore, implement this reportas rapidly as possible.m * mum tv m txK * . mmB CommitteememberRabinowitzwm iMHH ' v- 'MINORITY REPORT OFTHE COMMITTEE ONSOCIAL RULESBY RUTH WEBBERThis report is not; to be con¬strued as a condemnation of themajority report as a whole. Quiteto the contrary, for it must beemphasized that there was com¬plete unanimity in the committeeas far as the first two sections ofthe report are concerned. The dis¬agreement revolves around cer¬tain provisions of the third sec¬tion, the ground rules governingresidence requirements, women’shours and dormitory regulations.It is our conviction that thereshould be hours’ rules for fresh¬man and sophomore girls in order(1) to provide them with someorganizational framework untilthey have successfully adjustedto both the freedoms annd the re¬sponsibilities of academic life;(2) not to discourage prospectiveentrants or their parents or coun¬selors because of extreme liberal¬ity of rules. The rules regardinghours in the majority report donot seem adequate to performthese functions. Therefore, it isproposed that there be a curfewsystem, 11 pm (5 nights perweek), 1 am (2 nights per week)for the first quarter, becoming12 pm and 2 am the second andthird quarters. The second yearwould continue the 12-2 rule withthe addition of two 3 am permis¬sions per month. The releasingfrom hours’ rules of junior andsenior women should be contin¬gent upon good academic stand¬ing and parental permission. Anyviolation of the signing-out re¬quirement should carry as a pen¬alty the reinstatement of thehours’ rules.It is also felt that permissionfor girls to live out of the dormi¬tories, which automatically car¬ries with it the release fromhours’ restrictions, should be con¬tingent upon good academic stand¬ing and parental permission.Finally, I feel that the provi¬sion for visiting hours for mem¬bers of the opposite sex in dormi¬tory rooms should be deleted. Itrepresents an invasion of privacyduring hours in which every stu¬dent should have free access tohis own room and be able to relaxwithout being concerned aboutthe presence of visitors in thedormitory. This does point up,however, the critical need for ade¬quate lounge space within thedormitories as they are presentlyarranged. (Editor’s note: the followingis the third in a series of articleson drugs and college campuses.The first two articles in theseries, which appeared in the lasttwo Tuesday MAROONs, dealtrespectively with the effects ofamphetamines and barbituratesand the findings of a panel ofresearchers from the Food andDrug Administration.)by Mark LonoCollegiate Press ServiceThe New York Times thisspring reported that “fromone-fifth to one-half of thestudents ... at Harvard . . .will have tried marijuana” whilethere. All Cambridge broke loose.Harvard dean John U. Monrovie the Times letter column, in¬sisted that this just was not so,and Dr. Dana Farnsworth of theuniversity health service was quo¬ted by the Crimson to the effectthat “the crisis in drug traffic hasbeen greatly exaggerated by peo¬ple without accurate information.”BUT THERE DOES seem to bea crisis, and a Cambridge judgedid urge a full investigation “toclean out Harvard Square” ofdrug peddlers. “I have no use forthose people in Harvard Squarewho are preying on students,”Middlesex Superior Court JudgeFrank W. Tonasellor declared,after sentencing a 19-year-oldyouth to a five-to-seven year sus¬pended sentence for selling drugsin the area.And so fell the judicial gavelthroughout the country. FiveHunter College students studiedtheir exams in a Bronx jail afterbeing arrested during an alleged“pot” party.Last month a University of Cal-ifornia-Berkeley student was ar¬rested for marijuana possession,and last week a University ofPennsylvania senior was similarlyarrested and held under $10,000bail. State police investigators ar¬rested five Bandeis Universityundergraduates last fall in a mari¬juana raid on campus. The use ofmarijuana by some students atCornell University in March ledto the second investigation ofcampus narcotics traffic in lessthan two years.Seminars heldThe concern at Harvard ledBoston police' and New YorkState’s Bureau of Narcotics Con¬trol to hold seminars for collegeadministrators. The New YorkBureau, reports Time, has collect-Today'sAssignmentDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERDO 3-7644 1510 E. 55th St. DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty Discount 1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN$1995JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL ed evidence of marijuana use ;15 upstate New York campuses.An Oklahoma psychiatrist tes¬tified before the House CommerceCommittee that some college stu¬dents were earning $200 a weekselling “pep pills” to their class¬mates. The Texas Department ofPublic Safety reported eight casesof illegal possession involving col¬lege students last year. A healthcenter official at the Universityof Texas reported “a pronouncedupswing” in university students’use of the drugs recently.CANADIAN SCHOOLS, too,face the problem. The Universityof Toronto Health Department re¬ported in February that drugoverdoses were responsible for thedeath of at least two studentsthere last year. Three Universityof British Columbia students havebeen arrested this year on mari¬juana possession charges. A leaf¬let advocating the legalization ofmarijuana has been distributedon the UBC campus.At the University of Manitoba,eight “pot” users told about theirdrug experiences to a campusnewspaper reporter. The Manito¬ban printed the story, along witha school official’s lament that “OhGod forbid that it has come toManitoba.”Reporter disillusionedA student was arrested fordrugs possession on the Riverside campus of the University of Cali¬fornia, and an Associated Pressreporter rushed there to get thestory. The UCR Highlander re¬vealed that the reporter was sodisappointed in his interviewswith students.. He had hoped toobtain avid defenses of the use ofmanjuana, but found that theonly student concern was that theissue not be distorted by the press.The Highlander found anothermatter for concern in the factthat, in connection with the druginvestigation, “the University hasused types of evidence and ‘trial’procedures to decide his (the stu¬dent arrested) future with theUniversity which no law court inthe United States would tolerate.”AT BERKELEY, the Daily Cal¬ifornian printed a first personaccount of the LSD experience.The writer explained: “Fortunate¬ly for us adults there is an avenue,however temporary, which by¬passes social structure in the jour¬ney to heightened awareness andimproved consciousness. The vehi¬cle in which we can travel on thisroad is LSD-25. With this artifi¬cial aitf, I could once again openmy eyes to the beauty on detailsand nuances of color and design.”Bot-h pros and consHis article went on to documentthe joys of LSD, a contrast tosome of the experiences relatedelsewhere.fjtvfrom our &aj0m3&eacAs collectiony fAThere’s nothing so popular as’> POPLINolors, and a new, slimmerare yours with a new 1965Beach Poplin Suit. You will findthe tailoring especially attentive,featuring the exclusive “ContourCollar’’ that made Palm Beach famousfor perfect fit. Palm Beach Poplinsare made from an easy-to-care-forblend of Dacron® polyester and cottonthat sheds wrinkles and hardly everneeds pressing. Wash ’n wear or dryclean. Styled with soft shoulder,narrow lapels, raised seams and plainfront trousers. Come in today andtry on this smartest of the smartsummer poplins.$45°oavailable atTHE STORE FOR MEN(Mh* Ston,-Qtattm attft ©ampuain the flew Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100May 21, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Students feted at annual honors awards assemblyOser 300 UC students werehono ed and recognized yes-terri.ty for their literary, artis¬tic. political, and intellectual; ro\vess above and beyond thecall of duty.Tilt*; occasion was the ninth an-11 honors awards assembly,presided over by dean of studentsWa 1 ner A. Wick, at which woreT dispensed awards and prizes total¬ling In the thousands of dollars.THE AWARDS ranged from thepresentation of the Quantrellawards, given annually to fourundergraduate teachers for pedaygoglcal excellence, to the presenta¬tion of the Howell-Murry alumniS association awards, given to tengraduating seniors for their con¬tributions to extra-curiiculat activi¬ty at UC.Also presented were awards tottie winners of the various tradi-. D-Mr-; '- lional poetry and reading contests.Lv to the winners of National,ScienceFoundation fellowships, to NDEAfellowship winners, and; to Dan-forth, Fulbright, and Rhodes schol-. at ship winners. In addition, .the"new inembers of such _ honoraryas Ptii Beta Kaona. Owl.societies as Phi Beta Kappa. ()wland Serpent, Iron Mask, Mntoon.-.key. and Nu Pi Sigma- wore an¬nounced.Maroon KeyFust- on the-agenda;, was theannouncement of the new mem-!>-•;< of Maroon Key, a long siand-, , mg honorary society. New momher< arc Sandra Baxter, JudyFeekner, James Dalton, Anna Hoi-L . I i *•* rtrtii :\Ton/vir T T-TAimrlit nn TA:■v- .Me '-MM k ■Jz •• hI•: Y' c. s1;V i Petersen,ird Stone. JudyAnn Student aides, who will serve asushers at the June commencement,are Neil Blast, Laura Campbell,Carl Hod el, Anna Ilollinger, JohnMorrison, Allan Novetsky, MaryPugh, Arthur Robins, Judy Schav-rien, Joel Shapiro, William Specht,Martin Sternstein, Judith Strom-mor, F/hvin Taylor. KatharineWexler, Lewis Williams, and PaulZuekcr.ExtracurricularTlie winners of the Howell-Murray extra-curricular activitiesawards were Marc Roland Cogan,former editor of the ChicagoMaroon Literary Review; EricJohn Gangloff of University The¬atre; W. Eugene Groves, formerpresident of Student Government;Mark Loren Joseph, president ofthe Pierce Tower council; EllenKamovsky, a leader of the UCorchestra; Robin % Joan Kau fman,; former news editor,of the,Maroon;Judith Magidson. a former Stu¬dent - Government . member andchampion of womens’ rights; FIiich Melrhei. senior member ofthe Forensic So, iety; Charles Packor. former station manager of„WFCB: and Peter Rabinowitz,Maroon musi, cm..' politico, and■ general ga<William N. Kluessneri- won theWilliam B. Bond medal, given tol1 ic varsity Ua.k team member-cming the gieate-t number ofpo,m- dm in.;' th-- season Larry:Rockwood won the Amos AlonzoStagg; medal for tlie “best all-around record for athletics, schol¬arship",., and character.’.’1 ieAca PoetsPrize for the bu.-t group of poemsby an undergraduate wont 1oSteven IY Lowenstam tor his "November 9,1953, and Other Poems.” «Poetry readingst pri/.t the Flore • JamesAdams poetry reading contest; : You won't believe itUntil you hear it.You may not believe itWhen you do hear it. - iiilithe KLH Model Eleven-W,The phonographOf tomorrow, today.this is the furniture version of the famous KLHModel Eleven Stereo Portable — the most copiedphonograph in America today. Designed and builtby a leader in component high fidelity to bring;you incredibly clean performance of your favoritemusic. Here, for the first time, is tone quality thatonly the most expensive consoles can equal —but in a fraction of their size and cost! The threehandsome, walnut-finished cabinets fit in any¬where, take no ‘furniture space’,KLH Model Eleven-W Compact Stereophonic Phonograph ..,. *Suggested Retail2 revolutionary full-range KLH speaker systemscan be separated up to 40 ft., deliver performanceyou have never heard before in a system of this size20 watt music power, solid state amplifierspecially created by KLH to drive the new speakers.Special KLH 4-speed automatic turntable (by Garrard)plays all records — Stereo and Mono.Pickering V-15 magnetic pickup with diamond stylus,'Inputs for a tuner or tape recorder..Separate bass and treble gain controls.'Unique 5 year guarantee, including parts and labor. *209.9£- - - KLH — Exceptional (Never just acceptable)7 Day Free Home TrialUntil, you actually hear the KLH Model, 11-W, you Won t believe thatany instrument so small can have such spectacular sound quality.47? arran8ed a Special Home Trial Offer. Listen to the Modeli » 4" your own home for 7 days. There’s no risk, no obligation.. d*y* °* beautiful music. If you aren't convinced that theII W is everything we say it is, just tell us so and we'll take it backvvith no questions asked. For further information, just give us,a call,S!®§;Musicraft120 E. Oak DE 7-4150Mon. & Tliurs. 10-9; Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10-6Closed SundayCall or I is it for I'urthvr Information went to Susan N. Horowitz.Second, third, and fourth prizeswent in order to Richard Eno,Victor Rostow, and Paul J. Peckar.The Roy D. Albert prize for anoutstanding work in the field ofanthropology was awarded toCharles M. H. Keil for his essay“Urban Blues.”AnonymousAN ANONYMOUS prize for excellenee in graphic arts went toCarole Greenberg Nelson.The Millard P. Binyon memorialfund prize for distinction in hu¬manistic pursuits in and out of theclassroom was awarded to Kathe¬rine Bailey.The Paul R. Cohen prize for tliegraduating senior who hasachieved the best record in mathe¬matics went to Charles P. Lanski.The Elizabeth Susan Dixonhonor award for outstanding workin the first year in the school ofsocial service administration wentto Sister Mary Wine.Fiske Poetry PrizesThe John Billings Fiske poetryprizes for original poems went toPhilip O’Mara (frist prize!, RobertDrexler (second prize), and Hen ryW. Haslach, Jr. (third prize).The Goethe prizes for excellencein the study of Germanic lan¬guages and literatures wereawarded to Sue Ellen Allman(German), Charles E. Oliver(German), Cheryl Register (Swed¬ish ), and Helen B. Stein (German).;The Hamilton Watch award,for the student receiving a bachelorof science degree who has mostsuccessfully combined proficiencyin his major field of study withi'achievomenis. in, the,., humanitiesand social sciences was given loZbigniew lionrv Nitecki.'Hie Milo P. Jewett prize lorexcellence in bible reading went toWilliam C. Brown (first' and■ ,c A - 1. ' - -:The David Blaii McLaughlinprize for an essay showing a spc. ,al skill and sense ot form inwriting English proses -went toSusan Neakes ■ be hei es-ay ’ HowIshmael Becomes and Is Becom¬ing Sea-Gudgeon."THE THEODOKI Fee Net tprize for excellence m the study olFrench languages' and literature■went to Susan Ruth 1 lii.schteldei.The Elizabeth R. Norton prize-for ext elleiK e in < hemic iwent to Fit: •<ene I >. F< itN" The ELsa Reinhar honor awaidfoi e\( ellein e in the 1 ir-t \ < ,n .V.till' s, hi ml ot Social -ei \ ice ad".ministration was awarded to Cyn¬thia Burr.The Mr. and Mr^z Joseph RandallShapiro prize for excellence in thefine arts was presented to WilliamFrame Conger.The John Roger-, Snoudayac c , -. 1 : I,in the field ot litcrar\ ‘ n itieismwai.- aw ai ded to Leonard M. Berkfor his essay “The RhetoricalFunction of the Relationship Be¬tween Realism and Fanlasy mThree Modern Plays.”The Richard West Temple prizefor outstanding research in psy¬chology was awarded to Alan J.Lirnpo for his essay "SelectiveResistance of Performance on aSchedule of Reinforcement to Dis¬ruption by Forebrain Lesions.”' THE WALL STREET Journalaward to a law student for excel¬lence in work in the field ofcorporate law was awarded toRaymond Ellimvood. Jr.DanforthsThe winners of the I>arifoi thgraduate fellowships were Jack X.Catlin, W. Eugene Groves, andDaniel M. Farrell. Groves also wronayRhodes scholarship. FulbrightsWinners of Fulbright grants in¬cluded Kay Beth Bartoletti, Rich¬ard Beck, Lenore Coral, RobertCoombs, Oliver Wendell Holmes,Grazina M. Musteikis, Hal Opper-man, Robert Panos, Jay A. Rubin,Sister Thomas More Smith, andWilliam Walensky.Tlie Dankstipendium of theFederal Republic of Germany wasawarded to James M. Berg andPaul Eric Souers. French govern¬ment fellowships went to CharlesR. Bailey and James Michael Law¬ler, while German Academic Ex¬change Sendee Summer fellow¬ships were awarded to Sally Giesel,Mark Liebowitz, and Judith Olson.The Inter-University Committeeon Travel Grants fellowship forstudy in the Soviet Union wasawarded to Robert A. Horick andMartin A. Miller, while the Univer¬sity of Chicago-German AcademicExchange fellowship went to AnnaL. Glier. Thomas B. Fry won theUniversity of Chicago-Universityof Frankfort Exchange fellowship.National Aeronautics and SpaceAdministration fellowships wereawarded to Edward Bromberg,Eugene Feit, Andrew Hazi, Nor¬man Hurt, Rick Lawrence, DeloMock, Richaid Kadiner, andEugene Fauman.NSF awardsNATIONAL SCIENCE Founda¬tion co-operative fellowships werepresented to James P. Cottingham,Dennis D. Cunningham. MargaretHardin. Philip Heckman, RonaldF. Inglehart, and Robert Sandling,while NSF summer fellowshipsfor graduate teacliing assistantswere received by Ross Amann,Harvey R. Margolls, I lerbert E.- Schulz,Mitchell Snyder, Robert M.West, and Uidiaid Wlie.-den.', NSF graduate fellowships wentto Mark Adelman. Marshall Ash.■Roberta Aslt. Alan D-nnett. JohnBurroughs,;: Keith Carlson, JackCatlin. Wentworth B. Clapham, Jr..Jeremiah Cronin, Larry Dornhoff,; William Fa die, Ronald Englade;John Fanselow, R Friis,Jr., Charles A Garvvin, RonaldGolden, Frank; Grosshans, FridolfHanson, John Hai'per. Barry Jacob¬son, Edward Jor.es, Kirbv K'lump,Susan I,ar.T"!h. ( - ■ IdUlski,’■lie i 1 ' < . Lewis,Michael Meeker, Michael Parkin-: "■ '■■ . ' ! 1 ! • i’.l 1Richaid Ibwo'-, Bru- e Sherwood,Kli/aht-rh Sl<•;«n. Step ten Sontz,Lawrence SromoVSkv, David Tantei - ind i Man i Ta$ INDEA grantsNDEA title'six fellowships wereawarded to Richard Barz, CharlesLutterworth.;'Ruth Claik. NikolaCvetanovie. Billy Joe Darden,Gabor all Drachman,-'Clifford Gallo> iy Edmunds. Ji . Linda Eich-meier, Robert Ell wood, RalphFasold, Michael Finegan. Erici langli d 1. Jean I lellie. Catherinelives, Georgette Kataoka, DavidLelyveld, Albert Leong, Harold■■■Levy, Phyllis Lyons; Thomas Mar-key, Peter McGregor, MichaelMeeker, Terry Merz, Fredrika-Miller, Sandra Bodiu, Ivors Rubinyi,Philip Salzman, Henning Sehms-doi f, Richard ■■Tubesing, Paul Tur-ner, Dennis Whelan, and WillardWilcox.NDEA title four fellowshipswere presented to Susan Borker,Howard Chudacoff, Allan Feld¬man., Barry Gale, Martin Geisel,David Hall, John Humpal, JohnJamieson, Burton Jones, MichaelLoux, Louis Mizel, John Musgrave,James Osborn, David Richter, Al¬lan Saaf. David Szanton. SusanScliachm , 1 In Lard Schroeder, Mel-1CHICAGO MAROON May 21, 1965 FREE SPORT C AR RLAZER■ ■: ■ :;,'■■■. - It THE HYDE PARK SHOPPIN 5 CENT.EIIU buy an ■AUSTIN HEALEY MG PEUGEOT TRIUMPHfrom either store Midway 3-4500Complete RepairsAnd Service ForAll Popular ImportsBOB NELSON MOTORS6052 or 6136 South Cottage Grove Avenue v1n Silberman, Daniel WiiliokJohn Wilson, and Wesley WoolyvFannie and John Hertz Miowships went to Walter Lyons iH. Nielsen, and David K Piobsi,WilsonsWOODROW WIUSON V f.*H.)Wship winners were Jordy Bell. ja,.kCatlin, Marc Cogan, Ralph DolingRichard Epstein. Daniel Faricip.Michael Finegan, Eugene GanoiDaniel Hamermesh, Jas»'ph Ka>per. Michael Klein, Susan LeesIrwin Levinstein, David D)p07’Chauncy Jeffries Mellor IIIgYlanaMiller, Zbigniew Nitecki, -Mai.LParmer, Paul Rabinow, Petci j -Rabinowitz, Steven J. RosenThomas Rosenwein, and MichaelSilverman.University of Chicago muties fellowships were awarded toMarc Cogan, Michael Finegan Ei i>Gangloff, Chauncey Mellor! peterRabinowitz, and Ellen Ross!HonorariesNew members of the Cfwl an.lSerpent honorary society are I )avidL. Aiken, Victor Bers, B«>rnai !Grofman, Thomas Hoagy, RobenF. Levey, John Lion, Charles Pack¬er,' Richard Schmitt, Joel Shapiro, ;Alan Sussman, and .RichardThompson.Now members of Iron Mask mDonald L. Anderson, Joel -BockDavid Eisenbud, Richard B L,Kenneth Iloganson, Kenneth;Kii. h.Steven Lowonstam, Terry-^tivonsJoseph Neisendorfer, Joseph Sill¬ier, William Specht, and Et ic vanYoung. -■.■Ly:Nu Pi Sigma, the wotm-ndhonorary society, elected NancyBarty, Barbara Beigun, Holly;(Muan. Mat ion Cuilini, Jud.ili i’Sally Cook. Tallin Fri--,!Goldstein, Jo Ann Henikbff. KveHochwald. Maragaiet 11Susan Ilorowav, Anna li->ilDiedre Holloway, Susan Th".CUtt, Mlchi Isuala. CarolMlr:.Ellen Karnofskv, Joan L •Susan Noakes, Mora Oxitiliorn,Jane Piore, Roberta Reb, Barbaia■Rhine, Judy Srhavrien/M ..Taranovvski, Anna Thai. K c ■Wexler, and Sandra Whale.Sigma Xi elected .Teie BJames Cottingham. Staphjrenzo, Jeanne Call ill. Clui -■ .rett, Merrill Gassmanv JohnHermanson, Barr y Jan >bson.Edward Jones, Charles ; I.anskiRobert Momil. Alexandra Navovt-->ky; Zbigniew Nitecki. R<-and Robert West.Phi Bctcs‘I !,o new mernbei - "I I’Kappa are Jordy Bell, t-Boggs, Katherine Boshes, JackCatlin, James Cottingham, Cha5Daslie,-Michael Finegan, HaFrisch, W. Eugene Grover, IHamermesh, Eric Gangloit . < MIglauer, Charles P. Lanski, Chauicey Mellor, Zbigniew - Nitecki■Peter--. Rabinowitz, Ellen IDCharles Schauf, Victoria Sehauf.Barbara von Eckhardt,. Robf'iiWolosin, Jean. Anton, Neil BiaRobert Gennis, Jo Ann Heriikoff,and Paul Zucker.The Harold JS. Goettler Politit alInstitutions Prizes, to undergradnates for original essays weirawarded to:David French Feingold firstprize) for an essay on “NegroPolitical Activity in IllinoLs. Indi¬ana, and Ohio before 1900: T h‘‘Search for Recognition.”Martha P. Saxton (second1 "i“The Authorities ol The I *« :Linda Sue Spaot (second“ITte Art of Loving and The •ond Treatise of Government.’Joseph J. Kasper (third' (,,J“The Class Basis of the NationalSocialist Triumph Over WeimaiGermany.”EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaxa1200 East 53 rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FoeultyDiscountSchwab, Cochrone, Redfield, YongQuantrell awards to undergraduate teachersEric Cochrane, James Red-field Joseph J. Schwab, andNien-Chu Yang received $1thousand Quantrell awards forexcellence in undergraduate teach¬ing yesterday.President George Wells Beadlepresented the Quantrell Awardsin i he faculty members at yester¬day's awards assembly. Theawards were established in 1938by the late Ernest Eugene Quan-lirl) of Bronxville, New York, aformer trustee of the University,in honor of his parents LlewellynJohn and Harriet ManchesterQuantrell. They are the nation’soldest prize for outstanding collegeinstruction.THIS YEAR’S awards weremade after dean of the CollegeWayne C. Booth asked studentslor their suggestions on teacherswho had especially impressedthem.Student suggestionsBooth told the Maroon thatabout twenty suggestions fromstudents had come into his officem the two days between the re¬quest for suggestions and thedeadline set for receiving them,lie promised more time will begiven for suggestions to be madem future years. The selectioncommittee consisted of Booth;Norton Ginsburg, associate deanof the College; Warner A. Wick,dean of students; and George L.I’laye, dean of undergraduate stu¬dents.They also considered the list ofrecommendations from each of thefour section heads of the Collegeareas, and looked into each nom¬inee's record. Booth said only oneI-«i.son received more than onestudent nomination. Recommenda¬tions from sent ion heads had beenDie only basis of the awards inthe past.Ciehrane Is asscoiate professorin the department of history andm the College; Redfield is assist¬ant professor in the committee onsocial thought; Schwab is WilliamRainey Harper professor of nat-mal sciences, and professor in thedepartment of education; andVang is professor in the depart¬ment of chemistry and Ben Maylaboratory for cancer research.Cochrane — renaissance man( (K’HRANE, 37, received hisHA degree in 1949, his MA in 1950,and his Ph.D. in 1954, all fromVale University. He taught his¬tory at Stanford University fora year; served 2Va years in theAi my, and then came to UC in1957, Cochrane received a Gugen-h<‘im Memorial Foundation fellow¬ship in 1961-62. His research has^entered on the renaissance,< ounter-reformation, and historyof Italy before 1800.His citation says in part; • As a teacher, Mr. Coch-rane has effectively translatedscholarly rigor, commitment toclarity of thought and of expres¬sion, and a passion for interpret¬ing the nature of historical meth¬od and experience into the termswhich make his students not sim¬ply learners, but participants. Atevery level, in his sections in thehistory of Western eiviliation, hiscourse on the later Middle Ages,his courses on the renaissance, thecounter-reformation, and the his¬tory of Italy, undergraduates arestimulated to such participationand to lively discussion. Mr. Coch¬rane gives generously of his timeto students outside the classroomas well ... he demonstrates theideal of the teacher-scholar, andthe possibilities of being a dis¬tinguished specialist and an out¬standing generalist.”Redfield — AthenianREDFIELD, 30, received hisBA degree in 1955 and his PhDdegree in 1961 from UC. He wasa Woodrow Wilson Fellow at Ox¬ford University, England, andjoined the UC faculty in 1960. Red-field’s fields of special interestare classical Athenian politics, po¬litical philosophy, and literature.He has translated several of theplays of Aristophanes and Euripi¬des for the modern stage.His citation says in part:". . . Redfield embodies thescholar committed to imparting toothers what he knows. (His stand¬ing invitation to teach anyoneGreek who wants to learn it is asymbol of that attitude.) . . . Any¬one who has studied with Mr.Redfield is aware of his devotionto his task as teacher, his in-sistance on a rigorous examina¬tion of the subject matter athand, his demand that the studentlive up to his own perfectioniststandards. By precept and examplehe has demonstrated what itmeans to be scholar and teacherin the truest and best sense.”Schwab — UC manSCHWAB, 56, received a PhBdegree in 1930, a MS degree in1936, and a PhD in 1939, all fromUC. He received the QuantrellAward for the first time in 1938,and is the first faculty memberto receive it twice. His appoint¬ment in 1950 as William RaineyHarper Professor, honoring theUniversity’s first president anddistinguished pioneering educator. cellence in undergraduate teach¬ing.”Yang — persuasive chemistYANG, 37, received his BS de¬gree from St. John’s Universityin Shanghai, China, and his PhDin 1952 at UC. He served as a re¬search associate at MassachusettsInstitute of Technology from 1952-55 and as a research fellow atHarvard University in 1955-56, af¬ter which he came to UC. Yangis an organic chemist with par¬ticular interest in compounds as¬sociated with the growth of inhi¬bition of cancers, and with theelectronic characteristics of organ¬ic substances. He recently pro¬posed a new theory of the chemi¬cal origin of cancer involving elec¬tronic factors and a steric factor,and is synthesizing radioactivecompounds to test this theory. Healso is active in the field of pho¬tochemistry, with an interest inthe organic reactions that arelight-induced. His citation reads in part“For his dedicated and inspiringteaching of organic chemistry toundergraduate students, and forhis tireless efforts to stimulatetheir independent study. Throughhis leadership, as director of un¬dergraduate honors research inchemistry, increasing numbers ofstudents now have an opportunityto make original contributions toscientific knowledge. Keen judgeof potential ability, wise counselor,and persuasive innovator, he hasgiven renewed vigor and meaningto undergraduate studies in chem¬istry.”LAST YEAR’S Quantrell win¬ners were Sylvain Bromberger,assistant professor of philosophyand physical sciences; John G.Cawelti, assistant professor ofEnglish and humanities; FrankM. Child, assistant professor ofzoology; and Ralph M. Lerner, as¬sistant professor of social sci¬ences.In 1958, he was awarded a fellow¬ship at the Center for AdvancedStudy in the Behavioral Sciencesin Palo Alto, California.Among his publications are: TheTeaching of Science as Enquiry,Education and The Structure ofthe D isciplines. What Do Scien¬tists Do? and “Structure of theDisciplines: Problems, Topics, Is¬sues.” His special fields of inter¬est are the philosophy of educa¬tion, with special reference to gen-eraLcduoation, and the philosophyof science.His citation reads in part:". . . His investigations into theeducational process have beencoupled with a great ability tocommunicate with students. Hisclasses are invariably oversub¬scribed and unforgettable to thosewho are fortunate enough to bein them. As a result of his activi¬ties in the area of materials, meth¬ods and classroom technique hehas held visiting professorshipsat Columbia University and atPuerto Rico . . . He was also aprime mover in the developmentof the biological sciences curricu¬lum study materials which areamong the finest high school pro¬grams available today , . . Thisstatement demonstrates his worth¬iness to be the first to receive asecond Quantrell Award for ex- Medical teaching awardDr. Richard Kekuni Blaisdell,assistant professor of medicine, ofChicago, received last month a$30,000 Lederle Medical FacultyAward in recognition of his su¬perior talents as a teacher.The award will be used to sup¬plement his salary and profession¬al expenses over the next threeyears.The Lederle Medical FacultyAward are supported by LederleLaboratories, a pharmaceuticalfirm, which is a division of Ameri¬can Cyanamid Company withheadquarters in Pearl River, NewYork.Dr. Blaisdell is one of elevenmembers of medical school facul¬ties in the United States who willshare in a grant of $250,000. Since1954, Lederle has given more than$7 million in the support of medi¬cal education, of which $3.5 mil¬lion has been allocated to 178faculty members.DR. BLAISDELL, a 40-year-oldnative of Hawaii, is a graduate ofUC’s school of medicine. He first joined the department of njedieinefaculty at the University in 1957.The departmental faculty un¬animously nominated Dr. Blais¬dell for the Lederle award. Dr.Leon Jacobson, department chair¬man and professor of medicine,recommended him to the awardscommittee in these terms:“. . . this talented individual isrecognized by the combined clini¬cal and preclinical faculty as oneof our outstanding teachers . . .his major interest and talent isin teaching at all levels, includingmedical students, house staff andfellows . . . Dr. Blaisdell does notconcern himself only with bed¬side teaching but is instrumentalin leading the student into thelaboratory as well.”MODEL CAMERALEICA, BOLEX, NIKON, PENTAXZEISS, MAMIYA, OMEGA, DURSTTAPE RECORDERS1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259 JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAP UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“« strong bank*9NEW CAR LOANSiji oo per hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C.Keep Cool!In a Shapely short sleeveshirt. White, Pastel, Bleed¬ing Madras. Button down,tab, spread collars. All withtapered body.$4.00 and $5.00University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. HARPERLfQI/Oft STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONE- 1318— 1233— 7699HY 3-6800FA 4B’nai B’rith Hillel FoundationpresentsA UIASS1D1C £11A BIBOSGuests — A Group of Young Lubavitcher Chassidimfrom Brooklyn will lead us inPRAYER SONG DANCEandDiscuss Chassidic Teachings 'Friday, May 21st Saturday, May 22ndServices 8:00 p.m. Morning Services ond KiddushSobbos Toble 9:00 p.m. 9:00 a.m.Sholosh Seudos 5:30-8:30 p.m PETERSON'SUltra-Modern Storage Facilities Protect Your Possessionsw»h "CONTAINERIZED CARE''Our beautiful new warehouse features everyadvance in scientific storage . . . alarmgong, anti-fire sprinklers, humidity control,insulated walls, dust-free floors ... to men¬tion a few. Our "Containerized Care" eliminates piece-by-piece re-handling . . . assures maximumspeed, safety, economy. Each item iswrapped and padded then packed in giant,sturdy containers.PETERSON moving & storage co.DAILY PICKUP IN UNIVERSITY AREAph one: 646-4411 Authorized Agent for United Von LinesServing the Greater Hyde Park Areo Since 1918III. MC 1991May 21, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROOTHEATRE REVIEWTartuffe: Old wine in old bottlesTARTUFFE, by MoliereDonneMine. Pernelle ...FlipoteElmireDamisMarianeUleanteOrgonValereTartuffe .Donald SwantonLoyalOfficerdirected by Kenneth NorthcottTartuffe is not Moliere’sfinest play, but it has somepretty entertaining highpoints.The same thing applies to Uni¬versity Theatre’s production of itlast weekend.The student actors, directed byassociate professor of GeimanKenneth Northcott, presented acompetent, successful production.But only two or three performersand two or three scenes raised itabove the level of “very nice—foj' students.”The play itself is generally heldto be somewhat sloppily put to¬gether, depending on some prettybroad humor and a touch of slap¬stick for much of its interest. Theending leaves a funny taste inmodern mouths—a deus ex ina-cliina to end all dei ex machinae(?) appears to punish evildoersand plug that “enemy of fraud,whose eyes can pierce his sub¬jects’ hearts,” etc., Louis XIV.MOST OF THE play dependson the two main characters—Tar¬tuffe, a hypocritical Casanova incleric’s cape, and Orgon, who istricked by Tartuffe into giving upall his property to the safekeep¬ing of this fine, pious crook.UT's production was fortunatein featuring two remarkably tal¬ented performers in these roles.Don Swanton, long a heavyweightmainstay for UT productions,was wholly convincing as heturned from obnoxious piety to de¬lightful lechery to professed“mortification of the soul” uponbeing discovered manhandling Or-gon’s buxom wife Elmire, playedattractively by Annette Fern.The “new discovery” of the pro¬duction was Paul Levin, as Orgon.In his first appearance, he wasString group playsThe Gateway String Ensemble,a south-side amateur group underthe direction of Basia Polischuk,will give a benefit concert in theFirst Universalist Church, 910 E.83rd, on Sunday evening at 7:30.Included on the program will be“Spring and Summer” from Vi¬valdi's Four Seasons, Grieg’s Hol-herg Suite, Hindemith’s Trauer-musik, and works by Bach andLocatelli.Admission is $1.50; 75c for chil¬dren under 12. outstanding in Orgon’s misguidedfrenzies which provide so muchof the crucial comic element.As we have mentioned, AnnetteFern was amply enticing for Tar¬tu ffe’s advances. She was a de¬light while first coyly leadingTartuffe, then somewhat desper¬ately being chased about.UNFORTUNATELY, however,these three performers were notenough. The supporting roles wereperformed adequately in mostcases, but no more than adequate¬ly. Hene Tamarkin did open theplay promisingly as an asthmaticmoralistic grandmother, but thatwas a pretty small role. The restof the cast had generally the sameshortcoming—they all stayed atone rather plodding level of voiceand action.The only really bad acting camefrom Norman VVallis, who worethe same silly expression bothquarreling and making up withhis lover, Marianna. This scenebetween Valere and Marianne, es¬pecially because it just doesn'tfit in with the rest of Moliere’splay, was the low point. Wallisand Judy Sehavrien quarreledwithout bite, and were reconciledwithout convincing affection. Theperformance of this scene waswooden and perfunctory.THE PERFORMANCE wasstaged most unusually—the aud¬ience seated on two sides of theperforming area, which was inthe middle of Hutchinson Com¬mons. Entrances and exits weremade from the doors to the old,,fondly remembered cafeteria serv¬ing line. It was easy to grasp theidea of making the setting authen¬tic 17th century Sun King — es-speeially when Jim O’Reillystomped out before the perform¬ ance and welcomed us to the“racquets court,” throwing in apunny line about how it was usedby the “common” folk, (get it?cackle, cackle).There were great problems,though. If you were behind as fewas four rows of people, you could¬n’t see anything below chest level.I got a glimpse of some thingsthat went on via a fortuitouslyplaced painting on the far wall,whose glass cover provided a dan¬dy mirror. Others were not solucky, and had to stand up to seeanything.Sound was not too much of aproblem, since performers rarelyspoke directly at either half ofthe audience for fear of losingtheir lines to the other half.David L. AikenEncounter editor talkson Utopia & revolutionMelvin J. Lasky, editor of En¬counter magazine of London, willdeliver a series of three lectureson “Utopia and Revolution" nextweek.The talks, which are part of theUniversity’s Encyclopaedia Britan-nica lectures, will be given onMay 25, May 26, and May 27, at4 pm in Breasted Hall, 1155 East58th Street. Admission is withoutticket and without charge.The lecture schedule is: May25, “The Utopian Dream;’’ May26, “Revolutionary Commitment;”and May 27, “Principles and Her¬esy.”The lecture series was estab¬lished under a grant from theEncyclopaedia Britannica. Eachyear several speakers are broughtto the University campus to speakon topics of current interest. Three young writersThe Chicago Review willpresent three young Chicagowriters reading from their fic¬tion and poetry at Jimmy’sWest University Room, 1168 E.55th, on Thursday evening, May27, at 7:30. This is the third in aseries of such readings that theUC magazine has sponsored inthe past year.Roger Aplon, associate editor ofChoice magazine, will read fromhis poetry. He was one of theprize winners in the Daily NewsChicago poem competition. Hisprizewinning poem, “An Accumula¬tion of Birds,” was recently pub- read at Jimmy'slished in the Chicago Review’sspecial issue featuring new Chi¬cago writers and artists.William Hunt, who will also readfrom his poetry, has publishedpoetry in Choice and has recentlybecome poetry editor of the Clu-cago Review.Eugene Wildman, newly 3ppointed editor of the Chicago Re.view, will read from his shortstories. He was winner of theCoradi prize in fiction at the recent Arts Festival on the Univer¬sity of North Carolina campus.At Thursday evening’s readinga 50 cent donation will be requested.Social research talks today. Sat.The 42nd annual Institute of thesociety for social research, a twoday long program of speeches,panel discussions, and presenta¬tions of papers, will be held begin¬ning this morning at InternationalHouse.Highlights of the institute in¬clude the presentation of papersby students and faculty of UC’ssocial sciences division, a speechby professor of history Louis Got-tschalk on the philosophy of his¬tory, and a discussion led by pro¬fessor of sociology Philip M.Hauser on the demographic aspectsof the current Negro revolution.Among the titles of the papersthat will be read at the instituteare “Social Movements and the Negro,” “Formal Organization,”“Social and Personal Disorganization,” “Religion and Ethnicity,”“New Nations,” and “PoliticalSociology.”RESIDE UC STUDENTS andfaculty, delegations from severalother midwestern universities willbe on hand.The institute will concludeSaturday night with keynote ad¬dress by Erving Goff man of theUniversity of California, entitled“A Random Walk Through SocialOrganization.” All those interestedin attending are welcome. Registra¬tion fees for the conference are$2.50 for students and $3.50 forfaculty.Culture CalendarChamber series set for next yearThe music department an¬nounced last week the dates andartists for its Chamber MusicSeries of 1965-66.The programs, which will againbe held on Friday evenings at8:30 in Mandel Hall, will featureworks of the 18th, 19th, and 20thcentury.On October 22, the NetherlandsChamber Orchestra will give aconcert with Szymon Goldbergboth the conductor and violinSoloist. December 3 will be a re¬cital by basso Andrew Foldi. Janu¬ary 28, the Paganini Quartet willperform, and February 25 will bea concert by the Marlboro Trio.April 1 is a piano recital by JakobGimpel, and the final concert ofthe series, April 22, will be aconcert by the ContemporaryChamber Players.The prices for series subscriptionare $10 for general, $8 for UC faculty, and $3 for UC students.Since the College will be takingup the entire balcony section fordistribution to the incoming firstyear class, there will be fewerseats available to the general pub¬lic. The music department urgesthat all present subscribers wnoplan to renew for next season doso before June 12th. For furtherdetails, contact the music depart¬ment, 5802 S. Woodlawn or ext.3553.The Musical Society willpresent a program of musicfor clarinet and piano byBrahms and others today at12:30 in Mandel Hall. Therewill be another concert onSunday, May 23 in the eastlounge of Ida Noyes featur¬ing woodwind quintet music.Hand-pickedoffice helpersneeded!Every day the Elaine Revell company is asked tosupply office help to the best known blue-chip firmsin C'hicagoland. And we do. Our girls are knownas Elaine Revell Roses—very special AmericanBeauties who are hand-picked for their assignments.Would you like to work on your own terms—close to home, convenient hours, highestpay, finest firms? Women of all ages, with .all office skills, are eligible. To see if you qualify/^just fill out and mail the coupon. The ElaineRevell office nearest you will supply details.5 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS THROUGHOUT CHICLOOP — ?$0 North Michigan Avanuo. ST 2 2325NORTH — 4832 North Lincoln AvonuoNORTHWEST — 2510 DompoUr, Das Plain#*WEST — 1044 Lako Stroot, Oak Park ^0SOUTH — 7922 South Ashland Avonut ConcertsCHICAGO BUSINESS MEN S ORCHES¬TRA: Sylvan Ward, dir. Vivaldi: Cone. InD minor. Brahms: Sym. no. 1. Borodin:Polovetslan Dances. Moussorgsky: TheGreat Gate of Kiev. May 29 at 8. Or¬chestra Hall. Adm. Ch.UC COLLEGIUM MUSICUM MADRIGALGROUP: Howard M. Brown, cond. Joa¬quin and his contemporaries. May 29a 8:30. Bond Chapel. Free.UC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: H. ColinSlim, con. Prokofief: Three excerptsIrom Romeo and Juliet. Schubert: Sym.no. 9 (Great C Major). May 22 at 8:30.Mandel Hall. Free.DanceSTONE CAMRYN BALLET: Haydn: ’Forthe Birds.” Clementl: "Frohllcher Relgen.”Delius: “A Friend is Someone Who LikesYou.” A born: “The Lonely Ones.” Also“The Shooting of Dan McGrow” and Di-verissements: May 21 a 8:30. St. Al-phonsus' Athnaeum, 2936 N. Southport.Adm.Exhibits68th Annual Exhibition by Artists ofChicago and Vicinity. Art Institute thruMay 31.HOHENBERG AND HAYDON: non ob-ective abstract paintings. At MarguerieGallery, 102 E. Oak St.. Chicago.RICHARD LIPPOLD: Exhibition of sculp¬ture and drawing. Sponsored by the UCRenaissance Society. May 4-June 12.Daily, 10-5: Sat.. 1-5. 108 Goodspeed Hall.MARC CHAGALL: Original lithographsand etchings. La Fontaine. Chagall Bible,large signed lithos in small editions andsome inexpensive posters. Sat. 11-6. Ben¬jamin Galleries. 900 N. Michigan.RUTH DUCKWORTH and NANCY BER¬RYMAN: Recent work At CraftsmansGallery. Daily 1-6; Sat. & Sun., 2-5. 1763N. Sedgwick.FilmsA RAISIN IN THE SUN: With SidneyPoitier, from the Lorraine Hansberryplay. Thompson House. May 23 at 8.50cMAFIA: Pietro Germl, dir. At the ArtInstitute. May 27 at 7:30. 75cTHE MALTESE FALCON: John Huston,dir. Wih Humphrey Bogart. SydneyGreenstreet, Peter Lorre, and Mary Astor,from the Dashiell Hammett novel. PlusHIGH SIERRA: Raoul Walsh, dlr„ withBogie, and Ida Lupino. Carnegie The¬atre, Rush and Oak, all week, $1.60. CITY LIGHTS: With Charlie Chaplain.RussFllms. May 23 at 7 and 9. Judd Hall.CYRANO DE BERGERAC: With JoseFerrer, acting and directing. May 22 at7:30. Billings Hospital. 50cRecitalsSVIATOSLAV RICHTER: Pianist May 23at 2:30. Orchestra Hall. $3.50-6.50.FREDERICK HAMMOND: HarpsichordWorks by Couperin. Scarlatti, and Bach.May 21 at 8:30. Bond Chapel. Free.TheatreHANDS AROUND IN LOVE: The musi¬cal version of La Ronde. Allerton HotelTheatre in the Clouds, 701 N. Michigan,9 and 1 pm Tues.-Sat.; 4 and 9 pm.Sun. Weekdays $2.65; Frl. and Sat. $2 95.SU 7-4200.THE WRECKING BALL: Second Cityreturns with the same review, but anew New York-ish cast. Nightly 9 and11; Sat , 9. 11, and 1. Tickets $2; Fri.and Sat. $2.50. Closed Mondays. Tele¬phone reservations accepted. At 1846N. Wells, DE 7-3992.DUTCHMAN (LeRol Jones); HOMEFREE (Lanford Wilson); PICNIC ONTHE BATTLEFIELD (Fernando Arra-bal): Three one-act plays by contempo¬rary authors, directed by Selma (Mrs.Robert) Sickinger. Hull House Theatre.3212 N. Broadway. Weekends thru July10. Frl. and Sat. at 8:30' Sun. at 7:30.Tickets Frl. and Sat. are $3.40, $3 onSun. Ticket informaion 348-8330.THE GAME THEATRE. Paul Sills (ofSecond City), dir. You can either ob¬serve or participate in this new. improvi-sational theatre. $2 for either observersor participants. Saturdays from 8:30 on.1935 N. Sedgwick. 642-4198THE KNACK: Ann Jelllco's play In theoriginal New York Production. OpensApril 7 at the Harper Theater, 5238 S.Harper. Nightly at 8:30, Sat. 7 and 10 15,Sun. 2:30 and 7:30. Closed Mon. Nightly$3. Fri. and Sat. $3 90.ANNA KARENIA: The Leo Tolstoy noveldramatized and adapted to the stageby Eugenie Leontovich and James Good¬win. in a producion by the GoodmanTheatre. Directed by Miss Leontovichand Joseph Slowik, with Dolores SuttonIn the title role. May 7-29. Sun-Thurs.7:30; Fri. Sat. 8:30. Nightly, $3; Fri. &Sat., $3.50. Student discount of 50cGoodman Theatre, Monroe and Colum¬bus. CE 6-2337.TONIGHT AT EIGHT-THIRTY n: Anti¬gone by Sophocles and Antigone byAnouilh. May 21-23, 28-30. Reynolds ClubTheatre. $1.50.Halne Revell, Inc., Dept. WD-1230 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Illinois 60601am interested in becoming an Elaine Revell Rose andworking In Chicago’s finest offices. Please let me knowthe qualifications forpart time □ full time □MissName Mrs. _ Age UNIVERSALARMY STOREThe universe in studentwear for campus undcampingLevis - Tennis ShoesAN OUTFIT FROMTOP TO TOE1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856 PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhair stylists at5242 Hyde Pork Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710 % Student Discount.Zone. . Phone No..Married Single—Other No. Children Ages.I Specialty Applied For.I,10 • CHICAGO MAROON May 21, 1965 the One, the Only-the Originalforeign car hospital ft clinichome of team winkauthorized BMC sales and service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113fAhSAM-Y&NCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYII A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062tiki topicsCIRALSHOUSE OF TIKIIs proud to offer all of ourfriends of Hyde Park andthe surrounding areas a se¬lection of Polynesian dishesas well as our choice Ameri¬can menu. This choice ofPolynesian foods is now partof our regular menu.JUST A SAMPLE OF OURMENU:Shrimp Polynesian; chickenTahitian; lobster Polynesian;beef and tomatoes; egg roll;ono ono kaukau; shrimp deionqhe; beef kabob flambe.Try one of our delightfulHawaiian cocktails.See The Last Stage's newGorky play, "THE LOWERDEPTHS." Drop by beforeor after the show.CIRALSHOUSE OF TIKI51st fir HARPERFood served 11 A.M. to 3 A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-7585 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856PIZZAPLATTER1508 HYDE PARK BLVD.DELIVERY &TABLE SERVICEHE G-6606 — KE €-3801Chicken - SandwichesPizza &Italian Foods^4.M” enterworld ofdiningpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken*616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668GOLD CITY INN“A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDE PARK S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559OPERA HOUSE * *2=“ MAY 25 thru 29 :introducing NANA MOUSKOLRISEATS NOW ON SALE AT BOX OFFICEOpen daily 10 am to 7 pm until opening — Then 10 am to 9 pmPRICES Tue., Wed., Thurs.Eves. & Sot. Matinee Fri. & Sat. Eves.MAIN FLOOR 6.00 & 5.00 6.75 & 5.50FIRST BALCONY 5.00 & 4.00 5.50 & 4.502nd BALCONY 3.00 & 2.50 3.50 & 3.00For Mail Orders Make Checks Payable to OPERA HOUSE,20 N. Wacker Drive, Chicago 60606. Please enclose stampedand self-addressed envelope. ( dark■■ 50* l mmm■ for college student! m■ with i.d. card m• different doublefeatures dailyu • open datvn to duivn■ • little gal-lery■ for gals onlyfn. 21—“written on the■ wind,” "the cobweb”■ sat. 22—"ensign pulver,” m"goodbye Charlie” m■ sun. 23—“a tale of twocities," "the tempest” ■■mon. 24—“four ways out," ■“lost souls” ■tues. 25—“gangbusters,”“guns don’t argue”m wed. 26—“roisemarie,”■ "bittersweet”■ thur. 27—"guns of thetlmberland,”"armored attack."udark & madisonfr 2-2843 MAROON WEEKEND GUIDEBRINGTHISCOUPON ISPECIAL STUDENT RATEThis coupon and $2.25 may be exchanged at Ithe Box Office no later than half hour before Jperformance for regular $3.00 seat. JNot Good on Friday or Saturday Nights |"IT IS THE CITY'S BEST SHOW"Dettmer, Chi Americanthekwkthe London and New York hit by Ann Jellicoestaged for the Harper by Brian Bedford. Asoriginally directed by MIKE NICHOLS.REGULAR PRICES & SCHEDULETues., Wed., Thurs. at 8:30, $3.00Fri. at 8:30; Sat. at 7 & 10, $3.90Sun. at 2:30 & 7:30, $3.00HARPER theaterBU 8-1717 5238 S. HARPER AVE.. . . you can hear yourself think . . . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booze.Bass ale and Schlitz beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . . .air conditioned5311 BLACKSTONE 324-7859UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTSSOPHOCLES ANOUILHFRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAYMay 21, 22, 23 — 28, 29, 30REYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE8:30 pm $1.50 — Students $1.00TONIGHT AT 8:30 SERIESTickets on Sale Reynolds Club DeskMay 21, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11CLASSIFIED ADSPERSONALSecond pianist needed lor Bach 2-clav.cone, in C major. 363-6614 for details.Share economy male apartment $35 plusutilities. x3187.Come see “Raison in the Sun," 7thfloor. Pierce, Saturday, May 22, 8:00.One black cat wanting a home. Pleasecontact 363-0930.Rooms for the summer. Phi Delta Theta,5625 University. FA 4-9723.Piano lessons by Mrs. R. Thilenius, fac¬ulty member formerly of the LongySchool of Music, Cambridge, Maas. Nowreturned to Chicago after 2 years ofteaching Harvard <fc Radcllffe students.Further details: Phone 363-0321.An Exhibit of Prints by Jack Levineand Leonard Baskin Hlllel House, 5715Woodlawn, May 16-31. Monday-Friday.9:00 am.-5:00 m.; Sundays 1:00-5:00pm. All works for sale.WRITERS’ WORK3HOP. pl 2-8377Round Trip to N.Y. by chartered bus(air cond., spring ride) June 12-19, $35,bus leaves lnt. House Hotel rms. $3-$4nlte if desired. Inquire lnt House Assoc.,FA 4-8200 evenings: SU 7-2055 daytime.Europe this summer? FLY TWA DAILYnon-stop jets to London. Campus rep.:M. Lavlnsky, MI 3-6000,European Travelers: There arc someseats available on the SO charter June 23 - Sept. M. Only $250 from New Yorkto London and return. (From Chicago,$315.)N.Y."(Chicagoi-London, June 23. London-Chicago, Sept. 10. $290 ($320)x3272.WANTEDApt. — Bonus for a 4 bdrm. apt. nearcampus starting June or Sept. CallX3779, Laurie.Want apt. for 2, sum. Si after. Call Judyor Diane D03-7548 after 5.Male roommate wanted to share apt. forsummer. 324-1224.Wanted: Two male sudenta to share6(2 rm. 3 bdrm. fum. ap. 493-7806, 5328Klmbark.$25 if we take your 5-, 6-man or two3-man apt(s). 324-3456 643-4185, Oct. 1occup.Single girl desires female traveling com¬panion on 11 week European trip. Con¬tact Roseanne Paul at 739-7711 x3881,8:30-5.Female wanted to share 4Vi room airy,furnished apt. Ann 493-7612.Wanted: Ride to New York. June 10-12;will have only a small suitcase and willshare expenses. Richard Hoffman, BU8-6610, room 3321x.Wanted: 3rd or 4th year female studentto share suite at Blacks tone Hall thissummer. Fran Rigberg, 1319. Wallace anyevening.Quote of the dayThe Daffodils intramural softball team ended Its season Wednesday bylosing to a despictable group of law students 17-13. After the game,the Daffodils conducted their first annual awards banquet to celebratea successful season, which included the first three victories for the teamin four years of intramural competition. Sparked all season long byspeed, courage and teamwork, the Daffodils showed their real stuffin fighting back in the last game from a 16-2 deficit to an exciting17-13 finish. The last inning, marred by several fights and vicious verbalbarrages, saw the Daffodils denied the realization of a winning season—a bitter pill to swallow — when their final batter, Kaplan, flied out toleft center field.Regathering their spirits, the Daffodils showed their sportsmanshipby giving the opposing team their traditional cheer, and resolutely andfraternally uniting for their banquet. The banquet opened with a silentprayer for the New York Mets. The principal speaker. Woody Hayes,athletic director of Ohio State, wired that he was unable to attendand so manager Epstein agreed to preside. Manager Epstein spoke softlyof the year’s struggles and praised the team “for never letting up, noteven under pressure.”The following awards were then given to the players: Paul Cowan—Everett Dirksen-Dizzy Dean-Ho Chi-Minh Award for Rhetorical Excellenceon the Mound. Jeff Stark-Ted Williams-Billy Mar tin-Jim Piersall Awardfor Psychotic behavior in Left Field. Tom Mascal—Stan Musial-WilliamBurroughs Award for Brotherhood. Steve Dworkin—Steve Bilko-JohnnyMize Award for Speed on the basepaths. Bob Vare—Bo Belinsky Rookie ofthe Year Award. John Lewis—Gandhi Award for Non-Violence. Bob Hodge—YMCA Babe Ruth Award for Clean Living. Bill Mitchell—Alvin DarkAward for Racism. John Levitt—Ron Swaboda Award for Fielding. AndyKaplan—H&dassah-Hank Greenberg Award for Furthering Hebraic CultureAround Second Base. John Lyon—Shoeless Joe Jackson Award for Suspi¬cious Player of the Year. Paul Rabinow—Emile Durkheim-Talcott-ParsonsAward for Anxiety.The banquet ended happily by the players holding hands in a circleand singing “Take Me Out To The Ball Game.”* v 0«: Wanted: Apartment — 6 rooms or more.Call B. J. MI 3-6000,^436, _445.Grad student wants 1 bdrm. apt. fromJune nr. UC. Call Diana, HY 3-8346 eves.Rlde^o Philadelphia wanted aroundJune 18. Call 642-2363 evenings.Wanted: 2-3 rm. apt. light, under $100.Now to June 1966. 493-9166.Leaving for sabbatical? 2 very respons.young women want house to rent toJune 1966 or longer. Miss Liveright, 493-9166.Subjects wanted for group-learning ex¬periment on campus from now throughAugust. Hourly pay. Ext. 3638 10:30-11:45,1-3.Ride wanted from Boston to Chicago,around June 24-27. Also from Clevelandarea to Boston around June 18. Willdrive and pay. Call lnt. House No. 719.If no ans.. leave message.Fem. to share’ 2-girl apt. starting Julyfor summer, option for next year. CallEllen Weiss, 752-2036.SUBLETLarge apt. with 4 bdrms, 2 baths, fur¬nished. 51st 8t Klmbark, behind 53rdS. Shopping Center. Call Clarice, Rustl,Martha x3777.Summer sublet 3 bdrms, 2 baths, June15-Oct. 1. $120..'mo. Call 752-2536 after 6.Apartment for rent, summer quartersublet, 56th Si Klmbark. MU 4-3370, 5roms, 2 bedrooms. Very reasonable.2 rm. furnished summer sublet only$68/month—60th Si Klmbark—HY 3-2909,Tom or Mike after 6 pm.June 14 thru Sept. Attractive apt. nr.lake. 3*,i rms., furn. $90. HY 3-0623,SUMMER SUBLET: Near campus; 3 bed¬rooms; 324-1395 early morning, late eve¬ning. $120/month._Sexy apt. for rent June-Sept., 3'i rms.,nr. campus, partly furn. DO 3-3863.Apt. 3»i rms. furn. Paid utilities. 6900 S.Crandon Ave. (Apt. 303). Avail. June 15-Oct. 1. Lease extension optional afterOct. 1. $115 mo. Call 493-6474 after 6 pm.FOR RENTUnfum. apt., 6 large rms., sun rm., woodburning fireplace. Avail. June 15. $175.667-4106.3 bdrm. apt. summer qtr., laundry facili¬ties. patio, large yard. 5437 Dorchester.Phone MI 3-4528 or 285-4295.Lovely 5 rm. townhouse, 2 bdrms., Chat¬ham Village Co-op (83rd-Langly) sub¬lease for 1 yr. starting Aug. 1. Furn. orunfurn. ST 3-C975.3 rm. apt. on 1st fl. of former mansion,beaut, beamed ceiling. Ideal for marriedcouple or prof, woman. 6757 S. Jeffrey.288-6757.FOR SALE’64 Honda 90, 58 mph, 100 mpg; excel¬lent condition, $315 or best offer. 667-6544.Used ’65 Triumph Herald conv. AM-FM,ww. 4 speed. 288-4547 or BA 1-0088.SUMMER JOBSFOR STUDENTSApplications Now Being Accepted For SummerJobs With Major National CorporationStudents 18 years of age or older wanted to learn market¬ing, sales promotion, and brand identification techniquesduring summer.High Level Executive Management Courses Given toQualified ApplicantsSalary: $85 per week for first 3 weeks$125 per week plus bonuses starting fourth weekSCHOLARSHIPS — win one of fifteen $1,000 scholarshipsHIGH PAY — earn at least $1,500 for the summer. Many studentsmake $3,00 or more.TRAVEL — work anywhere in U.S. or Canada. Qualified students maywork overseas.SEE TOKYO — win all expense paid holiday in JAPAN for an entireweek.BEST POSITIONS GOING FAST! CALL TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT.Oak Park, III. 386-5464Evanston, III. 475-2543Chicago Loop — North ST 2-4363Chicago Loop — South 346-6108Hammond, Indiana 931-4311Milwaukee, and all of Wise. BR 6-4119Grand Rapids, and all of Mich. 459-5079FROM 9 A.M. - 1 P.M. Electric Underwood typewriter. Like new.$125 eves. BA 1-2166._Custom made sandals & bags, etc. TheBag I’m In, 1250 N. Wells, Chicago’* OldTown. •Lambretta 175cc. motor scooter 85 mph.,85 mpg. 1964 model. Cost $500 phis. Mustsell, price $370. Don Weinberg, PL 2-9648.1961 Vespa motor scooter, 150cc. Call752-5057 after 6. Cheap.Furniture: beds $20 ea., desks $5 and$15, sofa $10, tables Si chairs $5. Call684-5917, 6-7 pm. jCheap furniture cheap. Must sell im¬mediately. 752-0968.All American Royal Portable typewriter,never used. $60. RE 1-7065.NO LUCK HOUSE HUNTING IN HYDEPARK? Ideal homes available for facultyand new PhD’s at sensible prices. Livein Marynook amid cherry blossoms,robins, and acres of green space only 15minutes from the U. of C. A few highquality homes will be for sale this springand summer; all less than 10 years old.Progressive neighborhood, aclve in com¬munity affairs, school problems, etc. Forfurther data phone SA 1-9064.MOTORBIKE — 3 horsepower, top speedaround 45 mph. Will sell for $50 (maybeless). Contact K.K. x2898 days; 493-1129nights.63 VW. sunroof, seat belts Hardly used.Mileage under 8.006. $1,200. HY 3-9753.HELP WANTEDOirl for light cleaning and cookingduties In exchange for free room andpartial board. 65-66 Academic year. CallMittelman: BU 8-6610, Lieber: FA 4-9500.Need baby sitter weekdays, boy 4 yrs.,student wife preferred. Beth Johnson,263-1045 (9-5).Sec’y, free rm. & board for occasionaltyping DR 3-1133.Young woman to care foF3 Children ,~20hrs./wk. in exchange for rm., bd., andsalary, from the end of June thru Au¬gust. BU 8-3983.TYPINGwill type papers 6, 1-6 12 . 667-6825 Advise shake-upin U. of Calif.BERKELEY, Cal. (CPS> - Aspecial committee appointed hvthe University of California Boardof Regents to investigate the dLs.turbances that have rocked thatcampus for the entire school yearhas returned its report placing theblame for the trouble on the struc¬ture of the University. The &5-page report also criticized theRegents themselves and Univer¬sity President Clark Kcit.The committee was headed byJerome C. Byrne, a Beverly HiUsattorney, and Included studentmembers. All members of thecommittee were chosen from out¬side the University of California,and their report was based onsome 300 interviews with members of the University commu¬nity.In an analysis of the action ofstudents, faculty, and administra¬tion during the crisis last fall, thereport found fault with the Uni¬versity’s present system, its ownprinciples and values.” The docu¬ment criticized the civil disobedi¬ence of the students but alsolabeled the handling of the crisisby the administration “indecisive,vacillating, and Ineffective,”The crisis, the Byrne committeesaid, “was fundamentally . . . acrisis in government caused bythe failure of the President andRegents to develop a governmen¬tal structure at once acceptable tothe governed and suited to thevastly increased size ot the Uni¬versity.”LOST AND FOUNDFound: maroon parka on North Field,May 13. Call 1610, Pierce Tower.BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIESEXCLUSIVE FRANCHISEAmazing new liquid plastic coating usedon all types of surfaces interior or ex¬terior. Eliminates waxing when appliedon Asphalt Tile, Vinyl, Linoleum. VinylAsbestos, Hard Wood, and Furniture.Completely eliminates painting when ap¬plied to Wood. Metal, or Concrete sur¬faces. This finish is also recommendedfor boats and automobilesHO COMPETITIONAs these are exclusive formulas in de¬mand by all businesses, industry andhomes. No franchise fee. Minimum in¬vestment—$300. Maximum investment—$7,000. Investment Is secured by inven¬tory. Factory trained personnel will helpset up your business. For complete de¬tails and descriptive literature write;Chem-Plastics & Paint Corp., 1828 Lo¬cust, St. Louis 3. Mo.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060Complete LineOf Pet AndAquarium Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012 The report recommended that“the Regents separately chartereach campus as an autonomousUniversity within the system ofhigher learning under the Re-gental jurisdiction.” The Univei \sity now consists of nine separatecampuses with a total of morethan 80,000 students.The Byrne report further states“that all powers and authoritynecessary to self-government andself-determination be placed withthe Chancellors, faculty and stu¬dents of the individual university(campus), reserving to the Re¬gents and the President only thosepowers and authorities essentialto constitutional unity of thewhole.”In the area of reorganizationof Regental policy, the reportsays “We recommend that theRegents re-formulate their rob¬in the government of the Uni¬versity”; and further adds, ‘Theregency is an institution untoitself, giving expresion to manyvalues of the highest order, ac¬cumulating through the yearspractices good and bad, and oftenholding to positions of mind andassumptions about role which runcounter to the realities of today."“We recommend that the Re¬gents concentrate on their legis¬lative function and fully delegatethe executive and judicial func¬tions of government.”/ ■ 1TYPEWRITERS:\>*r MJsed RepairsWe moke type chonges and repairs on foreign or domestic typewritersThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.IS THE TIME FORSAFE-INSURED-COLD STORAGEFOR ALL YOURWINTER WOOLENS BOXSTORAGEFIIRSCUANEI>f GLAZED & STOREDtftetictir*'FROM MOTHS- FIREHI AT OR THEFT /FOR SOROANA-0LLEGA0 AND ALL FUR-PILE 0ARMSNTSPELT-RENU CUSTOM TUR CITAM/Mffmsuptd p/ox-up t Mi/rexyjames Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL2-966210% Student Discount with I.D. Card12 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 21, 1965