Asks larger, improved student facilitiesBlum committee's housing report releasedA major new complex of housing and recreation facilities would be built along 55th street,and other extensive efforts would be made to build, renovate, and enlarge facilities for stu¬dents, if the recently-completed “Blum report” is adopted.A committee of faculty members, under the chairmanship of Walter J. Blum, professorof law, have conducted a study —— —of student residences and facili¬ties since last July. The finaldraft of its report was typed upand sent to committee membersfor final approval this week. Blumlias agreed to let the Maroonsummarize its findings. THE REPORT IS only advisory,Blum emphasized, and he expectssome of its recommendations willnot eventually be put into effect.Concrete action must come fromtheh administration and trustees.They must still raise moneythrough private gifts and loans from the Housing and Home Fi¬nance Administration.Broad field of inquiryThe committee was appointedwith broad guidelines of its duties.It saw its field of inquiry to in¬clude all possible facilities rele¬vant to lives of UC students, in¬Vol. 73 — No. 47 The University of Chicago 31 Friday, May 28, 1965Several schools at soc conferenceHauser examines Negroes' roleby Barry Salins“Once we have turned off the faucet, it will still be necessary to mop up the floor,” statedPhilip M. Hauser, professor of sociology, in discussing birth control and the Negro at ameeting of the Society for Social Research over the weekend.The Society’s 42nd annual Institute, held last Friday and Saturday at International House,featured prominent members of . .universities and research groupsfrom across the nation. Hauserspoke at a Friday afternoon ses¬sion entitled "Social Movementsand the Negro,” with Anthony M.Orum of the National OpinionResearch Center (NORC) andAugust Meier of Roosevelt Uni¬versity. Jan Dizard of the Com¬munity and Family Study Centerwas chairman and Gerald A. Mc-Worter of NORC was the discus¬sant.DISCUSSING "DEMOGRAPHICFactors in the Integration of theNegro,” Hauser noted that in 1910nine-tenths of the Negroes in theUnited States lived in the southand three-fourths were living onfarms or in towns with less than2,500 inhabitants, "effectively iso¬lated from the rest of society.”Since 1910 he said, there has beena major redistribution of the Hauserimmigrant groups. But becauseof the great size of the Negroghettos—this is purely a geome-Negro population from the South trie problem—the Negroes haveto the North and West and from 1 "”*uthe rural areas to the urban.Redistribution two-sided“This shift has been the majorfactor in opening the door to in¬tegration,” Hauser observed, “butit is hardly sufficient. The re had less contact with whites.'In discussing integration, Haus¬er stated that it should not beconfused with admixture, which isa “salt-and-pepper mixing—like inan audience. Integration consistsof social interaction, effective corn- stumbling block to integration andstressed the need for the passageof open occupancy legislation.“The battle over open occupancyis one of symbols rather than ofrealities,” said Hauser. “Immi¬grant groups have lived voluntari¬ly in their own enclaves. It is thesame with the Negro. He will stayfor quite a while after open oc¬cupancy is law, until he chooses tosettle out.”Hauser cautioned, however, thatlaw cannot bring about integra¬tion, but only admixture. He notedthat although it was hoped thatadmixture would turn eventuallyinto integration there is alwaysthe possibility that admixturecould set back progress in thisarea.TURNING TO another aspectof the racial situation, Hauserspoke about the population prob¬lem. "Natural increase has re¬placed in-migration as the greatestcontributing factor to the popula¬tion increase. An increase infertility is probably due to urban-distribution has had a negative municati°n, and^ the sharing^of i2atjon xhis can oniy hurt thepresent situation, by adding to(Continued on page three)effect also. The in-migrant Ne¬groes followed the same pattern activities that fill the life space.He added that residential segre-of setting in urban ghettos as did gation has proved to be a major eluding commercial establish¬ments in the neighborhood. It wasgiven the duty to plan for at leastthe next decade, but it kept longer-range effects in mind.Members of the committee are:Walter J. Blum, law professor,chairman; Joseph Ceithaml, pro¬fessor of biochemistry; Lloyd J.Fallers, professor of anthropolo¬gy; Norton Ginsburg, professor ofgeorgraphy and associate dean ofthe College; Clifford W. Gurney,associate professor of medicine;Gwin J. Kolb, chairman of theEnglish department; James Mil¬ler, Jr., of the committee on social thought; James Redfield, assistantprofessor in the committee onsocial thought; Joseph J. Schwab,professor of education and Wil¬liam Rainey Harper professor ofnatural sciences; Joshua Taylor,William Rainey Harper professorof humanities; Leo Treitler, assist¬ant professor of music; Karl J.Weintraub, associate professorof history; and Warner A. Wick,dean of students.Its major recommendations in¬clude:• A "New Area” of housing andrecreation facilities west of Pierce(Continued on page eight)Launch huge fund driveUC will launch a king-size fund-raising drive beginning nextfall aimed at collecting over $100 million for all areas ofthe University, Richard O’Brien, director of planning anddeveloping, told the Maroon Wednesday.The drive, part of which willintentionally fall at the same timeas the University’s seventy-fifthanniversary celebration, will cen¬ter not only around raising fundsfor buildings but also around "im¬proving the University in general”by such means as name professor¬ships, a more complete library,and an increased surplus of un¬restricted funds.ORIGINALLY SCEHDULED tohave begun at the beginning of thecalendar year, the fund-raisingdrive has been delayed in order forits start to coincide with the begin¬ning of the academic year. In addi¬tion, prospective donors will beinvited to many of the myriadevents scheduled in connectionwith next year’s anniversary cele¬bration in an effort to "show themwhat the University has been andwhat it can be. It’s a pretty goodplace right now, but it can bebetter,” O’Brien said.Long-range plansBut bringing alumni and otherlikely donors to campus for theanniversary celebration does notmean, O’Brien emphasized, thatthe drive will last for only oneyear. “Plans now call for a long-range drive,” he said, "oyer aperiod of three years at least.”The great majority of the giftsand pledges that O’Brien expectswill come, he predicts, from in¬dividuals rather than from corpor¬ations. Furthermore, he expectsmost of the gifts to come frommidwestem donors rather thanfrom the east or west coasts.O’BRIEN IS FAR from feelingthat the job ahead of him is aneasy one, but he is encouragedby the country’s attitude to edu¬cation in general. “Now, morethan ten years ago and even morethan five years ago, the citizensof the United States are awareof the need for top-flight educa¬tion,” he said. As a result, he O'Brien- - nexpects that pursestrings will beall the looser.Solicitation the wayO’Brien insisted that less thanone per cent of the gifts he hopesto receive will “just turn up inthe mail.” He feels that personalsolicitation is the only way to as¬sure at least a reasonable degreeof success.With his commitment to per¬sonal solicitation In mind, O’Brienplans to add several new membersto the development office, whosejobs it will be to “keep watch”over a certain fund-raising dis¬trict. Specifics are far off on thisproject, however, he said, will notbe decided for some time.All told, O’Brien is enthusiasticabout the drive if for no otherreason than that, from the peopleto whom he has already talked, hehas gotten the feeling “that theyreally care about this place.” Forthe future, he said, it is from hispoint of view merely a matter ofturning this concern into dollarsand cents.'M mwmm'i * -. . '<•. /<The many sides of the HUAC hearings-•« *Georgia's Weltner: HUAC dilemma Students arrested, beatenby Dan HertzbergRepresentative CharlesWeltner of Atlanta, Georgia,is a congressional paradox: aSoutherner who votes for civilrights and a member of HUACwho proposed that it investigatethe Ku Klux Klan before Presi¬dent Johnson requested such aprobe.In a brief interview after Welt-This is the Iasi MAROONof the spring quarter. Pub¬lication will resume on June25, the first Friday of sum¬mer quarter. ner had met with UC student lead¬ers at the house of Charles Daly,the University’s vice-president forpublic affairs, the congressman toldthe Maroon about HUAC and itscurrent investigations in Chicagoand the South.WELTNER STATED thatHUAC had nothing to do with thearrest of some the pickets outsidethe committee’s meeting place inChicago this week. He pointed outthat they were arrested for block¬ing traffic, not for protestingagainst the committee.“I don’t applaud the picketing,”Weltner said, “but I do applaudtheir right under the Constitutionto picket.”Leak a mysteryThe congressman denied any re¬ sponsibility on HU AC’s part forthe much-criticized leak to theChicago press of the names of theeleven Chicago residents sub-penaed to appear before the com¬mittee. Such a leak is forbiddenunder the rules governing HUAC.The leak, he said, came afterHUAC had given the subpenasto the Chicago police, who wereto serve them. A reporter for theChicago American obtained thenames from one of the policemenserving the subpena, Weltnerstated, with the aid of one of thepoliceman’s superior officers.Weltner said that he doubtedthat HUAC would investigate anycivil rights groups in the forsee-(Continued on page three) Six UC students were amongthirty-eight persons arrestedyesterday for attempting tocrash the hearings of theHouse Un • American ActivitiesCommittee (HUAC) at the USCourt of Appeals building in theLoop.The students, Eric Joseph, JohnSlocum, David Vigoda, RobertHickler, Robert Schehr, and JayGreenberg, were charged by 18thdistrict police with both state andcity disorderly conduct violations.THE STUDENTS were to havebeen held until booking was com¬pleted late Thursday night, ac¬cording to Sergeant Carey of the18th district force.Carey told the Maroon that thestudents were orderly and that they had been given “good treat¬ment.” He did not elaborate, butUC’ers had a different version oftheir treatment.The six students were the firstUC’ers to have been arrestedwhile protesting HUAC’s investi¬gations, which began Tuesday andwound up yesterday afternoon.On Tuesday, however, a formerUC student, Rainier Seelig, wasforcibly ejected from the hearingroom and arrested on disorderlyconduct charges.Scene describedIN A CALL to a Maroon staffmember, one of the demonstratorswho was arrested in Wednesday’ssitdown passed on the tales of(Continued on page five)NEWS MUSEHUAC barking up a touchy tree Morgenthau, state departmentofficial debate Vietnam warby Bruce FreedHUACs engagement earlierthis week at the US Court ofAppeals building added a dashof tragi-comic relief to theweek’s otherwise dull news.Passing through Chicago on an¬other of its annual Communisthunts, the committee has onlystirred up protests and emotionsand most likely will reveal noth¬ing that the Federal governmentdoes not already know.With its visits to specific citiesto ferret out known or suspectedCommunists, the necessity andpurpose of such a Congressionalinvestigating committee is debatedrecurrently.FIFTEEN YEARS AGO, duringthe heyday of McCarthyism, Taft-ism, and Red-baiting, HUAC andthe other Congressional Commu¬nist hunting committees posed aserious threat to civil liberties asthey do to a great extent today.But times have changed; thenation is much more stable andless fearful about creeping do¬mestic Communism. And the in¬ternal Red threat, whether ornot it was as ominous in the lateforties as it was pictured, is cer¬tainly negligible today.The American Communist Party,Male andFemaleIf You Will Be In:NEW YORK CITYAREACHICAGO AREASAN FRANCISCOBAY AREALOS ANGELES AREADETROIT AREALONDONEAST LANSINGANN ARBORBLOOMINGTONPALO ALTO — SANJOSE AREAThis SummerOperation Match(the computer datingservice)Has Something For You!Do the college studentsyou’ve dated possess somebut not all of the qualifica¬tion that appeal to you. En¬joy this summer datingthose students who meetyour specifications andshare your interests. If youcan describe your idealdates, we think we can findthem.In the first experiment ofits size, students from al¬most 100 New England col¬leges were matched throughour Quantitative Personal¬ity Projection Test. What’smore, the knowledge gainedthis spring has enabled usto refine our questionnaireand expect even better re¬sults. We’ve taken the blind¬ness out of a blind date.For An ApplicationPrint Your Name andAddress on a PostCard and Mail to:Operation MatchP.O. BOX 72Cambridge, Mass.02139 according to recent special, in-depth reports in Newsweek andthe Saturday Evening Post, is theUncle Tom on the left. Conserva¬tive when compared to Progres¬sive Labor and the Trotskyistgroups, it is a small, moribund,impotent organization that stilllives in its own unreal world andthat has been thoroughly infil¬trated by the FBI.HUAC’s exposes of its “new”activities and subversive plotsprobably give the Party morecredit than it is due. But, moreimportant, the committee appearsto be beating mercilessly a deadcarcass. The real activists on thefar left are the new Peking-ori¬ented movements that have leftthe old CP in a cloud of dust.Whether or not it intended to doso, HUAC’s investigations of theCommunist party and its front-groups seem to be more interestedin hauling people before the pressand tainting organizations whichmight unknowingly have a fewCommunists as members than inreally exploring the problem.WHILE THE committee’s hear¬ings are as distasteful as are itspious pronouncements on the un¬covering of new Communist activi¬ty, they take on a ludicrous castin the mid-sixties. With the hyper¬emotionalism of the Korean Warand late Truman period spent, theCommunist issue has lost most ofits appeal to the American voter.The committee has become an unfortunate fixture on the Ameri¬can scene which in time, it ishoped, will disappear. The mainargument against its existence,in addition to the fundamentalconstitutional question, is its man¬ner and tone of exposing Com¬munism, and, even more basic, thestate of the problem it was createdto handle.Certainly, the extremist groups,both right and left, and subver¬sive organizations must be keptunder constant surveillance andcontrol. But that can be carriedout by the FBI and other Federalgovernment investigatory arms,not by HUAC. When sound evi¬dence is gathered of a threat tonational security, the governmentcan try the offenders in the courts.And the need for new internal se¬curity legislation can he investi¬gated by a subcommittee of theHouse Judiciary Committee.However, if HUAC is going toremain, as it unfortunately seems,a new orientation and certain re¬forms should be initiated. Let itspend more time investigating thefar right extremist groups like theKlan which it is about to do. But,also, let it revise its subpoena andquestioning procedures to protectthose named and calk'd to testify.For a committee dedicated to ex¬posing un-American activities,HUAC pays scant attention to por-tecting the American constitution¬al rights of its witnesses. by William E. Herzog "li ff*Ilans Morgenthau dueled * jjthe assistant to the assistant msecretary of state for public 5: \ xi 3affairs Tuesday night. l ' '1K L HMODEL SEVENTEENACOUSTIC SUSPENSIONLOUDSPEAKER SYSTEMHigh Fidelity Sound at LOW COST!8-Ohm, Full-Range, Two-Way System10" WOOFER P/4" TWEETER3- Position Switch for -f- or — 2.5 dbfor matching to any acousticenvironment12 watt amp provides sufficient driveOnly $69.95available atM usicraft120 E. Oak DE 7-4150Mon. tr Thurs. 10-9; Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10-6Closed SundayCali or Visit for Further Information The two took up rapiers overthe issue of US involvement inSouth Vietnam.MOIIGEN THAU, DISTIN¬GUISHED service professor ofpolitical science and history anddirector of the center for thestudy of American foreign andmilitary policy, has gained fame asone of the outstanding “snipersin the groves of academe” againstthe US administration’s policiesin Southeast Asia.He debated Frank Sievert, assis¬tant to the assistant secretary ofstate for public affairs, who saidhe has just returned from SouthVietnam. He has been working onthe subject for a year, he said, buthad never before been there him¬self.The debate, sponsored by a stu¬dent group called ACREN, tookplace in Mandel Hall.Sievert began the debate by in¬sisting that, during the periodfrom 1955-9, US aid to SouthVietnam helped to repave and ad¬vance “the internal structure ofthe country.” By way of contrast,he said, the North Vietnamesewere in desperate straits by 1959,and they embarked upon a “syste¬matic policy aimed at underminingthe achievements of the South,”Sievert said.Non-military aidEven though the US stepped upmilitary assistance to South Viet¬nam on the latter’s request in1959, Sievert maintained that, upuntil 1962, US aid was mostly ineconomic and social form. WhenDiem’s fall was followed by aseries of coups, the US moved inthe military “because it was dearthat, despite the progress of SouthVietnam, there was not yet a verystrong sense of national society,”Sievert said.Striking at the “anti-administra¬tion hard line,” Sievert then as¬serted that Communism is not thethreat in Vietnam. Instead, he pin- Morgcnthaupointed the real question aswhether border grievances shouldbe settled by peaceful negotiationor by force of arms.IN HIS REBUTTAL. Morgen-thau ridiculed Sievert’s “idyllicpicture of an almost happy SouthVietnam.” Morgenthau insistedthat, even if bombings of NorthVietnamese installations “broughtNorth Vietnam to its knees,” theCong in South Vietnam would stillbe in the same position as theyarc now. He added that the USis currently in the same positionas that of France in 1954, a posi¬tion from which he said “the UScan’t win.”“Radical miltary action is nosubstitute for political policy,’’Morgenthau declared. He accusedstate department officials of idl¬ing stories “different from thefacts’” and said that the currentsituation “is a result of faultymisconceptions of policy whichmust be gotten rid of.”INTENSIVE DAYCLASSESinGUITAR ond BANJOwith Ray Tate, Ted Johnson,John Carbo, Stu RamsayJuly 6 thru 23T uition — $60.00The Old Town Schoolof Folk Music333 W. North Ave.WH 4-7475 Chicago MaroonEditor-in-('hief Robert F. LeveyBusiness Manager. .Michael KasseraManaging Editor David L AikenAssistants to the Editor, Sharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsCampus News Editor Dan Hertz,bergAssistant Campus NewsEditor Dinah E*ralEditor, Chicago LiteraryReview Martin MlehneisonCulture-Feature Editor David H RiehierThe Maroon is published Tuesday andFriday mornings by students at U'eUniversity of Chicago. Its editorials andletters to the editor do not indicateUniversity policy. Offices are in IdaNoyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th st., Chicago60637. Phones: Ml 3-0800: extensions3265, 3266, 3269. Second class postagepaid at Chicago, Ill.Charter member of Collegiate PressService.COURT THEATRE11th SEASON"Classic Theatre in abeautiful outdoor settingTICKETS: julius caesarJuly 9 thru July 25*1*2C A Thurs.Fri.Sun.SaturdayStudent-Faculty Discount “THE LADY’S NOT FOR BURNING”by Christopher FryJuly 30 - August 15Ben Jonson’s VOLPONEAugust 20 - September 5 For 40 years ...Helping College SlndenlsSummer “Get-Ahead” or“Brush-Up” SessionsMATHEMATICS — All branchesENGLISH — All levelsFOREIGN LANGUAGES —Native-born teachersCHEMISTRY — BIOLOGYPSYCHOLOGYTutoring or semi-private closscsSpecial low ratesCHICAGO SCHOOLFOR ADULTS< Non-profit institution'28 E. Jackson Blvd.5th floor WA 2-0673EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT R0SEHBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscount(Corona SludiIOJPORTRAITS1312 E. 53rd684-7424PassportPhotosHUAC member sees red threat WUCB might be FMby spring quarter '66(Continued from page one)able future. Nor will the commit¬tee investigate the Berkeley FreeSpeech Movement, he said, despitethe statement by FBI Director J.Edgar Hoover that some of themovement’s leaders are Commu¬nists.Such an investigation “wouldnot be within the scope of thecommittee” at the present time,Weltner said.CONGRESSMAN WELTNERsaid that one of the reasons thatlie had joined HUAC was becausehe was anxious to have the Klanin the South investigated.“I am vitally concerned with ourpart of the country,” he stated,citing the Klan as a “drag” onthe South whose influence shouldbe diminished as far as possible.HUAC staff members havespent eight weeks investigating the Klan, Weltner told theMaroon. »“We will probably hold HUACexecutive committee hearings onthe Klan In eight weeks,” he said,“with public hearings in tenweeks.”Big red threatWeltner stated that there stillis a “potent” Communist threat inthe US today. “The size of it hasbeen substantially contained inthe past few years,” he said, dueto constant investigations byHUAC, the FBI, and other relatedgovernment organizations.“Continued vigilance” is neces¬sary to contain this US Commu¬nist threat, he said.Congressman Weltner, a gradu¬ate of Oglethorpe University andColumbia University law school,was first elected to Congress fromAtlanta in 1962. He was re-electedin 1964. Weltner has voted for both theextension of the Civil Rights Com¬mission and passage of the CivilRights Act of 1964.At the time of the extension ofthe Civil Rights Commission,Weltner stated, “My vote to con¬tinue the Commission is not likelyto be popular. Yet popularity isa poor substitute for facing fact.”“Like all Southerners, I grewup to the tune of ‘Dixieland.’ Butwe in Dixie cannot ‘look away’forever — nor can the rest of thenation, too lately acknowledgingits own paradox of prejudice andpride.”Summer MAROON infoThe MAROON will publish fourissues during the summer quarteron June 25, July 9, July 23, andAugust 6. Students and facultywho wish to subscribe to the sum¬mer MAROONs may do so for 50cfor all four. Cash payments arerequired, and may be made at theMAROON office, third floor, IdaNoyes, on May 31 and June 1.Mail subscription requests shouldbe accompanied by 50c in coinand full address. Moil to ChicagoMAROON, 1212 E. 59th st., Chi¬cago 37, Illinois.There will be no change in dis¬play advertising rates, althoughonly two display insertions will berequired for a $2.50/column inchrate, and only 40 inches will be necessary for the $2 rate. Therewill be no change in the open rateof $2.75.Classified ads will be acceptedon a cnsh-with-order basis. Theymay be submitted either in personor by mail. Classified rates are75c per line for the first insertion,60c per line thereafter withoutchanges. Faculty, student, andstaff rates are 45c a line for thefirst insertion and 30c a linethereafter. For mail orders, count34 spaces per line.The display deadline is 6 pmWednesday prior to publication.Office hours will be irregular de¬pending on class schedules. Mes¬sages may be left at the studentactivities office, extension 3591. A Sharp farewellMalcolm P. Sharp, retiring pro¬fessor emeritus in the law school,was given a farewell fete by ad¬miring law students Wednesdayas he prepared to leave UC forsunnier climes at the Universityof New Mexico.Students in the law school havedonated money to be used for buy¬ing a collection of books for thelaw library in his honor, and thestudents’ contributions will bematched by the school.According to James Cowley, aSharp admirer who helped organizethe tribute, Sharp never treatedthe subject of law “legalisticallyand mundanely,” but alwaysshowed connections with struc¬tures of values, logic, and otherfields. He would always tell hisstudents to read works by Freud,Plato, and others whose writingsare not normally kept in a strictlylaw library. For this reason, Cow¬ley said, a collection of this sortof works will be donated by thestudents. by Robert F. LeveyCampus radio station WUCB, despite a variety of setbacksin its never-ending quest to become an FM station, is notabout to give up the fight, according to program directorMike Klowden.In fact, it is entirely possible ** said> involve such Particularsthat WUCB will be FM by a year as a clause guaranteeing equalfrom now, Klowden said. If this time to all parties on controversialseems like a long period of time, issues and possibly running tapesKlowden insisted that it isn’t; of discussions and forums somethe Federal Communciations Com- thirty seconds after the partici-mission (FCC) is noted for its Pants actually speak in order toinefficiency, he said. avoid the broadcasting of libelousTHE CAUSES OF Klowden’s op- or obscene material,timism are twofold: first, the Budget changes, Klowden said,administration has told Klowden will have to be “realistic.” He didand station manager Dave Ross not elaborate,that, provided that the FM pro- But Klowden emphasized thatposal comes before the President’s nobody in the administration hasboard by the first of July, it is “promised us anything yet.” Oneentirely possible that either or both 0f thie reasons no promises haveof them will be permitted to at- been made, he said, is that thetend and to state their case. station will eventually be forced toSecond, although they haven’t move from its Mitchell Towerpromised anything, the administra- studios when the music depart*tion has been working with Klow- ment takes over all of Hutchinsonden and Ross in recent weeks to Commons. This move might causeiron out the WUCB constitution problems of antenna placement andand the proposed FM budget to studio relocation, Klowden noted,meet the standards of both theFCC and the President’s board. A conditions formember of the University’s busi- administration approval of the FMness office, James Turner, has proposal, Klowden said, is thateven been assigned to work in the WUCB have enough staff memberscase> * to keep a repsonible station going., . | . Klowden insisted, however, that byConstitutional changes the time the station is ready toThe constitutional alterations go FM, there will not be any staffthat will have to be made, Klow- problems.Hauser outlines Negro plan(Continued from page one)already bulging areas,” Hausersaid. “High fertility handicaps theNegro by limiting the educationand training each child can getand by increasing poverty. Pover¬ty must rank as the single mostimportant factor in keeping downthe potential of the Negro,” hecontended.Figures show povertyReferring to the statistic ofpoverty “using the Shriver scale,”which allows 22 cents per personper meal, Hauser drew shockedexclamations from his listenersby citing the following data. In theUnited States, 23 per cent of allchildren are being raised in pover¬ty. For Negro children alone, 62per cent are being raised inpoverty. For all children in fami¬lies with five or more children,the figure is 28 per cent. ForNegro children in the same situa¬tion, it is 84 per cent. If the “moreliberal” scale of 26 cents per per¬son per meal is used, the finalNegro figure is 94 per cent.“Until the birth rate is lowered,”Hauser said, “the Negro will becaught in the cycle of poverty,high fertility, inadequate educa¬tion and lack of skills, and pover¬ty again.”He also indicated the “high rateof family disorganization” en¬countered by Negro children.While one white child out of everyfourteen is raised in a family with¬out both parents, one Negro childin every three lives in such anenvironment. “Deviance and mal¬ adjustment” often come fromthese conditions, by which the“prospects for integration are notenhanced,” according to Hauser.“SCHOOLS WERE most impor¬tant to the immigrant,” he com¬mented, adding that education isalso a key to Negro advancement.“But the educational achievementof Negroes is inferior to that ofwhites year by year. Education isnecessary to raise income and totransform a person’s style of life,”Hauser said.Hauser criticized present schoolpolicies as well. “We must recog¬nize the need for compensatoryeducation,” he said, finding partic¬ular fault with “the practice—which is going on now in theschools of Chicago—of promotingstudents with no regard to gradeor achievement.” He pointed outthat many seventh and eighthgrade students are unable to read.“The high drop-out rate shows thefailure of the schools and not ofthe child.”Income discrepancyHauser noted, however, that ed¬ucation of the Negro is not theonly goal. The need for a changeof attitude on the part of the whitepopulation is shown by the factthat the more educated a Negrois, the greater is the differencebetween his income and that of awhite person who has attained thesame educational level, he said.Hauser concluded by outliningwhat must be done to bring theNegro into what he called “themainstream of American life.”First, the Negro birth rate mustbe decreased and Negro educationand skills increased. Second, a change Is needed in the attitudesand practices of whites. “Massiveprograms are needed to educatethe white population,” Hausersaid. “Integration is an Americanproblem, not a Negro problem. Itmust be solved if America’s con¬tributions to history—the idea ofunity out of diversity and of aperson’s rising in accord with hisown abilities—if these contribu¬tions are to have meaning,” Haus¬er insisted.Other speakers on the programcalled for a reconstruction ofvalues, not just material improve¬ments, to help insure integration,as well as an informed knowledgeof Negroes’ penchant for joininggroups. The final speaker, AugustMeier of Roosevelt University, ina speech on Martin Luther King,called the Negro leader a “con¬servative militant” and said thathis greatest value was as a sym¬bol of Negro frustration and de¬termination, as well as acting insuch a way as to make non-violentprotest acceptable to the whitemajority.UNIVERSALARMY STORE“The universe l» studentwear for campus andcamping.**Levis - Tennis ShoesAN OUTFIT FROMTOP TO TOE1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856 TRAVELING?Get Nearly FreeTRANSPORTATIONBy Driving a Car to California,Salt Lake, EastArizona, Seattle,ALL CITIESMinimum age 21WE 9-2364AUTO DRIVEAWAY CO.343 S. DEARBORN ST. UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGOS0PH0M0RES-JUNIORSThe International School of Amer¬ica offers a unique educationalexperience. Twenty students and3 professors spend 8 months(Oct.-June) traveling together byair 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, coll DavidNewby, 667-5521 (evenings); orwrite Mr. Karl Jaeger (ExecutiveDirector, ISA) P.O. Box 244,Columbus, Ohio. JhsL Tyicoc (Shook. Qo.CLEANERS LAUNDERERS1013-17 East 61st St.Across from B-J Ct.For Call fir DeliveryMIDWAY 3-7447ALL YOUR VALUABLE WEAR¬ING APPAREL WILL BE SAFEAND WELL CARED FOR ALLSUMMER LONG.THRiFtYPuaBaest0RaaeO95FOR 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 A ■ PlusCleaningChargesInsured for $200Addl. Ins. at 2%UMBRELLAONE UMBRELLA FREE WITH EVERY BOX STORAGE ORDERCONTAINING A MINIMUM OF $15 IN DRY CLEANINGAvailable in a variety of colors and styles to choose from.May 28, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON •UC students, faculty improving city schoolsf by David L. AikenThe seeds of concern for theproblems of students in publicschools in the inner-city areasurrounding the Universityhave blossomed into a wide vari¬ety of fruitful projects by UC peo¬ple.Students, faculty, and adminis¬tration are all hard at work in sev¬eral fields, working with theircounterparts in high schools andelementary schools of Hyde Park,Woodlawn, and other nearbyneighborhoods.This is not the first time UCpeople have tried to help out withthe area school’s problems. Butmore is being done now than everbefore. The new co-operative re¬lationship with UC reportedly ledone overworked public schoolteacher to say with some emotion,•*I never knew they cared before.”The concern takes severalShapes:—• The UC student-run StudentWoodlawn Area Project (SWAP)Will expand this summer with newseminar groups in five academicareas, in addition to the regulartutoring and a repeat of the “sum¬mer project” in which the highschool students involved investi¬gate problems facing the city.• UC FACULTY are not onlyusing Hyde Park and Woodlawnschools as laboratories for re¬search, but are now actually beingused by classroom teachers inHyde Park High School for specialprograms and lectures on topics related to course work, under arecently developed program orga¬nized by the University Extensiondivision.• Two programs run underfoundation grants by UC facultywill work with high school stu¬dents from Hyde Park high schooland other deprived “inner-city”schools, while another programwill work with their teachers.• A dozen other efforts havebeen made to put the University’sresources at the disposal of admin¬istrators and teachers in the pub¬lic schools. Through individual ef¬forts by faculty members, manysmall and large gains have beenmade in several area schools.SWAP parents run nurserySWAP will also take advantageof the federal “war on poverty”program to set up a nurseryschool for pre-school age childrenin Woodlawn. Parents of SWAPtutees and other Woodlawn moth¬ers will run the school for sixtychildren, with help from two orthree UC graduate students in ed¬ucation and other professionals.A special group of parents will beset up to administer the program.A grant of $6 thousand for thenursery school was OK’d just thisweek by the Office of EconomicOpportunity. Signing of the con¬tract has been delayed until asite for the X school has beendefinitely found, but this problemshould be out of the way in a fewdays, according to Herb Mack, aSWAP boss.THE OTHER MAIN addition toTOWNE HOUSESA CO-OP forBetter LivingforMarriedStudentsand FacultyWithin easy distance of the Campus. Excellent city¬wide transportation via bus, 1C, and Expressway.1, 2, 3, AND t-SPflCIOUS BEDR00MSSEV EN MO DELS TO CHOOSE FROMNO MONEY DOWNFrom$370 MEMBERSHIPDEPOSIT MOVESYOU IN! per month TOTAL MONTHLYPAYMENT INCLUDESPRINCIPAL, INTEREST,TAXES, INSURANCEAND ALLMAINTENANCE SWAP's program will be the “aca¬demic project,” in which groupsof fifteen high schools studentsfrom many schools and all abilitylevels will take part in seminargroups in five fields.City politics, including the bosssystem and the political position ofNegroes and other ethnic groupsin the city, will be among thetopics discussed by one group,while a group in psychology willhave discussions and research pro¬jects on problems facing teenagerssuch as sex education, relationswith parents, conformity, and anti¬social behavior. A group in human¬ities will be led bv John G. Cawelti,associate professor of English andchairman of the Hum I course; agroup in biology will study floraand fauna in nearby forests andthe dunes; and a special course in“SWAP math — the study ofgames” will approach maththrough probability, statistics, andgames theory.All these seminar programs, theSWAPers say. are drawn up to letstudents study interesting thingsthey would never get in a regularhigh school course. Most will in¬volve field trips and discussionswith experts in the city.AS IT 1HD LAST year, SWAPwill conduct what they call descrip¬tively enough their “Summer Pro¬ject.” The high school studentswho participate, led in smallgroups by UC students, will getout into the city and talk withofficials and experts about suchpixfblems as de facto segregationof city neighborhoods, the effect ofan influx of Negro tenants onreal estate in an area, the condi¬tions of families living on Aid toDependent Children relief, and thepossibility of action by the poorto change their situation. The pro¬ject participants hope to talk withsuch people as Mayor Daley andDeton Brooks, administrator ofChicago’s anti poverty program.SWAP has put out one of theirperiodic calls for help from UCstudents. In addition to tutors, stu¬dents are needed who would bewilling to help compile informationand background material for thesummer project on such questionsas open occupancy, poverty, etc.The SWAP office extension is3587.UC faculty in HPHSOne of the most direct methodsof UC faculty involvement in pub¬lic schools has been administeredby Mrs. Meryl Levine, administra¬tive assistant for research in theUniversity Extension. Since lastfall, she has helped bring UC fac¬ulty members into Hyde Parkhigh school classrooms for specialprograms. UC faculty who indi¬cated by answering a question¬naire that they were willing tohelp in the program have beencalled upon quite frequently in re¬sponse to requests from HPHSteachers who want to provide theirstudents something extra.Mrs. Levine said most of theclasses to which UC profs wereinvited have been in the two toptracks of the high school, with afew in the “regulari’ track. Seem¬ingly, the things UC instructors Hyde Park high school, at 62d and Stony Island.'. v • • •• V , V ‘•• ■'Your co-op has: Hotpoint Range, Refrigerator and Disposall •Lovely Custom Kitchen Cabinets • Storms and Screens • FullBasements • 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.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. GoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 can talk about isn’t applicable towhat classes in the lower tracks(“basic” and “essential’') arestudying, she mused.WHAT THEY have talkedabout covers a wide range oftopics, however. Assistant profes¬sor of humanities Herman Sinai-ko, for instance, talked aboutPlato’s Republic for a HPHS Eng¬lish class, and Kenneth Northcott,associate professor of German,will discuss the beginnings of Ger¬man literature.Mrs. Levine had special praisefor the newly developed humani¬ties program at HPHS.Frederick Hammond, instruc¬tor in the department and a notedharpsichord performer, invited theHPHS humanities class to campusfor a demonstration of old instru¬ments, while composer arrd asso¬ciate professor Easley Blackwoodlooked at contemporary music inan informal lecture and perform¬ance.Bring innovationsSome of the UC faculty’s ef¬forts have broughl about strikinginnovations in a few schools inthe area. One of the most enter¬prising Is that of Wayne Fisher,assistant professor in the gradu¬ate school of education, who hascharge of the school’s Master ofArts in Teaching (MAT) programfor prospective Russian teachers.He has undertaken to teach Rus¬sian to high school students whowould not normally be taking arryforeign language, since the lowertrack curr icula do not include lan¬guages. His aim is to show themthat they can learn a difficultsubject like ihe Russian language,thereby giving them a big Ixiostin self-confidence in their school-work.ANOTHER HIGHLY successfulinnovation — a paperback book-si ore — was spread from UC’s“lower school” in the laboratoryschools to several area elementaiyschools. Robert E. Newman, jr.,assistant professor in the gradu¬ate school of education and prin¬cipal of the lower school, starteda bookstore with paperbacks forelementary school children in hisown school, the fir*st time such adevice had berm spread to theelementary level, to stimulate in¬terest in reading. After its successat the lab school, ho encouragedprincipals in neighborhood publicschools to try it, and several tookhim up on it. They have reported¬ly met with remarkably brisksales. One principal of a schoolin Woodlawn joyfully reported hehad sold out his whole stock justa little while after he slarted theexperiment.Reading interest has beenhelped along at the high schoollevel by UC Press, which recentlydonated 250 volumes of its ownpublications to the HPHS library.These have reportedly been ofgreat use to students in advancedclasses who were formerly unableto find high-level works in theschool’s library collection.THE NEW emphasis on Chica¬go’s inner-city schools is reflectedby the graduate school of educa¬tion’s effort to assign more ofits teachers-in-training to this typeof school. According to BruceMcPherson, a staff associate inthe department of education, onlytwo trainees in the MAT programwent into Hyde Park h(eh schoolfor their full year of classroom teaching two years ago. Nextyear, there will be twelve inHPHS alone, and many more inother schools serving similarareas.Help principals, teachersUC help has gone not only topublic school students, hut theirteachers and principals as well.About a dozen elementary schoolprincipals from the city have Ix^nattending a bi-weekly series ofseminars with Dan C. Lortie, as¬sociate professor in the depart¬ment of education, and Luvern L.Cunningham, professor in the de¬partment and director of the Mid¬west Administration Center. Theyanalyze some of the problems thathave bothered them and, hopeful¬ly, are helped by the discussionin solving them.Some public school teachers havegotten boasts through the effortsof Mark M. Krug, professor inthe graduate school of education,who has invited four of them toattend a conference of elementaryschool social studies teachers.THIRTY CHICAGO teaeheis ofEnglish will get special trainingin an imaginative pilot trainingprogram this summer, directed byGwin J. Kolb, professor and chair¬man of the department of Eng¬lish. High school teachers, es¬pecially ihose who are assignedto teach sludents in Ihe “basic”track of English, will attempt inthis experiment to devise the bestmethods of coping with the j>ar-ticular problems of these students.The institute will be financed bya $42 thousand grant from theUS office of education.Two other projects run by UCfacully will both work with highschool students who need an extrapush to work up to their capaciiy.Projects for underachieversLeopold E. Klopfer, assistantprofessor in the graduate schoolof education, will head a planninggroup to develop the latent scien¬tific interest of 160 students fromnine area high schools. The 6Viweek program of special couiseswill be financed by a grant of$54,985 from the National ScienceFoundation, as was a similar pro¬gram last summer.A new effort in this field willbe made in a program led by Wil¬lard Congreve, principal of thelab school’s high school. Under agiant from the Stern Familyfoundation, experienced highschool teachers and some collegestudents will work with 25 stu¬dents from HPHS who are classedas “underachievers,” in an effortto try to change some of theirattitudes about school work.New directions, old concernUC people have never keptaloof from the problems of Chi¬cago’s schools. They are on picketlines to get rid of Willis. Two ofthem — Robert J. Havighurst inthe education department andPhilip M. Hauser in sociology —wrote highly important and con¬troversial reports on the Chicagoschool system this year.But this crop of promising proj¬ects has spiring up just recently.Other seeds are being assiduouslyprepared for planting in the nearfuture. Most observers see aneven fuller blossoming of innova¬tion if the present Chicago schoolssuperintendent had indeed foundanother job, as so many hoped. The.^r-hool system at < present,obedience, not innovation.UC students arrested, beaten(Continued from page three)students who were arrested yes¬terday.He said that the demonstratorswho had been demonstrating infront of the Court of Appealsbuilding saw an opportunity tocr<*t as close as possible to thebuilding when all the police guard¬ing the front side shifted positionsto the rear of the building afterspotting what looked like a groupof'demonstrators heading in thatdirection.When the demonstrators sawthat nothing stood between themand the building, they began torush toward the front, but reachedthe gates guarding the front doorjust as federal marshals got themclosed.The demonstrators sat down,looked arms, and asked those whowere still picketing to join them.Police then came back andwrenched them free, draggingthem to waiting paddy wagons. MANY PERSONS related talesof injuries they received at thehands of policemen while beingdragged to the wagons. JohnDouard, a Roosevelt Universitystudent, reported that two or threemen twisted his fingers whiledragging him to the w’agon, andthreatened to break his arm justbefore they threw him in.find plenty to do in the way oftheater and concerts. On cam- Daniel Stern, a psychology in¬structor at the Gary branch ofIndiana University, was reportedto have received three broken ribsfrom kicks delivered by those tak¬ing him to the police wagons. Heand others were reported to havebeen denied any medical attentionuntil the wagons reached the po¬lice station.ford Wilson, Picnic on the Battle¬field by Arrabal, and Dutchman,pus, UC’s Court Theatre will pre¬sent Julius Caeser, Volpone andChristopher Fry’s The Lady’s Notfor Burning. Near campus, theHarper Theater and The LastStage provide indoor theater; bothare open as to the plays whichthey will present this summer. by Leroi Jones. Lovers of Com¬munity Theater might try Fuller¬ton Parks Theater on the Lake,an amateur theater which drawsits talent from businessmen andhousewives all over the Chicagoarea. Tryouts, anyone?Chicago: summer arts hotbedThose of us staying in Chi- On the North side, Hull Houseeago over the summer will Theater is presenting three one-act plays — Home Free by Lan-HUAC blasted at forumThe House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) iseither useless, unpleasant or downright insidious, and shouldbe abolished, according to a panel which met to discuss thecommittee and the issue of legislative investigation Monday.Composed of four faculty mem-hers, with an assist from Carl roaimi and that the effects of theBraden, a southern journalist once investigation were onlv harmful,jailed by HUAC for refusing to not at a]1 profitable,cooperate with them, the panelcalled for a massive turnout of profitable.EDWARD SHILS, professor on. tttt*/-. u • hie committee on social thought,pmtTOtors at the HUAC hearings fM at lhc idua of anvonehoM tins week and lor a hard line subverti ,hc UnHod states andof non-cooperation based on the Ued m7AC «a useless, unpleasfust amendment should the com- ant nuisance.”‘‘HUAC doesn’t have the appara¬tus or the personnel to investigate, , . . ... . espionage,” Shils said. This sortastaplo, a lecturer in liberal arts. JK * u•, *. . . j. of investigation, he felt, was moresaid that HUAC is good In that itdemonstrates the limits of reason.mittee ever investigate any of themembers of the audience.SPEAKING FIRST, George Anup the alley of the FBI or the CIA.Subversion impossibleCalling HUAC the ‘‘Un-AmericanAffairs Committee’ instead of the‘‘Un-American Activities Commit¬tee,” Shils dubbed HUAC “aspuny as the subversive parties itinvestigates.” He said that subver-Hl’AC goes beyond these limits,though, In Its usurpation of thepowers of the judiciary and in itsintimidation of the individual, An-astaplo said.Don't plead fifth“'Hie Committee implies that the sion Ls so impossible in the US thatAmerican people can’t look out HUAC is useless,for itself,” Anastaplo said, but he Then Carl Braden, an official ofnoted that there are nevertheless the Southern Conference Educa-tvvo general constitutional safe- tional Fund, delivered what heguards that can be employed by called an “insider’s account” of thethose summoned: the first or the HUAC issue. He called HUAC “a Arsn lit: student ought tofly up to the Theater in the Cloudsat the Allerton Hotel to see theHugh Bins (Jerry Mast, Bob Ap-plebaum, Franklyn Broude andthe rest of the old UC crowd! pro¬duction of Hands Around in IiOve,the musical version of La Ronde.Theaters abound in the OldTown-Rush st. area. The HappyMedium, Encore Theater, and Sec¬ond City, with the newly returnedreview The Wrecking Ball.For the music lovers, there aretwo series of concerts under thestars. In Grant Park, just northof Soldier’s Field, the Grant ParkSymphony Orchestra presentsweekend and Thursday eveningconcerts with no admission charge.And north of the city, in High¬land Park, Ravinia Park’s annualconcert series, which usually in¬cludes folk groups as well as con¬certs by the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra, charges a more thannominal entrance price to sit onthe grass and a huge fee to sitinside the Pavillion — if you goto hear any of the soloists orvocal groups, it is worth thehuge price to sit inside; other¬wise, the only concert one hearsis the sqaulling of babies and thechatter of the mobs on the grass.Whether you have lots of moneyor none at all, there will alwaysbe something to do in Chicagothis summer.fifth amendment. “Respectablepeople don’t plead the fifth,”though, Anastaplo said.Professor of law Malcolm Sharp,speaking next, strongly urged thatanyone called before the commit-ice consult a lawyer first. Hecalled the present committee some¬what of a modification comparedto the times when it was headedby Huey Long and Senator JosephMcCarthy, and said that the majorfoundation of a democratic socie¬ty was to keep the governmentunder control, particularly thatpart of it that deals with “punitiveproceedings ”Speaking of the “alleged reds”that HUAC investigates, Sharp in¬sisted that those investigated asw'ell as the communist party “haveno illegal or violent intentions.”Dubbing himself a “pre-New Dealliberal,” he noted that in his ex¬perience with HUAC, the commit¬tee lias never served any profit¬able ends.Assistant professor of philoso¬phy Fred Siegler divided theIIUAC issue into two pails: thecommittee’s intentions and the ef¬fects of its Investigations. He saidthat the honesty of the HUACmembers must not be impugned,although their motives were cer¬tainly fair game. Siegler addedthat the intentions of the com¬mittee were out of its rightful mainstay of segregation” and saidthat the only way to tackle thecommittee as a witness is “to sayit’s none of your business.”Braden did exactly this severalyears ago, and was sentenced to ayear in a federal penitentiary. Hisconviction was upheld by the USSupreme Court 5-4.Braden agreed with Anastaplothat employing the fifth amend¬ment was not the way to fight.HUAC. “Civil disobedience andnon-cooperation are the onlyways,” Braden insisted.HUAC perpetuates segregation,Braden said, because it lendscredence to the belief that prevailsamong white southerners that any¬one associated with the civil rightsgroups is a communist. “The south-era press might say that CarlBraden was seen in a SNCCmarch,” Braden said, “whichmeans by implication that sinceHUAC has called Braden a com¬munist all of SNCC is commu¬nists.”BRADEN URGED that civil dis¬obedience against HUAC continue,but he added that hearings shouldnot be blocked. The first amend¬ment, used in the hearings, isthe way to fight the committee*,Braden said.An anti - HUAC rally alsoscheduled for Monday was calledoff on account of rain.“Secularized Protestantism is cel¬ebrating its own funeral; Tillich andRobinson are declaiming the funeralorations. This is inevitable andprobably desirable once the principleot authority has been lost. A secu¬lar church will not long survive.Yet here end there, in individualchurches, the old principle ol obedi¬ence to a divine revelation persists;where It does.there Is still achurch, and stilla l.ord.” I For a free copy of thoI current isiu# of NA-| TIONAL REVIEW, writ*I to Dopt. CP-3, 150 E.133 St, K V. 13, N. r.Mil, t*. I HARPERLMQIOR STORE1514 E. 53rd Streetfull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer at lowestprices. FREE DELIVERYPHONE— 1318— 1233— 7699HY 3-68001 nil • >l\FA 4 Now Books ByCampus AuthorsA System Analysis ofPolitical Lifeby David Easton $8.95The Educational Missionof the Churchby Robert J. Havighurst$4.50The Legacy of MauricePekarsky, Edited with anIntroduction byAlfred Jospe $5.50THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.Chicago 37, III.THFFRET SHOPNO 7-106011:30 to 6. 7:30 to 10 Mon.-ErL11:30 to 6, Saturday*' * $ ,i ■* it * I : ~ t 5 I Forty faculty members ofnew college council namedThe forty members of thecollege council, a body whosecreation was suggested in theLevi report last October, wereannounced by dean of the CollegeWayne C. Booth yesterday.The council, which is designedto give faculty better representa¬tion and a stronger say in bothCollege and all-University curricu¬lar affairs, is composed of bothelected members and membersappointed by Booth and provostEdward H. Levi.ELECTED MEMBERS of thecouncil are the following:For one year, Grosvenor Cooper,Arthur Heiserman, John L. Hubby,Gerson Rosenthal, H. StefanSchultz, and Leo Treitler,For two years, David Bakan,Hanna Gray, Kenneth Northcott,Charles Olmsted, George Playe, Herman Sinaiko, and Roger Weiss.For three years, Mark Ingra¬ham, Arcadius Kahan, NormanMaclean, Richard McKeon, Nor¬man Nachtrieb, Everett Olson,and Gilbert White.Members appointed by Boothand Levi are as follows:For one year, Marshall Cohen,Fred Eggan, Jacob Getzels, RayKoppelman, Richard Levvontin,Peter Meyer, and Stuart Tave.FOR TWO YEARS, LawrenceBogorad, Hans Morgenthau, Al¬fred Putnam, Milton Singer, Ber¬nard Strauss, Nathan Sugarman,and Edward Wasiolek.For three years, William Krus-kal, Donald Levine, JosephSchwab, Joseph Smith, JoshuaTaylor, George Stigler.Alternates are Paul Voth, Me-Kim Marriott, Paul Moses, andPerrin Lowrey.ASAMATTEROF...the man who hat a planned SunLife program it in an enviable position.No one it better prepared to face thefuture than the man who has providedfor hit retirement yeart and hitfamily's security through life insurance.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood. Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, IH.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hoars 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYI can save you almost $700 on a$25,000 Ordinary Life insurance pol¬icy, if you purchase now rather thanwait until you graduate or marry.This may be an important savings,plus protection right away. Includedis an option to protect your futureinsurability guaranteed to be atstandard rates up to $60,000, regardless of future health or occupation.Defer premium payments, if you wish!Under this arrangement, my insuranceprogram permits you to postpone thepremium payments until three months after you graduate.FREDRIC M. OKUNCAMPUS MANACERNational Life Insurance Company120 South LaSalle Street, Chicago. Call me at: CEntral 6-2500SAFE INSURED-COLO STORAGEFOR ALL YOURWINTER WOOLENS BOXSTORAGEniRSCtUNEIGLAZED a STOREDFROM MOTHS- FlRINIAT OR THIFT /FOR OOR0AHA-0UE6R0 AH0 AU FUR-Flit 6ARMENTSPELT-RENU CUSTOMm CUAM/M0//V£U*£D fi/CX UPc P£l/M£*yjames Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53 RD STREET: PL 2-966210% Student Discount with I D. CardMay 28, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Of protests, politics,, & provostCollege revamp marks campus yearby Robert F. LeveyInnovation, protest, and anemphasis on the future char¬acterized the past year oncampus, as the College was onthe verge of sweeping changes,students decried war and in¬justice, and plans went aheadon various fronts for years tocome.On the innovative side, provostEdward H. Levi’s report and rec¬ommendations concerning thestate and desired future of theCollege was proposed at the be¬ginning of autumn quarter andratified some two months later bythe faculty. Students, while op¬posed to some of the details,seemed to second Levi’s motionsas a rule and, It'd by the StudentGovernment (SG) Academic Af¬fairs Committee, began a seriesof examinations and criticisms ofthe curriculum which, in intensityand interest, was unprecedented.LEVI’S REPORT, a modifiedmultiple colleges proposal alongthe lines of that which departeddean of the College Alan Simpsonhad first suggested, called for theestablishment of five area colleges,one corresponding to each majoracademic area, with a fifth re¬served for general studies. In ad¬dition, Levi asked that a morerepresentative College council beestablished. According to his mas¬ter plan, the council would not onlygive faculty as a body a strongersay in curriculum decisions in eacharea College, but would also in- Levi — College plansets year's tonevolve them in College affairsmore directly.Hum I makes changesNo sooner did Levi suggest ba¬sic curricular change than the Hu¬manities 111-2-3 staff voted to fol¬low the trend toward the abolitionof comprehensive exams by mak¬ing the introductory art, music,and literature course one with aquarterly grade of record. Lateron, in perhaps a more significantchange, the Hum I staff decidedto experiment with a system, longsuggested by many, under whichHum I . instructors would teachtheir own disciplines. This changewill be experimental at first, butif it works out, it will become per¬manent.In a completely unprecedentedExclusiveFranchiseATUXISWORTH ATHOUSANDWORDSNo motter where you go prom night,you'll go confidently in our handsomecustom-tailored formal wear in 10coat colors—15 accessory colors —plaids, solids and checks.SPECIAL PROM DISCOUNT«... .... available at —■ JTHE STORE FOR MENftaum atth (ftampaaIn the J%ew Hyde Park Shopping CenterT 502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 but not unexpected innovation, theadmissions office, in announcingthe basics about next fall’s enter¬ing class, revealed that it hadwritten to some 125 Negro highschool students across the countryin an effort to boost UC’s Negrostudent percentage. Fifty-three ofthose contacted were admitted anda significant percentage of those53 will attendBut, if all these changes seemedsomewhat unconnected, Wayne C.Booth’s appointment as dean ofthe College in early December pro¬vided the College and the wholeUniversity with a man who wouldcany out these previous plans andalso suggest bushels of new ones.Booth’s reign has been character¬ized by examination and delibera¬tion. He has not jumped intocurricular decision too quickly,and he has come up with someimportant suggestions for improv¬ing faculty-student relations andthe College curriculum. Some ofthe best were his request for stu¬dent opinion before despensingthe Quant rell awards for excel¬lence in undergraduate instruc¬tion, his work in opening the fac¬ulty lounge in Gates-Blake tostudents and faculty eveiy after¬noon, and his continued willing¬ness to consult with students,discuss the same problems overand over, and come to studied,sensible conclusions.JUST AS BOOTH was takingover, a quarter-long squabble onan SG proposal was coming to atemporary end. The debate wasover a proposal made by SG pres¬ident Gene Groves to the effectthat there should be a communi¬cations board to oversee those stu¬dent activities which dealt withthe printed or spoken word. Theboard, as Groves saw it, wouldhave had the power to investigatetransgressions of professional eth¬ics after the fact and to issue re¬ports on them. In addition, another The year’s newsin reviewUNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“« strany hank99NEW CAR I OAVS%A oo£M| per hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C. clause of the proposal called forthe establishment of a revisedcommittee on recognized studentorganizations (CORSO), whichwould take over the annual dis¬bursement of the student activitiesbudget after meeting with repre¬sentatives of the various activitiesand judging one way or the otheron their requests.Nobody really objected to thefinancial part of the proposal, butthe Maroon and Cap and Gownresented being “watched over” forwhat they thought was no reason.They recognized that the originalpurpose of the communicationsboard was to set up a body whichcould act as a legitimate licenseholding body for the FM licensethat campus radio station WUCBwas so desperately trying to pro¬cure, but they saw no reason whytheir inclusion under the jurisdic¬tion of the board should make anydifference either to the Fed¬eral Communications Commission,which dispenses FM licenses, orto the UC board of trustees, whichwould have had to approve WU-CB’s FM switch.In the end, the Maroon andCap and Gown argument won out.Late in November, the SG assem¬bly voted to refer the proposal tocommittee, while going on recordas opposed to any organizationwith jurisdiction over any activityexcept WUCB. No action has sub¬sequently been taken on the com¬mittee proposal and, partially asa result WUCB is still quite farfrom obtaining its FM license.Any discussion of the campusyear would not be complete with¬out mention of the various pro¬tests and demonstrations that tookplace. Curiously, the issues thisyear were completely distinct fromthe two major issues of last year:football and board contracts. Theysmacked instead of politics firstand foremost and moral issues(notably capital punishment) sec¬ond.THE WAR IN Vietnam was thetarget of the most vociferous andwell-attended protest of the year;the April teach-in in Mandel Hall.Scheduled to go all night, theteach-in didn’t quite make it, butit nevertheless saw some 700 stu¬dents and faculty decry the warand US Southeast Asian policy ashad been done at many other cam¬puses.The teach-in, as its sponsorspointed out, was unique in that itwas organized predominantly byfaculty. Participants included pro-lessor of geography Gilbert White;president of the Chicago Theologi¬cal Seminary Howard Schomer; Fairleigh Dickenson Universityprofessor Robert Brown; and Viet¬namese ambassador Tran VanThinh Paul.But the teach-in was not UC’sonly expression of opinion overthe Vietnam war. Democratic Sen-ator Wayne Morse of Oregon cameto speak in early March and blast¬ed US policy as dangerous andnearly illegal. In other action, sev¬eral members of the faculty signeda petition sent to President John¬son urging the end of the war, andStudents for a Democratic Societycontinued the fight by sponsoringnot only the march on Washingtonbut also weekly and well-attendedforums on the war and a demon¬stration in the Ix>op last week atwhich several students were ar¬rested.The most recent Issue overwhich protests erupted was thearrival this week of the House Un-American Activities Committeefor hearings to investigate allegedcommunist activity in the Chicagoarea. The members of the commit¬tee were met with pickets in theLoop, as several Chicago schoolsparticipated. UC students picketedin large numbers, but none hadbeen arrested or bothered as ofThursday morning.Although the year’s protestswere political in tone, the annualdisplay of politicking that is theSG elections turned out to be adown-to-the-wire fight this year.GNOSIS, the incumbent majorityparty, had to fight for its lifeagainst SPAS, a new liberal party.The election resulted in an evensplit in the assembly, 23 seats to23, with four independents. Thiscreated even more problems whenit came time for the election ofmembers of the executive council.Coalition proposals were broughtup and abandoned right and left,as both parties maneuvered for anadvantage as well as to insurethat, whatever the composition ofthe council, it would be able to ac¬complish something in the comingyear. In the end, a coali¬tion proposal was adopted. BeinieGrofman of GNOSIS was electedpresident and Rusti Woods ofSPAC whom he had defeated forthe top office, was elected vice-president.What does the coming year thenhold? All indications are that itwill be a year of continuing aca¬demic change, political action, andchanges in the University commu¬nity. But, whatever the specificevents turn out to be, one thingis quite sure: just as this yearwasn’t dull, neither will next yearbe.We Did Not Want To LeaveHYDE PARKBUTOn June 1st We TakeUp Residence At7646 STONY ISLANDRE 4-6393HYDE PARK AUTO SERVICEWe Will Aon? Hare Complete Service i.e.Wheel Balance • New Tires • Grease Jobs • Oil Change • Tune Up*Major Repairs • Body Work • We Remove Mustache Hairs from Carburetors• CHICAGO MAROON • May 28, 1965The nation's campusesWillis stays on after yearof efforts for his ouster Student protests hold nation's eyesIn city news, 1965 will beremembered with bitternessby some, who had hoped itwould be the last in the reignof Chicago school superintendentBenjamin C. Willis.It will, however, also be noted asthe year the Lutherans moved in,the year TWO and “warriorsagainst poverty” had it out, andmaybe even the year open occu¬pancy legislation in the state leg¬islature got somewhere.'GROWing campaignCHICAGO’S PUBLIC school sys¬tem was center of attraction formuch of the public. Last year, UCsociology professor Philip M. Hau¬ser came out with a report on thedetrimental effect of de facto seg¬regation in the system. The nextbombshell from academe waslobbed at Robert J. liavighurst,chairman of a committee to inves¬tigate all aspects of the schoolsystem which supposedly includedas a member the head of thatsystem—superintendent of schoolsBenjamin C. Willis.Beniamin C. Willis will remainas superintendent of Chicagoschools until December 1966, itwas decided in yesterday's schoolboard meeting. He was offered afour-year contract, but verballypromised in his acceptance speechto step down when he reaches theusual retirement age of 65.Pickets demanded his ouster.Hauser was a frequent speaker atanti-Willis gatherings. Organiza¬tions old and new held forumsand spewed out releases demand¬ing that Chicago schools GROW—Get Rid of Willis. They objectedmostly to his firm defense of the“neighborhood schools” policy,which in all-Negro neighborhoodsleads to all-Negro schools. Theseschools, according to statisticsmarshaled by anti-Willis forces,are consistently given less ade¬quate facilities, equipment, andteachers than white schools. Theyalso damned his autocratic per¬sonality, which was alleged to sti¬fle all innovation.Argue over HPHSThe debate on schools was par¬ticularly intense in Hyde Park andWoodlawn, which are served byHyde Park high school, an over¬ crowded, 88 per cent Negro school.Some solution had to be found torelieve its overcrowding and im¬prove the instruction, especiallyof those in the lower tracks. Anadministration - inspired plan tostart a branch of HPHS in a pres¬ent elementary school in the mid¬dle of Hyde Park gained littlesupport; most thinking turned toan expansion of the present build¬ing, keeping it to serve both HydePark and Woodlawn for four fullyears, instead of putting ninthgraders somewhere else. The argu¬ment shows no sign of early reso¬lution.Lutheran 'invasion*The immediate neighborhood is¬sue that generated most heat fromUC students was the purchase bythe Lutheran Theological Schoolof new land above 55th street foruse as a site for their new sem¬inary. One block would be clearedfor the classroom complex, anoth¬er would be vacated of its presentoccupants by next spring and usedfor LTS personnel.The move led to vociferous pro¬tests, especially by UC studentswho lived in the affected blocks.They accused the University,which sold LTS some of the landfor their site and encouraged it tocome to Hyde Park in the firstplace, of neglecting the housingneeds of students.UC AND LTS officials, whoheld several meetings with protest¬ers, pointed out the benefits ofthe new institution, and assuredstudents that their housing needswould be provided for, pointing tothe work of the Blum committeeon student housing which recentlycompleted its work (see page one).The upshot of the furor: the Lu¬therans are coming, UC will notlet evicted students stay homeless,and the need for loosening theHyde Park housing market isgreater than ever. A report thatUC has offered Catholic monas¬teries land near campus was de¬nied by UC administrators. by David SatterIt was a bad year for thestatus quo on the nationalfront. Student protest drewnationwide attention as MarioSavio and the Free Speech Move¬ment (FSM) at the University ofCalifornia’s Berkeley campus de¬posed a chancellor and led to newrules for administration - studentrelations. The Berkeley protesttook other forms at colleges fromYale to Brooklyn to Kansas. AtYale, the objection was to the re¬fusal of tenure to a popular phi¬losophy professor. At Kansas, stu¬dents protested the exclusion ofNegroes from fraternities andsome university housing.Student discontent spread fromthe campus to the national scene.As early as October, 1964, thepresidential elections were involv¬ing students. At UC, as well ascolleges across the nation, stu¬dents worked helping to registerthe record Negro turnout thathelped swamp Barry Goldwaterat the polls.THE END OF Novemberbrought the nationwide Fast forFreedom in which students agreedto skip a meal and have the costof the meal sent to needy Missis¬sippi Negroes. The effort nettedclose to $15 thousand.Rebuilt churchesOver the Christmas vacationstudents from Oberlin Collegewent south for the holidays, but itwas to Mississippi, not MiamiBeach. The object was to helplocal Negroes rebuild a burned-out church. The idea spread toother campuses and at least fortyschools had contingents of stu¬dents working in the south overthe spring holidays. Not the leastof these was the Southern WorkProject Committee (SWPC) con¬sisting of 35 UC students whofinished construction on a com¬munity center in the Negro sec¬ tion of Somerville in FayetteCounty, Tennessee.The American “Communist un¬der the rug” paranoia played itspart in the life of the campus.Early in the year at the Uni¬versity of New Mexico, the W.E.B.Du Bois club campus chapter wasoutlawed on the basis of its so-called subversive character as as¬certained by J. Edgar Hoover andthe FBI.At Indiana University, threeofficers of the Young SocialistAlliance (YSA), a group of Trot-skyite advocates of the continuingrevolution, were in danger of be¬ing held under the Indiana anti¬subversion law. The law was up¬held in January by the IndianaSupreme Court, which had re¬versed the decision of a lowercourt.At the University of Wisconsin,a state legislator demanded aprobe of the managing editor ofthe Wisconsin Daily Cardinal, be¬cause he lived in the same houseas a “known subversive.”WITH THE SPRING and Presi¬dent Johnson’s escalation of thewar in Vietnam, students and fac¬ulty joined forces in a commonprotest. At the University ofMichigan a few imaginative pro¬fessors conceived of the idea ofan all-night protest of speechesand discussions. Columbia andWisconsin quickly adopted theidea and the “teach-in” spread toscores of campuses across thecountry.At UC over 1200 studentscrowded Mandell Hall to hearHoward Schomer of Chicago The¬ological Seminary, Gilbert Whiteof the department of geographyand Tran Van Thinh of the FrenchUnited Nations delegation blastAmerican policy in southeast Asia. Previously, almost 1,000 peoplehad turned out to hear SenatorWayne Morse (D-Ore.), the Sen¬ate’s leading critic of the war inSoutheast Asia.Washington marchApril 17 marked what may havebeen the high point of the year’spolitical protest. Over 16,000 stu¬dents from all parts of the coun¬try, including 300 UCers, marchedon Washington in a massive pro¬test against the war in Vietnam.After picketing the White Houseduring the morning, the demon¬strators marched to the SylvanTheatre south of the WashingtonMonument, where they heardspeakers including journalist I. F.Stone and Sen. Ernest Gruening(D-Alaska) charge the UnitedStates with irresponsibility in itsconduct of the Vietnam war. Themarch, which was organized byStudents for a Democratic So¬ciety, ended as the marcherswalked 8 abreast along the mallto the Capitol building, wherethey presented a petition to Con¬gress.Marchers went home deter¬mined to continue their protest atthe local level. At UC, studentspicketed in the Loop and sat inat State and Madison; in othercities the story was much thesame.The summer brings with it theprospect of continued political ac¬tivity. For many, it will meanpicking up where last year’s Mis¬sissippi Summer Project left off.For others, it will mean work inthe slums of their own cities. Atany rate, the prospect is thatactivity on the part of studentsmore aware and concerned thanever before is not likely to slow,down.Complete LineOf Pet AndAquarium Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012 MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259 DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent fir Faculty DiscountNOW IN CHICAGODATSUNDatsun 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.Chicagoland DATSUNSALES - SERVICE - PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AVE. in Beverly HillsPhone 239-3770IHfmttllHttiiChicago, Illinois 60620 [111 Chicago's most complete record store—Every label in our huge inventory always at adiscount—Every Record factory fresh and fully guaranteed—Large selection of importand hard to get records.STUDENTSBRING THIS COUPON TODISCOUNT RECORDS, INC201 N. LaSalle (Corner Lake)GOOD FOR 38% OFF Regularly NOW$5.98 $3.71LIST 4.98 3.093.98 2.47ON ANY ONE TIME PURCHASE from our LARGE INVENTORYClassical • Jazz# Folk Music • Spoken • Show Tunes, Etc.BUY ONE OR A HUNDREDSome labelsincluded:COLUMBIALONDONFOLKWAYSELEKTRARCAPHILLIPSEPICRIVERSIDETRADITIONKAPP, etc. THIS COUPON GOOD FOR38% OFF LIST PRICE* ONAny One Time RecordPurchase Atdiscount records, inc.201 N. LaSalle (corner Lake)CE 6-2187Good until June 30, 1965"mono"or sterec5JUST BRING THIS COUPON!!Some labelsincluded:ANGELDeutsche-GrammaphoneBACH GUILDVERVEVANGUARDPRESTIGEARCHIVEMERCURYATLANTICCAPITOL, etc.Browse our budget binsdiscounts from 50% to 60%labels as VOX • RIVERSIDE • PRESTIGE • SCALAETERNA • MGM CLASSICS • PERIOD • URANIAMONITOR • ASCO • TAP • COUNTERPOINTEVEREST • CONCERT DISC • PRESTIGE FOLK MUSIC♦Sorry, due to monufocturer's price policy imported LP's cannot be allowed in this offer.lUi til *■ j. 1 * May 28, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON •. 1:1 i new bookstore,(Continued from page one'Tower along 55th street all theway to Cottage Grove avenue.• Major renovation of IdaNoyes Hall Into a real studentcenter which would attract con¬stant traffic. First step would beinstallation immediately of an at¬tractive coffee shop and snack batwith ‘‘live” food.• Building a new, big book¬store, probably on the site of thepresent Lexington hall, with a big,lavish collection of books and notso much “general merchandise.”• Acquisition of new apartmentbuildings in northwest Hyde Parkfor married students’ housing.• Improving the present condi¬tions at Pierce and New Dorms,which were sharply criticized inthe report.• Encouraging private entre¬preneurs to set up food shops andrestaurants in the area neat cam¬pus.Tiie ‘‘New Area” along 55thstreet was proposed as an areawhich would both provide a need¬ed students housing facility, andattract outsiders to the recreation¬al, cultural and eating facilities.It would include an addition tothe present Pierce Tower; a new.imaginative complex of low-risehousing for students, both singleand married, and young faculty;and a big new men’s gymnasiumand playing fields. A big snackbar would be built to serve thewhole neighborhood as a meetingplace, and a repertory theatremight even be built nearby.THE NEW GYM is necessarybecause the present facilities formen at Bartlett gym, Universityand 56th street, are crowded andoutmoded, the report says. TheStagg field area next to Bartlettwill he the site of the new generallibrary. Bartlett itself will re¬main for women’s athletics, free¬ing the pitifully inadequate facili¬ties at Ida Noyes for other uses.The new housing facilities arenecessary because, according tothe administration’s origihal In¬structions to the committee, a sub¬stantial number of new students will have to be accommodatedwithin the next decade.Indecision over PierceThe committee was undecidedwhether the addition to Pierceshould take shape as a secondtower (which was planned in theoriginal architect’s drawing) ora duster of low-rise smaller units.If one could be built more quicklythan the other, the committee’srule of thumb was the sooner thebetter. If both plans were foundto be equally speedy, the commit¬tee recommended that a secondtower have priority, since anynew plans for low-rise facilitieswould have to be designed fromscratch.A new tower, the committeemade clear, should be built onlyif it is very much better than thepresent one. It should abandon thearrangement of putting two stu¬dents in one room, but should mixabout 45 single rooms and tenroom suites with room for twopeople in each two-floor house.Resident heads would get plusherapartments, assistant residentheads would be given extra-largerooms with kitchenette facilitiesfor entertaining, lounges would bemade bigger, and the great acous¬tical problems facing the presentbuilding would be very carefullyavoided.If it is decided not to build thesecond tower, the new addition toPierce would be meshed with theother housing units to be builtin the “New Area.”There would be four or fivehouses for unmarried studentseach with 40-60 people in fourfloors, with lounges on the firstfloor. - These houses would begrouped to form a cluster, andsome facilities like laundry roomand central mail desk would servethe clustered unit. The units wouldbe attached by archways similar tothose spotted around the mainquadrangle connecting such build¬ings as Wieboldt and Classics.TIIE COMMITTEE insisted thatthe “New Area” as a whole —with its coffee shops, gym, play¬ing fields, and all — be lookedupon as an opportunity to builda really attractive addition tocampus.The recently-built Pierce TowerPHOTOGRAPHIC ITEMSRent or buy cameras or binocularsBuy pre-paid processing envelopesbefore you leave on vacation.Your prints or slides will be on hand when you return.University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. and New Dorm arc definitely notshowplaees, the committee deoided. To alleviate the inadequaciesin New Dorm, it suggested thattwo double rooms in the middleof each floor be joined into a floorlounge, and that the halls be car¬peted. In Pierce, efforts should bemade to cut down noise transmis¬sion, more rooms should be as¬signed as singles, and loungesshould be made warmer. Burton-Judson was given good marks ex¬lounge furnishing. Decorating andfurnishings in general were foundby the committee to score very’low.Ask Hitchcock renovationTo take care of the increasein enrollments in the second halfof the next decade, the committeerecommended that Snell-Hitchcockhall be completely renovated andfireproofted for continued use as amen’s dorm, and that Culver hall,which is now used for the biologylibrary and other biology class¬rooms, should be turned into adorm.If, in addition, space for hous¬ing is reserved to the south ofthe Mott Industrial Relations Cen¬ter, which faces 60th street east ofWoodlawn. and if a new wing for200 students is added to Burton-Judson on the Ellis avenue side,then there will be room for about1550 more students five yearsfrom now, more than enough tomeet the projected need, the re¬port says.IDA NOYES hall must be en¬larged and refurbished as a stu¬dent activities center to make upfor the loss of Reynolds Club, theC-shop, and Hutchinson commonsto the presently desperately over¬crowded music department, which,according to the administration’sguidelines for the committee, willhave to start moving very soon.The transfer of women’s athleticsto Bartlett gym will provide spacein the north wing of Ida Noyes,which the committee suggestsshould be used by UniversityTheatre. It could have a 250-275seat theater, with dressing andprop facilities in the basement.Facilities with highest priorityto be brought to Ida Noyes, be¬sides the snack bar where thepresent Cloister club now stands,are: four new moderate-sizedlounges for meetings; offices fortwelve more student organiza¬tions; a new large lounge forreading and big gatherings; abilliard room and barber and beau¬ty shops to replace the ones nowin Reynolds club; and a televisionroom. *A Bit; NEW bookstore shouldbe located very dose to Ida Noyes,to increase the rate of traffic inthat area, the committee recom¬mended. The best site is whereLexington now stands, on Uni¬versity ave. between 58th and 59th streets. If it were found thatpoor parking and loading facilitieswere too serious a drawback, thecommittee suggested that the siteof the present music department,the southwest corner of 58th andWoodlawn, would be a good alter¬native; - ■ *Need 'best' bookstoreAny new bookstore must havethe biggest and best stock ofbooks in the US, the committeeinsisted. “General merchandise"should be inconspicuous, and nofood at all should be sold in thebookstore. >Married student housing mustadd 400 to 600 more units withinthe next five years, the committeewas told. It recommended that UCbuy up buildings in northwestHyde Park.Grofman commentsBERNIK GROFMAN, StudentGovernment President, praisedthe Blum committee report bc-cuase “it involved faculty in theconcerns of students, it was along overdue, hard look at theUniversity’s ten-year expansionplans, and because of the largeamount of painstaking effort putin by committee members,” hesaid.“I am enthusiastic about thechanges the report recommends,”Grofman said. “However, I seeseveral basic difficulties. Nowhere l’a:k f.ii non .student tenants, vmI,result in ,i serious shortage' whichhas already become apparent, ofsingle student apartments.“A SECOND MAJOR difficultywith the report,” he commented,“is that it does not consider thecomplexities of lh(> University’srelationslnp with the community.For example, a i r it ie could charge,although I do not believe this tJbe the ease, that the committeeregards commercial facilities asexisting solely for the benefit ofmembers of the University. Thereport fails to consider that thereare other residents of the HydePark Kemvood Woo<llawn commienity than the. University and itsstudents.“The report talks about a Uni-versity ‘corridor,’ an unfortunateuse of tenps which suggests aUniversity ghetto ” Grofman said.“The report also suggests thatstudents should not be put in theposit ion of living along a ‘fron¬tier.’ which suggests the notionof the University as a besiegedfortress isolated from the com¬munity. I do not wish to suggestthat this actually the position ofthe Blum committee. However, 1do feel that the wording of thereport in these two areas couldbe substantially improved.“It is unfortunate” he said,“that a report on student facili¬ties should be drafted, by a committee which has no student members. I re.v . - • Hie Blum committee consulted over 100 stu¬dents, but I do not consider thisconsultation equivalent to studentpatricipation in the actual deliber¬ations of the committee.”Grofman said that these criti¬cisms, while serious, “do not affeet the vast enthusiasm I havefor the committee's recommenda¬tions, nor my admiration of thetime and effort devoted by thecommittee members. On thewhole, I think this is the mastsignificant report in recent Uni¬versity history,” Grofman coneluded.Ultra-Modern Storage Facilities Protect Your Possessions"CONTAINERIZED CARE nOur beautiful new warehouse features everyadvance in scientific storage . . . alarmgong, anti-fire sprinklers, humidity control,insulated walls, dust-free floors . . . to men-i 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 AREAAuthorized Agent (or United Van LinesServing the Greater Hyde Park Area Since 191iIN. MC 1991 Grofmanin the report Ls there any recogni¬tion of the value of student apart¬ment living, nor of the need formaking available to students non-dormitorv apartment facilities.“Admittedly there are advan¬tages to a dormitory system, es¬pecially the kind of dorms en¬visaged by this report,” he con¬ceded. However, many studentswill still prefer the freedom fromsocial regulations, lower costs, andgreater privacy to be found inapartment living.“The report calls for purchaseof facilities for married studentshousing, taking many units offthe housing market that manysingle students depend upon forapartments, he continued. ‘This,combined with a natural increasein enrollment, University expan¬sion which will involve demolitionof property used by students, andthe increased desirability of Hyde WUS nets $2800The UC World University Sen-ice (WUS) fundraising drive,conducted to aid students in SouthAfrica, netted $2,800 dollars thisyear, a WUS spokesman told theMaroon Thursday.The total of $2,800 represents anincrease of $700 dollars over thetotal collected last year. Of the$2,800, $1,850 was donated by UCstudents and faculty. The remain¬der came from the Chicago Theo¬logical Seminary, the divinityschool. Rockefeller Chapel, andseveral religious services at whichthe hat was passed.All those wishing to make addi¬tional donations should contact thestudent activities office, secondfloor, Ida Noyes, extension 3591.VISA will be making its las*visit of the academic year to theChicago State Mental Hospital thisSaturday. Buses leave from Ne*Dorm parking lot at 12:30 pm.j JESSELSON’Sl i" H*' - _*•■£** _ ■ • ^SERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdthe One, the Only-the Originalfwettn car hospital t chutehome of team winkauthorized BMC sales and service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113MUSIC REVIEW THEATER REVIEWTragic weekend in UC music Ex-UC'ers have another hitThe past year has had itsmusical downs and ups, but itroared to a coda worthy ofBeethoven: five consecutivelanding ovations.Two of them, downtown, worefor S\iatoslav Richter. He was atthe peak of his persuasiveness,reasoning us that the metronom¬ic faithful-only-to-thescore (aliasUi-hell-with-the-music) approachhas not been completely success¬ful in its plot to Infiltrate andsubvert the art. But whereas thesehvo downtown storms thunderedover a visiting two-shot occur-lenoe, the coups on campus com¬memorated culminations.The first was at the Contem-porary Chamber Players’ Vareseconcert. It was herqjed upon thecomposer, but almost as worthywas the CCP. Although less thana year of age, it is a professionaloutfit of unparalleled quality, cap¬able of bringing out the best incontemporary m u s i c , perhapsmore educational than entertain¬ing, but always impeccably pre-pa red..LUCKILY, ALTHOUGH theEstablishment has .given most ofits spiritual and financial supportto these well endowed profession¬als, the far more important areaof non-professional performancehas independently struggled to arenaissance. With the CollegiumMusieum, the UC Symphony Or¬chestra, ami the Musical Society,we have had a constant stream• in fact, a veritable flood) of ama¬teur concerts, ranging from atranscription for two trombones ofthe Bach Double Violin Concertoto the Haydn I>ord Nelson Massand a stunning realization of theSchubert Octet the way chambermusic ought to lie played: in anintimate setting.Two leaders of this movementhave been Frederick Hammond,whose harpsichord provides sup-port for mast of the pre-Mozartrepertoire, and H. Colin Slim, con¬ductor of the UC Symphony andcountless Musical Society ensem¬bles. Obviously, without the talentand energy of the student popula¬tion, their efforts would have beenmeaningless; but it is equallydear that without them, the cam¬pus creative forces would not have been able to manifest them¬selves so forcefully.The standing ovation for Ham¬mond crowned his solo recital(an all-too-rare occurrence) on Fri¬day evening. I can hardly hidemy strong anti-harpsichord bias:to me, it usually sounds like apiano with mononucleasis. Butwhile other performers use thephysical limitation of the instru¬ment to disguise their own inade¬quacies, Hammond’s musicianshipalways transcends the mechanics.The program included a wittyreading of the Vingt-troisienieOrdre by Couperin (who in lesserhands so often emerges as intol¬erably dull); Scarlatti’s ultimatework, the Salve Regina for sop¬rano, strings, and harpsichord;and, of course, a springy selectionof six Scarlatti sonatas.But most impressive was hisreading of Bach’s Chromatic Fan¬tasy and Fugue. Until Friday, Ihad thought that its full powercould never he communicated onanything less flexible than apiano. Now I realize that the faultlies with the performers, not withtheir instrument.THK OVATION FOR Slim cameon Saturday evening, followingone of the orchestra’s most ambiti¬ous projects: Schubert’s Great C.Major Symphony. When Slim tookthe helm of the orchestra aboutsix years ago, it was already ac¬cording to all available legend,pretty much under water. Evenin 1960, when I first heard it, theensemble, although presentable,was hardly a paragon of perfec¬tion. Unlike the CCP, it was notfound fully-grown under a Rocke¬feller cabbage-leaf: it had to bebuilt slowly out of sweat and oc¬casionally outraged ears. The re¬sults? We now have an orchestraof which we can be proud, forwhich no apologies need be made.One of the best things aboutthe orchestra has been its pro¬gramming: instead of the chicken-livered type of tripe often offeredby less-than-professional groups,Slim has emphasized the challeng¬ing. Not that they haven’t donethe Nutcracker Suite and the Cap-riecio Espagnole: but what otherorchestra of this type could attack(much less conquer) the originalversion of Wagner’s Siegfried’sRhine Journey or the Bruckner Fourth Symphony? Or Stravinskyand Ives, Copland and Delius?But their best concert was thislast one. There was no question ofjust making it through the Schu¬bert: the performance had astrong personality, refreshing, dra¬matic, with fast tempas, almostdemonic rhythms, and massiveclimaxes. For any who might findthis symphony stale, here, Iimagine, was the perfect antidote.The concert also included threecharming minuets by Thomas Att-wood (a Mozart pupil), three ex¬cerpts from Prokofieff’s Romeoand Juliet (vividly conducted byconcertmaster Howard Kaplan)and a brief jazzy brass sonata bysome anonymous genius of theseventeenth century. The perform¬ances were all excellent, especiallythe Prokofieff with its shatteringbrass playing, but they only pavedthe way for Schubert.It would have been a festiveweekend, were it not for an un¬derlying tragedy: both Hammondand Slim are leaving next year,and these concerts were their fare¬wells. Whether the musical lifeon campus will be able to adjustdepends in part on how seriouslythase responsible for the situationattempt to rectify it; but it isdoubtful that it can ever be quitethe same.And so I would like to closeby tossing off all pretense at pro¬tocol and doing something nocritic should ever be permitted todo. I can speak only for myself,of course, but I believe my senti¬ments (if sentiment hasn’t beenoutlawed yet) are shared by mostconcerned people on campus. Tobe quite simple and quite corny,to both Frederick Hammond andH. Colin Slim I would like to ex¬press my deepest thanks for whatthey have given us ... or betteryet, shared with us.Peter Rabinowitz HANDS AROUND IN LOVEBook and Lyrics by Stephen BrownMusic by Robert ApplebaumMusical Director Ken PierceSets and Lighting. .David H. Kat/.iveCastPeter BurnellPeggy Le RoySusan RaeJoe VocatDirected by Gerald Mast at theAllerton Hotel, 701 N. Michigan.The MAROON needs 15 copiesof eoch of the following editions:October 2, 9, 16, 23, December 4,Februory 26, ond April 2. Wewill poy 25 cents per copy in goodcondition. Contoct MAROON busi¬ness office, extension 3265, 3266,3269. It always gives one morepleasure to see a person juggleeggs or brickbats than oranges— that’s because it is riskierto do so. And it always gives megreat pleasure to see a good stageplay turned into a good musical,because of the added fillip whichgoes with the risks of adaptation.“Hands Around in Love," the mus¬ical adaptation of Arhur Schnitz-ler’s Rcigen is such a play, and itis a credit to the tact as well asthe talents of the men responsi¬ble.Reigen is set in Old Vienna,which is a terrible place to havea musical unless the composerhappens to be a lineal descendantof Josef Strauss (Robert Apple¬baum isn’t). So “Hands Around inLove" was placed in contempo¬rary American, and equally decad¬ent society. This was the majorchange in the adaptation.Stephen Brown kept the origin¬al plot structure of the Schnitzlerplay, a pattern in which the Pros¬titute has sexual intercourse withthe Soldier, the Soldier with theMaid, the Maid with the YoungGentleman, and so on, ad nause-uni.Ad nanseum is the moral ofReigen and Brown kept to thatas well, altering some of thecharacters to fit the modernsetting, and cutting two of thescenes with a view to keeping“Hands Around in Love” wellwithin the two-hour-and-fifteen-minute time limit for musicalcomedies. The humor is mostlySchnitzler’s, and it is good, happyhumor for the most part, forSchnitzler never let the barbweigh down his satirical shaft.Brown's finale, compared withSchnitzler’s, is rather more down-beat (as one might have expectedfrom his other musicals), but al-PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhoir stylists ot5242 Hyde Pork Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710% Student Discount "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 Blvd.FA 4-8800 BOOKSPAPERBACKSWATCH REPAIRING14K PIERCEDEARRINGSTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75001540 E. 55 St.10 % Student Discount A Complete Source ofARTISTS’ MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS » BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESPICTURE FRAMINGMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSDUNCANS1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111U. of C. Graduation GiftsCeramic Stein—20 oz. capacity—$3.00Rookwood ash trays with insignia—$3.50Long and short sleeve sweat shirts—$2.95Poplin and nylon jackets—$6.95 - $10.95Charms, cuff links, necklaces—$2.00 - $6.0010 kt. gold ring—$32.00 plus taxUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. SHIPPING BAGGAGE HOME?Have it there when you arrive by sending itAirfreight. Charges comparable to Rail Express.Call American Airlines Airfreightfor information and rates.686-4100FREE SPORT CAR RLAZERfrom COHN & STERN, INC.IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERWhen you buy onAUSTIN HEALEY-MG-PEUGEOT-TRIUMPHfrom either store Midway 3-4500Complete RepairsAnd Service ForAll Popular ImportsBOB NELSON MOTORS6052..or 6136-South Cottage Grove-Avenue. AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111— TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH —Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.24 HR. SERVICE CALLS — $3.00Tape Recorders — Phonographs — AmplifiersPhono Needles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cords though his moralizing is heavy-handed at the end, it cannot makethe musical drag.The score, by Robert Apple¬baum, is rather reminiscent ofBernstein’s Candide in its tonalcomplexity, and in the tune of thefinale of Act One. It is also lightand tuneful, well adapted to thetone of the play.Reigen is in ten, separate, dis¬connected scenes; “Hands Around"is in eight. The musical mightwell have been slow-moving, wereit not for Mast’s direction. Heused a revolving stage and fastcostume changes to insure thatthere would be only a twenty-second wait between scenes, andadded stage business to increasethe pace.THE CAST WITHOUT excep¬tion sang and acted very well —Peter Burnell was perhaps thebest actor, and Peggy Le Roy hadthe best voice, but all of themwere more than adequate to theirparts.All this adds up to another hitfor “Hugh Bris Productions” (getIt, huh?), which gave us “SixAges of Man” previously. If youlike good musicals, and if youdon’t mind attending a productionby a bunch of former UC people(William Rainey Harper is listedin the credits), go see “HandsAround in Love.”David H. RichterMovie benefit willaid UC studentsA benefit showing of an AlfredHitchcock movie aimed at raisingfunds to send a UC student southto do civil rights work this sum¬mer will be held Friday night inSocial Sciences 122.The movie, “Notorious,” starsIngrid Bergman and Cary Grant.It will be shown at 7 and 9 pm.Admission is 75 cents.All proceeds from the showingwill help to send Devorah Cohen,a second year student in theCollege, to Haywood County, Ten¬nessee this summer to work withthe Western Tennessee VotersProject.SAMUEL A. BELL‘Buy Shell From Hell**SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150Today'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN$ 1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTALMay 28, 1965 CHICAGO MAROONCLASSIFIED ADSPERSONALinterested in working on POT A ’66?Call Student Activities Office, x 3591.EMERGENCY! Relatives want desper¬ately to see brilliant young familyscholar graduate from the College. 3Tickets mandatory. Please call 667-5993.HYDE PARK MEDICAL LAB5240 S. Harper Suites 6 and 7open 24 hours—7 days a weekPREGNANCY and MARRIAGE TESTS2 hour service, complete laboratorytests. For information and rates callHY 3-2000, day or night.HYDE PARK MEDICAL LABSALL CAMPUS PARTY at Phi Sig, Satur¬day night after exams.Tonite! Open to all! Party for SNCC.Entertainment "Refreshments,” 932Rush St. — 9 pm. Donation— 50c. Spon¬sored by the Chicago Inter-collegiateFriends of SNCC.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, Mass. Nowreturned to Chicago after 2 years ofteaching Harvard & Radcliffe students.Further details: Phone 363-0321.An Exhibit of Prints by Jack Levineand Leonard Baskin Hillel House, 5715Woodlawn. May 16-31. Monday-Friday,9 00 am.-5:00 m.; Sundays 1:00-5:00pm. All works for sale. Female roommate for summer. Univ.Apts. (55th & Blackstone). Modern.air-oonditioned, sundeck. 667-6205.ROOMMATE WANTED: for summer.7-room apt., close to campus. Call Bon¬nie Muirhead, Sayre Jennings: 667-4925.Rider-driver to Calif, needed June 11.No gas expense. Must be familiar withstick shift. Elaine Baskin, 363-9851 after6 pm.Driver to share toil and expense toNew York City in a spacious '65 VW.June 25-26 or 27. 684-4189.Wanted: Apt. suitable for one. Pref.furn., for year, from anytime bet. Sept.10-Oct. 1. Earlier in Sept, if necessary.MI 3-6501.5738 Kenwood, completely furnished, 2roommates needed (male), individualbedrooms, very fine stereo set, porch.324-3819.Rider wanted to N.Y.C. area. Sharedriving and expenses; must be familiarwith stick shift (VW). Leaving June 4or soon after. MI 3-6501.Girl needed to share newly decoratedapt. for summer. $40/mo. Own largerm. Nr. campus. 288-4278.Wanted: Man's Eng. Bike, Call 752-5338Roommate wanted, grad, woman toshare 6-rm. apt. with 2 other for sum¬mer. Call 288-8347 after 6. $25 if we take your 5-. 6-man or two£man apt(s). 324-3456/643-4186. Oct. 1occup.Single girl desires female traveling com¬panion on 11 week European trip. Con¬tact Roeeanne Paul at 739-7711 x3881,8:30-5.Wanted: Ride to New York. June 10-12;will have only a small suitcase and willshare expenses, Richard Hoffman, BU8-6610, room 3321x.Apt. — Bonus for a 4 bdrm. apt. nearcampus starting June or Sept. Callx3779, Laurie.Ride wanted from Boston to Chicago,around June 24-27. Also from Clevelandarea to Boston around June 18. Willdrive and pay. Call Int. House No. 719.If no a ns., leave message.Wanted: Apartment — 6 rooms or more.Call B. J. MI 3-6000, 436. 445.Ride to Philadelphia wanted aroundJune 18. Call 642-2363 evenings.Male wanted to share 3 bedroom town-house. Summer: near campus. Inexp.TV, dishwasher. 324-5751.SUBLETSublet large, cool, quiet. 3-rm. (1bdrm.) University apt. Furnished, paidultilities, Common recreation, laundry,storage, lounge and study rms. June 24-Oct. 8. (other arrangements possible).53rd <fc Dorchester. Call PL 2-3722, aft. 6. 1 bdrm. apt. to sublet July 1, opt. tolease in Oct. $115, mo. NO 7-5762, 5550Dorchester.4-room furnished apt. for July St Aug.5128 Dorchester. $95mo. 684-4189 after4 (and keep trying!)July 1. 2 bdrm. apt. Old Town. Reason¬able rent. Opt. for next year. WH 3-7809. after 8 pm.6 rooms — across University ave. fromPierce! (Like, great location!) June 15-Sept. 15. Call New Dorms 3317, 3228, or3221.Extraordinary Bargain! 8 room, 4-5bdrm.. 2 bath apt. for summer sublet.Kimbark bet. 51 St 52. One block fromshopping center. $U0/mo!!! Call Mlttle-man. BU 8-6610 or Lieber, FA 4-9500.Leave message if not in.Sexy apt. for rent June-Sept., 31'2 rms.,nr. campus, partly furn. DO 3-3863.COZY. ENGLISH-BASEMENT APART¬MENT. close to campus, lVa rooms,completely furnished, must rent begin¬ning June 15 (with June rent free)rent: $60 monthly. Call Marty or Ylanaevenings 667-0206.6-room apt. 2 blocks from campus. Wellfurnished, reasonable, sub-rent forsummer. Television set 8c added attrac¬tions Call 752-8457.MAGNIFICENT BUY—large apt., 4-5bdrms. — living rm., dining rm., furn¬ished; coats us $175 mo. WWtll rent for$110/mo. From June 15-Sept. 15. Rusti,Martha, Clarice. Ext. 3777.WRITERS’ WORKSHOP, PL 2-8377Round Trip to N.Y. by chartered bus(air cond., spring ride) June 12-19, $35,bus leaves Int. House Hotel rms. $3-$4nite if desired. Inquire Int House Assoc.,FA 4-8200 evenings: SU 7-2055 daytime.Europe this summer? FLY TWA DAILYnon-stop jets to London. Campus rep.:M Lavinsky, MI 3-6000.European Travelers: There are someseats available on the SG charter June23 - Sept. 16. Only $250 from New Yorkto London and return. (From Chicago,$315.)N.Y. (Chicago)-London, June 23. London-Chicago. Sept. 10. $290 ($320)x3272.Share economy male apartment $35 plusutilities. x3l87.PROFESSIONAL ALTERATIONSFormerly with Bonwit TellerLeah Rothenberg, 5216 Cornell, 324-2871WANTEDRider to New York—June 25, $10 (lessthan an even split). Call Mike at 363-6228 or x3265.Wanted: Girl to share apartment fromJune 14, located near I.C., U.C., air-conditioned, furnished, clean. Call 643- $25 for your lease option. We want a2 bedroom apt., starting Oct. 1. CallDavid Kaufman, 46 Snell.Riders to NYC. June 19 . 667-7833.Male wanted for summer, for next yr.,or both. Spacious private room. $38/mo.5328 Greenwood. 667-2540.Wanted: Quiet single room or small apt.for summer. Call 324-4876 after 4.Ride to St. Louis—June 13. Call MI 3-9386 between 6 & 7.Ride to N.Y. June 8-10. 752-7161.Roommates wanted — own room, furn.,near campus. Only $30/mo. From June15-Sept. 15. Call Laurie, ext. 3779,Wanted: Male student to share $88/mo.apt. for summer or acad. yr., privatebdrm. Call Glenn or Frank, iJ3-2467after 6.Apt. Wanted — 1 fe. student to share3 bdrm. apt. for summer. PL 2-2171. $30mo.Subjects wanted for group-learning ex¬periment on campus from now throughAugust. 1V2-3 hrs. per subject. Hourlypay. Ext. 3638. 10:30-11:45, 1-3.Wanted: Two male sudents to share6>/2 rm 3 bdrm. furn. apt. 493-7806, 5328Kimbark. 3Ya rm. apt.. Kimbark nr. 56th. Subletmid-June thru August. $100/mo. 667-3979.HELP! We must rent our modern apt.by June 12. Take it fully furn. for un-furn. price. 1 lg. bdrm.. living-dining,new kltch.. good furn. Til 9-15 or 10-1.752-7763 NOW.1 \'2 rms. off-street, In shade. 1352 E.53rd st. Avail. June 15, opt. for nextyr. Call 288-0377.Will exchange lovely 4 bdrm. home InLos Angeles for home in Hyde Paa-k-Kenwood. Month of Aug. Air cond. perf.Or will rent such Hyde Park home.Call MU 4-3734.Pussy Galore! Sublet this apt. and youget 2 wonderful cats to take care of—optional. 5551.Apt. to sublet: driven by 2 girls onlyon weekends. 5551.Perfect for parties, weddings, bar mitz-bahs. and those intimate little dinners.Apt. to sublet. 5551.What has 4 rooms and flies? Not 5551.It all "Ads” up to — 4 large, cool rooms,furn., June-Sept. Perfect for 2 or 3.5551 Kimbark. Call 363-8274.For summer: Beautiful 4-rm. furn., 6lstSt Kimbark. $75/mo. 363-0930.SUMMER JOBSTOR 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.10 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 28, 1965 Modern, fumiahed. 1 bdrm. apt. Innew bldg. 1 block from campus. June14-Sept. 24. $110/mo. Inc. util. 363-3517 eves.To sublet: 2*2 rm. apt., furn. Opt. foryr. $77.50. 5847 Blackstone. Cali 288-6642 Monday Previously thought rent¬ed, interested parties call again.IV] rm. furnished summer sublet only$88, month—60th St Kimbark—HY 3-2909,Tom or Mike alter 6 pm.Summer sublet 3 bdrms. 2 baths. June15-Oct. 1, $120./mo. Call 752-2536 after 6.FOB SALEMOTORBIKE—3 horsepower, top speedaround 45 mph. Will sell for $30 (maybeless). Contact K K. x2896 days; 493-1129nlghs.VW ’65, perf. condition, shown between6-8 pm. 5110 Kenwood. Apt. 1006.FOR SALE: 1960 Black Rambler Amer¬ican. Good condition. Reasonable price.Contact Pat Boyd. 288-6222 or MI 3-0800,ext. 3976.For sale: 1960 VW, rebuilt motor, radio,seat covers New paint Job and new.bumpers. $750 or best offer. 607-4997.BECKER AM-FM-SW automatic carradio. Fantastic new model. Cos $250.Sell $100. DO 3-4300. ext. 410.For sale: 1955 Dodge, $95. 2-dr. V8. r&h.s.t.. s.b., 78.000 mi., bdy-good. mech-good, ires-exe. C. Wade, ext. 3746 eves.PL 2-3800. apt. 504.Loveseat, tables, rug, lamp, mirrors; mustsell. Call 643-2630.MG 1100 Sports Sedan July 1963, 15.000miles, good condition, seat bels. $1100or reasonable offer. 288-7652.1952 Ford, $35. Has new battery. 288-4391.College debate setFour faculty members, two ofthem recent winners of Quantrellawards for excellence in under¬graduate instruction, will debatethe issue of whether the under¬graduate college can surviveThursday in Shorey House.- The participants include deanof the College Wayne C. Booth;assistant professor with the com¬mittee on social thought JamesRedfield; William Rainey Harperprofessor of biology and profes¬sor of education Joseph J.Schwab; and associate professorof history Karl J. Weintraub.Schwab and Redfield won Quan-trells last week, while Booth andWeintraub are former winners.The debate will begin at 8 pmin the ninth floor lounge of Pierce.Booth has urged as many studentsas possible to attend.free concertsMUSICUnder the TreesJune 25, 26, 27Friday 8 pm —SYMPHONY CONCERTChicago Community MusicFoundationSaturday 8 pm —JAZZ AND FOLK MUSICStuds Terkel, Master of Cere¬moniesValucha, Brazilian folk singerFleming Brown and his banjoRed Sounders and his jazz bandFred Holstein, folk singerSunday 3:30 pm —FAMILY PICNIC DAYPost Office Marching BandMarynook Art FairAvalon Park—Rain or Shine1215 E. 83rd St.Sponsored by South EastCommunity Organizationfree concerts.hi n. ft .f i. r 11 i i ■ in , All American Royal Portable typewr.t*,never used, $60. re 1-7995. lNO LUCK HOUSE HUNTING lN Hvn»PARK? Ideal homes available for faenu^and new PbJD’s at sensible pricesin Marynook amid cherry1 blS^robins, and acres of green space Z!/;minutes from the U. of C. A few hJhquality homes will be for sale this spri^and summer; all less than 10 years /mProgressive neighborhood, acive in com'munlty affairs, school problems etc fwfurther data phone SA 1-9064. ' 'Electric Underwood typewrite. Like$125 eves. BA 1-2166. new’Custom made sandals <k~bags~euT~Bag I’m In, 1250 N. Wells, Chicago's OldTown. uLambretta 175cc. motor scooter 85 mnh'85 mpg. 1964 model. Cost $500 plus MastseU. Price $370. Don Weinberg, pl 2.’64 Honda 90. » mph.lent condition, $315 or best offer. 667-6544.Used '65 Triumph Herald conv. AM-fm'ww. 4 speed. 288-4547 or BA 1-0086 '63 VW, sunroof, seat belts' Hardly usedMileage under 8.000. $1,200. HY 3-9753. 'FOB BENT5326-36 GREENWOOD AVE Nl«^furn., 4 rm. pa.t Rented by the yearWill decorate. See Janitor or coll own-’er. WI 5-6368.3 bdrm. apt. summer qtr.. laundry faci!?.ties, patio, large yard. 5437 Dorchester.Phone MI 3-4528 or 285-4295.Lovely 5 rm. town house. 2 bdrms~Chauham Village Co-op (83rd-Langly) sub¬lease for 1 yr. starUng Aug. 1. Furn orunfura. ST 3-0975.3 rm. apt. on 1st fl. of former mansionbeaut, beamed celling. Ideal for marriedcouple or prof, woman. 6757 S. Jeffrey288-6757.HELP WANTEDNeed baby sitter weekdays, boy 4 yrs.,student wife preferred. Beth Johnson’263-1045 ( 9-5).Sec'y, free rm. 6c board for occasionaltyping. DR 3-1133.TYPINGWill type papers. 667-6825.Typing and editing, spring and suirvlmer quarters. Graduate students andfaculty attention: Dissertation andmanuscripts typed. Reasonable prices.Electric typewriter. Dictating machineavailable for your use. 667-0388.LOST A FOUNDLost. In the last ten weeks — hard¬bound ML. Thucydides’ PeloponnesianWar. Please return to Wolf, New Dorms2315.$10 reward for brown suede patchpurse probably lost at the forum onDominican Republic. Call FA 4-2538LOST, on campus, black woman's rain¬coat. small siae, striped lining. Reward.Call ext. 2746.BUSINESS OPPOBTUNITIES 'EXCLUSIVE FRANCHISEAmazing new liquid plastic coating usedor 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. Tills 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—$7,000. Investment is secured by inven¬tory. Factory trained personnel will helpaet up your business. For complete de¬tails and descriptive literature write:Chem-Plastics St Paint Corp., 1828 Lo¬cust, St. Louis 3, Mo.s« mmmm *<.$*.** < ,Quote of the dayAlma Pater"NEW YORK—Educa¬tor Robert M. Hutchins,father of four and former |University of Chicagochancellor, was namedfather of the year Thurs¬day by the National Fa¬ther's Day committee tor |his part in indoctrinating ;the nation's youth with ,democratic principles." |—from a UPI dispatch 1ErratumThe name of Cynthia Burr, astudent in the school of i0C,°service administration, was inad¬vertantly omitted from last Fri¬day's coverage of the honorsawards assembly. Miss Burr wasawarded the Elsa Reinhardt awardfor excellence in the first year orSSA study and promise of excel¬lence in the future.PATRONIZEOURADVERTISERSIr’ x • — -urskSOTTMAROON WEEKEND GUIDEJimmy*sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty-Fifth and Woodlown Ave.TIKI 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 dejonghe; beef kabob flambe.Try one of our delightfulHawaiian cocktails.CIRALSHOUSE OF TIKI51 st- & HARPERFood served 11 A.M. to S A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-7585 CHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062\j/-entera newworld ofdiningpleasurecharcoal-broiled steaksbroasted chicken£616 E. 71st ST.PHONE 483-1668!Uimiiiiim[]iiiiiiiimi(]iiiiiiiimi[}HHiiiiiiiiutiiiiiMiii[]iifiiiiiiHowimm<nimiiiiiiiir]imitmiiinMiiiimiii(iiiiitniiiiic]iiiii!SM n ^ ■■ Fifty-Seventh et KenwoodTfSWMLfUT food |DELIftNTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICES»TTTT?TT¥TVTTTrTTVTTVVV?TTVT?TTVTVTVVTTTVTTTTVTVj•OAV UMD|pOOM s SZ9S*W*d 01 Z\ 04|D(] DU1615 (i|jounp #‘4D$►►►►►►►►►►►►►►►►►►►^ A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A. A A A A A A. A A A. A. A AAA A A A A A A A A A A A A AVI1IV.I SltlllVIrivazoog puog1VAI1S3J ABB39MV8±SA A A a2CAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THE ‘Y*HY 3-5300 FA 4-5525PIZZAMed. LargeCHEESE 1.45 2.00SAUSAGE 1.80 2.35PEPPER & ONION 1.65 2.20BACON & ONION 2.15 2.70COMBINATION . 2.40 2.95MUSHROOM 2.15 2.70SHRIMP 2.40 2.95THIS COUPON WORTH 35cON ONE PIZZA DELIVERYIN JUNEt== =t=—i—^ 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 SERVICEKE €-6606 — KE 6-3891Chicken - SandwichesPizza &Italian Foods Patronize Our AdvertisersBRINGTHISCOUPON SPECIAL STUDENT RATEThis coupon and $2.25 may be exchanged at ithe Box Office no later than half hour before |performance for regular $3.00 seat. |Not Good on Friday or Saturday Nights J"IT IS THE CITY'S BEST SHOW"Dettmer, Chi Americon1HEKMGKthe 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.The Eagle’s Adam chair has especial importance for young sitters. It is a high chairwhich belongs to the Adam Smith himself.Adam is son of economist Winfield Smith. The Smiths bring Adam with themwhen they dine at the Eagle—they also brought Adam’s chair. So the real AdamSmith, 4 years old, sits in a real Adam high chair ... at the Eagle for the young set.COCKTAILS . . . LUNCHEON . . . DINNER . . . LATE SNACKSTHE EAGLEBass ale and SehlilK beer on tap5311 BLACKSTONE 324-7859DON'T MISS UNIVERSITY THEATRE'SSOPHOCLES -and- ANOUILHFRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY—May 28, 29, 30FINAL PRODUCTION OF Till: SEASONREYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE8:30 pm $1.50 — Students $1.00"TONIGHT AT 8:30" SERIESTickets on Sale Reynolds Club DeskMay 28, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • , 11SG group probes bookstore Tsou winner of Laing awardA Student Governmentcommittee on University fa¬cilities is currently studyingthe role of the bookstore inthe Universty community, theMaroon learned this week.Under the chairmanship ofgraduate student Steven Silver,the committee aims to improvethe effectiveness of UC facilitiesby polling student and facultyopinion and then making recom¬mendations based upon the resultsof the polls.A PRELIMINARY survey ofUC opinion on the bookstore takenthis quarter showed that mem¬bers of the UC community havetwo general concerns: 1) the lim¬ited availability of both texts andpaperbacks and 2) the price poli¬cy of the bookstore.Specifically, those polled sawAcademic affairsThe Student Government (SG>Academic Affairs Committee an¬nounced this week that it willsolicit student evaluations of un¬dergraduate courses as an aid topublication sometime during au¬tumn quarter of a dossier of in¬formation on the undergraduatecurriculum.Questionnaires for students tocomp] te will be available in dor¬mitories, Mandel corridor, Swiftlobby, the SG office in Ida Noyes,TYPEWRITERSTO 55% OFF*New-Used-Electric-Office-PortableAll machines (new or used) areguaranteed for 5 years. We arean authorized agency for mostmajor typewriter manufacturers.If any machine we sell can bepurchased elsewhere (within 30days) for less, we will refund thedifference in cash.* Discounts average 37%Discount Typewriters50 E. Chicago Tel. 664-3552 the lack of student faculty com¬munication as one of the causesof the bookstore’s limited stock.Faculty have no way of knowingwhat students are interested inreading, those polled said, and viceversa.No discountsThe basic gripe over price poli¬cy centered around the fact thatthe UC bookstore is the only book¬store on a major campus in theUS which does not give facultyand students some discount onhardback books. This situationleads to a feeling of being “ex¬ploited,” the committee found.On the plus side, however, al¬most all those polled felt thatbookstore employes aie courteousand hard-working, but that theyare handicapped by the limitedstock.evaluations setthe bookstore, and in the lobbyof social sciences. Completedquestionnaires should be returnedto the SG office either in personor by faculty exchange.The questionnaires, which willask in detail about such essentialsas course formats, size of classes,course requirements, exams, andquality of instruction, will be usedto assess the courses and to offersuggestions for their improve¬ment.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 Tang Tsou, associate profes¬sor of political science, wasawarded the Gordon J. Laingprize by the UC board of pub¬lications this week for his book“America’s Failure in China, 1941-50.”Tsou, who was feted at theCenter for Continuing EducationThursday, won rave reviews forhis book, a study of both Chineseand American policy during whatNewsweek called “that criticalperiod from 1941 to 1950.”The Laing prize, awarded an-Tsouv ' n u a 11 y by the UC publicationboard, goes to a member of theUC faculty whose book, publishedduring the two preceding calendaryears, has lent the greatest dis¬tinction to the UC Press list. Lastyear’s winner was professor ofhistory William H. McNeill for hissweeping histoiy “The Rise of theCalendarFriday, May 28LECTURE: "Machiavellian Aspects ofPoet-Renaissance Ideology," John O. A.Pocock, department of political science,University of Canterbury, Christ -church,New Zealand, room 2, law school, 3:30pm.LECTURE: "The Greatest Sermon forthe Smallest Crowd," John J. Kiwlet,associate professor of church history,Northern Baptist Theological Seminary,Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.THEATRE: Tonight at 8:30 series, Antl-gones of Sophocles and Anouilh, Reyn¬olds Club Theater. 8:30 pm.HILLEL FIRESIDE: "The Teaching ofHistory in the UAR and Israel: A Study-in Contrasts,” Mark M. Krug, professorof education, Hillel, 9 pm.Saturday, May 29MOVIE: "The Mouse That Roared,"Billings P-117. 7:30 pm.BENEFIT: "The Music Room." directedby Satyajit Ray, for the benefit of cy¬clone-afflicted Pakistanis, students $1,other $1.25, Ida Noyes Hall. 8 pm.COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: MadrigalGroup. Bond Chapel, 8:30 pm.THEATRE: Tonight at 8:30 series, Antl-gones of Sophocles and Anouilh, Reyn¬olds Club Theater, 8:30 pm.Sunday, May 30BRIDGE: Ida Noyes Hall, 7:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30pm.THEATRE: Tonight at 8:30 series, Antl-gones by Sophocles and Anouilh. Reyn¬olds Club Theater, 8:30 pm.Tuesday, June 1OPEN SING: 57th Street Chorale, withMargaret Hillis of the Chicago Sym¬phony Orchestra Chorus, Reynolds Clubnorth lounge, 7:30 pm. West ”Tsou’s book, published in thespring of 1963, was dubbed “abalanced, scholarly, and soberingbook” by the New York TimesBook Review. Robert H. Ferrellin the Yale Review called it “abrilliant volume, a major contri¬bution to knowledge.”.of EventsWednesday, June 2LECTURE: "Machiavellian Aspects ofPost-Renaissance Ideology.” John G aPocock, department of political scienceUniversity of Canterbury, Chrlst-churchNew Zealand, room 2, law school, 3 39pm.Thursday, June 3LECTURE SERIES: "Political Actionand Social Change,” "Community Or¬ganization as an Agent of Change,"Richard Flacks, assistant professor ofsociology, moderator, and three panel¬ists to be announced, Mandel Hall11:30 am.DISCUSSION: "Can the UndergraduateCollege Survive?,” Wayne C. Booth,dean of the College; James Redfield,assistant professor with the committeeon social thought; Joseph Schwab. Wil¬liam Rainey Harper professor of biologyand professor of education; and KarlJ. Weintraub. associate professor ofhistory. Shorey House lounge, ninthfloor, Pierce Tower, 8 pm.Friday, June 4LECTURE: "Machiavellian Aspects ofPost-Renaissance Ideology.” John G. APocock, department of polltioal science.University of Canterbury, Christ-church.New Zealand, room 2, law school, 3:30pm.LECTURE: "The Ethics and Politics ofAristotle," Richard McKeon. distin¬guished service professor of philosophyand Greek, downtown oenter, 64 E.Lake st., room 201, 8 pm.Sunday, June 6BRIDGE: Ida Noyes Hall. 7:15 pmFOLK DANCING: Ida Noyes Hall, 7 3<>pm.HYDE PARK YMCANewly redecorated student rooms available with or without meal plons.Study lounge, private TV room, health, and physical facilities allavailable for student use.Call FA 4-5300 RANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open Evenings — Billie Tregonza, Manageress— Scandinavian Imports —What so many have been asking for IS NOW HERE!ROSEWOOD JEWELRY GALORE !!Our Norwegian Shipment held up by the East Coast Dock Strike has finally arrived.STERLING —Rings from $1.20 to $12.00.ROSEWOOD — Hair Buckles at $1.00, $1.50,$2.00, $2.40.Bracelets at $2.00, $2.50, $3.00. STAINLESS STEEL — Ashtrays to dishes to saladNecklaces at $6.00. *Rings at $4.40. bowls, sugar and creamersets, etc., etc.HAND MADE PEWTER BY CEORCEN JENSENREMEMBER FATHER'S DAY with a big, he-man reclining chair.The MOONMAN is back!New Supply of Wallhangings by BANC — $6.00, s8.00Solid TEAK Hope Chest —$180TEAK Candlesticks from $2.88 pair Continental Solid TEAK CombinationCocktail-Dining Table — $135NEW SUPPLY of Suede Leather and Wrought Iron small CLOSE-OUT collection of French ProvincialMagazine Racks — $12 furniture which must go at ROCK BOTTOM PRICES!1538 E. 53rd St. 11 A. M. to 10 P. M. Daily — Sunday Noon to 6 P. M. NO 7-404012 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 28, 1965