-, Vol. 74 — No. 2 The University of Chicago Friday, July 23, 1965 Hyde Park celebratesHarper Court completionThe Hyde Park community will celebrate next week thecompletion of construction on a special urban renewal projectto provide low-rent business space for small craftsmen andartisans. than a regular commercial build-The project, Harper Court, was er ^ny decrease jn the total costs]Q/r instituted through the efforts of construction would depend on' the planning committee of the j.be conditions under which theytheyHyde Park-Kenwood Community Stained a loan for their $600,000Conference (HPKCC), the fed- projecteral Small B^iness Adminlstr^ THEY WERK able to obtain a^i°n, an sp p low-interest 25-year mortgage forReveal Mariner IV dataData from Mariner IV show that while the level of radiation on the surface of Mars ismuch greater than on Earth, it is not so high as to pose a threat to future manned explora- “launching,” a prelude to final foundation raised in si*ti,0n t0f fa_ld_J°,hnrA^Simpson’ Professor of Physies at UCs iaboratory of astro- occuPancZ.bLi^:n^ months the remaining $120,000Foundation.The court will observe $480,000 from the Small BusinessAdministration.physics and space research (LASR).Simpson made a report to as¬sembled LASR staff Wednesdayafternoon in the LASR building.He and two UC assistants wereat the Jet Propulsion Laboratoriesin Paradena, Cal., during MarinerIV’s encouter with Mars last week.ALTHOUGH THE total weightof the satellite was 575 pounds,only 35 pounds of this was avail¬able for experiments, Simpsonsand. The rest of the weight wasneeded for the superstructure,transmitting and receiving equip¬ment. and solar energy cells forelectrical energy to power theequipment on the satellite.Among the experiments werea plasma probe (for detectingrelatively low energy chargedparticles emitted from the sun),a magnetometer which provideda running account of the strengthand direction of the magnetic fieldpresent, a micro-meteorite detec¬tor, Geiger counters, and a cosmicray telescope, the last of thesedeveloped at LASR.Small field 3 cerf™ony at“*^ °n needed for the project by sellinga planet with a significant mag- ^e',bo .Ten 52 and 53 S ' y bonds to 480 individuals in thenetic field (like the earth), much , ..., .. .. ,. ’ „ AMONG THE guests at theo the cosmic radiation heading ce]ebration will be Eugene Foley,toward it is either deflected by chief administrator of the Small Hyde Park-Kenwood area.Mrs. Beadle called the comple¬tion of the remaining fund rais-...... , , , . __ . . . . . . .. - _ ing in this short period of time “athe Held or captured by it to Business Administration, and Mrs. , triumph.. lor the foundatlon>form Van Allen ardiation belts. Paul Douglas, wife of Illinois m . , .... ....senior Senator. The foundation has worked outrenting formula for Harperform Van Allen ardiation beltsTHE MAGNETOMETER a lclll luulluia iV/l tshowed Mars’ magnetic field to ..Tbe HarP®.r Court pioject. t e Court that will allow it to rentfirst of its kind in America, has . .. . , , ... .be less than one two-hundreuth excited interest around the coun- to craftsmen at low rates withoutthat of the Earth. This was sub- try » acc0rding to Mrs. George W. ba,Tg the foundat,on 8° mt0stantiated by the Geiger counter, Beadle, wife of UC’s president debtwhich failed to show any Van Al- and a leading member of the Har- ONE-THIRD of the businesslen belts, and by the plasma de- per Court Foundation. space in the court will be rentedtector and cosmic ray telescope, w . Park. is “the at rates above the avera8e rentwhich detected no large deflection y . .. . _00_,c rate for the project to restaurantsof low or high energy charged \ype «I community that :needs pic- simiIar businesses that canDarticles resDeetivelv ture *ramers and has stringedparucies, respectively. instruments to be repaired,” Mrs.The atmosphere of Mars ap- Beadle told the Maroon,pears to be 76 per cent nitrogen,16 per cent carbon dioxide, andeight per cent argon, with almost Renewal CasualtiesBut it is this class of small afford these higher rates.The remaining two-thirds of thecourt’s space will be rented belowthe average rate to artisans andcraftsmen.The modern buildings in Harperno oxygen. By extremely precise ^SnTtnnovaS’’ that has^n mouern ouuumgs in rwpermeasurement of the weakening g ... bv rHsioea Court have been built accordingradio signal from Mariner as the hardest hit financially by disloca- ^ ^ „converted brownstone?»radio beam was bent by the Mar- ^°r^s due J? urba!3 1'enev^a *n concept in which the entrancestian atmrvsnhprp srientistc ficnirP Hyde Park-Kenwood, Mrs. Beadle concept, in wnicn me enuanresgreater radiation on Mars is due ranf atm?®phare’ scie.ntls[f “gure explained to shoPs are either above or ^to its almost negligible magnetic tbat lts density 15 ordy about one P . . low ground level,xo ns almost negligible magnetic ^ cent of the Earth*s> Thus a These businessmen need low- ch tai|orc.dprospective explorer would need rent shop space she explained WUh entr3,ces on all sides 0fa pressurized suit and oxygen sup- and have found tlhat they'can get tWQ buildin?s the court isply on Mars, Simpson reported. jt only in old, dilapidated build- able tQ uge partitions to tailorNot only would Mars’ rarified ingS- shop size to the needs of itsatmosphere and negligible mag- WHEN THESE structures are tenants.netic field permit more cosmic torn down in urban renewal proj- The shops will range in arearays to reach the surface of the acts and replaced by higher priced from about 500 to 1500 sq. feet,planet, but upon reaching it, the modern buildings, the small crafts- MOST OF the space in the courtrays would irradiate the surface men have nowhere in which to bas aiready been rented, Mrs.material and create new sources relocate their shops. Beadle said. Shops will open, sheof radiation. Fortunately, said Noting that Hyde Park-Ken- stated, “in the course of the wholeSimpson, the radiation level would wood was losing this special class summer.”The old adage about Washington — first in war, first in not be dangerous, though higher of small businessmen, the plan- The July 29 “launching,” whichpeace, and last in the American League — might have to be than on Earth. ning conference of hpkcc be- will be open to the public, willamended in at least one respect this summer. LASR’S COSMIC ray telescope came interested in their plight, feature a ceremonial release ofIf the Senators don’t undergo some metamorphosis — and consists of three disc-shaped par- Mrs. Beadle said. a 36-in. helium-filled balloon byit doesn’t seem as if they will — tide detectors separated by radia- This interest led to the incorpo- each of Harper Court’s tenants,then their home town will have eight of the voting rights bill, the tion shields. Each time a particle ration in 1963 of the nonprofit plus fireworks and an appearanceto go on record with another first: likelihood of a cabinet shakeup, passes through a detector, it pro- Harper Court Foundation for the by the Fifth Army band,in eccentricity. or the incompetence of the ad- duces an electrical pulse. A pulse purpose, she stated, of “renting The attendance of Mrs. PaulThe summer it seems is a ministration in his agency. from the first detector followed, space at low cost to artists, Douglas at the launching of Har-particularly apt time for said ec- ‘ And what is the setting for after a prescribed interval, by a craftsmen, and innovators. per Court will be a “symboliccentricity to reveal itself Beaches these tirades? The Cocktail Party, pulse from the second detector, Loan conditions link between art and govern-foster it Clothing reflects it It of course. As such, drinking in indicates that a charged particle The foundation members soon ment, Mis. Beadle said, since Mrs.extends from the White House to the company of others is not an has come almost directly (within found, according to Mrs. Beadle, Douglas is the wife of a US Sena-the greenhouse from tulips to indigenous Washington phenome- 20 degrees) into the telescope. All that they could not have business tor and the daughter of the latejuleps. And absolutely everybody non. But there are cocktail parties other pulses are ignored. space constructed any cheaper Chicago sculptor Lorado Taft,and everything has been alloted and Cocktail Parties. The latter,According to Simpson, the field and its thin atmosphere. ForOur man in WashingtonDC is a summer festivalby Robert F. Levey(Editor’s note: Robert F. Levey, MAROON editor-in-chief thispast year, is spending the summer in Washington working forVISTA in the Office of Economic Opportunity.)his, her, or its share. probably an even greater indicaItem: Where else in the world tion of eccentricity than taxis,can one find Yellow Cabs painted Shriners, or restaurants, have sev-orange and black? eral distinguishing characteristics,Item: Where else in the world all of which are accentuated bywould 100,000 (yes, 100,000!) the summer and the literallyShriners hold their annual con- greater scope (namely, the out- Plan House sit-in to fight warby Rita Dershowitz a previously scheduled march onCollegiate Press Service August 6 at the White House by__ _ _ WASHINGTON — The coalition of civil rights workers, four groups: Committee for Non-vention, complete with purple doors) that Parties can conse- pacifists and students which made last April’s SDS March violent Action, War Res ssatin headdresses, specally issued quently encompass. For instance: Against the War in Vietnam so successful will again come to- LeaSue> Student Peace Union andlicense plates, and total chaos? • Glamorous guest lists, which gg^gj. jn Washington as a “symbolic Assembly of Unrepre- i^Caiholic Worker. These or-Item: Where else in the world are often more important than the spnted PeoDie +Q Declare Peace” gamzations have been distributingwould a restaurant close down Parties themselves; August 6-9 nam Drotest would be the initial a “Decoration of Conscience” stat-^aUoforder-lrCOndiUOn‘ng "" the'Four days of demonstrations projeet in a continuing coaiition of S^tTc^ry^fthT^The answer is, clearly, nowhere almost always several levels of andA^usfTVan^tte^t^ nonvkS movSnent.” ” -* in Vietnam- The declaration nowse. The reason is, not so clearly, importance above the goo^ hn^ks on Augusx y Dy an aixempxthat one would not be too hard that one has read lately;else The reason is not" so clearlv importance above the good books on August 9 oy an anempt to * . . has over 6000 signatures,eise. me reason is, not so cieany, importance « . . s the House of Represents workshops would continue to be The workshops will takoccupyput to go mad in a city which • Bartenders in red jackets try- tives and “deny that Congress has newly^rgan- August 7 and 8’ Probab]y on thevirtually is bureaucracy and effi- ing to keep the bar that they have the right to dwlare war in our ® couldSget grassA,surrounding the Washing-ciency personified if there were established on the side of a hill |iar"e^ The demonstiators in- y.g MFDP (Missis ton Monument- The first da>’’sno coloror levity to offset them, from falling over; tend to holdla s -in andaread- to know^ the^MFDP^Miss^- workshop will be divided into ^Lost in a maL of initials and • Butlers who can rattle off ^ ^**££*£“ ^e rtopped is and students active in cLpus t “TTh'hopeless over the prospect of hav- names of dignitaries and not-so- reaching the Capitol.1 P movements could get a better un- ^ r!lntr °f- th?ing to remember who’s who, it dignitaries on sight. wprp ohre derstanding of what is meant by 1((., " ongres.sionais indeed hard to inject color and But, once one descends from THE AUGUST dates were cho- , * democracy ’ ’’ he ?a,lenge’ tbe recent threatslevity into the Washington tasks parties at which the guest list in- sen because August 6 is the 20th ^id ^ y ^ destructive investigation by thethemselves, since the mental ef- eludes the entire cabinet, there is anniversary of the dropping of ' . , .. . .. .. House Un • American Activitiesfort is so demanding But for somewhat more normalcy. The di- the first atomic bomb on Hiro- Weinberger noted that the coali- Committee,” the “right-to-work”every hard-working 9 to 5 Dr. vision between Jekyll and Wolf- shima, and August 9 is the anni- Lon would not be limited to pro- provisions of the Taft-Hartley Act,Jekyll there is an after-hours Mr. man-Hyde is less pronounced, and versary of the Nagasaki bomb. testing the war in Vietnam, but and the Free Universities.Hyde. probably the one distinguishing The four-day protest has no or- could come together on other is- The second day’s workshopsWashington’s version of Mr. characteristic is this oft-repeated ganizational sponsorship; its lead- sues without having to form an wm ^ based on constituencies:Hyde is actually much closer to question: “. . . And what agency ers here say they are acting as entirely new organization. The ministers, members of the aca-the Wolfman than to Robert do you work for?” individuals only. Most of the 32 concerns of the new coalition demic community, union mem-Louis Stevenson’s original. As the Washington, in short, is a sum- persons who have signed the call J^ld ^ pe?ple from local communi'moon comes out, the fangs of the mer festival. As the chief shoulder for an assembly are associated Wari racial injustice, inquisition ties, and professional people,various functionnaires are bared, for the nation to cry on, it can with either student or civil rights by Congressional committees, la- On August 9, those “in a posi-Where the good Dr Jekyll might doubtless be pardoned for letting groups. bor legislation, anti-poverty and tion to face possible arrest andnever have taken a swipe at any- off some eccentric steam. And Eric Weinberger, a former wel aie progiams, and American willing to pledge themselves tothing in his daytime role Mr. who can help but sleep well at CORE worker and one of the ioreign policy. nonviolent behavior” will attemptWolfman Hyde is hardly loath night knowing that Lyndon B. leadens in organizing the demon- THE ACTIVITIES of the four- to convene the Assembly of Un¬to point out the fallacy in section Jekyll is overseeing it all? stration, indicated that the Viet- day demonstration will begin with represented People in the Capitol.—lazarsfeld: Sociology in new phaseSociology has passed through two stages of its development would be of little value. Using thisand may now’ be entering a third, according to Paul Lazars- data> a sociologist can provideftld, professor of sociology at Columbia University. factual backing for an impression-Speaking on “Sociology beyond Survey: The Ghost of Her- j*stl.c es*ay 0,1 ,he different out-bert Blumer” July 12, LaSrsfeld — -- -- - - looks of the organizations undersaid that sociology is tending to- ment between them, Lazarsfeld study. _wards tlie use of imaginative ^id, but others saw the rise of Ingenuity is thus reinstated inquestionnaires. the P°H as unfortunate. In par- qie research, Lazarsfeld said, dis-This new development, ho said, ,1.c^»r BlumeI; playing itself in the way in whichmay serve lo unity the earlier *"» “ ,he I?30s' p,'0,<f *?> "V> the questionnaire is worded andmethods ot sociological research. sf"’lo«-v no longer Healed soetal ,he use t0 whic.h the resulting^. phenomena, but had become eon- js l)ufLazar feld noted that sociology pprnp/i m'ith uvw'i'phad begun as a discipline eharac 8 ‘ Another trend indicative of so-terized'by the researcher’s “in- BLUMERS objections, he said, ciology’s expanding methodologygenuily in finding evidence for had been overstated and probably js a growing dissatisfaction with Letters to the editorthe ideas" he wanted to express.”THIS PERIOD was marked, hesaid, by reliance on published data contained a large clement of “nos- usr Gf everyday language, hetalgia for the good old days.” said. There is currently an at-Lazarsfeld felt that sociology tempt to define more precise in-, . .. , will not return to its first phase, dices for use in data analysis,or previously existing recoids, but su„gested instead that there Th indices should be derivedsuch as police files, and by the , f -soeioloev he- 1 nese ,ntnces •nouia oe oemeuinferential nro- wdS a role Ior ,3. soclo;°J'' , from the answers to purely factu-use of complex inferential pro vond surveys” which would make . TheThere was no use made ; f th tinnnaire in an a questions, Lazarsiekt said. 1 neuse of the questionnaire inan resea|.c}ier must have a goodan(] imaginative, somewhat modified jn(Ujpve grasp of the situationf°rrn". . under study, even though theDurine the earlv 193fK he Lazarsfeld cited three trends in prob]em is defined in terms ofuuiing me eariy jujus, ne current sociological researchwhich are indicative of this ex¬panded methodology. All threecesses.at this time of sampling tech¬niques, although linguisticbehavioral data were employed.During the early 1930s, hestated, the use of the poll becamecommon. This enabled the re¬searcher to obtain his own in- ^j.en(js arf> found within that areaformation and to introduce sta statistics.WITH SUCH a grasp, he isbetter equipped to arrive at theright mathematical combinationsindices and to obtainan untie* anding of the signifi¬cance to be attached to the differ¬ent values they assume, Lazars¬feld noted.But perhaps the most promising. of sociology that takes as its unit,tistieal controls. In this way, so- not tbe individual, but the organ- lo U!>ciological research was able to izatjonbecome more objective and to ex- THE FIRST trend is the de-pand its inteiests. velopment of a new style of ques-Some workers in the field were tjon ^ ^ey man tQ fo<* questionedable to make use of both tech- an ©j-ganization can be askedniques and to obtain good agree- |or a sejf.cvaluation of his role, trend of all, he said, is the debut more helpful at times is the velopment of contextual proposi-use of factual inquiries, Lazars- lions. It is this trend in particularfeld said. that 5?oes furthest to meet.Blum-Answers to purely factual ques- er s criticism,tions, he noled, can provide in- The contextual survey is aformation about the general philos- three-variable analysis, the thirdophy of an organization in eases being somehow external to thewhere a more head-on approach others.TYPEWRITERSTO 35% OFF*Now- Used- Electric- Off ice- PortobleAll machines (new or used) oreguoronteed for 5 years. We orean authorized agency for mostmajor typewriter monufocturers.If ony mochine we sell con bepurchased elsewhere (within 30days) for less, we will refund thedifference in cosh.* Discounts overage 37%Discount TypewritersSO E. Chicago Tel. 664-3552 HYDE PARK YMCANewly redecorated student rooms available with or without meol plans.Study lounge, privote TV room, health, and physical facilities allavailable for student use.Coll FA 4-5300Corona wS/w J,105PORTRAITS1312 E. 53rd684-7424PassportPhotos A Complete Source ofARTISTS’ MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESPICTURE FRAMINGMATTING ' NON-GLARE GLASSDUNCANS1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111BOOKSPAPERBACKSWATCH REPAIRING14K PIERCEDEARRINGSChChChch><hC«h>0-THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75001540 E. 55 St.10% Student Discount HARPERLiQEOR STORE1514 E. 53rd StreetFull line of imported ond domesticwines, liquors ond beer at lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONE- 1318— 1233— 7699HY 3-6800FA 4 You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411Big Sale of Master Drawings and Brush Stroke Prints00 and *198$1Masterpieces by Rembrant, Picasso, Braughel, Modigliani,Turner, Da Vinci, Rubens, Renoir, Kollwitz, CezanneTitian, Monet, Boticelli, Homer, Ingres, Degas, Seurat,Goye, Van Gogh, Verocchio, Lorain.Frames to fit both kinds of pictures at various prices.Framing done while you wait.Sole starts Friday July 23 at 8:00 A.M.Shop in Air-Conditioned ComfortThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. SG’s Grofman refutescourse evaluation criticsTO THE EDITOR:Messrs. Feingold, Jones, andMuller’s criticisms of StudentGovernment's course evaluationquestionnaire (Maroon, June 25,1965) are valid only insofar asthey embody useful suggestionson how not to evaluate such aquestionnaire. In the many hoursof discussion with both studentsand faculty that preceded SG'sdecision to publish a course eval-uation booklet the criticismswhich they make were consid¬ered and means were found toresolve them. Taking up theircriticisms point by point:There is no danger that the un¬representative views of only afew students will be published,since only courses and instructorsfor which an adequate number ofquestionnaires have been returnedwill be included in the booklet.Furthermore, students are askedto list their course grade, andthis, too, will be taken into ac¬count in evaluating the question¬naires. Indeed, SG felt' that the1000 questionnaires that were re¬turned to us in the spring quar¬ter were not adequate to give afair picture of the UC under¬graduate curriculum, and thecourse evaluation booklet will notbe issued until many more ques¬tionnaires have been received.As for the accusation that thequestionnaire is biased in favorof the “easy grader” or ‘goodguy,” this is not the case unlessyou assume that UC students equate good teaching with easygrading. I have greater respectfor my fellow students than toassume this to be the case. Fur¬thermore, the questionnaire asksabout all of the qualities whichaffect a teacher’s effectiveness,not just his easiness as a grader.Are lectures well organized? Isthe student stimulated to furtherstudy? Is there overlap betweencourse materials and class dis¬cussions? In addition the ques¬tionnaire seeks objective informa¬tion about such things as Ihenumber and length of papersassigned, the length of the read¬ing list, the type and frequencyof exam, etc. All of this informa¬tion will bo used to build up acomposite picture of the courseand its instructors.To prepare a fair and infor¬mative course evaluation bookletis not an easy task, and it is atask which SG assumed only aftera great deal of internal debateabout its ability to do a verygood job. SG would welcome thehelp of Mssrs. Feingold, Jones,ami Muller in evaluating thecourse evaluation questionnaireand in designing a new and bet¬ter questionnaire for the comingvear.BERN1F GROFMANPresidentStudent GovernmentChicago MaroonEdifor-in-Chief Daniel HertzbergBusiness Manager Michael KasseraAssistant to the Kditor David L. AikenCampus News editor David SutterCulture-Feature editor Jamie Beth GaleJAMES SCHULTZ CEEANERSSHIRTS MSI KIMSRepairs fir Alterations 5 Hr. Service1363 East 53rd PL 2-9662IO% Student Di*eouut with I.D. CardRANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC: SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open Evenings — Billie Tregonxa, ManageressJESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 I. 55rh St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent & Faculty DiscountASAMATTEROP... tha man who has a planned SumLife program it In an enviable position.No one ie better prepared to face th«future than the man who has providedfor his retirement years and hisfamily'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, II.FAirfox 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY QF CANADA. a MyryAk COMPANY/*""^'2 • CHICAGO MAROON • July 23, 1965THEATRE REVIEWUT, Harper give good Chicago ShakespeareThe two performances which I have seen this week negate the statement previously in thiscolumn that there .s no decent Shakespeare in Chicago. Both productions, though not per¬fect by any means, are far above the "decent” mark hHarper Theater's production of Othello was full of surprises, some pleasant andrather less so. Among the pleas- — 1 someant ones was the high calibre of >ollnS rnari at Harper Theater. Iconic dress! Once one got past**the acting, some of which was tJT’s Roderigo might have played the dearth of togas, the meritsperfectly delightful. The major Sir Andrew Agueeheek without of the production were easilyfault o fthe Harper’s previous pro- changing anylhing but the lines, discernable.ductions was that they presented He *’as the more amusing charac- since I had not seen anv ore.one major ar.or supported by a trr. but the Harper Theater's ver- vious Court TheaterStS Zcast o( scenting amateurs. While ®»"mb' e athorn,tin Otheflw season-s production of THEthis might be a way of making THE HIGH IOIN rs of the TEMPEST, I am in no positiona good actor api>ear even bettor, performance were worth the cost to wmpare this' season with pre-it does not leave the audience of admission. Act II scene 1 shows vious ones> blJt j b that *thexvith a very favorable Impression J«8°■ h‘s ,east a'lificial and othor two productions this yearof the production as a whole. best, both in terms of the acting are as as tbe firstThis fault was not in evidence a,M* *be eliaraeter. Cedric Smith r . T _ ’ ‘in Othello. The particular delights lets us **♦>, behind his sharp and J,ame? ° Rei1Uy in,er'of the east were the ladies, who ready wit, the conniving intellect. * ‘‘ ie Play ior rcahsm; oneIx*rformed with less milksoppish- The drinking scene again shows ® ®cfors commented thatness than one usually finds in Iago at his wittiest - though . ‘,K n * whether youShakespeare's heroines. here with more odious intentions, e vvfy 1o slt orthe chief PKOHI EM with hut a(l(ls little to Cassio's char- ** °.r wd k as long as youTHE CHIEF I KOHEEM with . . ...nkpn yelled loud enough when youthe production was the direction. a ' lo di unken tag- were -n Jhp crowd » There JereM^»?i"ThSneU,IS!n,ab!va^ IbbCHbl Kamal, as Michael Cas. *<*» > that ,he dra-Marshall, though undeniably a »iisarmnintmr»nt• maf,c impact and continuitypowerful and persuasively expres- * °’ a; d d'sappointment, he sacrificed to this realism-live Othello is not entiallv talent ^‘med too delicate of feature and , nncea to mis jealism,sive otneiio, is not equally talent- „hmissive notion in ,,ie crowds during some scenes,.,t in .he field of direction. There on 'S "in ? blo‘k”d «•» audiences view, and,he blocking and a"' ikillfnllv drown«i out the principals within the deli very of the actors which [10 rnat,< * 1GW sa),,tully plantedwere inconsistent and sometimes mosl beautiful sceneof all is Act III Scene 1. For the their noise.As Court Theater draws its„ l:* ui t»u /vvi m oreiie c. rur me ...! 4 4. , , , last time one sees Othello without ^mpany not only from the Uni-. he Interpretation of he play a trace of suspi(.ion, and with ™rs,t/ but f r o m Goodmandiffered great y Horn that pre- nothing but ]ove for Oesdemona. Thoa'er and amateur Theatersseidx-d by University Theater .r,)p bf,auly arui wit of Oesdemona ,n ‘he Chicago area, there is<UT earlier this year. UTs pro- played against the ingratia,ing naturally a great disparity ,n the(luetlon featured a much older fondness of 0the|]0 created for ca,,bre of the rhe P,in'a..d slyer - though not half as n)p a pic(UIt> of ]uve lhat x wiJ1not soon forget.Court's CaesarTriFFRET SHOPcynical — Iago, and a weak, ill-lempered Emilia, in contrast tothis production’s utteily heartlessyoung cynic and his shrewish and THK rLEASANT surprises ofstrong-minded young wife. Rode- ot||Hlo werP nothing 1o the abngo, too, seemed to be two com- solute vjsual shoek I received, lemly different characters m the within the first two minutes oftwo productions; the blond vvigged urs Julhls ( the entireand completely unrealistic Roden- show was continued in Napo-go of the U I show was replacedby a more pathetically serious "BUDGETWISEAAA 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 ciples with only one exception,were excellent and Ihe suportingactors varied from excellent toabysmal.WES SAUNDERS as Brutus\Vas by far the most profession¬al actor on the stage; his bear¬ing and diction would haveshown as much even without histhoughtful portrayal of Brutus.He captured the audience’s in¬terest with his first words andheld it until the bloody end.Renee Capellni Portia, his wife,holds all the honors for makinga small pa it seem essential tothe success of the entire produc¬tion.More disappointing was TomKeener as Cassius. His lines wereclearly delivered, but with novariation in tempo or intensity;in short, there was somethinglacking without which Cassiusbecame merely a ranting youngman, instead of an envious andrather unscrupulous schemer.Charles Geraci gets full marksfor his remarkably convincingperformance as Mark Anthony.The transitions were a bit tooabrupt between the two sides ofhis character one is a sort ofRoman Hugh Hefner, while theother is an unscrupulous politi¬cian and rhetorician but the playitself affords little latitude forthe change-overs.Among the minor eharaetors,two deserve special notice. Joel Cope played a partly and gossipyold Casca, and John Slyvanodoubled as Cains Legarius andthe leader of the crowd. His ver¬satility as both a true patricianand an agile plebian Is greatly tobe admired.O’Reilly’s direction, as- statedbefore, ran to realism rather thanpolish, and almost inevitablyfrom this—to a play about poli¬tics rather than ethical philoso¬phy. It is a standard interpreta¬tion, skillfully and consistentlydone, but one which, due to theexigencies of Court Theater’sfacilities, ran into trouble afterAct III. Without the spectacularelements available, the play fallsflat in the battle scenes. The bigmoments — the temptation forBrutus, the assassination, thecrowd scenes are all over andthe play which had begun witha bang, ends with a flaccidwhimper.Jamie Beth GaleSAMUEL A. BELL“Buy Shell From Bell**SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150UNIVERSALARMY STORE“The universe in studentu-ear for campus andcamping.**Levis - Tennis ShoesAN OUTFIT FROMTOP TO TOE1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856 TAl-SAM-YfcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYII A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63 rd St. MU 4-1062 PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhoir stylists ot5242 Hyde Pork Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710 % Student DiscountlS47 E75»rd St.ChicagoNO 7-106011:30 to 6. 7:30 to 10 Moii.-fri.11:30 to 6, Saturday EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 Eost 53rd StreetHYde Pork 3-8372Student ond FacultyDiscount FREE SPORT CAR REAZERfrom 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 Cottoge Grove Avenue UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“« strong banh"NEW CAR LOANSSAOO per hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C.STA-PREST SLACKSFOR MENThe Levi Strouss Compony helped pioneer thesesuperb no iron fobrics for men's slocks.Try o pair now of the oir conditioned Universityof Chicago Bookstore.5802 Ellis Ave.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 $1$2 TICKETS:rn Thurs-50 Fri.Sun.Saturday ,50cStudent-FocultyStaff Discount COURT THEATRE11th SEASONLAST WEEKEND!JULIUS CAESAROPENS JULY 3 0THTHE LADY'S NOTFOR BURNINGby Christopher FryTickets on Sale Daily at Reynolds Club DeskJuly 23, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Culture Calendar Calendar of EventsTheatreBAREFOOT IN THE PARK: Nell Simon’scomedy starring Myrna Loy, RichardBenjamin, Joan Van Ark and SandorSzabo. Mike Nichols, dir. Nightly 8:30.Matinees Wed. & Sat. at 2. Closed Sun.Nightly, $2.50-$4.95; Fri. Si Sat. $2.75-$5.50. Matinees, $2.50-$4.50. Blacks toneTheatre, Balbo <fe Michigan.HANDS AROUND IN LOVE: A new mu¬sical comedy based on Arthur Schnitz-ler's drama “La Ronde.” Nightly, 8:30;Fri. & Sat. 8:30 & 11; Sun. 7:30. ClosedMon. Nightly, $2.65; Sat. $2.95. AUertonHotel, 701 N. Michigan. SU 7-4200.NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY DRAMAFESTIVAL: Three plays presented inrepertory. Ben Johnson’s “Volpone.”Jerome Landfield, dir.; July 25. 28, 31& Aug. 6.Jean Giraudoux’ fantasy “The En¬chanted.’* Leslie Hinderyckx, dir. July23. 27. 29 & Aug. 1, 4.T. S. Eliot s classic “Murder in theCathedral.” Robert Schneiderman. dir.July 24, 30 & Aug. 3, 5. Nightly, 8.Nightly. $2.00. Fri. & Sat. $2.50. GardenTheatre, next to Speech School Bldg. (inside in case of rain). 1905 Sheridan,Evanston.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO COURTTHEATRE: Shakespeare’s "Julius Cae¬sar”; James O’Reilly, dir. ChristoperFry's “The Lady’s Not for Burning”;Kenneth Northcott, dir.; July 30-31 SiAug. 1, 5-8, 12-15. Nightly, 8:30. Thurs.,Fri. & Sun. $1.50; Sat. $2.00 (Theseprices do not include a 25c chair rental.)In case of rain, performances are held inMandel Hall, 57th & University. MI 3.0800, ext. 3581.OTHELLO: Starring William Marshall.Nightly, 8:30. Sat. 7 &10:15; Sun. 2:30 &7:30. Closed Mon. Nightly, $3.00. Fri. &Sat. $3.90 Harper Theatre, 5238 S. Har¬per. BU 8-1717.ConcertsRAVINIA FESTIVAL: Chicago SymphonyOrchestra. Sat., July 24 — Pretre, cond.;Van Cliburn, p. Schumann. Sym. No. 4.Brahms; Cone. No. 2; July 27—JosefKrips, cond.; Rudolf Firkusny, p. AnAll-Beethoven Program: Leonore Overt.No. 3. Cone. No. 5; Sym. No. 3. Thurs.,July 29—Krips, cond. Firkusny, p. AnAll.Brahms Program: Academic FestivalCLASSIFIED ADSHELP WANTEDTypist wanted to type 1-3 hours a weeksporadically for Doc Films. No pay, butwill enoy all benefits of regular mem¬bers: free movies, basement facilities,library, etc. Leave note at Doc Films boxin Goodspeed (art dept.) office. Moetrewarding for person interested in film.Subjects needed for group learning ex¬periment on campus from now throughAugust. Good pay. Ex. 3638 or call 752-8374,FOR SALEGerman Books: Goethe — 20 vols. Schil¬ler — 9 vols., published Stutgart 1877.Call RE 4-2371.T.V. 21” — $21, 24" blond Zenith — $70;Duncan Phyfe sofa $69; Apollo babygrand piano, 2 fur-poster beds anddresser, misc. lamps $4 and up. CallRE 4-2371.63 VW G REEN SEDAN FOR SALEMoving overseas. Excellent condition, seat belts, undercoating, extras. Alsonew and used household goods: TV,Hi-Fi, air-conditioner, men’s clothing.Call 324-8223 or see at T. Fry, 5316 Dor¬chester.TUTORINGFrench lessons by native speaker; call324-3519,WANTED TO RENT OR LEASEWANTED; apt. suitable for one; pref.furn.; begin anytime in Sept., pref. by15th. but Oct. 1 if necessary. Call MI3-6501 eves. Overt.; Cone. No. 1; Sym. No. 4. Sat.,July 31—Seiji Ozawa, cond.; Janos Star¬ker, vc. Copland: An Outdoor Overt.Martinon; Cone, (first US. perform¬ance). Tchaikowsky: Sym. No. 4.Nightly, 8:30. Adm. to the park $2 00.Reserved seats at additional charge rang¬ing from $2.00 to $6.00. Tickets: RaviniaFestival Assoc., 22 W. Monroe. Daily,9-5. Closed Sat. & Sun. ST 2-9696. Ra¬vinia Park, Highland Park. 273-3500.GRANT PARK SYMPHONY ORCHES¬TRA CONCERT: Fri.. July 23—Hoffman,cond. Block, p. Program to be an¬nounced. Sat. St Sun., July 24-25—IrwinHoffman, cond.; Itzhak Perlman, v. AnAll-Tchaikowsky Program. Wed,, July28—Hoffman, cond.; Lois Marshall, s.Program to be announced. Fri., July 30—Hoffman, cond. Marshall, s. Program tobe announced. Sat. & Sun., July 31 SiAug. 1—Martin Rich, cond.; Elinor Ross;Richard Verreau; Sherlll Milnes; LuigiVellucci; Louis Sgarro; Bernard Izzo;Grant Park Chorus. Puccini: Opera, Tos-ca. Wed., Aug. 4—Elyakum Shapira. cond.;Charles Treger, v. Mendelssohn: Cone.Other works to be announced. Nightly,8. Free. Grant Park Bandshell, Colum¬bus (Inner Drive at foot of 11th St.)HA 7-5252.ExhibitsART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO: Art ofIsrael, July 23-Aug. 22. Dally, 10-5;Thurs., 10-9:30; Sun. 12-5. Free. Michi¬gan & Adams.NATIONAL DESIGN CENTER: Art Insti¬tute Alumni Summer Watercolor Show.Daily. 9:30.5. Sat. & Sun.. 10:30-5. Ma¬rina City Plaza, 300 N. State.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO: The Renais¬sance Society presents retrospectivepaintings of Olle Baertling: July 23-Aug. 28. Daily, 10-5. Closed Sat. Si Sun.Free. 1010 E. 59th.Complete LineOf Pet AntIAquarium Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012 Cobeauty salonS ExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259-:- TYPEWRITERSFOR SALE OR RENTALWe are equipped to make any type changesyou may require —Languages, Mathematical,Statistical or Medical.Inquire at our Photo andTypewriter CounterThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Today'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN*1995lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 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 TIKI51st & HARPERFood served 11 A.M. to 3 A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-7585Jeffery Theatre1952 E. 71st ST. HY 3-3333NOW PLAYINGEXCLUSIVE SOUTHEASTSIDE SHOWINGBURT UNCASTERINTRAIN 9fA Suspense - Filled War ThrillerSEE DAILY NEWSPAPERS FOR FEATURE TIMES4 • CHICAGO MAROON • July 23, 1965 Sunday, July 25TV: “The Ecumenical Movement," J.Coert Rylaarsdam, professor in thedivinity school, and Norman Golb. ast.professor in the department of orientallanguages and civilizations, discuss"The Ecumenical Movement and Juda¬ism.” WMAQ-TV (Channel 5), 1 pm.RADIO: “From the Midway,” US Sena¬tor Paul H. Douglas and Dr. MorrisFishbein, physician and publisher ofthe Medical World News, debate “Med¬ical Care for the Aged,” WFMF, 7 aril,WAIT, 7:45 pm.RADIO: "The World of the Paperback."John H. Rust, professor In the depart¬ment of pharmacology, discusses RachelCarson's Silent Spring, WFMF, 8:15 am,WAIT, 7:30 pm.RADIO: “Chicago Dialogue,” Philip M.Hauser, professor of sociology, hosts adiscussion of “Chicago’s Culture: LyricOpera of Chicago,” WIND. 7:05 pm.RADIO: “Nightline,” public discussionshow, WBBM, 10 pm.Tuesday, July 27FOLK DANCE: International Housefolk dancing, Ida Noyes Cloister Club,8-10:45 pm.ORGAN RECITAL: Benjamin Hadley,Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 8:30 pm.Wednesday, July 28LECTURE: “Education and CulturalDeprivation in Israel,” M. Smilaneky.chairman of the department of educa¬tion. University of Tel Aviv, Judd 126,7:30 pm.COUNTRY DANCE: Ida Noyes Hall,8 pm.Thursday, July 29LECTURE: “Shakespeare’» Politics," Christopher Norris, university lecturerin history and fellow of King’s College.Cambridge, Social Science 122, 3:30 pm.Friday, July 30LECTURE: “The Present State at His¬torical Studies in Great Britain,"Christopher Morris, university lecturerIn history and fellow of King's College.Cambridge, Social Science 122. 3:30 pm.FOLK DDANCE: Ida Noyes parking lot,7:30 - 12 pm.Sunday, August 1TV: “The Ecumenical Movement," AlvinPitcher, associate professor in the divin¬ity school, and Richard C. Wade, pro¬fessor of American history discuss “TheEcumenical Movement and the SecularWorld.” WMAQ-TV (Channel 5), 1 pm.RADIO: "From the Midway,” BrianAbel-Smith, reader in the departmentof social administration, London Schoolof Business and Political Science, dis¬cusses “The British National HealthService," WFMF. 7 am. WAIT, 7:45 pm.RADIO: “The World of the Paperback,”William H. McNeill, chairman of thedepartment of history, discusses Win¬ston Churchhlll's The Second WorldWar, WFMF, 8:15 am, WAIT, 7:30 pm.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle Sr.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty-Fifth and Woodlawn Ava.LondonTOWNE HOUSESA CO-OP forBetter LivingforMarriedStudentsand FacultyWithin easy distance of the Campus. Excellent city¬wide transportation via bus, 1C, and Expressway.1, 2, 3,-AND 4-SPACI0US BEDROOMSSEVEN MODELS TO CHOOSE FROMNO MONEY DOWNTOTAL MONTHLYPAYMENT INCLUDESPRINCIPAL, INTEREST,TAXES, INSURANCEAND ALLMAINTENANCEYour co-op has: Hotpoint Range, Refrigerator and Disposall •Lovely Custom Kitchen Cabinets • Storms and Screens • Full.Basements • Lavishly Designed Baths • Beautiful Sliding GlassPatio Doors • Ceramic Tile • Extra Large Wardrobe Closets •Full Insulation • Genuine Oak Floors • Lifetime Face Brick aAluminum 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 MLong as You Live in Beautiful London Towne Houses.Hours: Open Daily & Sunday, 12-8 pmSaturday, 12-6 pm. Closed Thursday