hree college cleans appointedDean of the College Wayne C. Booth has appointed the deans of three of the five “collegi¬ate divisions” into which the College will be divided under the Levi plan.Selected were Arthur Heiserman as dean of the humanities college, Ray Koppelman asdean of the biological sciences college, and James Redfield as dean of the new generalstudies college. ’Booth has not as yet named the “The College In the past has THE SECOND requirement isdeans of either the physical scien- been marked by real excitmerit in “first rate administrative ability,’’ces college or the social sciences controversy over educational he said. This is necessary, hecollege. ideas,’’ he stated. “We don’t have noted, because “Chicago is a veryHeiserman, an associate profes- enough of that controversy now.” complex, free-wheeling university,The thiee new deans, Booth even though it is not very large.”Hot wishy-washysphere of educational conflict As part of this ability, the deanswithin the College. must be “skillful at achieving con-BOOTH CALLED the three new sensus without wishy-washy com-deans “paragons,” citing as the promises,” Booth stated.sor of English and College human-ities, has been serving as chair- said, will help revive this atmo-man of the College English de¬partment.KOPPELMAN, an associate pro¬fessor of biochemistry, is current¬ly head of the College biology reason for the long period of timesection, a job equivalent in the required to choose them the highcurrent College structure to his standards that the College has setnew position as dean of the for their selection.He listed two major qualitieswhich the College has looked forbiological sciences college underthe Levi plan.Redfield has the lowest current in appraising candidates for therank of any of the new deans, deanships.holding a place as assistant pro¬fessor in the committee on socialthought. He is well known, how- intellectual criterion‘The first and most importantcriterion,” Booth said, “is intellec-ever. among students for his tucal leadership,teaching ability and was the re- The deans have to be “peoplecipient this year of a Quantrell who would be both themselvesaward for excellence in under- sources of interesting curriculargraduate teaching. ideas and good at stimulatingBooth happy other men,” he stated.“I fell extremely pleased with They also should bo “intellec-the three men we’ve found so far,” tually admirable in their ownBooth told the Maroon. fields,” Booth added. Booth said that the new deanswould have an important part inthe improvement of both the Col¬lege’s general education programand the full four-year programsin their respective area colleges.“While committed to our tradi¬tion of general education,” hesaid, “they will be looking forways to improve it and integrateit into the third and fourth years.”AMONG THE new innovationsin the College that Booth pre¬dicted would come from the Levicollegiate division plan are variantcourses for many of the generaleducation courses, along the line of the present Biology 111-112course.Booth also foresaw the develop¬ment of a number of new pro¬grams of study in the new generalstudies college, as well as thecreation of interesting electivecourses in all the five colleges.Each of tlie collegiate deans,Booth pointed out, will have forthe purpose of aiding him a“strong” administrative commit¬tee “which will include both facul¬ty traditionally associated withthe college and divisional facultywho have not taken part in thepast in college affairs.”Arthur Heiserman, James| named this week.' w, t ' * > ' * : Redfield, and Ray Koppelman, the three Levi plan deansVol. 74—No. 3 The University of Chicago *31 Friday, August 6, 1965Revises Vietnam views“Our group talked with hundreds of people in South Vietnam, from the swank streets ofSaigon to the pitiful refugee villages of the provinces, and nowhere did we find strong senti¬ment for the reunification of North and South Vietnam, a move I advocated at last spring’steach-in,” said Howard Schonin a Maroon interview Tuesday.Schomer, who has just returnedfrom a tour of Southeast Asiawith 15 other clergymen and re¬ligious leaders, stated, ‘The Co-chinese, who make up 80 per centof the population of South Viet¬nam, resent and detest the Tonk¬inese, who form the bulk of thepeople of North Vietnam.”Schomer said that the Viet¬namese are "very sharp people,”distinctive among the many peo¬ples of Southeast Asia.But there are differences amongVietnamese, he declared. TheTonkinese of North Vietnam aremore energetic, aggressive, andSpartan, while the Cochinese ofthe South are more easy-goingand, especially in the cities, morecosmopolitan.The South Vietnamese, SchomerSaid, pride themselves on repre¬senting the best elements of theChinese, Indian, and French cul¬tures. Saigon, he continued, stilllooks like the French colonialtown it once was.“EVEN THE FRENCH "Schom¬er said, “gave regional autonomyto the North and South.” “A deepsource of the unpopularity of thegovernment in Saigon, he con¬tinued, is the people from theNorth have been heading the gov¬ernment of the South. The rulersfrom Diem to Air marshall Kyhave all either come from theNorth or were educated there,he said.Refugees flee North“When Ho Chi Minn was givenVienam north of the 17th paral¬lel, anti-Communist refugees fromthe North crossed over into SouthVietnam,” Schomer stated. “Thesewere an eilte group, as such ref¬ugees generally are, and they in¬cluded many Catholics. It wasn’t!°ng before the newly arrivednortherners shouldered aside theless aggresive southerners and de¬liberately filled minor positions ■, president of the Chicagowith Cochinese incompetents whocould l^e pointed at to justify theascendancy of the northerners.“Northern domination is a deep¬er problem to the South Vietnam¬ese than Communism,” Schomersaid."Yet,” Schomer added, “resent¬ment of the Saigon government ofnortherners does not always meanallegiance to the Vietcong. Italked with many lawyers, doctors,educators, and other such menwho had been active in the re¬sistance to the Japanese and thenthe French and who oppose theSaigon government and its totali¬tarian ways — men who mightsympathize with the Vietcong, ex¬cept for their nausea at thewanton terror.”“The bombing of the Saigonriver restaurant was cold bloodedmurder,” Schomer said. “A smallfire was started on the boat sothat the crowd of diners, mostlyVietnamese, by the way, wouldpanic and flee over the gangplanksto shore. At the moment when themaximum number of people filledthe gangplank, a Vietcong sta¬tioned less than thirty feet awaydetonated a bomb planted underthe gangplank, while watching themen, women, and children he waskilling.”CONTINUING ON the subjectof Vietcong terrorism Schomersaid, “The stories of the villagechief assasinations are true. SouthVietnam is governed much likeFrance is, with provincial and dis¬trict heads as parts of the admin¬istration.”“These regional chiefs were bothgood and bad. Bad administratorswere murdered in public by theVietcong, good administratorswere killed quietly, at night per¬haps. Sometimes the Vietcongwould just hit and run, but oftenthe murdered district chief wouldbe replaced by members of theVietcong, who, like their predecs- Theological Seminary (CTS),sors, have also proved both .goodand bad.’'Schomer said the he “just didn’tknow” how the masses feel aboutthe Vietcong, and that the identityof the Vietcong “is the $64 ques¬tion.” He estimated that the Viet¬cong hard core is only about 30,-000 men, 1 per cent of the popula¬tion, aided by an additional 100,-000 part time guerrillas. Prob¬ably between 60 to 70 per centof the rest of the South Viet¬namese, he added, don’t mindbowing to Vietcong demands andfeel no loyalty for Saigon.Wants peace Force“I revised another notion ofmine,” Schomer said. “I advocatedcomplete withdrawal, but it’s notthat simple. The morrass is soterrible that our best glimmer ofhope is an international peacekeeping force, once negotiationshave begun. I’m afraid it willhave to be a peace force madeup of Africans and Asians, though,because the white man is done forin Southeast Asia.“THE WAR is many things tomany different people,” Schomersaid. “Along Tu Do, the mainstreet of Saigon, it’s boomtown,as war profiteers make moneyoff of free spending AmericanGI’s. The women of South Viet¬nam are also the most beautifulthat side of Stockholm and theyhave no trouble picking up Ameri¬can or government soldiers. Waris no problem in the capital aslong as the pinch isn’t on.”“It isn’t one war,” accordingto Schomer, “but many differentwars in different regions. In manyplaces there is neither sentmientto throw out the Americans orthe Vietcong; it isn’t even thatmature a situation.”Schomer compared Americanescalation of the conflict, par¬ticularly the bombing of NorthVietnam, to travelling a road that(Continued on page six) UC given Ford fundsto study Latin economicsThe Ford Foundation has granted the University $400,000over a five-year period to establish a Center for Latin Ameri¬can Economic Studies within the department of economics.The new center will begin operation in the autumn quarterof 1965 with Arnold C. Harberger, professor and chairman ofthe department of economics, as its first director.In addition to Harberger, the ■■ 1faculty of the center will include is with the National University ofH. Gregg Lewis, professor of Cuyo in Mendoza, Argentina. Theeconomics, Larry A. Sjaastad, as- contract began in 1962 and willsociate professor of economics, run until 1967.and Richard W. Parks, who re¬cently earned a Ph.D. from theUniversity of California and willjoin the department as an assis¬tant professor on October 1.Harberger said that the centerwill have three general objectives:• To help meet Latin America’svital need for a greatly expandedsupply of well-trained professionaleconomists, both in universitiesand in government.• To provide for Latin Ameri¬can graduate students of econom¬ics a curriculum which includesmaterials which are directly rele¬vant to the types of problems thatLatin American economists arelikely to encounter.• To provide a continuing flowof high-quality research on LatinAmerican economic problems byAmerican and Latin Americaneconomists.SPECIFICALLY, Harbergersaid, the Ford Foundation grantwill make possible a year-longseminar for Latin American stu¬dents, a new course on LatinAmerican problems, a new courseon project appraisal, fellowshipsfor Latin American students andothers interested in Latin Ameri¬can problems, faculty research onLatin American problems, andfield work in Latin America.Harberger said the center is anoutgrowth of government-spon¬sored contracts between UC andtwo Latin American universities.From 1956 to 1964, 28 Chileanswere trained at the University un¬der a contract with the CatholicUniversity of Chile in Santiago.About the same number ofArgentines will be trained at UCunder the second contract, whichThis is the last issue ofMaroon for the summerquarter. The Maroon will re¬sume its normal schedule,publishing every Tuesdayand Friday, with special Ori¬entation Week issue Octo¬ber 1. AS A consequence of the twoprograms, between 15 and 20 percent of all Latin Americans nowdoing graduate work in econom¬ics in the United States are study¬ing at the University of Chicago,Harberger said.Under both programs, the Uni¬versity has had field staffs inChile and Argentina. In Chile, thestaff devoted itself to research; inArgentina, the emphasis is onteaching.Harberger has been a memberof the UC faculty since 1953 anda professor since 1959. He wasnamed chairman of the departmentof economics on October 1, 1964.He received his Ph.D. from theUniversity in 1950.|jP~ '?■, '%<■*'■'M wIn an attempt to supply UC §|| students and faculty with more ||information on the changes tobe made in the College underi§ the Levi plan, the Maroon isconducting interviews with each j|p of the new area college deans 1as they are appointed. Starting ||| with this issue of the Maroon, iti which contains the transcript |1 of an interview with Ray Kop- ||i pelman, dean of the new I1 biological sciences college, the ip Maroon will publish these in- §<1 terviews.t mmmmm mmmmmmmmm JHarberger has written exten¬sively in the fields of public fin¬ance, materials policy, economictheory, international trade, eco¬nomic development, and economet¬rics.LEWIS joined the Universityfaculty in 1939 and became a pro¬fessor in 1957. He received hisPh.D. from UC in 1947. His fieldof special interest is the economicsof labor.Sjaastad earned his Ph. D. atthe University in 1961 and joinedits faculty in 1962.Harberger and Lewis haveplayed major roles in the Chileanand Argentine programs, both inChicago and in the field. Sjaastadwas field director of the Argentineprogram from August, 1962, toDecember, 1964.Campbell: integration perplexing problem“Apparently many people think two terms, integrated education and quality education,are synonymous, that only an integrated school can be a good school," stated RonaldCampbell, chairman of the department of education and dean of the graduate school of edu¬cation, in a background report prepared for the June 21 White House Conference on Edu¬cation. Campbell, however, does he said, programs in each of these Mayor Daley, nominal chief ad-areas have most often been or- ministrator of Chicago, is oftenganized as separate bureaucracies, blamed for de facto segregationeach with its own semi-autono- because of his position, Campbellmous policymaking machinery. said. But he can say he was notThe result of such separation of involved in this and other de-not find school problems so clear-cut.In his background paper, en¬titled “School-Community Collabo¬ration in Our Cities,” and in aMaroon interview following theconference, Campbell emphasized governmental bodies, said Camp- cisions, Compbell noted, especiallythree main problems faced by bell, is that “we almost get to the others which directly involve thecities and city schools. point where we have political school board, which historicallyFraqmentcd power irresponsibility, because we have in this country is supposed to beThe first two moblems said 80 many separate governments free of political influence.Campbell!^are*<the>‘ problems'^ol School boardrlu m ».»sponsiDinty, -lemming Horn an almost impossible to get anything groups opposed the appointmentincreasing separation of the ^0^ with them.” of Mrs. Green to the school board.She was appointed, nevertheless,Public not consulted and as a school board member willBecause the governments are decide school policy.powers of government that iscausing this power to becomefragmented and irresponsible.rifW thpdfnnet!ftir Of often supposed to be political and Civil rights groups, Campbelltinnaf civetpm- Tc tho cvcipm in he independent, vitally important and said, sense that the Mayor,ennrerned with the training far-reaching decisions are often through his power of appointment,c ncerned only wi h he a g made with uttle concern for public controls such decisions, but heopinion, Campbell pointed out, be- can claim he does not. The civilcause who can the public blame? rights and other groups are notleft with any effective way toof “literate, right-minded, andeconomically efficient citizens,”or is it also to be “directly con¬cerned with improving all aspects CAMPBELL CITED two cases oressure said Camobell andin Chicago’s history to prove his these frustrations lead to demon¬strations.IN CALLING for greater eol-of living in the community?”URBAN governments, Campbell point. The decision to erect thenoted, have realized that almost Robert Taylor public housingall aspects of life — education, project in one area of State street,welfare, health, housing — can rather than dispersed around the laboration among the variousand should be influenced and im- city, he said, “did more to per- local, state, and federal govern-proved by government. But, and petuate de facto segregation than ment groups, and for more publicthis represents a “notable” and any policy decision by the school control over governmental deci-“major” problem in our cities, board or any other body.’L * * X> sions, Campbell separated the de¬cisions to be made into two types.One type is professional ques¬tions — those in which one “ex¬pects to go to people who knowsomething to get the decisionsmade.”Questions at the “policy or poli-TOWNE HOUSESA CO-OP forBetter LivingforMarriedStudentsand FacultyWithin easy distance of the Campus. Excellent city¬wide transportation via bus, 1C, and Expressway.1, 2, 3, AND 4-SPACIOUS BEDROOMSSEVEN MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM TYPEWRITERSTO 55% OFF*New-Used-Electric-Office-PortableAll mochines (new or used) oreguaranteed for 5 years. We arean authorized ogency for mostmajor typewriter manufacturers.If any machine we sell can bepurchased elsewhere (within BOdays) for less, we will refund thedifference in cash.* Discounts average 37%Discount Typewriters50 E. Chicago Tel. 664-3552 tical” level are “another sort ofdecision” entirely, emphasizedCampbell. “Teachers can tell youwhy they need money, but theycan’t make the decision to raiseand spend it.”Views polarizeIt is at the policy level that civilrights groups and many educatorstend to polarize around differentviews of the role of schools in oursociety, said Campbell. ‘To manyschool people,” he noted, “theoverriding purposes of the schoolare the teaching of literacy andappreciation of American cullureand prepartion for work or forcollege.”MANY PEOPLE in present-dayAmerica, however, including civilrights groups, see the school as apowerful instrument of socialpolicy, he said, and they insist thatsuch power be exercised.“So important is the school seenby civil rights advocates in theachievement of social ends,” addedCampbell, “that we may get theimpression that no attention isbeing paid to the educational func¬tion of the school. In any case, thepolarization around the school asan ‘educational’ agency and as a‘social’ agency is a factor of con¬sequence in most of our cities.”Goals unattainableCampbell emphasized that thegoals of the civil rights groups arenot going to be reached in thenear future. "With all our efforts,”he said, “I see no way at presentby which all the schools of Har¬lem, South Chicago, and Washing¬ton, D. C., can become integratedschools. I do think they can allbecome better schools.”HE STRESSED the fact thateducators still consider educationthe primary goal of the schools. Arespect for learning, he said, and adesire for education are what theNegro needs to ensure access tomiddle-class America society, and the acquisition of tliis desire maytake generations.Talking about the present,Campbell mentioned some prob¬lems faced by present city schoolsystems. “The flight of the middleclass from the city leaves the citylacking in leadership potential,”said Campbell, “not just in educa¬tion, but in other areas.”Action needed“My own prejudice,” notedCampbell, “is that we get betterschools when groups are inter¬ested and active, and don’t justsit back and take what’s giventhem.”THE MAIN problem of cityschools in general, and slum andsegregated schools in particular,Campbell pointed out, is the lackof collaboration on the part ofgovernment agencies. “Somehowthere ought to be a way to bringthese governmental bodies to¬gether,” he said.This will prevent, Campbell de¬clared, the making of decisionsthat adversely affect school sys¬tems and for which the schoolsystems bear the blame bui notthe responsibility.Another tendecy that must bedealt with to prevent mediocrityin slum schools, Campbell said, isthe bureaucratic tendency to playit safe, to treat all schools alike.But slum schools, he declared, arenot like other schools.At present they are worse —dangerous and deadly dull toteachers — but they needn’t be,Compbell stated.“Some of these slum schoolscould become the most excitingplaces in the world, if they couldonly be seen as an educationaland social experiment,” saidCampbell. That he pointed out, isthe real problem of city schoolsystems: to overcome bigness andirresponsibility so that the schoolsmay change society as they havethe opportunity to do.HYDE PARK YMCANewly redecorated student room* available with or without meot plan*.Study lounge, privets TV room, heolth, and physical facilities aMavailable for student use.Call FA 4-5300JAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSSHIRTS — LINENSRepairs Gr Alterations 5 Hr. Service1363 East 53rd PL 2-966210% Student Discount with i.D. 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Doty Ave.646-4411 EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and FacultyDiscountA Panel DiscussionThe Future Of The Welfare State In AmericaProf. RICHARD FLACKS, Asst. Prof, of SociologyLEE WEBB, Former President, Students for aDemocratic Society ,RICHARD ROTHSTEIN, Organizer with the JOINProject for Appalachian Whites.Brent House Sunday, August 8th5540 S. Wood lawn 7;00 P.M.Dinner at Calvert House, 5735 University, at 6:00 P.M. UNIVERSALARMY STORE“The universe in studentwear lor campus andcamping.”Levis - Tennis ShoesAN OUTFIT FROMTOP TO TOE1459 E. 53rd St. FA 4-5856Hours: Open Daily & Sunday, 12-8 pmSaturday, 12-6 pm. Closed Thursday2 • CHICAGO MAROON • August 6, 1965 Important New Books by Campus AuthorsOn the Poet and His Craft: Selected Prose of Theodore RoethkaEdited with an Introduction by Ralph J. Miles, Jr. $3.95The Creative OrganizationEdited with an Introduction by Gary A. Steiner $5.00Context and Meaning in Culturol AnthropologyEdited by Melford E. Spiro $9.95Stormy Petrel: The Life and Work ofMaxim Gorky by Dan Levin $7.95The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. CoBEAUTY SALONS ExpertPermanent WavingandHair Cuttingby Max and Alfred1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302First1 of Moroon dean interviewsKoppleman discusses new role as dean of bio sci college(The following is the essentialtranscript of a Maroon interviewv,ith Ray Koppelman, new deanof the biological sciences college.Koppelman served the past yearas head of the biological sciencessection of the College.)Maroon: What are your feelingsat>out your new appointment?Koppelman: Well, I’ve been doingthis for more than a year now, soit’s not much of a change exceptfor my title.Maroon: How have you found yourwork in the past year as head ofthe biological sciences section ofthe College?Koppelman: Well, it’s a lot ofheadaches—I’ve got a lot of peo¬ple to keep happy, and obviouslyone can’t.Maroon: Why do you think youwere offered the position of deanof the biological .sciences collegeunder the new Levi plan?Koppelman: Well, I was here; Iwas doing it; I was familiar withit to some extent. And, possibly,I can do some of the things thatwe hope will come out of the re¬organization.Maroon: How do you view yournew position?Koppelman: Well, only partly asan administrative one, if this wasthe point of your question. I thinkthat the purpose of these particu¬lar jobs, as far as the disciplinesgo, is mainly educational — to alarger extent than administrative.Maroon: What plans do you havefor the biological sciences college?Koppelman: Only one, very broad¬ly, which is the obvious one. Thefact Is that we’re going to start infrom scratch, and any educationalprogram we come up with In thebiological sciences we hope willnot be conceived out of the base,necessarily, of our traditions or of anything we happen to be do¬ing right now.Maroon: How has Biology 111-112,the general education biologycourse, worked in the immediatepast?Koppelman: Reasonably success¬fully, but I think it could stand agood deal of improvement. It’s acompromise, like any general ed¬ucation course will probably windup to be.Maroon: What Ideas do you havefor changes in College biology?Koppelman: Well, if I talk aboutthem, you have to understand firstof all that they would be personal,and the new set-up charges agroup of interested people withmaking changes. The kind ofchanges I personally think wouldbe desirable would be more in¬volvement of research people insome fashion in the courses—inother words, get them to devotesome of their time in some aspectsof their work, get them to bringthemselves down to the under¬graduate program. I would like tosee, obviously, more research op¬portunity for our own staffMaroon: What are the main prob¬lems with the biology in the Col¬lege today?Koppelman: The main problem isthat of getting very good scientiststo devote any appreciable portionof their time to teaching at theundergraduate levels - at the be¬ginning levels particularly, ratherthan at the departmental or pro¬fessional levels. This is the obviousproblem, and there are a lot offacets to it.Maroon: Why is it so difficult toget people to teach?Koppelman: The point is that itrequires time and effort, providedthat one knows all about the ma¬terial of the course that one’s in¬volved in. Secondly, the fact isthat everybody’s willing to say that biologists, of whatever spe¬cialty, ought to be able to teachthe general biology course, be¬cause it is obviously the founda¬tion for anything further. The sim¬ple fact is that while everybodyagrees that this is so, there arevery few people who are willingto demonstrate to undergraduatesthat the generalist really exists,namely in their own person. It’smuch more comfortable, economi¬cally and professionally, and inmany ways much more rewarding,to be a specialist and pay lip serv¬ice to the generalists.Maroon: How many people will beon the advisory committee in thebiological sciences college?Koppelman: I don’t know, off-handat this time.Maroon: How important do youthink the biological sciences ad¬visory group will be?Koppelman: I can’t speak for theother areas, but the people I knowof who will be involved in the bi¬ology group are top-flight in theirareas. They are accepting the jobbecause they are genuinely inter¬ested, and I think it will work outvery well, And, I might add, Ithink it will work very well be¬cause we have strong divisionalsupport for what we want to do.Maroon: How much divisionalhelp do you think the biologicalscience college will get?Koppelman: I think that theamount of divisional help we getwill be directly related to how im¬aginative we are. There are toomany people in the divisions whoknow that the College exists, andthat’s about the extent of it. Themore we can get across to the di¬vision just what the college is andjust what it is supposed to be ac¬complishing, after we get throughdefining that—the more likely wewill be to get the kind of divi slonal support, both personal andfinancial, that we need.Maroon: What is your philosophyof general education?Koppelman: I think the Collegeis very broadly—and this meansnothing when you say it—reallytrying to turn out people who aregenerally educated and have anappreciation for the work of thespecialists, whether they happento be in one of the specialties weare concerned with directly or not.Maroon: What do you think thepurpose of general education is?Koppelman: What do I think? Ithink that what we mean is thatany field of study which a special¬ist undertakes ought to be relatedin some fashion to all other fieldsof study and human endeavor.Somehow, the job of general edu¬cation is to make the connectionsand the effect of any given areaof human endeavor on other areasmuch more apparent than it is tomost of us.Maroon: Does general educationhelp the biologist?Koppelman: Yes, I think It helpshim, because very few biologistsspend all their waking hours doingbiology. There’s a real problem ingetting across the fact that a lotof the stimulation which a biolo¬gist may bring to his own field ofendeavor may come out of thingswhich occurred to him as randomthoughts about other fields.Maroon: Do you intend lo continuedoing research yourself?Koppelman: I intend to have somegoing on in my lab facilities. Evenif I don’t get too directly involved,I still will be involved with peopledoing things.Maroon: Do you think that UCsgeneral education program has in¬ fluenced the teaching in other col¬leges and universities?Koppelman: I think that it’s hardto say if it’s had any effect onteaching biology. The kind of ef¬fect we have is related to the factthat we supply people, and thepeople go away from here to dotheir jobs with the prejudices thatto a large extent were providedby this institution. This is whereI see the effect: not that someonetries to copy our program, orthinks it’s better — institutionalpride often prevents this, and theywon’t accept a program that lookslike ours—but they may be doingthe same things as a result ofwhat we do.Maroon: What do you think willbe the effect of the new Levi plan?on the College?Koppelman: I think that it will bepossible for things to be done inmuch more reasonable lengths oftime and in much more reasonableways, without a lot of compro¬mise thrown in. The possibilitiesfor experimentation are in shortvery much improved by the newstructure.Maroon: Do you think that thenew Levi divisional college sys¬tem will significantly change dieCollege?Koppelman: Only time can answerthat question, but personally, theanswer is, yes, I think it will. Ithink that we have enough diverg¬ent points of view about what weought to do, how we ought to doit, and so on, so that, just in theprocess of trying to start fromscratch, in a sense, and use thisnext year to determine whatthings we might be able to do andwhich of those would be best to(Continued on page 5)Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient end Around The World.1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 Complete LineOf Pet AndAquarium Suppliesthe cage1352 E. 53rdPL 2-4012 SAMUEL A. BELL*Buy Shell From Bell”SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150 Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty-Fifth and Woodlawn Avo.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent Cr Faculty Discount DO 3-6866CONTACT LENSESPHOTOGRAPHYRemember good times with pictures.Select film from ourstock in every size atour Photo Counter.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.C’KSTIllFAIT!i pr&wetran fwswfcllto qusWidonnez i votre femille eujourd'huldev re lul *tre procurde d'une autrefapon domain. L’aaaurance Sun Lifepeut aartalnement accomplif catt#tteba * votra placa»/fn taht qua raprlsihta'nt local de la SunUfa, puia-le voua visitor 4 un moment devotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood. Jr.. CLUHyde Fork Bank Building. Chicago 15. Id.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hoers 9 to 5 Mondays * FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA£ mutual S9MFAJ4Y COURT THEATRECHRISTOPHER FRY'STHE LADY’SNOT FORBURNING(Directed ByKenneth NorthcottTHURSDAY —SUNDAYThrough Aug. 158:30 p.m.OPENS AUGUST 20thVOLPONEDirected by iJames O'ReillyThurs (Fri. « *150 Sat. * *nooSun. 1STUDENT - FACULTY - STAFF DISCOUNT EXCEPT SAT.Tickets On Sole Doily At Reynolds Club DeskAugust 6( 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3r mSWAP summer mixes urban problems, studiesThe Student Woodlawn Area Project (SWAP) is conduct¬ing a busy program this summer, ranging from preparing5-year olds for school to teaching high school students theIntricacies of big city power politics.“The main philosophy whichpervades all the programs that patterned after Woodlawn playersSWAP runs,” according to Ann represent small homeowners, pub-Cook, founder and co-coordinator lie housing and apartment dwell-of SWAP, “is to help the partici- ers, people unemployed and re¬pants think independently and be ceiving public aid, and the Uni-able to make critical judgements versity of Chicago,and decisions on their own.” In a white residential wal'd,In line with this philosophy, we^ - to - do liberals, professionalthe SWAP summer program in- people, wealthy old families, andeludes a series of summer semi- large apartment dwellers are rep-nars in biology, mathematics, resented.psychology and a group study of ONE OF the players representssome of the problems that face organized crime as a powerfulthe Woodlawn Negro community, interest group,plus a continuation of SWAP’s The bossopoly players meethigh school tutoring program.AS IN the past, SWAP is draw formally once a week to electaldermen and conduct city busi-the players may make secret po¬litical deals among themselves,using the “money” and votes thateach special Interest group Ising much of its teaching staff fol?ml sessfon8’from undergraduate and graduate UC student volunteers.HeadstartSWAP is conducting its "Oper- assigned as part of the game,ation Headstart” pre-school train- Groves servesing program for 60 four and a Gene GroveSi last year’s UChalf and five-year olds under a student Government president,grant from the War on Poverty. has served as a mediator in theThe Headstart program, con- “bossopoly” game by represent-ducted at St. Cyrils Church in jng C0U1>ts and federal gov-Woodlawn, is being run by two ernrnentgraduate student head teachers ^ -Big aty polities” courseand two assistant teachers, both ^ being run by Herb Mach, co-of whom are parents of SWAP coordinator of SWAP.tutees. THE OTHER SWAP summer_ The SWAP course in ‘Big City seminars are more academicallyPolitics, is being given as part orientated. One is a field biologyof its summer seminar program. seminar called “Biology: Explore,The politics seminar attempts to Examine> and Experiment.”show Woodlawn high school stu- It features field trips todents what a politian is and does swamps> forest preserves, andby letting the students actually other natural biological eommuni-play the part of Chicago city poll- fjes under the direction of severalticians m mock political situa- gra(juate students in the biologicaltlc^ _ .. . sciences, a biology teacher from^ PROVIDE a realistic po- tbe UC laboratory school, andlitical atmosphere, SWAP has de- Richard Lewontin, professor ofvelopea a special game called 20ology"*SUteen*playens each represent- " . probabilitysixteen players, eacn repi esent- Another seminar named “Rea-ing a Chicago special interest soni and Game Plaing.. is agroup take part in the game. ]argefy theoretical course in ele-The players are organized in sets ment/ry probabilityi statics, andChicago eddeS patteJnsm,n'°r ,ogic' 11 is t*u*h' * a ^radua,eLmcago residenual patterns. student in statistics and a mem-In the bossopoly Negro ward, ber of the MAT (master of artsin teaching) program.SWAP is also conducting a sum¬mer seminar in the humanities.The humanities group meets fourdays a week, devoting one dayeach to literature, music, and art,with one day set aside for an openart studio workshop at Lexing¬ton Hall.THE STUDENTS choose whatspecific material they will studyin each area of the humanities.The course is taught by severalundergraduate, graduate, andMAT students.A special feature in the seminarprogram is a course on “ThePsychology of Teenagers” taughtby a practicing psychiatrist. Theseminar examines family relation¬ships and the feelings of teen¬agers.Approximately 75 Woodlawnhigh school students are involvedin the total of five SWAP sum¬mer seminars. The UC lab schoolprovides the classrooms in whichthe seminars are taught.Three topicsSWAP is conducting a specialsummer project aimed at givingWoodlawn students a chance tostudy three topics of major im¬portance to Woodlawn and otherNegro ghettoes: open occupancy,public aid, and poverty.THE PROJECT, Summer proj¬ect 2, is a successor to a similarSWAP program held last summer.The project’s 40 participants arespending three weeks of study oneach of the topics under the di¬rection of Woodlawn and UCSWAP student leaders.Miss Cook said that SummerProject 2 gives the students “achance to find out informationabout issues in wheih they arereally involved.”Having this information, shesaid, enables them “to cope bet¬ter with these situations.”“Maybe at some point,” sheadded,” the kids will see possiblesolutions to these problems."Question officialsThe project will also serve toget the participants in the habit SWAP seminar students explore art in Lexington studiommmmmYOUNGFOLKSHOWfeaturingGeorgia Sea IslandSingersKerner, Ray andGloverDave Van RonkJim Kweskin JugBandPhil OchsLen H. Chandler, Jr.Tom RushJonathan, Davidand ElbertAire Crown TheatreMcCormick PlaceFriday, August 20at 7:30 P.M.Tickets: $4.50, $3.50,$2.50 available at allSears Stores, The Folk¬lore Center and at theMcCormick Place BoxOffice. 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 cordsTIE MUST l*l!UI'ITAItl.i; TRIP YOU CANEVER MAKE IS Tt YUUR »ATSIIN HEALERIt’s loaded with luxuryfeatures that come asstandard equipment ... easy on the pocket-book when you buy it;so economical todrive!ONLY $1,860 LISTDATSUN “Four-Ten” 4-dr. Station WagonChicagoland DATSUNSALES - SERVICE - PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AVE. in Beverly HillsChicago, Illinois 60620 Phone 239-3770 of speaking to people in authority.This way, Miss Cook said, thestudents won’t be overawed bypublic officials and will thus beable to question them.SUMMER Project 2 is makinguse of adult experts in its studyprogram. To start off its researchinto the problem of open occu¬pancy, the project sponsored adebate in which Fifth Ward Aider-man Leon Despres argued in favorof open housing against a Baptistminister from Des Plaines, Ill.SWAP is entering a new phaseof activity this summer with theformation of a college committee.The group plans to write a 50-pagemanual for Woodlawn studentscalled “How to Get into Collegeand How to Pay for It.”The largest summer programrun by SWAP in terms of thenumber of participants involvedcontinues to be its tutoring pro¬gram which is SWAP’s major ac¬tivity during the regular schooolyear.NEARLY 300 Woodlawn highschool students are currently be¬ing helped in their studies and inbasic reading skills by UC SWAPstudent tutors.Fall programSWAP already is planning a fullprogram for the coming fall quar¬ter. Among the new programsenvisoned, according to MissCook, is a “vastly expanded coun¬seling program” for SWAP tutees.SWAP hopes to be able to coun¬sel every high school student thatit tutors, a proposition that “es¬sentially means individually coun¬seling 400 teenagers,” Miss Cooksaid. For this program, SWAPplans to train 25 volunteer coun¬selors.Also scheduled is a programof expanded work with the tutorswhich will include workshops andguest speakers.SWAP’s Tutee Advisory BoardTIKI 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 8 A.M.Kitchen closed Wed.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.LI 8-7585 (TAD), a group of SWAP tuteesthat advises SWAP on its activi¬ties plans to actively raise moneyfor SWAP this fall. Already TADhas raised $150 through a talentshow it ran.SWAP HOPES to start In thefall a special “high school” tutor¬ing program in which high schoolstudents, many of them SWAPtutees, will tutor elementaryschool children from Woodlawn.Continue HeadstartAs part of its effort to reachlower age groups, SWAP wouldlike to continue a pre-school pro¬gram similar to the summer’sOperation Headstart. The federalgovernment grant for SWAP’sHeadstart program, however, isonly for the summer.The present Headstart projecthas placed emphasis on participa¬tion by parents within the Wood¬lawn community. SWAP is hopingthat in the fall these parents willbe ready to play a major part inany pre-school program.BOOKSPAPERBACKSWATCH REPAIRING14K PIERCEDEARRINGSChchOh«h«hMh>THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75001540 E. 55 St.10 % Student DiscountPIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhair stylists at5242 Hyde Park Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710 % Student DiscountA Complete Source ofARTISTS’ MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES ' EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESPICTURE FRAMINGMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111COSMETICSAchieve the softer more naturallook with Revlons New Brow.Beautiful Brush On Eye Shodowond Moon Drops LipstickSee it at HieThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • August 6, 1965Greater communicationNew look for British U'sby Rita DershowitzCollegiate Press Service“Alienation” and “bureaucracy” are words which have re¬cently become associated with harsh criticism of the universitycampus. They have been used to describe the results of over¬crowding, increasing specialization, lack of communication,and the age of automation in high- ——— -er education. And those who have legiate life,” the EFL report de-applied the words have tended to dares,view these phenomena as uniquely Quality foodAmerican. One secondary effect of thisThere is evidence, however, that unique British housing pattern isthe problems of rapidly expanding a rise in the quality of food servedcampuses are not limited to the in the dining rooms. Students areUnited States. An enrollment eri- permitted to eat where they choose,sis comparable to ours is also oe- and naturally favor the hall withcurring In Europe; and at least the best food. This results in corn-one country, Britain, is meeting petition among the chefs, and thethe crisis with an imaginative, quality of food has risen accord-ccntrally-planned expansion pro- ingly.gram that is designed to overcome The Unlversity of Essex is onethe sense of anonymity among o£ lhe six new universities inBritain. It expresses many of thefeatures which will mark universi-university expansion program cm- ty planning for Britain in the fu-phasizes a “continuous teaching ture.environment,” according to a re- ESSEX WAS built in the beliefport just published by the Edura- that studies and curriculum crosstional Facilities Laboratories. The administrative boundaries, that thereport, “The New Campus in Brit- split between teaching and socialain: Ideas of Consequence for the activities is arbitrary and shouldUnited States,” indicates that the not be perpetuated; that, in theexjieriment In combined dormitory- words of its vice-chancellor, “theclassroom - library buxine's which university is a community wherethe University of California is the student is guided in the firstplanning at San Diego and Santa stage of a lifelong task of self-ed-Cruz has been Implemented na- ucation; a community whose con- New dean discusses biology, gen edstudents in a large university.THE FOUR-YEAR old Britishtionally in Britain.Combined facilities corn is not just with the pursuitof learning but with the fulfillmentTo meet their enrollment crisis, of lives.’the British are creating six new Housing at Essex will take theuniversities, raising other schools form of 14-story tower buildingsto university status, and adding within five minutes’ walk of theto the enrollment capacity of ex- academic center. Each floor willisting universities. New facilities contain a 13-room flat, with serv-are being built to combine living, ioe and kitchen facilities.learning, and social activities forboth students and faculty. The towers will contain bedroom¬sitting rooms for residents andHousing patterns for the British ^ for nonresident stu-campuses represent a radical do- d*nts- housing pattern is anparture from the traditional Amer- attempt to encourage the studentsican dormitory scheme. The basic J° u^,the university facilities un¬social unit is a friendship group ensively and to avoid barriers be¬ef 12 to 14 students, each having tween those who live on campushis own study-bedroom, and each ^ose who must reside 0,1sharing a small kitchen for break¬fast and snacks and a commonroom. campus.ALTHOUGH the United Statesfaces much larger numbers of stu-^ , dents seeking college entrance thanTHESE BASIC units are com- does Biitain, the rate of increasebined into halls of up to 500 stu- expected for the next decade isdents. Each hall contains a dining f^mparable for the two countries,room and special interest rooms huge university campus is aswhich support theater, sports, and inevitable for the British student]K)litical organizations. as £or American counterpart.The double student bedroom, the j3Ut British expansion programtraditional social unit in the United facilitates small social groupsStates, “may be an anachronism, within the larger institution, a wayperhaps unduly prolonging the o£ dealing with depersonalizationweaning period from home to col- 1hat may weU ^ applicable to the (Continued from page three)try, that we will have some thingscome out which will look tremen¬dously different from what we’vedone in the past.Maroon: Do you think that therecent great advances in molec¬ular biology will influence theteaching of biology in the biologi¬cal sciences college?Koppelnian: I think that “molec¬ular biology” is a gimmick kindof word. I’m a biochemist, and Ithink that you have to relate theactivities of an organism back tobasic chemistry and physics. Thishas always been true, but we hap¬pen to be in a situation now wherewe can exploit it. If what you’reasking me is “Do you think you'llbe concentrating on doing thatkind of thing?”and not worryingabout the fact that people live ina world, my answer would be no.We may tend more in the otherdirection in many areas where itseems pertinent to do it. In otherwords, behavior is a major areaof biology which we’re only start¬ing to tackle on a molecular basis.Maroon: What do you think aboutthe laboratory sessions in the gen¬eral education biology course?Koppelnuui: I think they’re abso¬lutely essential, and to some ex¬tent at least unsatisfactory atpresent, for a number of reasons.If I had my choice, they’d be quitea bit different, and I know I speakfor just about everybody on thestaff. I know we don’t have exact¬ly the same ideas on what ought tobe done, but we know that whatwe are doing is a far cry fromwhat ought to be done and fromwhat we think should be done.Maroon: What are the presentproblems of the College biologysection?Koppelnian: Well, obviously wesuffer from physical space limita¬tions, inadequate storage, inade¬quate instrumentation in someways, and truthfully, in someToday'sAssignment1965COMET2-DOOR SEDAN*1995Lake Park Motors6035 S. COTTAGE GROVEHY 3-3445Sales - Service - PartsLINCOLN - MERCURYCONTINENTAL American campus scene. TAhSAM-\fcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYM A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062RANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open Evenings — Billie Tregonsa, ManageressJeffery Theatre1952 E. 71st ST. HY 3-3333Now PloyingRichard ChamberlainandYvette Mimeuxin>99“JOY IN THESATURDAY, AUGUST 14 — 7:30on our stageTHE DAVE CLARK FIVEbeing interviewed by CLARK WEBERAll Tickets $1.25Now on Sale ot the Box Office ways, inadequate imagination andthought on the problemMaroon: How do you think thenew college structure will affectthe full four-year College biologyprogram?Koppelnian: I think that it willproduce a major change, becausethe bias of the people Involvedis that there ought to be a biologyopinion as to the tenor of the peo¬ple involved. Rather than havinga whole slew of highly individual¬ized programs, biologists acrossthe country are generally comingto agree that there is a core ofbiology beyond what the generaleducation course would provide,and that this has to be present—and then one builds the specializa¬tion on top of this.Maroon: Provost Levi suggestedas part of his original plana fourth-year seminar for the stu¬dents in each college. Do you plansuch a seminar for the biologicalsciences college?Koppelman: I think it’s a verygood idea, and I think we’re goingto have it.Maroon: Would this seminar coverthe entire range of the biologicalsciences?Koppelman: I think that the topicsthat would be chosen would be,very broadly speaking, interdisci¬ plinary. I would hope that the peo¬ple who carry it out with a groupof students would be representa¬tive of different disciplines them¬selves and that it would not nec¬essarily be restricted to a biologyseminar, or a soc seminar, or some¬thing like that. It would reallybe a general education seminar inthe full sence of the word.Maroon: Do you have any finalremarks that you would like tomake about the biological sciencescollege?Koppelman: One thing that shouldbe emphasized more is somethingtiiat I believe and most of my col¬leagues hope—that a much greaterpercentage of the university fac¬ulty becomes somehow involvedwith the new programs in under¬graduate education. I have heardone kind of complaint in a thou¬sand different forms—that all thegreat people are here, but wedon’t hear them, and it’s largelyour own fault, or it’s largely yourfault because you don’t make themavailable, and so on. I think thatjust hearing one of the great peo¬ple is not quite enough. I hopewe’ll have mechanisms wherebythey’ll really be involved in theteaching of undergraduates—thatis to the extent that our needs andtheir time permits. ^You Cannot Buy a:Griffith, Turner, Morgan,Saab, Humber, Sunbeam,HillmanOr a Black Label Bentleyfrom us. But we service them, maintain them.prepare them for racing, repair them afterracing.For fine quality professional auto carecontact the One, the Only, the Original!HYDE PARK AUTO SERVICEJIM HARTMAN7646 Stony Island Ave. RE 4-6393FINAL CLEARANCELight Weight SuitsSport Coats & Trousers20% ReductionsonWalk Shorts 6c.Swim WearTHE STORE FOR MENSbML"*Stow# anil (Siam jut 0in the Net© Hyde Pnrh Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th Si. Phone 752-8100August 6, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Schomer tells escalation peril Lady an unusual play(Continued from page one'topples off of a cliff. “And wewon’t know when we’ve reachedthe point of no return,” he said.So far, Schomer declared, NorthVietnam has really stayed in thebackground as far as aiding theVietcong. “But,” he continued.”there are terrible dangers ifNorth Vietnam decides to moveits formidable army into theSouth.”There would be terrible pressure,Schomer stated, to send a massiveAmerican land army to SouthVietnam, and this in turn wouldbe sure to provoke China. Hesaid, however, that It would bephysically impossible for theChinese to send their huge armiesinto Vietnam.There is only the remnants ofa single French railway northof Hanoi, Schomer noted, andour planes have destroyed mostof that. This would leave theChinese a single alternative—re¬sponding by air with nuclearweapons.The Chinese may be preparedto do desperate things, Schomerdeclared, and the Pentagon wouldprobably find an overt act byChina more than ample excusefor bombing Chinese nuclear facili¬ ties. If that happens, he said, theSoviet Union must come to China’sdefense or forever relinquish theleadership of the Socialist camp.Negotiate with VietcongSCHOMER SAID that the Pres¬ident should agree to talk withthe Vietcong. He stressed thatthe Vietcong like the people ofSouth Vietnam, is separate fromNorth Vietnam."They are grateful for aid, butnot eager for integration of thetwo countries,” Schomer stated.A neutral representing the peo¬ple of South Vietnam would havea chance of beating Ho Chi Minhin national elections, he said.“The people of South Vietnam are not likely to be comfortablewith Communism. I would encour¬age a government like the neutral¬ist government of Cambodia, ex¬cluding foreign domination andincluding elements of the Viet¬cong,” he declared,hope for a deadlock peace,” hesaid.“The present course of Ameri¬can policy—troop escalation andair attacks on North Vietnam—can only lead to a runaway war,”Schomer said. He compared theAmerican forces now in Vietnamto members of a beleaguered gar¬rison. “We must at least try tonegotiate with the Vietcong andhope for a deadlocked peace,” hesuggested. THE LADY’S NOT FOR BURNINGby Christopher FryRirhard Tom KeenerAlizon Eliot Susan HorowitzThomas Mendip ... Victor RostowNicholas Devize Andrew HarrisMargaret Devize Jane McDonoughHumphrey Devize Steven WeilHebble Tyson Jerome LoebJennet Jourdemayne Eleanor StuartThe Chaplain Richard EnoEdward Tappercoom Donald SwantonMatthew Skipps Arthur GeffenDirected by Kenneth NorthcottUC doctor elected to postDr. M. Edward Davis, chairmanof the department of obstetricsand gynecology and chief of serv¬ice of the Chicago Lying-in Hos¬pital of the University of Chicago,has been elected president of theAmerican Association of PlannedParenthood Physicians (AAPPP).The AAPPP represents morethan 200 physicians engaged inmedical services in planned parent¬hood centers in 138 cities, servingmore than 250,000 patients.Calendar of EventsSaturday, August 7HIM Tisha B ar (special fast day)services, Hillel House, 5715 Woodla wn,8 30 pm.Sunday, August 8RADIO: “From the Midway.” G. Mor-ria Carstairs, professor in the depart¬ment of psychiatry, University of Edin¬burgh, talks about “The Practice ofPsychiatry under Socialized Medicine,”WFMF, 7 am, WAIT, 7:45 pm.RADIO: “The World of the Paperback.”Edward Rosenheim, Jr., profeasor ofEnglish, talks about Gulliver's Travel*,by Jonathan Swift, WFMF, 8:15 am,WAIT, 7:30 pm.RADIO: “Chicago Dialogue.” a discus¬sion of the “Chicago School” of archi¬tecture, WIND, 7:05 pm.RADIO: “Nightline,” public discussionshow, WBBM, 10 pm.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutuolLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle Sr.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 Tuesday, August 10LECTURE: "Shakespeare’s Tragic Recon¬ciliations.'' Fredson Bowers, chairmanof the English department, Universityof Virginia, Classics 10, I pm.ORGAN RECITAL: William MacOowan,Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 8:30 pinFOLK DANCE: International House folkdancing, Ida Noyes Cloister Club, 8-10:45 pm.Wednesday, August 11COUNTRY DANCE: Ida Noyes Hall,8 pm.Friday, August 13FOLK DANCE: Ida Noyes parking lot,7:30-12 pmSunday, August 15RADIO: “From the Midway," Dr. GeorgeBaehr, chairman of the public healthcouncil, State of New York, presents atalk on “Medical Care: Old Goals andNew Horizons,” WFMF, 7 am, WAIT,7:45 pm.RADIO: "The World of the Paperback.”Philip M Hauser, director of the popu¬lation research training center, reviewsPopulation: The Vital Revolution, edit¬ed by Ronald Freedman, WFMF, 8:15am. WAIT, 7:30 pm.RADIO: “Chicago Dialogue,” a discus¬sion of literature in Chicago, WIND,7:05 pmRADIO: “Nightline,” public discussionshow, WBBM, 10 pm.the One, the Only-the Originalforeign car hospital 4 crimehome of team winkauthorized BMC sales and service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113FVTTTVTTVTTVVWfVTTVVVTVTTTtWVVTVTVVTTVVTTTTTVV► IN A HURRY?RUSH SERVICEAVAILABLE WHENNEEDED.JhsL yyicvc fi/wolc Qo.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERS"Unexcelled Quality Since 7977”Phones: Ml 3-7447 1013-17 East 61st St.HY 3-6868 Across from B-J Ct.Serving Campus since 19176 • CHICAGO MAROON • August 6, 1965 I In The Lady’s Not ForBurning, now at Court Thea¬tre, we are entertained and,indeed, quite pleasantly di¬verted all evening by thespectacle of ten or so excellentactors standing on stage talk¬ing utter nonsense at eachother. If you are moralisticenough to think three hoursof nonsense a waste of time, youshould stay away, and I feel verysorry for you. This play is meantonly for those who have no seri¬ous objection to hearing somefairly important ideas and themestraduced if not actually raped.Mr. Fry’s play, set in time atthe turn of the fifteenth and intone at the turn of the twentiethcentury, is about a disgruntledcynic, Thomas Mendip, whosehatred of the world is virulentenough to make him wish to leaveit— at a rope’s end. To this end,he petitions the village mayorMr. Tyson, who forces him toclaim first that he is the murdererof the local rag-an-bone man andthen that he is the Father of Lieshimself—all in order to get thetown to arrange for his quietus.To his great chagrin, Tyson isconsiderably more willing to exe¬cute one Jennet Jourdemayne (ayoung heiress) for malignantlyhaving turned said rag-an-bonemerchant into a cocker-spaniel.During the course of the threehours of poetic rot which follows,Medip is converted from hisdeath-wish to the conviction thatlove makes life worth living again,and the matter-of-fact Jennet be¬comes an admirer of the poeticmetaphor she has been speakingall along. The lady is not burnt,and the unusually suicidal cynicdoes nothing more than what allcynics do about the world they sodespise—not depart it, but merelyrail at it. A true cynic (Mr. FreyLs not such) might properly feela bit cheated.MR. FRY HAS written one ofthe most unashamedly stagy playsever, and Mr. Northcott, the di¬rector, has to our good fortunetaken advantage of every cheekymoment of it. He has filled thestage with poses and posturing,and with a glamor that only Mr.Fry’s specious rhetoric can con¬fer. It is a thoroughly gifted andamazingly sympathetic bit ofwork. One can only shudder atthe thought of what a die-hardHlllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHI SCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS |offers( BRAIDED HEAVY WOOL RUGS || compatible with Contemporary or Traditional ]1 Furnishings. Beautiful Color Combinations — || A Great Buy!? || 4x6 —$19.95 || 6 x 9 — $44.00 |1 9 x 12 — $69.00 I2 =I And THANKS II || The University Community i| for its Patronage 1Enjoy the rest of the summer.| 1538 E. 53 St. NO 7-4040 |1 11 A.M. to 10 P.M. Daily-Sunday Noon to 6 P.M. |Dr. Davis was recently honoredfor 40 years of service to the Chi¬cago Lying-in Hospital. He joinedthe hospital in 1925 as a residentobstetrician to work and studyunder Dr. Joseph Bolivar DeLee,founder of the hospital and apioneer in obstetrics.In 1947, Dr. Davis was appointedthe first Joseph Bolivar DeLeeProfessor in Obstetrics and Gyne¬cology. This was endowed in Dr.DeLee’s memory by the Mothers’Aid of Chicago Lying-In.Dr. Davis is a native of Chey¬enne, Wyoming. He received aBS degree from UC in 1920 andan MD degree from Rush MedicalCollege in 1922.He was appointed chairman ofthe department of obstetrics andgynecology in UC school of medi¬cine in 1954. Also that year he wasnamed chief of service at Lying-inHospital.Free x-raysFree chest x-rays will be avail¬able to Hyde Park residents inmobile x-ray units from Monday,August 16, to Friday, August 20.The corner of 53 st. and LakePark ave., will be a focal pointfor a three-day x-ray campaignfrom August 16 through August18. From the 1,766 persons x-rayedat this location in 1964, suspicioussigns of chest disorder, includingtuberculosis and heart disease,were sighted on 28 of the filmstaken.On August 19 a unit will locateat the corner of 55 st. and LakePark ave. This corner drew 971persons last year, of which 39showed signs of chest diseases.On August 20 a mobile chestX-ray unit will be present at thecorner of 53 st. and Kimbark ave.,where 488 persons received freeX-ray service in 1964. Stanislavskian director wouldhave made of this tit-bit of elegantmish-mash.The cast does an undeniablyprofessional job most of the time;they are far and away the bestensemble I have yet seen atCourt. My speculation is that thiswas inevitable, since the “char¬acter” parts are nearly alwaysbetter filled at Court than the“straight” parts, and since, Lordknows, Fry’s play hasn’t a“straight” part in it.Top honors go to the lead ac¬tors Victor Rostow and EleanorStuart, despite the fact that bothof them talk much too fast, swall¬owing enough lines to choke anynormal human being. They areunusually attractive couple, andtheir verbal duels are responsiblefor much of the play’s glamour.EACH OF THE minor char¬acters is certainly worthy a para¬graph to themselves, but spacerestricts their mention to a sen¬tence or so. My favorite, for noparticular reason, was Jane Mc¬Donough, who turns in a perform¬ance as the fourteenth centuryJewish mother which ls In everyway as stunning as her portrayalof the nurse in last year’s Romeoand Juliet. Steven Weil was ex¬cellent as her leering, lecherousolder son, as was Andrew Harris,who played the Tony Lumpkin-esque younger son. Dick Eno man¬aged to bring down the houseseveral times with his quiet por¬trayal of the bumbling, music-loving man of God.Tom Keener and Sue Horowitzwere pleasant to watch as twonaive young lovers: Keener is bet¬ter as the clerk than he was asCassius a few weeks ago, andMiss Horowitz gives a deliciousdramatic adaptation of Gains¬borough’s “Pinky.” Jerome Loebwas delightful as Mayor Tyson,a one-man bureaucracy; DonaldSwanton—how unfortunate it isthat he has been sterotyped forpompous roles—was up to hisusual standard as Judge Tapper¬coom; Arthur Geffen was appro¬priately hilarious and disgustingas Skipps the rag-and-bone man.Perhaps I show myself some¬thing of a synic myself if I stateat this point that, despite thefun which precedes It, there issomething mildly disconcerting inthe way the hero and heroine walkbravely off into the dawn at theplay’s end. Here the dishonestywith which Fry uses ideas marshis effect: how can we squarethis image of love triumphantwith Mendip’s long speeches, theliveliest and most rhapsodic inthe play, which emphatically denythe worth of life itself?David H. Richter"BUDGETWISE"AAA Approved: 24-hourSwitchboard.Maid Service: each roomwith own bath.Special student rates:$180.00/qtr.Special daily, weekly andmonthly rates.BROADVIEW HOTEL5540 Hyde Park Bird.FA 4-8800UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“« strong bank"NEW CAR LOANSSA oo per hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C.Hl!l||||||||||||||||||lllimillll!!!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIII!ltl!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll|||||IEHews MuseA journalist's summerby Bruce Freed(Bruce Freed writes the Maroon's “News Muse” column duringthe regular schqol year.)Composing a column while on vacation Is a tedious task,especially when one has vowed to avoid his winter work asmuch as humanly possible.But on my vacation, though I am managing to squeeze insome relaxations, I have done the ,opposite of most vacationers by assignment from the city deskdelving more deeply into my t0 come back with a story,school year avocation—journalism. What do you do? Certainly theFar from shunning it, I am *lve ^s who, what, when, where,working as a reporter for the why—only help to a certain de-Worcester, Mass., Evening Gazette, But there’s so much moremedium-sizer daily in a central ,at can he explored. How did hisMassachusetts industrial city. wife react when told of the dis-ic routine. Covering the policebeat, exploring such feature pos¬sibilities as the high price of poNewspaper work is a fresh and eovery? What did his friends say?exciting change from the academ- An( so on-Or let’s say you hear of fourboys who claim they saw a UFO(unidentified flying object).What’statoes or why it didn’t rain in first, start with old clips in theJuly, polling four prominent local newspaper morgue on past sight-art critics and scholars on what ings. But that’s only the beginning,they consider to be the five most THE HUMAN side is alwaysbeautiful buildings in Worcester, present. What were the boys doingor just reporting the daily city when they saw the saucer? Werenews, all add new dimensions and they telling ghost stories? How dothe parents feel about their sons’experiences.SOME OF the news is fascinat- encounter?ing; some of it is banal. But it’s The routine that should be fol-news and must be reported if a lowed can be learned, but afternewspaper is to fulfill Its obliga- that, the reporter must improvisetion to keep the public informed, and be his own pathfinder.And with the pmper attitude, a These are just a few of my re¬little imagination or Initiative can flections midway through my sum-transform the routine bit Into an mer work-vacation. Journalism isinteresting, if not exciting, feature.Consider this: a compositor dis- a n occasionally misunderstoodprofession and discipline, some-covers an original Currier and what like the wayward girl. WhenIves print beneath a sentimental seen closeup, it becomes much lesspicture of four kittens. You get romantic, but much more human.ID ADSNOTICETHE FUTURE OF THE WELFARESTATE IN AMERICA, a panel discussionwith Flacks, Webb and Rothstein. BrentHouse, 5540 S. Woodlawn, Sunday, Aug.8 at 7 pm.WANTED Someone to drive VW to Los AngelesAugust 23 to Sept. 6. Call 752-2191.ROOMMATE WANTEDFemale Graduate Student needs room¬mate for 3-room apartment (separatebedrooms) $42.50 plus utilities. MI 3-0800, ext. 4303 9-5, 667-8006 evenings.The Maroon needs a secretary for nextyear. Light typing, phone answering,general detail work. Hours are flexible,20-30 per week. Must be steady andreliable. Pay Is good. Call Maroon Busi¬ness Manager at ext. 3265 days or caU752-4367 and ask for Mike. FOR SALEBECKER AM-FM car radio. Fabulousnew model. Cost $250; 6ell $125. CaUDO 3-4300, ext. 410.MG-TD 1952 Mark 2 — Excellent Condi¬tion. Call HY 3-2424. HU 3-4500.JOBS FOR TEENS: Supervised workproject. lawn care, wall and floor wash¬ing, Inside windows, light painting.Light moving, (books and boxes). BU 8-8343. Mon.-Sat.Subjects needed for group learning ex¬periment on campus from now throughAugust. Good pay. Ex. 3638 or call 752-8374.WANTED: 1 female looking for worth¬while relationship. It would be nice ifshe read "The Realist" and liked theWeavers; obviously she must be secureenough to answer this ad. Send Repliesto Maroon, Box 516.RIDERS to N.Y. or Wash . D C. Leaveabout 8/13; return 8/20. Schedule flexi¬ble. Share expenses. Call Mike at 752-4367 evenings. 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.APARTMENT wanted for 1. ConditionImmaterial. Tenant will decorate forlow rent. Unfurnished preferred. Canoccupy Sept. 1, later if necessary. CallMike at 752-4367 evenings.FOR RENTLARGE ROOMS — 2 baths, naturalood burning fireplace, wall-to-wall.rpeting. Suitable for business or pro-‘ssional people. Near I.C., C.T.A.,lopping center, lake, park. Garage,0 extra. MU 4-8222.SERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdHARPERLIQUOR STORE1514 E. StreetFull line of imported and domesticwines, liquors and beer ot lowestprices.FREE DELIVERYPHONEFA 4=!l”■ ^ — 7699HY 3-6800,oronaPORTRAITS1312 E. 53rd684-7424PassportPhotos THFFREr SH°PNO 7-106011:30 to 6. 7:30 to 10 Mon.-Fri.11:30 to 6, Saturday Summer enrollment figures releasedGraduate students greatly out¬number undergraduates at theUniversity this summer, accord¬ing to figures released by theregistrar’s office.Only 280 undergraduate stu¬dents are enrolled at UC duringthe summer quarter, while thegraduate student population is1752. This compares with an en¬rollment during the regular aca¬demic year of approximately 2400undergraduates and 4600 gradu¬ates.The summer graduates and un¬dergraduates together with an¬other 510 students, most of whom are taking special courses in edu¬cation or the social sciences, makeup a total summer enrollment onthe quadrangles of 2542.At UC’s downtown branch, 552people are enrolled in the down¬town business program and 305in the extension division, raisingthe total University enrollment onand off campus to 3399.In the graduate divisions onthe quadrangles, 542 of the sum¬mer students are in the social sci¬ences, 361 in the physical sciences,251 in the humanities, and 201in the biological sciences.In the professional schools, 190 graduate students are registeredin the business school, 105 in t heschool of education, 58 In the li¬brary school, and 2 in the lawschool.Eighty-four per cent of thosein the physical sciences are work¬ing for doctorate degrees, while80 per cent are doing so in thebiological sciences.In the social sciences 55 per centof the students are working fordoctorates, as are 33 per cent ofthose in the humanities.Of the undergraduate students,18 per cent are not working lor adegree at UC.Culture CalendarArt Exhibits and ShowsART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO: Art ofIsrael exhibition: thru Aug. 22. StuartDavis Memorial: thru Aug. 29. DailyIP'S: Thurs. 10-9:30; Sun. 12-5. Free!RENAISSANCE SOCIETY:. Baerting,retrospective exhibition of paintings:thr,u„Aug- 21 • Daily. 10-5; Closed Thurs.and Sat. Univ. of Chicago, 1010 E. 59thGOLD COAST ART FAIR 1965: Aug. 6-8from 11-8:30. Free. On Rush street, be¬tween Cedar and Chicago.OLD ORCHARD ART FESTIVAL: Worksin all media by more than 150 artists.Aug. 28-29 from 10-6. Free. Old OrchardShopping Plaza, Skokie.RAVINIA FESTIVAL TENTH ANNUALAJJT JEXHIBITION: Pop, op and Kineticart. Exhibit will be open every concertevening and afternoon beginning anhour and a half before the performance.Free with admission to the park. CasinoBldg., Ravinia Park, Highland Park.SECOND ANNUAL ANDERSONVILLEUSA ART FAIR: Aug. 14-15 from 11-8:30.Free. Clark street, north and south ofFooter.ConcertsGRANT PARK SYMPHONY ORCHES¬TRA CONCERTS: Sat. and Sun., Aug.7-8 — Martin Rich cond. Beverly Bowerand Mary Beth Peil, s’s; Helen Vanni,All shows program highlighted by ex¬cerpts from Der Rosenkovalier. Wed.,Aug. 11 — Irwin Hoffman, cond. FritzSregal, v. Prokofieff Cone. No. 1. Otherworks to be announced. Nightly, 8.Free. Grant Park Bandchell, Columbus(inner) Drive at foot of 11th.DanceAMERICAN BALLET THEATRE: Thefull company at Ravinia, Aug. 2-7 at8:30. Admission to the park $2.00. Re¬served seats an additional charge rang¬ing from $2.00 to $6.00. Tickets: RaviniaFestival Association, 22 W. Monroe.Daily, 9-5. ST 2-9696. Ravinia Park,Highland Park, 273-3500.Jazz Folk MusicDOWN BEAT JAZZ FESTIVAL: The firstChicago Jazz Festival sponsored byDown Beat Magazine, George Weln andthe Illinois Cultural Company. Artistsinclude: Miles Davis Quintet; DaveBrubeck Quartet; Stan Getz Quintet; Dizzy Gillespie Quintet; Count Basieand Orchestra; Carmen MaCrea; MuddyWaters’ Blues Band; Jimmy Smith Trio;Woody Herman and Orch.; Joe Williams;John Coltrane Quartet; Thelonius MonkQuartet; Gary MacFarland; Ray Eld-ridge; Gerry Mulligan; Newport JazzFestival Stars; Austin High School Gangwith Pee Wee Russell; Bud Freeman;Art Hodes; Floyd O’Brien; James Col-trane; Jimmy McPartland; Jim Lani-gan; George Wettling and Otis Spann;Cecil Taylor Group; The Salty Dogs;and Franz Jackson and the originalJASS all-stars.Aug. 13-15. Evening, $3.50-$5.50; After¬noons, $2.00. Tickets: Down Beat Maga¬zine, 205 W. Monroe, Soldier Field, 16thst. and the Outer Drive, FI 6-7811.SUMMER OF STARS 65: Roger Williams,Aug. 6, $2.50-$5.50. Peter, Paul and Mary;Henry Mancini, Aug. 9-14; Aug. 9 & 10.$2.50-65.50; Aug. 11-14: $3.50-$6.50. RogerMiller, Boots Randolph, Hank Thomp¬son, Del Reeves, the Brazos Valley Boys;Roy Clark, Dave Dudley, Leroy VanDyke, Roy Drusky, Wanda Jackson. Aug.15. $2.50-$4-50. Young Folk Show starringJim Kuleskin, Phil Ochs, Dave VanRonk, Buffy St. Marie: Aug. 20. $2.50-$4.50.Gloria Lynne: Aug. 21. $2.50-$5.50.The Beach Boys: Aug. 28 and 29. $2.50-$5.50. The King Family: Aug. 31-Sept. 5.$2.50-$5.50. Nightly, 8; Fri. & Sat. 8:30;Sun. 7. Matinee times to be announced.Triangle Productions, 156 E. Superior,Arie Crown Theatre, McCormick Place,23rd and Outer Drive, SU 7-7565.TheatreHANDS AROUND LOVE: Musicalcomedy based on Arthur Schnitzler’sdrama "La Ronde,” starring Peter Bur¬nell, Peggy LeRoy, Susan Rae and JoeVocat. Nightly, 8:30; Fri. & Sat. 8:30 &11; Sun., 7:30. Closed Mon. Nightly,$2.65; Fri. & Sat., $2.95. Theater in theClouds, Allerton Hotel, 701 N. Michigan,SU 7-4200.OTHELLO: In a production by theHarper Theatre starring William Mar¬shall with Cedric Smith, Norma Young,Rasih&d Kamal. Nightly, 8; Sun., 7:30.Matinees, Wed. & Sat. at 2. Closed Mon.Nightly. $3.00; Fri. & Sat. $3.90; Mati¬nees: Wed., $2.50; Sat., $3.00. HarperTheater, 5238 S. Harper, BU 8-1717. SECOND CITY: The title of their 18threvue is “Off the Road.” Starring AlexCanan, Joan Bassie, Bob Klein, FredWillard, Judy Graubart, and DavidSteinberg; Sheldon Patinkin, dir., Wil¬liam Mathew, p. A number of originalsongs by Will Holt are also included inthis current. Nightly, 9. Fri, & Sat.,$2.50, Sat. $3.00. There is also an in¬formal show at 11 pm on week nightsand Sunday that includes improvisedscenes based on suggestions from theaudience: $1.00. Second City, 1846 N.Wells, DE 7-3992.THE TROJAN WOMEN: Euripides’classic Greek tragedy in the productionby Michael Cacoyannis which has playedfor 18 months at New York’s Circle inthe Square. Aug. 10-29. Nightly, 8:30;Sun., 8; Matinees, Sat. 2:30 & Sun., 4.Closed Mon. Nightly, $4.00 & $4.75; Fri.<fc Sat., 4.50 & $5.50; Matinees, $2.75 Ac$3.50. A limited number of studenttickets will be available for every per¬formance at $2.00. Tickets: Ravinia ParkBox Office, Highland Park. MurrayTheatre, Ravinia Park, 273-3500.THEATRE ON TIIE LAKE: JosephHayes’ drama "The Desperate Hours’;starring the Stateway Community ArtsTheatre; Harold Johnson, dir. Aug. 3-7.Joseph Fields & Jerome Chodorovscomedy “My Sister Eileen”; starring theChase Park Theatre Guild; PaulineZanetakos, dir. Aug. 10-14. KatherineMorrill’s drama *‘A Distant Bell”; star¬ring the Bessemer Park Theatre Guild;Everett Smith, dir. Aug. 17-21. ThomasHeggen and Joshua Logan’s comedy"Mister Roberts”; starring the LaFol-lette Playhouse; Frances Carter, dir.Aug. 24-28. William Inge’s comedy ‘‘BusStop”; starring the Loyola Park Play¬ers; Howard Witt, dir. Aug. 31 and Sept.1-4. Nightly. 8:30. $1.00. Fullerton Pavil-lion at Fullerton and the Outer Drive.HA 7-5252, ext. 388; DI 8-7075.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO COURTTHEATRE: Christopher Fry’s "TheLady’s Not for Burning”; KennethNorthcott, dir. Aug. 6-8, 12-15. BenJohnson’s "Volpone”; James O'Reilly,dir. Airg. 20-22, 26-29 and Sept. 2-5.Nightly, 8:30. Nightly, $1.50; Sat.. $2 00(these prices do not include a 25c chairrental). In case of rain, performancesare held in Mandel Hall, 57 th andUniversity, MI 3-0800, ext. 2581.BOB NELSON MOTORS 6136 S. COTTAGE GROVEMIDWAY 3-4500PRESENTSHONDAworld's biggest seller!ONLY 52 AVAILABLE ON JULY SHIPMENT-ORDER NOW FOR EARLIEST DELIVERY.HONDA SUPER 90, Model S-90, 90 cc. New sport version of the popular Hondo 90.AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE FOR MOST POPULAR IMPORTS^ BOB NELSON MOTORS6052 or 6136 SO. COTTAGE GROVE MIDWAY 3-4500August 6, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Kaim Mitchell, 1412 E. 55th Street; 'v<„We need you when you need to saveWe need you now.It all comes to the same thing.After all, your present need to save is based on your future needs to spend.Chances are, your future needs to spend will exceed your present cash on hand.But why save at the credit union? Why not?We're currently paying you four cents on the dollar to do so.We'll match each dollar saved with a dollar's worth of life insurance.We'll welcome you during business hours, not during bankers' hours.And — perhaps most importantly — we'll respect your efforts even if you fall short of your goal—A savings history is one of your best credit^ references when you find that you need the credit union.9 • CHICAGO MAROON • August 6, 1965