University silent on land's future useU C buys Ceorge Williams College campusThe University recentlypurchased the Hyde Park cam¬pus facilities of George Wil¬liams College. Terms of thesale are not being released.The property covering a squareblock, is bounded by Drexel ave.on the west, Ingleside ave. on theeast, 53 st. on the north, and 54 st.on the south.With housing for 144 students in72 rooms, George Williams’ mainbuilding also has 10 classroomsand laboratories, an auditorium, alibrary, two gymnasiums, and a swimming pool with locker rooms.In addition there are food servicefacilities covering 5,425 squarefeet.George Williams College, a pri¬vate and independently governedinstitution founded in 1890, plans tomove in June, 1966, to its new $12,-000,000 campus in Downers Grove,Illinois, a suburb west of Chicago.Exactly when the University willoccupy the site, and for what pur¬poses the facilities will be used willnot be known until spring or sum¬mer of 1966, accordjng to James J.Ritterskamp, Jr., vice president of administration.“The University has been con¬cerned for some time about itsneed for additional facilities, bothfor housing and academic pur¬poses, Ritterskamp said in a Uni¬versity statement.There has been no specific deter¬mination by the University of itspermanent plans for the use of theGeorge Williams campus. How¬ever, the facilities will provide anadded measure of opportunity forour campus planning committees,’’he said.Vo!. 74 — No. 6 The University of Chicago Friday, October 8, 1965 Main building of the newly purchased George Williams campus*Teach-in to protest warWUCB radio will broadcast tomorrow an internationalteach-in from Toronto, Canada, as part of the InternationalDays of Protest program sponsored by the UC Committee toEnd the War in Vietnam. The day-long program will beset ors school planThe Midway in front of President George Beadle’s home will be the scene this after¬noon at 3:45 pm of a mass rally in support of the Unity Plan for Hyde Park High School.The Unity Plan is a response to the proposed new high school in the Hyde Park neigh¬borhood. Its advocates maintain that building a high school on the present Murray Schoolsite at 53rd and Kenwood would to-tally segregate the present Hyde SPAC, involving the high schoolPark High. The Unity Plan calls controversy,for an expanded and improved Petition circulatingHyde Park High School to be built A petition is being circulatedby clearing land adjacent to the among the faculty calling for “theUniversity to take a position in fa-school's present site at 62nd andStony Island Ave. Speaking at therally will be Jesse L. Lemisch, asst,professor of history, and other fac¬ulty members as well as HydePa^k students and members of theHyde Park and Woodlawn commu- vor of the Unity Plan which wouldhelp maintain and improve the ex¬isting integration in the local pub¬lic high school”. The petition takesnote of the seriously overcrowdedconditions at Hyde Park High and U C PresidentGeorge Beadle;he'll have lotso f visitors a thome today. broadcast to the dorms and to Rey¬nolds Club.Speakers will include PatrickGordon Walker, former Britishforeign secretary; Thoutch Vuthi,United Nations representative fromCambodia; and a representativefor Tranh Van Do, foreign ministerof the Republic of Vietnam. Amorning session, dealing with theDominican Republic, will featureDr. Cheddi Jagan, ex-prime min¬ister of British Guiana, and PedroNunez, informational secretary ofthe Social Christian Party of theDominican Republic.The International Days of Pro¬test, according to the UC commit¬tee, are an attempt to voice stu¬dents’ objections to the currentUnited States policy in Vietnam.They will culminate in a nation¬wide series of workshops on Octo-Charges ultra-right influence ber 16. when college students willconcentrate their efforts on localprotest activities.Here is a corrected, up-to-dateversion of the calendar of protestactivities originally printed in theOctober 5 issue of the Maroon:• Saturday, October 9: An inter¬national teach-in from Toronto,piped by WUCB into the dorms andinto Reynolds Club;• Monday, October 11 throughThursday the 14th: Discussions inNew Dorms, Pierce Tower, andBurton-Judson (one dorm a night),with three or four faculty membersleading them. The Tuesday discus¬sion will take place during the aft¬ernoon in Reynolds Club.• Tuesday, October 12: A twistparty in the Cloister Club to raisefunds. Admission will be 50c. The(Continued on page six)nities. Also scheduled to speak isWalter Johnson, Preston and Ster¬ling Morton professor of history.He, however, is in Washington,conferring with Francis Keppel,US. Commissioner of Educationand there is some doubt whetherhe will be back bv this afternoon.ORGANIZERS OF THE RALLYhope that a massive show of stu¬dent support for the unity positionwill lead the University to take apublic stand in favor of the educa¬tional park plan. The board of edu¬cation is scheduled to consider theHyde Park High School issue nextWednesday, and so far the Uni¬versity has remained officially si¬lent in regard to its preference foreither plan.The meeting is but one in a se¬ries of actions organized by SGwith the support of Student Wood¬land Area Project (SWAP), StudentTutors Elementary Project (STEP).Student Nonviolent CoordinatingCommittee (SNCC), GNOSIS, and the need for major expansion of fa-cilitities there and compares thetwo alternative plans designed toremedy the situation. A separatehigh school in Hyde Park wouldleave the present school “totallysegregated” while that envisionedby the Unity Plan would “maintainthe limited integration that nowexists.”Copies of the faculty petition willbe presented to the Chicago Boardof Education at its meeting on Oct.13. At that meeting a representa¬tive of SG is scheduled to testify infavor of the Unity Plan.There is hope that a compromiseplan can be agreed to by bothsides in the dispute in time to pre¬sent a united community front atthe board of education meetingWednesday. Members of the HydePark-Kenwood Community Confer¬ence who are on record in supportof the Murray site will be meetingwith Unity people on Saturday.Katzenbach hits student demonstrationat Washington education conferenceby David L. AikenWashington Bureau“It should not be supposed that because students usemany of the same techniquestheir dissatisfactions are asGeneral Nicholas KatzenbachAmerican Council on Education.Katzenbach, a former UC lawprofessor, asserted that studentprotests on campus issues are dif¬ferent from civil rights protests be¬cause their goals are not as urgentand important.“The freedom to eat, to vote, tolearn—indeed to live—justifies farmore than the freedom to exclaimfour-letter words,” he commented.One of the problems of campusprotesters is that their goals aretoo diffused, he said. They protestagainst too many issues. Their othertrouble is that student protest canbecome “an instrument not of per¬suasion, but of coercion.”“The Negro, without access to•ny of the democratic forms of ex- as Negroes in the South thatprofound,” said US Attorneylast night to a meeting of thepression, has had little choice butto demonstrate,” Katzenbach stated.“The student, whether he objectsto conformity or to government pol¬icy in Vietnam, has a range of al¬ternatives.”Student dissent, Katzenbach said,is welcomed, “no matter how bit¬ter or extreme. It may contributeto their goals of influencing deci¬sions.”“But at the point that it becomescoercive—when students lie downon the tracks to block a trooptrain—protest changes from essen¬tial ingredient to something aliento the liberal tradition. Efforts tocoerce are wrong in principal andineffective in practice.” Hannon blasts L A police“This country is not above genocide; we did it to theAmerican Indian and we can do it again,” declared MichaelHannon, speaking Tuesday night at Mandel hall as a guestof the Democratic Socialist club. A Los Angeles policeman,suspended for his socialist activi¬ties, he spoke on “The Meaning ofthe LA Riot.”As a witness of the LA riots,Hannon fears white retaliation toNegro violence. As a defendentfound guilty of “carrying a placardintended to demean, vilify, andcalumniate the President of theUnited States,” he also fears rightwing domination of Americanthought and government. Hannondescribed the conditions of the cen¬tral ghetto and proposed that radi¬cal groups must act. Believing lib¬erals half-hearted, unions irrele¬vant, politicians ineffective, Hannonobserved that the reactionaries arestrong: “Los Angeles is their heav¬en.”Shed “middle class glasses"Hannon described his indoctrina¬tion as a rookie, telling how he wasforced to read literature “thatlooked like it came from a JohnBirch Society bookstore.” At first,Hannon admitted, he had fallen inline. Wearing his “middle classglasses,” he had “blamed the poorfor their poverty.” Yet when thepolice cars were integrated, Han¬non got to know the Negro point ofview and to see the police as an“occupation army in an impover¬ished society.”-THE WATTS AREA, where therevolt began, he characterized as“crowded, demoralized, and unem¬ployment.” Official unemploymentis 30%, with 50% of the populationon some type of public aid. The ad¬ministration of the aid was splittingup families, Hannon pointed out,because a home with a man in itcould not receive aid.It “gnawed” him to hear goodliberals gasp, “violence brokeout!” Although 32 people werekilled, 29 were participants shot by police, 2 were policemen shot byother policemen, and one was aman crushed by a falling wall. Ac¬cording to the speaker, even thesefigures are insignificant becauseviolence is a part of the life of theghetto. “Ordinarily it is expressedby a man beating his wife or stick¬ing a knife into a guy in a bar.”Trailed by spyAs soon as he believed that “inthis land of opportunity, opportuni¬ty depends on how you pick yourgrandparents, ” Hannon joined theSocialist party. Because he demon¬strated with CORE in April, 1963Hannon was rated in the lower 10%of the police force and declared“probably a grave threat to thenational peace and security.”FROM THEN ON, a spy was as¬signed to him. A Nicaraguan, pos¬ing as an avid revolutionary, wentto the Socialist meetings andforced Hannon to defend policies ofcivil disobedience and describe hisThe stress and troublesome pres¬sures that plague students in thecollegiate "social system will be thesubject of a national conferenceNovember 11-14 in Warrenton, Vir¬ginia.Sponsored by the US NationalStudent Association NSA in coop¬eration with the National Instituteof Mental Health, the meeting willatempt to help the students andfaculty deal productively with thepressures of the college communi¬ty.NSA and sixteen professional,government, and student organiza¬tions have financed the studythrough grants from the DanforthFoundation and the National Men- own experiences. When the PoliceDepartment had 9‘/2 hours of tapefrom the discussions, they calledHannon in, questioned him forthree days, and indicted him on 10counts. Two of these counts validlyaccused him of falling asleep atthe desk.The others accused him of partic¬ipating in demonstrations police-men were breaking up; of drawingThe first MAROON staffmeeting of the year will beheld today at 4 p.m. in theMAROON office, third floor,Ida Noyes Hall. All staff mem¬bers—new as well as old-should attend.a cartoon of racist policemen; ofwriting an unsigned editorial at¬tacking bigotry and Birchism inthe police force; and of carrying aposter saying “What Khrushchevdid in Hungary, Johnson is doingin the Dominican Republic.” Han¬non was found guilty of thecharges and suspended from thepolice force for six months. He ispresently appealing the case.tal Health Institute. The confer¬ence delegates will form a seriesof groups to define the nature ofthe pressures and their varianceunder different academic and so¬cial conditions. A report on theconference will be sent to collegepresidents and interested groups.SG will select UC’S two dele¬gates to this “National Conferenceon Student Stress in the CollegeExperience.” The University willpay their travel expenses, fees,room, and board.Students interested in attendingshould contact the SG office on thesecond floor of Ida Noyes Hall,Monday through Friday between10:30 and 5:30.Conference to probe student stressesPjwWBHi'ters edi •i.« * ..« EDITORIAL tVISA oilers a new worldlo Illinois menial patients(Editor's note: Greg Bellow is afourth-year student in the Collegeand the president of VISA, a stu¬dent organization which spends Sat¬urday afternoons visiting patientsin the wards of Chicago StateMental Hospital.)TO THE EDITOR :Volunteers are now needed for arange of VISA projects, includingwork on adolescent and women’sunits and on final planning for ahalf-way house in the Hyde Parkarea.State Hospitals house eighty percent of the institutionalized mental¬ly ill in the United States. ChicagoState (Dunning) is one of thesehospitals which, at present, housesover four thousand patients. AState Hospital is symbolic of twodestructive attitudes toward men¬tal illness, rejection and pessi¬mism.Rejection brought about the con¬ struction of a fence around Chica¬go State. It is not so much that thefence is needed to keep the pa¬tients from escaping, but ratherthat is is a concrete expression ofthe emotional gap between thosewho are inside and those who areoustide. The fence is a product ofmutual rejection of the mentallyill by the community and rejectionby the mentally ill, of normal inter¬personal contacts.The second attitude of which Ispoke was pessimism. Pessimismis evident all over the hospital, butit is especially prevalent in the“back wards”. These wards aredull and poorly kept places whichwere designed to hold, not to treat,human beings. There are patientsin these wards who have beenthere upwards of twenty years andmany have not seen a friend or rel¬ative in a decade. Their contactwith the outside world has beenlimited to the ward staff and theT.V. It is on these “back wards”that V.I.S.A. (for Volunteer Institu-EVERYBODY WELCOMEto the first GNOSIS caucus of the school year,Topics and projects to be discussed include:SOCIAL RULES IN THE COLLEGEOFF CAMPUS STUDENT HOUSING PROJECTSCIVIL RIGHTSACADEMIC AFFAIRSTuesday, October 12, 1965, at 7:30 in Ida NoyesCoffee will be served tional Service Activity) does mostof its work.V.I.S.A. has been going out toChicago State Hospital for twoyears. At present we visit a wo¬men’s ward and an adolescent ward.At first contacts with the patientswere extremely strained, but nowthe students and patients havecome to know one another and alllook forward to the Saturday after¬noon visit. The V.I.S.A. studentstry to approach the patients insuch a way as to aid the patient intesting reality and re-establishingbonds with the outside world. Bybeing friendly and firm, the stu¬dents help the patient to realizewho he is, where he is, and what isgoing on around him. Many of thestudents try to accomplish this byinitiating friendships with the moregregarious patients. Others use re¬creational activities such as danc¬ing, singing and drawing to aidfearful and reticent patients infeeling relaxed enough to enter intoa friendship with a student.Because of this method of ap¬proaching the patients, and be¬cause of our position as volunteers,we are able to give the patient anopportunity to enter into a specialkind of relationship. This relation¬ship is different from the warmbut professional relationship be-(Continued on page six)ALL UNIVERSITYTWIST BASHPrl. Oct. 8 — 9 P.M.-12 MidnightWoman Free — Men 50*Judson LoungeBurton-Judson Court*Music By The Gorillas UC must take standFn all the conflict over what to do about Hyde Park HighSchool, one powerful voice has been conspicuously absent—*that of the University. Other local organizations have takena stand on this vital issue: The Woodlawn Organization, theHyde Park-Kenwood Community Council, and the Hyde ParkHerald. Nor have UC students and faculty been silent. Todayat 3:45 SG is holding a rally on the Midway across fromPresident Beadle’s house in support of the Unity Plan for amodern “educational park’’ at the present site of Hyde ParkHigh. The rally is supported by UC’s two student politicalparties—SPAC and GNOSIS, and by student groups likeSWAP, UC Friends of SNCC, and STEP. And UC facultymembers, such as J. Alan Thomas of the education depart¬ment, McKim Marriott of the department of anthropology,and George J. Benston of the business school, have been ac¬tive in planning and supporting the Unity Plan.But the University remains silent. In the past, UC hasnot hesitated to involve itself in Hyde Park affairs when thecondition of students, faculty members, or the families ofeither was involved. Surely the education of Hyde Park chil¬dren falls under this definition. And the University is cur¬rently planning to involve itself in the education of slumchildren, just the sort that go to Hyde Park High, by buildingan experimental high school in Hyde Park or Woodlawn.Thus the University is concerned with the welfare of all thechildren that go to Hyde Park High, not just these living inHyde Park.Yet the University still says nothing, even with the fu¬ture of the relationship between Woodlawn and Hyde Parkat stake. If the Willis plan for a new school situated in HydePark is adopted by the school board, Hyde Park will becomecompletely segregated, completely cut off from the middleclass world that Hyde Park represents. The level of educa¬tion at Hyde Park High will drop drastically, and ten Uni¬versity experimental schools will be needed to repair thedamage done. The Unity Plan, on the other hand, promisesa chance to raise the educational standards for all the stu¬dents at Hyde Park High while keeping the school integrated.With this choice between school plans, the University mustact now, before the October 13 school board meeting, to makeitself heard in support of the Unity Plan. Too much is atstake for the University to say nothing.You are invited to attendA FREE LECTURE onSunday, afternoon, October 10th at 3:30 p.m.BYMarcus BachSubject:THE WILL TO BELIEVENEW YORK TIMES:"Respect and sincerity are the secrets of Dr.Bach's success. With the indefatigable energy ofof an explorer and the zest and eagerness ofa skilled reporter, he has discovered the springsand stimuli that rouse men and women to fol¬low faith/'CHICAGO TRIBUNE:"Dr. Bach has developed a new approach to in¬ter-religious and inter-cultural relations. Hiscoming to Chicago is regarded by many as anecumenical event/'World traveler, lecturer, authorILLINOIS COLLEGE:"It is the unanimous opinion of all the students that yourswas the best program we ever had."Sponsored by and given atTHE CHURCH OF THE HOLY CITY(SWEDENBORGIAN)5710 S. Woodlawn Avenue HYDE PARKAuto ServiceLOTUS TR-4MG CORVETTEBUICK PEUGEOTALFA ROMEOFIAT MORGANFERRARI VWJIM HARTMAN7646 S. Stony IslandRE 4-6393 Informal coffee hours will be¬gin again this year on Monday,October 11, in Gates Blake313. Held from 3:30 - 5:00 p.m.,they are open to all members ofthe UC community.THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111THE HOST PROFITABLE TRIP YOB CANEVER MAKE IB TB YIHIR BATSWN DEALERHere’s an economy compact with built-in luxury. It saves youmoney when you buy it; saves more when you drive itlOXLYin DATSUN “Four Ten” 4-dr. SedanDATSUNNow 67 h.p. for 1966(hicagoland DATSUNSALES - SERVICe — PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AVE. m B«v*riy him*CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 40620 PHONE 23937702 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 8, 1965Draft deferments tighter University backs studentWASHINGTON—With the October and November draft calls the largest since the Ko* UC draft policy samerean W ar, the nation s draft boards are set to look at requests for student deferments with Th Universitv is continuing with its usual treatment ofa more discerning eye.. draft-age male students, while the Selective Service, includ-in JSZStZSSZ y—n0 mtenti°n 0^band01ling defement3 f0r StUdenta tag the local 63 st. office,’ is .coking for more draftees.under the tighter policy, draft calls since the end of the Korean ial points out. “There is nothing According to UO Registrar 1 axine u ivan,boards will be picking up some de- ^ar. Ami in November, for the automatic about a student being sity reports each October only worjc can be considered a full timeferred students who are not attend- firf1t ,tinJe since Korea, the draft deferred. Each case is considered whether a student is working full stude’nt if s0 designated by his de-....... , . will include men for the Marine on its own merits with the stu- time for a degree and when the de- rtment jn such a case, the Uni-jng school full time 01 who aie not Corps. dent’s course of study, its impor- gree is expected. Any changes in versity w'm pay any additional Un¬making satisfactory progress in ON AUGUST 26, President John- lance to the national interest, and full time status or the date the de- tiQn tQ cover three COUrses.their classes. son dropped his well-remembered ihe student’s scholastic ability” gree is expected are reported dur- jt ha$ recentiy been mentionedLAST JANUARY the total na- bombshell and announced he had being used as measuring sticks. ing the year. This information is by Selective Service officials thattionwide draft call was only 5 400 revo^e(l President Kennedy’s order The same high official suggested sent to Springfield, Ill., and distrib- poor Qr borderline students mightmen In February it dropped to 3 - an?. thilt f,ro.™ now on married men that as the quotas rise ( or even if uted to the local draft boards of be refused student deferments. As000. The Vietnam crises shot the without children would be consid- they stay at the present high levelered the Same as single men as far for some extended period of time )draft call to 7,900 in March; 13,700 as the draft is concerned. and the age of the draftee drops,in April; 15,100 in May; 17,000 in Trying to beat the order’s mid- boards probably will not be able toJune; 17,100 in July; and 16,500 in night deadline, young couples giye deferments for longer than aAugust. sought out marriage spots like Los year- UC students.UC concern for students“The first concern of the reg¬istrar is for the student and whatis best for the student,” said Mrs.Then, on July 28 President Lyn- Vegas, Nev. Some made it and got “This would cover a man in his gullivan “We work within thedon Johnson announced that a Sep- married before midnight. senior year or probably could be . , , .. , . „„ .tember call of 27.000 men would be But Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hersey, extended in order to let a junior framework of the law to protectnecessary in order to meet the in- national director of the Selective finish school, but it probably would the student. A student here merelycreased commitment in Vietnam. Serevice System, observed, “I be- not let the 19 or 20 year-old sopho- to avoid the draft, however, mightEven at that time most state Sel- lieve these couples will find they more finish college before being be referred to the local board” sheective Service men were quoted as didn't beat any deadline. We’ll get called for military duty.” he said,saying they didn’t feel the new fig- most of them — in four or five Year's delayures would cause any change in months. He said any student who re- .....the draft status of most men be- Childless next ceived an order for induction while Pr°blem in classifying students ascause “draft pools” were large The facts remain that with the in school might be given a I-S clas- full time or part time. While it isenough to take care of the in- increased draft calls, local boards sification that would allow him to relatively easy to classify under¬creased demands. In most states, are rapidly running out of single fimsh that school year before re- graduates, graduates, especiallydraft officials were quoted, some men between the ages of 19 and 26 porting for duty. those doing research work, areotf the record, as saying that mar- — the present induction limits — The first thing likely to happen is sometimes more difficult. Since astated.THE UNIVERSITY has had aried men with no other dependants and the childless married men arestill need not fear for the draft, the next to go.Under a 1963 order by PresidentKennedy, married men with nochildren were not to be drafted aslong as single men were available.Marine drafteesBut the Defense Department an¬nounced an October call of 33,600and recently announced its Novem¬ber call of 36,450 - the two largest The same sort of concern hasbeen registered among college stu¬dents who fear that continued highdraft calls will further deplete thedraft pools and they, after themarried men will be the next togo.To a degree, they’re right.AS ONE Selective Service offic- that probationary or borderline student must be taking threestudents will lose their deferments courses to be considered a full-as they did during the Korean time student, a graduate taking(Continued on page seven) less than this, but doing research of now, nothing is reported regard¬ing the academic status of stu¬dents. Said Mrs. Sullivan, “It wouldbe very difficult for this office toprovide information regardingacademic status, simply from aclerical point of view. We justdon’t have the resources.”(Continued on page seven)BOOKSSTATIONARYGREETING (ARDSTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55 St.10% Student DiscountYARNShetland * BulkyKnit • Ryga FromNorway • FisherknitSport yarn • SayelleMohair10-9 on ThursdayS£XD*y‘ FABYAR 5225 Harper363-2349GRANDOPENINGThis Friday, Saturday & SundayBHH # FOR 5 MINUTESCC CARMm J WASHFREE GIFTSAt last! a professional car-wash for only $25 and you can do-it-yourself! Ingenious new equipment, new chemicals, and soft waterlet you give your car that sparkling "just washed" look In only5 minutes and for only a quarter I Why pay more? It's so easy,so simple . . . and you can do it In your street clothes withoutworry about mess or fuss. S0FSPRA is good for motors, boats,and machinery. Coin-Op Vacuums 10c. Try our new auto waxer,it only costs 50 cents.Shore Sofspra Car Wash Inc.1701 E. 75th Street7 A.M.-1I P.M. • EVERY DAYI SERVINGAt TheUniversity of Chicago BookstoresOUR CLERKS WILL BE GLAD TO ASSIST YOU IN OURSELF SERVICE DEPARTMENT(Please use package drops or free lockers)TEXTBOOKS: All required and recommended Texts.GENERAL BOOKS: Over 20,000 titles in a wide range of interests.SCHOOL SUPPLIES: To meet your needs.• STATIONERY & OFFICE SUPPLIES: For work-room or office.• RECORDS: A wide choice among hundreds of titles.(Will be back on sales floor, Oct. 7)• NEWSPAPERS & MAGAZINES: Including many of academic and cultural interest.CLERK SERVICE DEPARTMENTS• TYPEWRITERS: New, used and rentals in standard, portable or electric.• TAPE RECORDERS: New, used and rentals.• PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES: Many types, cameras and services.• GIFTS: Many gift suggestions, U. of C. items and cards in color.• MEN'S & WOMEN'S WEAR: A fine selection of accessories.• TOBACCO: A representative assortment of items.• SNACK BAR: Sandwiches, coffee, cold drinks and candy.• MAIN STORE ONLY (Newly lighted and air conditioned for yourconvenience and comfort)MAIN STORE 5802 Ellis Ave. —Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 8:00 s.m. to 5:00 p.m.—Sat 8:30 «.m. to 12:30 a.m.EDUCATION BRANCH 5821 Kimbark Avo. (In Balfiold Hall)Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. (Opan Evenings as nacassary to accommodateEvening Program Students).DOWNTOWN CENTER BRANCH: 64 I. Lake St.Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 11:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. — Sat. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.DOWNTOWN PROGRAM BRANCH: 190 I. Delawaro PlaceHours: Mon. thru Fri. 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.Oct. 8, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON # 9Redfield Interview? second fn q sertefFifth College no revival of Hutchins era• Okav I was edu- vers^es since its founding it has reauy different, something which** 'tt • •* . always had a somewhat more sta- vm. ar„ tlTin 'tn „nmp tft tprmsat the Umversity of ble faculty than other places—I ^h"e trymg t0 C°me t0 termSpast as something really past,^Editor’s note: the following is the know. . . REDFIELD: It was two years—Second in a series of interviews MAROON: Robert Redfield, the It was important to me because itWith the newly appointed “mas- anthropologist? ' was there that I really began toters” of the five area colleges es- learn something about classicaltablished under the Levi report. REJ,*ELD,1 *®3, Actually, my history. That’s an extraordinaryJames Redfield is an associate pro- Sr£mdfather als0 *a!Jght ^ere» n*y university in that area. As youlessor on the committee on social ™other ® father Robert I ark. bo know> the College I was raised inthought, and was recently named * ™ ?or* °.f dug *n ^ere * mean, bere> j-be so.ca]iiec| old Hutchins“master” of the college of inte- bee*? my ^°me' 1 College, or Clarence Faust college,grated studies.) think that in these days when, as was very ahistorical. It tended toMAROON* Could we start with one.of my friends says, academic treat all linkers as belonging to'u- „ u-T, 7% SUn Wltn work 1S a form of migratory labor, th neriod or transcendingcome biographical data? it, • t h th that th me.same Penoa, or transcendingREDFIELD- What sort of hio- . nice to nave tne sense tnat tne peri0(j 0r mostly talking to one an-p- graphical data? university is very much your own other_so here was where I firstMAROON: Like your early edu- *"stltut,°”- Chicago has had that b t0 , some scnse of theyour e*ny eau sense rather more than other um- —“a. -- ... .cation. . .REDFIELD:Cated entirely - ~ uie lacuny uian uuiei places—i „.:*uChicago, from the third grade on- don’t know whyward, except for two years which I In case ,id through the “AR°0N:D «°w, d‘d >'m' feel*pcnt at the University of Oxford whole That , one th of when Mr. Booth first asked youin the New College. I came out of Ule whole range of what the uni. whether you would accept theft university family here, as you vpr(i:tv ha* tn nff^r deanship?maroon! 2t about the year , ^^.ELDi fiong pause, Weil,at Oxford? Why was that impor- 1 don' kn°w I guess one always| t .1 7 goes into these things with a cer-y ’ tain amount of trepidation. This isgoing to be an extraordinarilycomplex piece of work. In a sensethey were trying to create some¬thing which is a new institution,but not a new institution, some¬thing that will be independent butnot independent, and it’s experi¬mental. but it’s not experimental—almost everything you can sayabout it is paradoxical. My firstreaction—one often has this sensewith things of this kind—was-“This isn’t the most convenientmoment”—you know, I wish thewhole thing were happening some14 karat goldpierced studssouth sideavailablein culturedpearl, jadecoral, gold,onyx, opalmany others(rom $4 00 TAl-SAM-V&NCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecfaHzhtg laCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILTII A.M. H 9:45 PM.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062SUPREMEJEWELERSHandbags & Jewelryfof Distinction: 1452 East 53rd St.iFAirfax 4-9609 DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT t FACULTY DISCOUNT other time. I also think that it isan opportunity, if one’s Interestedin this kind of thing, as I alwayshave been. You almost feel thatyou have to do it—you’d feel like afool if you didn’t . Here you havethe chance to do something veryinteresting—and that’s a chancewe must try to do something with.MAROON: As head of the fifthcollege, you are going to have tocome up with something very orig¬inal, because your position has nopredecessor at all. How do you seeyour role in your rather anomalousappointment?REDFIELD: The word anoma¬lous is rather a good one here. . .MAROON: Well, there’s a namefor it at least. . .REDFIELD: It hasn’t even beennamed as yet. It’s been namedvaguely as the fifth, or the newcollegiate division. But what yousay is true—we don’t yet have avery clear idea of just what we’regoing to do. It’s creation is an as¬sertion that we can do somethingthat we’re not doing now.I’ve spent some time this sum¬mer just talking to people, tryingto find out what they think the Col¬lege isn’t doing, and it’s clear thatthere is no consensus—no onewants to drive the fifth college tofulfill any particular end. The firstjob, and, in a way, the largest one,is to evolve some kind of consen¬sus. It’s still at such a:; early stagethat we have no idea what it’seventually going to look like.MAROON: Do you have any vi¬sions?REDFIELD: Oh, well, one hasvisions on various levels.MARCON: You needn’t consider this a policy statement. 'REDFIELD: Well, one of the le¬vels would apply to all of the colle¬giate divisions. We want it to begood, to be serious, we want thereto be a good education here, wewant it not to be mechanical, andso on. This is the vision what onemust have if one wants to be anedtftator, and that’s all of our busi¬nessI suspect that we will have a col¬lege that is not so monolithic asold Hutchins College was. It seemsthat it is always necessary to startdefining the fifth college in con¬trast to the old Hutchins College.Almost everybody seems to thinkof it as a continuation or a revival.MAROON: Do people almost au¬tomatically think of it as such? Ihadn’t looked at it that way at all.. REDFIELD: The people whodate from that era have that no¬tion. because it is not concernedwith subject matter, which is thecase—it’s not built on subject mat¬ter. It is concerned with giving aneducation in some other way, andsince the great experiment inteaching that way was the Hutch-ins-Faust College.MAROON: I've always consid¬ered it as a sort of tutorial studiesto the nth degree.REDFIELD: Well, I think we’llhave a lot of independent study inthis college, for that’s one of thefew things there seems to be wide¬spread consensus about. Our stu¬dents don’t get enough independentwork, don’t get enough sense of ac¬complishment. They go throughfour or five years here and at theend of that time they have been(Continued on page five)UNIVERSITY THEATREAnnounces It's First General Meeting OfThe Year Today — 5 P.M.Reynolds Club TheatreWorship According to the Several TraditionsBAPTISTSundays00 A.M.—First Baptist Church, 935 E. 50th Street00 A.M.—Hyde Park Union Church, 5600 Woodlawn Avenue00 A.M.—Woodlawn Baptist Church, 6207 University AvenueCHRISTIAN SCIENCESundays10:45 A.M.—Tenth Church of Christ Scientist, 5640 Blackstone Av.DISCIPLES OF CHRISTSundays11:00 A.M.—University Church, 5655 University AvenueEPISCOPALSundays9:30 A.M.—Sung Eucharist at Joseph Bond Chapel (adjacent toSwift Hall, Baby-sitting provided: Breakfast following)Wednesdays7:30 A.M.—Holy Communion, Brent House, 5540 WoodlawnAvenue (Breakfast following)Thursdays12:00 A.M.—Holy Communion, Joseph Bond ChapelFridays7:30 A.M.—Holy Communion, University Clinics G-106JEWISHSabbath Services at Hillel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn AvenueFridays—8:00 P.M.Yavneh (Orthodox) Services, Fridays—SundownSaturdays—9:00 A.M.LUTHERANSundays10:00 A.M.—St. Gregory of Nyssa Campus Parish (MissouriSynod), Communion at Graham Taylor Chapel,58th and University Avenue (Dinner following)11:00 A.M.—Augustana Lutheran Church of Hyde Park (L.C.A.),Joseph Bond Chapel (Refreshments following)Wednesdays7:45 A.M.—Communion in the “Upper Room” at Chapel House,5810 Woodlawn Avenue (Breakfast following)Fridays12:00 A.M.—Service at Joseph Bond Chapel METHODISTSundays11:00 A.M.—Hyde Park Methodist Church. 54th Street andBlackstone Avenue11:00 A.M.—St. James Methodist Church. 4611 Ellis Avenue11:00 A.M.—Woodlawn Methodist Church, 64th Street andWoodlawn AvenuePRESBYTERIANSundays11:00 A.M.—First Presbyterian Church. 6400 Kimbark Avenue11:00 A.M.—United Church of Hyde Park. 53rd and Blackstone11:00 A.M.—Sixth United Presbyterian Church, 1210 F. 62nd St.ROMAN CATHOLICMasses at Calvert House, 5735 University AvenueSundays8:30 A M.. Calvert House; 10:30 A.M. and 12:00 M. BreastedHall; 5:00 P.M., Bond ChapelDaily7:30 A.M., 12:00 M. and 5:00 P.M. at Calvert HouseMondays 12:00 M. (Joseph Bond Chapel)SOCIETY OF FRIENDSSundays11:00 A.M.—57th Street Meeting House, 5615 Woodlawn AvenuaUNITARIANSundays11:00 A.M.—First Unitarian Church. 5650 Woodlawn AvenueUNITED CHURCH OF CHRISTSundays11:00 A.M.—United Church of Hyde Park, 53rd and Blackstone11:00 A.M.—Hyde Park Union Church. 5600 Woodlawn Avenue11:00 A.M.—Kenwood United Church of Christ, 4608 GreenwoodROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELSundays, 11:00 A.M.—'The University Religiou* Service E. Spencer Parsons, Dean of the ChapelA non-denominational service held each Sunday the University is in session, open to the public. MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSM»««l Typing A Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICECom slete lab. EKG t BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM - 10 PMi-3YCG PABK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 5. HARP”* HY 3-2000Ml 3 31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign car hospital> ! ■■Cobeauty salon—J ExpertPermanent WavingandHair CuttingTinting1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302• CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 8, 1965 You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411The three R’s-writing, rewriting, and reforming-to be stressed(Continued from page four)through a lot of courses, but theyhaven’t done anything. They can’tshow you anything that’s theirown.So I think, yes, there’ll be sub¬stantial writing in this college—andnot only writing, but rewriting.That’s very close to my heart.Many of my students can producea first draft, but they’ve very littleidea of what to do with it. Theydon’t know how to develop ideasover a period of years. They can’twrite the same paper over againwith different material, or a differ¬ent paper with the same material.This, I think, is the real core of thelife of the mind, where you don’tproduce discreet objects, but ev¬erything fades into everything else.If you take the papers of any ser¬ious intellect—to take a big man,Freud—if you read through his col¬lected papers, you see how muchoverlap there is, in a sense, howmuch repetition. But this is one ofthe marks of a really serious man,that he is never satisfied, is alwaysreshaping, reforming it, developingit. Now that is certainly somethingthat we ought to be teaching ourstudents. It’s not exactly some¬thing that can be taught, but it canbe encouraged.I think we’ll have some specialprograms in this college, some ofwhich will be particularly ap¬propriate to it because they are insome sense inter-disciplinary. Forexample, I have been talking tosome of the people in the Civiliza¬tion courses, particularly in Indianand Islamic Studies, because theyare partly social science and part¬ly humanities—and they do have areal scientific element in some ofthem—that’s the type of programthat we’re going to be looking for.This is very appropriate to the newcollegiate division because it ob-contact tense*Dr. KURT ROSENBAUMOPTOMETRIST53rd Kimbark PlazaHY 3-8372 viously doesn’t fit very comforta¬bly in any of the others.MAROON: What if you saw acourse like biophysics? Would yoube concerned about it simply be¬cause it doesn’t seem to fit comfor¬tably into either biological or phy¬sical sciences?REDFIELD: That’s a possibility,but I’m afraid that in the new col¬legiate division we’re not going tobe able to accomodate many peo¬ple who are in a strict sense inthe sciences. That is a difficulty,and I'm very sorry about it, butgiven the state of American educa¬tion, we won’t try to move moun¬tains about it—we’ll be content tomove molehills and work up. Tenor fifteen percent of the studentsmay be in some sense in science;they may be interested in historyor philosophy of science. . .MAROON: Logic, perhaps?REDFIELD: Logic. We mightconceivably have a program—though nobody has designed it—which would give the type of edu¬cation required of a scientific ad¬ministrator. That’s a rising career,and it might be the kin* of thingwe should have. But on the whole,our college, which may be calledthe College of Integrated Studies,will be integrating a range ofthings mostly in the social sciencesand humanities. I don’t see muchpossibility of breaking that. Most¬ly, people who are in science wantto get into the laboratory and startsystematically working in theirdiscipline—that’s part of the sociol¬ogy of science. It’s something rath¬er different from the Republic ofletters.MAROON: Do you think that thegap between the sciences and let-Butterfield Blues Album is in!THEH*r SW5210 HARPERChicigoNO 7-106011:30 to 6, 7:30 to 10 Mon.-FrL11:30 to 6, SaturdayGeneral BooksBoth Hard Bound and PaperbackWe don't carry them all but we do stock over 20,000 titles,covering a wide range of interests from which you maychoose.The titles are arranged by subject and alphabetically byauthor from left to right on the shelves.With so many titles on hand in so little space, we cannotarrange them all face out nor are they all displayed on thesales floor so some titles may be hard to find.If you do have difficulty in locating the title you want, pleasesee Beatrice Vedel, Ann McGiffin, Susan Imlach or ElizabethWerderich in our General Book Department.They are wearing the yellow jackets and will be happy toserve you.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. ters is completely unbridgable, ordo you just think that it is unbrid¬gable now?REDFIELD: No, it is clearly notcompletely unbridgable, because itis bridged by all kinds of peopleMAROON: Like C.P. Snow?REDFIELD: Yes, C.P. Snow.But what I was thinking of wasthat the few scientists I know oncampus (I don’t know many, whichis an indication of the gap) mostlystrike me as cultivated people.They also have a good sense of thephilosophical bases of their work—so there is in effect a built inbridge.MAROON: What about generalvs. specialized education?REDFIELD: One distinctionwhich almost never turns out to befertile, when you get around totalking about it, is that betweengeneral and specialized education.We’re all interested in education,and a livelier distinction, althoughit’s more difficult to talk about it,is the one between serious educa¬tion and trivial education. 4n edu¬cation can be extraordinarilyspecialized, and yet do all the jobsthat are usuually ascribed to gen¬eral education. Ed Levi, for in¬stance, says—and I think, verywell—that the law school gives oneof the best liberal educations in thecountry. We take students whocan’t read and can’t write, andcan’t think, and we have to teachthem.MAROON: In the law school? REDFIELD: In the law school.So in no sense can the education inthe law school be considered sim¬ply a professional training in law.MAROON: To continue your fig¬ure, people in the College who donot learn to read and to write andto think are yet theoretically givena liberal education.REDFIELD: Yes, that’s right, sowhat we’re really talking about isgood education and bad education.Now there’s no reason why peopleshouldn’t be trained in. . . I can’tthink of anything limited enough.MAROON: Entomology?REDFIELD: Entomology. Well,I don’t know much about it, but Isuspect that if you have reallygifted teachers who really caredabout the students, and who reallycared about what this thing reallyis, its human meaning, then thatcould be a general education.One of the things that I alwaysthink of as a model, is what usedto be called, very arrogantly, aclassical education. Now one thingabout a classical education wasthat it was entirely based upontexts in Greek and Latin. Most cfthe training was in how to readthese languages and somewhat ar¬tificially to write them. One of thethings which made it a seriouseducation—at its best—was thatthe classicist was expected u* knoweverything in his area. This washis ultimate responsibility, al¬though it was understood that no¬ body really would know every¬thing.Now, the man who was con¬cerned with the Greeks not onlycould read Greek, but he was ex¬pected to know a good deal aboutthe linguistics of the Greek lan¬guage. He was expected to under¬stand Greek history, very closelyand chronologically, to know thedates on which everything oc¬curred, and what is controversialabout them, and to know the sub¬stance of the controversy. He wasexpected to have a feeling forGreek literature of a great varietyof kinds, to have some sence ofGreek philosophy, to have someknowledge of historical method asit is represented in the variousGreek writers. He was expected toknow someting about Greek scienceand Greek medicine. Now, if youthink about it, you can see whatan extremely broad education thatis. It is limited in some respects,and certainly a man could comeout of that education and know ab¬solutely nothing of what is going onin the world today, about what thetrouble is in Vietnam, and whywe’re having so much trouble withAfrica, and so on. But as far asdeveloping a man’s capacities, hisabilities for dealing with the wholerange of human problems, it is acomplete education.Now what the English alwaysfelt—and it had some foundation—was that a man who had complet-(Continued on page eight)Just call kim MDappet Dan**HE’S WEARING "ORLON”®-worsted woolflannel Haggar Slacks. He wears them toclass, to the game and out on dates...and still he looks dapper. They’re styled withthe trim fit he wants in fine dress slacks.Tailored in 70% "ORLON” acrylic-30%worsted wool. "Orion” in the blend makesthese slacks hold their knife-edge crease andshrug off wrinkles practically forever. Nowonder the gals go for "Dapper Dan”.®Du Pont’* Reg. T.M. 10.95WIN A FORD MUSTANG or one of 50 other bigprizes. See your Haggar dealer for details.Get HAGGER SLACKSat your localfine men’s shopOct. 8, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • iMusic reviewAll—Mozart a hit(Continued from page two)Is free from much of the bitteremotional content which the pa¬tient may have experienced in pastrelationships. The student is some¬one reliable to whom the patientmay reach out to in his search forsomething to hold onto.Presenting the patient with suchan opportunity to come out of hisshell is a difficult task. I believethat it requires two major quali¬ties from those in the group: real¬ istic planning on the part of thewhole group, and patient courageon the part of each member of thegroup. From its inception, V.I.S.A.has had professional advice inplanning its ward activities. Thisyear the students will meet regu¬larly, in groups, with local profes¬sionals to examine the results oftheir work as well as to plan pro¬grams for future Saturdays. Thegroup also meets regularly withthe professional staff at the hospit-Varied program set for protest days(Continued from page one)party will run from 9:30 to 12:30;• Friday, October 15: An “As¬sembly of Inquiry” to investigatethe responsibility of an institutionlike UC to the country in the eventof war. Faculty members will beasked to call off classes in order toparticipate in the assembly. Amember of the administration willbe invited to speak. The assemblywill begin at 9 am in Mandel Hall.Beginning at 11 am, a march onFifth Army headquarters, then amarch to Grant Park, wherespeeches will begin at 2 pm, andSr>1 i 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 FROMNO MONEY DOWNFrom.$370 MEMBERSHIPDEPOSIT MOVESYOU INI per month TOTAL MONTHLYPAYMENT INCLUDESPRINCIPAL, INTEREST,TAXES, INSURANCEAND ALLMAINTENANCE.Your co-op hast 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 • IPud Insulation • Genuine Oak Floors • Lifetime Face Brick •Aluminum Siding • Convenient Gutters and Downspouts • Sound*proofed for Privacy • Private Rear Yard Areas.Plumbing, Heating, Electrical Repair Bills . . . Complete Care ofLawns and Shrubs . . . Everything is Taken Care of For You asLong as You Live in Beautiful London Towne Houses.FCH Company Inc.Cooperative Representatives101st and Cottage GrowHours: Open Daily & Sunday, 12-8 pmSaturday, 12-6 pm. Closed ThursdayCHICAGO MAROONthen a protest at Army inductionheadquarters;• Saturday, October 16: Work¬shops evaluating the protest move¬ment and setting up projects to en¬list community involvement. Forfurther information on the work¬shops, contact the Chicago Com¬mittee to End the War in Vietnam,1103 E. 63rd St., 752-5293.Apart from the above program,a Rally for Peace in Vietnam willbe held Sunday, October 17, in theLittle Theatre of McCormickPlace. Sponsored by the ChicagoPeace Council, the rally will fea¬ture civil rights leader Dick Grego¬ry. Student admission will be 50c. It’s apparently becoming an annual occurrence for theal. However, the greatest amount chicag0 Symphony to give us our Mozart for the season inof planning and direction is carried one ]arge jump an(j then £0 deprive us for the rest of theon by the students themselves. year However unfortunate that might normally be, whenThe second quality of which I Qne treated to such luminous ■spoke was patient courage. This is an(j beaUtifUlly proportioned read- Throughout, he was plunging inthe courage to walk into the waid jngs as ^ose offered by Jean Mar- and out of phrases and souping updespite the ignorance and fear tjnon jast p^ay, then it is doubly his tone to such an extent that ifwhich rejection of the mentally ill unfajr> Martinon had not held firm controlhas brought. Courage is also need- j have never been particularly and kept Saryk within the line ofed in the effort to make contact keen on one-composer programs, the work, it might have gotten outwith the patient. The patient wants simply because it is all too easy °f hand- However, in all mattersa friend, but his fear of rejection for a conductor to fall into a stylis- bl’1. the first-movement cadenza, inmay prevent him from showing his tic rnt. By l^ ime the last work Kreislerish concoctjon, Martinonneed. If the student can patiently is played, it begins to sound like a concerto didand firmly keep trying to make continuation of what was heard ^ cQme Qat as disfigured as itcontact, however, he can succeed. earlier. What is invariably missing . controlis that necessary contrast needed nil|nt n*ve Wl.m less c?n“°1-GREG BELLOW t0 illustrate the changes of period >omethmg happened at interims.and musical philosophy that mark sion however. Maybe it was that1 ,l jn« o nomnne Martinon had to wait at the podi-Chicago Maroon I £.s creative life. This, indeed, was for five mimdea unti> lhe Northa pitfall of which Martinon was sh°ra , “atrons yakkingeditor-in-chief Daniel Hertzberg wary and one that he circumvent- and,let him proceed, but he deliv-business manager .... Michael Kassera ed in two ways. First he presented ered an absolutely flaming readingmanaging editor Dinah Esrai a varied sampling of Mozart from °f *nd Fuguue' ,K- 546‘NEWS EDITOR David Safer different eras. In addition by Srassistants to the editor adapting his interpretive approach ducted the Prague Symphony, eith-AssisTANTs To tme editok v «? . ...u er. The first movement wasSharon Goldman to the differing character of each , , ■J»n Phillips of these works, he deprived them brought to a pitch of almost tern-David l. Aiken „f the classical sameness of ap- f!™8 in ensi y, and in his readingpreach which has tended in the c0“ld the li-past to make the public overlook ta"lc atr“«les lha! ware t'd|y.d*-the diversity in Mozart's music. «doj*d latcr »" lh,e G-M.nor„ .„ „ The Third Violin Concerto, writ- S'mphon,. Throughout, though.D,»,d aichier ten when MoMrt was on,y „ineteerli Martmon maintained this aplomb.MUSIC EDITOR Pc.r Rabinpwiti is one of his early concertos which ™d ,hd Ia„Ve.. s.! „T“ ,“S ,Lassociate music editor Ed chikofsky sparkles with wit and exuberance.political editor Bruce Freed it is an example of how graceful . the Droerameditor emeritus Robert f. Levey the concerto form was before the . i ; ®staff: David Gumpert, Marc PoKemper, Bar- nineteenth century got its hands on . . ’ t b marvelled at*bara Jur. Tom Heagy, Micbae, Nemeroff, * and expanded it to unbelievable ^^ th^ he overloaded theunits. The only person for whom stage wilh stringS( he never let*h‘s “"<*?» was not *racetu and them over power the winds, and heman, Craig Reiier, Susan Kirchmyer, Nina delicate, though, \vas ( oncertmas- was ajwayS careful to preserve theGordon, Mahonri Young. ter Steven Staryk, the soloist. transparenCy and delicacy thatMozart requires. Even the Praguewas carefully performed, for all itsovert vehemence and passion.Loath as I am to speculate on suchan odious prospect, perhaps the oldladies down front ought to rile upMartinon more often.Ed ChikofskyCOPY EDITOR Eve HochwaldCULTURE EDITOR Jamie Beth GaleEDITOR, CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWing to this as he gave to the less^potent Symphony No. 33, whichPaul Satter, Paul Burstein, Rick Pollack, ,j jt Th only person for whomEve Hockwald, Dick Ganz, Ellis Levin, Jeff J vKuta, Carol Chave, Pat Buckley, Mike Seid-THE WORD FROM THE BIRD:QUALITYThe Max Brook Co.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERShas served the Campus with Unexcelled Qualityand Service Since 19171013-17 East 61st StreetAcross from Burton-Judson Ct. Phones: Ml 3-7447HY 3-6868 UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“a strong bank"NEW CAR LOANS$JIOO per hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.CMR. PIZZAS? ecv,o\* WE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTSHY 3-8282FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENAlso Ch. Broiled Hamburgers s°*cPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 4 PartySautaga 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Olivo 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50Vi and Vi 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients 50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pina 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacon 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pina 2.50 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers) Box of Broasted Chicken20 Pieces, Golden Brown16 Pieces, Golden Brown10 Pieces, Golden BrownBAR B-Q RIBSSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGE,MEAT BALL1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Ope" 1 Day* a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — FrI. to 3:00 a.m.Sat. to 3:00 a.m. «— Open 2 p.m. SundaysOct. 8, 1965- X -Selective Service will look twice(Continued from page three) If a man is called to take his than during World War IT.War. This means draft boardscould require a student to meetcertain academic levels in order toretain his deferment.The graduate students’ chances ofcompleting his studies before ser¬vice vary. The state director of Sel¬ective Service for Maryland said ina recent interview that graduatedeferments were considered by lo¬cal boards but that defermentswere given after asking if the stu¬dent's study were serving the na¬tional interest, health or safety.The Maryland director, Brig. GenHenry C. Stanwood, said he felt therequirement could be interpretedto mean that science, math, andmedical students were favored.JUST AS there will be a tighteningof student deferments, medical de¬ferments will also be harder tocome by. physical, the chances are still bet¬ter than even that he will beturned down. A report from theArmy Surgeon General’s office in¬dicated that during 1964 only 47percent of the 847,511 drafteeswere accepted.Of the 53 per cent that failed toqualify, 22.2 percent were for med¬ical reasons; 16.2 percent for men¬tal reasons; 11.4 percent had “lim¬ited training ability’’ 1.5 percenthad both medical and mental rea¬sons for being rejected; and 1.7percent were found to be “morallyunfit.”Changing criteria“The criteria for medically de¬termining “combat fitness” haveobviously changed with the chang¬ing techniques of warfare,” the re¬port said. In some ways, the pre¬sent standards are more liberal Still, medical deferments aregoing to be harder to get in thecoming months. Gen. Hersheycompares the situation to shoppingfor tomatoes. “When you go shop¬ping for tomatoes and discoverthat there is a limited supply,” thegeneral says, “you have to buysome with spots if you’re to get asmany as you need.”The easiest way to get draftedstill is to be in some sort of troublewith your local board. The highestdraftable classification is reservedfor those who the local board findsto be “delinquent” under the Selec¬tive Service Act. This may be aperson who doesn’t keep the boardinformed of his address or his sta¬tus. The law says a registrantmust furnish the board informationon any change of status within 10days. Now there is a new way tobe in trouble with the board, andwith the law.Registrar sees little prospect for immediate change(Continued from page three) gon at the registrar’s office.THE SELECTIVE SERVICE at Local situationpresent does not ask for the stu- “There has been a 100 to 200dent’s field of concentration, al- man per month local induction in-though, Mrs. Sullivan said, this crease since the August inductioncould easily be done. As to specu- of 385 men,” according to Mrs.lation that students might be draft- Hertha Maas, supervisor at theed according to how vital to the Selective Service office at 2355 W.national interest their field of con- 63 st-centration might be deemed by * would like to emphasize thatSelective Service. Mrs. Sullivansaid that she did not see how itcould be determined whether ornot a student’s program is vital.As a comfort to nervous malestudents, Mrs. Sullivan said thatthere has been no indication thatmore information will be requestedof the registrar. “No one has asyet been jerked from the Universi¬ty.” she said. “All possibilities ofthis type have so far been avert¬ed.”Students in difficulty as to theirdraft status should see Mrs. ReaLehnhoff Studios ofMusic and Dance• Private Music Lessons in Clarinet, Flute, Trumpet, FrenchHorn, Recorder Piano, Violin, Viola, Cello, Guitar. Theoryand Harmony.• Dance Class Lessons — Children and Adults. Special Classesin Modern Dance for University Girls, Saturday Afternoon.• Faculty composed of Members of Chicago Symphony Or¬chestra, Lyric Opera Orchestra and Grant Park Orchestra.1438 E. 57th ST. BU 8-4347PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhair stylists at5242 Hyde Pork Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710% Student Discount the qualifications could be signifi¬cantly altered for November andthe months thereafter,” cautionedMrs. Maas. “Our present proce¬dure as regards a student is to re¬view requests for student defer¬ments in September and Octoberwith an eye toward whether he isdoing full time satisfactory work,”she said.SUNDAY’SFUN DAY,CHARLIEBROWNTHE NEWPEANUTS*CARTOON BOOK Iby Charles M. Schulz*iinehart a at your collogobookstoroONLYHolt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc.Thank YouALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKI For your indulgence during a trying quarter opening periodTED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from the when our volume reached over 12 times that of a normal day.SOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICAN Our limited space made it impossible for us to provide the serv-dishes. ice you deserve but we do stock all titles required or recom-TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOU mended by your instructors and in quantities estimated to fullySUCH DISHES AS: meet the needs of registrants for each course.Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll, However, during the big rush you may not have been able toas well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, Seafood secure all of the text books you need.Delight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates. Every effort has been made to re-stock our shelves and theAfter dinner don’t miss the new book you need may be on the shelf now so please try us again.play at the Last Stage, “4 by 4”Join us for cocktails at inter- The titles are arranged in labelled sections and on shelvesmission and sandwiches afterthe show. marked to identify course requirements.URALS HOUSE OF TIKI If you should have difficulty in finding the text you need pleasesee Mel Ahlert, Lionel Holmes, Mike Balias or Keith Eastin.51ST& HARPER They will be happy to serve you.Food served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed. The University of Chicago BookstoreLI 8-7585 5802 Ellis Ave. RANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open Evenings — Billie Tregonza, Manageressi.et a Smile Be YourUmbrella When You Wear anAndes Maincoat®beautifully tailored coat has a stand-up collar, fly front,self yoke, and is made of 50% polyester/50% cotton. Acomforting feature is the split shoulder with London’s Fog’sspecial Third Barrier® Construction. It defies the mostdevastating downpour. For perfect temperature control,this easy convertible is equipped with a zip-out warmermade of 100% orlon pile. Sizes Regular 34-46,Short36-42, Long36-46. In natural, olive,black, with black liner.•DuPont’s reg. t.m.BONUS OFFER!!THIS WEEK ONLYFREE TICKET (Good Any Nite Exc. Sot.)to "HANDS AROUND IN LOVE"NOW PLAYING AT THE ALLERTONHOTEL WITH PURCHASE OF $35 ORMORE. THIS OFFER RESTRICTED TO THEFIRST 100 U OF C STUDENTS ONLY.MUST PRESENT STUDENT I. D. AT TIMEOF PURCHASE.THE STORE FOR MENUfflttttt atth (Earn pu a ftifopitt the tVew Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100$4250’• I ■ Oct. 8,1965 • Chicago marocTn • f! $ Good educational system designed for teachers, not students(Continued from page five)ed this education could learn al¬most anything else.MAROON: Like the ChineseCivil Service?REDFIELD: You know, iheBritish Civil Service was to a largedegree based, by direct borrowing,on the Chinese Civil Service. Thenotion is that if you can learn towrite Greek elegiacs, you can cer¬tainly learn Arabic in a year ortwo, and what’s more, you can findout all about what’s going on in theNear East, and you'll be a very ef¬fective administrator. And many ofthe classicists who were taughtnothing about the modern worldbecame very successful adminis¬trators. Now this isn’t the greatesteducation ever produced. It’s onegood one, though, and it does giveyou an idea of what can be donewith a specialized subject matter.So there’s a distinction betweenthe generality of an education andthe liberality of the capacitieswhich it builds. You can developcapacities in a very broad waywith a very narrow subject matter,and vice versa.MAROON: If you don’t do any¬thing with it.REDFIELD: Or if what you doWith it is doctrinaire, or guided bysome sense of the right way tothink . ..MAROON: Or mechanical. . . REDFIELD: Or mechanical. Ithink, for example, that the Hutch-ins-Faust College, that I wentthrough, had some extraordinarilygood teaching in it, and any stu¬dent who makes the effort couldfind himself some remarkableteachers in any of his courses. Butit was also true that there weresome teachers who responded inan infertile way to this system.They had a notion that their wayof teaching and exposition wouldenable them to teach any text. Theresult of which in unclever handswas that every textbook came outsounding very much the same. Itdidn't matter if you were readingAristotle’s De Anima, or Harvey’sCirculation of the Blood or Warand Peace —they all turned out tobe very much the same kind ofbook. Now, that's general educa¬tion at its most mechanical, and itcan happen as easily as specializeeducation becoming mechanical.MAROON: Then how do you getaround the mechanical quality ofteaching?REDFIELD: Here again youhave a paradoxical situation. In acertain sense, you’re really con¬cerned with people. If you have agood staff, you're going to get goodteaching. On the other hand, theadministrator’s role in this systemis simply to make a atmosphere inwhich this is slightly more likely tohappen than it would otherwise.That’s all an administrator can do—you encourage what you value and discourage what you distrust.How to do that is a long question.One of my teachers, DavidGrene, used to say “There is nokind of course in which you can’tteach anything, but a surveycourse comes as close to it asany.” Now that, I think, puts itvery well. We don’t have surveycourses on this campus, but...MAROON: We don't?REDFIELD: I haven’t seenthem, but they may exist.MAROON: What about Historyof England or History of EnglishLiterature?REDFIELD: I know very littleabout them. My guess is that verylargely the people who teach themwould not describe them as surveycourses, and very largely theywould be right.MAROON: What sort of course,then, did Mr. Grene mean?REDFIELD: He says he used toteach a course in World Literature—it was broken down into periods,and you read representative textsin each period. So he had twoweeks to talk about Homer, then aweek to talk about the Oresteia,then they would read five or sixplays of Euripides and five or sixplays of Sophocles and he had aweek to talk about those. Thenthey would read some comedy andsome Thucydides, and that wouldbe the Greeks. Then they would goBOB NELSON MOTORS 6136 S. COTTAGE GROVI• MIDWAY 3-4500HONDAworld's biggest setter!ONLY 52 AVAILABLE ON JULY SHIPMENT . ORDER NOW FOR EARLIEST DELIVERYN4NM SVPU N, HI, n tt. Sew iport v*r»ion of th« popuUr Honda 90.AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE FOR MOST POPULAR IMPORTS1 on to the Romans.Now that means that, no matterhow brillant your lectures are, thestudents haven’t got the time tobegin even scratching the surfaceof any of the texts, because they’rehustled on to something else. It isalmost necessarily superficial. Itake this as an example of a formin which you can set a teacherwhich will be crippling. Now, Ihope that there are forms whichwill develop them, really get themgoing—this is particularly ourresponsibility.MAROON: What sort of form doyou think these classes will take.REDFIELD: Well, I have a setof biases here.MAROON: Go right ahead.REDFIELD: I am interested inthe staff course. I think a staffcourse can be a good thing if it de¬velops the teachers who work in it.This is one of my fundamental no¬tions—it’s not very radical—it’sthat if you have a learning faculty,the faculty are really developing inthe course of their work, then thestudents will learn. Now a staffcourse can do this on occasion itthe members are diverse enough togive each other ideas, and similarenough to be really concerned withone another. In an ideal stallcourse, the most interesting thingabout it are the staff meetings—this is w'here the most interestingthings go on. This is where som>thing happens to the teachers.The staff course isn’t the onlything that can develop the teacher.One thing is teaching a reading listthat you yourself haven’t designed.This would often force me to readand think about books which Ididn’t like, which were unsym¬pathetic to me. Something is lost,of course, but every once in awhile you can discover a book thatway. That’s a very exciting exper¬ience for the teacher, and it seemsto me that the excitement is com¬municated to the students. All of asudden I had to read Santayana carefully, and he really isn’t suchan idiot. I always thought so, be¬cause I can’t stand the way hewrites, but there’s something goingon in his mind. That can be veryexciting.MAROON: Is there anythingelse of this kind?REDFIELD: Yes, sometimes itis good to design a course whichsystematically breaks with the ex¬isting structure of knowledge—asexemplified in the College cata¬logue. The teachers have to take afresh look at the material and ex¬amine the foundations of theirknowledge—and this too can be re¬warding. Let me stress this point-one thing about every good educa¬tional system is that is is fundam¬entally designed for the sake of thepeople who are teaching it. Oneword which always makes me un¬comfortable is that so-and-so is“responsible” in his teaching of hisundergraduate courses, or that heis “careful” that he is “meetinghis obligation”—any phrases ofthat kind. In my opinion, goodteaching is teaching that you liketo do. You don't attack it with asense of duty; on the contrary, it isfulfilling, as an intellectual. If it’sa really good course, it would takewild horses to drag you away fromit. You don’t do it because you arepaid a salary and it’s part of yourjob. but because it has become oneof the centers of your own develop¬ment. That’s what teaching at agood college really ought to be.MAROON: In Mr. Sinaiko’scourse last spring quarter, he lec¬tured and you stepped in fromtime to time to heckle wheneveryou felt he had gone too far. Whatabout that system?REDFIELD: Well, that worksall right for Herman Sinaiko andmyself, because we’re old friendsand understand one another verywell. It’s not the sort of thing thatone would want to force on people. ,There are colleges where this is *(Continued on page nine)BOB NELSON MOTORS6052 or 6136 SO. COTTAGE GROVE MIDWAY 3-4500IV.V. AUTUMN SEMINARSPresented by CHAPLAINS TO THE UNIVERSITYopen to all studentsFAITH AND MYTH IN THE NEW TESTAMENT: an introductionLeader: Fr. John McKenzie, Visiting Prof, in the Divinity SchoolFirst Meeting: Monday, October 11, 1965 4:30 p.m. Chapel HouseFATHERS AND HERETICS: the early shaping of Christian theologyLeader: Rev. Wayne Saffen, Lutheran Campus PastorFirst meeting: Wed., Oct. 13, 1965, 4:30 p.m. Calvert HouseTHE SECULAR CITY: a contemporary “secular" interpretation of the Gospel;text The Secular City, by Harvey CoxLeader: Rev. Phil Drippes, Methodist ChaplainFirst Meeting: Monday, October 11, 1965 4:30 p.m. Calvert HouseSEXUALITY AND THE NEW MORALITYLeaders: Rev. Harold Walker, Jr., Campus Minister for the Porter Foundationwith Fr. Thomas B. McDonough, Roman Catholic ChaplainFirst Meeting: Thursday, October 14, 1965 4:30 p.m. Chapel HousePSYCHOTHERAPY AND CHRISTIAN VIEW OF MANLeaders: Rev. Phil Anderson, Lutheran Campus Pastorwith Ronald Moen, PhD., Clinical PsychologistFirst Meeting: Tuesday, October 12, 1965 4:30 p.m. Chapel HouseSeminars meet once each week for eight weeks.Inquire or register at Chapel House, Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3391or Calvert. House, BU 8-2311, 5735 University Ave. EARNINGS FOR SCHOOL EXPENSESWe are quite interested in men who have worked all or a part of theirway through school. We have found that this type of candidate gains val¬uable practical experience, certainly demonstrates ambition, initiative, self-reliance, and knows the value of a dollar. He usually has confidence, cannotbe discouraged easily, and has a more mature attitude toward job procure¬ment and business in general. He views life somewhat more seriously thanthe student who has been given everything during his college career.Part-Time: 3 evenings or weekendSalary $75 per weekContact: Student Personnel Director — Mr. G0ULETAS9 A.M. to 3 P.M. 782-4362The Christian Science Monitor— An International Daily Newspaper —• Concise, Reliable Coverage• Feature Pages On Major Topics, IncludingTravel, Sports, Business And Finance• Overnight Mail DeliverySpecial Half Rate Offer toFaculty and Students□ 1 YR. $12 (reg. $24 per yr.) \J 9 MOS. $9 Q 6 MOS. $6Please send me a subscription to the Monitor for the periodchecked. I enclose $ I am a □ student Q faculty mem¬ber at _NAMESTREET.CITY STATE ZIP CODE.Mail to:The Christian Science Monitor1 Norway StreetBoston, Massachusetts 021158 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 8, 1965'Heckler's role comfortable, but irresponsible(Continued from page eight)done all the time. At St. John’s, for(example, all their seminars arehandled by two people. I heard aseminar there and it was a goodone. Normally there, one man be¬comes the leader and the othernian tags along. It’s not the sort ofthing that could be done mechani¬cally. but joint teaching is certain¬ly something which we could haveiiiore of. Herman Sinaiko and Ilearned some things from ourspring experience which we will beputting to use this winter when wewill be teaching a joint course onthe Republic. This will be muchmore of a joint course—and it’svery important to exchange rolesin a situation like that. The heck¬ler’s role, I know from experience,is a very comfortable one, but it’salso a very irresponsible one. Allyou have to do is find the difficul¬ty; you don’t have to find any solu¬tions. So I think we’U try alternat¬ing roles of leader and heckler . . .MAROON: The heckler’s rolemay be an irresponsible one, butit’s also an extraordinarily usefulone, because it leaves studentswith the impression that the wholething isn’t just cut and dried, andthat the professor’s words of wis¬dom aren’t the only solution to theproblems being discussed.REDFIELD: But I always as¬sumed that our students knew that... I mean, that’s such a simplething.MAROON: But it’s not alwaysmade clear.REDFIELD: Well, that may bethe case. Once you get to talking—not just lecturing, but even talking—: -u have an impulse to put thewhole thing together. Anyone who’stalking about something warns to make sense of it, and he tends toput it together and make it verytight. And then it’s hard for thestudents to crack it—after all, theydon’t know as much as we do, orthey wouldn’t be here. They’re notas sophisticated, and their sophis¬try is not as expert. We have atendency to talk our way out of ourdifficulties if we can get away withit.But this heckling could be a ser¬ious problem with joint teaching ifit closes up the teacher who’s lec¬turing. Any good teaching methodopens up the teacher who uses it.We will have to be very carefulwith it—we wouldn’t want to im¬pose it on everybody.MAROON: You would think of itas a possible experiment, though?REDFIELD: It’s very much thesort of experiment which we oughtto be doing. Another sort of experi¬ment which we used to try infor¬mally when we were students wasto go to several sections of thesame staff course. As a matter offact, in any course I really like Iuse to go to at least two sections.You see, there the teacher is free—he can explore, grind his ownaxes, but the student who goes totwo or more sections rapidlylearns . . . Even quoting one teach¬er back at the other is not alwaysa success. On the contrary, it mayhappen that the very thing thatstirs you and seems to clear every¬thing up in one section, when youbring it up in the other sectionvery quickly falls to pieces in yourhands. It turns out that it reallywasn’t right at all—or at least you can’t defend it. And that’s oftenvery useful for people.MAROON: What do you thinkthe main difficulty is with educa¬tion in the College today? Whydon’t people learn more? Becomemore independent?REDFIELD: Well, it’s hard forme to comment on the College to¬day because, really I don’t know itvery well—I’ve done a certain am¬ount of college teaching, but I’venever been on the College faculty.I’ve never attended a College fa¬culty meeting, and I can neitherspeak for the College nor discuss itvery systematically.I have a general feeling that ourcollege now is a kind of jungle. It’sfull of good things, but they’rethrown together in a way whichcan only be explained historically,which is rather haphazard. Onevery simple thing you can say isthat it’s hard now for students tofind the things that are good—thatare good especially for them. Ifyou read through a time schedule,you’ll find there are lots of courseswith various titles. And some ofthem are taught by people youknow. And some aren’t. But youdon’t really know what you ought tobe taking next, or what the nextstep is in your education, and thesystem as a whole has not enoughcoherence. Now, in general, I be¬lieve that the aims of all five colle¬giate divisions will be to producegreater coherence. The differenceis that in our division we are goingto be concerned about building co¬herence not about some subjectmatter, but around something else. Around what else is not perfectlyclear, but something else.MAROON: If you’re not teach¬ing a subject matter, will you beteaching two subject-matters, or anumber of subject matters, orwhat? You can’t be teaching noth¬ing.REDFIELD: Well, let me put itthis way: I think that everybodywho thinks about undergraduateeducation starts out by thinkingabout how he was educated—notwhat was done to them in someformal sense, but what worked intheir case. In my own case, I hada rather curious career here.I came into this college ratheryoung, in the way people used to—when I was about fifteen. I tookthose placement tests. I reallyknew nothing—I’d had a very nar¬row education—but I had in thosedays a gift which I’m sorry to sayI’ve lost, for taking multiple choiceexams, so that I could usually geta passing grade on an exam in asubject in which I was totally igno¬rant-just by reading the exam.The result of that was that I wasrequired to take just over twoyears of the four year College. Andsince I was very young, and sinceI was living at home, and since myparents could afford it, they ad¬vised me to take these two yearsspread over a four year period. The result was that I wentthrough the old big model of theCollege and at the same time 1was running a kind of private edu¬cation of my own, which largelyconsisted of the Greek language-*which is a long slow process. I didfour years of steady work onGreek and Greek texts all the waythrough the college. Now a patternof this kind, I think, can be a veryuseful one, and hypothetically, Isuspect that it is a pattern whichwill emerge in the fifth co!isS*»todivision.It seems to me tfNte 'ffs mafhave an education in which thereis general education—in the sensethat there are big staff courses—which are centered on problems,which are taught by discussion,and which do not in any senseclaim to be producing expertise inthe students. These courses willnot all be introductory. Some ofthem will be introductory, some ofthem will be senior, so that theybuild up a kind of total framearound the College. I imagine thatthese courses will be taken by ev¬ery student who enters the College,and they will embody the intellec¬tual community which I hope thiscollege will be.Then, also, every student will becoming to terms with some subject(Continued on page ten)SAMUEL A. BELLUiitf Shell From Bell**SINCE 192<4701 S. Dorchester Ays.KEnweed t-3150 JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH--NEW & USED-Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsSERVICE CALLS - S3NEW TEXT BOOKS USEDSTUDENT SUPPLIESFOUNTAIN PENS—NOTE BOOKS — STATIONERY — LAUNDRY CASESBRIEF CASES —SPORTING GOODSTYPEWRITERS SOLD — RENTED — REPAIREDPOSTAL STATION RENTAL LIBRARYWOODWORTH’SBOOKSTORE1311 EAST 57lh STRUT2 BLOCKS EAST OF NANDEL HALLSTORE HOURS: DAILY 8:00 A.M. »• 6:00 P.M..,, EVENINGS — Monday, Wednesday, Friday to 9.00 PM.Oct. %, 1965 CHICAGO MAROONHONDASIMMEDIATE DELIVERY• ALL MODELS• ALL COLORSFOR A REALLY GOOD SELECTIONCOME TO SOUTH SIDE HONDACENTER ONE OF CHICAGO'SLARGEST D!£ ?LAYS CF KOJCACYCLES . . .Exclusively KCt^DA!• EXCLUSIVE LAY AWAY PLAN• BANK FINANCING• INSURANCE PAYMENTSouth SideHONDA CENTER8426 SO. ASHLAND AVE.Phone 239-3611EXCLUSIVE HONDA . . .SALES • SERVICE - PARTS Students miss sense of personal accomplishment(Continued from page nine) give you was the thing I was talk- general program, which will be for the full man, conference the readymatter. In the special programs ing about before—the sense of per- everybody, and which I look upon man< and writing the exact man."we will be teaching subject mat- sonal accomPlisbment. The sense ag essentially a development of REDFIELD: \es, that s it. Nowe will be teaemng s j that you have personally mastered ^ nrnhlemaHf we also want to devel°P the “fullters. I expect them to be intellec- something, or that you have creat- capac * ■ g» P > man »> an(j not jn the sense of dille-tually tough, even a little dry, and ed something. and the ?^d sense^ genet at— tantes. The “full man" has some-I expect that they will communi- indpnpndpnt and the special Pr°6ran]s> which tbjng of the specialist about him. Itcate to the student the sense that , , also should be serious, educational means that you have some sense inthere is a recalcitrant world out study, it could be built around bit and driving towards the develop- yourself that you have really comethere that you have to know about, papers-but it could also be built ment of the student, but which will t0 terms with material—that youwhich you can find out about only around a ^^age^This^ was^my be concentrating on a specialized know things that other people don’tthrough hard work, and which you experience: the exotic and classi¬cal completely master-it’s some- , which are jxtraorthing bigger than you are.Now, this is an element of under¬graduate education which, in myopinion, the old Hutchins-FaustCollege did not adequately provide.It seems to me that that College,which after all, was designed forpeople entering at fifteen or six¬teen, was the greatest secondaryschool education ever created. Itwas what a really good high schoolought to be. It really introducedyou to the intellectual life—turnedyou on—gave you ideas—got you dinarily difficult for students, arein themselves a kind of accom¬plishment. If you get out of college area, that there will be created atension out of which I hope thatsomething interesting will emerge.Now the interesting things thatemerge should do so through theand you can read Greek or Chi- independence study programsnese, you have something you canreally hang onto. You know: “Iwent to this college and it wasvery exciting, and also I learned toread Greek or Chinese." Or: “. . .and also I really did some substan¬tial social research here—I reallyfound something out.” Or:. . . andalso I am an expert (of a certainkind) which is going to be the third part.So you imagine the student—you„„„ ture. I mean, I’m really very sd-started—go >ou rea \g & • phisticated about modern literaturethinking—got you to arguing aboutthings. It gave you a sense that itis important to think, that it is im- must remember that this is com¬pletely hypothetical: it's just easi¬er to talk about these things in theconcrete—you imagine the student— who enters this College andtakes, scattered through a four orin modern European litera- five year period, some courses inwhich he is simply trying to cometo terms with some serious texts—reading War and Peace, or Aristo-—if my friends want to knowsomething about it, I’m the first tie’s De Anima, or whatever he’s, ., , ,, , person they call.” Any one of those reading for the purpose of havingportant to read carefully, and that thj can be important to one’s general ideas in a class discussionthere are a number of very greatmen out there, and that it would bevery interesting to find out some¬thing about them. What it didn't sense of really being ready to goon, which is what we are talkingabout here.It is in this contrast between thejames Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS-LINENS-TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. Card eyes examinedDr. KURT ROSENBAUMOPTOMETRIST53rd Kimbark PlazaHY 3-8372 and writing short term papersabout them. These general coursesconcentrate on what Bacon callsthe “ready man.” What’s the otherone?MAROON: “Reading makethMODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 I. 55th HY 3-9259 know, and that you’ve accom¬plished things that other people ha¬ven't accomplished. The specialprograms will be an introduction tothat kind of process, and the inde¬pendent study its completion.Take for example the relatedstudies of economics, politicalscience, and history. Each has itsown methods of research, itscharacteristic sets of questionswhich it asks about society. If youtreat these things as all “socialsciences” you are introducing afalse similarity. You are talkingabout things which cannot be di¬vided from one another—not be¬cause they’re not separate, but be¬cause they're not even compara¬ble.So we can’t talk about How WeShould Teach; we have to talkabout How Should We Teach What.It is my hope that thinking abouthow to teach each course will enli¬ven our ideas of what the course isall about. If we are talking abouthow to teach economics, for exam¬ple, we have to ask the fundamen¬tal questions: “why is economicsinteresting?” “why does anyonestudy it?” “how does it take itsplace as part of our intellectuallife?”—then we can build ourteaching methods from that inves¬tigation.HALL impends1444 E. 57 ST.(next to the Medici & the Green Door)BU 8-4500Opening In about a weekGuarantees that nothing purchased in TOAD HALL can bepurchased in the Chicago area for less within 30 days.FRANK FLYNN - General ManagerHi - FidelityAM-FM RADIO-TVTAPE RECORDERSTYPEWRITERS (a division of Discount Typewriters)ALL MAKES OF TYPEWRITERSAn exhibition of the paintings and metal sculpture ofSTEVEN JAY URRYAMPEX - ROBERTS • SCOTT - FISHER - AR - ALTEC-LANSINGDYNAMIC ACOUSTICS - ZENITH - GRUNDIG • KLHKENWOOD - EMPIRE - DUAL ■ GARRARDand many others Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty-Fifth and Woodlown Ava.LISTIIIFAIT 77. La protection flnancllre qua vouedonnez A votre famille aujourd’huldevra lui fetre procure d’une autrefapon demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certalnement accomplir cettetAche A votre place.En tant que reprAsentant local de la SunLife, puis-]e vous visiter A un moment devotre choix?Ralph J. Wood, Jr.. CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15. III.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays A FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA)A MUTUAL COMPANYThe Fret ShopNOW HASKLHStereo Music SystemsIncluding the FamousMODEL ELEVEN PORTABLEWith Built-In Solid StateFM Stereo Tuner5210 S. HarperIn Harper CourtNO 7-106010 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 8, 1965Classifieds ABTEXmBTT.i October 10-27. Contem-Wt tefcu °is and Graphics inter-preting Jewish Traditions by Baskin., f°55’ Rivers and others from the Jew¬ish Museum in New York. ew Female Grad. stud, with sharp mind &varied work exp. as research asst, writ¬er, typist, business rep. seeks lucrative&/or interesting part-time job. 493-8423. Will do typing for students. Call! Mrs.Fox 149-1316. „ .FOR RENT 1964 VW white sedan 30.000 Mi. goo4condition. $1,100. Write Carl Anderson,2301 S. Central Pk. Chicago, Ill.PERSONALS rP?CKrat£ „the Hillel Sukkah Sat.Kite, October 9, 8:00 pm. Free room and board in exchange forSitting. Call: FA 4-4867. 8 Rm. Apart., 3 baths, $185, availablenow. 752-7540. 953 E. Hyde Park Blvd. TR 4 for sale 1962 low mileage, extras.In excellent condition. Call 684-6403evenings.-,iiv in support of the Unity plan forvde Park High School * 3:45 pm_TOmY . in the midway across from Pres-jdent Beadle's house-sponsored by Stu¬dent Government Album is ini Second Hand Book Sale. Library Clear¬ance. Jewish and non-Jewish subjectsLanguages of the West and Near East.Most books less than $1.00.Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn__ Mon-Fri 9:00 am - 5:00 pm Need waitresses desperately, part time,. , me> any*irne. Good pay. good tips.Apply in person to Mr. Bigg, 1440 E.57th St. Two bdrm. apt. opening at 5401 S. HydePk. Blvd. Nov. 1st. Call 288-8362 or 372-5914 (days)WANTED Exp. babysitter available my home. Rec¬ommendations. Reasonable rates. Call288-8047.TTf've been waiting for a store like ToadHall to open for 15 yrs, Frank Flynn WEEK ENDSThe return of THE GORILLAS tonite 9pm at B-J Courts. The "IN” crowd is "OUT’1 OFFSET PRINTER. Young man to op¬erate multilith four evenings week. 7-10.Experience required. NO 7-2410. Furnished room in elevator bldg, nearcampus and International hse. close toIC station. References requested. Wom¬an preferred. Call FA 4-0111 before 7:30or between 5 and 6. For Sate: 3 Indian bedspreads, suitablefor curtains for very large windows, $8;one bamboo curtain, reddish-browri,hangs from ceiling and rolls up, excel,lent room divider, $6. Call MI 3-938®nights.Karate Club meets Mon., Wed. 8:00 pmIda Noyes Theatre. Beginners Welcome.Bring exercise clothing. Taking a Humanities Lab courseDriving a YELLOW CAB WANTED: Bus boys and waitresses. Ol-iver Twist Coffee Shop. 53rd & Harper. Furn. rm. for girl, very lge. near IC Sc55th, in private home. $45 a mo. CallMU 4-5076, 5-9 pm or weekends.FOR SALEViolin Pupils - Call David Vigoda, 5326Greenwood. 363-3336.air-bus-rail-ship-hotels world-wide or lo¬cal. do-it yourself or escorted quicktours, see us now. MARCO POLO, BU8-5944.■ No, vou’ll have to do it alone. I'll be atthe teach-in in Reynolds Club all daySaturday.” or on WUCB. PREREQUISITESonly21 or overDriver's LicenseExperienced DriverCREDITSjustMONEY, MONEY, MONEY Help Wanted wiring up sound systemfor social psychological observation fa¬cility. About 60 hrs work. Call: ProfJack Sawyer, x4771 days. Jeff Mellov.493-0552 eves.TYPINGTypist expr. Reas HY 3-24387 NO LUCK HOUSE-HUNTING IN HYDEPARK? Live amid acres of green spacein a sensibly-priced home. A tew too-quality houses are available this falland winter in famous Marvnook, thestable interracial community. 15 min¬utes from the U. of C. All homes lessthan 10 years old. $18,000 to $26,000. 2 to4 bedrooms. For further data, phone SA1-9084. The Student Government Com¬mittee on Recognized Student Or¬ganizations (CORSO) will meetthis Saturday, October 9, at 7:30p.m. to appropriate funds to stu¬dent organizations. All those inter¬ested are welcome to attend. Theexact location of the meeting willbe announced on the SG bulletinboard, second floor Ida Noyes Hall.LOST: Blue wallet return to the desk atChicago Beach Hotel. 5100 Cornell. Ool.vinterested in ID s. No questions asked.B Jameson Call CA 5-6692or aoply in Derson120 E. 18th St.Work From Garage Near HomeMAROON WEEKEND GUIDEON SUMMERHILL• art exhibits• entertainment COFFEE HOUSE• literature• literature rack 1810 N. LARRABEE• 24-hour bus (No. 10) CHICAGO• study area• recorded music• 337-9168* sandwiches• pastries 6 P.M. - 6 A.M. PIZZA PLATTER1508 Hyde Park Blvd.KE 6-6606 KE 6-3891Delivery .25TABLE SERVICEPIZZA AND ITALIAN FOODSANDWICHESVa FRIED CHICKENFRENCH FRIES - COLE SLAWROLL & BUTTER$1.50 HARPER THEATRE5238 S. HARPER BU 8-1717presentsTHE ESTABLISHMENT"England's satirical poke at the status quo'1THRU OCT. 10th ONLYrues., wed., Thurs., 8:30 — Sun. 2:30 and 7:30 $3.04Friday 8:30 — Sat. 7 and 10 P.M $3.20Student Disc, with I.D. card availableonly on Tuos., Wed., Thurs., Sun. eve $2.25| "FIEIT" "SAVAGE” "POWERFUL" "COMPELLING" "MOST MOVING PLAY IN TOWN" jLimes Her. Trib. N.Y. Fost W. Tele. A Sue Journal AmericanTHRU OCT. 17 armur miller'sa new irom me undueON STAGE—DIRECT FROMA SMASHING OFF-BROADWAYSUCCESS—WITH MEMBERS *F ORIGINAL CAST.SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT AVAILABLEMILL RUN PLAYHOUSE Milwaukee Ave.at GoH Rd.t NilesH PHONE ORDERS: 763-1608, 299-5559mww&ms&mmmsmmmmaa [ dork ,hM*r» | F|■am 50'£. ■■m for college student* ■m witfc i.4. cord Dm • different double ■features daily■ • open dawn to doom ■■ • little gallery ■■ far gals only ■■Fri. 8—"stalag 17", love in 101the afternoon".> Sat. 9—"sex and the single p■ girl", "why bother toknock". 1Sun. 10—"the night watch". a"of wayward love".Mon. 11—"young dillinger". ■■ "requiem for a aunfighter".■ Tues. 12—"the buccaneer","attila".■ Wed. 13—"beyond a reasonable■ doubt", "affair with astranger".a Thur. 14—"flying leather-, necks", "split second". Ddark & maditemit 2-2843GOLD CITY INN"A Gold Mine of Good Food1110% STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD THE MEDICIGALLERY and COFFEE HOUSENOW SERVES• SHISH-KABOB• LULA-KABOB• TAS-KABOBNATIVE DISHES OF AHMAD, OUR PERSIAN MANAGERHOURS: Weekday* 6-12 P.M., Friday Till 1 A M.Saturday 12 A.M.-2 A.M., Sunday 10 A.M.-12 P.M.1450 E. 57thBehind The GREEN DOOR BOOK SHOP5228 HARPERHY 3-2559NICKY’SRESTAURANT AND PIZZASPECIAL! 6 bottles of Nehi,Royal Crown or Diet RiteCola with every carryoutorder of $2 or more.PIZZA OUR SPECIALTYFREE STUDENT DELIVERY53 - KIMBARK PLAZA FA 4-5340Oct. 8,1965 CHICAGO MAROON 11■ ]rtl Culture CalendarCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA—Oct. 8: Jean Martinon. cond; JohnBrowning, p. cimerosa; La MatrimoniaSegreto Overt. Mendelssohn: Cone.Stravinsky: Fire-Bird Suite.JOSH WHITE—Folksinger. Oct. 8 at8:30. $2.00. Lake Forest H. S. Aud. LakeForest. 234-3100, ext. 235. OPERALYRIC OPERA OF CHICAGO: Oct 11SIMONE BOCCANEGRO w/Tito Gobbi.Oct. 13; MEFISTOFELE w/RenataScotto.Nightly 8. $3-10. Opera House Box Of¬fice open daily 10-6: later on perform¬ance nights. Civic Opera House, 20 N.Wacker. FI 6-6111. revue sketches. The revue featuers Chi¬cago talent and is directed by Gus Gior¬dano, with continuity by David Blom-quist. 2 shows nightly. Adm charge. 901N. Rush. DE 7-1000. Sat, 8-30; Sun. 7:30. Fri & Sat, $3.90;Sun, $3.40. Jane Addams Center, 3212 N.Broadway. 348-8336.ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO -IndianBronzes: Thru Oct. 10. Prints &Drawing Dept. 60 years cf Graphics byP casso: Thru Oct. Master Drawings.M~ster Prints. Continuing. Watercolorsl ,:i'E:ow turner: t..r 1 Oc.aotography Dept. Photographs byI l Va. cCrbiit: T.iru Nov. 21.ziental Ar.. Deo'., icstivrls in Edo:F. nts of “the floating world" by mas¬ters of the Japanese woodblock print.Ceramics, Tomb Tiles and Sculpturefrom the Han Dynasty. ContemporaryC inese Painting. Continuing.Daily, 10-5: Thur, 10-9:30; Sun, 12-5.Free. Michigan & Adams.RENAISSANCE SOCIETY—Ink andpastels by Lu Wu-chiu. Oct. ll--Nov 6Daily. 10-5; Sat, 1-5; Closed Sun UC,Goodspeed Hall, 1010 E. 59th.SOUTH SHORE COMMISSION ARTLEAGUE—Annual Fall juried show.Daily, 10-10. Country Club Hotel, 6930South Shore Dr.ARTS CLUB OF CHICAGO - Gleizes-Oils, Watercolors & Drawings. Sept. 20-Oct. 30. 109 East Ontario St. THEATRE185 BAREFOOT IN THE PARK —Neil Simon's comedy starring MyrnaLoy, Richard Benjamin, Joan Van Arkana Sandor Szabo;* Mike Nichols, dir.Nightly, 8:30; Matinees, Wed. & Sat at2 Closed Sun. Nightly. s2.50-$4.95: Fri &Sat. $2.75-$5.50. Matinees, $2.50-$4.50.Bkickstone Theatre, Balbo & Michigan. 189 THE OWL AND THE PUSSY CAT—A two-character comedy starring Ear-tha Kitt and Russell Nype. Nightly 8:30;Wed & Sat matinees, 2. Closed Sun.Nightly. $3.00-$5.50: Fri & Sat, $3.50-$6.00; Matinees, $2.50-$4.50. Theatre Par¬ty and Benefit rates available. Stude-baker Theatre, 418 S. Michigan. 922-2973. 199 HULL HOUSE THEATRE ATPARKWAY —Peter S. Feibelman’s dra¬ma “Tiger, Tiger Burning Bright"; Mi¬chael Miller, dir. Thru Oct. Fri & Sat,8:30; Sun, 7:30. Fri & Sat, $2.50; Sun,$2.00. Parkway Community House 500E. 67th. 324-3880. heads”; Thomas Joarn, dir. Gtrad-oux's "The Appolo of Bellac’’; JamesMiller, dir, Henry Jenkins’ "FiveDays”; Gary Vitale, dir. A new one-actplay of Saul Bellow; James Redfield,dir. Fri-Sun, thru Oct 24. Fri & Sat at8:30; Sun at 7:30. Fri & Sat, $2.00; Sun,$1.50; Students, $1.50 Fri. only. 1506 E.51st. OA 4-4200.201 THE LAST STAGE—An evening ofone-act plays. TVilliam Hunt’s "Sleepy- HULL HOUSE UNDERGROUND _Roots by Arnold Wesker, dir. McFaddenand Sickinger. Fri & Sat at 8:30 pm Sunat 3:30 pm tickets $1.50 2250 S. State St.I S3 T.IE COCKTAIL PARTY — In aproduction by the Goodman The lire,sca ring v.obert Flemyrg of the originalLondon company. Oct 22—Nov. 13.Kigntly, 7:30; Fri & Fat. 8:30: ClosedMon. Nightly, $3.00; Fri & Sat, $3.50.Phone and mail reservations accepted.Goodman Theatre, Monroe & Columbus.CE 6-2337.187 HANDS AROUND IN LOVE —Anew musical comedy based on ArthurSchnitzler’s controversial drama "LaRonde,” starring Peter Burnell, PeggyLeRoy, Susan Rae and Joe Vocat.Nightly. 8:30, Fri & Sat 8:30 & 11: San,7:30. Closed Mon. Nightly, $2.65; Fri &Sat, $2.95. Theater in the Clouds, Al’.er-to.n Hotel, 701 N. Michigan. SU 7-4200.FILMSCLARK THEATER: Oct. 12: ATTILAv Quinn Loren, Papas. Oct 15: AuntieMarne Clark Theater, 11 N. Clark S't.C ricago.ART INSTITUTE: Oct 14: BIZARR BI¬ZARRE Fr. w/Jean-Pierre Aumont. dirMarcel Carne. Art Institute, Michigan &Adams Chicago.CHICAGO HISTORICAL SOCIETY:CONE ARE THE DAYS (PURLTE VIC¬TORIOUS) Chicago Historical Society,Clark & North Ave. Chicago. 90 GAME THEATRE —This residentcompany plays Theatre Games. Thesegames, orginated by Viola Spolin, resultin a truly improvised show which is dif¬ferent each time the Games are plaveCThe company is directed by Paul Sills.There is some audience particinatio.i.This is a first for Chicago, with Gamesnow being played in San Francisco andNew York. Nightly, $1.50; Sat, $2.00:Closed Sun. Mon. & Tue. 1947 N. Sedg¬wick. 642-4198. Official recognition of allstudent organizations expiresOctober 25. Organizationswishing to renew cr n!n rec¬ognition must fi!l out a fermwhich is available in both t!;eStudent Government officeand the s'udent activities of¬fice, both on the second floorof Ida Noyes Hall. On thepetition for recognition organ¬izations must list the namesfof at least 10 members. Onlyrecognized student orgaivza-tions are permitted to useUniversity facilities. Calendar of EventsFriday, October 8MEETING: “Koinonia" (ecumenicalfellowship group) supper, Chapel House,6 om, fallowed by a lecture by EgonWeiner, Chicago artist, 7:15 pm.1 ECTURE: "TVe Binding cf Laac: "Psychological Religious View,” DavidBalkan, hillel House, 8:30 pm.Saturday, October 9190 SECOND CITY —This and ThatNightlv, 9: Fri, 9 & 11: Sat, 9.11 & 1.Closed Mon. Nightly, $2.00; Fri $2.50;Sat, $3.00. There is also an informalshow at 11 pm on week nights & Sun¬days that includes improvised sconesbased on suggestions from the au¬dience: $1.00. Second City, 1846 N.Wells. DE 7-3992. RADIO: “International Teach-in fromUniversity of Toronto.” WUCB. i :30 am(Latin America), 1;30 pm (Vietnam).MEETING: / merican Friends ServiceCommittee, Warren Ave. Congregation¬al Church, 10:30 am.RADIO: “Eternity’s Monkey” JeromeNrthanson reads his own poetry,WUCB, 9:45 pm.MOVIE: "Potemkin.” snonsored by theRussian Film Festival, Mandel Hall,7:30 and 9:30, students 75c others $1. lished, talks about his own companyand the publication of Gypsy Moths,WFMF, 8:15 am, WAIT, 5:45 pm.MELTING: Chess Club. Ida NoyesHall, 3 pm. Everyone invited.DISCUSSION• United Christian Fellow-ship supper, Chapel House, 5:30 pm.MEETING' Ted Primer, executive di¬rector of the Hyde Park-Kenwood Com¬munity Cor'icii will speak to UC reli¬gious liberals, 1174 E 57th St., 7:30 pm.wADIO: "From the Sooken Word." BillWheeler hosts a program of recordedooetry, WUCB, 9:30 pm.RADIO: "The Opera House,” TimJanes presents a recording of “LeNozze di Figaro,” WUCB, 10 pm.RADIO: "Nightline,” public discussion,WBBM. 10 pm.MEETING: International VoluntaryServices, Inc., a nonprofit service or¬ganization which sends personnel to un¬derdeveloped countries overseas, Rey¬nolds Club. 10 am. For further informa¬tion. call Mr. William Meyers, extension3282.Sunday, October 1091 THE HAPPY MEDIUM —The titleof the new show is "Hip Hatmening."and is a departure from the first threeproductions in that it does not contain 198 HULL HOUSE THEATRE —Twoone-act plays by Harold Pinter. "TheDumb Waiter” and "A Slight Ache":Robert Sickinger, dir. Thru Oct. Fri & RADIO: “From the Midway”. Law¬rence Suhm, director of the center forleisure resources development at theUniversity of Wisconsin sneaks on “Au¬tomation and Leisure: Values in Con¬flict." WFMF. 7 am. WAIT, 6 pm.RADIO: “The World of the Paper¬back,” James Draught, author and pub- Monday, October 11SEMINAR: "Faith and Myth in theNew Testament ” Fr. John McKenzie,Chapel House. 4:30 pm.SEMINAR: "T'-e Secular City,” Rev.Phil Dripps leads a discussion of a bookI v Harvey Cox, Calvert House, 4:30 pm.REHEARSAL; The 57 Street ChoialT,7;30 pm. open to all, at 1174 E. 57 st.NOW!! NOW!!S^bUAL STUDENT DISCOUNTPHILLIPS JEWELRY COMPANY50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS67 E. Madison Room 1101 DE 2-6508Campus Representative: M. KASSERA — Ext. 3265 or 752-4367 DEPARTMENT OF STATEFOREIGN SERVICECAREERSRobert B. Hill, Foreign Service Officerwill be on campus October 12 & 13to discuss career opportunitiesA film, "The Unending Struggle," depicting the work of the Service, will be shown.See office of Career Counseling and Placement Reynolds Club 200WE VE TRIED & TRIED & TRIED & TRIED, BUT MOVING THE URBAN RENEWALDEPARTMENT SEEMS LIKE MOVING A STONE WALL - No Success Yet.We're still trying.Last Friday our ad in the MAROON brought tremendous results. 21 low-backchairs, 48 TV tables and 24 Coffee tables were SOLD OUT. TUSIN TAKK (thousandthanks). BUT NO MIRACLE. So please join us in our FINAL liquidation. EVERY¬THING MUST BE SOLD AT ONCE!!!Our complete GIFT line at Vl price.DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING NOW12 teak secretaries—flip top deskaries—Tiip Top aesK C~7~7 r\f\plus 3 drawer desk *p/ ' \)\J15 love seats —5 fabrics —open teak arms $127.0012 sofa tables — teak — Regularly $60.00now $30.0024 square tables 30" x 30" — Regularly $45.0048 variety tables — $56.00 valuenow now$17.00CASH AND CARRY ON ALL ITEMS $20.00The Urban Renewal Department has cooperated in liquidating display units andoffice equipment. Will you please help us clean out our shop? —TO THE BARE WALLSAfter 30 years in the import business in HYDE PARK we must leave.We are most grateful for your tremendous support.§cantl in avian ImportsE. 53rd St. NO 7-404012 u CHICAGO MAROON a Oct. 8, 1965/ '11 A.M. - 7 P.M.MON. & THURS. to 9 P.M