Vol. 74 - No. 8 The University of Chicago Protest rally march setThe war in Vietnam will be the subject of a demonstra¬tion, a speech, a workshop, and an assembly this weekend.An “Assembly of Inquiry” to investigate the responsi¬bility of an institution like UC to the country in the eventof war will be held today. Fac- *ulty members will be asked to call induction headquarters,off classes in order to take part A£ 3:30 pm jn Social Sciencesin the assembly. Participants 122. Steven Carey will speak onwill be Wayne C. Booth, dean of “Vietnam.” Carey’s lecture will fo«the college. Hans J. Morgenthau, cus on Vietnamese attitudes to-Albert A. Michelson, distinguish- wards the war. He is just backed service professor of political from three months of travel inscience and history, Howard VietnamSchemer, president of the Chicago Q Saturd October 16 aTheological Seminary, Steven Car- <<viptnam will LiraBernie Grofman, president of Student Government (SG) and member of GNOSIS, sup- ey> executive secretary of the p]ace in Ida Noyes £all at 1#30 jnports bringing the SG Vietnam resoultion before the campus in a referendum and sees it ^*rican /p'eTfl SfJvice Crtom‘ the main floor lounge. The purposeas a “real choice, not a wishy-washy statement.” izer 0f the April 17, March on“What GNOSIS has objected to in past Polit governments is not that stands have Washington. The assembly will be-bcen taken on ‘off-campus’ as op- — gin at 9 am in Mandel Hall.posed to‘on campus’ issues,” Grof- Miss Woods, “It*s going to pass.” continued, “that those of us over 21man said in an interview, al- Asked why she thought the ref. cannot make ourselves heard with J°”though we certainly did object to erendum should ba held Miss the ballots we cast in November headquarters, and then proceed to Place. Sponsored by the ChicagoSG wasting its time debating is- Woods replied that Vietnam is an and through our elected represen- Grant Park’ where sPeeches will Peace Council, the rally will fea-sues whose outcome we couldn’t issue on which there ought to be an . begin at 2 pm. The speeches will ture civil rights leader Dick Greg-affect.” “What we did and do ob- expression of community sentiment (Continued on page three) be followed by a protest at Army ory. Student admission will be 50c.ject to is a student government on this campus. “Rather than have 1 *• 1 jwhich takes stands on ‘on or off- tke fifth Deonle in the assemhlv innovations plannedcampus’ issues which are unrep- acting aS self-appointed spokesmenBoth parties support pollof the workshop is to evaluate theOctober 15 demonstrations and dis¬cuss future anti-war activities.A Rally for Peace in VietnamBeginning at 11 am, demonstra- will be held Sunday, October 17, inwill march on Fifth Army the Little Theatre of McCormickCobb Hall awaiting renovationby Dinah Esralnions clear. “The resolution as it referendum be Tassed overwhelm- October 1, 1892, when the University first opened, students going to classes hadstands expresses the stand which jngiy by the student body” said to walk over temporary floor boards and stoop beneath scaffolding where stonecuttersresentative of the student body’he stated.GROFMAN sees the referendumas a place where students willhave a chance to make their opi- arbitrarily deciding what the cam¬pus thought, we devised this ref¬erendum as a more accuratemeans of determinations”“SPAC strongly urges that thisits proponents would like to see SGtake on behalf of the student body.If students disagree with the reso¬lution as a whole or think that SGshould under notake a stand on an international is¬sue, then they can vote against it.”Grofman expects a very largeturnout of voters, and hopes that Miss Woods.Asked why this issue is a legiti¬mate concern for SG and the cam-“*“* ^ pus as a whole, Miss Woods main- vf*LC _ _. _ . ,.circumstances (ained (ha( „ is gcncra„y c0„ceded <<°M one reach his destination inthat freedom is a primary concernof students and SG. were still engraving the words “Cobb Lecture Hall” over the doors.Today, few people enter these doors. Those who do hurry on their way to the adjoiningGates-Blake offices, but, neverCobb, itself. For the building is nota destination now. Instead, it is a_ w , „ , t transition from the past to the fu-WE FREELY talk about our ^ure, spannjng the entire history ofevery voter will read the resolution freedom to make social rules, for the University on the Midway,carefully, and decide not only example, she said, but in times COBB presently stands empty,whether he is “for or against” ad- °f war these concerns are tar over- awaiting complete renovation ofministration policy in Vietnam, but shadowed by the need to preserve the interior. The new plans, whichwhether he supports the “substan- freedom of dissent. And m times 0 are sfjjj being finalized, provide fortive issues the referendum raises.” vvai] this freedom is especially 1m- the building to house extensive col-According to Grofman, “If this periled. ’ lege facilities. Hopefully, the re¬resolution is read carefully and de- In addition, Miss Woods said, modeling will be completed andbated and voted upon on its merits, “Students as students have a vest- the building ready for use in theit is not unreasonable that is will ed interest in this Asiatic struggle fall of 1967.pass.” — a vested interest because as this Although Cobb will basicallyRUSH WOODS, SG vice-presi- war continues, we are the people serve as a classroom-office build-dent and chairman of the Student who’ll be asked to fight and make ing, additional facilties will also bePolitical Action Committee the sacrifices — a vested interest incorporated. A snack area in the(SPAC), was responsible for bring- because it is our future that is at basement, as well as an art study¬ing the resolution before SG’s exe- stake.” <t gallery, and music rooms on thecutive committee. According to “It is perhaps unfortunate, she upper floors are among the inova-iBBi % V ’V'UC, NASA dedicate laboratory tions.A two-floor auditorium, seatingTHE BUILDING, itself, will beenlarged by the addition offifth and sixth floors. This addi- Cobb designs Cobb plastic kind of building, one that isHenry Ives Cobb, no relation to characterized by assertive protru-500, on the second and third floors, contributor Cobb, was the ar- sions . . . . ”will provide new lecture facilities, chitect for the building, as well as THE DESIGN of Henry IvesEquipped with projection equip- for master plan of the Gothic Cobb’s will not be lost during thement, the new auditorium will be quadrangles. future modernization of the struc-the largest housed in a campus Quoted in the University of Chi- ture’s interior facilities. And, asclassroom building. (The Law eago Magazine 0f November, 1963, the plans are to be initiated short-School auditorium seats 475, that in joskua c Taylor, William Rainey ly, the prophetic words of Good-Kent, the largest accessible to the pjarper professor 0f Humanities in speed, writing in 1922 in his Uni-College, seats only M the College and Professor of Art versity of Chicago Biographicalcomments on the Cobb architec- Sketches, should be recalled,ture. “We wouldn’t build it today, “Cobb,” he wrote, “proved to be ational"space"is defTnitefy needcd, »f ,courf;. because we no longer most important building for moreaccording to Dean of the College ff J"st!f'e„d, “. a I>ast tha" a ?uar!er °f, a,..cenl.ury !heWayne Booth. Undergraduate style. But that did not worry Henry center of University life. As origi-classes are now scattered through- Ives Cobb. He accepted Gothic as nally constructed it provided aout the quadrangles, and faculty a useful vocabulary and used it in chapel or assembly room for tern-offices are presently crowded, with a way that was very much his own. porary use, taking for this purposeas many as three instructors in an Cobb Hall is extraordinarily free in the north third of the first floor, a0£fjce its design and astonishingly lively, general lecture room that wouldSufficient in the '90's “Most of its virtues stem from accomodate nearly two hundred,In the 1890’s Cobb was sufficient the architect’s own enjoyment of and offices for the president, dean,not only as a classroom building, form. He was not interested in and other officials,but also as the residence of the ‘copy-book Gothic,’ nor in the pious “With the mutliplication of build-Dean of Graduate Students, the overtones usually associated with ings, great changes have takenuniversity extension office, the Chi- the style. Instead he created a (Continued on page six)cago Press facilities, and the of¬fices of the University Registrarand Examiner. It was the firstbuilding erected on compus at acost of $221,956.03 and long servedas the center of the University.WILLIAM RAINEY HARPER,first president of UC, had his of- ,fices in the building, and conducted ferred to as the Shapiro Collection, is now in the processJUC, ^u>cs W1U agaiI1 Iiavc 1UUU XJ1C „ daily services in the Chapel, “a 0f being formally and permanently donated to the University.service when the old “Hangout” is out will be torn down, doubling plain bare ro°^’ for the The works, which have been on display this week in the" "raffia SSTi ear* lounge of .da Noyes Ha., had pre-The Ratskeller will have foun- nn£ rnnnprf settler of Chicago, the building’s viously been loaned to UC each tiestain, sandwich, and short-orderNASA administrator James Webb, President Beadle, andphysics professor John Simpson at the dedication of UC snew laboratory for astrophysics and space research (LASR)Wednesday.New "Ratskeller" replaces "Hangout1Ida Noyes will again have food The north wall of the old Hang-out will bethe available Shapiro Collection a permanent gift;transaction to be completed this spring“Art to Live With,” a group of paintings commonly re-Landt. “We want a place that is ,. ,enjoyable to come to,” said Landt. hind the screens-“It should compete with 57 St. anddo even better.” in late February. Landt said theBecause there is no student cen- student activities office hopes toThe arches that now connect settler of Chicago, the building’s viousiy Deen loaned 10 uv, eacn ties office, the remainder havewith tho Cloister Club will be erection was largely dependent year by art connoisseur Joseph R. been under appraisal since therow of upon the generosity of this man. Shapiro for the express purpose of summer of this year.and Thomas Wakefield making quality art readily availa- “it was apparent years ago thatservice, according to student activ , , *.lies directors Al Killilea and Skip Palmes Zl Z located be- HarperGoodspeed in the 1890’s were at- ble to students. The collection of the program was so successful that. tempting to raise one million dol- more than 400 paintings valued at it WOuld be an act of inhumanity toThe Ratskeller should be finished jarg jn gd days, when they ap- approximately $69,000 will now of- stop it,” added Shapiro, referringpealed to Cobb for aid. His gift of ficially belong to the University. to (he program’s popularity which$150,000 greatly advanced their “The original intent was to even- has prompted him to donate addi-ter at UC, the Ratskeller could be- open the Ratskeller before the C- success The donor said in a letter tually donate the entire collection tional material frequently. Sincecome a focus of activity, he said. shop closes due to music depart- tQ j|arper> “As my years increase in installments,” Shapiro said in a its conception, Art to Live with has“Ratskeller” might be a mis- ment remodellm2- the desire grows upon me to do Maroon interview,” and this will increased in content fourfold,leading name because it usually The new Ratskeller is the begin- something for the city which has be completed within the next four “The Shapiros” are available tomeans a place that serves beer, ning of plans to re make Ida Noyes been my home for nearly sixty months.” By the spring of 1965, a students on a first-come basis to-Under state law no alcohol may be Hall into a student center. There is years. I am persuaded that there total of 56 paintings appraised at day from 3:30 to 5:30 and 7:30 tosold on campus. However, said talk of having activities such as is no more important public enter- $15,100 had already been given to 9:00 pm in Ida Noyes Hall. A 75Landt, there would be good food theater and films there, Landt prise than the University of Chica- UC. cent quarterly fee is required im*nd atmosphere. said. tfo*” According to the student activi- help pay for insurance.HHMMSWaEDITORIALWar in Vietnam demands student censureThe “nasty little war/' as StewartAlsop of the Saturday Evening Postaffectionately calls the war in Viet¬nam, threatens to get bigger and itsconsequences could vitally affect thelives of every American.We, as UC students, have a specialresponsibility. As American citizenswe are represented by our govern¬ment’s actions anywhere in the world.We must assume part of the blamefor wrong actions simply because welet them happen. As members of anacademic community and, as you haveprobably heard before, “the leadersof tomorrow” we are obliged to serveas guardians for our less informedcountrymen.The war in Vietnam presents aclear challenge to that two-fold re¬sponsibility. It is a war that is dia¬metrically opposed to everything thatAmerica has ever stood for.If the American way has anythingto do with fair dealing and respectfor law, then can we justify ignoringthe provisions of the 1954 GenevaAccord, the rules of internationallaw, and the dictates of the UnitedStates Constitution?In 1954 the United States had achance to work for a viable and per¬haps even democratic government inVietnam. The planned 1956 plebisciteshould have been a challenge to teachdemocracy. We chose instead to tryto dictate a government to the Viet¬namese people because there was agood chance that, left to themselves,they would pick one we didn’t like.Ten years later, in a tacit admis¬sion of its inability to control theguerilla war in the south, the UnitedStates began bombing North Viet¬nam. There are no two ways aboutit - an attack on a sovereign nationwithout a declaration of war is indirect violation of international law.Our own Constitution explicitlystates that only Congress can declarewar. This war is, in effect, beingdeclared by President Johnson, withthe advice and consent of SecretaryMcNamara.Ignoring for a moment the moral¬istic—legalistic argument, the war inVietnam is still bad for America.While the US may have interests inSoutheast Asia, they have not beenshown to be the vital interests thatmany, including Secretary of State Dean Rusk, have claimed they were.Even more important, our govern¬ment must recognize either now orlater that the days of the dominationof European interests, vital or other¬wise, is over. According to Hans J.Morgenthau, “The white man isthrough in Southeast Asia”.Fifteen years ago the United Statesformulated certain policies to adjustto a cold war that pitted Russia andthe US against each other. One ofthese policies was containment, con¬ceived as a response to the Russiantakeover of Eastern Europe and theCommunist takeover of China. Un¬fortunately, the world changes andthe policies of governments must beflexible enough to bend with thetimes. The United States is applyingthe policies of 1950 to the worldof 1965.It is unrealistic and presumptuousfor the United States to assume therole of policeman for the world.Among other things, it strains themen and resources of this countryand presents a prospect of continuousinvolvement in one conflict or anotherin the various parts of the world.Containing Asian Communism inAsia will not be done by Americansand certainly will not be achievedmilitarily. To be politically free, menmust be economically free. Americanefforts at containment are doomedto costly failure if the needs of thepeople concerned are not considered.America misinterpretation of itsown best interests is as extreme asits misinterpretation of the nature ofthe Vietnamese war. Almost by itsvery nature, a guerilla war must bean indigenous phenomenon. The net¬work of tips and information, thepart-time soldiers, the knowledge ofthe country, the confidence of thepeasants, all of these requirements ofguerilla wTar are evidence of the pop¬ular support for the Vietcong. Thereis little question that there is NorthVietnamese aid to the Vietcong, butAmerican characterization of theconflict as aggression from the northsuggests a blindness to the conditionsunder which the Vietnamese peoplelive.Starting with Ngo Dinh Diem, wehave supported in South Vietnam aseries of absolute dictators, one morecorrupt than the other, culminatingin Air Marshal Nguyen Cao Ky, who likes flashy clothing and vows he’dshoot 50,000 traitors to prevent dis¬loyalty.The refusal to recognize the con¬flict as essentially civil in nature hasled to a dogma that prevents us fromtaking advantage of the differencesbetween the Vietcong, Hanoi, andPeking. The sooner we bring this warto the conference table the soonerthese differences will become ap¬parent.Our present policy, based on mis¬conceptions of the future and themistakes of the past, has been ahorribly costly one. Close to six hun¬dred Americans and thousands ofVietnamese have died. Many of thesehave been innocent civilians killedbecause of the near impossibility ofdistinguishing the Vietnamese farm¬er from the Vietcong guerilla. Ifcontinued American presence inSoutheast Asia should succeed intriggering a military response fromRed China, or more likely, fromNorth Vietnam, it would require,according to Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.), a minimum initial commitmentof 300,000 American troops just tohold the line. An American land wrarin Asia, besides its other unpleasentpossibilities, would present the great¬est danger of escalating into a nu¬clear war.The answer is American withdraw¬al. The replacement of United Statesforces by an international peace —keeping force that would hold freeelections in accord with the Genevaresolutions of 1954 is the only just,the only expedient, and in a frighten¬ing way, the only possible alternative.Face is an ephemeral thing. Franceis a greater nation today because sheleft Algeria. We would neither bedisgraced, nor lose prestige as anation, by recognizing the right ofthe Vietnamese people to self deter¬mination and the role of the UnitedNations as the keeper of internationalpeace.The campus resolution sponsoredby SG is an important step for sev¬eral reasons. It represents the firstcampus referendum on the war, andthe results of a poll at a school ofthe national and international statureof UC must be taken seriously. Evenmore important, the UC referendumcould come in for national publicityand trigger a series of similar cam¬ pus referendums. The teach-In move¬ment began on the campus of theUniversity of Michigan and spreadto schools across the country. Itseffect is still being felt by govern¬ment officials who feel obligated tospeak of the “small minority” thatmakes it seem as though the academiccommunity isn’t behind the war.Referendum votes expressing dis¬approval with the war at majorAmerican campuses would amountto an academic vote of no confidencefor American policy in Vietnam.No one knows for sure what it willtake to bring about a change. Buteach pressure, each sign of disapprov¬al to an approval - conscious Presi¬dent, will make it more difficult forhim to continue present policy. Butperhaps most important of all, it willbe a matter of record that UCstudents were among those who dis¬sented when wrong things were beingdone.The importance of the issue andthe worth of the referendum planmakes it unfortunate that the pro¬posed SG resolution is so poorlyworded. In particular, we object toattempts to tie wrong-doing in Viet¬nam to wrong-doing in general. Whilewe do feel that the Vietcong or NLF,as it is referred to in the resolution,is indigenous, we do not feel thatAmerican failure to accept this isnecessarily representative of a gen¬eral inability to “deal sympathetic¬ally” with revolutions in the under¬developed world, nor do we recognizea casual relation.We have other reservations aboutthe declaration and mandate, buthesitate to go on lest the real issuebe obscured. SG has written theresolution, and it is for us to voteon it, not rewrite it. The issue is stillVietnam and the danger is in lettingreservations concerning the petitionoverrule reservations concerning thewar. This must not happen.We urge you to vote for the SGresolution. We think that the warmust end and that an internationalpresence and free elections are theonly basis for peace and relativejustice in Vietnam. This is what theresolution is calling for.(This editorial represents the view of amajority of the Maroon editorial board.)Maroon editorial minorityagainst SG Viet mandateAN OPEN LETTER:We, members of the editorialboard of the Chicago Maroon,strongly dissent from the stand ofa majority of the board membersin supporting passage of the SGVietnam declaration and mandateas expressed in the editorial in thisissue of the Maroon. We believethat in their present form, the dec¬laration and mandate, rather thanproviding a true test of sudentopinion on the war in Vietnam, at¬tempt to perpetrate the extremeviews of a small group of sudent.®©n the whole University in theguise of opposition to the war.Due to the excessive length ofthe declaration and mandate, stu¬dents opposed to the US presence in Vietnam may easily miss a se¬ries of untruths and dangerouspropositions buried in the text. Bydismissing the NLF with the state¬ment “Whatever one thinks of thespecific character of the NationalLiberation Front,” the declarationsomehow holds the NLF unaccount¬able for its militarily unnecessaryterrorist killings of South Vietnam¬ese civilians, while condemning theUS for killing civilians. And thedeclaration persists in consideringthe Vietnamese war to be a civilwar at the present time, despitethe fact that the NLF is now fight¬ing in battalion-sized units, the laststage in Mao Tse Tsung’s celebrat-<1 plan cf guerilla tactics. No bat¬talion can fight effectively withoutstandardized weaponry that en¬ables the battalion to use standard¬ized ammunition. It is for justthis reason that the NLF has been receiving standardized Russianand Czech weaponry for the lastyear. US withdrawal from Vietnamwill not magicly turn the war inVietnam back into a civil war, de¬spite the implication in the SGdeclaration that this will happen.But most astonishing of all in thereferendum text is the mandateprovision, nestled inconspicuouslyat the very bottom of the long text,that would give the SG executivecommittee, not even the Assembly,complete carta blanche to supplyfunds to any organization that isprotesting the war. This uncheckedgrant of power over student fundsto a small group of students canquite easily lead to a heavy SGsubsidy for SDS or a more extrem¬ist organization, according to thewhims of the executive committee.We find it incredible that SG woula offer students such a proposal, andextremely disturbing that SG hasburied this provision where manystudents may miss it.Thus, while we heartily supportthe idea of a student referendumon the Vietnam war, we stronglyurge all UC students, whatevertheir views on the war in Vietnam,to vote to reject the polemical dia¬tribe that a segment of SG hastried to foist on the UC studentbody in the guise of a fair referen¬dum.DANIFX HERTZBERGDAVID RICHTERBRUCE FREEDJAMIE BETH GALEEDWARD CHIKOFSKY Referendum an attemptto perpetrate SG viewsTO THE EDITOR:It is extremely regrettable thatSG, in addition to not being realis¬tic about the South Vietnamese sit¬uation, is dogmatically attemptingto label the entire student bodywith these same unrealistic views.There are at least two points onwhich the procedural ethics aloneof SG may be questioned. First,considering the generous numberof political clubs and organizationsalready on campus, it is extremelyquestionable whether SG shouldeven become involved in the sphereof politics. Since, by nature, it isan organization in which everyonemust be represented regardless ofchoice, it should refrain from theContinued on page eight)'SG pushes referendum(Continued from page one)Natives in Washington. These dem¬ocratic means are denied us todays0 ,ve look for other means.”•Hopefully, on campus aftercampus, students as a kind of cor¬porate interest will express loudlyand persistently their disaffiliationwith the course of American for¬eign policy,” asserted Miss Woods.ACCORDING to Bill Lakin,GNOSIS chairman of SG’s electionand rules committee, too often it isthe case that only the Collegevotes. “It would be unfortunate ifthis resolution were passed withonly token graduate voting. Be¬cause of this, the election and rulescommittee is going to bend overbackwards to insure fairness in thelocation of ballot boxes,” he said.• Because of the importance ofthis issue, because each memberof the student body will be com¬mitted to a stand as a result of thisreferendum, I urge everyone tovote", Lakin continued.However, there is much more tothis referendum than filling out aballot, he said.Students are needed to pollwatch on Tuesday and Wednesday,and to count ballots Wednesdaynight. A sign-up list will be avail¬able in the SG office.Lakin feels that the fact that areferendum is being held at alldemonstrates that students arethinking about Vietnam and wouldlike to do something. “If SG is totruly represent student think, itmust make itself available as anorgan through which students canact. While because of the wordingC hicago MaroonEDITOR-IN-CHIEF Daniel HertzbergBUSINESS MANAGER Michael KasseraMANAGING EDITOR Dinah EsralNEWS EDITOR David SalterASSISTANTS TO THE EDITORSharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsDavid L. AikenCOPY EDITOR Eve HochwaldCULTURE EDITOR Jamie Beth GaleEDITOR. CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWDavid RichterASSOCIATE EDITOR, CHICAGOLITERARY REVIEW Rich PollachMUSIC EDITOR Peter Rabinowit2ASSOCIATE MUSIC EDITOR Ed ChikofskyPOLITICAL EDITOR Bruce FreedEDITOR EMERITUS Robert F. Levey of this particular resolution, I feelthat I cannot support it, I feel thatif SG is to reflect student thinking,some sort of resolution should bepassed so that SG can legitimatelytake a stand.”Proposition textDECLARATION: We the studentsof the University of Chicago, actingby referendum through our StudentGovernment profoundly disapproveof current United States policy inViet Nam.In the last two years our countryhas become more and more deeplyinvolved in a vicious, brutal conflict—a conflict which has seen us in therole of policeman in Southeast Asia.We believe this to be a mistake forAmerican policy anywhere in theworld. Moreover, in doing so in VietNam we have consistently supporteddictators and opportunists who haveno substantive program for better¬ing the conditions of life in VietNam. Whatever one thinks of thespecific character of the NationalLiberation Front. American refusalto recognize its indigenous nature ispart of her general inability to dealcooperatively and sympatheticallywith revolutions in many parts ofthe under-developed world.In particular we object to:1. Indiscriminate bombing of civil¬ian populations in both Northand South Viet Nam and tacitor active collaboration in theuse of torture and other warcrimes.t. Refusal to recognize the NLFas a legitimate parly to nego¬tiation about the future of warand reconstruction in Viet Nam.This reflects the United States’Insistent refusal to recognizethe war as essentially a civilwar in which the US has no'egitimate role.For these reasons we urge ourgovernment to take all necessarysteps to implement a gradual with¬drawal of all American military per¬sonnel from Viet Nam. and to pro¬vide for an international presenceto protect the rights of all SouthViet Namese, and to supervise theholding of free elections in SouthViet Nam.MANDATE: 1) The Student Gov¬ernment Assembly shall elect andshall provide for financing a threeman delegation (chosen from anypart of the University) to go toWashington to communicate (he sub¬stance of this resolution to IllinoisCongressmen, Senator Paul Doug¬las. Senator Everett Dirksen, Vice-President Humphrey, members ofthe State Department and other rel¬evant public officials.2) The Student Government shallcommunicate the results of the ref¬erendum to local and national newsmedia, as the first campus to voteas a community an anti-administra¬tion position on the war.3) The Assembly mandates theexecutive committee to support andassist protest activities against thewar, and in particular to makeavailable appropriate Student Gov¬ernment facilities and funds for thispurpose.ilillUimilHHillllllllllllHlltmilliSchedule of ballot box locations lorSG Vietnam referendumTuesday, October 19MorningMandel Hall corridorSwiftKentLaw SchoolBusiness SchoolEveningHitchcockNew DormsPierceB-JMed. School AfternoonMandel Hall corridorNew DormsPierceLaw SchoolMed. SchoolNightNew DormsPierceHarper LibraryWednesday, October 20MorningMandel Hall corridorNew DormsEckhartSwiftSoc. Sci. AfternoonMandel Hall corridorNew DormsEckhartBusiness SchoolSoc. Sci.NightII Int. HouseNew DormsPierceHerper LibrarySoc. Sci.Morning hours: 9-12Afternoon hours: 12-4:30Evening hours: 4:30-6:30Night hours: 6c30-10Students interested in helping poll watch at any of theabove times should contact Clarice Johnston at 684 3933, or theSG office, ex 3273. Students interested in helping count ballotsWednesday night in Ida Noyes Hall should call the SG office.tiiiHiiumutiiiHiiuiiHtimMimiiiiiiiiiKiiHiiHiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiimimiimiii, mi nil , Survey suggests revisionsConcluding that the elementary school is the dominantpolitical influence on children, a newly-released five-yearstudy by researchers for UC’sment suggests a revision ofchildren in grades two througheight.The report, based on a study ofabout 12,000 school children ineight large cities across the US,was prepared by Robert D. Hess,professor of education and profes¬sor on the committee of human de¬velopment, and Judith V. Torney,associate director and research as¬sociate on the committee. DavidEaston, professor of politicalscience, plans to publish additionalstudies on the body of data separ¬ately.According to Mrs. Torney, “Wefound that children know moreabout politics than people thinkthey do, and that their politicalknowledge is not liimited to part¬isan membership.” The reportpoints out that the school is moreimportant than the family in intro¬ducing the American political sys¬tem to children, but that party pre¬ference is learned in the home.Party alignment is “playeddown” in school, Mrs. Torney sug¬gests, “because a teacher whostates her personal views jeopar- committee on human develop-social studies programs fordizes her position. By osmosis,children can’t help noting theirparents’ affiliations, especially inmiddle class families where issuesare discussed.”The first attempt to present adetailed picture of elementaryschool children’s progress towardadult political behavior, the reportstresses the importance of intelli¬gence quotients over social classlevels on political development.Where IQ’s are constant, the sur¬vey shows, the middle class childlearns more rapidly than the lowerclass child, since parental concernreinforces school instruction. IQ ismore important than class, thestudy shows, because the school isthe primary learning environment.Even at the outset of the pro¬gram, testing displayed children’sinitial relationships with govern¬mental authority through the Pres¬ident. But because children werenot taught the realities of politicallife (e.g., group importance as op¬posed to individual), they miscon¬ ceived basic theories about the le¬vels of government.Researchers Hess and Mrs. Tor¬ney feel that their findings will beused as a source of information forfurther studies.Hess, who holds a BA (1947)from the University of Californiaat Berkeley and a Phd (1950) fromUC, has been a UC faculty mem¬ber since 1949. The author of manyarticles on child development, he isthe co-author of the book FamilyWorlds: A Psychosocial Approachto Family Life.Mrs. Torney, holds a BA (1959)from Stanford University and anMA (1962) from UC and receiveda PhD from UC last month."All fourth-year male under¬graduates and all male qualifiedstudents interested in RhodesScholarships are urged to makean appointment as soon as pos¬sible with Dean George L. Piaye,Rhodes Institutional Representa¬tive for the Rhodes ScholarshipTrust, in Gates-Blake 116. Com¬plete details concerning eligibil¬ity and application proceduresmay be found on campus bulle¬tin boards or in Mr. Playe's of¬fice."At 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 requested by your instructors.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.• 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 Avt. —Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.—Sat 8:30 a m. to 12:30 a.m.EDUCATION BRANCH 5821 Kimbark Ava. (In Belfield Hall)Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. (Opan Evenings as nacassary to accommodatoEvaning Program Studonts).DOWNTOWN CENTER BRANCH: 64 E. Laka 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 E. Dalawaro PlacoHours: Mon. thru Fri. 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.Oct. 15, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • J—m ImhUnity speakers offer plan to schoolby David L. AikenI A long string of speakers urged the Chicago school board to adopt the Unity plan for ^Improvement of Hyde Park High School at a hearing Wednesday, but Superintendent |of Schools Benjamin C. Willis did not seem convinced.The board of education heard testimony on the two plans for alleviating overcrowdedconditions at the present HydePark High School, 62 St. and Stony J. ALAN THOMAS, assistant school need not necessarily be 6,-Islaad ave. It will continue hear- professor in the UC department of 000, as suggested in his plan,ings next Wednesday morning, and education, was the main speaker The figure of 6,000 was reachedperhaps take even more time toconsider the question.Willis has proposed that a newschool for Hyde Park-Kenwood res¬idents be built on the site of the on the Unity plan, which he and because it would assure that a ful-several other experts in school ad- ly comprehensive program wouldministration drew up this summer, be feasible, Thomas said. ThisThomas summarized the “posi- number would assure that theretion paper” which outlines the would be enough students for atpresent Murray elementary school, plan. Its goals, he said, are 1) to least two honors courses in each53 st. and Kenwood ave. The UnityOrganization, a confederation ofseveral community groups in theHyde Park and Woodlawn neigh¬borhoods. is pushing a plan for an‘‘educational park” at Hyde ParkHigh.The present school, under thisplan for, would be expanded withthe addition of two new classroomwings and remodelling of the pres¬ent building into two other wings.This would enable the largerschool to be subdivided into four“houses” of 1200-1500 studentseach. The houses would share com¬mon specialized facilities.All except one of Wednesday’s provide education adapted to thevaried needs of *he student body;2) to provide a comprehensiveschool; 3) to introduce opportunityfor innovation; and 4) to provide a subject within each house, he ex¬plained.BOARD MEMBERS James Clement put forward the number of4500-5000 students for the educa¬tional park. He then took 800 as aSpeakers represented groups which swer to another question, however,support the Unity plan or oppose he noted that the number of stu-the Murray site. dents in the proposed expanded Leon M. Despressense of excitement in the commu- possible figure for the number of st-nity. It aims to encourage both in- white students who would go to the secondary education,” and whattegration and very high quality expanded school. goals should be aimed at.education at HPHS, Thomas stated. An educational park of the size With a touch of irratation in hisc . he suggested would be 16% white, voice noted that “quality edu-Suggests compromise while a separate school of te pro- .. „ „School board member Mrs. Louis posed size of 2500 would be 32% catlon and 'integration hadMalis asked Thomas whether he white with the same hypothetical been mentioned frequently in thethought there was any possibility number of white students, Clement morning’s testimony. He then re¬said.He suggested that the education¬al park plan would be more“viable” because it would offerhigher educational quality, eventhough it might not have as large aproportion of whites.of a compromise between the op¬posing plans.Thomas declined to commenton any “compromises” with theplan he had written. In an-LONDONTOWNE HOUSESA CO-OP forBetter LivingforMarriedStudentsand Faculty-Within easy distance of the Campus. Excellent city¬wide transportation via bus, 1C, and Expressway.1, 2, 3, AND 4-SPACI0US BEDROOMSSEVEN MODELS TO CHOOSE FROMNO MONEY DOWNiw Willis slaps Unity PlanIn comments after all testimonyhad been heard, Willis rather heat¬edly supported his o n plan for theseparate school. If it takes five tosix thousand stud-ms in a schoolfor quality education, then theschools of America are in trouble,”Willis said in reference to the Uni¬ty plan’s proposed size. He grant¬ed, however, that the figure 6,000was probably a val i projection ofthe number of neighborhood highschool students in the coming fouror five years-The “major issue,” Willis said,“centers on how best to organizeKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856$370 MEMBERSHIPDEPOSIT MOVESYOU IW eyes examinedDr. KURT ROSENBAUMOPTOMETRIST53rd Kimbark PlazaHY 3-8372 leased figures taken from informalracial “headcounts” of the studentbody at HPHS. showing that thenumber of whites has declined inthe last three years.IN 1963, Willis said, the schoolwas 11.1 per can; white; in 1964, itwas 9.1 per cent white; and in lastweek’s tally, it was 6.9 per centwhite.In comments after the board ses¬sion, it was reported that TimBlack, a teacher at HPHS who hadtestified earlier, claimed thatHPHS teachers were not evenaware of any “headcount” lastweek.Doubt about head countFurther doubt on the count’svalidity was cast by the fact that alargely white area in South Shoreis row a sending district for SouthShore High, instead of HPHS.IN COMMENTS after the hearing on Willis’s statement. FifthWard Alderman Leon M. Despres.who represents Hyde Park andWoodlawn in the city council, toldthe Maroon , “Willis at this pointis like Hitler during his last years.Autocrats, when they see their ter¬mination date, engage in parox¬ysms of ill-will and bad tempers.Willis, as a lame duck, is trying toinflict as much damage as he canon the city.”Willis agreed last spring hewould resign upon reaching age 65in December, 1966. Several schoolboard members have said hewould not have been rehired if hehad not made such a promise.UC involvementDespres said he has talked withper month TOTAL MONTHLYPAYMENT INCLUDESPRINCIPAL, INTEREST,TAXES, INSURANCEAND ALLMAINTENANCE.Your co-op has: Hotpoint Range, Refrigerator and Disposall •Lovely Custom Kitchen Cabinets • Storms and Screens • FullBasements • Lavishly Designed Baths • Beautiful Sliding GlassPatio Doors • Ceramic Tile • Extra Large Wardrobe Closets • iFull 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 Bids . . . Complete Core ofLawns and Shrubs . . . Everything is Taken Care of For You asLong as You Live in Beautiful London Towne Houses. $ I860jL.7 ," / TDAN RYAN EXPRESSWAYN / / II /sl* London103R0 STREETItlTN STREETr~7 rFCH Company Inc.Cvfr—iv topraMeleliwM101st and Cottage Grove .Hours: Open Doily & Sunday, 12-8 pmSaturday, 12-6 pm. Closed Thursday Now 67 h.p. for 1966(hicagoland DATSUNSALES — SERVICE — PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AVE. in B.v.ny him.CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60620 PHONE 239 377* UC administrators over their standon the issue. “They are guarded intheir expression. Like an iceberg,you have to guess at the 80 percent that’s below the water,” hecommented. “But I am hopeful attheir expressions of willingness tohelp Hyde Park High.”UC has proposed to build a re¬search school on a site just northof the proposed educational park.The UC school would experimentwith ways of meeting problems ofurban education.Willis also pointed out that one ofthe Unity proponents, arguments isthat the UC facility would be nextto the proposed site of the expand¬ed HPHS He commented that therelationship between the schoolsystem and UC has not yet beendetermined.IT HAS BEEN learned that aUC representative involved in theplan for the research facility hasbeen holding conferences withmembers of Willis’s staff in thepast month.They have discussed the Willisadministration’s plans for sup¬plementary programs within thesystem which could be financed bythe federal office of education un¬der Title III of the Elementary andSecondary Education Act of 1965.The talks have so far not beenpromising, according to the UCrepresentative.Favors Willis planOther than Willis, the onlyspeaker in favor of the plan for aseparate school in Hyde Park wasRobert S. Solomon, who represent¬ed the Committee for a NewSchool. He is also a member of theschools committee of the HydePark-Kenwood Community Confer¬ence (HPKCC), which supports theseparate school proposal.Solomon argued that there is adanger that many white familieswill flee the neighborhood or atleast send their children to privateschools if there is not a separateschool. “In District 14, there arenow not enough white children tointegrate even a single highschool,” he claimed, charging that“he claimed, charging that the Un¬ity pain ignores the problem of in-the Unity plan ignores the prob¬lem of integration.ONE OF the speakers for tnaUnity plan was Robert L. Ashen-hurst, associate professor in thegraduate school of busines , \uuspoke for the Faculty Friends ofPublic Schools- This is a group ofUC faculty who send their childrento public schools now, or who areprofessionally interested in thepublic schools, and support the Uni¬ty plan.Ashenhurst said that the commit¬tee requests the board to acquirethe land next to HPHS soon, takesteps to reduce over-crowding “im¬mediately,” plan to use all federaland other funds available for in¬creasing quality in HPHS, and“declare its readiness to establisn(Continued on page seven)MEN S WiARIncluded among our selecteditems for your shopping con¬venience:Levi slacks $4.25 to $6.98Shapely shirts $4.00Botany Ernst andPrince Consortties $1.50 to $3.00Hanes Underwearpkg. of 3 for $2.95Esquire socks $ .75 to $2.00U. of C. Sweatshirts, Jacketsand T-shirts by Champion.The University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Ave.CHICAGO MAROON Oct. 15, 1965No Berkeley '66by Rita DershowitzCollegiat* Press ServiceWASHINGTON—The demonstrations which rockedBerkeley last year won’t happen again, President Clark Kerrof the University of California believes.“The mood within the faculty is changing fast,” Kerrsaid in an interview during the48th annual American Council onEducation meeting (Oct. 6-8).“There is no question that the un¬dergraduate has been neglected,but the faculty has a new interestin him.” This is one of the “con¬structive results” of the Berkeleyconflict, he contended.Another factor in the “new moodon campus” was the shakeup with¬in the administration, Kerr noted.The immediate cause for the origi¬nal student protest was an admin¬istration ruling, given without con¬sulting either the faculty or stu¬dents, which closed off an area onthe campus traditionally reservedfor distribution of political litera¬ture. “Roger Heyns (the new Berk¬eley chancellor) just isn’t going tomake a mistake like that,” Kerrsaid.THE LACK of communicationamong students, faculty, and ad¬ministrators was growing beforethe Berkeley revolt, he comment¬ed. “The students came to us bet¬ter prepared and more highly mo¬tivated toward acedemic study atthe same time that the faculty wasdrawn to research and tasks asconsultants. The gap grew.”How is the administration de¬veloping the channels of communi¬cation that students charged werelacking last year, Kerr was asked.The Byrne report, prepared forthe university regents, recom¬mended decentralization along thelines of a “commonwealth” tomeet the needs of the individualcampuses of the University.No implementation“We are not going to implementthe Byrne report,” Kerr said. “Ina commonwealth any member canwithdraw at any time, and no onereally wants that.”Kerr also looks to possible struc¬tural changes at Berkeley, al¬though he admits that the campusis so large and settled that sub¬stantial innovations are probablynot possible. He has recommendedto the University of Cailfornia re¬gents, however, dropping the en¬rollment from 27,500 to 25,000 whileraising the graduate student pro¬portion from 38 per cent to 50 percent.KERR ALSO remains interestedin educational activity within theresidence halls—a plan of his re¬jected by the regents in the latefifties. Living-study units for stu¬ dents and faculty are now gainingsupport at Berkeley, he said, butagain the problem lies in convert¬ing existing structures to such use.Kerr was the target of attacksfrom all sides during the conflict,and he has remained a target forconservative pressure in the state.“There is some feeling outside thecampus that the liberalization thathad gone on during my sevenyears as president had gone toofar, and the demonstrations werean inevitable result. Conservativessee no counteraction from us forthe actions of the students; as in aGreek tragedy they expect suffi¬cient retribution.”Referring to a report made bythe state senate’s un-American ac¬tivities committee, Kerr dismissedthe charge that the revolt was aCommunist plot. “It wasn’t, and Isay so,” he declared.KERR TALKED about the threenew campuses within the Universi¬ty of California which carry hishopes for combining the “advan¬tages of the small college and thebig campus.” These new universi¬ties, at Santa Cruz, Irvine, and SanDiego, represent three distinct ap¬proaches to education, he indicat¬ed.At Santa Cruz the three universi¬ties on the campus are organizedaround the science laboratories,research libraries, and cultural fa¬cilities. The Irvine campus is“highly integrated,” with class¬room buildings of the various dis¬cipline mixes on the campus. SanDiego contains three sub-cam¬puses, each one a self-containedunit of four colleges.Rumors have been rampant con¬cerning Kerr’s resignation or firingfor some time, and he actually didtry to resign last March. However,he now says unequivocally that he“has no intentions of leaving.” Heappears to be much more optimis¬tic about Berkeley’s future than hewas reported to be at the time ofthe crisis — “People don’t under¬stand the tremendous vitality ofthis place. You could have gonethrough the whole of last yearthere without ever realizing any¬thing was wrong.”If his compusure was at onepoint shaken, he now appears con¬fident of his own ability, and thatof his new Berkeley chancellor, tohandle whatever comes up.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111— TEIEFUNKEN & 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 - $3... Le protection flnanclire que vou*donnez h votre tamllle aujourd’huldevra lui fltre procurOe d’une autrefa^on demaln. L’assurance Sun Lifepaut certalnement accompllr cettetflche h votra place.6n tant que reprteentant local de la SubLHe, pula-je vous visiter 6 un moment devotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood. Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building. Chicago IS, IB.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2380Office Hour* ? to 5 Mondays ft FridaysSUN UFK ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAWNf ANt Insurgents and armbandsLocal Du Bois Club off to flying start“I sort of thought more people would show up,” said a student with a turtle-necksweater, and with those words an organization was born.Six chairs and two couches were pushed together in the Ida Noyes library, and thefirst meeting of UC’s W.E.B. Du Bois Club—billed as “The organization of the InsurgentGeneration...The Club that provesMarxism works...The club thatgets things done" — was under¬way."WELCOME to the first meet¬ing of the W.E.B. Du Bois Club,”said Bill March, a foreign lan¬guage graduate student. He pro¬nounced it “De Bwa,” and the “or¬ganization of the Insurgent Gen¬eration” immediately began de¬bate.Ted Pierson, a local organizer ofDu Bois Clubs pointed out that thecorrect pronunciation was “DeBoys.” March countered by ex¬plaining that he was well aware ofhow the word was pronounced, butthat it was really essential to avoidconfusion with The Boys’ Clubs, astheir aims were quite different.There was general agreementfrom the floor, and the matter wasallowed to drop, although everyonesaid “De Boys” for the rest of theevening.Chicago uniqueHaving disposed of these appar-ently standard preliminaries,March formally introduced Pier¬son, who spoke briefly about thehistory and purposes of the DuBois Clubs. “The Clubs,” he ex¬plained, “are action-based discus¬sion groups with a Marxist outlook.Although they are strongest in NewYork and on the Coast, the ChicagoWest Side Club is growing. Chicagois unique in that it’s the only placewhere De Bois Clubs developed off-campus first. Right now we’d liketo get a Club going at the Universi¬ty.”WHEN PIERSON had finished;March observed that he guessedthe next order of business was todecide exactly what the club wasgoing to do. There was an awk¬ward silence.“Du Bois Clubs have a dual pur¬pose,” continued March, “educa¬tion and action. We must decidejust where we want to be uniqueand where we want to pitch in withother groups.” Another brief sil¬ ence. “Any ideas?”“Will the Club be active in thisVietnam deal coming up?” askeda tall student with a sports jacketand the beginnings of a beard.March pointed out that that wasprecisely the type of thing theywere there to decide, and asked ifanyone had any specific proposals.Arm bandsSomeone suggested that is mightbe useful for the Club to give outblack arm bands at the rally. Theorganizers of the group hadthought of that, explained March,but it seemed kind of trivial. Still,they had to start somewhere.“This black arm band thing by it¬self doesn’t mean anything,” addedPierson, “but to express our ownpoint of view as different from oth¬ers, it would be valuable. It’s myfeeling that this kind of thing isvery important.”AN INTENSE looking youngman who hadn’t spoken before saidthat he hated to ruin a good thing,but that he thought the ChicagoCommittee to End the War in Viet¬nam was already planning to giveout black arm bands, and that theUniversity anti-Vietnam group wasgiving out blue arm bands as well.“The Vietnamese color of mourn¬ing is white,” said March, andthere was nervous laughter.Mr. Henry V. Poor, as¬sistant dean of the YaleUniversity Law School, willbe in the office of careercounseling and placement,Reynolds Club, room 200,on the afternoon of Wed¬nesday, October 20, to in¬terview students interestedin applying for admissionto the Yale Law School.An appointment with Mr.Poor may be arranged bycalling extension 3282. Someone made a few general re¬marks about the importance of notantagonizing groups with similarpurposes, and it was agreed to ap¬point a representative to go to theVietnam groups to work out thearm band question.DisobedienceAn equally intense looking youngman sitting in a corner askedabout civil disobedience and sug¬gested raising a black flag overRockefeller Chapel. The tall stu¬dent in the sports jacket remarkedthat “civil disobedience is a lot offun, but it’s pretty hard to studyfrom behind bars,” and Marchagreed that the flag raising propo¬sal had definite merit, but that itwould be more effective later inthe year when the group had morestrength.A few more general details aboutplans for passing out literature atthe Vietnam rally, a brief sugges¬tion about protesting the Universi¬ty’s conduct in draft defermentcases (“I hate to suggest it, butmaybe we could pass a petitionaround,” said the student with thesports jacket), and March an¬nounced that they had taken careof the essential business and wereready to elect officers."WE WANT to keep this thingas informal as possible, but we doneed some kind of hierarchy to sa¬tisfy the administration,” he said.With that, five people volunteeredto be on a steering committee, andafter a brief hassle over whichfour of them would get the jobs,the student with the sports jacketwithdrew his name.There was really nothing else todo, so March announced that mem¬bership cards would cost a dollar,and that there would probably beanother meeting soon. People be¬gan to stretch their legs, a fewwalked out the door, ar ’ *he firstmeeting of “the club ' ^rovesMarxism works” was r d.Five ideal dates.Three dollars[s3]Join in the most adventurous experiment of our time. Operation Match.Let the IBM 7090 Computer (the world’s most perfect matchmaker) stampout blind dates for you.It started early this year with 20,000 New England area college stu¬dents. Now you and 1,200,000 college students in 500 colleges in 25 citiescan join in.Just send us the coupon. We’ll send you the Operation Match Quanti¬tative Personality Projection Test pronto!Then return the questionaire with $3.00 before November 1, 1965.What you’re like and what you like will be translated into our 7090’smemory file. It will scan the qualifications of every member of the op¬posite sex from this area. Then it will select the five or more matchesbest for you.You’ll receive your names, addresses and telephone numbers beforeNovember 19, 1965. You’ll be what your date is looking for. Your datewill be what you are looking for.In other words: the matches will be mutual.Dear IBM 7090,I am 17 or over (and 27 or under) and I want to help stamp outblind dates. So mail me my questionnaire. Quick!Name SchoolAddress City State Zip CodeOperation MatchCompatibility Research, Inc. 1100 Sheridan Road, Chicago, Illinois {Oct. 15, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • iUnity speakers offer plan to school boardby David L. AikenI A long string of speakers urged the Chicago school board to adopt the Unity plan forImprovement of Hyde Park High School at a hearing Wednesday, but Superintendentof Schools Benjamin C. Willis did not seem convinced.The board of education heard testimony on the two plans for alleviating overcrowdedconditions at the present HydePark High School, 62 St. and Stony J. ALAN THOMAS, assistant school need not necessarily be 6,-Island ave. It will continue hear- professor in the UC department of 000, as suggested in his plan,ings next Wednesday morning, and education, was the main speaker The figure of 6,000 was reachedperhaps take even more time to on the Unity plan, which he and because it would assure that a ful-consider the question. several other experts in school ad- ly comprehensive program wouldWillis has proposed that a new ministration drew up this summer, be feasible, Thomas said. Thisschool for Hyde Park-Kenwood res- Thomas summarized the “posi- number would assure that thereldents be built on the site of the tion paper” which outlines the would be enough students for atpresent Murray elementary school, plan. Its goals, he said, are 1) to least two honors courses in each63 st. and Kenwood ave. The Unity provide education adapted to the subject within each house, he ex-Organization, a confederation of varied needs of the student body; plained.several community groups in the 2) to provide a comprehensive BOARD MEMBERS James Cle-Hyde Park and Woodlawn neigh- school; 3) to introduce opportunity -SZiJ? ^5 ^“m^ri/xofborhoods. is pushing a plan for an for innovation; and 4) to provide a tional park He ^ took 800 „ *a*‘‘educational park” at Hyde Park sense of excitement in the commu- possible figure for the number ofHigh. nity. It aims to encourage both in- white students who would go to theThe present school, under this tegration and very high quality expanded school.plan for would be expanded with education at HPHS, Thomas stated. An educational park of the size., . . , he suggested would be 16% white,the addition of two new classroom - - - - & ’Suggests compromise while a separate school of the pro¬wings and remodelling of the pres- School board member Mrs. Louis posed size of 2500 would be 32%ent building into two other wings. Malis asked Thomas whether he white with the same hypotheticalThis would enable the larger thought there was any possibility number of white students, Clementschool to be subdivided into four of a compromise between the op- said.“houses” of 1200-1500 students posing plans. He suggested that the education-each. The houses would share corn- Thomas declined to comment al park plan would be moremon specialized facilities. on any “compromises” with the “viable” because it would offerAll except one of Wednesday’s plan he had written. In an- higher educational quality, evenspeakers represented groups which swer to another question, however, though it might not have as large asupport the Unity plan or oppose he noted that the number of stu- proportion of whites,the Murray site. dents in the proposed expandedONDONTOWNE HOUSESA CO-OP forBetter Livingfor Willis slaps Unity PlanIn comments after all testimonyhad been heard. Willis rather heat¬edly supported his o n plan for theseparate school. If it takes five tosix thousand stud_n,s in a schoolfor quality education, then theschools of America are in trouble,”Willis said in reference to the Uni¬ty plan’s proposed size. He grant¬ed, however, that the figure 6.000was probably a valid projection ofthe number of neighborhood highschool students in the coming fouror five years-The “major issue,” Willis said,“centers on how best to organize Leon M. Despressecondary education.” and whatgoals should be aimed at.With a touch of irratation in hisvoice, he noted that “quality edu¬cation" and “integration” hadbeen mentioned frequently in themorning’s testimony. He then re¬leased figures taken from informalracial “headcounts” of the studentbody at HPHS. showing that thenumber of whites has declined inthe last three years.IN 1963, Willis said, the schoolwas 11.1 per cent white; in 1964, itwas 9.1 per cent white; and in lastweek’s tally, it was 6.9 per centwhite.In comments after the board ses¬sion, it was reported that TimBlack, a teacher at HPHS who had UC administrators over their standon the issue. “They are guarded intheir expression. Like an iceberg,you have to guess at the 80 percent that’s below the water,” hecommented. “But I am hopeful attheir expressions of willingness tohelp Hyde Park High.”UC has proposed to build a re¬search school on a site just northof the proposed educational park.The UC school would experimentwith ways of meeting problems ofurban education.Willis also pointed out that one ofthe Unity proponents, arguments isthat the UC facility would be nextto the proposed site of the expand¬ed HPHS He commented that therelationship between the schoolsystem and UC has not yet beendetermined.MarriedStudentsand Faculty Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856Yfithin easy distance of the Campus. Excellent city¬wide transportation via bus, 1C, and Expressway.1, 2, 3, AND 4-SPACI0US BEDROOMSSEVEN MODELS TO CHOOSE FROMNO MONEY DOWNAetn$370 MEMBERSHIPDEPOSIT MOVESYOU IN! eyes examinedDr. KURT ROSENBAUMOPTOMETRIST53rd Kimbark PlazaHY 3-8372 testified earlier, claimed thatHPHS teachers were not evenaware of any “headcount” lastweek.Poubt about head countFurther doubt on the count’svalidity was cast by the fact that alargely white area in South Shoreis row a sending district for SouthShore High, instead of HPHS.IN COMMENTS after the hearing on Willis’s statement. FifthWard Alderman Leon M. Despres.who represents Hyde Park andWoodlawn in the city council, toldthe Maroon , “Willis at this pointis like Hitler during his last years.Autocrats, when they see their teimination date, engage in parox¬ysms of ill-will and bad tempers.Willis, as a lame duck, is trying toinflict as much damage as he canon the city.”Willis agreed last spring hewould resign upon reaching age 65in December, 1966. Several schoolboard members have said hewould not have been rehired if hehad not made such a promise.UC involvementDespres said he has talked withper month TOTAL MONTHLYPAYMENT INCLUDESPRINCIPAL, INTEREST,TAXES, INSURANCEAND ALLMAINTENANCE.Vour co-op has: Hotpoint Range, Refrigerator and Disposal! •Lovely Custom Kitchen Cabinets • Storms and Screens • FullBasements • Lavishly Designed Baths • Beautiful Sliding GlassPatio Doors • Ceramic Tile • Extra Large Wardrobe Closets • tFull 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 Bids . . . Complete Care ofLawns and Shrubs . . . Everything is Taken Care of For You asLong as You Live in Beautiful London Towne Houses.FCH Company Inc101st and Cottage Grove .Hours: Open Daily & Sunday, 12-8 pmSaturday, 12-6 pm. Closed Thursday Now 67 h.p. for 1966(hicagoland DATSUNSALES — SERVICE — PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AVE.CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60620 In Beverly HillsPHONE 239 377* MEN S WEARIncluded among our selecteditems for your shopping con¬venience:Levi slacks $4.25 to $6.98Shapely shirts $4.00Botany Ernst andPrince Consortties $1.50 to $3.00Hanes Underwearpkg. of 3 for $2.95Esquire socks $ .75 to $2.00U. of C. Sweatshirts, Jacketsand T-shirts by Champion.The University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Ave.IT HAS BEEN learned that aUC representative involved in theplan for the research facility hasbeen holding conferences withmembers of Willis’s staff in thepast month.They have discussed the Willisadministration’s plans for sup¬plementary programs within thesystem which could be financed bythe federal office of education un¬der Title III of the Elementary andSecondary Education Act of 1965.The talks have so far not beenpromising, according to the UCrepresentative.Favors Willis planOther than Willis, the onlyspeaker in favor of the plan for aseparate school in Hyde Park wasRobert S. Solomon, who represent¬ed the Committee for a NewSchool. He is also a member of theschools committee of the HydePark-Kenwood Community Confer¬ence (HPKCC), which supports theseparate school proposal.Solomon argued that there is adanger that many white familieswill flee the neighborhood or atleast send their children to privateschools if there is not a separateschool. “In District 14. there arenow not enough white children tointegrate even a single highschool,” he claimed, charging that“he claimed, charging that the Un¬ity pain ignores the problem of in-the Unity plan ignores the prob¬lem of integration.ONE OF the speakers for tnaUnity plan was Robert L. Ashen-hurst, associate professor in thegraduate school of busines., w iuspoke for the Faculty Friends ofPublic Schools- This is a group ofUC faculty who send their childrento public schools now, or who areprofessionally interested in thepublic schools, and support the Uni¬ty plan.Ashenhurst said that the commit¬tee requests the board to acquirethe land next to HPHS soon, takesteps to reduce over-crowding “im¬mediately,” plan to use all federaland other funds available for in¬creasing quality in HPHS, and“declare its readiness to establisri(Confin-jed on page seven)CHICAGO MAROON Oct. 15, 1965 IMPERFECTlyaasnt-wheder-het9 No Berkeley '66 Insurgents and armbandsby Rita DershowitzCollegia!* Press ServiceWASHINGTON—The demonstrations which rockedBerkeley last year won’t happen again, President Clark Kerrof the University of California believes.“The mood within the faculty is changing fast,” Kerrsaid in an interview during the Local Du Bois Club off to flying start48th annual American CouncU on dents and faculty are now gaining “I sort of thought more people would show up,” said a student with a turtle-necksweater, and with those words an organization was born.Six chairs and two couches were pushed together in the Ida Noyes library, and thefirst meeting of UC’s W.E.B. Du Bois Club—billed as “The organization of the InsurgentGeneration...The Club that provesEducation meeting (Oct 6 8). support at Berkeley, he said, but“There is no question that the un- again ^ pro5iern jjes in convert_dergraduate has been neglected, jng existing structures to such use.but the faculty has a new interest Kerr was the Urget of attacksin him. This is one of the con- £rom all sides during the conflict,structive results of the Berkeley and he kas remaj[ned a target forconflict, he contended. conservative pressure in the state.Another factor m the new mood “There is some feeling outside theon campus was the shakeup with- campus that the liberalization thatin the administration, Kerr noted, had gone on during my sevenThe immediate cause for the origi- years as President had gone toonal student protest was an admin- far> and the demonstrations wereistration ruling, given without con- an inevitable result. Conservativessuiting either the faculty or stu- see n0 counteraction from us fordents, which closed off an area on the actions of the students; as in athe campus traditionally reserved Greek tragedy they { suffi.for distribution of political litera- cjent retribution.”ture. Roger Heyns (the new Berk- Referring to a report made byeley chancellor) just isn t going to the state senate’s un-American ac-make a mistake like that, Kerr tivities committee, Kerr dismissedsa'd- the charge that the revolt was aTHE LACK of communication communist plot. “It wasn’t, and Iamong students, faculty, and ad- say so,” he declaredministrators was growing before KERR TALKED about the threethe Berkeley revolt, he comment- new campuses within the Universi-ed. The students came to us bet- ty 0f California which carry hister prepared and more highly mo- hopes for combining the “advan-tivated toward acedemic study at tages of the small college and thethe same time that the faculty was hig campus.” These new universi-drawn to research and tasks as ties, a£ Santa Cruz, Irvine, and Sanconsultants. The gap grew. Diego, represent three distinct ap-IIow is the administration de- Proaches to education, he indicat-veioping the channels of communi- edcation that students charged were At Santa Cri)Z the three universi-lacking last year, Kerr was asked. ties on the campus are organizedI he Bvrne report, prepared for ar0und the science laboratories,the university regents, recom- research libraries, and cultural fa-mended decentralization along the cilities The Irvine campus islines of a commonwealth to “highly integrated,” with class-meet the needs of the individual room buildings of the various dis-campuses of the University. cip]ine mixes on the campus. SanNo implementation Diego contains three sub-cam-“We are not going to implement puses, each one a self-containedthe Byrne report,” Kerr said. “In unit of four colleges,a commonwealth any member can Rumors have been rampant con-withdraw at any time, and no one cerning Kerr’s resignation or firingreally wants that.” for some time, and he actually didKerr also looks to possible struc- try to resign last March. However,tural changes at Berkeley, al- he now says unequivocally that hethough he admits that the campus “has no intentions of leaving.” Heis so large and settled that sub- appears to be much more optimis-stantial innovations are probably tic about Berkeley’s future than henot possible. He has recommended was reported to be at the time ofto the University of Cailfornia re- the crisis — “People don’t under¬gents, however, dropping the en- stand the tremendous vitality ofrollment from 27,500 to 25,000 while this place. You could have goneraising the graduate student pro- through the whole of last yearportion from 38 per cent to 50 per there without ever realizing any-cent. thing was wrong.”KERR ALSO remains interested If his compusure was at oneIn educational activity within the point shaken, he now appears coft-residence halls—a plan of his re- fident of his own ability, and thatjected by the regents in the late of his new Berkeley chancellor, tofifties. Living-study units for stu- handle whatever comes up. Marxism works...The club thatgets things done” — was under¬way. ence. “Any ideas?” Someone made a few general re-“Will the Club be active in this marks about the importance of not"uipi rnMc . Vietnam deal coming up?” asked antagonizing groups with similart t- ° Jr6 tT- „ a student with a sports jacket purposes, and it was agreed to ap-Du,Bo,s C1“b- and the beSinnings of a beard, point a representative to go to thesai i March, a foreign lan- March pointed out that that was Vietnam groups to work out theguage graduate student. He pro- precjseiy the type of thing they arm band question,nounced it De Bwa, and the or- were there to decide, and asked if DisobediencegamzaUon of the Insurgent Gen- anyone bad any specific proposals,eration immediately began de- An equally intense looking youngbate. Arm bands man sitting in a corner askedTed Pierson, a local organizer of Someone suggested that is might about civil disobedience and sug-Du Bois Clubs pointed out that the be useful for the Club to give out gested raising a black flag overcorrect pronunciation was “De black arm bands at the rally. The Rockefeller Chapel. The tall stu-Boys.” March countered by ex- organizers of the group had dent in the sports jacket remarkedplaining that he was well aware of thought of that, explained March, that “civil disobedience is a lot ofhow the word was pronounced, but but it seemed kind of trivial. Still, fun, but it’s pretty hard to studythat it was really essential to avoid they had to start somewhere, from behind bars,” and Marchconfusion with The Boys’ Clubs, as “This black arm band thing by it- agreed that the flag raising propo-their aims were quite different. self doesn’t mean anything,” added sal had definite merit, but that itThere was general agreement Pierson, “but to express our own would be more effective later infrom the floor, and the matter was point of view as different from oth- the year when the group had moreallowed to drop, although everyone ers, it would be valuable. It’s my strength.said “De Boys” for the rest of the feeling that this kind of thing is A few more general details aboutevening. very important.” plans for passing out literature atChicago unique AN INTENSE looking young (f*e Vietnam rally, a biief sugges-Having disposed of these appar- man who hadn’t spoken before said 0°n ab°l't protesting the Universi-e n 11 y standard preliminaries, that he hated to ruin a good thing, ty’s conduct in draft defermentMarch formally introduced Pier- but that he thought the Chicago cases ( J h®(e to suggest it, butson, who spoke briefly about the Committee to End the War in Viet- m®ybe we could pass a petitionhistory and purposes of the Du nam was already planning to give around, said the student with theBois Clubs. “The Clubs,” he ex- out black arm bands, and that the sP°rts jacket), and March an-plained, “are action-based discus- University anti-Vietnam group was nounced that they had taken caresion groups with a Marxist outlook, giving out blue arm bands as well. (be essential business and wereAlthough they are strongest in New “The Vietnamese color of mourn- ready to elect officers.York and on the Coast, the Chicago ing is white,” said March, and "WE WANT to keep this thingWest Side Club is growing. Chicago there was nervous laughter. as informal as possible, but we dois unique in that it’s the only place need some kind of hierarchy to sa-where De Bois Clubs developed off- v P tisfy t*ie administration,” he said,campus first. Right now we’d like . rlwny V. roor, as- ^ith that, £jve peopie volunteeredto get a Club going at the Universi- sistant dean of the Yale to be on a steering committee, andty.” University Law School, will after a brief hassle over whichWHEN PIERSON had finished; be *n the °IHce °f career four of them would get the jobs,March observed that he guessed counseling and placement, the student with the sports jacketthe next order of business was to Reynolds C lub, room 200, withdrew his name,decide exactly what the club was on the afternoon of Wed- There was really nothing else togoing to do. There was an awk- nesday, October 20, to in- do, so March announced that mem-ward silence. terview students interested bership cards would cost a dollar,“Du Bois Clubs have a dual pur- in applying for admission and that there would probably bopose,” continued March, “educa- to the Yale Law School. another meeting soon. People be-tion and action. We must decide An appointment with Mr. 2®n to stretch their legs, a fewjust where we want to be unique Poor may be arranged by walked out the door, ar-’ ‘he firstand where we want to pitch in with callinc1 extension 3282 meeting of “the club ' -rovesother groups.” Another brief sil- h * Marxism works” was r d.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111— TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH--NEW t 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 - $3(TEST111FAIT ... La protection financier* qua vouedonnez h votr* tamllle aujourd’huldevra lul fitre procurAe d’une autrefa^on demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut eertalnement accompllr cett*tfiche h votr* place.En tant que reprisentant local de la SunLife, puls-]e vous visiter A un moment devotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood. Jr.. CLUHyde Park lank Building. Chicago 15. 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Quick!SchoolCity State Zip Co<leL Operation MatchCompatibility Research, Inc. 1100 Sheridan Road, Chicago, IllinoisOct. 15, 1965 CHICAGO MAROONTjNQRIGINAL | _GNOSIS ponders roleShould Student Government or the house council systemhave more influence in voicing student opinion on dormitorylife?That was an issue at the GNOSIS caucus Tuesday night,in a discussion between Mark Hal¬ler, assistant professor of his torvand a resident head at Pierce Tow¬er, and Bernie Grofman, SG pre¬mier.SOME FORM of student in¬fluence on housing and social rulespolicies was proposed in lastspring's report of a faculty-studentad hoc committee on social rules.Amony other things, the committeeurged that a permanent faculty-student committee on the problemof social regulations in Universityhousing.Haller pushed for increased pow¬er for the individual house coun¬cils, along with more unity amongthe members of the councils.Advocating greater benefits fordorm residents, Haller said, “Ithink we should have a chef in ev¬ery kitchen instead of a dietitian.”Grofman urged that SG shouldbe given more influence than theindividual councils, since a centralgovernment could be more effec¬tive in this matter.‘‘Student government is the onlyrepresentative of all the students,”Grofman commented.Repart on off-campus housingHoward Abrams, an SG rep¬ resentative from the law school,reported on studies of possible SGaction in helping on the off-campushousing shortage. Abrams and acommittee have studied the similarsituations at the University ofMichigan and the University ofNorth Carolina.He said two methods are possi¬ble. One would be establishment ofa r.on-profit or limited dividendcorporation to build or maintainhousing. This could get low-interestfederal loans.Another possibility would be tobuy an old building and renovateit, again with help from federalloans.Problems have arisen alreadyfrom lack of land, a non-committalattitude from the University, andred tape from government agen¬cies, Abrams reported.A GNOSIS committee on thebookstore urged a general discounton all purchases, and increasedselection. They reported the ad¬ministration would be interested inhearing of workable discount sys¬tems in other schools.THE NAVY BLAZERDRESS RIGHT - ANY TIME, ANY PLACE . ..WEAR THE TRADITIONAL BLAZER.TAILORED AND STYLED TO COHN & STERN'SUSUAL HIGH STANDARDS OF EXCELLENCE.»3750STILL A LIMITED NUMBER OF FREE TICKETS (GOOD ANY NITE EXCEPTSATURDAY TO "HANDS AROUND IN LOVE" NOW PLAYING AT THEALLERTON HOTEL.OFFER RESTRICTED TO U. OF C. STUDENTS ONLY PURCHASING 8. 3T OR MORE.THE STORE FOR MENSTmtftt attii (Hampaain the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 ■' • iU C clinic plans seminarsThe UC hospitals and clinics have opened their doorsthis month to a new series of eight seminars on “Frontiersof Medicine." Presented by the committee on continuingmedical education, its purpose is to provide physicians withan opportunity for a comprehen¬sive view of recent developmentsin medicine.Different sessions of the semi¬nars will be held, from one till sixpm on the second Wednesday ofeach month from October, 1965,through May, 1966.The seminar titles are: ‘‘Respi¬ratory Emergencies” (Oct- 13);“Anemias” (Nov. 10); “Jaundice”(Dec. 18); “Indication for Surgeryin Heart Disease” (Jan 12^; “Re¬cent Advances in Human Genet¬ics” (Feb 9, 1966); “The Place ofRadiation Therapy, Chemotherapyand Surgery Today in the Treat¬ment of Cancer” (Mar. 9); “Haz¬ards to the Unborn” (Apr. 13);and “Clinical Uses of Radioiso¬topes” (May 11).The regularly scheduled meetingof the department of pediatrics andthe department of medicine will becoordinated with each seminar.The program has been accreditedby ‘he American Academy of Gen¬eral Practice and repTesents 36hours of credit.Each one of the programs fiveparticipants are qualified profes¬sors in various departments in thefield of medicine of the University. Dr. Joseph B. Kirsner, professorof medicine, and chairman of thecommittee, has been an importantfactor in the developing and imple¬menting of the program.“Plans for this program werebegun in 1964, he stated- “AlthoughThe WAA fall marathon swim¬ming meet is being held October 10to 21. All women in New Dorms,Harper, and Blackstone apart¬ments can take part in swimminglengths for their floors. the seminars are not a new idea,we feel that the material will bepresented on a much higher levelof medical knowledge.” It is, how¬ever, the first advanced education¬al program for practicing physi¬cians offered by the University’smedical center. He expects thatthe Seminars will strengthen theschool and hospitals and increasetheir prestige as a center for medi¬cal care and knowledge.On October 19, the WAA Volley¬ball Tournament begins, continuingto November 23. Games are playedTuesday and Thursday at 7:00 p.m.in Ida Noyes Gym.Ida Noyes Pool is open for mara¬thon swimming Mondays, Tues¬days, and Thursday, at 4:30 p.m.and Sunday, at 3:30 p.m. Lengthscan be swum only at these times. Women, students and employeesnot on a team but wish to play,of the University may form teams,should contact Pat Green, Room3324. New Dorms.Cobb Hall not dead yetnd thtwill beplace in the arrangement of the more largely restricted to the workfirst floor and the general use of of instruction. It has a record forthe building. Other changes will be general utility which no other Uni-made as later buildings still furth- versity building can ever have.”WAA fall swimming meet being held(Continued from page one) eJ reli?^e the congestion, ar ■* time will come when its useFree Lecture onCHRISTIAN SCIENCE"YOU HAVE A PURPOSE"byJosephine H. Carver, C.S.B.Member of the Christian Science Board of LectureshipSunday, October 17, 3:30 P.M.Fifth Church of Christ, Scientist4840 Dorchester AvenueAll Are WelcomeBattered Book ClearanceOne Week OnlyFriday, October 15 thru Thursday, October 21Paper backs and hard bound booksShelf-worn and dusty booksHalf Price or LessMostly single copiesNew titles added dailyThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Eltis Ave. MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBlood Typing t Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICEComplete Lab. EKG & BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM • 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3-2000Cobeauty salonExpertPermanent WavingandHair CuttingTinting1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302"There is no room in the JohnBirch Society's conspiracy theory othistory for misplaced idealism, Intel-lectual error, the lures ol power, theweaknesses and vanities of men.These are the elements always pres¬ent in society, which, when they getthe upper hand, corrode a well-con¬stituted social order and bring aboutits decay. These are the elementsof the established Liberalismagainst whichAmerican con¬servatives arefighting.” for a free copy of thecurrent issue of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writeto Dept. CP-6, 150 E.35 St., N. Y. 16, N. Y.7 can save you almost 8700 on a$25,000 Ordinary Life insurance policy, if you purchase note rather thanwait until you graduate or marry.This may be an important savings,plus protection right away. Includedis an option to protect your futureinsurability guaranteed to be atstandard rates up to $60,000, regard¬less of future health or occupation.Defer premium payments, if you wish!Under this arrangement, my insuranceprogram permits you to postpone thepremium payments until three months after you graduate.FREDRIC M. OKUNDIVISION MANAGERNational Life Insurance Company120 South LaSalle Street, ChicagoCall me at: CEntral 6-2500 S210 HARPERChicagoNO 7-105011:30 to 6, 7:30 to 10 Mon.-FrL11:30 to 6, Saturday6 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 15, 1965Faculty - student seminar series held on Vietnam foreign policyA series of faculty-student seminars dealing with USforeign policy have been held this week in conjunction withthe International Days of Protest against the war in Viet¬nam, today and tomorrow.Fifty students attended an infor-rnal discussion Sunday night at ‘‘This fear is baseless,” he said.Sliorey House led by Peter Rossi, Rosenberg said it is this fear andprofessor of sociology, psychologist not the administration’s unwilling-Milton Rosenberg, and Dick ness that prevents our withdrawingFlacks, professor of sociology. Horn Vietnam.Rossi opened the discussion by Students and teachers could ac-noting the consistent public approv- tually succeed, through protestsai of American foreign policy anc* demonstrations, in setting a.u ■ precedent of an aroused public op-»"« the inception of poll-Uking in posing the wal% he said1939 Tuesday night at the ReynoldsROSENBERG SPOKE of the in- Club, Naomi Weisstein, lecturer inherent political apathy of the pub- soc|al science, and Jesse Lemisch,, . . *. *. u,- assistant professor of history, heldlie and suggested that public op.n- a seminar entitled ‘‘Can the Peopleion could be counted on to flow Decide?”. They discussed the pos-with the mainstream of political sibility of democratic action to ef-thought. He went on to attack the feet US withdrawal from Vietnam.policy elite for their reluctance to Miss Weisstein used interviewlegislate progressive reform be- material to demonstrate that manycause of their fear of arousing pop- people have abrogated their rightular dissent. to decide on the Vietnam issue.Speakers call on school board to adoptUnity Plan, save Hyde Park - Woodlawn Lemisch attributed this to controlof mass media and the growth ofauthoritarianism. Because peoplereceive misinformation from thegovernment through mass media,he said, they are unable to makerational decisions on foreign poli¬cy.Authoritarianism in all areas ofour society, Lemisch said - the hos¬pital and the university, as well asgovernment - has led people tobelieve that the state departmentis best able to deal with foreignpolicy. Lemisch suggested that wemust demand inside information.”“The time has come to standfast,” he said, “and see how muchthis society will take.”BOTH SPEAKERS agreed onthe possibility for functioning de¬mocracy if correct informationwere available to the people. Thediscussion which followed centeredon the kind of society in which ra¬tional, moral decisions would bepossible.The India-Pakistan border con¬flict was the subject of anotherseminar held Wednesday, October13, and conducted by Mr. and Mrs.Lloyd Rudolph, associate profes¬sors of political science, Marc Ga-lanter, chairman of the Collegescourse in Indian civilization, and David Lelyveld, a seminar leaderin last spring’s teach-in.Mr. Rudolph began the discus¬sion by stating that at present hesaw no possibilities for negotiationson the Kashmir dispute, thanksmainly to the domestic situation inIndia and Pakistan.He described the origins of theconflict, saying, “Pakistan expect¬ed a native uprising to follow theirinvasion, just as did the US in theBay of Pigs incident. Like the US,Pakistan was badly disappointed.”Mrs. Rudolph discussed the pos¬sibilities for action on the part ofthe international community. “Thegreat powers can either force ne¬gotiations, demand a local plebis¬cite, or just let things simmerdown to the pre-war status quo,”she said.The neutral role of the US in thedispute was humorously comment¬ed upon by Mrs. Rudolph, whoaphorized that “No move is a good move, as far as LBJ in Asia isconcerned.”In fact, she continued, I was sin¬gularly cheered by our abstention.Peace Corps returneesContact the office of C.Arnold Anderson (Judd 320,tel. ext. 2921 or 2922) so thata roster of Peace Corps re¬turnees can be set up andplanning for this year's PeaceCorps Seminar can begin.14 karat goldpierced studsSAMUEL A. BELL“Buy Shell From BelV*SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Are.KEnwood 8-3150(Continued from page four)District 14 as an experimental dis¬trict.”SWAP parents representedThe Parents Committee ofSWAP, the UC tutoring project,was represented by Mrs. RosieStanley. She said the Unity plan isan opportunity to “reverse thepractice of trying to stabilize inte¬grated communities by limiting thenumber of Negro students in theschool. “This plan could demon¬strate that high quality educationis th" ’ '"tor in attractingand holding people of all groupsto a school and to a community,”she said.“Too long have the needs anddemands of the Negro communitygone unheeded, while decisions aremade in the interest of white com¬munities,” she continued. “We in¬sist that in this instance, where themajority sentiment—Negro andwhite—is united in its demand, theboard has a responsibility to re¬spond to those demands.”LEWIS A. CALDWELL, presi¬dent of the Woodlawn CommunityServices Agency, seconded thispoint. “It is our belief that thesecondary education park would goa long way in cementing whateversuccess there has been (in develop¬ ing good relations between Wood¬lawn and its adjacent areas),”Caldwell said.Woodlawn can boil over“On the other hand, an integrat¬ed school in Hyde Park-Kenwood,and an integrated school in SouthShore, leaving Woodlawn as a seg¬regated island in the middle, maybe likened unto a container of wa¬ter that begins to boil over on allsides when it reaches 212 degrees—a temperature that will be pro¬duced by the proposed fencing-inon the north with a Hyde Park-Kenwood school and on the southwith a South Shore school,” Cald¬well warned.BOOKSSTATIONARYGREETING (ARDSTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55 S».10% Student Discount 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 & FACULTY DISCOUNT ©-o-€> $ee thelargestselectionon thesouth sideavailablein culturedpearl, jadecoral, gold,onyx, opalmany othersfrom $4.00(SUPREMEJEWELERSh Handbags & Jewelryof DistinctionM1452 East 53rd St.FAirfax 4-9609RANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open Evenings — Billie Tregonza, ManageressYou’re under 25but you drive like an expert.Why should you have to payextra for your car insurance?Sentry says you may not have to.A simple questionaire could saveyou up to $50 or more.Call these Sentry men for fast facts.JIM CRANE8124 Woodlawn Ave.374-0350 TOAD HALL wm1444 E. 57 ST.(next to the Medici & the Green Door)BU 8-4500with more than $80,000 worth ofmerchandise on display or coming.We guarantee 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 TYPEWRITERSNEW — REBUILT — USEDall with our famous 5 year guaranteeAn exhibition of the paintings and metal sculpture ofSTEVEN JAY URRYAMPEX - ROBERTS - SCOTT - FISHER - AR - ALTEC-LANSINGDYNAMIC ACOUSTICS - ZENITH - GRUNDIG - KLHKENWOOD - EMPIRE - DUAL - GARRARDand many othersOct. 15, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7(Continued from page two)very debatable questions of politicsand concern itself more with cam¬pus problems. Anyone who wishesto express his opinion on Vietnamcan do so through many organiza¬tions other than SG.In addition, however, and moreimportant, by wording the referen¬dum, “We the students of the Uni¬versity of Chicago. . .” SG is un¬ethically implying a unanimity ofopinion which is obviously not pre¬sent. Even if the referendum pass¬es, there is still no right given tospeak on behalf of the minority. Itis very ironical that by thus at¬tempting to completely disregardany dissenting voices to its policy,SG is doing the same thing forwhich it condemns the FederalGovernment. Swish. . .hear thepetar?RUDOLF PERINAUse of student funds alissue, not Viet war itselfTO THE EDITOR:The main issue involved in theSG referendum to be voted on nextweek is not the war in Vietnam. Itis whether or not every single stu¬dent at UC should be forced to con¬tribute part of his tuition to a polit¬ical cause regardless of whether or not he supports it.The essential part of the resolu¬tion is the Mandate which givesblanket approval for the expendi¬ture of Student Government funds(which are gotten from tuition) tosupport the protest activities.There is no reason why this moneycouldn’t be raised through volun¬tary contributions.Furthermore, if they must takeour money, they could at leastspend it rationally. Why send threepeople to Washington, D.C., to de¬liver a letter that could easily besent in the mail for a nickel?In an unprecedented action, SGhas allowed only one week betweenthe announcement of the referen¬dum and the voting. A very highproportion of UC’s graduate stu¬dents read the Maroon rarely, ifever and will probably not find outabout the referendum until it’sover. In addition to causing a verylow vote turnout, the lack of ad¬vance notice may also result in abasic misunderstanding of the ref¬erendum which is being encour¬aged by its advocates, namely thatit is primarily a opinion poll, thatits purpose is to find out studentopinion on the war in Vietnam.Regardless of your opinion onthe issues in Vietnam, you shouldvote against this referendum.TOM HEAGY Viet referendum objectioanswered by opponentTO THE EDITOR:A strongly worded protestagainst the United States war ef¬fort in Viet Nam has been present¬ed for approval to the UC commu¬nity. If by this time any intelligentperson has not questioned ourcountry’s military policy for itsneglect of social factors, its inflex¬ibility, and its blind support of pet¬ty dictators changed on a weeklybasis, I cannot hope to convincehim now. But I would like to an¬swer some of the objections oppo¬nents of the protest Referendum,otherwise favorable to sentimentagainst the Viet war, have beendiscussing in the last few days.First, some have objected on thegrounds that a student’s place insociety is following his curriculum,and nothing more; political mattersmust be left to the vulgar world ofprofessional politicians. The feelingof isolation must certainly be acomfortable one for these oppo¬nents of the Referendum and polit¬ical involvement. But it is a fool’sparadise.The political situation caused inpart by the Viet Nam war is a di¬rect threat to the academic com¬munity. The state of war endemi-Just call liim “Smooth SamHE’S WEARING “DACRON”®-“ORLON”®Ultramatic Prest Haggar dress slacks. Evenwhen the humidity hangs hot and heavy,or he’s soaked in a sudden shower, 70%“DACRON” polyester-30% “ORLON” acrylickeeps these fine dress slacks smooth and sharplycreased. They even take repeated washingswithout a wrinkle. And Haggar styling giveshim the trim fit he wants in fine dress slacks. Nowonder the gals go for “Smooth Sam”. 10.95(EDu Font's Reg. T.M.WIN A FORD MUSTANG or one of 50 other bigprizes. See your Haggar dealer for details.Get Hagger Slacks at fine stores everywhere. cally leads to a tightly policed so¬ciety and a serious undermining ofacademic freedom.-One is temptedto recall how the society in GeorgeOrwell’s 1984 was kept in a flaccidmental submission with the aid ofa simmering, objectiveless “con¬flict.” Narrowmindedness resultingfrom an extended war limits thewillingness of even those opposedto think and speak. If studentswant a university in a societywhere there Is a limited freedomof thought, they want a contradic¬tion.Today, almost no member ofeither major US political party iswilling to resist administrativepressure and red-bating left overfrom the early 1950’s and take anopposing position. The only seg¬ment of American society opposedto the war and willing to speak itsmind is the academic community.Second, it has been objected thatindividual protests are sufficient.Financially minded non-activistshave protested the expense ofsending the three-man delegationto meet with the Illinois Senators.Certainly a letter would be cheap¬er. But many individual lettershave already been sent for secre¬taries to peruse.. If the Resolutionis passed, UC will be the fir^t toprotest as a community of intelli¬gent scholars, speaking directly ina forceful, meaningful way. Theinvestment is infinitessimal whencompared to a single day’s expendi¬ture in Viet Nam. The amount tobe appropriated is insignificantwhen we realize the good it can doin motivating other universitiesYou won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12«55 S. Doty Av«.646-4411 throughout the country to act sim¬ilarly.Finally, a /ew object to the useof our Student Government as themeans to deliver the protest. Eventhough the campus is generally op¬posed to the US policy in VietNam, they argue, some are in fa¬vor of it Use of Student Govern¬ment machinery, this group con¬tends, for political purposes wouldbe unfair to the minority in favorof the war.What these opponents of the VietNam Referendum want, in effect,is the UC student body to expressthe minority opinion. If we donothing between Presidential elec¬tions, it must be assumed that wohave given a mandate to the Presi¬dent to do whatever he likes. Hethus assumes unquestioned authori¬ty every day of his tenure exceptthe one every four years when thepublic votes. In the case of ourcountry’s Viet Nam policy, non¬protests is tacit approval. If ourStudent Government does nothing,it will, in effect, be abusing whsttmay well be called the majorityopinion.The Referendum now awaitingapproval by the student body is thefirst meaningful project undertak¬en by Student Government in along time. The only significantfraction of American society todayopposed to the dangerous situationin Viet Nam is the academic com¬munity, both students and profes¬sors; all this is meaningless unlesstranslated into forceful protest. Itis imperative that we override anypersonal objections we may haveto the wording of the Referendum,or individual points in it withwhich we may disagree. Politics isan art of choosing and actualizingthe best alternative available, andit is time for the academic com¬munity to become political.HOWARD P. GREENWALDMODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55* HY 3-9259Lehnhoff 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 8-4347IN A HURRY?RUSH SERVICEAVAILABLE WHEN NEEDEDThe 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* • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 15, 1965Theater reviewThis tiger plays no tricks Blackfriars script contest announced“Tiger, Tiger Burning She says “things are the way I see Daphne Davis as Cille, the daugh-TJright,” the first major pro- *be p*ay Pr°8resses the ter, was excellent in the only al-auction of Hull House Theatre “uUruth a“d Mama lear“ * ”T"si un|>1*!'al,te r„ole *” “,eBdra“a;u_ . n . , eni iruiQ- Tiger, Tiger Burning Bright,”at 1 arkway Community Peter Feibleman, in adapting his which has many obvious similari-House, is fundamentally an honest book “Darkness at Twilight,” best ties to “The Glass Menagerie,” isand straight forward play. It is not maintains the rapport between au- most similar in the type of por-an exercise in deft dialogue or an dience and characters when his trayal of the daughter characters,unfathomable compilation of clever characters are going through the Felton Perry as Clarence, thelines. The sadness, humor and routine actions of daily living, tiger, was competent. Y’Etta Aik-suspense of the play evolve from When they sit around the breakfast ens as Adelaide the prostitute doesthe genuineness of the characters, able and taunt or joke with each not do well with a major and diffi-As an intellectual game it is not other, they are fresh and alive. But cult role. She is a beautiful girltaxing, basically because it is not the dialogue which usually seems and seems to have the fire thatintended to be such a game. The to be colloquially perfect, appropri- the part requires. Unfortunately,author strives to maintain the ate for each character, the spark- she never stops playing a role longcompassion of the audience ling product of a good ear, be- enough to be credible, even whenthroughout the simple action of the comes to literary during moments the script has Adelaide stop pre¬story, and he is generally success- of high tension. The speeches tending. In lesser parts Claudiaful. which summarize each character’s Young and Bill Moore as neighborsThe story concerns a New Or- particular plight are too poetic and and Robert Harris as the younger The UC Blackfriars Society to¬day announced the opening of theirannual script competition. TheBlackfriars, who in the past haveproduced such student written mu¬sical shows as “Sing Out, SweetRock,” “The Road to Dunsinane,”and “Casino in the Sky,” are ask¬ing for scripts and lyrics for newmusical plays. The best of those submitted shall be accepted forproduction in late April, 1966.Any UC student graduate or un«dergraduate, who is interested,should submit, on or before De¬cember 12, 1965, a completed scriptand lyric sheets to William Wolf-son, 5310 Harper Avenue or forfurther information contact himpersonally at MU 4-5199 as soon aspossible-son were more than adequate.The play, presented in arenastyle was well directed by MichaelMiller. His staging made the mostof a small stage area with one set.leans Negro family living next to a P3*- The allegorical restatementsgraveyard. The theme of the play of the theme b7 individual charac-could be told through any cast of *ers are aiso distributing,characters in any setting. The Like the script, the actors aremother is trying to protect her at their best when the emotionalhome, her children and her special peak is not high. The characters The comical scenes were presentedreality. Her eldest living son Clar- themselves are fascinating, and, with excellent timing and the ac-ence. the tiger, is a male prostitute because they and their situations tion leading to the climax of theand thief. Despite himself, he con- appear real, there is almost a con- play was especially well executed,tinues to enforce Mama’s illusions stant suspense. The actors sustain The audience reaction was ex-about the rest of the world and her this suspense of the human mys- tremely enthusiastic. The honestytiger. tery in the relationships of the 0f “Tiger, Tiger Burning Bright”Cille. the daughter, is condemned characters held up before us. But is an important virtue, but itsto see every truth in her mother’s wben tbeY must build up and pro- flaws cannot be overlooked. Thehouse of illusions. She lives with l°n£ profound emotional reactions, verbal repetition of the theme andconflicts which manifest them- tbere seems to be something lack- the characters’ poetic analyses ofing. themselves do much to weaken theIN THE DIFFICULT ROLE of otherwise fine portrayals. The in-Mama, Louise Jenkins is admir- ability of the actors to continue ac-able. She gives the part an air of tion of high emotional intensity deselves in migraine headaches.Mama’s coddled youngest son, Dan,is a virtual child at nineteen.Adelaide, the girl whom Mama has UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATRE PRESENTSCHEKHOV'SUNCLE VANYADIRECTED BY RICHARD EHOOctober 22, 23. 24,28, 29,30. 31REYNOLDS CLUB THEATRETickets $1.50 Students and Faculty $1.00Tickets On Sale At Reynolds Club DeskCALL Ml 3-0800. EXT. 3581picked for Dan, is a prostitute dignity, and is especially effective tacbes the characters from the au-whose real interest is Clarence. jn Mama’s humorous moments. dieI,ce for several important mo-BUT MAMA PRESERVES her Though she did not put over the ments during an evening of almostdreams about all of them and shebelieves in these dreams as firmly more intense, almost anti-climacticlast scene of the play with the continual involvement.Mark Rosenas she believes in the telegram an- same believability as she offerednouneing the honorable death ofher eldest son in the Korean War. as Mama trying to protect her illu¬sions, she was very touching.JESSELSOITSSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2 2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rd TAl-SAM-N&NCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing hiCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. H 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062 Business OpportunityFor permanent faculty staff member to place a requestedinstallation of Type-A-Line coin-operated typewriters in theLibrary at the University of Chicago. Extremely modest in¬vestment required — fully secured wtih excellent return.Four to six hours per month time requirement. Write:TYPE-A-LINE, INC.168 East 2nd SouthSalt Lake City, UtahPhone (801)355-1271UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“« strong b«»w*c”NEW CAR LOANSco p.-r hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C. HONDASALES & SERVICELAY AWAY ORSPOT OELIVERYALL MODELSINSURANCETIME PAYMENTSBOS NELSON MTRS.6136 S. Cottage GroveMl 3-4500SWEDENBORG READING ROOMand REFERENCE LIBRARY5701 S. Woodlawn AvenueOpen Wednesday and Friday2:30 to 4:30 P.M.STUDIES IN BIBLICAL SYMBOLISM, based upon Swedenborg'sBible interpretations, will be the theme of a class, under theleadership of the librarian, Miss Billings, on Tuesdays at4:30 P.M. The first meeting will be on Tuesday, Oct. 19.The library, as also the class, is open to the public withoutcharge. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO1965 ORATORIO FESTIVAL 1966ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and WoodlawnSunday afternoons at 3:30NOVEMBERDECEMBER 12JANUARY 16 7 —FEBRUARY 20APRIL 3MAY 15 ELIJAH, MendelssohnMESSIAH, HandelCANTATA 50, J. S. BachHYMN OF JESUS, HolstTOWARD THE UNKNOWN REGION,Vaughan WilliamsMASS (1963) for a cappella voices, Hindemith(First performance in the midwest)MISSA SOLEMNIS, BeethovenST. MATTHEW PASSION, J. S. BachLE ROI DAVID, HoneggerROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIR (40 singers)members of theCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (45 players)EDWARD MONDELLO, Organistunder the direction ofRICHARD VIKSTROMSEASON TICKETSUC Staff/Student $8.00, Reserved $17.00, General Admission $14.00SINGLE CONCERT TICKETSUC Staff/Student $2.50, Reserved $4.50, General Admission $3.50Tickets on sale at: University of Chicago BookstoreWoodworth's Bookstore, 1311 E. 57th StreetCooley's Shop, 5210 S. HarperMail Orders to: ORATORIO FESTIVAL, 5810 S. Woodlawn, Chicago 60637Oct. 15, 1965 CHICAGO MAROON*UI i •j'HU HTHUMtt’ stillDanforth fellowship info available;application open to seniors and grads HUV-'News MuseInformation is now availableabout the Danforth Graduate Fel¬lowships to be awarded in March,3966. Professor of mathematicsAlfred L. Putnam is the campusrepresentative. His offices are inEckhart 411.The fellowships, offered by theDanforth Foundation of St. Louis,Missouri, are open to men and wo¬men who are seniors or recentgraduates of accredited colleges inthe United States. They are intend¬ed for students who have seriousinterest in college teaching as acareer, and who plan to study fora PhD in a field common to theundergraduate college.fashion eyewareDr. KURT ROSENBAUM* OPTOMETRIST53rd Kimbark PtazaHY 3-8372HYDE PARKAuto ServiceCORDOLDSCHEVOPELMOONWILLIS - ST. CLAIRJIM HARTMAN7646 S. STONY ISLANDRE 4-6393 Applicants may be single ormarried, must be less than thirtyyears of age at the time of applica¬tion, and may not have taken anygraduate or professional study.The approximately 120 Fellow¬ships will be awarded in March,1966. Candidates must be nominat¬ed by liaison officers of their un¬dergraduate institutions. The foun¬dation does not accept direct ap¬plications for the fellowships.Danforth Graduate Fellows areeligible for four years of financialassistance, with a maximum annualliving stipend of S1800 for singlefellows and $2200 for married fel¬lows, plus tuition and fees. De¬pendency allowances are available.Financial need is not a conditionfor consideration.Danforth Fellows may hold otherfellowships such as Ford, Ful-bright, National Science, Rhodes orWoodrow Wilson, fellowships con¬currently, and will be DanforthFellows without stipend until theother awards lapse.The Danforth Foundation, one ofthe nation’s 10 largest educationalfoundations, was founded in 1927by the late William H. Danforth,St. Louis businessman and philan¬thropist. The foundation’s primary-aim is to strengthen liberal educa¬tion through programs of fellow¬ships, and through grants to col¬leges, and universities. Vietnam proposition limits expression“Things are not just what they seem . . .” That refrainfrom Gilbert and Sullivan might characterize well the out¬come of next week’s Student Government referendum onthe Vietnam war.Sponsored to sample campusopinion, the referendum may pro¬duce a reaction that could blur theissue and lead to a large anti-prop¬osition vote.The proposition, written largelyby SPAC, is designed to divine, forthe first time, the attitude of theUC campus toward the war. Aftermonths of agitation by Students fora Democratic Society againstPIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhoir stylists ot5242 Hyde Pork Bird.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710 % Student Discount American involvement, SPAC, theSDS-oriented campus party, feelsthe campus’ pulse should be taken.But the manner in which it istaking the pulse may lead to un¬scientific findings. This is due tothe proposition itself.Instead of allowing those whostrongly oppose the war and thosewho have moderate reservations toexpress their feelings together, theproposition has been phrased toscare off the moderates.The opening statement declaringdisapproval “of current UnitedStates policy in Viet Nam” findsgeneral approval. But that’s whereit ends.In the proposition’s followingparagraphs, the bitter attack onAmerican foreign policy and the inconsistencies in the argument,especially on the second objectionover America's refusal to negotiatewith the Vietcong over a “civilwar” which involves the world’sgreat powers, may cause thosewho agree in principle to disagreewith its literal sense and, hence,vote against it.The polemical approach of theproposition, also disturbs manywho may be in sympathy with itsspirit. Second thoughts may beraised by its dogmatic and pungentlanguage.Apart from the declaration, thethree-part mandate leads to gravequestions which might defeat theproposition. Instead of focusing ongleaning campus opinion, the man¬date injects the heated question:should SG be involved in divisiveoff-campus issues? In this in¬stance, the question is: should SGfunds and facilities be used to op¬pose actively the war in Vietnam?Should UC SG commit its name tothe opposition?The extent of SG off-campus in¬volvement always has been a ma¬jor issue in SG elections. POLIT,an off- campus oriented party, wasbeaten badly in the 1963 SG elec-james Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS-LINENS-TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. CardWorship According to the Several TraditionsBAPTISTSundays11:00 A.M.—First Baptist Church. 935 E. 50th Street11:00 A.M.—Hyde Park Union Church, 5600 Woodlawn Avenue11:00 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)T hursdays12:00 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 E. 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 AvenueUNITARIANSundays] 1:00 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 Religious Service E. Spencer Parsons, Dean of the ChapelA non-denominalional service held each Sunday the University is in session, open to the public. tions because of its telegram toPresident Kennedy opposing theCuban blockade. On the otherhand, SPAC, with no Cuban alba¬tross around its neck, did well lastyear when it campaigned forgreater student involvement in off-campus problems.The proposition to be voted onTuesday may also be defeated inspite of its avowed opinion-sam¬pling purpose. Tying mandated off-campus action by SG to an expres¬sion of opinion on Vietnam may bethe cause.Furthermore, the partisan toneof the proposition may turn awaymany votes. If the referendum issupposed to reflect UC opinion,then two or three propositionsshould be presented.Because of the various shadingsof attitudes on the current Ameri¬can position, the single statement,which hews the SDS line, fails torecord degrees of disagreementand may well force those whoagree in spirit to oppose it becauseof its tone and mandates.It is unfortunate that the SG ex¬ecutive committee did not take thisinto account. A record of the cam¬pus’ stand would be very impor¬tant in declaring American univer¬sity student sentiment on the war.However, the grave deficiences inthe proposed proposition defeat itspurpose of sampling campus opin¬ion.Bruce FreedJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060PIZZA PLATTER1508 Hyde Park Blvd.KE 6-6606 KE 6-3891Delivery .75TABLE SERVICEPIZZA AND ITALIAN FOODSANDWICHESVs FRIED CHICKENFRENCH FRIES - COLE SLAWROLL l BUTTER$1.50THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS ' BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign car hospital10 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 15, 1965Culture CalendarExhibitsINSTITUTE OF CHICAGO: Win-Ur hot ham CoUection; thru Nov. 14.^,‘inhks by Picasso; thru Oct. 31pS colors by Winslo Homer; thruKEV4ISSANCE SOCIETY: Ink andpastels by Wu-chiu; thru Nov. 8. Good-IciaTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCA-•io\- Prints and drawings by Rachellii’na Baron. Thru Nov 13. 1307 E. 60th.ConcertsCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA:Oct 14' Jean Martinon, cond. HenrykSzeryng. v. Roussel: Spiders BanquetSuite Hindemith; Symphonic Dances.Beethoven: Cone. Oct. 21: Martinon,cond. Narcisco Yepes, g. Corelli: Con-■erto Grosso. . . . c,ivaldi: Concerto. Boccherini: Sym inThru-Sat Concerts: Thu, 8-15: Fri, 2:at, 8:30. $2.50-$6.50. Fri gallery seatsfor students, $1.00 (available until 1 pmonly).Orchestra Hall Box Office: Daily,9 ;j0-6: later on concert nights Sun. 1-4.Orchestra Hall. 220 S. Michigan. HA 7-0362 Sun & Hoi after 5: HA 7-0499.NETHERLANDS CHAMBER ORCHES-Tit \ —Szmon Goldberg, cond & v Vi-,-aldi: Four Seasons. Schonberg: Verk-larte Nacht. Stravinsky: Cone in D for| Strings. Fri. October 22nd at 8:30. $3.00.Mandel Hall. Univ of Chicago, 57th &University. MI 3-0800, ext 3885.Jazz, Folk MusicI UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO FOLK¬LORE SOCIETY —3rd Annual Interna¬tional Folk Festival. Performing artists|include: Popovich Brothers. TamboritzaOrchestra, Balkanske lope, Honnka^Dancers, The Dovle Dancers and oth¬ers. Fri. October 15th at 8:15. $2.00: stu-Idents. $100 Tickets' Univ of ChicagoFolklore Society. Box 87 Faculty Ex¬ change. Chicago 37. Mandlel Hall, 57th« University.TheatreBAREFOOT IN THE PARK —Neil Si¬mon’s comedy starring Myrna Loy,Richard Benajmin, Joan Van Ark andSandor S’zabo; Mike Nichols, dir. Night-ly, 8:30; Matinees, Wed. & Sat. at 2.Closed Sun. Nightly, $2.50-$4.95; Fri &Sat., $2.75-$5.50. Matinees, $2.50-$4.50.Blackstone Theatre, Balbo & Michigan.THE COCKTAIL PARTY — In a pro¬duction by the Goodman Theatre, star¬ring Robert Fleming of the originalLondon company. Oct. 22—Nov. 13.Nightly, 7:30; Fri & Sat, 8:30; closedMon - nightly, $300; Fri & Sat, $3.50Phone and mail reservations accepted.Goodman Theatre, Monroe & Columbus.CE 6-2337.HANDS AROUND IN LOVE — A newmusical 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; Sun.7:30. Closed Mon. Nightly, $2.65; Fri &Sat, $2.95. Theater in the Clouds Aller-ton Hotel, 701 N. Michigan. SU 7-4200.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 played.The company is directed by Paul Sills.There is some audience participation.This is a first for Chicago, with Gamesnow being played in San Francisco andNew York. Nightly, $1.50; Sat. $2 00:Closed Sun. Mon & Tues. 1947 N.Sedgwick. 642-4198.THE HAPPY MEDIUM — The title ofthe new show is “Hip Happening,” andis a departure from the first three pro¬ductions in that it does not contain re¬vue sketches. The revue features Chica¬go talent and is directed by Gus Giorda¬no, with continuity by David Blomauist.2 shows nightly. Adm charge. 901 NRush. DE 7-1000.THE OWL AND THE PUSSY CAT — Atwo-character comedy starring EarthaKitt and Russell Nype. Nightly 8:30;ALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau. and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.After dinner don’t miss the newplay at the Last Stage, “4 by 4”Join us for cocktails at inter¬mission and sandwiches afterthe show.(IRALS HOUSE Of TIKI51ST& HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 8-7S8S JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAP Wed & Sat matinees, f. Closed SunNightly, $3.00-$6.50; Fri & Sat $3.50-$6.00; Matinees, $2.50-$4.50. TheatreParty and Benefit rates available. Stu-debaker Theatre, 418 S, Michigan. 922-2973.SECOND CITY — This and That Night¬ly, 9; Fri, 9 & 11; Sat. 9,11 & l. ClosedMon. Nightly $2.00; Fri $2.50; Sat. $3.00There is also an informal show at 11 pm?n week nights & Sundays that includesimprovised scenes based on suggestionsfrom the audience: $1.00. Second Citv1846 N. Wells. DE 7-3992.HULL HOUSE THEATRE — Two one-act plays by Harold Pinter. “The DumbWaiter” and “A Slight Ache”: RobertSickinger, dir. Thru Oct. Fri & Sat,8:30; Sun, ) 30. Fri & Sat. $3.90: Sun,$3.40. Jane Addams Center, 3212 N.Broadway, 348-8336.HULL HOUSE THEATRE AT PARK¬WAY — Peter S. Feibelman’s drama"Tiger, Tiger Burning Bright”: MichaelMiller, dir. Thru Oct. Fri & Sat, 8:30;Sun. 7:30. Fri & Sat. $2.50; Sun. $2.00.Parkway Community House 500 E. 67th.324-3880.THE LAST STAGE — An evening ofone-act plays. William Hunt’s “Sleepy¬heads"; Thomas Joarn. dir; Girado”x’s"The Appolo of Bellac”; James Miller,dir. Henry Jenkins’ "Five Days”; GaryVitale, dir. A new one-act play of SaulBellow; James Redfield, dir. Fri-Sun.thru Oct 24. Fri & Sat at 8:30: Sun at7:30. Fri & Sat, $2.00; Sun, $1.50; Stu¬dents, $1.50 Fri. only. 1506 E. 51st.OA 4-4200.HULL HOUSE UNDERGROUND —Roots by Arnold Wesker, dir. McFaddenand Sickinger. Fri & Sat at 8-30 nm Sunat 3:30 pm tickets $1.50 2250 S. State St.TRETEAU DE PARIS THEATRECOMPANY — This noted Frenchtheatre company, sponsored by theNorthwestern University Department ofRomance Lanuages will presentGeorges Feydeau’s "Feu la Mere deMadame,” the best known play of amaster of French comic theatre, andJules Renard’s “Poil de Carotte," oneof the best examples of French natural¬ism in the theatre. Sun, Oct 17 at 4.$3.50; students & teachers, $2.00 CahnAud, 600 Emerson, Evanston. 492-7561. Calendar of EventsSaturday, October 16SWAP: Student Woodlawn Area Project,first counseling workshop, 10:30 ■ 2:00pm, Ida Noyes Hall, "Motivation andGuidance of High School Students,” byTimuel Black, Hyde Park High Schoolteacher, 10:30 • 2:00 pm, Ida NoyesHall.VIETNAM WORKSHOP; Organizationalmeeting for discussion, sponsored byUC Committee to End the War in Viet¬nam, 1;30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.FILM: “The Great Dictator,” withCharlie Chaplin, Mandel Hall, 7:30 and9:30 pm, admission, student, 75c, non¬student, $1.FILM: “Damn the Defiant” with Alec Guinness, Billings P117, 7:30 pm, 50c,25c with SAMA card, all faculty, stu*dents, staff welcome.ART EXHIBIT: "Kiss” by Andy War¬hol, Hyde Park Art Center, 5236 S.Blackstone, 8 pm, admission $1, phon®924-5623.Sunday, October 17SWAP: Student Woodlawn Area Projecttutor orientation, lectures, discussions,refreshments, Ida Noyes Hall, 1-5 pm,all welcome.BRUNCH: Hillel Foundation, "YouthCultures in Modern Society,” by Dr.Hayim Adler, dept, of sociology andschool of education. Hebrew University,Jerusalem, Hillel House. 11:30 am.Parsons to be new Rockefeller dean;formal installation ceremonies Sun.The Reverend E. Spencer Par¬sons will be installed as the newdean of Rockefeller MemorialChapel at 4 pm Sunday, Octo¬ber 17.Approximately 2,000 personshave been invited to attend the in¬stallation which will be held in thechapel, 1156 E. 59 st. The main ad¬dress will be given by the Rev¬erend Samuel II. Miller, dean ofthe divinity school, Harvard Uni¬versity.Dean Parsons is also an asso¬ciate professor in the University’sdivinity school and the formerminister of the Hyde Park BaptistChurch, now known as the Hyde Park Union Church.He received his BA at DenisonUniversity, Granville, Ohio, in 1941and received the Bachelor of Di¬vinity degree from the AndoverNewton Theological School, NewtonCentre, Massachusetts, in 1945.College Tea has begunagain this year and is opento all students and facultyof the College. Held everyafternoon from 3:30-5:00pm in Gates-Blake 313, itsfeatured item is informaldiscussion.[ dark ■■■ 50* L ■a■ ter college student* or■ witfc 1,4. cardn • different doublefeatures daily• open dawn to dawn■ • little gal lery ■■ for gals onlyFri. 15—"auntie mame", "best ■of enemies".Sat. 16—"major dundee",■ "blood on the arrow".■ Sun. 17—"masquerade", "a■ boy ten feet tall".Mon. 18—"hide and seek".a "apache rifles".Tues. 19—"allegheny uprising"."valley of the sun".Wed. 20—"legend of the lost",a "naked maja".■ Thur. 21—"annie oakley".■ "pearl of the south pacific", jU AGENT II " HSTARTS TODAY ALL OVER CHICAGOLAND!dork 6 modisoa<f 2-2143Jeffery Theatre( 1952 E. 71st ST. HY 3-3333the incomparable BOGIEHUMPHRY BOGARTANDAUDREY HEPBURNINSABRINAPLUSWhat's New Pussycat?" For That After-Theater Hunger!visitOLIVER TWISTCOFFEE SHOP53rd & HarperFeaturingHyde Park's Newest InnovationA Charcoal Broiled Sandwich & Dinner—-— (Ice Cream Specialties^ —*11Join the In CrowdINFEATURE TIMESSabrina weekdays — 4:00, 7:50Sabrina weekends — 1:30, 5:15, 9:15 Smedley’s5239 S. HARPEROct. 15, 1965 CHICAGO MAROONClassifiedsPERSONALSButterfield Blues Band Album is in!The Fret Shop. Baez too!University House 5737 Univ. Ave. ishaving its housewarming on Thurs. Oct.20 from 7-10 pm. All welcome.To whom it may concern: The left oneIs sterile. IraCommuting from Glen Ellyn. Interestedin car poem Call HO 9-3o90 evenings.T s ticket service is back! Tickets toi- Crc eslra Hall events c..n be or-f td through Student Gov't (Ida NoyesH.n. 217) Special student rate ($1.-0)* ailab'.e tor Fri. a.'ternoon per, or-nance: deadline for orders noon Fri¬day. ART EXHIBIT. October 10-27. Contem¬porary Watercolors and Graphics inter¬preting Jewish Traditions by Baskin,Gross, Rivers and others from the Jew¬ish Museum in New York Hillel House,5715 Woodlawn.Second Hand Book Sale. Library Clear¬ance, Jewish and non-Jevvish subjects.Languages of the West and Near East.Most books less than $1.00.Hillel House, 5715 WooklawnMon-Fri. 9:00 am - 5:00 pm.Steven Cary, Executive Secretary ofAFSC, just back from 3 months in Viet¬nam, will speak on "Social Conditionsin Vietnam”, TODAY, 3:30 pm, in Soc.S-ci. 122. FOR SALESofa and drum table reas. MI 3-7338 or731-0286 (before noon or aft. 6) Foreign trade institute officer on campus1959 VW - $400. 643-6156.Black Suzuki motorcycle 250cc like new,mirrors, carrier, electric starter, 750miles. Paid over $700 end of July ’65.Asking $550. Must sell. Call VI 8-8642.250 paperbacks, classical records.American Hermitage 1954-61 Horizon &Art Books. Call: 864-1432.’55 VW Black sunroof radio, goodmech. cond. $375 or best. LA 5-1563. Theodore I. Rothman, admis¬sions officer for the American In¬stitute for Foreign Trade, Phoenix,Arizona, will be in the office ofcareer counseling and placement,Reynolds Club, Room 200, on Tues¬day, October 19th.He will discuss the institute’s in¬tensive 9-month program of postgraduate studies In me practical techniques of international com.merce, the business and social con¬versation of a foreign language,and the life, culture, psychology,politics, economics and geographyof the world's major product mar¬keting areas.Individual interviews with Roth¬man may be arranged by callingex. 3282.WANTEDMechanic Wanted: Put yourselfschool working on cars. Full ortime. Hyde a~k Auto Service,Stony Island. RE 4-6393. thrupart-76461 T: Red & Black check lumber jack¬ed Call: 3G3-C4S9 evenings.Announcingn:lE GREAT DICTATORThe first campus showing of CharlieChaplin's classic parody or Hitler, pro¬duced in 1940 and tne subject of muchciscussion ever since. To the best of out-knowledge, this film has not been showni t Chicago since its initial release, andhas appeared only on rare occasionsand at premium prices in New Yorka td San Francisco since that time It ise hremely funny, and, in some placesdeeply moving; ranked very hignly byc itics at the time and ever since To beshown TOMORROW NIGHT ONLY, Oc-t< er 16th. 7:30 and 9:30 in MandelHa'lbv the Russian Film Society. Studentsi.c. We expect a very large audiencesi arrive early in order that we mavs art on time. Bedroom-sitting rm & kitchen in Ken¬wood home in exchange for babysitiineT-1H afternoons essential. Family hastwo small children. Call WA 4-4166.F'-ee room and Board in exchange forsitting. Call: FA 4-4867.Wanted: Female to share apt. Close toCampus. $42. Call: 283-8347 aft. 5.Test administrators & assistants wantedfor interesting cross-national project.Call Mrs. Martin 363-0438, 8:30-5:00.TYPING SERVICEMarcella Bryant MI 3-6871WANTED: Ride to N.Y. or North NJover Thanksgiving. Can leave Nov. 2’>will share driving & $. Call 493-9360 aft¬er 6:30 pm.Indian throws for couchor bed — striped andprinted wool fromMEXICODifferent Weaves,Different WeightsAll Unique.10-9 on Thursday10-5:30 Other DaysClosed Sunday FABYAR 5225 Harper363-2349 NICKY'SRESTAURANT AND PIZZANICKY'S TAKE-OUT &DELIVERY MENU(Bs&h. andRIBS1 S’cb 2.502 Slobs 4.75 Fizza Small Medium LargeCHEESE 1.35 2.15 3.20SAUSAGE 1.60 2.40 3.50ANCHOVIE 1.60 2.40 3.50ONION 1.40 2.20 3.25PEPPER 1.60 2.40 3.50MUSHROOM .... 1.60 2.40 3.50BACON 1.60 2.40 3.50HAM 1.60 2.40 3.50Free Stuc wt DeliveryWITH THIS COUPON4 Pizzas for thePrice of 3On Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs.In OCTOBER CHICKIE IN THE BOX10 Large Pieces 2.5016 Large Pieces 3.7520 Large Pieces 4.75SANDWICHESPlain cr BAR BQ Beef 75Meat BaU 65Sausage 65Above Served with PeppersHAMBURGER 50CHEESEBURGER 60BAKED LASAGNE 1.75FA 4-5340FINITHIS IS IT!OUR FINAL WEEKEVERYTHING MUST GOSOME GOOD STUFFSOME FAIR STUFFSOME JUNK A%ALL AT JUNK PRICES!Cart It Away With Our ThanksScandinavian Imports^33 E. 53rd St. OPEN EVERY NIGHT ’TILL 10 P.M. NO 7-404012 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 15, 1965