UC students defeated thegG Vietnam referendum by avote of 2,846 to 981. Thereferendum included a strongdenunciation of American foreignpolicy and a controversial man¬date that would have allowed SGto give financial support to anti-Vietnam protests.Voting on the referendum wasespecially heavy at the law school,the business school, and the un¬dergraduate dorms. SG is not issu¬ing any figures on the breakdownof the vote by College, divisions,or -rofessional schools. THESE RESULTS, however,differ sharply from the findings ofa MAROON poll held Tuesday thatshow a substantial majority of UCstudents opposed to American poli¬cy in Vietnam.Vietnam or mandate?Ellis Levin, acting chairman ofSG’s election and rules committee,said “It appears to me that the re¬sults do not reflect support of thewar in Vietnam as much as reser¬vations with the mandate sectionof the resolution and the role ofSG.”Rusti Woods, SG vice president,said that despite the referendumresults, there was more excitement and discussion generated over animportant issue than ever beforeon this campus.Referring to the results of theMAROON poll showing close tosixty per cent of those votingagainst the resolution as objectingto the mandate, Woods said, “Ireally believe that this defeat wasnot a defeat of the mandate. Themandate was an excuse for themany indecisive people who re¬sented being called on to take aposition at a time when they wereconfused.”RETURNING to the good ac¬complished by the referendum,Woods said, “We've involved morepeople, people who we’d have nev¬ er gotten to. This referendum re¬sulted in a stop the war movementin the divinity school that hadn’tbeen there before, for example.”IVI plans petitionOne response to the referendumresults is the project underway or¬ganized by the UC IndependentVoters of Illinois (IVI).The UC IVI is currently circulat¬ing a petition entitled “An Expres¬sion of Disagreement with Viet¬namese Policy”.First emphasizing that ’’opposi¬tion to the referendum should notbe construed as endorsement of thewar,” the petition states asgrounds for opposition to the gov¬ ernment’s policy the US’s supportof undemocratic, unpopular gov¬ernments, its denial of the Viet-cong’s South Vietnamese origin,and its censorship of war statistics.THE FINAL SECTION of thepetition requests the Johnson Ad¬ministration to a), begin to carefor the needs of the Vietnamesepeople, b), enter into negotiationswith all parties, including the Viet-cong and c), eventually withdrawall troops from Vietnam.The purpose of the petition, ac¬cording to one of its originators, isto show how UC students stand onthe issue of Vietnam isolated fromthe SG resolution.Revise history 131-2-3by John BealHistory 131-2-3, the college general education course inthe history of western civilization, has been changed froma comprehensive to a cumulative comprehensive course, on aone year experimental basis.Vol. 74 - No. 11 The University of Chicago Friday, October 22, 1965Students oppose Viet warThe defeat of the SG referendum wasn’t due to student support for the war in Viet¬nam, according to a Maroon poll of nearly 450 UC students.Working at or near SG election tables, Maroon polltakers at Mandel corridor, PierceTower, and New Dorms collected opinion samples all afternoon and into the evening, Tues¬day. :Students oppose war they objected to the mandate. 192 tively simple. Pollers stationed atTHE RESULTS showed that UC persons gave general poor wording key points polled only those stu-students by a sizable majority op- as an objection to the resolution . . . . . , , , , . . ..pose US policy in Vietnam and and oniy 192 out of a total of 451 d 1 who had already voted in thesupport the withdrawal of Ameri- voters voted against the resolution ^G referendum. In this way it wascan forces with internationally su- because of objections to its con- impossible for any one person topervised elections for \ ietnam. tent (j e its condemnation of the be polled more than once.Out of a total of 451 polled stu- war). c uidents, 247 or 54.8% said they did The poll was conceived as a de- T, *.Y°r*. .*. resP°ns®not support American policy in vice for clarifying UC student views -T/16., po ’ whlC,h c°nd“Jte<|Vietnam, and 25-4 or 56.3% said on the war in Vietnam taken as an vvith the aPProval of SG Presidentthey supported the withdrawal of isolated issue. According to Ma-American troops and their replace- roon NeWs Editor David Satter, “Itment by an international force to was rapidly becoming obvious thatsupervise free elections. an incompetent resolution on a , . . „Student opinion broke sharply, crucjai issue was about to be voted omer cnoice-however, over the SG resolution it- on in an incompetent way.”self. While only 45.2% of the stu- c*ir% „,,ii a,JUdents polled actually approved of . .f e h P ■ u were disregarded and only thosethe war in Vietnam; 306 or 67.7% »ould C'f ‘ « samples were counted that wereof those polled said they had voted showing o w a - completely filled out. About thirtyagainst the resolution. olution defeat was the fault of the samples were disallowed due toOut of the 360 persons who voted f“™ ° 6 Jj, rocedure was re,a. improper completionagainst the resolution, 215 said ^ Bernie Grofman, elicited predomi¬nately favorable response fromstudents, who, according to onepoll taker, seemed anxious for an-In the tabulation of the poll, allcomments and extraneous marksVietnam Poll ResultsDo you supportUS action inVietnam?Do you supportwithdrawal ofAmerican forcesand internation¬ally supervisedelections forVietnam?Do you supportthe SG resolution?Objections to the SG resolution:the mandatethe wording; the condemnation of the waryes no total204 (45.2%) 247 (54.8%) 451254 (56.3%) 197 (43.7%) 451 One exception was made to thisrule, however. Samples were al¬lowed that didn’t indicate a spe¬cific school or college. As a result,these statistics are incomplete. Itappears however, that those polledwere predominately students in theCollege, with students in the grad¬uate divisions of social sciencesand biological sciences, and thegraduate school of social serviceadministration also well represent¬ed. Examinations at the end of thefirst and second quarters, preparedand graded by instructors, willcount 10 and 20 percent of theyear’s grade respectively. A winterquarter paper, graded by the in¬structor, will count 30 percent ofthe grade, and a comprehensiveexamination at the end of the thirdquarter, prepared by the staff; willcount the remaining 40 percent.The change w'as conceived lastspring by the history of westerncivilization staff. The staff dis¬cussed the plan and voted. A ma¬jority of the staff favored themove, with staff chairman, Karl J.Weintraub, and senior staff mem¬ber, Christian W. Mackauer, amongthe dissenters.The proposal was taken todean of the College Wayne C.Booth and his executive commit¬tee. Booth and the committee ad¬vised the staff that a ruling by thefaculty senate three years ago saidthat a course must be either com¬prehensive or quarterly, but notcumulative.Staff members in favor of thechange regrouped their forces andagain approached the dean whogave permission to make thechange on a one year experimentalbasis.Hanna H. Gray, assistant profes¬sor of history and chairman of theCollege history group, told the Ma¬roon the advantages of the change.She said that the plan removes thepressure of a single exam, andgives the individual instructormore flexibility. The added impor¬tance of the paper will give thestudent a greater opportunity forindependent thinking and hopefullyquarterly examinations will helprelation.In addition, the new system ofcreate a better instructor-studenta more personal involvement inthe course material. A number of possible defects inthe new system were pointed outby Associate Professor Karl J.Weintraub and Professor EmeritusChristian W. Mackauer. The pri¬mary criticisms were that the newsystem might harm instructor -student relations, because of theinstructor grading the first twoquarterly exams and the paper.-Christian W. MackauerMackauer felt the new plan tendsto impose too much work on stu¬dents at one particular time. In ad¬dition, some of the instructors haverather large classes and giving agreat deal of time to a large num¬ber of long papers could hindertheir teaching, he said.The implications for the othercomprehensive courses and thecollege curriculum in general isdifficult to determine. The wholecollege curiculum in general in¬cluding examinations, is being re-considered at this time byBooth and the college masters. Im¬portant innovations are expected,starting next year.145 (32.3%) 306 (67.7%) 451215 out of 306192 out of 306192 out of 306Protestors face inductionby David SatterUniversity of Michigan students who sat in at the AnnArbor selective service center over the weekend are in dan¬ger of loss of their student deferments and immediate in¬duction, according to Lawrence Kirshbaum, managing editorof the Michigan Daily. ~ "Colonel Arthur Holmes, state di- notified with recommendations forrector of the Michigan selective immediate induction,service, has announced that the 28 william Merrill, chief assistantMichigan students, who were .. TT~ ,. . . .among the 38 persons arrested in 10 the US district attorney for thethe anti-war demonstration Satur- eastern district of Michigan saidday, may be found guilty of inter- that the arrested students mayfering with the draft. Holmes said also be in danger of federal prose-that the students may be charged cution. He cited interference withwith disrupting the selective serv- the draft and possible destructionice procedure and, if they are found of government property as proba-guilty, their local boards will be ble charges. U S witch hunt in the offingA new hunt for communists may be one result of last weekend’s student protests ofthe widening United States role in the Vietnam war.In Chicago Sunday night, Attorney General and former UC law professor NicholasKatzenbach claimed that communists are active in the marches and demonstrations pro¬testing the war in Vietnam and —said that the justice department come conscientious objectors, not vice-chairman of the subcommit-has begun an investigation. draft dodgers.” SDS leaflets and tee, said that the weekend demon-Katzenbach charged that some literature do not advise people to strations were especially charac-.. . c. avoid the procedures of the Selec- tenstic of communist tactics,communists were working for Stu- Mye Service Act> he saidi but the SUBCOMMITTEE'S study.!! file with their draft boards as con. prepared at Dodd’s direction,scientious objectors. conceded that “the great majori-“Most importantly,” Booth said, ty” ?f. Pers°ns, who differ wUh the“we feel that the attorney gener- administration s policy in Vietnamt’s Investigation to determine al’s drumming up of the commu- are, oyal ^^ricai?s' , But thet s investigation to determine ? * to obscure study suggested that leaders in thestrength of SDS and whether msl issue only serves 10 oDscure ti mnvpmpnt uavo ... . .there are anv direct ties between the real issue, which is the war in anl war movement have tailed tothere are any direct ties Between „ ' prevent or limit communist infil-the group and the Communist Par- Vietnam. sam. wou|a tration of their ranks and havebe willing to explain its program to “ . , ranxs ana navei/*TTeuB*ru riTcn / a i any interested group, including us control to people “whoKATZENBACH CITED federal representatives of the justlce de. are openly sympathetic to the Viet.national group that has been aleader in the anti-war movement.The attorney general said he isawaiting results of his depart¬mentthecong and openly hostile to theUnited States.”In a chapter of the report enti-laws against aiding and abetting aJtment when and if they inquire,persons to avoid the draft, and de- yscribed SDS pamphlets that were In a staff study released lastdistributed at several rallies that week, the Senate’s Internal Securi- tied “Biographical Notes on Sometell how to avoid military service, ty subcommittee also charged that of the Participants,” 19 academi-COs not dodgers the demonstrations have “clearly dans are listed as sponsors of thePaul Booth a spokesman for passed into the hands of commu- Inter-university Committee forSDS said Monday that “our pro- nists and extremist elements.” Public Hearings on Vietnam andgram is perfectly legal. We are ad- Better Red than Dodd *re said to have “persistent reo*vocating that people should be- Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D-Conn.), (Continued on page three)EDITORIALji§PNeed US Vietnam actionto stop Chinese growthTO THE EDITOR:United States troops are fightingIn South Vietnam, because ourgovernment considers their pres¬ence there to be in our nationalinterest. The United States ‘pres¬ence’ is not there to spread democ¬racy, dollars, or moral uplift, butto maintain a pro-American gov¬ernment in control of as much ofSouth Vietnam as possible. Thosewho advocate withdrawal of ourtroops will have to prove eitherthat our troops are not containingthe expansion of Chinese Commu¬nist influence in Asia, or that it isnot in our national interest to con¬tain such an expansion.I believe that our armed forcesin South Vietnam are containingthe expansion of the Chinese Com¬munist sphere of influence, andthat peace protesters are living ina dream world—unless they are infavor of handing over SoutheastAsia to the Chinese Communists.Does anyone really believe thatBurma and Thailand would notcome under Communist attack ifhostilities ceased in Indochina?Border regions of these two coun¬ tries have already been infiltratedby communist guerilla bands.If a great power insists on ex¬panding into your sphere of in¬fluence you have to make a standsomewhere—either South Vietnam,or Thailand, or Burma,'or Malaya,or the Philippines, or perhaps Ha¬waii. Whereever you decide to takea stand you will have to meet forcewith force, so why not take thatstand in South Vietnam? Is thelesson of Munich completely for¬gotten?Does anyone really question thedetermination of the Chinese Com¬munists to expand, or the fact thatsuch expansion can be halted onlyby a large, long term committmentof United States troops on the peri¬phery of China?Sure war is rough, but at leastthis one is being fought far fromour own homes. We intervenedagainst the Nazis because a victo¬ry on their part in Europe wouldhave meant a threat to the survi¬val of the United States and to ourway of life, which with all of itsfaults is much better than the onemost people have.It’s not nice to torture people butthis isn’t a nice, white, middleclass, U.S. world. It’s a world con¬taining expansionist and status quopowers, nationalism and nuclearweapons, racism and lots of plain,ordinary hate.What a beautiful season for pictures in color.You may secure the proper film and thefastest processing service atThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEBAPTIST GRADUATE STUDENT (ENTER4901 S. ELLIS AVENUEFall Sunday Seminar Series:URBANISM AND RELIGIONSunday, Oct. 24 "The Urban Church and the Racial Revolution"Ed Riddick, Director, Christian Citizenship Dept.,Church Federation of Greater ChicagoSunday, Oct. 31 "Metropolis and Community"George Younger, Author, "The Church and Ur¬ban Renewal," "The Church and the UrbanPower Structure"Sunday, Nov. 7 "The Twentieth Century Urban Revolution"David McCleskey, Corporate Ministry, The Ecu¬menical InstituteMeetings begin with a buffet at 5-.30 p.m. followed by speakerand discussion, closing at 7:15 p.m. All are welcome.HeKnown;The Max Brook Co.CLEANERS- TAILORS -IAUNDERERShas served the Campus with Unexcelled Qualityand Service Since 19171013-17 East 61st StreetAcross from Burton-Judson Ct. Phones: Ml 3-7447HY 3-6868 At home we should strive for asgood a society as possible, with in¬tegration, better education, and soon. In foreign policy, however, Ibelieve that the interests of theUnited States come first, followedby the needs of people overseasand lastly by our attempts to fos¬ter Judaeo-Cnristian ethics and topromote Judaeo-Christian ideals.Why not face the facts? We’rethe citizens of a great power whichfavors the status quo, because thestatus quo favors us! If you enjoyliving in the United States, as I do,you should recognize this fact, aswell as recognizing that yourrights in this country carry con¬comitant obligations, such as serv¬ing in the armed forces if drafted.If you want to opt out-fine, go toMexico or a monastary, but don’tbitch about the fact that some ofyour fellow citizens are dying farfrom their homes in order to pro¬tect you. I don’t want to die morethan anyone else, but if drafted Iwill serve as best I can. recogniz¬ing that it is my duty to do so.BOTOND VARGAChicago Maroon IEDITOR-IN-CHIEF Daniel HertzberoBUSINESS MANAGER .... Michael KasseraMANAGING EDITOR Dinah EsralNEWS EDITOR David SatterASSISTANTS TO THE EDITORSharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsDavid L. AikenCOPY EDITOR Eve HochwaldCULTURE EDITOR Jamie Beth GaleEDITOR, CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWDavid RichterASSOCIATE EDITOR. CHICAGOLITERARY REVIEW Rick PollackMUSIC EDITOR Peter RabinowitzASSOCIATE MUSIC EDITOR Ed ChikofskyPOLITICAL EDITOR Bruce FreedEDITOR EMERITUS Robert F. LeveyStaff: David Gumpert, Marc PoKemp-ner, Tom Heagy, Michael Nemeroff,Paul Satter, Paul Burstein Dick Ganz, EllisLevin, Jeff Kuta. Carol Chave. PatBuckley. Mike Seidman, Craig Reller,Susan Kirchmyer, Nina Gordon. Mahon-ri Young, Karen Edwards. Bob Hertz.Steve Grant, Monica Raymond.UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“a strong bank99NEW CAM LOANS$Aoo per hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C. SG to blame for defeatThe SG Vietnam referendum has been defeated, as wasinevitable. By including in the referendum text a series ofhighly controversial statements on US foreign policy a po¬tentially dangerous mandate for unchecked SG spending onanti-Vietnam protests, SG assured the referendum’s re¬jection. UC now stands before the world as a strong support¬er of President Johnson’s policy in Vietnam. Yet, as theMaroon poll results published in today’s issue show, suchsupport is not as strong as the referendum vote indicates.Why did SG allow such an objectionable text to go beforethe student body as a Vietnam referendum? Why did SG notpostpone the referendum and alter the text when warned bynumerous students and several informal dormitory polls thatobjections to the text would give an unrepresentative amountof support to US Vietnam policy? The reason for these blun¬ders lies in the inability of the small SG group that wrote thetext and organized the referendum to see the true purposeof the vote. The SG group, especially the militant SPACmembers in it, saw the referendum as a chance for formalstudent authorization of SPAC’s campaign proposal, madein last year’s SG selection, for more SG off-campus action.To them, the strong declaration and mandate were neededto give SG real power to oppose the war in Vietnam.But what the SG group failed to see was that it was thepercentage of UC students opposing US policy in Vietnam,not the declaration or mandate wording, that will have thegreatest effect in expressing opposition to the war. A dele¬gation of three SG leaders with a strong mandate in theirhands will have very little effect in Washington. But a newsstory published in newspapers throughout the US, whichstates that more than 50 per cent of the student body at UCoppose American involvement in Vietnam will have a verysizable effect on the consensus-conscious policy makers in theWhite House. What the referendum needed to be,-to be ef¬fective, was a formal opinion poll.Yet the SG planners, in their haste to put through theirdeclaration and mandate, never really considered this sideof the referendum question.Instead, by leaving only a week between the announce¬ment of the referendum and the voting, the planners made itimpossible for the text to be altered and the alterations con¬veyed to the students. The SG Assembly could only accept orreject the plan for holding the referendum itself, and, per¬haps unwisely, it voted to hold the referendum. Thus thestage was set for the inevitable rejection by the studentbody of the referendum proposal. We can only hope that SGhas learned something from its inept handling of the Viet¬nam referendum.UNIVERSITY THEATREFinal TryoutsSophocles'ELECTRAREYNOLDS CLUBMon. 3-5, 7-9 SAMUEL A. BELL"Muy Shell From Bell**SINCE 19264701 S. Dorchester Ave.KEnwood 8-3150DR. 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 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856Lehnhoff 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 8-4347 THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-41112 • CHICAGO MAROON • Oct. 22, 1965\ <•■Rubin assesses weekend SWAF> tutees testify before board“Despite many difficulties, the protests achieved theirpurpose of making dissent visible,” said Allen Rubin, thecampus co-ordinator of the October 15-16 protest, for theDC Committee to End the War in Vietnam.Rubin said that Friday morn- ——lug's meeting at Mandel Hall was opportunity for intelligent views toexcellent because .t provided an confront each otherThe march, according to Rubin,was also a success. He said thatpeople along the way reacted veryenthusiastically and the marcher’smorale was high. Three tutees from the educational committee of the Stu¬dent Woodlawn Area Project (SWAP) testified yesterdaymorning before the Chicago board of education concerningplans for the Hyde Park High School. Indicating support forthe Unity proposal, they asserted honors classes has increased thesefeelings. If a new school is built inHyde Park, this would lead to in¬creased feelings of hostility on thepart of Woodlawn students.”FBI to investigate SDS(Continued from page one)ords of communist sympathiesand or of association with known Saturday’s workshop at Idacommunists and known communist ™.s. baS^a!!f "**'"if'1 tional, and Rubin said that the Ma-jnovementtions.” and front organiza- roon had misrepresented what hap¬pened there in a story that ap-Meanwhile, impressed with their peared October 19.weekend showing, leaders in the The workshop, according to Ru-movement have pressed plans for b*n’ was first attempt to createa March on Washington against the an autonomous and functional UCgroup concerned with the war inwar. The march, now being organ- Vietnamjzed by SANE an established pad- Rubin said that the uc Commit.fist group, will be held Nov. 27 and tee to End the War in Vietnam waswill include rallies at the White forme(j jn ]arge measure to par-House and the Washington Menu- ticipate in the 0ctober 15.16 pr0.ment.Chamber series opens test. The workshop, then, was ameeting designed to organize theUC committee, and re-evaluate itsrole. It was for this reason thatreporters were barred from theThe music department has an- meeting, Rubin said.nounced that the opening concert The Maroon, according to Rubin,of (he UC Chamber Music Series, 8ave ”,e t,lse in’Pr«siou that eon-versations and suggestions in theto be given Friday evening in Man- workshop were the plans and poli-del Hall by the Netherlands Cham- organization. He empha¬sized that the meeting’s purposeher Orchestra, is completely sold was to discuss the future and heout. revealed some possible futureplans.Persons .'ho have not yet picked Rubin said that the committee isup series tickets ordered last considering reviving the “Hawkand Dove” forum and organizingspring, as well as those wishing to other seminars. He mentioned theobtain the few remaining tickets possibility of another teach-in. Ru-....... . , ., bin also said the committee willfor the last five concerts of the se- enlisl ^ aid 0l coramunity groupslies, should contact the music de- |n ending the war.partment, 5802 Woodlawn, ext. Rubin said that no anti-draft ac-3885. tivities are planned, however. that this proposal “is not only the of them are led to believe. We be-most feasible plan, but the only lieve- We believe that a larger,plan which takes into considera- mor?. adequately squipped, school, would offer an expanded and moreion the needs of all students in varied curriculum and would meanDistrict 14.” more programs to fit the needs ofThe students based their support a11 students.”on a petit*°n sign'd by two thous- They added that a number ofand Hyde Park students m favor of teachers in the Hyde Park schoolthe Lmty plan. would transfer if the second or“Students at Hyde Park have split school proposal were followed,seen what has happened to other ‘‘leaving the present school with aschools which have become entire- higher ratio of inexperiencedJy segregated,” the tutees stated, teachers.”We do not mean that because a Commenting upon the presentschooljs all-Negro that it has to be Hyde Park-Woodlawn communitybad. But that is what segregated relations, the SWAP tutees statedschools are m Chicago. We are op- that “relations between studentsposed to Hyde Park becoming a and Woodlawn are not very goodsegregated school.” as js since the phrase "culturally“Many students attending Hyde deprived” has been thrown aroundPark feel depressed and neglected. s0 much, many Woodlawn studentsThere are few special classes now feel that they have to overcomedeveloped to pull remedial students economic and social harriers,out of their below average classes. while students from Hyde Park-Most of these students are as- Kenwood grow up in an environ-signed to classes which could not ment which made them feel morepossibly help them get into college “culturally advanced.”or a job after graduation as many “Emphasis on honors and double MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259•yes examinedDr. KURT ROSENBAUMOPTOMETRIST53rd Kimbark PlazaHY 3-837214 karat goldpierced studsAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH--NEW & USED-Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsSERVICE CALLS - $3 6K>\ I see thelargestselectionon thesouth sideavailablein culturedpearl, jadecoral, gold,onyx, opalmany others$4.00fromSUPREMEJEWELERSHandbags & Jewelrylof Distinction*1452 East 53rd St.FAirfax 4-9609This is our last ad in theMAROONfor some time The United StatesTHANKS A LOT to all the staffWe still have a few things to sellthrough SUNDAYMONDAY IS APUBLIC AUCTIONCOMPLETECLEANOUT The United States is very bigIt's very big indeedAt least one hundred thousand menCould rule the world and leadThey rule the housesThey rule the world and overtakeTo bring in peace which makesnew friendsI want to thank everyone and closewith a poem written by our8 year old grandsonTHANK YOU! For all the world to seeThe United States is our home townWhere we can have some funAnd make new friends with everyoneWhile working and in play.RON KRUEGERScandinavian Imports1538 E. 53rd Sf. OPEN EVERY NIGHT ‘TILL 10 P.M.f After we're gone you can always reach us at NO 7-4040/ NO 7-4040Oct. 22, 1965 CHICAGO MAROONAcademic affairs comm, sets discussionsPlan new course guide effortThe Student Government academic affairs committeehas created the framework for this year’s program. “Westill need plenty of help from the student body, but I thinknow we have a basis for our work” explained co-chairmanMark Joseph. “We want to havefuture meetings open to all, so that had this summer” stated Joseph,the students will understand what “Different teachers will be invitedwe are doing, and will want to par- in the hope of obtaining a balance”ticipate in such programs as our added co-chairman Peter Nagour-area discussions.” ney.Modeled after a successful pro- STUDENT discussion leadersgram initiated by Neil Braust this have been chosen for three of thesummer, the area discussions will five colleges with Jack Kolb chair-center around small, informal ing the humanities, Jay Lemke themeetings between interested stu- social sciences, and Neil Brastdents and faculty of the five ccl- continuing in the physical sciences,leges. “The ideal student-faculty Chairmanship for the biologicalratio is about 7:3, the ratio we sciences group is still open, andsince the committee is virtuallyhamstrung by the lack of factualdetails on the fifth college, thatdiscussion group has been tabled“until we can talk to someonebesides Redfield,” explained Na-gourney.Steps were also taken to re-or-BE PRACTICAL!!!BUY UTILITY CLOTHES!!;Complete selection of sweatshirts, par¬kas, insulated ski wear, belts, under¬wear, DOOts, overshoes, jackets, khakis,ponchos, levis, sweaters, work & sportshirts, winter caps, trousers, turtlenecks, raincoats, camping equipment,insulated boots, gloves, scarves, tennisshoes, pajamas, robes, coveralls, blank¬ets, work shoes, wallets, folding cots,umbrellas, tanker jackets, sport coats,corduroys, suspenders, union suits,shoe laces, gym wear, sweat pants,dress shirts, sox, ear muffs, etc., etc.UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1364 E. 63rd St.Open Sundays 9:30-1Students discounts with ad BOOKSSTATIONERYGREETING (ARDSTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55 St.10% Student Discountthe epo shiRTThat authentic old-salttang tells you this is theauthentic CPO shirt...right down to the navyanchor buttons! Fine,warm wool protected bylifetime mothproofing.Sizes from Extra Small f*Extra Large. $00.THE STORE FOR MENGrAh* SfeM."*Qfatptt attft (Hampuain the flew Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 gauize the course evaluation pro¬gram which was initiated lastspring. The spring project, due topoor timing and a limited responsemust be repeated.“We plan to revise our originalquestionnaire and to use the infor¬mation to publish a magazine likeBerkley’s SLATE ” stated Nagour-ney. The Berkley magazine is pub¬lished every term and contains in¬formation about each teacher’sstyle, grading system and majorpoints of emphasis.“We don’t want to indicate inwhich class a student can get thebest marks, but instead informhim as to which teacher uses such-and-such a style that the studentmay prefer,” said Nagourney. Ad¬vertising will be included, and anominal amount will be chargedfor the quarterly magazine.DETAILED QUESTIONNAIRESwill be distributed in the fall andwinter quarters with the publica¬tion date set for the spring pre-reg¬istration week.Nagourney explained that thefirst issue will be basically experi¬mental in nature with the majorstress placed upon a comprehen¬sive issue for next fall. Any stu¬dents interested in formulating thequestionnaire or compiling the re¬sults are urged to contact KerryBerland in care of SG academicaffairs, Ida Noyes Hall.HONDASALES & SERVICELAY AWAY ORSPOT DELIVERYALL MODELSINSURANCETIME PAYMENTSBOB NELSON MTRS.6136 S. Cottage GroveMl 3-4500Tobacco Dept.For over a century BBB pipeshave been held in high es¬teem by pipe smokers allover the world.Priced from $4.95 to $15.00an ' ' "ent in years ofsmoking pleasure.Tobaccos — Cigarettes — CigarsTheUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.Butterfield Blues Album is in!•njr Baez toolFRET SH^pluneali — New, thod. AntiqueGUITARS, BANJOS, MANDOLINSBooks and Folk Music MagazinesDISCOUNT ON FOLK RECORDS5210 HARPERChicagoNO 7-106011:30 to 6. 7:30 to 10 Mon.-FrL11:30 to 6, SaturdayCHICAGO MAROON Oct. 22, 1965 How to get love by IBMand lower divorce rateby David Gumpert“Do you think romantic love is necessary for successfulmarriage ?”On the basis of this question and over one hundred others,you could be matched up with your ideal date. At leastthat's the contention of “OperationMatch,” the newest thing in blinddating.Through the use of a speciallydesigned questionnaire and an IBM7090 computer, college studentsacross the country will be matchedup with ideal dates.ALL THE STUDENT has to dois fill out the questionnaire andsend it to Cambridge, Massachu¬setts along with three dollars. With¬in two weeks of the closing date,which is November l in the Chica¬go area, the student will receivethe names, addresses, and phonenumbers of from five to fourteenmatches in the Chicago area. Therest is up to the individual.According to Herman Fishman,UC representative of “OperationMatch.” 1750 questionnaires havealready been passed out aroundcampus, and another 600 question¬naires have been requested bymail as a result of an ad run bythe Maroon. “The response sofar has been very encouraging,”Fishman noted.While some students view “Oper¬ation Match” as just another ex¬ample of how ours is a computer¬ized society, reducing individuality,MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBlood Typing & Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICEComplete Lab. EKG & BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM - 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3-2000 Fishman disagrees. “The object ofthis project is for people to havefun. The computer is merely actingas an intermediary. The functionperformed by the computer couldbe performed by people, exceptwith a lesser degree of efficiency.As I see it, the complaint of thecomplete impersonalization of ‘Op¬eration Match’ could perhaps beapplied to all blind dates.”SINCE THE COMPUTER relieson the questionnaire being filledout accurately, there is the prob¬lem of students failing to put downcompletely honest answers. Ac¬cording to Fishman, “If someonelies on the questionnaire, they arepresenting themselves in a certainway, the same way that someoneelse has requested. I see no reasonwhy such a match should not workout.”Fishman also feels that the longterm results of “Operation Match”could be beneficial. “If we assumethat many people get marriedwhen they feel personally readyfor marriage, then “OperationMatch,” by greatly increasing thechances of proper compatibility,could conceivably lower the di¬vorce rate,” he said.PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhair stylists at5242 Hyde Park Blvd.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-072710% Student DiscountWASHABLE JERSEYandMcCALL PATTERN 7945for MATCHINGTOPS and SOCKSSTRIPED and PLAIN10-9 on Thursday10-5:30 Other DaysClosed Sunday FABYAR 5225 Harper363-2349SWEDENBORG READING ROOMand REFERENCE LIBRARY5710 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. and Weekdays at 7:30 P.M.The library, as also the class, is open to the public withoutcharge.Renaissance Society sponsors exhibit SWAP a,lvises co||ege-bound tuteesThe Renaissance Society of the University is presentinga showing of Lu Wu-chiu’s work through November 6th inGoodspeed Hall.Miss Lu, a daughtei of the painter and calligrapher LuFeng-tzu, former president of the —National Arts College in Soo-chow, vary in expressive content fromKiangsu province, began her ca- labyrinthine wanderings of linesreer as an artist working with ex- to spidery jungles of stretchedperinicntal uses of textile threads textile, to aimless puffs of downyand other embroidery. These works silk forms, set against solid color backgrounds.IN 1959 AND 1960 Miss Lu visitedNorth America ^ringing her intocontact with some of the majortrends of Western artistic develop¬ment. This visit, and the develop¬ment in her thought resulting froman examination of the radicallydifferent artistic modes of the Chi¬nese and the modern West, pro¬duced the desire to do the type ofwork seen at Goodspeed.ClassifiedsPersonalsWRITERS' WORKSHOP (PLaza 2-8377)University House 5737 Univ. Ave. ishaving its housewarming on Thurs. Oct.20 from 7-10 pm. All welcome.ART EXHIBIT October 10-27 Contem-porarj 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.Mississippi Freedom Democrat Partyfund raising party. 5612 S. MarylandSat Oct 23. 8 pm admission 50c.The ticket service is back! Tickets toall Orchestra Hall events can be or¬dered through Student Gov't (Ida NoyesRm. 217) Special Student rate (1 40)available for Fri. Afternoon perform¬ance deadline for orders noon Friday.MEN OF UC: Tired of coffee hours?Want to make Sunday more than just aday of rest? Come to the PUNCHHOUR given by the graduate women ofthe Ellis Ave. Apts, on Sunday Oct.24th. at 7 pm. in the Soc. Serv. AdBldg. 60th and Ellis. STUDENTS, FACULTY EMPLOYEESWant to learn to dance—with a partnerthat is? A revival of “contact dancing.”If your bones are tired from the Jerk,Frug, Watusi, etc , here’s a chance towaltz, foxtrot, Cha Cha, Samba, Tango,Rumba. Let it be known now—Room201, Ida Noyes Hall. There's no charge,of course. WantedWanted: Wife of Grad Stud, to spendVi time with a small French speakingboy for 1 month. 288-2976.Alexander Nevskydir. by Serge Eisenstein: org. musicby Prokofief. This Saturday only. Man-del Hall 7:30 and 9:30 Students 75c Civil¬ians $1.00CharlieChaplin'sModern Timeswill be shown Sat. Oct. 30th in MandelHall by the RFS. Advance Ticket Reser¬vations will be taken at the Student Ac¬tivities office until Oct. 29th.Bring an envelope containing a notewith your name, no. of tickets at 7:30 or9:30 showing, plus 75c for each studentticket and $1.00 for each non-studentticket requested. Tickets will be he'dfor you at the door. RFS TYPING SERVICEMarcella Bryant Midway 3-6871Wanted: Good exp. office help wantedMale or Female to work in Credit Dept.Full time, Good Pay. Hours flexible.4555 S. Cottage or Call BO 8-1111.For Sale The Student Woodlawn AreaProject (SWAP) has added a newcollege advisory program to itsservices this year. Through this in¬novation, approximately forty UCstudents will provide 200 highschool juniors and seniors from theChicago area with individual infor¬mation and guidance on continuingtheir education.A 6G page manual containing ad¬vice on choosing a college, apply¬ing for admission, and financingthe years at college has been com¬plied and distributed by the SWAPcommittee. Tutees under SWAPwere the first to receive the hand¬books. Area high schools andprofessional counsellors also re¬ceived copies of the first edition.The need for a program of stu¬dent college advisors became ap¬parent as students being helped bytutors also came to SWAP for aidin gaining admittance to college.The training sessions for studentadvisors began on October 16 and will continue with professionalcounselors through the year tohelp solve tutee’s problems as theyarise.After the high school students*admittance to college, student ad¬visors will continue to aid them incollege study habits. They will alsohave contact with the studentcounsellors while they are attend¬ing their new school.| Slate talks on PlatoElizabeth Anscombe, of Somerville College, Oxford University,Oxford, England, will deliver threepublic lectures at UC October19 and 26 and November 2, 1965.Her general topic will be “Plato,Phaedo, and Later Developments.’*All three lectures will be given inRoom 122 of the social science re¬search building. 1126 East 59thStreet, Chicago. The lectures willbegin at 8 pm. Admission is with¬out ticket and without charge.Beaut. 4 Bedrm. Town hse near 55th. ICtrains. HP Co-op off street parking, private patio, enclosed play area. 363-0259Old French ?4 size violin, bow, andcase. In perfect condition. Young student has outgrown. $150. Call DO 3-0281Grundig AM-FM-SW transistorized radioin teak and plastic, compact, $50. 6840954 aft. 6.AM-FM-Stereo FM-Stereo Phono Setwith stereo tape recorder $150. CallES 5-9532.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospital TYPEWRITERSCompletely over-hauled office typewriters available withnew machine guarantees.We are also an authorized dealer for Olympia portable,standard or electric typewriters.Many others available for sale or rental.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE . . . when there has been an addi¬tion to the family, it's high time tothink of an addition to your SunLife insurance portfolio. /Am a local Sun Life rapcaaanfeUva, mayI o«l upon you at yaar aoaaawtoaaofRalph J. W—6, Jr„ CUINyfe Park Book lulMfe* CWcofo If. OkPAIrtax 4-MM — PI 1-23HOMm Hoar* 9 la I Maifeyi ft PiMaySUM ui$ Af^WAwce company qj»IfiiTVAL CQMfAmrCHEKHOVUNCLE VANYADirected by RICHARD ENOPRESENTED BYTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THEATREIN THE REYNOLDS CLUBOCTOBER 22-34; 28-9; 30; 318:30 PMTICKETS $1.50STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF $1.00Oct. 22, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • iHow Will You Decorate Your Walls?Buy a print at our sale which starts Friday, October 22Large, beautiful brushstroke printsOnly $1.98Old masters and impressionists with many from the RussianMuseum collection in glowing color. Listed below are avery few of the artists and subjects available.Modigliania Gypsy Woman with Baby 18x24Klee Senecio 16x17Rouault Tete de Clownesse 18x22Miro Bourn Bourn Bird 17x21Lautrec At the Moulin Rouge 17x1914Cezanne Bridge at Creteil 17x21Picasso Child with Dove 18x24Renoir The Bower 17x21THE BOWERCHILD WITH DOVEWhite and gold frames to fit most sizes, $2.95 and up.Framing done while you wait.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE SCLC to assess its role at conferenceThe Mid-Western Conference of the Southern ChristianLeadership Conference (SCLC) SCOPE project (SummerCommunity Organization and Political Education), will beheld October 23 in the International House. This will be thefirst project of the University ofChicago chapter, which began last go’s housing problem,year under the direction of faculty Orientation before fieldworkadvisor Walter Johnson, professor jn June the team from Chicagoof history, and student director along with students from 200 otherLance Nelson, along with SCOPE campus chapters will attend an in¬volunteers. tensive orientation session conduct-At the conference Hosea L. Wil- ed by civil right’s leaders, fieldliams, National SCOPE director workers, and professors beforeand top aide to Dr. Martin Luther they go to their assigned county.King, Jr., Reverend James Bevel The UC SCOPE chapter aims atwho is presently working with the creating informed leadership andChicago civil rights movement, community organization in NegroJames Orange a fieldworker com- areas where assistance has beening from Alabama, and John- requested. Thus, Negroes withinson; the chairman of the National the community can carry on theirSCOPE Advisory committee will struggle with discrimination afteraddress students and professors the SCOPE workers have left,from various mid-western colleges THE VOLUNTEERS educate theand universities. Notre Dame, people in political education class-Wayne State, Roosevelt University, es about the United States form ofand the University of Illinois at government and the protectionChicago will be among the repre- which the civil rights bill givessented. their freedom. The classes are setTHE CONFERENCE will examine up to help Negro people of thelast summer’s work and make community realize and exerciseplans for the organization of their rights as citizens. CommunitySCOPE chapters on other cam- awareness of the importance ofpuses. participating in government is alsoDuring the year the Chicago effected through door to door can-chapter composed of graduate and vassing and mass meetings,undergraduate students will con- The continuation of the “mutual-centrate on raising money and se- ly beneficial relation” of the uni-lecting a team of volunteers to versity with the adopted county iswork this coming summer in the another aim of the University ofUC adopted county. They will also Chicago SCOPE chapter. The UChelp Rev. Bevel s work on Chica- chapter hopes to send volunteer professors to do research on thespecific problems that are presentin the county in order to find solu¬tions for the community struggle.The volunteers have also bencfit-ted. Johnson in an open letterwrites, ‘‘Recently I have talked toseveral of the volunteers—the edu¬cational experiences they had incounties all over the South wereextremely rewarding.”117% Whites registeredLance Nelson was director of aSCOPE project in Allendale Coun¬ty, South Carolina this summer. InAllendale the population is 65 percent Negro with only 15 per centregistered to vote, whereas 117 percent of the white population is reg¬istered.Throughout the summer only 80Negroes were registered with thehelp of SCOPE. Segregationist voteregistrars used ‘‘slow down” tac¬tics to keep Negroes from register¬ing to vote.After exhausting the officialchannels without being granted ex¬tra days for registration, a sit-in inthe County Court House wasstaged, and arrests were made.Two weeks of marches, vigils, andmass meetings took place after thearrests. As a result the countygranted four extra days for reg¬istration.At the end of the summer localleaders and the community reg¬istered 1000 Negroes without thehelp of SCOPE. In addition, extravote registrars were hired and aBiracial Committee was estab¬lished.Yale considers giving honor students chance to rate facultyt t Collegiate Press Service dean.NEW HA\ EN—Yale University has taken the first step By giving a voice only to the top-in giving students a voice in faculty tenure appointments. rankinS students and by askingUniversity authorities plan to invite academically high- padSl'V“STdm”"ranking students to submit “a written appraisal of the tration hopes to prevent short-strengths and weaknesses” of their : — sighted appraisal under the pres-educational experience in lectures, promotion to the tenure position of sure of immediate campus life,discussions, and seminars. full professor. When a department recommendsThe move, which is subject to Students demonstrated against a candidate for tenure, the recom-faculty approval, is part of a com- what they considered an injustice mendation will have to include de¬plete review of the institution’s to an ‘‘outstanding teacher.” The tails of the faculty member’ssystem of faculty appointments, department complicated the issue teaching experience and effective-The review was ordered by King- when it recommended Bernstein ness.man Brewster, Jr., president of for tenure but not for promo- The report, however, does not es-Yale, after a controversy last tion. Bernstein has since left Yale tablish any mechanism for corn-spring when Richard J. Bernstein, and is chairman of the philosophy municating student evaluations toan associate professor of philoso- department at Haverford College, the tenure committee. Neither thephy, was not recommended for a Haverford, Pennsylvania. department chairman nor the deanIf the plan is implemented, each would have to use the evaluationsstudent graduating from Yale Col- jn their own reports. Students in-lege with departmental honors and volved in last spring’s demonstra-each recipient of a degree from the tions said the report was a step ingraduate school will be invited to the right direction, but that any fi-submit a written appraisal of his nai provisions would have to insureeducation to the chairman of his that student evaluations would bemajor field and to the appropriate used.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.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST& HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a„m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 8-7585 [ dark *"*• |■mm 50* Sl. ■■■m lor codoga students am witk Ld. card H■ # different double ■feature* daily■ e open dawn ie dawn■ e little gallery ■■ for gal* only■ Fri. 22—"wild rapture", %taboo's of the world".Sat. 23—"father goose",■ "operation snafu". ■■ Sun 24—"empty canvas", "les |■ abysses". aMon. 25—"naked brigade",« "stop train 349". ■■ Tues. 24—"the big land",■ "great day in the morning".Wed. 27—"the younga stranger", "female animal".s Thurs. 2ft—"run of the arrow".: "verboten". TAI-SAM-Y&NCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialising InCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 fM.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 Eost 63rd St MU 4-1062dark 6r madisontr 1-2843 You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Are.646-4411Ml 3-4045TERRY'S PIZZAFREE STUDENT DELIVERY1518 EAST 63rd STREETMEDIUM 1.45-LARGE 1.95EXTRA LARGE 2.95GIANT 3.95ONIONS 10c EXTRA • GREEN PEPPERS or ANCHOVIES 15c EXTRAMUSHROOMS 20c EXTRA • PEPPERONI 25c EXTRAAlso comploto lino of othor foods4 PIZZAS FOR THE PRICE OF 3 CoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302MAROON Oct. 22, 1965HUKlusic reviewMarti non style: occasional flashes wake you upA stianger in Chicago could hardly have stumbled ona more representative week than last to visit the Symphony,goth in menu and in execution, Martinon's fourth week wasa startling microcosm of his reign as a whole.First came a taste of the 20th —century, Chicago-style. Nothing Concert Music for Strings andradical, of course; instead, a deli- Brass. And, since Roussel is acate blend chosen from yesterday’s . . ,. , , U 1 1 aniusic of tomorrow, calculated p ct dlsp*ay for the maestro’sneither to shock through novelty Urtures, one would have expectedn0r to bore through familiarity. In the evening to leap to a good start,other words, it oozed respectabili- it did. Martinon revelled in un-^ ty. rovelling the profusion of pastels,ACTUALLY, on paper the two summoning and shading wisps ofworks were intriguingly contrasted: tone which appeared and disap-Roussel's The Spider's Feast, a peared with elegant naivete. Onefragrant souffle, opposed by Hin- could quibble with occasional mis-d e m i t h ’ s all-muscle-and-sweat calculations—sloppy woodwind articulation, or the overbalance ofstrings which, at the beginning,nearly drowned the solo flute in¬stead of holding it up. But if Marti¬non was not at his peak at least hewas high enough to disguise thework’s total lack of substance.With the Hindemith, however,the mountain reverted to a mole¬hill. The work is such that no con¬ductor could lose its solidity andgrandeur. Martinon, however, ig¬nored two other crucial ingredi¬ents —dignity and deftness. Thebrass players buried their compan¬ions in an avalanche of tone sougly that, instead of emerging as acathedral (as it did when Hin¬demith conducted it here two years ago), the work came closer tobeing a steamroller—without amuffler.From that collision Martinon, asoften happens, jerked us fromslightly off the batoned path to themiddle of a six-lane highway. Whatcould be a less appropriate finalethan yet another run-through of theBeethoven Violin Concerto?MAYBE a really fierce perform¬ance would just have come off.Martinon and soloist Henry Szer-yng, however, seemed of the opinionthat since there’s nothing new tosay about the piece, there’s nopoint in even turning on the igni¬tion. Oh, there were occasional felici¬ties to keep you from actually fall¬ing asleep. Once in awhile, Szeryngwould play flat enough to inspire ayawn-suppressing wince, or Marti¬non would shine the headlights onthe trumpets so that for a fewmeasures you’d hear nothing butthe same note repeated over andover.But all in all, it was a leisurelyand uneventful trip until, catchingsight of home, the participants de¬cided to liven up the coda. Theyshould have realized it was toolate, but then, there are alwaysthose who think a flashy dessertcan make up for a so-so meal.Peter RabinowitzMAROON WEEKEND GUIDEJimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifry-Fi#Hi umd Woodfawn Ave.GOLD CITY INN"A Gold Mine of Good Food”10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559Try Our Convenient Take-Out Ordersf Eat More For Lessi 0°s* MR. PIZZAWE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTS 1/HY 3-8282 * of CFOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE PARKDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKEN C,Q/$Also Ck. Broiled HamburgersPIZZAFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 4 FortySausage 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Mushroom 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Green Pepper 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Anchovie 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Onion or Garlic 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Tuna Fish or Olive 1.53 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Cheese 1.25 2.00 2,50 3.50 4.50Vi and Vi .. 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Extra Ingredients 50 .50 1.00 1.00 1.00Pepperoni Pixxa 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Shrimp ...» ....2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Bacon 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 6.00Coney Island Pixxa 2.50 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.00(Sausage, Mushrooms and Peppers) Box of Broested Chicken20 Pieces, Goldan Brown16 Piacet, Goldan Brown10 Pieces, Golden BrownBAR B-Q RIBSSHRIMP, PERCHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCOLIRAVIOLISandwiches:BEEF, SAUSAGE,MEAT BALL1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.Ope* 7 Days a Week — 4:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. — Fri. to 3:09 a.iSat. to 3:00 a.m. — Open 2 p.m. SundaysJeffery Theatre '1952 E. 71st ST. HY 3-3333 {Rita TushinghamINi“THE KNACK”ANDCharles BoyerLeslie CaronRock HudsonIN“A VERY SPECIALFAVOR"Feature TimesKNACK, Doily: 2:00, 5:10, 8:20KNACK, Sot.: 1:30, 4:40, 8:00. 11:15 FOR THE FINESTINITALIAN and AMERICAN CUISINESMEDLEY’S ■JOIN THE ININHYDE PARK’S NEWESTOct. 22, 1965 CHICAGO MAROONmmCalendar of Events Culture CalendarThursday, October 21LECTURE: “Social Work and the Con¬victed Criminal’’, Norval Morris, speak¬er, Annual Alumni Dinner Meeting,School of Social Service Administration,969 E. 60th St., 5:00 pm, Dinner, 6:30pm.Friday, October 22DISCUSSION: “Personal Bible Study”,Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, IdaNoyes Hall, 7:30 pm.ONEG SHABBAT: "A 20th CenturyView of Biblical History, Stanley Ge-virtz speaker. Dept, of Oriental Lan¬guage and Civilization, B'nai B'rith Hil-lel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.FILM: "Mother”, V. I. Pudevkin, So¬cial Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15 pm, 60cAdmission.Joseph K. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 Saturday, October 23CONFERENCE: Southern ChristianLeadership and Midwest Regional Con¬ference, Hosea Williams, top MartinLuther King aide, and Rev. James Be¬vel, head of Direct Action Division ofSCLC, speakers, International House,9:00 am.FILM: “Alexander Nevsky”, presentedby Russian Film Festival, Eisensteindirecting, Mandel Hall, 7:30 and ?:30pm, students 75c, others $1.00.FILM: "The Golem”, B’nai B’rith HillelFoundation, 5715 Woodlawn, 7:30 pm,affiliates-50c, others-75c.Sunday, October 24RADIO: "Blitz and B’ight—Post- warPractice in Britain”, Desmond Heap,Comptroller and City Solicitor, City ofLondon, speaker, 7:00 am, WFMF, 100.3me., 6:00 pm. WAIT, 820 kc.RADIO: Zohra Lampert, actress, Lin¬coln Center for the Performing Artsconsiders central protagonists in litera¬ture, 8:15 am, WFMF, 100.3 me., 5:45pm, WAIT 820 kc.FILM: “Chaudhvin Ka Chand”, pre¬sented by the India Student’s Associa¬tion of Chicago, Mandel Hall, 7:30 pm,members $1.00, non-members, $1.25.TRIBUTE: Tribute to Adlai Stevenson,Auditorium Theater, Marina Towers,Gallery tickets SI.00, Balcony tickets,$2.00. Phone Kathryn Lewis at 321-1841for more information.Battered Book SaleToday is the last day.Many remain at half price or less.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE ConcertsCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA:Oct 22: Martinon, cond. NarciscoYepes, g. Corelli: Concerto Grosso.Vivaldi: Concerto, Boccherini. Sym. inC.Oct. 28: Irwin Hoffman, cond. VladimirAshkenazy, p. Hanel; Cone. Grosso, Op.6. No. 8. Tchaikowsky: Sym No. 2. Rig¬ger: Dichotomy, Prokoffief: Cone. No.2.Thru-Sat. Concerts: Thu. 8:15; Fri. 2;Sat. 8:30. $2.50-$6.50. Fri. gallery seatsfor students, $1.00 (available until 1 pmonly).Orchestra Hall Box Office: Daily,9:30-6; 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¬TRA —Szmon Goldberg, cond. & v. Vi¬valdi: Four Seasons. Schonberg: Verk-larte Nacht. Stravinsky: Cone, in D forStrings. Fri. October 22nd at 8:30. $3.0.1.Mandel Hail. Univ. of Chicago. 57th &University. MI 3-0800, ext. 3885.CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAY¬ERS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHI¬CAGO —Ralph Shapey, musical dir;Chester Milosovich, cl. Rochberg: Dia¬logues. Lutoslawski: Dance Preludes.Shapey: Cone for Clarinet — ChamberGroup. Other works to be announced.Tues. October 26 at 8:30. Free. Mandel Hall, 57th & University. MI 3-0800, ext3885.FilmsThurs., Oct 21: QUAI DES BRUMES:Marcel Carne, w. Jean Gabin. Art Insti¬tute, 7:30.Fri., Oct 22: MOTHER: V. I. Pudevkin,DocFilms. 7:15 & 9:15. 60c, Soc Sci 122.Sat., Oct 23: ALEXANDER NEVSKY:S. Eisenstein. RusFilms, 7:30 & 9:30.75c, Mandel Hall.Wed., Oct 27: THE INFORMER: JohnFord, with Victor McLaglen. DocFilms, 7:15 & 9:15. 60c. Soc Sci 122.Fri Oct 29: ZVENIGORA: A Dovsht n-kn. DocFilms, 7:15 & 9:15, 60c, Soc Sci122.Sat., Oct 30: MAGNIFICENT OBSES¬SION: Douglas Sirk, SAM'., Billings.fashion eyewareDr. KURT ROSENBAUMOPTOMETRIST53rd Kimbark PlazaHY 3-8372Just call liim“Confident CkarlieHE’S WEARING “ORLON”s'-worsted woolHaggar Slacks in a new hopsacking weave.Haggar styling gives him the trim fit he wants infine dress slacks. Tailored in 70% “ORLON”acrylic-30% worsted wool. “Orion” in the blendkeeps these slacks looking freshly pressed,sharply creased... keeps him confident ofalways looking neat, well dressed. No wonderthe gals go for "Confident Charlie”. 10.95®Du Pont’s Reg. T.M.WIN A FORD MUSTANG or one of 50 other bigprizes. See your Haggar dealer for details.Get Haggar Slacks at fine stores everywhere. TheatreBAREFOOT IN THE PARK — Neil Si¬mon’s comedy starring Myrna Loy.Richard Benjamin, Joan Van Ark andSandor Szabo; Mike Nichols, dir. Ngh'-ly, 8:30; Matinees, Wed. & Sat. at 2.Closed Sun. Nightly. $2.50-$4.99; Fri. &Sat. $2.75- $5.50. Matinees, $2.50-$4.50.Blackstone Theatre, Balbo & Michigan.TIIE 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. $3.00; Fri & Sat. $3.50.Phone 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 Vooat.Nightly. 8:30. Fri & Sat. 8:30 & 11; Sun.7:30. Closed Mon. Nightly. S2.65; 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, originated by Viola Splin. resultin a truly improvised show which is dif-i)WNMMMMMNMNMMgMNMNNNNM|As usual, SWAP could usesome more UC students as tu¬tors for high school studentsfrom Woodlawn and otherChicago areas. If you have acouple of hours a week tospare, ring up extension 3587,or drop by the SWAP officein Ida Noyes Hall. ferent each time the Games are played.The company is directed by Paul bills.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 olthe 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 Gioda-no, with continuity by David Blomquist.2 shows nightly. Adm charge. 901 N.Rush. DE 7-1000.THE OWL AND THE PUSSY CAT — Atwo-character comedy starring EarthaKitt and Russell Nype. Nightly 8:30;Wed. & Sat. matinees. 2 Closed Sun.Nightly, $3.C0-$5.50; Fri & Sat. $3 50-$5.00; 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 & 1. ClosedMon. Nightly $2.00; Fri. $2.50: Sat. $3.00.There is also an informal show at 11 pmon week nights & Sundays that includesimprovised scienes based on suggestionsfrom the audience: $1.00. Second City,1846 N. Wells. DE 7-3992HULL HOUSE THEATRE — Two one-act plays by Harold Pinter. "The DumbWaiter” and "A Slight Ache"; Robe tSiekinger, dir. Thru Oct Fri & Sat,8:30; Sun 7:30. Fri & Sat. $3.90; Sun.$3.40. Jane Addams Center, 3212 N.Broadway, 348-8336. „HULL HOUSE THEATRE AT PAHK-WAY — Peter S. Feibclman's drama“Tiger, Tiger Burning Bright": MichaelMiller, dir. Thru Oct. Fri & Sat. 8:30;Sun 7:30. Fri & Sat. $2.50; Sun $2.01.Parkway Community House. 500 E.67th. 324-3880.THE LAST STAGE — An evening ofone-act plays. William Hunt’s "Sleepy¬heads"; Thomas Joarn, dri; Giradoux'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 F,. 51st. OA 4-4200.HULL HOUSE—Studio Writers p esentan original play by Richard Gosswiller.JIMMY GOSPEL. Thurs and Son only:Oct 21 at 8:45 and Oct 24 at 2:45. Dona¬tion $2 at the door only hour beforeperformance time.UNIVERSITY THEATER — Uncle Va¬nya, dir. Richard Eno. Oct 22 24, 28-31.8:30. Tickets $1.50, university people $1.Reynolds Club Theater, upstairs in Rey¬nolds Club.PIZZA PLATTER1508 Hyde Park Blvd.KE 6-6606 KE 6-3891Delivery .25TABLE SERVICEPIZZA AND ITALIAN FOODSANDWICHESVi FRIED CHICKENFRENCH FRIES - COLE SLAWROLL & BUTTER$1.50 ExhibitsART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO: Win-terbotham Collection; thru Nov. 14.Graphics by Picasso; thru Oct. 31 Wat¬er colors by Winslo Homer; thru Oct.31.RENAISSANCE SOCIETY: Ink andpastels by Wu-chiu; thru Nov. 6. Good-speed Hall. UC.CENTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCA-TION: Prints and drawings by RachelMinna Baron. Thru Nov. 13. 1307 E.60 th.Peace Corps ReturneesIn order to establish a ros¬ter of returned volunteers,please contact the office ofC. Arnold Anderson (Judd320, Tel. 2921 or 2922) atyour earliest convenience.CINEMAChicago at Michigan2 Full Length Features2 Intimate views of a marriageOne the husbands, the other the wifes"ANATOMYOF A MARRIAGE”TRIBUNE—"Highly recommended, Fascinating"DAILY NEWS-"Bears the mark off genius"Student Rates $1.00Every day but Saturday with I.D. card HYDE PARKAufo ServiceWinter hits Chicago like aton of cold bricks. Todaymay be 80° but tomorrowyou'll chatter.Play Safe.WINTERIZE NOW!GREASE JOBSandOIL CHANGES TOO!JIM HARTMAN7646 S. STONY ISLANDRE 4-6393RANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open Evenlnga — Billie Tregonzo, Manageressjames Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS - LINENS - TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. Card• Oct. 22, 196*