Draft head at law schoolNo CO increase evidentRecent student demonstrations have apparently been un¬successful in persuading prospective draftees to file con¬scientious objector (CO) forms, General Louis B. Hershey,National Dirctor of the Selective Service Commission, told anews conference Wednesday pre-Vol. 74-No. 15 The University of Chicago Friday, November 5, 1965Faculty group organizes symposiaU S forgein policy probed ceding a speech to UC law schoolstudents.Hershey stated that there hasbeen no increase in CO applica¬tions since the last wave of anti-Vietnam demonstrations. “Our sta- CO friends that they are a luxury,’*he said.“If everyone were like them,we'd have no country. We can af¬ford that luxury now, but we can’tafford the phoneys. I haven’t losttistics do not correspond to what my faith in peop]e who are reallypeople have been saying,” he ob- sjncereserved. “Life is such that peopleexaggerate the unusual. Because of TT , . . . , , ..t • • XT „ . the way we’re organized, a little Hershey also stat da P s‘The Living Newspaper, a series of faculty symposia which will attempt to present noise can sound very loud.” conference that there are no pres-information on US foreign policy not readily available from American mass media, will hold ALTHOUGH REFUSING to ent Plans t0 hmit student defer“its first session November 12 in the Ida Noyes Cloister Club at 3:30 pm. SerecentTr"'"THE TERM student has beenSponsored by a group called the Faculty Committee on the Problems of Foreign Policy, Shey pointed out that it was to thrown around a little wildly,” hesvmnncia will iisp Ac™nnt* — their advantage to “make us fight said- “* am stl11 in favor of defer*Booth, and Howard Schomer, head eacb other.” “I don’t know any-of the Chicago Theological Semi- thing about the Communists, but I No student limitthe symposia will use accountsfrom foreign newspapers andAmerican left wing journals andwill analyze the content on nation¬al newspapers and television.The first session will includebrief reports on the topics: “Gold-water and LBJ Campaign State¬ments on Vietnam: Remember?”,“The Defamation of the Professori¬ate ", “Journalists Caught In theAct: This Week's Distortions andLies in Newspapers, Radio, andTV” “The Psychology of InflictingPain”. “What the Radicals Say:This Week in the American LeftPress”, “News from the (Relative¬ly) Free World: This Week in theEnglish, French. Italian, Dutch,German, and Spanish Press.”Speakers will include Jesse Lem-isch, David Bakan, RichardHacks, Naomi Weisstein, HowardBrofsky, Milton Rosenberg, Wil¬liam Fowler. Hans Lennenberg,and Carol Gilligan.AFTER THE first week, the orig¬inators of the “Living Newspa¬per" hope to have students becomeactive in presenting material. nary.Future meetings will include dis¬cussions about the French intellec¬tuals and the Algerian war andabout the Nuremberg trials, andreports on peace iniatives in Viet¬nam which have been rebuffed bythe US.Lemisch said that he was madeaware of the need for a “livingnewspaper” when he saw the reac¬tion to his seminar on Vietnam. Herealized it was unfair to expectpeople to agree with his opinionswhen they did not possess relevantinformation, he explained.“There is an iron curtain overAmerican mass media,” Lemischsaid. “Sometimes the parade of“We’re interested in students dedi- recantations makes American tele-catcd to doing honest research and vision look like Russian televi-presenting it in brief, raw form,” si0n.”according to Lemisch, an assist- do know that our enemies want todisrupt us,” he said.Hershey characterized the dem¬onstrators as “unfortunate peo- ing full time, satisfactory students,but the schools must cooperate andtell us who is unsatisfactory.”Pointing out that decisions of thiskind are left in the hands of localboards, Hershey refused, however,pie who for some reason of other to Pred*ct whether the drafting ofgraudate students would developare frustrated. I pity them, but IJesse Lemisch, a speaker at thefirst session of the faculty "LivingNewspaper" November 12.ant professor of history.Faculty who are scheduled tospeak after the first session in¬clude Dean of the College Wayne LEMISCH'S SOLUTION is tolook in the foreign press for“things which are not in theAmerican press.” Other ways touncover distortion, he said, in¬clude comparing US newspaperresults and comparing national General Louis B. Hershey, Nat¬ional Director of the Selective into a trend. Ncr would he statewhat specific criteria would beused in drafting them.Speaking later before UC lawstudents, the General warned thatthose who participate in anti-draftdemonstrations are elegible fordelinquent status. “If one of themhad a classification of 2-S, I don’tthink he was in college while hewas demonstrating,” he observed.“If I were on the board, I think I’ddecide that maybe he needed a lit¬tle settling down.”Delinquents—those who in someway refuse to cooperate with theirlocal board—are inducted beforeboth volunteers and draftees.IN ANSWER to student ques-Service Commission, speaking to tions about draft deferment, Her-law school students Wednesday, shey said, “This deferment busi¬ness is not to help anybody cx-will still have them prosecuted. It’s cept the United States. Anyoneunfortunate that democracy gets who can prove that he’s doingJ results and comparing national unfortunate that democracy gets who can prove that he s doingMinOrQIlQ C||m rPlMlQTIlin and local TV coverage of speakers plagued by these kind of people, something of critical importance. U 11 IOI Uli O ClIU I'UsUvyClLIUII on foreign policy. but that’s what democracy is— for the government can get hison foreign policy.Lemisch stressed the fact that pushing liberty almost to license.”the “Living Newspaper” is not a “As for this fellow who set firemutely $1500 to relocate families displaced by the current teach-in. A teach-in, he explained, to himself, he’s 31, a minister, andpresents both sides of an argu- with children so I don’t think IThe Lutheran Theological Seminary has spent approxi-demolition work going on to clear ground for the seminary’s ment, while the job of the “Living burned him up,” Hershey said. status changed.”While asserting that in theorydraft boards make no distinctionbetween various academic areas,The General conceded that innew campus, according to h rank Zimmerman, business Newspaper” is to present the facts. Hershey was quick to explain practice they usually considered itmanager for the seminary.Almost 160 apartment units arebeing demolished in antween 55 st. and 54 place fromGreenwood to Woodlawn ave.Eighty-one University students areamong those being displaced bythe seminary. different that he did not include legitimate less desirable to draft those stud-ing the scientific disciplines.Hershey characterized the draft¬ing of fathers and single men over26 as “a remote possibility.” Headmitted, however, that he wouldof urban renewal (DUR) facilities Vietnam. A talk-back session will doesn’t come in one night. I’ve got have placed husbands in the same“We are not offeringand Woodlawn that they traded for opinions, we are offering different conscientious objectors among thethe co-op facts,” he said. demonstrators. “A lot of peoplearea be- ‘ Lemisch hopes that people will don’t understand that conscientiousOriginally the Lutherans had at|end ,he svmposia who ,Jisagrce objection is very narrow,” he said.planned to use Chicago department with him and support us policy in "RELIGIOUS TRAININGin the relocation project. A planwas drawn up by DUR, approvedby the Lutherans, and then drop-These families were offeredapartments either owned or found Ped on the grounds that the Lu-for them by the Lutherans, Zim- therans relocation project and the New UC reportmerman said. Fourty-four of the University’s promise to give pref-UC students involved took advan displaced students in UCtage of this. The others either , *elected to live in University stu- housing left very few displaceddent housing, where they were giv- persons uncared for.en preference, or were graduating According to Zimmerman, “We follow the speeches. “We want some very very good friends whomore than the SDS and SNCC peo- are conscientious objectors, andpie,” Lemisch said. “We don’t we hafe them doing work of na-want to preach to the converted.” tional importance. But I tell my category a year ago. PresidentJohnson removed husbands fromthe botten of the 1-A list last Au¬gust.students who were not in need ofhousing this year. did everything urbancould have done.”Along the same lines,ORIGINALLY the Lutheransbetween "551 and^J^'st BlTckstone Kennedy> manager of the Universi- ology, last week released findingsen dd ana oy st., Biac t — „«• from a three-vear series of studiesReveal public schoo i flawsTwo UC sociologists have probed the anatomy of the Chicago public school system, andrenewal recommended treatment of structural defects which make it sluggish in responding to thedemands put upon it.Winston Morris Janowitz, professor of sociology, and David P. Street, assistant professor of soci-and Cottage Grove The university, ty’s community and real estate of- fr.°™ a three-year series of studies the gussei Sage foundation, which terviewed key officials, and hadhowever, decided that the property fice told the Maroon, “I’ve had Jjjf.J*,, system as a soc,al provided funds. Superintendent of “prolonged contact” with teacherswould be needed for academic and no complaints from anyone that institution. schools Benjamin C. Willis ap-related Dumoses and suggested (U . i ... , ", , „ THE STUDIES were initiated by proVed of the investigation, and hethey’ve been unfairly treated. the sociologists, with the help of and his staff C0.0perated with theresearchers. A copy of the final re¬several other sites, including thepresent campus of George Wil¬liams College at 54th and Drexel orthe site of the Fifth Army head¬quarters at 51st and the lakeOn May 20, 1965, the parent sy¬nod, representing 344 Lutherancongregations, approved the 54thand Woodlawn site. A month laterthey purchased three married stu¬dent apartment buildings owned bythe University, and privately nego¬tiated for another four. BERKELEY, Calif.—On the first day of last month, theWhen these plans were an- Daily Californian, student newspaper at the University ofverity11 Block5ChibWandlathe 5450 California—Berkeley, printed the following quotes in its edi-University- Greenwood Block Club torial columns.'Berkeley students see Viet war ascause for more protest demonstrations(The following is the first of a two-part analysis of the situation at Berkeleywritten by H. Neil Berkson, general secretary of the Uniteil States StudentPress Association.)by H. Neil BerksonCollegiate Press Servicewere formed to prevent the de¬struction of middle income housing.The Lutherans pledged that theywould relocate the people dis¬placed, and, according to Zimmer¬man, a majority of them have re¬mained in the Hyde Park area.another problem arosewhen the owners of a co-op apart¬ment on the proposed site refusedto sell to the Lutherans. The Luth¬erans purchased * building at 51st “As many as 3,000 studentsjammed the Student Union-Sproul Hall Mall yesterday, asthe Bancroft-Telegraph contro¬versy reached a new peak ofactivity.New moves by both sides in¬cluded an arrest by the Uni¬versity police, a successful at¬tempt by the demonstrators totrap the Deans in their SproulHall office, and the immobili¬ zation of a University policecar by a group of aroused stu¬dents.Later a new force joined thefray — an anti-demonstrationthat erupted late last night.Gov. Edmond G. Brown is¬sued a statement on the con¬troversy during the day. ‘This and principals.Among the major findings:• “The organizational structureof the public school system can beseen as constituting a significantbarrier to continuous and effectiveinnovation,” because there is “lowarticulation between schools andthe central office” in its day-to-dayoperations.• Because of inadequate centralstaff, the individual classroomteacher and school principal eachfeel “isolated” from other teachersand principals. They need “groupsupport” to boost their effective¬ness. More in-service training forteachers, and planning on the dis¬trict level for principals, is needed.Staff Primitive• The central staff structure is“primitive.” It does not have theresources, facilities and people itneeds, and operates without ade¬quate information. Paradoxically,the staff tries to plan down to thesmallest detail of curriculum forMorris Janowitzport was sent to Willis last June, the whole system, instead of tryingJanowitz, Street, and the grad- only to help the local teacher andis purely and simply an at- uate assistants who worked on the principal develop their own way»tempt on the part of the stu- project attended staff and public of teaching and handling probelms.(Continued on page five) meetings of the school system, in- (Continued on page nine)EDITORIALJanowitz - Street: Chicago schools revisitedTwo UC sociologists have issued areport on the Chicago public schoolsystem putting forth proposalswhich, although perhaps not as likelyto attract excited publicity as those inprevious reports on the schools,promises to force a new look at thesystem’s whole structure.Morris Janowitz and David Streetled a three-year study of the schoolsystem with a question that has awide significance: how can the sys¬tem adjust more readily to the manysocial changes that affect it?This question comprehends manycurrent issues in education. How canthe public schools help Negroes out ofthe circle of poverty and low skills?How can the schools train students ofwidely varying backgrounds for skillseach one can use ?Chicago’s school system doesn’tcome out too well in this study, al¬though the authors mute their tonewhen they hit notes of criticism. Thecentral bureaucracy which runs theschools from downtown seems to bepeculiarly uncoordinated. It does nothave the resources to keep in touchwith the individual classroom teach¬ers who are the most important peo¬ple in the whole system—or shouldbe.Yet the downtown people try toplan what each and every teachermust do—the lesson plans he mustfollow, the rules he must obey. Thesystem is like an army with a generalat the top and foot soldiers at the bot¬tom, but not too much in between tohelp the GIs do their job.This is the central finding in thereport by Janowitz and Street. Thecentral suggestions they offer, suchas reorganizing the chain of com¬mand, with “super-districts” taking over much of the planning responsi¬bility from the central headquarters,are structural changes which wouldmake it easier to bolster the teacherin his often lonely battle.In-service training for teachers,which would make them familiarwith the vast piles of sociologicalknowledge now unused, is anotherproposal in this direction.The other main elements of the re¬port are specific proposals to allevi¬ate specific problems, and a call fornew energy in finding ways of meet¬ing other problems through increasedresearch.Primary among suggestions in theformer category is the strong call forcity-wide open enrollment, as a “firststep toward a reasonable and respon¬sible integration program.”Such a step is viewed as a “moralresponsibility,” to demonstrate goodfaith to ghettoized Negroes whichhas been so lacking so far. It will notbe a cure-all; it will not even producea great amount of integration, as Ja¬nowitz and Street themselves pointout. But such a policy will perhapsalleviate the feeling that the Negro istrapped by ghetto housing and ghettoschools and must get an inferior edu¬cation where he lives, whether helikes it or not.This procedural matter, however,takes back seat in the scheme of Ja¬nowitz and Street to the “substantivelevel,” i.e., what kind of school thesestudents will attend.Because of the still-brewing furorover Hyde Park High School’s prob¬lems and what to do about them, itmight be helpful to quote an entireparagraph:“At the substantive level thecrucial question is the development and maintenance of a core of out-standing comprehensive highschools in those areas where inte¬gration is or could be an immediatereality. The comprehensive highschool is based on an open socialclass concept; it must now also be¬come racially integrated. A fullrange of programs would be of¬fered. from the highest academic toremedial, vocational and work-study programs. Special resourceswould be made available to thesehigh schools to develop strong pro¬grams at all levels and to maintainintegration by attracting whites toparticipate. This program wouldcreate a new form of demonstra¬tion high school. The core of thisprogram already exists in a limitednumber of cases such as Hyde Parkand Waller High Schools and nowSouth Shore. It is the responsibili¬ty of the Chicago schools to seethat these high schools arestrengthened in their integrationand that additional high schools ofthis type are developed steadily.The existence of new federal fundsmakes possible the development ofspecial programs to assist integra¬tion in these areas.”Isn't this just the opportunity pre¬sented by the Unity plan? Thisscheme would retain Hyde Park HighSchool as a truly comprehensiveschool, with an imaginative structureand, it should be remembered, addi¬tional special personnel and facilitiesto serve all its students. It would di¬vide the 6000 students into four“houses,” each heterogeneous, whichwould provide a sense of intimacy.When combined with establishmentof District 14, which HPHS serves,as the type of “experimental district” which Janowitz and Street recom-jjmend, such a school could really be an]innovative factor in big-city schools.An experimental district In which"lresearch and development of new|ideas would be carried on with greatfreedom from bureaucratic control)must be connected with the resourcesof a university to be effective, Ja¬nowitz and Street state. If UC really*1wants to be effective in improvingthe education of the children of all ofDistrict 14, then shouldn’t it supportestablishment of this type of “demon¬stration” comprehensive high school^at Hyde Park High, with the experi¬mental district?These considerations are certainlysuggested by the Janowitz and Streetreport.According to Janowitz, however,Jhe does not expect the specific recom¬mendations in the report to be im¬mediately put into effect intact. Theinglorious experience of the Hauserand Havighurst reports, which havealmost been ignored by the school su¬perintendent and board of education,prevents any such optimism.But the Janowitz-Street reportdoes present important findingswhich should be taken into account.Superintendent Willis has had it onhis desk since last June. It is hoped hehas found useful suggestions in it.Since he approved of the purpose ofthe study when it was started threeyears ago, there is a fair chance hewill not reject it out of hand, as hashappened, it seems to reports fromthe two other UC sociologists, whosestudies were resented because theyimplied criticism from the start.We hope this new report has a hap¬pier fate than its predecessors.Letters to the editorSummer teaching at labschool not slum projecfI wish to call your attention toseveral blatant errors in your arti¬cle of 10/29 reporting on the SternSpecial Summer School held at U-Iligh this past summer.Most conspicuous of these (andthe one I’m sure was immediatelypicked up by any of the SSSS boyswho read Friday’s Maroon wasyour “U. High aids slum pupils”headline and your two other ref¬erences in the article to “the edu¬cation of Negro slum children.”While it is true that all of the boysin the program had attended HydePark High and that many of themlive in Woodlawn, it is absolutelyfalse that this program was basi¬cally a “slum” project. Of the 29boys in the program, nine werewhite. In addition, many of theboys, both Negro and white, camefrom middle class and professionalhomes. None of the boys were se¬lected, to my knowledge, becauseof their economic or social position,but because it was felt that theyall had a far greater potential forlearning than they were demon¬strating in school. When Dr. Con¬greve states that, “We want to de¬velop wholly new procedures,” heis speaking of problems of individ¬ual motivation, and is in no waygenerically speaking of a “radical¬ly revised kind of curriculum forslum children .” (My emphasis)Moreover, I find your article notonly misleading but damaging tothe entire idea of the SSSS. Inbrief, this idea centered aroundDr. Congreve’s statement that,“We are seeking to help individualkids,” a goal which we were ableto approach by having a 2 to 1 stu¬dent-faculty ratio and by treating all problems as being relative tothe individual and not as socio-eco¬nomic experimental data fromwhich to extract group theories.To all 29 boys in this summer’sprogram, the Maroon owes quitean apology.MARK GREENBERGASST. TEACHER, SSSSSG president claimsquorum was presentI don’t know about Mssr. Mahaf-fey, Shelton, and Stameshkin, but Idon’t know all 50 members of theSG Assembly by sight. On two oc¬casions I was asked to take a quo¬rum count. I did, by show ofhands, and counted a quorum pre¬sent. The secretary also counted aquorum. The SG minutes indicatethat 28 members of the Assemblywere present at the meeting.Twenty-five is a quorum.It is true that there were not al¬ways 25 people present in themeeting. Parliamentary proceduredoes not require the constant pre¬sence of a quorum. People maystep out of the room for variousnatural reasons. Parliamentaryprocedure does reqiure that a quo¬rum be present to answer a quo¬rum call. On the two occasionswhen a quorum was challenged,both the chair and the secretarycounted the presence of a quorum.At no time did I privately “con¬cede” to any of the three that noquorum was present. It seems un¬likely that I would, since on twooccasions I counted a quorum, andthe secretary’s minutes show 28people present at the meeting.BERNIE GROFMANPRESIDENT,STUDENT GOVERN¬MENT Bra counter threatens inViet-Bookslore campaignNgo Hue Dumb feared capturedby SPICK party. Dumb, leader ofthe Vietnamese Boobist faction,flew from Saigon last week to in¬vestigate the possibility of collu¬sion between the SPICK party andthe UC Bookstore. In response tohis clarion call to action againstBookstore injustices, it is believedthat the SPICK party kidnappedand hid him in Ida Noyes Base¬ment. The purpose of the kidnap, itis thought, was to gain time tosquabble over the UC Stupid Gov¬ernment referendum.Chicago MaroonEDITOR-IN-CHIEF Daniel HertzbergBUSINESS MANAGER Edward GlasgowMANAGING EDITOR Dinah EsralNEWS EDITOR David SatferASSISTANTS 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. LeveyPHOTOGRAPHERS: Dick Ganz, Steve Wofsy.Charter member of U.S. StudentPress Association, publishers of Col¬legiate Press Service.STAFF: David Gumpert, Marc PoKempner,Tom Heagy, Michael Nemeroff, Paul Satter,Paul Burstein, Ellis Levin, Jeff Kufa, CarolChave, Pat Buckley, Mike Seidman, CraigReller, Susan Kirchmyer, Mahonri Young,Karen Edwards, Bob Hertz, Steve GrantMonica Raymond, Ken Simonson, NancySteakley, Judy Van Herik, Bern Myers, DavidRanson, John Beal, Slade Lander, BonnieHolz, Marc Rosen, Dov Dubin. Meanwhile, UC Bookstore injus¬tices continue. It is rumored thatthe Brassiere counter will be ex¬panded to fill the foreign languagesection and that the candy counterwill replace the biology text sec¬tion. Furthermore, it is said thatthe management is considering aruling to only order three copies ofthe required text for each course.This argument is based on the factthat the proposed expansions willlimit storage space. Whether moreNastiness or Rudeness seminarswill be required of the personnel isnot yet known.Sorez R. Uoy has abandoned hisreporting job to concentrate uponbuilding up a boobist undergroundmovement at UC. He is nowDumb’s second in command, andsays that the movement will con¬centrate on attacking the Book¬store and SPICK party. Headquart¬ers is at Jimmy’s.POLF WOCCHIEF SAIGON REPORTERIN UOY’S ABSENCEAcademic affairs groupto organize student pollThere has been a noticeable un¬dercurrent of discontent amongstudents of the College concerningthe courses they are taking, partic¬ularly in General Education. Butsince there has been no effectivechannel for responsible criticism,instructors who are not necessarilyhostile or indifferent, instructorswho would be receptive to theideas of students, have a surpris¬ingly limited knowledge of studentopinion. The Academic AffairsCommittee of SG believes that acourse-evaluation pamphlet will provide channels of communicationbetween students and faculty,prompting necessary changes inteaching method and curricula.This pamphlet will also aid stu¬dents in choosing courses andteachers—since education is asmuch the responsibility of the stu¬dent as it is the concern of theteacher. The University of Chicagois, after all, one of the few institu¬tions in the United States wherechanges may be influenced by thestudent body, so we only have ourown lack of interest to blame if ourcomplaints remain unknown.With these things in mind theAcademic Affairs Committee hasdesigned a questionnaire to evalu¬ate courses and teachers. It ishoped that its structure is looseenough to facilitate changing con¬ditions and attitudes. The question¬naire for each course is a one-pagechecklist with ample space forcomment and personal suggestion.It covers six major topics: lec¬tures, sections, readings, papers,labs, and exams—plus a generalsection concerning the course as awhole.Questionnaires will appear withintwo weeks with collection boxes atdesignated locations on campus.The initial edition will be aimed atstudent opinion on courses com¬pleted last Spring or earlier. Theywill again appear during the Win¬ter quarter, polling students on thepresent quarter’s courses. It isplanned that a course-evaluationpamphlet will appear shortly be¬fore pre-registration for the Springquarter. Editions will appear regu¬larly thereafter.Student participation is essentialfor the success of this program.Anyone interested in helping i*(Continued on page six)2 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 5, 1965Tighten draft defermentsCollegiate Press ServiceStudents, especially graduate students, are finding themselves in the Selective ServiceJiotseat as local draft boards begin to tighten their requirements for student deferments.The extent to which students will be called in the next few months cannot be accuratelydetermined since local draft boards set their own standards in this regard. What is certain,however, is that some students will ——-—be called. In fact some have al- bad asked bjm to expia;n tbe reje. tbus tbe nevvs of tbejr actions jsready been ordered to appear ioi vance 0f his “studies and future just becoming known,physicals—the first step in tne in- pians» to the national interest, A man has 10 days after he re¬duction pi ocess.. health, and safety. ceives notice of his application toBEHIND IT all is the rising After the student had told the submit an appeal, and most uni¬monthly draft quotas because of board he had worked for Rep. Jo- versities are advising their stu-the build up of forces in Vietnam nathan B. Bingham, a Bronx Dem- dents to appeal. An appeal boardand the expansion of active-duty ocrat, and intended to “go into then hears the student's case andforces to three million—an in- government work,” he was classi- decides on a classification. If therecrease of some 300,000. The build fied 1-A, or draftable. is a split vote, when the appealup in Vietnam and the expansion The clerk of the board said tbat board votes, a registrant still mayof the number of men on active a registrant’s course of study and appeal to the President. If there isduty were ordered by the Presi- grades were both considered in no split, there is no further appeal,dent this summer. Since then draft granting a deferment. A student of Wesley First, director of univer-the social sciences would be re- sity relations at Columbia, corn-classified 1-A before a student of mented, “This thing sends coldengineering or the natural shivers down my back. Educationsciences, the clerk said. is big with us. If they’re going toBESIDES THOSE at Columbia, start drafting graduate studentsseveral other colleges reported this is meaningful. I just don’t un-that full-time students had re- derstand it at all.”Protesters lose defermentcalls have risen each month to le¬vels that are the highest since theend of the Korean War. The De¬cember call will be 45,224.Although the policy of nationalheadquarters is to encourage thedeferment of students, some localboards have found themselves una- ceiVed notice that their applicationble to meet their quotas without a for deferment had been denied,severe tightening of the require- At Harvard, at least four lawments for student deferment. students from Tulsa, Okla., andIhe request by the national Sel- Baltimore were reported to haveective Service officials that stu- been denied student classification.The Harvard Crimson said thatone of the students had been toldthat he could not even receive a 1-AC classification which would al-dents be deferred covers graduatestudents as well as under¬graduates. The law officially statesthat a local board may defer a stu¬dent whose study “is found to be low him to finish the year.necessary to the maintenance ofthe national health, safety, and in¬terest.”HOWEVER, AT least five stu¬dents working toward doctorates at Meanwhile, students protestingU.S. policy in Vietnam have beenwarned by some draft boards thatthis could result in the loss of theirdeferments.The director of the Michigan Sel¬ective Service system intends toreport the names of 31 studentswho sat in at the Ann Arbor officeto their local boards. He warnedthat this could very well result inThe law permits a student satis¬factorily pursuing a full-time the loss of their deferments,course of study to be deferred until WHILE EMPHASIZING that fi-the end of the academic year, nal action is up to the local boards,should he be called for induction. Michigan Director Arthur HolmesColumbia University have been no- However, only one such deferment said, “Some of the local boardslified of deferment reviews. One of js permitted. will no doubt be changing the sta-Russel S. Beecher, a Harvard in- tus of those students involved instructor who often counsels stu- protests of this sort.”dents on military matters, said Pennsylvania Selective Servicethat the reclassification of students Director Henry M. Gross issued aappeared to be “scattered inci- similar warning to students. “De-doctoral candidates are being noti- dents”, but there was some fear ferment is not for the benefit of thelied of pending draft calls. Al- that “it might become a trend.” student,” Gross said, “but for thethough good grades have been ac- New York University and Fordham benefit of the nation. If at anycepted in the past as evidence that University report that one student time a board determines that aa student is progr^sing satisfacto- at each school has reported the deferment does not benefit the na-rily, the law DPmibits selection denial of his application for defer- tion, it can take it away.”vto be based on ment.COLLEGE STUDENTS requestdeferment in late September, usu¬ally as a part of the school’s reg¬istration process. During their Oc-the students, David Whitcomb,president of the Student Council,has been told to report for a pre¬induction physical.At Columbia it appears that onlyamong students^to be based onscholastic averages.Of the students at Columbia hav¬ing trouble with their deferments,at least two are from the Bronx.One, a graduate student in political tober meetings local draft boardsscience, is taking 15 credits, or usually pass on the requests andthree more than the minimum sug- ___gested by the New York SelectiveService office as meeting require¬ments for a deferment.Denied defermentThe student said his draft boardKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4 6856 PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhoir stylists at5242 Hyde Park Bird.2231 E. 71st St.DO 3-07271C% Student DiscountTHE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111Jimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty-Fifth and Woodlawn Ay*.James Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS - LINENS - TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. Card News MuseRepublican post mortemby Bruce F. FreedHenry Adams once observed, “Only on the edge of thegrave can man conclude anything.”How apt that observation is, especially after election day.It is then that the end is judged near and hence, final ver¬dicts are passed.This year is no exception. With the Democrat Mollen—with him,the vote tallies in from this week’s IN PHILADELPHIA, a reg-off year elections, political oraclers istered Democrat running as a Re-are craning their necks to find the publican won the District AttorneyGOP’S grave to pronounce their office. But there, local corruptionconclusions. and the Democratic machine wereHOPE IS DISCERNED in the key issues. Hope of a national Re¬midst of gloom. John V. Lindsay’s publican renaissance is not evidenthair-breadth victory in New York where the GOP had to pick a Dem-_.A , , , . , , , t. ocrat to win their laurels.City is exploded into a fantastic, . , „ ... , * Nevertheless, some general les-triumph. The Republicans mayor- son$ can be gjeaned from tbe re.alty sweep in Louisville, Ky., is suits. Looking for the lowest corn-transformed into an electoral sen- mon denominator, one finds that ifsation. And so it continues with all the'ltepublicans are to win in big, ,, , , .mi citibs they must run as anythingthe races dubbed nauonal bell- , Republican. The party's baseweathers. 0f support is so narrow that theirBut in all these conclusions, the candidates must cut heavily intopundits tend to stress national ihe broad coalition that identifiesramifications instead of giving lo- with the Democratic Party,cal factors their rightful place. In The large ethnic and Negro votetheir effort to find a flicker of light must be bid for. That means reth¬in the thick of darkest ruins, they inking basic party positions on aoccasionally misjudge an election’s host of issues that appeal to thesereal import. groups and not just parroting anThe New York mavoralty race updated or refurbished conserva-was exceedingly important. But tive line. It also means building aLindsay owes his photo-finish win vigorous Republican organizationnot only to his carefully cultivated in the cities to get out their vote,non-partisan image but also to the EVEN MORE IMPORTANT , thedeep split in the Democratic Party, results show that where Republi-Without that development caused cans did well, they spoke with anby Mayor JWagner’s decision not to urban voice. For Lindsay to have arun for reelection and the acrid future in national politics, theDemocratic primary bout that fol- whole face and temper of the GOPlowed, Lindsay’s chances would must be drastically reshaped to behave been negligible. akin with the thinking and de-As it was, he only squeaked mands of today’s urban-orientedacross the line. Mayor Wagner’s society, both in the south and thepluralities in 1957 and 1961 toped rest of the nation.900,000 and 400,000 votes. Lindsay’s The future of the Republicansmargin was only 136,000 out of can be debated for hours. Becauseover 2,500,000 ballots cast. At that, the party is so close to the gravehe could not carry his two running after last year’s debacle, it is farmates—the Liberal Costello and easier to pronounce the final ver¬dict than make the tenuous predic¬tions and the realistic suggestionsof what “ought” to be done. Per¬haps some points can be extractedfrom election 1965; but they will bemeaningful only if they are consid¬ered in their proper context.HUGGERGant "Invented” this oxford button-down formen who want their shirts to look trim, slim and neat, ’The fit is as exacting as the flare. s ^ 5 OIn Gant’s inimitable soft rolled collar.THE STORE FOR MEN(Mu*ftmnn anb ttantpuA WopIn the new Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 JEFFREY THEATRE1952 E. 71ST ST.HY 3-3334Starts TodayLimited ShowingCOLUMBIA PICTURES fi?■ prisents mWILLIAMWYLER'Sthe collectorKarting TERENCE STAMPSAMANTHA EGGARTECHNICOLOR*ANDRANK DEBORAHSiNdTRCMteimoeoN MflliTiNMaRR'iQGErCROCKSr**in«b,«ntiMiH04Mn3.AS.CHMT-TOIlOrU OMcMtrJACHDOMM* BlAn AC Product** prclwo-wi.n.1, by CY hOMMCOHwa »oc oiow wownwr wow wMmwowoaNov. 5, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • *if. i,.U C professors outline proposals for new Levi CollegeA team of five UC faculty-admin¬istrators spent two weeks this sum¬mer under the auspices of the Dan-forth Foundation drawing up a se¬ries of proposals to serve as aworking document for the planningof the new Levi College this year.The group consisted of WayneBooth, George M. Pullman, profes¬sor of English and cean of the Col¬lege, Albert Hayes, professor ofEnglish and College examiner, RayKoppelman, associate professor ofbiochemistry and master of thenew biological sciences college,George Playe, associate professorof French and dean of undergrad¬uate students, and Warner Wick,professor of philosophy and dean ofstudentsThe following article is a precise1and analysis of the "Danforth Re¬port" written by David H. Richter,a former member of the SGdemic affairs committee and cothor of a series of reports on ge'era! education published inMaroon last year.I. The Common Year;Perhaps the most original anddecisive thinking went into the sec... v. fara-2: undecided at entrance. "We shouldconstruct our curricula so that (thestudent) will have the maximumchance (of deciding on a field) inhis first year, certainly before hehas wasted too much effort oncourses which are only pre-profes¬sional.”The following recommendationswere drawn up by the writers ofthe Danforth Report about thefirst, or Common Year:1), At entrance, all studentsshould take - placement tests inforeign language, mathematics,and the physical sciences (but notin the social sciences and humani-ti££iW' :'2) First year courses in humani¬ties and social sciences should beplanned which would be suitablefor all students regardless of pre¬vious training or future plans.3) The student should take acourse in science during his firstyear, of a type suitable for the in¬dividual student in light of histraining and future plans.Only one of these threejlgainition of the Danforth proposals de- courses should be replaced by avoted to the first undergraduate pre-professional course,year. The Levi Report, it will be 5) The dean of undergraduateremembered, stressed that the di- students should deal with all enter-vision of the College into colleges in2 students under a single systemshould be accompanied by a more advising. Students will be asked,Unified first-year program. This is on entrance, to identify their possi-the first major proposal for what ble directions, but will not be as-that first-year ought actually to signed to an area college then,consist of. tv 6) At the end of the first year,The Report notes that the prep- man-v students should be assignedaration of the students coming to *° a particular area college.Chicago is extraordinarily diverse 7) By the end of the second year.4n all fields. But there can be no all students will be required tocommon course, it said, which will choose an area college,meet the needs of all entering stu- 8) The first year should bedents in the fields of foreign lan- planned in such a way that no pen-g n a g e, mathematics, biology, alty in time will be attached tochemistry, and physics, because changes of field by a student dur¬al! of these fields have a "heir- ing that year. Many changesarchy” of knowledge which must should be equally feasible duringhe mastered sequentially. the second year.Since the humanities and social II. The Freshman Tutorialsciences are less dependent upon anecessary sequence of prerequis¬ites, "It is possible to conceive ofcourses here'" where thematter and methodologyequally challenging to studentsfrom a great variety of back¬grounds/” It is from these areas,then, that the common courses inthe first-year ought to be drawn.Some majors require that the That all first year studentsshould participate in a tutorial inaddition to their three courses is asubject revolutionary idea, and a fine one.will be This is how it would work for thestudent. He would meet togetherwith not more than three other stu¬dents with a faculty member. Thegroup would meet once a week forat least an hour, and the conversa¬tion would begin with a discussionstudent begin his pre-professional of an essay written by one of thework his first year, but it is rec- students. He would write five es-ommended that this be held to **ys a quarter: two or three ofone course during that year. "The them would be gone over in the tu-Cdllege Council should demand tori a 1; the rest would be returnedvery special justification before by the instructor with his com¬approving any curriculum that ments.normally requires two pre-profes- These essays would be w-ritten onsional courses in the student’s first questions having "intrinsic theoret-ye#r” ical and practical interest.” TheyThis is recommended, not only would be controversial in that sub-for the purpose of making the first stantial authorities have supportedyear more unified, but also be- several answers to the question,cause of the large numbers of stu- The student is to read these au-deats who change fields or who are thorities, but his primary job would be to construct an original mends as the best of the severalargument which can withstand the possibilities that "all the sciencecriticism of his instructor and his representatives sit down and comefellow tutees. Learning about a up with a two-year science pro¬subject would be incidental to this gram which is not made of piecesgoal. from physics, chemistry, botany,It is expected that other goals zoology, etc.” This course, like thewould be achieved, though. Stu- present general education coursedents would learn to write well, to in physical science, would probablyuse the libraries, and to work inde- not be taken by students intendingpendently. Most important, they to specialize in the physical orwould become actively engaged in biological sciences (although even-the intellectual process rather than tually budding biologists might use"passive absorbers of fact and the course as a base for their fu-doctrine.” They will be introduced ture work).to the theoretical and piactical guch a course could begin withimplications of intellectual issues , , , . . .as well as to the delights and anx- the stu'a5' ot vanous loP,cs.ln ^ieties of inquiry, argument and the sics (mechanics, electricity andimaginative elaboration of hvpoth- magnetism, wave theory, atomiceses.” theory and wave mechanics, fun-This would also put the student damental particles). Once the stu-nto close contact with a member dent is conversant with atomicof the faculty to discuss intelleetu- theory and with the notion of fun-al concerns. This situation, once damental particles, he could go onestablished, would counteract the * considerations of the oiigin ofincreasingly impersonal nature of elements, the universe, thethe university. No student would eart)1- an^ finally life. The consid-then believe, as some do now, that eratff of thl* physical evolution"nobodv knows my name.” would connect up with the study o, * , ,, , , biological evolution, which wouldSince the tutorial would not be ^ jreate(j at some depth. "The na-used in order to cover a subject £ure 0£ geological evidence formatter, but rather to develop the evo]uyon could be used as a tool tostudent s abilities for cogent self- raise some of the problems en-expression, the tutor w'ould be the countered in the earth sciences,student s ally and objective ent- Connections of this kind betweenic, not his instructor or his varj0Us science areas could be list-judge. The tutor should therefore e(j by dozens and used as thenot give a letter-grade to the stu- basis 0f a good course in science.”deni: 'pass’ or fail' would be sufti- ^ , unified cours(, sciencecien ' which would give the student a no-With respect to the materials jjon 0f tbe problems and possibili-and topics for writing and discus- {jes ^ various sciences, wouldsion, there seems to be a dilemma: make possible a senior integratingon the one hand, to let the individ- seminar. A suggestion for a topicual tutor make up his own topics for such a seminar would beand design his own reading list "Predictions from Consideration ofwould "invite chaos and subject Contemporary Problems,” whichhim to a heavy burgden.” On the WOuld be staffed by natural scien-other hand, a rigid list of topics tists, as well as humanists and so-and readings would make it very cjai scientists,difficult to get enough tutors fa- IV A Final Comprehensivemiliar with both the topics and the Examinationreadings. At present there are some under -Steering between the horns of the graduate majors which require adilemma, the Danforth Report re- comprehensive examination in thecommends that a special commit- last year of study—English,tee make up the set of organized_FrfBch, history, and philosophytopics and select a core of read- are among these. The Danforthings. leaving the instructor free to Report recommends that all stu-eupplement the committee's list. dents be required to take such an"It seems clear that a tutorial examination as a major part of theprogram such as we have/been degree requirement,describing could not be the respon-^-Jftsorder that general educationsibility of any presently existing pot be dismissed by the studentstaff, department, or committee. It after his second year, this exami-would have to be manned by a nation should have a component ofstaff specially recruited from var- general education. This componentdous parts of the faculties, and it should be prepared either by otherwould be well-adapted to the tal- departments in the area college orents of many graduate faculty by a central commiitee. Thismembers who have not been able would be "a strong reminder to ev-to reach freshmen in the past with- ery student that interest in otherout submitting to the rigors of a areas besides his specialty, and ins t a f f-taughtcourse.”III. Science in General EducationThe Danforth Report recomMR. PIZZAWE DELIVER — CARRY-OUTSHY 3-8282FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HYDE FAREDELICIOUS BROASTED CHICKENAIm Ch. Broiled HamburgersPIZZAhrl hrl fmr 4 hr t tirtfhwp I.M 2.00 SJt 4.00 5.00Moohrowo ISO 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.008f99R l.SB 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Aidievit .1.50 2.00 3.00 4J0 5.00!Onto* or Garlic t.so 2.00 3.00 4.00 S.NTmo fUk or <M«v . l.SB 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Ckooso 1.25 2.00 2.50 3.50 4.50V* and Vr 1.50 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00Intro logredioot* ..... 50 .50 1.00 1.00 140PopporoiM fhoo ....... 2.00 2.50 4.00 SjOO UtShrimp 2.00 2.50 4.00 SJO tooBocoo 2.00 2.50 4.00 5.00 4.00C—y Mood Ham - 2.50 3.00 5.00 4.00 7.00- *l ’' mm* PoppoK) general education the relation of his specialty tothose areas, should be cultivatedthroughout his college career.”V.Independent StudyThe idea of the freshman tutori¬al, at least in part, is to encourageindependent study of high quality.This idea should not be droppedgr the freshman year, however,the Report says, “If possible, thepattern of three courses plus an‘independent’ unit should be pre¬served throughout four years,though the nature of the independ¬ent unit should vary from year tor.” In the junior year, perhaps,the student might have a super¬vised project of independent study;in the senior year he might takeOfSt, * CSox of BroMtod Chicken14 PiocM, GoMon Brownft) Wocor GoMon Brown part in a "senior seminar” admin¬istered by liis area college, ratherthan by his particular department.VI. Advising in the New CollegeBecause of the complexity andthe variety of the problems in¬volved. the Report finds that "it is ®literally impossible for us to askfaculty members to undertake fulladvising responsibilities for anysingle student, although one couldargue that ideally, faculty mem- [ ,hers should be responsible for the yicomplete advising of students.”The Report recommends the ex¬tension of the use of several aca¬demic advisors, which is alreadyin effect in some departments. But ;|gthis solution itself contains the #|problem that the student may feelhe is being treated as a “problem”by a specialist, rather than as an l“individual within a unified plan.”The conclusion arrived at in the ;Report is that the advisory systemmust be institutionalized so that awell-defined system of communica¬tion among the various types of :advisors is formed. This system -should be centralized, rather than Jfragmented among the five areacolleges, in order not to neglect thestudents who change their major rinterest and their collegiate divi-i| /sion. “• f.At the head of the centralized W.system would be the dean of un- Eredergraduate students, whose officewould be mainly to interpret the ffaculty policies and practices tothe students, and the students’needs and problems to the faculty. |In additon. the dean would be re-sponsible for relating the non-aca- /demic needs of the students to the ft-appropriate University facility. |§Next in line come the assistantdeans, one for each area college.Like the present senior advisors,they would “represent directly the &Collegiate Divisions, and would su- »pervise the work at the ad minis-trative advisors.” They would alsowork with the advising committeesaf the various collegiate divisions.The administrative advisors >would keep records on specific stu- 4dents, do the paperwork connected \with registration, and referdents to special sendees.The advising committee, madeup ot faculty from a particular/collegiate divison "would inventways of bringing faculty membersof that division into meaningful*casual, and yet official contactwith students.” ,\WDepartmental counselors, underthe recommended system, as now/,would “represent the department;in curricular and career problemsfor students in that department.”--Under the new system, then, thestudent would see an adminis;|trative advisor for the mechanics!of his registration. If he was indoubt as to what the best course off.study for him was, he might visit$~ •his departmental counselor to dis;|fcuss the matter. Or he might dis¬cuss his problems with a faculty /member under the auspices of that/area college’s advising committee.>Because of the complex organiza¬tion, each advisor could keep in- /formed as to the progress of the i,student: each, knowing what the <others kaew,< could deal with the"whole man” rather than only •segment of him. #BAR S-Q BIBSratcHSPAGHETTIMOSTACCOUBAVtOUSandwiches:BEEF. SAUSAGE.MEAT BALL1465 HYDE PARK BLVD.I toys • Wtd — 44B p.m. to 1:00 oan. — PrL to 3>BB <Sot. to 3:00 a.m. — Opoa 2 p.m. UNIVERSITY THEATRE— presents —The ELECTRAofSOPHOCLESDirected by James O'ReiHyLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM60th and University AvenueNOVEMBER IB. 19. 20. 21TICKETS ON SALE AT REYNOLOS CLUB DESKCHICAGO MAROON Nov. 5, 1965.~)! VDC attracts support from community;0-Board opposes Pierce resolution Vietnam protest march avoids violenceLast Friday’s Maroon carried an article explaining the purposes and proposals of thenewly formed Intra-Dorm Council. The major question discussed at its first meeting wasthe proposed reorganization of the Orientation Board. Since members of the OrientationBoard were not invited to the house meetings in Pierce Tower where the resolution wasInitially proposed, and since wewere not invited to the Intra-Dorm wjjj insure, any more than the pre- the new student. This seems to beCouncil meeting, we would like to sen^ organjzation 0f the committee, directly opposed to the tradition oflake this opportunity to state our that these students be sincerely in- any university. One of the majorposition. terested in planning and operating purposes of gathering people to-There is a drastic difference be- the orientation program. gether in an intellectual communi-tween the kind of education one re- Further, the Intra-Dorm Council ty is precisely to expose them to areives in high school and the kind calls for the election of a central wide variety of people and ideas,of education one can receive at the planning committee of one mem- Contacts with non-dormitory stu-University of Chicago. In order to ber per house to relay information dents (among whom we find al-take full advantage of the many to other orientation workers. If this most the entire executive commit-opportunities offered here, one committee is to plan the program tee of Student Government, theneeds more than a personal com- for Orientation Week, then it ap- president and vice-president of themitment—one needs an awareness pears that the proposed student- Folklore Society, the president ofof the type of intellectual commu- faculty-administration committee WUCB, etc.) are bound to enrichnity in which he is involved, and of has no function whatsoever. If it the experiences of the entering stu-the philosophy underlying that exists only to relay information, dent.community. Orientation Board con- then it adds an additional and un- if the function of the orientationsiders as its major function the necessary step to the present pro- program u to integrate new stu-cultivation of this awareness in the cedure. The president of the Orien- dents into the university communi-entering student. In order to do tation Board is a member of the ty, then the organization that at-this, O-Board attempts to integrate present executive committee and tempts to effect this integrationthe student into the intellectual serves as the liaison agent between must be typical of that community,and social community of the Uni- that committee and the Orientation As a heterogeneous body, con¬cerned all year with the curricu-THP new resolution akn lum’ Philosophy, and organizationTHE NEW RESOLUTION also Qf the Collegei and concerned alsoproperly the body to plan and op¬erate Orientation Week activities.IT HAS BEEN SHOWN, then,versity as a whole, and not to one Boardparticular facet of that community.THE EVENTS of the orientation rpf,1Ijrpc that all nrinntatinn work- l,IC V'U1,C6C’ a,,u '-u,,v-aijyjprogram are designed to effect this be returning residents to the with the University community asntesration. The various lectures, "sus^e l0 SVev are asSled a whole’ the °™"tati°n Board isdiscussions, and social events thi^ ^t tSat the new "ro: hM'' ",a" ami “serve as a common experience pQggj seems most inadequate. Ori-from which new personal relations en^ation Board can be effective .can develop and from which a onJ ev student is sincerely assuming the Orientation Boardmeaningful dialogue among stu- interested in devoting a great deal and the Intra-Dorm Council havedents of diverse interests, back- tjme and energy to the orienta- similar views as to the function ofgrounds, and ways of life can tion of new students, both on a per- ^ O-Board, that the new proposalarise. In short, the orientation pro- sonal and organizational level. Re- 15 rather inappropriate. If, howev-gram attempts to make students qUjrin" all O-Board members to er> we do no* m3^ this assump-aware of a rather unique aspect iivp £ thp rtnrmitnripc mU the tion, but infer from the characterof the University of Chicago- ^ of pros^ctive^ candidates the: proposal the function of thethat the intellectual and social considerably. The presence of this Orientation Board, we are led tocommunities are virtually insepar- requirement in the resolution even more distressing conclusions,able. seems to have no sounder basis Given the character of the newIt is particularly unfortunate that than the feeling that O-Board is a proposal; ie., that O-Board mem-the proposal for the reorganization vehemently anti-dormitory organi- bers be dormitory residents, thatof the Orientation Board does not zation and that the presence of the central planning committee bestate what the Intra-Dorm Council non-dormitory residents on 0- composed of one member fromconsiders the function of O-Board Board is detrimental to the housing each College house, and that theto be; for it is only on this ground system. While this may have at executive committee contain nothat we can even consider examin- one time been a fact, it is certainly more than 50 per cent non-dormito-ing the merits of the proposal. If no longer the case. At present ry residents and contain one mem-we assume for the moment that more than 50 per cent of the mem- ber from each dormitory complex,both the Intra-Dorm Council and bers of O-Board live in the dormi- it appears that this proposed or-the Orientation Board agree as to tories. ganization is not attempting to in-the function of the latter, then it The following assumptions seem tegrate students into the universityappears that the proposal is rather to underly the exclusion of non- community, but into the Collegeless effective than the current or- dormitory residents from partici- housing system. This is not orients-ganization of the Orientation pating in orientation activities: tion to the University of Chicago.Board. j) o-Board gives new students an The criteria for admission to theTHE RESOLUTION calls for the | priori prejudice against dormitory Orientation Board are simply ainstallation of a new student-facul- life. If entering students become display of interest and a vvilling-ty-administration committee with aware of the disadvantages of dor- ness to participate. We would sug-one member from each dormitory mitory life, it is an awareness that Sest, then, that if the Intra-Dormcomplex and not more than 50 stems not from a desire of O-Board Council considers its interests inper cent of its membership being to undermine the housing system, Ihe orientation process so singular,non-dormitory residents. There is but from a desire to present an it encourage more dormitory resi¬st present an executive committee honest and objective appraisal of dents to join O-Board, rather thancomposed of interested students all types of housing arrangements, attempt to institute an unbalancedand faculty which was appointed 2) Contacts with non-dormitory and inappropriate organizationv Dean Booth. We cannot quite residents should be delayed until based, not on interest, but on dor-see how the new qualification that the new student is "more settled .” mdory residency.0 per cent of the students on this The rationale behind this policy is Larry Litzkycommittee be dormitory residents that such contacts tend to confhse President, Orientation Board (Continued from page one)dents to use the campus unlaw¬fully by soliciting funds and re¬cruiting students for off-cam¬pus activities,’ he said.”—October 2, 1964THE DAILY CAL ran the quoteswithout comment under the head¬line: “Remember...”. And none ofthe 30,000 Berkeley students andfaculty had to work very hard torecall images of the Free SpeechMovements...Mario Savio, SteveWeissman, and Bettina Apthek-er...a massive sit-in at SproulHall...Clark Kerr addressing thecampus at an outdoor theatre, withSavio attempting to follow him andbeing dragged away by police...theabortive Filthy Speech Move¬ment...Kerr’s resignation and sub¬sequent withdrawal of that resig¬nation...Regent’s studies, legisla¬tive reports...an interim chancel¬lor, a new chancellor...new rules,more new rules..harsh court sen¬tences of demonstrators that arestill being appealed.BUT THE MEMORIES are dim,for this is a live, throbbing cam¬pus. It is neither ashamed norboastful of last year—it is muchmore concerned with the present.The present means Vietnam; andthe profound issues of academicreform raised last year by theFSM have been partially shuntedaside. The FSM’s successor, theFree Student Union, has grownweak as most campus activistshave become deeply involved inthe Vietnam Day Committee.Vietnam predominatesThe FSU, which had 4,000 mem¬bers within two weeks of its found¬ing last April, drew fifty people toits meeting last week. It has beenhit by internal dissension and bythe lack of a strong program, butprimarily it has been hurt becauseVietnam is now “the issue” atBerkeley.AS ANOTHER example theonce-popular Congress of RacialEquality here is also declining.Membership is down; meeting,lightly attended. “With studentsit’s not so much the crucialness ofthe issue, but where the action is,”CORE chairman Richard Broad-head says.First of all, however, Vietnam is“the issue.”“All of us feel the colossal pres¬sure of the war,” Bettina Apthek-er, instrumental in both the FSMand FSU, says. “All of us feel thatif it escalates, academic freedomwon’t mean a bloody thing.” Paul Ivory, an assistant profes¬sor of economics and member ofthe VDC steering committee, de¬clares that the Vietnam war “isthe most important political crisisAmerica has faced in my maturi¬ty.”THE BASE of the VDC is broad-er than the university. Its 30-mem¬ber steering committee which drew7,000 people to a march throughthe town of Berkeley on Oct. 15, in¬cluded a cook, a longshoreman,and a practising psychiatrist, be¬sides faculty and students.Amidst all the national publicitythe march has drawn, few peoplerealize that it avoided violence andcivil disobedience. Speaking for theadministration, John Searle, assist¬ant to Berkeley’s new chancellorRoger W. Heyns, said on Oct. 17:“It is important that the public bemade aware that the marcheswere orderly throughout, that themarchers refused to respond toprovocations, and that every effortwas made to avoid dangerous con¬frontations.”DiversityTo focus just on the VDC, how¬ever, is to ignore the extreme di¬versity of activity on the Berkeleycampus. “People don’t realize thetremendous vitality of this place,”University of California PresidentClark Kerr has said. “You couldhave gone through the whole oflast year here without ever realiz¬ing anything was wrong.” He isprobably right. Many students hereare little involved with Vietnam.Some have other issues: walkingby the Sather Gate one can hearand engage in arguments on every¬thing from free love to the condi¬tion of agricultural laborers.At the same time, the new Berk¬eley administration is working tocreate a new atmosphere in boththe curricular and extracurricularareas. Searle’s statement about theVDC, for instance, would havebeen unheard of last year.(Tuesday: A look «t Berkeley'snew chancellor Robert W. Heyns,and at other facets of the institu¬tion.)Third and fourth year Collegestudents interested in serving asstudent observers to the Collegedisciplinary committee shouldcontact John Bremner or BernieGrofman, Student Governmentoffice, 2nd floor, Ida Noyes, 1212E. 59th Street, x3274, Mon-Fri10:30-5:30, to arrange to be in-interviewed.TOAD HALL SellsRentsLeasesAnything Sold in Toad Hall May Also Be Leased or RentedHigh FidelityTape RecordersTelevisionAll Makes of TypewritersNew — Rebuilt — Used TypewritersAM-FM RadiosAccessoriesAltec — Ampex — ARDynakit — Empire — GarrardJBL — Kenwood — RobertsScott — Shure — Sony — ZenithWe Guarantee that nothing purchased in TOAD HALL can be purchased in theChicago area for less within 30 days. Frank T. Flynn—General Manager1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500Near the Medici and Green DoorWFMT Program Guide Student Tickets toTriangle Prod. ConcertsNov. 5. 1965Innovation studiedScientific research at universities is less “innovative’*than research in other types of institutions like hospitals,medical schools, and health agencies.This is the finding of a pair of research assistants in theHealth Information foundation, ■connected with UC. ly. “Academic goals, such as in-According to Gerald Gordon and creasing the general fund of knowl-Sue Marquis, a researcher is edge, tend to be more nebulousspurred to be innovative when he than the goals of institutions pri-has freedom to try his own proce- marily concerned with practice ordures, and when he can see for profit,” Gordon and Miss Marquishimself the results of his research hypothesize.in actual cases. Where these two The person most likely to assessconditions don’t exist together, re- the consequences of research is thesearch projects can be expected to person who owns the organizationbe more routine and unimagina- doing the research and supervisesits conduct. He can encourage re¬searchers who show most promiseof solving the problem beforethem, because he can see mostclearly the goals of the research.When there is no extra encour-tive.IN ACADEMIC SETTINGS, theysay, there is plenty of freedom, assupervisors don’t try to controlevery aspect of research. If free¬dom from executive authority werethe only factor in encouraging in- agement to innovate, researchers,novation, then it might be expected beinS human, tend to stick to triedthat universities would turn out the true methods, sinee^ in terms. of the repercussions of failure it ismost innovative scientific re- more dangerous to innovate then tosearch. follow habitual or accepted re-Gordon and Miss Marquis found search paths.”this wasn’t so, however They Gordon and Miss Marquis thenasked directors of research proj ,es,ed ,he e,tecls of ''difterentects conducted by universities,hospitals, medical schools, andhealth agencies, to send in the ma¬jor reports form their studies.These reports were summarized,then evaluated by leading people inmedical sociology.They were asked to judge howmuch the report “adds to ourknowledge of illness through the types of authority patterns,” to seewhat effect the boss’s attitudeshave on his researchers.They found:• The most innovative researchcomes when “an administrativesuperior discusses the researchand the results of the research”with the staff members, therebymaking the consequences of the re¬search more visible, and when thedevelopment of new theory or find- boss does not specify research pro-ings not explicit or anticipated in cedures.There is least innovation whennobody discusses the research andits consequences with the staffmember.• There is little innovation,also, where there is little freedomto be creative, even though the su¬perior might discuss the researchprevious theories or findings,and or adds to the development ofnew methods of research.”REPORTS from universitiescame out on the bottom. Only eightpercent of the university-run proj¬ects were put in the “most inno¬vative” category, far below thehospitals with 32 per cent, medical with the staff,schools with 30 per cent, and t ,health agencies with 18 per cent. DlSCUSS DSHlSn iCdCnlllQTo explain this finding, Gordon 3and Miss Marquis hypothesized Students and faculty interestedthat in a university setting“there is in discussing teaching and learningless direct contact with the popula- opportunities in Scandinavia aretion affected by the research, the invited to meet with Aage Rosen-patients. and with the practitioners dal Nielsen, founder and formerto whom the research is more rele-vent, the doctors. . . . The morecontact an individual or organiza¬tion has with the populationserved, the easier it is to measurethe actual or probable conse¬quences of research.”IF THE GOALS of the projectare clear-cut, the researchers arealso more likely to see the conse¬quences of their effort more clear-Third and fourth year students jn the College interested; in serving as student observersto the College disciplinary com-:l mittee should contact John| Bremner or Bernie Grofman,Student Government office, sec¬ond floor, Ida Noyes Hall, x3274,Monday through Friday, fromi 10:30 to 5:30, to arrange to beI interviewed,l " -v'"" director of the Scandinavian Semi¬nar, and presently director of theNew Experimental College, Copen¬hagen, Denmark.Nielsen will be in Room 440,Judd Hall, November 8, between3:00 and 5:00 pm. Committee questionnaireslo aid course evaluation(Continued from page two)urged to contact one of the follow¬ing people: Peter Nagourney, 304Gates Blake; Mark Joseph, 5Snell; or James Prier, 1306 Tufts.K.BURLANDJ. PRIER(See sample course evaluationquestionnaire on this page.)3 lectures on AfricaThe department of history andthe committee on african studieswill present three public lectureson African history November 4. 11,and 18, 1965.All three lectures will be deliv¬ered by Jan Vansina, professor ofhistory and anthropology at theUniversity of Wisconsin.The lectures will be given at 8pm in Room 106 of Swift Hall.They are open to the public with¬out ticket and without charge.Thursday, November 4, 1965:“The Tools of the Historian in Afri¬ca.”Thursday, November 11, 1965:“Toward a Cultural History ofCentral Africa.”Thursday, November 18, 1965:“Congo: Cultural Diversity andNational Integration.”Vansina is a native of Belgium.He spent eight years in Africa(1952-59 and 1963-64) as a staffmember of the Scientific ResearchInstitute for Central Africa.He is the author of severalbooks, including Oral Traditions(1965) and Kingdom of the Savan¬nah, which will be published soonby the University of WisconsinPress.Vansina is a specialist in the useof oral tribal traditions for histori¬cal research. He has been on thefaculty of the University of Wis¬consin since 1961.Quote of the dayTo a drunken man, the affairsof the world appear as so muchduckweed in a river.—Liu Ling14 karat goldpierced studs8-0f>0 f -€> UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKHu strong battle”NEW CAR LOANS$4°° ~ hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200ib«r F.DXC. HYDE PARKAuto 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 4-6393see thelargestselectionon thosouth sideavailablein culturedpearl, |adecoral, gold,onyx, opalmany others$4.00 RANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Alr-Conditioiiiitf — Open Evenings — Billie Tregonxo, ManageressfromSUPREMEt JEWELERS:Handbags & Jewelryf of DistinctionI 1452 East 53rd St.ii FAirfax 4-9609 PHOTOGRAPHYWe will be happy to advise you on how to takeor process your pictures.We carry a line of well known chemicals andsupplies.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE. mmSample Course Evaluation QuestionnaireThese questionnaires will be the basis for a pamphlet sum¬marizing student evaluation of instructors and courses to bemade available later this year. Please fill out separate ques¬tionnaires for only those courses you have completed and re¬member well. Questionnaires may be returned at any of theplaces provided on campus.Many questions ask for a RATING, scaled from “A” to “F”:A—EXTREMELY HIGH, B—ABOVE AVERAGE, C-AVERAGE,D—BELOW AVERAGE, F—EXTREMELY LOW. Other ques¬tions are self-explanatory.We depend on your fairness; please confine your commentsto results of your experience—don’t quote rumor. Feel free toattach (FIRMLY) extra sheets of paper for further comments.Thank you for your cooperation.COURSE, Taken,INSTRUCTOR ., 19 —RATE:—RATE:LECTURES:RATE: organization of lectures.; interest aroused significance of contententhusiasm of lecturerclarity of delivery.COMMENTS:SECTIONS or CLASS MEETINGS:RATE: organization interest arousedcommand of material,sections to course presentation. teacher’svalue ofHow were classes conducted? (Circle)cussion discussion other: lectures lect. & dis-Student participation:not relevant hereNumber attending class: encouraged tolerated discouragedIs any aspect or approach favored by instructor? Comment:Discuss instructor’s advantages and disadvantages as a teacher:COMMENTS;READINGS:RATE: significance of content. interest aroused.Amount of assigned reading (not enough? too much? pp.?)Did the reading list influence your decision to take the course?COMMENTS (you might list the books and rate them):PAPERS:RATE: topics ; educational value ; helpfulness ofreader’s comments fairness of reader’s comments; fairness of grading .How many papers? How long?.search?) What type? (re-COM M ENTS:LABORATORY:How much time needed in preparation for each lab?.Was enough time allowed in the lab,est: .? RATE your inter iCOMMENTS:EXAMS:RATE: interest.grading clarity of questions. fairness ofDid you learn anything from the exams?Basis of the exams 0%age): readingsections .; labs. .; other (specify:. lectures.)Number of quizzes. midterms?.COMMENTS:GENERAL:Did course follow an organized and integrated plan?What did it do to your interest in the field?Would you recommend course to a non-major?What advice would you give to help a person who must takethis course? jWhat outstandingly good teachers have you had in the depart¬ment?What outstandingly bad teachers have you had in the depart¬ment?COMMENTS:PERSONAL DATA:Your year in school ; sex : major .Your grade in this course. grade point average.SUGGESTIONS FOR IMPROVING QUESTIONNAIRE:Cobeauty salonExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302 contact lensesDr. KURT ROSENBAUMOPTOMETRIST53rd Kimbark PlazaHY 3-8372CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 5, 1965Movie reviewPreminger a moral relativist Ask teaching changes01’ Prem has his mojo humming again.BUNNY LAKE IS MISSING is best understood in termsof the New Film Criticism, an approach which assumesthat film, like other arts, is a communication; this attitudehas revealed that many directors,like novelists and painters, developconsistant themes in consistantways in each of their works. Prem¬inger is a fine example.Preminger is a product of theW e 11 e s i a n revolution (OrsonWelles’ CITIZEN KANE, 1941)which, like bop in jazz, split filmmaking into two schools and pro¬foundly influenced all subsequentdevelopments in the medium. Acomparison with Fritz Lang andHitchock will help clarify theideas, and style of Preminger.HITCH HAS REWORKED Prem’s LAURA into VERTIGO; inBUNNY LAKE, Prem has re¬worked Hitch’s PSYCHC material.Both directors have a great fond¬ness for playing with audiences;Hitch fools the audience into ac¬cepting a particular point-of-viewwithin the film, and at the end tell¬ing us there was no justificationfor our point-of-view; Prem playsnot with subjectivity, but withcomplete objectivity—we are givenno point-of-view, only actions andobjects without interpretation.Researchers examine fat-diet linksRobert W. Wissler, chairman of UC’s department ofpathology, has revealed new evidence showing that a “pru¬dent” diet can prevent atherosclerosis, a disease whichresults from the accumulation of fatty deposits in thearteries.Wissler experimented with twogroups of monkeys, feeding onegroup a “typical American” dietand the other a “prudent” diet.Two years later, the monkeys onthe “prudent” diet showed far lessfat lining the walls oi their ar¬teries or circulating in their blood¬stream.AFTER FORTY FIVE weeks offeeding, the fat levels in the mon¬keys’ bloodstreams were measuredfor the first time. Monkeys on the“typical” diet showed higheramounts of the fat containing sub¬stances lipoproteins and cholesterolthan the other group. After sixtyweeks their fat content reached apeak and then began to decline.However, it always remained high¬er than that of the monkeys on the“prudent” diet.At the end of 107 weeks, an au¬topsy showed that the monkeys onthe “typical” diet had seventy-fivepercent of the artery lining in¬volved with streaks and fatty de¬posits, while the monkeys on theprudent diet showed only fifteenpercent.The “prudent” diet does not ap¬pear to differ radically from the“typical” one. However, both totalfood intake and calorie contentwere lower. In addition, certainfoods were eliminated entirelyfrom the “prudent” diet, such asdry cereal, pound cake, liver, lard,and butter.A SECOND PART of the experi¬ment involved injecting fat con¬taining substances into the aortasof a third group of monkeys. In¬jecting low density lipoproteinsproduced lesions of the kind foundin human atherosclerosis, Wisslernoted. These “model” lesions arethe first of their kind produced inany experimental animals. Theyshould prove a useful source ofFemale self-defenseA course in practical self-defensefor girls is being conducted thisquarter.The course matter consists oftechniques selected from Judo,Karate, Aikido, and other schoolsof jujitsu and hand-to-hand com¬bat, with the purpose of enablingthe student to deal effectively witha variety of situations rangingfrom insult to murder threat organg attack. Instruction is directednot toward the most talented, buttoward those girls least prepared,physically and emotionally, to an¬swer a physical threat.If this program is successful anddemand sufficiently great, othercourses may be organized for wo¬men or for men. Also, other in¬structors may be trained and theprogram expanded. further information about atheros¬clerosis.Wissler presented his findings ata meeting of the American HeartAssociation on October 15. In hisexperiment, he collaborated withDr. Godfrey S. Getz, UC professorof pathology, Dorothea Turner,medical nutritionist, and severalresearch assistants in the depart¬ment of pathology. Or. Wisslerholds an MD and a PhD from theUniversity, and has been professorof pathology here since 1957.McKean appointedRichard P. McKeon, the CharlesF. Grey distinguished service pro¬fessor of philosophy and of Greekat UC, has been appointed the Wil¬liam H. Colvin research professorin the University’s division of thehumanities for the academic year1965-66.His appointment was announcedby Robert E. Streeter, Professor ofEnglish and Dean of the Divisionof the Humanities.The William H. Colvin researchprofessorship is awarded annuallyto a faculty member in the divisionwho is engaged in a writing proj¬ect. It frees him from his normalclassroom duties and allows him toconcentrate on his project.McKeon will devote his time towriting the Paul Carus lectures.The lectures are given under theauspices of the American Philo¬sophical Association. The serieswas initiated by John Dewey withExperience and Nature in 1925. Mc¬Keon will deliver three lectures atthe meeting of the association inDecember, 1965, and he hopes tohave the manuscript of the bookready for publication by Spring,1966. His subject is “Facts, Catego¬ries, and Experience.”MILLIE'SSPORTSWEAR HEADQUARTERSTurtleneck Jerseys1375 E. 53rd St. HY 3-592210% Student Discount with adUTILITY CLOTHES!!!!BE PRACTICAL!!!COMPLETE SELECTION of thermalboots, handkerchiefs, hats, hoodedcoats, rain parkas, long underwear,insulated jackets, khaki pants, turtle¬necks, sweatshirts, tanker jackets,work shirts, basketball shoes, camp¬ing equipment, gloves, pajamas,scarves, robes, levies, folding cots,corduroys, union suits, dress shirts, earmuffs, overalls, sweaters, sweat sox,wool shirts, dress pants, etc. etc.SAMUEL A. BELL*Buy She R From BeWSINCE 19244701 S. Dorchester AmKEnwood 8-3150 UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1364 E. 63rd St.PL 2-4744Open Sundays 9:30-1:00Student discount with ad When BUNNY LAKE appears inthe film, we don’t know if she’s asleep, drugged or dead, for severalminutes.Like Hitch and Lang, Prem’scamera is very fluid and pryingvery curious; all three men makemovies in which meaning is com¬municated through striking im¬ages, juxtapositions, and pacing.Hitch uses his tools for extremelyartificial constructions of guilt andreligious problems; Lang, for por¬traits of dominating evil, the con¬sequences of passion, and generalrottenness of the world. Premingeris a moral relativist: he delights inshowing us the exterior of theworld and showing within it an un¬ending disorder his charactersmust contend with, some well,some poorly. His films do not fol¬low the Hollywood conventionalform of Orderly world- Disorderintroduced- Order restored byhere. His characters are each part¬ly good, partly bad, and mostlyneither.Without blowing the formal joysof the suspense picture, allow theassumption that the above patternsoccur in BUNNY LAKE. The spe¬cific ideas of BUNNY LAKE areeven more interesting.WITH MUCH ATTENTION TOSADISM as a part of the meaning,Preminger gives us two worlds:the world of the child and theworld of the adult; and in each se¬quence, one element of one worldis incongruously placed in the oth¬er world, beginning inconspicuous¬ly (and visually) with a man ab¬stractedly carrying a teddybear.The contrast grows more and morealarming until finally, in a remark¬able descent into hell sequence(the more hellish because it showsCarol Lynley losing her status asan adult and the consequencesthereof) Preminger brings thetheme to completion in a harrow¬ing sequence of intensified reality.Finally, a remark on Premin¬ger’s reality. Preminger insists onshooting his films as realisticallyas possible because, like a docu¬mentary, he is interested in theway the real world is. He shotBUNNY LAKE in Britain, andspends considerable time subtlyexploring British streets, pubs, andtelevision. Unlike Land and Hitch,Preminger’s concept of reality isintimately committed to the au¬dience’s normal reality.Richard Thompson “Joint appointments between public school personnel anduniversity faculties should be expanded, supervision of stu¬dent teaching must be thoroughly re-examined, and newstructural arrangements to facilitate a true partnershipmust be sought.” This is the viewof two faculty members of the Uni¬versity’s graduate school of educa¬tion.The professors, Roald F. Camp¬bell, William Claude Reavis profes¬sor of educational administrationand chairman of the department ofeducation, and Luvern L. Cunnin¬gham, professor of education anddirector of the midwest adminis¬tration center of the university,state this view in The Organizationand Control of American Schools,a book they wrote in conjunctionwith Roderick McPhee, school su¬perintendent in Glencoe, Illinois,and a former professor at HarvardUniversity graduate school of edu¬cation.COLLEGES AND SCHOOLSmust also work together in suchareas as reducing the number ofstandardized tests a student musttake, allowing more contact for ad¬vanced high school pupils, and de¬veloping new programs to reachdeprived children.Dr. Campbell sees the new UCUrban Education Laboratory as avaluable opportunity in this lastfield. It should attract researchersin sociology, urban studies, andmedicine as well as education. Inaddition, it should produce resultswhich will affect slum children inmany cities. Dr. Cunninghamthinks it will be useful in develop¬ing new fields of professional peo¬ple, and in testing the capability ofan American university to affectpublic school systems.HE BELIEVES these new pro¬fessions are needed for correct¬ing the inequities faced by de¬prived children in the school sys¬tem. Both men feel that smallgroups and individual tutoring arenecessary for these students. Pro¬grams like Head Start, for de¬prived pre-school children, providea partial solution. They also ad¬vocate a closer link between theschools and health, welfare, andcorrectional agencies.What should be the federal gov¬ernment’s role in education? “Wethink the federal government hasone major function: providingfunds and seeing that they are dis¬tributed with appropriate safe¬guards to help the school serve na¬tional needs more adequately.”They feel that most of these fundsshould be administered on a cate¬gorical basis. It should work prin¬cipally through the states and localschool systems. There is no causeto fear federal control of schools,but the government should retainpower to cut off aid, as it did re¬cently to Chicago public schools.State departments of educationmust become more effective, the authors say. These offices shouldbe responsible for maintainingminimum standards of education,providing at least one-third of theeducational funds in the state, andplanning more extensively for thefuture.BOTH MEN feel that UC mustkeep striving to attract the best re¬searchers and professors in theworld. Dr. Cunningham sees aneed also for a new type of profes¬sional who can relate the work ofthe pure researchers into meaning¬ful applications for the community,such as the Hyde Park Unity Plan.They view the plan as a very in¬teresting opportunity. According toDr. Cunningham, it could be with¬out parallel in its effect on an ur¬ban community; it provides achance to use the best know educa¬tional techniques and to try outnew approaches. Dr. Campbelldoes not believe the Unity Plan isthe only solution, and thinks thatadministration is more importantthan approach. Both of them sup¬port the general idea of an educa¬tional park, in which a group ofschools share resources, such asan auditorium, laboratories, andathletic facilities.S6 asks for student helpStudent Government (SG) is set¬ting up student advisory commit¬tees concerning many areas ofUniversity policy. These includehousing committee which will dealwith University policy towards theresidential College and the housingshortage in Hyde Park, and a Uni¬versity planning committee whichwill offer opinions to Richard F.O’Brien, UC’s vice president forplanning and development. .Other committees will deal withadmissions and aid, library facili¬ties, career counseling and guid¬ance, and student employment.According to John Bremner,chairman of SG’s campus actioncommittee, these committees areboards of review and will providean opportunity for students to havea voice in determining policy.Bremner maintained that “Clear¬ly, this is a time when the shapeof the University for many years tocome is being decided, and if stu¬dents wish to have a voice in de¬termining it, they must speak upnow.”Graduate and undergraduate stu¬dents interested in serving on anyof the advisory boards r' ’’d con¬tact Bremner in the S \ sec¬ond floor, Ida Noyes °"4 orat 363-3292.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 newplays at the Last Stage. Join usfor cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.(IRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST & HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 8-7585 TUB MtT KtFITUU TRH* VON t.EVBR MAKE IS TS YOUR BATSNH BEAIA.Itera’s an economy compact with built-in luxury. It saves youmoney when you buy it; saves more when you drive ItlONLY $1,006DATSUN “Four-Ten” 4-dr. SedanDATSUNNow 67 h.p. for 1966(hicago'and DATSUNSALES — SERVICE — PARTS9425 S. ASU'.AND AVi. In Ceuerly HillsCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60.20 PHONE 239 3770Nov. 5. 1965 CHICAGO4- Innovation studiedScientific research at universities is less “innovative**than research in other types of institutions like hospitals,medical schools, and health agencies.This is the finding of a pair of research assistants in theHealth Information foundation, ——connected with UC. ly. “Academic goals, such as in-According to Gerald Gordon and creasing the general fund of knowl-Sue Marquis, a researcher is edge, tend to be more nebulousspurred to be innovative when he than the goals of institutions pri-has freedom to try his own proce- marily concerned with practice ordures, and when he can see for profit,” Gordon and Miss Marquishimself the results of his research hypothesize,in actual cases. Where these two The person most likely to assessconditions don’t exist together, re- the consequences of research is thesearch projects can be expected to person who owns the organizationbe more routine and unimagina- doing the research and supervisestlve- its conduct. He can encourage re-IN ACADEMIC SETTINGS, they searchers who show most promisesay, there is plenty of freedom, as 0f solving the problem beforesupervisors don’t try to control them, because he can see mostevery aspect of research. If free- clearly the goals of the research,dom from executive authority were When there is no extra encour-the only factor in encouraging in- agement to innovate, researchers,novation, then it might be expected beinS human, tend to stick to triedthat universities would turn out the a”d true methods, since in terms. of the repercussions of failure it ismost innovative scientific re- more dangerous to innovate then tosearch. follow habitual or accepted re-Gordon and Miss Marquis found search paths.”this wasn’t so, however. They Gordon and Miss Marquis then„- , tested the effects of “differentasked directors of research proj- , - ,, ., ,, ,. . types of authority patterns, to seeects conducted by universities, what effect the boss’s attitudeshospitals, medical schools, and have on his researchers,health agencies, to send in the ma- They found:jor reports form their studies. • The most innovative researchThese reports were summarized, comes when “an administrativethen evaluated by leading people in superior discusses the researchmedical sociology. and the results of the research”They were asked to judge how with the staff members, therebymuch the report “adds to our making the consequences of the re¬knowledge of illness through the search more visible, and when thedevelopment of new theory or find- boss does not specify research pro-ings not explicit or anticipated in cedures.previous theories or findings, • There is least innovation whenand/or adds to the development of nobody discusses the research andnew methods of research.” its consequences with the staffREPORTS from universities member,came out on the bottom. Only eight • There is little innovation,percent of the university-run proj- also, where there is little freedomects were put in the “most inno- t0 be creative, even though the su-vative” category, far below the perior might discuss the researchhospitals with 32 per cent, medical wi*h tbe staff,schools with 30 per cent, and t ,health agencies with 18 per cent. DlSCUSS DcMIStl iGdCllillQ Committee questionnaireslo aid course evaluation(Continued from page two)urged to contact one of the follow¬ing people: Peter Nagourney, 304Gates Blake; Mark Joseph, 5Snell; or James Prier, 1306 Tufts.K. BURLANDJ. PRIER(See sample course evaluationquestionnaire on this page.)3 lectures on AfricaTo explain this finding, Gordonand Miss Marquis hypothesized Students and faculty interestedthat in a university setting“there is in discussing teaching and learningless direct contact with the popula- opportunities in Scandinavia aretion affected by the research, the invited to meet with Aage Rosen-patients. and with the practitioners dal Nielsen, founder and formerto whom the research is more rele- director of the Scandinavian Semi- The department of history andthe committee on african studieswill present three public lectureson African history November 4, 11,and 18, 1965.All three lectures will be deliv¬ered by Jan Vansina, professor ofhistory and anthropology at theUniversity of Wisconsin.The lectures will be given at 8pm in Room 106 of Swift Hall.They are open to the public with¬out ticket and without charge.Thursday, November 4, 1965:“The Tools of the Historian in Afri¬ca.”Thursday, November 11, 1965:“Toward a Cultural History ofCentral Africa.”Thursday, November 18, 1965:“Congo: Cultural Diversity andNational Integration.”Vansina is a native of Belgium.He spent eight years in Africa(1952-59 and 1963-64) as a staffmember of the Scientific ResearchInstitute for Central Africa.He is the author of severalbooks, including Oral Traditions(1965) and Kingdom of the Savan¬nah, which will be published soonby the University of WisconsinPress.Vansina is a specialist in the useof oral tribal traditions for histori¬cal research. He has been on thefaculty of the University of Wis¬consin since 1961.vent, the doctors. . . . The morecontact an individual or organiza¬tion has with the populationserved, the easier it is to measurethe actual or probable conse¬quences of research.”IF THE GOALS of the projectare clear-cut, the researchers arealso more likely to see the conse¬quences of their effort more clear- nar, and presently director of theNew Experimental College, Copen¬hagen, Denmark.Nielsen will be in Room 440,Judd Hall, November 8, between3:00 and 5:00 pm. Quote of the dayTo a e'runken man, the affairsof the world appear as so muchduckweed in a river.—Liu Ling, JThird and fourth year stu-ii dents in the College interestedin serving as student observersj to the College disciplinary com-| mittee should contact John18remner or Bernie Grofman,Student Government office, sec-i ond floor, Ida Noyes Hall, x3274,Monday through Friday, fromj 10:30 to 5:30, to arrange to be1 interviewed.14 karat goldpierced studs©“08 -o UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK*« strong bank99NEW CAR LOANS*4“- hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200sber F.DXC HYDE PARKAuto 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 4-6393 mamma am mammmmammmmmmmSample Course Evaluation QuestionnaireThese questionnaires will be the basis for a pamphlet sum¬marizing student evaluation of instructors and courses to bemade available later this year. Please fill out separate ques¬tionnaires for only those courses you have completed and re¬member well. Questionnaires may be returned at any of theplaces provided on campus.Many questions ask for a RATING, scaled from “A” to “F”:A—EXTREMELY HIGH, B—ABOVE AVERAGE, C-AVERAGE,D—BELOW AVERAGE, F—EXTREMELY LOW. Other questions are self-explanatory.We depend on your fairness; please confine your commentsto results of your experience—don’t quote rumor. Feel free toattach (FIRMLY) extra sheets of paper for further comments.Thank you for your cooperation.I COURSE Taken 19sec thelargestselectionon thesouth sideavailablein culturedpearl, jadecoral, gold,onyx, opalmany others$4.00 RANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE FA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open Evenings — Billie Tregonza, ManageressfromSUPREMEJEWELERS| Handbags & Jewelry* of Distinction1452 East 53rd St.FAirfax 4-9609iWMMi PHOTOGRAPHYWe will be Happy to advise you on how to takeor process your pictures.We carry a line of well known chemicals andsupplies.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.CHICAGO MAROON Nov. 5, 1965 INSTRUCTOR . —RATE:—RATE:LECTURES:RATE: organization of lectures. significance of content; interest aroused.clarity of delivery . enthusiasm of lecturerCOMMENTS:SECTIONS or CLASS MEETINGS:RATE: organization interest arousedcommand of material,sections to course presentation.. teacher’svalue ofHow were classes conducted? (Circle)cussion discussion other: lectures lect. & dis-| Student participation:not relevant here encouraged tolerated discouragedNumber attending class:Is any aspect or approach favored by instructor? Comment:Discuss instructor’s advantages and disadvantages as a teacher:COMMENTS:READINGS:RATE: significance of content. interest aroused.Amount of assigned reading (not enough? too much? pp.?)Did the reading list influence your decision to take the course?COMMENTS (you might list the books and rate them):PAPERS:RATE: topics ; educational value ; helpfulness ofreader’s comments fairness of reader’s comments: fairness of grading .How many papers? How long?. What type? (re¬search? ).COMMENTS:LABORATORY:How much time needed in preparation for each lab?.Was enough time allowed in the labest: .COMMENTS:EXAMS:RATE: interest. clarity of questionsgradingDid you learn anything from the exams?Basis of the exams (?>age): readingsectionsNumber of quizzesCOMMENTS:GENERAL:Did course follow an organized and integrated plan?What did it do to your interest in the field?Would you recommend course to a non-major?What advice would you give to help a person who must takethis course? jWhat outstandingly good teachers have you had in the depart¬ment?What outstandingly bad teachers have you had in the depart¬ment?COMMENTS:PERSONAL DATA:Your year in school ; sex : major.Your grade in this courseSUGGESTIONS FOR IMPROVING QUESTIONNAIREbeauty salonExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingT350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-8302IMPERFEC1Movie reviewPreminger a moral relativist Ask teaching changesOF Prem has his mojo humming again.BUNNY LAKE IS MISSING is best understood in termsof the New Film Criticism, an approach which assumesthat film, like other arts, is a communication; this attitudehas revealed that many directors, When BUNNY LAKE appears inthe film, we don’t know if she’s asleep, drugged or dead, for severalminutes.like novelists and painters, develop prem’s LAURA into VERTIGO; inconsistant themes in consistantways in each of their works. Prem¬inger is a fine example.Preminger is a product of the BUNNY LAKE, Prem has re¬worked Hitch’s PSYCHC material.Both directors have a great fond-Welle si an revolution (Orson ness for playing with audiences;Welles’ CITIZEN KANE, 1941) Hitch fools the audience intowhich, like bop in jazz, split film cepting a particular point-of-viewmaking into two schools and pro- within the film, and at the end tell-foundly influenced all subsequentdevelopments in the medium. Acomparison with Fritz Lang andHitchock will help clarify theideas, and style of Preminger.HITCH HAS REWORKED ing us there was no justificationfor our point-of-view; Prem playsnot with subjectivity, but withcomplete objectivity—we are givenno point-of-view, only actions andobjects without interpretation.Researchers examine fat-diet links Like Hitch and Lang, Prem’scamera is very fluid and pryingvery curious; all three men makemovies in which meaning is com¬municated through striking im¬ages, juxtapositions, and pacing.Hitch uses his tools for extremelyartificial constructions of guilt andreligious problems; Lang, for por¬traits of dominating evil, the con¬sequences of passion, and generalrottenness of the world. Premingeris a moral relativist: he delights inshowing us the exterior of theworld and showing within it an un¬ending disorder his characters “Joint appointments between public school personnel anduniversity faculties should be expanded, supervision of stu¬dent teaching must be thoroughly re-examined, and newstructural arrangements to facilitate a true partnershipmust be sought.” This is the viewof two faculty members of the Uni- authors say. These offices shouldversity’s graduate school of educa- be responsible for maintainingtlon- minimum standards of education,The professors, Roald F. Camp- providing at least one-third of thebell, William Claude Reavis profes- educational funds in the state, andsor of educational administration planning more extensively for theand chairman of the department of future,education, and Luvern L. Cunnin- BOTH MEN feel that UC mustgham, professor of education and . strivin„ to attract the best re¬director of the midwest adminis- keep ,stto a D*st 4r®nation center of the university, seaT,fersn an? pr0foeas0rs in theHai, tu. world. Dr. Cunningham sees astate this view in The Organization , , , . c cand Control of American School,, need also for a new type of profes-a book they wrote in conjunctionwith Roderick McPhee, school su- , . .... , ., .. ,perintendent in Glencoe. Illinois, STS’sional who can relate the work ofthe pure researchers into meaning-and a former professor at Harvard such as the H>'de Park Unitr Pla"University graduate school of edu¬cation. They view the plan as a very in¬teresting opportunity. According toRobert W. Wissler, chairman of UC’s department ofpathology, has revealed new evidence showing that a “pru¬dent” diet can prevent atherosclerosis, a disease whichresults from the accumulation of fatty deposits in thearteries. —Wissler experimented with two further information about atheros.groups of monkeys, feeding one clerosisgroup a ‘‘typical American” diet must contend with, some well,some poorly. His films do not fol¬low the Hollywood conventionalform of Orderly world- Disorderintroduced- Order restored byhere. His characters are each part¬ly good, partly bad, and mostlyneither.Wissler presented his findings atTwo years later, the monkeys on a meeti,ng of lha American HeartaL* r/v i„,„ Association on October 15. In hisand the other a “prudent” diet.the “prudent” diet showed far lessr , ,. . ,, ,, » ... experiment, he collaborated withfat lining the walls oi their ar- - n c n . ” ‘ .inninc oirn„i.tina in ihoir hwi. Dr- Godfrey S. Getz, UC professorteries or circulating in their blood¬stream.AFTER FORTY FIVE weeks of of pathology, Dorothea Turner,medical nutritionist, and severalfeeding, the fat levels in the tnon- research, assistants in the depart-kevs' bloodstreams were measured !'U.r! 0 pa ° , ^l‘SSu'rfor the first time. Monkeys on the kolds an, MU a"d a PhD ,r“ lhe-typical" diet showed higher ^ has been professoramounts of the fat containing sub- °f Pathology here since 1957.stances lipoproteins and cholesterolthan the other group. After sixty MIweeks their fat content reached a ItICIXvhiI dDDOIllTBClpeak and then began to decline.However, it always remained high- Richard P. McKeon, the Charleser than that of the monkeys on the F. Grey distinguished service pro-“prudent” diet. fessor of philosophy and of GreekAt the end of 107 weeks, an au- at UC, has been appointed the Wil-topsy showed that the monkeys on liam H. Colvin research professorthe “typical” diet had seventy-five in the University’s division of thepercent of the artery lining in- humanities for the academic yearvolved with streaks and fatty de- 1965-66.posits, while the monkeys on the His appointment was announcedprudent diet showed only fifteen by Robert E. Streeter, Professor ofpercent. English and Dean of the DivisionThe “prudent” diet does not ap- of the Humanities,peac to differ radically from the ^foodPllimak0e"eand0“caloHc content Professorship is awarded annuallywere lower. In addition, certain 10 a tacuIt>' m,™ber ln tbe d,v,sl°nfoods were eliminated entirely "ho » ,c"«a8ad “ a wrd‘n8 proj-from the “prudent" diet, such as <f 11 free.s h™ from h.s normal., , , v classroom duties and allows him todry cereal, pound cake, liver, lard, .and butter. concentrate on his project.A SECOND PART of the experi- McKeon will devote his time toment involved injecting fat con- writing the Paul Carus lectures,taining substances into the aortas The lectures are given under theof a third group of monkeys. In- auspices of the American Philo-jecting low density lipoproteins sophical Association. The seriesproduced lesions of the kind found was initiated by John Dewey within human atherosclerosis, Wissler Experience and Nature in 1925. Mc-noted. These “model” lesions are Keon will deliver three lectures atthe first of their kind produced in the meeting of the association inany experimental animals. They December, 1965, and he hopes toshould prove a useful source of have the manuscript of the bookready for publication by Spring,1966. His subject is “Facts, Catego¬ries, and Experience.” Without blowing the formal joysof the suspense picture, allow theassumption that the above patternsoccur in BUNNY LAKE. The spe¬cific ideas of BUNNY LAKE areeven more interesting. COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS Dr. Cunningham, it could be with-must also work together in such out parallel in its effect on an ur-areas as reducing the number of ban community; it provides astandardized tests a student must chance to use the best know educa-take, allowing more contact for ad- tional techniques and to try outvanced high school pupils, and de- nevv approaches. Dr. Campbellveloping new programs to reach does not believe the Unity Plan isdeprived children. the only solution, and thinks thatDr. Campbell sees the new UC administration is more importantUrban Education Laboratory as a than approach. Both of them sup-valuable opportunity in this last P°rt the general idea of an educa-field. It should attract researchers tional park, in which a group ofin sociology, urban studies, and schools share resources, such asmedicine as well as education. In an auditorium, laboratories, andaddition, it should produce results athletic facilities,which will affect slum children incities. Dr. Cunninghammany S6 asks for student helpWITH MUCH ATTENTION TOSADISM as a part of the meaning,Preminger gives us two worlds:the world of the child and theworld of the adult; and in each se¬quence, one element of one worldis incongruously placed in the oth¬er world, beginning inconspicuous¬ly (and visually) with a man ab¬stractedly carrying a teddybear.The contrast grows more and morealarming until finally, in a remark¬able descent into hell sequence(the more hellish because it showsCarol Lynley losing her status asan adult and the consequencesthereof) Preminger brings thetheme to completion in a harrow¬ing sequence of intensified reality. Student Government (SG) is set-thinks it will be useful in develop¬ing new fields of professional peo¬ple, and in testing the capability of . , , , , . „„„» • • ., . i . ting up student advisory commit-an American university to affect y11*3 UF . „ nrtees concerning many areas ofpublic school svstems. Univers,ty p0,”y Thesc inc|udefes”fons are netded for correct- housins commi,tce which wil! dealtessions are needed tor correct University policy towards them the inequities faced by de- ^ tw college and the housingpriced children in the school sys- shortage Hydc Park a„.d a Uni.tem. Both men feel that small versdy planning committee whichgroups and individual tutoring are m „ opi„ions to Richard F."!“S!a(L. U heie C. “ienlL I? O'Brien. UC's vice president forgrams like Head Start, for de- ,annto’ and development. .pnved pre-school children, provide Fa partial solution. They also ad- Other committees will deal withFinally, a remark on Premin¬ger’s reality. Preminger insists onshooting his films as realisticallyas possible because, like a docu-mentarist, he is interested in theway the real world is. He shotBUNNY LAKE in Britain, andspends considerable time subtlyexploring British streets, pubs, andtelevision. Unlike Land and Hitch,Preminger’s concept of reality isintimately committed to the au¬dience’s normal reality.Richard Thompson vocate a closer link between the admissions and aid, libraiy facili-schools and health, welfare, and GeS’ career counseling and guid-correctional agencies. ance’ and student employment.What should be the federal gov- According to John Bremner,ernment’s role in education? “We chairman of SG’s campus actionthink the federal government has committee, these committees areone major function: providing boards of review and will providefunds and seeing that they are dis- an opportunity for students to havetributed with appropriate safe- a voice in determining policy,guards to help the school serve na- Bremner maintained that Clear-tional needs more adequately.” ly. this is a time when the shapeThey feel that most of these funds °f the University for many years toshould be administered on a cate- come is being decided, and if stu-gorical basis. It should work prin- dents wish to have a voice in de-cipally through the states and local termining it, they must speak upschool systems. There is no cause now.”to fear federal control of schools, Graduate and undergraduate stu-but the government should retain dents interested in serving on anypower to cut off aid, as it did re- of the advisory boards ^d con-cently to Chicago public schools. ^ tact Bremner in the S , sec*State departments of education ond floor, Ida Noyes °'4 ormust become more effective, the at 363-3292.Female self-defenseA course in practical self-defensefor girls is being conducted thisquarter.The course matter consists oftechniques selected from Judo,Karate, Aikido, and other schoolsof jujitsu and hand-to-hand com¬bat, with the purpose of enablingthe student to deal effectively witha variety of situations rangingfrom insult to murder threat organg attack. Instruction is directednot toward the most talented, buttoward those girls least prepared,physically and emotionally, to an¬swer a physical threat.If this program is successful anddemand sufficiently great, othercourses may be organized for wo¬men or for men. Also, other in¬structors may be trained and theprogram expanded. MILLIE'SSPORTSWEAR HEADQUARTERSTurtleneck Jerseys1375 E. 53rd St. HY 3-592210% Student Discount with adSAMUEL A. BELL"Buy Shell From Be IP*SINCE ISM4701 S. Dorchester AmKEnwood 8-3150 UTILITY CLOTHES!!!!BE PRACTICAL!!!COMPLETE SELECTION of thermalboots, handkerchiefs, hats, hoodedcoats, rain parkas, long underwear,insulated jackets, khaki pants, turtle¬necks, sweatshirts, tanker jackets,work shirts, basketball shoes, camp¬ing equipment, gloves, pajamas,scarves, robes, levies, folding cots,corduroys, union suits, dress shirts, earmuffs, overalls, sweaters, sweat sox,wool shirts, dress pants, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1364 E. 63rd St.PL 2-4744Open Sundays 9:30-1:00Student discount with ad 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 newplays at the Last Stage. Join usfor cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST& HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 8-7585 BfTNG MOST PROITTAKLK TRIP YOU tEYBR MARK IS TO YOBR OAT MIN MAU.Hero's an economy compact with built-in luxury. It saves youmoney when you buy it; saves more when you drive ItlONLY $1,666DATSUN “Four-Ten” 4-dr. SedanDATSUNNow 67 h.p. for 1966Chlcago’and DATSUNSALES — SERVICE — PARTS9425 S. ASH'.AND AVi. In Eei/erly HillsCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60^20 PHONE 239 3770:t in original I Nov. 5. 1965 CHICAGO MAROON■To exhibit rare 1847 Mendelssohn score Purids did Ul*bdl1 StlidieSMendelssohn’s proof copy of the has no title page, but it is fairly .... , , ,,Elijah vocal score with his own certain that it is the version print- Students of the city will have an extra half-million dollars 3corrections and instructions to the ed by the London firm of Ewer and to boost their program, as UC s center for urban studies ie- AR se-engraver will be displayed in the Company, and that it is probably ceives its share of the University s $160 million fund-raising ™es 0 e e“*r s organized fornarthex of Rockefeller Memorial the first English edition of the drive. e purpose o ringing noted ur-Chapel on Sunday afternoon, No- work. According to Jack Meltzer, di- ; ban .po lcy m?,s and authoritiesvember 7, through the courtesy of It must have been published in rector of the center, the extra ™ C NTRR does not intend to discuss their viewpoints and ac-THE CENTER,, tin vu .. *,. „ .. . .... ...... to confine itself entirely to the tivities. This year the lecture se-the UC library, in conjunction with 1846 or 1847, between the year of money will be used to build an ar- scholarly community, but to devel- ries will bring to campus such fig-*v,a “•* 1°c,: cc 5*~ — *" ^ the 0p on the technical level also. Such ures as Richard J. Daley, mayorthe opening concert of the 1965-66 its first performance and Mendels- chives center and to expandOratorio Festival. sohn’s death. This score was a gift current programs.This copy later belonged to the to the University from Frank W. THE ARCHIVES center wouldadapter of the English text, Wil- Gunsaulus, a noted theologian at be managed in connection with theliam Bartholomew. The proof copy the turn of the century.■. Sentry ^reportsgood news (at last!) aboutcar insurance savingsfor young menIf you’re a man under 25, or have a son whois, you know what a big extra premium you payfor car insurance. Now, Sentry Insurance offer*a 15% discount for young men who qualify assafe drivers. (This is in addition to Sentry’s 15%discount for driver education.)HOW TO QUALIFYYoung men under 25 qualify for the SentryPreferred Youthful Driver Discount on the basisof a simple questionnaire that takes only about20 minutes. It is not a test of driving skill orknowledge. It is completely confidential. Therela no penalty for young men who do not qualifyfor the extra discount.ACT NOWFor full details about the Sentry PreferredYouthful Driver examination, call or drop a cardto me today.JIM CRANE8124 WOODLAWN AVE. 374-03504 Ua*SENTRY. ^INSURANCEMiWfcrvwHardware Mutuals • Sentry Uf*Surprise!your ArfCarved Diamond Ring comesto you on its own precious throne.LOTUS on 3 lillle throneAll styles shown with their little thrones, charmingly gift boxedfrom $150 to $1200 backed by the written ArtCarvedguarantee and Permanent Value Plan.Jr\rt (VrvedDF^EAM DIAMOND FLINGSFor free folder write J R Wood & Sons, Inc . 216 E 45th St other campus libraries. It wouldcontain papers of distinguished Illi¬nois figures, political, commercial, areas as water and air pollution, of Chicago, Terry Sanford, formerand land planning are of concern governor of North Carolina andto the Center. In addition, services Martin Meyerson, dean of thesimilar to those offered by the school of experimental design atagricultural extension services are Berkeley. .4to be offered by the Center. A series entitled “The RelationDuring its first year, enrollment of Design to the Social Sciences”and financial, and “retail giants’’ in the courses offered has risen to will attempt to provide socialof Chicago. Some of this material 62, including one undergraduate scientists with “design insights’*might be displayed in Robie house. ?nd lwe‘™ auditors. The courses which can be ' ab?>ribed »b«Graduate students and scholars ‘or tbe 1965*66 vear me ude a one- fi] b . equarter undergraduate course on scholarly and professional activi-the modern city, a three-quarter ties.” A sabbatical fellowship es-graduate course on urban systems, tablished for the 1965-66 year,an urban research workshop, and enables a person employed inan urban studies seminar. The urban affairs in Metropolitanprincipal purpose of these courses Chicago to study for a year at theis to give the specialist an under- University. |standing of the total urban field. No past, just future 4GUIDING THE research pro- The Center has just begun togram is the idea that relationships branch out into a vast and reward*,betweeen research activities in the ing field. Student and faculty r^urban field and urban practice sponse which dictates the tempo ofneed strengthening. To achieve this the Center has been, in the opiniongoal the “faculty of diverse fields” of Meltzer, as exciting as one couldhave complete responsibility for want. The variety of interests andthe Center’s research program. possibilities in urban studies willResearch programs completed in provide numerous outlets for thethe past year include reports on Center in years to come. As Brianurban renewal, “development of a Berry, professor of geography, andcurriculum designed to train peo- chairman of the training program-pie for professional practice in the pointed out, “the Center has rmurban field,” and industrial rede- past, but hopes to have a future.,”j§could utilize the resources of thelibrary.Academically, the Center has nointention of becoming a separatedepartment of the University,Meltzer said. The interdisciplinaryaspect of the Center which “exam¬ines origins, growth and change ofurban systems” has been empha¬sized since its inception in the fallof 1963. Degree programs in con¬junction with other divisions of theUniversity, such as one leading toa degree in urban economics con¬nected with the Graduate School ofBusiness, are under consideration.A three quarter internship for sec¬ond and third year students is alsobeing contemplated. The coursewould include in addition to regu¬lar classes and a research project,“first hand exposure to the prob¬lems of the city” through work inpublic or private organizations.Plan new researchResearch projects which will beundertaken by the Center includestudies of “the physical facilitieshousing children’s institutions,”“the problems of small merchantrelocation and development,” the ClassifiedsPERSONALSWRITERS WORKSHOP (PLaza 2-8377)possibility that programs now pro- wuffleviding housing for the poor couldu , . , , . . THE GENERAL LINE <5h«urinovbe Supplanted by cash payments, By popular request, Russian Films has j 75 *the relation Of federal aid pro- arranged this campus showing of Sergei *■„ , ■ Eisenstein's much-hailed film for To-grams to urban areas, and an 1m- morrow evening, Nov 6. Judd auditor!-provement Of urban renewal and um (behind New Dorms) It is our un-nlonnind Kn “a derstanding that our copy of the filmplanning by a system Of social has no7 been expurgated in this country.analysis.” A journal Of public af- The New York Times has written: "TheGeneral Line is not simply a stage ofdevelopment between Potemkin and Alexander Nevsky, but rather some¬thing quite different and delightfullystriking. . -the film vibrates with pleas¬ant humor and eroticism to an extenthardly to be found elsewhere in thecinema. .The General Line is Eisensteinat his peak of humor and humanity^’at 7:30 and 9:30. Students,#FOUND in Woodworths Book Store, pairof eye glasses with brown frames In¬quire at front desk. Woodworths.fairs may also be published.See Dream Diamond Rings only at these Authorized ArtCarved JewelersAlton—HUDSON’S JEWELRYAurora—TSCHANNEN JEWELERSBelleville—BECHERER’S JEWELRYBelleville—DIEHL’S JEWELRYCarbondale—J. RAY, JEWELERCarmi—H. D. BEAN, JEWELERCentralia—HERRON'S LEADING JEWELERS, INCCharleston—HANFT’S JEWELRYChicago—BASKIND JEWELERSChicago—COLE l YOUNGChicago—DE NAPOLI JEWELERSChicago—FARMER JEWELERSChicago—ROMAN KOSINSKIChicago—R. L. SEIDELMANNDixon—F. OVERSTREET & SONEast Chicago—BELL JEWELERSEast Moline—VAN DE VOORDE JEWELERSEldorado—PUTNAM JEWELRYElgin—PERLMAN’S FINE JEWELERSElmhurst—ELMHURST JEWELRYl OPTICAL STOREFreeport—LUECKE’S JEWELRY STOREFreeport—C. L. RINGER CO., INC.Galesburg—ELLIS JEWELRY CO.Geneva—ANDERSON JEWELERSHarrisburg—W. A. GRANT JEWELRYHarvey—BASTER JEWELERSHinsdale—ARTHUR W. RETZELJacksonville—THOMPSON JEWELERSKankakee—HUFF l WOLF JEWELRY CO.La Grange—SPENCER JEWELERS Lansing—PAUL WILSONLa Salle—C. A. JENSENLitchfield—PFOLSGROF'S JEWELERSMacomb—ARRASMITH JEWELERMacomb—LEBOLD l VOEGELEMilan—GODFREY JEWELERSMonmouth—MERLIN M. VAUGHNMount Carmel—ROBERTS JEWELERSMount Carmel—TANQUARY JEWELRY STOREMt. Carroll—B. L. SIEBERMt. Prospect—MT. PROSPECT JEWELERSMt. Vernon—CLARK JEWELERSOaklawn—WHEELER JEWELRYOak Park—HAYWARD JEWELERSOttawa—TRESS JEWELRY STOREPalatine—BYHRING JEWELERSPeoria—JERRY GARROTT, JEWELERSRockford—COMAY’S, INC.Rockford—MINCEMOYER JEWELRYRock Island—BROOKS JEWELRYSt. Charles—MATSON JEWELERSSterling—HART JEWELERSStreator—WALTER H. KERRUrbana-WHITTAKERS JEWELRYWestchester—WESTCHESTER JEWELERSWest Frankfort—JACOBS-LANE CO., INC.Wood River—TAYLOR JEWELRY COZion—ASHLAND JEWELERSNew York 10017 This week is the Deadline for depositson SG Christmas flights to Boston, NewYork, Phila. Wash. DC.. 8r San Fran-cisco. Departures on Thurs Fri & Sat.Dec. 16, 17 & 18. $10.00 required to r e¬serve a seat. ‘-Vv"Volkfest.spier’-Fri. Nov. 12, 7:15 pm.5810 Woodlawn. Bring songs & string's^.CONGRATULATIONS. Peter and JoanMcG Two agitators can stir more thanone- „ 1*’Like new D-28 Martin guitar 7 yrs'fqldFret Shop. iL° .7-1060Henderson yeu fool you ve dohtjKitagain. Happy birthday anyway. Ip’Come on now, Andy, what is RS?, Films General Line poster really Jpllabout?Many thanksgranted. to St. Cow for fawjrsWANTEDSleeper fern. priv. rm. in exchangStur |sitting, references, MU 4-3431. :«,j|Call |2>* room apt. with bedroom. *.Ml 3-6000 rm 132 leave messagePart & full time busboys & dishw,ers. 642-4230. jFem. wanted for Doctors office f^i'hlknowledge of typing full or part-tmve.Call 723-1009. |Part-time grillman, soda fountain, Sishawasher. 684-9398. 1440 E. 57th. f5-7 Sm.PART TIME HELPDELIVERY of morning papers,MESSENGER 8:30-10:30 am. vf,COLLECTOR 6-8:30 pm, 3 eveningsfper|week, apd Sat. am.No car required. Salary $1.25 net Mf IWorthy, Mr. Ehler, Hyde Park N»««lService, 1302 E. 53rd HY 3-0935. WiWoman with daughter 9 wants to vh.ubeaut, new apt. priv. rm. bath 493-688eves. & weekends.OFFEREDBabysit in your or my house take goodcare. Call morn. 643-4138.Room & Board in exchange for babysitting & dinner dishes. FA 4-0329.TYPINGTypist exper. reas. HY 3-2438.ifjg|§;"TYPING SERVICE. itPfjfMarcella Bryant Midway 3-wHTyping. Complete, good, steno seiwice493-6882 eves & weekends. ‘S’54FURNISHED APT. FOR RENT7761 So. Shore Dr.2 lge. rms. kit. util. incl. $22. 1 rnifkit.util. incl. $18. tFOR SALEOver 2000 used books at the Book Ex¬change a non-profit low overhead bo°Kstore (not to be confused with the'1,de¬funct USNSA Co-op). Reynolds CUi»Basement 10:30 am-3:30 pm.'63 Bel Air station wagon very cl tan,many extras, best offer. 752-2190.1965 15 vol. Childcraft highest recom¬mended for children thru 4th grade.save almost half 752-4826.CHICAGO MAROON Nov. 5. 1965Chicago schools deficient in structure(Continued from page one) school, one with voluntary enroll- with even greater autonomy.“A teacher’s preihdicSHtl)ward Io«nSnlnu;iUflra?teed raclal quo' where r°search and demonstrationft. ^P.Uft'K .“‘of r 0t C0Uld be Ca™d •* Co-opwratioaprejudice than of preconceived, gessed.”fcteicotyped notions of the limitededucability of pupils whose back- as- with a university is “a key ingredi¬ent” for such districts, the reportHPHS as demonstration school comments, pointing out that fundserounds differ from his own” in * action to these procedural are available under federal pro-class or race. This calls for better steps, Janowitr and Street urge grams for just such activities,in-service training, concerned with development and maintenance of University research plans“broad approaches and substantive a. cor.e. °J outstanding comprehen- UC has drawn up a proposal toissues” rather than techniques. A ?ive hl"‘1 schools in areas where the US office of education for aseries of seminars conducted by integration is or could be an im- “laboratory” teaching and trainingn professor or psychology Bruno ?Tdia,te. reality.” H.vde Park High school, which would, hopefully, beSchool is mentioned as one school co-ordinated with an experimentalwhich could be used in this way.“It is the responsibility oi theChicago schools to see that theseh:gh schools are strengthened inBettelheim shows teachers’ negative attitudes can be changed bygroup discussion with other teach¬ers.The report says, “There exists a district in the Hyde Park-Wood-Iawn district.The experimental school pro¬posed by UC would admit studentsgreat deal more knowledge in. . . th"ir integration and that addition- from predominantly Negro Wood-tile social sciences than currently a* schools of this type are de- lawn and middle-class white stu-is being made available to teach¬ers and principals.”THE CENTRAL CONCERN ofthe system must be “increasingthe authority and professionalcompetence of the classroomteacher,” Janowitz and Street em¬phasize. Any innovations in tech¬niques and materials must recog¬nize that the teacher is the “cen¬tral manager” in the classroom,and should have authority to usewhatever resources or methods areneeded.Other problems to be met in- veloped steadily,” the report dents from other areas of the city,urges. These schools would offer a but not Hyde Park itself, to avoidfull range of course, offer special attracting whites away from theresources for strong programs at public high school,all levels and for attracting whites Janowitz and Street also call forto maintain integration.Radical DecentralizationThe chief specific recommenda- a co-ordinated program of educa¬tional research within the schoolsystem, with a special assitant to4- - . „ . . the general superintendent for re-tion for change m the systems search and development,structure is rr.dicai decentraliza- CTiincur* i . ution ” WHEN STUDENTS do not have| t (t , . , , to be “kept back” a grade, but canminictrar t 2 new level of ad- a(jvance at their own rate, teach-hictriot fir rh^ °* 6 SU!)er" ers tend to be more sensitive to the, , f () . lca&°‘ Superinten- abilities of each individual student,i a ff rOc t a At f. 1 n °a f ° ^Se sectors studv showed. Janowitz andelude the effects of advanced tech- would adapt the over all policy set street rec0mmended extendingnologv and limited market for un- by the board of education to the recommended expandingskilled Theater reviewPirjfer plays scoreDirector Bob Sickinger has a right to be proud of hiamost recent production, two plays by Harold Pinter. The twoplays, A Slight Ache and The Dumbwaiter combine brilliantsatire with terrifying overtones to produce delightfully hair-raising results.A Slfght Ache was written as a suddently down to the basement,radio play, and as such presents bringing a note demanding a meal,some problems in its adaptation The gunmen, fearful of beingfor the stage. The characters are discovered, desperately send up allrevealed in all their weaknesses the food they have-a bottle ofand supressed frustrations through mjik) a bag of potato chips, somea series of monologues directed at stale biscuits. The dumbwaitera deaf, dumb, and possibly blind descends again, this time express-old matchseller, whose appearance ing dissatisfaction with the foodoutside their door causes resent- and demanded more and morement on the part of the husband, elaborate dishes: Cantonese andAs the two characters talk to the French cuisine seem to be all thatold man, their true characters are will satisfy the mysterious powersmore and more fully revealed until THE WILDLY FUNNY situationtheir own relationship completelydisintegrates.FLORA, ably played by HullHouse Veteran Bea Fredman, is a leads to a breakdow n of communi¬cation between the men; theyargue about the origin of the notes,and eventually about the results ofpersons onespecially Negroes.Open EnrollmentOne of the recommendations forcity students, needs of each area, and “developthe types of regional school-com¬munity relations which appear nec¬essary.” To overcome lack of com¬munication with the this program, with effective in-service training for the teacherswho will use it.According to Janowitz, he doesnot necessarily expect the report’sr : munication with the community uwlexpandingintegrationi is city-wide each district would have an specific recommendations to be petite woman whose self-possession their crimes. (“Who cleans up af-and garrulous politeness only thin- ^er we’ve gone, that’s what I’d likely masks the violent passion which to know.->) For the first time. Benis revealed in the course of her forgets to repeat to Gus full in¬monologue to the old man, whom structions on their procedure forshe has named Barnabas. Ed- the murder. When Gus goes out ofward, her husband, has frustra- the room to make some tea, Bentions of an entirely different sort; receives his orders—via the speak-his hoPes and plans for a success- jng tube attached to the dumbwait-ful life all failed, leaving him wnth er_t0 kilthe second-hand furniture bought the roombefore his marriage, and second¬hand faded hopes. The catalysing er—to kill the next man who entersThe two plays complement one“acted upon as directives.” Rath¬er, he told the Maroon, the report’sopen enrollment which would make "uu,“ uave anil possible for each high school«tu- “ “T fr“m **dent to enter any high school in the Within these sector districts, spe- maj0r findings, such as the emphacity for which he is qualified, in c'a* officers should be put in sjs on decentralization and enhanc-which there is available space, and charSe of in-service training. ing the status of the teacher,ANOTHER RECOMMENDA- should “become part of the generalT*ON urges establishment of two discussion’’ within the school sys-or three “experimental districts,” tern. agent of the matchseller is enough a?°‘h<Lr1- ?.e monologuesto bring these repressed feelings to 2* A ■*** A.c.h* ?re rePlacedthe surface and wreak havoc in the 7^ " by 'vl ,y„-s.maUonce contented home. talk and pantomome. But Pinter’sin which his enrollment would notpromote racial imbalance.”Janowitz and Street urge openenrollment as “a moral responsi¬bility.’’ It would “produce t only alimited amount of Integration, butwould indicate a fundamental stepin guaranteeing this right.” basement of a deserted cafe fortheir victim. In the midst of theirMidwestern high school science students lo visit UCgas?”) the dumbwaiter crashesLike A Slight Ache, The Dumb- Powerful portrayal of the break-waiter is concerned with the of human relations unifiesbreakdown of a relationship the two plays. He is one of thethrough an impersonal agent. Two mo^ telling and truthful of ourgunmen, Gus and Ben, wait in the m<K*ern playwrights Jamie GaleMore than 1,200 outstanding gram will be the Enrico Fermi in¬science students from 200 high stitute for nuclear studies and itsStudents could express their pre- schools in four states will visit the laboratory for astrophysics andfermces for a school in the spring, University Saturday, November 6, space research, the institute forand bussing at public expense for the University’s eleventh an- the study of metals and its ultra-wrndd be provided. nual Science Open House. low temperature laboratory, the"WE BELIEVE that in the long The group, from Illinois, Indiana, institute for computer research,run this approach will be clearly Wisconsin, and Michigan, will hear the department of biophysics, andlegal and that present legal ambig- talks an(* witness scientific demon- the instructional departments ofuities must not be allowed to deter stations presented by 50 Universi¬ties constructive step,” Janowitz ty facu.Uy an.d staff members. the divisionsciences. of the physicaland Street say.( They also urge development ofa special experimental integrated.Id.TtISS-all Iorsfor ICall Iash-' It Ime.iish-am.per ]Mr.Jews |hail-6HH1goodljysit-H- 111o el CINEMAChicago Ave. at Michigan2 comedy featuresPETER SELLERS"HEAVENS ABOVE"WithCecil Parker, Eric Syfcts, Brack Patersand CHARLIE CHAPLIN"CHASE MECHARLIE"With Ben Turpin ft Chester ConklinStUDENTS $1.00W|th I B. cards every day but Saturday Participating in the day’s pro-MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSMood Typing ft Rh FactorSAMI PAY SERVICECampUt. Lab. EKG * IMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. f AM - II PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3-2000 Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 •yt examineeDr. KURT ROSENBAUMOPTOMETRIST53rd Kimbark PlazaHY 3-8372 Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospitalMODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1B42 I. 55th HY 3-9259ITkitjk Ex-book |le de-Club!clean,■ecom* K1H (ompaci StereoPhonographsBeautiful engineeringBeautiful packagingBeautiful soundIN STOCKNOW! at theFret Shop5210 S. Harper JESSELSOTSSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 TEARSWITH THE VERY REST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2*70, M. 2-1190, DO 3-91M 1540 I. 53r4 MEN'S SWEATERSThere'* nothing to compare to a wool sweater for warmth,looks and value.100% Lambs Wool V-Neck Pullover $7.0075% Mohair, 25% Wool V-Neck Cardigan $9.95Sizes S-M-L-XL in burgundySome sizes in navy or black.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.The Phoenix literary magazine is looking for a businessmanager. He will receive commissions for advertisementand subscription sales. Please apply to the editor atHY 3-7209.Students are invited to submit manuscripts of poems,stories, article essays, and one act plays to the Phoenix,Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St.. . . when there has been an addi¬tion to the family, it's high time tothink of an addition to your SonLifo insurance portfolio^As a loeal San Life nfmSwHBUH BpoR JOO OL fOWRolpi J. Wood, Jr* CtM AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- T'L-FUN tEM & ZENITH -- NSW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders - Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartrld es - Tube* - Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsSERVICE CALLS - $3Nov. 5, 1965 CHICAGO MAROONMusic reviewRussia ahead in 'piano race' Culture CalendarRemember seeing that great Marx Brothers flick A Nightat the Opera? Those who have will never forget how that zanytrio sabotaged a whole opera production in one shot. Perhapslast week’s Chicago Symphony Orchestra concert should havebeen called An Afternoon at theSymphony, for, judging by the brilliantly dispelled. Americaperformance of Associate Conduc- doesn’t have a pianist under fortytor Irwin Hoffman, he can do the wb0 can come close to him withsame thing, except less humorous- respect to maturity and breadth ofly and, one fervently hopes, less interpretation.°^en- If one is to make comparisons,Hoff in an conducted Ernest Chau- one mus^ consider Ashkenazy ansoons Symphony in B-flat, a work amaigam 0f two 0f his Soviet com-which might easily be sub-titled a patriotS; for he combines the steelyDvorak symphony if it had been technical brilliance of Emil Gilelswritten by Franck, and he com- with the emotional and romanticpletely misunderstood it from the temperament of Sviatoslav Rich-beginning. The only way to make t But what reall distinguishesthis pastoral romp jell is to give it him i$ that> unlike Richter whoa broad, unpretentious perfor- jjas on occasjons ]et his emotionsmance and a relaxed, congenial at- ]ead him t0 interpretive gau-mosphere in which to unfold. ^THIS WAS PRECISELY whatHoffman failed to do. His climaxeswere consistently rushed, episodessectionalized; in general, the workwas too pressured. The finale, inparticular, sounded like somethingfrom the sound-track of a Grade-Bsoap-opera. Could the title be “Ir¬win Hoffman Faces the Music”?Handel’s Concerto Grosso, op. 6,no. 10 , didn’t turn out much bet¬ter. The way Hoffman overloaded cheries, he still retians objectivityand keeps his interpretations with¬in the bounds of good taste.Ashkenazy’s introspection neithersoftened the concerto’s jagged con¬tours, nor obscured the stingingand acrid bite of Prokofiev’s disso¬nance. And don’t think for a mo¬ment that this music is easy toplay. Some sections are so difficultand complex that Prokofiev had towrite them on three staves. YetAshkenazy played as if the difficul¬ties meant nothing to him.What spoiled what could havebeen a legendary performancewas, once again, the intrusion ofHoffman. Throughout, he and hissoloist were at cross-purposes witheach other. Apparently, Hoffmanjust got up on the wrong side ofthe podium last week.Ed Chikofsky BALASARASVATI: South IndU*« most dir. Henry Jenkins "Five Days"; Garyfamous classical dancer an* %mes^Hedfield?1 di? Fri-IS?Nov. 6 at 8:30. Mandel Hall. thru Qct, 24. Fri. & Sat at 8:30; Sun at7:30. Fri & Sat $2.00; Sun $1.50: Stu-Concerts dents $1.50 Fri only. 1506 E. 51CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: 0A 4 420°-Nov 5: Irwin Hoffman, cond Frank HOLE HOUSE—Studio Writers present„. t . c vs nn original play by Richard GosswillerMiller. Elgar: In South Overt. Vi- JIMMY GOSPEL Thurs and Sun only:ski: Cone. Brab,7W*. Sym No 1. Nov. 11: Oct 21 at 8:45 and Oct 24 at 2:45 Dona-Josef Kripps, Schubert: Sym No 8 tion $2 at the door only hour beforeperformance time.Calendar of EventsFriday, November 5WORKSHOP: "Community Organiza¬tion,” with Jesse Jackson, SCLC staff, 2pm, UC divinity school coffee shop,sponsored by UC SCOPE.LECTURE: "The Political Function of. . Indian Intellectuals,” Edward A. Shils,the Stage with strings, smothering professor of social thought and sociolo-the harpsichord, one can only sur- gy, 3:30-5 pm, Social Sciences 302. spon-mise that his Italian was slightly *^rned by uc Po]ltlcal science .nssocia-garbled: concerto grosso does notmean “gross concerto.” MEETING: UC Students for a Demo-TT ,,, . , , , cratic Society, 3:45 pm, Reynolds Club.Hoffman improved somewhat DISCUSSI0N: "Peace Corps in Cosvawhen he led the Chicago premiere Rica” Charles Tadiock, speaker, rap-of Wallingford Riegger S Dichoto- per g pm, program 7:15 pm, Chapelmy. Written in 1931, Dichotomy House 5810 Woodlawn.was one of Riegger’s first forays „T .. .. .„ . , . , ., . . WUCB: “Incident at Vichy, by Arthurinto serial music and it contains Miller, performed by the repertorytwo tone rows on which the three company of Lincoln Center, 6 pm.sections Of the work are based. LECTURE: “The Civil Rights Crisis inIn spite of the music’s structural Chicago,” James Bevel, direct action, ., .. . . director of the Southern Christian Lead-complexity, it IS quite an engaging ership Conference, 8 pm, Universityand accessible composition. With- Disciples of Christ church, 57th andout stooping to gimmickry, Rieg- Umversity-ger enmeshes his listener in the fi- lecture: "Ecumenicism and Schoi-ber of the music and makps him arship,” speaker Father John McKen-uei OI ine music ana maxes mm 2ie g pm Swift commons, sponsored bylose Sight of the complex conflgur- divinity school student association,ations required to bring it about, travelogue: "India.” sponsored byClearly, more contemporary works International House Association, 8:15Of this caliber belong on the pro- Pm- Home Room- International House.grams of the Chicago Symphony,rather than yet another run-through of Beethoven’s Fifth.IF THE RIEGGER proved to besuch a luminous unknown work, wucb: "The Blues Bag,the Prokofiev Second Piano Con- with Mississippi John Hurt, hosted byGeorge Rutkowski and Peter Hayward,WUCB: "Masterwork,” Wagner, Dawnand Siegfried's Rhine Journey, Mahler,Symphony No. 1 in D major, Mendels¬sohn, Symphony No. 5 in D major, 8:30pm.interview10 pm.certo shone even brighter for all itsfamiliarity. The young Soyiet pi¬anist Vladimir Ashkenazy was thesoloist, and if there was any doubtas to who is ahead in the East- WUCB: "Concert ” the first in a two... week series of great symphonies,West young pianist race, it was Haydn, Symphony No. 104, Beethoven,Saturday, November 6TYPEWRITERSWe are an authorized Olympia dealer for portable,standard and electric typewriters.We employ factory trained mechanics to handle anyoffice machine repair.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE. Symphony No. 3. Mozart, Symphony No.40, Schubert, Symphony No. 9, 6 pm.FILM: "Eddy Duchin Story,” TyronePower, Kim Novak, Victoria Shaw andJames Whitmore, admission 50c. 25cwith SAMA card, 7:30, Billings P 117.FILM: "The General Line,” Eisen-stein, 7:30 and 9:30 pm, Judd Hall.RECITAL: Balasarasvati, presented byUC Asian Arts Series, tickets $2.50 and$1.25, 8:30 pm, Mance! Hall.Sunday, November 7SALE: Clothing sale for UC LaboratorySchools Scholarship Fund pre-sale, 2-6pm, Sunny Gym, 5821 Kenwood.MEETING: O-Board, 3 pm, Ida NoyesLibrary.ORATORIO: "Elijah,” Mendelssohn,performed by the Rockefeller Memori¬al Chapel Choir and members of theChicago Symphony Orchestra, conduc¬tor, Richard Vikstrom, organist, Ed¬ward Mondello, 3:30 pm, RockefellerMemorial Chapel.MEETING: Douglas B. Anderson. Sen.Paul Douglas representative in Illinois,speaks to UC Student Religious Liber¬als. 7:30 pm, Unitarian Church, 1174 E.57St.CAUCUS: SPAC, 7:30, East lounge, IdaNoyes, second floor.WUCB: "Opera House.” Tosca withMarian Callas and Tito Gobbi, 10 pm.Monday, November 8FILMS: "Popular Hinduism in India,"titles are "Cave Temples of India: Hin¬du,” "Konorak.” Khajuraho,“Tanjore,”and Saga in Stone,” presented by In¬dian Civilization course, 7:30 pm, Ro-senwald Hall, room 2, bring student orfaculty identification card for admis¬sion.MEETING: "Why Goldwater Lost,”speaker Bob Schuchman, former nation¬al chairman of YAF, Young Republi¬cans, 8 pm, Ida Noyes library. (unfinished). Bruckner: Sym No 8. Thu-Sat Concerts-Thu, 8:15, Fri.2: Sat. 8:30.$2.50-6.50. Fri Gallery seats for stu¬dents. $1 (Available until 1 pm only, andat SG office). Orchestra Hall Box Of¬fice: Daily 9:30-6: later on concertnights; Sun 1-4. Orchestra Hall, 220 S.Michigan.ROCKERFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRAND SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Rich¬ard Vickstrom, cond: Nov 7 at 3:30.Mendelssohn: ELIJAH. At RockerfellerChaoel.ExhibitionsART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO:Wisterbotham Collection thru Nov 14:Graphics by Picasso thru Oct. 31: Wa¬ter colors by Winslow Homer thru Oct.31.RENAISSALl’NCE SOCIETY: Ink andpastels by Wu-chiu; thru Nov 6. Goodspeed Hall, UC.CENTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCA¬TION: Prints and drawings by RachelMinna Baron. Thru Nov 13. 1307 E 60th.BENJAMIN GALLERIES: Japaneseartist Norio Azuma, serigraphy on can¬vas Oct. 30—Nov: Fri and Sat. 11 am-6 pm; 900 N Michigan, Apt. 318.MONROE GALLERY—“Encore Show”with works by Frank Salantrie, Sylvest¬er Britten, Yuko Nasu. Frances Badgerand Victor Hayes. Daily, 9-9; Sat, 9-4.Closes Sun. 59 E Monroe.MARSHALL FIELD & COMPANY PIC¬TURE GALLERIES—"Sculpture andPaintings—A New Exhibition” Featur¬ing works by Strobel, Benst, Klee,Beeching, Ying and Hon Chi Fun.Daily, 10-5 Closed Sun 111 N State.TheatreBAREFOOT IN THE PARK—Nell Si¬mon’s comedy starring Myrna Loy.Richard Benjamin, Joan Van Ark and t.at 2. Szabo: Mike Nichols, dir. Nightly8:30; Matinees. Wed. & Sat at 2 ClosedSun. Nightly $2.50-$4.99; Fri & Sat.S2.75-S5.50. Matinees. $2.50-$4.50 Black-stone Theatre. Balbo & Michigan.THE COCKTAIL PARTY—In a produc¬tion by the Goodman Theatre starringRobert Fleming of the original Londoncompany. Oct. 22-Nov 13. Nightly 7:30;Fri. & Sat. 8:30: closed Mon-nightly.$3 00 Fri & Sat. $3.50. Phone and mailreservations accepted. GoodmanT h e a t r e, Monroe & Columbus.CE 6-2337.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 Gioda-no, with continuity by David Blomquist.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;Wed & Sat matinees 2. Closed Sun.Nightly $3.00-$5.50; Fri & Sat. $3.50-$6.00; Matinees, $2.50-$4.50. TheatreParty and Benefit rates available. Stu-debaker Theatre, 418 S Michigan. 922-2973.THE LAST STAGE—An evening of oneact plays, William Hunt's "Sleepy¬heads”: Thomas Joarn. dir; Giradous’s"The Appolo of Bellac; James Miller, 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 at11 pm on week nights & Sundays thatincludes improvised scenes based onsuggestions from the audience: $1.00.Second City, 1846 N Wells. DE 7-3992HULL HOUSE THEATRE—Two one actplays by Harold Pinter. "The DumbWaiter” and "A Slight Ache"; RobertSickinger, dir. Thru Oct. Fri & Sat. 8:30Sun 7:30 Fri & Sat $2.90; Sun $3.40Jane Addams Center, 3212 N. Broad¬way, 348-8336.HULL HOUSE THEATRE AT PARK¬WAY—Peter S. Feibelman's drama“Tiger, Tiger Burning Bright”; MichaelMiller, dir. Thur Oct. Fri & Sat. 8:30;Sun 7:30 Fri & Sat. $2.50; Sun. $2 00Parkway Community House, 500 E. 67th324-3880.HANDS AROUND IN LOVE— A newmusical comedy based on ArthurSchnitzler’s controversial drama. "LaRode.” starring Peter Burnell, PeggyLeRoy, Susan Rae and Joe VoeatNightly 8:30 Fri & Sat. 8:30 & 11: Sun.7:30: Closed Mon. Nightly $2.65; Fri &Sat. $2.95 Theater in the Clouds. AllertonHotel, 701 N. Michigan. SU 7-4200.GAME THEATRE—This resident com¬pany plays Theatre Games. Thesegames, orginated by Viola Selin resultin a truly improvised show which is dif¬ferent each time the Games are plaved.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.Intramural briefsThis is the final week of regularleague touch football, with all-Uchampionship play-downs sched¬uled for the following week.Weigh-in for the November 9 I-Mwrestling will be in Bartlett gymon Friday, November 5, from 10am. to cU>m.The second round of I-M tennistourney is to be completed by No¬vember 3.Fifty-four basketball teams willstart play in the pre-Christmastournament on November 15.Coach Hayden strongly recom¬mends that those planning to runin the Turkey Trot should do someconditioning work.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 DON'T MISS!!CHICAGO STYLE DEBATE“POLYGAMY"TONIGHT 8:30IDA NOYES1212 East 59th StreetTHE WORD FROM THE BIRD:QUALITYThe Max Brook Co.CLEANERS - TAILORS - LAUNDERERShas served the Campus with Unexcelled Qualityand Service Since 19171013-17 East 61st StreetAcross from Burton-Judson Ct. Phones: Ml 3-7447HY 3-6868 Butterfield Blues Album is in!Baez too! Sonhouse on"Tjjr Columbia!FREr SHOPinstrument* — New, Died, AntiquGUITARS, BANJOS, MANDOLINSBooks and Folk Miuic MegtilneeDISCOUNT ON FOLJC RECORDS5210 HARPERC335£oNO 7-106011:30 to 6. 7:30 to 10 Mou.-Fri.11:30 to 6, Saturday HERE! THE NEWTRIUMPH TR-4A!New optional independentrear suspension. New easy-up, easy-down convertibletop. Four forward synchro¬mesh speeds. 110 mph.Rack-and-pinion steering.Disc brakes. Come in soonand test-drive the TR-4A.*2899BOB NELSON MOTORS6136 S. COTTAGE GROVEMl 34500 You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Avo.646-4411HONDASALES a SERVICELAY AWAY ORSPOT DELIVERYALL MODELSINSURANCETIME PAYMENTSBOB NELSON MTRS.6136 S. Cottage GroveMl 3-4500SPECIAL UNTIL NOV. 20th!10% discount on all personalized or imprintedChristmas card orders.Why travel to the Loop when you canchoose your cards in comfort?We carry the largest selection of Christmas cards on theSouth side: religious, traditional, humorous & quaintOPEN EVERYDAY 9-9■' * A Ail’i-MH »HI*A-Consolidated Services8619Vi SO. STONY ISLAND 721-1211ADVERTISING • PRINTING - SECRETARIALMl 3-4045TERRY'S PIZZAFREE STUDENT DELIVERY1518 EAST 63rd STREETMEDIUMlargeEXTRA LARGEGIANTONIONS 10c EXTRA - GREEN PEPPERS or ANCHOVIES 15cMUSHROOMS 20c EXTRA - PEPPERONI 25c EXTRAAlso complete lino of othor foods4 PIZZAS FOR THE PRICE OF 3 EXTRACorduroyImperial • Wide WalePrinted and Plane Pinwale10-9 on Thursdayfabyar 5225 Harper363-2349 uy •VHfm’-".-•> yyt. i&WTV’.ys.MAROON WEEKEND GUIDETO V.. mm ms am mm mCPIZZA PLATTER1508 Hyde Park Blvd.KE 6-6606 KE 6-3891Delivery .25TABLE SERVICEPIZZA AND ITALIAN FOODSANDWICHESVa FRIED CHICKENFRENCH FRIES - COLE SLAWROLL & BUTTER$1.50[ dark ■■■ en • ■■ nil ■* ■■ VV *mm ■■ sfwdoaft ■■ wl* LA oartf ■m • different double ■features deify■ • open deem la dmm im • little gal lery ■m far gals enfy ■■ Fri. 5—"3 forbidden stories","age of infidelity". ■ft■ Sat. 6—''lost world of sinbad",a "Cheyenne autumn". ■Sun. 7—"the dybbuk".• "ordet" (the word)Mon. 8—"eye for an eye". ■"the lowest crime".Tues. 9—"battle hymn","ride a crooked trail".Wed. 10—"the king S. 4 queens* "band of angels".K Thurs. II—"rio bravo".JJ "track of the cat".afafk ft modlsooir 1-2843 Mr. BiggsThe Finest Treat in Casual EatingCOME-IN ANYTIME FOR LUNCH OR DINNER11:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. FRI. to 12:30 A.M.Closed WednesdaysThe Hyde Park Players are performing satirical improvisationsat audience suggestion, styled after TW3.SHOWTIME 11 P.M. TONIGHTreservations: 684-93981440 EAST 57th STREETHARPER THEATRE5238 S. Harper BU 8-1717presentsTHE PAUL TAYLOR DANCE CO.MODERN DANCEN.Y. Herald Trib.: "impressive, absorbing, powerful"TONIGHT THRU SAT. 8:30ENDS SUN., NOV. 10 - 2:30-7:30CHICAGO STYLE DEBATE!PolygamyTONIGHT8:30 P.M.IDA NOYES HALL1212 EAST 59th STREETNICKY'SNICKY'S TAKE-OUT &DELIVERY MENU(Bath, and rizza 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 3.50RIBS1 Slab 2.502 Slabs 4.75[ Free Stui nt DeliveryWITH THIS COUPON CHICKIE IN THE BOX10 Large Pieces 2.5016 Large Pieces 3.7520 Large Pieces 4.75SANDWICHESPlain or BAR BQ Beef 75Meat Ball 65Sausage 65Above Served with Peppers4 Pizzas for thePrice of 3On Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs.In OCTOBER HAMBURGER 50CHEESEBURGER 60BAKED LASAGNE 1.75FA 4-5540 BOOK SALE *2” EachFAMOUS CITIESA distinguished series of photo-studies of themost endlessly fascinating cities of the world.Each 9"xl2" volume is the work of a well-known photographer, each captures the city'sbreathtaking art and architectural wonders,everyday life and special charm.LONDON. Photos by R. S. Magowan. Textby A. P. Herbert. 150 Illus Only 2.98VENICE. Photos by L. Donald & G. Guz-zoni. Text by Michael Redgrave. 150 Illus¬trations Only 2.98DUBLIN AND CORK. Photos by R. S. Ma¬gowan. Text by Kate O'Brien. 150 illustra¬tions Only 2.98OXFORD AND CAMBRIDGE. Photos by R. S.Magowan. Text by Raymond Postgate. 150illus Only 2.98PRAGUE. Photos by Erich Tylinek. Text byF. Kozik. 155 illus Only 2.98VIENNA. 150 photos by Alfred Cermak.Text by W. Staudacher Only 2.98MOSCOW. Photos by Jan Lukas. Text byAlexander Werth. 157 illus Only 2.98MUNICH. Photos by Chris Nowotny. Intro.by Niels von Holst. 125 illus 2.98ATHENS. Photos by Jan Lukas. Intro, byDilys Powell. 140 Illus 2.98The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.Smedley'sHASSteakburgers ... all choice Sirloin 75cChili . . . full of meat & Smedley style....50cHome made Italian Sausage Sandwich 75cCheese BurgerCheddar or American 85cGrilled Cheese - Pumpernickel 50cPotato Pancakes . . . sour cream 50cBasket Smedley French Fries 25cMUCH MORE LATERFriday Luncheon Special - Perch PlatterNov. 5, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • _llBOOKReferencePhilosophyPscphology SportsHistoryPoetry ScienceTravelArt V3 TO V2 OFFAND MORE!AdventureHumorLiteratureA vast variety of books at bargain pricesSale starts Friday, November 5, at 8:00 a.m.ONE WEEK ONLYMany other titles not listed..99c EACH1. THE PROFESSIONAL: LYNDON B. JOHN¬SON. By William S. White. What makesLBJ tick? Pub. at $5.00 Sale .992. THE COMPLETE ESSAYS OF FRANCIS BA¬CON. 59 beloved classics of English lit¬erature and philosophy. Handsome vol¬ume. reproduced from famous limitededition. Pub. at $4.95. Sale .993. WHEN F.D.R. DIED. By Bernard Asbell.Pub. at $4.00 Sale .994. James Gould Cozzens' CHILDREN ANDOTHERS. 17 richly rewarding short storiesby the author of the award-winning ByLove Possessed. Pub. at $5.95. Sale .995. Gavin Maxwell's THE ROCKS REMAIN.Sequel to the highly-acclaimed "Ring ofBright Water." Photos. Pub. at $4.95.Sale .996. Cornelia Otis Skinner's ELEGANT WITSAND GRAND HORIZONTALS. Sparklingpanorama of Paris in the "tres gai" '90's.Many period photographs. Pub. at $5.00.Sale .997 NEGOTIATION FROM STRENGTH: AStudy in the Politics of Power. By CoralBell. Incisive analysis of the failure ofour foreign policy of negotiating fromstrength—a policy now being used inVietnam! Pub. at $4.95 Sale .998. A GUIDE TO CHRISTIAN EUROPE. By C.J. McNaspy, S. J. A unique and selectivehandbook that pinpoints the most import¬ant shrines, cathedrals, castles and arttreasures that make up Western Europe'scultural and spiritual heritage. Pub. at$3.95. Sale .999. Parkinson's Third Law—IN-LAWS ANDOUTLAWS. Prof. C. Northcote Parkinson'snewest excursion into the never-neverland of Every corp. Illus. by Robert C.Osborn. Pub. at $4.00. Sale .9910. The US. and THE COLONIAL RECKON-ING. By Margery Perham. Penetratinganalysis of the anti-colonialism, anti-im¬perialism, and African nationalism thathas developed out of the British Colonialexperience—by a world-renowned au¬thority. Pub. at $3.95. Sale .9911. A History of Husbandry-THE CARE OFTHE EARTH. By Russell Lord. The first ref¬erence and detailed narrative of man'soldest profession—farming. Pub. at $7.50.Sale .9912. SANE SEX LIFE AND SANE SEX LIVING.By H. W. Long, M.D. This classic study ofthe sexual intimacies of marriage is stillwidely held to be the best book on thesubject available. Pub. at $4.00. Sale .9913. The Congo Story-TO KATANGA ANDBACK. By C. C. O'Brien. Irish diplomat'sexciting, eye-witness account of the UN'sactions after the Katanga secession. Pub.at $5.95. Sale .9914. AFRICA'S RED HARVEST: Communism inAfrica. By Pieter Lessing. Startling ac¬count of Russian and Chinese penetrationof the continent. Pub. at $3.95. Sale .9915. PIETY ALONG THE POTOMAC. By Wil¬liam Lee Miller. Highly-partisan accountof the country's political and moral cli¬mate during the Eisenhower years. Pub.at $4.00. Sale .9916. GREAT BRITAIN OR LITTLE ENGLAND?By John Mander. Keen, controversialbook explores Britain's decline from the30's to the 60's, the shocks after “CubaWeek" and exclusion from the CommonMarket, and the meaning of changing at¬titudes towards DeGaulle, Red China, andthe U.S. Pub. at $3.75. Sale .9917. Patrick Dennis' FIRST LADY. Wildest,wackiest, most outrageous spoof of lifein the the Executive Mansion ever writ¬ten. Side-splitting photographs by ChrisAlexander. Pub. at $6.95. Sale .9918. MAN AND HIS BODY. By B. F. Miller,M.D. & Ruth Goode. A basic book on theanatomy, physiology and biology ofman. Profusely illus. Pub. at $5.95.Sale .9919. THE UNIVERSE OF SCIENCE. By Charles-Noel Martin. Popular science writing onthe highest level. Illus. Pub. at $3.95.Sale .9920. Man and The Ice Ages-THE GREATWHITE MANTLE. By David O. Woodbury.Vast drama of the earth's history and thecataclysms of ice which have shaped thecontinents and man's desfiny. Illus. Orig.pub. at $4.95. Sale .9921. RELATIVITY FOR THE MILLION. By Mar¬tin Gardiner. The clearest and best lay¬man s guide to Einstein's four-dimension¬al world. Illus. Orig. pub. at $6.95. $1.49 & $1.98 EACH1. THE ARABS: A Compact History. By Fran¬cesco Gabrieli. Turbulent story of therise of Islam. Illus. Pub. at $4.95.Sale $1.492. FREEDOM FROM FEAR-The Slave andHis Emancipation. By O. A. Sherrard. En¬grossing history of commercial slaveryin the New World and the role of theAfrican slave-trade in the plantation sys¬tems of the Americas and the West In¬dies. Pub. at $3.95 Sale $1.493. ROMAN HELLENISM AND THE NEWTESTAMENT. By Frederick C. Grant. Pub.at $3.95. Sale $1.494. JOHN O'HARA: THE HAT ON THE BED.24 short story classics that demonstrateO'Hara's range, style and power. Pub.at $5.95 Sale $1.985. THE BASIC BOOK OF THE CAT. By Wil¬liam H. A. Carr. Concise guide to fe¬line care and habits. Illus. Pub. at$4.95 Sale $1.986. CREATIVE SELLING. By Charles F. Lohse,Crown-Zellerbach Corp. Illus. Pub. at$4.95. Sale $1.985. A TREASURY OF FAVORITE POEMS. APersonal Selection by Frances ParkinsonKeyes. Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.988. GARDENS. By Miles Hadfield. 134 illus¬trations, 20 in color. A beautiful tour inspace and time through the world'sgreat gardens. Pub. at $4.95. Sale $1.989. THE ILLUSTRATED BOOK OF GARDENPESTS AND DISEASES. Ed. by T. H.Everett. Over 250 photographs andand drawings, 60 in full color. Pub. at$5.00. ~ Sale $1.9810. ON THE EDGE OF THE RIFT: Memoriesof Kenya. By Elspeth Huxley. Vividlyrecreates the virgin, untamed East Afri¬can wilderness of forty years ago—lustysettlers and Kikuyus, the incredibly richand varied animal life and natural won¬ders. Pub. at $5.95. Sale $1.9811. INSIDE VATICAN CITY: THE HOLY SEEAT WORK. By Peter C. Van Lierde. Themost authentic account of the innerworkings of the Vatican organizationever published. Imprimatur. Biblio. andglossary. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.9812. THE ROMANTIC REBELLION. By Eric New¬ton. Perceptive survey of the romanticmovement in the field of fine art overthe past five centuries. Over 50 illus.Pub. at $5.95. Sale $1.9813. RUEBEN FINE'S LESSONS FROM MYGAMES. 246 diagrams. Pub. at $5.00Sale $1.9814. THE TRIAL OF ADOLF EICHMANN - THERECORD. By Lord Russell of Liverpool.Pub. at $5.95. Sale $1.9815. THE GEORGE WASHINGTON PAPERS.Ed. by Frank Donovan. Expert selectionand interpretation of Washington's mostsignificant writings. Illus. Pub. at $5.00.Sale $1.9816. AN AGE OF ENORMITY. By Isaac Rosen-feld. Fwd. by Saul Bellow. An incisiverecord of life in the 40's and $50's bythe talented young essayist and critic.Pub. at $5.00. Sale $1.9817. THE ECONOMISTS OF THE NEW FRON¬TIER. Ed. by B. H. Wilkins & C. B.Friday. Basic selections from the worksof Rostow, Galbraith, Heller, Bell andothers who laid the groundwork forKennedy-Johnson program. Pub. at $5.95.Sale $1.9818. A MAN MUST CHOOSE: The Dilemma ofa Chinese Patriot. By Eric Chou. Theshocking, true story of a young Chi¬nese journalist's four-year ordeal behindthe Bamboo Curtain Pub. at $5.00.Sale $1.9819. THE PRECARIOUS BALANCE: Four Cen¬turies of the European Power Struggle.By Ludwig Dehio. Pub. at $5.95.Sale $1.98$2.98 EACH1. FOLKLORE IN AMERICAN LITERATURE.Ed. by J. T. Flanagan & A. P. Hudson.Over 500 entertaining pages, illustratedwith rare woodcuts. Pub. at $7.75.Sale $2.982. EGYPTIAN MYTHOLOGY. Trans, from thefamous Mythologie Generale Larousse.151 illustrations, 25 in vivid color.8V4"xll". Special Import $2.983. GREEK MYTHOLOGY. By Felix Guirand.Gorgeously illustrated volume with over220 reproductions of Greek vase paint¬ings, classical sculpture, etc., 24 in richcolor. Special $2.98Special .99THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO $2.98 each (continued) $3.98 A up (continued)4. THE LETTERS OF F. SCOTT FITZGERALD.Ed. by Andrew Turnbull. One of themost beautiful, intimate, and nakedlyhonest collections of letters ever pub¬lished. Pub. at $10.00 Sale $2.985. H. G. WELLS: JOURNALISM & PROPH¬ECY 1893-1946. Ed. by W Warren Wag¬er. A superb collection of the essaysand writings of the 20th century's mostperceptive prophet—more than 60 piecesin all. Pub. at $6.95. Sale $2.986. Captain Marryat's A DIARY IN AMERICA.Td. by S. W. Jackman. Famous Englishnovelist's lively account of life in ourpioneer Republic in the 1830's, etc. Pub.at $5.95. Sale $2.987. TIMES OF TRIAL: Great Crises in theAmerican Past. Allan Nevins, Bruce Cat-ton, C. Van Woodward, John KennethGalbraith and other distinguished histor¬ians recreate the dramatic issues andprovocative human factors. 65 contem¬porary illustrations. Pub. at $5 95.Sale $2.988. "The Power & The Glory"—THE TRIPLECROWN. By Valeric Pirie. Classic historyof the bitterly fought Papal Conclavesthat took place between the Renaissanceand the late 19th century. Illus.Special $2.989. SIXTY DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WEST-The Fall of France: 1940. By JacquesBenoist-Mecbin. Monumental study ofthe Wehrmacht's blitzkrieg across thelow countries and France. Maps. Pub. at$7.95 Sale $2.9810.' FRANCE REBORN-The History of the li¬beration. By Robert Aron. Illus. Pub. at$8.50. Sale $2.9811. PICASSO. By Frank Elgar and RobertMaillard. 191 magnificent illustrations,75 in full color. Text in French.Special $2.9812. A NATURAL HISTORY OF NEW YORKCITY. By John Kieran. A book that willopen any city-dweller's eyes to thewealth of natural wonders at his feet.Illustrated by Henry B. Kane. Pub. at$5.75. Sale $2.9813. DIEPPE: The Shame & the Glory. ByTerence Robertson. Dramtic account ofthe terrible debacle suffered by theCanadian commandos as they stormedthe beaches of Hitler's Fortress Europain August. 1942. Illus. Pub. at $6.95.Sale $2.9814. THE WISDOM OF BUDDHISM. Ed. byChristmas Humphreys. A new anthologyof Buddhist writings and scriptures, se¬lected by an outstanding British authori¬ty. Pub. at $4 95. Sale $2.9815. THE JEWISH MIND By Gerald Abrahams.Vital introduction to the rich veins ofJewish law, religion, literature andethics as they have evolved over somethree thousand years. Pub. at $6.00Sale $2.9816. THE CRESCENT AND THE BULL. By ErichZehren. Traces the history of archaeologyin Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the NearEast, from the amateurs of e centuryago to today's scientists who have re¬discovered buried civilizations. 100 illus¬trations of cities, temples, art, clothing,famous excavation sites. Pub. at $6.95.Sale $2.9817. MONT BLANC & THE SEVEN VALLEYS.By Roger Frison-Roche & Pierre Tairraz.Exceptionally beautiful volume illustra¬ted with 170 magnificent gravure photo¬graphs of one of the world's outstand¬ing natural wonders. Pub. at $10.00Sale $2.9818. ROOSEVELT AND HOWE. By Alfred B.Rollins, Jr. Probing story of the vitalrelationship between F.D.R. and his chiefpolitical strategist, Louis McHenry Howe.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $2.9819. SUPPRESSED BOOKS. By Alec Craig.Fwd. by Morris Ernst. Perceptive evalua¬tion of the problems of literary ob¬scenity from medieval times to thepresent. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $2.9820. JOHNSON'S DICTIONARY-A ModernSelection. By E. L. McAdam, Jr. & GeorgeMilne. The essence of Dr. Johnson's won¬derful classic, sure to delight and in¬struct all word-lovers. Pub. at $6.95.Sale $2.98$3.98 & UP1. FIREARMS. By Howard Ricketts. 140 illus¬trations, 29 in color. Boxed. Pub. at$4.95. Sale $3.98 2. THE SEEKERS: GAUGUIN, VAN GOGH,CEZANNE. By Lawrence & Elizabeth Han¬son. Fresh, dramatic account of thebirth of modern art as seen throughthe related lives of the three greatpost-impressionist painters. Illus. Pub at$6.95 Sale $3 983. THE HAREM. By N. M. Penzer. Withoutminimizing the sensational aspects of thesubject, this is the most objective his¬tory of the strange institution that ex¬isted behind the walls of the TurkishGrand Seraglio for over 450 years. Withinterior and exterior photographs of thePalace and many other rare illustra¬tions. Special $3.984. IN QUEST OF THE WHITE GOD. By PierreHonore. Absorbing account of the fabu¬lous Inca, Aztec, Mayan, and other pre-Columbian civilizations—and the mysteri¬ous "White God" myth that is commonto each. 92 outstanding drawings andphotographs. Pub. at $5.95. Sale $3.935. THE NATURAL AND THE SUPERNATURALJEW By Arthur A. Cohen. A brillianthistorical and theological introduction tothe dualism of the Jewish mind and ex¬perience. Pub. at $6.00. Sale $3.986. A WORKING FRIENDSHIP: The Corres¬pondence Between Richard Strauss andHugo von Hofmannsthal. Trans, by H.Hammelmann & E. Osers. Exciting ex¬changes between two great artists asthey created their classic operas. 558pp. Pub. at $10.00. . Sale $3 937. THE AGE OF CHURCHILL: Heritage a IAdventure, 1E74-1911. By Peter de Men¬delssohn. Illus. Pub. at $8.95. Sale $3.988 FREDERIC REMINGTON'S OWN OJT-DOORS. Ed. by Douglas Allen. Withmore than 100 exciting Remingtondrawings, paintings and ohotographs ofoutdoors life. Pub. at $7 50. Sale $3.989. THE MARCH OF MEDICINE. By H. S.Glasscheib, M.D. Dramatic account ofthe conquest of diseases that haveravaged the human race. Illus. Pub. at$6.95. Sale $3 9310. THE NEW LOOK. A Social History ofthe Forties and Fifties in Britain. ByHarry Hopkins. Illus. 512 pp. Pub. at$7.50. Sale $3 9811. HENRY JAMES AND THE JACOBITES. ByMaxwell Geismar. Here is a new viewof the “Master," with some fresh andfascinating conclusions about his ba¬roque temperament, and his role as theliterary symbol and figurehead of ouraffluent society. 463 pp. Pub. at $7.00.Sale $3.9812. BONJOUR PARIS. By Francois Brigneau.92 exquisite full color photographs byEurope's leading photographers.Only $3 9813. NEW ENGLAND DISCOVERY: A PersonalView. Ed. by Nancy Halo. A beautiful,bulging anthology of New Englandthought, tradition, essence. 549 pages,64 illustrations. Pub. at $9.95. Sale $3 9814. Indian Wars of the West—MASSACRESOF THE MOUNTAINS. By J. P. Dunn, Ir.Unexpurgated, documented narrative ofevery major engagement fought be¬tween the white men and the Indiansfrom 1815 to 1875. 669 pages. Illus.Pub. at $6.95. Sale $3.9815. SCIENCE AND SENSIBILITY. By JamesR. Newman. Two-volume collection ofessays on science, philosophy and civili¬zation, by the distinguished Americanscholar. Illus. 2 vols., boxed. Pub. at$10.00. Sale $3.98 the set16. COMPLETE WORKS OF WILLIAM SHAKE¬SPEARE. Ed. by A. H. Bullin, noted Eliza¬bethan scholar. 1,280 pp. Special $5.9517. IN THE BEGINNING: Early Man and HisGods. By H. R. Hays. 575 pp., 64 pp. ofillustrations. Pub. at $10.00. Sale $4.9818. GREAT AGES OF WESTERN PHILOSOPHY.Ed. by Henry D. Aiken, Isaiah Berlin,et al. Monumental collection of keywritings, with introductions and inter¬pretive commentaries. Over 1,200 pages;two volumes in slipcase. Pub. at $15 00.Two-volume set .Sale $7.95.19. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF RUSSIAN & THESOVIET UNION. Ed. by Michael T. Florin-sky. 3,500 articles on every aspect ofRussian life—from medieval timesthrough the Revolution of 1917 and upto the present. 640 double-columnpages, 400 illustrations, 8V2"x 11". Pub-at $23.50. Sale $5.9520. BURL IVES' SONG IN AMERICA. 150 de¬lightful selections, with complete p'ar|°and guitar arrangements. 9"x 11 V2'.slipcase. Pub. at $10.00. Sal* $^®BOOK STORE — 5802 Ellis Ave12 • CHICAGO MAROON • Nov. 5, 1965