Vol. 74-No. 16 The University of Chicago Tuesday, November 9, 196S$10 million given for new libraryThe Joseph and Helen Regenstein Foundation has giventhe University $10,000,000 to make possible the constructionof the new graduate research library.The total cost of the new five-story building, to be calledthe Joseph Regenstein library, will —will be “an unsurpassed monumentto learning.”'Impressed by plans'Mrs. Joseph Regenstein, Sr.,whose late husband was chairmanand president of the Arvey Corpo¬ration and the Velsicol Chemicalcorporation, both located in Chica¬go, said at the press conference:“Our family has been consider¬ing for some period of time an ap¬propriate manner to honor thememory of my husband. Welearned of the University’s drama¬tic campaign for Chicago. We im¬mediately were impressed by themajor component in the Universi¬ty’s development plan—a newgraduate research library."MR. REGENSTEIN was afourth generation Chicagoan and alife-long resident of the city. Al¬ways interested in research, hewas responsible for many innova¬tions in the paper, plastic, and pet-ro-chemical fields. Mr. Regensteinmaintained an intense interest inthe development of the city and itsinstitutions which inured to thebenefit of all of its people. We havedecided that the library would be aparticularly suitable memorial tohim.“We hope that others will sharein our belief that the greater devel¬opment of the University of Chica¬go is vitally important to everyman.”Regenstein, born in 1889, died inbe approximately $18,000,000. Uni¬versity officials expect no troublein raising from government fundsand other sources the amount re¬quired in excess of the Regensteingift.According to Charles U. Daly,UCs vice president for public af¬fairs, “We have the funds in handor in sight to permit constructionjust as soon as the plans are fin¬ished.”The Joseph Regenstein librarywill be situated on Stagg Field,near 57 st. and Ellis ave. The li¬brary was designed by the Chicagoarchitectural firm of Skidmore,Owings and Merrill.Construction of the new librarycannot begin until new athletic fa¬cilities have been built to replaceStagg Field in a four-block areabetween 55 st. and Ellis ave. Butthe University does not expect thisto delay work on the library.THE ANNOUNCEMENT of thegift, one of the largest single con¬tributions in the 74-year history ofthe University, was made thismorning at a news conference atthe Continental Illinois NationalBank and Trust company of Chica¬go.In a statement announcing theRegenstein gift, UC PresidentGeorge Beadle called the library“our primary and most urgentneed.” He said that the buildingChicago-style debate Front view of the Joseph Regenstein library, viewed from 57 st.1957. Last June, Mrs. Regensteinmade a contribution to the Univer¬sity in memory of her husband toestablish the Joseph Regenstein,Sr., professorship of biological andmedical sciences.The Regenstein family has madeother gifts to the University, in¬cluding support for the SoniaShankman Orthogenic School andthe School of Social Service Ad¬ministration. Biggest, most expensiveThe total sum to be expended forthe new library is the greatestever spent for a single building onthe campus of the University ofChicago. The Library—five-storieshigh with a total gross area of 575,-000 square feet—will be the largestbuilding on the campus.The library will have storagespace for 3,000,000 books and peri¬odicals. At present, the UC libraryPolygamy a panacea?by Mike SeidmanTurning momentarily from the more mundane problemsof Vietnam, Woodlawn, and the University Bookstore, UCrtudents viewed a calm, dispassionate debate last Friday onthe prospects of achieving what one participant called “thefamily of all men.”Debating the resolution “Thatthe time tested practice of polyg¬amy should be encouraged in theUnited States” were Karen Halvor-sen and Charles Ledbedder on theaffirmative team, opposed by AvisVidal and Richard LeVarnway de¬bating negative.Miss Halvorsen, beginning thedebate, observed that the affirma¬tive plan held the ultimate solutionto the problems of over-population,the draft, racial equality, divorce,illegitimate children, and prostitu¬tion. Vigorously attacking the"Granny Fricket syndrome,” sheexplained that the sanctity of mar¬riage had created most of theworld’s problems.Unfortunately, Granny Fricketwas unavailable for comment.“If marriage is evil,” said MissHalvorsen, “then two marriageswould be twice as evil. But theway to destroy marriage is to fightit on its own grounds. Why not tat¬too each child at birth in the ap¬propriate place with a sign sayingthat he is married to everybody.”She went on to argue that such astep would destroy the naggingproblems of virginity, courtship,and Granny Fricket. “The oldquestion—would you want yourdaughter to marry one—would nolonger have any relevance,” shesaid.Miss Vidal countered by pointingout that there are already too fewgood men around. Arguing that thelogic of the affirmative plan wouldlead to an over abundance of sex.she commented that “there’s aphallicsy there.”MISS VIDAL ended her speech with an empassioned plea for tra¬dition, Granny Fricket, and littleold ladies everywhere. “Do youwant Ann Landers replaced byGroup Research Incorporated?”she asked. In perhaps the mostheated attack of the evening, sheaccused the affirmative team ofwanting “everyone to lie down onthe job.”Ledbedder began his defense byquoting George Bernard Shaw tothe effect that “any woman wouldbe satisfied with one-tenth of agood man, rather than all of a badone.” Describing the present sys¬tem as a remnant of “nineteenth-century monopolistic capitalism,”he called for a new “sexual social¬ism.”“Let’s give everybody a chance,”he cried, his voice breaking withemotion. “Let’s move from the cultof the other to the cult of all.”SEEKING to regain the emo¬tional initiative, LeVarnwayopened his speech with a stirringcry for “one man—one mistress.”Accusing his opponents of trying tosquander our natural resources, hecategorized the affirmative plan as‘a physical impossibility.”Then, in a dramatic demonstra-iton of his committment to monog-imy, LaVarnway left the hallarm-in-arm with Miss Vidal.Throughout the debate, audienceinterest remained at a feveredpitch, and one observer comment¬ed that Student Government shouldhold a referendum on the subject.SG President Bernie Grofman wasunavailable for comment, but ananonymous source reported thatGranny Fricket really gets around. One of the 260 separate faculty study units planned for theJoseph Regenstein library. system contains 2,400,000 volumesin the William Rainey Harpermemorial library and 24 depart¬mental libraries and readingrooms located around the campus.The Harper library building, themain service unit, was completedin 1912.THE STAGG FIELD locationwas chosen to make the library’sfacilities central to the entire cam¬pus. The library will be immedi¬ately adjacent to the Quadrangleclassrooms and academic offices tothe south of the building and stu¬dent residential quarters to thenorth.Around-the-clock for profsThe new library building willhave a seating capacity of 2,400. Italso will include 260 separate studyunits which will be assigned to fac¬ulty members. These study unitswill be available to faculty mem¬bers around the clock each day.Five areas for special academicstudies will he arranged in the newbuilding. These areas will servescholars interested in business, ec¬onomics, geography, and maps; lan¬guages and literature, history, an¬thropology, political science andsociology, education and psycholo¬gy; Near Eastern studies and phil¬osophy; and Far Eastern studies.Electronic gadgetryThe Joseph Regenstein libraryalso will include provisions formodern electronic systems de¬signed to improve the access ofscholars to recorded knowledgeand information, such as:• Direct input from the libraryeither to the University’s main(Continued on page two)//Forecast of only 5000 in HPHS aids “education park;'UC sociologist stresses quality of education in Unity planOnly 4500 to 5000 high school students will have to be accommodated in Hyde Park andWoodlawn in the coming years, not 6000, according to corrected projections of popula¬tion by a UC sociologist.ROBERT L. CRAIN, assistantprofessor of sociology, saidSaturday that the estimates hegave last spring of future highschool age population in District 14contained an error, since it includ¬ed in the figures for the districtstudents who are now being sent toSouth Shore high school.TWO ELEMENTARY schools inthe South Shore area, Parkside andO’Keefe, formerly sent children onto Hyde Park high school, but wereswitched to South Shore HS lastspring.There are now 4255 students offi¬cially enrolled at HPHS, which wasbuilt to accomodate about 2500.CRAIN REVEALED the new es¬timate at the fifth annual Wood-1 a w n Community Roundtable,sponsored by the Woodlawn Com¬munity Services Agency (WCSA),held in the UC school of socialservice administration.The conference also discussed urban renewal plans, and healthfacilities in Woo-dlawn.Smaller parkThe new high school populationestimate will enable to proposed“secondary educational park” tobe smaller than the originallyplanned 6000 students, according toJ. Alan Thomas, assistant profes¬sor in the UC department of educa¬tion who drafted the “park” plan.It had called for four semi-auton¬omous “houses” of 1500 studentseach, sharing central facilities forspecialized programs.Thomas said the plan was neverlimited to only the estimated sizeof 6,000, which some school boardmembers feel is too large.CRAIN, WHO was first speakeron the high school panel, comment¬ed that there is really very littleinformation available generally onactual conditions at HPHS. “Noone has ever thought to ask thestudents there what they think of conditions,” he remarked.The discussion of numbers andracial percentages has obscuredthe more important issue of thequality of education at the school,Crain continued. The Unity organi¬zation, which has pushed for the“education park” plan, has “cutthrough this mess” and put its em¬phasis on quality, Crain said.Integration not a numberHe stressed that it is misleadingto talk about integration in termsof numbers. “Integration is not anumber,” he said, commmentingthat many people had unfortunate¬ly taken some arbitrary measuresof integration contained in theHauser report as “gospel.” Thelevel of ten percent white in amostly-Negro school is not a“Magic line,” he said.CRAIN WAS an associate in tharesearch for the Hauser report onde facto segregation in the Chicago(Continued on page two)Computers to b* usedElectronic systems planned for library Crain: human relations integration keySpecial collections room of the Joseph Regenstein library.ar whose sources must be drawnfrom many different subjects canwork with extraordinary efficiency.The tradition of the University ininter-disciplinary studies makesthe establishment of such a librarya milestone in the intellectual de¬velopment of this University.”Campaign gets boostThe Regenstein gift for the li¬brary came only 20 days after theUniversity had announced a three-year campaign to raise $160,000,000—the largest goal ever set by anAmerican university for such a pe¬riod.It also was announced at thattime that the Ford Foundation hasawarded UC its maximum educa¬tional grant—$25,000,000. The grantto the University must be matchedwith three dollars in private fundsfor every one dollar provided bythe Ford Foundation.The first contribution to the newlibrary program was a gift of $500,-000 made in December, 1963, bythe Harriet Pullman SchermerhornCharitable Trust.(Continued from page one)computer center, or to a librarycomputer, or both.• Floor conduits for easy andfelxible computer console and dis¬play connections at various pointsin the building.• PROVISION FOR the futureinstallation of teaching machines,closed circuit television, and otherinformation-handling devices.• High speed book-paging serv-ices, and photo-copying and micro¬text reading facilities.• Provision for a book-carryingpneumatic tube to link the libraryWith one or more future compon¬ents of the University’s librarysystem, making the resources ofone rapidly available to another.HERMAN H. FU3SLER, directorof the library system, said thatthe new' library “will provide theUniversity with a truly distin¬guished facility”.“In the new building, collectionswill be arranged so both the schol¬ar working intensively in a con¬centrated subject field and a schol-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 (Continued from page one)schools, conducted by UC sociologyprofessor Philip M. Hauser.“Integration” must be discussedin terms of non-discrimination andgood human relations, not num¬bers, Crain stressed.Vice principal praises HPHSDiscussing the high school situa¬tion in District 14 was also CharlesMe Carthy, assistant principal incharge of program at HPHS.He began his remarks by saying,“I feel that Hyde Park high schoolis the finest high school in theUnited States.”HE CITED such programs as anadvanced math curriculum whichallows top students to take asmuch as 5^ years of math; courseofferings in five foreign languages;advanced placement courses; re¬medial reading for students twoor more years behind in English;and the “distributive education”program which gives students ex¬perience in retailing by placingthem in part-time jobs.In this discussion session afterMcCarthy’s talk, he was closelyquestioned for about 45 minutes.When asked what provisions aremade for students in the lowertracks (ability levels) of the pro¬gram, McCarthy mentioned thatmost teachers instruct classes onseveral levels, and that there were1,067 shifts of tracks last June(though some students shiftedtracks in more than one area).OTHER HIGHLIGHTS of the“Roundtable” program, u'hichlasted from 10 am to about 4 pm,included:• CHALLENGE from Rev. Ar¬thur M. Brazier, a chairman of theWoodlawn Citizens committee onurban renewal, that some “visibleaction” be taken soon in clearingthe buildings on the proposed ur¬ban renewal area around 60thstreet and Cottage Grove avenue,and reply from Lewis W. Hill,chairman of the Chicago depart¬ment of urban renewal DUR, thatthis will be done.Early acquisitionHill said that the week beforelast, the DUR sent a request to thefederal urban renewal agency, ask¬ing permission to go ahead withacquiring land for the proposedtown-house and commercial devel¬ opment around 60th and Cottage,even before all the steps have beencompleted in approving the wholeprogram.This “early acquisition” will notinclude land in the South Campusarea, to be bought and developedby UC for campus expansion. Hillsaid he hoped acquisition couldstart January, but warned thereare many steps which cannot berushed through.Conferees agreed Woodlawn cit¬izens must have wide participationin planning programs of rehabilita¬tion for the area.• ENDORSEMENT by theRoundtable participants, who rep¬resented many Woodlawn groups,of the University’s proposal for anexperimental research school, forwhich funds have been requestedfrom the US office of education.Julian Levi, UC professor of ur¬ ban studies and UC’i chief lobbyistin Washington, stressed the impor¬tance of finding new ways of meet¬ing the problems of students in ur¬ban schools, through such a re¬search facility as UC has proposed.In the Roundtable luncheon ad¬dress, Levi asserted, . . convan-tional techniques, even accompan¬ied by great increases in budgetsand costs, cannot suffice.”City and school administratorsmust “break barriers of profes¬sional specialization,” and theschool program “must reach be¬yond the primary pupil to his com-nuinity and family,” Levi stressed.• DEMAND BY the participant*for a “comprehensive health cen¬ter” for Woodlawn, after hearingfifth ward alderman Leon M.Despres attach the adequate serv¬ices available to meet every-dayhealth needs.Calendar of EventsTuesday, November 9MOVIE: "Shadow of a Doubt.’’ Hitch¬cock, 7:15 and 9:15 pm, Social Science122Wednesday, November 10LECTURE: “People. Technology, andthe Future,” speaker Ralph Helstein,president. United Packinglvou.se Work¬ers of America AFL-CIO, sponsored bythe Graduate School of Business, 1 pm,Business East 103.MEETING: Pre-med Club. Dr. WrightAdams, professor of medicine and asso¬ciate dean, division of biologicalsciences, will speak on “Aspects of In¬ternal Medicine. 7:30 pm. Billings M-137. refreshments.MEETING: Jazz Society. 7:30 pm. Rey¬nolds Club loungeSYMPOSIUM: “Community Action inWoodlawn,” participants Rev. LynwardStevenson, president of TWO. Mrs Al-mita Woods, executive director of Wood¬lawn Community Services Agency,Mrs. Richard Durham, chairman.SWAP coordinating committee, B pm.Hillel House. 5715 Woodlawn.DANCING: Country. Dancers. 8 pm.Ida Noyes Hall, please bring tennisshoes.WUCB: “Students Government Re¬ports,” Bernie Grofman. president ofSG. Rusti Woods, vice president of SG,discuss the previous week’s happeningsin Student Government, 9:30 pm.Thursday, November 11WUCG: “Of Reeds and Things,” thisweek featuring Friedrich ChristianBach's Bassoon Concerto and Handel’sRoyal Fireworks Suite, 7 pm.LECTURE: “On Higher Miseducation.”speaker Paul Goodman, reserved tick¬ets $2, general admission $1, 8 pm. In¬ternational House, mail checks to Dem¬ocratic Socialist Club, 6056 S. IngiesideAvenue.op- Jp ApDLook ARoVffDABOiiy fiVERyTHWg...Books • Books Sporting Goods Social and andTypewriters Commercial Greeting CardsPapers for Every NeedWoodworth's Bookstore1311 EAST 57th ST.OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK u SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT //NOWIIPHILLIPS JEWELRY COMPANY"50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS"67 E. Madison Room 1101 DE 2-6508Campus Representative: E. GLASGOW — Ext. 3265 or 752-4367 MEETING: “Recursion via Anti-Recur-sion,” presentation of original work byBrian Schmidt, to the Lobachevski So¬ciety, 8 pm. Eckhart 209.WUCB: “Alderman Despres Report.;,”comments on the workings of city gov¬ernment by the fifth ward’s representa¬tive, 8 pm.UC Ski Club organizedA strong and growing interest inskiing has led to the organizationof a UC Ski Club, according to clubpresident Henry Bennett.Intended to co-ordinate all cam¬pus ski activities, the club plansvacation trips to the Rockies, aswell as Friday evening tours to skiareas in the Midwest.In addition, several club mem¬bers are planning a trip to JacksonHole, Wyoming, during the secondweek of Christmas vacation. Otherplans include weekday trips to rel¬atively uncrowded Midwestern re¬sorts.A meeting of all persons interest¬ed will be held in late Novemberor early December. Consult theMaroon and the campus bulletinboards for announcements, or forfurther information call club secre¬tary Irving Wladawsky, ext. 4146on campus, or Bennett at MI 3-3676.Int. House celebrationA candlelight ceremony andtea will be given by the Chi¬cago Chapter of InternationalHouse Association Sunday at3 pm to celebrate InternationalHouse Association Day.This day is celebrated annuallyto commemorate the nationalfounding of International HouseAssociation on November 10, 1946in New York city.Y«’ Gotta Have Hope!Miles & Miles of HOPE ...Something wonderful happenswhen you join Bob in hislatest road discovery.Travel with him on everyHiLAMOiJS step of the wayhe led over 70.000,000television viewers on thetwice repeated network (MBC)showing of his memorablejunket of joy for our boysin Vietnam. Recorded duringactual performances at US.Military bases in Vietnam,Thailand, Korea, etc. 11018 CCADET LP4046% There’* m World of Excitement on CARET Record*(Chats Prod. Corp , Chicago, Illinois 60616)1 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 9# 1965Berkeley analysis — part IIBerkeley's chancellor Haynes seeks to harness “will of renewal”Collegiate Press Service{The following is the second of a two-part analysis of the situation atBerkeley written by H. Neil Berkson, general secretary of the UnitedStates Student Press Association. Part one, published in Friday’s Ma¬roon, dealt with the switch by Berkeley student activists from demon¬strating for free speech to protesting the war in Vietnam.)BERKELEY, Calif. — “The best thing about this univer¬sity is that it alienates so many people.”“There is no place in the United States more exciting thanthis campus; there is no place or institution offering morevaried experiences; there is noth- —ing like Berkeley.”“Few Berkeley students will re¬member their alma mater withfond romantic images becauseBerkeley is not that kind ofschool.”When Roger Heyns left theacademic affairs vice-presidencvat the University of Michigan thissummer to become Berkeley’schancellor, the above attitudes arewhat he let himself in for. Heyns,who has turned downed several of¬fers of presidencies in the past fewyears (including, it is rumored, theFord Foundation), came becausehe believed he could get thingsdone. Whether he can or not re¬mains to be seen.HEYNS has not had the usual“grace” period accorded a new of¬ficial. Some of his actions have al¬ready created a stir. Among them:• He has brought in four facultymembers to serve as his top aides,three of whom were active sup¬porters of the FSM last year.• He has issued one new set ofstudent activity regulation"—theold regulations set off last year’s demonstrations. After some initialcriticisms, no one has shown muchconcern with the rules, even whenHeyns has enforced unpopular as¬pects of them. By and large, theyhave not inhibited campus activity.Students, faculty and administra¬tion at Berkeley all seem to havean obsession with rules which mustseem rather strange to Heyns,coming from relatively rule-lessAnn Arbor. He is in the process ofhaving yet more rules—a “final”set—drawn up by a student-facul¬ty-administration committee.• He has offered an appoint¬ment to Eli Katz, a German pro¬fessor fired by Heyn’s predecessorEdward Strong for refusing to dis¬cuss his political activities. Katzhad been strongly recommendedfor tenure by his department, andhis firing caused a controversy.• He has moved firmly to asserthis control of the Berkeley campusvis a vis the statewide universityadministration. Observers say thatuntil this year University of Cali¬fornia President Clark Kerr, aformer Berkeley chancellor, ac¬Law students to run national conferenceThe legal rights of people Conference Planning Committee,with low incomes who buy on said -their interest in credit abusedeveloped while doing research oncredit will be the subject of a the subject during a class assign-two-day national conference ment.sponsored by students at the UCLaw school Friday and Saturday.The conference, entitled “Con¬sumer Credit and the Poor,” willbe held in the auditorium of thelaw school, till East 60th street.Among the 200 persons expectedto participate are businessmenwith a stake in credit reform, at¬torneys who handle bankruptcycases and wage assignments, gov¬ernment officials concerned withcorrecting credit abuses, and edu¬cators who must consider the so¬cial factors involved in credit mis- tually made most of the campusdecisions.Some of last year’s FSM leadersare nevertheless suspicious ofHeyns.Beyond that problem, the majorquestion remains how much of agrasp can he get on this sprawlinginstitution where the problemsrange from undergraduate educa¬tion to the handling of millions ofdollars of research money. Here ishis own perspective of his institu¬tion, given in a speech to the stu¬dent body in September:“These characteristics of Berk¬eley today—the energy, the plural¬ism, and the will to renewal—arealready opening new perspectives.One of the reasons for the crisisin higher education generally hasbeen the discrepancy between thenature of new knowledge and theneeds of new students. The ad¬vancement of learning has de¬manded even more intensive spe¬cialization. But the new genrationof students have sought for a formof learing with clearer relevanceto their personal lives and theproblems of modern society. Ouruniversity has become the classicfocus of this tension by virtue ofour very strengths. Berkeley’sgreatest assets have been the schol¬arly power of its faculty and thevitality and ability of its students. . . Our character as a universitydepends on integrating our two as¬sets in a reawakened sense thatwe are a community of learning.”Heyns has yet to enunciate hisgoals more clearly, however.Morever, he has stated that hethinks Berkeley can become largerthan it already is.BUT THE UNIVERSITY isseeking change at both the extra¬curricular and curricular levels.One of Heyn’s new assistants, phi¬losophy professor John Searle,wants to give students completeWinter AccessoriesWinter weather approaches and we are ready for it withscarves, mufflers, ear muffs, ski head bands, caps, glovesand mittens.A wide assortment of warm fabrics andattractive colors for men and women.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE. authority over their lives outsidethe classroom. Searle, one of thestrongest FSM supporters amongthe faculty last year, declaredupon his appointment: “To me thisis a case of put up or shut up. Ihave been critical of some of theuniversity’s procedures in the past,and this appointment gives me theopportunity to make suggestions. . .necessary to make the universityrun more effectively.”Searle is working on a ten-mem¬ber committee (five students andfour faculty besides himself) todraw up the final rules. He is alsosupporting a constitutional conven¬tion for the Berkeley student gov¬ernment which would revise itsrole in campus affairs.Not interestedIn spite of the issues raised lastyear, Searle is not surprised at thefailure of the Free Student Unionto maintain its momentum. He at¬tributes part of this to the Vietnamissue, but claims that “more im¬portant, students just aren’t inter¬ested in academic reform. Theyhave vague complaints about thesystem, but they don’t really knowhow to change it.”HE BELIEVES that this is prop¬erly a faculy concern and that“students now think the facultywill do the things.” A faculty sen¬ate select committee on education¬al policy is now conducting hear¬ings on a variety of issues. Lastweek one of its members proposedabolishment of the grading system.Educational experimentation isgoing on in many departments.One of the most exciting programsis known as the “Tussman plan.”Instituted this semester under thedirection of philosophy professorJoseph Tussman, the plan involves150 freshmen who will go throughtwo years of a “non-course with 48credits.” They will study one sub¬ject a semester over the next fourterms. Beginning with why the Greek civilization destroyed itself,they will subsequently examine17th century England, the launch¬ing of the American experiment,and “a current American problemof real magnitude” which has yetto be decided.Normal loadEach student will be able to takeone course per semester outsidethe plan. This will give him an av¬erage course load and, combinedwith the Tussman program, willallow him to fulfill all universityrequirements.Surprisingly, FSM and FSU lead¬er Bettina Aptheker partiallyagrees with Searle about studentinterest in academic issues. Sheadds, however, that students havea particular point of view whichcannot be duplicated by faculty.“Only students know their griev¬ances,” she says.MISS APTHEKER further be¬lieves that the dormant FSU willagain become an important forcein university affairs. “Movementsgo in waves,” she explains.The Berkeley campus is not soeasily dismissed. Problems rangefrom the Vietnam Day Commit¬tee’s inability to get a permit tomarch into Oakland to the CampusSexual Freedom Forum’s (motto:“If it moves, fondle it.”) inabilityto find a bank where it can do bus¬iness. Most students have fewclasses of less than 500, but alucky 150 will get the exclusive at¬tention of five tutors for the nexttwo years.The institution is much healthier,much more dynamic than many ofits critics realize. Many studentsmay not learn in the classroom,but they learn quite a bit outside.“Obstacles abound and failure iseasy.” the Daily Californian wrotein its welcoming editorial, “but no¬where else is there opportunity forso much success.”This is the first time in the histo¬ry of the law school of the Univer¬sity that students have conceivedand organized a major nationalconference.The students, who formed aFOTAMeeting tonight!7:30 P.M.Ida Noyes Library Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospital HARPER THEATRE5238 S. Harper BU 8-1717presentsTHE ROBERT JOFFREY DANCE CO.-BALLET-Copenhasen Mews: "The audience went wild"TONIGHT THRU SAT. 8:30ENDS SUN., NOV. 10 - 2:30-7:30TAhSAM-N&NCHINESE . AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing isCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. MU 4-1062PIZZA PLATTER1508 Hyde Park Blvd.KE 6-6606 KE 6-3891Delivery .25TABLE SERVICEPIZZA AND ITALIAN FOODSANDWICHESVa FRIED CHICKENFRENCH FRIES - COLE SLAWROLL l BUTTER$1.50Vietnam ProtestMARCH ON WASHINGTONNOV. 27i Charter bus tickets availableat sds literature tables or RonTabor Snell 24 BRITISH SCIENTISTSSenior scientists from Imperial Chemical Industries Limited,England, will be visiting the Campus on . . .Tuesday, Wednesday, 16th, 17th NovemberThey wish to meet graduates in any scientific discipline fromBritain or the British Commonwealth who would like todiscuss careers with I.C.I. in the United Kingdom. Recent ar¬rivals, as well as those who are considering the possibilityof returning to Britain, are invited to get in touch with themthrough:Mr. L. 5. CalvinCareer Counseling ansi Placemen5706 S. University Avenue TOBROWSEIN OURQUALITYPAPERBACKBOOKDEPARTMENTWOODWORTH'S BOOKSTORE1311 East 57th StreetOpen Seven days a weekNovember 9, 1965 • CK ff:II?t■M1 Lipsch to succeed Woods as SPAC head Blake at CTSt. .The Student Political ActionCommittee (SPAC) elected JerryLipsch chairman for the comingyear, at its caucus Sunday night.Lipsch, a second year student inthe College, was elected by accla¬mation to succeed outgoing chair¬man Rusti Woods.The caucus also appointed aSteering committee to formulateSPAC policy. Its members are JeffBlum, Howie Gutfield, Peter Na-gourney, Joan Phillips, Karen Phil¬lips, Tom Smucker, and RustiWoods. JOE LUBENOW, a second yeargraduate student in the humanitiesdivision, was chosen to fill theSPAC vacancy in the Student Gov¬ernment assembly. The vacancywas created by the resignation ofRobert Hamburger. Lubenow’s ap¬pointment must be approved bySG’s executive committee.The caucus also voted to activelysupport “The Living Newspaper”,a series of faculty symposia whichwill provide information from theforeign press on Vietnam. Christian unity stressedClassified AdsPersonalsWriters workshop (PLaza 2-8377)fs~[T TRUE that C. Newman has re¬cently been named official Universityphilosopher????feichard & John: It was especially to at¬tract men all the way from 5400 Green¬wood that we spent all day Sundaymaking cookies for tonight’s BlackstoneCoffee Hour. F.F.PARTY to support the Washingtonpeach march. Fri, Nov. 12 at 4850 Kim-bark. Help send people to Washington.LIVE MUSIC-ENTERTAINMENT TA-COS.Chuck Berry & Little Richard tonite at7:00 on WUCB*‘Volkfestspiel”. Fri. Nov. 12, 7:15 pm.$810 Woodlawn.'Bring songs & strings.Allan: A special Lucifer will be fed deli¬cious coconut macaroons if he comes totonight’s Blackstone Coffee Hour. G. W. Girl will share your apt. in Hyde Park.CaU RE 1-0315CAP AND GOWN, the UC yearbookneeds an advertising manager. Interest-ed? Contact C & G office, 3rd floor IdaNoyes, weekdays 3-5 pm ext. 3598Fern, wanted for Doctors office withknowledge of typing full or part-time.Call 723-1009.Typing. Complete, good, steno service493-6882 eves & weekends.Woman with daughter 9 wants to sharebeaut, new apt. priv. rm. bath 493-6882eves. & weekends.Waiters Quadrangle Club Hrs 5 pm-8:30pm Call Dora x3696Typist exper. reas. HY 3-2438.LEAF RAKING, Wall washing, floors,inside windows. JOBS FOR TEENS,SUPERVISED. BU 8-8343. Mon-Sat.Furnished apts. for rentNancy: Thanks for8181. wonderful weekMarcusWantedGrad, student capable of writing exten¬sively on the learning process wanted.Nat’l distr. generous advance & royaltyarrangement. Call DI 8-4800 ext. 628betw 7-9 pm Mon-Fri. 7761 So. Shore Dr.2 Ige. rms. kit. util. incl. $22.00 1 rm kit.util. incl. $18.00For saleCo-op apt. for sale 14th floor overlook¬ing lake 6 rooms, 2 baths, beautifullycarpeted and decorated must be seen tobe appreciated. Must sell. Call 752-0973ifty-Seventh at KenwoodUNUSUAL FOODDELIGHTFU LATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICESNew Books by Campus AuthorsForms of Extremity in the Modern Novel:Kafka, Hemmingway, Camus, GreeneEdited by Nathan A. Scott, Jr. $1.00Four Ways of Modern Poetry:Stevens, Frost, Thomas, AudenEdited by Nathan A. Scott, Jr. $1.00Man in the Modern TheatreEliot, O'Neill, Brecht, BeckettEdited by Nathan A. Scott, Jr. $1.00BARGAIN BOOK SALEContinues Through Thursday, November nThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.You’re under 25but you drive like an expert.Why should you have to payextra for your car insurance?Sentry says you maynot have to. A simplequestionnaire could saveyou up to $50 or more.Call the Sentry manfor fast facts.Jim Crane8124 Woodlawn Ave.374-0350SENTRY ITINSURANCECHICAGO MAROON • November 9, 1965 "The church needs a sharper focus of what its missionis, both in the nation and in the world,” was the basic messageof Rev. Eugene Carson Blake, stated clerk of the United Pres¬byterian church, who spoke Thursday at the All-Seminarynight of the Chicago TheologicalSeminary. The church is a Biblical conceptBlake is the author of proposals implying a gathering of people,which have brought about the cur- an(j denominations have “norent conversations concerning the theological basis whatever”, Blakepossibility of uniting six major sajd. An emphasis on denomina-Protestant bodies in the United tions therefore, tends to distort ourStates: Christian, Evangelical understanding of the gospel.United Brethren, Methodist, Prot- Mutual enrichmentestant Episcopal, United Church Secondly, “a united church im-of Christ, and United Presbyterian. p]jes neither uniformity, ecclesias-CTS President Howard Schom- ^jcaj capitulation, nor theologicaler, in introducing Blake, termed dilution, but, rather- seeks to be ahim a spokesman for American unjon 0f mutual enrichment.” TheT) n rtfi r. w» U TJmin d b i f nnn , , , . • . ,cleavages which do exist, Blakefeels, do not follow denominationallines, but cut across them.He proposed that the various de-Protestantism.” He cited his con¬tribution to “keeping worldwideChristian fellowship alive.”Blake’s talk centered around theadvantages and implications of a nominations stop negotiating andunited church of the Evangelical,Catholic, and Reform denomina- ask together what the gospel andthe church equally are, and whattions. He pointed out the “amaz- js done to fulfill their man-ingly broad consensus on what the datechurch essentially is”, and regret- THIRDLY, A United Churchted the “widespread reluctance” of does not imply a diversion of de-the church commmunity to draw nominations. It may be, instead,practical conclusions from thisconsensus.'Weak in witness'The 1965 US church is “weak inits witness to the gospel of JesusChrist”, Blake noted. It is irrele¬vant to the major concerns of mostpeople.” And, further, it is “muteor muffled in its call to follow Je¬sus Christ in individual and socialpursuits.”The current councils of thechurch are not a sufficient meansof achieving unity of action to con¬front these problems.BLAKE WENT on to set forththe implications which the notionof a united church would have.First, he explained, the “produc¬tion of a united church is not,essentially, an organizational mat¬ter”. God’s way of enabling the fulfill¬ment of an economically, socially,ethnically, and racially unitedbody. The elements of planned unionare due to be completed by thetime of a conference to be heldnext May in Dallas. A plan willthen be written, which will, Blakehopes, create a chance for thechurch “to be truly obedient to Je¬sus Christ in our time and place.”“TO SEEK church union and toseek a renewal of church mission”are not separable; Blake stressed;one “cannot fully do one withoutthe other.”Reverend Blake obtained hisA.B. and his Th.B. at Princeton,lie also did graduate work at NewCollege in Edinburgh, Scotland. Hehas been awarded many honorarydegrees at universities throughoutthe country, and, last year, wasawarded for his leadership in thecause of interracial justice andgood will by the Catholic Interra¬cial council of the archdiocese ofChicago.AT PRESENT, he is chairman ofthe commission on religion andrace for the National Council ofchurches, chairman of the divisionof Inter-Church Aid, Refugee andWorld Service of the World Councilof Churches and a member of theNational Advisory council for the“War on Poverty.”Goodman talk—"Higher Miseducation //Paul Goodman, noted socialcritic and educator, will speakon "Higher Miseducation” atInternational House Thursdaynight.Goodman is a sociologist andcity planner (Communitas, UtopianEssays and Practical Proposals),a social and literary critic (Grow¬ing Up Absurd, The Structure ofLiterature), a novelist (The Em-SPECIAL 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 9-9A-Consolidated Services8619Va SO. STONY ISLANDADVERTISING - PRINTING - SECRETARIAL 721-1211 pire City, Making Do), a poet, aneducator (The Community of Schol¬ars), and a frequent contributoron numerous subjects to a host ofmagazines and periodicals such asCommentary, Harper's, Dissent,and Partisan Review. He is pres¬ently associate editor of Libera¬tion.Goodman served on the facultyof UC between 1939 and 1940 whileworking on his PHD. which he re¬ceived in 1954, with a dissertationentitled “The Structure of Litera¬ture.”Goodman has described himselfas “a man of letters in the oldsense, one w’ho thinks that the lit¬erary process itself, the criticismof life, adds a new indispenableelement.” He calls himeelf anarchist and agrees with much ofMarx and Freud.Seats to the lecture, which startsat 8 pm, may be reserved fromthe Democratic Socialist Club, 6056Ingleside, under whose sponsorshipGoodman will speak. Reservedseat tickets are $2: general admis¬sion at the door is $1.UNIVERSITY THEATRE— presents —The ELECTRAofSOPHOCLESDirected by James O'ReillyLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM60th and University Ave.NOVEMBER 18. 19, 20, 21TICKETS ON SALE AT REYNOLDS CLUB DESK BOB NELS0H MOTORSImport CentreComplete Repair*And ServiceFar Ad Popular Import*Midway 3-45016052 So. Cottage GroveCOME JOIN USOur weekly services consist of• readings from the Bible and Science andHealth with Key to the Scriptures• remarks by congregation• hymn singingChristian Science Organization at U. of (.Tuesdays at 7:15 p.m.Thorndike Hilton Chapel, 58th and University 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