1966 lecture seriesPlan urban studies talksVol. 74-No. 19 The University of ChicagoComputer-age library seen Eminent metropolitan and national figures will be oncampus during the months January through May, 1966, todiscuss cities’ problems on race, politics, urbanization, andculture in a series of lectures sponsored by the center forurban studies. —Although the series coincides City,” February 25. Glazer is a pro-Friday, November 19, 1965 with the 75th anniversary celebra- fessor at the University of Cali-qon 0f tjie founding of the Univer- fornia at Berkeley.sity, Jack Meltzer, director of the ~ n ,, .. _Tcenter tor urban studies, said that Dame P' Moy"‘han' “The Negroit originated “mainly from the im- Family, March 11. Moynihan, for-portance to the center of having mer Assistant Secretary of Labor,such a series.” is author of the Moynihan reportThe new Joseph Regenstein graduate research library will feature a wide variety of A major function of the lectures, on the breakdown of the Negroequipment, some of it not yet fully developed, designed to increase efficiency of library added Meltzer, is “to give students family in America.operations and availability of materials, according to Herman H. Fussier, director of the mVe^and^talkwith th^Sinctive Hon- JosePh s- Clark, “New Ur-University library system.Fussier said that construction isscheduled to begin in late summeror early fall of 1966. The librarywill be ready for use between Sep¬tember 15, 1968, and January 1,1969.A maze of electronic gadgetryand communications devices thatcould set a precedent for librariesof the future are planned for thenew library. Fussier emphasized,however, that realization of someof these plans will be dependent onthe progress of computer technolo¬gy and the availability of funds.PERHAPS the most intriguingaspect of the whole library is thecomputer system being planned. kind of people who will be speak- banism: Fiscal, Environmental,ing. Aside from this, they will give and Political Aspects,” March 14.the speakers themselves an oppor- dark, former mayor of Philadel-funity to think through problems , . , . _ .which profoundly effect cities gen- ph,a- ‘s a senator fromerally.” vania.All the lectures, and the lunch- Whitney Young, “Desegregation:eons and seminars which will What Impact on the Urbanfollow them, are scheduled for the Scene?” April 11. Young is direc-mornings and early afternoons of ior of the National Urban League,the days they are given. This, ac-cording to Meltzer, should giveFront of the Joseph Regenstein library, looking north from 57 $t. series, the topics, and the sched¬uled dates are:August Ileckscher, “The City:brary. These information handling of reserve books are among the Art and Technology,” January 20.According to Fussier, there will be systems include: situations the computer would han- Heckscher served as advisor toa small computer system installed # parge electronic storage sys- die. Machine readable identifica- President Kennedy on art and cul-m the new library that will be tcms of pertinent library data. tion cards and machine readable tural affairs..TV., u.p U1 rea.1 ^ eX1S Book orders, serial orders, catalog- charge cards would be used by the Hon. Richard J. Daley, Januarynivvisuy compu ~r sys cm. jng jnformaqon on new books, and machines to store pertinent infor- (title and date to be announced).We will be using these ma- invoicing records could all be mation on circulation and circula- Daley is mayor of the city of Chi-chines for repetitive jobs formerly stored within the system. “From tion records. cago.done by people, fussier said, f^e ordering of the books to their (Continued on page four) Nathan“We are developing plans so that getting on the shelf, the computerwe will be able to adjust to COuld take care of many proce-changcs should more or bigger (jures now done manually,” Fus-computers be needed.” sler Glazer, “Race in theCommittee on student Woodlawn housingviews student migration beyond MidwayThree UC faculty members, in collaboration with the com¬munity relations committee of Student Government, announc¬ed plans this week for the formation of an ad hoc committeeto investigate the possibility of helping students move intohousing in Woodlawn.The purpose of the committee, fall.The local Democratic party controls all federal programs according to a student spokesman, Students asking the committee toFussier pointed out three possi- • Library circulation problems,ble applications of a computer sys- Procedures related to withdrawaltern being considered for the li- and return of books and handlingDespres hits city’s Dems Jcmes Farmer, national di¬rector of the Congress ofRacial Equality (CORE), willspeak on "Prognosis of aRevolution" Monday in Man-del Hall at 8:30 pm as aguest of Student Government(SG).The address will be thefirst in the William B. Ogdenmsmorial leclure series ini¬tiated by SG to commemoratethe University's 75th anni¬versary.A founder of CORE, Far¬mer has pioneered in the de.velopment of nonviolent tac¬tics in the civil rights move-ment.Tickets for the lecture arepriced at 50c for students and75c for nonstudents. Theymay be obtained from theSG office, second floor, IdaNoyes Hall.David Owen, “Urbanization in. ,,, . ... _ ~ , . is to make the student migration find housing for them would be the Developing World,” April 13.in ( hicago, said Alderman Leon Despres at a seminar spoil- from Hyde Park to Woodlawn, screened with the aim of finding Owen is head of technical assist-sored by the UC Friends of SNCC Tuesday night. which is already underway on a those who would best contribute to ance at the United Nations.fairly large scale, more organized, creating a spirit of community. .. M .Despres, speaking at Ida Noyes Hall, said that Chicago is The eventual aim, the spokesman James Vice, director of student Martin :leyerson, pn-; ay ( i-....... „ said, would be the “reintegration housing and assistant dean of stu- and date to be announced).controlled by Mayor Daleys Dem- _are- ^organized nartv of Woodlawn” and good relations dents, said that the reintegration of Meyerson, former professor at Chi-ocratic party machine. Daley’s po- llley aIe- we gan ed p y with current Woodlawn residents. Woodlawn along the lines that the ca=° and Harvard, is dean of thesition, Despres said, is Mayor of machincry in the Negro wards, THE COMMITTEE, headed by committee proposes “would defi- school of environmental design atJ tight control of patronage, and professor of geophysical sciences nitely be a good thing.” He added er 2 ey'careful, clever use of the Demo- Joseph Smith, professor psycholo- that he would “even be happy to Terry Sanford, “The Cities andcratic party label. gy David Bakan, and assistant pro- work with it myself.” the States: The Unfinished Agen-fessor of humanities Herman Sinai- The committee, which has been da,” May (date to be announced).These methods, Despres said, woui(i find available apart- meeting informally for lunch once Sanford, former governor of Northhave assured solid electoral sup- ments in Woodlawn during the a week, will hold its first formal Carolina, is head of the Ford foun-port from the Negro community, summer and would hold them for meeting this Tuesday. Details will dation study at Duke University on“As a result Daley has been able students when they returned in the appear in Tuesday’s Maroon . the role of state governments.Leon M. Despresi . m. e .Chicago, but his job is Democraticparty chairman. His primary con¬cern is to win the next election;to do this he must preserve theparty and its power.THE MEN in city politics,Despres said, feel that politics is abusiness and that they are in it forthe same reason men are in anybusiness, personal gain. “Their bus¬iness,” Despres said, “is winningelections, that is what they’re paidfor, that is what they get their jobsfor, and that, and that alone, iswhat keeping their jobs dependsupon. The party is a parasitic pa¬tronage albatross.”Control Negro voteThey win elections, Despres de¬clared, by controlling enough mi¬nority group votes to make a ma¬jority. Typical, according toDespres, is the Negro vote. TheNegro ve'e is controlled by a com¬bination of factors, Despres said. to make concessions to the whitesegregationists, primarily inschools and housing, and therebyobtain their support, too, ” he said.Despres said that this politicalcontrol has been possible becausethe important business and finan¬cial interests in Chicago are satis¬fied with the way things are and,tacitly at least, support Daley.“Business is good, the downtownbusiness district is in good physicalcondition, good expressways to thesuburbs have been built, and forthese reasons the monied interestsare happy with Daley,” he said.Despres indicated that the UCtrustees, for example, have a mu¬tually understood, though unwrit¬ten, agreement with Daley that aslong as he goes along with the Uni¬versity’s urban renewal plans theywill not bother him in other majormatters.DESPRES SAID it may appearthat the machine’s modus operandiis not particularly farsighted, butthat the politicians feel that theywon the last election by thesemeans, that they will win the nextone in the same way, and that theywill worry about the following onewhen it comes around.Despres turned to the machine’sdealings with the federal govern¬ment. These begin with Daley’s al¬most total control of the IllinoisDemocratic delegation in theHouse of Representatives and tothe national Democratic conven- No housing gain from resaleby Eve HochwaldThe Lutheran Theological Seminary has sold one of theapartment buildings that it obtained last year with Univer¬sity help to the Dominican Fathers of St. Albert the Great.The building will become headquarters of the Priory Press,publishers of textbooks and theo¬logical works and the quarterlytheological magazine Cross andCrown .Tenants of 1163 E. 54th Placewere notified in June that theywould be unable to renew theirleases after October 1. Since thenleases have been extended on amonth-to-month basis. Of the sixapartments in the building, onlyfive are now occupied, all by UCfaculty or students.One of them, Mrs. Sylvia Glas-gov, wife of a member of the de¬partment of pathology, comment¬ed, “Given the extreme shortage offaculty and student housing, itseems most unfortunate that thisbuilding was not sold back to theUniversity.”"THIS BUILDING has servicedthe University for many years,especially the faculty members bounded by Jimmy’s, 55 st., Wood¬lawn, and University. This blockwas the first choice of the Luth¬eran Theological Seminary as thesite for their new seminary, butthey were prevented from buyingTheological Seminary has soldAlbert the Great.one old-time Hyde Parker.According to William Stoll of Mc-who have lived here. The quality Key and Poague, 1163 E. 54thof the apartments for Hyde Park is pjace “was the only building avail-marvelous; it’s not as if they had abie to the Dominicans, and it istrouble finding tenants,” she said. the onjy one they own.” The rest ofNone of the building residents the houses owned by the Lutheranwho consulted the University real- Theological Seminary in that blockty office (Administration 301) will be used for their own facultyfound them very helpful. “They housing.were very kind, but it seems The building is part of the block to the Dominican Fathers of St.(Continued on page five) there’s nothing to be had,” said as much property as they needed : j&M. i • • ,<s?, *•. -1to build there by the formation of aneighborhood block club.THE SEMINARY will soon bebuilt directly west of this block, onthe almost leveled site of 55 st.,54th Place, University, Greenwood.Construction will begin in thespring on a new Lutheran churchat the southeast corner of 55 st.and University, opposite PierceTower.(Continued on page five)Living newspaper fuzzy;leftist distortion criticisedTO THE EDITOR:Mr. Jesse Lemisch and his“cause of the week” have beenparading across the pages of sev¬eral recent issues of the Maroon. Ido not dispute Mr. Lemisch’s rightto deport himself as king of theliberals, but the point has beenreached when common sense is re¬volted and the mind shudders inagony.First, Mr. Lemisch announcedhis “living newspaper”, which hepretended would be totally un¬biased. Only the facts would bepresented. Strangely (or not sostrangely), the proposed topics fordiscussion in this newspaper indi¬cated a good deal of bias. Cansymposia entitled “distortion in thepress this week” and “news fromthe not-so-free world” be impar¬tial?Perhaps Mr. Lemisch selects onlythose “facts” that suit him.The first of these “living news¬papers” was a triumph of thesame narrow-mindedness whichthe left often assigns to its oppo¬nents. Where did Lemisch get his“fact” that all Vietcong death sta¬tistics are multiplied by two?From the leftist press? Obviously,only the statement of a high gov¬ernment official can be acceptedas valid. Any other source mustrely upon conjecture.Further, no one denies that theVietnam war is inhuman, but tocondemn our policy on this basis isa complete skirting of all politicalissues with a singular fuzzy-mind-edness. Such political fuzzy-mind-edness gave us Munich and theslaughter of World War II.The anti-war forces even wish toplace an exhibit of their art inWoodward Commons. Theirs is notthe only opinion on campus, yetthey wish to subject everyone totheir barrage, even in the Univer¬sity commons rooms! Perhaps the“benighted” students (to use Mr.Lemisch’s term) respect each oth¬ers opinions.Finally, Naomi Wcisstein provedthat Mr. Lemisch had no monopolyon irrationality. She stated that 20CIA men were screened out of thePeace Corps volunteers. How?CIA files are certainly not open toPeace Corps “screeners”, so itwould be impossible to identifyCIA agents. Also, if a man wererejected as a suspected CIA agent,would he admit to being one?Hardly! What is the source forMiss Weisstein’s statement?In the future, I trust that the“living newspaper” will pay moreattention to its facts.PHILIP M. GI.RALDIUS statistics don't lie;2:1 is how the VC dieTO THE EDITOR:Of Vietnamese government forces,144 were killed during the week ortwice as many as the Americandead. Two months ago one Ameri¬can was dying to every four Viet¬namese. The Vietcong dead wereestimated at 536, giving alliedforces a 2.5 kill radio in their fa¬vor.—Chicago Sun-Times,November 11, 1965With All Thy MightThe mathematician has taken hisaspirin and silently put out hislight;he’s tallied the action to full satis-WANTED TO BUYGood Books & PaperbacksRudolph van TellingenBooksellerHarper Court HY 3-57875225 So. Harper2 • CHICAGO MAR faction and found we’re stillwinning the fight.Though two months ago he neverwould throw the ratio of Viet¬namese deadto Americans gunned at that high—two to one! he’s sure that westill are ahead.He thinks of confessin’ he sees aprogression in this sum ofAmericans killed—but he knows we are pourin’ moremen the war in, and concludesthat he ought to keep still:and for each native trusty who’sbiting the dust he can find onlyhalf a GI;and seventy to one-four-four is notjust twice but a little bit more—ain’t it grand that statisticsdon’t lie!Two more months, however, islong: he’ll be clever and lookat the toll of Viet Cong:no pacifist pamby possibly can bedismayed when he sees it solong.For these are not our boys, they’reRed Chinese farm boys thathate all the freedom we love;that beautiful ratio proves it’s agreat show' for patria, Mother,and our God above!The mathematician in search ofprecision saw that five thirtysix was a guess;and yet in his heart he knows, onour part, ’twas reliable, true,more or less.But he wondered if VC’s were sav¬ing their corpses and strewingthem over each paddy;each “extra” stiff gave our sidefigures in favor wide of peace,home for Christmas, andvict’ry.Thus he tallied statistics of SouthAsian fisticuffs but thought, ashe put out the light.“There are more things, Horatio”than an allied kill ratio; is ittrue that we fight the goodfight?SARA C. IIESLEPMarch on Washingtonwill rally war protestorsTO THE EDITOR;Long before the recent Interna¬tional Days of Protest, a group ofleaders of the peace movementcalled for a “March on WashingtonI Chicago Maroon |EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Daniel HertzbergBUSINESS MANAGER Edward GlasgowMANAGING EDITOR Dinah EsralNEWS EDITOR David SalterASSISTANTS TO THE EDITORSharon GoldmanJoan PhillipsDavid L. AikenCOPY EDITOR Eve HochwaldCULTURE EDITOR Jamie Beth GaleEDITOR, CHICAGO LITERARY REVIEWDavid RichterASSOCIATE EDITOR, CHICAGOLITERARY REVIEW Rick PollackMUSIC EDITOR . Peter RabinowitzASSOCIATE MUSIC EDITOR Ed ChlkofskyPOLITICAL EDITOR Bruce FreedEDITOR EMERITUS Robert F. LeveyPHOTOGRAPHERS: Dick Ganz, Steve Wofsy,Bern Meyers.STAFF: David Gumpert, Marc PoKempner,Tom Heagy, Michael Nemeroff, Paul Satter,Paul Burstein, Ellis Levin, Jeff Kuta, CarolChave, Pat Buckley, Mike Seidman, CraigReller, Susan Kirchmyer, Mahonrl Young,Karen Edwards, Bob Hertz, Steve Grant,Monica Raymond, Ken Simonson, NancySteakley, Judy Van Herik, David Ranson,John Beal, Slade Lander, Bonnie Holz, MarcRosen, Dov Dublin.Charter member of US Student PressAssociation, publishers of CollegiatePress Service.MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBlood Typing & Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICIComplete lab. EKG t BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM • 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3-2*Q00 0 N • November I9# 1963 for Peace in Vietnam” on Novem¬ber 27. Few of the younger peoplein the movement thought such ademonstration would be meaning¬ful in light of the ineffectiveness ofthe April march. But our perspec¬tive has changed. Perhaps, in asense, the April march was a suc¬cess in continuing an atmosphereof restraint against further escala¬tion of the war; but the primarychange came after October 15 and16.On the Days of Protest the peacemovement measured itself andfound itself tall; across the coun¬try, tens of thousands said “stop!”to the President. One does not say“stop” to a paranoid presidentwith impunity; the administrationreaction was swift and threatening.Because the peace movement isnow the victim of an attempt tolimit civil liberties “because weare at war,” because more Viet¬namese and Americans are dyingeach week and we are told we can¬not question our nation’s actions—the youth who are opposed to thewar are rallying behind the No¬vember 27 event and will add ourvoices to the outcry that will rep¬resent America’s conscience to ourcapital and to the world.We realize that this is a bad timefor a demonstration. But it isthere: like all events, its effect willbe measured only by its size—andour presence will make it bigger.Those who oppose the war and thedomestic hypocrisy that it gener¬ates must make every effort toclear their desks and attend.Bus tickets, for $25, may be pur¬chased at the SDS literature tablesor from Ron Tabor (Snell 22) ormyself (5400 Greenwood, 684-3786)until Tuesday November 23. Wewould like the names of peoplewho cannot afford the ticket price,also, in case we receive subsidiesfrom outside contributors. To quotethe Chicago March Committee: it’syour move now.BRENT H. KRAMERNo slur on free expressionto refuse anti-war exhibitTO THE EDITORProfessor Lemisch expressed theopinion in last tuesday’s Maroonthat, “If a small group of studentsare to reject an art exhibit on thegrounds that it might be propagan¬da, they had best be prepared tokeep their peace when the librari-and tells them they may not read acertain book because she thinks itmight be propaganda.”Mr. Lemisch’s analogy is whollyinappropriate.First of all, the exhibit is consis¬tently referred to as “the anti-Viet¬nam art exhibit.” The title in itselfindicates that the exhibit expressesa certain point of view concerningthe controversial topic of Americanpolicy in Vietnam. Furthermore,unless I misinterpret him, Mr.Lemisch is upset about the refusalto display the exhibit not so muchbecause artistic expression is beingcensored but rather because hefeels that his right to free expres¬sion is being abridged.Woodward Court is a residencehall; it is the home of perhapsfive-hundred people whether theyfind it charming or not. Just asMr. Lemisch would have the rightto refuse to let pro-war persons be¬deck his house and car with theirslogans, it is within reason that the residents of Woodward Court havethe right to choose what opinions,if any, will be displayed and seem¬ingly endorsed by them.It is not the abridgement of freeexpression to defend your ownright of free expression from theintrusions of others.JAY KNOXHutchinson Commons seenas centra! Student UnionTO THE EDITOR:The University’s proposed pro¬gram of expansion promises tomake UC an even finer institution.However, in anticipating the devel¬opment of new facilities, we shouldnot neglect optimal use of existingones.A student union could counteractfragmentation on this campus.This fragmentation will increasewith coming peripheral expansion,but there are no immediate plansto build a union. The need is now.We do have a currently unusedfacility that could largely fulfillthis need. Hutchinson Commons,located near Mandel Hall next tothe C-shop, is more central thanany other building that could pre¬sently be used. It would serve tointegrate students from insulardorms and scattered apartments.In addition, it would create an in¬formal atmosphere in which facul¬ty and students might commingle.The Commons has been used as astudent dining room in years past;there’s no reason why it couldn’treassume this capacity in additionto serving as a meeting place be¬ tween meals and in the evenings.Present plans call for the re¬modeling of the Commons for theMusic Department. With the Com¬mons’ original function therebydestroyed, further constructionwould be needed anyhow. And withsuch extensive expansion in theoffing, it seems wasteful to shuntthe Music Department into an in¬appropriate building.We therefore urge the Adminis¬tration to reopen Hutchinson Com¬mons for student-faculty use assoon as possible.CONCERNED STUDENTSAttacks forced retirement;men still active at age 65TO THE EDITOR:Next June the school of medicinewill lose two of its most eminentfaculty members. Both these menare distinguished in research; bothare excellent teachers, and bothare popular among the students.Yet they will be denied their placeon the faculty because they will be65 years old and forced to retire.Mandatory retirement has nottroubled the medical school alone,of course; the same problem hasarisen in every department of theUniversity, and each year somedistinguished faculty member isrequired to leave because of ananachronistic rule.(Continued on page six)News MuseBlackout re-enacts Bibleby Bruce F. FreedThe American experience is nowcomplete.Thanks to Con Ed and the powerinterests, the American people atlast have undergone the Genesiscreation of the world in the recentgreat Northeast power failure.While the script wasn’t repro¬duced literally, it bore manymarked resemblances.According to the Bible’s KingJames version, “In the beginningGod created the heaven and theearth. And the earth was withoutform, and void; and darkness wasupon the face of the deep. And thespirit of God moved upon the faceof the waters. And God said, Letthere be light; and there waslight. . . . And the evening and themorning were the first day.”EONS AFTER God’s productionand three and a half centuries af¬ter the publication of the KingJames Bible, Con Ed has had thegall to attempt to recreate this di¬vine act.Nothing is sacred in this modernage of super-secularization. Themovie magnates have broughtheavenly experiences onto thescreen. But the electric companiesoutdid them by finally making reli¬gion a living experience.America’s historical developmenthas been unique. Historians havespent pages and years provingthat. And some have even tried todepict this nation’s citizens as thechosen people.But when someone feels it’s hisduty to make us feel chosen, that’sanother story.Sit back, close your eyes andfantasy, imagine the ingenuity thatwent into the blackout’s produc¬tion. Precision timing was essential.So was the element of surprise.After all, since the world’s creationwas an act of God, so must be itsrecreation.SELECTING a clear, cool, mid¬ week evening for that moment wasvital for the maximum impact.Planes flying over the northeastmust experience the sudden black¬ness. And beleagured motoristscrawling through rush-hour trafficmust feel its total effect. Man thesinner must suffer.Since the “true” cause of the fail¬ure has not been divined yet, wemust surmise that it was due to aMr. X acting under supernaturalorders. For within minutes after hepulled the switch or waved hiswand, the Eastern Establishmentwas in the dark.Just as the Bible said, “darknesswas upon the face of the deep.”And darkness it was, especially inNew York, Boston, and other com¬ponents of the Atlantic seaboardmegalopolis.For those who have doubted theBible’s explanation of the creationin favor of modern science’s, theabsolute truth was revealed.But the worst revelation comingfrom this whole episode was thatthe power companies impress oneas almost believing that lastweek’s blackout was of divine in¬spiration.THEY SAY they don’t know howand why it happened. And, theycontinue, it could happen again. Ina word, they admit their fate isguided by some higher being.However, the blackout has a lar¬ger meaning. If Con Ed and its fel¬low power producers consider theirfailures to be divinely instead ofhumanly inspired, shouldn’t somemid-twentieth century men try tointroduce some rationality into ourfragile complex of society?Is it necessary that Con Edshould say again, “Let there belight”?The American experience hasbeen unique enough without itbeing necessary for the powercompanies to harken back to theBible.RANDELLBEAUTY AND COSMETIC SALON5700 HARPER AVENUE PA 4-2007Air-Conditioning — Open Evenings — Billie Trogonzo, ManageressStrength in unity?HPHS controversy ragesby David L. AikenEfforts are continuing in the attempt to reach a compromise between supporters ofdifferent plans for high school facilities in th2 Hyde Park-Woodlawn district, but not every¬body thinks they have a chance of success.After deferring the matter again at its November 10 meeting, the Chicago school boardmay consider the problem this — —Wednesday. 1970. no single formula to insure inte-One side wants the present site CLEMENT SAID the Universi- gration, the district boundaryof Hyde Park high school, 62nd ty’s proposed experimental second- changes and an adequate programstreet and Stony Island avenue, to ard school, which would be built in the school could result in abe used for an “educational park’’ under a federal education research 25 percent white attendance,of small semi-autonomous program, would accommodate at Before the vote on the Janowitz“houses” joined with common fa- least 300 students from Woodlawn. motion was taken, school boardcilities into a comprehensive school About half the experimental member Clement asked to speakfor students from both Hyde Park- school’s student body will be lower- on the question of enrollment fig-Kenwood and Woodlawn. This plan class Negroes from Woodlawn, un- ures, but was denied the oppor-is supported by the “Unity organi- der the University’s proposal. unity. It was explained that onlyzation” of several community Clement said if the experimental present members of the boardschool were expanded, it could would be heard.SIDE, supported take up an extra 200 Woodlwanstudents.Some action could be taken togroups.THE OTHERby the Hyde Park-Kenwood Comm unity Conference (HPKCC),wants a separate school in Hyde encourage more Woodlawn stu Meeting undemocraticThis brought charges fromGeorge Benston, assistant profes-Park. The site of the present Ken- dents to attend Chicago Vocational r’or.m the UC 0raduate school ofwood elementary school at 51st High School instead of Hyde Park, busin(jss and a Unity supporter,street and Lake Park avenue, has Clement said. Urban renewal and that the meeting was run undemo-been proposed. school building plans for Woodlawn craT*lca \Meeting unsuccessful should reduce the neighborhood’s He was countered by Marks, whoAt a meeting of both sides Mon- overcrowded population by tearing commented that Clement is one of.. . . • • tk a H J nf tViA r»r aV\! a m ntirlday night, efforts to find common down more buildings, he suggest-ground between the two proposals ed, resulting in even fewer highwere unsuccessful. school students in five years.Unity supporters would not ac- Size a problemcept a school of smaller than four Clement’s doubts about an “edu- the “deciders” of the problem, andhis “participation in forming ourposition would not have been wel¬come.” He said the final outcomeof the vote would not have beenthousand, and HPKCC representa- cational park” at the present Hyde changed if Clement had spoken, al-tives would not accept a school for Park site have been based on prob- though one member of the boardboth Hyde Park and Woodlawn. lems of size. Older population pro- did reportedly change his vote inTuesday evening, however, a jections had forecast 6 thousand anger at Clement’s silencing,split on the board of directors on students, who would all have been The school situation was furtherthe HPKCC on a vote to approve accommodated in one place under clouded Wednesday, when an edito-the Kenwood site was interpreted the Unity plan. The new size would rial was published in the Hydeby some as an indication that still Clement's objections, he has Park Herald, accusing the Univer-many people in Hyde Park do not said. sity administration of “deliberatelyinsist on a separate school, even Meanwhile, strong doubt that an and callously double-crossing boththough the HPKCC has consistently acceptable compromise is possible groups (HPKCC and Unity) andpushed for one. came from F. Raymond Marks, trying to prevent either plan fromThe vote on the Kenwood site chairman of the HPKCC schools happening.”was a 13-13 tie. It was broken in committee. THE UNIVERSITY'S “plan” toMarks insisted that the primary prevent either a separate school orconsideration is the location of the education park is based on its de¬school, and that he and the HPKCC sjre mafce sure it gets the feder-ALTHOUGH THESE two events hold to the position that there must aj government’s approval for thedid not change the organization’s be a separate school in Hyde Park, experimental school, the editorialposition, two other efforts at reach- This is the only way to assure a aneged.ing a solution agreeable to all are “viably integrated” school with at Tt narnpj “hatrhpt mpn”-in the works. least 25 percent white students, whois UCprofeslr of• Julian H. Levi, director of the Marks said, since there is a limit- urban affairs as well as director ofSouth Fast Chicago Commission ed number of white families in the the SECC and Charles v Daly(SECC), announced that he and the Hyde Park-Woodlawn area. ■ nrpsidpnf nt nnblic affairscommission’s board of directors The Unity organization has ^ daclined Pcomment, otherarc working on a set of proposals argued that if a school for tne en- (han to mention he had framed thefor action on the high school situa- tire district were made goodtion which might be accepted by enough, white parents would haveno objections to sending their chilfavor of the Kenwood site by theconference chairman, John H. Bal¬lard.both sides.Levi, who chaired the Monday dren there, and integration wouldnight meeting of the two sides, be no problem. „ u.»u h.it hsaid these proposals will be trans- MARKS SAID that, in view of V. > as the ”erald had p"ntededitorial and hung it in his officenext to five other Herald editorials.Daly also had no comment, ex¬cept that his middle initial is notmitted to officials of the organiza- the differences in these positions, A University spokesman did,tions concerned by this afternoon, the only solution is for the school say ^at u BrV?e Sa&an>They will be released to the public board to decide between them. Published ol the Hera a (an aMonday, giving the organizations a “You can’t have a consensus on all stron8 supporter of the plan for asometimes have to separate school) had three timesweekend to respond issues—youLevi declined any comment on have an outside decider,” Marks within the past week threatenedthe situation at present.• James C. Clement, a schoolboard member who lives in Hyde said. Daly that unless the Universityceased what Sagan considered toopposition to the separateProposal narrowly defeatedAt the HPKCC board meeting be .Park, told the Maroon he is work- Tuesday night, a resolution calling school, he would write an editorialing on the possibility of a high for a new school just north of the that would ^blast jhe^ University^school for district 14 (the Hyde present Hyde Park high school andPark-Woodlawn district) that renovation of the present building,would accommodate only 3,500 stu- plus a reduction of the district’sdents in 1970.Hyde Park overcrowed and cost its fund raising campaign‘millions of dollars.’ ”THE SPOKESMAN said he hadsize by chopping off some small n0 idea whether Daly plans to takepart of Woodlawn. legal action in the matter, al-The present Hyde Park high The vote was eleven in favor, 14 though there are grounds to doschool, built for about 2200 stu- against. The motion was made by so.” Daly would not comment ondents, is now squeezing in 4255. Morris Janowitz, UC professor of this matter, either.Clement based his hope on re- sociology who is a member of the The spokesman also indicatedvised population projections HPKCC board. there is no fear in the administra-worked out by Robert L. Crain, as- JANOWITZ'S MOTION also call- tion that the federal governmentsistant professor in the UC depart- ed for co-ordination of the propos- will not approve its experimentalment of sociology. Crain estimated ed public school with the Univer- school and grant the funds, or thatthere will be about 4850 high sity’s experimental school. Jano- the editorial will have any effectschool students in the district in witz said that while there can be on fund-raising. Socialist idealism askedThe “new radicals” must get over their “non-ideologica!hang-up,” said Hal Draper, who presented himself as a“socialist of the older generation,” as a talk sponsored byStudents for a Democratic Society Sunday night.Draper is author of Berkeley: —*The New Student Revolt, and marked. “Left opposition” is inher-chairman of the Independent So- ently revolutionary, since it rejectscialist committee. the “established” channels of“Politics abhors an ideological change. But SDS also insists onvacuum,” Draper declared. Those keeping itself a “broad” move-young persons on the “new left” ment, attracting people with awho want to avoid haggling over wide range of special interests cov-ideological issues cannot avoid this an!?POPeaCe' c/vd ^^bts, poveity,b and campus reform,law,” he asserted.Rather, they should try to devel- To*° "confe. the,ir diI™-,, ma, SDS has been trying to pursueop a program which would serve a “collisionless course” by devot-as a “democratic alternative” to ing most of its political action tototalitarian Communism, and a community action projects in poor“revolutionary alternative” to the areas of Northern cities. Draperstatus quo in the US. said he does not believe these haveTHE “NEW RADICALS" are worked, because “the poor cannotself-consciously amorphous in their be organized as the poor.”several organizations, Draper said. SDS HAS also been trying toTheir other most important deny the importance of the ques-characteristics are: tion of their relation with Com-• They feel there is something munists. This is a mistake, Draperdrastically wrong with society but said. “You can’t cop out on thedon’t quite know what; question of Communism,” he• They are activists, and concen- warned,trate on concrete issues; .......They talk in terms of moral . He cited the experience of social-choices when they discuss political *& s in s ai^d 40 s, whenissues’ Communists were known in the• They have an aversion to ideo- teftist groups as “the biggestlogical systems. *irdfS ,in, ./.*e C0Vntry- To gam,, ,. , „ . respectability during the period of. These n_ew radicals say, This tbe “p0pu]ar front” 0f the 30’s,is wrong; it must stop ; but when Communists even co-operated withthey get into questions of how they management Jn throwing him andknow it’s wrong, and what should other militant ]abor orgaenizers out^ df°m tQf Tw \ Z 3re of shipyards and factories, Draperthe field of ideology, Draper com- recaHedmented.SDS chooses tactics .UlUT! r,fdlfa's” mus* st0I>As the foremost example of the "/“ i gw l at history. Draper“non-ideologieal new left,” Draper fl ° Jh ,L1,\e. fey ,can. tarntook his hosts SDS In the last °f radlcal move’year or so, he said, they havechosen between the two possible“operating approaches” availableto them.They have chosen the tactic of“left opposition,” working outsidethe power structure, or “liberal es¬tablishment” which links the laborunions, liberals, and the Democrat-ic party in the North. , Tabata, president of the Uni-„ ty Movement of South Africa, will.. TaEY#HA*uE rejected PC™163* speak on “The Struggle for Libera-L0n A thA P?weri tion in South Afrioa” tonight in thethrough the liberal establishment, Ida N s cloist(,r club at , »a tactic advocated by such persons xhe h is spomored b stJen,as Michael Harrington, chief of the GovernmentLeague for Industrial Democracy(LID). Tabata is on a tour of the UnitedUntil about a month ago, SDS states sponsored by the Alexanderoperated under the organizational Pefcnse Committee, which is rais-sponsorship of LID. When they inS funds for the defense of Nevilleseparated, the joint announcement Alexander and other victims of po-explained that SDS wanted to go ^ical persecution in South Africa,into fields of activity in politics Tabata has devoted his life to thewhich the tax-exempt LID could struggle for freedom in South Afri-not legally sponsor. ca. In the early thirtees he joinedThe underlying cause of the di- the African Voter’s association,vorce, however, was opposition of which was fighting for universalthe LID’s leaders to the anti estab- sufferage in Africa. During thelishment plans of SDS, Draper Second World War he was a lead-said. ing figure in the non-EuropeanTHE LID, Draper remarked, Tnity Movement of South Africa“wants to be the court socialist in whose program called for full dem-the palace of power.” Tom Cons, ocratlc nShts for a!1 Africans re-its executive secretary, said he godless of race,wants to make the Democratic Jn 1955 the Verwoerd regimeparty * the political instrument of piaced Tabata under a five yearthe poor, the civil rights move- confinement to Cape Town for hisment, and the peace movement, anti-apartheid activities. Upon hisDraper said. This is likely of reiease he resumed his organiza-realization provided Mary Poppins ti0nal activities and two years la-joins the LID, he quipped. ter had to flee the country in orderRevolution or breadth? to avoid arrest and imprisonment.The program of SDS puts them He now heads the Unity Movementin a dilemma, however, he re- in exile at Lusaka, Zambia.Exile speaks tonight- African liberationUNIVERSITY THEATRE— presents —The ELECTRAofSOPHOCLESDirected by James O'ReillyLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM60th and University Ave.TICKETS ON SALE AT REYNOLDS CLUB DESK NOVEMBER192021Faculty members protest US reactionagainst October student demonstrationsNinety-nine faculty members, including some of UC’sbiggest names, have signed a statement expressing deepconcern over attempts to intimidate students who stronglyquestion official Vietnam policy.The statement calls the tradition-al American tolerance of dissent a formulated and circulated by Da-source of strength and says that vid Bakan, professor of psycholo-the anti-war protests “are general- gy, Wayne C. Booth, dean of thety based on integrity and genuine College, Richard Flacks, assistantconviction. professor of sociology, Milton Ro-“As teachers of these young peo- senberg, assistant professor of psy-ple,” the statement concludes, “we chology, and Robert Adams, pro-have striven to teach them the fessor of anthropology and directormeaning of freedom. We cannot of the Oriental Institute,easily disassociate ourselves from Commenting on the statement ofthem when, on an issue deeply concern, Dean Booth said, ‘ Wemeaningful to them and to our- were prompted not by one particu-ueives as well, they are moved to lar incident but rather by theexercise their fundamental free- threat of investigations of groupsdoms under the Constitution of the and individual loyalty. This cre-United States.” ated a general climate of misunder-The faculty statement was first standing.” U S views campus unrestWASHINGTON (CPS)—The tumblings of student unrest and the unprecedented pre¬occupation of educators with the student havs penetrated even the stolid bureaucracy ofthe US Office of Education.Two proposals are currently making the rounds of the USOE's Division of HigherEducation Research: a series ofs t u d e n t-faculty- administration ^r* ^rno Jewett, the officer in Conferences plannedconferences to improve the curric- charSe of the curriculum branch of Jewett foresees a total of sixulum of colleges and universities the Division of Higher Education conferences, beginning this Feb-uium of colleges ana universities ruary and continuing into nextand a national conference on the Kesearcn anti tne cmei amocate or year> in different areas of thgrole of the student. curriculum conferences, admits country. Each of tho conferencesThe first of these proposals is at that the conferences could become would include five to ten studentsa more advanced stage of planning ™uch broader than simply discus- among its 60 participants andAnd, being less controversisl than sions of curriculum innovations. would focus on specific types of in-a national conference on the stu- “There’s a connection between stitutions:dent, more likely to be approved. the causes of student unrest and • Junior colleges. Attention hereTHE PURPOSE of the curricu- the curriculum of an institution, would probably be directed towardlum conferences would be dissemi- between student feelings about an the development of junior collegesnate information about innovations impersonalized education and the into community schools, servingand reforms that are taking place kind of instruction received,” he the needs of the entire community,in higher education and to stimu- said. (Continued on page seven)late proposals for research proj¬ects in the area of curriculum de¬velopment which the Office of Edu¬cation could Finance. Calendar of EventsIBM—card catalogue of the future?(Continued from page one)• Storage of bibliographic infor¬mation. Fussier emphasized thatthis type of system is more in thefuture than the previous two possi¬bilities. It would involve storage inthe computer memory of biblio¬graphic information to which thereWould be access through a type¬writer console system and, later atelevision system.Fussier pointed out that the cardcatalog system, as it now stands,will Bot be discarded until the new¬er systems have been perfectedand tested and retrospective rec¬ords can be converted to machinereadable form.INITIALLY, the records on newbooks will be stored in the com¬puters and, as funds permit, therecords for older books will be con¬verted for storage in the computer.In converting the present card cat¬alog system to computers, Fussiersaid, “There are difficult intellec¬tual and technical problems in¬volved in accomplishing this, con¬ trary to much popular belief that itis an accomplished procedure.”Teaching machines possibleOn the subject of teaching ma¬chines, Fussier said that an elab¬orate underfloor duct system willbe installed in the Regenstein li¬brary, primarily to connect cardcatalog consoles to the computer.This duct system could then beused to connect teaching machines,should the University wish to in¬stall such devices, he said.In addition, a pneumatic tubesystem, developed on a much moresophisticated and flexible basisthan the one in the present library,will be installed. Within the JosephRegenstein library will be a pneu¬matic tube system and book con¬veyer system serving all majorareas and all floors.REQUESTS for books from thestacks and delivery of the bookswill thus be made to many areasof the library, instead of to onearea, as now occurs. Also, a second pneumatic tubesystem is planned to connect theRegenstein Library with a pro¬posed new separate science li¬brary. It will carry books and re¬quests in combination with the sys¬tem within the Regenstein Library.This will enable a student to re¬quest materials from many pointswithin either of the two libraries,thus enabling the two libraries tooperate as one.Computer-tube linkFussier expressed a hope thateventually the computer systemstoring catalog information and thepneumatic tube system would beused together, providing even moreaccurate and efficient service.While the new library is plannedprimarily to serve specialized andresearch interests in the humani¬ties and social science, along withspace for the graduate libraryschool, a portion of Harper Li¬brary, plus additional space, willbe converted into a general andundergraduate reading library. Friday, November 19LECTURE: George Moore, presidentFirst National City Bank of New York,will speak 2 pm. Business East 103.TALKING NEWSPAPER: Vietnam, oth¬er topics, 3:30 pm, Ida Noyes CloisterClub.LECTURE: ”A Code of Ethics for theIllinois Legislature.” Abner J. Mikva,member Illinois House of Representa¬tives. twenty third district, speaker,sponsored by UC political science asso¬ciation, 3:30-5 pm. Social Sciences 303.WUCB: “Othello.” with Paul Robeson,Uta Hagen and Jose Ferrer, 6 pm.OPEN HOUSE: “Our School—HydePark High,” annual open house at HydePark High School, 9:30-9 pm, 9820 StonyIsland.DISCUSSION: “War and the IndividualConcience,” Lee Webb, former nationalsecretary of SDS. leader, sponsored bythe Ecumenical Christian Program, 7:15pm, supper 9 pm. Chape! House, 5910Woodlawn.FILM: “Open City.” Rossellini, admis¬sion 60c. 7:15 and 9:15 pm, SocialSciences 122.LECTURE: “The Liberation Movementin South Africa.” I.B. Tabata. presidentof the Unity Movement of South Africa,speaker, noation 75c, 8 pm. CloisterClub Ida Noyes Hall.LECTURE: Yehudi Menuhin, violinistwill give lecture-performance, WilfredN. Halperin Memorial Lecture, 9:30 pm,Mandel Hall.LECTURE: “Cultural and Social Inte¬gration in Israel," Mrs. Dvora Elon, Is¬raeli scientist, professor, author isspeaker, 9:30 pm. Hi net House, 5715Woodlawn.Saturday, November 20WUCB: “Rhapsody in Blue,” Gershwin,Bruckner's “Ninth.” 9 pm.FILM: “3:10 to Yuma,” starring GlenFord and Van Heflin, with "DestinationMagoo.” admission 50c, with SAMAcard 25c, 7:30 pm. Billings P 117.CONCERT: Collegians Mnsiraas , musicby Bach and Buxtehude, Howard MBrown, conductor, 9:30 pm, Bond Chap¬Sw Dream Diamond Rings only at these Authorized ArtCarved JewelersSurprise!your ArtCarved Diamond Ring comesto you on its own precious throne.LOTUS BLOSSOM ...on a little throneAll styles shown with their little thrones, charmingly gift boxedfrom $150 to $1200 backed by the written ArtCarvedguarantee and Permanent Value Plan.QsurvedDF^EAM DL\MOND FLINGSFor free folder write J. R. Wood 4 Sons, Inc.. 216 E, 45th St., New York 10017 Alton—HUDSON’S JEWELRYAurora—TSCHANNEN JEWELERSBelleville—BECNERER’S JEWELRYBelleville—DIEHL’S JEWELRYCarboodale—J. RAY, JEWELERCarni—H. D. BEAN, JEWELERCentraHa—HERRON’S LEADING JEWELERS, INCCharleston—HANFT’S JEWELRYChicago—BASKINO JEWELERSChicago—COLE & YOUNGChicago—DE NAPOLI JEWELERSChicago—FARMER JEWELERSChicago—ROMAN KCS1NSKIChicago—R. L. SEIDELMANNDixon—F. OVERSTREET & SONEast Chicago—BELL JEWELERSEast Moline—VAN DE VOORDE JEWELERSEldorado—PUTNAM JEWELRYElgin—PERLMAN S FINE JEWELERSElmhurst—ELMHURST JEWELRY& OPTICAL STOREFreeport—LUECXE’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 t WOLF JEWELRY CO.La Grange—SPENCER lEWELERS Lansing—PAUL WILSONLa Salle—C. A. JENSENLitchfield—PFOLSGROF'S JEWELERSMacomb—ARRASMfTH JEWELERMacomb—LEBOLO & V0E6ELEMilan—GODFREY JEWELERSMonmouth—MERLIN M. VAUGHNMount Carmel—ROBERTS JEWELERSMount Carmel—TANQUARY JEWELRY STOREMt. Carroll—B. L. SIEBERMt. Prospect—MT. PROSPECT JEWELERSMt. Vernon—CLARK JEWELERSOakiawn—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—ASHLANO JEWELERS el.FILM: “The Great Dictator,” CharlieChaplin, repeat performance presentedby the Russian Film Festival, students75c, others 91. 8:39 pm, Mandel Hatl.Sunday, November 21RELIGIOUS SERVICE: Thanks Be toGod.” the Reverend E. Spencer Par¬sons, dean of the Chapel, preacher. 11am. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.MEETING: UC Chess Club. 3 pm, IdaNoyes, all chess players invited.PROGRAM: "The Theatre Game: AnExperiment in Communication.” Rev¬erend James Shiflett of the Broken JarCorporation, sponsored by the UnitedChristian Fellowship, 6:15 pm, supper5:30 pm. Chapel House,BRIDGE: Open pair club championship,7:15 pm, Ida Noyes first floor lounge.LECTURE: “Religion: in General andin Particular,” E. Spencer Parsons,University chaplain, speaker, 7:30 pm,Brent House. 3540 Woodlawn.FILMS: "Four great films.” presentedby the Windy City Film Guild, admis¬sion 40c. 8 pm. Ida Noyes theatre.WUCB: “From the Spoken Word," EdBegley reading from Whitman's Leavesof Grass, 9:30 pm.WUCB: “Don Giovanni,” DietrichFischer-Dieskau, Ferenc Fricsay con¬ductor, 10 pm.Monday, November 22DISCUSSION: “On Vietnam.” spon-sored by SDS. 3 30 pm, Reynolds Club.*®MMfAB: "On the Origin of Meteor¬ites,” Edward Anders, professor depart¬ment of chemistry and Enrico FermiInstitute, sponsored by the departmentof chemistry, 4 pm, Kent 193.LBCsUBE: “Views of Current SovietIntellectual Activity,” Mrs FrumaGottsehalk. speaker, at Russian clubmeeting. 4:30 pm, Forster lounge.LECTURE: “Balancing Nuclear andNon-Nuclear Powers." Albert Wohlstet-ter. University professor in politicalscience, speaker. 8 pm, Social ScienceLECTURE: “Prognosis of a Revolu¬tion,” James Farmer, national directorof the Congress of Racial Equality. Wil¬liam B. Ogden Memorial Lecture spon¬sored by be Student Government, stu¬dents 5»c. others 75c, tickets may be ob¬tained by mail or phone from the Stu¬dent Government, 8:30 pm, Ida NoyesHall, second floor.PROGRAM: “Life in redbrick,” Wil¬liam E Yuill, professor of German Uni¬versity of Nottingham. Kenneth North-cutt, UC professor of German, spon¬sored by Shorey House, 9 pm. PierceTower, nin.’h floor.CHICAGO MAROON • November 19, 196S ■E PRACTICAL!!!UTILITY CLOTHES!!!Complete Selection ofhooded coats, long underwear,sweatshirts, Levis, etc. etc.UNIVERSAL ARMY STORE1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2*4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9 30-1 00Student discount with adTarFREr SHOPaments — New, Used, AntiqueGUITARS, BANJOS. MANDOLINSBooks snd Folk Music MagazinesDISCOUNT ON FOLK RECORDS5210 HARPERChicagoNO 7-106011:30 to f. 7:30 to 10 Mon.-FrL11:30 to 6, SaturdayDespres on DafeyDiscusses Dem. machiner11M (Continued from page one) said. This, Despres stated, “hasI tion, he said. “Daley said to John- rendered the program a little gro-I son, I will give you all my congres- 55s?ue;,., The result> .J1® adde<J\ia* sional and convention votes if you that the ext*-a vitality whichwill give me control of all federal W0ldd make the program trulyprograms in Illinois,” Despres 8reat is not there.”33x1' Highways are hopelessThe alderman then gave some Despres mentioned that the oneexamples of the results of this. One area in which the city and federalis the school assistance funds. The governments are equally bad isstandards of the federal office of highways. He said that the federaleducation are much higher than Bureau of Roads is only interestedthose of City Hall, but when the of- in expressways. In the Jacksonfice began looking into the Chicago Park dispute, Despres saidschools and withheld federal mon- hundreds of letters were sent toey because Chicago’s schools did Mrs. Johnson because of her inter-not meet federal standards Daley est in natural beauty. Politics,became furious, Despres said. The however, came first, and Mrs.money became an important politi- Johnson replied that they shouldcal issue, and Daley “made a po- w°rk with their local officials andlitical bid for the money. Johnson trust them. Despres said, “I ambehaved like the head of a national sure she was embarrassed.”political party responding to the Regarding a i r pollution andhead of the local party,” and re- health, Despres declared that fed-leased the money, Despres stated. eral funds have raised standardsTurning to public housing and here arid as yet there has been nourban renewal, Despres said that opportunity for political exploita-public housing is an attractive pro- tion. He warned, however, that itgram, so the city has become in- will be necessary to wait until somevolved in it. But rigid enforcement of the wealthy industries are re-of segregation in Chicago housing quired to expend large sums tohas "cut across all aspects of life” control pollution before knowingand is Chicago’s greatest barrier the true state of this matter,in the way of progress, he said. In REFERRING TO THE 1967urban renewal the federal govern- mayoralty election, Despres saidment requires cities to submit that Daley’s re-election is a cer-comprehcnsive, workable plans for tainty if he chooses to run, and ev-urban development before receiv- ery indication is that he will. Bar¬ing federal money, but Chicago, ring a major scandal, any real op-Despres declared, does not meet position would have to come frdmthese requirements and gets its within the Democratic party be-money all the same. cause a Republican cannot win inReferring to the war on poverty, Chicago, and the election law pro-Despres said, “This is an interest- hibiting running under more thaning example of a paradox in the one party label makes it unfeasiblenature of the operation of political for an independent to be successfulparties.” The national Democratic in a city-wide race. Any Democrat-administration, according toic opposition, Despres said, wouldDespres, has developed this pro- have to begin with the legislativegram involving job training, primaries in June of 1966 in orderhealth, legal aid, and other pro- to build the kind of organizationgrams. These are ideas which do necessary for winning a city elec-not even occur to the local Demo- tion. Despres said that he has seencratic administration, yet the local no evidence of such developing,party is given control of them, he that “the will is not yet here.”Lutheran leases extended Monarchy for Europe, US?“Democracy in Europe will not last longer than a generation at best,” said Erik Rittervon Kuehnelt-Leddihn, one of Europe’s leading intellectual monarchists, at Ida Noyestheatre last Sunday night.Speaking on the subject “The Future of Democracy in Europe” and sponsored by thenewly formed Whig Society, Kuehn-helt-Leddihn predicted that eventu- southern Europe they are In great with the rule of such experts?” heally both Europe and the United danger,” he said. questioned.States will become completely mon- The reasons for such a division HE CITED, secondly, the prob¬abilistic. he traced to religious causes. He lem of “mutual trust and confi-In justifying monarchism, cited the fact that northern Europe dence.” He discussed this in re-Kuehnhelt-Leddihn distinguished is predominantly Protestant, east- gard to international relations,between democracy and liberalism. ern Europe Catholic, and southern “Agreements between nations areHe defined democracy as a politi- Europe Greek Orthodox as the fac- difficult when one or both of themcal rather than a social term that tors most responsible. “There is is a democracy, because there isconformity present in the Protes- always a possibility that the rulertant world that you don’t have in who makes the agreement will notthe Catholic world,” Kuehnelt-Led- be around to recognize it later. De-dihn said. mocracy rests on change whilehand, he said does not answer the "But•" he said' ' th're are d<*>>- toreiSn P°licy rests on stability,"question of who should rule. In- er reasons for the improbability of he concluded.answers the question of whoshould rule. He feels its essenceto be equality and majority rule.LIBERALISM, on the otherstead, it means that regardless of the success of democracy in Eu- Finally, Kuehnelt-Leddihn statedwho rules, they should rule with r»I*” «>“ there is * Ialent monarchismFirst, he pointed to what he felt in both Europe and the Unitedliberty, so that the essence of lib¬eralism is liberty. “I think the im¬portant thing for us today is thepreservation of personal liberty. to be a gap between what the peo¬ple should know and what they ac¬tually do know. “There is increas-Absolute monarchy cannot be a de- rule by exJ*rt! in democracy,mocracy, but it can have liberal- How are we 10 save our llber,yism,” he said.Kuehnelt-Leddihn also tracedwhat he felt to be the history of de¬mocracy and monarchy from ear¬liest times to the present. He stat¬ed that democracy was born in an¬cient Greece and failed with thedeath of Socrates. The next revivalof democracy came after theFrench Revolution. In the nine¬teenth century, he noted, we seefailures of monarchies of thedemocracies crumbled into tyran¬nies, using Nazi Germany, Musso¬lini’s Italy, and Franco’s Spain ashis prime examples.HE DIVIDED present day Eu¬rope into three parts, according towhat he felt to be the degree of de¬mocracy present in each. “Today,in the monarchies of northern Eu¬rope, the democratic elements arevery secure, while in eastern Eu¬rope they don’t exist, and in States. “If the present prosperityin Europe should recede, it is hardto tell what would harpen,” hesaid.(Continued from page one)Frank Zimmerman, businessmanager of LTS, told the Maroonthat construction of the seminaryis proceeding on schedule, with thecompletion date set for June, 1967.“There is a strong likelihood,” headded, “that UC students now liv¬ing in Lutheran-owned buildingswill be able to stay through June,’67.”The Dominican Order plans torenovate the building by July 1and then use it as the headquartersof the Priory Press.“We will be a religious commu¬nity, not a business,” emphasizedFather O’Reilly, editor of the Pri¬ory Press, now located at 2005 S.Ashland. Five editors will livethere, with additional rooms tohouse visiting writers. There willalso be a chapel, common diningroom, and kitchen.The Priory Press is now engagedin a joint project with McGraw- Hill, writing a series of high schooltexts on religion.Two separate orders of Domini¬can sisters are already in HydePark-Kenwood. One is the teachingorder affiliated with St. Thomasthe Apostle School at 55th andKimbark; the other is a congrega-iton of mission sisters who work inLatin America, with their head¬quarters at 50th and Greenwood.They are not directly related toeach other, or to the DominicanFathers of St. Albert the Great. CoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting1350 E. 53rd St. HY 3-S302PIERRE ANDREface flatteringParisian chicten skilledhoir stylists of5242 Hyde Park Bird.2231 L 71st St.DO 3-072710 % Student Discount You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Are.646-4411 Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restr*foreign car hospitalDR. 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 DISCOUNTTHE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSOILS • WATER COLORS • PASTELSCANVAS • BRUSHES • EASELSSILK SCREEN SUPPLIESCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMATTING • NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111 Ml 3-4045TERRY'S PIZZAFREE STUDENT DELIVERY1518 EAST 63rd STREETMEDIUM 1-45LARGE 1-95EXTRA LARGE 2.95GIANT 3.95ONIONS 10c EXTRA • GREEN PEPPERS or ANCHOVIES 15c EXTRAMUSHROOMS 20c EXTRA • PEPPERONI 25c EXTRAAlso complete line of other foods25c OFF ON EACH PIZZA PURCHASED BY A STUDENT ThEMOIMltEy'suncIeIt’s the world-famous “monkey” parka ...now with a warm “Orion*" acrylic pilelining I Woolrich tailors it in husky woolmelton with bucket hood and patchpockets... wraps it up neatly in afull-length zipper with jumbo pull ringlS,M,L,XL.•CU PONT TM FOR ITS ACRYLIC FIBERTHE STORE FOR MENMr*Gfutott and (Bampua £ijniiin the New Hyde Parh Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-B100November 19, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROONPlan DC summer programThe officer of career counseling and placement (CCP) isoffering to place UC students in federal government sum¬mer internships in Washington, DC.The program, in its second year, is operated in conjunctionwith the UC alumni associationclub in Washington. It is open to her office and, thereby, the Uni-third and fourth year college stu- versity. The agencies then decidedents and all graduate students. whether to accept or reject the ap-APPLICATIONS may be ob- plicants.tained beginning Friday in the ALL STUDENTS who obtainCCP office in the Reynolds Club, jobs will be invited to participateThey must be turned in before Jan- in a number of activities arrangeduary 7. In addition to the formal by the UC Washington alumni club,application, the Federal Service These activities range from meet-Entrance Examination must be ings with important governmenttaken in January or February and officials to social events. The stu-an unofficial grade t;anscript filled dents can also participate in theout. Information regarding both of federal government program forthese is available with the applica- all students working in Washingtontion- during the summer.Mrs. Anita Sandke, director of The summer intern positionsCCP, told the Maroon that she will generally involve a great dealtake all of the applications with more than pure clerical work. Theher to Washington in late January agencies use these programs asand visit the various government Par* °f their recruiting efforts andagencies to find out specifically !he)'„trs’ and ‘"'’“l'": lhc st“de,lts. . ... . in all aspects of their operations,what positions are available andwhich students are qualified for The eight to ten week programthe positions. She will return to was initiated last summer with 25Chicago, fit the applicants to the students. Their reaction w'as uni¬jobs, and submit the applications formly highly enthusiastic, accord-as having the seal of approval of ing to Mrs. Sandke.New program in international studies set LettersOne third year College studenteach year will be sent abroad un¬der the International Honors Pro¬gram, George L. Playe, dean ofundergraduate students has an¬nounced.The student will spend five to tenweeks in each of three to six coun¬tries in an interdisciplinary pro¬gram of studies. Students in theprogram will be from 20 Americancolleges. They will be accompaniedby three preceptors representingdifferent disciplines.The trustees of the program willoffer a $1,000 grant to each studentand the University will offer an ad¬ditional $600. Students will alsokeep their normal UC financial•id. A faculty committee will screenapplicants, who must have out¬standing, College records.Full details are available in theCollege advisor’s office, Gates-Blake 130.$£ '> . ' ,1. 'ErratumBruce Terris, a speaker at thelaw school’s conference on con¬sumer credit and the poor, was in¬correctly identified in Tuesday’sMaroon as a member of the Officeof Economic Opportunity (OEO).He is currently assistant directorof the President’s Crime Commis¬sion, and is no longer associatedwith the OEO.5 / t*' v >/, y ' \-, ' Liberalize retirement age(Continued from page two)There is no reason to deprive a65 year-old professor of his job. Inpast years no one contested thislaw because men did not survivemuch longer, but today men of 65are vigorous and active. Manystatesmen are over 65; names likeDe Gaulle, Adenauer, and MaoTse-tung come to mind immediate¬ly. If older politicians can makenational and international deci¬sions, is it not possible that olderprofessors can teach a handful ofstudents?We do not expect a professor tobe as productive at 65 as at 40. Hemay not write as many articles,nor travel to as many conferences;but he still writes and he still trav¬els. Most important of all, if hewere an inspiring teacher before(and this is a professor’s greatestasset), he still would remain aninspiration to his students.Finally, there is a humane as¬pect in extending the retirementage. A man who wishes to continuewith the same work he has beendoing his entire adult life must bevery sad if he is asked to divorcehimself suddenly from the Univer¬sity; it must be especially sadwhen he knows that he is of valueto the institution. Furthermore, ifhe helped to build the University toits pre-eminence, do we not owehim a debt of gratitude? Should wenot be grateful enough to allowhim to stay even if his output isless than that of his younger days?Unquestionably there will beproblems arising with an extensionof the retirement age; there is noroom to discuss them here. Butthe great advantages gained froman older retirement age would off¬set any problems brought on bythe change. This mandatory ruleshould have been changed yearsago (certainly before Harold C.Urey left for Berkeley), aruMhereis no time to lose now if we wish toretain an eminent faculty.GLENN MILLERTHE NEWDATSUN FOR ‘66Check In At Your DATSUN DealerToday-Check Out In A DATSUN UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK**a strong bank”NEW CAR LOANS%A OO per hundred1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200member F.D.I.C. Misguided notion reflectsabsence of architectureTO THE EDITOR:Regarding Dean Booth’s com¬ments on the forthcoming confer¬ence, “What Type of Knowledge IsMost Worth Having,” why does theUniversity refuse to have a depart¬ment of architecture? As a stu¬dent of art and art history, I can¬not agree to the classification ofthis form of art with such “stud¬ies” as mortuary science and ani¬mal husbandry. Is this simply areflection of the misguided notionthat architecture involves littlemore than drafting ability or, aswas suggested by the article, isthis the betrayal of “our own igno¬rance and prejudices?”A STUDENTAbolish 0-Board, arguesUC dorm plan "advocate"TO THE EDITOR:As a former resident of a dormi¬tory, I want to agree strongly withMark Haller, a resident head inPierce, that O-Board should beabolished. As Haller says, it is ir¬relevant “if O-Board did an excel¬lent job.” Nobody who doesn’t livein a dormitory should have anycontact with entering students thefirst two weeks. Only dorm resi¬dents from the house in which stu¬dents are going to live their firstyear should have anything to dowith orientation, since after all,that is where the student mustlive.The University is clearly com¬mitted to housing almost all of itsCollege students in dormitories.The only reason it does not do sonow is because it doesn’t have thedormitory space—but it is buildingit. Already, 65 per cent of Collegestudents live in dorms.If the University were not totallycommitted to a dormitory Col¬lege, it is obvious that they wouldnot have torn down most of theHyde Park apartments in whichstudents could live. If the Universi¬ty were not totally committed toputting all of its undergraduatesin dorms, then why doesn’t theUniversity use its tremendous re¬ sources to acquire apartments inHyde Park and lease them to stu¬dents, or, better yet, build newapartments and make them availa¬ble to students.Instead the University builtPierce Tower, and now they aregoing to be buildijpg a secondPierce Tower. What better proofcould there be that the Universityis totally committed to putting ev¬ery undergraduate in dorms. Yes,the residence requirement hasbeen reduced (five years ago, re¬member, it didn’t exist), but every-body knows that with the scarcityof housing in Hyde Park (causedby University-planned urban re¬newal), students who want to moveout can’t because they have noplace to go.O-Board is being foolish in at¬tempting to buck that trend. Theyshould disband and let the dormstake over. If they don’t step asidegracefully they’re going to be runover and the collision won’t bepretty. Mark Haller clearly rep¬resents the wave of the future. Thedormitories will become the centerof College life, because soon noth¬ing will exist outside their fourwalls. I heard one Administrator—quite high up (even higher thanJim Vice, who iust got a promo¬tion)— say that what UC reallyneeded was to develop a house sys¬tem just like Harvard’s.If this is to be true; if we are toemulate Harvard, then it would bedisastrous to permit O-Boarders(only half of whom come from thedorms) to have any contact withfirst year students. It would betragic to confuse first year stu¬dents by acquainting them with aUniversity not contained withinfour dormitory walls. First yearstudents should be told from thefirst that they are going to be liv¬ing four years in the dormitories,and that they are going to love it,lest they be corrupted so as not toclearly perceive all the many vir¬tues of UC dorm living. If not,heaven forbid, they might demandthat the University build apart¬ments free of social regulations.How could we continue to emulateHarvard then?ALAN SCHULMAN ’64EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty Discount SAMUEL A. BELL"Buy Shell From BelT*SINCE 192S4701 S. Dorchester Are,KEnwood 8-3150Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060’'Four-Ten" 4-dr. Sedans & Station Wag-mm $1606 end $1860, and the fabulous SPl-311 Sports Carseomplole for cnly $2546. Drive the** new DATSUNS and teaDATSUN owners make up ths fastest growing importedear list in America today.(hicagoland DATSUNSALES - SERVICE — PARTS9425 S. ASHLAND AVE. * eavarty HintCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60,20 PHONE 239 3770 The Fret ShopNOW HASKLHStereo Music SystemsIncluding the FamousMODEL TWENTYCompact StereoMusic System5210 S. HarperIn Harper CourtNO 7-1060 14 karat gold£^0u H© see thelargestselectionon thesouth sideavailablein culturedpearl, jadecoral, gold,onyx, opalmany other*from $4.00SUPREMEJEWELERSHandbags & Jewelry• of Distinction11452 East 53rd St.| FAirfax 4-9609CHICAGO MAROON • November 19, 1965Activist" forum unlikely ^lassrfiecTX3s(Continued from page four)i-This conference will probably be[held in California, where the com-Ijiumity college movement is strong-[est.’• Developing colleges. Coopera-|tion among the Negro colleges ofI the South and the colleges of Ap-Ipalachia. according to Jewett,I would allow each college to spe¬cialize and utilize teaching staffs.more effectively by sharing facul¬ties.• Teachers colleges that are be¬coming multi-purpose institutions.(These schools face the problems of(transition, and of meeting thebroader needs of their students.]• Large state universities, land-[grant colleges, and large privateuniversities. The conference wouldIdeal with questions of student un¬irest, impersonalized teaching theIthreat of “publish or perish’’ or, asI Jewett phrased it, “do research or|be poor.”]• Continuing education programs.[These must provide up-to-date edu¬cation in the professional fields,including doctors, teachers, andscientists.[• Small, prosperous, well-known(colleges such as those concentrated(in New England. Asked what prob¬lems these institutions face, Jewettbacktracked and said the confer¬ences would not be “problem-ori-|ented,” but “innovation-oriented.”The proposed national conferencelof the role of the student is a more(sensitive subject. It probably origi-Inated with some of the ideas that|came out of this year’s AmericanCouncil on Education conference,[whose theme was “The Student in[Higher Education,” and with aproposal that has been circulatingas a memo within the Office of(Education.THE MEMO was written by Jo¬seph Turner, of the President’s Ex-•cutive Office, and it proposed anational conference of about 20 stu¬dent activists and five older schol¬ars on the new role of the studentn campus and in society.“This conference,” the memoaid, “should examine the chang¬ing roles of the student (includingthose of student age who have de-iberately chosen to become non-Ostudents or ex-students) in Ameri¬can society, and the changes in¬duced by these roles in the func¬tioning of colleges and universi¬ties.’’ APPARENTLY, no one reallyexpected the Turner proposal toget anywhere in that form, sinceanother proposal for a conferenceon the student is currently underconsideratiop. This one would relymore on traditional types of stu¬dent leaders, drawn through stu¬dent government and establishedstudent organization channels. Itwould take place next year at theearliest.Why this sudden interest in re¬searching the student? For onething, there is money to do it. Therecently-passed Elementary andSecondary Act of 1965 considerablyextended the research funds avail¬able under the Cooperative Re¬search Act, and also allowed non¬profit organizations as well as col¬leges, universities, and state de¬partments of education to apply forfunds from the Office of Education.From $0 to $110 millionAs an indication of the expansionthat has taken place over the pastten years, in 1956 no funds wereavailable from the USOE for edu¬cational research. In 1957, $1 mil¬lion was granted; in 1964 it was $20million, and just recently the headof the Research Division, Dr.Francis Ianni, predicted that nextyear OE research programs willamount to $110 million.With new sources of funds avail¬able for grants, the Research Di¬vision is anxious to identify andencourage creative and innovativepeople in the academic world whoshould be getting the funds. One ofthe primary purposes of the curric¬ulum conferences will be to stim¬ulate educators to do research inareas of critical importance.ANOTHER FACTOR in this newemphasis is the shake-up which isgoihg on within the USOE. Once abastion of researchers and “special¬ists,” the office is now in theforefront of carrying out programsand policies in a field which theJohnson administration has startedas one of its top priority concerns.As a result, many of the old titlesv r m «> • -/• r(Anyone who has been re¬classified by his local draft.board or told to report for,a pre-induction physicalshould see Mrs. Regan, inthe registrar’s office, im-fmediately if not sooner. remain, but the people who holdthem have changed considerably.Younger men are being brought into responsible positions, and linesof authority are being reorganizedto reflect the new interests of theagency.Did Berkeley, and similar inci¬dents of student unrest on othercampuses, have any effect? “Thecircumstances are purely coinci¬dental,” Jewett said.“Sure, they had an effect,” an¬other member of the Research Di¬vision said. “These people read thepapers, too.”Savio & SDS?Some of the participants Turnersuggested were Mario Savio, for¬merly of the Berkeley Free SpeechMovement; Carl Oglesby and PaulPotter of the Students for a Demo¬cratic Society; Yale ProfessorStaughton Lynd, a leader of theanti-Vietnam war movement; PaulGoodman, author of “Growing upAbsurd”; and Robert Parris,Courtland Cox, and Stokely Carmi¬chael of SNCC (Student Non-Vio¬lent Coordinating Committee).One of the purposes of such aconference, according to thememo, would be to get the activ¬ists to apply social science discip¬lines to their concerns. If destruc¬tive eruptions on the campus areto be avoided, the memo said, “itmay be important to get the stu¬dents better to understand what itis they mean by such labels or slo¬gans as ‘university reform,’ bytheir ideas of student participationin political action, and by their no¬tions of a transformed socialscience.” PERSONALS Woman with daughter 9 wants to sharebeaut, new apt. priv. rm. bath, 493-6882eves. & weekends.PART TIME HELPDozens of indigent students depend onthe BOOK EXCHANGE for their foodmoney. . .many excellent titles stillavailable for only peanuts. ReynoldsClub Basement 10:30-3:30.Delta Sigma sponsors clothing drive forAmerican Indians Nov. 15-Dec. 1 Collec¬tion Boxes in dorm lounges.Thanksgiving ride offered to Columbus,Ohio. Call Howard, 493-4329.SDS needs typweriters! If you have agood standard or electric typewriters &wish to make a contribution to a newleft in U.S. please cal us now, the needis desperate!!! SDS' 1103E. 63rd. 667-6050.Air-bus-rail-ship-hotels world-wide or lo¬cal, do it yourself or escorted quicktours. See us now. MARCO POLO.BU 8-5944.Girls wanted to form a harem for NickLembares, Candidates will be inter¬viewed 8 pm Mon. Nov 22 at 5555 S.Woodlawn. No experience necessary.Selections made solely on the basis ofinterview. For more information callPL 2-9704.WRITERS WORKSHOP (PLaza 2-8377).Don’t put me on: which is it? THE MA¬ROON or THE DAILY PURPLE.Ride needed N.Y.C., Thanksgiving.Share expenses, 475-1543 anytime.THE IN CROWD GO GOES to theYoung Adult Group, 8 pm, Sunday,North Shore Congregation Israel, 840Vernon Ave., Glencoe.SAD TALE 9 mo. old black male catwill be sent to Chinese res'taurant aschop suey-meat unless other solutioncan be found. 363-7789.WUFFLE?FREN. GRAD. STUD. WANTS ROOMAPTR START DwfNTILOUART Tel’m papers & Thesis typed 30c per363 9285 rm 104 CALL page. Call Jacqueline Smith 664-7188.DELIVERY of morning papers, 5-7 am.MESSENGER 8:30-10:30 am.COLLECTOR 6-8:30 pm, 3 evenings perweek, and Sat. am.No car required. Salary $1.25 net. Mr.Worthy Mr. Ehler, Hyde Park NewsService. 1302 E. 53rd HY 3-0935.Fern, wanted 'for Doctors office withknowledge of typing; part time Call 723-1009.Cashier wanted: full or part-time days684-4320.Grad. Stud. Male part time employmentbookstore. Must be avail thru holidays.MI 3-7511.CAP AND GOWN, the UC yearbook,needs an advertising manager. Interest¬ed? Contact C & G office, 3rd floor IdaNoyes, weekdays 3-5 pm. Ext. 3598.Wanted: Two bedrm. apt. to rent orsublet. Start Winter Quarter. Contactrm 1225, New Dorms.ARE YOU UNDERPAID?There is no need to be today-unless yousimply have never found out what youcan be earning. There are far morejobs than applicants today, whichmeans that salaries are at an all timehigh. Star Employmnet Service invitesyou to visit our lovely Michigan Ave. of¬fices, where the largest listing of alljobs in Chicago is available for yourconsideration. Our staff of college-edu¬cated counselors will be ahppy to dis¬cuss your job situation, abilities, inter¬ests & salary desires with you. Justcontact Miss Heydegger at Star Em¬ployment Service 116 S. Mich. Ave.ST 2-3270.TYPINGTyping. Complete, good steno servic*493-6882 eves & weekends.SDS march newsCampus SDS has announced thatit may be getting subsidies fromoutside sources to help pay for itsbus to the March on WashingtonNovember 27. For this reason, peo¬ple who would like to go but cannotaffort the $25 bus tickets shouldcall Ron Tabor (Snell 22) or BrentKramer (684-3786) by Tuesday, No¬vember 23 and leave their name. Tickets to Chicago Symphony Ore.avail, through S.G. Student discounttickets for Fri. aft. (1.40) Advance tick¬ets to all events in Orchestra Hall.Since S’.G. must pay the airlines, weneed to have final payment this weekby all who are going on the groupHeights to N.Y., Boston & Wash. D.C.Accordingly we will be charging latepayment fee beginning next week.Girl wants to share apt with other girls.Start Dec or next Quart. Call 288-7574Vicki Aft. 5.Spanish tutoring by native speaker Call752-5113.WANT GENESIS WEST 7. 8, 9 231-2921.WANTEDDON’T BE DRAFTEDVolunteer at SDS office. We need hel¬pers & you can gain valuable exposureto good political life. Don’t wait! Callnow 667-6050 or come to 1103 E. 63dr. FURNISHED APT. FOR RENT7761 So. Shore Dr.2 lge. rms. kit. util., incl. 22.001 rm. kit. util. incl. $18.00.FOR 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 752-0973.’61 SIMCA 30 mi. ga. $300 RE 5-8268 aft.11 am. Mrs. Starr.Selmer Mark VI alto sax, good cond.$225. Jett Bragg 81 Hitchcock MI 3-0800X 260.Piano, Tape-recorder and assorted fur¬niture Tel. BU 8-6610 rm. 1202 or betw.Nov 24-28, 667-7833 and ask for Dave.Typewriter, Smith Corona Portable,script type, international keyboard $50.Bef. 5 at Rosenwald 1, aft. 5 Call 752-0855. .AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111► -TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH--NEW & USED-Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsSERVICE CALLS - $3THE 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 FIRST LECTURE OFTHE WILLIAM B. OGDEN LECTURE SERIES . .JAMESFARMERNATIONAL DIRECTOR OF CORELEON MANDEL HALLMONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 19658:30 P.M.TOPIC:PROGNOSIS OF A REVOLUTIONTickets available at Student Government Officeor Mandel Hall Box OfficeADMISSION: 75c .STUDENT PRICE: 50cSPONSORED BY STUDENT GOVERNMENTNovember 19, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7GadflyImprovements necessary in gen ed phy sciM k 'ihV.Last year I made a comparative and individual analysis in the Maroon of the problems lutionary successes may be dictment into every corner of hu-facing general education planners in the physical and biological sciences. The responses to ac ieve ' man t*10^*1* and concern. 1 hethat statement have led to many conversations with students and faculty. In what follows study wkh I facJ^LmbeTta hll Thole Pconc“°pt ^reaMy remain"I will try to give the rationale behind the concrete proposals with which I conclude by rais- {ield and related disciplines, em- unknown to the vast majority ofing for the reader the questions — phasizing the wider application of scboiars< Scientific methods hav#which have been central in my dents form an audience rather all that is necessary—provided concepts and tools encountered, |>een misapplied; scientific historyown mind. than participate in the two-way only that it is supplemented by at followed by a final quarter of ret- ^fogged; the philosophy of scienceprocess of learning are a waste of least one quarter of the more rospective analysis, fitting the ex- js a bastard when we havetime on both sides. The lecture hall broadly based study that alone can periences of the earlier weeks into faued t0 marry modern sciencecan serve a valuable function in establish a sense of the discipline- the context of the physical sciences wjtb tbe humanist tradition.I. What is the most effectivecontribution members of the vari¬ous departments of the physicalsciences can make to new andexperimental programs of gener¬al education in their field? the curriculum, but in the class- in-context.room we must provide the oppor¬tunity to go beyond the passiveThis is the central question, and learning of the auditor. The valueit is not one peculiar to the physi- of the teacher lies not in his knowl-cal sciences. But for this area in edge alone, but in his ability toparticular the demands of grad- communicate what he knows, touate teaching and research great- sense the difficulties and misun-ly limit the degere of involvement derstandings of particular studentsin undergraduate education we can °r a whole class. It is in interac-reasonably expect. Even soulty resources and the IV. I therefore propose, as enexperimental framework, e sys¬tem of one and two-quarter com¬plementary courses chosen and.arranged to meet the varying re¬quirements of individual studentand faculty background and in¬terest. as a whole.. ‘ . .. .. .. The great share of this onusTins vanant provi s. weighs on the scientist himself, fordiscretion in c-oice o having failed to communicate. Hisconcentration. Weak spots in the fai|ure (o communloat „background of ^nts can always his taUure t0 stop anjbe filled in the last quarter, where .... - . . ,. “ , consider the meaning of what hea broader and more philosophical . . . .approach would be appropriate just within the frame-Here is the chance for the scientist , .. ,, ,LI; * * work of science itself, howeverhas learned, to look at scientific'owe can or a whole class It is in interac , doubt tbat apy one approacb| who has not recently taken the broad The Diversity *, the fac- hon with a good teacher that the based jn ej[ber the broad-scope or lime to step back and look at the pbjcag0 cannot be a party to thefacilities student really becomes involved in ^ lin)ited subject matl„ developments of his field within !™, . . t. . , — subject matter ap- ueveiupmcma neroetuation of ignorance in anvavailable are enormous-and little the process of learning. It is only b can tulfil| our require. the context of advances in other ^“ totheintellectual steriiit!used to enrich the undergraduate when a teacher is learning with his raents Very few of the additional areas. This is the variant for the °™-“ br^s TOiTtnust te rnprograms, especially in general class that he is truly involved in facujty we contemplate will be instructor who really enjoys teach-education. This is not to say that the process of teaching. ai>ie t0 teach a three-quarter se- ing, and who can use the great surely breeds, mis must be myanswer to scientist and non-scien¬tist alike who are content to con-the BS programs of the depart- Let busy faculty members be quence. The program I will detail freedom it offers to his own advan- tjnue as they haye done No( t()ments are not even now greatly in- called on to teach, but if what they below is designed to provide acreasing their faculty’s commit- are called on to do is not true framework of one and two-quarterment to students in the College, teaching—let them refuse; they teaching loads on limited facultyor that these resources are en- have better things to do. It is the schedules, and it incorporates bothtirely neglected by the present gen- responsibility of the College to general and particular exposure toeral education course. It is to say make the best use of their time; it the field.that much more must be done. has not the right to waste it. If we VARIANT A* two quarter un-The problems of misunderstand- are expecting company, if we wish der - q s -ing between the sciences and other to receive the hold we so tage and that of his students.V. No more than on# ytar ofgeneral education in the physicalsciences should be required, butno less than two should be of¬fered.No examination of the problems communicate is to further dividean already dangerously fragment¬ed culture.Jay L. Lemke(Last spring the Maroon publishedJot/ Lemke s report on “Generalbadly ?ne instructor of general intro- q{ generai education in the physi- Education in the Sciences," a doe-the scientist. A program of generaleducation in the physical sciencesmust set as its prime goal thecommunication to students ofsomething of the excitement of thescientific ideas which are today rev¬olutionizing our whole concept of aims of general education be metby programs centered in thefield of interest of a given facultymember and by those designedto reveal the fuller scope of thediscipline? wide range of allied areas), fol- Jra, education type. coveringSrlS topics of interest ,o students in thetact with a faculty member in the , ,, . .. .,, ,.. ... . . . latter years of their College pro-field of his particular interest on a.. . . ... ., grams, will be offered by each ofsmall group basis-with the option fhe c(Jllegiale division (area col.This is the immediate question ment.for independent study or experi- Quote of the dayI I Johns of The World Unite!Johns and friends of Johns, forreality, and a genuine appreciation we must consider in deciding the A11 that would be neCessary to/hf t h a nntui<A nnrl It m itotinnr nf * . » 1 i i • • il »limitations of future 0f general education in the initiate this experiment for a test ^sical50 much, at physical sciences (and in all the orn„n inurhuiK rWrminPft hv v y \leges), from which students maybe expected to choose to fulfill va- generations we hava lived withdegree requirements. The social stigma of having oursciences must make a noJMe name of John linked ne >of the nature andscientific method. So much, at physical sciences (and in all the group (perhaps determined by second"""offerine^stronefv aonealine fariously with a common waterleast, is necessary for the student other sections of the College as placement) would be a few faculty f T oaring, strongly appealing rto achieve a productive integration wen). Are there an ever-growing Tilli„T?o offer the larger broad ° “"“S. studen.,1? who w‘ t0 T ' d Pof his experience in the physical minimum number of basic ideas k Jg “ / larger broad tinue the synthesis whose seeds*1. • J- minimum iluniDer 01 DdSiC laeas based courses for two quarters, 0,0.0 nlantprf in thp first rnursp Insciences with the other various dis- and concepts to which a student and several instructors willing to SS- * • !• ? ? •ciplines he is expected, in this col- must be introduced before he can ?V , lns,rucL°rs ;o addition to examination of topics, „ , , ’ musi De miroaucea Deiore ne can a smaJier number of students c„htlpr than thnsp rnvpred in thplege, to encounter. be said to possess that basis for for onp auarter at the end of the covered in tneII. Present concepts of under- nonmninCnn nnH ptroinatiAn uihiPh for one ^uartef at lhe end of the previous course, joint programs Now at last we are doing some¬thing about it.DON'T CALL A JOHN AJOHN SOCIETYhas been formed to right thisgraduate education in the physi¬cal sciences are excessively de¬manding on faculty time.I blame no scholar who prefers theme or area of investigation reresearch and graduate teaching to veal enough to do the job?appreciation and evaluation which year to give tbem a concrete ex- with faculty in biology philosophy terrible injusticel Join the otherwe^have set as our aim. Can a penem* 0f the ideas and methods sociai scjenee, and humanities Johns end friends of Johns cf%for which the previous two quar- seem to offer opportunities for the th» World, and lend your sup-j,ters have prepared them. maturing of this sense of the totalVARIANT B: One quarter of context of our knowledge. Espec-study of the physical sciences thruthe careful examination of one-UU 6icuuflc Lcayuub tu *. *7 * - - ’ . . , general introduction and prepara- ially is this needed in an age ofa thrice-weekly series of lectures This is a problem to which I and f. L pnti.tc «,hn Piaim thpv 9rp nnnr.which provide no more than could many others have devoted a long tion followed by two Quarters of scientists who claim they are poor-8 close study in the research inter- ly understood and non-scientistssupplementary textbook. Lee- period of attention. In my opinion, T '' IZlTTu Ithat WP11 at Uact thp tinritpH chi! ests and allied area of a particular who have called our times every-tures that can be read as well as at least, the limited subject matter .heard and classes in which stu- approach can succeed in conveying faculty memt)er-It is this variant which would beSentry ^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 offersa 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. Thereis 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. 374-0350fri(oofrlM#for TO,SENTRY. 71 INSURANCEL Hardware Mutual • Gentry Life thing from pseudo-scientific toscience-dominated. This is indeedthe mainstay”of”those Who wish to th,e essence of the Problem generalexperiment with the limited sub- educatlonject matter approach. It will give sc,cncesthem the advantage of the knownbackground students will have re- must face in theThe view of reality, of the physi¬cal universe, which science pro-ceived in the previous quarter. It vides today reaches tentacles ofis here that some of the most revo- implication, points fingers of in¬ port to tho cause. The donation f Iof $2.00 will provide you or an 1other John with e lifetime membership charter suitable forframing, lapel pin, DCAJAJSNewsletter and membershipidentification card. As aboutforming your own local chapter.Don't call a John a John society, c/o Gilt Complex, 1453 Grant ]Avenue, San Francisco, Califor¬nia.—from ad in the DailyCalifornian, University of;jCalifornia, BerkeleyTOAD HALL SellsRentsLeasesYou normally think of a component music system as something for the livingroom. But Toad Hall in Hyde Park is now featuring a new Electrovoice stereo soundsystem that's completely portable and weighs only 36 pounds, so you can take itwherever you go.Its cost is only $190.00 ... but here is what you get:A solid state 30-watt amplifier. — A Garrard automatic turntable.Two famous 12-inch Electrovoice loudspeaker modules. And ...A lifetime-guaranteed EV diamond stylus.All this is enclosed in molded luggage type cases that won't chip, scuff, or fade. AndElectrovoice warrantees all parts against defects for two years, or they'll pay for theneeded parts or labor. With Toad Hall's unique five-year guarantee on all equipment,you get an additional three years of protection on parts.Electrovoice calls this system the ENTERTAINER ONE —a new breed in sound reproduction. Toad Hall agrees, and invites you to hear theexceptional frequency range of this portable component system from Electrovoice.All Makes of TypewritersNew — Rebuilt — Used Altec — Ampex — AR — ConcertoneDynakit — Electrovoice — Empire — GarrardJBL — Kenwood — Marantz — RobertsScott — Shure — Sony — Zenith1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500Near the Medici and Green DoorWFMT Program Guide Student Tickets to Triangle Prod. Concerts8 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 19, 1965Culture CalendarIURPER THEATER BANCE FESTI¬VAL: Edward Villella &. Patricia Mc¬Bride doing pas de deux. Nala Najan,Indian dancer, and James Mod¬ern Dance Co, At Harper Theater 5238S Harper St. Tonight thru 8ut. '%i30,Ends Sun. Nov. 21—2:30 Sc 7:30 Spe¬cial Student rat ($2.50) for Tues., Wed.,Thurs., & Sunday Performances.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. NightlyM 30; Matinees, Wed. & Sat. at 2. ClosedSun. Nightly $2.50-$4.00; Fri. & Sat.$2 75-$5.50. Matinees, $2 50-$4.50. Black-stone Theatre Balbo & Michigan.SECOND CITY—This and That. Nightly!« Fri 9 Sc 11: Sat 9. 11 & t. Closed Mon.Nightly $2.00: Fri. $2.50; Sat. $3.00.There is also an informal show at 11 pmon week nights & Sundays that includesimprovised scenes based on suggestionsfrom the audience: $1.00 Second Citv,1816 N. Wells DE 7-3993.THE HAPPY MEDIUM —The title of the new show is “Hip Happening,” andis a departure from the first three pro¬ductions in that it does not contain re-tjVflie >ketches. The revue features Chica¬go talent and is directed by Gus Gioda-no, with continuity by David Bloom-quist. 2 shows nightly. Adm. charge. 901In. Rush DE 7-1000.hull HOUSE THEATRE —Two oneact plays by Harold Pinter. “The DumbWalter'1 and “A Slight Ache”; RobertSickinger, dir. Thru Oct, Fri & Sat. 8:30Sun. 7:30. Fri. & Sat. $2.90; Sun. $3.40.Jane 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. $2.00.Parkway Community House. 500 E. 67th!24-3380.IANDS AROUND IN ? OVE—A newmusical comedy based on ArthurSc^nitzler's controversial drama. “LaLeRoy. Susan Rae and Joe Vocat,H*htlv 8:30 Fri & ca* & 11. Sun7:30; Closed Mon. Night'y $2.65; Fri. &'Talking Newspaper' makes debut todayA second symposium on US foreign policy and the press,its title changed from “Living Newspaper’’ to “TalkingNewspaper,” will take place at 3:30 p.m. today in theCloister Club.Lemisch said that there was a — ——— —possibility this type of program keley ‘Riot’.”will spread to other schools suchas the University of Michigan.Brooklyn College, and Queens Col¬lege.The next “Talking Newspaper”program will be held December 3rwith Wayne Booth, dean of the Col¬lege, and others participating.Participants and the subjecteach will talk on will include Phil feating C.T.S.—divisional cham-Altbach on “The Indian Press"; plans in the final play-off game.Jesse Lemisch, assistant professor annu^ Turkey Trot will be.... w XI run November 23 at Washingtonof history, on A Talking Newspa- A _ . , b .c ..... d u „ Park. 4:15 pm. A record entry isC,Wp!f ’ , on °'s£n ,erg ?, expected in the annual competition‘From Nuremberg to Vietnam”; ,OI! lhe turkey pri,es.According to Lemisch, Individ¬ual reports will be briefer andmore tightly edited than before,with more time for talk-back bythe audience.”Intramural briefsMead House wins all Universitytouch football championship, de-rls'%>rSPUf (Ir.rentr-of I League basketball entries aredue on December 9. Please checkif your organization has receivedits entry blank.Fall tennis is in the final stages.and Jackie Goldberg on “The Ber-Continue script contestThe Blackfrairs Society is con-nuing its annual script coMpeti- The College house championship ision. Any interested graduate or being decided. Yuknis, Psi U frat.undergraduate student should sub- Championship and divisional tourmit a completed copy of the script ney in final road,for an original musical comedy to The fall Squash Tourney is enter-the office of University Theatre on ing the final stages with the twoor before December 1, 1965. favorites Drs. Gootschalk andThe writer of the winning script Beem favored to meet in the fi-will receive a $50 award. nals.JESSELSON'SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdJames Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS - LINENS - TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. Cardmi Fifty-Seventh at KenwoodUNUSUAL FOODDELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICESSPECIAL 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 Services>1914 SO. STONY ISLANDADVERTISING • PRINTING - SECRETARIAL 721-1211 Sat. $2 95. Theater in the Clouds, Allar-ton Hotel, 701 N. Michigan, SU 7-4200.GAME THEATRE —This resident com-pany plays Theatre Games. Thesegames, originated by Viola Selin resultin a truly improvised show which is dif¬ferent each time the Games are played.The company is directed by Paul Sills.There is some audience participation.This is a first for Chicago, with Gamesnow being played in San Francisco andNew York. Nightly $1.50; Sat. $2.00;Closed Sun. Mon. & Tues. 1947 N.Sedgwick, 642-4198.THE SUBJECT WAS ROSES—PulitzerPrize-winning drama starring Jack Al¬bertson, Martha Scott and Martin Sheenof the New York Cast; opens Nov. 29.Nightly, 8:30; Wed. Sc Sat. matinees at2. Closed Sun. Nightly, $3.00-$5.50; Fri.& Sat. $3.E0-$6.00; Matinees, S2.50-$4.50.Theatre Party and Benefit rates avail¬able. Studebaker Theatre, 418 S. Mtchi-■fanLINCOLN PARK PLAYERS—HaroldPinter’s comedy-drama “The Caretak¬er,” Fri. Sc Sat. Nov. 5-20 at 8.30. $L,00.Lincoln Park Theatre, 2021 N. StocktonDr. LI 9-0081.THE ELECTRA—of Soc rates. Ut dir.James O'Reilly. Law school auditoriumFri. Sun 8:30.ExhibitionsMONROE GALLERY—“Encore Show”with works by Frank Salantne, Sylves¬ter Britten, Yuko Nasu, Frances Bad¬ger and Victor Hayes. Daily, 9-9; Sat.,9-4. Closed Sun. 59 E. Monroe.MARSHALL FIELD & COMPANY PIC¬TURE GALLERIES—“Sculpture andPaintings—A New Exhibition’’ Featur¬ing works by Strobel, Benst, Klee,Breeching. Ying and Hon Chi Fun. Dai¬ly. 10-5. Closed Sun 111 N State.FINDLAY GALLERIES—Recent worksby Nicola Simbari: Nov 1-20. Recent byGaston Sebire: Nov 15—Dec 18. Daily,9-5:30. Closed Sun. 320 S. Michigan.ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO—Win-terbotham Collection: Thru Nov 14. Gia¬cometti’s Complete Works: Nov 5-Dee12 “The Golden Age,” Viking Art ofSweden: Opens Nov 22.Prints and Drawings Dept. MasterDrawings from the Museum’s collection.Master Prints. ContinuingPhotographs by Paul Vanderbilt. ThruNov. 21.Oriental Art Dept. “Festivals inEdo”: Prints of "the floating world” bymasters of the Japanese woodblockprint. Ceramics, tomb tiles and sculp¬ture from the Han Dynasty. Contempo¬rary Chinese painting. Continuing.Daily, 10-5, Thu. 10-9:30; Sun. 12-3.Free. Michigan & Adams.ConcertsCHICAGO SYMPHONY—Ninth Week—Thu. Fri, Nov. 18-19—Jean Martinon,cond; Yehudi Menuhin, v. Prokofieff:Love of Three Oranges Suite. Partos:Cone. Dvorak: Sym. No. 9.Tenth Week—Thu-Sat. Nov. 25-27 —Jean Martinon, cond; Wilhelm Kempff,p. Rossini: William Tell Overt. Ses¬sions: Sym No. 3. Beethoven: Cone No.5.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,and at SG office). Orchestra Hall Boxoffice: Daily 9:30-6: later on concertnights; Sun 1-4. Orchestra Hall, 220 S.Michigan.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 Operetta reviewSmiles in F sharpTo say that Iolanthe surpassed expectation would bea gross understatement: it was an unequivocal triumph. Iwalked out of Mandel Hall grinning from ear to ear, mypalms smarting from joining in the sustained and well-de.served applause. —THE APPLAUSE was greatest And one can but marvel at thefor Ray Lubway (The Lord Chan- completeness and perfection of thecellor), whose performance would technical work, which is usuallynot have disgraced Martyn Green, the stumbling-block for amateurA consummate actor, a brilliant operetta. Miss Peter Page’s setsdancer, a past master of the pat- were so beautifully executed that Iter-song, Lubway’s scenes were a believed them to have been rented,show in themselves. Like The Lord Miss Elizabeth Conger’s costumesChancellor himself, whose “deci- were appropriately fanciful. Kathysions in F Sharp Minor got a dou- Wexler’s choreography was excel-ble encore,” Lubway was much in lent, and she deserves specialdemand for an extra chorus or praise because she was workingtwo. Regrettably, he gave way to with previously untrained dancers,the audience’s desires only once. The one black mark goes to theMuch the same could be said of orchestra, who appeared the worseErnest Arnett (Lord Tolloller) and ^ecause excellence of every-p. ., v ... ,T thing else. The brass section partic-David Kaufman (Lord Mountarar- ularly was off.time> too loud andat). Both are strong actors and a few distracting klinkers. Thesingers; both understand full well jess said about them the better,the art of mugging, and could lay Nancy Lorie and Ruth Stack,the audience in the aisles with a wh0 produced and directed thestiff, lordly grimace. show share the praise for its manyHelen Bailey (Phyllis) was per- virtues. As producers, they mayfeet as the Gilbertian ingenue: in- claim the credit for having foundnocent, but hilariously self-pos- an incredible number of extremelysessed and convinced of her beau- talented people; as directors, theyty’s power. She also has a superb puned the show together, making itsoprano voice. David Currie (Stre- flow on without a slack moment,phon), her intended, has not so jt may seem blasphemous toconfident a singing voice, but he some, but I felt that the show wasmore than made up for this with superior to that of the d’Oyly-Cartehis acting. It was a beautiful per- company, which I saw a few yearsformance of the stereotyped Vic- back. I cannot think of anythingtorian hero: upright, moral, happy, nicer to say about the productionand perfectly imbecile. than that—but if I could, it wouldBette Sikes (Queen of the still be deserved.Fairies) and Joyce Meinrikson (Io- David H. Richterlanthe) have less to do, but they doit wonderfully. Miss Sikes is an ex¬cellent clown, and Miss Meinriksona fine soprano with enormousrange. Jerome Loeb (Privat Willis)had only one song and a few lines,but he showed himself a fine actorwith admirable stage presence(what do you do if your falsemoustache falls off on stage?Loeb did it.)THE CHORUS of peers and fair¬ies held up the high standard ofthe principals. They not only sangwell, but, more important for Gil¬bert and Sullivan, articulated solhat one could distinguish thewords.Quesquemes andRebososin brilliantcolorfrom Mexico10-9 on Thursday10-5:30 Other DaysClosed Sunday FABYAR 5225 Harper363-2349 tONlGhtChannel 2 News DirectorJohn Madigan,Chicago television'smost knowledgeablediscussion host, presentsoutstanding guestsprobing provocativetopics.FREE DELIVERY3 FREE PEPSIS with each PIZZACAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THE THY 3-5300 FA 4- 5525PIZZAMed. LargeCHEESE — 1.4S 2.00SAUSAGE —. 1.80 2.35PEPPER & ONION 1.65 2.20BACON & ONION .......••••••••••••■ 2.15 2.70COMBINATION 2.40 2.95MUSHROOM 2.15 2.70SHRIMP 2.40 2.95 WHATS REALLYHAPPENING IN VIETNAM?Jesse LemischAae’t. Prof, of HistoryU. of ChicagoCritic of Vietnam reportingRobin MooreAuthor, The Green BeretsSgt. Daniel J. MaloneySgt. Marvis MacklinMarines wounded in VietnamINSIDE THEMcCarthy committeeRoy CohnCounsel for theMcCarthy CommitteeCharles E. PotterFormer U. S. SenatorAuthor, Days of ShameIS LINDSAY AREPUBLICAN?Edward J. DerwinskiU. S. Congressman (R.—Ill.)Casper CitronAuthor, John V. LindsayWHAT ROADFOR RHODESIA?I. B. TabataPresident, Unity Movementof South AfricaP. G. D. AdamsC. M. G., Consul Generalof Great Britainplus... “Mr. Viewer”Following ^The Late Show®2WBBM-TVNovember 19, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • tUT “Electra” this weekendThe University Theatre production of The Electra ofSophocles began a series of four performances with its open¬ing last night in the law school auditorium. Directed byJames O’Reilly, director of UT, the script is taken from thePenguin edition, translated by — “ Theater reviewPinter play "fine production nWatling.UT first made use of the Saari- “total theatre” experience.Electra plays uncut, without in-jien-d e s i g n e d auditorium for termission, beginning at 8:30 pmtheatre three years ago, with aproduction of Lorca's Blood Wed- and ending by 10. Performancesare in the law school auditorium,ding. Since then the idea of doing a goth and University, tonight, Satur-Greek play in the same room has dav and Sunday.teen a major project in UT’s Tjckels are S150 on Su„day,P'ans' $2.00 tonight and Saturday, withUSING NO SCENERY, the UT the usual student-faculty discountproduction focuses on the play and of 50c applicable to all perform-the actors. Says O’Reilly, “Of all ances. The first impression of The Caretaker Is of emptiness]despite the piles of junk, newspapers, and suitcases fillingthe stage. The empty feeling is maintained and hmftlifiedby the play itself. The Caretaker, in a fine production hithe Lincoln Park Players, is a loud — —statement by playwright Harold an extended period of time. TheyPinter of the hollowness of the lack many-sidedness and seem toscores of words in its dialogue and be drawn for the stage rather thanthe aridness of the human relation- front a“hough the emptiness,. , , with which the play leaves the au-ships based on these words. dience expresses the vacantnessThe Caretaker is anything but and dissatisfaction of life itself,a tight little play. It Is two hours They are intensely portrayed,long, considerably longer than Pin- their total personalities presentedter’s other works. It is rambling the audience from the beginningof the .play. These first impressionsthe Greek tragedies, this is a play IN ADDITION, UT plans to con- and sometimes difficult to watch. of personality are constantly reaf-«f personality. Elcctra's; and the ^ its series ..Tonight at 8:3o,”play is a senes of shocks to her wbjcb traditionally has consisted ofwhich we see reflected in the cho- two or three experimental one-actrus as they identify with Electra. p}ayS bv modern playwrights. TheThis interpretation is not new-; p,avs are produced and directed byO Reilly credits H.D.F Ki to with students and presented in the Rey.clarifying his ideas on the play.. nolds Club Theatre for two week.“Electra’s story was dramatized ends,by all three of the major Greek Past productions have inciudedplaywrights, but Sophocles treat- Genet>s The Maids and Deathwatch/ But these qualities are inherent in firmed as the play progresses.Pinter’s approach and possibly the The characteristic droll, cynicalpoint of view expressed by the humor of Pinter is present, but notment is the one with which themodern actor can most readilyidentify. These are very real peo¬ple, not towering heroic figures,and I believe the actors have madethem and the play come alive,which is what theatre ought to do. play.THE TITLE refers to the job of¬fered to Davies, an offensive oldman who is travelling under thename of Jenkins for reasons hedoes not hesitate to explain severaltimes. It is ironic that Daviesshould be asked to assume such aYeats’ At the Hawk's Well and OnBaile's Strand, de Ghelderode’sEscurial, Albee’s The AmericanDream, and Jarry’s Ubu Roi.The first series of “8:30’s” willbe announced the ninth week of. , . , . , this quarter and performed the‘The experiment of last year s fourth and fifth weekends 0f theAntigone encomaged us to amplify wjnfer quarters. Prospective direc-mu?lc and the size tors or anyone interested in theatreof the chorus. Again Richard Eno are jnvjted submit suggestionshas orchestrated and rehearsed he tQ the UT office by November 30.chorus speeches for the twelve in sufficient quantity to relieve thetension created by the characters.Paul Tomasello captures ex¬tremely well Davies’ scheming,lying, imposing character. He isparticularly good in the comicalscene where Mick asks to talk tohim as “a man of the world.” Heresponsibility; unable to maintain bas a remarkably expressive facehimself, he would certainly be ill- Maurice Justine as Aston does wellvoices. This is in a sense a com¬promise, as Sophocles used fifteenwomen, and our chorus is mixed,primarily to secure a variety ofvoices,” O’Reilly says.TWO STRIKING elements of theproduction are the costumes andthe use of projected scenery. The The major production of the win¬ter quarter will be the three-actIonesco tragi-comedy Amedee,or How To Get Rid of It. The playwill be directed by John Lion andpresented in Mandel Hall, Febru¬ary 11, 12 and 13.The emphasis in this productioncostumes were designed and deco- will be on experimental acting andrated by Virgil Burnett, prize-win- staging techniques, supported byning artist and member of the the music ofhumanities staff. Charles Ives;Mrs. Carol Nelson painted the byundheerslides which were projected on the Leon Rotsteinwalls of the auditorium throughoutthe play. Music composed and Stockhausen andthe latter beingUC Chamber Or-the direction ofIn addition, fragmented filmplayed by Becky Friend, flutist, is scenarios by Stanley Karter will beincluded to add to the feeling of a an integral part of the production.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKIOPENTHANKSGIVING DAYTHURSDAY, NOV. 25thin addition to ourregular menu, we offerA COMPLETE DINNERofROAST TURKEYAND DRESSINGorBAKED HAM$195CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI1510 Hyde Perk Blvd. LI 8-758551st Street and HarperKitchen Closed Wed. HONDASALES & SERVICELAY AWAY ORSPOT DELIVERYALL MODELSINSURANCETIME PAYMENTSBOB NELSON MTRS.6136 S. Cottage GroveMl 3-4500 equipped to be caretaker for anapartment building. The position isoffered to him at various times by-two brothers, one of whom ownsthe apartment house and the otherresponsible for Davies’ coming intotheir lives.The action of the play com¬mences when the latter Astonbrother brings Davies home toshare his flat. Davies continues theaction by using each brother to hisadvantage, and finally playing oneagainst the other. This leads to hisdownfall.There is an emotional, thoughw'ordless communication whichmakes brother Mick defend Astonfrom Davies and harbor him fromthe world. Aston walks about in ahypnotic state induced by a shocktreatment given him to restore hissanity several years before. Daviesis little more than a tramp, unableto keep a job, or to keep himselfclothed and fed. With all of his talkand bragging about the companyhe has known, he is unable to suc¬cessfully establish and maintainmutually beneficial relationshipswith others. Neither has he theability to cope with reality on anadult level.PINTER'S CHARACTERS aretedious when they are on stage for in the difficult role. He handles thelong expository speech about histreatment in the mental institutionwith skill.MICK, THE OWNER of theapartment house, is played suc¬ cessfully by Barry Corbin. After an|jjve entrance at the bi^in-lof the play, he fills out thjlCharacter more than adequately!from the beginning of the second]act. Mick is maliciously playful!and loud, announcing his dreamj|of redecorating the apartment!house as if they were earth-<.hat.|tering, and expounding won*phrases like new revelations; but!beneath the words is the emotionalbond with his brother which draws!him to Aston's defense and com-pels him into a partnership that is[financially detrimental.With Davies’ raspy voice, Ast¬on’s monotonus voice, and Mick’sbaiting voice, the cluttered vacant¬ness of the stage resounds through¬out the theater. Frederick Wrob-lewski, the play’s director, does anexcellent job coordinating thesvoices. The staging is consistent!:good and the actors well-timed]More imaginative use might be!made of the properties, especiallythe vacuum cleaner which Mick]uses to scare Davies in the second!act. The lighting, while adequate,might also be used more effectively. The play is generally well-preisented, its dramatic and comicalpossibilities impressively exploited,Mark RosinViolinist Menuhin to give lecture tonightThe second annual Wilfrid N.Ilalperin memorial lecture will begiven by the noted violinist andconductor Yehudi Menuhin thisevening in Mandel Hall at 8:30pm. The topic of the lecture-dem¬onstration will be “Matters ofStyle”. Admission is by ticket only.Saturday evening, November 20,the Collegium Musicum is holding Its first concert of the quarter. Theprogram will include cantatas byBuxtehude and Bach, a prelude,chaconne, and fugue for organ byBuxtehude, and a trio sonata fortwaJlates and continuo by Bach.The concert, conducted by Cotlegium Musicum music directaHoward Brown, is open to the pub¬lic without charge and will beginat 8:30 pm in Bond Chapel.UC plans high school humanities seminarAbout 250 juniors and seniorsfrom Chicago area high schoolsare expected to attend a SaturdaySeminar in the humanities at theUniversity tomorrow.Kenneth J. Northcott, professorof older German literature, will speak to the students on “CoinLove and German Medieval Litera¬ture.”The seminar is the second in aseries of three to be held this autumn. Students attending the seminars are chosen by their high]school teachers for proficiency ithe humanities.fESTmFAITHERE! 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 7T. La protection fin an cl Ire que vouedonnez 6 votre familfe aujourd’huidevra lul 6tre procure d’une autrefa?on demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certalnement accomplir cettetflche & votre place.En tant que repr6sentant local de la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter 6 un moment devotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, 111.FAirfax 4-6800 — FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY MILLIE'SSPORTSWEAR HEADQUARTERSTurtleneck Jerseys1375 E. 53rd St. HY 3-592210% Student Discount with adPIZZA PLATTER1508 Hyde Park Blvd.KE 6-6606 KE 6-3891Delivery .25TABLE SERVICEPIZZA AND ITALIAN FOODSANDWICHESVa FRIED CHICKENFRENCH FRIES - COLE SLAWROLL & BUTTER$1.50HURRAY!AMERICAN AIRLINESFINALLY HAS ACAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE(ABOUT TIME)FOR: RESERVATIONS; FLIGHT INFORMATION; GROUP RATES; FUNNY STORIES}TIPS ON EXTRA LUGGAGE; AND MORE . . .Contact: CAMPUS REP. E. TAYLOR DO. 3-2293HURRY1 'TIS THE SEASON10 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 19, 1965/ . V-,MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPINGEXPERT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1342 E. 55tfc - HYJ-92S9•CTVlUf CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganAntonioni's first film in colorRichard Harris - Monica VittiVenice prize winnerP.v.yftlJA; kfory of a womans hiddenM( ... thirsts A hungers"THE RED DESERT"Students $1.00Every day but Saturday with t.D. Card Maroon Weekend Guide5210 Harper CourtA GIFT FORNieceNephewBrotherSisterSonDaughterGrandsonGranddaughterAll Siblingsand Singlings *of both sexes.Sizes Infant -12 yrs. WUCB starting this Sundaywill broadcast the Hum 111tapes for the coming week. Anew weekly feature of WUCB,every Sunday at 5 p.m.WUCB 640 AMHYDE PARKAuto ServiceWinter hits Chicago like aton of cold bricks. Todaymay be cold but tomorrowyou'll freeze.Play Safe.winterize now*.GREASE JOBSandOIL CHANGES TOO!JIM HARTMAN7646 S. STONY ISLANDRE 4-6393 JEFFERY THEATRE1952 E. 71st HY 3-3334Friday, Nov. 19thEXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENTW ——■———————»"As eksssy a spyfilm asyou couldask tosee!”-N. Y. TIMETECHNICOLOR* TE-. ..dSCOPE*m A UNIVERSAL RELEASEFeature Times2:00-4:50-7:30- 10:00THE NEW HYDE PARK SERVICE STATION1330 E. 53rd Street (near Kimbark) Ml. 3-1715FREE CAR WASH WITH THIS COUPON& PURCHASE of 8 or MOREGALLONS of GASOUR INTRODUCTORY OFFER EXPIRES SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 28th, 1965WE ARE PROUD TO BE PART OF THE NEW HYDE PARKIMAGE AND ARE LOOKING FORWARD TO SEEING YOUSid & Mort Fischel, proprietorsGAS STATION OPEN 24 HOURSWASH RACK HOURS 8:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M.NICKY'SRESTAURANT AND PIZZANICKY'S TAKE-OUT &DELIVERY MENU(BaeA. andRIBS1 Slab 2.502 Slabs 4.75 Small Medium LargeCHEESE 1.35 2.15 3.20SAUSAGE .7.. .1.60 2.40 3.50ANCHOVIE 1.60 2.40 3.50ONION 1.40 2.20 3.25PEPPER 1.60 2.40 3.50MUSHROOM .... 1.60 2.40 3.50BACON 1.60 2.40 3.50HAM 1.60 2.40 3.50Free Stuc inf DeliveryWITH THIS COUPON4 Pizzas for thePrice of 3On Mon., Tue«., Wed., Thurs.In NOVEMBER 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 PeppersHAMBURGER 50CHEESEBURGER 60BAKED LASAGNE 1.75FA 4-5340 Jimmy'sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFifty-Fifth and Woodlawn Ava.GOLD CITY INN"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559HARPER THEATRE5238 S. Harper BU 8-1717presents* EDWARD VILLELLA & PATRICIA McBRIDEdoing pas de deusTHE PRINCIPAL DANCERS OF THE N.Y. CITY BALLET CO.Clive Barnes of N.Y. Times: "Edward Villella it one of the 2 or 3 mostexciting male dancer* in the world."* Nala Najan doing classical dances of India* James Waring Modern Dance Co.Tonight thru Sat. 8:30Ends Sun., Nov. 21 - 2:30 & 7:30Special Student Rate ($2.50) for Tues., Wed., Thurs., & Sunday Performance*THE MEDICIGALLERY and COFFEE HOUSENOW SERVES• SHISH-KABOB• LULA-KABOB/ 'NATIVE DISHES OF AHMAD, OUR PERSIAN MANAGERHOURS: Weekday* 6-10 P.M., Friday Till 1 A M.No Persian Food on WednesdaySaturday 12 A.M.-2 A.M., Sunday 10 A.M.-12 P.M.1450 E. 57thBehind Th. GREEN DOOR BOOK SHOP mA Jug of Winef 'A Bowl of SpaghettiandAll We Need is ThouISmedley’sonharperNovember 19, 1965 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11CHRISTMAS SALBeautiful Gift Books and Art Books at Bargain PricesThe last book sale between now and Christmas.Do your shopping early.Sale Starts November 19, 8:00 AM.HISTORY t V. ORLD’S ART. ByHerman Leicht. Over 300 Photos plus180 Drawings in Monochrome & ColoLavishly illustrated, comprehensive his¬tory of the c eveiooment of art coveringsculpture, painting, and all other fieldsfrom the <ca Age to the present dayPub. at $7.50WINSLOW’ HOMER American Artist:His World and Work. By Albert TenEyck Gardner. . urod. oy James J.Rorimer, Met. Museum of Art, NewYork. With 33 full-color pla.es and over THE CIVIL WAR. A Pictorial Pro¬file. By John W. Blay. A completechronological and geographical pic¬torial history of the Chil War told in365 pictures of battles, generals andpo itical figures and 16 maps with100.000 words of feet. Size 8!2 x ll'LOrig. Pub. at $10.00 New, completeed Only 4.95AFTER THE CIVIL WAR. A Pic¬torial Profile of America lrom 1865to 1900. By John W. Blay. A livelypictorial history of the diificult daysof the Reconstruction Period, theopening of the West, the develop¬ment of the Arts and Culture, thegrowth of industry and the labo>-movement, the War with Spain andthe emergence cf the U. S. as aworld power. Uniform with THECIVIL WAR. Orig. Pub. at $12.00O n 1 y 4 95The 2 volume set. complete. Ori".Pub at $22.00 New, complete edBoth for 8.95 THE STORY OF WORLD BALLET. ByK. V. Burian. With 300 Illus. 12 in FullColor. The development of the dancefrom primitive ritual to modern ballet.All of the major directors, producers,many lesser known, wnth a wealth offine photographic records of productionsfrom all over the world. Pub. at $15.00Only $7.95A CONCISE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF GAS¬TRONOMY. Complete Sc Unabridged byAndre L. Simon. Illus. The famousguide compiled especially for Americanuse is both a practical cook book and acomprehensive guide to food and drinkthroughout the world containing in 800pages over 2400 international recipes,descriptions of 3800 foods and a guide to431 wines, spirits & liqueurs. There are9 major sections: Sauces; vegetables;Breads; Desserts & Cereals; Fruit;Fish; Meat; Birds Sc Eggs; Cheese;Wine. Long out of print and available atpremium prices in the rare book mar¬ket. Orig. Pub. at $5.00.New7, complete ed. Only $2.93196 black & while reproductions. A com THE GINGERBREAD AGE: ( View ofOnly $3.79 Victorian America. By John Maass. Theunique quality cf American Victorianarchitecture in private and public build¬ings depicted in more than 100 hand¬some pnolcs. 75 drawings, paintings &rare engravings with sparkling natta-tive. advertisements, fashion plates, in-prenensive c Vi.lkC 1 t, JI UUuLtiUlio. t-DUi oi/ i < i / t>. , uilieCtio.i of tne work of the tenors f}c- ^lze ^ 4 x Vi 4‘greatest artist America has ever pro-ar ced wit i a ful‘-scale biography of hislife, the story of his friends, his timesand t’e ini ",.ccn 'iia: ' d im.Size 9>4 x 12>2. Orig. Pub. at $32.00.New’, complete ed. Only $<.95 at $7 95 New’, complete ed. Only $2.98SOFT SKIES CF FRANCE. By Samuel Puo° at $5 75Chamber.ri:i. 143 suoerb photographs THE SCIENTIFIC LIFE. By TheodoreBerland. Portraits of 9 leading Ameri¬can scientists - their lives, achieve¬ments, philosophies, politics, views onreligion. Only 1.98by the noted author and photograoher,printed in brilliant gravure. A photo-g; aphic panorama of French life, its TERM IN OXFORD. Photos by CasOorthuys. Introd. by Alan Bullock. Alarge, handsome album of photographsa. cnitecture, landscape, manor houcss depic-ing the activities, beauty of theand farms churches, cities, towns and churches, lecture halls, libraries; pic MASTER DRAWINGS. Handsome,magnificent volumes, 11U x 15'2.containing the great collection ofdrawings in the Budapest Museumof Fine Arts, including Leonardo,Raphael, Durer, Veit Stoss, 41todor-fer, Titian, Breughel, Poussin, Ho¬garth and others. The reproductionsare astonishing replicas, virtuallyevery drawing is shown in the samesize as the original.MASTER DRAWINGS 14th to 18lhCENTURY. Introd. & Notes by La-jos Vayer. Illus. with 109 reproduc¬tions in the full, original colors.Pub. at $25.00 Only 16.95MASTER DRAWINGS 19th & 20thCENTURY. Selected & Introd. byDenes Patasky. With 94 reproduc¬tions in the original colors.Pub. at $25.00 Only 16.95 COLLECTOR’S LIBRARY OF THEW O R L D’S MUSICAL MASTER¬PIECES. Basic Library of over 40complete selections brilliantly per¬formed by the world's greatest so¬loists, orchestras and conductors in¬cluding Stokowski, Steinberg, Dixon,Krips, Goossens, etc. Selections in¬clude Beethoven: SYMPH. NO. 5.CHAMBER WORKS: Tchaikovsky:PATHETIQUE SYMPH NUT¬CRACKER SUITE, WALTZES:Bach: COMPLETE VIOLIN CON¬CERTOS. CHAMBER MUSIC;Strauss: WALTZES: Stravinsky:RITE OF SPRING: Mozart: JUPI¬TER & SYMPH NO. 40. CHAMBERWORKS: Schubert: UNFINISHEDSYMPH. Nos. 3 & 4: Dvorak; NEWWORLD SYMPH . etc. All works areperformed in their entirety and ar¬ranged in sequence for automatic re¬cord changers. These 16 Siero re¬cords have sold separately for over$80.00.The 16 record set Complete. S-2169Only 14.95The above in Monaural Hi-Fi M-2170Only 14.95 THE JUNGLE BOOKS. By RudyardKipling. Profusely illustrated in beauti¬ful color by Tibor Gergely? All theJungle Stories, complete and unabricieed. Size 7'a x lO'i. Pub. at $5.00Only fi.iiONCE UPON A TIME: Folk & FairvTales of the World. Retold by R LGreen. Illus. In strikingly beautiful cokor throughout by V. Kubasta. 35 out*standing fairy tales representing coun¬tries throughout the world; Puss inBoots, the Leprechaun, Little SnowWhite, etc. Ages 5-10. Pub. at $395Only $1.98PARIS IN COLOUR. By Peter Corneli¬us. With 109 brilliant colour plates, LerKnfants, Rive Gauche. Seine, HallesAux Vins, Montmartre and all tie oth¬er phases of city life in an unusuallyhandsome 10 x 12 picture album.Special $4.95BEAUT.FUL BUTTERFLIES. 56 magnificent realistic paintings in full colorhighlight this informative vo'”me en themost resplendent species. Size 8I2” x10'2" Special $2.98villages cf every region, with explan- turesque shops, pubs, markets; delightatory capttors.Pub. at $5.00 Only $2.49TUB AMERICAN MUSE. Story ofAmerican Painting, Poetry and Prose.By Henri Dorra. With 12.9 illus., includ- ful pa ks of Oxford and its vicinity. Size10 x 12.Fub. at $12.50 Only $4.95THE FILMS OF MARILYN MONROE.Ed. by Michael Conway Sc Mark Ricciing 28 color plates. A unique art book wiih a Tribute by Lee Strasberg. Introd.shewing tho civerce i.u„ cnees that by Mark Marris. With 166 photos. A pic-formed American art and literature torial album of the oareer and 28 filmswith splendid reproductions and ex- Cf the extraordinary star from her firsteerpts from the work of Audubon, aopearance in Scudda Hoo! ScuddaPeale. Eckins, Harnett, and Sheeler and Hay! to The Misfits. Size 8‘2 x 1114-writers such as Melville, Poe, Faulk- Pub. at $5.95 Only $2.98nre; from the pioneer days of Catlinand Wisler to Ben Shan and GrantWood. Pub at $10.00 Only $4.95CONVERSATION-PIECE RECIPES. By WHERE THE OLD WEST STAYEDYOUNG. By John Rolfe Burroughs. Il¬lus. with over 180 photos & maps. A re¬markable account of the rise and fall ofRu.h Vendiey Neumann. Illus. Hundreds ^ Range-Cattle business in Coloradoof recipes for special occasions and for d Wyoming with much about cattleevery day - for jaded appetnies - to harf* sh ® and sheeomen. forestmake your cooking the talk of the townfrom hors d'oeuvres to desserts.Pub. at $3.95 Only $1.69Krips’ COMPLETE BEETHOVENSYMPHONIES. Now, arranged insequence for automatic record chan¬gers, you can hear any symphonycomplete without turning a recordover. These are the famous LondonFestival definitive recordings. 7magnificent records plus handsome2-color softbound Pictorical Historycf Composer's life. Originally re¬leased in different format at $40.00Mow onyl >4 of the original price!S-2694. Stereo Only 9.95M-2693. Monaural Only 9.95 barons, sheep and sheepmenrangers, gold miners, range wars, longriders, paid killers and other charac¬ters. Size 812 x 11\\.Pub. at $15.00 Only 5.95BEAUTIFUL ROSES. 56 plates in fullcolor. Beautifully reproduced, full pagepaintings of varieties from all over theworld with text on their characteristicsand history. Special $2.98ENGLISH HERITAGE In Color. 28beautiful fu.i page, mil color photo¬graphs with text depict the beauties ofthe countryside, ancient streets, houses xiIE BOOK OF RUGS. ORIENTAL &PASCIN. By Alfred Werner. 87 illus., in¬cluding 34 Hand-tipped Full-ColorPlates. Beautiful volume 11 x 14, de¬picting the work of Jules Pascin, whofocused mainly on one theme—women.Here is the master’s beautiful linesmoving over the contours, with lovelytones of colored mist and evanescentwashes that can lift his subjects evenfrom sordidness to heights of poetic vi¬sion.Pub. at $17.50 Only 10.95and landmarks out of the rich tradition EUROPEAN. By I. Schlosser. With 200of England’s history. Illus., 16 in Full Color. AuthoritativePub. at $3.95 Only $2.49 gujde to the history, techniques of man-THE STARS: The Personalities Who ufacture and design of fine oriental orMade the Movies. By Richard Schickel type carpets. 8',2 x 11. Pub. at $10.00& Allen Hurlburt. A beautiful album of Only 4.95the gSSSSl *» weirasTur2ficdK'"? MNQ8 QF AMERICAN'Sr.'T* St?h” !ie da£r°v Drawings by Gordon Grant. Authenticcollection of American sea shanties WHO LIVED HERE? Text by M. ADeWoife Howe Photographs by SamuelChamberlain More tnan 50 beautifulpictures of lovely, historic houses ofNew England occupied by Emily Dick¬inson Hawthorne, Emerson, Paul Re¬vere John Brown, Sarah Orne Jewettand others Interiors and their furnish¬ings as well as exterior views with in¬teresting text on the accomplishmentsand way of life of the famous occu¬pants. Orig. Pub. at $6.50. New’, com¬plete edition Only $3.95SEX, CULTURE, AND MYTH. By Bro¬nislaw Malinowski Based on researchamong primitive tribes but directed pri¬marily to modern problems, this bookconsiders marital fidelity versus pro¬miscuousness, premarital experimenta¬tion versus caution, parental authorityversus permissiveness, etc.Pub. at $6.95 Only $2.98COMPOSERS ON MUSIC: From Pales-trian to Copland. Ed. by Sam Morgen-stern. A comprehensive anthology ofwritings by composers on the art of mu¬sic. Berlioz Schubert. Debussy, Mozart,Rossini, and 85 others are representedin 584 pages of essays, diaries, letters,conversations, and books. Orig. Pub. atS7.50. New, complete edition Only $3.49THE LONDON SHAKESPEARE. A NewAnnotated and Critical Edition of TheComplete Works in Six Volumes. Ed. by-John Munro. The famous, beautifullybound and printed set containing all ofthe plays and poems with much valua¬ble material including a bibliographyand glossary. Each yol. sixe 6x9, all 6vols. in a handsome box. Pub. at $36.00.The set of 6, boxed $14.95THE LITERARY GOURMET. Ed byLinda Wolfe. Drawings by Fred D. Ban-bery. In this one large handsome vol¬ume is the history and delights of won¬derful food through the ages—the de¬lights of savoring it is in the recipes ofthe Master Chefs and many little knownfacts about the Art of Cooking withmenus and anecdotes about the food bygreat writers from many times andcountries. Size 7*A x 10V«-Pub. at $12.50 Only $5.95 HOW TO KNOW FRENCH ANTIQUES.By Ruth T. Constantino. 210 Photos andhundreds of line drawings. T.iorougcomprehensive guide to every major period and style of the world's most elegant furniture and interior design in anattractively designed, lavishly illustrated 9 x 12 format. Orig. Pub. at $15.00New, complete edition. Only $4.95AN ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OFFRENCH CUISINE. By C. Guy Over100 interesting illustrations in this informative and entertaining history of theworld's greatest cuisine from Charlemagne to de Gaulle, with recipes forboth traditional and historically significant dishes. Orig. Pub. at $10.00. New.complete edition. Only $2.98TABLE GLASS English. Scottish & Ir¬ish. By G, Bernard Hughes. Over 300 il¬lus. in black & white and color. Mostcomplete account of glass producedfrom the 16th century to 1820 • shapes,engraving, enamelling, cutting, etc.with a glossary of terms. Orig. Pub. at$20.00. New, complete edition.Only $4.95ROUND THE WORLD COOKERY. ByMarguerite Patten. With 36 photos incolor and many in black & white.Hundreds of unusual recipes of the clas¬sic dishes from every region of theworld: Hors d'oeuvres, soups, meat andfish dishes, desserts, sandwiches, etc.Special $2.98Beethoven: THE COMPLETE LATEQUARTETS. Definitive recording ofthe late quartets includes the twoendings Beethoven wrote for Opus130. The Fine Arts Quartet playswith the harmonic brilliance andw’armth required by these works.Complete 5 record set. Stereo (S-2222)Pub. at $29.75 Only $7.95Monaural (m-2221) Only $7.95 International Pictorial Treasury ofKnowledgeOUR WORLD IN SPACE AND1'iME. With brilliant maps and pic¬tures in color on every opening, 'i’hestory of the world's beginning, pre¬historic men and animals, the e'e-ments of geology and veatlier.man's evolution, epic discoveriesand explorations, the challenge ofouter space.Pub. at $7.50 Only 2.98LIFE AND ITS MARVELS. Plant -Animal - Human. A basic guide toknowledge, the secrets of all livingthings from the simplest organismsto man in a vivid presentation withbrilliant drawings, maps and di¬agrams in color on every facingpage.Pub. at $7 50 Only 2.98SCIENCE AND DISCOVERY Man'sConquest of Materials. Man's pro¬gress from prehistoric times to civ¬ilization—from fire to nuclear ener¬gy, alchemy to chemistry and medi¬cal science, caves to cities, rafts toglobal communications The lucidtext is faced on each page by fullcolor drawdngs, maps and diag amsPub. at $7.50 Only $2.98MAN’S PAST AND PROGRESS TheStory of Civilization. A dramatic his¬tory of people and events from tinancient splendors of Babylon. Egypt.Greece. Rome, the Dark and M dd'eAges; the great explorers and theNew World: Eastern and Westerncultures with handsome full-color il-lustrations.Pub. at $7 50 Only $2.98THE ARTS OF MANKIND PaintingArchitecture and Music. Withhundreds of illus. in full color. Thehistory of the growth of the usefularts as well as the fine arts, suchas: architecture, interior decorationfashion, painting, theatre, music, in¬dustrial design, etc.Pub. at $7.50 Only 2.98THE WORLD’S SOCIAL STRUC¬TURE. Economics, Politics, Go\ em¬inent. With hundreds of pictures incolor. The story of man and his en¬vironment: the evolution of trade,business, economics, forms of gov¬ernment, international organizationslaw, space, etc.Pub. at $7.50 Only 2.98WILLY’S SILLY GLASSES. A big picture-story book for the read-aloud -ftabout the little boy who found a pair ofspectacles that "make the world ln<>!silly." Huge; brilliantly colored illustra¬tions. Size 9>i x 13.Fub. at $2.95 Only $1.4!ALBERT DURER: Complete Woodcuts.Ed. by Dr. Willi Kurth. Illus. with 346Woodcuts All the woodcuts of the mast¬er in this field, particularly on sacredthemes. Large, handsome volume. Orig.Pub. at $7.50 Only $3.95 THE MAGIC BUTTERFLY AND OTH¬ER FAIRY TALES OF CENTRAL EPROPE. Six long-time favorites enchant-ingly retold. Over 50 Full Color paint¬ings. Size 10'i x 14',2. Pub. at $3.95Only SI 9!Wm. S. Hart to the present • MaryPickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Valentino,Garbo, Chaplin, Keaton, W. C. Fields,Bogart, Gable. Cooper, Marilyn Monroe,Harlow, and more, 9',4 x 12V4.Pub. at $13.50 Only $4.95SONGS BELAFONTE SINGS. De luxe from clipper ship days - the immortalsongs of sea labor, ribald, roaringtunes, hearty and whole-w’inded. Pub.at $5.00 New, complete ed. Olny $2.98U.S. CAMERA ANNUAL, 1964. Ed. bygift volume with 40 songs from around Tom Maloney. Features 13 pages of ex-the world. Negro Songs (from Chain traordinary photos (including nudes) ofgangs and blues to spirituals and West Marilyn Monroe, taken less than twoIndian Songs), all from the Belafonte months before her death, by Bert Stern,repertoire selected and with commen- Also John Stewart’s 10-page Humantary by Belafonte himself. Included are Form portfolio, brilliant photos bycomplete words and music (including Karsh, Halsman, Chandoha. manyGui.ar chords) to IJay-O. Jamaica Far- more. 211 photos including 24 pages inewe 11, Kingston Market, Scarlet Ribbons full color. 8'2 x 11. Pub. at $10.00and his other favorites. 18 drawings byChas. White. 8)2 x 11.Pub. at $7.95 Only $3.95SKI AND SNOW. Illus. by Ray Atkeson. Only $4.98PORTRAIT OF MOSCOW. Glorious,Full Color presentation of the ancient,beautiful history-laden city. The ex-Nearly 100 stunning full and double traordinary color photos of the architecrrtacro nhnfnc /'f c ri u n rl unntpr uirmripr. , 4.. 4 j . e •» *page photos cf ski and winter wonder¬land scenes with text and technical photo c ata, appealing to the ski enthusiastphotographer and the traveler^ Sixe_ 9 x ture, the art and the life of Moscow vir¬tually leap from every page. Deluxe 10x 12 format. Only $5.9512 ''ub. at $3.50 Only $1.98 THE BOOK OF THE BLUES. Ed. bTHE BAD GUYS. By Wm. K. Iverson. Kay Shirley. Annotated by FranA pictorial history of the movie villain Driggs. The Music and Lyrics of 100from The Great Train Robbery of 1903 songs, melody lines with chord symbolsto the present - the western heavies, for singers, pianists, arrangers, guitar-gangsters, masterminds, hoodlums gunmen, super-criminals, the serial vil- Pub. at $7.50Jains, mad doctors, psychos—all in live- New, complete ed.Jy text and over 500 pictures. Size 8V2 xll>/4 Pub. at $6.95 Only $3.95ESQUIRE COOK BOOK. Over 200 illus.In color. Hundreds of taste-tempting re ists and banjoists. Size 9>« x 12',4. Orig.Only $3.95COMMEMORATIVE STAMPS OF THEU.S.A. Augmented Second Edition.By Fred Reinfield. Lavishly illustratedcipes for all types of food and drink with all of America’s 330 commemora-plus an incomparable guide to the best tive stamps from 1893 through 1956,in dining and superior cooking by out- with text describing the men, eventsstanding Esquire Magazine writers. An and industries making this a virtual il-attractive volume to give and to own. lustr-ated history of the U.S.A. Orig.Orig. Pub. at $5.95 New, complete ed. Pub. at $5.00Only $2 98 New, complete ed. Only $2.69 THE HOMES OF AMERICA. By ErnestPickering. With 215 beautiful photosplus drawings & diagrams. A fascinat¬ing picture-text survey of Americanhomes, architecture & interiors, cover¬ing 3 centuries from the Colonial periodto the present in all sections of thecountry. Orig. Pub. at $5.75. New, com¬plete ed. Only $2.98CARUSO: His Life in Pictures. By Fran¬cis Robinson. With 240 photos with nar¬rative text. A heart-warming biographydepicting his triumphs and failures, hisroles, performances, places and per¬sonalities. Size 8)2 x 11Pub. at $8.50 Only $2.9*THE FIFTEEN JOYS OF MARRIAGE.Trans, from the French by E. Abbott.15 Illus. in Full Color by Rene Ben Sus-san. First English translation of the ri¬bald French classic.Pub. at $10.00 Only $3.95LONDON IN COLOR. 32 handsome, fullpage, full color photographs with text.An album of the memorable sights ofhistoric and modern London in a lovelyvolume. Pub. at $4.95 Only $2.98CHESS FROM MORPHY TO BOTVIN-NIK. By Imre Konig. How the mastershave developed the famous openings andideas of play; illustrated with over 100fully annotated games.Orig. Pub. at $4.00 Only $1,98NYMPHOMANIA. A Study of the Over¬sexed Woman. By Dr. Albert Ellis &Edw. Sagarin. A full-length, frank studyof nymphomania, its causes and condi¬tions. Actual case histories that showthe hidden drives that have made out¬casts of some women because of hyper¬sexuality. Orig. Pub. at $5.95. New,complete edition. Only $1.98 THE WIZARD OF OZ, read by MarvinMiller and Jane Webb. The whole fa mi'ly will enjoy listening to and readingthis jolly classic. 4 12” hi-fi long-playingrecords plus beautiful copy of the boolwith the original Denslow illustrating,in full color. Gift-boxed.Special, only $5.95THE ANNOTATED MOTHER GOOSE.Introd. Sc Notes by Wm. S. & Ceil Bar-ing-Gould. Over 200 illus. by Caldecott,Crane, Greenaway, Rackham, ParrisltSc Historical Woodcuts. The completetext and illustrations in a fully annotat¬ed edition containing more than 1.000separate rhymes - original, variations,sources and allusions Orig Pub$10.00 ‘ Only $3GULLIVER’S TRAVELS. By Jonathan!Swift. Illus. by Luis Quintanilla. The!great classic, complete and unexpurgat-led. with 184 prints made from plattiletched by the artist himself. Orig. Pubfat $5.00 New, complete editionOnly $2.49CHILDREN’S BOOKSA Special SelectionFrom America’s Leading PublishersNow At New Low Prices!Books For All AgesFrom Toddler To TeenagerPINOCCHIO. By Carlo Collodi. Beauti¬ful color illustrations throughout by Ser¬gio Rizzato. The beloved classic in anew edition, complete and unabridged,deluxe format 10'A x 13'A. Pub. at $5.00Only $2.98THE WARRIOR Sc THE PRINCESSAND OTHER SOUTH AMERICANFAIRY TALES. Exciting, long populartales newly translated by George Obli-gado. Over 50 Full Color Illus. by G.De Gaspari. Pub. at S3 99 Only $1.98 THE ANNOTATED ALICE. Alice's IAdventures in Wonderland 3jThrough the Looking Glass. By Lew¬is Carroll. Illus. by John Tennie!With Introd. Sc Notes by MartmGardner. The complete text and orig¬inal illus. in the only fully annota¬ted edition. Notes are current withthe text on all the jokes, games, par¬odies. puzzles, etc. with which Car-roll filled his writings. Size 8»A x 12.Orig. Pub. at $10.00 Only 3.95CHILDREN’S TOYS THROUGHOl'1THE AGES. By Leslie Daiken. With H'illustrations in color and black & whitA history of toys of every type throughout the world SpecialTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOK STORE — 5802 Ellis Ave12 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 19, 1965