Proposal calls for townhouse student residencesSC urges purchase of off-campus housingby Joan PhillipsStudent Government (SG) will begin to press for administration action to assure off-campus housing for UC students with the introduction of a bill in the SG Assembly to¬night urging the University to buy townhouses in Hyde Park for use as student housing.The bill, sponsored by SG’s campus action committee, was drawn up after SG learnedthat the University has the optionto purchase some of the town-houses being built in the vicinitiesof 55 st. and Ingleside ave. and 53gt. and Kimbark ave.ACCORDING TO Dave Rosen¬berg, chairman of the SG consult¬ant board on student housing andfacilities, there are a total of about50 townhouses for sale in the HydePark area.Of these, the University alreadyhas the option to buy between 10and 20 new three-bedroom models,selling on the open market for $29,-000 each.Six students a house?Each townhouse is suitable foroccupancy by from three to sixstudents. In the three-bedroom mod¬el, there is a master bedroom andtwo smaller single bedrooms. Thesingle bedrooms are about the size of the current Pierce Tower dou¬bles.In addition to the bedrooms,there is a finished basement with apartial bathroom, a full bathroomon each of the two upper floors, afully equipped modern kitchen, anda large living room-dining roomwith a wood-burning fire place.Each unit also as an enclosedyard and parking facilities, andsome of the models are air-condi¬tioned.ON THE open market, the $29,-500 models rent for $300 month.However, Rosenberg points out,the University could rent each unitfor $252 per month, including gasand utilities, on a twelve-monthsbasis and still both pay the mort¬gage and property taxes earn a4Vi per cent interest rate on an ini¬ tial $6000 investment.Students living in Pierce Towerpay approximately $58 per monthfor a double room and $61 for asingle.High Tower costsRosenberg claims that the con¬struction of the proposed secondPierce Tower would cost $14,000per student, compared to a totalcost of $29,500 for'a townhouse thatcan house as many as six students.The townhouses also have theadvantage he says, of being readyfor immediate occupancy.SG PRESIDENT Bernie Grof-man, in supporting the SG bill,states that any new dormitory fa¬cilities that the University may de¬cide to build can not be ready be¬fore the fall of 1967, and probablynot until the fall of 1968.“In the meantime, we suggest townhouses as one solution to theserious housing scarcity that willoccur in the fall of 1966,” he says.Current housing woesCurrently, according to Grofman,there are about 500 UC studentsliving outside the University areain apartments in South Shore, an¬other 105 living in the YMCA orYWCA, and 55 living in hotels ormotels.In October, the University an¬nounced plans for expansion thatinclude an enrollment increasefrom 7,300 to 10,000 within 10 years,with the College accounting formost of the rise."NATURALLY," Grofman as¬serts, “there will be more facultyand staff members looking forhousing in the area, and it will be¬come more and more impossiblefor students to find housing inHyde Park, unless the Universitytakes action, such as buying thetownhouses.‘‘We strongly agree with theBlum committee report on housingin its recognition of the need for more and much better undergrad¬uate dormitory facilities,” h«states. “However, building betterdormitories does not alter the needapparently unrecognized by theBlum committee, for the many stu¬dents who will not wish to live indormitories, no matter how de¬luxe.”According to John Bremner,chairman of the SG campus actioncommittee, the townhouses “canbe more than just a stop-gap solu¬tion, because they offer both con¬venient and desirable facilities atprices comparable to dorm rates.“They will also provide for stu¬dents living in the community ad¬jacent to nonstudent-owned town-houses,” Bremer adds.Grofman, Bremner, and Rosen¬berg are confident that the SG As¬sembly will pass the bill. Theystress, however, that the purchaseof the townhouses would only beone step in the solution of the se¬rious housing shortage.Conference to includestudent-faculty dinnersThe “Dinners for Community Program”, a series of stu¬dent-faculty dinners, is being planned for the week of theLiberal Arts Conference with SG underwriting the costs upto SI.25 per participant.The program, according to co-or¬dinator Jerry Lipsch, is plannedonly for the period around and dur¬ing the Liberal Arts Conference,but Lipsch said, “We hope it willspringboard into a movement forgreater student-faculty fellowship,particularly in the College.”There will be two requirementsfor eligibility for the SG subsidies.Approximately one-fifth of the stu¬dents invited must be first yearstudents and a complete list of stu¬dent and faculty guests must besubmitted to the SG Office in IdaNoyes Hall. Subsidy checks will bemailed after the Conference.A list of faculty hosted dinners isgiven below. Anyone wishing to at¬tend a dinner in a faculty homemust first sign up in the SG office.Sign ups for the faculty dinnerslisted below will close tomorrow,Wednesday, January 26 at 5 pm.Lothar Meyer (Chem) with N.Nachtrieb (Chem), Gilbert White(Geography, African Studies) withL. Krieger (Hist), Bert Hoselitz(Soc. Sci. & Econ.) with R. Dern-The Peace berger (Soc, Sci. & Econ), andGerhard Meyer (Soc. Sci.) with C.Mackauer (Hist).Roger Weiss (Soc. Sci.) with J.Nyman (Soc. Sci.) and H. Brown(Music), Janice Spolford (Biology)with D. Wake (Biology), Alice Ben-ston (Hum.) with P. Moses (Hum.)and special guest in Fine Arts, andClyde Hutchinson (Chem).Bernard Weinberg (Rom. Lang,and Lit.) with R. Webber (Rom.Lang, and Lit.), Jeanne Bamber¬ger (Hum.) with D. Freedman(Human Devel.), Izaak Wirszup(Math) with A. Putnam (Math),and Warner A. Wick (Philosophy).Kenneth Northcott (Germ. Lang.& Lit.) with S. Schultz (Germ.Lang. & Lit.), Nancy Helmbold(Classics), Merlin Bowen (Hum.)with P. Herring (Hum), GrosvenorCooper (Hum. , Edward Anders(Chem.) with R. Clayton (Chem.),and John Frese (Hum.).Daniel Cardenas (Rom. Lang. &Lit.), John Hubby (Biology),George Bogorad (Botany), with R.Haselcorn (Biophysics), HaroldHaydon (Art) with V. Burnett(Art), Leo Nedelsky (Phys. Sci.),and Milton Singer (Anthro.) withR. Fogelson (Anthro.). Vol. 74-No. 30 The University of Chicago Tuesday, January 25, 1966I DC constitution readiedby Paul Burstein“As of now, I don’t think we have any body on campus which represents the opinion ofa large body of students,” declared Michael Klowden, chairman of the Interdormitory Coun¬cil (IDC).The IDC, which meets to vote on the constitution Wednesday night, hopes to provide justsuch a body. The purpose of theproposed constitution, written by aconstitution committee chaired byRick Stone, president of Chamber-lain House, and a revised versionproposed by the Henderson Housecouncil, is to have the IDC “pro¬vide an experienced and respectedrepresentative assembly for theconsideration and resolution ofquestions of interest to the stu¬dents of the UC dormitory commu¬nity.”THE IDC was established as anad hoc committee last quarter asthe result of an initiative taken byKlowden.Klowden commented that lastquarter he had occasion to speakwith members of the administra¬ tion on such matter as the evalua¬tion of O-board, the possibility ofimproving dormitory food, and theidea of carpeting the halls inPierce Tower. He found the admin¬istration receptive to him as a stu¬dent and as a representative of thedormitory, but realized, however,that “in many ways, the people inthe dormitories are just not rep¬resented to the administration.”Klowden noted the administra¬tion usually goes to SG when itwants official student opinion. Butwhile SG would like to representthe dormitories, only two out of thefifty SG representatives are pres¬ently living in the dormitories.AFTER NEXT year, this situa¬ tion will be improved by a rulechange which makes SG repressen-tatives from the dormitories live inthe living unit they represent.However, Klowden asserted, SGis actually run by its executivecommittee, which “has not yetproven” that it represents the stu¬dent body.Randall Bovbjerg, president ofThompson house and its delegateto the IDC, declared that “in manyways, SG has failed to meet theneeds of the dormitory community.It is not representative, it does notdirectly consider most of the prob¬lems of interest to the CollegeCorps-a sense of empathy KLOWDEN VIEWS the estab¬lishment of the IDC as the con¬tinuation of a recent trend involv-by John Beal(Maroon staff writer John Beal spent 1904-5 working in Colombia as a Peace Corps volunteer.)The Peace Corps experience is as varied as the different countries and cultures of theworld are varied, yet it is everywhere basically the same because wherever and wheneverpeople of two cultures come together the problems of communication and understandingare the same.The outward differences of ex* " 1 ’■*"*■*■ *"1 * ~#perience of Peace Corps volunteers in the Questionnaire, and the infor- can history, communism, medicalare great. There are 14 thousand of mation in the questionnaire an ap- self-help, wilderness survival, andthem in 46 countries with jobs as plicant is or is not invited to adifferent as grade school teachers training program»nd automobile mechanics, nurses which counlry'*„d which job anand fishermen. They live in vil- . , , , . , .lages of 40 and cities of four mil- applicant is likely to be asked tolion. Some speak Telegu, others train for depends upon his skillsSpanish, French, or Swahili; and and language ability, if any.some never leave the English Training consists of eight to- peaking world. twelve weeks at an American uni-lt is remarkable, though, how .. , .Volunteers who have relumed vers"y' and’ in “me programs,from all the different areas of the tw0 three additional weeks inworld speak of what they have Puerto Rico or Hawaii. A programgone through in virtually the same having part of the training duringterms. The experience of becoming the summer betweenimmersed in another culture seems , .. .to be far more significant than the fourth J™1- in colle8e andU* restdifferences between the foreign after graduation is being tried,cultures. The university training is rigor-Placement tests ous, with up to seven days a weekJoining the Peace Corps begins and 14 hours a day (not includingwith the completing of a question- meals) of classes and other in-naire and the taking of a place- structjonment test, similar to the college „board scholastic aptitude tests. On INSTRUCTION is usually gi\en volunteer* oiv# twothe basis of the test scores, recom- in the social system and culture of Peace Corp* volunteer* give t omendations from references given the country of assignment, Ameri- lesson. physical education, as well as in¬tensive language study and train¬ing in technical skills necessary forspecific projects.The training program also servesas a further selection process. Thetrainees are evaluated by all of(Continued on page two)native boys their first basketball ing the administration’s increasingwillingness to listen to student opin¬ion and to consider it seriously.He added that the administrationnow will have a responsible stu¬dent body to deal with. He believesthat the combination of student ini¬tiative and administration open¬ness has already manifested itselfin such action by the Pierce Towercouncil as the opening of discus¬sion of sweeping changes inO-week and O-board, changing ofmeal hours, and petitioning the ad¬ministration to open Hutchinsoncommons.Klowden foresees the IDC con¬tinuing and extending these discus¬sions to recommendations on suchsubjects as the Blum commit¬tee report on student housing andfacilities and the Social Rules com¬mittee report.THE SOCIAL rules, particular¬ly, provided the impetus for theformation of the IDC. Severalhouse presidents and residentheads felt that the report inaccu¬rately portrayed conditions in thedormitories, and that if its recom¬mendations were implemented,non-dormitory students would exer¬cise considerable control over th*dormitories which they left due !•lack of concern and interest.Inexperience, communication barriersadd to challenge of life in Peace Corps Calendar of Events(Continued from page one)their instructors and each other.These evaluations are compiledand further evaluated by a staff of?sychologists and psychiatrists.he final selection is made by aselection officer who is responsibleonly to the director of the PeaceCorps and who is usually a psychi¬atrist.Not everyone makes itThe percentage of those arrivingat training who actually go over¬seas varies considerably. It hasbeen 100 per cent. It has also been30 per cent. Usually it is around 70per cent, though in the more highlytechnical programs (registered nurses, architects) it tends to behigher and in the more generalizedprograms (community develop¬ment) lower.In the training programs, no ef¬fort or expense is spared (half amillion dollars were spent to sendless than 90 volunteers, this writerincluded, overseas in one pro¬gram).Nonetheless the inexperience inthis type of enterprise, especiallythe lack of trained instructors,along with the difficulty of com¬municating to an American withoutany relevant experience the con¬cept of understanding and workingeffectively in a different culture■TOMLM Fifty-Seventh at KenwoodUNUSUAL FOODDELIGHTFULATMOSPHEREPOPULARPRICESi\ SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT"PHILLIPS JEWELRY COMPANY“50% OFF ON ALL DIAMOND//ENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS67 E. Madison Room 1101 DE 2-6508Campus Representative: E. GLASGOW — Ext. 3265 or 6244512 creates obstacles which have notyet been fully surmounted.ONE RETURNED volunteer toldthe Maroon that his training was“scarcely related” to the situationhe found himself in. Another saidthat his had “absolutely nothing”to do with his situation. But otherscalled their training “good prep¬aration” and “good in parts.”The situation appears to be thatthe training programs are improv¬ing as the Peace Corps learns, thehard way.Once a volunteer is overseas heis under the supervision of thePeace Corps staff in his country,often in conjunction with local offi¬cials. The overseas staff is bothcompetent and incompetent. Thereason for this is twofold. Theresimply are not that many peoplewho have had good experience inthis sort of international ventureand it is rather difficult to con¬vince a truely competent interna¬tional development specialist totake the job of assistant PeaceCorps representative to Saint Lucia(where there really are volun¬teers). More and more of the bet¬ter staff members are those whojoin the staff after the end of theirterms as volunteers.Impossible to generalizeEven a general description of theliving conditions and work of a“typical” volunteer is impossible.The differences within a single(Continued on page three) SEMINAR! “Paul Tillich’* Theology!An Introduction,” 6736 University, 7 pm.FILM! “Million Dollar Legs” and “TheFatal Glass of Beer,” W. C. Fields, So¬cial Science 122, 7:15 and 9:19 pm.LECTURE: “Inkblots, the PleasurePrinciple and Ego Boundaries,” Dr.Samuel Beck, speaker, sponsored bythe undergraduate psychology club, IdaNoyes theatre, 7:30 pm.Wednesday, January 26TEST: Peace Corps placement exami¬nation. questionnaire available at boothmust be completed and brought to test¬ing center, Ida Noyes, east lounge, testgiven at 9 am, 1 and 7 pm.FILM: “The Pit and the Pendulum,”Ida Noyes Hall, 7 and 9 pm.PANEL DISCUSSION: “Peace Corps:Education and Social Action,” Profes¬sors Susanne Rudolph, Lloyd Rudolphand Manning Nash, Ross Prichard,Peace Corps Washington and three re¬turned Peace Corps volunteers will dis¬cuss the relevance of the Peace Corpsexperience to continuing education andconsider the Corps’ activities as mean¬ingful community action, Reynolds Clublounge. 7:30 pm.DISCCSSION: On the general educationprogram led by professors Richard Le-wontin and David Orlinsky, ThompsonHouse lounge, 8 pm. DANCING! English Country dancinginstruction and introductions to manyEnglish country dances and Scandinavi.an folk dances, bring tennis shoes, re-freshments afterwards, Ida Noyes base¬ment, 8 pm.Thursday, January 27TEST! Peace Corps placement exami.nation, questionnaire available at boothmust be completed and brought to test¬ing center, Ida Noyes, east lounge, testgiven at 9 am, 1 and 7 pm.LECTURE: Martin Luther King, speak¬er, presented by SG W. B Ogdenmemorial lecture series, Mandel Hall8:30 pm.Friday, January 28TEST: Peace Corps examination. IdaNoyes, east lounge, test given at 9 amand 1 pm.TALKING NEWSPAPER: “Educationand the Draft,” David Bakan, professorof psychology will lead student discus¬sion, Reynolds Club, 3:30 pm.Saturday, January 29TEST: Peace Corps placement exami¬nation. Ida Noyes, east lounge, 9 am.Monday, January 31TEST: Peace Corps placement exami¬nation, Ida Noyes, east lounge, 9 amand 1 pm.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign car hospitolJEFFREY THEATREWednesday and ThursdayFebruary 2 and 3Exclusive ShowingAN ACTUAL PERFORMANCE OF THENATIONAL THEATRE’WOF GREAT■BRITAIN/riie m"greatestOthello everby the greatestactorofour time.LAURENCEOUVIER-OIHEIIOA B.H.E. PRODUCTIONALSO STARRINGPROOUCEO BYANTHONY HAVELOCK-ALLAN and JOHNbrabourme•sfuftRTBURGE PANAV1SI0N* TECHNICOLOR’ FROM WARNER BROS.FEATURE TIMES2:00-5:15-8:30Student Discount Rates for 2:00 & 5:15 PerformanceStudent Rates $1.25NO SEATS RESERVED DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OpvcnetristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.CO 3-7644 DO 3-5866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESTYPEWRITERS & TAPE RECORDERSTape recorder and typewriter rental; We will apply threemonths of rental toward the purchase price.Two type changes without charge on any new typewriterpurchased atTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 SOUTH ELLIS AVENUEFREE DELIVERY3 FREE PEPSIS with each PIZZA(confirm phone; with take out orders only)CAFE ENRICOACROSS FROM THE VHY 3-5300 FA 4« 5525PIZZAMed. LaroeCHEESE ... 1.45 2.00SAUSAGE .... 1.80 2.35PEPPER & ONION 1.45 2.20BACON & ONION ... 2.15 2.70COMBINATION ... 2.40 2.95MUSHROOM 2.15 2.70SHRI M P •••••• •eeteeeoeeeoeoeooeeeeeeeeoe ... 2.40 2.95UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor Tonight At 8:30BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentreComplete Repair*And ServiceFee AN Popular Import*Midway 3-45016052 So. Cottage Grove University Theatre PresentsMANDEL HALLFEBRUARY 11-12-135 * CHICAGO MAROON • January 25, 19661Heart of Peace Corpsis mutual co-operation Classified Ads? > mm • *l i mm;Personals(Continued from page two)country are often great. All volun¬teers live on roughly the same sal¬ary, but what is available to spendthat money on varies widely. Andworking conditions in the samejob. in nominally the same pro¬gram, but in different areas, canbe extremely dissimilar.It is also difficult to evaluate theeffect of the volunteers on thecountries in which they are sta¬tioned. The top Peace Corps offi¬cials do not have more than a goodgeneral impression.MANY VOLUNTEERS feel thatthey accomplish practically noth-jng' during their service. Others,especially teachers, are satisfiedwith their jobs. And a large part,while they think that they did ac¬complish something, feel that itwas not enough, not significant.The reason for this attitude is ap¬parent from the situation of thevolunteer in India who improvedthe English of one or two hundredstudents in a country where 400million people are facing possiblefamine and live under a govern¬ment unable to do anything aboutit.In much of Latin America com-nmnity development volunteers arebringing about definite improve¬ments in international understand¬ing. but their effect on the econom¬ic and social development of thesecountries is often slight.Nowhere, to the knowledge ofthis writer, have the changes in theinstitutions, in the fabric of socie¬ty. which are necessary for per¬manent change, been broughtabout by Peace Corps volunteers.BUT THE ESSENCE of thePeace Corps experience cannot befound by looking at the contribu¬tion that volunteers make towardeconomic growth or social reform. Rather, it Is to be found in the ex¬perience of living within and devel¬oping an understanding of underde¬veloped nations.The people of those regions donot think as we do, do not wantwhat we want, and much of whatthey do want they cannot have.Western industrialized society doesnot have a monopoly on humanvalues, and the Peace Corps volun¬teers are discovering the values ofthe rest of the world in the onlyway that that discovery can bemade, by living as a part, not anobserver, of different cultures."An educational experience"A former volunteer told the Ma¬roon, “It was a tremendous educa¬tional experience; it gave me a dif¬ferent perspective of the world, abroadening of experience.” Aformer Liberian volunteer said, ‘‘Itwas a radically different type ofexperience which gave me a newapproach to values in the UnitedStates.” A former Indian volunteersaid. “I have had a reorientationof attitudes and ambitions.” Andthe foremost impression that thisreporter has of his term in Colom¬bia is of learning how another partof the world really works.THESE IMPRESSIONS comepartly from overall views andpartly from specific encounters.The most frequently mentionedimpression is the difference in theconcept of time. Volunteers have to“slow down and readjust expecta¬tions.” No one is in a rush to doanything. They never have beenand are not about to change toplease a 22 year old American.Another problem encountered theworld over is the initial difficultyin really communicating with thepeople, in really understandingtheir actions and feelings. Why did John Platt leave UC? Find outduring the L.A.C.Tickets on sale now for Wash Prom,Feb. 19.THE PHOENIX needs literature! Poet¬ry, short-stories, one act plays, criticalEssays. Please help. Send to PhoenixMagazine. 1212 E. 59th Ida Noyes Hall.Are you afraid to find out what you’redoing in college?Kamelot Restaurant 2f80 E. 71 St. 10%discount and no sales tax for UC stu¬dents.Funds available for student-faculty get-togethers during the L.A.C. contactMary O’Dowd, G.B.-130.Air-bus-ship-hotels-world-wide or local.Do it yourself or escorted quir'i tours.See us now. Marco Polo. BU 8-5944.Hurray, wifey is here!Hurray for wifey! VICE PRESIDENT HUMPHREY maynot make it to the party at Pierce Tow¬er, Friday, Jan. 28 at 8:30, but he’llwish he had.Pierce Tower, Friday, Jan. 28, 8:30.WUFFLE will attend.Rummage saleRummage sale Fri. Jan. 28, 12-5 pm.Chicago Osteopathic Hospital auditori¬um, 5200 S. Ellis. Sponsor by ChicagoCollege Osteopathy student wives auxili¬ary.Jobs offeredLooking for good food and a room closeto campus? Openings now available atAlpha Pelt. Call PL 2-9718.GO million Germans can’t be wrong seeTRIUMPH OF THE WILL tomorrowIda Noyes Theatre 7 & 9 pm.If you don’t support the Liberal ArtsConference-Who will?German Shepherd pups 7 weeks AKCreg. call Ext. 4737.Finally coming Sun. 7-11 another partywith the Ellis apartment girls. S’SABldg, (corner 60th Ellis).O.Z. It is only a short walk from Int.House to find some horrible memoriesat tonight’s Blackstone Coffee Hour.F.F.P.KLH: musical flights leaving daily fromFret Shop. OFFSET PRESSMAN. Will train youngman with experience on multilith. 5days week. Southeast side. CallNO 7-2412.Looking for a career? Openings in Jew¬ish Social Welfare and Communal Agen¬cies. Scholarships and graduate workstudy plans available. Contact HillelPL 2-1127.Wanted qualified graduate students towork with groups of children & adoles¬cence in a Jewish Community Center,Part-time exper. helpful, call Joy John-son RE 1-6969.Wanted: Girl to answer phone. Hrs. 2-7pm. call 493-2000 aft. 6 pm or come inMon-Fri.Rm. & Bd. in exchange for babysitting.324-6131.I offer an unique typing SERVICE forstudents & faculty. Available 24hrs./day, 7 days a wk. work of thehighest quality. Term Papers - doc-torals - manuscripts, etc. Call MissTweed - World Wide Dictation Service.261-5343.Typist exper. call HY 3-2438.Instructor for woodshop classes for chil¬dren ages 6-12. 5 classes/wk. after¬noons J.C.C.. Miss Heilpern. RE 1-6969. Private rm. & bd. in townhouse nearUniv. in exchange for helping with sup-per of 3 small children and occasionalsitting. DO 3-3539.Apts. & rms. for rent6 rms. with 2 bath in excellent condi¬tion, by 1st of March 5th fl. for rent.MI 3-6470.FREETENANT REFERRAL SERVICEReasonable Rentals. Desir. Apts. 8 min.to U of C by IC. Eff. S80.00 1 Bdrm.$90.00 & up. Also large Deluxe apts.furn. & unfurn, NO 7-7620.6900 South Crandon Ave. Deluxe High-rise 1 bdrm. apts. from $120: parquetfloor, see Mrs. Haley receiving rm. orsecurity guard. MU 4-7964.Roommates wantedTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PROFESSIONALTHEATRE PROGRAM AND THE GOODMAN THEATREPRESENTMoliere's THE MISANTHROPETranslated by Richard WilburSTARRINGGEORGE GRIZZARD BARBARA BAXLEYBRENDA FORBES LEE RICHARDSONProducted and Directed by John ReichFEBRUARY 4-27The University of Chicago Law School AuditoriumTicket Reservations at Information Desk, Administration Building, or ext. 4400Prices: Tues. • Sat. Eves. (8 P.M.) $4.00; Sat. & Sun. Mats. (2 P.M.) $3.00;Students: Eves., $2.00; Mat., $1.50ORGAN AND CHOIRworks by buxtahudu. bach, zing truth and franchPHOTOGRAPHYEasy Inexpensive Enjoymentwith an Instamatic CameraSimple to use.Economically reduced from $17.95 to $15.95Fun to take black & white or color picturesAsk the people who own one.PHOTO DEPARTMENTTHE UNIVERSITY CF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 SOUTH ELLIS AVENUE BEVERLY WARD / THE MEN AND BOYS CHOIR* and coocart at tha church oh,ca 624-3185 / woodwonh'tChicago (tludani lie* Hi only}. 57th and unraanrty avanvaTUESDAY, JANUARY 25 / DEMONSTRATION 7:30 PM, CONCERT 8:30SAINT PAUL’S CHURCH / DORCHESTER AT 50th STREETDEMONSTRATION AND CONCERT 1.50 / STUDENTS 1.00 „ERNEST WHITE• lecture-demonstration by the designer of the'amarie an classic' organ at saint pau/'s churchORGAN DEMONSTRATIONTonight At 8:30i ALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andEilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.After dinner don’t miss the newplays at the Last Stage. Join usfor cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST & HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 8-7585 UNIVERSITY THEATREPresentsTONICHT AT 8:30ILEby Eugene O'NeillRIDERS TO THE SEAby John Millington SyngeTHE BEARby Anton Pavlovitch ChekovTICKETS $1.50STUDENTS $1.00January 28-29-30 - February 4-5-6Reynolds Club Theatre57th and UniversityBUY YOUR TICKETS NOW AT REYNOLDS CLUB DESK OR BY MAIL Girl wanted to share 7 rm. townhousewith 2 grad, students; call eve.MI 3-5251.For sale1958 Plymouth 4 dr. new battery bestoffer. 667-6539 between 6 & 8 pm. Cheaptransportation.All household goods draperies, carpet¬ing & furn. for sale. MI 3-6470.For sale today, because leaving thecountrv. 1 double bed almost new $50.221-8012,Sandals mid-winter discounts sale 10-20% saving to students with ID card.All sandals made to order. Adlib Studio,1422 E. 53rd St. ■1964 Corvair Spyder convertible: yelloww/black top; exc. cond; 4 new tires,radio, 4 speed. Call 363-7391.Apt. for sale14755 S. CRAWFORD AVE, 5 yrs. old 16rms. 2 suite occupied, 1 suite vacancy.Consisting of 5 rms. Price 65,000 - 15,000cash with terms. F. WalkerBAIRD & WARNER1348 E. 55th St. BU 8-1855EXCELLENT BUYLight, large 6 rooms, 2 bath apartmentmortgage FREE: must see to appre¬ciate: call FA 4-6783.Ride wantedWanted ride to N.Y.C. Feb.share expenses, call 288-8347. 1-9, willUniversity Theatre PresentsFRI., SAT. $2, SUN. $1.50STUDENTS 50c OFFSPECIAL SALE(THIS WEEK ONLY)SWEATERS50% OFFBROKEN STYLES & COLORSCOHN&STERN.Town and Campus ShopIn the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St.Phone 752-8100January 25, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3-0SPECIAL SALlOutstanding Values in Publishers' RemaindersOne-third to One-half Off Original PricesStarts today, January 25Helen Gurley Brown: SEX ANDTHE OFFICE. By the author ofSex and The Single Girl.Pub. at $4.95 Sale $1.00Ernest K. Gann: OF GOOD ANDEVIL, author of Fate Is the Hunt¬er. Dark thriller of the hiddenviolence, brutality, and fear thatvibrate endlessly through a greatcity.Pub. at $4.95 Sale $1.008TH ANNUAL OF THE YEAR'SBEST SF. Edited by Judith Merril.A collection, excellent in varietyand scope of intriguing science fic¬tion stories, and with curioustwists and results.Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.98THE LITTLE FELLOW: TheLife and Work of Charles Chap¬lin. By Peter Cotes & ThelmaNiklaus; Fwrd. by W. SomersetMaugham. 55 screen photos.Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.98MODERN ART MOVEMENT. ByTrewin Copplestone. Featuring 54Full color plates and three black-and-white illustrations, the devel¬opment of modern art throughFauvism, Cubism, Expressionism,Futurism, Surrealism, etc.Special $2.98P.G. Wodehouse: SERVICE WITHA SMILE. Another hilariouswhoop-de-doo starring Lord Ems-vorth of Blandings Castle, GeorgeCyril Wellbeloved, Uncle Fred—and all the unexpected shenanigansthat are found only-in-Wodehouse.Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.00BRIDGMAN'S COMPLETEGUIDE TO DRAWING FROMLIFE. By G. B. Bridgman. Thelargest, most comprehensivelife-drawing volume every pub¬lished, now in its 6th printing—shows and names all the mus¬cles and bones of the body; acomplete anatomical referenceguide, combining in modernizedform 6 well-known Bridgmanbooks. Over 1000 drawings; 360pages on fine opaque paper; 9”x llVi’-.Pub. at $15.00 Sale $7.98 THE WORLD OF THE WALLSTREET JOURNAL. Edited byCharles Preston. A treasury ofgood reading from The WallStreet Journal.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $2.98THE NEW WORLD OF THEWALL STREET JOURNAL. Ed¬ited by Charles Preston. A col¬lection of good reading fromThe Wall Street Journal, thecountry’s only national businessdaily.Pub. at $6.95 Sale $2.98PROSTITUTION IN EUROPEAND THE AMERICAS. By Dr.Fernando Henriques. Scholarly andreadable history of prostitutioncovering sexuality in early Chris¬tianity, the century of the cour¬tesan, 18th century Russia, Franceand England, and prostitution inBrazil, the Caribbean, and the USfrom colonial times to the present.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $2.98 GOYA. By Bernard Myers. Aroyal read of excellent text andbrilliant, full color art reproduc¬tions—the heroic Goya and hispassionate search for artistictruth, that moved from lighthearted tapestry cartoons, tothe horrific Disasters of Warand the savage “Black Pic¬tures”. 49 plates in full color, 9monochrome, 9Mi” x 103/4”.Special Import $2.98DARE CALL IT TREASON. ByRichard M. Watt. The Story ofthirty years of political corruptionand military incompetence thatbrought the French Army to muti¬ny in 1917.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $1.98ODDITIES: A Book of Unex¬plained. Facts. By Rupert TGould. Eleven true mysteries,exciting mysteries, still unsolvedin our world of omniscientscience. Illus.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.98ENIGMAS: Another Book ofUnexplained Facts. By RupertT. Gould. Eleven well-told realLife Mysteries—the longevity ofthe 165-year-old Britisher, OldParr; the Victoria maritimetragedy; a successful and wit-n e s s e d-by-experts alchemicalexperiment; the cry of the Mem-mon; more. Illus.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $2.98 The Hermitage, Leningrad: GOTH¬IC AND RENAISSANCE TAPES¬TRIES. By Nina Birjukowa. Photosbv W. Forman. Superb volume ex¬hibiting the unsurpassed glories ofthe Hermitage tapestry collection—•206 photos, 128 in exquisite color ofthe finest in European Tapestryart—plus introductory notes andcommentary upon each tapestry.10% ” x 12”. Special Import $9.98 MR. SEIDMAN AND THE GEI¬SHA. By Elick Moll, author ofSeidman and Son.Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.00S. M. EISENSTEIN’S SCREEN¬PLAY: IVAN THE TERRIBLE.Ed. & Trans, by I. Montagu &Herbert Marshall. The completescreenplay, both parts, plus thenever-produced Part 3, inter¬rupted by Eisenstein’s death—with over 100 illustrations, in¬cluding stills from Part 3, manyof Eisenstein’s drawings, and anarticle by Eisenstein on hisdrawings—a dramatic script forevery reader, a must for everycinema lover.Pub. at $6.50 Sale $1.98Walter Kerr: THE DECLINE OFPLEASURE.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.00MAN & SEX—A Practical Manualof Sexual Knowledge. By J. J.Kaufman, M.D. and G. Borgeson.The first solid medicn manualwritten specifically for men in non¬technical language.Pub. at $3.95 Sale $1.98 ban Hunter]BUDDWINGTHE WORLD OF CARNEGIEHALL. By Richard Schickel. Richand resonant history of one ofAmerica’s most famous musicallandmarks. 66 photos.Pub. at $8.50 Sale $2.98Bernard Baruch: THE PUBLICYEARS. Baruch’s memoirs cover¬ing the years between his depar¬ture from Wall Street and his post-WW II UN Atomic Energy Com¬mission days. 431 pp; 30 photos.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $1.00BIRDS OF HEATH AND MARSH¬LAND. By O. Stepanek and E. De¬martini. Handsome volume de¬scribing over 50 species of heath,pond, and marsh birds—illustratedwith 56 full-color art plates.Special Import $2.98Father of Yiddish Literature: MYMEMOIRS. By Isaac Leib Peretz.Admirable auto-biography by the“Father of Yiddish Literature”.Pub. at $3.50 Sale $1.49 Evelyn Waugh: A LITTLELEARNING-The Early Years.First volume of Waugh’s long-awaited autobiography, withperceptive observations on thefading institution of maidenaunts, the remnants of the plushgaslight era. Oxford revelry,and the start of Waugh’s road tofame—by the author of TheLoved One.Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.08 THE GEOGRAPHY OF WITCH¬CRAFT. By Montague Summers. Acomprehensive study of witchcraft,including many case histories andbrilliantly surveying the occurencesof witchcraft in Greece, Rome,Germany, Spain and New England.Bibliography and index. 623 pages.Pub. at $12.50 Sale $5.98 THE GOD HUNTERS. By WilliamKelley. Dazzingly powerful novel ofthe brilliant, hubristic world of theAmerican-baronial Strycker family—by the author of Gemini.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $1.00English Scandal: TEMPLE OFLOVE. By Donald McCormick.Pub. at $4.50 Sale $1.98Evan Hunter: BUDDWING. Mag¬nificent kaleidoscopic novel of anamnesiac’s search for self-knowl¬edge in the byways of New York.Pub. at $4.95 Sale $1.00Bertrand Russell: HAS MAN AFUTURE? Trenchant examinationof man’s hope for survival in thenuclear age.Pub. at $3.00 Sale $1.00The South Today: LOOK AWAY,LOOK AWAY. By Ben Haas. Rich¬ly dramatic novel of two men, onewhite, one Negro, friends sincechildhood, who are driven by back¬grounds to become fierce antago¬nists on opposite sides of the strug¬gle over civil rights.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $1.00THE MOONS OF PARADISE: Re¬flections on the Breast in Art. ByMervyn Levy. 103 special photos.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $2.98 Contemporary Spanish Sculptor:JOSE LUIS SANCHEZ. By JoseLuis Fernandez Del Amo. 63photos; text in Spanish & Eng¬lish. 8” x 9Mi”.Special Import $1.00PABLO SERRANO. By Jose Ma-ria Moreno Galvan. Engagingintroduction to the 20th centurySpanish sculptor Pablo Serrano—with 40 photos—and texturalappreciation of the sculptor’srevolutionary work. Text inSpanish & English. 8’’ x 9Mi”.Special Import $1.0020th Century Spanish Sculptor:AMADEO GABINO. By JuanRamirez de Lucas. Particularlyfine photographic introductionto and textural appreciation ofGabino’s “architectural” sculp¬ture-examples of some of theworld’s best metal sculpture. 44photos; text in Spanish & Eng¬lish. 8” x 9Mi”,Special Import $1.00VAQUERO TURCIOS. By JoseMaria Morena Galvan. Photo¬graphic introduction to thepaintings and murals of one ofSpain’s pre-eminent painters—the drive, ecstatic rhythms, andpassion of these works is ex¬traordinarily impressive. 30photos; text in Spanish & Eng¬lish. 8” x 9Mi”.Special Import $1.00RUBENS—With 49 Color Plates.Text by Edward Lucia-Smith. 49color plates, introduction, outlinebiography and full notes.Special $2.98LE MORTE D’ARTHUR: TheBook of King Arthur and HisKnights of The Round Table. BySir Thomas Malory. A single-vol¬ume, 960-page, unexpurgated edi¬tion of the 15th century classic ren¬dered into modern English spell¬ing. Exact replica of the historicMedici Societa edition.Pub. at $15.00 Sale $6.98 MASTERPIECES OF GREEKSCULPTURE. By A. Furtwan-gler. New Edition of the long-out-of-print classic work on thegolden age of Greek sculpture-over 350 handsome illustrationsof the best in Greek art—plusan extensive text introductingthe sculptors, their schools andworks, and delineating the his¬tory and evolution of art stylesduring the Classical period. 9” x12%”.Pub. at $20.00 Sale $9.98Colin Wilson: RASPUTIN ANDTHE FALL OF THE ROMANOVS.Brilliant and controversial study ofRasputin.Pub. at $5.50 Sale $1.98 PABLO PICASSO. By Paul Elu-ard. Translated by Joseph T.Shipley. The eminent Frenchpoet depicts in this work the in¬ner life of Picasso—the artist’sdreams, the artist’s imagina¬tion, the artist’s creations—99magnificent reproductions of Pi¬casso’s paintings illustrate thegrowth of the century’s mostoutstanding painter, from hisearly years of struggle to hislatter day achievements. 8%” x11%”.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $4.98BEING AND NOTHINGNESS. ByJean-Paul Sarte. A MUST foreveryone interested in philosophyand psychology.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $3.98A TREASURY OF WORLDSCIENCE. Edited by Dagobert D.Runes. Preface by Dr. Wernhervon Braun.Pub. at $15.00 Sale $2.98LOVE IN THE SOUTH SEAS. ByBengt Danielsson. Complete, accu¬rate account of the family and sexlife of the Polynesians, from the18th century to the present. Unusu¬al photographs.Pub. at $4.00 Sale $1.00THE BOOK OF THE DEAD. Themost important religious writingsof the ancient Egyptians, theHieroglyphic Transcript of the Pa¬pyrus of ANI, the translation andan introduction by E. A. WallisBudge of the British Museum.Pub. at $12.50 Sale $6.98 MATHEMATICAL PUZZLES-AND OTHER BRAIN TWIST¬ERS. By Anthony S. Filipiak.100 puzzles that will challengeyour ingenuity and skill in aproductive and amusing manner—100 “brain-twisters” fromshifting blocks to geometric de¬signs, plus instructions on howto make and solve them. Di¬agrams.Pub. at $3.95 Sale $1.98GIANTS OF FAITH: Great Ameri¬can Rabbis. By Rabbi Alex J.Goldman. Illuminating biographiesof 18 great rabbis, Conservative,Orthodox, and Reform, who, overthe last century and a half, haveplayed distinguished roles in theirreligion.Pub. at $6.95 Sale $2.98COROT: 48 Color Plates. By KeithRoberts. An expert and searchingstudy of the life and works of Cam-illo Corot - with 48 full color repro¬ductions displaying the remarkablestrength and serene simplicity thatmakes his paintings quite inimita¬ble. 57 plates, 48 in color; x10%Special Import $2.98Lillian Ross: PORTRAIT OFHEMINGWAY. The classic NewYorker profile of HemingwayPub. at $2.50 Sale $1.00LAROUSSE ENCYCLOPEDIA OFMYTHOLOGY. Ed. by Felix Guir-and, intro, by Robert Graves. Theonly complete one-volume encyclo¬pedia of world mythology frompre-Biblical Egypt and pre-Homer-ic Greece, through Celtic, Teuton- „ic, Chinese and Japanese myths, tothe myths of Oceania, and BlackAfrica—over 70,000 hardcover cop¬ies sold at $17.50 each. 868 illus-of art around the world, 500 pp..8Mi” x 11%”, softbound, sewn forlasting use.Special Import $4.9» „The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis AvenueCHICAGO MAROON January 25, 1966