DAILY MAROON1964 -i 1966I IENDOF FILMPLEASE REWINDitUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOJOSEPH REGENSTEIN LIBRARYPHOTODUPLICATION DEPARTMENTDAILY MAROON1966 1968INCOMPLETE OR IMPERFECTAT THE TIME OF FILMING THIS WAS THEMOST COMPLETE FILE THAT COULD BELOCATED.IF AN IMPERFECT OR MISSING SECTION ISSUBSEQUENTLY LOCATED IT WILL BEFOUND AT THE END OF THIS REEL.'m ^UNIVERSITYCF CHICAGOLIBRARYChicago Maroo SUMMERWEEKLYVol. 75-No. 1 Tho University of Chicago Friday, Juno 24, 1966Hopes to Stay ActiveMikva Discusses Plansby Doniol HortzborgAbner Mikva believes that the volunteer organization mobil- Special Ranking CommitteeOutlines University's Choicesby David E. Gumpert. .. ^ , • . .. A special student-faculty committee has released a report detailing what it feels to bebed for his unsuccessful bid for the Democratic nomination the practical consjderations of the University’s involvement in the Selective Servicefor US House of Representative gave Chicago some of the' tem sys-“fresh air, citizen participation, and new ideas” that it needsto make the city Democratic machine more responsive to publicopinion.But Mikva now fears that, fol¬lowing his June 14 primary defeatin the second congressional districtat the hands of incumbent USRepresentative) Barratt O’Hara,“There just is not a place” for hisvolunteers."I WAS very encouraged by allthe new people who got involved,”Mikva declared in an interviewWednesday. They were not justmotivated by, anti-machine feel¬ings, he said, but by “a construc¬tive attitude” and the belief thatthe answers to many city problemscould be found in the politicalarena.“The only thing that makes themachine is a vacuum” which, Mik¬va commented, the machine triesto create by generating “themyth” of its invincibility and bykeeping people out of party poli¬tics. The volunteers in his cam¬paign helped fill this vacuum, Mik¬va said.Thi aversion to citizen partic¬ipation in city Democratic politicsleaves Mikva’s volunteers with novehicle to keep themselves togeth¬er.While.some volunteers will jointhe Independent Voters of Illinois(1VI), Mikva said; many, like him¬self, consider themselves to beDemocrats, not independents.The volunteers may regroup thisfall, however, to support the candi¬dacy of Adlai Stevenson III for The report, released June 7, is in response to a May 21 resolution by the Committeeof the Council of the Faculty Sen- *7* —Abner Mikvastate treasurer. “I would hopeyoung Adlai would capture theirimagination,” comments Mikva.Anti-machine victoriesMikva sees some hope for anti¬machine forces in the primary vic¬tories of Alderman Charles ChewJr. an independent, and RichardNewhouse, a political novice with astrong civil rights background, forDemocratic nomination for thestate senate.THE CHEW victory demon¬strates that “the machine is basedon economics in Negro neighbor*(Continuod on Pago Four) ate calling for a committee of sixstudents and six faculty membersto study “the consequences overthe coming summer and fall of ad¬hering to or reversing the presentUniversity policy of submittingrank upon the request of the stu¬dent” to his local draft board.Chairman of the special committeewas professor of law Allison Dun¬ham.The report recognizes a basic di¬lemma involved in the issue ofranking by questioning the effectof the use of grades and class rankon the educational process and theobligation of the University to ful¬fill requests to report informationto be used in determining defer¬ments. It makes no suggestions,however, as to what particularI course of action the Universityj should follow.In addition, the report makesmention of the fact that on the ba¬sis of previous experience, lessthan one per cent of male studentsin the College who take the draftdeferment test will score less than70.“The report is purely factual andI think the committee carried outits function very well,” commentedAlan Gewirth, professor of philoso¬phy and Council of the Senate andCommittee of the Council member..“It makes available data on thebasis of which one can make deci¬sions on the ranking issue.”Recognizes complexity of IssueBefore examining the choicesLong Summer Ahead for theCity's Troubled V/est Side fbAby David A. SetterChicago’s West Side is dangerousany time of the year but in thesummer it simmers. When it getshot, the tenements are torture tosleep in and people sit out on theirfront porches or walk the streets.Last summer seven were injuredand sixteen people were arrestedin a riot that resulted in the after-math of the death of a Negro wom¬an. The woman was killed in afreak accident involving a firetruck from a nearby all-white fire¬house.the west side riot was over¬shadowed in the news by the LosAngeles riots but there is specula¬tion that this year no one will beable to upstage the West Side.Among white Chicagoans, thearea has long enjoyed a reputationas being a good place to stay awayfrom. It’s the first stop for poorNegroes coming to Chicago fromMississippi and Alabama and it’sprobably the city’s worst slum.This summer, the West Side willhe the focus of the first campaign•gainst slums in the north evermounted by major civil rightsforces.The Southern Christian Leader¬ship Conference (SCLC), under thedirection of Martin Luther King,has set July 10th as the date for amassive civil rights rally in Sol¬dier’s Field. SCLC workers hopethat the rally will provide impor¬tant momentum for the summer’sactivity.King and SCLC believe that In¬tensive civil rights activity is animportant—perhaps the only—wayto forestall the summer riots whichmany believe are all but inevita¬ble.THE RIOTS BY Puerto Ricanson the near Northwest Side .tookChicago police by surprise. HieNegro ghettos of the South and. West Sides had always seemed tobe far more likely places for vio¬lence and the outbreak in the rela¬tively quiet Puerto Rican sectionindicated, to many, the potentialfor trouble.Sources in the Movement say animportant part of the SCLC cam¬paign to “end slums” will be theparticipation of college and highschool students. Candy Dawson, aformer student at Illinois Teach¬er’s College North, is one of theMovement’s college coordinators.ACCORDING TO Miss Dawson,students will serve as ushersand marshalls at the massive July10th rally in Soldier’s Field. Shesak' that the SCLC leadership iscounting on the march and rally tomobilize students. “Hopefully,” shesaid,” the role of students in theMovement will be similar tp thatplayed by students in the South,where they served as a main focalpoint of activity.” “If,” she said,“college students don’t really in¬volve themselves in the Movementthen the Movement won’t be suc¬cessful.”Whether or not Dr. King’s Move¬ment is really what th# city needsto prevent Watts-type riots is opento considerable debate. Particular¬ly controversial has been SCLC’swork with teenage gangs. King andhis chief aide, the ReverendJames Bevel contend that they areencouraging gang members tochannel their energies into con¬structive activity. Others, includingjnany city officials, argue thatSCLC’s program with gangs, whichincludes showing movies of the LosAngeles riots, really encouragesgang violence.SCLC SOURCES say that plansfor Chicago will eventually includebuilding a city wide mvoemeat.According to Reverend A. J. Samp-ut SCLC field worker and staff member, “What we’re tryingto do is mount an attack on all thefactors that make and perpetuatethe slums.”SAR Takes StandAgainst Viet WarThe Students Against theRank (SAR) voted last night togo on record in opposition tothe war in Vietnam. SAR hadpreviously refrained from takingan explicit organizational standagainst the war.Last night’s meeting was thefirst of the summer quarter forSAR, the group that conducted thesit-in in the administration build¬ing May 11-10. The group had pre¬viously taken stands against sub¬mission of grade^ and class rankto the Selective TSefvice, againstthe concept of student deferments,against the draft’deferment test,and against the idea of militaryconscription.In other business, a committeewas formed to explore ways todemocratize decision-making pro¬cedures within the University.Tho Maroon will publishweekly during the summerquarter through August 12.Tho deadline for classi-f i a d advertisements iseleven O'clock on Thurs¬days. Business office hoursaro 12 to 12:30 am Mon¬days and Tuesdays, 9 to11:30 am and 12 to 12:30am Wednesdays, and 9 to11:30 am and 12 to 4 amThursdays and Fridays.~ iHMaa problem arising from a reversalretroactively of a long standingpo!’Cy; the problem of making adecision as to the record-keepingservices available to a student onthe basis of the purpose of worthi¬ness of the person to whom theAllison Dunham, chairman of thestudent-faculty committee onranking.and possible consequences facingthe University in the determinationof its policy, the report touches onsome of the many additional issuesthat have been raised in relation toUniversity policy.IT SAYS, "Your committee alsowishes to record its recognitionthat debate on and determinationof the ranking issue may involvemany matters not touched upon inthis report; matters raising ques¬tions concerning national policy,foreign and domestic, concerningthe University’s relation with thegovernment and with the society atlarge, concerning the University’sobligations to the maintenance oflegality and order in its internaland external relations.“These issues,” it continues,“cannot be settled by determina¬tions of fact; they involve ques¬tions or values and the conflict ofcompeting values such as those in¬volved in the problem of the Uni¬versity’s participating in the Selec¬tive Service System either by al- records are to be sent at the stu¬dent’s request; and the problem ofadding to student tensions and un¬certainty by instability of prac¬tices Your committee recognizesthat there is in relation to theranking issue no simple or singlemoral imperative.”Committee cautions UniversityThe committee, in its recommen¬dations, cautions the University Intake several factors into account indeciding whether to reconsider orto adhere to the previous policy orto modify it before October 1.FIRST, it warns, “Students reg¬istered with local boards which be¬gin reclassification on August tmight very well be unable to makefull use of rank information re¬leased after that date. An attemptby the University to postpone anydecision on the issues consideredhere until after August 1 wouldtherefore be fraught with consid¬ers We difficulties.”Also, the report speculates onwhether all local draft boards willfollow „ *a the tetter the recentguidelines set down by the Selec¬tive Service regarding the use ofclass’ rank and/or the draft testxince these are only advisory.While the committee feels thatmost boards will follow the guide¬lines, it concedes the possibilitythat there will be exceDtions.Cites UC protestsIt also speculates on what mighthappen if a university refused torelease ranks. “If the refusal of aninstitution to release rank is inter¬preted as a protest against the Se¬lective Service System or as non¬cooperation with it, some localhoards may act in irritation. Thisis a distinct possibility in view ofthe recent protests on many cam¬puses, particularly our own,” itsays.THE REPORT CONCEDES thelowing its records to be used or by inequities of ranking on the basisreacting to the system; the problem of an institution of continuedstanding purporting to take a posi¬tion through its officials temporari¬ly in care of the institution whenthose who make up the institutionhave radically differing views; the of grades. “Any formula for rank¬ing necessarily involves systematicdiscrimination to the advantage ofsome students and to the disadvan¬tage of others, in terms of criteriaor variables not reflecting educa-(Continued on Page Four)Redmond Awaiting Chicago 'Challenoe'by Mark RosinSYOSSET, LI.—Sitting in JamesRedmond’s tranquilly comfortableoffice in a remote section of one o'Syosset’s two junior high schools, icouldn’t help but wonder why Red¬mond is leaving Syosset to becomeChicago’s superintendant of schoolsnext fall.Syosset, a community of about30,000 on the north shore of LongIsland, has 9,000 public school stu¬dents, one high school, and paysextremely high taxes—Redmond’ssalary as superintendent of schoolsis over $32,000 a year. AlthoughChicago will pay Redmond $48,500a year, the problems he will haveto cope with are, of course, multi¬plied by tens. Chicago has 500,000public school students, 54 highschools, and the amount of moneyit has to spend per student is ap¬proximately half of what is availa¬ble in Syosset.The problems of integratingschools and improving the inade¬quate slum schools, described in(fig Hauser «nd Havighurst re- James Redmondports, make Syosset’s troubles withenlarging classes to about thirtystudents and having to rent tem¬porary space for several element*-(Continued on Page Four)ms-c>tHERE COMES THE BIGGEST BOHD OF ALL!1ST SEAN CQNNERYI■THUNDERBALL1MducN k| KEVH UcCLORY flHJimmy*sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVFRSITY CLIENTELEAnother ImpressiveSeason at CourtCourt Theatre, UC’s annual pro¬gram of classic entertainment, willbegin its season with a presenta¬tion of George Bernard Shaw’sSain* Joan, Friday, June 8.The play, which will be directedby James O’Reilly, features De¬nise Huot in the title role withLeo Krug as the Dauphin, DonSwanton as Baudricourt, WilliamCostello as the Archbishop, andJoel Cope as Cauchon.Shaw’s wit will be followed byShakespeare’s in his Twelfth Night,directed by Harvey Landa. Thecast includes Tim Enos as Orsino,William Wolfson as Sebastian, PaulLevin as Antonio, and Jerry Zi-man as Feste. Female roles willinclude Connie Mango as Viola,Kathleen Ruhl as Olivia, and CarylKelley as Maria. Twelfth Nightwill open on July 29 and play forthree weeks.The final production of the sea¬son will be Shakespeare’s TheMerry Wives of Windsor, directedby James O’Reilly.Court Theatre has traditionallytried to be a “community theatre.”Only 16 of the 53 actors involved inthis season’s productions are regu¬lar participants in UniversityTheatre.1952 E. 71st ST. HY 3-3334NOW PLAYING DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55H* ST. EYE EXAMINATIONS DO 3-6860 — DO 3-7044PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSES %NEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESSTUDENT fir FACULTY DISCOUNTNews AnalysisEXCLUSIVE AREA ENGAGEMENTFeature TimesALL WEEK3:15-5:30.7:55-10:00 Who is your idea! date? Thousands use Central Control and its high-speedcomputer for a live, flesh-and-biood answer to this question.Your ideal date - such a person exists, of course.But how to get acquainted? Our Central Control computerprocesses 10,000 names an hour. How long would it takeyou to meet and form an opinion of that many people?You will be matched with five ideally suited personsof the opposite sex, right in your own locale (or in- anyarea of the U.S. you specify). Simply, send $3.00 to CentralControl for your questionnaire. Each of the five will beas perfectly matched with you in interests, outlook andbackground as computer science makes possible.Central Control is nationwide, but its programs arecompletely localized. Hundreds of thousands ef vigorousmid alert subscribers, all sharing the desire to meet theirideal dates, have found computer dating to be exciting andhighly acceptable.All five of your ideal dates will be delightful. Sohurry and send your $3.00 for your questionnaire.CENTRAL CONTROL, Inc.22 Park Avenue • Oklahoma City, Oklahoma2 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 24, 1966Hutchinson Court, the scene for this summer's Court Theatreseason.Offer Public Affairs Course on the DraftGraduate students will be able toenroll in a credit course during thesummer quarter dealing with se¬lective service policies. The course,Public Affairs 250—“Public Af¬fairs Workshop on Selective Serv¬ice,” will begin on Friday, June24, at 1:30 pm in Business East 10.The workshop will be under theFrfty-FrfHi and Weodlavn Ava.n 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 324-9020 direction of Roger W. Little, re¬search associate in the departmentof sociology and lecturer in theCollege. Mr. Little has previouslytaught sociology at the militaryacademy at West Point, and thisfall will assume the post of asso¬ciate professor of sociology at theUniversity of Illinois (Chicago Cir¬cle).Students interested in registeringfor this course should contact Pro¬fessor Morris Janowitz in SocialSciences 313, ext. 2967.MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBl««d Typing B Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICEComplete Lab EKG A BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. Hmi Sat. 9 AM 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3 2000 The Buddhist Revoltby John Bremner"The Buddhist rebellion (in Vietnam) can be checked bvGeneral Ky, armed by the US, but only at the cost of thefinal alienation of the mass of Vietnamese from both theSaigon government and its American protector.”These are the words of HowardSchomer, President of the ChicagoTheological Seminary, and a manof long acquaintance with South¬east Asia. If Schomer is right, thewar is moving to a decisive phase,and we may be nearing our finalchance to get out of Vietnam hon¬orably.SCHOMER VIEWS our choice asbetween “the ugly and endless taskof occupying a South Vietnam inwhich we are not simply resentedbut hated” and accepting the Bud¬dhist effort to create “an authen¬tically Vietnamese society, free ofevery kind of foreign domination.”In effect, Schomer has posed theBuddhists as not only the best op¬portunity for peace and develop¬ment, but also as a last chance to—as Kennedy put it—“win the war,contain the Communists, and gohome.”The problem is not seen thisway here by more than a few. In¬stead, it appears to be just anotherVietnam crisis with the familiaroption of continuing the present ef¬fort to build a society beneath awar, or taking a chance with divid¬ed and not so anti-Communist Bud¬dhist leadership.THE CHANGE APPEARS to bethat the significant element in thecountry—one with organization and80 per cent of the population—is nolonger passive and a mere hin-Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 TAhSAM-YLNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpocioHeine laCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 AM. Be 9:45 PALORDERS TO TAKE OUTI Bit last 6Srd ft. MU 4-1042SAMUAL A. BELL'BUY SHELL FROM BELL'SINCE 1926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake ParkHY 3-5200 drance to our efforts, but will be¬come absolutely destructive ofAmerican efforts unless accommo¬dated.Schomer is optimistic about theBuddhists. He feels on the basis ofhis knowledge and friends in themovement that “The Buddhistleadership is varied, but not inco¬herent.”Richard Flacks, of the depart¬ment of sociology, agrees withSchomer. He suggests that ‘itseems plausible that the Buddhistscould constitute an independent po¬litical force—a third force, inde¬pendent of the military and theNLF.”BOTH MEN FEEL the Buddhistsare^jyily dedicated to a non-align¬ed aad independent nation andSchomer mentioned the currentproposal calling for a strictlyAsian peacekeeping force to re¬place American forces.Washington cannot be sure of theBuddhists of course, as it cannotbe sure of very much in foreignpolicy. Both Schomer and Flacksare knowledgeable and convincing,but some would dispute them. Thisis not the point, however. On thebasis of much more than the testi¬mony of these two men, the alter¬native to the Buddhists seems tobe perpetual occupation, a choicehardly acceptable to our professedwar aims, and possibly our realones as well.COMEDY FROM ISRAELRobert Hirsch & anall Israeli castTribune "Robert Hirsch is a versatileactor'"Sun-Times "Story provides hilarity"Saturday Review "a masterpieceof fun"Critics compare Robert Hirsch toPeter Sellers & Alec Guinness"IMPOSSIBLEON SATURDAYStudents $1.00with this adGood every day but SaturdayWeekdays open e pm.Sat. ft Sun. open 1:30JEFFERY THEATREA lot of tho students are different but the procedure's the same.'Here, summer school students wait in line in the Bursar's office1 Student Life Committee Makes PlansThe newly formed student-faculty Committee on StudentLife met last Wednesday and announced its plans to act im¬mediately on issues affecting the campus this summer as wellas to begin formulating long term plans and a policy for de¬ter m i n i n g permanent studentmembership.The new campus committee,which was announced in the ninthweek of the spring quarter byDean of the College Wayne Booth,was formed in an effort te join stu¬dents and faculty together to workon campus problems and plans.Presently six faculty members,three administrators, and eighttemporarily appointed studentscompose the group.THE SCHEDULING of campus¬wide open meetings, the first ofwhich will be held Monday night at7:30 pm in Ida Noyes* was decidedupon at the first committee meet¬ing. At these meetings studentsand faculty will be afforded thechance t® suggest future agendafor the committee as well as amethod as to how the permanentstudent members of the committeeshould be chosen.The Monday night meeting willthus be an open forum at which new and returning students andfaculty can freely discuss campusissues and problems with the in¬tent of seeing future committee ac¬tion on these matters, according toJohn Cawelti. professor of humani¬ties and acting chairman of thecommittee.THE SUBMISSION of writtenproposals or memoranda will alsobe welcomed according to the ex¬ecutive subcommittee, composed ofCawelti and three students, Em¬manuel Cassimatis, John Adams,and Dinah Esral, which is planningthe open meetings.In addition to this series of cam¬pus meetings, the group is also di¬recting its immediate efforts in asecond direction. In connectionwith the Blum committee which isnow directing the creation of newsocial and eating centers on cam¬pus to be open next fall, Peter Ra-binowintz, and Jeff Blum, of theCommittee on Student Life, and a yet unnamed member of Dean ofStudents Warner Wick’s office, willattempt to determine: 1) what ac¬tion already has been taken withregard to the rev/ facilities; 2» thedegree to which student opinionwas taken into account in the plan¬ning; 3) the possibility that futureinvestigation of student opinionmay be in order; and 4) the neces¬sary steps to obtain future discus¬sion about the establishment andoperation of the new facilities.IN THE NEXT few weeks thecommittee will be meeting in bothopen session with the campus aswell as in executive session to hearthe reports of its committees.In addition to Cawelti and thestudents already named the com¬mittee also includes Morris Janow-it7. professor of sociology; MarvinMikesell, associate professor of ge¬ography; Joseph Schwab, WilliamRainey Harper professor of naturalsciences, professor of education;Herman Sinaiko, associate profes¬sor of humanities; Joseph Smith,professor of geophysical sciences;Tom Heagy, Jack Kolb, and GaeaLeinhardt. Both Wick and Boothare ex officio members of the com¬mittee.trying to finish registration.?■ MmmmMmmzmmmmmmmzm wmm m mm >■ wimmProvost Levi Named to Board of TrusteesEdward H. Levi, University Provost and former dean of theLaw School, has been elected to the board of trustees. Theelection was announced by Fairfax M. Cone, chairman of theboard.The election by the board makesLevi one of the few faculty mem¬bers in the University’s history tobe elected a trustee. Levi, howev¬er. will continue to serve as Pro¬vost under President George W.Beadle, who is also a member ofthe board of trustees.The board of trustees are the“owners” of the University. Leviand the thirty-nine other trusteesare legally responsible for UC’sacademic and financial policy deci¬sions.THE BOARD, as well as rep¬resenting the University to thepublic, supervises the administra¬tion of the University and sets longrange development policy. IAlthough it is legally responsiblefor all University operations, theboard of trustees has rarely inter¬fered with the faculty whereacademic matters (such as hiringand curriculum) were concerned.IN A PREPARED statement,Chairman Cone said, “The Boardof Trustees has been impressed bythe intellectual leadership whichMr. Levi has provided the Univer¬ Edward H. Levi' s' , • & ' , ✓ ".Vsity through the years. As a facul¬ty member, dean of the LawSchool and Provost, he has workedcontinuously to improve the aca¬demic stature of the entire Univer¬sity. We believe that his appoint¬ment to the board will help tostrengthen the interaction betweenthe board and the University’s offi¬cers at a significant period in theUniversity’s history. I know thatPresident Beadle and my othercolleagues on the Board share myview about Provost Levi’s value tothe University.” Four Get Quantrell AwardsFour professors have been honored with an award for excellence in undergraduate teach¬ing.The Quantrell Award, the nation’s oldest prize for outstanding college instruction, hasbeen presented to Arunas Liulevicius, associate professor of mathematics; Elder J. Olson,professor of English; David E. Or-linsky, assistant professor of socialsciences; and Nathan Sugarman,professor of chemistry and in theEnrico Fermi Institute for nuclearstudies. All four faculty membersreceived their doctorates from UC.The Quantrell awards were estab¬lished in 1938 by the late ErnestEugene Quantrell, a former trusteeof the University, in honor of hisparents. Each year four membersof the UC faculty are selected fortheir performance in undergrad¬uate teaching.LIULEVICIUS RECEIVED hisBA, MA, and PhD degreesfrom UC and joined the faculty in1960. He spent an academic year atthe Institute for Advanced Study inPrinceton, New Jersey; and wasappointed an assistant professor atthe University in 1962. Earlier thisyear, he was named an Alfred P.Sloan Research Fellow, one of 90young scientists in the pnitedStates and Canada so honored.Olson received his BA, MA,and PhD in 1938 from UC. Hetaught at the Armour Institute ofTechnology in Chicago and laterjoined the UC faculty in 1942. Hehas been a visiting professor at theUniversity of Frankfurt am Main The Quantrell Award winners; (I. to r.) Arunas Liulevicius, Elder J.Olson, David E. Orlinsky, Nathan Sugarman.■'• * •(West Germany), the University ofPuerto Rico, and Indiana Universi¬ty. He is the author or co-author ofnine books and numerous scholarlyarticles.Orlinsky received his BA andPhD in 1962 from UC. He alsostudied at City College of NewYork and Columbia University. Hewas a US Public Health ServiceFellow in clinical psychology dur¬ing 1956-58 at the University and ;sw»* s.. •' • •• ijoined the faculty in 1960.Sugarman received his BS andPhD in 1941 from US. He was asection chief in the metallurgicallaboratory at the University in1942-45, and was a group leader atthe Los Alamos Scientific Labora¬tory in 1945-46. He joined the UCfaculty in 1946. His special field isnuclear chemistry and he is theauthor of the book, Radio-chemicalStudies: The Fission Products.Looking For Something To Do This Summer?The Maroon needs people who are anxious to work on a newspaper and think they can devote time this summer.We will be publishing weekly with only a skeleton staff and there are limitless possibilities for anyone with interestand a willingness to learn. Summer papers are the epitome of informal organization. There is usually very little in theway of news going on during the summer and as a result there exists tremendous latitude for anyone interested indoing original work.Chicago literally abounds with feature material. This summer in particular promises to be significant as civilrights forces, under Dr. Martin Luther King, prepare for a movement to “end the slums."If you think you'd be interested in covering Chicago this summer come on up to the Maroon office on the thirdfloor in Ida Noyes Hall or call ext. 3265. We're looking for people from any college and we can guarantee there willbe work to do. If the office is empty or no one answers your call, keep trying.Jvn« 24, 196* • CHICAGO MAROON • •Mikva Does Not Want to See MachineBroken through Defeat of Mayor Daley(Continued from Page One)hoods,” not race, Mikva pointedout, because Chew beat the ma¬chine in a middle class Negroneighborhood.Newhouse's victory over incum¬bent Nathan J. Kinnally, Mikvasaid, proved that the machine cannot elect two candidates in Wood-lawn. He cited the lack of ma¬chine support for Finally in theHyde Park-Woodlawn Fifth Wardas an example of the machine’sruthlessness to its own memberswhen political dictates suggest it.Bond not politicalAccording to Mikva, the passageof the $165 million city bond issuein the primary election can not belaid to the machine. Too manypeople supported the bond, he said,tcmake it a political issue.UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor MIKVA DOES not believe thatthe Democratic machine should bebroken by the defeat of MayorRichard J. Daley when he seeksre-election. He called such an ac¬tion an example of reforming aparty ‘‘by bleeding it to death,” aswas done in New York City withthe election of John Lindsay asmayor.‘‘I don’t want to see that happenhere.” Mikva declared. ‘‘I want tosee that fight made within the par¬ty.”He discounted newspaper reportsthat he might be a candidate formayor on a Republican-independ¬ent coalition ticket against MayorDaley.No Future plansMikva currently has no plans forthe future other than that he has“a wopping big deficit to wrestlewith.”“I INTEND to stay active,” butthis does not necessarily meanrunning for public office, he de¬clared.“1 intend to support Mr. O’Haravery enthusiastically,” he said. “Hissins were not those of commis¬sion.”Mikva expressed thanks for theparticipation of UC students in hisprimary campaign.“By and large it was studentswho created the kind of enthusi¬asm that spearheaded the cam¬paign. Their efforts showed.”Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the rest, foreign cor hospital PIERRE ANDREfact flatteringParisian chicten skilledheir stylists ot5242 Hyde Perk Btvd.22S! I. 71st St.DO 1-072710% Student Dfecewnt Ranking Study Considers Alternatives(Continued from Page One)tional attainments,” the committeesays.On the basis of interviews withstudent advisors the report con¬cludes that the release or rank tothe Selective Service in and of it¬self has had little direct effect onchoice of courses. Rather, the de¬sire to be admitted to graduateschool has caused students to takeeasier courses with the hope ofgetting higher grades.The direct effect of the possibili¬ty of being drafted has, howevercaused some students to postponetaking leaves of absence, the com¬mittee feels.THE COMMITTEE notes themoral conflict facing the faculty ingiving grades to be used for draftranking and acknowledges it as areal problem to be considered.“The moral dilemma and mentalconflict (in giving grades) are veryreal consequences of a decision torelease ranks to Selective Service.These consequences exist whetheror not there results any change ingrading practices or in studentachievement patterns. Although wehave no way of guessing what suchchanges might be, they must bementioned as a possibility.”University's role in societyThe effect of ranking the role ofthe University in society is also animportant consideration accordingto the committee. “Because of itsrole in society, it says, “it is im¬perative that a university remainessentially independent of pres¬sures from other interests in socie¬ty, public or private. There are, ofcourse, numerous occasions whencooperation with these other inter¬ests is an appropriate course of ac¬tion, and one cannot determine inadvance which occasions there willbe. But the University should havea clear conception of the relevantcriteria, and it is here that a dan¬gerous policy vacuum exists."THE DANGER is that the Uni¬versity will allow its independence to be eaten away bit by bit, simplybecause in each particular case itis the path of least resistance, andbecause consequences have notbeen clearly foreseen and takeninto account. A decision by theUniversity to calculate and releaserank among males, whether to Se¬lective Service or to an employermight have the character of aseemingly insignificant decisionwithout long range consequencesor it might make it more difficultto deny another request.”The report also considers thepossibility of making rank availa¬ble for some purposes, but not tothe Selective Service. It sees threemajor difficulities in such a courseof action. There is the question ofthe legality of such action, the pos¬sibility that some local boardsmight interpret such action as aprotest and react to the disadvan¬tage of certain students, and thedifficulties in “policing” such apolicy (preventing students fromobtaining their rank for another purpose and forwarding it to theirdraft board).Considers possible alternativesIn considering possible allerna^tives to the present system of re¬porting ranks, the report mentionsthe possibility of sending informaland unofficial letters from an of¬fice other than the registrar, esti¬mating rank among males, to bemade available to those studentswho will not have taken the nation¬al exam.The possible objections to thispolicy raised by the committee arewhether local draft boards wouldaccept such informal letters asrelevant to deferment, the legalityof the action, and the necessity ofassuring the students in questionthat such letters would be readilyavailable on request.The report also includes possiblealternative methods of ranking, ex¬amining the various complicationsof more complex systems of rank¬ing.Redmond Wants More School SpendingHalf-price tocollege students andfaculty:the newspaper thatnewspaper peopleread. . .At last count, we had more than 3,800 news¬paper editors on our list of subscribers to TheChristian Science Monitor. Editors from allover the world.There is a good reason why these “pros” readthe Monitor: the Monitor is the world’s onlydaily international newspaper. Unlike localpapers, the Monitor focuses exclusively onworld news — the important news.The Monitor selects the news it considersmost significant and reports it, interprets it,analyzes it — in depth. It takes you further intothe news than any local paper can.If this is the kind of paper you would like tobe reading, we will send it to you right away athalf the regular price of $24.00 a year.Clip the coupon. Find out why newspaper¬men themselves read the Monitor — and whythey invariably name it as one of the five bestpapers in the world.The Christian Science■FOCUS IXThe Christian Science Monitor1 Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02116Please enter a Monitor subscription for the name below.I am enclosing $ (U. S. funds) for the periodchecked. Q 1 year $12 Q 9 months $9 □ 6 months $6NameStreet. .. Apt./Rm.j City.. State.. Zip...□ College student...□ Faculty member ._ Year of graduation4 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 24, 1966 BOOKSSTATIONERYGREETING (ARDS***■*•**•THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student Discount (Continued from Page One)about the situation, Redmond re¬plied slowly, “If the people can bemade to realize the value. . .” Heinterrupted himself and said em¬phatically, “I’m convinced that thewhole country in the past fiveyears has learned that you can’thave first rate education on a sec¬ond rate budget. And Chicago'sproblems are the whole state’sproblems.”HE THEN EXPLAINED histhoughts on the distribution ofschool money. “I think you have tospend the money on the facilitiesand staff where needed.” Hepaused and then added: “I don'tknow the facts—but if you’ve gotphysically disabled children youhave to spend more for specialhelp. The same has to be true forthe culturally deprived. It’s the es¬sence of democracy: equal educa¬tional opportunity does not meanidentical—it means to give what isneeded where the need exists.”? f. WPM ' W Redmond emphasized that thejob of superintendant of schoolswas not a political one, that he didnot have to devise a platform orcreate issues and an image of him-self.He said, however, that “It is dif¬ficult to satisfy Martin Luther King«t al. and the extremely conserva¬tive white element.” He explainedfurther, that “this is not a popular¬ity contest.”Redmond lifted his hand and in¬dicated on his palm the central po¬sition of the school systems inAmerica as he sees it. “The nextdecade will be vital to our socie¬ty,” he said, “and the schools willbe sitting in the middle. Whetherin Syosset or Chicago, we’re deal¬ing with problems of humanbeings, and the objectives are thesame. The only objective of admin¬istration,” Redmond stressed, “isto improve the educational envi¬ronment of the school system, toimprove the learning situation.”: /*■■ ;•> ■ iCalendar of events(, - v \? - ,,i <£M anawswv ' *** * *Tuesday, June 28PUBLIC LECTURE: “The Great Epic.”JAB. van Buitenem, professor of San¬skrit and Indie Studies. Co-DirectorSouth Asia Language and Area Center;Eckhart Hall 133. 8 pm.OPEN MEETING; SG Election andRules Committee to discuss new Consti¬tution and By-Laws, SG Office, 2ndAMERICAN 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 10 cards floor Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.Wednesday, June 29M1EETING: For people interested tnworking on course evaluation project,SG Office. 2nd floor Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: Country Dance Socie¬ty, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.BALLROOM DANCE INSTRUCTION:International House. Assembly Hall,8,30 pm.Thursday, June 30PUBLIC LECTURE: “Sanskrit Poetic#and Shakespeare,” Edwin M. Gerow,visiting assistant professor of Sanskrit,Eckhart 133. 8 pm.You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall ws today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 $. Duty Ava.646-4411Office Space AvailableNEAR THE UNIVERSITYhas Conference Room, Reception Room, and three private offices. Total2600 square feet.55th AT THE LAKE on South Shore Drive.Private entrance. N. T. NorbertPI 2-1000The Draft ReportThe greatest value of the ranking study, released June 7by a special student-faculty committee, lies in the fact that itpoints up both important shortcomings in the present selec¬tive service system and the dilemma facing the University asa result of these shortcomings. The study was undertaken inthe aftermath of last quarter’s anti-rank sit-in and completedin a little over two weeks.The most significant thing to come out of the study’s analy¬sis of the possible complications of any policy that the Uni¬versity might follow on the ranking issue is the tacit recogni¬tion that there is a lot wrong with the Selective Service as itnow operates.The complete power of the local draft boards in granting de¬ferments is brought out over and over. The report states, “Wehave no way of determining the practices of some 4,000 draftboards and we do not have means to determine the practices ofthe more than 250 boards with whom Chicago students haveclassifications.”The possibility that different draft boards may use differentcriteria for determining deferments puts the University in aquandary and raises other questions about the existing system.There is the problem of the natural inequality of such a decen¬tralized system. Different areas, because of their socio-eco¬nomic makeup, have different manpower problems, so that de¬pending on the kind of area in which a male student, or anyyoung male, for that matter, lives, his chances of being draftedchange accordingly.The additional problem of communication because of such adecentralized system is also raised by the report. “An impor¬tant function of the committee was tracking down rumors,” itsays, “the discovery of various courses of action which theUniversity could pursue, and a delineation of consequences.”The issue of ranking would become much clearer if the Uni¬versity were able to understand exactly what the draft boardswould do under given circumstances.These inequities make a student’s chances of being drafteddependent on where he lives and the kind of draft board hehas.It is obvious, however, in the light of previous discussions ofthe whole question of whether students should be deferred ornot, that the inequities brought out in the committee’s reportare really small in comparision to the larger inequities en¬tailed by deferring students in the first place. That is, thosenot able for one reason or another to attend college are bear¬ing the brunt of the draft load while the committee is concern¬ing itself with inequities affecting students only.By simply accepting students who, except for the fact thatthey are attending UC, would be eligible for the draft, the Uni¬versity is helping perpetuate both these large and small in¬equities.This report has importance in relation to the question of thedraft in that it is the first semi-official recognition by the Uni¬versity that inequities exist in the present draft system.The recognition of these problems suggests that the Univer¬sity has a larger role to play in analyzing and making recom¬mendations about the selective service system as it nowstands. A long term student-faculty committee with enoughtime available should make a study of all the many issues in¬volved in the draft question. On the basis of this study, then,the University would be in a position to take a stand on thewhole issue and use its considerable influence to affect na¬tional policy.Hudson's LetterJoseph Hudson’s letter in today’s issue is important be¬cause it demonstrates—poignantly at times—the alienation ofthe peace movement from too much of the mass of the Ameri¬can people.It is impossible of course to understand precisely what Hud¬son’s motives were for writing, but it’s a fair guess that a deepsense of bewilderment was a major factor.Hudson’s bewilderment is all the more tragic because it isboth eminently understandable and, at the same time, terriblyunreasonable.It would be difficult, we suppose, to explain to Hudson thatwhen student activists discard conventional morals, dress, andmanners they are also trying to disassociate themselves from asociety with all the proper entrapments and none of the realsubstance of humanity.Yet there is absolutely no one with greater arrogance and noperson who is more undemocratic than a liberal or radical whois convinced that God is on his side.Perhaps the more self righteous among us might do well tothink of the Joseph Hudsons in the world, the people for whomtheir actions are confusing and threatening. Change, after all,will depend on the common man and it might be wise to startacting now lest the gap between the common man and theenlightened few become unbridgeable. Letters to the Editor T(Editor's note: Mail dealing with theissues raised in last quarter's sit-inwas still coming in when the Marooncompleted its publication schedule.The following letters represent onlya portion of the heavy volume ofmail received. There was an attemptmade in the selection of letters to in¬clude viewpoints that are somewhatnew. The Maroon apologizes to thosewhose letters could not be includeddue to lack of space.)From Los AngelesTO THE EDITOR:This letter is addressed to youMr. or Miss editor only as a meansof getting a communication fromhere to there, not to you as an in¬dividual. Not knowing your views Iwould prefer this letter be deliv¬ered to a member, leader or whathave you, of the “activist group”at UC. On with the story.I am from Chicago. About 3years ago I made the mistake oftransferring to the coast. A lousytown, where nite spots per se, donot exist and bars close at 2 am.Smog permeates the atmosphere.Free ways becoming jammed evenin off hours. Very high prices oncommodities. High rents for apart¬ments where the .floors, ceilingsand walls are evidently made ofpaper. The TV or radio turned ontwo apartments away can be plain¬ly heard from your own “pad.”After transferring here I worked inSan Francisco living at Palo Alto.Also in Oakland near Berkeley.This was about the time the ac¬tivist groups really got into highgear. I have personally attended ameeting at Stanford (Palo Alto)and the command post UC (Berk¬eley). I have noted at these meet¬ings parties wanting to speak “progovernment” are booed, hissed,foot stomped, whistled so they areunable to present their views.(Free Speech my way or not atall.) I have seen the trains carry¬ing troops in Oakland, picketed, at¬tempts to block them, etc. I haveseen train crews, demonstratorsendangered by these groups’ ac¬tions trespassing on private prop¬erty. I have seen (Little Red Rid¬ing Hood) Betina Aptheker, anavowed Commie, no witch huntingplease, she is self-avowed, leading,mind you leading, large groups ofbig bronzed American youths inmarches on the repple depple, re¬placement, or processing center ifyou will in Oakland. She was elect¬ed to the highest student commit¬tee on campus. That she ran foroffice is O.K. That she was electedis unthinkable. I, as an older, 41year old, citizen was to make upmy mind on how I was to feelabout Vietnam. On one hand I hada group of students, led by anavowed Commie not one havingbeen to Vietnam, backed by themajority of profs at UC, who alsohad never been to Vietnam and infact, check me on this, again in themajority has never even served inthe US armed forces, saying ourgovernment was wrong. On theother hand I had elected officialswho had been to Vietnam, wellbriefed who said we are right. Thisactually is, believe it or not, a fairstatement. Perhaps you dear read¬er won’t believe it, but think itover.Man I got sick of these activists.Conformists, to the nth degree.Girls, same clothes, same hair,parted in the middle, hung downon both sides. Men, same beard,same clothes, mass thinking. CON¬FORMISTS. Funny thing they ac¬tually think they are non-conform¬ists.Then pray tell what do I see onTV. U of Chicago. Same people,mass teria. Could change thegroups and not miss a beat. Con¬formists. My Chicago Idea has col¬lapsed. Might as well stay herewith the hop heads, LSD trip-tak¬ers.Say man some one should cluethese birds, “tea” was being usedwhen I went to Steinmetz High inChi in 1941 and Wright City College1942-43. This ain’t something thatwas “made up” by this generation. Sex too has been around a bit andthe swinging sex groups at UCBerkeley ain’t doin nuthin thatain’t been done for thousands ofyears and possibly better. Thelatest fad at Berkeley is sex clubs,preferably interracial. Member¬ships sold, meet at house, disrobeby 10 pm and pair off. Group ther¬apy?? Make out, so OK, we madeout in the dark ages in the 1940sbut group??? Funny the gals allfor it in discussion I have heardaround swimming pool where Ilive. Guys surprisingly enoughmore against it. My apartmentbuilding LA loaded with students,UCLA, Valley State, etc.I heard a Democratic Committeehead speak on campus UCLA reVietnam, against our country’sstand of course. During his talk,delivered to wide-eyed, attentivestudents, he talked about WorldWar II bombing missions. Mademany misstatements, totally inac¬curate. How do I know?? Well 52missions over Italy, Germany,Austria Greece, Balkans, I know.Could I alter the opinion he gener¬ated, never having been there?? Ofcourse not. Lately and only lately Iregret possibly having fought. Myson is in Vietnam. Do I want himback now, and I mean right now?You b«t.Why?? Well why should he bepenalized, if it is a penalty byserving, when the bearded onesmake a career out of school? He is3 to 4 and even more yearsyounger than the average activist Inoted at Berkeley et al. Just be¬cause he did not choose to go on tocollege at the present time heshould go army while the beardedones, who I personally feel wouldnot or could not fight if an enemywas landing on the beach at SantaMonica stays at home??? Keep inmind I refer to activists not all oreven a majority of students, ateven Berkeley. I do read quite afew college papers and I must saythe college press at least the ones Iread are definitely anti-U.S. proVC etc.Growing older is not good, buthonest friend if I could changenow, my life, good times, with oneof the young activists I would notdo it. If I lived, slept, ate, madelove with the “Bomb” thoughtsconstantly with me, I’d go nuts. Ohhell I could go on and on. Am Iworried?? Well yes, when I sawpictures of hundreds and hundredsof our brave Calif, youth fleeing toLas Vegas last year to beat thedraft. What a hell of a way to be¬gin married life. LSD, legalize pot.Hanky Panky clubs at Berkeley,beatnik elected class pres. Stan¬ford. Betina at Berkeley. DorothyHealy, avowed, self proclaimed redhere in L.A. running for city office.Well she won’t be elected here, ifshe ran at Berkeley, well I wonder.By the by I am no Bircher, neverto my knowledge even met one.However I really do not see toomuch wrong in wearing an Ameri¬can flag in your lapel, being pa¬ triotic and detesting commies. Ireally have never heard of a.Bircher burning a cross on some¬one’s lawn. Honest. Like I said onand on and on.JOSEPH HUDSONLOS ANGELESA Faculty ViewTO THE EDITOR:Does someone no longer a stu¬dent dare admit he found thecapture of the AdministrationBuilding by our youngsters imag¬inative, healthy and even delight¬ful? The display of spirit and goodnature on the part of the studentswas remarkable, as was theirsense of style.I stress their good points becauseof the blinding indignation I en¬countered the past week among somany members of the faculty. Theprincipal complaint I heard wasthat the students had been lawless.But I found them on this occasionremarkably well-disciplined andrespectful of each other, of thefaculty and of the property of theUniversity. The more I saw ofthem as they went about theirbusiness, especially in their longparliamentary deliberations, themore attractive I found them: theyare decent, intelligent and gener¬ous. If they are representative ofthe rising generation, the countrywill be in good hands when wepass on.Administration and faculty nat¬urally regard themselves as supe¬rior to students. No doubt they arein many respects. The studentsthemselves recognize this, not onlyby coming here for an education.The model for faculty behaviorcould well be that provided byTocqueville, who instructs the truearistocrat how to deal fruitfullywith a rising and vital democraticspirit that will not be denied.The students have in their mea¬sured rebellion set a high standardof dedicated moderation. Cannotthe faculty rise to the occasion andmatch this good will and sense ofpurpose? Talk of “illegality,” of“trespass,” of “coercion,” and ofreprisals is unrealistic. No matterwhat statutes and by-laws maysay, it is also the students’ univer¬sity. The true man of law recog¬nizes that nothing is really settleduntil it is settled right.Two critical problems have nowbeen brought dramatically and ef¬fectively to the attention of thisacademic community. We mustdevise means of adequate consulta¬tion with students on universitymatters affecting their lives. Wemust define publicly, before it istoo late, the proper relation be¬tween a free university and ourgovernment. Much more seriousinstances than draft policy are in¬volved here.GEORGE ANASTAPLOLECTURER IN THELIBERAL ARTS^ Chicago MaroonSUMMER WEEKLY•m. y v /• ;Editor-in-Chief David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzDavid H. RichterDinah EsralJoan PhilipsFeature Editor Mark RosinAssistant News Editor Jeffrey KutaPolitical Editor John BremnerEditor Emeritus Daniel HertzbergStaff Josef Lubenow, Paul Recht, Paul BursteinRichard Rabens, Miron Straf, Belita LewisPhotographer Steven WofsyJune 24, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • fV/hat's Happening in Chicago This Summerby David RichterWhen the white-hot ball of the«un seems to hover in the sky,when the famous lake-front breezegoes on summer vacation, whenthe Hyde Park theatre starts to fillthe house for old Sandra Dee-Bob¬by Darin flicks, whan that Julyewith his zephyres hoote—Makethgarbage-cans to smellen like agoote. . .the question in the mindsof every UC summer student be¬comes: How can I enrich my cul¬tural life? Gather ‘round, kiddies,for a preview of this summer’sbr illiant offerings. Roy Rauschenberg’s drawingsfrom Dante’s Inferno at the ArtsClub of Chicago, 109 E. Ontario . ..“Art of Living’’ exhibition at theArt Institute (superb industrial de¬sign). . .“Op” art at the Silvermangallery, 2433 N. Lincoln. . .Art ShowsYou have about two weeks left tosee the Rene Magritte show at theArt Institute, which closes July 3.Magritte is a surrealist who, unlikeDali, has no social conscience or“message” in his paintings; hischief attraction is a rather drollsense of humor. The exhibition isfree and well worth the price. Oth¬er exhibits worth travelling to see:Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 ConcertsThe Ravinia Festival opens nextTuesday with the Chicago Sympho¬ny Orchestra under the baton ofSeiji Ozawa. The program foropening night is the Mahler Sym¬phony No. 1, Busoni’s Lute StilOverture, and Requiem for Stringsby Toru Takemitsu. The symphonyconcerts are on Tuesday, Thurs¬day, and Saturday thru August 16.Popular, folk, and jazz concertsare on Wednesday and Friday. Allprograms begin at 8:30 pm at thepavilion in Ravinia Park.Guest conductors of the sympho¬ny concerts include Lukas Foss,Josef Krips, Charles Munch, Thom¬as Schippers, Kiril Kondrashin,Sixten Ehrling, William Steinberg,1 and Henry Lewis. Seven pianistswill be appearing with the ChicagoSymphony during the eight weekrun of the concerts: Van Cliburn,Hans Richter-Haaser, Byron Janis,Peter Serkin, Ralph Votapek, JujiTakahashi, and Nicole Schweitzer.Other soloists for the classical con¬certs include violinists HeinrichSzeryng and Itzhak Perlman, so¬prano Roberta Peters, and mezzo-soprano Shirley Verrett. The Chi¬cago Symphony Chorus will jointhe orchestra late in the season fora performance of Verdi's Requiem.Featured artists for the popularconcerts include Ella Fitzgerald,the Dave Brubeck Quartet, NancyWilson, the Ramsey Lewis Trio,Miriam Makeba, and the Cannon¬ball Adderley Quintet.After the concert season, Raviniawill play host to the New York CityBallet: that’s August 16-21.Ravinia Park is hard to get tofrom the South Side, but the trip is usually well worth the trouble.Take the IC to Randolph, walk toCanal and Madison, and catch aChicago and Northwestern train tothe Highland Park station. Driverstake the Dan Ryan and Edens ex¬pressways to the Highland Parkexit, and drive east until they hitthe park. Admission to Ravinia is$2—more for seats within the pavilion. My advice is to get there early and lay claim to one of thebenches which surround the concert area.Grant Park used to be dependedon to offer all of the BeethovenSymphonies and piano concerti. Nonote A fast glance at the offer¬ings in the eight week concert se¬ries reveals no Beethoven at allApparently the bargain-basementcf symphony orchestras has decid¬ed to go a little less “pop” thisseason, trading in its well-worn Beethoven scores for some less-performed numbers.The opening concert of the sea¬son, given tomorrow at 8 and re¬peated on Sunday, will feature Ir¬win Hoffman on the podium and(Continued on Page Seven)BOB NELSON MOTORSImport ContraCompUte Repairs— —DO vOirlevNr AM Popular ImportsMidway 1-45016052 So. Cottage Grove Want Some RelaxationSummer Quarter?Visit Air-ConditionedTOAD HALLand choose from our largeselection of transistor radios,hi-fi's, stereos and t.v.'sToad Hall 1444 E. 57th St.BU 8-4500PLEASE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERSHONDA SOUTH & SOUTH EASTSEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES • SERVICE • PARTS• PICK UP & DELIVERY• EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESMl 3-4500BOB NELSON MOTORS CHICAGO'S LARGEST &6136 s cottage grove JUST AROUND THE CORNERSee the MAROON classified for your campus sales representativeGOLD CITY INNrr, in'A Gold Mine of Good Food'10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559(Eat Mora Far Lass)Try Our Convenient Take-Out Orders5Z NEW BOOKS BY CAMPUS AUTHORSThe Place of the Hidden Moonby: EDWARD C. DIM0CK, JR.Harper's Universityby: RICHARD J. ST0RRVisions of Cultureby: KARL J. WEINTRAUB $7.50$7.50$7.50BATTERED BOOK SALE CONTINUESTHROUGH JUNE 24The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE. COURTTHEATREJULY 8 - JULY 24shakespeare| TWELFTHNIGHTJULY 29 - AUGUST 14shakespeareTHEMERRYWIVESOFWINDSORAUGUST 19 - SEPTEMBER 4Thurs. & Sun. $1.75Fri. $2.00, Sat. $2.50student discount 50cexcept SaturdayNOTE TO STUDENTS!Saturday Discount ifyou buy the Series.Saturday series $6.00ASAMATTEROP. •. Mint day either your family willneed money to replace your earning*or you yourself will need an Incomefor retirement Sun Life insurance canprovide both.Aa a local Sun Life representative, mayI tall upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago IS, lit,FAlrfax 4-6800 —FR 2-23*0Office Heura * to S Monday* 4 FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OP CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK“e strong bank99NEW CAR LOANSas low as$ 375~1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-12004 ■—In 1MCHOW TO SURVIVETHE ATOMIC AGE.Brochure $1It has been said by more than one:Thl* world to an end will come—In N)neteen-hundred-nlnety-one.And I do here declare:America might well be there—Destroyed in an atomic flare, before-The year Nineteen-hundred-eighty-four.JULIUS ROSE5406 Myrtle Ave.,Ridgewood, N.Y. 11227§ • CHICAGO MAROON • Juno 24, 1966Papa Richter's Guide to Chicago(Continued from page six)guest soloist contralto Lili Chooka-sian. The Chisymphonesque pro¬gram consists of Symphony No. 88by Haydn, “Song of the WoodDove’’ from Arnold Schoenberg’sGurrelieder, and Prokofiev’s can-lata Alexander Nevsky. Next weekHoffman teams up with pianistAlfred Brendel: Wednesday’s con¬cert is all-Mozart; Friday’s is all-Brahms. Next weekend, July 2 and3. Leo Kopp takes the stand with apianist and two vocalists, present¬ ing an all-Gershwin programRhapsody in Blue, Concerto in F,and excerpts from Porgy and Bess.These free concerts are given inthe Grant Park Bandshell at 11thStreet and the Outer Drive. TheRoosevelt Road IC and El stationsare convenient to the concerts. Onecan generally trust to hear classi¬cal music Wednesday and Fridaynights; on weekends the offeringsvary from opera to Rodgers andHammerstein. All concerts beginat 8 pm sharp.s'?:;?Culture CalendarSummer theatre on campusstarts in Hutchinson Court on July8, with James O’Reilly’s produc¬tion of Bernard Shaw’s Saint Joan,which runs Thursdays thru Sun¬days for three weeks. July 29marks the opening of Shakes¬peare’s Twelfth Night, directed byHarvel Landa, English instructorat I1T. Shakespeare’s Merry Wivesof Windsor, directed by O’Reilly,closes out the season with its Au¬gust 19-September 4 run. Call ext.3581 for times and prices.^ ••*:/.> f.: -nt - vArt ExhibitsART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO—Rene Magritte: Thru July 3. Prints &Drawings: I6U1 Century to Bonnard.Photographs from the museum collec¬tion. Japanese Prints from the collec¬tion of Gaylord Donnelley. Chinese Pot¬tery of the Tan* Dynasty. The Art ofLiving Exhibition: Thru July 31. Daily,10-5; Thu, 10-9:30; Sun. 12-5. Free. Mi¬chigan & Adams.CHICAGO PUBLIC LIBRARY—Exhib¬it Corridor: Photographs by CornelSomogy; Jewelry from around theworld from the collection of Mrs. How¬ard R. Peterson. Art Dept: Ten YearsLater: painting by Bacia Gordon. Ed¬ward G. Kelley and Atsushi Kikuchi;sculpture by Albert E. Henselman; Cer¬amics by Charlotte Aronson; Jewelryby Fridl M Blumenthal. Music Dept:• 'Music on the Lakefront” from the Chi¬cago Park District. Natural SciencesDept: Farm Scene and Landscapes pho¬tographed by Albert M. Hayasni;Household Hardware as a Hobby bvPhilip H. Ennis. Applied Science &Technology Dept: How an Air Condi¬tioner Works by Heat Exchanges, Inc.History & Travel Dept: Poland in Histo¬ry lent by the Polish Museum of Ameri¬ca Children's Dept: Whistles fromAround the World lent by Van Buchan¬an: Aluminum, a Pictorial Exhibit.Thru June. Dailv 9-9; Sat, 9-5:30. ClosedSon & Hoi. 78 E. Washington.ConcertsR A V l N I A FESTIVAL—CHICAGOSYMPHONY ORCHESTRA; Seiji Oza- jwa. Ravinia Music Director and Resi- ident Conductor. „ „First Week—Tue, June 2A— Seiji Oza¬wa, cond. Program to be announced.Fri. June 30—Ozawa, cond. Program tobe announced. Sat, July 2—Ozawa cond;Vronsky & Babin, duo-p. Program to beannounced. INightly. 8:30. Adm to the park S2.00. 'Reserved seats an additional chargeranging from $2.00 to $6.00. Tickets: Ra- jvinia Festival Association, 22 W. Mon- |roe. Daily 9-5. Closed Sat & Sun.ST 2-96M. Ravinia Park. Highland Park.273-3500.GRANT PARK CONCERTS—Irwin jHoffman, Principal Conductor.Sat & Sun, June 25-26—Irwin Hoff¬man, cond; Lili Chookasian, c; GrantPark Sym Cho, Thomas Peck, dir.Haydn: Sym No. 88. Schoenberg: Songof the Wood Dove from Gurrelieder. IProkofieff: Canatata, AlexanderNevsky.Wed. June 29—Irwin Hoffman, cond: |Alfred Brendel, p. All-Mozart Program:Marriage of Figaro Overt; Sym No. 39; jCone No. 25.Fri, July 1—Irwin Hoffman, cond; jAlfred Brendel, p. All-Brahms Pro- jgram: Cone No. 1; Sym No. 1.Sat. & Sun, July 2-3—Leo Kopp, cond:Earl Wild, p; Carolyn Smith-Meyer, s;Edward Pierson, br; Grant Park SymCho, Thomas Peck. dir. All-Gershwin Program: Rhapsody in Blue; Cone InF; Excerpts from Porgy & Bess.Nightly. 8. Free. Music Shell, foot of11th Street at Columbus Drive.HA 7-5252.Theatre(Professional)HELLO DOLLY!—David Merrick’sBroadway production starring CarolChanning; Gower Champion, dir. Night¬ly, 8:30; Wed & Sat Matinees, 2. ClosedSun. Nightly, $3 50-$9.00; Matinees,S3.50-S6.00. Shubert Theatre, 22 W. Mon-roe. CE 6-8240.HITS OF BROADWAY—A show ofmusical comedy hits, changing monthly.Tue-Thu, 7:30. 9 & 10:30; Fri & Sat, 8,10, 11:30; Sun. 4:30. 7:30 & 9. ClosedMon. Nightly, $7.45-$8.45 (price includesdinner and show). Imperial Room, DelPrado Hotel, 5307 S. Hyde Park.HY 3-9600.JOY '66—A musical revue by OscarBrown. Jr.; starring Oscar Brown Jr,Luis Henrique, Jean Pace. Rita Lerner.Glenn S'cipio and the Floyd Morris Triowith bassist Ernest McCarty and drum¬mer Curtis Boyd. Nightly, 9; Fri & Sun,9 & 11:30; Sat. 8. 11, 1:30. Nightly. $2.95& $3.50: Fri, $3.50 & $3.95: Sat, $3.95 &$4.50. Happy Medium, 901 N. Rush.DE 7-1000.LUV—A Broadway comedy starringTom Bosley and Dorothy Loudon; MikeNichols, dir. Thru June 11. Nightly,8:30; Matinees, Wed & Sat at 2. Nightly,$3.00-$5.50; Fri & Sat, $3.50-$6.00; Mati¬nees, $2.50-$4.50. Studebaker Theatre,420 S. Michigan. 922-2973.THE ODD COUPLE—Neil Simonsnew comedy hit starring Dan Daileyand Richard Benjamin; Mike Nichols,dir. Nightly, 8:30: Wed & Sat Matinee, 2Nightly, S2.75-S5.00; Fri & Sat. $3.50--$5 95. Matinees, $2.50-$4 50. BlackstoneTheatre, 60 E. Baiba. CE 6-3240. v >;,4 WMMitt >;JSECOND CITY—This is the ttheatre’s21st revue. "Through the Eyes of theInmates,” starring Sandra Caron, JudyGraubart, Bob Klein, David Steinbergand Fred Willard. Nightly, 9; Fri, 9 &11; Sat, 9. 11, 1. $2.00; Fri, $2.50; Sat,$3.00. Special improvisations Tue, Wed,Thu & Sun at 11: $1.00. 1846 N. Wells.DE 7-3992.SHADY LANE FARM SUMMERTHEATRE—A resident company ofEquity actors: Louis Tanno, dir. Thecomedy, “Boeing-Boeing’’: Thru June 5."Pajama Tops’r: June 7-19. “Yes MyDarling Daughter”: June 21—July 3.Nightly, 8:45; Sat, 7 & 10; Sun, 8:15.Matinees, Wed & Thu at 2. Closed Mon.Nightly, $3.20; Sat, $3.50; Matinees,$2.25. 3 miles west of Marengo on U.S.20 (Northwest tollway to U.S. 20). 815-568-7218.(College and Community)HULL HOUSE THEATRE—Albert Ca¬mus' "Caligula”; Robert Sickinger, dir;Thru June 19. Paul Shyre’s “The ChildBuyer”; Opens June 24. Every Fri. Sat& Sun. Fri & Sat, 8:30; Sun, 7:30. Fri &Sat, $3.90; Sun, $3.40. 3212 N. Broadway348-5622.PARKWAY COMMUNITY HOUSE—August Strindberg’s “Miss Julie” andLeRoi Jones’ “The Slave.” Every FriSat & Sun thru June. Fri & Sat, 8:30;Sun, 7:30. Fri & Sat, $2.50; Sun, $2.00.500 E. 67th. 324-3880.THEATRE ON THE LAKE—Josef &Karel Capek’s fantasy “The InsectComedy” by the Lincoln Park Players;Frederick Wroblewski, dir: June 14-18. jRuth Gordon’s “Over 21” by the ■Ridge Park Players; Victor Frohlich, 1dir: June 21-25. Harry Segall’s fantasy“Heaven Can Wait” by the Chase Park 'Theatre Guild; Pauline Zanetakos, dir: jJune 28-30 & July 1-2. Nightly, 8:30.$1.00. Fullerton Pavilion. Fullerton &Outer Drive. HA 7-5252, ext 432; !DI 8-7075. The other south side theatre opcrating this summer is Hull HouseParkview, presenting Stringberg’sMiss Julie and LeRoi Jones’ TheSlave thru the end of June. Pricesare $2.50 Fridays and Saturdays,$2 Sundays. The show starts at8:30 Fridays and Saturdays, anhour earlier Sundays.Hull House North, at 3212 N.Broadway, is opening tonight theChicago Premiere of Paul Shyre’sThe Child Buyer, based on theJohn Hersey novel. The play willrun through mid-September. Timesare the same as Hull House South;prices are $3.90 Friday and Satur¬day, $3.40 Sunday. Phone 348-5622for reservations.The perennial caberet, SecondCity, recently opened its 22nd re¬view, entitled “When the OwlScreams,” Shows are nightly at 3with additional performances Fri¬days at 11 and Saturdays at 11 and1. Prices are $2 nightly, $2.50 Fri¬day, and $3 Saturday. CallDE 7-3992 for reservations.At the tag end of the summer,the American ConservatoryTheatre will come to Ravinia to dosix plays in repertory August 23-September 18. The plays will beSix Characters in Search of an Au¬thor (Pirandello), Charley’s Aunt(Brandon Thomas), Uncle Vanya(Chekhov), Tiny Alice (Albee),Misalliance (Shaw), and Beyondthe Fringe. For dates, times, andprices, phone ST 2-9696.With concerts and theatre almostevery night, the city can hardly becalled a vast wasteland. And its noone’s fault but your own if you findyourself driven to drink—or theHyde Park theatre. ALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.After dinner don’t miss the newplays at the Last Stage. Join u»for cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST& HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 8-7585Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweet-shirts, "Levis," rain parkas,tennis shoes, underwear, jack¬ets, camping equipment, washpants, etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 24744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Student discount with idTHE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMOUNTING; MATTING;NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESBe Sure toAsk for Weekly SpecialDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111 COURT HOUSERESTAURANT(HARPER COURT)* LUNCH* DINNERS* AFTER DINNERCONTINENTAL ATMOSPHERE open daily until 7 amAir Conditioned EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty Discount OpBEAUTY SALONS ExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting1850 E. 53rd it. NT 9-0302For the Convenience and Needs of the University,VOLKSWAGEN 3.95 for 12 hrs. plus 6c mi.Mustangs - Tempests - Fords — PontiacsAlso AvailableKING RENT A CAR1330 E. 53rd ST.DAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYIf you require a rental car for business, pleasure, or while yourcar is being repaired call us atMl 3-1715 DIVISIONS IN THE UNIVERSITYPanel:ALAN GEWIRTHAssoc. Prof, of PhilosophyJOSEPH LUBEN0WDAVID GUMPERTStudents In the CollegeBRENT HOUSE, 5540 S. WoodlawnDinner 6:30 Program 7:30LAST CHANCEforSix Day Float Trip on Columbia River, B.C. Run White-water Rapids in Rubber Rafts. 100% Safe. Two dayshiking in Baniff and Yoho Parks, B.C.Chartered Bus Leaves Chicago 3 September; Returns 16 SeptemberTotal Cost $150,Includes Transportation, Food & Camping EquipmentBefore August 1st contact Harold W. Lucas; 5801 S.Ellis, Ml 3-0800, Ex. 2381; Eves 288-2145Management byWESTERN RIVER, EXPEDITIONS, INC.Lj*Wood River dam will end all float trips after 1966 0 THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:Southern Fried Chickenin a Basket... $1.50Generous Order Every Sunday Night You eon have a steaktoo, or the biggeststeakburger In town.Don Hamilton Now Playing For Your Pleasure and DancingJune 24, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7SWAP Plans V/ide Range of Summer Activitiesby Richard RabensThe Student Woodlawn Area Proj¬ect (SWAP) will sponsor a widerange of activities this summer forhigh school and grammar schoolstudents from the impoverishedWoodlawn community, accordingto Earl Durham, the project’s di¬rector.Many of the projects involve col¬lege and high school students asadvisers and tutors. Tutors, mainlycollege students, will be given gen¬eral orientation sessions to discussproblems of the Woodlawn commu¬nity in terms of housing, education,and culture. Specialists in thesefteld® will conduct the seminars.According to Roberta Reb, directorof the tutoring project, “This will help the tutor relate to the situa¬tion he faces and thus help him es¬tablish a personal basis with hisstudents.”Under the direction of MarieStern, special programs will be in¬augurated in .reading and in for¬eign languages. The foreign lan¬guage program is designed to givetutees a chance to learn about theculture in which a specific lan¬guage is rooted.GRAMMAR SCHOOL studentswill also have a tutoring programavailable to them. Directed byJoan Bradbury and Vicki Slavin,the program will include as tutorshigh school students who havebeen tutees themselves. Studentsfrom University and Hyde Park■i® ' ..... - v *... •>,- fClassifiedsPERSONALS Delivery of CHICAGO MAROON 4hrs/wk. Early Fri AM. Excellent pay.Must have car to tote 7M papers. CallDawn X326S.Good news! Wuffle will be here all sum¬mer.PRUSSIAN by qualified, experienced na¬tive; rapid method. Call 236-1423. 9 am-5 pm. Trial lesson no charge. FOR SALESANDALS - CUSTOM MADE. 4th JulySpecial. 10-20% discount till July 1. Act.Lib. Studio. 5056 Lake Pk. 268-6910.A Thorp is a Dorp.Wanted: Prtable electric piano. 268-9433. Fisher 440-T transistorized receiver 3wks old: $255 , 463-0460.“Divisions in the University.” BrentHouse, 5540 S. Woodlawn, 7:30 pm. Garrard RC 88 $16. 521-0460. 463-3585.Save from S.P.C.A.! Kittens, 8 wks. Boxtrained, black, black & white. 667-8693. TO RENTMushroom Man wants potatoes (andpooler temperatures). 2‘a rms. unfurn. apt. avail. July 1. S.Shore area. $85/mo. HY 3-4267, after 6.Chartered bus to Stratford Theatre Fes¬tival. Canada. Wkend July 15-17. DonGiovanni, Henry VI, 12th Night, Nicho¬las Romanov Sym., Iturdi. Tickets*2.50-5.50 Sleeping accom. reserved.Knd trp bus fare $20. I-House Assoc.324-0079 & FA 4-8200. HOTEL SHORELANDSpecial student rates Hotel rms. withprivate baths. 2 students/rm. $45/stu-dent per mo. Complete Hotel Service.Ask for Mr. N.T. Norbert, 5454 S. ShoreDrive.HOUSE FOR SALEBargain price. Marynook. 84th & Ken¬wood $23,000 cash for $28,000 home orcontract $2,500 & $200/mo. Low 20 s. 4bdrms., IV2 baths, separate dnrm.. fur¬nished bsmt. Ideal neighborhood. Byowner RE 1-0855.JOBS OFFEREDRM & Bd. in exchange for baby-sitting& dinner dishes month of July. Freerm. in Aug. for tending empty house.Call Mrs. Mikva—BU 8-7522.Rm. & Bd. offered in exchange for ba¬bysitting & dinner dishes for summer SUMMER BUSINESSOFFICE HOURSMon. & Tues. 12-2:30 PMWed., 9-11:30 AM, 12-2:30 PMThurs. & Fri. 9-11:30 AM, 12-4 PM.quarter. Call COHN FA 4-0329.fever thought of HOUSEWORK for yourtot-time job? Choose yr own hrs. about24 hrs/wk at $1.50/hr. faculty family-3 small children. Pleasant house veryclose to campus. 324-3535. REMEMBER: All Classifieds must beprepaid by noon on Thurs.James Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS* LINENS - TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. CardMftVtMC NYDf PARK FOR OYER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2*70, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53r4 high schools will also be recruitedas tutors. They will escort gram¬mar school students on tours of thecity and will be able to meet inconferences to discuss group dy¬namics and leadership techniques.A third program for SWAP thissummer will be a college counsel¬ing project for high school juniorsand seniors. College students, un¬der the direction of Isabel Schoen-feld, Joe Simpson, Mike Zigmund,and Steve Perkins, will counselstudents on college application pro¬cedures, scholarship opportunities,and various college programs. Inaddition, the advisers will try todevelop a program for training thehigh school students for what theywill be faced with in college. Theywill be taught how to use Harperlibrary and how to do research—“so they won’t get clobbered bytheir freshman courses.” The col¬lege counseling project will be di¬rectly in cooperation with thecounseling staff of University high ,school.A POSSIBILITY for this sum¬mer is a vocational guidance andcareer program. Durham hopesthat the program will give students jan exposure to long-range careerprograms—such as those in thecomputer and biomedical fields.The University’s office of careercounseling will help students inves¬tigate vocational opportunities. Theproject will be under the directionof Gil Hersch. SWAP will also sponsor work¬shops in various areas. One staffmember hopes to develop a groupdiscussion of rock-and-roll and itsrelation to culture. Plans are un¬derway for a Negro history club,with the active participation ofUniversity faculty members.SWAP also hopes to participatewith committees concerned aboutthe future of Hyde Park highschool and will meet with parentsand agencies of the Woodlawn areain order to develop positive activi¬ties as an alternative to streetgangs.A FINAL PROGRAM which willcontinue this summer, will be a leadership training group for hischool tutees. They themselves vbe involved in an extensive stuof the Chicago school system aits problems. They will meet wofficials of the Board of Educatiand others to investigate what c<stitutes good education. These sdents, under the advisementHerb Mack, Don Abel, Wally W:shawsky, and Ann Cook, will ameet in groups to learn leadersltechniques.Students are still neededSWAP as tutors and advisers jthe various projects. Anyone intiested should visit the SWAP offiiri Ida Noyes Hall.Music Dept. Announces Concert SerieThe department of music has an¬nounced the six Friday eveningconcerts of the annual chambermusic series for the 1966-7 season.Featured will be an unaccompa¬nied cello recital by Janos Starkerand concerts by the Quartetto Itali-ano and the New York String Sex¬tet. Also to be included are per¬formances by the Early MusicQuartet, which specializes in musicof the Middle Ages and the Renais¬sance, and a piano four-hand recit¬al by Milton and Peggy Salkind.The series opens on October 14with a concert by Arthur Balsam,William Kroll and Benar Heifetz. Series tickets are $11; $9 for fiulty; and $4 for students. Indivual tickets at $3 ($1 for studenwill go on sale October 1. Ticktand information can be obtainfrom the music department, 58Woodlawn.!i. :'W "V ’ J '' ’» • - •>Absolute Final Deadline forreturning Course EvaluationQuestionnaires is July 1st.Additional copies availablein the SG Office, 2nd floorIda Noyes.WELCOMEFor the Summer QuarterWe’ll be glad to see you inThe Main Store is newly lighted and air conditioned for yourconvenience and comfort and our clerks will be glad to assistyou in our:SELF SERVICE DEPARTMENTS(Please use package drops or free coin return lockers.)TEXTBOOKS: All the required and recommended Texts, selectedby your instructors.^GENERAL BOOKS: Over 20,000 titles in a wide range of in¬terests. In our limited space some titles may be difficultto find. See one of our girls wearing the yellow scarves.SCHOOL SUPPLIES: Of every description to meet your needs.*STATIONERY & OFFICE SUPPLIES: For work-room or office.meet the gangfor anair-conditioned beeraton harper ^RECORDS: A large selection at popular prices.CLERK SERVICE DEPARTMENTS*TYPEWRITERS: New, used and rentals in standard, portableor electric.*TAPE RECORDERS: New, used and rentals.*PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES: Many types, cameras and services.* GIFTS: Many gift suggestions, U of C items and cards in color.*MENS & WOMENS WEAR: A fine selection of accessories.^TOBACCO: A representative assortment of items.*SNACK BAR: Sandwiches, coffee, cold drinks and candy.*Main Store onlyMAIN STORE 5802 EllisHours: Monday through Friday 8:00 AM - 5:00 PMSaturday 8:30 AM-12:30 PMCLOSED FOR INVENTORY SATURDAY, JUNE 25thEDUCATION BRANCH ' 5821 Kimbark (In Belfield Hall)Hours.- Monday through FridayDOWNTOWN CENTER BRANCHHours: Monday through Friday190 E. DELAWARE BRANCHHours: Monday through Friday 8:00 AM - 4:30 PM64 E. Lake St.11:30 AM-8:30 PM190 E. Delaware Place5:30 PM-8:30 PM8 • CHICAGO MAROON • June 24, 1966