Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary Year SUMMERWEEKLYVol. 75 No. 4 The University of Chicago Friday, July 15, 1966Set for DecemberPlan UC Draftby Dinah EsralThe University will host ainternational conference tstudy American draft policDecember 4 through 6 at thCenter for Continuing Education.A faculty committee composed oSol Tax, professor of anthropologyMorris Janowitz, professor of sociology, Arnold Webber, professoof business, and C. Arnold Anderson. professor of education and sociology, is presently engaged in thpreliminary planning of the meeting. In conjunqtjpn with the conference a public affairs workshocourse is being offered to UC stvdents this summer, instructed bRoger Little, associate professor rsociology at the University of I1Tnois Circle campus and an experton military affairs.STUDENT PARTICIPATION wilbe a major factor in both the prep¬aration and the actual sessions othe international gathering.The purpose of the conference isto study “the problem of conscrip¬tion and of military manpower,and how this issue relates to edu¬cation,” according to Tax. Theprofessor believes that the Univer¬sity’s sponsorship “will provide aquiet intellectual situation in whichto study the issues and facts in¬volved.”The conference will assume anInternational aspect with the arriv¬al of scholars and people fromother countries, including Sweden,Israel, and England, who will pre¬sent their own countries’ views onhow armies should obtain theirmanpower.In addition, position papers dis¬cussing different points of view onthe American conscription policyare expected to be presented. Ac¬cording to Tax, among the policiesproposed will be that of MiltonFriedman, Paul Snowden Russelldistinguished service professor ofeconomics, who favors a merce¬nary army model, and that of Mar¬garet Mead, noted anthropologist,who at the opposite extreme favorsuniversal service. Tax regardsthese two proposals as “interestingmodels” which will provide an im¬portant contrast to ideas which willalso be forwarded on the compli¬cated third alternative form of se¬lective service.INVITATIONS TO ATTEND theconference are presently beingsent with the hope that importantnational congressmen and possiblycabinet members or others high inthe administration structure willbe able to attend.The convening of the conferencein December will enable the prep¬aration of conference reports forpublication before Congress takesup the draft issue for considerationafter the first of next year.In conjunction with the confer¬ence a course on the national draftquestion is being offered this sum¬mer in the newly created depart¬ment of public affairs. Donald Le¬vine, associate professor of sociolo¬gy and master of the socialsciences undergraduate college,explained that the course, whichincorporates a new “workshop”format, was created when a num¬ber of students approached himlate in spring quarter asking if af •./>-- - v ' - *On the Insidem m• Latest University hous-ng improvements onpage 2• Special report from Pe¬king on page 3• Additional photos of thecivil rights rally on page4 Sol Taxstudy UC's Robie House OscsFor Stevenson Memoirs®!!by Miron StrafRobie House has been selected as the headquarters of a new international affairs institutethat will serve as the official memorial to Ad’ai E. Stevenson.Hermon D. Smith, president of the Stevenson Memorial Fund, Mrs. Edison Dick, vice-president of the fund, and Adlai E. Stevenson, III, eldest son of the late ambassador, an¬nounced the decision yesterday, onourse could be set up toraft problems.LEVINE described the course asi “workshop” in that it is a topical.ourse in which students work onafferent aspects of a specific ques-on, and each write a paper study¬ing one side of the general issue.There is no exam scheduled for the.vorkshop, though it is a full-creditcourse which may be taken byboth undergraduates and grad¬uates.Little, who is instructing thevorkshop, is considered by Levine.o be “an outstanding sociologist inhe field of military sociology.”Appointed to the University’s sum¬mer faculty and presently workingwith Janowitz, Little will assumelis new appointment of associateprofessor of sociology at the Chica¬go Circle campus of the Universityof Illinois this fall.In coordinating the efforts of theworkshop with that of the Decem¬ber conference, it was originally(Continued on Page Eight) the first anniversary of the dis¬tinguished statesman’s death.“THE ADLAI E. STEVENSONInstitute of International Affairswill provide a center in which theworld’s most distinguished states¬men, scholars, government offi¬cials, and practical men of affairswill meet to study problems affect¬ing international peace,” saidSmith.The proposed institute is the re¬sult of an intensive survey of suita¬ble memorial possibilities begunshortly after the death of GovernorStevenson by members of his fami¬ly, friends, and associates. Twoconsultants, Dr. Herman Wells, chancellor of Indiana University,and Dr. William Marvel, presidentof Education and World Affairs, anorganization formed to study edu¬cational institutions which dealwith international affairs, suggest¬ed that the memorial take theform of this new kind of center forinternational studies, directed byan international board of trustees.Will Offer FellowshipsAccording to the report issued byWells and Marvel, the institutewould offer fellowships to graduatestudents (Stevenson Fellows) on aninternational basis. It would pro¬vide facilities for research and dis¬Robie House, the future headquarters of the Adlai Stevenson In*stitute of International Affairs.Rally Kicks off Rights Drive,Emphasis To Be on HousingTo the background of rioting on the Near West Side, Chicago’s summer civil rightsdrive opened this week with the initial emphasis on open occupancy.Heading the list of demands posted on the door of City Hall Sunday by Dr. MartinLuther King, head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), was a de¬mand that real estate boards andbrokers make all housing listingsavailable immediately on a non-discriminatory basis, and endorseand support the principle of openoccupancy.OTHER DEMANDS asked actionby Illinois Governor Otto Kerner torevoke the licenses of real estatedealers who discriminate in hous¬ing sales, the passage of a pro¬posed open occupancy provision aspart of the 1966 federal CivilRights Act, and the construction ofpublic housing units outside Negroghetto areas.King received strong support forhis open housing program from theMost Reverend John P. Cody, arch¬bishop of the Roman Catholic arch¬diocese of Chicago. In a speechread in his behalf at a Soldier’sField rally before the posting ofKing’s demands, Archbishop Codydeclared that the sale or rental ofa house involved a moral decisionwith no justification possible fordiscrimination on racial or reli¬gious grounds.Governor Kerner fulfilled one ofthe open occupancy demands withthe signing Wednesday of an exec¬utive order forbidding the statedepartment of registration andeducation to license real estatedealers who sell housing on adiscriminating basis. Illinois real¬tors are expected to challenge theorder in court.KING APPARENTLY did not,however, receive strong supportfor open occupancy in his Mondaymeeting with Mayor Richard J. Da Civil rights workers in Dr. King's movement toat Sunday's rally in Soldier's Field.ley. After the meeting King saidthat the mayor had not offeredhim any constructive support forhis demands.Meanwhile, civil rights groupsare planning to take their open 'end slums" relaxhousing drive to white neighbor¬hoods. Negroes plan to “test”churches, real estate brokers, andpark facilities of the white GagePark neighborhood in south-west¬ern Chicago this weekend. cussion for potential loaders in c’.i-nlomacy, business, and education,doreover, it would invite emin. itworld figures to spend time at thenstitute ?s Stevenson Distin¬guished Fellows.BY ELECTING an academy ofsome twenty-five world leaders tomeet at an annual symposium, theinstitute could publicize its re¬search and proposals. “A distinc¬tive feature of the institute,” saidSmith, “is its organizational con¬tinuity, and resulting capacity tofollow up excellent policy recom¬mendations with equally effectiveprograms directed to achievingpractical results.”The board of directors of theStevenson Memorial Fund decidedthat the institute suggested by theWells-Marvel report would provide“the most appropriate and mean¬ingful memorial for perpetuatingAdlai Stevenson’s unique qualitiesof mind and spirit.”The institute will be autonomous,according to Smith. Its governingbody, as well as its fellows andstaff will be drawn from all overthe world, but picked solely on thebasis of excellence. “All countrieswill have equal prerogatives notwithstanding the institute’s locationin the United States,” said Smith.“Thus, the institute will be theonly permanent organization of itskind that is explicitly internationalfrom its inception.”$10 Million NeededA goal of $10 million has been setto establish the institute. Addition¬al funds, however, will be requiredas it grows. Nationwide public so¬licitation is now being prepared.THE DIRECTORS of the fundselected the UC campus for the in¬stitute’s permanent headquartersbecause of the University’s li¬braries and other specializedacademic resources. The institutewill work in close cooperation withthe University.Provost Edward H. Levi saidthat the University was “extreme¬ly pleased by the decision to makeour campus the home of the Ste¬venson Institute.”“The program of the institutewill be important to statesmen andscholars from all over the world,”he added.Levi said that UC would makeavailable Robie House, the first ofFrank Lloyd Wright's “PrairieHouses”, to serve as the home forthe institute. “It seems especiallyfitting,” he said, “that this world-significant new venture, honoring astatesman of broad vision and leg¬endary grace of speech, who wascf the Middle West and loved hisprairie home, and who spoke forand to the academic community,should now be housed in this archi¬tectural landmark on a universitycampus.”Lady Jackson CommentsIn a recent issue of Saturday Re-view, Lady Barbara Ward Jack-son, a distinguished British econo¬mist and author and a member ofthe board of directors of the fund,commented on the idea presented(Continued on Page Six;Business Exploring Dropout EducationLyle M. Spencer, a UC trusteeand the president of Science Re¬search Associates (SRA), told anestimated one hundred people atJudd Hall that social causes arestimulations and language experi¬ence.”Spencer delivered the first of the1966 Colver-Rosenberger lecturesat the Graduate School of Educa¬tion Wednesday night."WITH THE GOVERNMENTacting as broker, a number oflarge American corporations areorganizing some of the nation’sbest-trained and original minds inthe fields of social reform, educa¬tion, and management to attemptto equalize the spread of opportuni¬ty in American life,” he said.Social-Industrial ComplexSpencer described this new com¬mon goal of industry and govern¬ment and termed the intertwiningof both parties a “social-industrialcomplex.”Companies, such as SRA, Gener¬al Learning Corp., and Xerox, hesaid, are competing to find an¬swers to questions “which recentlyengaged a relatively small groupof academics cloistered in researchlibraries of teachers’ colleges.”"WE PLAN TO FIND outmore,” Spencer said, . .aboutwhat is specifically meant whenwe say that pre-school children ofthe ghetto become educationallydisabled for lack of certain sensorystimulations and language experi¬ence.”Business also hopes to find out,he said, how school-children canlearn in their own way at theirown rate of speed, and how the di¬rection of the lives of school drop¬outs may be reversed.“Just how handicapped,” heasked, “is an 18-year-old who haslearned the habit of consistentfailure in ten or twelve years?Must he learn everything in thecurriculum that he failed to learnbefore; or can he base a new, use¬ful education on certain selected Lyle M. Spencerbuilding blocks?”“To what degree.” he added,“can he base a useful education onthings he’s really interested in?”Job Corps IndicationSpencer said that leads to wheresome of the answers lie are beingfound at the Rodman Job CorpsCenter, which his company is oper¬ating for the government.A documentary film on the Rod-man center was shown, and Spen¬cer described the ideas and prob¬lems his company had to cope within operating the center as a part¬ner with the government. Rodmanand nearby New Bedford, Massa¬chusetts were the scenes of disturb¬ances two months ago involvingmembers of the Job Corps."IF WE, INVOLVED in the JobCorps,” said Spencer, “can indeedconstruct a method of successfuleducation for teen-agers withwhom established methods havefailed, we will have helped make afundamental contribution with im¬plications far beyond the JobCorps.”$4.95$6.95NEW BOOKS — JUST RECEIVEDShantung Compound by: Langdon GilkeyRulers of Darkness by: Frederick J. LippTriumph or Tragedy: Reflections on Vietnamby: Richard N. Goodwin $1.45The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. ELLIS AVENUEDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Discount CONTACT LENSESFor the Convenience and Needs of the University,VOLKSWAGENS 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 "It seems to me,” he concluded,“that such a contribution to im¬proving the quality of Americanlife is a fit one for a corporationwhich may be sustained by themaking of profit, but whose mo¬tives should and do include an obli¬gation to earn its place as one ofAmerica’s basic institutions.”Students ProtestShortly before his talk, three orfour University students displayedsigns and handed out leaflets pro¬testing the student draft defermentexam. Spencer’s company, SRA,published the exam for the govern¬ment.Spencer’s talk was the first offour weekly lectures in the Colver-Rosenberger series on “NewForces in American Education.”The lectures are held on Wednes¬day evenings, 8 pm in room 126 ofJudd Hall.EDWIN C. BERRY, ExecutiveDirector of the Chicago UrbanLeague, will deliver the next talkentitled “The Civil Rights Move¬ment and its Implications for Edu¬cation,” on July 20. Teachouts at Point and Federal BuildingTo Set Pattern for Remainder of SummerTwo new teachouts — oneat the Federal building andone at the 55th Street Point— are being planned for thisweek.The teachout at the Point willtake place this Sunday and is beingsponsored by the Hyde Park Com¬mittee to End the War in Vietnam.Though officially billed as a teach¬out, the planned demonstrationmight better be labeled a speak-out, as the committee is planningto let anyone who wants to voicehis views on the war speak.FUTURE ACTIVITIES plannedby the Hyde Park Committee in¬clude weekly demonstrations at thePoint and participation in the In¬ternational Day of Protest, August6.On Monday, July 18, at 12:00, theMid-West Faculty Committee onVietnam will sponsor its secondteachout of the summer at theFederal Building at Dearborn and Jackson streets. The purpose ofthe teachout will be to protest ih«latest escalation of the war in Viet-nam.The committee is planning a se¬ries of teachouts at the FederalBuilding to be held on alternateMonday noons, emphasizing aca¬demic opposition to “distortion ofthe truth by the administrationwhich alone makes possible thecontinuation of this frightful war.”THE AGENDA FOR the teach-outs includes picketing, facultyand student speakers, and the dis¬tribution of a leaflet which claimsto present the facts of the Vietnamwar in the form of an examination.Participation will be by facultyand students from the Chicagoarea including members of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society(SDS) and Students Against theRank (SAR) who have voted tosupport the Midwest Faculty ac¬tion.Dorm Improvements Okayedby David E. GumpertIn an apparent effort to sat¬isfy at least some student de¬mands to improve Universityhousing, the administrationhas authorized the construction oflounges in New Dorms and theconversion of some double roomsto singles in Pierce tower.According to Dean of StudentsWarner A. Wick, eight new loungeswill be built in New Dorms, andtwenty doubles converted to singlesin Pierce, all in time for fall quar¬ter.THE EIGHT new lounges will bemade by knocking out the parti¬tions between two double rooms inthe middle of each floor. This,noted Wick, will mean a reductionin income from Woodward by 32people.Bo Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweat¬shirts, "Levis/1 rain parkas, ten¬nis shoes, underwear, jackets,camping equipment, wash pants,etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Student discount with adTAhSAM-A&NCHINES! - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpocMMaf IaCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN BAHTII A.M. to 9*5 PALORDERS TO TAKE OUT1118 Boat Mrd ft. MU 4-1042 . • •Now Dorms, where eight new lounges will be constructed.In Pierce, five double rooms in because of the reduction in rent re-each of the four houses will become singles which, says Wick,will necessitate an increase inmal rates for singles. The new sin¬gles will be $50 a quarter morethan regular singles. Wick pointedout that the University will still, ineffect, be subsidizing these roomsKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856PIERRE ANDREtoco flatteringParisian chictan skill«dhoir stylists ot1242 Nyda Fa* Bird.2281 I. 71st St.DO 1-072710% Student Msaaant ceived and from the loss ©f 20board contracts.“This action shows that we thinkit’s important to do something inthese dorms,” said Wick. “Besidesmaking both places more pleasant,it will also serve to equalize thingsa bit in University housing in gen¬eral.”EVERYONE scheduled to returnto Pierce next quarter will be noti¬fied of the change and asked ifthey want to be considered for thenew singles. A drawing will baheld if more students are interest¬ed than there are singles available,said Wick.Wick also expressed hope thatmore such improvements can bemade in the future. “This is themost we can spare in space thisyear, however,” he said.So you think S GIV ceds to be changedHOW?*?Come to the open hearings on changes in-the SG Constitution-Monday, July 18, 7'30 pmSG OFFICE , IDA NOYES (Second Floor)*May move outside if too hot You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ava.646-4411Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the rest^foreign car hospitalCHICAGO MAROON July 15, 1966Chinese People's Republic Fears U,S. Aggression(editor's note: The following is anoffering front China Features, a pub¬lic relations group in mainland Chinasends out manuscripts to select¬ed newspapers in all parts of theworld. Our getting this material isIttrgely due to efforts by past Marooneditors to get on foreign mailing listsa practice the present editors willtrv to continue. Word from mainlandChina is difficult to obtain and theMaroon will print any further materi¬el as it comes in.)Special To The Chicago Maroonby Chien LaiPEKING — “China is pre¬pared. If the United Statesimposes war on China, theUnited States will not be ableto pull out, however many men itsends over or whatever weapons ituses, nuclear weapons included.”This statement was made byPremier Chou En-lai in a recentinterview with a Pakistan corre-s 'endent.he people everywhere in Chinaare ready to meet aggression. Dur¬ing a recent visit to the ChiaohsiehPeople’s Commune in KiangsuProvince, we saw armed militiamen and women throughout thecountryside, parching on the roadswere groups" of militia memberswith rifles slung over their shoul¬ders and spades in their hands.Clusters of rifles were stacked inthe fields where militia memberswere doing farm work. During thework-breaks, the militia gatheredin groups to study Mao Tsetung'sworks on people’s warfare. Otherspracticed rifle shooting or grenade¬throwing. At times the crackle ofrifle-fire proclaimed that somemilitia units were busy at theshooting range further off.ON THE WALLS in the villages were slogans: “The US aggressorsare pushing China around. We areon the alert and ready to wipethem out.” In the meeting halls ofthe commune’s production brigadeshung charts and photographs illus¬trating the US military deploy¬ment around China under the in¬scriptions: “The enemy is sharpen¬ing his sword and we must sharpenours.”THE MILITIA units in Chiaoh¬sieh Commune came into being dur¬ing World War II. They were poor¬ly armed at first, but they captur¬ed weapons to equip themselves tofight against the Japanese occupa¬tion army. The ranks of the militiaswelled as the war went on and,operating in coordination with theregular army units, they played abig role first in defeating the Japa¬nese and later in routing theAmerica n-equipped army ofChiang Kai-shek.After the liberation of China, themilitia was supplied with equip¬ment by the People's LiberationArmy. “The gun is a matter of lifeand death for us working people,”said Fu Yung-chih, one of thefounders of the Chiachsieh militia.“We relied on the gun to overthrowour oppressors. We rely on it evenmore now to defend our countryagainst aggression. Without thegun, the toiling people would haveno hope of survival.”WITH THE CHIAOHSIEH militiaare thousands of women. Someserve as battalion and platoon com¬manders. There is a women’s artil¬lery detachment, many of whosemembers have become skilled inhandling mortars.Some war veterans, many ofwhom saw action in Korea as Chi¬nese People’s Volunteers, are giv¬ ing the militia political and mili¬tary training.The People’s Liberation Armysend in men from time to time tohelp train the militia into an effec¬tive fighting force. This corre¬spondent met Liu Chin-shan, deputycommander of a military sub-areaof the People’s Liberation Army, inhis simply furnished office in theChiaohsieh Commune. He was theleader of an outstanding guerilladetachment which operated alonga railway and struck terror intothe hearts ol the Japanese duringthe war. He spoke of the importantrole the armed masses play inmodern warfare. “Chairman MaoTse-tung’s idea of ‘everyone a sol¬dier’ is a much more powerfulweapon than guided missiles andatom bombs,” he said.LIU CHIN-SHAN added, “Themore a war is fought with modernweapons, the greater is the need tobuild militia forces to the maxi¬mum. However destructive theatom bomb, it cannot decide theoutcome of a war. That is decidedultimately by the infantry, by man.By turning everyone into a soldier,we make the whole country into asnare. It becomes difficult for theenemy to move an inch.Guerrilla Experience“An invasion army possessingmodern arms may have more in¬tensive fire-power and create de¬struction at one point or another. Itmay destroy concentrated targets,but it cannot destroy the vast ruralareas.”Liu Chin-shan, who led a guerrilladetachment that blew up many en¬emy railway bridges and trainsduring the war, continued: “Themore mechanised an enemy armybecomes, the more the supplies ituses up and the heavier the vol¬ume of its transport. During thewar, we took advantage of thisweakness of the enemy by destroy¬ing his supply lines.”DURING THEIR invasion ofChina, the Japanese army hadplanes, tanks, artillery and ma¬chine-guns in plenty, he said. Jap¬anese forts were everywhere, andthey were within shouting distanceof one another. The Japanesethought their mass murder couldmake the Chinese capitulate. “Butit only made us fight back withgreater hatred, and the JapaneseBOB NELSON MOTORSImport’ CentroM. Q.HondaTriumph lost battle after battle,” he said.“Finally the Japanese regiment,which had fought us for years, sur¬rendered to us. The commander, a colonel, said reluctantly, ‘We’velost.’ This once cock-a-hoop Japa¬nese militarist had to acknowledgethe might of people’s warfare.”Girls of a militia unit practicing laying anti-tank mines in KwangsfProvince which borders on Vietnam.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH- j- NEW & USED -Sales and Sarvica on all hi-fi oquipmont. £ "71Chinese militiamen studying the war situation in Vietnam.HONDASUPERSUMMERSALE FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to itu cUnts with ID card*Rent Or Purchase YourEscape From Tedium AtCewylata RepotaiAnd SarvicaPar AN Popular ImportsMidway 1-45016052 So. Cottage Grove& LicenseSaleSEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES - SERVICE - PART*• PICK UP A DELIVERY. EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESCALLMl 34500Chicago's Largest & Just Around the CornerBOB NELSON MOTORS6136 COTTAGE GROVEFree MirrorDuring TOAD HALL1444 E. 57th St.BU 8-4500Choose from Our Large Selectionof Transistor Radios, TV's,Hi-Fi's and Stereo's■■ s. - . '* *■ - j/| Photos by |Jean Raisler §W-■ ' ' v • - <■ - "V&s? • :* j Calling*tor a Movement |in Chicago j4 • CHICAGO MAROON • July II, 1944The Hope for Dr. Kings Chicago MovementLast Sunday's rally marked the be¬ginning of the “long hot nonviolentsummer” promised for Chicago bycivil rights leaders. On Monday, Mar¬lin Luther King announced himselfnot satisified with the Mayor’s re¬sponse to civil rights demands. As aresult, King says, the Movement willbegin to take action to dramatize theplight of the ghetto.The Daley-King confrontation wasimportant because it illustrates theproblems facing civil rights organizersin the North and concomitantly therealities of Negro life in the northerncities where oppression is the realitybut not the law.Part of the reason that King and thecivil rights movement have been soeffective in the South has been the ex¬istence of unjust laws which providedan important focus for civil rights ac¬tivities. A certain tangible successcould be enjoyed when an ordinanceestablishing segregated bathroom fa¬cilities was rescinded. And concretegains could be appreciated in the lightof concrete injustice.For a movement oriented to fight¬ing tangible oppression, a Northerncity like Chicago poses special prob¬lems. In Chicago, separate and un¬equal is the rule but (generally speak¬ing) is not the law. Because it isn’t thelaw, civil rights workers are at astrategic disadvantage in organizingpeople—they have lost a focus, anovert and unmistakable symbol of theoppression they are trying to fight.The Southern Christian LeadershipConference (SCLC) and the Coordinat¬ing Council of Community Organiza¬tions (CCCO), two groups who willplay the biggest role in this summer’sactivity, have been aware of the diffi¬culty for some time. They explain tothe faithful that the forces responsiblefor their condition reside in some¬thing called the power structure andthe symbol of the power structure hasbecome Mayor Daley.The situation is somewhat similar tothat which existed before the resigna¬ tion of Schools Superintendent Ben¬jamin C. Willis. Willis became thesymbol of all the problems of Chica¬go’s inadequate schools. Willis’ re¬moval became an obsession for liber¬al Chicagoans even though his resigna¬tion, (which is effective August 31),will have a negligible effect on theproblems of the schools, in and of it¬self.Rightly or wrongly, SCLC andCCCO must make of Daley and thepower structure, what they once madeof Willis—a symbol of oppressionagainst which people’s energies can bedirected.In dealing with Daley, however,they have a distinct problem. Daleydoesn’t want to be a scapegoat and issmart enough not to let himself be¬come one. In the words of a top Daleyaide, “In the South, King gave themlove and he got back hate. Here he’sgiving us love and we’re giving himlove right back.”If nothing else, Daley proved hewas more flexible than a lot of peoplegave him credit for being, when hedecided to saturate the South andWest Side Negro ghettos with muni¬cipal attention. At the same time, thestrategy of sweetness is seriouslyhandicapping the Movement.SCLC staff members mutter darklyabout Daley’s motives but they findthemselves exasperated in attemptingto organize people whom the city isdetermined to keep content. Everytime King makes a demand, the citybegins implementing it.At Monday’s meeting, Daley hadthe temerity to suggest to King thathe join in the municipal efforts nowunder way to end the slums. King, ofcourse, refused. He gave as a reasonhis belief that the Mayor, while inagreement with general goals reflect¬ed in SCLC demands, was basicallysuperficial. “We’re demanding struc¬tural changes,” he said. If King hadoffered anything faintly resemblingaccomodation with the city, he couldhave packed his bags and gone home to Atlanta. To have a movementyou’ve simply got to have somethingto move against.An organizaer for The WoodlawnOrganization (TWO) expressed it well.“In Kansas City,” he said, “One of ourorganizers went down into the Negroslum and tried to do a little organiz¬ing. He was getting nowhere fast so hewent to the city administration andpersuaded them to locate a mentalhospital in the heart of the Negro dis¬trict. He then went back to the peopleand said, ‘Listen, their trying to senda bunch of nuts down here, we gottafight ‘em.’ ”Like the Kansas City organizer, theSCLC workers have got to get theirpeople fighting. They are starting outat a distinct disadvantage. Tellingpeople to fight city hall is like tellingpeople to fight society - it’s very dis-hartening. The staff workers at theWest Side Christian Parish know thatending slums will involve rebuilding alot of shattered humanity but facedwith the task of organizing peopleagainst city hall, it becomes very diffi¬cult to also try to organize people for,self help.This is not to say that the Move¬ment hasn’t included an emphasis onpersonal responsibility and the role ofcitizenship. It has. But of necessity,that emphasis has been subordinatedto an official interpretation of slumsas the result of exploition. People inSCLC include under the heading ofexploitation the years of brutality thathave bred in Negroes what King calls“slumism” but somehow the messagenever comes across as clear as thecries against the Machine - and, forthe purposes of organization, itshouldn’t.The arrival of Dr. King’s Movementcould be of great historical impor¬tance for Chicago for several reasons.In the first place, it is doubtful thatthe Cook County Democratic Organi¬zation would have turned its attentionto the slums if it hadn’t felt itselfthreatened among the traditionally safe Negro electorate by the arrival ofa charismatic leader like King. In thesecond place, and perhaps even moreimportant, a Movement in the slums -even if its aim is totally misdirected,,is the best hope for the poor urbanNegro.If this summer’s activity can beginto build a cohesiveness and sense ofcommunity on the West Side, it willbe a momentous thing for this city andfor the country as a whole.There is exploitation to be eradicat¬ed not as much as SCLC theoristswill tell you—but there is some. Ifduring the fight against this exploita¬tion a social coherence and idenity isbuilt in the slums, there will be a realbasis for ending poverty.Slums exist in Chicago and else¬where largely because of social andeconomic facts of life. These facts oflife are the sad realities with whichcivil rights workers will have to cometo grips once the last concession iswrung from the power structure. Nomatter how many companies beginpreferential hiring of Negroes, therestill won’t be enough jobs in our twen¬tieth century economy for peoplewithout skills. No matter how manylandlords agree to refurbish their.buildings, there still be slums wheretenants are destructive. It will takemore than protest to cure the socialills bred in the Negro by hundreds ofyears of mistreatment. Yet even if theprotests are entirely irrelevant to end¬ing the slums, the act of protest andthe kind of organization such protestinvolves build an inner stability andsense of idenity in slum dwelling peo¬ple.The salvation of the slums - indeed,the salvation of America’s cities willdepend on taking the most anti-socialand destructive elements within theghetto and making them part of thecommunity around them. It’s a kind ofbridge building process and organiza¬tion techniques are the tools. This isthe hope for Dr. King’s Movement inChicago, 1966.Letters to the EditorFrom the EditorDEAR READERS:During the last two W'eeks, myattention has been repeatedlycalled to a quote attributed to mein the July 1st issue of the Maroon.The quote, which is allegedly myreaction to the publication of anarticle of mine in the New Repub¬lic, contains astonishingly poorgrammar. Since it appeared I'vehad my hands full turning downgenerous offers cf tutoring in re¬medial English and big discountson used high school grammars.What happened was that I wasmisquoted. I never said, “As oneof the nation’s most widely readliberal magazines, I’m pleasedthey decided to use it.” I simplytold the guilty reporter that I waspleased, which 1 was.For those of you who think it’s apretty sad state of affairs when aneditor is misquoted in his own pa¬per, all I can say is that I agree andthe Maroon (including me) will tryto do better. Now that I know howit feels to be misquoted I can bet¬ter understand how upset otherpeople sometimes get and, honestly,we’ve been trying, and will keeptrying, to keep 'iftat sort of thingdown to an absolute^ minimum. Ifwe succeed, maybe other peoplebesides embarrassed Maroon edi¬tors will benefit.DAVID A. SATTER Bloom Charges PerfidyTO THE EDITOR:It has come to my attention thatStudent Government intends toscrap its entire Christmas andSpring charter flight program be¬cause ot the half-fare youth planon most major airlines. This deci¬sion, which will be made officiallyby the small clique of SG leadersin the near future, is one of themost incredibly stupid acts con¬ceivable.The Student Government officersplanning this action have shortmemories. They seem to forgetthat just a few short months agothe student body voted on the abol¬ishment of SG in an election thathad many of the organization’smembers worried. They forget thatthe vote was swung in such placesas Woodward Court and the Law School in favor of SG almost en¬tirely because of its services. Nowthey seek to abolish one of theirmajor services. Their argumentthat this service will be unused ifoffered because of the half-youthfare is absurd because:1. Nobody in his right mind isgoing to try half-fare at Christmastime. It is impossible to get regu¬lar reservations at that time muchless “stand-by”.2. A majority of students on thiscampus are graduate students andmost of them are over 21 (themaximum uz fare age).I urge every student to protestthis to the SG office as well as tohis Student Government represent¬ative as soon as possible beforethis action becomes official.ALAN BLOOMINDEPENDENT SGREPRESENTATIVEWOODWARD COURTChicago MaroonSUMMER WEEKLYEditor-In-Chief David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor * David E. GumpertExecutive Editor «... David L. AikenAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzDavid H. RichterDinah EsralJoan Philips News AnalysisWhy Bomb Hanoi?by John BremnerOne wonders, after all the smoke has cleared above bothHanoi and Washington, whether or not Hanoi was worthbombing at all.up. Can we really break theThe standard queries comeNorth Vietnamese psychologicallywith napalm if Hitler failed tobreak the British by the same .tac¬tic? Can we really defeat a gueril¬la army in one disorganized coun¬try by bombing oil in another one?BUT A MORE SERIOUS ques¬tion arises. Hanson W. Bladwin,military affairs correspondent forthe New York Times, indicated inan article on July 2nd that Hanoiwas not worth bombing becausethere was nothing there.“The delay (in bombing) re¬duced the military importance ofthe targets. ... the enemy has hadample time to construct new facili¬ties and to disperse fuel in drums,railroad cars and field storage fa¬cilities.”This comment makes at leastone assumption: there can be mili¬tary value to eliminating NorthVietnamese power. This seemsplausible, as oil does fuel thetrucks on the Ho Chi Minh trail.McNamara himself commented onthis development when he said afew weeks ago “truck movement toSouth Vietnam doubled in the firstfive months of 1966 as comparedto 1965.”THIS DOES NOT CLOSE thecase, but added to the fact of anincreasingly well equipped enemyin the South, it suggests the profit such a force. This well might notwin the war, but it would perhapskeep us from losing it, and itwould even possibly assist thedrive for negotiations, so far borneof futility.In any case, working with thisassumption as true, we have, ac¬cording to Baldwin, not eliminatedHanoi’s pow'er, and have lost ouropportunity to do so at the presentlevel of warfare.IF BALDWIN IS right about theevacuation from Hanoi of all mili¬tary essentials, it appears we areabout at the end of cheap possibili¬ties in this war. If bombing of Ha¬noi could have been made to pay afew months ago, w;e might haveseen an end to the war, or at leastan end to the need to escalatefurther. Now that the opportunityhas been lost, we are perhaps in acorner, out of which the only roadsare acceptance of defeat becauseot prohibitive risk, or war withChina as the only means of achiev¬ing destruction of the enemy thislate in the game.If we have been decided to makewar, perhaps we should have beenmaking it faster and harder, in or¬der to have kept it smaller andcheaper than it ultimately andin reducing Hanoi’s ability to field tragically might have to be.CHICAGO MAROON • 5July 15, 19*4—Theatre Review"The Child Buyer” Is Lacking Somewhat in GeniusSince I have not read John Her-sey’s The Child Buyer, I cannotcomment on the quality of the nov¬el but I suspect that is quite alot better than Paul Shyre’s dra¬matic adaptation of it which is cur¬rently at the Hull House Theater.It would have to be.The Hull House production is acompetent one, but there are im¬portant faults in the play. Thebasic problem is that despite thesixteen characters, the movementon stage, and the amount of dia¬logue. very little happens duringthe play.IN ORDER TO tell the story ofan agent from a large companywho comes into a small town topurchase a child genius whosebrain he wants to develop for themother firm, Shyre uses the con¬ventional courtroom setting. Theaction of the play centers aroundthe state senate’s investigation ofthe child buyer and the circum¬stances surrounding his propositionto buy young Barry Rudd. TheF.udd family and all those connect¬ed with Barry and the proposition | testify in court, and their testimo¬ny amounts to the longest, mostartificial exposition I’ve seen onstage.Because each character tellsabout himself, besides telling aboutBarry, the point of view is a little !confused. The play seems to be, atleast quantitatively, as concernedj with showing that all those con-I nected with Barry are willing to jsell him if they are properly jtempted, as it is concerned withjtackling the question of the placeof genius in the contemporary so- jciety. The latter question is ob ,viously the more original and in- jteresting of the two, and deservesa far better treatment in the play.As it is, of those who speak atcourt, only Barry’s parents’ reac¬tion to him is presented with suffi¬cient emphasis.THE OTHER CHARACTERSwho testify, although interesting,speak irrelevantly about them¬selves, their histories, and, to somedegree, their philosophies. As thesesubjects relate to Barry, they aresignificant, but often the speechesshift interest to these characters. At the end of the play, when Bar¬ry’s teacher Miss Perrin, his mother,and school principal Dr. Gozareach have a change of heart anddecide to sell the child, the interestraised in their peculiar personali¬ties and circumstances is cultivat¬ed.It seems unfortunate, however,that the force of what will be doneto Barry in the event that he issold is not made more manifest tothe audience: only then would theinsensitive, crass, jealous attitudesof most of the senators, state em¬ployees, relatives, friends, and as¬sociates be significantly felt. Theburden of reacting to Barry restson the senators, and none of thethree is really a well-created char¬acter, although Senators Mansfieldand Skypack are far more success¬ful creations than the sterotypedand reptitious Volyolko. Still, theirreacting to Barry and his case con¬stitutes most of what is happeningon the stage, for there is no char¬acter development. Characters de¬velop off stage and merely come tothe court room to tell the audienceabout their changes.Culture CalendarArtART INSTITUTE v.. C HICAGO—Win-terbatham Collection: July 8—Aug. 8.5 "The Art of Living Exhibition": ThruJuly 31. Recent Accessions of 20th Cen¬tury Drawings and Prints. Prims,Drawings and Watercotors from the col¬lection. Photographs from the perman¬ent collection. Free. Daily, lO-o: Thu,10-9:30; Sun, 12-5. Michigan & Adams.ConcertsRAVINIA FES-tVAi,— iilCAGO SYM-PHONY OKCilE Tit A: Seiji Ozawa..Ravinia Music Director and ResidentConductor. Programs were not availa¬ble at press time.Third Week—Tue & Tl.u, July 12-14—Sixten Ehrling. cond; Henryk Szeryng,v fon 14th). Sat., July Id—Earling, conu;Szeryng, v.Fourth Week—Tue & Thu, July 19-21—Josef Krips, cond.Fifth Week—Tue & Thu. July 26-28—Seiji Ozawa, cond: Byron Janis, p.Works by Rachmaninoff for Piano &Orch. Sat.. July 30—William Steinamrg,cond. Mahler: Sym No. 2 (Reserrec-tion) with soloists to be announced.Sixth Week—Tue, Aug 2—WilliamSteinberg, cond. Verdi: Requiem withsoloists to be announced.Nightly, 8:30. Adm to the park, $2.00.Reserved seats an additional chargeranging from $2.00 to $6.00. Tickets: Ra¬vinia Festival Assoc. 22 W. Monroe.Daily, 9-5. Closed Sat. Sc Sun. ST 2-9696.Ravinia Park. Highland Park. 273-3500.GRANT PARK - CONCERTS—IrwinHoffman, Principal Conductor.Fri., July 15—Irwin Hoffman, cond;Florence Kopleff. c; Grant Park SymCho; Thomas Peck, dir. All-BrahmsPrograms. Academic Festival Overt;Song of the Fates for Cho & Orch; AltoRhapsodie, Op. 53. Sym No. 2.Sat & Sun, July 16-17—Martin Rich,cond; Judith Raskin, s. Haydn: SymNo. 102. Mozart Arias (Sat only): L'am-ero, saro costante from 11 Re Pastore;Batti, batti from Don Giovanni :Zef-fiertti Lushinghiere from Idomeneo;Welche Wonne, welche Lust from theAbduction from the Seraglio. Bach:Cantata, No. 51 Jauchzet Gott in alienLanden (Sun only). Barber: Adagio forStrings, Op. 11; Knoxville: Summer of1915 for Soprano & Orch. Strauss: TillEulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks.Wed., July 20—Julius Rudel, cond;Paul Olefsky, vc. Mozart: Sym No. 25.Haydn: Cone tn D. Schubert: Sym No. 9in C.Fri, July 22—Julius Rudel, cond; Jef¬frey Siegel, p. Prokofieff: LieutenantKije Suite. Shostakovitch: Cone No. 1,Op. 35. Tcnaikowsky: Sym No. 6. Sat & Sun. July 23-24—Julius Rubel,cond: Martina Arroyo, s; BeverlyWoltt. ms; Michele Mutest*, t: RaymondMichalski, b: Grant Park Sym Cho,Thomas Peck. dir. All-Rossini Program.Excerpts from La Cenerentola; StabatMater.Wed July 27—Irwin Hoffman, cond:Samuel Asnkenasi, v. All-Brahms Pro-gra.m. Haydn Variations, Op. 56a; SymNo. 3: Violin Cone.TheatreProfessionalHELLO DOLLY!—David Merrick'sBroadway production starring Eve Ar¬den; Gower Champion, dir. Nightly.8:30; Wed & Sat Matinees, 2. Clos-.dSun. Nightly, $3.50-$9.G0; Matinees,$3.50-$5.00. Shubert Theatre, 22 W. Mon-rue. CE 6-8240.HITS OF BROADWAY—A show of mu-sical 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, $7.4o-$8.45. (price includesdinner and show). Imperial Room. DeiPrado Hotel, 5307 S. Hyde Park.HY 3-9600.HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESSWITHOUT REALLY TRYING—The Pu¬litzer prize-winning musical comedystarring Michael Arquette; William Pui-iinsi, air. Nightly, 8:30; Sat., 6 & 10:45;Sun, 7:30. Dinner is served 2 hours be¬fore curtain time. $3.95 to $5.95 (in-eludes dinner and show). 5620 S. Har¬lem, Summit. GL 8-7373.JOY ’66—A musical revue by OscarBrown, Jr.; starring Oscar Brown Jr,Luis Henrique, Jean Pace, Rita Lerner,Glenn Scipio and the Floyd Morris Triowith bassist Ernest McCarty and drum¬mer Curtis Boyd. Nightly, 9; Fri A Sun,9 A 11:30; Sat, 8. 1L 1:30. Nightly, $2.95A $3.50; Fri. $3.50 A $3.66; Sat, $3.95 A$4.50. Happy Medium, 901 N. Rush.DE 7-1000.THE ODD COUPLE—Neil Simon s newcomedy hit starring Dan Dailey andRichard Benjamin; Mike Nichols, dir.Nightly, 8:30; Wed A Sat Matinee, 2.Nightly. $2.75-$5.00; Fri. A Sat., $3.50-»$5.95; Matinees. $2.50-84.50. Blackstone»Jheatre, 60 E. Balbo. CE 6-8240.I3ECOND CITY—The title of the new22nd revue is "When the Owl Screams.”Sheldon Patinkin, dir. Starring Bob Cur¬ry. Sid Grossfeld. Sandy Holt. JonShank, David Walsh and Penny White.Nightly. 9; Fri., 9 A 11; Sat.. 9. 11 A 1.$2.50; Fri A Sat. $3.00. Special Improv¬isations Sun, Tue-Thu at 11: $1.00. 1846N Wells. DE 7-3992; MO 4-4032 after7:30.SALE!Mid-summer savings on womens clothes.Skirts, blouses, shifts and dressesat significant marked down prices.Many styles end colors can be worninto the fall.The University of Illinois Bookstore5802 S. ELLIS AVENUE SHADY LANE FARM SUMMERTHEATER—A resident company of ;Equity actors; Louis Tanno dir. "RightBed-Wrong Husband" :J uly 5-17. "Me1and Thee": July 19-31. Nightly, 8:45;Sat, 7 & 10; Sun, 8:15. Matinees. Wed AThu at 2. Closed Mon. Nightly, $3.20;Sat, $3.50; Matinees, $2.25 3 miles westof Marengo on US 20 (Northwest toll¬way to US 20). 315-568-7218.College & CommunityCOURT THEATRE OF THE UNIVER¬SITY OF CHICAGO—Shaw's "St.Joan"; James O'Reilly, dir: July 8, 9,10, 14, 15, 16. 17, 21. 22, 23, 24 at 8:30.Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night"; Har¬vey Latida, dir: July 29. 30, 31 & Aug 4.5. 6. 7. 11. 12, 13, 14 at 8:30. Thu A Sun,$1.75; students, $1.25 Fri., $2.00; stu¬dents, $1.50 Sat., $2.50. Courtyard be¬hind Mandei Hall, 57th A University.MI 3-0800 ext. 3581ENCORE THEATRE—Lionel Bart'smusical “Oliver": Every Fri-Sun thruJuly. Fri, 8:30; Sat. 8; Sun, 7. $2.00 A$3.00.“Shows toppers.” special revue pro-grams consisting of 45 minutes of enter¬taining production numbers and solosfrom more than 36 well-known Broad,way and off-Broadway shows. Wed AThu, 8 A 11; Fri A Sat, 11 A 12; Sun, 3A 4. $1.00. 1419 N. Wells. 664-5533.HULL HOUSE THEATER—PaulShyre’s "The Child Buyer," based onJohn Hersey’s novel. Every Fri-Sun. FriA Sat. 8:30; Sun, 7:30. Fri A Sat. $3.90;Sun, $3.40. 3212 N. Broadway. 348-5622.HULL HOUSE THEATER AT PARK¬WAY—Stringbreg’s "Miss Julie" andLeRoi Jones’ "The Slave”; Every Fri-Sun. thru July 10.James Baldwin's "Amen Corner":Every Fri-Sun beginning July 15. Fri ASat. 8:30; Sun, 7:30. Fri A Sat, $2.50;Sun., $2.00. 500 E. 87tih. 334-3880.NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY DRA.MA FESTIVAL—A repertory of 3 plays.Jean Anouith's unique charade "RingRound the Moon”; Robert Schneide-man, dir; July 7, 10, 16, 20, 22, 26, 28, 31A Aug 6.Sheridan's classic comedy "TheSchool for Scandal"; Jerome Landfield,dir: July 8. 12, 14, 17. 23, 27, 29 A Aug 2,4.Bernard Shaw's "The Devil's Dici-ple”: July 9, 13, 15, 19. 21, 24, 30 A Aug3, 5.Nightly, 8:30. Nightly, $2.00; Fri ASat., $3.00. Garden Theatre, School ofSpeech (in case of rain, the indoor audi¬torium), 1905 Sheridan, Evanston. 492-7282.THEATRE ON THE LAKE—John Mur¬ray A Allen Boretz’ comedy "RoomService" by the Town Hall Players;Steve Anthony, dir: July 12-16. JeanKerr's comedy "Mary, Mary” by theHomer Park Theatre Guild:July 19-23.Elick Moll’s comedy "Seidtnan andSon" by the Footliters; David Schle-singer, dir: July 26-30. William Mar-chant’s comedy "The Desk Set" by theMargate Masquers; Robert Reddington.dir: Aug 2-6. Nightly. 8:30. $1 00. Fuller¬ton Pavillion, Fullerton A Outer DriveHA 7-5252, ext 432; DI 8-7075. BY FAR THE MOST impressivepart of the play is the contempla¬tion of the contrast between thehumanity of the ten year old boyand the inhumanity of what UnitedLympholoid is going to do to devel¬op him. The company will take thechild who is so vitally interested inthe biological processes of all lifeand the cultural achievements ofman, and place him in the forget¬ting chamber, where he will re¬main naked and hungry for sixweeks. He will ultimately have allsenses dulled, and be made into acomputer, concerned only with themysteries of U. Lympho.Although a bit too obvious, (themother says: “I feel like I’m deliv¬ering a package”) the last scene ofthe play effectively handles thecontrast between the life of a littleboy genius which Barry had knownand the life of the human computerwhich he is determined to resist.Before going to the plant in Ari¬zona. Barry must leave his teddybear, books and suitcase with hismother. Computers have no needfor such things, nor do they needvisits from parents.Most of the performers are good,although there is a tendency toover-act. Jeanette Metzger andFrank Reckitt are good as theRudds, and Roger McMillian isalso good as Barry’s ‘‘juvenile de¬linquent” friend Charles “Flat top”Perkonian. Patricia Warren does acompetent job as Dr. Gozar, devot¬ed to intellectual pursuits and Bar¬ry Budd, and Robert Kidder is fineas Mansfield, the most rational, in- jtelligent and sympathetic of thethree senators. As Owing, in jcharge of the exceptional (deviant)students in Barry’s district, Harv¬ey Rubin is quite funny, playinghis caricature part with a comedi¬an’s sense of timing. Paula Ger¬hart, as Miss Charity Perrin, Bar¬ry’s school teacher who was aCommunist in the thirties accord¬ing to Senator Skypack, although alittle too repetitious in her manner¬isms, has a wonderful face and ismore than adequate in the part.Wissey Jones, the agent for U.Lympho, is supposed described asrather eccentric by Broadbent whopresents evidence and maladjustedby Barry; although he wears sunglasses and walks with a cane, Don¬ald Marston is too regular forWissey and seems miscast. Hedoes, however, delivery his dia¬logue well. Under Bob Sickinger’sdirection, “Jake” Jacobs as BarryRudd does not really succeed. Hehas a wonderful memory, but hisperformance is often too automa¬tic, mechanical and his primarilyunemotional portrayal of Barry isun effective. SICKINGER’S STAGING is good,but the many entrances and exitsof the people called to testify be¬come, by the second act, very mo¬notonous. The small playing area,however, seems to dictate thispractice, since there is not enoughroom on stage for all of the wit¬nesses to sit in a box, and thescript requires that some of thembe off stage during the hearing.The set, designed by Sickinger, isespecially attractive, and the light¬ing, by Sickinger and Bruce Mul¬lins, and costuming by Selma Sick¬inger and Esther Beren are alsofine.The Child Buyer is never boring;despite its flaws, it is an entertain¬ing production, with interestinglooking, and generally talentedcast. I only wish that the play it¬self were worthy of production.Mark RosinMost DistinguishedScholars to GatherAt Adlai Institute(Continued form Page One)by Wells and Marvel for the uniqueStevenson Memorial:‘‘Most of the world’s politicaleducation still lies in teaching stu¬dents how to grasp their own na¬tion’s interests and policies andhow, at best, to ‘understand’ otherpeople and to know why they aredifferent.”SHE POINTED OUT that officialinternational organizations are notfitted for the task of "taking theworld’s dialogue out of the nationalcontext.‘‘One thinks rather of the meet¬ings of professional bodies comingtogether not as ‘representatives’but as a community based on com¬mon interest and concerns,” shesaid.Referring to the Pugwash andBilderberg meetings as examplesof such international conferences,Lady Jackson cited the lack of apermanent institution for this pur¬pose. “Nowhere can the nations goto school together. Nowhere canthey meet, in an on going center oflearning, to study, explore, anddiscuss, in perfect equality, thecommon life of a world societywhich concerns them all.”It was for this reason, LadyJackson said, that Wells and Mar¬vel suggested the memorial takethe form of an autonomous centerof international studies establishedat an appropriate university.Great Masters Drawings SaleCONTINUES$1.00 EachOld Masters, Impressionists, ModernsFRAMES TO FIT $2.95 & upThe University of Illinois Bookstore5802 S. ELLIS AVENUE UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKmm strong bank"NEW CAR LOANS$ 375~1394 BAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200 rF.D.LS. GOLD CITY INN"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559... L’assurance Sun Life est un moyensQr d’obtenir I’ind6pendance finan¬ce re pour vous et votre famille.En tant que reprtsentant local de la SunLife, pula-je vous visiter & un moment davotre choix?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Fade Bank Building, Chicago IS, IN.FAirfax 4-6800 - FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays t FridaysSUN LIFE DU CANADA, COMPAGNIE D’ASSUR ANCE-VIIUNE COMPAGNIE MUTUELLE• CHICAGO MAROON • July 15. 1966srMaroon Weekend GuideI*. 1f *■***■'' v' ' ^4* *'»**«?» * ><* .. < s**© <vs/' •■<> *THE PUB/N THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWN - $1.00Michelob and Budweiser on Tapii i Don Hamilton Now Playing For Your Pleasure and DancingHYDE PARK'S ORIGINAL OLD TYME PUBSmedley’sonHarperFEATURINGITALIAN SPAGHETTI & MEAT SAUCE - *1.00FULL 67 oz. PITCHERS OFSCHLITZ ON DRAUGHT i"KEEP COOl"5239 S. Harper NO 7-5546THE SALE OF THE SEASONIS NOW IN PROGRESSGIANT SAVINGSREDUCTIONS ONSuits - Sportcoats - TrousersSummer Jackets - Dress Shirts - SlacksSport Shirts-Knit ShirtsFlorsheim & Freeman ShoesTHE STORE FOR MEN0Tmtm & GJampua £Ljoptn the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th SI. Phone 752-8100 Calendar of EventsFriday, July 15COURT THEATRE: Saint Joan, by Ber¬nard Shaw, Hutchinson Court, 8:30 pm.Saturday, July 16COURT THEATRE: Saint Joan, by Ber¬nard Shaw, Hutchinson Court, 8:30 pm.Sunday, July 17RADIO SERIES: “From the Midway”WFMF, 100.3 me., 7:00 am. Melvin J.Lasky, editor of “Encounter,” London,England, gives the first of three lec¬tures delivered on the campus of theUniversity of Chicago during May, 1%5,on UTOPIA AND REVOLUTION, “TheUtopian Dream.” (820 kc., 10:00 am)ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL: WorshipService, 11 am.TEACH-OUT ON VIETNAM: 1 pm. atthe Point (Mth St. at the Lake) Spon¬sored by the Hyde Park Committee toend the war in Vietnam.COURT THEATRE: Saint Joan, by Ber¬nard Shaw, Hutchinson Court, 8:30 pm.Monday, July 18TEACH-OUT ON VIETNAM: 12:00 atthe Federal Building, corner of Dear¬born and Jackson. Sponsored by theMidwest Faculty Committee on Viet¬nam, UC, SDS and SAR.OPEN HEARINGS: on changes in theSG constitution. 7:30 pm, SG Office, IdaNoyes. Tuesday, July 19SWAP MATH WORKSHOP FOR TU-TUTORS: 7:00 pm in East Lounge.DOC FILM SERIES: Keatons "Sher-lock Jr.” and “The Balloonatick” 7:ld& 8:15 pm, Ida Noyes. Adm. 75c.LECTURE: “Religious Changes in anIndian Town,” McKim Marriott, Profes,sor of Anthropology and of the SocialSciences, Eckhart 133, 8 pm.Wednesday, July 20DISCUSSION: Prof. St. Claire Drake,Roosevelt University, will lead a discus¬sion on “Black Power and the New Di¬rections in the Civil Rights Movementtaken by SNCC” 2:30 in the ReynoldsClub South Lounge.SWAP READING WORKSHOP FORTUTORS: 7:00 pm. in East Lounge.SUMMER CINEMA: “My Little Chicka¬dee,” (W.C. Fields), 8:30 pm in The IdaCloisters or, in case of rain, in TheCloister Club.Thursday, July 21SWAP FOREIGN LANGUAGES WORK¬SHOP: 7 pm in East Lounge.COURT THEATRE: “Saint Joan,” byBernard Shaw, Hutchinson Court, f:30pm.LECTURE: “British Social Relations inIndia,” Bernard S. Cohn, Associate Pro¬fessor of Anthropology and History,Eckhart 133, 8 pm.CONGRATULATIONStoED GLASGOWJIMMY'Sand th#UNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TA? SAMUAL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"since msPICKUP a DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake ParkHY 3-5200JEFFERY THEATRE1952 E. 71st St. HY 3-3334Now PlayingLIMITED ENGAGEMENTTli* Top Double Feature ofThis Year or Any Other Year!Sean Connery asAgent 007InThunderballandPaul NewmanOSFri. & Sat.:Sun. - Thurs.: Harperwith Lauren Bacalland Janet LeighTHUNDERBALL: 1:45, 5:50, 10:10HARPER: 3:55, 8:15THUNDERBALL: 1:30, 5:40, 9:50HARPER: 3:40, 7:50 *Feds Crack Down on Campus PotheadsWASHINGTON (CPS) — Aspecial corps of undercoveragents is going into action oncollege campuses and else¬where to ocmbat the illicit manu¬facture. sale, and use of the mind-WUCB Gets ConsoleThe University has orderedWUCB a new $5900 console as anecessary step in its change to FMbroadcasting.The purchase is being financedby an outside gift and student ac¬tivity funds, according to Dean ofStudents Warner A. Wick.Wick pointed out that moreequipment is necessary beforeWUCB will be fully prepared to goFM.The console is being built to spec¬ification and should be deliveredlater in the summer to be readyfor use next quarter.SDS MeetingThe UC chapter of SDS is hold¬ing an open discussion of “BlackPower” at its next regular meetingon Wednesday, July 20, at 2:30 pmin the Reynolds Club south lounge. expanding drug LSD, the Food andDrug Administration has revealed.FDA Commissioner Jamas L.Goddard said LSD has been underintensive investigation by medicalresearchers since it was discov¬ered by accident in 1943, and thatno legitimate medical use has everbeen found for it.Asked what he thought of thewidely-published claim that LSD“expands” the mind and makespossible a sort of mystical spiritualexperience, Dr. Goddard snapped,“Pure bunk.”“It’s an extremely dangerousdrug that can precipitate seriouspsychiatric illness or even sui¬cide,” he added.Goddard said that no one reallyknows how widespread the currentLSD fad is. “You hear loose talkabout 30 per cent of college stu¬dents using LSD, but I know of noreliable data on the extent of theusage,” he said. “That’s one of thethings we’re trying to find outnow.”UTY SALONExportPormanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting1150 L k. NT 3-0101 MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBlood Typing l Rh FactorSAMI DAY SERVICEComplete Lab EKO B BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM • 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3-2000MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 MILDEVELOPING■CP8RT PHOTO ADVIOINSA DISCOUNTStt4t l S5tb HY l-tlf*The studentis thecentral figure inTHENEW SCHOOLCOLLEGEa Junior/senior liberal arts program leading to the Bachelor of Arts degree• THE new SCHOOL college views general and special¬ized education as interdependent, with specializationmeaningful only when it is rooted in a foundation ofliberal arts studies.• It restores to students full recognition of their indi¬viduality and of their role as the central participantin the educational process.• It treats the undergraduate experience not as a sepa¬rate entity, but as one which should be connected towhat is meaningful in the total human experience.• It regards as the goal of a liberal arts education, notonly the acquisition of knowledge but, more impor¬tant, the development of those orderly and criticalhabits of mind which are fundamental to all intellec¬tual inquiry.• THE new SCHOOL college is open to students whohave satisfactorily completed the freshman andsophomore years at recognized institutions of higherlearning. Courses of study are offered only in the areasof The Humanities and The Social Sciences. Thedegree is awarded on the basis of student perform¬ance in a comprehensive examination given after twoyears of study. Classes are held in the day hours atThe New School’s modern Greenwich Village campus.Admissions Office/.<•$$& THE NEW SCHWjtyfftjj/ New School for Si66 West 12 th StreetT New York, N.Y. 10( StNew School for Social Researcheet10011Please send me the Bulletin and application for the New SchoolCollege.I am now attending ______(College or University)Name _________________________AddressCity State ZIP Draft Conference(Continued from Page One)hoped that the students would workon composing a suitable bibliogra¬phy on the draft question, accord¬ing to Little. Yet this aspect of theworkshop has “not been very suc¬cessful.” he said, as Harper li¬brary does not possess the neces¬sary materials. Therefore the student groupis now concerned with the opera¬tion of the selective service systemand how the military functions andutilizes its manpower. Alternativesystems to the present draft sys¬tem are also being discussed. Inthis way Little believes that theworkshop is generating interestand providing preliminary materi¬ als for the International meeting.THE WORKSHOP meets in Bust-ness East 10 on Fridays at 1:30 pmfor two hour sessions. In the nextfew weeks the enrolled studentswill hear Janowitz’s proposal for anational service program which in¬cludes employment of all availablemanpower in some branch ofservice and incorporates a lotteryto determine who will service inthe military area.Classified Ads\ . >','■?> < V . > a' ,.Personals '4t> ' $ , * ,SG loan service now operative. YouMUST have proof of fall registration:College pink slip for advisors, Grad let-ter from dept.COME to the Summer Mixer. Dance atthe Hullabaloo. Fri. July 22, 5555 Wdln.DISABLED fern. grad. stu. seeks room¬mate to share apt. in bldg, with eleva¬tor. Vicinity of Chi. Univ. Assistanceneeded for stairs and long walks. Willpay part of helper’s rent for the schoolyear Call WH 3-2485 after 5. Ask forLynne.BOOKS, jobs, baby-sitting. StudentCoop. Reynolds Basement X3561SEATS available on SG charter flight,Sept. 25, London-New York, $133.HOTMUSHROOM lady is going to the ArtInstitute.CHARTERED bus to Stratford TheatreFestival. Canada; Wkend, Aug 12-14.Henry V. 12th Night, Don Giovanni,Dance of Death (Strindbreg), Sym: allSchubert; Rose, cellist. Tickets $2.50-$5.50 Rm, accom. reserved. Rnd. triofare $20 Int. Hse. Assn. 324-0079 &FA 4-8200UNLICENSED film showing Sat. night363-9565CHARTERED bus to Stratford TheatreFestival. Canada, Wkend, Aug. 11-14.Hen. V, Hen. VI, 12th night. Don Gio-Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 vanni. Dance of Death (Strindberg),Sym: all Schubert; Rose, cellist. Tick¬ets $2.50-$5 50 Rm, accom. reserved.Rnd. trip fare $20. Int. Hhe. Assn. 324-0079 Sc FA 4-8200.GUITAR instructio:.-H. Fishman 684-4101.RAVINIA Four O’Clock Concert, Sun.July 31. by chartered bus. Cond. S. Oza¬wa Soloists; Y. Takahshi. M. Breves,D. Peck, G Peters, Program for: soloviola—Schulman; flute—-Berio; piano—Xenakis; Percussion—Varese Bus fareSc ticket, $2.75. Int. Hhe. Assn.,FA 4-8200 , 324-0079. Lv. money at frontdiesk or send to International House,1414 E. 59th St. (60637)_I’M sorry that Denise Huot, an actressof no mean ability, did not thoroughlysucceed as Saint Joan. MBRGOLDILOCKS—Have you been sleepingin our beds alone—Papa BearCONGRATULATIONS or Daniel X.Hertzberg, the Scarsdale Flash.RED RIDING HOOD—What’s IhTs be¬tween you and Goldilocks?—Wolfie.WHAT was the Scarsdale Flash doing inf:he forest?For RentHOTEL SHORELANDSpecial student rates Hotel rms. with private baths, 2 students/rm. $45 studen per mo. Complete Hotel ServiceAsk for Mr. N. T. Norbert, 5454 S ShoreDrive.2Va RM. unfurnished apt. South ShoreArea. $86/mo. HY 3-4267, after 6 ScWkndsFor Sale‘65 MG Midget. Gd. condition. Radioheater, tonneau. $1,560 BA 1-0763.MOVING-Must sell '65 JAWA 50 CC. N >reas. offer refused. 752-8975 2-5 Frionly.GARRARD RC88 $16 521-0460. 483-358.f2 CUSTOM made speakers Walnut cab¬inet. $40 each 521-0460, 463-3586WantedGIRL or couple to share camping tripto Los Angeles with student's wife.Leaving early Aug Call 667-6888.RIDE to New York. Leaving any timefrom Fri. 15th to Wed. 20th. Call Leah324-0740 or 667-2424ROCK 'n Roll Band. Brunn PL 2-9704.TARGET Handgun. Prefer .22 or 9mm.Luger. Call 493-3153.James Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS-LINENS-TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. CardJESSEUOrSSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 C. 53rd@2(ty BARGAIN DAYSSIDEWALKSALEIn The MallJULY21 - 22 - 23 •ygl EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty DiscountALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.After dinner don’t miss the newplays at the Last Stage. Join usfor cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.(IRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST & HAP.PERFood sorved 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI 8-75858 • CHICAGO MAROON • July 15, 19666