Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary Year SUMMERWEEKLYVol. 75 No. 5 The University of Chicago Friday, July 22, 1966Committee Makes 9Recommendations forProposed Facilities SAR Votes Aug.DemonstrationStudents Against theRank (SAR voted at itsmeeting last night to holda demonstration in frontof the administration build¬ing August 1 to protest the Uni¬versity's decision to issue classranks to draft boards.The decision is in accordancewith the previously determinedpolicy of the group to keep pres- jsure on the University through jthe summer or until the Univer-jsity changes its draft procedureForm 3 NewThe student-faculty com-mittee on student lifepassed nine recommenda¬tions concerning theThe recommendations are basedon over a month of meetings, in¬cluding three campuswide openforums, and the research con¬ducted by a special subcommitteecomposed of Peter Rabinowitz, a:-* , »- i ,second year graduate student, and !S|MQ0nT”rQCUlTVJeffrey Blum, a third year stu-i^ •dent in the College.Rabinowitz, commenting on therecommendations, said that theirbasic principle is that operationof the facilities should not be to¬tally dependent on economic con¬sideration. Rather, Rabinowitzsaid, the most important consider¬ation should be the facilities' con¬tribution to the social aspects ofthe university community. "Hope¬fully this will be the first smallstep toward the creation of a stu¬dent union," he said.The recommendations are: Seek CausesOf Negro Riotingby David E. GumpertA pro-Castro revolutionary organization, Martin Luther King and the SouthernChristian Leadership Conference, and Chicago's Negro gangs have all been ac¬cused of playing large roles in precipitating last week’s West Side riots.CommittesStudent Government (SG) presi¬dent Tom Heagy has been asked:by University Provost Edward Levito recommend the student mem-!bers for three newly created stu¬dent-faculty committees.A permanent advisory commit¬tee on the bookstore will consistof three student and three facultymembers. According to Heagy, the |idea for such a committee hadbeen suggested by the SG con¬sultant board on the bookstore.• At least one of the three fact- . The second committee on rank-lities (probably Ida Noyes, which ^ w'll haw flve snjdent and flvewill be run on the smallest scale)should begin as an entirely student-run, student managed operation, faculty members. Its purpose is toadvise President George WBeadle on the re-examination of Life has begun to return to normal on the West Side.University policy toward ranking'. Here, men wait for a bus in tront of a store that had, a“Tp_ L. 'll 'This re-examination is scheduled;been looted during the riots.successful, such student manage- __ ~ment can be extended to other fa-1 (Continued on Page Two)cilities. Within certain economicguidelines-a designated budgeted!loss, not a profit-all managerialdecisions should be made by thestudents running it.With the aid of some UC ex¬perts, a survey should be takenin early fall to determine stu¬dent and ’faculty sentiment on ma¬chine dispensers in the C-Shop.Such a study should reveal not only Forum Considers Black PowerIn a discussion Wednesday on"Black power and the new direc¬tions in the civil rights movementtaken by SNCC" Roosevelt Univer¬sity professor of sociology St.Claire Drake indicated that "blackpower" implied a "separate but j dentsequal" status for Negroes in the, south movement.United States.Drake pointed out that the Ameri¬can Negro in the south already hadan inferior estimation of himselfwhich was furthered by the ob¬vious competence of the white stu-from the north who cameas part of the civil rights > moved| whitesIN ORDER TO bolster the self-identities of southern Negroes and south)The riots, which lasted threedays, resulted in the deaths of twoNegroes as well as 30 injuriesand over 300 arrests. Six police¬men were also injured.WHEN 900 POLICEMEN wereunable to quell the disturbanceswhich included widespread loot¬ing and gun battles between Negrosnipers and police, Governor Ker-ner, ordered the callup of 3500Illinois national guardsmen.Friday night, July 15th, troopsmoved in with jeeps, M-l rifles,and machine guns with orders toshoot to kill if fired upon.By Saturday, the violence sub¬sided into isolated incidents andtoday no troops remain in thearea and only a few hundred na¬tional guardsmen are standing by.THE WEST SIDE'S troubles be¬gan last Tuesday night when areateenagers objected to police turn¬ing off an illegally opened firej hydrant. Police turned off the hy¬drants to preserve water pressurej in the area, and the youths re¬taliated by stoning the police.Wednesday night trouble flaredagain, this time over a largerarea, and by Thursday night theriots encompassed an area ex¬tending from Throop (1300 west)to Pulaski (4000 west) and fromLake (200 north) to 16th (1600(Continued on Page Two)Wilson, Dedmon Appointed TrusteesChristopher W. Wilson, executive vice president of the First National Bank ofChicago, and Emmett Dedmon, editor of the Chicago Sun-Times and a widely knownauthor, have been elected to the UC board of trustees. .Wilson was born April 27, 1910, in New York City. He is an alumnus of thePolytechnic Preparatory CountryDay School, Brooklyn, New York; |Cornell University, where he re-:ceived his A.B. degree in 1931,and the Harvard University LawSchool, where he received theLL.B. in 1934.WILSON JOINED the staff of theFirst National Bank of Chicagoin February, 1951, as an attorney.He has been executive vice presi¬dent since August 9, 1963. He alsois a trustee of Blackburn College,Carlinville, Illinois, and a direc¬tor of Scott Foresman & Co. ofChicago, and the Children's Mem¬orial Hospital of Chicago. He ischairman of the Winnetka (Illinois)Zoning Board.Emmett Dedmon was born April16, 1918, in Auburn, Nebraska.With the exception of five yearsservice in the Air Force duringWorld War II, Dedmon has beena member of the Sun-Times' staffsince 1940. He was assistant for¬eign editor, book and drama cri¬tic, assistant Sunday editor, as¬sistant managing editor, manag- cago, a national best seller pub-ing editor and executive editor be- lished in 1953; Great Enterprises;fore being named to his present the centennial history of the YMCA develop local initiative, as well askill the myth that only whitescan do anything right, SNCC hasto discourage or excludefrom their movement,Drake said.Paralleling the move for "blackpower" is an effort to build "blackconsciousness" and pride in beingblack, Drake stated. In the wake of the riots, MayorDaley met with Martin LutherKing and agreed to install sprink¬lers on fire hydrants and installportable swimming pools through¬out the riot area.It was hoped these measureswould prevent further outbreaksof violence.Drake also pointed out that "blackpower"was nothing new in the civilrights movement. He noted that inthe Garvey movement in the twen¬ties and with the Communists inthe thirties, black power had beenthe goal, even if the slogan hadnot been used.The Communists had adopted:the somewhat contradictory slo¬gans of "black and white united"and "build a black republic", Drake ,stated.HE THEN OBSERVED that this!dichotomy is still present, sepa-jrating those groups who aim forintegration from those who aim fora separate but really equal statusfor the Negro.Drake presented "black power"as being simply the securing of po¬litical and economic power for theNegro. The goal of integrationwas viewed as irrelevant by thosegroups pushing "black power",since integration has always meantgoing from something that Want SegregationDespite ToleranceDespite the fact that people arebecoming more liberal in theirracial attitudes, the majority ofAmericans still prefer to live inhomogeneous neighborhoods, ac¬cording to a recent pilot studyof integrated neighborhoods in 3major U.S. cities, conducted bythe National Opinion ResearchClnter (NORC), a UC affiliate.Peter Rossi, a UC professor ofsociology and the head of NORC,discussed the trends in public opi¬nion on integration with the Ma¬roon.Christopher Dedmonposition in October, 1965. He also' a member of the NewspaperDivision Executive Committee andManagement Board of Field Enter¬prises, Inc.DEDMON IS THE author of four on the board of trustees of theI Chicago Historical Society, and isa member of the Northwesternof Metropolitan Chicago, issued University Associates and the Na-in 1957, and A History of the tional Academic Council of Val-Chicago Club, published in 1960. paraiso University. He is a mem-Dedmon received his A.B. from ber of the board ofUC, was editor of the Maroon, of the Chicago Chapter of theDedmon serves as president of American Red Cross, and a trus- Summarizing all the research ongoing irom someming mat wasi H16 since 1942, Professorblack and bad to something white Possl,sald *•* increasingnum-and eood he said * ber of people believe themselves toThe^asie departure from the:156 raciaUT tolerant Pe0Ple todaylhe basic departure trom me express much more willingness towork next to a Negro or to haveone in their neighborhood thanthey did in 1942, he said. Yet, Ros¬si added, when asked if Negroes inbooks: Duty to Live, a war novel the Young Men's Christian Asso- tee of the George Mpublished in 1946; Fabulous Chi- ciation of Metropolitan Chicago, Educational Foundation. past signaled by the slogan "blackpower" will be the declining im¬portance of whites in SNCC andCORE, Drake predicted.DRAKE IS CO-AUTHOR of "Black! their vicinity are discriminatedMetropolis", a study of the urban1 against, the majority of people willNegro ghetto. In a recent article say no. "They don't notice thedoctors ;in Daedalus, Drake characterized discrimination because they don'tthe plight of the urban Negro as some into contact with Negroes,"being one of helplessness com-Pullman i^ined with a crisis of self-identity. (Continued on PageUrban League Director SpeaksBerry Gives Facts On Ghettoby Miron StrafEdwin C. Berry, the Executive Director of the Chicago Urban League, gave aJudd Hall audience some stark facts about Chicago's Negro ghettos Wednesday night.Delivering the second in a series of four Colver-Rosenberger lectures, Berryspoke on the current civil rights movement in Chicago and its implications foreducation."WE LIVE in a great segregatedsociety," said Berry. "We live ina series of ghettos--black ones andwhite ones."People are so segregated, hesaid, that they do not have the op¬portunity to know one anotheracross racial lines. "Right in themiddle of the city of Chicago, wehave Negro children... who actual¬ly believe that Negroes representthe majority race in this city." Headded that whites too do not knowthe "coloration of America."Berry compared a Negro ghettoto a colony, characterized by ab¬sentee ownership, where the shod¬diest merchandise is sold andwhere every kind of sharp creditpractice is exploited. "The mer¬chants and landlords live outsideand they come in and take outwhat little wealth is in the colony,"he said.HE ALSO WAS critical of thehousing projects: "These com¬pounds we call housing projects," Student Life Committee...he said, "are triple ghettos--ghet- j boots on the people and the otherstos of race, ghettos of poverty, would get off the toes of them."and ghettos of human misery." jBerry speculated about the real i BERRY WAS NOT shocked when"enemy" of the civil rights move- he heard reports that half of thement. "The battle of civil rights; Negroes in the lower class areat this moment is not a battle with from broken homes; rather, he wasthe bigots," he said. "It is a battle! amazed that half of them are stillof gentle white moderates who want together. "Nobody can make meto keep the status quo. They are. ashamed of the Negroes," he said,the people who started the riot!". . . The whole deck is stackedon the West Side last week. . . against them."They have kept this lousy system1going." Berry explained, in a quiveringBerry claimed that schools built voice, how sad he was when hefor Negro children were built sole- ' Jheard people say that MartinLuther King and other civil rightsleaders were responsible for thei sonisWest Side riots.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 ly for their containment. As a re¬sult, high schools were not builtfor the graduating classes, "since,"said Berry, "we so very much werejpreoccupied with containing the "MARTIN LUTHER KING isNegro." the greatest living American." he"BAD SCHOOLS,"he added, "have said. "He's done more to keep ourbecome bigger blockbusters than society straight than anybody Ireal estate speculators." know."i Returning to the purpose of theBerry, remarking about the rec- civil rights movement, Berry saident West Side riots, said that that after the long period of mis-at the moment the disturbances education, we are at a time wherehave been quelled. "But the rea- "equal is not just enough. We havesons for it remain unchanged," to have more for those who have (Continued from Page One)Priority should be given to stu¬dents for employment; in fact,student employment should be ac¬tively sought.All managers should be in con¬tinuous consultation with a perma¬nent student-faculty advisory coun¬cil which would evaluate the oper¬ation of these facilities. (This coun¬cil might well be the Student LifeCommittee or a sub-committeethereof). In addition, suggestionboxes should be placed in thethree areas.If the Commons begins with fullmeals only at lunch, it shouldremain open for coffee, donuts,and, most important, society, atleast through dinner time. In ad¬dition, it should be open at nightbeginning one hour before and ex-1tending to at least one hour afterall Mandel Hall functions. TheC-Shop should be open no less jthan 7 AM to midnight, Mondaythrough Saturday, and 10 AM tomidnight Sunday. To permit per-who buy food in the C-Shopto be consumed in th$ Commons!he added. been crippled," he said.After the speech, Berry, in ans-, wer to a couple of questions fromhis audience, expressed his ap¬proval of Jim Redmond, Chicago'snew superintendent of schools. "1 when the latter is serving only cof| fee and donuts, the C-Shop shouldalso be open after midnight when-!ever the Commons is. The Ida!| Noyes Coffee Shop should be openfairly early in the evening (thereshould be not time in the eveningwhen the Ida Noyes Coffee Shopj and the Commons are both closed),remain open at least until one hourafter the library closes during theweek (i.e., until 1:00) and at leastuntil 2:00 on weekends. (To faci¬litate this, the possibility of clos¬ing off the rest of the building af¬ter midnight, for example mightbe considered; this might reducethe cost of guards.)Ultimately, we should tend tow-think this guy is all-right," he said. _ v. t t :"I'm real pleased with him." “5“” h?urafor a11 faci‘THE RIOTS, he said, werecaused by despair. "There is onlyone place to put despair-insideoneself; and inside oneself has acapacity." It had to come out, headded, "and it came out in a ter¬rible explosion."Disturbed by those events, Berry BERRY SAID he favored an edu-™ !"O**compieKidfoTthe‘beginningofwhich approves all high rise hous¬ing sites in Chicago, for approv¬ing them for only the ghetto areas, iPaul Briggs, Superintendent ofSchools in Cleveland, Ohio willdeliver the next lecture entitled"Current Trends: A Superinten-.dent’s Perspective," on July 27 at8 pm.have foretoldlast week, I never would have ac¬cepted the engagement to comehere."Turning away from the riots,Berry said that Negroes had thepotential to lift themselves up bytheir bootstraps, "if we had some lities, with at least one open atall times.If the new Commons kitchen isthe fall, quarter, this should notbe considered an adequate excusefor closing the Commons entirely.Specifically, the dining area shouldbe kept open as much as feasibleduring renovation of the kitchen, and the old sandwich concessionshould, if possible, be operated outof the C-Shop on at least a tem-porary-and preferably a perma¬nent-basis.Since the basic need for thesepreferences, but also strength ofpreferences and the acceptabilityof various compromises (part ma¬chines; machines in the basement;etc.)facilities is as much social andeducational as culinary, the Uni¬versity should not expect them tobreak even economically, butshould rather accept a certain bud¬geted loss commensurate with thevalue of these facilities to theUniversity community. Under nocircumstances should customersbe faced with a minimum charge.As much as possible, all de¬cisions made on these facilitiesshould be made "temporarily," thatis, in such a way that they canbe easily changed if for somereason tltey are unsuccesslul. Inaddition, tne three facilities shouldbe run independently, so that fail¬ure of one can be made up forby the others.If any of these operations is tobe run by a chbe run by a caterer, he must bewilling to abide by all the recom¬mendations above.'New Committees(Continued from Page One)to take place during fall quarterThe third committee has a broadmandate to consider student-facul¬ty relations. It was created by aresolution of the committee of thecouncil of the faculty senate. Mem¬bership of that committee will in¬clude five students and five facul¬ty members.All members of the three com¬mittees will be appointed by Leviand Beadle, but the student mem¬bers will be recommended byHeagy.Anyone who has suggestions forthe student members, or any stu¬dent who would like to serve onany of the committees should con¬tact Heagy at MU 4-5597, or x3273before 5 pm. Monday, July 25."the stresses of student life"Dr. Richard Moy,Director of Student Health ServicesFrederick Siegler,Associate Professor of HumanitiesSunday at 7:30Brent House 5540 Woodlawn BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroComplete Repair*And Servicetar AH Popular ImportsMidway 1-45016052 So. Cottage Grove duwmen vHcxendance to the music ofB.C. and the CAVEMEN5555 woodlawn refreshmentsaufien.calcfayiCiA&ccxfiiatocO^^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 8-4500 mFree Mirror & LicenseDuring SaleSEE ALL MODELSSO C C. TO <44 C CSALES - SERVICE - PARTS• PICK UP t DELIVERY• EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESCALLChicago s Largest & Just Around the Corner Ml 3-4500BOB NELSON MOTORS6136 COTTAGE GROVE2 CHICAGO MAROON July 22, 1966Teachouts at Point,Federal Building Blast Vietnam WarBy Rick PollackMax Primack, the headof the Hyde Park Commit¬tee to End the War in Viet¬nam, opened the first of twoChicago area teacheouts by charg¬ing that American actions in South¬east Asia were in clear violationof international law. He spoKe atthe 55th Street Point, Sunday, July17Primack, who is also a profes¬sor of philosophy at the IllinoisInstitute of Technology (IIT), saidthat the U.S. was spending goodlives without a reason. He also sta¬ted that the war in Vietnam wasa flagrant transgression of allstandards of justice and morality.AFTER HIS SPEECH Primackinvited questions and discussion.Several workers from the WestSide Union To End The Slumspointed out what they saw as theracist character of the war inVietnam. They A member of the audiencetakes the microphone todiscuss the racist natureA soldier who was present con¬ceded an inherent wrong in ournoted that the U.S. |presence in Vietnam, but mainwas fighting Asians, and U.S. Neg- tained that we had no choice butroes constituted a disproportionate i to stay. He argued that if thenumber of the fighting men. j U.S. left Vietnam now, it would of the Vietnam war at Sun¬day's teachout at the 55thSt. Point.be dishonoring a committment.The teachout ended after policeinformed the Hyde Park Commit¬tee that it was illegal to use soundequipment in a park without apermit. The crowd quickly dis-Prefer Homogeneous Neighborhoods Despite Growing Tolerance(Continued from Page One)said Rossi. "There’s a steadilygrowing surface sympathy, but noempathy. This Is due to lack ofcontact. Public tolerance has in¬creased more rapidly in the Norththan in the South, he added.The NORC pilot study comparedattitudes toward integration in se¬gregated and integrated neighbor¬hoods in Washington, San Jose,Calif, and Atlanta. Seymour Sud-man and Norman Bradburn, bothof whom teach at the UC GraduateSchool of Business, are the co-au¬thors of the study.According to their preliminaryfindings, people living in segrega¬ted neighborhoods show little en¬thusiasm about the possibility ofhaving Negores in their communi¬ty. Yet their intolerance is notsoley toward Negroes. Accordingto the study, they want to liveamong people exactly like them¬ selves in religion, education andincome—as well as race. "Theyget nervous if someone with a col-,lege degree moves in when the restof them have only finished highschodi," said Rossi.• Sudman told the Maroon that al¬though the median incomes werethe same for all neighborhoodsstudied, the income range wasgreater in the integrated neighbor-'hoods. There is also more reli-1gious variety in the integrated1neighborhoods, Sudman said. By icontrast, segregated neighbor¬hoods tend to be all-Protestant, jhe added.Integrated neighborhoods are a |steadily, if slowly, growing min¬ ority," said Sudman. The pilotstudy showed that 29.6% of Wash¬ington's white population lived inintegrated neighborhoods. The fig¬ure was 34.2% for San Jose and3.8% for Atlanta.The study defined an integratedneighborhood as one where bothNegroes and whites were movingin. Most of the neighborhoods stud¬ied were around 10% Negro, ac¬cording to Sudman.One of the study's chief conclu¬sions is that the stability of aneighborhood depends chiefly onthe percentage of Negroes living init. A "more integrated" neighbor¬hood is less likely to be stable,the study noted. persed. j The Mondav teachout was org-On Monday morning, the Mid- anizea around a pamphlet test de¬west Faculty Committee on Viet- vised by the Committee. A typicalnam held the week's second teach-1 question in the test asked howout at the Federal Building at Clark ! many civilian casualties wereand Adams Streets. 'caused by recent U.S. bombingsTHE COMMITTEE addressed a of North Vietnam. A soldier hold-generally hostile audience withpo- Tng an honorable discharge calledlice standing quietly in the back-;the forty faculty members presentground. Counter-pickets from the'"liars." He asserted that thereNeo-Machiavelli Party paradedwith signs reading "Red Traitors"and others calling for preventivebombing of China before it candevelop into a nuclear threat. was none of the mistreatment ofprisoners described by the testpamphlet, citing as proof his neverhaving seen any of this allegedbrutality.Calendar of EventsFriday, July 22Saturday, July 23COURT THEATER: Saint Joan, byBernard Shaw, Hutchinson Court,8:30 Dm.Sunday, July 24RADIO SERIES: "From the Mid¬way," WFMF. 100.3 me., 7:00 am.Melvin J. Lasky, Editor of En¬counter, London, Eng., UTOPIAAND REVOLUTION, "Revolu¬tionary Commitment."ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL:Morning Worship, 11:00 am.RECITAL: Lila Woodruff,Soprano and Alex Lindsay, Bass-Baritone. 7:30 pm. Assembly Hall,International House, 1414East59thStreet.COURT THEATRE: Saint Joan,by Bernard Shajv, HutchinsonCourt, 8:30 pm.Tuesday, July 26MEETING: SAR Democratiza¬tion Committee, 7:30 p.m., IdaNoyes.MEETING: UC SDS, joint meet¬ ing of the chapter and the work¬shop on "new left" politics, 7:30pm in Swift Coffee Shop.DOC FILMS SERIES:Preminger's "Laura" and Brak-hage's "The Dead," 8:30 pm., IdaNoyes.LECTURE: "History of the Con¬gress Party," Anil Seal, VisitingAssistant Professor of ModernHistory, Eckhart 133 , 8:00 pm.Wednesday. July 27SWAP SEMINAR: Tutor Semina**Education in the Ghetto: The AngryStudents, 7:00 pm. in East Lounge,Ida Noyes.OPEN FORUM: On the CHICAGOMAROON, Sponsored by the Com¬mittee on Student Life, 7:30 pm.,Ida Noyes.SUMMER CINEMA: "A Night atthe Opera," (The Marx Brothers),8:30 p.m. in the Ida Cloistersor, in case of rain, in The Clois¬ter Club.Thursday, July 28LECTURE: "Indian 'Feudal¬ism,' " Irfan Habib, Visiting As¬sociate Professor in Indian His¬tory, Eckhart 133, 8:00 pm.UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK*n Btrmn§ bank”CAM LOANS•i lew at$ 375~1154 IAST 55tfc STRUTMU 4-1200PJ>.ML What did Dana Andrews and Clifton Webb discuss in the bathroom?Find out at D6c Films' showing of Preminger's Laura. \Vith Brakhage's The Dead.At Ida Noyes, 59th and Woodlawn, Tuesday, July 26 at 8:30 pm. 75 cents. Next questionr —For the Convenience and Needs of the University,VOLKSWAGENS 3.95 for 12 hrs. plus 6c mi.Mustangs — Tempests — Fords — PontlacsAlso 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 3-1715ALOHA 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& HARPERFood sorvod 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed,LI 8*7585 "SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT"PHILLIPS JEWELRY COMPANY50% OFF ON ALL DIAMOND\\ENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS"67 t. Madison Room 1101 DE 2-6508Campus Representative: E. GLASGOW — Ext. 3265 or 324-9020AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3*9111— TELEFUNKEN l ZENITH-- NEW 8 USED -Solos and Service on all hi-fi aqaipmant.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETapa Racordars - Phonos - Amplif iareNaadlas and Cartridgas - Tubae - Battariae10% dtmnt to «t*d—H with ID urd* tyy(S) YOU CAN SHOPRIGHT AT YOURDOOR STEP FORthe exceptional inWomen’s Apparelrts“First For Fashion”PLEASANT shopWomen’s WearJXeumode Hosiery.Hosiery & Children’s Wear Ss>S3)(£i<nCra)CruiJuly 22, 1966 CHICAGO MAROON 3The Indiana Sand DanesPhotos by Jean Raisler and David Satter4 CHICAGO MAROON July 22, 19664News AnalysisPopulation U. S. Problem Too Classified AdsJtPERSONALSperhaps the great ignored pro¬blem of this decade is population.People are talking about it, ofcourse, and while there is provi¬sion for population control in theforeign aid bill before Congressthis week, population control inthe foreign aid bill before Con¬gress this week, the problem isnot receiving major or dramaticattention.THERE ARE really two partsto the population dilemma: one, theexplosion in underdeveloped coun¬tries, and two - the more ignored- population growth in developedsocieties.Excessive population growth inthis country is a potentially seriousproblem. Joseph Spengler, an eco¬nomist at Duke University, esti¬mates that it takes an equivalentof 4% to 5% of national incometo support an annual populationgrowth of 1%.Business Week reports that "onthe basis of this calculation the1.2% rate of population growth in1965 soaked up between $26 billionand $29 billion of the $48 billionincrease in gross national pro¬duct." Given the extent of our by John Bremnerproblems, it is doubtful that wecan afford a 1.2% increase in pop¬ulation per year.John Kennedy indicated in 1960that we will have to build as manyschool rooms in the next ten yearsas we have in all our history,and Robert Weaver, the new headof the Department of Urban Af¬fairs has said he could use abudget twice that which he now has.Population growth not only soaksup needed money to deal withthese problems, but makes thetasks greater each day.FORTUNATELY, SINCE 1960population growth in this countryhas been declining -- 16% so far.This is an anomoly since annualincrease in the past has fallen indepressed times, and risen in pro¬sperity. Our population growth thisyear is the lowest since 1936.Our relief may be short-lived,however. Business Week reportsthat "even on the most conservativeassumptions, demographers ex¬pect an early reversal of the^declining trend in the actual num¬ber of births." Some economistsby the desire to space childrenbetter and reports indicate that the average intended family sizefor the 1960's is 3.1, whereasin the 1950's it was 3.0. So*far,the sixties have not met theirintended quota, but four years arestill left to go.THE SPACING THEORY and thefigures which support it are not thewhole story, however. Some econo¬mists believe the tightening of thejob market coupled with the desireof newly weds to approach theirparents' income as fast as possiblehas led to a flat decrease in thenumber of children planned.Thus, the issue is unsure, butthe decline right now continues.The U. S. has been afforded timeto turn its efforts to the problembefore it gets out of hand.IF WE ARE to keep a securehandle on our social problems --and it is doubtful that we haveone even now - something coherentwill have to be done soon. Failureto react to this problem wouldlikely involve the sacrifice of bil¬lions of dollars just to keep thiscountry standing still in the restof this century, and the hope thatthe quality of our national life willimprove would be a vain one,indeed. Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!!!! A sum¬mer mixer. Dance to the music of BC (andthe Qavemen)Tonight9:30.5555 Woodlawn.Refreshments.Opening soon. THE OTHER SIDE Coffee¬house. live folk and baroque music, chess,stimulating conversation, fascinating people,coffee and refreshments. No cover charge.1603 E. 53rd St.Hear Moy & Seigler on student life. Sun.7:30 at Brent House.Complaints? Accusations? Grievances? ormaybe, Praise? Whatever your opinioncome to OPEN FORUM on the CHICAGOMAROON. Sponsored by the Committee onStudent Life. Wed. nite-July 27, 7:30 pm. inIda Noyes.CHARTERED bus to Stratford Theatre Festi¬val, Canada; Wkend, Aug. 12-14. Henry V.12th Nivht, Don Giovanni, Dance of Death(Strindbreg), Sym: all Schubert; Rose, cellist.Tickets S2.50-S5.50. Rm. accom, reserved.Rnd. trip fare S20. Int. Hse. Assn. 324-0079& FA 4-8200.RAVINIA Four O'Clock Condert, Sun. July31, by chartered bus. Cond. S. Ozawa.Soloists: Y. Takashi, M. Proves, D. Peck, G.Peters. Progrj’nr. for: sole viola--Schulman;flute-Berio; piano-Xenakis; Percussion —Varese. Busfare&ticket, S3.75. IntHse. Assn.,FA 4-8200, 324-0079. Lv. money at frontdesk or send to International House Assn.,1414 E. 59th St. (60637).Blackstone Rangers Avoided Riots(Continued from Page One)Possible reasons for the out¬breaks have been offered by police,city officials, and news media.These, however, have been con¬tradictory and have raised morequestions than they have answ¬ered.Chicago's American on Tues¬day, July 19th, reported that apro-Castro nationwide Negro revo¬lutionary group advocating vio¬lence was behind the three daysof rioting. This group, known asthe Revolutionary Action Move¬ment (R.A.M.), reportedly suppliedgang members with weapons andcalled a halt to the riots whennational guardmen prepared tomove in.Last Friday, police arrested 23who they believe worked for R. A.M.at a West Side apartment andseized a quantity of pistols, re- .the First Presbyterian Church of: Woodlawn, presently being used by;theithe Rangers asMaroon that Looking for a way to spend a pleasant 5 wksbefore fall quarter begins? The proprietorof a coffeehouse in Porter, Ind., 5 mi. southof Lake, Michigan and the Indiana Dunes, issubletting an apartment above hisestablish-ment for *80/mo. for I couple or *90/mo.for 2 couples. He is looking for students whomight be willing to pay off part of their rentmoney by working for him doing handiwork,serving in the coffeehouse, making pictureframes for his art gallery and the like. Any¬one interested should leave a message forDavid Softer at the Maroon office.Guitar Instruction - H. Fishman 684-4181.Unlicensed Film showing Saturday, July 23:"My Hustler," by Warhol; 9:00 at the HydePark Art Center, 5236 Blackstone.FOR SALE1956 Chev. Automobile (2-door) Reasonablecondition, reasonable price. ContactHermanKonrad BU 8-9019 (if not in leave number).13 ft. Sailfish Sailboat. S125. 566-8414MOTOR SCOOTER-Lambretta !50cc. ‘63.Exc. cond. Cost new, *500. Sacrifice, *220.Call Dan at 752-4111.Vespa 150, '645,000 mi., gd. condition. *265.Call 363-2439.SANDALS Custom made. Special discountto students with ID card. Ad Lib Studio268-6910.CO-OP APT. FOR SALEOn E. 67th St. 6 rms., 2 baths, overlooks lakefrom 14th floor. 752-0973.TO RENTHOTEL SHORELANDSpecial student rates Hotel rms. with privatebaths, 2 students/rm. *45 student per mo.Complete Hotel Service. Ask for Mr. N. T.Norbert, 5454 S. Shore Drive.2-1 /2 rm. unfurnished apt. South Shore Area.*86/mo. FIY 3-4267, after 6 & Wknds.WANTEDa center, toldjW,v. ...... w.. ...... Ranger partici¬pation was "Peripheral."! Chuck LaPaglia, a First Pres¬byterian Church youth worker whohas been working closely with theBlackstone Rangers explained thatleaders of the Vice Lords, a WestSide gang, tried to persuade theRanger leadership to participatein the riots, but that the Rangersj refused. "I was at the church with ;• Ranger leaders the night of the jriot, he said. Ranger leaders, he _reported, were answering phone GirI or couple to share camping trip to Loscalls reporting possible trouble in j Angles with student's wife. Leaving earlyWoodlawn and going out to try and t Aug. Call 667-6866.I stop anything before it began, jThe New York Times in a Wed-1 Shore 2 blks from lake. Own rm. *50/mo., nesday story noted that several Fum. Begin Fall.C.Dez.667-2372orX4119.West Side gang leaders are im-; *SC14CU a quaintly ui pisiuis, re- tkn u |.nJ , pressed With SCLC'S approach to ; Sleep Lab needs male subjects for summervolvers, marijuana, and "civil dis- °ne 0f the b(>arded-up windows that line RooseveltRd. in the problems of the Negro. Ac-, experiments. Call Ml 3-0800 X2353 for fur-obedience" leaflets. They were wake of the riots,charged with disorderly conductbut officials are considering thepossibility of charging the groupwith conspiracy to commit trea¬son. According to George Sims,Filmore police district station,"We are investigating this groupnow and if we think that they werebehind it, we will get indictments." A DIFFERENT and more spec¬tacular account of what was be¬hind the riots was given in Mon¬day's Christian Science Monitor.According to two Monitor repor¬ters^ teen gangs, formerly archenemies united into a single fight- cording to the Times, several lea- ! ^er Information. Subjects will be paid.! ders met with Martin Luther King j. . .. ■ , „ Friday night. "They went awayi Responsible couple or individual who willmZ h»vp ! impressed and for the time being, livf in esPa^°sus aP»- from &?p*- ‘i:]7-PoJradio station may have been trans- Qy ^ 5y Nobei Prize- utlli,ies&$40& c°re for cats. Call 324-6247.nutting coded messages directing!win££s charisma „ it,DU AARON ZIMBLER. OptometristIN TNINEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 I. 55th St.M 3-7444 DO 34444IYI EXAMINATIONSPMSCMPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLINO IN FRAMESStudent end Fatuity Discount.JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR ©VlR 10 YEARSWITH THI VIRY REST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2170, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 8. 53m! the teenage rioters, and furtheroutbreaks have already been plan¬ned for New York City and oilierplaces.They also cited a "Mr. Big" whothey say was pulling the strings-presumably the head of theR.A.M.blamed by the American.According to the Monitor, May¬or Daley refused to meet withgang leaders who said they couldassure that there would be nomore rioting. Said the Monitor,"These gang leaders could onlypromise they could stop riotingon the West Side of the city. Theyadded that while their once bitterenemy, the Blackstone Rangers,a South side gang, had joinedthem in the three nights of riot¬ing, they could not control the2,000 number Rangers if theychose to shoot and to throw bricksand Molotov cocktails.THE BLACKSTONE RANGERS,say people familiar with theirrecent actions, had almost noth¬ing to do with the riots. HaroldWalker, Jr.,Vassociate pastor of said.THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMOUNTING; MATTING;NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESBe Sure toAsk for Weekly SpecialDUNCAN'S1305 S. 53rd HY 3-4111 Roommate for Aug. Gd. apt., rent, & loc.Call (persistently) Don, HY 3-0552.1 or 2 fern, roommates to share Ig. 7 rm.apf with3othergirlsforrestofsummer. App.*40 *50/mo. each: 1159 E. 52. 667-2145.Reliable person tomanagecoffeehouse, partor full time. Experience preferred. Good pay.Excellent opportunity. Call 324-6796.LOSTLady's green traveling bag with umbrellaattached. If found, please call HY 3-2680.Reward.BOOKSSTATIONERYGREETING (ARDS******THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student DiscountJuly 22, 1966 CHICAGO MAROONA MOUTH OF VALUESOur clearance sale of summer clothes,jewelry and other items continues.Savings to you from 20% to 50%.SPECIAL THIS WEEHAssorted clutch and French Purses inred, blue and bone colors.Were *2.00 New *1.00Gift Dept, iThe University of Chicago Bookstore 5802 Ellis Ave. ... Sun Life Insurance Is a sure wayto financial independence for youand your family.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyda Patti Bank Building, Chicago 19, M.PAkfax 44900-fR 3-2390Offka Hours t to 5 Mondays A FridaysSUN UFK ASSURANCE COMPANY OP CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYMusic Review Theatre ReviewMahler Poorly UsedThe anti-romanticism of contemporary music appearsin many forms besides the productions of quasi-compos¬ers, quasi-computers such as Milton Babbitt. It can befound everywhere from theHall to the impersonal rigiditiesof conductor George Szell.A somewhat subtler formemerged last week, when naturearranged an accompaniment toGrant Park's scheduled all-Mahlerprogram that was worthy of themost pathetically fallacious ofpoets. Frightened by petulant hea¬vens, and too unimaginative to con¬ceive of the effectiveness of Mah¬ler's First played in a thunder¬storm, some clear-headed anony¬mous bureaucrat chose a mostrational solution. Half of the con¬cert was transposed onto the fol¬lowing all-Brahms program, withthe audience cordially invited toreturn for the re-match. The hy¬brid, however noble in intent, bor¬dered on the disastrous.OF COURSE, ANY time Brahmsis followed by Mahler, he is aptto get the worst of the encoun¬ter; but on this occasion, he evenhad the dice loaded against him.Outdoor acoustics, especially ona night fraught with fireworks andwhisper-silent jets, usually tendsto emphasize the outline of awork, leaving any richness of de¬tail to the listener's imagination.And whatever substance one mayclaim to find in The Song of theFates or the Alto Rhapsody, itcan hardly be said to bless itsoutline. There are no big melo¬dies, flashy harmonies, or bril¬liant orchestral effects-nothingwhich carries outdoors. The re¬sult was amorphous, soggy, andcharacterless to the extreme, de¬spite electronic distortion of thechoral parts.The four Mahler songs pre¬sented (two from the Ruckert setand two from Das Knaben Wunder-horn) are products of a far moresensitive musical mind, but theperformances suffered much thesame fate. Florence Kopleff's sup¬erlative singing (once she warmedoff and abandoned her initial vir¬gin coolness) made the perform¬ances worth hearing, but no amountof melancholy warmth in the vocalline could really compensate forthe virtual absence of orchestralbackground. Whatever Irwin Hoff- St. Joan Good Summer FunMODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HUDEVELOPINGbcpert photo adviceNSA DISCOUNTSf!4S L 55H» HY I-P2SP acoustics of Philharmonicman and the orchestra were do¬ing, most of Mahler's poignantcolorations were lost by the timethey were squeezed through thePA system and spattered with sta¬tic.Mahler's First Symphony, theconcert's finale, had just the kindof outdoor vitality that the restof the evening lacked. Had the or¬chestra been better rehearsed orHoffman more in tune with Mah¬ler's idiom, it might have madeup for the slight disappointmentof the first ha’f.HOFFMAN, unfortunately, wasas unsubtle as he was last yearwhen he performed this symphonyin Orchestra Hall. Only the secondmovement really benefitted fromhis bulldozer approach, which'brought out that diabolical vul¬garity so often skirted by morefinicky Mahler conductors. Thesinister irony of the third move¬ment, however, was straight-jack¬eted by inflexible tempo, whilelittle of the fourth but its fero¬city came across.The orchestra injected morespirit into their performance thanthe higher-priced spread from Bos- j.ton did in a similar Brahms-Mah-ler combination a few years back.But technically, the work is just*too difficult to handle on their!limited rehearsal time. They man¬aged to hang on until the lastmovement, but the final pages hadone sitting on the edge of his seatfor entirely the wrong reasons.THE PRESENCE of Mahler ona free outdoor summer concertis perhaps symbolic of his ac¬ceptance into the circle of "clas- isics"--a recognition far overdue.It is too bad that the Grant Parkmanagers saw fit to refuse Na¬ture's participation in the cele¬bration, for a few extra rolls ofthunder might have given the Firstjust what it needed to catch fire.But rationality won out-and, un¬fortunately, Mahler was a roman¬tic.Peter RabinowitzAnyone interested inhelping write the SGcourse evaluation book¬let should contact CliffAdelman, 667-4531, orext. 3273. Saint Joan, by Bernard ShawDirected by James O'ReillyJoan Denise HoutRobert de Baudricourt . . . Donald SwantonGilles de Rais John LionLa Hire Herb JonesThe Dauphin (Charles VII) Leo KrugDunois William SchulerWarwick Leonard KraftPeter Cauchon,Bishop of Beauvais Joel CopeThe Inquisitor . . . : Patrick O'GaraDe Courcelles Richard EnoEnglish Soldier Donald SwantonIf the Court Theatre productionof Saint Joan proved anything, itwas that there is nothing intrin¬sically wrong with a conservativeapproach to the theatre. O'Reilly'streatment of Bernard Shaw display¬ed neither virtuosity nor original-ity-and it was the most unaffected¬ly enjoyable production thus farthis summer.Most characteristic of O'Reilly'sdirection of Saint Joan was hisfidelity to the playwright's inten¬tions. Many a production of SaintJoan has emphasized the pathosof Joan's trial and martyrdom, andone that I have heard of went sofar as to omit the epilogue becauseit diminished the "tragic" effect ofthe last scene. O'Reilly, on theother hand, was interested only inpresenting the high moral comedyShaw wrote. It is a virtually uncutversion of the play, by the way, and it lasts nearly until midnight,but there is hardly a dull momentfrom start to finish.DENISE HOUT'S JOAN was ad¬mittedly not a perfect portrayalof the role: there was too much ofLiza Doolittle and not enough ofMajor Barbara in it. But althoughshe sometimes gave what I felt jwas an inappropriate cuteness tc'her part, she more than made up •for it with her lively and sensitivereading of the lines.Sharing the honors with Miss jHout are Donald Swanton, LeoKrug, and Joel Cope. Swantonseems always to be stuck withplaying flaming bullies, and I wouldobject to the type-casting exceptthat he always does it so well. Itwas a pleasure to see him as De {Baudricourt, but his return, in a,slightly different metier, as the;English soldier who offers the :cross to Joan in her last moments,was if anything even more welcome.Court Theatre veteran Leo Krugmade a thorough success out of hispart as the Dauphin. Those who;saw Krug last year as Corvino inVolpone can testify that as acharacter actor he is skilled andversatile. Joel Cope had a ratherdifficult acting problem in this:play: how to make sympathetic therather unlovely character of PeterCauchon, Bishop of Beauvais. Cope jredeemed his part by emphasizing ICauchon's strength and zeal for ! justice, turning the villain's roleinto that of a towering fortress ofconventional morality. Throughthis transformation Joan and Cau¬chon represent not white heroineand black villain, but rather twoopposed, but equally "right" ideals.THE PRODUCTION WAS marredby a few hams (Richard Eno andJohn Lion) and a few flat perfor¬mances (Herb Jones and LaurenceBraude), but on the whole the actingwas right on key. There was asingle major exception to this, onewhich must, I think, be laid atDirector O'Reilly's door. PatrickO'Gara, playing the Inquisitor,read his role in a pompous andaffectedly rhetorical "Thy-sins-are-forgiven-my-son" tone, which wasnot only tiresome, but wrong forthe part. Shaw's own stage direc¬tions indicate that a bland, man-of-the-world approach is called for.All in all, though, one need haveno hesitation in endorsing the pre¬sent production at Court. Shaw'swit and dramatic force has sel¬dom been seen to so great advan¬tage in the Chicago area. It isalmost a pity that the show will bewhisked into limbo after this week¬end, to be replaced with another.Perhaps O'Reilly would considerrepeating last summer's practice,and run all three plays in repertoryat the end of the season . . .Clive StaplesCulture CalendarMl 3-31133424 S. Kimbarkwa sell the best,and fix the restv foreign cor hospitalw.1 PIERRE ANDREfact flatteringPqrisian chic ♦ten skilledHofr stylists of9242 Hyde Perk Blvdj2291 L 71et S».DO 1-0727 _10% Stedent DieceuntYou won't have to put your Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!moving or storage problem Complete selection of sweat-off unfit tomorrow tf you shirts, "Levis," rain parkas, ten-ciU m today. nis shoes, underwear, jackets,camping equipment, wash pants,etc., etc.PETERSON MOVING Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.AND STORAGE CO.12655 5. Defy Are, PL 2-4744•44-4411 OFEN SUNOAYS 9£0-1:00Student discount with ed ArtART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO-Winterbot-ham Collection: July 8-Aug. 8. "The Art ofLiving Exhibition”: Thru July 31. Recent Ac¬cessions of 20th Century Drawingsand Prints.Prints, Drawings and Watercolors from thecollection. Photographs from the permanentcollectipn. Free. Daily, 10-5: Thu. 10-9:30;Sun, 12-5. Michigan & Adams.Concerts7AVINIA FESTIVAL-CHICAGO SYMPHONYORCHESTRA; Seiji Ozawa, Ravinia MusicDirector and Resident Conductor. Programswere not available at press time.Fifth Week--Tue & thu, July 26-28—SeijiOzawa, cond; Byron Janis, p. Works byRachmaninoff for Piano & Orch. Sat., July30-William Steinburg, cond. Mahler: SymNo. 2 (Resurrection) with soloists to beannounced.Sixth Week-Tue, Aug 2-William Steinberg,cond. Verdi: Requiem with soloists to beannounced.Nightly, 8:30. Adm to the park, *2.00.Reserved seats an additional charge rangingfrom *2.00 to *6.00. Tickets: Ravinia FestivalAssoc. 22 W. Monroe. Daily, 9-5. ClosedSat. & Sun. ST 2-9696. Ravinia Park. High¬land Park. 273-3500.GRANT PARK - CONCERTS Irwin Hoffman,Principal Conductor.Fri, July 22—Julius Rudel, cond; JeffreySiegel, p. Prokofieff: Lieutenant Kije Suite.Shostakovitch: Cone No. 1, Op. 35, Tchai-kowsky; Sym No. 6.Sat & Sun, July 23-24-Julius Rubel, cond;Martina Arroyo, s; Beverly Wolff, ms;Michele Mofese, t; Raymond Michalski, b;Grant Park Sym Cho, Thomas Peck, dir.All-Rossini Program. Excerpts from La Cen-erentola; Stabat Mater.Wed July 27-lrwin Hoffman, cond; SamuelAsnkenasi, v. All-Brahms Program. HaydnVariations, Op. 56a; Sym No. 3; Violin Cone.TheatreProfessional.HELLO DOLLYI-David Merrick's Broadwayproduction starring Eve Arden; Gower Champion, dir. Nightly, 8:30; Wed & SatMatinees, 2. Closed Sun. Nightly, *3.50-*9.00; Matinees, *3.50-*6.00. Shubert Thea¬tre, 22 W. Monroe. CE 6-8240.HITS OF BROADWAY-A show of musicalcomedy hits, changing monthly. Tue-Thu,7:30, 9 & 10:30; Fri & Sat, 8, 10, 11:30;' Sun, 4:30, 7:30 & 9. Closed Mon. Nightly,! *7.45-*8.45 (price includesdinner and show),i Imperial Room, Del Prado Hotel, 5307 S.' Hyde Park. HY 3-9600.! HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUTREALLY TRYING-The Pulitzer prize-winning! musical comedy starring Michael Arquette;’ William Pulinsi, dir. Nightly, 8:30: Sat., 6&j 10:45; Sun, 7:30. Dinner is served 2 hoursbefore curtain time. *3.95 to *5.95 (includesi dinner ond show). 5620 S. Harlem, Summit,j GL 8-7373.JOY '66--A musical revue by Oscar Brown,j Jr.; starring Oscar Brown Jr, Luis Henrique,. Jean Pace, Rita Lerner, Glenn Scipio andthe Floyd Morris Trio with bassist Ernestt McCarty and drummer Curtis Boyd. Nightly,9; Fri & Sun, 9 & 11:30; Sat, 8, II, 1:30.Nightly, *2.95 & *3.50; Fri, *3.50 & *3.95;i Sat, *3.95 & *4.50. Happy Medium, 901 N.1 Rush. DE 7-1000.THE ODD COUPLE-Neil Simon's new; comedy hit starring Dan Dailey and Richard, Benjamin; Mike Nichols, dir. Nightly, 8:30;Wed & Sat Matinee, 2. Nightly, *2.75-*5.00;^ Fri. & Sat., *3.50-*5.95; Matinees, *2.50-; *4.50. Blackst-one Theatre, 60 E. Balbo.I CE 6-8240.SECOND CITY-The title of the new 22nd| revue is "When the Owl Screams," Sheldon' Patinkin, dir. Starring Bob Curry, Sid Gross-j feld, Sandy Holt, Jon Shank, David Walshand Penny White. Nightly, 9; Fri., 9 & 1 1;Sat., 9, 11 & I. *2.50; Fri & Sat, *3.00. SpecialImprovisations Sun, Tue-Thu at II: *1.00.1846 N. Wells, DE 7-3992; MO 4-4032 after7:30.SHADY LANE FARM SUMMER THEATER-Aresident icompany of Equity actors; LouisTondo, dif. "Right Bed-Wrorig Husband"; JulyiAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting»50 1. Slid It. MY 1-1102 MARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBleed Typing t Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICEComplete Lab. EKG A BMR FACILITIES 5-17. "Me*and Thee": July 19-ji. 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 ofMarengo on US 20 (Northwest tollway to&S 20). 815-568-7218College & CommunityCOURT THEATRE OF THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO -Shaw's "St. Joan": JamesO'Reilly, dir: July 21, 22, 23, 24 at 8 30.Shakespeare's Twelfth Night"; Harvey Lan-da, dir: July 29, 30, 31 & Aug 4, 5, 6, 7, 11,12, 13, 14 at 8:30. Thu&Sun, *1.75; students.*1.25. Fri., *2.00; students, * 1.50. Sat., *2.50Courtyard behind Mandel Hall, 57th & Uni¬versity. Ml 3-0800 ext. 3581.ENCORE THEATRE-Lionel Bart's musical"Oliver": Every Fri-Sun thru July Fri, 8:30;Sat. 8: Sun, 7. *2.00 & *3.00."Showstoppers,”- special revue programsconsisting of 45 minutes of entertaining pro¬duction numbers and solos from more than36 well-known Broadway and off-Broadwayshows, Wed & Thu, 8 & 11; Fri & Sat, 11 &12; Sun, 3 & 4. *1.00. 1419 N. Wells. 664-5533.HULL HOUSE THEATER -Paul Shyre's "TheChild Buyer," based on John Hersey's novel.Every Fri-Sun. Fri & Sat, 8:30; Sun, 7:30.Fri & Sat. *3.90; Sun, *3.40. 3212 N. Broad¬way. 348-5622.NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY DRAMA FES-T1VAL-A repertory of 3 plays.Jean Anouilh's unique charade "RingRound the Moon"; Robert Schneideman, dir:July 22, 26, 28, 31 & Aug 6.Sheridan's Classic comedy "The School forScandal"; Jerome Landfield, dir: July 23, 27,29 & Aug 2, 4.Bernard Shaw's The Devil's Disciple": July21, 24, 30 & Aug 3, 5.Nightly, 8:30. Nightly, *2.00; Fri & Sat.,*3.00. Garden Theatre, School of Speech (incase of rain, the indoor auditorium), 1905Sheridan, Evanston. 492-7282.THEATRE ON THE LAKE-Jean Kerr's comedy"Mary, Mary" by the Homer Park TheatreGuild; July 19-23. Elick Moll's comedy "Seid-man and Son" by the Footliters; David Schle-singer, dir: July 26-30. William Marchant'scomedy The Desk Set" by the MargateMasquers; Robert Reddington, dir: Aug 2-6.[Nightly, 8:30. *1.00. Fullerton Pavillion,Fullerton & Outer Drive, HA 7-5252, ext.432; Ql 8-7075.HOUR&: Mon. thru Sat. * AM • 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 $. HARPER HY 3-2000 SAMUEL A. BILL"BUY SHILL FROM BELL"siMca itttFtCKUP A-DBLIVERY SKRVICB52 A lake ParkHY 3-5200James Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1363 EAST S3RD STREET: PL 2-9662SHIRTS - LINENS - TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. Card BYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Pl?za1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty Discount TAI-SAM-YMilCHINKS! - AMERICANROT AURA NTlurtafchu l»CANTONESE A1VBAMERICAN MIKESOV*M< DAILYVI AAA. ao trtS MLOR MRS YD YAKS OUT!»T« MMA MB 4-1 M2 UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor6 CHICAGO MAROON July 22, 1966Jimmy’sand the University RoomRKSMVBD EXCLUSIVELY FOE UNIVFRSITY CLIENTELEFifty-Fifth end Weodlovn Arm. Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient end Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856THE PUBIH 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 TapiDon Hamilton Now Playing For Your Pleasure and DancingHYDE PARK'S ORIGINAL OLD TYME PUBSmedley’sonHarperFEATURINGITALIAN SPAGHETTI & MEAT SAUCE - *7.00FULL 67 oz. PITCHERS OFSCHLITZ ON DRAUGHT' "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 MENmeQfattm $c vEmnpuuIn the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th SI. Phone 752-8100 •V % .V ,v. ;X*X88 X* *•*•*•*< 888: V. 88: 858 x*x :888 v.v.MAROON WEEKEND GUIDEWELCOME TOO’NEILL’Stool EAST 61 it STREETJEFFERY THEATRE1952 E. 77st St. HY 3-3334Now PlayingUMITtD ENGAGEMENTThe Top Double Feature ofTbit Yoor or Any Ofbor VtorlSean Connery asAgent 007tnThunderballandPaul NewmanOfHarperwith Lauren Bacalland Janet LeighFrf. & Sat.: *THUNDERBALL: 1:45, 5:50,HARPER: 3:55, 8:15Sun.-Thurs.iTHUNDERBALL: 1:30, 5:40, 9:1HARPER: 3:40, 7:50CHICAGO MAROONSummer Sale of Books$1.00 to $14.98Were $3.95 to $25.00Beautiful art books, biographies, reference works, recent fictionand non-fiction to add to your permanent librarySale starts TODAY , July 22.SHORT DICTIONARY OF MYTHOLOGY, byP. G. Woodcock. Over 1,200 entries pluscross references - every name of impor¬tance in classical history and Norse, Greek,Roman, Hindu, Egyptian, and Near-easternmythology - an invaluable aid to the studentand general reader.Pub. at *3.75 Sale *1.00 Saint or Fraud-VERDICT ON SCHWEITZER,The Man Behind the Legend of Lambarene,by Gerald McKnight.Pub. at *4.95 Sale *1.98Philip Freund: THE DEVIOUSWAYS. Strikingquartet of novelettes dealing with: theharassed, hunted smuggler; the innocentdaughter of a murderer; the strangely “be¬reaved" husband; the vengeful Americanturncoat - striking suspense in the “deviousways” of the mind.Pub. at *3.95 Sale *1.00AMERICA'S SMALL HOUSES. The PersonalHomes of Designers and Collectors, byHenry L. Williams and Ottalie K. Williams.An open door to the country's most attractiveand original homes - those of interiordesigners, architects, collectors and connois¬seurs. A monumental volume lavishly illus¬trated with 29 color and 178 black and whitephotographs.Pub. at *25.00"" Sale *14.98The Four Gospels - THE CLARIFIED NEWTESTAMENT, by Emil G. Kraeling. TheGospels expounded in the light of modernhistorical research.Pub. at *8.95 Sole *2.98COLOR PSYCHOLOGY AND COLORTHERAPY. By Faber Birren.Pub. at *7.50 Sale *4.98RENIOR With 48 Paintings in Full Color-A rich volume, with vibrantly colored re¬productions. Introduction and notes by ColinHays - comments about and by Renoir-Noteson Impressionism - Notes on plates, etc.Large 9"x 10 3/4”-library edition.Special Import *2.98MEXICAN ART - From the \Miite God toOrozco, by Justino Fernandez. Twenty cen¬turies of Mexican art from pre-Aztec sulp-ture, jewelry, pottery, achitecture, jade andgold work, modern murals, more. 66 illus;English text; 9 3/8“ x 10 3/4".Special import *2.98I CHING Book of Changes. Translated byJames Legge. Ed. by Ch'uChaiandWinbergChai. A master volume of 448 pages, themost ancient of the Chinese Classics, be¬lieved to contain the key to all Chinesephilosophy - now available in a modern con¬test. Complete with Study Guide, Compara¬tive Transcription Table and Appendixes.Pub. at *10.00 Sale *5.98 THE ABC OF CONTRACT BRIDGE, by BenCohen and Rhoda Barrow. Clear, concise anddown to earth explanation of the intricaciesof Contract Bridge. Utilizes the Acol System ofbidding, a common-sense method easily assi¬milated and highly efficient.Pub. at *5.00 Sale *2.98Vance Packard: THE PYRAMID CUMBERS.This book probes the corporate personalityand the personality of corporate leaders,striving to find why executives lost partof themselves when scaling the corporatepyromid.Pub. at *5.00 Sale *1.00John Cheever: THE WAPSHOT SCANDAL.Best-selling sequel to The Wapshot Chronicle.Pub. at *4.95 Sale *1.00Jessica Mitford: THE AMERICAN WAY OFDEATH. The explosive best-selling expose ofAmerica's hush-hush, hard-sell burial busi¬ness.Pub. at *4.95 Sale *1.00STORIES FROM THE NEW YORKER 1950 to1960. Honor roll of 47 distinguished storiesby the decade’s most accomplished and ad¬venturous writers-stories by Bellow,Cheever, Nadine Gordimer, Mary Mc¬Carthy, Frank O'Connor, Nobokov, Salin¬ger, Updike, Eudora Welty, Tennessee Wil¬liams, Angus Wilson, 36 more--a wealth ofmemorable fiction. 780 pp.Pub. at *7.50 Sale *2.98Unbowdlerized! THE GUUSTAN OF SA'DI,translated by Edward Rehotsek. Within Islam,the single most famous work in Persian lit¬erature.Pub. at *6.00 Sale *2.98 THE ART OF CREATIVE WRITING, by LajosEgri, author of The Art of Dramatic Writing.Pub. at *4.95 Sale *1.98Graham Greene: A SENSE OF REALITYFour of the master writer's most powerfulnovellas--A Visit to Morin, Dream of aStrange Land, A Discovery in the Woods,and Under the Garden,Pub. at"*3.50 Sale *1.00Pirandello: THE LATE MATTIA PASCAL, transby William Weaver. Luigi Pirandello’s mostfamous novel and the first of his works togain international acclaim.Pub. at *4.95 Sale *1.00Dr. Albert Schweitzer: PILGRIMAGE TO HU¬MANITY. Here, in a clear and concise auto¬biography, is the essence of the philosophyand humanity of Albert Schweitzer.Pub. at *3.75 Sale *1.00BEING AND NOTHINGNESS. By Jean-PaulSartre. The definitive Sartre. A MUST foreveryone interested in philosophy and psy¬chology.Pub. at *10.00 Sale *3.98ROCKS AND MINERALS, by Fred Reinfeld.Exciting story of the treasures of the earth-the rare gems, ores and minerals, that lieburied beneath our feet.Pub. at *3.95 Sale *1.98THE PRICELESS GIFT, the Love Letters ofWoodrow Wilson and Ellen Axson Wilson.Edited by Eleanor Wilson McAdo. of the loveletters between the Brownings.Pub. a* *6.95 Sale *2.98THIS WAS THE PRESIDENT, John F. Kennedy,by Tony Spina. Collection of photographsshowing the sensitivity and insight of JFKthrough the time of his first nomination tohis inauguration. More than 100 photo¬graphs.Pub. at *7.50 Sale *2.98THE MODERN POUSH MIND. Ed. by MariaKuncewicz A remarkable collection of storiesand essays, by writers living in a Polandspread-eagled across the,frontier of a worlddivided, all but one previously untranslated.Pub. at *8.50 Sale *2.98COLONIAL FURNITURE IN AMERICA, byLuke Vincent Lockwood. One large and hand¬some volume that contains complete anddetailed information on furniture, architec¬ture and interior woodwork in ColonialAmerica. Over 1,000 illustrations of clocks,chairs, tables, chests, etc. 354 pp. 8"x 11 I /4".Pub. at *12.50 Sale *6.98 THE FUTURE OF THE REPUBUCAN PARTYBy Robert J. Donovan, best-selling authorof Eisenhower: The Inside Story.Pub. at *3.95 Sale *1.00EPILEGOMENA TO THE STUDY OF GREEKRELIGION and THEMIS. By Jane Ellen Har¬rison. A study of the social origins of Greekreligion, based on on-the-spot reports, prov¬ing that the Greeks belonged to the worldof primitive religion. Two important booksbound in one volume and well illustrated.Pub. a* *10.00 Sole *5.98CONVERSATIONS WITH NELSON ALGREN,by H.E.F. Donohue. Autobiographical con¬versations with the author of The Man WithThe Golden Arm revealing his wrong-side-of-the-tracks childhood, depression yearsand riding the rails, France, and Simonede Beauvoir, the Chicagoof prostitutes, junk,and the underworld, hisfellowwriters:Kero-uac, Mailer, Bellow, Baldwin, and muchmore, frankly stated.Pub. at *6.50 Sale *1.98Graham Greene: IT'S A BATTLEFIELD. Com¬bination suspense story and tense, probingnovel entangling the murderer of a HydePark policeman and a Prime Minister in atrap that allows no kindness, no justice, nohonor--by the author of The Comedians andOur Man In Havana.Pub. at *3.95 Sale *1.00BRIDGMAN’S COMPLETE GUIDE TO DRAW¬ING FROM LIFE. By G. B. Bridgman. Thelargest, most comprehensive life-drawingvolume ever published.Pub. at *15.00 Sale *7.98“Mad Jock": THE SELECTED WRITINGS OFJOHN JAY CHAPMAN. Edited and Intro¬duced by Jacques Barzun, Columbia Univer¬sity.Pub. at *5.00 Sale *1.08■ MAN DESTINY&qf FRANCEDE GAULa vMAN OF DESTINY: de Gaule of France, byRichard Harrity and Ralph G. Martin. Asuperb portraits of the man beneath theenigma that France's most infulential poli¬tician has become. Includes little known in¬cidents from his childhood, his days as astudent, and his life as a young cadet. Amust for those who want to know the monwho shaped modern France as he reallyis. Includes RARE PHOTOGRAPHS of deGaulle at home, with his wife and family,and at work during both World Wars.Pub. at *6.95 Sale *2.98THE BOOK OF COUNTRY CRAFTS, by Ran¬dolph Wardell Johnston. Invaluoble refer¬ence book for those working with wood, clay,metals, stone and color. Contains manynewly revealed secrets of the crafts, as wellas step-by-step instruction.Pub. at *4.95 Sale *2.98ITAUAN PAINTING, by Andrea. Emiliani.56 pp., 24 color plates. 10 I/2“ x 14 3/4".Pub. at *5.00 Sale *1.98ARTS AND CRAFTS, A Practical Handbook,by Marguerite Ickis. Comprehensive refer¬ence book on the exciting subjects of Paper-craft, Silk Screen Printing, Bookbinding,Weaving, Leathercraft, Pottery and Puppe¬try. Fully illustrated.Pub. at *5.95 Sale *2.98 MISSISSIPPI NOTEBOOK. By Nicholas VonHoffman, Chicago Daily News reporter.Vivid, entirely honest record of summer'64 in Mississippi-54 striking photos-of thetense weeks that saw numerous bombings,the murder of 3 civil rights workers, thefirst publicly announced and held civil rightsmeeting in Natchez, the tense state of mindof an entire State.Pub. at *4.50 Sale *1.00 A BRIEF DICTIONARY OF AMERICAN SUP¬ERSTITIONS, by Vergilius Ferm.Pub. a* *3.00 Sale *1.00Henri Pirenne: A HISTORY OF EUROPE -From the Invasions to the XVI Century.Pub. at *10.00 Sale *5.98MAN AND THE SUN. By Jacquetta Hawkes.An outstanding work on man's communionwith the sun, since the days of ancientcivilizations through to our present age.Pub. at *5.00 Sale *1.00SOUTINE-48 COLOR PLATES, by AndrewForge. An original study of the enigmaticand electrifying Russian artist Chaim Sou¬tine, and of his intensely exciting paintings,among them the famous "Page-Bor atMaxims." 58 plotes, 48 in full color; 9 3/8"x 10 3/4"- Special Import *2.98THE VWIITE PAPER. With a Preface and Illus¬tration by Jean Cocteau.Pub. at *3.50 Sole *1 00World War I - THE TWELVE DAYS, by GeorgeMalcolm Thomson. Dramatic, penetratingchronicle of the outbreak of the First WorldWar. Illustrated.Pub. at *5.00 Sale *1 98Hilarious non-book: EXTREMISM,by DavidNewman and R. Benton. Delightful analysisof Extremism in action-every aspect coveredfrom how to make a Klan robe to the Ex¬tremist Literacy Test (Defoliation-Blowing thebejesus out of North Viet Nam) to SexualExtremism ("A man is a Sexual Extremistif his name is Alice") -with cartoons andsample crank letters.Pub. at *2.50 Sale *1.00 VICTOR I jASKYA mho <ar K.: TW *•» »~l Ikr MvtllVictor Lasky THE UGLY RUSSIAN By tfauthor of JFK: The Man and the Myth.Pub. ot *4.95 Sale *1.CPOWER AT THE PENTAGON By JackRoymond, NY Times Pentagon correspon¬dent.Pub. at *6.50 Sale *1.98THE TALMUD OF JERUSALEM From the1500-year old socred book of Israel - legends,proverbs, teaching, anecdotes from the livesof the greatest Rabbis - a treasure house ofethical wisdom ond imaginative literaturePub. at *4.75 Sale *1.00Twentieth Century Classic: INCOGNITO ByPetru Dumitriu. Tumultuous, exalting novelby a master storyteller..Pub. at *5.95 Sale *1.00MAN AND THE WORLD OF SCIENCE, byHarry A. Kuljian. History of science, fromthe early Greeks to the present day.Profusely illustrated.Pub. at *6.50 SoU ,2 98CONCISE DICTIONARY OF JUDAISM, byDagobert Runes. A handy, up-to-date guide¬book of quick reference in the fields ofJewish history, religion, philosophy and lit¬erature. Over 60 full-page illustrations.Pub. at *5.00 Sale *1.00THE CORRESPONDENCE OF ANDRE GIDEAND EDMUND GOSSE: 1904-1928. Editedby Linette F. Brugmans. Full reproductionsof 88 of the hundred-odd letters exchangedbetween France'sforemostauthorandGreatBritains powerful and venerated man ofletters. •Pub. at *4.50 Sole *1.98•VIGIL THOMSON: Hid Life and Music byKathleen Hoover and John Cage. Arevealingbiography and perceptive analysis of thework of the famous American composer andmusic critic. Illustrated with many photo¬graphs and reproductions of scores. Witha complete list of works.Pub. at *6.00 Sale *2.98Eleanor Roosevelt - ON MY OIM'I: TheYears Since the VAiite House. The greatestbest-loved, gnd most controversial womanof our time shares the experiences, publicand private, of her 13 years since the deathof FDR. 24 photos.Pub. at *5.50 Sale *2.98DICTIONARY OF THOUGHT. By DagobertD.CURIOSITIES OF ANIMAL LIFE, by Maurice Runes. A unique book made up of 20 yearsBurton, D. Sc. Guided tour of Noture's of thoughtful writing and thinking. A readystrange and wonderful creatures, their reference for those who seektoimproveandsecrets of life, weapons for survival, and disciPline their own thinking,habits that make clear the startling diversity 0 • a*among birds and animals. Illustrated with STRANGELY ENOUGHI by C.B. Colby. Onephotographs and drawings. hundred supernatural talesthatdefy rationalPub. at *3.95 Sale *1.98 explanation, but which will fascinate as longas windows creak and the wind howls!AMERICA'S VANISHING FOLKWAYS, byEverett B. Wilson. Covers customs of a van¬ished era, when a young man was subjectto public flogging for courting a girl withouther father's permission; when bundling wasin vogue; when a seller of spoiled fish wasrequired to wear a necklace of dead smelts.All this and mor$. Illustrated with litho¬graphs from periodicals of the time.Pub. at *7.50 Sale *3.98Sale *1.00THE CHALLENGE TO REUNION, edited byRobert McAfee Brown and David H. Scott.Leading churchmen! probe the problem ofreuniting the Episcopal, Presbyterian,Methodistaand United Church denomina¬tions.Pub. at *6.50. Sale *1.98 Pub. at *3.95 Sale *1.98Borry Goldwater: WHY NOT VICTORY? AFresh Look at American Foreign Policy.Pub. at *3.95 Sale *1.00SPANISH PAINTING, by Ugo Bicchi. 56 pp.24 color plates, 10 1/2" x 14 3/4".Pub. at *5.00 Sale *1.98THE HISTORY OF MODERN CULTURE. ByMaurice Parmelee. A huge penoramic work Vladimir Nabokov: THE DEFENSE.'Brilliant,that examines the wide range of histori- intriguing nove, of a ,ragic hero destroyedcal forces which produced culture as we new by hjs Qwn genius Qnd of the helpless effortsconceive it, and traces the main course of hjs devoted wjfe fo save him from se|f.of man s cultural evolution from early times ruination By fhe author of PALE FIRE and♦othe present-day. 1295 p. LOLITAPub. at *10.00 Sole *4.98 pub at *5.00 Sale *1.00COUNTRY FURNITURE OF EARLY AMERICA,by FI. Lionel Williams. Detailed descriptionsof the antique furniture used by Americanpioneers-highboys, cradles, cupboards,secretaries, and more. Completely illus¬trated with 121 photographs and 191 draw¬ings.Pub. ot *10.00 Sale *4.98 ELEMENTS OF CONDUCTING, by WilliamCox-lfe. Intro, by Sir Adrian Boult. A master¬ful handbopk of orchestral, choral andoperatic conducting for talented amateurs.Profusely illustrated wifh diagrams onddrawings.Pub at *3.95 STARS,SUNS AND PLANETS, a Guide toAstronomy, by Terry Maloney, F.R.A.S. Thewonders of celestial bodies, vital to under¬standing today's race for space, presentedin concise Ipnguage that clarifies difficultconcepts.Sale *1.98 pub af $3 95 Sale *1.98WITCHES' SABBATH By Maurice Sachs; WHERE I STAND, by Senator Barry Gold-trans. from Le Sabbat by Richard Howard, water.Pub. at *7.50 Sale *2.98 Pub. a* *2.95 Sale *1.00THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE - 5802 Ellis Are.8 CHICAGO MAROON July 22, 1966