Vol. 75-No. 7CcNew Ca Chgo.,111. 6Q627 Anniversary Year fllift In lofefitty of Chicago Friday, August 5, 1966Air-conditioned ComfortMajor structural changes for thecommons have been planned. Thedining area will be carpeted andair-conditioned, and new furniturewill be installed.The room will accommodate 340people wuh all tables seating eight,four, or two persons. No long pic¬nic tables will be used. The tenta*tive floor plan also calls for a pri¬vate dining room for specialgroups or events.THE NEW furnishings will be in¬stalled in the commons by the falland the area will be open for stu¬dent use then, even though the caf¬eteria will not be ready until thewinter quarter.Once the food line is installed inthe C-shop, the vending machineswill be removed. “They are hor¬rendously efficient,” said Redfield,remarking that the machineswould offer too much competitionif they were to remain.C-shop HoursThe C-shop will serve breakfast,lunch, and dinner. Its tentativehours are 7 am to midnight, Mon¬day through Friday; 8 am to 11 pmon Saturday; and 4 pm to 8 pm onSunday.It will have a grill and a sodafountain and will offer “mostlypaper service,” said Redfield. Acomplete dinner may also be pur¬chased there in the evening, butnot much variety will be offered.THE COMMONS cafeteria willbe open initially only for lunch, 11am to 2 pm, Monday through Fri¬day, with no weekend service.However, if there is sufficient de¬mand for a hot entree in the even¬ing, said Miller, the caterer maydecide to keep the cafeteria openfor dinner.The University, Miller said, issubsidizing the operations by main¬taining the building rent-free andfurnishing utilities.As for an Ida Noyes coffee shop,f ■ ■ assNEXT WEEK'SMAROONWILL BE THE LAST |ISSUE OF THESUMMER QUARTERNormal tummor advertisingdeadlines will apply.igigiici i laniicuby Miron StrafA cafeteria in Hutchinson Commons and a new snack barfor the adjoining C-shop will open early in the school year.According to Eugene L. Miller, business manager for campusoperations, the C-shop will begin serving early in the autumnquarter; and the commons cafete¬ria. in the winter quarter.The new food service for thecampus was a result of a studymade by a special student-facultycommittee headed by James Red¬field. master of the new collegiatedivision.0 Stouffer’s Food Service will caterto both the cafeteria and the coffeeshop under a one-year renewablecontract. “We picked this catererbecause he looks less convention¬al,” said Redfield.INSTEAD of the usual cafeterialine, the commons cafeteria willhave several counters: one for hotfood, and others for desserts, bev¬erages, and salads. Thus a personwanting just a cup of coffee neednot wait in line while his beverageturns cold to pay his 10c.The cafeteria will have a “self¬bussing service,” with patrons tak¬ing their dishes to a receiving win¬dow on their way out. Redfield said, “the committee rec¬ommended that an attempt bemade to operate Ida Noyes as astudent activity.” Student Govern¬ment is to see if there is sufficientstudent interest to run the coffeeshop.According to tentative menussubmitted by Stouffer’s Food Serv¬ice, the commons cafeteria willfeature entrees priced between 65cto 90c, salads for 15c or 20c, anddesserts from 15c to 25c.A breakfast special at the C-shopwill offer two eggs, three strips ofbacon, juice, toast, and coffee for75c. Items may also be ordered in¬dividually.A C-shop luncheon special mayrun around $1, and a typical dinnerspecial (e.g., Chicken a la Kingwith French Fries, salad, dessert,and coffee) for $1.25.A “grill and pancake hour” dur¬ing the evening will offer, for ex¬ample, Ham Steak and TahitianPancakes ($1.00) and CheeseBlintzes with Sour Cream (75c) aswell as the ubiquitous hamburgerand hot dog. Pickets Hit Rankingby Joe LubenowThe UC administration building Monday was once again the focus of a demonstration byStudents Against the Rank (SAR) to protest the University’s formation of an undergraduatemale class rank for use by the Selective Service Administration.Sixty students marched from noon until 1 p.m. to the beat of a steam hammer operatedby nearby construction workers.The demonstrators walked backand forth outside the ad buildingaround picket captains placed atboth ends of the building on theeast sidewalk. MOST OF the students on theQuadrangles for classes or eatinglunch on the grass showed onlymild curiosity about the nature ofthe demonstration.Members of Students Against the Rank picketing outside theadministration building August 1.Bell, Noted Sociologist and Advocate of General Education,Be Visiting Professor Here for Coming Academic YearDaniel Bell, one of the most respected sociologists in thenation, has been appointed a visiting professor of sociologyhere for the coming academic year.A professor of sociology at Columbia University and former¬ly an instructor in the socialansciences at Chicago, Bell is a spe¬cialist in urban sociology and anoted advocate of general educa¬tion.He will hold a joint appointmentin the College and the departmentof sociology and will teach both un¬dergraduate and graduate courses."DANIEL BELL is one of themost astute commentators nowwriting about American society,”Daniel Bell said D. Gale Johnson, dean of thedivision of social sciences. “He willbe a welcome addition to our facul¬ty during the coming year.”According to Donald Levine,master of the social sciences divi¬sion of the College, and formerhead of the Social SciencesII gen ed course which Bellonce taught, “He is one of thefew qualified people who has beenthinking seriously, in fresh ways,on the problems of general educa¬tion, and we expect that throughinformal discussions with him aswell as through the impact of histeaching, we will be stimulated toachieve -more than a mere rein¬forcement of our current ideas onthe subject.”Bell is the author of The Reform¬ing of General Education, pub¬lished this year, in which he com¬ments on the present state of gen¬eral education, particularly Colum¬bia’s interdisciplinary courses incontemporary civilization and hu¬manities.He defends general educationcourses as providing undergrad¬uates with a broad understandingof Western culture and preventingOregon Student Editor Denied New TrialEUGENE, Ore. (CPS) — CircuitJudge Edward Leavy denied lastweek the appeal of a college news¬paper editor for ^ new trial oncharges of contempt of court-*The case will probably go to theOregon Supreme Couri,Miss Annette Buchanan, 20, of§>atue, I# managing editor of the•My Emerald, the student news¬paper at the University of Oregon.She wa# convicted on contempt June 28 and fined $300 by JudgeLeavy for refusing to tell a grandjury the names of students she hadinterviewed for a story about theuse of marijuana on campus,She refused twice to give thenames to the grand jury, the seo*ond time after the judge hadordered her to talks,Miss Buchanan has until August17 to appeal the ease to the stateSupreme Cou*4 „■«... . _ intellectual fragmentation. Includ¬ed in the book is a comparison ofColumbia’s programs with those atChicago and at Harvard Universi¬ty.HE ALSO IS the author of TheEnd of Ideology (1960), a collectionof essays which scrutinize some ofthe social and political changeswhich have occurred in the UnitedStates since World War II,Major themeg of the essays arethe nature of American society andthe decline in the West of Marxismand other systematic ideologies.Most of the 17 essays in Tho Endof Ideology were first publishedbetween 1948 and 1958, while Bellwas labor editor of Fortune maga¬zine.Bell also edited The New Ameri¬can Righf (1955) and The RadicalRight (1963). The first volumedeals with the McCarthy era; thesecond discusses the rise of theradical right in the early 1960’sand includes material on move¬ments such as the John Birch So¬ciety.Other books by Bell are A Histo¬ry of Marxian Socialism in thoUS (1952) and Work and its Dis¬contents (1956).Bell received an AB degree fromthe College of the City of NewYork in 1939 and a PhD fromColumbia in 1960.HE WAS a staff writer and man¬aging editor of The New Leader(1939-1944) and was managing edi¬tor of Common Sense (1945).From 1045 to x948, Bell was aninstructor in the social sciences atChicago. He became a lecturer insociology at Columbia in 1952, anassociate professor in 1959, and aprofessor in 1962.Bell was a member of the Presi¬dent’s Commission on Technology,Automation and Economio • Pro¬gress, and is a fellow of the Ameri¬can Academy of Arts and Sciencesapd chairman of t|je Academy’sCommission on the Year 2009, Nearly all the marchers wereveterans of the spring sit-in. Onegirl carried a sign reading “WeWant Our Building Back”.Joe Felsenstein, chairman ofSAR’s demonstration committee,felt that the demonstration hadbeen “moderately successful, butnot overly so”. He attributed thesmall turnout to the absence ofmost SAR members from campusin the summer and the inability ofothers to secure time off fromjobs.Felsenstein added, with a side¬long glance at the building whichthe demonstrators occupied for sixdays in the spring. “This is essen¬tially a token effort. The real thingcomes in the fall.”THE RATIONALE for holdingthe demonstration August 1 ratherthan some other date was that theUniversity would have had underits present ranking policy to com¬plete physical process of formingthe rank and making it availablefor students to transmit it to theirlocal draft boards in time for Oc¬tober reclassifications.SAR contends that voluntary co¬operation by the University with theSelective Service Administrationconstitutes tacit approval of thewar in Vietnam and direct en¬dorsement of such Selective Serv¬ice policies as the granting of stu¬dent deferments.One group of SAR members un¬der fourth-year College studentTom Smucker has been workingthrough the summer on plans forbringing new students into the or¬ganization. Others are doing re¬search on the workings of the draftand preparing discussion papersfor the University-sponsored na¬tional conference on the draft to beheld here in early December.A committee under third-yearCollege student Jeff Blum is ex¬ploring ways to make the Universi¬ty more democratic. The demon¬strators have also written a historyof their own movement and arecollecting information about“uprisings” on other campuses lastyear.Firsf-year Men lo LiveIn Geo. Williams DormSome entering male first yearstudents will be housed at ,GeorgeWilliams College, the University’snew housing addition, according toassistant dean of students JamesNewman. The administratipn hadpreviously announced. that GeorgeWilliams would be a completelyupperclass dormitory.Because of lack of space in regu¬lar entering student housing, 35first year men have been assignedto George Williams and 18 to Uni¬versity House, which last yearhoused 18 first year women.Students at George Williams willhave at least partial meal con¬tracts at Pierce tower, while thoseat University House will have con¬tracts at Woodward Court.The administration originallyplanned to house first year stu¬dents in tJC’s newest dormitory,the Broadview Hotel, but changedits plans when a special student-faq*ulty advisory committee headedby master of the new collegiate djsvision James Redfield recommendsed that first year students not b*housed there.The University now plans to u»#the Broadview for graduate •Un¬dent housing, rMeasures Need ''Critical Analysis'Official Raps Congress on EducationWilliam F. Gaul, counsel forthe House of Representativesspecial subcommittee on edu¬cation, criticized the govern¬ment’s handling of educational leg¬islation in a Judd Hall speechWednesday night. Gaul deliveredthe fourth and last lecture in theColver-Rosenberger series.His criticism came after praisingthe government’s many accom¬plishments in the field of educa¬tion.fiveshort films:Keaton's THE PALEFACEPorter's GREAT TRAIN ROBBERYLaurel & Hardy's TWO TARSGriffith's NEW YORK HATMcLaren's FIDDLE-DEE-DEEat Ida Noyes Hall59th & WoodlawnTuesday, August 9/8:30 pm '75c A DOC FILMS PRESENTATION He called operations such asHeadstart, Upward Bound, and theJob Corp an “expensive responseto years of indifference. The Fed¬eral Government is spending morein one year to train an enrollee inthe Job Corps,” he said, “than ithas spent in twelve years to trainhim in the public schools.”GAUL asserted that some of theeducational measures in the 89thCongress “have not been subjectedto the critical analysis of needsand priorities that they shouldhave had.”One of the major faults of feder¬al involvement in education, henoted, is its unpredictability.Gaul cited as an example theNational Defense Education Act(NDEA) student loan program,Which at one time was in jeopardyCLEARANCESALEWomens’ summer clothing atgreatly reduced prices. Stylesto be worn now and into earlyautumn.20% to 40%Discounti*SPECIAL VALUETHIS WEEKBeige or red seamless tightsmade of DuPont Stretch Nylon.Sizes: small, medium, large.Were $2.50 Now *1.19The University of ChicagoBookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.PHOTOGRAPHYWe stock the chemicals you need to make your own prints.Allow us to advise you on the camera which will meet your needs.Stop at our Photo counter and inquire.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.TYPEWRITERSWe are staffed and equipped to change your keyboard to meet any needwhether it be languages, medical, math or any other purposelInquire at our Typewriter Couhter.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis. Ave.^5KM© YOU CAN SHOPRIGHT AT YOURDOOR STEP FORNew & NovelSHOESatthe shoe corralorCohn & SternA ($Y*) A @@A6Y£)A(5YS1 *\s7S3PARK 55th & Lake Park by pending legislation in Congress.As a result of uncertainty over theprogram’s fate, school administra¬tors did not know whether theycould make loan commitments tostudents, he said.Gaul remarked that the authori¬zation and appropriation bills forsome of the current educationallegislation before Congress havenot been passed, with schoolsscheduled to begin their programsin one month.ANOTHER fault of Congress, hesaid, is that its legislation has been“piecemeal,” rather than longrange. Its “mission-orientated ap¬proach,” he added, has resulted inoverlapping and duplication insome areas and neglect in others.Gaul also noted that in someareas the Johnson Administration’srequests were on the same or low¬er levels than previous ones. “Viet¬nam and inflation,” he explained,“will have a profound impact onthe extent of federal involvement.” Dedication of Wyler Children's HospitalFeature Six-day Period of EventsThe University will mark the ded¬ication of the Silvain and ArmaWyler Children’s Hospital with sixdays of events beginning August28.The new hospital, located onMaryland ave. between 58th and50th st., was constructed by theUniversity at a cost of $7.8 million.The building is just north of UC’sChicago Lying-in Hospital.Four major events have beenscheduled for the six-day period:• The formal dedication of theSilvain and Arma Wyler Children’sHospital on Sunday, August 28, in aspecial pavilion near the entranceof the hospital, and a dedicationdinner at the University’s centerfor continuing education.• The Symposium on the Child,from Monday, August 29, throughFriday, September 2. The symposi¬um will bring to campus about 35authorities in the fields of medi¬cine, science, education, socialscience, and the law from tenstates and seven foreign countries.Calendar of EventswmmmmmmmmmmFriday, August 5COURT THEATRE: Shakespeare’s“Twelfth Night,’’ 8:30 pm, HutchinsonCourt.Saturday, August 6MOVIE: India Association presents“Poornima,” starring Dharmendra andMeena Kurmari, Judd Hall, 8 pm.COURT THEATRE: Shakespeare’s“Twelfth Night,” 8:30 pm, HutchinsonCourt.Sunday, August 7RADIO SERIES: “From the Midway,”WFMF, 100.3 me. “What Knowledge IsMost Worth Having/” James M. Red-field, Master, New Collegiate Divisionand Associate Dean of the College willdiscuss “Platonic Education: Creativityand Method,” 7:00 a m.ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL: Morningworship, 11 am.COURT THEATRE: Shakespeare’s“Twelfth Night,” 8:30 pm, HutchinsonCourt. LECTURE: “Self-Representation of anIndian Caste,” Miss Maureen Patterson.Bibliographer South Asia Library andInstructor in Indian Civilization, 133Eckhart. 8:00 pm.DOC FILMS: Five Shorts by Griffith.Porter, Keaton. Laurel & Hardy, andMetisren, Ida Noyes, 8:30 pm.SWAP TUTORS: Foreign LanguageWorkshop, Sun Parlor of Ida Noj7:00 pm. Over 1,500 specialists in childcare are expected to attend thesymposium programs, which willbe held in the Hospitals and Clin-ics,-950 E. 59th st.• The Home for Destitute Crip,pled Children luncheon, Tuesday,August 30. The luncheon will honorthe home for its 38 years associa¬tion with the University’s medicalcenter and its contributions to thenew pediatric hospital.The home has assumed responsi¬bility for the operation of the 100patient beds in the Wyler Chil¬dren’s Hospital.• The dedication of the JosephKennedy, Jr., Mental RetardationResearch Center of the Wyler Chibdren’s Hospital on Wednesday, Au¬gust 31. This center, which occu¬pies 50,000 square feet of the newpediatric hospital, was made possi¬ble by a grant to the Universityfrom the Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr.,Foundation.Members of the Kennedy family,along with city and state officials,will join 400 guests at a formaldedication dinner to be held in thecenter for continuing education.The hospital is named in honorof the late Silvain S. Wyler and hiswidow, Arma. of Chicago. A foun¬dation established after Mr. Wy¬ler’s death in 1963 provided fundsfor the construction of a children'shospital.foyes,Wednesday, August 10East Lounge of Ida Noyes. 7 :00 pm.SWAP TUTORS: Seminar: “Economicsof the Ghetto: Where are the Boot¬straps?” East Lounge of Ida Noyes, j7:00 pm.Thursday, August 11Tuesday, August 9SW'AP TUTORS: Math Workshop forSWAP tutors, East Lounge of IdaNoyes, 7:00 pm.UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKmM strong bank9*NEW CAR LOANSes low as375-Ii54 EAST 55th STREETMO 4-1200F.DA& LECTURE: “Caste and Politics InSouth India.” Andre Beteille, VisitingCOURT THEATRE: Shakespeare’s“Twelfth Night," Hutchinson Court, 8:30pm.Lecturer In Social Anthropology, Eck¬hart 133. 8:00 pm. You won't Wave to put yourmoving or storage problemoff untH tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12055 S. Defy Ave.040-4411James Schultz cleanersCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANING1343 EAST 53RD STREET: PL 2-7442SHIRTS-LINENS-TAILORING10% Student Discount with I.D. CardJESSELSmSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 HAMWITH TH1 VIRY REST AND FRESHCITFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 1-9186 1140 E. 51rdHYDE PARK'S ORIGINAL OLD TYME PUBSmedley’sHarperFEATURINGITALIAN SPAGHETTI & MEAT SAUCE - *1.00FULL 67 oz. PITCHERS OFSCHLITZ ON DRAUGHT"KEEP COOL"5239 S. Harper NO 7-5546CHICAGO MAROON • August 5, 1966Music ReviewSteinberg Goes the MinimumThe qualities which make William Steinberg the very modelof a modern major maestro were strikingly apparent in hisKavinia appearances last Saturday and Tuesday. An orchestralengineer with a solid, non-acrobatic conducting technique, heknows and gets exactly what hewants from his players: graniterhythms, clear sound, tidy ensem¬ble. In terms of pure orchestralplaying, he kept the oft-waveringChicago Symphony on top of twodifficult scores: the Verdi Requiemand Mahler’s Das Lied von derErde.But not all cobblers are alsomeistersingers, and Steinberg’scraft does not fully disguise anabsence of musicality. He can fol¬low explicit written directions,but nothing beyond the minimumis added. And since scores are onlyan approximation of music, hisperformances convey only the shellof a work—a finite, known quanti¬ty; all sense of mystery and discov¬ery is purged. Thus, everything inthe freewheeling Verdi was well-ordered, but without ecstasy; therhythmic tottering of Mahler’s“Drunken One in Springtime”might just as well have referred to a skim milk diet.THE FLAWS of his leadershipwere most apparent when the or¬chestra was alone. Least success¬ful was the flabby performance ofthe Schubert Unfinished (an ill-chosen prelude to the Mahler).Breaking down the dramatic con¬tours by expurgating crescendos,dulling orchestral colors, andmaintaining monotonous tempos,he reduced this early outburst ofromantic excess and orchestralgrandeur to a pseudo-impressionis¬tic symphonic pablum.The Verdi fared much better. Al¬though it lacked the white hot in¬tensity it ought to attain, the or¬chestra's terrifying volume, cou¬pled with excellent choral work bythe Chicago Symphony Chorus,made for an often exciting even¬ing.The soloists, however, while indi¬vidually capable, hardly made aMl 3-31135424 S. Klmbark UNIVERSITYwa sell the best,and fix the rest BARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.(Mg) FIVE BARBERS/*^fo reign car hospital WORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor consistent quartet. Their personalinterpretations often clashed, aswhen bass John Macurdy, who de¬livered a somber, insistant, almostprophet-like reading of his lines,was joined by tenor Jacob Barkingushing over in the molasses tradi¬tion of Italian opera.MAUREEN Forrester exceededher colleagues an interpretive sub¬tlety, but was somewhat short ondecibels. In the Mahler, however,her singing was unimpeachable.She seemed to bring a differentvoice to each song. From a bright,almost coquettish Von der Schoen-heit (whore she ad^ed a lilt toSteinberg’s all-too-regularrhythms), she faded into, deeperand darker hues for the Abscheid,giving it that elusive atmosphereof resignation that the orchestrabut ignored.James King gave the most stun¬ning reading of Mahler’s tenorpart I’ve ever heard. He has alarge, unconstricted voice, neitherfuzzy nor stingingly sharp. How hewould do in more intimate settingsremains to be seen, but in thisgusty bravura music, he left littleto be desired.Steinberg tended to Interpret the Theater ReviewShakespeare with GustoIn this day of unsubstantial and effete comedy, one-linersand costly but heartless comedies, it is extremely refreshingto see a comedy performed with life and heart and gusto anda few honest pratfalls. Twelfth Night, or What You Will Isjust such a play. It seems strange¬ly reminiscent of the best of silentmovie comedy, where gesture andaction count for at least as muchas the lines thrown upon thescreen.Peter RabinowitzWELCOME TOO’NEILL’Stool EAST 61 it STREET SAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE 1IUPICKUP A DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake ParkHY 3-5200Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweat¬shirts, "Levis," 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 adEYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESUR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Klmbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreotHYde Park 3-8372Student <- ‘ Faculty DiscountTHE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWN - $1.00Mlchelob and Budweiser on Tap!Don Hamilton Now Playing For Your Pleasure and Dancing Jerome Loeb as Malvolio inShakespeare's, Twelfth Nightpresented at Court TheatreAugust 5, 6, 7, IT, 12, 13, 14 at8:30 pm.Twelfth Night has a fairly typi¬cal comic plot—confusion createdby the presence of identical twins,complicated by a couple of casesof love at first sight. This plotmight be either a great comedy oran episode of I Love Lucy; but thewriting of Shakespeare, as mightbe expected, and the work of guestdirector Harvey Landa, do not pro¬duce the latter.AS WRITTEN and played,Twelfth Night is probably more ofa comic entertainment than adrama. It is played broadly by thepeople of the Court Theatre, andrightly so, for such playing seemsto make the warmth of the peopleShakespeare has created all themore real. In addition, TwelfthNight Is such a physical play thatits successful performance dependsa great deal on the direction, andLanda has presented a sort of rol¬licking happening, with great in¬genuity in setting up action, ges¬ture, and props.The acting is excellent, so excel¬ lent that the play produced in theaudience rare good spirit andsomething of a sense of participa-tion in a boisterous good time. Theaudience reacted to the play in away all too uncommon these days—it climbs what James Ageecalled the “ladder of laughs,” pastthe titter and the yowl, beyond thebelly laugh, to the pinnacle, theboffo. The mere anticipation of there-entrance of Malvolio, snottilyand excellently played by JeromeLoeb, practically rocked the au¬dience.ALMOST ALL the parts wrerewell filled. Concetta Mango as Vio¬la occasionally seemed to read heflines as if she were reciting themas an exercise, monotonically andloudly, but she had subtle gestures,graceful form, and a warm heart,She was an extremely wistful andmodest heroine.Tim Enos was a lusty but sensi¬tive duke, and Olivia was playedwith suitable confused aloofness byKathleen Ruhl. Jerrold Ziman, re¬membered by fans of last spring’sHey, Manny, Get This. . ., was awitty and sparkling clown.The comic stars of this romanticcomedy are the stars of the sub¬plot, Sir Toby Belch, Sir AndrewAguecheek, Malvolio, Fabian, andMaria (a servant to Olivia). Al|but Malvolio seem to have so muchfun that their spirit permeated theentire Court. Sir Andrew must bethe most foolish and stupid knightanywhere, and as played by Rob¬ert Swan, he is. One cannot helpbut admire such supreme stupidi¬ty.Sir Toby, as played by LloydWest, is a robust rascal; he is evena better comic than Robert Swan,And F. Lawrence Hart’s Fabian isa sly rogue. Their delight in theifpractical joke on Malvolio is, tosay the least, delightful.Twelfth Night is not a greatplay, but it has the expected attrbbutes of Shakespeare—believablecharacters and fine language,Court Theatre has taken a goodplay and done well by it in provid¬ing lusty acting, imaginative direc*tion and, in this case, broad andbrilliant comic execution. TheCourt Theatre’s Twelfth Night iswell worth seeing.Paul BursteltiHONDASUPERSUMMERSALEFree Mirror & LicenseDuring SaleSEE ALL MODELSSO C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES - SERVICE - PART?. PICK UP & DELIVERY• EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESCALLMl 3-4500Chicago's Largest l Just Around the CornerBOB NELSON MOTORS6136 COTTAGE GROVEAugusts,1964 • CHICAGO, MAROONOFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SHORELAND HOTEL55th at the Laka on South Shore DrivePRIVATB ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000For Summer ReadingGiles Goat BoySoldiers RevoltThe Ninety and NineSummer Book Sale Continues by John Barth — $6.95by Hans Helmut Kirst — $5.95by William Brinkley — $5.95The University of Chicago Booksiore5802 S. Ellis Ave.THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMOUNTING; MATTING;NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIESBe Sure toAsk for Weekly SpecialDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111 BOOKSSTATIONERYGREETING (ARDS•kick-kickTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student DiscountASAMATTEROF...the man who has a planned SunLife program is in an enviable position,No one is better prepared to face thefuture than the man who has providedfor his retirement years and hi*family's security through life insurance.As a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyd# Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 - FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & Fridays8UN LIFE DU CANADA, COMPAGNII D’ASSURANCE-VIIUNB COMPAGNII MUTUELLIJefferyTheatre1952 EAST 71stSTARTS FRI., AUGUST 5RICHARD BURTONELIZABETH TAYLORHY 3-3333in“THE SANDPIPER"Hear the award winning song"The Shadow of Your Smile"mamma the world with their incredible victory!CASTA GIANTSHADOW”^KOK DOUGLASSENTA BERGERtOLM by KLVXC vPANA¥ltt«rJ3f IWITE0 AUTWIij mmm mmmm mmmmmmmmmmmm mem.Classified Ads5 - v»j> s-,sVPERSONALSFRACTURED FLICKERS REGAINED!At the Hyde Park Art Center, 6236 S.Blackstone, Sat., Aug. 6 at 8:00 THEPHANTOM OF THE OPERA, the origi¬nal silent classic with Lon Chaney.White tie optional.SEAT available on 9G flight leavingMonday for Paris. $168 one-way. X3272JOBS OFFEREDBILINGUISTS with knowledge of con-versational French, German, or Span¬ish. Call Miss Del Valle at 761-1237 6:30-9 pmADMINISTRATIVE ass’t. M or F. Sometyping. Assist in administration of for-eign language training program. Keeprecords, follow up with students & ar¬range class schedules. $450-500/mo. E.Hyde Park. 288-5800 xtn 3361PART time foreign language instruc¬tors, evenings. Spanish. German, Rus¬sian, & French. 288-5800 xtn 3361ASSISTANT advertising manager forHyde Park-Kenwood Voices. Commis¬sion only. DO 3-2485FOR. SALEMAR’D Stud. Furn. all cheap 752-5338’58 VOLKSWAGON in good mechanicalcond. Radio & heater. Runs well. Per¬fect for city traffic. $350 or best offer.Call 285-0825 evenings.13 FT. Sailfish Sailboat, nylon si, $100566-8414CO-OP APT. FOR SALEBEAUTIFUL 6 rm. apt., 2 baths, forsale. High rise on 67th St. overlookinglake. Low price. 752-0973ALOHA 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.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST A HARPERPood sorvod 11 a.m. to 3 o.m.Kitchon closod Wod.LI 8-75SS—T*~mm to mil StreetSAM LESNERColumnistChicago Daily Newsl/A»441 bought my home In| South Shore Valley j| because it's a beautiful| single - family residential| area, conveniently located| for loop transportation and| neighborhood shopping.}}I If You Are BuyingI or Selling Call The| Valley ReferralOfficeSA 1-23631 SOUTH SHORE VALLEY*'Uvo lottop ||,It O lottor Community"CHICAOO MAROON • August 5, 1965 TO RENT6900 South Crandon Ave. Deluxe High-rise 1 bdrm. apts. from $120; parquetfloor, see Mrs. Haley receiving rm. orsecurity guard. MU 4-7964.HOTEL SHORELANDSpecial student rates Hotel rms. withprivate baths. 2 students/rm. $55 stu¬dent per mo. Complete Hotel Service.Ask for Mr. N. T. Norbert.‘ 6454 S.Shore Drive.HOUSE, furnished or unfurnished. So.Shore brick Georgian, 2 lrg. bedims.,living-dining rm., kitchen, 1 Vi baths,panellqd recreaUon rm., washer & dry.er, attached garage, ige. fenced yard.Available in Sept, for 1 yr. possiblylonger. Will consider responsible stu¬dents. Phone 375-5254. WANTEDMALE GRAD. STU to share lrge, apt.So. Shore 2 blks. from Lake. Own rm,$50/mo. Furn Begin fall C. Detz 667.2372 or X4119BIKE. John Herrmann 363-2443FEM. roommates with room beg. Sept,in the Hyde Park area. Contact Beverlybetween 9 & 5 at BU 8-2500, X39.BOY’S bicycle. Call MU 4-17151 OR 2 fern, roommates to share Ig. Trm. apt. with 3 other girls for rest ofsummer. App. -40 $50 mo. each. 1159E. 32. 667-2145SO. SHORE. 6 rms. & sun parlor, *baths. Near IC 3c Jeffery bus. Avail.Sept. 15 $160/mo. ALSO 3 rm & sun-parlor, Oct. 1. $135 Some furniture forsale. 643-0609 for appointment.ROOM in rambling house. 6052 Kim-bark. $40/mo. Aug. & Sept. only. Wash¬er & dryer use, kitch, use. Call Tyler orDave 363-7874LOSTLADY’S green traveling bag with un-brella attached. If found please callHY3T-2680. Reward.Koga Gift ShopDistinctly* Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St. >Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroPer Af Popular ImpartsMMwr 1-4J0I6052 So. Cottage Grove SAVE ON VACATION FILMPLAN, RETURN UNUSED FILMFORFULL REFUND11411. Hill <1. MY S-I2BIUNIVERSITY DISCOUNTJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060TAl-SAM-V&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTIpeeleM** I*CANTOIVES* ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYtl A.M. t* f *45 PALORDERS TO TAKE OUT111! lertMrdft. MU 4-1062Jimmy*sand the University RoomVIC EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEWh-RWi m4 Woodlovo Ave. IJDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 do 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDNEWEST STYLINO IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Discount CONTACT LENSCfFor 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 3-1715AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 i. 53rd Ml 3-9111\-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -— NEW A USED —Sales and Servic* on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETap* Recorder* — Phonos — Amplifier*Needles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to •tvdonta with ID <«rd«