Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary Year MIDWEEKEDITIONVol. 75 No.12 The University of Chicago Tuesday, October 11, 1966Vive lucet!French Minister to VisitCharles Lucet, French ambassador to the United States,will open the academic year for the University’s Academyfor Policy Study with a discussion of “France and WorldProblems,” 4:30 p.m. today in Kirkland Courtroom of theLaw School.Following a dinner, the 31-yeardiplomat will participate in a paneldiscussion on international affairs.Included in the discussion will beLeonard Binder, chairman of theDepartment of Political Scienceand Arostode Zolberg, director ofthe Center for Comparative Studyof Political Development.PRIOR TO his appointment asambassador in October last year,Lucet served in a number of postsin the French diplomatic corps.Starting his career in Washing¬ton in 1935 as member of theFrench Embassy, Lucet went on tospend most of his career in coun¬tries other than the United States.From 1943 to 1945 he served asFirst Secretary to the French Af¬fairs Commisariat in Ankara,Turkey.Following this, he held a varietyof posts in the Near East, until1953, when he was named a mem¬ber of the French delegation to theUnited Nations.Lucet left his U.N. post in 1959and returned to the Foreign Affairs j will be published within a month.Ministry in Paris, where he re-1 “China and Nuclear Prolifera-mained until his appointment as tion,” a treatise by Morton H. Hal-ambassador. ! perin of Harvard University will beOther Academy Programs published this week by the Acade-Aside from Lucet’s talk, the Acad- my. Chicago Today, a magazineemy is continuing its year-long published by the University, willstudy of China, which began lasti contain an article done by theMarch. Bringing in scholars and Academy in its November 1966 is-policy-makers from many places,' sue.the study has already produced China Policyseveral scholarly papers and an in- Several speakers will addressternational television broadcast on themselves on the United States•the BBC. ; position towards China during theyear.A. Doak Barnett, who spoke atan earlier session of the Chinastudy, will return Ocotber 31. Bar¬nett, professor of government andacting director of the East AsianInstitute at Columbia University,will speak on “The United Statesand China.”He will be followed on November1L by Adam Yarmolinsky, Harvardlaw professor and former assistantto the Secretary of Defense, whowill speak on “U.S. Military Powerand Foreign Policy.” Beadle Memo SuggestsContinued Draft Talksby Michael SeidmanAs sure as the falling leaves and the dropping temperature, discussion of ranking andthe selective service will continue at UC this fall.A quick check of the University’s divisional deans indicates that a number of facultymeetings on the draft are planned within the next two weeks, and that still more areset for early November.The meetings come in responseto a memorandum to academicdeans issued by President GeorgeBeadle on September 9 and madepublic last Friday.IN THE MEMORANDUM, Bead¬le announced the formation of theFiske Committee to continue thework of the Dunham Committee inexamining selective service policyand requested academic deans tohold meetings on the draft withintheir own divisions.France's LucetChina and Asia.”THE ACADEMY will also pub¬lish several writings, two of whichLargely under the direction offaculty fellows Ping-ti Ho, profes¬sor of history, and Tang Tsou, pro¬fessor of political science, thestudy will culminate with two con¬ferences which will be held duringthe Winter Quarter.The first. “China’s Heritage andthe Communist Political System,”will be held between January 30and February 4.The second, which will be heldbetween February 5 and 9, will ex¬amine the present and future of re¬lations among ‘The United States, UC's Ex-ChancellorTo Return For TalkAt Laird DedicationRobert Maynard Hutchins,the University of Chicago’sown enfant terrible, will re¬turn—if only for one speech.Tommorrow at 3:30 pm, Hutchinswill make the main address in thededication of the Laird Bell Quad¬rangle of the Law School.Hutchins, the legendary fifthchief executive of the University,stormed into office in 1929 by com¬pletely reorganizing Chicago. Dis¬satisfied with the unrelated collec¬tion of courses that was and is theBA in most Americian universities,Hutchins led the development of acurriculum which would contain aunified education identical in con¬tent for every student.HE SAID that this education is“the kind that everyone shouldhave Probably one-third ofthe young cannot learn from books.This is no reason why we shouldnot . . .work out a better course ofstudy for the other two-thirds.”Hutchins claimed that if manwas a rational animal, “the objectof the liberal arts is to develop ra¬tionality.”“(Continued on Page Six)Artists. Critics to Conveneby Mark RosinA conference on “The Arts andthe Public,” October 16-21 will as¬semble distinguished American rep¬resentatives of the arts to discussthe role of the critic in the rela¬tionship between the artist and hisaudience. It is hoped that this willbe the first of annual conferenceson the arts to be held at UC.THIS YEAR'S symposium, totake place at the Center for Con¬tinuing Education, will involve art¬ists, dramatists, novelists andtheir respective critics. If success¬ful the other arts will be rep¬resented in future years.Different ReasonsAll of the participants in the con¬ference obviously have differentreasons for their enthusiasm, butjudging from the responses re¬ceived, all are excited by the op¬portunity to participate in the fo¬rum.The artists, critics and public are interdependent: the critic,relying on a reading public, medi¬ates between the artist’s creationand the audience’s reception of it.Whether the artists participatingare directly interested in their re¬lationships with the critics or withthe public, their relations witheither effect the other. Consequent¬ly, whatever the individual’s rea¬son for desiring the discussion, anyimprovement in understanding willbe important to the flourishing ofthe arts in America.RICHARD STERN, novelist andassociate professor of English,both a Conference Committeemember and participant, ex¬pressed his expectation that “theconference will contribute to acritical environment independentof the sensationalism which cor¬rupts standards and ambition.”“So many critics write as if theycan only make themselves heardby violent pronouncements which deform their own reactions to theworks they describe,” Stern said.He further explained that “thecritical environment becomes evenmore raucous and soon corruptsthe art itself which reaches for un¬earned violence in order to elicit(Continued on Page Eight)| Meetingjp The second Maroon staffji| meeting of the quarter willbe held Friday, October 14,If at the Maroon office. It isvery important that all staffmembers attend. Anyone|f who is still interested injoining the Maroon staffand has not signed up yetshould also come to theP meeting.• ■ • Collegiate Divisions To MeetAlthough a number of deanswere unavailable for comment,deans in the Biology, Humanities.Physical Science and Divinity divi¬sions all indicated that meetingswere planned.There are no present plans for ameeting of the College Council inresponse to Beadle’s memoran¬dum. Wayne C. Booth, dean of theCollege, indicated that meetingswould probably be held by themasters of each of the five colle¬giate divisions. If a meeting of theentire collegiate division is foundnecessary, it will be scheduled at alater date.“These meetings are very help¬ful,” said Booth. “They representthe kind of widespread faculty dis¬cussions that the University origi¬nally envisioned when it talkedabout a reconsideration of its poli¬cy. It gives faculty members achance to express what they reallythink and an opportunity to get aword in edgewise.”BOOTH INDICATED howeverthat he did not expect a substan¬tive change in University policy toresult from the meetings, and theother academic deans echoed theseviews. “This is a University-widepolicy, and the decisions must bemade on the University level,”Booth said. “All these meetingscan do is tell the University whatthe faculty is thinking.”How The Faculty BouncesAlthough most of the deans dis¬counted the possibility that theirdivision would take substantive ac¬tion, they refused to~make anymore exact predictions on the out¬come of the meetings.“I’ve been at this for eleven years,” said Jerald C. Brauer,dean of the divinity school, “andone thing I’ve learned is never topredict what the faculty will do.You never know which way they’regoing to bounce.“THAT'S WHY it’s useful to findout where a concensus can befound,” Brauer continued. Themen who run this University mustrealize that they should be actingin the great tradition of freedom.”Hayek Analysis ofClassical Liberalismby Jeffrey Kuta“Social or distributive jus¬tice is irreconcilable with afree society,” declared Fried¬rich Hayek, professor of eco¬nomics at the University of Frei¬berg, Germany, last night in a talkat Breasted Hall.“Indeed, it is meaningless tospeak of social justice in amarket economy,” he said.HAYEK, who profoundly influ¬enced the “Chicago school” ofclassical economics while activehere, is professor emeritus in theCommittee on Social Thought.According to Hayek, there aretwo typfes of orders in modern so¬ciety, in which man’s efforts aredirected in different ways:• Self-generating, spontaneousorders do not serve specific pur¬poses, but many divergent pur¬poses of all their members.• Organizational, arranged or¬ders always serve the purposes oftheir organizers.(Continued on Page Three)The Flip Side a HitSunday night concert at the Other Side Coffee Housei, >, t m mm'by llene Kantrov and Leonne Star“Where’s the ladies’ washroom—quick!”A sagging woman stomped intothe Other Side Coffee House, bear¬ing a curious resemblance to thebulky shopping bag she carried.Dumping the bag into the nearestchair, she voiced her plea. A wait¬ress answered, and the womandashed through the aisle, wavingher walking stick wildly throughthe hir. She wasn’t the first personto raise cane in the three-month- old cabaret.ALTHOUGH THIS performance, was unscheduled, Other Side. Lim¬ited at 1603 E. 53rd St. regularly! sponsors a wide variety of enter¬tainment. Week enders can chooseamong folk or jazz music and orig¬inal comedy routines. More sedateSunday-and Mondav-nighters cansample Elizabethan or baroquechamber music performed by such1 artists as soprano Neva Pilgrim.Play, poetry, and philosophy read-(Continued on Page Three):^Kr>'p!SfSr:00& 'Detailed Architectural Planning BeginsThe highly touted JosephRegenstein library, first plan¬ned nearly one year ago, hasyet to even announce itsgroundbreaking.“H is dangerous to guess thestarting date, even the date to be¬gin tearing down Stagg Field,”said Kenneth W. Soderland, assist¬ant director of Harper library. complete the library has alreadybeen raised. This includes a $10million gift from the Joseph andHelen Regenstein Foundation and$3.4 million from the U.S. Dept, ofHealth, Education and Welfare.The architects are still busy onthe plans, working mainly on theelectrical and mechanical detailsand the furnishings.The Joseph Regenstein library isto be located on the present StaggField, 57th and Ellis, and will havehighly automated electronic facili¬ties including a computer, closedcircuit television, teaching ma-Close to $14 million of the esti-1 chines and micro-text reading fa-mated $18 million necessary to cilities.Stanley E. Gwynn, another as¬sistant director of the library, wasnot quite so vague. He said thatconstruction would begin sometimein the spring. Noted Theologian to Give lecturesby Harold SheridanThe Chicago TheologicalSeminary is sponsoring a seriesof leetures on Dietrich Bon-hoeffer, beginning Wednesday,October 12. ■The lectures will be given byEberhard Bethge, an authority onBonhoeffer and a distinguishedtheologian himself. They will be ti¬tled “Dietrich Bonhoeffer: theMan, the Work, the Time.”Bonhoeffer is probably the mostdiscussed and most influential per¬son among younger theologians.The recent “Is God Dead?” contro¬versy is based on Bonhoeffer’s ideaof religionless Christianity. Bonhoeffer was one of the fewmen who claimed, even before Hit¬ler’s rise to power, that NationalSocialism was an attempt to createhistory without God, but with Hit¬ler as an idol. He was hanged bythe Nazi S.S. Black Guard in April,1945. In the past 25 years, Bonhoef¬fer has achieved distinction as ascholar with many of the most out¬spoken critics of our political andsocial style of life justifying theirstands on Bonhoeffer’s premises.Eberhard Bethge was invited bythe Chicago Theological Seminaryto give a course on non religiousinterpretation. He became a stu¬dent of Bonhoeffer during the 30’s.Since then he has edited many ofBonhoeffer’s major works and hasWhat’s beneath the Klansman’s robes?Rnd #1* »t Dot Films' showing of D. W. Griffith's THE BIRTH OF A NATION. Wednesday, October 12. At * and * pm. In Social Sciences 122, 59th endUniversity. 60 cents. Next question.Ifto Johnson’s Warwith dollars & ballotsThe November elections pose a test ofconfidence in Lyndon Johnson. Every votecast for an opponent of the war in Viet Namis a vote against the belligerent foreign pol¬icy of the Johnson administration and thedeceptions with which it has undermineddemocratic institutions.In Congressional districts around the coun¬try, a grass roots movement for peace is chal¬lenging the destructive consensus of the coldwar; in many of these, electoral victory cannow transform dissent into real politicalpower.Almost alone in Washington, a handful ofSenators and Congressmen has been seekingto put the issues of this war before the people.They must be joined by others on all levelsof government and throughout the country.This will not happen unless Americans caredeeply enough to support “new politics” ean-didates against the “old politics” of militaryintervention abroad and racial and economichajustice at home.The National Conference for New Politicsk assisting iseues-oriented liberals, peace andcivil rights activists and anti-poverty organi¬sations who are striving to win elections. It isa co-operative effort to provide financial, re¬search and human resources to those candi¬dacies and constituencies speaking dearlyfor peace and a full scale assault on Hie rootcauses of poverty. It is now abundantly clearthat the cost of the war has doomed hopesof any meaningful attack on our slums andghettos. We can no longer be satisfied withpoliticians who whisper sentiments for peacein private that they fear to utter in public.In recent months the conference has con¬ tributed large sums of money and services tocandidates in Alabama and Mississippi, NewYork and California and elsewhere across thenation. Particularly disheartening, however,were those close contests in which a fewthousand dollars might have meant the dif¬ference between defeat and victory.This time we want to make sure that pli¬ant supporters of Lyndon Johnson’s war donot go to Congress because the “new politics”of peace is short of funds. Moreover, we areconvinced that growing numbers of Ameri¬cans see the need to continue the efforts ofpolitical organization and education beyondthe November elections, if our country is toturn back to the ways of peace and fulfillthe long delayed promise of equality for allits citizens.This is our opportunity to transform dis¬sent into real political power. Send a con¬tribution today to help elect public officialsof conscience and courage who will not bemanipulated into silence.Please! Make your check payable toNCNP and mail it now.National Conference for New Politic*Julian Bond Simon CasadyNational Co-ChairmenThe Rev. William Sloane Coffin, Jr.Chaplain, Yale UniversityBenjamin Spock, M.D.Pediatrician MwnfcaraMtt* Nrttonal awnl“1 happen to hold tothe point of view that it isn'tgoing to be too longbefore the American people repudiateour war in Southeast Asia.”Senator Wayne MomSanata Ftueign Relations Committee Hearingfebiuaiy 17,1S6« National Conference for New Politics M250 West 57th Street, New York lOOlfI enclose! ... for the ’66 campaigns ofpeace and civil rights candidates,t pledge?.I wish to assist NCN’s fund raising efforts.I wish to volunteer for campaign work. ODNema.Addr«M_2 • C H I C A G © M A R © O N • October 11, 1966 Ilf just recently comf eted a bio-.-;phy to be xitoased in December <this year.Dr. Edward Chandler, executivdirector of The Church Federateof Greater Chicago said, “The Chcago community is extremely fojInnate m having the privilege <hearing Dr. Bethge’s interpretatioof Bonhoeffer because of hiunique background both knowjnthe man and understanding ththought of one of the great mindof our time.”“At the present time,” said Peiry Lefeever, dean of the Seminar}Bonhoeffer’s works are being reaand studied in both West and Fa-Germany. It is interesting to notthat the East German’s interprehim as the prophet of ChristiaMarxism, while in West German},his ph os >phy directly coincidewith that of, perhaps, the SociaDemocrats.”.rh( S< ni nar> - mle," Lefeeu-continued,” is t" g&paint the Unversity community with significan' of th< heoiogical disemsion of our times,”“I recommend Bethge’s series clectures quite strongly to tfcoswho wish to get an understandsof a man who i- behind the movinthought of our time,” Lefeevesaid. *Tickets for the lectures aravailable at the business office othe Chicago Theological SeminaryAll the lectures will be Ini English.UC Organizes RumlColloquia; PolicyTalks QuarterlyThe University has announced the establishment 0The Beardsley Ruml Colloqui;for the purpose of exchangingstudent-faculty opinions on majopublic issues.The Colloquia' will include a series of seminars in which studentin all units of the University atwmembers of the faculty can shar<views on such topics as Viet Namcivil rights, or the poverty problem. *THE COLLOQUIA have benamed in honor of the late Beanley Ruml, who was an alumnusthe University, a professor of edcation, and the first dean of the <vision of the social sciences. Ccceivor of the withholding taRuml influenced both governmetaut industry arid uu- treasurerR. H. Mary uixJ Company, N<York.The seminars will be planned bja faculty committee headed by DGale Johnson, dean of the divisioiof the social sciences and professoiof economics. Members of tinplanning committee will includtprofessors from various fields o.the social sciences Each Individual seminar, however, will b<guided by a separate student-faculty committee of six to eight memhers.JOHNSON HOPES that a colloquium Will be held each quarter ora major policy problem confronting this country. He commentedthat, "While the Colloquia is th<responsibility of the division of thesocial sciences, participants will i*drawn from all parts of the University. It is especially hoped thatthere will be active and continuinginterest among studerits in the Col¬lege.” The colloquia will be open tothe entire University.. The faculty committee will mee1with Dean Johnson tomorrow toformulate more definite plans.Business Debate Ragesby Rob Skeist• Hutchins on Business .“Business has not suceeded inidentifying itself with a liberal out¬look, a professional one, or withpublic service," stated RobertMaynard Hutchins in the currentissue of IBM’s Think magazine.Hutchins, former chancellor ofthe University, discussed studentattitudes in the article “Why TheyDon’t Want Business Careers.”The brightest students study thehumanities," he claimed, becausethey “are more concerned with un¬derstanding the world than withanything else.”BUSINESS, he continued, isviewed by them as somethingwholly selfish, not as an opportuni¬ty for public service.Competition from the universitiesalso prevents many students frombecoming businessmen, Hutchinsasserted. Professors are well paid,have opportunities for independentthought, security through tenure,long vacations, and now even pub¬lic recognition and fame.“The sight of a few businessleaders opposing the selfishness ofbusiness, before the ^preachers,professors, and politicians getaround to doing it, would do moreto attract gifted young people intocorporations than reams of propa¬ganda and batallions of recruit¬ers,’’ he stated. • Fackler on Hutchins“There is a lot of intellectualsnobbery in the Hutchins article,”stated Walter D. Fackler, associatedean of the business school.Fackler told the Maroon that theleading business schools—such asChicago, Harvard, MIT, and Stan¬ford—have no problem findingplenty of very well qualified stu¬dents. They come from many un¬dergraduate backgrounds and finda “challenging academic affair,”he added."MANY PEOPLE look at busi¬ness as vulgar,” thinking it “morenoble to sew up wounds with socialwork than to increase the gross na¬tional product by half a percent,”Fackler acknowledged."But an understanding of eco¬nomic forces can do a lot to raisethe standard of living of every¬one.”Creative business minds helpthrough innovations that raise pro¬fits and create more jobs.AGAIN CRITICAL of Hutchins’article, Fackler said that business¬men actually are involved in to¬day’s social problems. For exam¬ple, the top corporation men inChicago, Fackler noted, have af¬forded enormously able and suc¬cessful tough leadership” ingauranteeing fair employmentpractices, “more than any politi¬cian.”TYPEWRITERSWe rent portable and office typewriters and give you an optionto buy after three months.We maintain complete service for any typewriter whether foreignor domestic.Please secure information from the Typewriter DepartmentTYPEWRITER DEPARTMENTThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SHORELANU HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000 "What's Good forThe Other Side isGood for America"(Continued from Page One)ings are also presented.All "Other Side"Chamber music, chess tables,and madeleines baked fromProust’s personal recipe. Studentmanagers and volunteer waitresses(occasionally doubling as pastrychefs), carrying trays with any¬thing from a cheeseburger to amug of cappucino. A mobius stripfor a trademark (because it’s all“Other Side”). Who crammed allthis into a small building locatedacross from the I.C. tracks at 53rdstreet?OVER TWENTY enthusiastic in¬dividuals, associated with or inter¬ested in UC and headed by Mr.Frederick Siegler, associate pro¬fessor of humanities. These spon¬sors, including people such asWayne C. Booth, dean of the Col¬lege, and Fairfax Cone, chairmanof the board of trustees, have con¬tributed ideas and funds to providean informal meeting place espe¬cially geared to UC -students.Good for America“What’s good for the Other Sideis good for America,” declaredSiegler.OPEN EVERY evening from sixuntil one or two am, the Other Sideprovides free entertainment and anintriguing assortment of food anddrink at prices generally lowerthan the Medici (although there isa minimum charge of 50c-70c).All of these things are availableat the Other Side Coffee House. Oryou can just run in and visit thewashrooms. Hayek: Justice Unassured in Free System(Continued from Page One)The latter system, Hayek assert¬ed, is the only one of the two inwhich social justice can be realiz¬ed. “Socialists have abandoned thespontaneous order for this type ofplanned system,” he noted.“Yet this is not the only kindof order through which the manygoals of human activity can beachieved,” Hayek added.There are three steps throughwhich the conception of justice ina free society is traced:• The free society, with its market economy, is considered aself-generating, spontaneous order.• Individuals in such a societyare free to pursue specific goalson their own. Some achieve them,and some do not.• For those who are unable tosucceed, the society is unjust.Hayek is considered to be theworld’s leading exponent of classi¬cal liberalism.His appearance was jointlysponsored by the Whig Society,SG, and the 75th Anniversary com¬mittee.LEHNHOFF SCHOOLOF MUSIC AND DANCEAnnPunces special classes and courses to coincide with U of Cschool calendar for University student.MUSIC STUDYOutstanding faculty, composed of members from the ChicagoSymphony, Grant Park, and Lyric Opera Orchestras.Private lessons: clarinet, flute, trumpet, recorder, french horn,violin, piano, viola.Class lessons: recorder,- theory and harmony.DANCEEvening classes and late Sat. afternoon modern dance — labanota-tion — composition.BU 8-4347 1438 E. 57th ST.Announcing The Opening ofThe Huchinson Coffee ShopWednesday, October 12, 1966 ’HOURS OF SERVICE:* , *, t Mon. thru FrLSaturdaySunday 7 am — 12 midnight8 am — 11 pm4 am — 8 pmTYPICAL MENU:Breakfast Special - 75*Choice of Juice2 eggs3 strips of baconButtered toastLunch Special - 90*Beef Chop Suey over Toasted NoodlesSpiced FruitVanilla Pudding10c beverage: ; Dinner Special - $1.25■■ i Roast Beef Au Jus ,ijFrench Fried Potatoes |Buttered PeasA J • I < 'jtt 10c Beveraget i i i , . ■ , , ■ > ■ > ( • ■ V •\ ■ ' ■ , •AVAILABLE AT ALL TIMES:Grilled Items, Sedas, Shakes, Suedaes, & Sett DrinksMain Dining Area Available to Coffee Shop Patrons 1October 11, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON » 3mm sisHiiS i»l m mmmClassified Advertisements wmmiPERSONALSHORSE BACK RIDING Any faculty orstudents interested in excellent instruc¬tion on good horses. Telephone 667-8079or MI 3-9866.MORDOR HAS RETURNED 145 BJWriter’s Workshop PL 2-8377temporary Art from the Synagogue”through Oct. 20th Hillel House 5715Woodlawn. Open daytime & eves. Mon-Fri.KAMELOT Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC students.Judaism, Pacifism, & Conscientious Ob¬jection, discussion and workshop Sun¬day, Oct. 16, 2 PM. Hillel House. Watchfor further details.Piano Lessons: by Mrs. Renate Thileni-us at 6842 S. Chappel. 363-0321. Formerstudent of Dr. Rudolph Ganz and ex-perienced in teaching and performing.Grad Stud, want same to share So.Shore apt. 3 blks from IC $60/mo. Call375-6955. Rm-mate wanted immed. $38.75. 5515University. DO 3-0522. The Goof Ball is coming to BJ Sat.night Oct. 15. 8:30 PM.Fern. grad. Stud, needs rm-mate. Call493-4981 after six. The grass is greener on the other sideof the Midway.Yiddish film festival Sat. eve. 7:30 PM."God. Man, & Devil.” Hillel House, 5715Woodlawn. adm. 50c. JOBS OFFEREDGroup worker needed 3-7 PM Mort.-Fri.to teach verbal and reading skills to Ne¬gro children age 2-16. Children’s Center—4608 S. Greenwood. Call Mrs. SueDuncan. BU 8-6003 before 3 PM.Judism, Pacifism, & Conscientious Ob¬jection: Discussion & Workshop RabbiEphraim H. Prombaum, Dr. Paul Lau-ter, Rabbi Max D. Ticktin, & RabbiDaniel I. Leifer. Sunday, Oct. 16, 2 PM.Hillel House, 5715 Woodlawn. Waitresses wanted must be 21. Full orpart time. Apply Smedley’s. 5239 S.Harper.Gordon: DC then NY now Chicago-Act Iscript too tight, start Act II soon. Meetme at rehearsal hall 10 PM Friday. Ij know about the five dollars. L. W aiter-experienced. Must speak Frenchfluently. Part time eve. work-Fridayand Saturday. High, high nightly earn¬ings. 642-6654 Ask for Rene after 6 PM.1 FOLKSINGERS WANTED to perform| at Saturdays Child, Porter (Next toj Chesterton), Ind., an hour from the! campus by car. We have hoots Fri.j nights, professionals Sat. night (8-121 pm). Also sell GUILD Guitars, otherj new and used classics, 12-strings, dul-j cirners, auto-harps, etc. Right near theDunes State Park. Non-performers wel-I come too. Ad space salesman, perm. pos. for localand regional publication. $150 salary &bonus. Average man earn. $14,000. Co.Benefits. 327-5914.Receptionist for two internists in the IHyde Park area. For afts. and Satur¬days. Contact Mrs. Wallace HY 3-8212. EARN FREE TRIP TO EUROPE. Oneof the largest and oldest firms dealingin European car travel seeks campusrepresentative. Must be serious, enter¬prising; preferably married graduatestudent, European travelled. Send re¬sume and reasons for applying.TOURS IN EUROPE INC.555 5th Ave. N Y. 17 (212)PL 1-3550Good typist needed for Dr’s, office to dosecretarial work. M-Th. either part orfull time. 873-4700.FOR SALEUnderwood Eloc. Typewriter, standardofc. model $180. Perf. cond. Call BA 1-2166 eves. UC ext. 4425 days.VW Square Back, sun roof, ’64 23.500miles, all extras. $1,495 or best offer.3 rms. furniture best offer before31. 543-6236. Oct.HEATHKIT-Amplifier. P r e-amplifier-tuner. All three $40. 463-3585 and 521-0460.3 wheel Harley-Davidson motorcycle.$115 or offer. 285-6529.Buster Keaton sporting a beret and a mustachio?Yes. In STEAMBOAT BIU, JR. *» Dot Films tonight. At 7:15 end 9:15. In Social Sciences 122, 59th and University. 60 cents. Next question.national security agencyannounces the1967 SUMMERLANGUAGEINSTITUTE:v.■!«a i Far Eastern andMiddle EasternLanguagesELIGIBILITY: Far Eastern and Middle Eastern language majors(or those possessing equivalent proficiency) who will have com¬pleted three years toward the undergraduate degree by June 1967,and have at least a "B" grade average.W \f:- ASSIGNMENTS: Students will participate in a 10 to 12-weekprogram of classroom training, on-the-job assignments includingarea studies involving translation of texts, and general research.SALARIES: Salaries will be determined by educational leveland experience.| :P TO APPLY: Complete Standard Form 57<v (Application for Federal Employment), whichmay be obtained from your Placement Officeor from any U.S. Post Office, by 21 October1966. Mail both the Form 57 and a copy of yourcollege transcript toi National Security AgencySuite 10, 4435 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W.Washington, D.C. 20016ALL CANDIDATES ARE SUBJECTTO A THOROUGH BACKGROUNDINVESTIGATION AND APHYSICAL EXAMINATIONAPPLICANTS MUST BE U.S. CITIZENSAn equal opportunity employer, M&F4 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 11, 1966 Prof wishes to soil complete Heathkitffmonoral components, Garrard turnta-f?ble, stereo cartridge. Excell cond. $60667-4475.TO RENTw/same $70/mo.4-7086. lge. r>. incl. utils. S. Sh. MU’Nicely furn. rm. for empl. gent or oldermale student. 1 blk from U of C Cam¬pus & I.C, Avail, now. Call 288-0207-9:00 A M. 45118 Dorchester Avenue Newly 3ec;|:furn. & unfurn. apts. for rent, life & 2'ifrms. all w/private bath & kit. Rentals!$115-$130 mo. No children. Call MU .4-11469. :i!U of C STUDENTS-FACULTY TENANT#REFERRAL SERVICE reason, rentals®desir. apts campus bus direct to U oilC. off. $80, 1 bdrm. $100. and up Also#large deluxe apartments. NO 7-78205South Shore Commission a non-profitcommunity organ.Economical nearby, newly dec unfurn.apt. Students or Faculty Quiet bldg IOwned by U. of C. Grad. 2-3 rms. $77 501up incl. free 9as, electricity, parking 3Private bath, elec, refrig . selected ten¬ants. Open housing.See Williams 6045 WoodtawmHospitals, ClinicsHost Lecture Series!More than 100 local physiciansare expected to attend the Univer-Vsity Hospitals and Clinic’s “Fron¬tiers of Medicine” series, whichbegins on Wednesday, October 12,at 2 pm.The series consists of eight after¬noon sessions to be held on the sec*ond Wednesday Y>f each month,from October through May, inroom P-117 of Billings Hospital.The sessions will be conductedlargely by members of the medicalfaculty of UC. They are designed!to give physicians in practice acomprehensive view of recent de¬velopments in various disease!processes, with particular atten¬tion to clinical applications.The course is accredited by theAmerican Academy of GeneralPractice. i ,Ml 3-31133424 S. Kimbarhwe sell the best,and fix the rest^—foreign cor hospitalMEET YOURPERFECTDATE!You too can be amongst thethousands of satisfied adults.Let Dateline Electronics com¬puters programmed for womenages 18 to 45 and men 18 to55. Take the guess work out ofdating.Continuous matching with anew expanded program with en¬rollment fees reduced to $3.00for adults ages 18 to 27, and$5.00 for adults over 27.For quick results send for your question¬naire today. No obligation, strictly con¬fidential. i ,Name ..AddressCity ...DATELINE ELECTRONIC . >f. O. Box 3*9, Chicago, ML*0*45RESEARCH INC. CMFor Add. Info Call 271-3133Night staff:David E. GumperfMaxine MiskaSeth MasiaHarold SheridanLetters to the Editor of the Maroon* - »» ; ui . .The Sands of TimeTO THE EDITOR:(Editor’s note: The Indiana Duneshave been called the greatest naturalwonder in this part of the country.They are located about 45 minutesuiiay from the L/C campus via theCalumet Skyway and Indiana Turn¬pike.For the last ten years, the futureof the Dunes has been in doubt. In¬dustrial giants like Inland Steel andBethlehem Steel would like to devel¬op a deep water harbor in the area.Conservationists, led by Illinois Sena¬tor Paul Douglas have fought for the< reation of a national park.Many of the area townspeople sup¬port the development of the deepwater harbor. The supporters of thenational park include many Chicago¬ans, and many residents of HydePark. . 1 vThe author of this letter is an art¬ist and himself an expatriate Hyde-parker who moved to the Dunes areaIS years ago.)(News Item Sept. 29, 1966: Nostate in the Union has shown lesszest for having a national parkthan Indiana” says Sec. of the In¬terior Stewart L. Udall. “I don’thave much zest for people whodon’t have any zest themselves”.)Until this week we had a chanceto give our fellow-man a dune cov¬ered wonderland so rare that tour¬ists from all over the United Stateswould come to see it.Travel agents in Tokyo, Paris,Rome or London would have rec¬ommended to visitors: “While youare in the American mid-West, besure to see the Indiana Dunes Na¬tional Park.!’It would have partially repaidour neighbors from coast to coastwho have given us Hoosiers theirown mountains, rivers, petrifiedforests, canyons, geysers, painteddeserts and ocean shorelines.It would have been like a Read¬er’s Digest story of a communitywhich acknowledged its responsi¬bilities and shared its rich heritagewith its growing nearby region.It was a great' chance.But according to the Secretaryof the Interior, we blew it.Instead, we let our Chamber ofCommerce speak for us. (“Jobs”was the key word uttered by all.)We let our mayors—27 of them—make fat and florid bombast at theopposition, who was mostly asweet little old lady known by thedirty name of “conservationist”.We let our county commissionersand town officials repeat the notionof jobs, jobs, jobs until no otherword could stand in opposition toit.Nobody said “un-Christian,” forexample. Not even a Minister.It would have been a strongenough word, but Christians arevery careful about being Christianin the face of jobs, jobs, jobs.Nobody said “people”. Not a sin-file politician.^ ’ * *.It would have been a strongword too, but politicians are not in¬terested in The People in the faceof jobs, jobs, jobs.Nobody said “Humanity”, noteven an educator or College Presi¬dent. (One campus Dean evenspoke in favor of jobs, and againstthe Park!)Humanity always backs down inthe presence of Mayors and Cham¬bers of Commerce and Governorsand County Commissioners.So it looks like the local Cham¬bers have won.The social planners from Wash¬ington D.C. have been driven off.The wise University trained ar¬chitects of America’s future who were trying to create an air holefor the Chicago which starts atMilwaukee and goes tightly aroundthe lake to St. Joe will try to findone somewhere else.The growing, compacting, ex¬panding, multiplying society whichwe leave to our children will haveno oasis here.Do not feel badly.We do not have to apologize toour children, because they havenot really been sold out.They can play at the tavernswhen they grow up.They can run the miniturizedshuffleboard games, the pin-ballbaseball machine and the full sizepool table.They can dance to the juke boxtoo.A bright, full, creative life.For we have won.We have won a big tax base andall the jobs we want.We have won an industrial lake-front.We have won a big tax base andminimum standards on tiny lotsrow on row in village after villagefestering endlessly into the farm¬lands and byways of our once-proud Hoosier landscape. (“Whenthe Frost is On the Pumpkin. . .”)We will have all the shoppingcenters we won, too. And all theused car dealers and nineteen centhamburger stands and neon signsand motels and junk yards and tel¬ephone posts and highway intersec¬tions and real-estate billboards.For we have won.We have won the right to existlike Whiting, and East Chicago andIndiaha Harbor, suppurating in ourown kind of petroleum and sulphursmells.We have won the right for con¬tractors to become rich buildinghouses.We have won the right for shop¬keepers to make more money intheir choked stores.We have won the right for de¬velopers to plunder our fields andtake our roads and our air whilethey mark off their thirty-foot lots.Our streets will be widened forthe trucks, and there will be noroom for the kids on bicycles whoflit now like damsel flies at sunsetunder the spreading trees.There will be more asphalt andconcrete smoothed over our earthsthan in any pleasant farmland thisside of the German Ruhr. (“Thisarea will become another RuhrValley” said a city planner fromGary recently.)That is what the Chamber ofCommerce meant by jobs.That is what the mayors meantby jobs.That is what the County Com¬missioners meant by jobs.Our righteousness has driven offhonor and decency for perhaps thevery last time.And we are in the hands of ourlocal politicians, trained at localcolleges, raised on local farms whohave a combined knowledge ofabout twenty-four of the threehundred great ideas that societieslike our; must grapple with today.We are chickens who, havingdriven off the farmer, take on thefox as our legal guardian.Is there not a single citizen, min¬ister, businessman, civic official,politician or professional man whohas the sensibility to stand up andspeak out for mankind?Is there not a professor, planner,educator, dean or University presi¬dent who will speak?Is there not a women’s club, sis¬terhood, sodality, Ruth circle,mothers group, PTA, sorority, aux¬iliary or women voters league whowill acknowledge what is beingtaken away from their children?Is there not a Boy Scout troop orYouth group of Civics Club or bandof University students who willspeak for their own manhood? If there not a newspaper editorcourageous enough to say what canno longer remain unsaid?Will nobody say to our Secretaryof the Interior, “We are withyou”?There is one thing we have real¬ly won.Each of our homes will rise invalue more quickly, now that themoney changers have taken overthe Temple.And when we die our childrenwill come back to Indiana fromwherever they have fled to, to sellit to some hapless victim who muststay and work here.For we have lost our childrenforever.There will be nothing for themhere. Least of all, the Idealism oftheir Fathers, the one thing theycould really stay and respect.There will be no small communi¬ties, no friendliness, no open skies,no country roads, no grandfathersfarm.There will be no Seasons for ourchildren to enjoy, nor will there bethe Harvest. Nor the heritage ofdecency between man and man,nor the solitude we knew, nor theclean air and the dustless livingroom.They willl have lost their brother¬hood, their kinship with mankind,their religion and their souls. Forwe have taken from them theirroots for all time.They will, of course, have jobs.God have pity on us all—if theChamber of Commerce will letHim.DAVID SANDERCHESTERTON, IND.Editorial ObjectionTO THE EDITOR:I feel obliged to object to the edi¬torial in Friday’s Maroon in whichyou charge the administration witharbitrarily rejecting the recom¬mendations of various student-fac¬ulty committees, particularly theMentschikoff Committee on SocialRules. It is possible that recom¬mendations have occasionally beenrejected arbitrarily; it is even pos¬sible that students do not haveenough “power” on this campus.But I feel that the Maroon shouldmake sure of its facts when it at¬tempts to prove a point.The Maroon gives only one ex¬ample of what it considers arbi¬trarily rejected committee recom¬mendations—the administration re¬jection of the formation of an all¬campus social rules committeewith binding power. The editorialstates that the student® had nopart in this decision. This I deny.The facts are as follows:Early last year, Dean of Stu¬dents Warner Wick submitted cop¬ies of the Mentschikoff report toeach house council, and asked thecouncils what they thought of thereport.Not a single College house ap¬proved of the idea that an all-cam-pus social rules committee be es¬tablished. The Henderson HouseCouncil, in fact, passed .1 a resolu¬tion strongly opposing the estab¬lishment of such a committee be¬cause the committee would “con¬tradict‘the principle of self-govern¬ment.’^ »We; ionsidered it absurdthat a |s>mmittee of non-dormitorystudents should make rules for us.We were consulted; we made ourrecommendations, and tliey werefollowed. ,.kSince the time that decision notto form a committee was made,the Inter-House Council has beenformed as a representative bodyadvising the administration onmatters of housing, (and other sub¬ject®). Because it is a new organi¬zation, its possible effectiveness isnot yet known. But it has workedsome improvements (extension ofvisiting hours, improved phone service), and the administrationhas been receptive to its requests.I question the need and the wis¬dom of the Maroon magnifyingwhat problems we have on thiscampus. It is foolish and unneces¬sary to create mistrust of the ad¬ministration over a decision madeby students.PAUL BURSTEINPRESIDENT,HENDERSON HOUSESECRETARY-TREASURER,INTER-HOUSE COUNCILIn ReplyIt should be obvious to Mr. Bur-stein from reading his own letterthat the decision not to form anall-campus committee on socialrules was strictly administrativeand not, “. . . a decision made bystudents.”When Dean Wick submitted cop¬ies of the Mentschikoff report tothe house councils, he was askingfor what he got - advice. It so hap¬pened that in this particular in¬stance, that advice was prettymuch in keeping with what the ad¬ministration was going to do any¬way, but it’s absurd to call thisstudent participation in any realsense.Meaningful student participationconsists of a situation where thehouse councils, an all campus so¬cial rules committee, or any otherrelevant and representative stu¬dent organization can send out acopy of a report to Dean Wick, askfor his recommendations andsuggestions, and then, if they like,disregard those suggestions andmake their own decision.Wick couldn’t have approved aplan for a rule-making studentcommittee with binding power nomatter what the house councils rec¬ommended. Wick has never madeany secret of his opposition tomeaningful student participationand we can see no reason to be¬lieve that cogent recommendationsfrom the house councils wouldmake him change his mind.THE EDITORSports at UC?TO THE EDITOR:I am writing in reply to Mr. SydUnger’s letter which appeared inthe Maroon of Friday last. While Ido not disagree with this premisethat there is a place for a footballteam at Chicago—I enjoy the gameand miss being able to attend in¬tercollegiate games as I once didon the East Coast—I feel obliged topoint out to him the actual reasonsfor which the University Board ofTrustees voted on 21 December1939 to remove Chicago from inter¬collegiate competition in football.President Hutchins was, of course, interested in improvingeducation at the University; thisshould be a major goal of all uni¬versity presidents. Football wasnot, however, a “scape goat,” touse Mr. Unger’s terminology, nordid President Hutchins specificallyrelate “football to the degeneracyof scholastic standards.” This ex¬planation was largely produced expost facto by those who eithermade their living from the gameor who simply closed their eyes tothe abuses then current. This ex¬planation, unfortunately, has beenpopularized to the point where it isaccepted as fact by a large seg¬ment of the American populace.The Board of Trustees reacted toa situation which had existed andwhich had been growing worse forsome time, namely the increasingprofessionalization of college foot¬ball in the United States. Early inDecember 1939 the Richmond (Vir¬ginia) Times Dispatch asked:“Will President Hutchins succumbto the uproar, as so many collegepresidents have done before him,or will he fearlessly announce thatif Chicago has to go out and buyfootball material on the hoof, asnearly everybody else is doing, itwould be better not to have anyteam at all?” Henry McLemore, awell-known United Press sports col¬umnist of the day, reacted in hisown characteristic way. He pickeda 1939 All-American team like noother: Chicago. To McLemore, theChicago football team was the onlyone which qualified for Ihe honor.All its members were volunteerswho had signed up for the teamonly after arriving on campus; noscouting for their football talentshad been done. In his words,“There (wasn’t) a single hiredhand on this eleven.”From the day it opened its doorsin 1892 the University operatedwith the idea that athletics of ev¬ery sort should be offered to everystudent. This is still its guidingprincipal, and is manifested todayin the fine intramural program inoperation here. A truly amateurspirit still rules the Midway as itdid in the golden days of Amos Al¬onzo Stagg who, to use Bob Consi-dine’s phrase, was to the end of hisdays an “unreconstructed ama¬teur.” No one loved football morethan the late Coach Stagg, and noone more deplored the encroach¬ment of professional characteris¬tics on what in college should be astrictly amateur game While sad¬dened by the passing of a Maroonteam which had once known suchgreat amateurs as Walter Ecker-sall, Mark Catlin, Hugo Bezdek,Paul Des Jardien, and many, manymore, he nevertheless understoodthe reasons for the Board’s deci¬sion. And this is all that is asked ofMr. Unger.CHARLES A. EDWARDSChicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editor David L. AikenAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinovvitzDavid H. RichterDinah EsralJoan Phillips*.1 Jeffrey KutaJ Michael SeidrtianFeatunj^ Editor Mark RosinBook Reyiew Editors ... Edward Hearne'‘ -■It - * Bryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyPolitical Editor John BremnerEditor Emeritus -Daniel HertzbergEditorial Staff—John Beal, Robert Hertz, Kenneth Simonson,Eleanor Kaplan, Slade Lander, Gary Christiana, Paul Burstein,Ellis Levin, Richard Rabens, Judy Schavrien.,HuNews Editors* ! \ V ** ? i • iOctober 11, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor.SECRETARIESTYPISTSHusband in School?? If you seekfull-time employment, good sal¬ary, benefits, and merchandisediscounts, call: 467-2158MONTGOMERY WARDCorporate Offices619 W. Chicago Ave.Am Equal OpportunityItplayarTAhSAM-Y&NCMIMBt * AMIIICAMRISTAUItAMTCAirrourm anbAMERICAN DISHESOffN DAILYVI AM. to 9m MLOftOBftS TO TARS OUTlilt IMS ABM*. MU 4-10026 • CHICAGO MAROON • Octobor II, 1966 Join TWA*$50/50 Club and getup to 50% off regularJet Coach fare*mtIt’s easy. If you’re under 22,just fill out an application, buythe $3.00 ID card—and you’re onyour way to any TWA city in theU.S. for half fare. Your 50/50 Clubfare is good most all year*, whenyou fly on a standby basis,"To get your card, call your travelagent, or your nearest TWA office!We’re your kind of airline*MmitmmwHi*WorhfwldmNov. 21 an* 27,t>ic. 15 ttuvMJt* 444Hutchins Abolished Football, Now Oversees Republic Fund{Continued from Page One)Asserting that football, with fra¬ternities and character building,w ere “attractive nuisances,”Hutchins abolished football in 1040.la 1947, he ordered fraternities eli¬minated, arguing that they, like football, could not be employed lorintellectual development.Hutchins was often criticized forvirtually ignoring the area sur¬rounding the University. Duringhis administration, Hyde Park-Ken wood degenerated to the pointPHOTONow is the time to take impressive color pictures of the campusOn our display counter you will find many different kinds ofcolor film.Take a look at our fine line of AM-FM radios.PHOTOGRAPHIC DEPT.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. that later the University had tospend $30 million clearing slumbuildings.Finally. Hutchins left the Univer¬sity in 1951 to become an associatedirector of the Ford Foundation,and later the head of the Fund forthe Republic. The Fund’s main ac¬tivity evolves from the Center forthe Study of Democratic Institu¬tions, of Santa Barbara, California.There important thinkers discuss,argue about, and occasionallyagree on topics current in American life.The Fund, which Hutchins called“a Fund for the American Dream. . .a fund for the law of contradic¬tion,” has published studies onsuch topics as mass media, Com¬munism in American life, the ef¬fects of nuclear war, and automa¬tion. The last time I saw MarthaSchism me perform, she appearedin a Hillel benefit at Ida Noyes ina program of folk songs and Weill-Brecht. materia. The time beforethat, she was offering an all KurtWeill program at McCormickPlace. My impression from thesetwo performances was that MissSehlamme is a sensitive artist whounderstood the songs she per¬formed and who truly enjoyedcommunicating with an audience.After seeing her Friday night atHarper Theater, my appreciationof her singing and acting abilitieshas even increased.MISS SCHLAMME'S selection ofmaterial was superb. Building onthe Weill-Brecht and folksong base,she adds new songs of this typeand a few specialty and topicalnumbers.Interlaced between the songs, tying the program together, are asurprisingly varied series ofpoems, including works by DorothyParker, e.e. Cummings and DylanThomas. Her delivery of these iseffective in its straightforwardnessand its emotional power.Abraham Stokman must also becongratulated for bis beautiful ac¬companiment. His assistance atthe piano provides the perfectcomplement to Miss Schlamme’srecital.Martha Sehlamme will be ap¬pearing at Harper Theater only un¬til Sunday and the theater is offer¬ing a fifty percent student dis¬count. The show is a bargain atany price.BARRY SALINS• •ftMl;.MU to*, -touactUmQ frnmQ HUr Cofer ia-te CCU Holds LectureViewing UC ThruEyes of WoodlawnThe new “Conference on the Cityand the University" (CCU), willhold the first of a series of lecturesand discussions investigating theUniversity's relationship to thecommunity this Thursday, at 8:00pm in the Reynold’s Club.Thursday's panel will depict VCthrough the eyes of Woodlawn. Onthe panel will be; Leon Finney, ex-ecutive director of the Woodlawnorganization (TWO) Mrs. RosieStanley, a resident of Woodlawnand the president of the StudentWoodlawn Area Project (SWAP)mother’s group, and Mrs. LadleLieberman, assistant dean of theSchool of Social Service Adminis¬tration (SSA >.CCU is being sponsored by as¬sistant professor of sociology Richard Flacks, The group has been or¬ganized primarily as a medium forinquiry and discussion, but alsoplans to organize student action.Music ReviewCoffee-Clotchers Like Schumann and TchaikowskyImagine, the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra programming Tchaikov¬sky and Schoenberg on the sameconcert. Gad!! The prospects areenough to make either composerroll over in his respective grave:Schoenberg, the arch-modernist,inventing a totally new harmonicsystem to fit his own specifica¬tions, and Tchaikovsky, the arch¬romantic, dipping his pen intomoonlight and wafting his luscious¬ly tonal melodies through the per¬fumed air.YET THE comparison is notthat completely out of line. Schoen¬berg’s Five Pieces for Orchestra,op. 16, was written a scant fifteenyears after the death of Tchai¬kovsky, and in its own peculiarlyamphibian harmonic idiom, rep¬resents as much of Schoenberg’sintensely personal emotional driveas does any Tchaikovsky scoremirror its creator’^ psyche.I call the Five Pieces amphibianbecause, in a sense, they are a compromise between the Wagneri¬an chromaticism that Schoenberghad forever renounced and hisultimate development of atonalityinto the twelve-tone techniquesome years later. As such, theFiv« Pieces while not strictly ton¬al, can’t really be classified ashard-core atonality either. There’sjust too much nineteenth centuryVienna in the muoic to stamp it“new wave”.Yet, it was certainly too muchfor the North Shore matrons whomarch to Symphony every Fridayafternoon for their sugar-coatedteaspoonfuls of culture. “Goodness,how could such a nice man as Mr.Martinon play such wicked andvile music?” Well, dearies, I’ll goalong with you to the extent thatMaestro Jean Martinon is not quiteat home where this repertoire isconcerned. But, even so, he stillmade some fine points for thescore. However, it didn’t reallymake much difference because, as it was Schoenberg he was playing,he lost his audience almost beforehe raised his baton.NEVER FEAR, the TchaikovskyPiano Concerto No. 1 which fol¬lowed, brought out the FlatbushFlappers in force. Don't let mysympathies be misconstrued, how¬ever. As previous readers have in¬deed surmised, I’m far morepleasantly disposed to the goldensonorities of my namesake, for allhis repetition and excessive pad¬ding, than anything the good pro¬fessor from Vienna ever turnedout.And, deep down, the B-flat minorConcerto is probably as fine a vir¬tuoso vehicle as the nineteenthcentury ha>s produced. It ran intotrouble for some twenty or soyears, when it was pummelled asthe concerto by every talentlesshack whose handspan stretched atenth. Who could resist the concer¬to with the built-in “swan-dive intothe keyboard”? No wonder musi¬ cians got sick of it.BUT, THIS is another era, with anew generation of pianists’, andJohn Browning’s emphasis of thelyric elements of the score, alongwith his beautifully fluid phrasingmade for a marvellous reappraisalof the old war-horse. I’ll comeright out and admit it, though, Isort of miss the molto rubato ap¬proach to the score. Browning’sphrasing was flawless and note-perfect, but it would be difficult tcfind a performance with less idi¬omatic flair or kinetic excitement.Perhaps he was afraid of spoilingthe flow by taking undue interpre¬tive chances. But, even so, it wasstill a beautiful expository run-through; just the kind of playing,in fact, that makes me sorry that Ididn’t practice the piano the way Iwas supposed to when I was little.All that came previously paledbefore Martinon’s powerful state¬ment of Schumann’s Symphony no.2. Martinon has a real feeling for the subjective works of the middle-period German Romantics aDd isnot afraid to experiment, takingthe repeats throughout and addingseveral retouchings of his own.His performance sent everyone,even the coffee-clotchers down¬stairs, home with a good taste intheir mouths.Ed ChikofskyUC Prof, to SpeakTo Boston AlumniPeter Meyer, professor of phys¬ics and in the Enrico Fermi Insti¬tute for Nuclear Studies at UC willspeak to Boston area alumni of theUniversity and their guests onWednesday, October 19.Meyer will speak on “Space Re¬search and the University.” Histalk will follow a reception at 7p.m. in room 436 of the Statler-Hil-ton Hotel in Park Square.KARATE8-9 PM. 9:15-10:15 PMMondays & WednesdaysIDA NOYES HALLCUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGIt 'KEY PUNCHINGC*U MRS. BUXT AT 782-2118FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT * ASSOCIATES. INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. 60602THE MONDAY LECTURESFourth Series HLaw School Auditorium S:00 P.M. itOCT. 17 - RALPH W. GIRARDThe University of California, IrvineOCT. 31 • BIRNARD COHENHarvard University ..NOV. 14 - RENE DUBOS; , The Rockerfeller UniversityNOV. 21 - WILLIAM H. McNEILLThe University of ChicagoTICKETS: University of Chicago Students and Faculty can obtainseries tickets without charge. Phone 3137 or pick up ticketsat Center for Continuing Education, Room 121.General Public series admission, $B.00.Phene Financial 4-4300. GMThis is Camara,buckets and all.(jCemerO Sport Coupe With style trim group you can add.All standard—Strato-bucket seats. Carpeting:Rrch vinyl upholstery. A 140-hp Six or abig-car V8 (210 hp!), depending on model.New safety features like dual master cylinderbrake system with warning light.Whatever bIsb you want, ask for!Camaro Rally Sport—Pull the'twitch "on” and headlights appear"at each end of the full-width'grille. You also get special exteriortrim and RS emblems. Then orderthe Custom Interior, somethingIplse again./, . « t i j n»i » iCommand PerformanceCamaraDm Chevrolet you** km watting torEverything new that could happen... happened/ Now at your Chevrolet dealer's!Camaro SS 350—Besides Camaro^)biggest V8 (295 hp!). SS 350comes with a scoop-styled hood*bold striping around grille, big.fat red stripe tires. Add Rally Sport)equipment too. Camara's your,Lidea of a car!October 11, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Shapiro Collection Provides OriginalsIda Noyes Hall this week, and dis-. tirely owned by the University,tribution will take place beginning “Mr. Shapiro keeps adding to8:30 a.m. Friday, October 12. it,” Haydon said. “He hates to seeThere is only a 75 cent insurance anyone disappointed and will occa-charge per quarter for taking out sionally go through his closets andone of the works. frame things he hadn’t had framed“It’s really an impressive collec-1 before and add them to the circu-tion,” commented Skip Landt. di- j lating collection,rector of student activities. “Last j Eight Tear Historyyear the people who were first in “Art to Live With” was startedline to choose an item were out eight years ago when Shapiro pro-there at 4:30 in the morning with vided 50 to 60 works and personallytheir blankets. By the time the supervised their distribution. Sincedoors opened at 8:30 there were then he has added to the collectionabout 130 people in line.” works which he said he “outgrew.”Chicagoan, and Masters S**!*™ ‘!0t?",fhat.l. StU1f°UThe collection includes works by might be likely tei follow the patternChicago artists such as Francis; «* development he experienced inTHE COLLECTION is on view at Chapin, J"3 and^vmour* Rosof I moved from an interest in art thatMargSa"°e" SSTSl h T Pleasurable to a great-by Anita Grossmanand Seth Masia“The Shapiro collection is areal breakthrough in—I hateto use as stuffy a word as ‘ed¬ucator!—but in the years be¬fore it was given over to circulationstudents had to be satisfied withreproductions,” remarked an en¬thused Harold Haydon, director ofthe Midway Studios.The “Art to Live With” collec¬tion, assembled by Joseph R. Sha¬piro. is a collection of over 400 ori¬ginal prints, drawings, and paint¬ings. for quarterly distribution tostudents, staff, and faculty. Conference to Submit Challenging Idea“The Anglo-American contentionon Rhodesia can be understoodonly as a verbat cover tor a plainand simple racist position. Messrs.Wilson and Goldberg object tolan Smith’s government not be¬cause It is minority but becauseit is white. It the Rhodesiangovernment were an unmixed dic¬tatorship, and were at the sametime black, Goldberg and Wilsonwould recognize skn Vrntt'"anH Arn er involvement in works that dealgall; Miro; Rouault, Ernst and Arp metaphysical,are represented by original etch HE SA|D he ^ hopes ^ the• mgs and lithograp s. ; program may arouse the collecting“Rouault is particularly well rep- instinct in some students,resented." Haydon said. “We According to Haydon, “We havehave the entire Miserere series, j a unique opportunity in this collec-which is very rare and will in- ^on ijve with real, live art, rath-it quicker thanyou can say‘uhuru.’ ” J For a free copy of thocurrent issue of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writ*to Dept. CP-3, 150 E.35 St., N. r. 16, N. Y. crease tremendously in value. TheGoyas are nice, too The collectionincludes six or seven pieces fromthe Disasters of War.THE COLLECTION is graduallybeing transferred to Universityownership as an outright gift byShapiro and will eventually be en-B0B NELSON MOTORSImport ContraTriumph9m AaMMtrav 1-49016052 So. Cottage Grove PIPESOur Tobacco Department fea¬tures a selected assortment ofpipes, tobaccos and cigarettesboth imported and domesticbrands.For a completely new concept inpipe smoking, try "The Pipe".University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Ave.NOW OPEN FOR LUNCHDAILY AT 11 AMFOR DISCRIMINATING TASTE IN FOOD & PLEASANT ATMOSPHEREMEDICI GALLERY & COFFEE HOUSEis"1459 E. 57th ST.as mmmsgk -(CHICAGO'S OLDEST COFFEE HOUSE)#lfif IS"ill§® "SI"""SHIS University Theatrei"i"ii§S® : Sf TRYOUTSBrendan Behan'sThe HostageCast of Twenty Singers * Actors * DancersDIRECTED BY JAMES O'REILLY•».v■ u TUESDAY, WEDNESDAYOCTOBER 11, 12-7:30 PMV 7 *4. ^ ,REYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE Ext 35818 • C H 1C A GO MAROON. , October 11,1966 er than reproductions. That is ex¬citing.’ (Continued from Page One)still more raucous acclaim.”To Strengthen CommunicationsStern therefore sees the confer¬ence as a means to strengthen thecommunication of the artists andcritics, to improve the critical en¬vironment which is but indirectlyof the artist’s own making, but inwhich the artist must create."MY HOPE," Stern said, “isthat the conference will mark, inpart, a reversal of the tendency toevaluate works of art by their can-vertability into notions or by theirthermomentric values, i.e. , theirvalue as reports from different so¬cial or moral precincts.”Participating with Stern in thefiction colloquia will be novelistsWright Morris, Reynolds Price andAnthony West, and critics WayneBooth, Leon Edel, Granville Hicks,Hoke Norris, and Theodore Solo-taroff. Besides general topics, thisgroup will discuss Stern’s novelStitch, Morris’s One Day, andPrice’s A Generous Man."“I hope that the artist partic- lenge the trained critics to produless tendentious conversions of tart works into social science, Iit<ary history, or subtle self-indigences,” Stern added emphatic;ly-STERN ALSO voiced his conct*that more and more a cade mirely on the testimony and supfwof journalists whose creationconversational topics is more pviously excusable. He notices wiregret that the alliance becommore viciously symbiotic andmarked by self-assertiveness i<rancor.“The alliance works today undvarious flags,” Stern said, “bmost notably under NoveltThousands of good literary soldiedie needlessly under these colorsResponsive ArtistsStern feels that “the men wiare coming are exceptionally rsponsible and responsive artists arcritics who may well find such toics congenial to their furies. \\hope they will help air out tlcritical house.”ipants will be able to formulate. „ .. .. fSEsome conceptions about their own',Kennelh ,N°"oU■ ass“,and other work which will chat- ",manlC lansaages- an? ,?Eaastudents in the Division of HumanCalendar of Events ties, who is chairman of the dram! colloquia which includes partim t-jhw&s-yTuesday, October 11LECTURE: (75th Anniv.) (Center forPolicy Study), Law School Courtroom,4 30 pm Charles Luoet, French Am¬bassador to the United States.MOTION PICTURE: IMAGES OFAMERICA (Documentary Film Group),Social Science 122. 7:15 and 9; 15 pmSteamboat Bill, Junior, Buster Keaton. CARILLON RECITAL: RockefellerMemorial Chapel, 5:00 pm Daniel Rob¬ins; University Carillormeur.MOTION PICTURE: WAR! (Documen¬tary Film Group). Social Science 122,6.00 and 9:00 pm The Birth of a Na-tino, D. W. Griffith.i FOLK DANCING: Country Dance SocieFOLK DANCING: International HouseAssembly Hall. 8:00 pmWednesday, October 12VARSITY SOCCER GAME: StaggField. 3:00 pm Rockford College.DEDICATION OF LAIRD BELL QUAD¬RANGLE: (75th Anniv). Law SchoolQuadrangle, 3:30 pm Principal speak¬er: Robert M. Hutchins, former Chan¬cellor of the University.FOLK-LORE SOCIETY: meeting (or¬ganizational). New students welcome!Wednesday Night 7:30 I.N. ty, Ida Noyes Hall, 8:00 pm ipants William Gibson, pi iwright, directors Alan Schneidi*j* j John Reich and Robert Sickiti ;-and critics Robert W. Corn: uWilliam Leonard, Albert Beimand Studs Terkel, anticipates nucdiscussion about several questuwhich he feels are unique to tldramatic arts. . j“DRAMA HAS a particular!close relationship with criticismis a highly interpretative art anBALLROOM DANCE INSTRUCTION: . ■ . . . „International House Assembly Hall, 8:00 1 the public IS at least one Or wpm | steps removed from the dramatisseminar: religion and the \ The play comes through the dire;present STATE of poetry: (New tor, through the actors, through tf)frJseSTHS^i,sii.s^Si.S!rsJ2: «••><*10sor, New Collegiate Division, J explained. “What is the work"art in drama? This is one of tiiLECTURE: “Feeling and Experienc- . .ing”, Eugene Gendlin, INH, East: interesting questions I hope will !'Lounge. 7:30 pm sponsored by VISA , brought up.” he added.NEW BOOKS BY CAMPUS AUTHORSPioneers in Missouri — by R. Pierce BeaverErnest Hemingway—A Critical Essay by Nathan A. Scott, Jr.Socrates & Aristophanes — by Leo StraussGENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENT $6.95$ .85$8.50The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. Peculiar RelationNorthcott’s concern with the putlie is evident in every statemenHe looks forward to the conferenefor its own sake, as a meatL jstimulating public interest in drJma. He thinks that this is e-.pidally important in Chicago wherdrama is not exceptionally welrepresented.FOREIGN SERVICEcareers ?#.i r iMR. ROBERT HENNEMEYER, Foreign Service Officer will be on campus October 13to discuss career opportunities Group meetings will be held at 10 A.M. & Iii; ■ i2 P.M. in the Office of Career Counseling and Placement, Reynolds Club, Rm. 200. It IILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANYWE'RE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE . . .• NOW, private telephone service IS available to University of Chicago studentsliving in dormitories and university apartments.• The University ARRANGED facilities within each building to permit IllinoisBell Telephone Company to connect a one-party line to each dormitory room.You can enjoy the convenience and privacy of an individual line for a basicmonthly charge of $5.60 (plus tax) and a connection charge of $6.00. The basicrate includes 80 units which can be used for calls within Chicago and to thesuburbs in the Metropolitan calling area, within Illinois. 1|m"" "TO ORDER YOUR PHONECALL 734-9100 * 7 - ■