Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary YearThe University of Chicago Friday, October 14, 1966Prof Receives Award for Cancer Research WEEKENDEDITIONUC's Huggins Wins Nobel Prizeby David E. GumpertHutchins Opens Law QuadWith Laird Bell Eulogyby Jeffrey KutaRobert Maynard Hutchins, still handsome but looking agreat deal older than he must have looked in 1929 when hetook over the chancellorship of the University, with a failingvoice eulogized Laird Bell yesterday.He spoke at the dedication of theLaw School quadrangle, namedafter the late board of Trusteeschairman Bell."IT HAS BEEN said that all theprogress in the world has beenmade by one-eyed men,” he stated.‘‘But we have learned of late totake a somewhat skeptical view ofprogress.‘‘The products and by-products his favorite lines was that he al¬ways agreed with the last man hetalked to. This was not true, as Ioften found out when I was the lastman.”Tradition of IndependenceHutchins called David Reisman’scharacterization of the University’s‘‘gay arrogance” incorrect. “Ishould like to think we were in- jof technology, with which progress j dependent, rather than arrogant,has been identified, carry their This was the tradition of theown doubts with them. ; Board.”‘‘The mushroom cloud over Hir- ‘‘The University was independentoshima and the bank of smog over of the community and its whims,”Los Angeles suggest it might be he asserted. ‘‘The faculty was in¬better if those who make technical dependent of the trustees. So im-decisions were as resolutely portant a matter as the relocationstereoscopic as Laird Bell. Since of the bachelor’s degree was re-he saw life steadily and saw it ported to the Board for its infor-whole, it came to be his function to j mation, not for action.”“correct astigmatism and to restore! He noted Bell’s address to thesight to the half-blind.”Helped Others to SeeHutchins pointed out that Bellcould help other people becomestereoscopic even when their view Citizen’s Board in 1953, in whichhe referred to the University as a“community of scholars.”"IT IS NOT easy for business¬men to .accept the idea that a uni-was clouded by emotion and their versity i', unlike a business, not anvested interests.He cited the controversy over theold Rush Medical College, whoseassociation with the University hecalled “one of Mr. Harper’s fewmistakes.” Bell ended the argu¬ment, he noted, “singlehanded andovernight.”"LAIRD CARED not at all forappearance. I never heard him re¬fer with anything but scorn to thepublic relations of the University.He was convinced that if the Uni¬versity was good it would eventual¬ly look good. If it looked good andwas not, it was not worth botheringabout.”Comparing Bell to Socrates,Hutchins noted that the late trusteeoften asked questions that hadgreat consequences. “But one of (Continued on Page Nine)Robert Maynard Hutchins, formerchancellor—aging but handsome.- m m mm \ m mm mmm % m Lucet told a law school audi¬ence Tuesday evening that,“A unified Europe is France’sultimate goal.” He did not, howev¬er, specify the means by whichEuropean unification could be ac¬complished.Discussing the French role inEurope, Lucet -said, “The truth isthat France, for the first timesince the war and postwar years,can now have her own policy.”LUCET SAID that “France haissince 1958, accepted the principleand realities of decolonization.” Heasserted that France respects self-determination as a golden rule, nomatter what form of governmentthe former colonies choose, and nomatter who they choose to leadthem.Lucet stated that this respect forindependence does not signify in¬difference or lack of interest. “Asyou know,” he said, “France makesa very large contribution - morethan 1.8% of her gross nationalproduct - to aid to the less devel¬oped countries and first, a-s is onlynatural, to those in Africa and Asiathat were once her dependencies.”On the subject of Franco-Ameri-can relations, Lucet said, “Francewants to remain a friend and allyof the United States.” Both coun- The University’s 75th anniversary year was unexpectedly climaxed yesterday with the an¬nouncement that Dr. Charles B. Huggins, director of the Ben May Laboratory for Cancer Re¬search, will share the 1966 Nobel Prize in medicine.Huggins has been awarded the prize on the basis of research he has done on the influence ofhormones on different kinds ofcancer. He shares the prize withDr. Peyton Rous of the RockefellerInstitute of New York.HUGGINS CAME to UC in 1927as a member of the original facul¬ty of the new medical school. “Un¬til this morning I have lived acompletely uneventful life,” hesaid at a Thursday morning pressconference.Administratiors a Help“This (UC) has been a perfectplace to do my work,” he saidfurther. “No one comes around.The administrators leave mealone, and this is good.”The research for which Hugginsis being awarded the Nobel Prizeconcerns what he calls the “Tu¬mor-host balance” principle. Itconsists of three propositions thathe says are very simple because“nature works very simply, in¬deed.” They are as follows:• Certain cancer cells differcompletely from the cells whichthey originally arose. This hasbeen proven through the use ofhormones.• Certain cancer cells die whenhormones are removed.• And conversely, excessiveamounts of hormones can kill cer¬tain cancer cells.THE BULK of his research hasbeen with cancer of the prostrateand mammary cancer. He has ap¬plied his findings on the affects ofdifferent hormones to controllingthese two cancers.Multiple CuresHuggins emphasized, however,that the hormone treatment cannotbe used for all cancers. He said,rather, it is a method of treatingcancer much like X-rays.When asked whether there canbe a general cure for all cancers,Huggins said, “I think there willbe multiple cures for cancer in thiscentury.” This, he said, is com¬parable to the fact that there aredifferent cures for different dis¬eases.HUGGINS EXPRESSED concernthat not enough young people aregoing into his field, experimentalmedicine. “. . .this is a vitalarea. . .This is where the cure forcancer must come,” he said.In expressing his reaction to thehonor, he observed, “It’s like thetime your house burned down—it’sexciting.”(Continued on Page Nine)Dr. Charles B. Huggins, who will share the 1966 Nobel Prize inMedicine.Lucet Says A United EuropeIs Frances Ultimate CoalFrench Ambassador Charles tries, he said, share a search for Britain, China, and France.peace and happiness. • Lucet stated that France is“There is a law of the jungle “quite definitely” against any formamong nations that is based on of nuclear proliferation.cynicism. We do not believe inthat,” declared the Ambassador.“France is the country of the Cru¬sades, Humanism, the Renais¬sance, the Rights of Many, and So¬cial Legislation. We must not, how-e v e r, delude ourselves withwords,” he added.UN PositionLucet called the UN a “great in¬ternational body.” France was oneof the charter members and con¬tinues to uphold the principles of aworld organization. Lucet added,however, “no expenditure may becharged to a member nation unlessshe agrees to it.”Lucet attempted to clarifyFrance’s disarmament stand. “Wehave been a leader in disarma¬ment from the very beginning,” hesaid, “but we will not participatein disarmament talks in Genevabecause they get bogged down.”He cited the conditions underwhich he said France might partic¬ipate in such talks. These were:• The admittance of China toany talks concerning nuclear weap¬ons, and• The participation of those na¬tions who have the bomb—theUnited States, the USSR, Great "FRANCE HAS emerged pros¬perous due to her own efforts—forexample, the Common Market and(Continued on Page Twelve)MeetingThere is a meeting at 4pm this afternoon forMaroon staff members inthe Maroon office. It isvery important that allstaff members attend.Haverford Refuses To Form Class RankHAVERFORD, Pa, Haver¬ford College, one of the mostprestiguous men’s colleges inthe country, will no longersupply class ranks for use by theSelective Service.HUGH BORTON, president ofthe college, announced Wednesdaythat Haverford’s year-old policy ofranking students would not be con¬tinued this fall. Previous to the 1965 66 academicyear, Haverford had not rankedstudents. Haverford’s decision toform a class rank was made incompliance to the Selective Serv¬ice’s request for academic criteriafor the draft.ACCORDING TO Burt Wallace,college vice-president, the decisionto end the rank was made because“we feared the system was forcingstudents to sidestep courses ortransfer to easier schools.”*« Keeping the Maroon Lean and Hungry■ Swiff'S A History of Heresythe Unitarian church: origins and developmentUnitarians are agnostics. They genuinely feel that the existence of God canneither be proven nor disproven.Some Unitarians are theists. Yet, although these Unitarians affirm a belief in God, they , ■ 'vv:x'. some unuarians are rneisrs. reT, airnougn rnese uniTarians anirm a Denet in boa, tneydiffer considerably among themselves in their interpretations of what the word "God"r might imply. ‘ ,Some Unitarians are atheists. They hold firmly to the conviction that the concept ofGod, however defined, is untenable.- ' ; - mHow can individuals with such diverse beliefs join together in one church? What DOUnitarians believe? This series of sermons will outline Unitarianism's historical roots ;in Judaism and Christianity. The,minister will discuss basic religious attitudes that :Unitarians feel make sense to modern man.■ October 16c the Gospels to the Creeds•, : ■ - - ,- v*-.Rebellion Against the CreedsUnitarianism in Poland and Transylvania October 23Unitarianism in England and AmericaUnitarianism TodaySTUDENT RELIGIOUS LIBERALS MEET ON SUNDAY EVENINGS at 7:30V - p,<'-v ' , K( *V» October 30November 6November 13Church Parlors—Entrance at 1174 E. 57th StreetHENRY WIENHOFF SRL Chairman—telephone 684-8480SPEAKER THIS SUNDAY:Mr. Hunter LeggetMinister of the Beverley Unitarian Churchand former associate of Timothy Leary."The LSD Experience, Religious or Otherwise."First Unitarian ChurchJack A. Kent, ministerFAirfax 4-4100Sunday Mornings at 11 o'clockm .57th and Woodlawn Special offer to students, fac¬ulty, and employees of theUniversity of Chicago.The original gourmet cheks foronly $6.00.Cultural events, restaurants andtheatres at two for the price ofone. Complete information in thegourmet chek books now beinghandled at the gift counter.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.The Other ArrivesNew BooksJust ReceivedThe Epic of New York City 3by Edward Robt. Ellis $9.95Modern American Usage-.A Guideby Wilson FollettThe Doctorsby Martin L. Gross $7.50$6.95Return to the Fairy Hillby Naomi Mitchison $5.50General Book Department $The University of ’Chicago Bookstore 15802 ELLIS AVE.SAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE 1924PICKUP A DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200The Other, a new campus newspaper arising, “not exactlyout of a whirlwind of popular demand” made its first appear¬ance Thursday.The foundling, which is being nourished with Student Gov-'eminent funds, hopes to keep theMaroon from getting sleek and fat, but will itself be content with a.not.;,,very fat 4 pages a week. fjfllThursday’s issue focusedcampus news, with generous co\erage given to two different ac¬counts of the same speech byFriedrich Hayek and the text ofthe address by Robert MaynardHutchins at the dedication cere¬monies for the Laird Bell Quad-,;rangle.Future issues of The Other willprobably contain letters, and news!features. ■ |;The editor of The Other is ToinfjjBlau, a graduate student in politi-cal science. He is being assisted by *Joan Phillips, who is the The Oth- 3•r's associate editor. Miss Phillips Mis a Maroon assistant to the editor.Plans call for weekly publication®for at least the rest of the quarter-mCALENDAR OF EVENTSFriday, October 14PARTY! for declared psychology ma-!jors at 5455 Hyde Park Boulevard, 8pm, Sign up at Green 108. \LECTURE: 'Norway’s Role in WorldAffairs”. , Soc. Sci. 122, 4:15 pm. Spon-Isored by the Dept, of Germanic Lan¬guages. IDOC FILMS: 'The End of St. Peters¬burg” & “Olympia Diving Sequence”,Soc. Sci. 122. 7:15 pm and 9:15 pm.RECITAL: Balsam Kroll Heifetz Trio,Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm. Chamber Music!LECTURE: “The Pathology of Deicide:Jewish Tradition and Jesus,” 5715Woodlawn, 8:30 pm. HiUel.FORUM: “Chicago: A Totalitarian So¬ ciety,” Hyde Park Co-op meeting room,1526 E. 55th, 8:00 pm. Coffee served at7:30. Citizens for a Democratic Society.Saturday, October 15MEET: Washington Park, North Cen¬tral College. Cross Country.FILMS: Yiddish Film Festival, 5715Woodlawn, 7:30 pm, Hillel.CONFERENCE: On State government,Adlai Stevenson III, Abner Mikva,speakers. University of Ill. Chicago Cir¬cle, 9 am-4 pm.Sunday, October 16RADIO: "The City: Art and Technolo¬gy” "Race in the City”, 7:00 am.WFMT.RADIO: "Nightline”, A public radio fo- mrum for the discussion of current issues.10:30 pm.SERVICE: ‘‘Lifes’ Inevitable Ex¬change”, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel,11 am.BRIDGE: INH, 7:15 pm, 25c students,50c others.FOLK DANCING: International FolkDancing, Cloister Club, INH, 7:30-11:00pm.Monday, October 17LECTURE: “Building Better Brains,”Ralph W. Gerard, neurophysiologist, Uof California, Irvine, Law School Audi¬torium, 8 pm. Tickets available free ofcharge at center for continuing, AdBldg. info. desk.THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWN - $1.00Michelob and Budweiser on Tap!Don Hamilton How Playing For Your Pleasure and DancingNOW SERVING THE ?„tU OF C COMMUNITY . 3the book center |"In Harper Court” !5211 S. HARPER AVENUECHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615Ml 3-1880 Ml 3-1881• CITY LIGHTS. SAN FRANCISCO,PUBLICATIONS• POETRY• DRAMA• FICTION• PSYCHOLOGY• PHILOSOPHY• SCIENCE FICTION•1MYSTERIESWE RE NEW.We're Anxious to Please./.fBrowse-in.Help Us Become A % r. • ’lGreat Bookstore. . 1g|§Open 7 Days 'til Midnight |UC To Construct Student ApartmentsThe UC administration ismaking plans for a new apart¬ment building at 57th and Dor¬chester to house students nextfall, according to Winston Kennedy,manager of the UC community andreal e-state office.The building, according to Ken¬nedy, will have 24 three-bedroomapartments, each having a kitchen,living-dining area, bathroom, andcloset space. The apartments havebeen arranged so as to provide liv¬ ing space for four occupants. Thebuilding’s height is as yet undetermined, but six stories has beenproposed.The cost of the apartment build¬ing has not as yet been figured andapartment rents have not been set.Kennedy hopes to break ground inJanuary and plans call for thebuillding to be ready for occupancyby next fall quarter.The building could possibly be acoed facility, but that has not beendetermined.Harvard Students Opposed to RankCAMBRIDGE, Mass.—MostHarvard University undergrad¬uates oppose the class rank, ac¬cording to a poll conductedamong students there this week.Of 43 percent of the undergrad¬uate student body who respondedto the poll, slightly more than halfanswered negatively to the ques¬tion, “Do you think the SelectiveService should require the Univer¬sity to compute student ranks?”BOB NELSON MOTORSImport ContraM. G.HondaTriumph6052 So. Cottage Grove LIKE HAVERFORD College,Harvard had not ranked studentsprevious to the 1965-66 academicyear.In other poll questions, respond¬ents indicated that they were infavor of draft deferments for stu¬dents (65 percent), opposed to alottery system (70 percent), and infavor of a system of alternativeservice such as the Peace Corps(84 percent). CORSO Grants Organization FundsAfter a marathon session lasting until 4:45 AM an exhausted Committee on Recognized Stu¬dent Organizations (CORSO) voted final allocations to twenty six student organizations Mon¬day morning.The grants, ranging from $3,700 for Student Government to $75 for the Karate Club comeout of the Dean of Student’s budgetfor student organizations and aredistributed by the students onCORSO. The total CORSO budgetfor 1966-67 was $27,500, or about $3,-000 less than last year. However,because the University decided thisyear not to classify the ForensicSociety and the University Orches¬tra as student activities, CORSOactually had $3,000 more to distrib¬ute.Despite this increase, severalmajor campus organizations foundtheir budgets substantially reducedfrom last year’s level. The STEPand VISA budgets were reduced by$100 and $150 respectively, andMaroon funds were cut from $5500to $2500.Cut the Fantastic“We cut the fantastic, but leftmost groups with increases,” said(Continued on Page Nine)Typewriters and Tape RecordersWe rent typewriters with an option to buy after three monthsrental. You may deduct the whole amount from the purchaseprice.We also repair tape recorders and all makes of typewriters.TYPEWRITER DEPARTMENTThe University of Chicago Bookstore if ' x' , % '' -At M $ M MiAlloca- Re- Spent Alloca¬tion: Organization tion quest '65-'66 '65-'66 nBlackfriars $ 400 $ 400 $1200 $ 400Cap & Gown $1300 $1300 $1700 $1700Chess $ 160 $ 840 $ 451 $ 500 nCourse Eval. Book $ 200 $ 200 — — !Dames Club $ 150 $ 150 $ 150 $ 150 nStud.-Fac.Dinner Program $ 400 $ 900 1Doc. Films $1300 $3000 — —s'$ Elec. &Rules Comm. $ 200 $ 600 B57th St. Chorale S 700 ’ $1000 $ 540 $ 350 iFolkdancers $ 190 $ 440 — — W-Karate Club $ 75 $ 200 — — iLiterary Review $1500 $2000 $1500 $1500 1Maroon $2500 $6600 $5500 $5500 Mii Musical Society $ 580 $1000 $ 540 $ 350 IfNihon Bunka Kai 0 $ 365 — — 1i Particle $ 400 $ 750 $ 285 $ 285 mPoli. Sci. Ass’n. 0 $ 600 — iiRugby $ 300 $ 845 $ 430 $ 400: Speaker’s Program $1500 $2025 $1545 $1400 pi STEP $ 400 $1000 $ 492 $ 500 isStudentGovernment $3700 ’|l$5845 $3048 $2380 iStudent Coop. $1000 $ 500 $ 135 $ 135 i1 Student MedicalForum loan$ 500 grant$1000 £m*iUSNSA $1300 $1500 . $2294 $2300 lVISA $ 600 $ 900 $ 749 $ 750 pWUCB (AM oper¬ating) only $2100 $3500 $2032 $1700 IWashington Prom $1000 $1200 $ 607 $ .9001 New MovieProjector $ 360 — — — 11 wmmmm wmmmm ' '.-You say the radio you bought in Iowa won't pick upWV0N? You can't find Otis Redding records at Lowe's?Never Mind!SWAP presentsNIGHT WITH THESOUL BROTHERSfeaturing the Soul Brothers, Mr. Lucky, The Vandellsand much much more.LIVE in a benefit performance for the Student Wood-lawn area project.MANDEL HALLSat., Oct. 15 — 8:00 pmTickets — Regular $1.50Student — $1.00Available at SWAP, Ida NoyesMl 3-0800 X 3587CUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCALL MRS. BLIXT AT 782-2118FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES. INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANT*33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. M602111! Announcing The Opening ofThe Hutchinson Coffee ShopWednesday, October 12, 1966HOURS OF SERVICE:Mon. thru Fri. 7 am — 12 midnightSaturday 8 am — 11 pmSunday 4 pm — 8 pmTYPICAL MENU:Breakfast Special - 75*Choice of Juice2 eggs3 strips of baconButtered toastLunch Special - 90*Beef Chop Suey over Toasted NoodlesSpiced FruitVanilla Pudding10c beveragei >■ Dinner Special - $1.25V> .1 sML lfir.il Roast Beef Au JusFrench Fried PotatoesButtered Peas10c BeverageAVAILABLE AT ALL TIMES:Grilled Items, Sodas, Shakes, Sundaes, & Soft DrinksMain Dining Area Available to Coffee Shop PatronsOctober 14, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3visa Members w«k with phycotics;jprof favors Acquisition of Air RightsInteraction Affects Patient and Workers The air rights to the area — — I Meltzer claims that the bene-The air rights to the areaby Maxine MiskaVolunteer Institute ServiceActivity (VISA) members wereadvised “supply a certain kindof relationship for psychoticpersons as a way of making themwell,” by Eugene Gendlin, assist¬ant professor of psychology andphilosophy, Wednesday at thefirst meeting of the year in IdaNoyes Hall.GENDLIN SPOKE to preparenew volunteers for the therapeuticwork they will do with the patientsof Chicago State Mental Hospitalevery Saturday afternoon. The vol¬unteers, many with no psychologi¬cal training, do not come as clin¬icians, Gendlin stressed, but ratherto read, talk, and "interact” withthe patients.Student volunteers are able tohelp the seriously disturbed pa¬tients through what Gendlin des¬cribed as the correlation betweenthe environment outside and theorganism's inside. “Inside we feelsituations, not feelings,” he -said. "The feeling process is also con¬cretely the bodily interaction pro¬cess.” Thus the student volunteertransmits his situation—his meet¬ing with a patient—to a psychoticwho is lacking interaction.As an example of his point Gend¬lin referred to the uncomfortablefeeling in the pit of the stomachthat occurs when one is studyingwhich makes one analyze, rational¬ize and philosophize and eventually“go right into the middle of theproblem. If you stick with it, youwill get some sense from it,” hesaid, "and you feel good althoughwhat you find out about yourselfmay be worse.“Often people read, think andstudy and don’t feel very creative,but they don’t ask themselves,‘what’s all this to me now?’ ” Gend¬lin continued. “When they feel thedull ache in their stomachs, theyshould stop to analyze it because itis their feeling of what they arereading. Then they can comeup with great original ideas any¬time.” between Randolph Street andthe north branch of the Chi¬cago River should be acquiredand developed for permanent pub¬lic use as a cultural center, ac¬cording to a statement released byJack Meltzer, director of the UCCenter for Urban Studies.The already over whelming as¬saults on the Lake Front are “evi¬dences of a city which has appar¬ently lost all interest in style andgrace,” according to the Meltzerstatement.MELTZER maintains that Chica¬go now has a dramatic opportunityto develop an area which is strate¬gically situated for public and cul¬tural purposes and which will notneed clearance. Yet, according toMeltzer, Chicago is ready to com¬mit this resource to private inter¬ests which can locate elsewhere.The establishment of “a newdramatic riverfront vista,” is envi- Jack Meltzersioned by Meltzer and the questionof the air rights cannot be separat¬ed from the issue of the Lakefrontin general. Meltzer claims that the benefi¬cial influence that the proposedpublic acquisition could exert overits geographical area of influenceovershadows the estimated mil¬lions of dollars of tax yield thatwould result from the site’s privatedevelopment. The short term ad¬vantages in increments to the taxba-se should not obscure the long¬term disadvantages of unwise ex¬ploitation. he argues.MANY MAJOR American citiesare spending fabulous sums to re¬capture waterfront areas, accord¬ing to Meltzer’s statement.He maintains that Chicago mustnot compromise its lake front byawarding private enterprise itsmo-st commanding lake front sites.In an era of expanding urbaniza¬tion, Meltzer warned that this gen¬eration should not be rememberedfor missing a rare opportunity torecapture a lake front site forever-lasting public use.SAR Petition Is CirculatedIRA Gets Robinson Students Againsl the Rank(SAR), bringing back memo¬ries of last spring, are circu¬lating a petition.H. Alan Robinson, assistant pro¬fessor in the department of educa¬tion, has been elected president ofthe International Reading Associa¬tion.LENSINIbyMURJNEk UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKNEW CAM LOANSas low as$45°~1154 BAST 55H. STREETM«J 4-1200P.D.LC The petition states, “We, the un¬dersigned, oppose the formulationby the University administration ofa class rank of males in the Col¬lege for the purposes of SelectiveService.’’BOOKSSTATIONERYGREETING (ARDSTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55»h ST.10% Studant Discount Signers indicate their sex, status port indicated byas a graduate or undergraduate b°n-student, and their name and ad¬dress. this week’s peti;f|■ 0The petition is being circulatedin all the dorms, and can be signedat Hutchinson Commons or at theUniversity Bookstore between 11:30and 1:30.The purpose of the petition, ac¬cording to SAR member Tim Nay¬lor, is to re-establish contact withthe student body and get new peo¬ple into SAR.-4 : '■ ■I ■ K:; ■ « T. - Said Naylor, “We'd like to get amajority of the College males tosign the petition and I imaginewe’ll keep working until we getthere.”There are about 250 signaturesso far. In a similar petition circu¬lated last spring before the sit-in,SAR got 1,000 signatures. The nextmove by SAR depends on the sup-■. ■I ' Iff!EXCLUSIVE!Free removable carryingcase! Provides hygienic,convenient carefor your % Jtenses. ^ Newt Stammerwas broad-minded enough■ <»•:.4^5 * ■ ,..v to try somebody else’s beer. Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimb.rkwe sell the best,end fix the restforeign cor hospitalUXVK Then he went back to this one.IS This one solutionrjf does all three!I. WETS. Lensine's special propertiesassure a smoother, non-irritating lenssurface when inserting your “contacts."Just a drop will do it.2. CLEANS. When used for cleaning,Lensine’s unique formula helps retardbuildup of contaminants and foreigndeposits on lenses.3. SOAKS. Lensine is self sterilizing and : ;antiseptic. Ideal for wet storage or "soak- •_mg” of lenses. Reduces harmful bacteriacontamination. ^-...CARRYING CASE. Exclusive removablecarrying case free with every bottle oflensine. The scientific—and convenient—way to protect your contacts.LENSINE fr«MThe Murine Company, Inc. i...•ye car. ap«cialiat for 70 y aaura . ■ ( Broad-mindednessisn’t everything.)-■ "V - ' : V ' ' : - - 'i AMHCUSER-IUSCH. INC. • ST. l«U!S • NEWARK • LOS ANMLIS • TAMPA • HOUSTON- V:rW. Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweat¬shirts, "Levis," rain parkas, ten¬nis shoes, underwear, jackets,camping equipment, wash pants,•tc.# etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Studant dtac.wnt wHk mi Tiffanv&Co.713 NORTH MICHIGAN AVC.CHICAGOPHONE 944-7500 ? 4aFor Illinois deliveryPlaots odd 4% Slota solas fox ('fZLATA'S BELGRADERESTAURANTEuropean & SerbianFood - Wines1516 N. MILWAUKEE 252-9514REYNOLD'S CLUBBARBERSHOP7 BarbersOnly Shop on Campus ... '.-lif'Vji• v'.mm&m■ • 1 |m : ■£&,APPOINTMENTS IF DESIREDREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT57th and UNIVERSITY, EXT. 3573 ■' ' /' '. ' AitM-F a am-S pm, Saf. I sm-l pm4 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 14, 1*66 ‘ i#8;* s. iUC Sets Monday Lecture SeriesThe Monday Lectures, be¬ginning this Monday, October17, will offer new views on anold topic—the nature of man.i“New Views of the Nature ofMan and His Biological, Intellec- jtual, and Social Potentialities” isthe official theme of the four-lec¬ture scries, sponsored bv the UC. ;All of the lectures will begin at 8pm in the Law School Auditorium, jRALPH W. GERARD, a neuro¬physiologist from the University ofCalifornia at Irvine, will speak thisMonday on “Building BetterjBrains.”Gerard is dean of the graduatedivision of biological -sciences and a professor of biological sciencesat California. Part of his lecturewill be based on his recent publi¬cation, “Information-Processing inthe Nervous System.”A MEMBER of the NationalAcademy of Sciences, Gerard wasa memb r of the faculty here from1921 to 1952.Other events in the series havebeen announced as follows:• 1.Bernard Cohen, profe-ssor ofthe history of science at HarvardUniversity, on “Creative Scien¬tific Personality,” October 31.• Rene Dubes, professor of bac¬teriology at Rockefeller University,on a topic to be announced, No¬vember 14. • William McNeill, chairman ofthe history department here, on“The Peasant Rising of OurTime,” November 28.Students and faculty membersmay secure free tickets for the se-I'i s at room 121, of the Center forContinuing Education or by callingextension 3137. Students may alsoreceive series tickets at the centralinformation desk in the Adminis¬tration Building.*nM!S$ION for the general pub¬lic is $8 for the series; no singleadrnsv':on tickets will be sold.Tickets may be purchased at theOn r for Continuing Education onci m us or at the downtown centerat 65 E. South Water St. FI 6-8300.Nature of Man on MondaysAll Lined Up at UCNew Eating Placeby Leanne Star i“At least machines are|friendlier,” commented one of;many students waiting in linefor lunch at the C Shop. Ad¬mittedly, the long awaited “peo¬ple” serving up ladles of beef soupand chop -suey looked fatigued asthe lunch hour neared its end. Butmost students agreed that humanservers were an improvementover the machines that servicedthe C shop in past years.That isn’t to say there weren’tanv complaints:"The machine never spilled mysoup.”“1 don’t like to see people touch¬ing mv food ”“WITH THE MACHINE, I gotcrummv food quickly, and I ate it.Today I wa-s so disgusted by thelength of the process of getting alunch, that I went hungry.”The wait seemed to be every- jone’s major complaint. Most stu¬dents were frustrated by the ideaof waiting for twenty minutes for asandwich and a cup of coffee.“Why should someone wait half jan hour to get something to drink?There should be a coffee ma¬chine.” remarked a third-year stu¬dent.“I think they should have a grillline and a sandwich line—andmore cashiers,” suggested a Build¬ings & Grounds worker, “but thefood’s alright.”WAS THE FOOD REALLY bet¬ter? If so, better than what?“It’s better than what I cook.”(Second-year male student.)“Stomachable.” “It’s worse than Pierce.”“Better than the Y.M.C.A.”Several lunchers thought that thefood was better than that served atother UC eating places, but“That isn’t saying much.” As onethoughtful undergraduate put it(between mouthfuls of a turkey onrye), “It is interesting and en¬lightening that a private companywould make a profit by servingbetter food at higher prices thanthe non-profit UC functions, whichserve shit.” (The C Shop is nowcatered by Stouffer’s.)Has the change in ownership af¬fected the menu? In an attempt todiscover new specialties, a Maroonreporter asked some of the peoplepresent about their particularlunches.SAID OF AN appetizing-lookingroast beef sandwich: “It tastesgreat—I made it at home andbrought it here.”Review of the venerable ham¬burger: “I just swallowed this one,cold hamburger; I wouldn’t ven¬ture any guesses about the rest ofthe stuff.”Philosophical considerations,such as those that prompted theremoval of the machines, were•scarce; the comments that existedwere frequently opposite to thoseexpressed last year:“I miss the machines! Automa¬tion means liberty! It saddened meto see those poor ladies slavingover steaming tables.”Etc. But, to use the word-s of abemused graduate student, “If wecomplain about this, will theybring back the machines?”GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food”10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559tI Eat More For Less lTry Our Convenient Take-Out Orders The handsewn* look and broguesare in. So is City Club!In class, on campus, in the grandstand,making the scene, City Club comesacross with the right answers ... righthere. Wear the *handsewn-frontTrujuns ($15-$18) or the bold long-wing brogue ($16-$25). They’re great.'""'MiParker's Shoes, 9040 Commercial Ave., Chicago, III.; Whiting Shoes, 1300-119thSt., Whiting, Ind.; Kline Bros. Co., 13108 South Western Ave., Blue Island, lit.;Natta Shoes, Highwood, III.; Duval Shoes, Zion, III.; Gatelys Peoples Store ofRoseland, Chicago, IN.INTERNATIONAL SHOE COMPANY, ST. LOUISOctober T4, 1966Haverford ActsIn a move that was as inevitable as it was unexpected, a ma¬jor American college has decided not to form a male classrank for the benefit of the Selective Service. By so doing, Hav¬erford College has placed itself in the middle of the fight for areasonable and academically viable reform of the draft.While students at Harvard University were holding an advi¬sory referendum on ranking, while Yale’s president was con¬tinuing his vociferous call for a search for alternatives to therank, and while UC was becoming still more hopelessly entan¬gled in a morass of student-faculty committees to study thedraft, Haverford’s courageous administration simply acted—inthe process proving that a simple alternative to the rank doesexist.UC, as well as most of the nation’s other academic institu¬tions has a great deal to learn from Haverford’s action. Itshould now be clear to anyone who takes the trouble to lookthat a simple and forthright decision not to rank need not turna university into a political institution. In fact, Haverford’s de¬cision seems to have had precisely the opposite effect. Farfrom being politically motivated, Haverford’s administrationapparently acted for reasons which are in the best academictradition. Finding that a number of students were transferringto less demanding schools in order to avoid the draft, Haver¬ford elected to get out of the business of politics and back intothe business of keeping their school an academic leader.We regret that Haverford’s decision was not made by its stu¬dents—the people whose business it really is and who will bemost directly affected. But student rights are meaningless inan institution that has lost its academic integrity, and to the ex¬tent that Haverford has restored its independence, it has tak¬en a step in the right direction.Haverford’s choice is a choice that is open to every Ameri¬can college that is asked to rank its male undergraduates. Bycompiling a class rank, a college is taking an institutional stepforward in cooperation with a war and in cooperation with ameans of conscription.No university has to cooperate with the draft. The SelectiveService is asking UC and Haverford and all the other Ameri¬can colleges to do something that they may never have donebefore—form a class rank. And forming a class rank tacitlyinvolves a college in a system that is nothing, if it isn’t anti-educational. -Haverford made no choice on the political issues involved.As far as we know, both Haverford’s administrators and itsstudents are more likely to favor both the war in Vietnam andthe present system of conscription that their UC counterparts.Haverford made a selfish choice to stop helping the SelectiveService because the College was, in the process, putting itselfat an academic disadvantage.The selection of Charles B. Huggins to share the NobelPrize for medicine will come as no surprise to those whoknow his work. This modest, unassuming, but supremelydedicated man has given most of his adult life to the open-ended war against disease, and recognition for his accom¬plishments is long overdue.That Huggins should express unaffected and uninhibitedshock at receiving the prize is entirely in character. It wouldnever occur to this compulsive humanitarian that the struggleto relieve what he calls “man-pain hours” should be rewarded.Yet clearly mankind owes a debt to Dr. Huggins, and a NobelPrize can represent little more than a down payment. ForHuggins, that payment will only be completed when theinterviews and press-conferences are over and his is allowedto go back to the work which he loves.We respect Dr. Huggins quest for the privacy which allowshim to continue his research, but before the chaos subsides,we would like to add our own word of congratulations tothis great scientist and great humanitarian.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 14, 1966 MICHAEL SEIDMANUCs "Silent Voten PosesProblems for ActivistsThe "silent vote” may neverhave materialized for Goldwater,but in UC campus politics itseems to be omnipresent andnearly all important.Careers seldom get ruined incampus polities, but politicalmiscalculation can—and in thecase of UC’s student governmentalmost always does—lead tocomplete fiasco. The uninterrupt¬ed series of miscalculationswhich has punctuated SG’s de¬clining influence in recent years—from the ‘‘Cuba telegram” ofseveral years ago through thedisasterous Vietnam referendumof last year to President TomHeagy’s abortive attempt of thismonth to mobilize the campus onthe women’s hours issue—resultfrom repeated failure by SG’spolitical wizards to appreciatethe impact of the “silent vote.”IT IS EASY to see why theyare misled. A cursory examina¬tion of University politics leavesone with the impression that thiscampus is as radical and politi¬cally active as any in the coun¬try. Effective political organiza¬tions range from the Du BoisClubs on the left to Young Demo¬crats on the right, with groupslike Students for a DemocraticSociety, Students against theRank, and Young Socialists oper¬ating in what is only in the mostrelatavistic of terms the middleground. With SDS national head¬quarters only a few blocks offcampus, and a long tradition ofradicalism dating as far back asThorstein Veblin, the Universityof Chicago seems as likely aplace as any to lead a revoltagainst sexual regimentation orthe war in Vietnam.But things are not always asthey seem, as a long line of would-be UC revolutionaireshave discovered to their dismayand embarrassment. The simplefact is that there are too manypeople interested in education atthis University to turn it into apolitical institution. Commitmentto a political cause requires time,and the total commitment de¬manded by radicalism requirestotal time. A substantial segmentof UC’s silent vote is composedof people who value their educa¬tion over their political convic¬tions, who would rather live withthe status quo than risk loss oftheir student deferment or disci¬plinary action resulting from so¬cial violations. These are peoplewho are quiet, studious, and easyto forget when making politicalcalculations. They rarely showup for meetings, write letters, orsign petition's, but they are therenonetheless, and when their posi¬tion is threatened they react, innumbers that almost alwaysseem to take UC’s activists bysurprise.MOREOVER, it should not beforgotten that, despite appear¬ances there is also a right wingat Chicago, and it is this groupthat makes up most of the rest ofthe ‘‘silent vote.” Inarticulate,unorganized, and generally ig¬nored, UC’s right neverthelessmanages to pull itself togetherwhenever It feels threatened byan activist takeover. Certainly noone can doubt the importance ofStudents for A Free Choice indissipating SAR’s momentumduring last spring’s sit in, or thesignificance of the well organizedright-wing campaign against theVietnam referendum last fall.Finally, anyone studying UCpolitics cannot ignore the kind ofanti-institutionalism which, al¬though largely fostered by SDS ideology and influential on theleft as well as the right, tends towork against political activism.There are large numbers of peo¬ple on this campus who are asunwilling to entrust decisions toStudent Government as they areto the administration. This view,expressed most forceable duringthe dispute over the Cuba tele¬gram and later during the effortto abolish SG makes virtuallyany united student action ex¬tremely difficult if not entirelyimpossible. Many of the silentvoters opposed the Vietnam ref¬erendum, for example, simplybecause they wanted no one de¬ciding what they thought by ma¬jority rule. A fair enought view—except that it makes any kind ofrepresentative student democra¬cy out of the question. Obviously,the leaders of SG, SAR, SDS, orany other student organizationcannot foster student activismas long as they are not permittedto make even the most elementa¬ry of decisions for their constit¬uents.THUS, the built-in politicalproblems Heagy faced earlierthis month in mobilizing studentaction on women’s hours wereindeed considerable. When theywere compounded by the naturalreluctance of even the most radi¬cal first-year students to risk ex¬pulsion during the beginning oftheir first year, they became in¬surmountable. Clearly, untilsomething is done to relieve theinstitutional difficulty posed bythe silent voter, Heagy and hiscolleagues would be well advisedto refrain from further such po¬litical fishing trips lest they crywolf once too often and bringwhat little remains of SG’s bu¬reaucracy crashing down upontheir heads.v'. '''Letters to the Editor* ■>>. - MMMi WMi I * • K ,v- '■RegistrationTO THE EDITOR:The consequences of the new“packetless” registration proce¬dure are of great concern to me.Having observed a few of the pit-falls into which I and a significantproportion of my colleagues havefallen, I am writing this briefwarning to others who may haveinadvertently overlooked some¬thing of importance.In my own case, the woman atthe registration table dutifullygave me the big grey card and theMaroon questionnaire; however,she totally neglected to give me, oreven to mention the religious pref¬erence card (I remember the un¬used space on the census card,which remains an enigma). Nordid she give me a Cap and Gownorder card. It was only by thegrace of God that the fellow infront of me asked for a selectiveservice card, jolting me into therealization that I too should ask forone.I consider this to be a seriousmatter, especially after discover¬ing that over half of the people Iasked had missed one or morecards which were formerly con¬tained within the registration pack- ><•-, ' j<<*% < , ''et. Of the six men I asked, threehad missed the selective servicecard.It appears to me that the reg¬istrar has eliminated the equivalentof one card in the “new” registra¬tion procedure: one out of threewhich used to list courses per se.The other cards have just been stuck together, a slight improvement which facilitates writing; buit seems to me that the potentiaharm to the student, the Cap an<Gown, and the religious groups oicampus more than negates th<benefits which accrue from th<new packetless system.EDWARD L. STER?'' wwKsm m ^ mmm >Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor ............. David E. GumpertExecutive Editor David L. AikenAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzDavid H. RichterDinah E?ralJoan PhillipsNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanJ Feature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan 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.Romantic Haze Surrounds the CreativeEffort Says Chairman of Arts Meetings“The critical function has suffered a blow because of theromantic haze which surrounds the creative effort,” saidJoshua Taylor, William Rainey Harper Professor of Humani¬ties and Art. Taylor will serve as chairman of the art colloquiathe conference Pre-School Center Planned for UCat the conference ‘The Artsand the Public,” to be held Oct. 16-2i. and he hopes that through thecolloquia this haze will begin toclear.Taylor stated that, ideally, thecritic functions not as a purveyor oftaste or as an outlet for the worksof a particular painter, but as ameans through which the viewer’sawareness of the many facets of awork of art is enlarged. He addedthat the critic, rather than providethe viewer with a range of absolutevalues within which to judge awork of art, should offer the ob¬server some bases for the forma¬tion of highly personal intellectu¬al experience.Taylor feels that the conferencewill try to re assert the function ofthe critic in relation to the indivi¬dual work of art by assembling art¬ists Leon Golub and Harry Bour-as, critics Katharine Kuh, HaroldRosenberg, Max Kozloff, andFranz Schulze, Richard Feigen, thedirector of the Feigen Galleries,Inc., and Richard F. Brown, direc¬tor of the Kimble Art Foundation.Taylor hopes that the functions ofthe artist, critic, dealer and buyercan be clarified through the ensu¬ing discussion.Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259NSA Discount* Conference ScheduleThe schedule of the open ses¬sions of “The Arts and the PublicConference,” Oct. 16-21, at theCenter for Continuing Education.Monday, Oct. 17 9:00 am-12:30 pm.Topic: "The Artist and His Audience’’Speakers: Richard F. Brown (Art),Alan Schneider (Drama), Wright Morris(Fiction).Tuesday, Oct 18 9:00 am • 12:30 pm.Topic: ‘"Tiie Reviewer and Public Un¬derstanding” Speakers: Max Kozloff(Art), Albert Bermel (Drama), AnthonyWest (Fiction).Wednesday, Oct. 19 9:00 am. - 12:30pm. Topic: ’'Scholarship, Criticism, andan Educated Public” Speakers: HaroldRosenberg (Art), Robert Corrigan (Dra¬ma), Leon Edel (Fiction).Thursday, Oct. 2* 9:00-10:30 am. Top¬ic: “The Artist on Art” Chairman:Joshua Taylor. Participants: HarryBouras, artist, Richard F. Brown, Di¬rector, Kimble Art Foundation, RichardFeigen, Director of the Richard FeigenGalleries, Inc., Leon Golub, artistwhose works are in the permanent col¬lections of the Museum of Modern Art ](NYC), Chicago Art Institute. La Jolla !Art Center, and the Museum Tel Aviv,Max Kozloff, Art Critic of The Nation,Kathatrine Kuh, Art Editor of The Sat¬urday Review, Harold Rosenberg, artcritic. Professor in the Committee onSocial Thought at UC, and author, and |Franz Schulze, Art Editor of the Chica¬go Daily News. 11:00- 12:30 pm. Topic:“The Dramatist on Drama”. Chairman:Kenneth Northcott. Participants: RobertW. Corrigan, Editor, Author arid Deanof the New York University (NYU)School of Arts, William Gibson, play¬wright and author (Two for the Seesaw,The Miracle Worker, The Cobweb), Al¬bert Bermel, critic, William Leonard,Drama Editor of the Chicago Tribune,John Reich, Director of The GoodmanTheater, Alan Schneider, director of Ed¬ward Albee's Tiny Alice, Who’s Afraidof Virginia Woolfe, and A Delicate Bal- by Marge PearsonThe University Departmentof Education lias received ten¬tative approval from the U.S.Education Office to set up aresearch and development centerfor urban education.This center will concentrate onpreschool education. It is connect¬ed with the National Laboratorya nee, Robert Sickinger, Direc tor of theHull House Theater, and Studs Terkel,WFMT Commentator. 2:30 - 4:30 pm.Topic: “The Novelist on the Novel”Chairman: Wayne C. Booth. Partic¬ipants: Leon Edel, critic, Henry JamesProfessor at NYU, Pulitzer Prize andNational Book Award winner, GranvilleHicks, Contributing Editor of The Satur¬day Review, Wright Morris, novelist(One Day, The Field of Vision, LoveAmong the Cannibals, professor of Eng¬lish at San Francisco State College,and winner of the National BookAward; Hoke Norris, Literary Editor ofthe Chicago Sun-Times; Reynolds Price,Assistant Professor of English at DukeUniversity, and novelist (A Long andHappy Life, A Generous Man); Theo¬dore Solotaroff, Editor of Book Week;Richard Stern, novelist Stitch, TeethDying and other Matters, In Any CaseGolk, and Professor in the Dept. English and Comm. Gen’l. Studies in Hu¬manities; and Anthony West, novelistand critic, recipient of the HoughtonMifflin Fellowship Award. for Early Childhood Education andis one of a series of centers thatwill be set up in universities acrossthe country. It will be located inthe University Laboratory School.The center will have eight facul¬ty members from the departmentsoi psychology, human develop¬ment, and education who will con¬centrate on research questionsunique to their fields. Each facultymember will concentrate on suchareas as cross-cultural patterns,culturally deprived children,linguistics, and genetic contribu¬tions to infancy.The Department of Educationhas also applied for a grant to de¬velop plans for a research centerto develop elementary and second¬ary education. Work on theseplans will also probably start inNovember.According to Roald Campbell,chairman of the Department of;Education, the whole program will1 be significant for a number of rea¬sons. “The program will provide afocus point for several areas ofstudy in the University,” he said.“All will be united by a commongoal—improvement of urban edu¬cation.”The center will work not only ona research level, but on a practicallevel as well. This will take placein schools in the city or in a newschool to be set up for the purpose.Campbell also hopes that the pro¬gram can disseminate into generalpractice.As part of the center, a Wood-lawn community board has beenset up to discuss the communityimplications of the project.While Robert Hess, new directorof the center and professor of hu¬man development, is on a year’sleave of absence, Philip Jackson,professor in the Department ofEducation, will serve as temporarydirector.UTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingK. Itw ft. m l-Ntt OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SH0RELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECali Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000SORRY!Due to a printing error the University’s Religious Service at ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAP¬EL was listed as Baptist in last Tuesday’s MAROON. In fact it is non-denominational. This Sunday,October 16 at 11.00 A.M., the preacher will be The Reverend E. Spencer Parsons, Dean of the ChapelAdditional CorrectionThe Tuesday, October 4 edition of the MAROON listed the incorrect time for the Lutheran Cam¬pus Parish (Missouri Synod) Communion at Graham Taylor Chapel, 58th Street and University Ave¬nue. Services begin at 10:00 A.M., instead of 11:00 A M. (Dinner following).AMERICAN AUTO PARTS7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3614MUFFLER HEADQUARTERSGolden SilenceMUFFLERSAt Advertised le LIFE e»d POSTLew «$065 NO WAITIN6ITAKES ONLY18 MINUTES! ;'GUARANTEED m Writing Against!’;>BLOW-OUT, HOST, EVERYTHING;LFor As Lmk m Ows 1m Cart J;Installed Free While You WaitComplete Line of Auto Partsfor Do-It-Yourself MechanicsBrakes Installed SHOCK absorbersFACTORYAUTHORIZEDSERVICE *19 OR ALL FOUR33 WHEELSU»l»f & Labor—Ford 6 CkovyTUNE-UP SPECIALInclude* Champion A.C., Auto-Lite Spark Plug*, Points, Rotor,Conderwer. Adjust ^ ^95 BRANDNEWFOR MOSTCARS $J 95Carburetor andTiming While YoeWait.An 4-cyl. cor* 1942 to 1942 REAR SPRINGSINSTALLEDWHILE YOU WAIT m*121®S-eyt cor* 1942 to 1942American Auto PartsrriTTAftC ftDAUC nr7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3614 CAP & GOWNThe first staff meeting of CAP 4GOWN will be held Monday eveningat 7 PM on the third floor of IdaNoyes. All interested in working onthe yearbook are strongly urged toattend this meeting. LEHNHOFF SCHOOLOF MUSIC AND DANCEAnnounces special classes and courses tc coincide with U of Cschool calendar for University studf nt.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 djneetion — composition. labanota-BU 8-4347 1438 E. 57th ST.TOAD HALL SellsUSED as well as NEW equipmentAvailable at Press Time:Pilot FM Receiver - Knight FM-AM Tuner - Rek-o-Kut Turn¬table with Empire Arm - Harmon Kardon Pre-amp - Rek-o-KutTurntable with ESL arm - Garrard Changer(Above are Stereo)Also a few monoral amplifiers, and many typewriters.TOAD HALL RentsTelevision Sets, tape recorders, typewriters, kitchen sinks (when available)BUT NOT OUR RHINOCEROS1444 E. 57th BU 8-4500October 14, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Levi Meets Undergrads,Samples Student OpinionUniversity Provost EdwardH. Levi has been meeting in¬formally with undergraduates'or the last two weeks, in whathis assistant Jerome Frese calls anattempt to “keep the lines of inter¬change and communication open.”There were two meetings lastweek and one yesterday. Anotheri-s scheduled for today. There areabout twenty students at each af¬fair, who are chosen entirely atrandom, in the interest of getting arepresentative sample of studentopinion.THE MEETINGS generally last«f„out two hours and follow no spe¬cific agenda. According to Frese, any worthwhile suggestion will beexplored.’’ Frese also told the Ma¬roon that Levi has already been in¬formed of “a few minor things hewa-s unaware of.”Frese denied that the meetingsare being held for the sake of de¬termining a general consensus. “1think that he (Levi) just feels thatit’s important to know what atleast some of the undergraduatesare concerned with. He's alwaysbeen available to students.”Three years ago when the Col¬lege was in transition, Levi metwith every member of the facultyin groups and about 200 students,randomly selected. According toFrese, Levi found those meetingsvery helpful “in thinking aboutchanging the College.” Frese saysthat the recent luncheon meetings“are in the same tradition.”FRESE SAID that they departfrom that tradition only in theirlack of formal structure. Sincethere is no format, students arerelatively free to voice opinions onany issue, “very small or verybig” he added.Frese admitted that the meetingshave something to do with in¬creased anxiety on the part of theadministration in the wake of lastspring's sit in.MUSTANGS - TEMPESTS - FORDS - PONTIACSRENT-A-CARBYVolkswagens $3.95 for 12 Hrs.Plus 6^ per Mi.Includes Gas and InsuranceRent A Volkswagon For That Special Date Tonite.Cheaper Than A Honda And A Heck Of A LotMore Comfortable.LOCATED AT:HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd Ml 3-1715 New Midway Studio ExhibitMidway Studios is showing paint¬ings and drawings by Arcadia Ol-enska-Petryshyn, a student in theUniversity, now through October 25.There are seventeen paintings andten drawings in all.An introduction at Midway states“In her paintings Olenska-Pet-1ryshyn explores a world of myth ,and fairy tale in a very personaland intimate interpretation. Thepaintings, which are figurative,show human forms* the faces ofwhich appear static and imperson¬al, in a vibrant atmosphere of adistant poetic world. They are the images of contemporary man’swaiting and longing for a meaning¬ful existence.”Mrs. Olenska Petrvshyn has hadshows at the Bodley Gallery, in New York, and is planning anotherNew York showing. She has, aswell, participated in many groupshows and is represented in somemuseums.Music Dept. Sets First ConcertAs the first concert of the 1966-67Chamber Music Scries, the MusicDepartment presents the Balsam-Kroll-B. Heifetz trio this evening ina concert of Beethoven, Ravel, andSchubert. The few remaining tick¬ets, priced at $3, General and $1, Students, may be obtained fromthe Music Department, 5802 S.Woodlawn Ave., or at the MandelHall box office before the concert.The program, which will begin at8:30 pm, will be at Mandel Hall.-"’T; 4 *'■ X ' '*>■Classified Ads- < -M- >~ 'PERSONALSCongratulations to David E.from Sandy Koufax. GumpertExhibit of large photo-murals: Comtemporary Art from the Synagoguel,hrouh Oct 20th Hull House 5715 Wood-lawn. Open day-time 3c eves Mon -FriYiddish film festival Sat. eve. 7:30 PM.‘‘God, Man, & Devil. ‘ Hillel House, 5715Woodlawn, adm. 50cJudism. Pacifism. & Conscientious Ob:iection: Discussion & Workshop RabbiEphraim H Prombaum. Dr. PaulDau-ter. Rabbi Max D Ticktin. & RabbiDaniel I Leifer. Sunday, Oct. 16. 2 PM.Hillel House. 5715 Woodlawn.Student Co-op buys/sells books.Grad Stud, want same to share So.Shore apt., 3 blks from IC $60/mo. Call375-6955. ’Student Co-op runs the poster service. HORSE BACK RIDING Any faculty orstudents interested in excellent instruc¬tion on good horses. Telephone 667-8079or Ml 3-9866Student Co-op has the largest cheapestcoUection of S.F. and Mystery books,hard and paper back. Reynolds Base-ment. 10-5 Mon.-Fri. 12-3 Sat. X3561.Female grad, student wanted to sharelarge 3rd floor pad with same. 52 andDorchester. $60 a month Call 288-4564Afternoons.Karate Mon/Weds 2 sections. 8:15-9:15pm. 9:30-10:30 pm. INH. Sat workout 3-6. Beginners welcome.Do you want posters posted? Student jCo-op Poster Service will post them for jyou for only 75c per set for 80 on cam¬pus bulletin boards, or $1.50 to includeoff campus coverage. Leave posters jwith Student Activities and they’ll be ;posted on Tues. Weds, or Thurs. Dis¬count for more than one set the sameday. info. X3561. QUADRANGLE CLUB—waiters no experience necessary. $1.50/hr. plusmeal. Lunch & dinner hrs. availableCall Dora ext. 3696.FOR SALEPolice, 3 wheel Harley-Davidson motor¬cycle. $115 or offer. 285-6529.HARPSICHORDS, by Sabathil. Beauti¬ful instruments at reas. prices. 324-6796& 752 8251.VW Square Back, sun roof, ‘64 23.500miles, all extras, $1495 or best offer.667-0840.MG-B. 4 m. old 6000 mi., wire wheels,heater, B R.G. $400 perfect, still underguarantee. 667-5190.Would you believe "Wild One”? Tomat-su 50ci\ motorcycle, exc. mech cond3600 mi.. $150 incl. A G V helmet. Con-tact Peter Mundy, 1802x ThompsonFA 4-9600Writer's Workshop PL 2-8377Student Co-op. Reynolds Club basement.Mon-Fri. 10-5, Sat. 12-3. X356L_THE OTHER SIDE Coffee House—Livefolk & baroque music—open every night‘til 2 am. 1603 E. 53rd.Leaving school? Student Co-op will pur¬chase your books or sell them for you.KAMELOT Restaurant. 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC students.Female grad student wanted to share3l,a rm. apt. w/same. $62.50. 752-3570.Piano Lessons: by Mrs. Renate Thiieni-us at 6842 S. Chappel. 363-0321. Formerstudent of Dr. Rudolph Ganz and exper¬ienced in teaching and performing.EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptom«tri»t53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty discount The Hyde Park Art Center is sponsor- jing an evening of underground filmsfrom San Francisco on Monday night at \the Harper Theater. 5238 S. Harper. The ;films are: Oh i)em Watermelons, Plas¬tic Haircut, Thick Pucker, and OileyPeloso the Pumph Man, by Robert ;Nelson: wiLh Schmeerguntz by Robert \Nelson's wife Gunvor Nelson. The sin¬gle showing takes place at 8:30 Monday.October 17th, subject to the dispensation jof the Chicago Police. Phone 363-9565for latest information.WE TRY HARDER-We have to because iwe have 63.3% fewer hours UPPERWALLACE. Hand carved pure block Meershaumpipes imported from Turkey. Variety ofstyles. $12-$17. Call 363-645L1962 Merc. Comet auto, trans. smv. trs.ww trs. bucket sts. radio, exc. cond$475, RO 4-6624 eveMartin Guitar 0018. Exc. cond withhard shell case new price $300. For you$180, 493-4103.'60 Rambler, fair body, good engirve-$300-best offer. Rm 446-1-House FA 4-3000Visionaries beware! there are REAL¬ISTS at the Book Center in HarperCourt. TO RENTNicely furn. rm. for empl. gent or oldermale student, 1 blk from l) of C Cam¬pus 3c I.C. Avail, now. Cali 288-4329 7-9:00 A M.Fem. grad.493-4981. Stud, needs rm-mate. CallI PROFESSORS AND STAFF!You deserve relaxation 3c inspiration. |j Dine in continental comfort in the CourtHouse Restaurant (Harper Court). Deli- ji cious dinners. lunches 3c lale snacks. '| Lunches, complete witfe drink and col- jfee from $2; complete dinners from 1$2 50. Sorry, you're not entitled to a10% student discount. j| Medici is now open for lunch )JOBS OFFEREDj Good typist needed for Dr's, office to ck> 1| secretarial work M-Th. either part or! full time. 873-4700.THE MONDAY LECTURESlaw School Auditorium 8:00 pm'' • - OCT. 17-RALPH W. GERARDThe University of California, Irvine“Building Better Brains”OCT. 31 - BERNARD COHEN Harvard University“The Creative Scientific Personality”NOV. 14 —RENE DUBOS The Rockefeller University(Subject to Be Announced)NOV. 28-WILLIAM H. McNEILL The University of Chicago“The Peasant Rising of Our Time”TICKETS: University of Chicago Students and Faculty can obtain series ticketswithout charge. Phone 3137 or pick up tickets at,Center for Continuing.Education, Room 121. Students only may obtain tickets also at the CentralInformation Desk, Adm. Bldg.General Public series admission, $8.00Phone Financial 6-8300 Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 5118 Dorchester Avenue Newly decfurn 3c unfurn. apts. for rent. 1»,2 & 2'..rms. all w/private bath & kit. Rentals$115-5130 mo. No children. CallMU 4-1469.U of C STUDENTS-FACULTY TENANTREFERRAL SERVICE reason, rentals,desir. apts. campus bus direct to U ofC. eff. $80, 1 bdrm. $100. and up. Alsolarge deluxe apartments. NO 7-7620South STiore Commission a non-profitcommunity organ.Rm-mate wanted immed. $38 75 . 5515University. DO 3-0522.Furnished room in elevator buildingclose to campus. International Houseand Illinois Central. Call before 8 amFA 4-0111 or after 5:00 pm. References/necessary.RM. & hath in exch-max of 20 hr./wkbabysitting-cooking facilities avail-Mustenjoy small children. 643-4401.LOSTGold dangle earring w/5 turquoisestones Call 684-7545.Hyde Park Medical LaboratoryOpen 9 am-9 pm, 6 days a week5240 S. Harper 493-2000(Corner 1400 E. 53rd St.)AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111* * j '*Xr'- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW A USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V/s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes - Batteries10% diuMDl »# student* with ID cards8 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 14, 1966Bloom Pushes Pigskin Proposal, Cries:Where Have All the Footballs Gone?SG representative AlanBloom announced this weekthat he is working for the passage of a resolution calling forthe return of varsity football toUC.The bill, submitted to SG Thurs¬day, may take from three to sixweeks to clear the Campus ActionCommittee, afterwhich the SG as¬sembly must act on it.ALTHOUGH intercollegiate foot¬ball was abolished in 1939, for adozen years students have beenable to play football in a footballclass, sponsored by the Men’sPhysical Education department.According to the bill, however“the class. . . is not a varsity sportso that members of it do not enjoythe same opportunities and recog¬nition that are accorded to stu- wrestling, basketball, or the othereight intercollegiate sports. Theyhave not been allowed to join anyconferences, and their players areineligible for any varsity honors.”BLOOM FEELS that the issue isone of civil liberties and that thefootball ban represents a violationof articles 4 and 8 of the StudentBill of Rights. Article 4 permits thestudent ‘‘to exercise his full rightsin forming and participating incampus, local, national, or interna¬tional organizations,” and article 8guarantees the right “to partici¬pate freely in off-campus activi¬ties.”‘‘If,” said Bloom, ‘‘we continuethis blatant disregard for therights of people interested in play¬ing football, such a principle couldwell be extended to include peopleinterested in certain phases of po-dents in cross country running, litical activity as well.” Student Activity Funds Granted(Continued from Page Three)one member of the committee whoasked not to be identified. ‘‘Youcan always use more money, but Iwas satisfied that we were able togive money to most groups that re¬quested it. I’m pretty sure that noorganizations will be dying thevine for lack of funds this year.”MEMBERS OF the committeeindicated that the main criterianfor granting funds was making“student life on campus more bear¬able and more enjoyable.” As onecommittee member put it, “It’sunfortunate that we must be cal¬lous at times, but it is often neces¬sary to look at things quantitative¬ly instead of qualitatively. Itstands to reason that an organiza¬tion like the Musical Society whichperforms for thousands of peopleshould get a little more moneythan the Rugby Club which existsonly for the enjoyment of its ownmembers.”Hutchins Opens Law Quad(Continued from Page One)organization of employees respon¬sible to a hierarchy of bosses,”Bell had said.Hutchins recalled the Illinois in¬vestigations of the University in1936 and 1949. “Under Laird’s lead¬ership, the University went intobattle with the bigots in the leg¬islature and emerged victorious.”“These hearings were profitableto me,” he quipped. “Laird offer¬ed me $25 if I would make nowisecracks during my testimony.He paid me—a triumph of avariceover art.”Trustees Not StereotypesReturning to assertions of theUniversity’s independence of theBoard, Hutchins described the con¬ventional picture of a universityWhyCan't YouControl YourMemory?A noted publisher in Chicago re¬ports there is a simple tech¬nique for acquiring a powerfulmemory which can pay you realdividends in both business andsocial advancement and workslike magic to give you addedpoise, necessary self-confidenceand greater popularity.According to this publisher,many people do not realize howmuch they could influenceothers simply by rememberingaccurately everything they see,hear, or read. Whether in busi¬ness, at social functions or evenin casual conversations withnew acquaintances, there areways in which you can dominateeach situation by your abilityto remember.To acquaint the readers ofthis paper with the easy-to- fol¬low rules for developing skiMin remembering anything youchoose to remember, the pub¬lishers have printed full detailsof their self-training method Ina new book, "Adventures InMemory," which will be mailedfree to anyone who requests It.No obligation. Send your name,address and zip code to: MemoryStudies, 835 Diversey Parkway,Dept. Cl 27, Chicago, III. 60614.A post card will do. trustee “that of an overstuffed cor¬poration executive telling the fac¬ulty and students to behave them¬selves on pain of losing financialsupport.“The trustees of the Universityof Chicago have never conformedto this picture. Yet even amongthem I find Laird Bell remarka¬ble.”HE CITED Bell’s last words tothe faculty and trustees:“I think I shall take the occasionto say that the most serious con¬cern is about our general spiritualhealth. I frankly am afraid that inour preoccupation with stilling the internal tempests, and cultivatingthe good will of the alumni andthe public, we may neglect thevery things that have entitled usto be proud of the institution.”Bell, Hutchins added, prescribed“insistence on the highest stand¬ards of scholarship, an atmos¬phere of academic freedom, andthe courage to be different and tobe unpopular as defining the prin¬ciple behind the institution.In other speeches at the dedica¬tion ceremony, Bell was eulogizedfor his “enthusiasm for creation,”“special wisdom and stature,” and“never-ending sense of humor.”HONDA - Fantastic Savings& Best BargainsSEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES - SERVICE - PARTS• PICK UP & DELIVERY• EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESCALLMl 3-4500Chicago's Largest and Just Around The CornerBOB NELSON MOTORS6136 S. COTTAGE GROVE“DEATH OF GOD:MOOD OR MOVEMENT?”PROFESSOR CHARLES LONG, SpeakerBaptist Graduate Student Center4901 S. Ellis Ave.BUFFET (25c) 5:30 PM PROGRAM 6-7:15 PMSEMINARS: FALL 1966Presented by the Ecumenical Christian Council at the University of Chicago.Open to oM members of the University community.I. FRONTIERS OF THEOLOGYLeader: Rev. E. Spencer Parsons, Dean, Rockefeller ChapelFirst Meeting: Monday, October 17, 4:30 P.M. Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn AvenueII. FATHERS AND HERETICS:The early shaping of Christian theologyLeader: Rev. Wayne SaffenFirst Meeting: Tuesday, October >1, 4:38 P.M. Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn AvenueIII. POLITICS:THE 1966 ILLINOIS CAMPAIGN: Conversations with repre¬sentatives from the major political forces at work in thepresent campaign.Leaders: Miss Janet Mather - Rev. Philip M. DrippsFirst Meeting: Tuesday, October II, 4:30 P.M. Calvert House (basement)5735 South University AvenueEach seminar meets for six weeks, ene hour weekly. Maroon ControversyIn applying these standards toappropriations for the Maroon,many committee members indicat¬ed that they felt the newspaperwas not fulfilling its function as ameans of campus communication.“If the Maroon wishes to go furth¬er along the way it started, theycan do it with their own money,”said one committee member. An¬other member, Jerry Hyman,argued in committee that the Ma¬roon should be given a one-quarterappropriation, at the end of whichtime the committee would decidewhether the paper had begun tofulfill its function. Although thisproposal was defeated, the Maroonnevertheless sustained the largestcut of any campus organization.ANOTHER GROUP which re¬ceived considerably less than it re¬quested was Student Government.Its speaker and student-facultydinner project grants were consid¬erably below the figure they re¬quested, and a number of its otherprograms were either abandonedcompletely or transfered to otherorganizations. “Most of the com¬mittee members are familiar withSG,” said one member, “and thusit was easier to tell just how manylies they were telling us.”MUCH OF the money that wouldhave normally gone to the Maroon,Student Government and othersuch organizations was funnelled into a variety of new organizationsand projects this year. The CORSObudget provides a total of $2,125for projects and organizationswhich received nothing at all lastyear. They include $1300 for Docfilms, $500 for the Student MedicalForum, and $360 for a new movieprojector.Huggins . . .(Continued from Page One)He also noted, “The main thingthat is accomplished is a decreasein man-pain hours.”Golden RuleHe explained that he works aseven day week and that he is aprofessional lab worker because hedoesn’t wear a lab coat but instead“. . .works in his shirtsleeves.”HE ALSO said that he does re¬search by the golden rule in thesense that he would not do re¬search he thought to be harmful,even if he could learn somethingfrom it.When asked whether he had giv¬en any thought to turning down theprize, he said, “This would be themost rude thing imaginable.” Healso explained, when asked whathe would do with the $30,000 cashaward that goes with the prizethat, “I get the glory and my wifegets the cash.”Dr. Huggins Enjoys His Biggest Dayby David E. GumpertCharles B. Huggins enjoyedhis biggest day Thursday, andstill kept his grace and charm.“I hope this will never makeme proud,” he told the pressThursday morning, hours after be¬ing notified that he had beenchosen to share the Nobel Prizefor medicine. “It’s not one of thegreat events of life like birth ormarriage, it’s nice.”A SHORT, trim man of 65, withclosely cropped white hair, Hug¬gins went out of his way to be ac¬commodating to all the people atthe press conference, posing forpictures as directed, answering allquestions as sincerely as possible,and rereading his opening state¬ment for reporters who came inlate.“The press conference was sortof a soliloquy,” he remarked later.“I tried to say things that would beof interest to the people.”Yet with his sudden emergenceas a celebrity he was all the moreconscious of some of the pitfallsthat might await him.As he rode home from the pressconference, he expressed concernthat he might become completelybogged down with the inevitablephone calls, invitations, and re¬quests for interviews, and tried tothink of a graceful way to avoid it. “The physiology can’t take allthis,” he remarked.HE ALSO expressed hope thathis receiving the Nobel Prizewould help the University and its75th anniversary celebration.“When am I going to get mywork done,” he lamented as hismind turned briefly from the ac¬companying excitement. Gettingthe Nobel Prize, he said, is largely“a matter of luck.” After all, heasked, “Who is to decide whosework is more valuable?”This was not the first time Hug¬gins stood to win the prize as hehad been nominated several timespreviously. But from all indica¬tions, it was worth waiting for.UC Highly PrizedWith the recognition of CharlesHuggins’ achievement in medicine,the number of Nobel Prizes award¬ed to persons connected with theUniversity has risen to 26.These include faculty members,former faculty members, and for¬mer students.Huggins, the third to win theprize while a faculty member here,is the seventh Chicago laureatehonored in the field of medicine.Fifteen have received awards inphysics, and four in chemistry.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED EYE EXAMINATIONSNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Discawnt CONTACT LENSESw Sunday, October 16Ethics and the GodsDr. A. Eustace HagdonProfessor Emeritus of Comparative ReligionsUniversity of Chicago Divinity School //CHICAGO ETHICAL SOCIETYA Humanist Religion for Today5480 S. Kenwood 332-7473 10:45 A.M.October 14, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9Music ReviewmCulture Calendarisa ■. S. V V " - ' * ' >wARTART LVSTITIE OF CHICAGO —Sixty-Eighth American Exhibition; thruOct 16. 20th Century Art acquired with¬in the last decade; thru Oct. Lands¬capes by Vera Berdich; thru Oct. Pho¬tographs in color by Chester Danett;Oct l-Nov 13. Japanese Brush Draw¬ings; thru Nov. 13. Pewter from Per¬manent Collection of Art Institute; thruOct. 23 First exhibition of major arttreasures from Polish national collec¬tions; Oct. 15-Dec. 31; adults; $1; chil¬dren & students, $.50. Daily, 10-5. Thurs.10-9:30, Sun., Noon-5. Michigan &Adams. CE 6-7080.CHICAGO PUBLIC LIBRARY —Exhi¬bit Corridor; Sculpture work of MiltonHorn: photographs by Estella Horn. ArtDeparment: Paintings by Edward Jag-man; sculpture by Elroy Johnson; Oct.4-31. Music Department: Stage Settingsand Costume Designs lent by Lyric Op¬era Natural Sciences Department;Plastic Models of Animals lent by De-noyer-Geppert Co.; Animal photographsby Kurt R. Bogen. Applied Science andTechnology Department: HighwaysThat Carry Your Voice, display by Illi¬nois Bell Telephone Co. History andTravel Department: Pictures and han¬dicrafts from Free China, lent by the-Chinese Consulate General. Children’sDepartment: Salt and Pepper Shakers,from collection of Mrs. Norman Voss;Drawings of Ringling Brothers Circusby Mrs. Hazel Tilly. Daily, 9-9; Sat. 9-5:30. Closed Sun. & Hoi. 78 E. Washing¬ton.LEXINGTON STUDIO GALLERY —•‘Architecture in Chicago,” an exhibit ofphotographs of important buildings inthe city from 1869 to the present.Hours: Daily 9-5; Saturday 10-5; Mon¬day. Wednesday, and Thursday Even¬ings 7-10. Through Nov. 4.CONCERTSCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA—In their 76th Season. Jean Martin on.Music Director and Conductor; IrwinHoffman, Associate Conductor; Margar¬et Hillis. Director, Chicago SymphonyChorus.First Week—Thur., Fri. & Sat, Sept.29-30 & Oct. 1—Jean Martinon, cond.Beethoven: Consecration of the House i Overt; Sym No. 4. Nielsen: Sym No. 4.i Second Week—Thur. & Fri. Oct 6-7—Jean Martinon, cond. John Browning,piano. Schonberg: Five Pieces for Or¬chestra. Tchaikovsky: Piano Cone. No.1. Schumann: Sym No. 2.Third Week—Thur., Fri. & Sat., Oct.13-15—Jean Martinon, cond. ArthurGrumiaux, violin, Handel: ConcertoGrosso in G minor. Messiaen: OiseauxExotiques. Brahms: Concerto for Violin.Fourth Week—Thur. & Fri., Oct. 20-21—Jean Martinon, cond. R. Strauss:Death and Transfiguration. Berg: ThreeFragments from Wozzeck. Stravinsky:Variations: Petrouchka.Fifth Week—Thur., Fri., & Sat., Oct.27-29—Irwin, Hoffman, cond. Leonid Ko¬gan, violin. Brahms: Serenade No. 1.Webern: Symphony. Shostakovich: Viol¬in Cone. _Thur-Sat. Concerts: Thur. 8:15; Fri.2; Sat. 8:30. $2.50-$6.00. Fri. gallery■ seats for students $1.50 (available until1 pm only). Orchestra Hall Box Office:Daily, 9:30-6; later on concert nights.Sun 1-4 Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michi¬gan. HA 7-0362; Sun. & Hoi. after 5; HA7-0499.HARPER THEATRE CHAMBER MU¬SIC —First in a series of four concerts.Symphony String Quartet: Victor Aitay,Edgar Muenzer, violins; Milton Preves,viola; Frank Miller, cello; KatherineGlaser, piano, Mendelssohn; StringQuartet in D. Tchereprin: Spring Quar¬tet, Brahms: Piano Quintet in F minor.Mon. Oct. 10 at 8:30. Adults, $3.50; stu¬dents, $2. Series tickets available:Adults $10, students, $6. 5238 S. Harper.BU 8-1717.THEATREMODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPING■XPERT PHOTO ADVICCNSA DISCOUNTSI. SJH. HY 1-9259 GENERATION —A Broadway come¬dy by William Goodhart starring RobertYoung and Jerome Cowan. Nightly at8:30; Matinees Wed. & Sat. at 2; ClosedSun. $3.00-$6.50. “Hostile Witness” withRay Miiland opens Nov. 7. StudebakerTheatre, 418 S. Michigan. 922-2973.HALF A SIXPENCE —Musical come¬dy starring Dick Kallmann. Opens Nov.1. McVickers Theatre. Madison nr.State. 782-8230.HELLO DOLLY! —David Merrick’sBroadway production starring Eve Ar¬den; Gower Champion, dir. Nightly8:30; Wed. & Sat. Matinees, 2. ClosedSun. Nightly, $3.50-$9.00. Matinees,$3.50-$6.00. Shubert Theatre, 22 W. Mon¬roe. CE 6-8240.THE MAD SHOW—Musical Reviewby Larry Siegel and Stan Hart based onMad Magazine and originally performedoff-Broadway. Music by Mary Rogers,lyrics by Marshall Barer, Larry Siegelj and Steven Vinaver. “Entire production! conceived by Alfred E. Neuman.”Opens Oct. 6. Nightly, 9; Fri, 9 & 11:30;KARATE■Mi 8:15-9:15 PM. 9:30- 10:30 PMMondays & WednesdaysIDA NOYES HALL* SATURDAY WORKOUT 3-6 Sat. 6, 9 & 11:30; Sun. 6 & 9; ClosedMon. Happy Medium Theatre, 901 N.Rush. DE 7-1000.MARAT/SADE—Chicago Premiere of“The Persecution and Assassination ofJean-Paul Marat as Performed by theInmates of the Asylum of CharentonUnder the Direction of the Marquis deSade” by Peter Weiss, co-starring Do¬nald Davis and Jerome Kilty. CharlesMcGaw, dir. Oct. 21-Nov. 13. Nightly,7:30; Fri. & Sat. 8:30; Closed Mon.Nightly S3 50; Fri. & Sat. $4.00 Subscrip¬tions (six plays): $16.50-$20.00. Good¬man Theatre, Monroe & Columbus. CE6-2337.THE ODD COUPLE —Neil Simon’new comedy hit starring Dan Daileyand Richard Benjamin; Mike Nichols,dir. Nightly, 8:30; Wed. & Sat. Matinee,2. Nightly, $2.75-$5.00; Fri. & Sat. $3.50.$5.95; Matinees, $2.50-$4.50 BlackstoneTheatre, 60 E. Balbo. CE 6-8240.SECOND CITY —Final performanceof “When the Owl Screams” Oct. 2.New satirical review opens Oct. 12 (pre¬views begin Oct. 4). Sheldon Patinkin,dir. Cast includes Bob Curry, SandyHolt, Sid Grossfeld, Jon Shank, DavidWalsh, and Penny White. Tue-Sun. at 9;Fri. 9 & 11; Sat. 9, 1>1 & 1. $2.50; Fri. &Sat $3.00. 1846 N. Wells. DE 7-3992. MO4-4032 after 7:30.THE THEFT OF THE BELT —Acomedy starring Julie Newmar. VernSchwartz, dir. Nightly 8:30; Sat. 6 and9:30; Sun. 7; Closed Mon. $2.25-$3.00:Fri-Sun. $2.75-$3.50. Matinee, Wed. at2:30: $2.50-$3.00. Drury Lane Theatre,Martinque Restaurant, 2500 W. 94th PL,Evergreen Park. PR 9-4000.HULL HOUSE THEATRE — TheBirthday Party” by Harold Pinter in anAmerican premiere, Robert Stickinger,dir. Fri. & Sat. 8:30; Sun. 7:30; Fri. 8cSat. $3.90; Sun. $3.40. 3212 N. Broadway.Telephone reservations accepted. 348-5622.HULL HOUSE THEATRE AT PARK-WAY —“Emperor Jones” by Eugene O’¬Neill. Gerald Wallace, dir. Fri. & Sat.8:30; Sun. 7:30. Fri. & Sat. $2.50; Sun$2.00. Parkway Community House, 500E. 67th St. Telephone reservations ac¬cepted. 324-3880.LINCOLN PARK PLAYERS —“Inher¬it the Wind” by Jerome Lawrence andRobert E. Lee. Frederick Wroblewski,dir. Nov. 4-6. Fri. & Sat. at 8:30. Sun. at7:30. $1.00. Lincoln Park Theatre, 2021N. Stockton Dr. LI 9-0081.DRAMATIC READING OF As YouLike It, the complete text in a stagedreading by Readers from The OtherSide. Sunday, Oct. 16, The Other Side,1603 53rd St. Promptly at 2 p.m. A Grand SchlammeThen Great Strings--;v:-: ProfessorJ. S. M. Moon asks:“Gee/ how come in a massJ society like ours a premluntbeer gets to be the mostpopular? How come?”Aw, Prof...the answer’son the tip ofyour tongue.ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. • ST. LOUIS « NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON LOUIE'S BARBER SHOP1303 E. 53 StreetFor . PERSONALITY haircut3 Chairs — No WaitingFA 4-3878Expert for Oriental HaircuttingTHE BEST SOURCE FORArtist's MaterialsComplete Picture FramingServiceMounting; Matting Non-GlareGlass - School SuppliesBE SURE TO ASK FORWEEKLY SPECIALDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-411110% STUDENT DISCOUNTON $10 OR MORE Big doings at the Harper Theater this autumn. What withMartha Schlamme concluding a solo engagement and their :annual importation of various dance troupes, Harper Theater ,has been doing a yoeman’s service for Hyde Park music anddance habitues, and the prospectsdon’t appear to be abating. What’smore, the management isn’t averseto plugging local talent, either.Monday evening, for instance,brought the Symphony StringQuartet for a program of Schubert,Martinon, and Brahms, and whileit might be stretching the point tocall them local talent (they’re thefirst-desk string players of the Chi¬cago Symphony), they are just thekind of musicians who fit so well ina community where people can ful¬ly appreciate quality performers.THEIR SECRET , if it can becalled that, is basically the sameas that of an artist like, say, Vladi¬mir Horowitz. To the average lay¬man they sound pretty good, but tothe really hard-core devotees, whoknow what they’re listening for,e’est la grande difference.The Symphony Quartet is not agroup of flashy virtuosos, and thispoint cannot be overstated. Anyonewho has heard chamber groupscomposed of famous soloists com¬ing together for a single perform¬ance and is treated to an eveningof one upstaging the other to thecomplete detriment of the musicunderstands this distinction all toowell. This, then, is their beauty:they’re all professional ensembleplayers and their chamber musichas this wonderful sense of balanceand clarity, above all. They’re notthe kind to go overboard as far asidiomatic flair and interpretive af¬fect are concerned. But, then, somany of their conferees revel inthis kind of affectation that its adistinct pleasure to hear the musicplayed in a relatively straightfor¬ward manner, once in a while.The one unusual piece of pro¬gramming Monday nite was the in¬clusion of CSO music director JeanMartinon’s String Quartet, writtenin 1946. For some reason, when acomposer turns conductor, thisspells the end of performances ofhis music by others, and in thisPIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVO.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT(TEST... Un jour, votre famflte aura besoind'argent lorsqu'eile n’aura plus votrasalaire, ou bien vous aurez vous-memebesoin d'un revenu.pour votre retraite.L'assurance Sun Life peut vous pro¬curer les deux.En tant que repr6sentant local de la SuaLife, puls-je vous visiter k un moment davotre choix? ...Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanlclin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY Maroon music critic Ed Chikofskyexplains his technique to one ofhis many admirers.respect, Martinon has been extremely fortunate in Chicago. Thisof course, may stem from the f.utthat he writes in an accessible andconservative vein, but, whatewrthe reason, his Quartet representsone of the highpoints of his output,and quite a cut higher in qualitythan any of the larger sym phonic-works of his that I’ve heard. While#the music is extremely derivativy-in character, not unlike middle-ptfriod Beethoven, much of the music:owes a strong debt to Martinon’steacher Roussel in the deftness ofthe part writing and its thorough!)solid workmanship. ft.LITTLE IF anything, of course,need be said about the Brahms Pi¬ano Quintet in F minor. Its one ofthe landmarks of nineteenth centii:ry chamber music and one of thefew works in the whole literaturethat I’m convinced cannot bespoiled, no matter how it is ap¬proached. Even though piani^Katherine Glaser did lack the suf¬ficiently sonorous technical equipment to bring off her part conipletely, this is one of those exceedingly rare compositions that suc¬ceeds in ennobling anyone who at¬tempts it, and the Quartet did pro¬vide just the appropriately under#stated (oil for her somewhat light¬weight account of the piano partiJust think, back home in Orches¬tra Hall, there are 95 other fellowswho are just as good!Ed ChikofskyR.F.K. Stumps AreaIn Bid for P.H.DSenator Robert F. Kennedy,stumping Illinois to arouse supportfor Senator Paul H. Douglas, willappear throughout Chicago tomor-Kennedy will address informalgatherings at four locations duringthe afternoon. He is scheduled toappear at Randhurst shopping cen¬ter in Mt. Prospect at 1:00, at Illi¬nois Teachers’ College North at2:30, at the Hyde Park Co-op at4:00, and at Lake Meadows shop¬ping center at 5:00.Yom won't Heve to put youfmoving or storage problemoff wstM tomorrow if youCoil Mt today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.IM» *. Doty Ave, :044-441110 CHICAGO MAROON • October 14, 1966KTrEOMAANCE AND PtICEStM.OlO- Workday '.(*$] 00SUN SUN ruts WED THU»SMAT EVf EVE EVE EVEIX /30 too too >00SftCIAl \ *41A (NO ONtY >} 90EAIY \ FI1 SAT SATANOIATE y EVE (AtlY (ATESHOW ON / 130 EVE EVESATUtDAV / 700 1000HARPER THEATER 5238 S. HarperLAST 5 PERFORMANCES Closes Oct. 16thSAVEUP TO SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT$3X0 S”TS $1.500 .F!L SSrfO STUDENTSONLYWEEKDAYFRI* SATHorp.f Thtol,, Bow OHka Op.n Now-6 PM Daily $2.00MEET THE GANG ATSMEDLEY’S PUB"Home of English Ale & Guinness Stout on tap."WORLD'S BEST CHILI, Lge. 12 oz. bowl 60°SPAGHETTIS, Meat Sauce & Garlic Bread $ 110Fancy Choice STEAKBURGER, Lettuce & Tomato 75°Lge. 67 oz. PITCHER SCHLITZ on Tap $ 135SEE YOU SOON . . . OK?5239 S. HARPER AVE. NO 7-5546"AMONG THEGREAT MOVIESOF Ml TIME., There is ao mteJ- M1 ectuai and d ramatieexcitement of this film Jthat J haw never felt 1in anytr<»fcmentof |AN6RY /■ ;YOUNG MANForceful,even arrogant,WAtTF* RtADESTEftMNGthetjospeLaeeoRdinqto st. Matthew, h Pit* MOO feSQUMfc*,o.AiF»EDC»INISPECIAL 7 D AY ENCAGE ME NTStarts Friday, October 14 at these theatres!■: - v i ... , l I ' ' i J ' J 1 * : !Hear North a- ESQUIRE - 58 E. Oak St.Northwest Northwest South South Evanston Elgin Elmhurst jWILL ROGERS TIFFIN HAMILTON MARQUETTE CORONET GROVE YORKEvergreen PR. Joliet La Grange Oak Park Forest Park Park Ridge WaukeganEVERGREEN MODE U GRANGE LAMAR HOLIDAY PICKWICK ACADEMY(Oct 12-18}Phone Theatre Nearest You For Special Group Rates ALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club and Fil¬et Mignon Steaks, Seafood De¬light, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.ORALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST& HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.LI 8-7585(OPEN DAWN TO DAWN)Hobby House Restaurant1342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER"The Best of All Foods"held overBY POPULAR DEMANDJason Robards inA THOUSANDCLOWNSplusEXCLUSIVE SOUTH SIDE SHOWINGKHARTOUMwithCharleton Heston and Laurence OlivierFeature times: Fri. & Sat.KHARTOUM 1:30, 5:45, 10:05A THOUSAND CLOWNS 3:50 A 8:15Sun. - Thurs - TimesKHARTOUM 1:10, 5:25. 9:40A THOUSAND CLOWNS 3:30. 7:45JefferyTheatre1952 EAST 71st HY 3-3333Patronize Our AdvertisersMEET 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 S3.00for 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.NameAddressCityDATELINE ELECTRONICP. O. Box 369, Chicago, III.60645RESEARCH INC. CMFor Add. Info Call 271-3133October >4, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • >1Lucet Notes Changed East-West Ties(Continued from Page One)cooperation with her owrn neigh¬bors,” Lucet declared. As a result,she now" ‘‘can and will direct herown destiny.”Lucet noted that France hasbeen accused of inhibiting the prog¬ress of the Common Market.‘‘This is not true,” he asserted.“No state can forego its right tomake its own decisions.”Lucet stated that Germany isnow the central problem of Eu¬ rope. “We are for a reunified Ger¬many. However, this cannot bedone by force.” He did not specifyhow exactly it should be done. “Aunified Germany and a unified Eu¬rope is our goal,” he said.“Things have changed in East-West relations. The possibility ofaggression in Europe today is al¬most nonexistant,” he declared.Alliances, he said, must changeas progress takes place. They mustI take new forms when there is aJESSELSOITSSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER SOWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1140 I. 3M new, unified Europe. Lucet definedFrance’s new Europe as includingEastern Europe and parts of theSoviet Union.HE POINTED out that there “is no question of neutralism involvedhere. We would fight at your sidein case of situations such as theCuban missile crisis and the Berlincrisis.”Jimmy’sand the University RoomMSIRVIO EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFHty-FiWi <hkI Woocflov-* Av*.<3x\r\j~rSHlRTMAKERSMulti-Stripe OxfordNew expression In a cotton oxford button-down! Three varied-color stripes — muted,mellow, distinctively Gant. Available In avariation of color combinations. Great forbusiness and leisure wear. £ yCMh ^ Stety-Qtatmt St (Campus g>ljopin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55fh Sf. Phone 752-8100 PHOTOTry our dependable service on slide making and printing.Check our low prices on electronic flash guns, slide files, camerasand film,PHOTOGRAPHIC DEPT.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.PEOPLE WHO KNOW CALL ONCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANINGAll Pressing Done on PremisesSilks Hand FinishedExpert Alterations and Repairs1363 E. 53rd St.10% STUDENT DISCOUNT PL 2-9662MODERNDANCE CLUD4:30-6:00 P.M. TuesdaysIDA NOYES HALL Int. House BoycottEmpties CafeteriaFifteen “little old ladies”were the only diners at Inter¬national House last night. The*formed the small minority thatwasn’t affected by a student-or¬ganized food boycott.But an estimated 95%-98% 0fthe house residents were affectedand many of them stood outsidethe dining hall in a well-orderedattempt to persuade people not touse the eating facilities for onenight.The boycott was organized toprotest the price of food at theInternational House cafeteria. Thecatering services that handles thecafeteria raised the prices of manyitems, but also eliminated manyof the lower priced dishes.Dissatisfaction has been ram¬pant at International House on.many issues. At recent meetingsto elect floor representatives forthe house council, the eighth floorvoted for no representative, charg¬ing that the house council has nosay on house management.Students have organized a moot¬ing for Sunday at 10:00 p.m inthe lounge of International House.They will discuss the lack of pow¬er of the house council and thefood situation. Before the meetinga student representative will gath¬er information on the food con¬tract from the cafeteria manager.Koga Gift ShopDistinctly* Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856IS THEWIGGY SCENEFOR YOU?It's the latest hang-up. Thepsychadelic Go-Go scene. Soonit will be the big noise oncampus. The current issue ofThe Saturday Evening Posttakes you on the rounds ofNew York's "total-environ¬ment" nightclubs. Experiencethe frantic kaleidoscope offlashing lights, movies, slides,colored smoke and deafeningrock 'n' roll that give you anLSD trip with no side effects.Get with New York's "Take-Over Generation" as they Jel¬ly Belly their cares away.: Find out what to wear whenmaking the new scene: bustshields, flourescent mini-| skirts, silver mr’lorcycle jack¬ets, aluminum 'wigs. Is thisreally a new art media as itsinventor believes? Is it for/our school? Find out in theOctober 22 issue of the Satur¬day Evening Post. Pick up onit today, baby.ItuniuMv <9POSTON SALE NOW12 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 14, 1966