Chicago Maroon WEEKENDEDITION75th Anniversary YearThe University of Chicago Friday, October 21, 1966Schlesinger Urges AudienceTo Vote for Senator DouglasFormer Presidential aide Arthur Schlesinger Jr. told an overflow audience at Judd Hall,Tuesday night, that a vote against Senator Paul H. Douglas would not constitute a vote infavor of a peaceful solution to the Vietnam War. Schlesinger said that a vote against Doug¬las would amount instead to a vote in support of the white backlash.Schlesinger spoke at UC underNEARING COMPLETION: The Searle Chem Lab Building in thenorthwest corner of the Quadrangles.College Women Freed-Slightly At Least1 WASHINGTON D.C. (CPS) — Colleges and universitiesare granting more liberal social regulations to women, thoughthe privileges often entail exacting qualifications.This fall, the University of Massachusetts abolished allwomen's hours, and the Universityof Oregon did likewise for itssophomores and juniors. For sev¬eral years, seniors and womenover 21 have had this privilege atOregon.All upperclassmen at the Univer¬sity of Utah are now eligible forkeys to the dorm-s, but only if theyachieve a 2.5 average (out of 4.0).THE UNIVERSITY of Illinoiswill experiment this fall with un¬limited hours and key privilegesfor seniors. If the system is suc¬cessful. the loosened regulationswill extend to juniors and womenover 21.Women at the University ofPennsylvania, tired of rushingback to their dormitories at twominutes to twelve because theyforgot to sign out, have initiated atrial system of telephone signoutsfor lates. Formerly girls had tosign out personally for lates whichcould extend to 1:30 am on week¬days and 2:15 on Saturdays. Now agirl may call her dormitory and request someone to sign her out forthose hours. A girl does not haveto sign out any time prior to mid¬night. the auspices of the UC IndependentVoters of Illinois (IVI,. The speechwas part of his two day speech¬making trip through Illinois in sup¬port of Douglas’s re-election.SCHLESINGER STRESSED thatDouglas’s defeat would not affectVietnam policy because Douglasdid not participate in the formationof foreign policy. Douglas’s defeat,however, would damage thedomestic liberal movement, hesaid."Main Issue"The main issue in the campaign,according to Schlesinger, is an im¬pending increase in domestic prob¬lems. He asserted that domesticproblems have become more seri¬ous because of the diversion ofboth resources and attentioncaused by the Vietnam War. Thus,Schlesinger stated, it is vital to Arthur Schlesinger Jr.have a senator who will devote hisenergies to domestic problems.Schlesinger sees Douglas as such asenator. “No member of the Sen¬ate has strived for a civilizedAmerica as much as SenatorDouglas,” he stated.Philosophy Dept. Opposes RankingThe Department of Philosophy has decided by almost unan¬imous vote to oppose the formation of a male class rank bythe University.The vote was taken on a resolution reading, “The Depart¬ment of Philosophy proposes thatthe University not make any rankings of students available to draftboards.” The Philosophy Depart¬ment will bring up the resolutionat a meeting of the Humanities Di¬vision on Monday. The meeting isbeing called in response to Presi¬dent Beadle’s request that facultymembers discuss the question ofranking in their divisions.ACCORDING TO Manley Thomp¬son, professor of philosophy andWatts Eyes FallacyOf Psycho-therapyAlan Watts, speaking on psycho-therapy and metaphysicsat Mandel Hall last night, stated that a mechanistic view ofreality has led to a psycho-therapy which is based on thealienation of the ego from its surrounding environment.“I am disquieted by the meta¬physical shallowness of psycho¬therapy,” Watts said. “Man shouldbe represented as an organic ex¬pression of his environment. Wedo not come into the world, we goout from it.”WATTS WENT on to explainthat modern psycho-therapiststend to view reality as thoughthey were looking with a narrowbeam spotlight at various thingsrather than realizing that it is oneorganic interrelationship.This fallacy, Watts explained,results from two beliefs held overfrom the nineteenth century: thatthe universe was created arbitrari¬ly out of form and substance, andthat it follows “fully automatic,mechanistic patterns.”“Because of these views,” Watts chairman of the department, nodebate or discussion took place onthe resolution, since it has been dis¬cussed often since last spring, andall the members present werestrongly in favor of the motion.The faculty members decided toexpress their opinions in accordwith the President’s memorandumand because Students Against theRank (SAR) is circulating a peti¬tion to express student opinion.Professor of philosophy andDean of Students Warner Wick,who is the only department mem¬ber to oppose the resolution so far,said, “If the resolution had been,that the department is opposed to not vote at the meeting.the use of class rank in the Selec¬tive Service system, I would havevoted for it gladly. But the objec¬tion I had to the particular resolu¬tion was “that it took no account ofcircumstances.”FREDERICK SIEGLER, asso¬ciate professor of philosophy, whosupported the resolution, comment¬ed that, “I was -surprised thatthere was no discussion of the sub¬stantive issue at the meeting and Ihope that there will be discussionat the divisional meeting. I doubtthat it will find much support withthe other humanist-s.” Thompsonexpressed doubt that the resolutionwould be passed at the divisionalmeeting. The division has almost160 voting members.Thompson also pointed out thatfaculty members who teach in theCollege and do not also have ap¬pointments in the division could Schlesinger said that he sees fivemajor domestic problems facingthe country. T’:;se are the prob¬lems of equalization of opportuni¬ties. reconstruction of the cities,shcring up the national economy,conservation of resources, and pro¬tection of the defenseless portionsof society.Schlesinger cited Douglas’s workin each of these areas. He listedDouglas’s sponsorship of laws pro¬viding for federal registrars in theSouth, his support of the SupremeCourt’s “one-man-one-vote” deci¬sion; his background in economics;sponsorship of the “Indiana dunes”bill; and introduction of the “truthin lending” bill.IN DESCRIBING Douglas’ oppo¬nent, Republican candidate CharlesPercy, Schlesinger said that he“might best be defined as an un¬identifiable flying object.” Schle¬singer maintained that Percy wasinconsistent in his political stands,especially in civil rights. Schlesing¬er said that Percy’s statement,“We have to have a proper bal¬ance between human rights andproperty rights,” was morally in¬consistent and appealed to thewhite backlash vote.Schlesinger said that Percy’sproposal of an all-Asian conferencewas an impractical means of end¬ing the Vietnam War. He statedthat the only solution he could seewould be the reconvening of theGeneva conference. Percy’s pro¬posal is opposed by Douglas.Disagrees on VietnamThough Schlesinger said that hedisagreed with Douglas’ position onVietnam he did rot state what hisdifferences were.Schlesinger was formerly -specialassistant to President John F. Ken¬nedy and is the author of A Thou¬sand Days, a book about the Kenne¬dy Administration, and The Age ofJackson. Formerly a professor ofhistory at Harvard. Schlesinger isnow the Albert Schweitzer profes¬sor of history at the City Universi¬ty of New York.MFDP Leader Speaks at Reynolds ClubFannie Hamer Chides LiberalsAlan WattsWMMstated, “we tend to separate our¬selves from our environment andeven from our own bodies andour own unconscious forces.” “This country just really doe-sn’tintend for the Negro to be free,”said Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer, aleader in the Mississippi Demo¬cratic Party (M.F.D.P.)Speaking at Reynolds Club yes¬terday afternoon, Mrs. Hamer:• Charged Office of EconomicOpportunity direct or Sargent Shri-ver with making a deal with Sena¬tors Eastland and Stennis to stran¬gle the Child Development Groupof Mississippi (CDGM), a Mississip¬pi Head Start program;• Told of the desperate need ofSNCC, CORE, and MFDP for mon¬ey, adding that the press wastrying to destroy every civil rightsorganization except NAACP (whichshe called the National Associationfor the Advancement of CertainPeople);• Asked for student volunteer help for the MFDP campaign inthe Sunflower County elections tobe held around February;• Pointed out that the people inMississippi were not just fightingfor themselves, but “for all ofyou.”S H R I V E R, by transferringCDGM to a group of Mississippibusinessmen, has handed the bestorganization for the poor to thepower structure, she charged.“The NAACP and three whiteMississippians control the programnow. This ‘Uncle Tom—Aaron Hen¬ry—is going to try to sell u-s backinto slavery.” The CDGM was aprogram aimed at giving specialinstruction to deprived Negro andpoor white children, many ofwhom, she said, had never seen acommode. But “we are used tostarving, and if help has to come from the power structure andAaron Henry, we don’t want it.”According to Mrs. Hamer, Ne¬groes would probably win offices inone town in Sunflower County.Even though eligible Negro votersoutnumber whites 14,000 to 8.000,Sunflower County is currently con¬trolled by a small group of whites.When Mrs. Hamer’s party nomi¬nated candidates for the Novemberelection, county officials refused toconsider petitions to place the can¬didates on the ballot until the U.S.Supreme Court ruled for M.F.D.P.challenge of the election.MRS. HAMER expressed littleinterest in integration as an end initself. “There are other things todo,” she said. “How can I careabout moving into Cicero if I don’thave the money to pay for thei shack I’m living in n»w?”It IPercy Calls Himself Morally Justified in Attacking Douglasby Ellis Levinr Charles H. Percy, Republicancandidate for the U.S. Senate,says that he feels morally justi¬fied in running against SenatorPaul Douglas because Douglas,“has lost his degree of independ¬ence.” Percy was interviewedby the Maroon, at his downtownoffice, last Friday.Douglas, Percy declared, hasnot in the least spoken outagainst any of the Johnson Ad¬ministration policies and is close¬ly tied to the Chicago Democraticmachine.PERCY DERIDED his oppo¬nent’s views on foreign affairs.Douglas, Percy said, sees theCommunist Bloc as a “monolith¬ic whole,” and wars such as theVietnam War as “holy war.”Percy indicated that he saw dif¬ferences between the variousCommunist countries, and thatour foreign policy “should be in aposition to work with the variouselements” and take advantage ofthe schisms."Military Solution"The Republican candidate disa¬greed with what he termed“Douglas’ emphasis on a militarysolution to a political problem,”and questioned whether Douglas’advocacy of firmer war measureswas not reckless. He saw weap¬ons, especially nuclear weapons,as being inadequate to win warsof the type being fought in Viet¬nam and could not envision theU.S. winning that war militarily.But even if we did win, he de¬clared; “we could no doubt losethe more important psychologicalwar.”Percy suggested as an alterna¬tive the use of “weapons of cultur¬al change: the principles of free¬dom and economic developmentto “overthrow the communist re-I gimes” and win the wider coldwar.THE REPUBLICAN candidaterefused to classify himself in theBe Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweat¬shirts, "Levis," rain parkas, ten¬nis shoes, underwear, jackets,camping equipment, wash pants,etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Student discount with ad political spectrum as either a lib¬eral or conservative He indicat¬ed that he’d “be his own man ashe has always been even in theRepublican party—‘an independ¬ent voice in the party’.” “Youcan’t find any group or individualI fit in with,” he added. He alone,he indicated as an example, was“pushing hard for an all-Asianpeace conference.”Percy told the Maroon that hewas running for the Senate be¬cause he could do more for Illi¬nois. As chairman of a business¬men’s legislative advisory com¬mittee under President Eisenhow¬er, he declared, he worked forthe adoption of a freer trade poli¬cy, by getting many of the Re¬publicans in Congress to vote forthe measure. As president of onein-significant company—Bell andHowell—which began sponsoringtelevision public service andnews programs, he soon got otherfirms to follow suit. As just onevoice in the Republican party, hewas responsible for the forwardlooking stance of the 1960 Repub¬lican platform.Got Things DoneIn business, Percy declared, hewas president of a small camerafirm which faced stiff competi¬tion from the much larger East¬man Kodak Co. He never let this,however, get in the way of thegrowth and success of his owncompany. He “knew how to getthings done.” Percy talked aboutthe passage of the Fair Em¬ployment Practices Commission(FEPC) bill in Illinois. He re¬called that he got 45 of the 59Republicans in the Illinois Sen¬ate to vote for the bill, and itwas a Bell and Howell official,Charles Gray, who served ais theFEPC’s first chairman. Percysaid that he also worked withCongressman Mathias of Mary¬land and McCulloch of Ohio toget a compromise open occupan¬cy .bill through the US House ofRepresentatives this year.Percy declared that his philoso¬phy was to look ahead. As chair¬man of the 1960 Republican plat¬form committee, he got the partyto come out for reciprocal trade,civil rights, and generally “tolook ahead instead of behind.”During the beginnings of the 1960campaign, he indicated, manywanted to run on the Republicanrecord. He, however, thought theparty had to look ahead to the1960’s instead of backward to thepast. The Republican platformunder his direction came to re¬ flect this view.THIS PHILOSOPHY is also re¬flected in his participation on theNational Goals Committee, whichcame into existence to “thinkahead” and to determine how fu¬ture generations might be spend¬ing their lives. In line with thisapproach, Percy saw a need toapply thi-s orientation to potentialproblems like the future schooldropouts. He specifically men¬tioned establishing programs ofearly pre-school education. In thecourse of the campaign, Percyhas proposed a program with thisaim in mind.Concerning the state of theeconomy, Percy indicated thataction should have been takenmore than a year ago, “when wefirst started talking inflation.”He termed it a “problem whichCharles H. Percy' & >■ v & m ''Scan not wait,” and a problemmanifested dramatically in thePresident’s proposal for an in¬crease of social security benefitsnot by 2 or 3% but upwards of10% to 15%.Speaking of Senator Douglas andhis proposal to increase withhold¬ing taxes in lieu of a tax in¬crease, Percy declared “as a pro¬fessor, he knew how to deal withthis type of problem, but as apolitician, he does not.” His planis little more than “a nice way toraise taxes.” Percy charged thatthe Johnson Administration plansto ask for a tax increase after theelection. At that time also thebudget increase necessary for theVietnam War will be presented,he predicted. Percy declared thathe would not commit himself onthe question of a tax increase un¬til after he sees the large budgetincrease he expects the Presidentto announce after the election.Cut Federal SpendingPercy said that the solution toinflation is the cutting of federalspending. “The Congress has justpassed a rivers and harbors bill which could have well waited foranother year.” He also saw theconstruction of a second federaloffice building in Chicago at thistime as detrimental to the econo¬my and as additional evidence ofthe influence of the Mayor of Chi¬cago. Referring to his own planfor pre-sehool education, he saidthat even here, while the plan¬ning for such a program shouldbegin now. the appropriation offunds fo finance the programshould not come until later.Turning to the war in Vietnamonce again, Percy expressed theconviction that the President wasnot pursuing the peace vigorouslyenough. He said that he was con¬vinced that the North Vietnamesefear an invasion from the South.“They see the construction ofU.S. military ba-ses which canweather 100 years of monsoons,”and they doubt if the U.S. reallyever intends to leave the South.”“We must get them to agree tonegotiate.” Percy declared thattrying to reconvene the GenevaConference was a waste of time,since neither side likes the Gene¬va Accord of 1954. He also saidthat working through the UnitedNations has failed, as have at¬tempts to set up direct negotia¬tions. Percy said that all three ofthese approaches taken by theJohnson Administration insuffi¬cient and called for the adoptionof his plan for an all-Asian peaceconference, where the North Viet¬namese and Chinese could sitdown with their fellow Asianstates and work out a compro¬mise agreement to end the war.Percy also attacked the John¬son administration for its “be¬trayal of trust and deliberatelack of truthfulness,” especiallyin regard to the Vietnam war. Hecited the statement of formerPresidential Press Secretary,Pierre Salinger that after theBerlin and Cuban missile crises,the Administration deliberatelyissued false statements on theVietnam situation because it feltthe country could not take anymore.Percy also said that he was sor¬ry that Mark Hatfield, runningfor the Senate in Oregon, was inSAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"sincePICKUP A DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 so much trouble in his campaibecause he had taken an extreiposition on the war in VietnaPercy thought he might hadone well to take a more modiate approach.ASKED TO COMMENTwhat was meant by the questiin his campaign literature “Fup with civil rights that still docome out right?” Percy indicatthat it referred to the failurethe civil rights legislation pas?in Washington to have any affion the Negro in Chicago or aiwhere in the North for that mter. “The civil rights legislatithat Paul Douglas has sp<sored,” he declared, “has ne\helped a single Negro in INorth.” Neither, he declared, 1Douglas marched in the «umircivil rights marches nor had aChicago Democratic precinct c;tains.Percy compared this withown record on civil rights whincludes work in getting a copromise open occupancy sectaccepted by the Republicansthe House of Representatives,fought for the bill that passe<he said. Percy went on to ?that no one blames Dirksen forbill’s ultimate defeat, as “th<were twice as many Demoerin the Senate as RepublicanPercy saw as an effective waydealing with Negro problemsapproach adopted by his New Inois Committee, a privatelyganized and financed projectfight -slum housing conditioprovide job opportunities ieducation for the unemplovand to give pre-school educatto deprived children.”LOUIE'S BARBER SHOI1303 E. 53 StreetFor a PERSONALITY haircu3 Chairs — No WaitingFA 4-3878Expert for Oriental HaircuttincJoseph H. AarorConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-106Hyde Park Medical LaboratoryOpen 9 am - 9 pm, 6 days a week5240 S. Harper 493-2000(Corner 1400 E. 53rd SI.)(OPEN DAWN TO DAWN)Hobby House Restaurant1342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER"The Best of All Foods"REYNOLD'S CLUBBARBER SHOP7 BarbersOnly Shop on CampusAPPOINTMENTS IF DESIREDREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT57th and UNIVERSITY. EXT. 3573M-F 8 am-5 pm, Sat. 8 am-1 pm BYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYd. Park 3-8372MM tmd r.c.tty niM.vni2 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 21, 1966New Site by 1968UC Extension Gets U. S. Grant To StartWorkshop for Community OrganizersUC’s extension division has taken a new step toward co¬operation with community organizers, with the start of a“community service workshop” to train people in socialagencies and grass roots organizations.With a grant from the U.S. Of¬fice of Education, the extension di¬vision will bring together about 100representatives of community or¬ganizations, mostly from the Chi¬cago metropolitan area.THE FIRST phase of the work¬shop begins Sunday, and will lastuntil next Thursday. Participantswill come back for further ses¬sions, including three week-endsscattered between November andMay. and a final wrap-up in June.Sol Tax, dean of the extensiondivision, is in charge of the pro¬gram, assisted by associate direc¬tors Earl Doty and Robert Reitz.TWO a Case StudyA prime feature of the programwill be the presentation of casestudies offering concrete examplesof community organizations andtheir tactics. Chief among the or¬ganizations to be used as examplesis The Woodlawn Organization(TWO), the grass roots communityorganization of Woodlawn, UC’sneighbor south of the Midway.In a plenary ses-sion on Monday,TWO staff members will talk about“power and responsibility” fromtheir viewpoint. The same topicwill be discussed Monday eveningby a panel including Julian Levi,UC professor of urban studies anddirector of the South East ChicagoCommission; Abner Mikva, formerIllinois state representative fromthe Hyde Park area: and GrantMcConnell, professor of politicalscience.PARTICIPANTS will hear about“social service and social change”in a case study of the ChicagoYouth Development Project, and ina discussion with Alan D. Wade,associate professor in the school ofsocial service administration, andrepresentatives of the ChicagoCommons settlement house and theWelfare Council of Chicago.Finally, the differences betweenindigenous and professional leader¬ship of organizations will bebrought out with a -study of NewYork’s mobilization for Youth. Itwill be supplemented with a panelincluding MFY representatives,Irving Spergel, and Elaine Switzer,professor in the UC school of so¬cial service Administration, andSol Tax.Broad RepresentationThe participants in the confer¬ence were nominated by agenciesand community organizationsaround the Chicago area. The ex¬tension division staff selected the100 who will attend with the aim ofgetting a broad, heterogeneous re¬presentation. Persons from all lev¬els on their organizations’ heirar-chies, and from groups concernedwith many problems, will partic¬ipate.Funds for the project are author¬ized by the Higher Education Actof 1965. Title I of that act providesfor grants to university extensionprograms for projects which helpcommunities deal with their prob¬lems.AMONG THE other activities ofthe UC extension division are theadult education program of the Taxdowntown center, the operation ofthe Center for Continuing Educa¬tion as a meeting place on campusfor community and educationalgroups.In addition. Tax and other UCrepresentatives have been meetingregularly for over two years withrepresentatives of the Woodlawncommunity to discuss problems ofmutual concern and ways of allevi¬ating them. Books Near! Bookstore To Expandby Jeffrey Kuta“We may have a new book¬store by the fall of ’68,” ac¬cording to Eugene L. Miller,campus operations businessmanager.“It would appear that the areanow occupied by Lexington Hall isthe most likely site. Of course, thisis still unofficial,” he told the Ma¬roon. “But you know as well as Ido that better facilities are need¬ed.”MILLER, WHO manages thepresent University Bookstore, saidthat a new building had been -sug¬gested as far back as ten yearsago. “Since then, well over 20 siteshave been suggested,” he noted.Complaints have been wide¬spread that the bookstore does notkeep enough books in stock, doesnot give a discount on books, andallocates too much space to non-academic items such as novelties,tobacco, clothing, and lingerie.“Pressure from students and fac¬ulty, together with the hospitalexpansion, seems finally to bebringing results,” Miller stated.Committee FormedHe was referring to the Blumcommittee on student facilities, aStudent Government Bookstoreconsultant board, and the student-faculty Bookstore committee whichis now in existence.The Blum committee had specifi- SEEING-EYE MIRROR in the Book¬store helping to catch anyonestealing pyjamas, souvenirs, bras¬sieres, etc.cally recommended Lexington asthe site for a new Bookstore withimproved facilities.After conducting a poll duringlast spring quarter, the SG consult¬ant board had revealed that 58percent of faculty members and 74percent of students were “dis¬pleased or very displeased” withthe Bookstore. It had also recom¬mended the formation of the pres¬ent committee.SINCE ITS formation last sum¬mer the student-faculty Bookstorecommittee has met three time-s, in¬cluding once last Monday. Millerindicated that he has not been incontact with the group.Chaired by Richard C. Wade,UC Researcher DiscoversRheumatic Fever Vaccine'■t' z&tr M&mChet McGraw, intramuraldirector, wants to meet withanyone who is interested inofficiating IM contests. Hecan be reached at Bartlett3ym, c/o the IM office.'S, V, , A new vaccine that mayhelp end rheumatic fever wasdescribed in New York Citytoday bv a team of UC scien¬tists at the scientific sessions ofthe American Heart Association.Dr. Eugene N. Fox. who present¬ed the report, described the drugas “a vaccine aimed at the com¬mon Group A streptococcus, whichis often responsible for rheumaticfever or nephritis.”Fox is an Associate Professor atthe La Rabida-UC Institute (LRUCI)and in the department of mi¬crobiology at the University. Work¬ing with him were Dr. Albert Dorf-man, director of the LRUCI andchairman of the department ofpediatrics, and Mrs. M. K. Wittner,research technologist at La Rabi-da.“It took about four years of workto produce a non-toxic vaccineagainst those streptococcus infec¬tions,” Fox said. “We have triedout the vaccine on about fortyadults with good success and suffi¬cient antibody production. We’reprepared now to test it with infantsand a larger number of adults. Itwill be a number of years beforethe testing is completed and thevaccine available.”It has been well established formany years that the initial strepto¬coccus infections may appear assimple respiratory infections, Foxsaid. Rheumatic fever or glomeru¬lonephritis may develop later.Rheumatic fever frequently leadsto heart disease, and is one of themost serious and widely occurringdisabling diseases of childhood.Nephritis, more common to adults,is a frequent result of untreatedstreptococcus infections, and maylead to los-s of kidney function.The vaccine is prepared by puri¬fying the “M protein” from thecell walls of the streptococci, Foxreported. The body responds to thevaccine by making antibodiesagainst the M protein. When strep¬tococci invade the body the anti¬bodies react with the M protein inthe cell walls and help destroy the organisms before an infection be¬gins.To be effective against differenttypes of streptococcus cells, vac¬cines must contain M proteinsfrom each of the different types.The LRUCI group is currentlyworking toward the development ofa vaccine which will be effectiveagainst five or six of the mostcommon streptococcus organisms.Many adults develop a skin reac¬ tion to some of the M proteins inthe vaccine because of previousexposure to streptococci. These in¬dividuals can be screened out bypreliminary testing, and an attenu¬ated vaccine which does not causethese reactions is being preparedfor possible use with them, Foxsaid. Very few infants show thissensitivity, so it should not be aproblem when they are immunized. professor of history, the committeeincludes James H. Lorie, professorin the Business School; William A.Ringler, professor of English;Steve Silver, SG vice-president andgraduate student in politicalscience; David Curley, fourth-yearstudent in the College; and LeonGlass, graduate student in physicalsciences.Monday MeetingAccording to an SG spokesman,three subcommittees of one studentand one faculty member wereformed at Monday’s meeting todiscuss Bookstore pricing, invento¬ry and space allocation, and stu¬dent-faculty participation in theselection of books and general poli¬cy.Abolishment of the clothing sec¬tion in the present Bookstore wasalso reportedly a major issue inthe meeting.Speaking of the Blum committeeBookstore suggestion. SG PresidentTom Heagy argued against theconstruction of a building on theLexington site."I FEEL that this campus des¬perately needs a real student unionthat integrates social and academ¬ic aspects of student life. Such acenter should include a Bookstore,and there should be no separateBookstore as advocated by theBlum committee.“One possibility is Harper library.When its books are transferred toRegenstein Library, Harper couldbe used as the new student center.There will be more than enoughspace from the beginning if an ad¬dition to Regenstein is built im¬mediately.”Heagy indicated that a motionsupporting this plan would proba¬bly come before the SG assemblyin the near future.Books used in political sciencecourses are now being stocked inthe Chicago Theological Seminary(CTS) book co-op at a ten percentdiscount in price.The contract with the CTS co-opwas arranged by political sciencestudents because of what theycalled general dissatisfaction withBookstore policy.TOAD HALLis featuring this weekELECTRO VOICE ENTERTAINERThe finest portable stereo sound systemavailable with 30 watts of transistor power, thefamous Garrard Changer and two 8" full-rangeElectro Voice Speakers.The Electro Voice is ahead of all competitorsin sound quality, and priced below. Althoughthis unit costs well under $200 it cannot betouched by units costing twice as much.SEE THE ENTERTAINER ATTOAD HALL1444 E. 57th ST. BU 8-4500October 21, 1966 CHICAGO MAROONf Hutchins on Students, Their Education, and Their UniversityDuring the visit to campus lastweek of Robert Maynard Hutchins,chancellor of VC from 1929 to 1951,Maroon executive editor David L.Aiken obtained the following inter¬view with Hutchins,Marcrn: Mr. Hutchins, will you be¬gin by explaining how you define a“general education,” and why youthink such education is necessary?Hutchins: Some people have sug¬gested that specialization is theonly education, or the only meansto a general education. Many yearsago, Mr. (James B.) Conant(former president of Harvard jmore than half jokingly suggestedto me that the only way you couldget educated was to take one sub¬ject and study it from the begin¬ning. This subject, as you studiedit, would reach out to all other sub¬jects. . .Thi-s what seems to meparadoxical assumption suggeststhat specialized education and gen¬eralized education are identical.The usual view of it is that generaleducation is the education every¬body requires, and specialized edu¬cation is the education required forsome special function, to realize•some particular ambition.Maroon: You say general educa¬tion is the education everybody re¬quires; however, it must be re¬quired for something.TypewritersOur typewriter department isequipped and staffed to maketype changes to meet your needsMathematical, Statistical, Medi¬cal or Languages.Please inquire at ourtypewriter counterThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. Robert M.rnmmmm- HutchinsHutchins: It’s what’s required tohelp you be a human being.Maroon: Then what content shouldgeneral education have?Hutchins: There may be manyways to design a program in gen¬eral education which could makesome contribution to this end. Iwould have to begin by saying thatI think the primary function ofeducational institutions is to devel¬op the intellectual powers of theindividual. Other institutions, suchas the YMCA or what have you,may develop other areas of the in¬dividual’s personality. Again, ofcourse, there may be many waysto develop these intellectual pow¬ers.JOBS OFFERED-MALEGrocery stock clerks, part time, approx.27 hrs./wk. Excell, starting salary w/-periodic increases. Exper. helpful but notnecessary, Hyde Pk. Co-op Super Mart,1526 E. 55th Call 667-1444 Maroon: Do you think it’s neces¬sary, in the college curriculum, for•such things to be drawn out andput into a separate general educa¬tion program which is more-or-lessself-contained, or do you thinkthere can be alternative programsof general education which wouldall aim at the same goals but havevarying contents, related to differ¬ent interests?Hutchins: I do not think that spe¬cial interests of individuals developtheir role when they are regardedas either an impedance to generaleducation or a substitute for it. Ishould say that the faculty shouldget together and agree what a gen¬eral, or perhaps you call it liberal,education is, how it should be giv¬en, allowing for individual differ¬ences by allowing each individualto proceed at his own pace. As¬suming that there i-s a body of dis-Newt Stammerwas broad-minded enoughto try somebody else’s beer.Then he went back to this one.Fast. PHOTORemembrances are more im¬pressive with good but in¬expensive snap shots.See our selection of films inevery size.Photo DepartmentThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. cipline and knowledge, certainways of working are indispensablefor dealing with this material.Maroon: Your primary goal,then seems to be to developthese powers. Now, there may beseveral ways of developing thesepowers, getting at the same goalwith different contents. Some peo¬ple have asked whether powers ofanalysis, inquiry, and so on couldbe developed with different cours¬es, according to different individu¬al interests.Hutchins: The primary goal ofeducation may be to develop hu¬man powers, but there are variousother incidental functions, and theideal curriculum would provide aneducation in which you would havea maximum of these incidentalsand your main object combined.For instance, I should think itwould be unfortunate for a personto go through life without havingread any Shakespeare. Now, if youcan develop these powers of themind by having the students readShakespeare, then you’ve, to coinan expression, killed two birdswith one stone. You can accom¬plish the end of liberal educationand at the same time acquaint thestudent with the great traditions ofthe West. Now this, of course,shows a predisposition to one kindof material over others; perhapsyou could develop powers of themind by having the students readthe New York Times, but it wouldtake a pretty remarkable teacherto do it. Perhaps another consid¬eration would be that you musthave a system which can be uti¬lized by ordinary teachers. . .Maroon: Well, then, I see two dif¬ferent goals which liberal educa¬tion might reach. . .Hutchins: No, no. Liberal educa¬tion has only one goal. But whenyou come to consider how to carryout these goals, then you can cer¬tainly take time to consider whatincidental benefits and disadvan¬tages of each method. . .Maroon: What particular advan¬tage is there to making sure thatpeople are familiar with the tradi¬tions of Western thought in today’stimes. . .?Hutchins: I think the primary goalof education is to help students un¬derstand the conditions in whichthey live. This requires, in additionto understanding these traditions,the effort to make some significantcontribution to them. I think thatone of the contributions educationcan make is to provide relevantstandards of judgement for the stu¬dent; one of the good ways to de¬velop standards of judgement forthe students is to give them themaximum sense of comprehensionof the intellectual traditions inwhich he lives. . .One of the ob¬jects of education has to be tomaintain a certain detachment ofthe student from the society inwhich you are immersed when youcomplete your formal education,not simply reflecting and repeatingthe slogans of your time. Maroon: One of the main tenets iryour writing has been that the university should play a role as a eritic of society. Do you think that thecurrent student unrest and demon•stration on Such issues as thedraft, university bureaucracy itself, and so on, is a part of thi*function, or do you think that students should be critics in othermore peaceful ways?Hutchins: I think that student;should be playing this role, but iiyou ask why they’re playing thisrole in the way they’re now playing it, it’s because the universityhas failed in its functions. If tinuniversity were performing thi;function, you might find that students were restless, but it would bidifferent -students for different rcasons. . . It would be athletes amfraternity members protestingconducting demonstrations and sitins; picketing by the Young Republican Club. You wouldn’t hav<students protesting who are novprotesting.Maroon: Do you think -such techniques as, to take a local exampleoccupying administration buildingor picketing are valid?Hutchins: I have made it a policyfor the last fifteen years never t<discuss events at the University oChicago.Maroon: Well, it also happened aplace«s likely Berkeley and the University of Wisconsin. The questioiis actually about the general use osuch techniques, involving cividisobedience, to make your point.Hutchins: The affair at Berkelewas so complex that it’s hard tform any judgements. There waslot of right on both sides. I thinsuch questioning by studentshould not be permitted to disrupthe functioning of the university. . .Maroon: Do you think there’splace for students, using normachannels instead of sitting in, tparticipate in making policy oithree areas—first curriculum, peihaps suggesting adding ne\courses or dropping old ones; setond, such things as housing, ho\dormitories should be designedand third, extracurricular activities, such as social regulation*and sports. Is there a place fostudents participation in all threof those, or one or two of them?Hutchins: I believe the administration should be willing to discusany of these matters with student*Maroon: Well there’s been corsiderable ferment at many can1puses, for more of a role for students than just being asked theiopinions. For example, what abouputting them on committees thahave decision-making power?Hutchins: As far as the curriculuris concerned,. . . the faculty’s gcto decide. . .Students, by defintion, don’t know enough about theducational program or the alteinatives to it to sit in judgemen( Broad-mindednessisn’t everything.)ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMRA • HOUSTON NEW FRONTIERS in an ANCIENT LANDA Young and Vibrant Land NEEDS Young and Vibrant PeopleISRAELwaits for youQualified graduate and undergraduate students between the ages of 19 and 30 canlive and work for a year in Israel as part of the new and exciting SHERUT LA'AMprogram. DO YOU QUALIFY? Call or write.□ Please send me information about Sherut La’am□ Please send me applications for Sherut La’amName.Address-StreetSchool. City, State-Telephone- ZipThe expenses involved: $670 round trip plane fare.Departures: July and September, 1967mail to: SHERUT LA'AM, 220 S. State, Chicago, III. 60604, Room 1704, Phono 939-64274 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 21, 1966Q|3 ChapmanCollegeOrange. California 92888Director of AdmissionsChapman CollegeOrange, California 92664Name. Present StatusCoHege/l/aiversity(First)Address. FreshmanSophomoreJuniorSeniorGraduate(Indicate Home or College/ University)Telephone.The Ryndam is of West German registry.Sun-Times Editor Dedmon AppointedChairman of Chicago Visiting CommitteeEmmett Dedmon, editor of the Chicago Sun-Times, hasaccepted an appointment as chairman of the College VisitingCommittee. Dedmon is presently a trustee of the University.The College Visiting Committee, formed in 1960, consistsof from 15 to 20 well known indi¬viduals who promote the interestsof the College by sponsoring spe¬cial events .helping to promotepublic relations, and developinginterest in and support for theCollege.Membership on the Committee ishonorary and usually, although notexclusively, is bestowed on alumni.“It will make a real difference tothe College that someone of Mr.Dedmon’s stature and importancein the community is willing to de¬vote a good deal of time and ener¬gy to helping the College develop¬ment,” according to Wayne C.Booth, dean of the College.Dedmon, a Chicago graduate andformer editor of the Maroon, is amember of the Visiting Committeeof the Divinity School and theAlumni Cabinet.The author of several books,most dealing with Chicago as acity or its history, Dedmon is alsopresident of the Metropolitan Chi¬cago YMCA, a trustee of the Chi¬cago Historical Society, and amember of the Board of Directorsof the University’s Chapter of theAmerican Red Cross. After receiving his BA as a eco¬nomics major in 1939, Dedmonjoined the staff of the Sun-Times in1940. Booth To Meet with StudentsDean of the College WayneC. Booth, has announced hewill hold informal discussionsopen to all students at hishome on Friday afternoons. Twoor three faculty members, Boothsaid, will be invited to each “openhouse” gathering. A specific topicwill be discussed each week. “One way of putting my reasonsfor arranging these open houses—the wrong way—would be that Ifeel a duty to do something aboutstudent-faculty relations,” statedBooth. “The truth is that I havefun whenever students come to thehouse.”At the first meeting, November4, students will talk about and 11s¬University Goes On to Bigger ThingsUC is going on to bigger ifnot better things.Undergraduate enrollmentjumped almost ten percent thisyear, according to Charles D. O’¬Connell, director of admissions,and the entire University studentbody now totals 8,308, an increaseof 6.3 percent.O’Connell cited three majorcauses for the increase in Collegeenrollment:• The graduation of a compara¬tively small senior class last June;• A small percentage of stu¬dents transferring out;• A decrease in the number ofdropouts, due in part to fear of thedraft.ALTHOUGH A ten-vear cam¬ paign to raise the total undergrad¬uate population ot 4,000 was ini¬tiated la-st year, O’Connell indicat¬ed that no drastic increases areanticipated in the next few years,despite a sharp gain in the numberof applicants. “As of now,” hestated, “there is no place to putany more students.”The graduate schools boast a pop¬ulation of 2,015 students, up 6.7%,while the four Collegiate Divisionshave an enrollment of 3,477, com¬pared to 3,327 last year.The only major graduate divisionto lose students is the BiologicalSciences, with 560 members, a de¬cline of 21. The Humanities divisionowns the largest rise, 10.7%. Ninehundred twenty-four are presently in the department.The Physical Sciences divisioncomprises 582 students, up from566. The Social Sciences membershave been increased by 26 to 1,381.THE GRADUATE SCHOOL ofEducation and the Social ServiceAdministration each recorded sub¬stantial gains. The former jumped15% to 362. the largest increase inthe graduate schools, while the lat¬ter rose to 208.Two less graduates entered theLibrary School, bringing the totalto 90. The Law School added 14 tolast year’s 451 students.The Graduate School of Businessadded 22 students to bring their to¬tal to 549, and the Divinity Schoolupped its ranks to 341, an increaseof 5.9%. ten to “Jazz.” They should bringtheir own favorite monaural re¬cordings.Other scheduled programs in¬clude:• November 11, “Alternatives inVietnam.”• November 18, “Chamber Mu¬sic” (classical). Students shouldbring their favorite short monauralrecordings.• November 25, “The Two Cul¬tures: Science and the Rest of theUnited States.”Other topics will be listed on thegeneral bulletin board. Suggestionsby students for additional topicsare welcome. The meetings will beheld Fridays at 4:30 pm at Booth’shome, 5411 Greenwood Avenue.The Contemporary Music Societywill present a concert-poetry read¬ing featuring the Joseph Jarmanquartet and John Sinclair tonightat 8 pm in Ida Noyes Hall.Admission is free, but a $1.00 do¬nation is being requested.Committee Formed To End Boycotts UC Professor Patents Tornado DetectorThe fifteen “little old ladies”who were the only eaters dur¬ing the International HouseCafeteria boycott last Thurs¬day may soon have company andgood food. The cafeteria is now' thesubject of a study by a temporaryhouse-council committee.The committee plans to evaluatethe entire cafeteria operation,comparing it with other house caf¬eterias. It will recommend somedefinite action to the InternationalHouse council November 15.Edward Span-sky, chairman ofthe committee, said that there hasbeen a long history of dissatisfac¬tion with the food at InternationalHouse. “There have been severalsurveys in the past; there seem tohave been several attempted boy¬cotts, but there has been no im¬provement in the cafeteria.” AStudent NeedsOur Men's wear department fea¬tures the following nationallyknown brands to insure yoursatisfaction.Levi's slacks and jean*.$4.98 to $9.00Shapely tepered shirtsPermanent Press $5.50Regular $4.00Esquire socks $1.00 to $2.00Botany and PrincoConsort ties $1.50 to $3.50Hanes UnderwearPackage of 3 $2.95The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the bast,and fix tha rastforeign car hospital survey made last year by the Lia-son Committee of the council indi¬cated that around 70% of houseresidents wrould accept a raise inprices, if it would bring betterfood. The prices w'ent up, but thefood went down.Disgruntled students were readyto do something this summer, butbecause of the number of tran¬sients, they decided to w'ait. Theboycott was organized by an infor¬mal committee of 20. One immedi¬ate effect it has had is the re-insti-tution of cafeteria “specials.” Butwith the report of the committee,the effect may be much greater. A radar system to detect torna¬does and sound an alarm hasearned a patent for David Atlas,UC professor of meterology, andRoger M. Lhemite, of the U.S.Weather Bureau. The device -is designed to recordparticles moving through the radarat speed-s of fifty mph.Rights to the patent, number 3,-271,764, were granted to the Gov¬ernment by Atlas. THE BEST SOURCE FORArtist's MaterialsComplete Picture FramingServiceMounting; Matting Non-GlareGlass - School SuppliesBE SURE TO ASK FORWEEKLY SPECIALDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-411110% STUDENT DISCOUNTCN S10 OR MORESOCIAL SERVICEGENTLEMAN, single, desires welfare orsettlement base position, full time.College Drop-Out. Please telephone:643-8735 This is Russ Kennedy of Balboa Island, California, on an in-port field trip as a student aboardChapman College’s floating campus.The note he paused to make as fellow students went ahead to inspect Hatshepsut’s Tomb in theValley of the Kings near Luxor, he used to complete an assignment for his Comparative WorldCultures professor.Russ transferred the 12 units earned during the study-travel semester at sea to his record atthe University of California at Irvine where he continues studies toward a teaching career in lifesciences.As you read this, 450 other students have begun the fall semester voyage of discovery withChapman aboard the s.s. RYNDAM, for which Holland-America Line acts as General PassengerAgents.In February still another 450 will embark from Los Angeles for the spring 1967 semesterthis time bound for the Panama Canal, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Nigeria, Senegal, MoroccoSpain, Portugal, The Netherlands, Denmark, Great Britain and New York.For a catalog describing how you can include a semester at sea in your educational plans, fillin the information below and mail.Worried about the Draft?1001 Ways toDeal me Draft00 plus 25$ far pastagiami kaadliag.Sand aback, mateyardar, cash arpc stage stamps.3 copies for *3°°wo pay postage.OLIVER LAYTON PRESS D«P» 203Bax 150, Cooper Sts., New Yett, N.Y. 10003October 21, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Dr. Robert Spike-ClergymanThe murder of Robert Spikeleaves a void in the Divinity School,the civil rights movement, and inthe lives of the many people whoknew him.Just before his death, Spike hadstarted work as head of the DivinitySchool’s new professional doctoralprogram for ministry. He had beena significant figure in church activi¬ty all of his adult life and will besorely missed judging from reac¬tions of religious leaders who knewhim.The story will be much the samein the Chicago civil rights move¬ment. Spike will be missed. He wasa former director of the Commis¬sion on Religion and Race of theNational Council of Churches and and Scholarhelped organize civil rights activityin the South. He was also a partici¬pant in last summer’s “summit con¬ference” on housing here that help¬ed arrive at an agreement endingopen housing demonstrations.Those w7ho knew Spike have calledhim a humanitarian, a man of visionand a man of determination whoheld to his convictions. He certainlyhad more to contribute to the worldwhen he died.That Spike was dedicating OhioState’s new United Christian Cen¬ter when he died is completely incharacter as Spike was always be¬ing asked to speak and express hisopinion. Men who take as active apart in the religious life and socialproblems around them as Spike didare few and far between.C-Shop Reopening ShouldPoint Way to Other ChangesThe opening of the C-Shop eve¬nings represents a significant steptowards making UC a full-time cam¬pus. It should, however, representonly a first step.There are at least three othercampus facilities that need extendedhours of operation. These includethe campus bus, the pool room andReynolds Club, and the library.Most of the campus bus lines nowoperate in the early morning hoursand late afternoon hours, with littleservice in the middle of the day andevenings, and no service on theweekends. Eugene L. Miller, who di¬rects the operation of the campusbus, contends that the bus service islittle used but notes that a commit¬tee is looking into the matter.It is probably true that the cam¬pus bus lines are not as heavilyused as they might be but it is ourfeeling that the greatest share ofthe blame for this must belong tothe buses’ high fare and constrictedhours of operation. For the studentwho has late classes, goes home ear¬ly, or stays on campus late, thecampus bus is practically useless.The student who can use it maynot choose to take the campus bus.Fifteen cents is too much to pay forthe service.When one considers that overthree quarters of the UC studentbody live off campus, the need formore complete service becomes ob¬vious. The Universities of Illinoisand Wisconsin are two examples ofschools that provide frequent allday, evening, and weekend servicefor a 10 cent fare. It’s somethingthat can be done.Running the campus bus eveningsand weekends needn’t even be a money-losing proposition. By givingstudents some place to go at night,the University could insure the suc¬cess of the additional bus runs.The Reynolds Club lounge, for ex¬ample, now closes at 10 pm everyevening and the pool room closes atan inhuman 9 pm. There is no con¬ceivable reason why a naturalgathering place like the ReynoldsClub cannot remain open until oneor two in the morning. UC, unlikepractically every good-sized univer¬sity in the country, has no studentunion, so that keeping the one placeon campus remotely resembling aunion open at night is not askingvery much.The library already has fairlycomplete hours. The Modern Lan¬guage Reading Room, however, isnot open Saturday evenings or Sun¬day mornings, and closes at 10 pmon Friday evenings. At least onesection of the library should remainopen during these times for thebenefit of those students who relyon the library as a place to study.Before this year, UC closed downat 4:30 in the afternoon, so that theopening of the C-Shop is a real ad¬vance. With the opening of the IdaNoyes snack bar, another startlingadvance will have been made. Butthere is still a crying need for moreplaces to go on campus at night andon weekends, and for an inexpen¬sive regular way of getting to cam¬pus. A complete campus bus serv¬ice, a full time Reynolds Club, anda library opened for all the time itcan be used, would go a long waytoward improving campus life. Allthis involves nothing that everyother major American universityhasn’t done. DAVID L AIKENIndividual TeacherStill Most ImportantThe College at UC has formany years—ever since theHutchins Era made it the cen¬ter of attention—been a pioneerin new forms for undergraduatecurriculum.Form, as someone ha-s saidbefore, is not all. What goes onin the classroom will be littleaffected by the new structureof the College. The individualteacher is still the most impor¬tant factor that makes a stu¬dent’s college experience re¬warding or not.Unfortunately, for all thewidespread emphasis on re¬search among faculty members,there has been little effort tocollect reliable data on whatteaching techniques are mosteffective on the collegiate level.A review of available literatureon this topic, distributed at lastweek’s American Council onEducation conference in NewOrleans, shows that the tradi¬tional lecture format, often sup-p 1 e m e n t e d with discussion,holds sway in most colleges,even though new techniqueshave been developed whichhold great promise.In the absence of objectivedata, one of the best ways ofassessing the relative effective¬ness of different techniques andstyles of teaching is, clearly, toask students. Asking students,in a well-designed question¬naire, what benefit they thinkthey received from a course iscertainly a valid method. Har¬old Howe II, U.S. Commission¬er of Education, came out insupport of this method in aspeech to the ACE last Friday.UC’s Student Governmentacademic affairs committeelast spring sponsored such aquestionnaire, with adequatestudent response. (Their firstattempt, last fall, did not at¬tract enough responses on anyone course to make the resultssignificant.) However, the results of SG’squestionnaire have yet to befully compiled and published.Why? The answer seems to liein plain old lassitude. Peoplehave been assigned to write upthe results in each field, butmost just haven’t gotten aroundto it yet. It is about time a con¬certed effort was made.Once the report is finished,the faculty will have a usefultool with which to evaluatetheir own performance, and im¬prove it when necessary. Thisis not to be viewed as any sortof inquisition, only as an effortto point out areas that need im¬provement.The kind of response thatmight be expected is indicatedby a report on a similar coursesurvey at the University of Ore¬gon. There, the faculty turnedaround and evaluated the stu¬dents’ evaluation. They foundthat the students were general¬ly “benign” and “favorable” intheir comments.The Oregon students also be¬lied the argument that studentswould rate easy courses higherthan challenging ones. “Appar¬ently, there is no connectionbetween difficulty of course andstudent response,” the reportstated.It may be true that an under¬graduate in his first or secondyear might not have the back¬ground to know whether the in¬structor “knows his material”(although this is not as self-evi¬dent as some think). It is clear,however, that any student cantestify whether the instructorhas captured his interest andmade him want to pursue thisinterest.To deny the student’s right toexpect improved teaching fromthose who need to improve is,as a delegate to the ACE con¬ference put it, to “confuseacademic freedom with thefreedom for a faculty memberto teach poorly.”Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editor David L. AikenAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowiUDavid H. RichterDinah EsralJoan PhillipsNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanFeature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyPolitical Editor John BremnerEditor Emeritus Daniel HertzbergEditorial Staff—John Beal, Kenneth Simonson, Eleanor Kap¬lan, Slade Lander, Gary Christiana, Paul Burstein, Ellis Levin,Richard Rabens, Judy Schavrien.News Staff—-John Moscow, Elaine Hyams, Harold Sheridan,Angela DeVito, Robert Skeist, Ronald McGuire, David Chand¬ler, Ina Smith, Seth Masia, Vivian Goodman, Cathy Sullivan,Jeffrey Blum, Sally Yagol, Leanne Star, Maxine Miska, AlfredMarcus, Marge Pearson, Leslie Recht, Helen Schary, Ann Gar¬field, John Welch, T. C. Fox, Gloria Weissman, Marlene Pro-viser, Ilene Kantrov, James Ruhinstein, Roger Black, DonaldPalombo, Harold Kletnick, Larry Hendel, Anita Grossman,Larry Struck, Lynn McKeever, Sanford Rockowitz, Peter Stone,Susan Loewy, Noralyn Newmark, David F. Israel.Photographers—Jean Raisler, Bern Myers, Charles Packer, H.David Alley.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 21, 1966GadflyA New Approach to theQuestion of a Student VoiceThe cry for “a student voice infaculty decisions” is old enoughnow to evoke its own historicalaura. The events that fall clearlyunder the meaning of this phraseare, most prominently, the pro¬tests, sleep-ins, and sit-ins of thelast few years; if one can saythat a student voice has existed,then these events must, by de¬fault. be its expression. Yet thetumultuous history of its dis¬course does not offer much thatis informative, nor does it often‘diow a coherent line of develop¬ment. The student voice hasgrunted and screamed, but its ar¬ticulate moments have been alltoo few.SINCE THE SAR formed lastspring, the student voice hasfound itself more deeply thanever entangled in Rousseau’sclaim that ‘‘Of itself the peoplewills always the good, but of it¬self it by no means always seesit.” Some have said that the truevoice of student opinion should besought with referenda, othersthat students must first bebrought to see the good throughextensive open discussions andthe example of those with com¬mitted consciences; still othershave asserted that in some ques¬tions, such as the ranking issue,the good or right answer is ofsuch a character that it is priorrather than subject to any major¬ity. And because each of thesestatements contains an importanttruth, those who seek a studentvoice in faculty decisions have tobe careful to avoid committingall of us to the falsity of any oneof the three.UC Political LifeIt is clear that had the Univer¬sity’s political life been in goodorder, last spring’s sit-in wouldhave never occured, nor wouldthere have been such confusionamong the faculty about the sit-in. The classic solutions for medi¬ating student-faculty disputeshave been some form of studentvote in faculty decisions, and thecure-all expedient of forming stu¬dent faculty committees. Both sosimply conceived can do little tocure the main ill of the Universi¬ty’s political life — the wide¬spread studenx (and faculty) apa¬thy that only occasionally burstsinto frantic protest ais issuescome to a head. While complexand more thoughtful proposalsStudents aren’t the only oneshaving trouble finding housingin Hyde Park.Winston Kennedy of Univer¬sity Realty Management has an¬nounced that the University hasencouraged the development ofDorchester House on DorchesterAvenue between 58 and 59 St. inorder to relieve the faculty housingshortage.Ham Named JudgeCatherine Ham, UC assistantprofessorial lecturer in English,has been named one of threejudges to reward promising crea¬tive writers in a Book-of-the-Month( mb fellowship program.the committee will award three-tiiousand-dollar prizes to two stu¬dents in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,and Wisconsin.Mrs. Ham will serve with Arnold1 aqarus and John W. Aldredge,Professors of English at Purdue< 'id Michigan Universities, respec¬tively. that deal with these and otherdifficulties may well be forthcom¬ing, I would like to suggest thatin any case the central problemand, actually, the most importantbusiness of the College is discus¬sion and not decision making,and in this light offer a proposalthat should keep discussion alivein a wholly pleasant way andavoid for the present the difficul¬ties of arranging formal channelsof power to student access.THE PLAN consists of threeparts, and its success rests on thesatisfactory performance of allthree:A committee of students orof students and faculty tokeep a fair account of allissues that arise, and tobring up issues itself whenno others are pressingfrom the outside, and tochose the authors ofAn essay or policy statement,prepared by an administra¬tion or faculty member ona position he currentlyholds in some issue, and ashort polemic, outlining theprinciple considerationsbearing on the issue, both toappear each week in theMaroon beforeA dinner, held inHutchinson Commons andopen to all students andfaculty, either by mealtransfer or purchasedticket, during which thewriter of the essay willagain address himself to theissue and answer questions,first questions prepared bythe committee and others,and then any questionsfrom the floor.The idea of such a weeklymeeting has been challenged asfrivolous and powerless, in prac¬tical results not worth the time itwould take. Nonetheless, it seemsall agree that the chief problemthe student voice faces is that ofachieving regular, active studentinvolvement in discussion andsome feeling of committedresponsibility.Social EventThe dinner is definitely con¬ceived as a social event, offeringdormitory and apartment dwell¬ers an evening out that should beALTHOUGH THE building is pri¬vately owned, Kennedy promisedthat ‘‘faculty will be given firstcrack at it.”Construction, which began in Feb¬ruary, 1966 will be completed inMarch of this year at a cost of ap¬proximately $1.2 million dollars.Plans call for unfurnished apart¬ments ranging in size from 2-bed-room garden apartments on theground floor to four bedroomapartments on upper floors. Rentper month will range from $235 to$400. stimulating and entertaining,where they can spend the timethey will use for eating anywayin discussion of worthwhile is¬sues. This, it seems, is a worth¬while end in itself, and it is per¬haps the only way we can securethe regular, active involvementof a large number of students. Itis further, not at all true thatthose who have the best idea-sand deepest concern for an issueare already politically active inproportion to their interest — in¬deed, one might guess that veryoften the reverse is the case.The questions of how formalpower should be opened to stu¬dents is deliberately avoided inthis proposal — it is an intricatequestion, and no doubt the veryidea is, not without cause, a bit¬ter pill to many of the faculty.But there is no doubt that clear,consistent student opinion ex¬pressed in questions at such adinner could become a considera¬ble force in the administration. Itdoes not seem likely that admin¬istrators would want to be forcedto admit to themselves and theircolleagues, if not to students, thatthey were not acting in a ration¬al, thoughtful way, and in the in¬terests of the parties concerned.And certainly we are confidentthat there exists within the uni¬versity enough sound judgementthat when issues where broughtinto the open in this way, admin¬istrators would be force to suchadmissions.LIKEWISE, SUCH meetingswould expose the seemingly clan¬destine operations of the adminis¬tration to student scrutiny andhopefully dispell the impressionsof an unenlightened bureaucracythey often receive at secondhand.Above all, this proposal is work¬able at the present moment. Itin no way precludes further de¬velopments, nor does it commitus to any judgement of the worthof student opinion; it merely sug¬gests a way of hearing and edu¬cating that opinion. There is noreason that such dinners couldnot be initiated in the first weekof the winter quarter, if not -soon¬er, nor any reason that intelligentalterations of its arrangementcould not be made at any time.Bruce Mayo(Mr. Mayo is a third-year student inthe college.)Although 70% of UC’s facultynow have apartments in the HydePark-Kenwood area, faculty turno¬ver and expansion have strainedthe neighborhood’s already tighthousing market.THE PLACEMENT OF facultymembers in Dorchester House isonly part of the University’s effortto solve the faculty housing prob¬lem, according to Kennedy. UC isalso building faculty housing, re¬modelling apartments for faculty,and encouraging private owners togive faculty members preference. buildings within the next threeyears, according to J. LeeJones, University architect. Mostof the money, Jones said, will bespent on new laboratory facilitiesof all kinds.Among the laboratories will bethe chemistry laboratory and thenew high energy physics building,both of which should be completedby 1967 at a cost of over six milliondollars. By 1968 the new geophys¬ics building on Ellis Avenue be¬tween 57th and 58th streets shouldbe in operation, as well as a newwing of the Research Institutebuilding devoted entirely to thestudy of biophysics.Students for a DemocraticSociety (SDS) spent Tuesdaynight participating in partici¬patory democracy.The chapter approved plans for aseries of lectures by radical schol¬ars and an anti-Vietnam War rallyto be held in Hutchinson Court ear¬ly in November. Both ideas werehanded to committees for more de¬tailed study.THE RADICAL scholars series,which will try to get lecturers who“are not ashamed to say they areleftists,” will aim at a broadergroup than just SDS. Speakers,perhaps one a week, will spend theday on campus, giving a publiclecture and discussing their work.They will attempt to reach stu¬dents interested in academic ca¬reers, and confront them with aradical view of their particular dis¬cipline.War ForgottenAs a morale booster, the chapter UC s experimental animals willalso benefit from $3%-million cen¬tral animal quarters, to be built inthe heart of the university hospitalcomplex.The oldest building on campus,Cobb Hall, is now undergoing ex¬tensive renovation. The insides ofthe building have been completelytorn out and all that remainsstanding at the present is thebuilding’s outer shell. Beforespring quarter, though, the build¬ing should once more be fit forhabitation.Plans for the future include theproposed Regenstein Library onthe site of Stagg Field, the newathletic facilities which will re¬place Stagg Field, and a new dor¬mitory complex at 55th Street andEllis Avenue.gave consent to the general idea ofa rally to be held around -electionday. Paul Boothe, former nationalchairman of SDS, expressed con¬cern that students had forgottenthe left, and that the communityhad forgotten the war. Most speak¬ers seemed to agree with him.BEYOND THAT, almost no oneagreed on anything about the rally.The group heard suggestions thatthe rally be made part of a city¬wide leafletting, that the rallymarch on the Fifth Army Head¬quarters, and that the rally limititself to speeches. The debate oversuggestions developed into a fightover the degree of “commitment”expected from people at a demon¬stration. Hence, the details of therally were left to the VietnamCommittee.The chapter also passed withoutobjection plans for literature ta¬bles, a theoretical newsletter, anda bulletin board.MBA - EVENING CLASSESLarge rapidly expanding Chicago financial institution has achallenging opportunity in the Comptrollers Department.If you are an evening student with a major area of concen¬tration in:- FINANCE - ACCOUNTING -- QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS -Please call: 828-2440 JESSELSOrSSERVING HYDE PARK POR OVER SO YEARSWITH THE WRY BIST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdOctober 21, 1966 • CHICAGO MAR.' O NUC Plans New Housing for Faculty WORKERS preparing the foundation for the new geophysics build¬ing to stand on Ellis Ave. between 57th St. and 58th St.UC plans to construct $36million worth of new campusUC SDS'ers Participate in ParticipatoryPemocra'y at Their Tuesday Meeting"Teaching and learning in 1991"Ed School Lectures SetA glimpse of what UC ex¬perts think education will belike 25 years from now will beavailable to anyone who wantsit this year.The Graduate School of Educa¬tion will sponsor a seven-month se-rie-s of lectures on “Teaching andLearning. 1991,” to be directed byRoger A. Pillet, associate professorof education. According to Pillet,the series was designed to providean “interdisciplinary appraisal ofcurrent trends in education.”Each lecture will consist of aformal presentation of approxi¬mately one hour, followed by a half-hour critique. Questions and com¬ments from the audience will beThe University’s Bookstorehas agreed to buy back unusedBiology III variant C texts be¬longing to 60 students evictedfrom the variant. The studentsCalendarFriday, October 21CONCERT AND POETRY READING:Joseph Jarman Quartet, John Sinclair,Cloister Club. 8:00 pm. Donation $1.00.SERVICES: Hillel Foundation Library,7:30 pm.LECTURE: “Traditionalists and Dis¬senters: Can Jews Coexist?”, RabbiMax Kasputin, Hillel House, 5715 Wood-lawn Ave. 8:30 pm.Saturday, October 22LECTURE: “History as Time Travel,”Dr. John Warwick Montgomery. IdaNoyes, 7:30 pm.FILM FESTIVAL: “Green Fields”. Hil¬lel Foundation, 5715 Woodlawn Ave.,7:30 pm.Sunday, October 23FILM: “Begaana” with English subti¬tles. Mandel Hall, 7:30 pm. $1.00 mem¬bers: $1.50 non-members.LECTURE: “Does the rejection ofAmerican Leadership by France underde Gaulle presage a new trend in Brit¬ish and other European political atti¬tudes?”, Christopher Hollis, CalvertHouse, 5735 S. University. 7:30 pm.Monday, October 24WORKSHOP: Conference on the Cityand University, Reynolds Club North.8:00 pm.LECTURE: Erika Fromm on Hypnosis,East Lounge, Ida Noyes. 7:30 pm. invited. Although all but one of theparticipants will be members ofthe UC faculty, not all of them rep¬resent academic disciplines direct¬ly concerned with teacher educa¬tion.The first lecture, on “Society andthe School, 1991,” will be deliveredon October 26, C. Arnold Andersonprofes-sor of education and of so¬ciology and director of the Univer¬sity’s Comparative Education Cen¬ter. The critique will be presentedby Morris Janowitz, professor ofsociology and director of the Cen¬ter for Social Organization Studies.Lectures will be held on Mondayevenings, beginning at 8 pm in theLaw School auditorium. The serieswill be open to the public withoutticket and without charge.Get Book Moneywere changed in an effort to re¬duce overcrowding.At the beginning of last week the60 students were transferred fromvariant C to variant A. Accordingto Ray Koppelman, master of theCollegiate Biology Division, variantA was sparsely populated becauseof summer enrollments and sched¬ule changes.During the week there was con¬siderable griping among the dis¬placed students and, despite Kop-pelman’s assurances to the con¬trary, there was widespread suspi¬cion that variant A was considera¬bly more difficult than variant C.Of the 60 students, many founddifferent classes in variant C,some dropped the course entirely,and a few accepted the transfer.RELIEF PRINTSBYANGELO SAVELLIANDMICHAEL PONCE DE LEONcontemporary prints and drawings5225 S. HARPER AVE.324-5880Transfers Gripe, butMerritt Willeya xloves goodconversation.All he needsis an opener. Letters to the EditorWick's HilariousTO THE EDITOR:The reactions mentioned in theMaroon article on the Haverforddecision not to rank are very inter¬esting. In particular, the state¬ments attributed to Dean Wick areto a certain extent, hilarious.First, he states the obvious whenhe says that students who wish totake advantage of the present sys¬tem are being interfered with.That is the whole point, to inter¬fere with them. Wick’s comment isequally well applicable to anychange in society—those who wishto take advantage of the old sys¬tem are being interfered with. Forinstance, it could apply to whitepeople who wish to take advan¬tage of segregation or to big busi¬nessmen who wished to take ad¬vantage of the lack of anti-trustlaws. I am not claiming the rankissue is of the same importance asthese two particular problems, butwish to point out that his criticismis hardly a criticism by itself.Even more importantly, howev¬er, Wick says there is no evidencethat the present draft system is notadding to the problems of applyingfor graduate school, presumablyusing that as an example that therank is not creating serious prob¬lems. Not only is Wick wrong, buthe is neglecting the evidence fromthe administration's own DunhamReport. While there is no evidencethat students are trying for easiercourses or majors here at Chicago,at least not yet, there is -specificevidence that medical school, ap¬plications have risen, cited in bothIV-1 of the report and in appendixIV to the report. Further, one oth¬er serious problem has already ris¬en at Chicago. The advisors saythat students who -should be takinga year off are not, directly becauseof a greatly increase chance ofbeing drafted for doing so. This iscited in the same places in theDunham report. I personally do notknow the extent of harm in thisarea, but for the individuals in¬volved it must be great.The reason why the medicalschool applications increase is seri¬ous is also outlined in the DunhamReport, but since Dean Wick doesnot seem to have read it, perhaps Ican sketch it for him here. Peopleare applying to grad school ingreater numbers so they won’t losetheir II-S statu-s, not because theyparticularly want a higher degree.I think it would be impossible toscreen these people out from thosewho sincerely want more academictraining. Therefore, the quality ofapplications and students must godown. Therefore the school cannothelp but be less good than it isnow.MEET 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 s*nd for your qutstlon-Mir« t«d«y. No obligation. Strictly con¬fidential.NameAddressCityDATELINE ELECTRONICP. O. Sox 349, Chicago, IN.*0445RESEARCH INC. CMFor Add. Info Cell 2714133 My question is this: why was theDunham Committee formed, if theadministration is not reading thereport? If that report was notread, then why are there all thesenew committees?PAUL HOMASP.S. Chikofsky’s reviews are betterthan they were last year, but hestill has a long way to go.P. T.Douglas Defense DubiousTO THE EDITOR:Arthur Schlesinger’s defense ofDouglas at the meeting Tuesdaynight rested on several dubious as¬sumptions. The most crucial one isthat Johnson can be influenced bythe Fulbright group to rectify hiswar policy. Experience of the two-party system shows that membersof the President’s own party sel¬dom persuade him to alter his poli¬cy. This is especially true when theman who is President so easilyidentifies his own interest with thenational interest.Faced with the greatest moralissue of our time, when youngermen have risked their careers tospeak out, Douglas has remainedmute, and has always voted to sup¬port Johnson's war. Those whowish to oppose the war can do soeffectively in the traditional two-party way by voting against ad¬ministration candidates, eventhough the stand of the oppositioncandidate may be deliberately am¬biguous.Percy represents an enormousimprovement over Goldwater andNixon, and offers a practical alter¬native to Johnson. Without that al¬ternative there is no end in sight tothe war.JAMES C. PHILLIPSReply lo UngerTO THE EDITOR:i would like to reply to the letteroffered by mr unger in the fridaymaroon (7 October) concerning thedemise, deference and demeanor(thank you, mr goffman) accordedfootball-fans-on-the-field at the uni¬versity.in a blinding exhibition of cross¬field running, mr unger carries thesuspension of intercollegiate foot¬ball in 1939 through to the chancel¬lor’s vendetta against athletics, thetriumph of pseudo-intellectuals,and the kernel of shame that isnow the full-blown disgrace of ourcurrent Frudite Eleven, “they areostracized because they dare to goagainst the tradition set forth byhutchins.” the tradition, i think,was set forth by our team, withinfifteen minutes the public relationsoffice provided me with a record ofour progress in the big ten in thefour years preceding our withdrawlfrom the conference, here it is,«yd:1936lawrence 34-0Vanderbilt 0-37butler 6-6purdue 7-35u of Wisconsin 7-6Ohio state u 0-44u of Illinois 7-18u of micluganmdiana u 7-20prinoetonharvardbradley polytechiowade pauwcollege of t>he pacificwabash college 1937 1938 19390-180-270-39 7 42 *0-010-21 0-34 *0-4612 13 7-45 *0-057-16 13-47 *0-610-014-2734-140-3212-2You won't Kov* to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow If youooi mo to dog.PCTMSON MOVINGAND STOtAGI CO.IM9f L ley Am•40-4411 u of Virginia *0.47oberlin college *25-0•of special interest(our last victory in 1939 wasagainst oberlin, robert m hutchins’alma mater: isn’t that retributionenough)? there’s the old whimper-without-a-bang, eh t.s.? i conser¬vatively surmise we didn’t leaveconference football too soon.i think it would be unfair if i onlyexonerated hutchins and left mrunger’s real gripe uncontested:that sportsmen (with especial em¬phasis on foot-feetballers) are inpoor stead at Chicago, there isgreat interest in athletics in gener¬al, intermural football specifically,students who want to play footballdo with no threat of personal inju¬ry from hutchins-hecklers. i havethrown a forward pass In broaddaylight on university avenue,most men in the college cannot orwill not devote that time to thelong and concientious practice re¬quired of any conference team-big ten or small college—to leadthem to the satisfaction of a gamewell-played, but suppose you liketo play football for “the fun of it”(we used to say)? is it fair to im¬ply this informal manly art of de¬fense and offense is ineffective?“they play because they like foot¬ball, and it is unfair to ridicule themfor that,” (you said), i think theacerbic attitude you described to¬ward athleticians i£ patently xeric:people really do not care with whator with whom you play around.SOL SEPSENWOLInter-House CouncilElects New Officersstill unsure of its objectives, isnow sure of its officers.At its first IIIC meeting,held last Tuesday, Mike Klowden.a fourth year student in the col¬lege, was elected President. Thenew Vice-President and Secretary-Treasurer are, respectively, PaulBurstein, a third year student, andJohn Moscow, a second year stu¬dent.The Council, composed of rep¬resentatives from all houses ratify¬ing its constitution is, according toout-going President Richard Stone,trying to make the life of students“richer and more meaningful.”During its one-quarter existence, ithas tried to fulfill its goal by win¬ning from the administration anextension of visiting hours.Zarem AppointedDr. Harvey A. Zarem, a notedresearcher in the field of microcir¬culation in skin grafts, has beenappointed head of a new division ofplastic surgery in the UC Depart¬ment of Surgery.Dr. Zarem, who will hold therank of assistant professor of sur¬gery, has been a resident in plasticsurgery at Johns Hopkins Hospitalsince 1964.JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAPKoga Gift ShopDistinctly* Gift Items From Th#Orient and Around TH* World1442 E. 53rd St.Chicago IS, III.MU 4-44S4• • CHICAGO" M A fcOO N • October 21,1944Dance Review Music ReviewLouis Dancers Go CampWhen was the last time you sawa dance performed to a Micrincommercial? If you haven’t hadthis particular aesthetic experi¬ence, you have until Sunday nightto see the Murray Louis DanceCompany at Harper Theatre. TheirMicrin dance forms only a smallpart of a repertoire that is execut¬ed with fine technique and camphumor.THE MICRIN chant, Galli-Cur-ci’s “Lo, Hear the Gentle Lark,”‘‘Blue Skies,” and a Bach fugueprovide background music for“Junk Dances,” an animated workof pop art. It begins with a MarcelMarceau-style jazz routine andconcludes with a dance around ahuman Christmas tree decorated■with milk cartons and a plasticbleach bottle. A reverse strip tease(not that reverse, men—they startout in gray leotards) is anotherhighlight of the dance.While humor is an important ele¬ment in all the dances, most of theprogram concentrates on a moreserious form of modern dance. Tothe opposing rhythms of LukasFoss’ “Interims,” Louis, director,choreographer, and central dancer,creates a vibrating pattern. Heachieves a subtle balance of move¬ment that gives substance to theentire performance.WHILE THE overall quality ofthe program i-s high, certain flawsare evident. In the opening num¬ber, “Chimera,” Louis slinks on¬stage wearing a felt-marked nyloncocoon. Although he later shedsthis identity of the figure he is por¬traying does not emerge with him.PIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNTUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingttw t. 53rd St. HY 3-M02POSTER SERVICEx 3561I1AIIICTy/IKHTAmerican Students Russia#* Monthly When questioned about his inter¬pretation of the character, Louisexplained that the figure was “anelusive one.” Perhaps more claritywould have increased the au¬dience’s understanding.The Murray Louis Dartce Compa¬ny is the first of six groups to ap¬pear at the Harper Theater DanceFestival. The Festival runs fromOctober 18 through November 27,with each company presenting twodifferent programs.Leanne Star andllene Kantrov BeethovenThe refined and expressive per¬formance of the Balsam-Kroll-Hei-fetz Trio brought out the best ofthe varied styles of compositionsincluded in Friday night’s pro¬gram, the opening concert of theChamber Music Series, which at¬tracted a capacity audience toMandel Hall.Although the members of the trioare individually excellent musi¬cians, they are best known fortheir ensemble playing becausethey have developed the key to allAMERICAN AUTO PARTS7003 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3614MUFFLER HEADQUARTERSJAs Advertliod in LIFE aid POSTi;GUARANTEED m Writing Against;fj;BLOW-OUT, RUST, EVERYTHINGj[ Fir As Lmi« m Ym Own Tnr Cart !;Installed Free While You WaitNO WAtTINGITAKES OMITIS MINUTES IComplete Line of Auto Partsfor Do-It-Yourself MechanicsBrakes InstalledPACTORY (4 ABC ALL FOURA‘»Si?r«IED l“ wMfEufjalag 6 Lmbor—Ford 6 Chevy SHOCK ABSORBERSBRANS —is Y*lFOR MOST t^QKCARS * # FreeTUNE-UP SPECIALIncludes Champion A.C., Aute-Ltte Spark Plugs, Points, Rotor,Condenser. Adjust *4 AQCCarburetor end wS Y™*Timing While You | SmWait.Alt 6-evt. «ors 1*42 to 1*42 REAR SPRINGSINSTALLEDWHILE YOU WAIT **12!®American Auto PartsDO 3-36147008 S. COTTAGE GROVEBaptist Graduate Student Center4901 S. ELLIS AVE.SUNDAY SEMINAR SERIES"DEATH OF GOD: MOOD OR MOVEMENT?"SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23, 5:30 (Buffet) to 7:15 PM"William Hamilton: Thursday's ChildSaturday Night and Sunday Morning"Speaker: Frank G. Nelson, Director of BGSCASAMATTEROP,.. Sun Life Insurance 1* a aure wafto financial independence for youand your family.At a local Sun Life representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY ' Warms Up Ravelchamber music performance—uni¬ty.THE PROGRAM opened with thelittle known Beethoven piece, TenVariations in G major on "Ich Binder Schneider Kakadu. The reasonfor its neglect is understandable asit certainly does not measure up tomost of Beethoven’s chamber mu¬sic, where we find such master¬pieces as the Archduke Trio.The theme and variations tossedaround a few simple melodies, butnever established any true depth offeeling. In spite of whimsical alter¬nation from instrument to instru¬ment, several of the more techni¬cally difficult variations gave theperformers an opportunity to dis¬play their virtuosity and warm upfor the real substance of the pro¬gram.The Ravel Trio in A minor was amusically successful bridge be¬tween the classical and the modern(as of 1915), for it uses unconven¬tional melodies, harmonies, andrhythms in a frame-work of rigidlystructured classical forms. But itis more than just a compromise.Ravel’s genius combines the twotraditions to explore a sweepingrange of color and mood.THE PERFORMANCE Fridaynight, however, did not quite takefull advantage of the potentialgreatness of the piece. On thewhole, the trio mastered the tech¬nical difficulties, opened up thebeauty of the melodies and bal¬anced the interplay of themes, butthey played with a slight restraintwhich dulled the sparkles ofnuance.The second movement, the Pan-toum, is probably the only musicalcomposition with this title. Thename is that of an ancient Malayverse-form which has been em¬ployed by French poets for severalcenturies. It consists of a succes¬sion of four-line stanzas; the firstand third lines of each stanza arerepeated as the second and fourth lines of the stanza which follows.In Ravel’s composition, the musi¬cal sentences, derived from thethemes of the first movement, arerepeated and reflected againsteach other according to this pat¬tern.The third movement, the Pasa-caille, was absolutely superb. Herethe musicians managed to relaxtheir inhibitions and let loose withfull tonal expression. The cellist’samazing dexterity in the upperrange and rich singing qualitythroughout captured the serious re¬flective mood.AFTER INTERMISSION therewas a noticeable change of atmos¬phere, as both the audience andmusicians relaxed to enjoy an oldfavorite, the Schubert Trio in Bflat major. This trio has often beenreferred to as the Beethoven’sFifth of chamber music, but theperformer’s thorough understand¬ing of the music and their spiritedinterpretation led to a freshnesswhich saved this great work fromsounding like just another old wai\horse.In particular, the fourth move¬ment rondo was played with greatspirit and clarity, revealing thethreads of consistency among theintertwining themes. The suddenchange of tempo at the coda cli¬maxed a most exhilarating concert.Susan LandayDIE FREIMAULERA CABARET GROUP FROM THEUNIVERSITY OF FRANKFURTin a program(in German, but with much mime)of satire and commentaryREYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE50c ADMISSIONMonday Oct. 24-8 P M.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH --NEW & USED-Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes - Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsMUSTANGS - 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 3-1715October 21, 1966 • C H 1C A GO M A I O 6 NMovie RevieCulture Calendar% %V ‘Ta <ARTART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO—Six¬ty-Eighth American Exhibition: thruOct. 16. 20th Centuiy Art acquired with¬in dhe last decade, thru Oct Land¬scapes by Vera Berdich: thru Oct. Pho¬tographs in color by Chester Danett;Oct. 1-Nov. 13. Japanese Brush Draw¬ings: thru Nov. 13. Pewter from Per¬manent Collection of Art Institute; thruOct. 23. First exhibition of major arttreasurers from Polish national collec¬tions: Oct. 15-Dec. 31: adults: SI: chil¬dren & students, $.50. Daily 10-5. Thurs.10-9:30. Sun.. Noon-5. Michigan ScAdams. CE 6-7060.CHICAGO PUBLIC LIBRARY—Exhi¬bit Corridor: Sculpture work of MiltonHorn; photographs by Estella Horn. ArtDepartment: 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-Geppart Co.; Animal photographsby Kurt R. Eiogen. 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. 76 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 Martinon,Music Director and Conductor; IrwinHoffman. Associate Conductor: Margar¬et Hillis, Director, Chicago SymphonyChorus.Fourth Week—Thur. Sc Fri., Oct. 20-21—Jean Martinon. cond. R. S'trauss:Death and Transfiguration. Berg: ThreeFragments from Wozzeck. Stravinsky:Variations: Petrouchka.Fifth Week—Thur., Fri. Sc 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 seatsHONDA - 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 for students $1 50 (available until 1 pmonly). Orchestra Hall Box Office: Daily9 30-6, later on concert nights. Sun. 1-4.Orchestra Hall 220 S. Michigan.HA 7-0362; Sun. & Hoi. after 5;HA 7-0499.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 minorMon. Oct 10 at 8:30. Adults. $3.50; stu¬dents. $2. Series tickets available:Adults $10, students, $6. 5238 S. Harper.BU 8-1717.THEATREGENERATION—A Broadway comedyby William Goodhart starring RobertYoung and Jerome Cowan. Nightly at8 30- Matinees Wed. Sc Sat. at 2; ClosedSun.’ $3.0O-$6.50. "Hostile Witness" withRay Milland 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. Monroe.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 bv Marshall Barer. Larry Siegeland Steven Vinaver. “Entire productionconceived by Alfred E. Neuman,Opens Oct. 6. Nightly, 9; Fri, 9 Sc 11:30;Sat 6. 9 & 11:30: Sun. 6 Sc 9; ClosedMon Happv Medium Theatre, 901 N.Rush. DE 7-1000.MARAT/SADE—Chicago Premiereof ‘‘The Persecution and Assassinationof Jean-Paul Marat as Performed bythe Inmates 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 Sc Sat. 8:30; Closed Mon.Nightly $3.50; Fri & Sat. $4 00 Subscrip¬tions (six plays): $16.50-$20.00. Good¬man Theatre, Monroe Sc Columbus.CE 6-2337.■rfsEMONkcy'suncIeIt’s the world-famous “monkey"parka ... now with a warm“Orion*" acrylic pile lining 1Woolrich tailors it in a huskywool melton with bucket hoodand patch pockets ... wraps itup neatly in a fast-moving,full-length zipper. S,M,L,XL.*19 95*DU PONT TM F0* ITI ACRYLIC FIBERCM* * Stety,MC(Town $c (HamptiB g>fjopin the Hew Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 Bad Movie "Hits”Provide Perspectiv<The mediocre movie is something that in one form orother occupies most moviehouses most of the time. T1films either have no publicity campaign and are thus ignoor they have too large a campaign and are thus overly pamDead Heat On a Merry-Go-Roundis of the latter category, but thatdid not prevent it from serving thefunction that both types do: givinga sense of perspective to moviego¬ing, showing how a bad movie ismade.The leading character, played byJames Coburn, is what seems to bethe stock leading man of today’sHollywood. He is the unfeelingmaster (this time criminal insteadof spy) unable to express passion(even in bed where he is oftenfound) and unable to be beaten.Like the movie, he is constantlytrying to be hip and never able tomake it.LIKE MANY OF these films, theplot is the most interesting ele¬ment. Coburn plays a convict whohas just been paroled. He immedi¬ately sets out to rob a bank at theLos Angeles airport. In the processhe uses various women (finallymarrying one of them under an as¬sumed name) and contracts threeof his cohorts. The crime is to takeplace during the confusion whicharises due to the visit of the Rus¬sian premier. The question iswhether this audacious plan (whichinvolved one of the gang membersspending time in jail) can be ac¬complished.It is this dependence upon ploti that is one of the cardinal errors of| the movie. We are not concerned! vvith anything else, so that when anI inconsistency arises or when some¬thing is left unexplained the movie| falls apart.Since Bernard Girard, the direc-i tor of the film, invites comparisonwith Hitchcock in several scenes, Ifeel justified in using Hitchock toillustrate my point. Hitchcock isable to say of The Lady Vanishes,one of his lightest films, that theplot is absurd: “Why didn’t theysend the message by carrier pi¬geon?’’ This failing of plot does notbother us because it is not plot thatinterests us in The Lady Vanishesas much as the plight of the char¬acters whom we believe in. TheLady Vanishes is as much a suc¬cessful romantic comedy as it is asuccessful thriller.IT IS HERE that the major faiLing of all the Bond-derivated filmsarises. No matter how pervertedHitchock’s (or any other great di¬rector’s) characters are, they arealways recognizably human. Thecharacters we find in Dead Heathave no emotions and thus have nohumanity. Very quickly, Coburn’scharacter, along with the rest, be¬comes a bore.Stylistically Girard also makesseveral notable mistakes. The mostobvious is that he attempts a sus¬ pense film without the policeizing what is going on until it ilate. Unless we know some!the protagonist does not knowless we have a feeling of daithere is no suspense. The mostcan be felt is fascination withplan.Girard makes another misthat, unlike the one just menticseems to be prevalent only anthe younger American direcFeeling the influence of the fpean “art” film, they try to usmethods without really understing them. Every time Girardnot know how to get out of a sche jump-cut. When the jum|is used meaningfully (as in theof Breathless ) it can be a verfective device. When used ashere, it becomes meaninglessboring. It is ironical that itfrom American movies thatdard learned to use the juni|effectively.BESIDES THE excellent <photography of Lionel Lindenthe pleasant musical score byPhillips, the film does havedistinction. The criminals, contto the letter of the production cdo get away with their crime,this can happen in a film witartistic distinction signalshopes) the final end of thisimplacable institution.Dead Heat will not drive yoiof the State and Lake wheiopens Wednesday. However, itnot make you feel that yougained anything by watchinrather than the Late Show wheam certain, it shall have aand prosperous life.T. C.Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 MY 3 9259NSA DiscountsBOB NELSON M0T0IImport Centro6052 So. Cottage GroveCUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCALL MRS. BUXT AT 7S2-2118FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. 606C’.10.. f ..CHICAGO MAROON • October 21, 1966HYDE PARK THEATRE5310 Lake Park BU 8-9106STARTING TODAYLE'BONHEURWITHJEAN CLAUDE DROUOUTrANDMARIE-FRANCE BOYER UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK•Si strong bank”NEW CAR LOANSas low as5 0 P«r hundred1154 EAST 55th STREETMO 4-1200PMC\a*% THRONE OF BLOODOctober 22Soc. Sci. 122 -7:15 & 9:15SUNDAY, OCT. 23 2 P.M.A DRAMATIC READINGHEDDA QABLERHENRICK IBSENREADERS FROMTHE OTHER SIDE1603 EAST 53rd ST.FREE -:-@SJUVJ YOU CAN SHOPRIGHT AT YOURDOOR STEP FORMONEY at . . .HYDE PARKFEDERALSAVINGSHYDE PARK CO-OPFEDERAL CREDITUNIONLAKE PARK CURRENCY EXCHANGE Ss>S3)(3)m«=aDvCSD Maroon Weekend Guide- ' * S'ZLATAS BELGRADERESTAURANTEuropean & SerbianFood - Wines1516 N. MILWAUKEE 252-9514ALOHA 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.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST& HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.LI 8-7585 HARPER THEATER DANCE FESTIVALFINAL FOUR PERFORMANCESMURRAY LOUISDANCE COMPANYFRI. & SAT. 8:30 PM - SUN. 2:30 & 7:30 PMStudent Discount 25%Reservations Call BU 8-1717HARPER THEATER, 5238 S. HarperBOSTON BALLET BEGINS TUES. 8:30 PMTHE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Heeling Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWN - $1.00Michelob and Budweiser on Tap!Don Hamilton Now Playing For Your Pleasure and DancingMEET THE GANG ATSMEDLEY’S PUB"Home of English Ale & Guinness Stout on tap.'WORLD'S BEST CHILI, Lge. 12 oz. bowlSPAGHETTIS, Meat Sauce & Garlic BreadFancy Choice STEAKBURGER, Lettuce & TomatoLge. 67 oz. PITCHER SCHLITZ on Tap $ 135SEE YOU SOON . . . OK? 60c$1^1075c5239 S. HARPER AYE. NO 7-5546-al“I got my jot) through a Chicago Ma¬roon. people-grabber want ad, saidTom Blau, editor. If you, too, want tostep up to another job, call MI 3-0800,ext. 3265. and ask for helpful, friendlyLee Hunt, girl ad-taker. A mere 50cents per line for UC people (it goesdown to 40 cents for a repeat perfor¬mance). Call or write before 11 am theday before you want the first insertionrun. Classified AdsPiano lessons by Mrs. Renate Thileniusat 6842 S. Chapped 363-0321, former stu¬dent of Dr. Rudolph Ganz and exper¬ienced in teaching and performing. Martin Guitar 0018. Exc. cond. withhard shell case new price $300. For you$180. 403-4103.PERSONALSAdventurous? Want to play unicyclehockey? Yes, with unicycles. Call EllisBoal-BU 8-1100REFORM service at Hillei. Tonight at7:30, the Library. Abe, Ike, and Jake.REWARD!!Free mug of Tschorr Braeu (light ordark) at the Court House Restaurant(Harper Court) for solving the beef fon¬due problem: The beef fondue is a mostexciting cook-it-yourself dish consistingof raw prime sirloin steak cooked at thetable in hot bubbling oil. The art of eat¬ing fondue lies in the creation of yourown sauces by combining any of elevenspices. How many different sauces canbe made from these eleven spices?The Court House is awaiting your an¬swer.Contest runs through October.Lecture: Traditionalists & Dissenters:Can Jews Coexist?Rabbi Max Kapustin, prof, near easternlanguages, Hillei Director at WayneState Univ., 8:30 PM, Hillei House.Yiddish film festival: Sat. eve. 7:30 PM“God, Man, & Devil.” Hillei House 5715Woodlawn. Admission 50c.Do you want posters posted? StudentCo-op Poster Service will post them foryou for only 75c per set for 80 on campus bulletin boards, or $1.50 to includeoff campus coverage. Leave posterswith Student Activities and they’ll beposted on Tues., Weds., or Thurs. Dis¬count for more than one set the sameday. info. X3561.Kamelot Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC students.Leaving School? Student Co-op will pur¬chase your books or sell them for you.Writer’s Workshop PL 2-8377. WANTED TO RENTFemale grad, student wanted to sharelarge 3rd floor pad with same. 52 andDorchester, $60 a month. Call 288-4564afternoons.Student Co-op Reynolds Club BasementMon-Fri. 10-5. Sat. 12-3, X 3561.Motorcycle storage space. Nov-March.$4 00/mo. Alien. 752-0628.Student Co-op buys/sells books.Charles Goren won’t be playing Bridgethis week at the UC Bridge Club, socome on over and pick up a few MasterPoints! Sunday 7:15 PM, Ida Noyes.CRAPS wishes to say goodby. O, and Iowe a cock to Ascleplus.PHI SIGMA DELTAUpper class Rush Smoker, Mon. Oct. 24,1966. 7:30-10:30 pm. 5625 S. Wdlwn.LOST: 1965 Calendar notebook—blk. &Gold. M. Frank, 304 GW, Sm. rwd.Funkshun at your junkshun in B.J.,Sat . Oct 22. at 8:30 til?DONCASTERCustom made casual & after five dress¬es, suits, coats. Call 324-8907.“54.9%. or 994,000 of all female studentsuse tampons. Brands used are as fol¬lows:” Next Question.Even if we are number one, we still tryharder.The “Knights of Soul” at B.J., Sat.Congratulations to David E Gumpertfrom Chingachgook.SERVICE BUREAU of Univ. of ChicagoSERVICE LEAGUE sponsors a sale ofused furniture Saturday Oct. 29 from 10to 1 at 5316 So. Dorchester (GAYLORDBldg.) Admittance by Univ. I.D. cardonly. Cash and Carry.Mushroom man says, “Turn into peanutbutter.”Whatever happened to the little cuddlymouse?You sehticks, where are you hidingWCFL's Chickenman? Studio Space—Must beAtrist—X3753—B arry heated-Comm.Violinist wishes to rent room to be usedas practice studio. Call 288-0731.FOR SALE’60 Rambler, fair body,$300, best offer. Rm. 4464-8200 good engine,• 1- House FA TO RENTEconomical nearby, newly dec. unfum.apts Students or Faculty. Quiet bldg.Owned by U Of C Grad. 2-3 rms. $77.50up inch free gas, electricity, parkingPrivate bath, elec, refrig., selected ten-anst. Open Housing. See Williams 6045Woodlawn.'62 Monza, 2 dr., 4 spd., silver blue, R.& H., New tines, $525, best offer, call:725-0625.MG-B, 4 mo. old. 6000 mi., wire wheels,heater. B.R.G.. $2400, Perfect—still un¬der guarantee. 067-5190.Harpsichords, by Sabathil. Beautiful in¬struments at reas. prices. 324-6796. &752-8291. Former foreign language teacher hasroom, bath, & kitchen privileges availa¬ble at nominal fee for girl graduate stu¬dent preferable foreign. Hyde Parknear Cornell. Call DO 3-8012. JOBS OFFEREDExcitement, intrigue, adventure. Be¬come a Student Government secretaryFull time—$2.00 an hour. Call MI 3-0800.ext 3273, 9-5 or MU 4-5597 evenings.Student wanted to help w/sick childrenin their home. 2,3, or 5 days: hrs. flexi¬ble; time off for classes, free lunch &breakfast, and you can get in somestudying on the job. DO 3-8767.Student w/Drug Store experience forpart time work. Hrs. to suit your sched¬ule. Sam at Drugs. DO 3-8262.WAITER or WAITRESS—3 or moredays/wk., 11:30 AM-2:30 PM. good in¬come, exper. preferred. Gordon’s Res¬taurant. 1321 E. 57th Street, Call afts752-9251.Wanted: roommates to share 21 roomhouse at reasonable costs. Ask for Rick.PL 2-9874Roommate wanted to share large apt. -2 baths-own bedroom, quiet neighbor¬hood 721-6857 after 11 pm. & before 9am. $50 month. QUADRANGLE CLUB—waiters no ex¬perience necessary $1.50/hr. plus meal.Lunch & dinner hours avail. Call DoraX3696Waiters & Waitresses wanted must be21. Full or part time. Apply Smedley’s.5239 S. Harper.Wanted—two gutsy salesmen of the Per¬cy type who want to become tycoons atan early age. Call Jack Kuesi - 372-5914folk 8c baroque music—open every night’til 2 am. 1603 E. 53rd. Heard late Thursday afternoon:other still isn't out yet, is it?" The Humor Editors Not LaughingAUSTIN, TEXAS (CPS) —Thingsdo not seem so funny for editors ofcollege humor magazines thesedays.In the latest in a series of con¬troversies over the content of stu¬dent publications, the University ofTexas at El Paso has fired the Ed¬itor of “El Burro” for publishing afictitious interview between JesusChrist and Beatle John Lennon.THE ADMINISTRATION hasalso suspended publication of themagazine for the remainder of thefall semester.The Sept. 14 issue of “El Burro”portrayed on the cover a girl wear¬ing bell-bottomed slacks and, inthe background, a man dragging across away.Following the disciplinary actionagainst the editor, students circulat¬ed petitions backing the magazine.“El Burro” is not usually cen¬ sored. but questionable material issometimes taken to the director ofstudent publications for approval.THE UNIVERSITY of Massa¬chusetts administration recentlytook action against the campus hu¬mor magazine by denying the pub¬lication any funds for the year. The magazine embroiled the schoolin a controversy last year after acartoon of a priest pulling a rabbitout of a chalice was published. Thestate senate censured the magazineand planned an investigation of allcampus publications, but the uni¬versity dissuaded the legislators.Baptist Union Names Alumnus of YearThe Baptist Theological Union of Street and Lake Michigan.UC’s Divinity School has named | An award citation will be pre-the Reverend Adam D. Beittel, di-; sented to Mr. Beittel at the dinner,rector of the Mississippi Program It describes him as a “distin-of the American Friends Service guished alumnus of the DivinityCommittee, as its 1966 Alumnus of School. . . a resourceful and effec-the Year.Mr. Beittel will be honored at theannual trustees’ dinner of the Bap¬tist Theological Union at 6:30 pm,Wednesday, October 19, at the Chi¬cago Yacht Club, East Monroe tive teacher both of religion and ofsociology . . . and a courageousand undaunted spokesman for so¬cial justice in communities madeturbulent by the bitterness of ra¬cial prejudice and oppression. . . ”Sale! Giant-Size, Custom Finished Full ColorBrush Stroke $4 98 Art PrintsOne Week Only Starting Friday October 21MOUNTED ON HEAVY BOARD, COVERED WITH PROTECTIVE VARNISH - SAVE THE COST OF CUSTOM FINISHING.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.ARTIST TITLE PLATE SIZEWatteau \ L'Amore Quieto 18x24Chardin Girl with Shuttle 16x20Rembrandt Young GirlHolding Medal 16x20Picasso Maternite 17x21Pissarro Red Roofs 18x22Renoir Idylle 17x21Turner Eton College 18x27Manet Bar Folies Bergeres 17x23Turner Venice 18x24Manet L'Amazone 18x24Picasso Child with Dove 18x24Constable The Haywain 18x24Renoir Lady Sewing 18x22Rouault A Woman's Head 18x24Utrillo Maison Mimi Pinson 18x24Utrillo Reims Cathedral 18x24Renoir Girl Playingwith Guitar 18x24Klee Senecio 16x17Rousseau Virgin Forest atSunset 18x24Daumier The Letter 18x22Redon Butterflies 18x22Klee Flower in Stone 18x22Weber The Three Musicians 18x22Renoir Mme. Charpentier 18x22Renoir The Bridge 18x22Murillo Small Fruit Dealers 18x22Picasso Seated Acrobat 18x24Renoir Lady at the Piano 18x24 Frames $295 andARTIST TITLE PLATE SIZERenoir Little Girl &Watering Can 18x24Fragonard Young Girl Reading 18x24Van Gogh Sunflowers 18x24Renoir LeMoulin de laGalette 18x24Modigliani Gypsy Womanwith Baby 18x24Homer In the Mowing 18x24Rembrandt Girl with Broom 18x24Lancret The Swing 18x24Terborch A Lady at HerToilet 20x24Dufy L'Avenue du Bois 20x24Corot Girl Reading 18x24Signac The Milliners 18x24Wood American Gothic 18x24Van Dongen Passe-TempsHonnete 20x24Greuze Le Guitariste 18x24Lancret La Danseuse 18x22Matisse The Open Window 18x22Marquet Port of Naples 18x22Murillo Pastry Eaters 18x22Shahn The Red Stairway 18x24Chirico Zebra & Horseon the Beach 18x24Renoir La Petite Irene 18x22Constable Cottage in theCornfield 18x22Modigliani Marie, Fille duPeuple 18x22 ARTIST TITLE PLATE SIZERouault L'ltalienne 18x22Gauguin Pape Moe 17x22Van Gogh Le Semeur 17x21Fantin-Latou rChrysanthemums 18x22Degas La Classe de Ballet 18x22Sisley Landscape onRiver Bank 18x22Manet Coming Tide 18x22Fantin-Latour Flower Still Life 18x22Utrillo Sacre Coeur 18x24Van Gogh The Sea 18x24Dufy Deauville 1938 18x24Picasso Compote Dish &Pitcher 17x21Cezanne Bridge at Creteil 17x21Cezanne Large Pine inRed Soil 17x21Matisse Harmony in Red 17x21Renoir The Bower 17x21Salietti Still Life 17x21Van Gogh Landscape inSt. Remy 18x24Van Gogh Haystacks inProvence 18x24Van Gogh White Roses 18x24Degas Dance with Bouquet 17x21Sisley AAoret-Sur-Loing 17x21Utrillo Rue Du Mont Cenis 17x21Feininger Sight of Village 20x22Modigliani Portrait Lipschitz& Wife 18x27 upARTIST TITLE PLATE SIZEModigliani Portrait of aYoung Man 18x27Leger The Red Table 20x24Hobbema View on High Road 20x24Matisse Still Life withFlowers 20x24Constable The White Horse 20x24Hoppner Bowden Children 18x22Renoir Child in White 20x24Picasso Mother & Child 20x22Renoir Boating Party 18x24Chinese—15th Century A Game of Polo 20x24Pissarro Regatta 18x24Rembrandt Girl at Open HalfDoor 18x22Pissarro The Harbour 18x22Picasso Still Life withOrange 18x22Pissarro BoulevardMontmarte 20x24Morisot Young Girl inGreenhouse 20x24Matisse The Window 18x22Monet The Gladiolas 18x24Bellotto V;ew of Pima 14x24Vermeer Lacemaker 16x20Vermeer Milkmaid 17x19Lautrec At the Moulin Rouge 17x19Miro Bourn Bourn Bird 17x2112 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 21, 1966