Chicago Maroon WEEKENDEDITION75th Anniversary YearVol. 75-No. 19 The University of Chicago Friday, November 4, 1966Second UC Prof in Three WeeksMulliken Wins Nobel PrizeConference Plans Set,SAR Declines InvitationWhile no UC students have yet expressed interest in attend¬ing the International conference on the draft at UC in Decem¬ber, plans are progressing to bring 125 other students, scholars,and experts together for a “scholarly discussion” of issuesrelated to draft policy.In a letter to Sol Tax. dean ofUniversity Extension, who is co¬ordinating the conference, StudentsAgainst the Rank (SAR) Tuesdaydeclined a special invitation fromTax to nominate a student to par¬ticipate .The conference, sponsored by UCwith Ford Foundation support, isscheduled for December 4-7, at theCenter for Continuing Education.THERE WILL be up to 15 stu¬dents from all over the country asfull participants in the conference.They will be chosen by a planningcommittee of professors assistingTax. which will decide whether thestudents nominated have enoughbackground in the subject to makea substantial contribution.According to Dean of StudentsWarner A. Wick, no UC studentshave yet expressed interest in par¬ticipating. “I have told the Maroonand SG that they ought to nominatesomeone, and I would hope theFiske Committee (the student- faculty group discussing the Uni¬versity’s relation to the SelectiveService system) would nominate amember,” Wick said.“If anyone else is interested inparticipating, I wish they would letme know,” he continued. All par¬ticipants must be able to devotefull attention to the conferencesessions for all four days of theprogram, Wick cautioned.SAR Hits StructureThe statement from SAR ex¬plained that the group’s main con¬cern with the draft is the “impinge¬ment of a system ... on the livesof men. The Conference does notspeak to this concern; its concernis with reviewing the design of thesystem .... For SAR to partici¬pate in the Conference would be togive token, and therefore decep¬tive, representation to • humanvalues in a milieu of manipula¬tion,” the letter stated.According to Chris Hobson, agraduate student in political sci-(Continued on Page Nine)1 1 Leary Speaks to Capacity Crowd at Mandel HallTurn On, Tune In, Drop Outby Slade LanderTimothy Leary, addressing an overflow audience at Mandel Hall Thursday night, reiter¬ated his call for the formation of a new religion based on LSD.Leary called himself a member of the profession of “religious founders.’ He said thereare four characteristics connected with the founding of any religion:olently against any innovations.Leary said his attitude toward hispersecution was, “That’s the waythe game is played.”“I’m arrested about every fourmonths. It gives me a chance totalk to the police.”FORMING A NEW religion, inLeary’s judgment, follows threestages:• Initiating the religion with thealienated, the young and the crea¬tive;• Initiating it in the family unit.LSD has been given to many care¬fully selected couples for use attheir own discretion, with the dis¬covery that if many qualificationsare fulfilled by the couple, it canact as a powerful aphrodisiac;• Bringing the religion into thepublic and political arenas. Learydescribed his religion as Leaguefor Spiritual Discovery (LSD).He said that the motto of the reli¬gion is, “Turn on, tune in, dropout.”Within our lifetime the LSD reli¬gion will become static and will bereplaced by new religions, Learyasserted. “We must not let thisnew religion be surpressed.” by David E. GumpertProfessor of Chemistry Robert S. Mulliken, known to scientists around the world as “Mr.Molecule,” became UC’s second Nobel Prize winner of the year yesterday. Mulliken wasawarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.His award comes three weeks after the awarding of the Nobel Prize in Medicine to Dr.Charles B. Huggins. Mulliken hasbeen a member of UC’s facultysince 1928. From 1942 to 1945 hewas director of editorial work andinformation for the Plutonium Proj¬ect, a part of the top-secret Man-atomic bomb.Electrons and MoleculesMulliken is responsible for thedevelopment of the molecular or¬bital theory, which has been saidto have bridged the gap betweenthe atom and the molecule.He holds a winter appointment asdistinguished research professor ofchemical physics, Florida State Uni¬versity, Tallahassee, and is pres¬ently there. Mulliken explained toreporters in Tallahassee that hiswork “. . . has been in frief tryingto understand what the electronsare doing in molecules, how- theparticular behavior of electrons inparticular molecules in the firstplace holds them together andgives each molecule its own indi¬vidual characteristics. These areinteresting in themselves just asdifferent people are, but they alsomake each kind of molecule usefulfor various applications to humanactivity.”HE ALSO noted that. “I havebeen happy recently to see howtheoretical work that I have devel¬oped over some decades has beentaken up and is being applied moreand more to chemistry and biolo¬gy.”Ultimate Basis of BiologyAccording to Norman H. Naeh-trieb, professor and chairman ofthe department of chemistry, Mul-n There will be a meeting forMaroon editors and editorialstaff members this afternoon at2:00 pm in the Maroon office.It is very important that all at¬tend.(Continued on Page Ten)• A crying need for a new reli¬gion in the society;• A new sacrament for the reli¬gion;• A new language of metaphorfor expressing the religion;• A socio-political reaction tothe religion from the “establish¬ment.”LEARY DESCRIBED our pres¬ent culture as having little func¬tion except to limit the conscious¬ness of its members, but he saidwe should not hate the society forhaving this effect on us. He stated,“I urge some of you, when ready todo it, to go home and turn on moth¬er and dad.”Addressing himself to the dan¬gers of LSD, Leary maintained thatany form of energy, even a collegeeducation, is dangerous in thehands of the foolish or the unitiat-ed. The sacrament must be ap¬proached with fear and knowledgeof its potential danger, he said. Heaccused psychiatrists of opposingthe use of LSD simply because itworked.the METAPHOR used in thenew religion, according to Leary, Timothy Learymust speak in terms of crackingyour DNA code.”“There is ? lawful regularity tointernal geography,” he said, main¬taining that there are levels of con¬sciousness which can be labeled.“Wherever consciousness is, that isreality.”The time to start a new religionis when the society is most!s the metaphor of science. “One frozen—when it will react most vi- Reynolds Club Lounges and PoolroomMay Remain Open Until Midnight-Wickwould mean locking the side dooron University Ave., forcing every¬one to enter through the front dooron 57th Street.This would insure that only Uni¬versity students and faculty use theReynolds Club facilities, but wouldpose the problem of having some¬one at the front desk to act as asecurity guard.Wick said that even if the prob¬lem of security could be solved, theUniversity would still not be surethat it would extend the hours. Hesaid he welcomed any indication ofstudent sentiment on the issue.Students may be able to playpool and shoot the bull untilmidnight in the Reynolds Clubif there is enough demand, ac-according to Dean of Students War¬ner A. Wick.Wick told the Maroon he is nowconducting a study to determineexactly how much student supportthere would be for the extensionand whether or not it would be aworthwhile project.PRESENTLY, both the ReynoldsClub lounge and the Reynolds Clubpool room are open Mondaythrough Saturday until 10 pm. Thenew proposal would change thesehours to coincide with those of theC-Shop, which is open until mid¬night Monday through Friday, until11 pm on Saturdays, and until 8 pmon Sundays.If the extension proves successfulthe hours of the lounge, the poolroom, and the C-Shop would all befurther extended to midnight, sevennights a week.ACCORDING TO Wick, the mainproblem in extending the hours isone of security. Longer hours CCU Conference SetThe Committee on the City andthe University (CCU) has an¬nounced that a city-wide confer¬ence on urban problems will be heldNovember 17 and 18 under theirsponsorship.CCU, a group composed of main¬ly STEP and SWAP tutors, willconcentrate its conference on twoareas: general urban problems andthe specific problems of Woodlawn.Maroon InterviewDouglas Discusses His Record, the Future(This interview with Senator PaulH. Douglas is the last of a series ofinterviews with candidates for stateand national offices. Senator Douglaswas interviewed by Maroon reporterEllis Levin at the Windermere Hotel,Tuesday morning.)Maroon: Senator, why are you run¬ning for re-election?Douglas: There is a lot of unfin¬ished business that I would like tohelp complete. First, I would say, Iwant to assist in further and betteraid to education, both on the ele¬mentary and secondary level, andon the college and university level.Education is as necessary to socie¬ty as fertilizer is to the farmer, andas machinery is to the industrialist.I believe the federal governmentshould participate actively in this.Second, I want to improve medi¬care, which I helped get throughoriginally. I want to have it includedrugs and also include the dis¬abled. This may not appeal to theyoung, but the young have parentsand grandparents, who are in¬volved in this. Third, I want to passmy truth in-lending bill, which Ihave had up for six years, to re¬quire that those who sell on theinstallment plan and those wholend money on personal creditshould tell the buyers and borrow¬ers the truth about the financecharges, what these amount to inan approximate annual rate on theunpaid balance. I have been thechief sponsor of this legislation,and I want to get it passed.Then, we have just won a greatbattle over the Dunes. It was afight which seemed almost hopelessat times against three giant steelcompanies, against one railroad,all the Republicans from Indianaand a few Democrats in Indianatoo. We had very little help exceptfrom the people, but we won. Nowwe want to improve this and getother recreational areas in North¬ern Illinois, which has a major por¬tion of the population of the State,but which does not have adequateparks.I am very proud, that I was theman, more than any other who de¬feated Senator Dirksen’s attempt toreverse the Supreme Court’s deci¬sion on one-man-one-vote. I led thatfight, holding the floor for twodays, and then Bill Proximire andJoe Tydings joined. They tried tocrush us, but we beat them. Theopponents of one-man, one-vote,those that want gerrymanderedlegislatures and rotten boroughsare hoping to defeat a lot of us inorder to get the Dirksen constitu¬tional amendment through nexttime.Now, one of the things that Ihave crusaded against has been theloopholes in the tax system. Therewere 33 people in 1963 with incomesover five hundred thousand dollarswho did not pay a single cent intaxes, not one cent. And in generalthe percentage people pay dimin¬ishes when they reach the incomeof fifty thousand dollars per year.They pay only 25 percent althoughyou would think according to thetax schedule that they would bepaying around fifty percent ormore. This is because of the loopholes or truck holes in the tax sys¬tem, notably the 27!^ percent deple¬tion allowance for oil and gas, butalso the provision where manyforms of income are taxed onlyone-half the rate of ordinary in¬come, and furthermore, stock op¬tions given to executives at lessthan market rate, which they selllater at a higher market rate.Their gains are taxed only as capi¬tal gains at half the rate of income.This provision also dilutes the equi¬ties of the remaining stockholders.We have made some reforms intaxation, but the major loop holes assistant for two years, has writtena book based largely on the mate¬rial I have spaded out which iscalled the Great Treasury Raid,and is now on sale in paperback.The book shows that if all the peo¬ple paid the taxes that they arepresumed to pay, we could raisethe same amount of money withhalf the rate. And this means thatthe people who do not have the loopholes, are not able to afford theexpensive tax lawyers and tax lob¬byists, are really being compelledby others to pay a much higherrate than they otherwise would.Those are some of the things Iwant to accomplish when I go backto the senate. . . Incidentally, Iwant to defeat Goldwaterism.Maroon: What do you see as yourmost significant contribution inyour 18 years in the senate?Douglas: I think I have done agreat many things. I can mentionlegislation. We passed the area re¬development bill twice. We savedthe Dunes. I am very proud of that.We passed the disclosure bill forwelfare and pension funds, plus awhole series of bills, that I passedmyself. Then in addition I led thefight on housing and what is called“slum clearance,” and on civilrights. And I regard all of these asreal contributions. Than I startedthe movement for ethics and gov¬ernment, and was chairman of thecommittee which went into that.Maroon: The press has been sug¬gesting that the Johnson Adminis¬tration will soft peddle new civilrights legislation in the 90th Con¬gress, that it will emphasize not in¬tegrated education, but qualityNegro education, not open occupan¬cy, but higher quality housing forthe Negro. How do you feel aboutsuch a shift.Douglas: I would regret it, but Ithink the result will largely dependupon what happens at this election.If Governor Brown is defeated byReagen, if I were to be defeated, ifCongressmen O'Hara, Murphy, andPucinski were to be defeated, andif in general the conservatives wonthe election, I think this would betreated as a mandate against ei¬ther further civil rights legislationor against enforcement of existinglegislation. So that this is one of thevery real issues in the campaign. Ifand when re-elected, as I expect tobe, I shall by the same principlesas I have always supported.Maroon: Do you consider this to bethe main issue in your campaign?Douglas: No, I think others aretrying to make it so. I think themain issue is whether you have asenator who represents the people,or a senator who primarily repre¬sents the big money power. I thinkthat is the main issue. Manybranches of the Republican partyare trying to stir up white senti¬ment against me by playing up mycivil rights record. That is beingused in the wards in an attempt toincourage a white backlash.Maroon: How serious a threat doyou consider this white backlash?Douglas: Well personally I think itis antagonistic to Christian morali¬ty, and basic American principles.After all we should remember thatthe Declaration of Independence,which was written by the founderof the Democratic party, ThomasJefferson, said, “we hold thesetruths to be self-evident, that allmen are created equal, and are en¬dowed by their creator with certainunailable rights including life, lib¬erty, and the pursuit of happiness.That to secure these rights govern¬ments are instituted amongstmen.” Well, I happen to believe inthat.By saying that all men are creat¬ed equal, Jefferson did not meanthat they were created equal eco¬nomically, we know that is notor truck holes still remain. I want! true. He did not mean that theyto go back to help close them. Phil- were created equal in ability. Weip Sten, who is the grandson of Ju-1 know that is not true. But he didlius Rosenwald, and who was my mean that they were created equal Senator DouglasV**■in the sight of their maker, and intheir status in civil society. That hedid believe. After the Civil War wepassed the Fourteenth Amendment,which said that no state shall de¬prive any citizen of the equal pro¬tection of the law. I take all ofthese things very seriously, and Ibelieve the American people do andyou can make an appeal to them onthis basis. I don’t know how signifi¬cant the so-called white backlashwill be, I just can’t believe that itis characteristic of any very largepercentage of the people.Maroon: Your opponent chargedwhen interviewed by the Maroonthat none of the civil rights legisla¬tion you have sponsored hasever affected “a single Negro inChicago.” Would you comment onthis?Douglas: Most of the legislationpassed thus far has been directedat the South, namely denial of vot¬ing rights. Negroes have these vot¬ing rights here; access to publicaccommodations, which was deniedin the South, but granted here; le¬gal segregation in the schools,there is no legal segregationhere—there is de facto segregationgrowing out of residential segrega¬tion and equal employment oppor¬tunities. This year I fought for thePresident’s new bill, which wouldhave promoted freedom of resi¬dence; but that was defeated by acombination of the Republicans andthe Dixiecrats, led by my col¬league, Senator Dirksen. My oppo¬nent has said that he will followSenator Dirksen’s lead when hegets to Washington.The problem in Chicago growsprimarily out of segregation in res¬idence and from the principle ofthe neighborhood schools, builtaround segregated neighborhoods.Now I may say that I think it istime for people to take a much bet¬ter view of this. Here in Hyde Parkwe have an integrated community.As a private citizen I have helpedto integrate the community, wehave had our troubles, but we be¬lieve that this and a communitysome fifteen blocks to the South ofus have done on the whole verywell.Maro&n: Do you favor a negotiatedpeace in Vietnam?Douglas: I would first say that Ifavor mutual de-escalation, that wewithdraw a proportion of our troopsprovided that the Communists with¬draw an equal proportion of theirtroops, and that this process go onuntil the two sides are out—provided that then there is an inter¬national body either under theUnited Nations or outside the Unit¬ed Nations, which will step-in topreserve the peace, guarantee freeelections, and guard against fur¬ther invasion from the North. So Iam in favor of that kind of nego¬tiated peace. But thus far NorthVietnam, China, and Russia haverefused to negotiate except on the terms that we first withdraw completely and recognize the Commu¬nists as the legal government ofSouth Vietnam. This I can notagree to, because it would meanturning the area over to the Com¬munists, not only South Vietnam,but the adjoining countries. Itwould be as bad as Munich, andwhile this generation does not re¬member Munich, it was whatbrought on the Second World War.It would not avoid war; it wouldultimately bring on a world war onterms disasterous to us. I havelong believed that the best protec¬tion against aggression is collectiveresistance, and I would favorthat. Our trouble to date isthat we have not gotten too muchsupport from other nations. But wcare getting more now from the oth¬er Asiatic states.Maroon: How do you feel aboutfurther escalation?Douglas: I am opposed to thebombing of cities in North Viet¬nam, and we have been very care¬ful not to do so. We have notbombed any civilian population. Iam opposed to the use of the nu¬clear bomb. I am opposed to a landinvasion of North Vietnam. Con¬trary to my opponent, I do not fa¬vor the mining of the harbor ofHaiphong, because I think thatmay provoke a world war. Thedanger in all these things is notmerely the loss of civilian lifewhich we abhor, but also the factthat it might bring China directlyinto the war, which she is now onlyindirectly involved in.If China comes into the war, theStalinist movement inside the Com¬munist nations, still very strong insome nations, would make it verydifficult for Russia to keep out ofthe war. If Russia came into thewar, it would be a nuclear war.They would destroy us, and wewould destroy them, and it wouldbe the death of Western Civilizationas we know it. So we are trying tooppose aggression. . . . We aretrying to deter aggression in theSouth, and at the same time mini¬mize the danger of its expandinginto a world war.Maroon: Your opponent has sug¬gested that the United States applymore pressure on its allies to stoptrading with North Vietnam. Couldyou comment on this?Douglas: He has been blowing kiss¬es to the pacifists on the one handwith his proposal for an all-Asianconference, to which China wouldbe admitted and from which theUnited States would be excluded.That would be dangerous, becauseI think the belligerents should gettogether. Then he blew kisses thelast day or two towards the inter¬ventionists, by saying that weshould get tough with those whotrade with North Vietnam. Well, Idon’t like it. We have to be carefulthat we don’f get the whole worldopposed to us.Maroon: One final question on for¬eign policy. Would you favor nego¬tiations with the Vietcong?Douglas: The position I have takenis that they should be present atthe conference, in an adjoiningroom. I don’t think you could getthe South Vietnamese to agree tomeet with them as equals. But youcould have them in an adjoiningroom, and suffle back and forth be¬tween them. I used to arbitrate la¬bor disputes. I arbitrated 85 dis¬putes in the newspaper industry.And sometimes the parties were soangry with each other that theywould not meet directly. In thatevent what we did is to get a suiteof rooms, I would be in the centerroom, and we would have labor onone side and management on tbeother; and I would shuffle back andforth between them, making anhonest effort to reconsile differ¬ences. Generally we ironed thingsout. So I would say let the Vietcong be present in the same buildbut not in the same room.Maroon: While you were a prtsor of economics at the Univciof Chicago, you ran and were eled alderman of the Fifth WVery briefly could you descyour relationship in the City Gcil to the then boss—Mayor KeDouglas: I was the oppositiorMayor Kelly. I was the sole opftion out of fifty for one year,then John Boyle, who is nowchief judge of the courts of Chgo, joined me. We were the offiopposition. We fought Kelly.Maroon: Do you see the libmovement entering a new phaseDouglas: Life always has chanI hope it does not move in therection of dictatorship. That's itrary to liberalism. And I hopdoesn't move in the directionrace or class hate. That’s eontrto the liberal philosophy. The lial spirit always has occasionfind things to do. I should notdisdainful because we have mso much progress. And we sh<not spurn those who bore the 1and brunt of the battle. WhenI present either were in diapers| were sitting on the sidelines,were retiring to the suburb?.BOB BELSOB MOTORImport Contro6052 So. Cottage GroveSTROLLINGPLAYERSneedsACTORS!comedianscomediennesrecorder playersclowns-foolsfor aGOTHIC GALAAUDITIONSTuesdayNov. 8th8:30 PMReynolds Club TheafreR. JAFFE, Prop.CHICAGO MAROON November 4, 1966Three Years, $200 MillionColumbia Begins DriveColumbia University openeda three-year campaign Mondayto raise $200 million for an ex¬pansion of facilities and fundsto maintain a leading faculty andstudent body.In a remarkable parallel to the“Campaign for Chicago,” the Co¬lumbia drive was touched off witha pledge of $35 million from theFord Foundation—the la r g e s tamount ever granted to a singleuniversity by the foundation at onetime.Last year Chicago was granted$25 million by the Ford Foundationat the opening of its three-year $160million campaign.To earn the foundation grant, Co¬lumbia must match $25 million of itwith $100 million in independentlyraised, non-governmental funds. The additional $10 million waspromised for the support of new ef¬forts in the field of urban and mi¬nority affairs—specifically, workwith the Negro population in theMorningside Heights neighborhoodadjoining the university.Among the major goals of thecampaign are the following:• To provide 100 new endowedprofessorial chairs, which wouldfree money now needed annuallyfor 100 full professors and raise thelevel of faculty salaries in general.• To increase endowment forscholarship aid to students.• To expand Columbia College by50 percent to an enrollment of 4,000within ten years.• To build 14 major academic andresidential buildings.• To provide an undergraduatelibrary with 300.000 volumes.SDS Staff Member Given Four YearsFor Failing To Report for InductionJeffery Segal, a Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)national staff member, was sentenced Monday to four yearsin federal prison for failing to report for draft induction.He was found guilty in a bench trial last Tuesday and wassentenced by US District CourtJudge James B. ParsonsWhen Segal’s attorney called theterm too severe, Judge Parsonsnoted that he had had twice asmany draft violation ‘cases thisyear as last.He added that half of his recentcases were draft cases. Conse¬quently, he said, he is givingfour-year sentences instead of threewhich he gave last year, when atrial is demanded. He claimed hewould reduce the sentence to two years for a defendant who pleadsguilty.According to Judge Parsons, themajority of those sentenced, havingno prior record, serve only a thirdof their term.Segal worked for SDS in SanFrancisco and Los Angeles beforejoining the national headquarters inChicago last winter. He is presentlytaking one course at Roosevelt Uni¬versity and is the copy editor of theRoosevelt Torch, the school’s stu¬dent newspaper. LBJ's Trip Off; Rally Still On %President Johnson’s ailinggall bladder has forced him tocancel a trip to Chicago sched¬uled for today, depriving anti¬war pickets of an opportunity todemonstrate.However, a rally is still sched¬uled for 10 am in Hutchinson Com¬mons.The rally will include three anti-Johnson speeches by Greg Calvert,national secretary of SDS; Chris Hobson, graduate student in politi¬cal science; and Robert Adams, di¬rector of the Oriental Institute.Johnson announced yesterdaythat he will undergo gall bladdersurgery in 15 to 18 days and thatuntil that time he is under doctor’sorders to rest. Consequently, hehas cancelled all trips and will begoing to his ranch in Texas for thetwo weeks.Johnson was scheduled to arrivein Chicago this afternoon to make aspeech to local Democrats at the Conrad Hilton hotel. He was to re¬port on the Manila conference, andgive endorsement to DemocraticSenator Paul Douglas.In response to the proposed trip,the University’s chapter of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society(SDS) had planned a massive anti-Vietnam war demonstration indowntown Chicago. This demon¬stration has been called off, howev¬er, due to the President’s cancella¬tion.Mandel Facelifting Nears CompletionMandel Hall can expect a new “face” by the end of theyear, according to Jack Hickey, business manager of Univer¬sity Theatre. But the facelifting may be only temporary.Early last summer UT and the Music Department wereasked for a plan to redecorate theauditorium for the Conference onGenetics. What they proposed thenwas a complete renovation, as theyconsidered Mandel to be “un¬safe”—indeed, several accidentshad occurred on stage during re¬cent performances.BUT THE PROJECT was killedfor lack of time and money.Then UT and the Music Depart¬ment proposed the current plan,which is now being enacted. Thegrid has been stripped, and moresteel has been added to strengthenthe ceiling. New rigging and betterlighting have been installed. Base¬ment dressing rooms are being re¬painted.All that remains is the installa¬tion of a new stage apron, sched¬uled for December.Oriental Institute Prof Finds Assyrians Made Glass JewelsA professor in the OrientalInstitute has discovered thatancient Assyrians made glassin order to simulate preciousgems._A. Leo Oppenheim, the UC pro¬fessor serving as editor in charge ofthe Assyrian Dictionary, discoveredthe methods and techniques of theancient Assyrians in his researchfor the Dictionary.“Most of the texts on glass workcome from the seventh centuryMODEL CAMERAon the South SideMost Complete1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259 B.C., but they actually representmuch older texts,” said Oppen¬heim. Techniques and formulawere copied and handed down toworkmen since the fourteenth cen¬tury B.C.“The Assyrians lived in an allu¬vial country,” he said, “with noprecious stones or metals. Whenthey wanted to obtain a certain ef¬ fect of polish, they used glass.”The Assyrians also developed thesand-cast technique, in which glassis poured into a sand mold. Theglass is drawn into threads whichare wrapped around a core tomake vases or into fused rods toform rods for decorative uses. Thistype of glass was popular with theRomans and is still made in Italy.doncasterSOMETHING TO FILLEVERY NOOKIN YOUR WARDROBECUSTOM MADESUITS-CO ATS-DRESSESSPORTSWEAR Special ShowingResort & Winter StylesTues., Nov. 8 & Wed., Nov. 910 am-9 pmNorth Room — 1st FloorSHORE LAND HOTELNSA DiscountsThe University of Chicago Theatre Presents AStaged Reading of Sartre's,NO EXITFollowed by Discussion 8:30 P.M.FRIDAY, NOV. 4th and UthSATURDAY, NOV. 5th and UthSUNDAY, NOV. 6thREYNOLDS CLUB THEATRE TICKETS $1.50 STUDENTS $1.1 “Everyone connected with theTheatre is delighted that this workis being done,” Hickey stated, butqualified his enthusiasm.TO DO THE job right, he main¬tained, either a new auditoriummust be built or the original planfor a complete renovation of Man-del must be reconsidered and fol¬lowed. A study is currently beingmade on the possibility of con¬structing a new theater in the pro¬posed Arts Center of the newly planned dormitory complex.The first group to use the reno¬vated stage will be the Gilbert andSullivan Opera Company.Be 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 StoreT364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-100Student discount with idThe Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Companypresents"THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE"FRIDAY SATURDAY SATURDAYEVENING MATINEE EVENINGNov. 11 Nov. 12 Nov. 128:30 pm 1:30 pm 8:30 pmMANOAl HALL THEATRE - 57th STREET AT UNIVERSITY AVENUETICKETSGeneral Admission: Friday and Saturday Evenings $2.00Saturday Matinee $1.50Tickets on saleet U.C. Bookstore& at the door. Telephone orders: BO 8-267 T orPL 2-7304Sponsored by Adventures in the Arts of theLaboratory Schools for the scholarship fund.Merritt Willeyloves goodconversation.All he needsis an opener. ’r KING OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC.f ST. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSE**November 4, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3f Gov't Fellowships Available1 Dean of Students Warner Wickhas announced the availability of anumber of government sponsoredfellowships and traineeships for the1967-68 academic year.The National Science Foundation(NSF) offers fellowships to studentswho are working on a graduate degreein the mathematical, physical, medical,biological and engineering sciences, aswell as in anthropology, economics (ex¬cluding business administration), geog¬raphy. the history and philosophy of sci¬ence. linguistics, political science psy¬chology (excluding clinical psychology),and sociology (not including socialwork). The basic twelve month stipendis $2400 in the first year of graduatestudy. $2600 in an intermediate year, or$2800 in the final year of study. In addi¬tion, a $500 allowance is provided foreach dependent, and tuition and feesare covered. Office cards for making1 preliminary application for NSF will beavailable in the Fellowship Office aboutNovember 7. In the meantime, students} may obtain the preliminary forms byi writing directly to NSF. The address isavailable in the Fellowship Office. Theeiesing date for filing applications isDecember 9, 1967.The National Institutes of Health(NIH) offer fellowships in health- oriented fields. Stipends and benefitsare the same as for NSF above. There Iis no deadline for applications, but Ithere are three periods of review: Ap- jplications and supporting material mustbe submitted by January 1 for notifica’- jtion in June, by April 1 for notificationin September and by October 1 for no¬tification in February. Application pack¬ets may be obtained from the Fellow¬ship Office or directory from NIH.National Defense Education Act TitleIV fellowships (NDEA IV) will beawarded throughout the Divisions andprofessional schools in Ph D. programsapproved annually by the U.S. Office ofEducation. Nearly all programs avail¬able at UC have been approved. Theapplication forms for University fellow¬ships are used. The student should notehis interest in this fellowship at the topof the application. Students must certifythat they are interested in collegetrachirg Normally the period of awardis three years. Stipends are $2000 in thefirst year of tenure. $2200 in the secondyear, and $2400 in the third year for anine month academic year. Tuition isalso covered. Dependency allowancesand supplemental summer study grantsare also available. Applications shouldbe filed in the Fellowship Office byJanuary 15, 1967National Detense Education Act TitleVI (NDEA VI or NDFL) awards aregiven for study in modern non-Western languages. The basic stipend is $2250for a nine month academic year in ad¬dition to tuition. Twelve month appoint¬ments and allowances for dependents |and travel are also available. Applica¬tion forms and further information may jbe obtained in Dean Northcott’s office, jAdministration 204. Applications are dueby January 15.The National Aeronautics and SpaceAdministration (NASA) provides,three-year grants to the University to ■train outstanding students in space- |oriented areas. These are mainly in the 1mathematical, physical and biological isciences, but awards have been madefor degree research in space-orientedproblems in law and political science iThe selection of students for these train¬eeships is made locally by a university icommittee. Application is made on theforms requesting university fellowships. ISpecial interest in space problemsshould be noted at the top. The stipend ;is $2400 for twelve months plus possible Iaugmentation for dependents or merit :up to a total of $3400. Applicationsshould be filed by January 15.Traineeships in the NIH and NSFareas are available in Departments thathave obtained United States PublicHealth Service (USPHS) or NSF re¬search or trainee grants. Selection oftrainees is made by the Departments.Application should be made on the reg- iular University form due January 15. University's Forensic Society To Host;Foreign Policy Debate All This WeekentThe UC Forensic Society willhost a debate tournament Novem¬ber 3-5. Eighty to 100 teams fromover 25 states are expected to par¬ticipate.This weekend, the team of DickNeumeier, vice-president of thesociety, and Barbara Spencer,president, will travel to the North¬ern Illinois tournament in DeKalb,while Mike Radcliffe and RichardJanda attend a tournament in De¬troit.The topic for all debates thisyear is: “Resolved: The UnitedStates should substantially reduceits foreign policy commitments.’’In tournaments, teams generallyalternate between the affirmativeand negative side. Superior per¬formance on the first six or eight rounds is necessary to qualify f0the final rounds.Mr. Richard I.aVarnway is eoa. jof the team and Bill Snyder the a.<sistant coach.Chicago Style DebateChicago Style Debate will dt.scend tomorrow on the topic “Rrsolved: that baseball is not the notional pastime.” Richard LaVarnway, director of forensics herepromises that the debate “wilmaintain the same high moraquality we had last year.”The 1965 topic was ‘‘Resolvedthat the time-tested practice opolygamy should be encouraged itEscape!Get out from under this weekend. Fly some¬place—for half fare on Eastern.Visit a friend in another town. See an'away" game. Change the scene. Leave late,come back late, enjoy a long weekend —without cutting classes.Use your Eastern Youth ID Card, or an¬other airline's version. If you don't have one—and yoO're under 22—you really ought to.To get your Youth Fare Card, send a $3check or money order, proof of age (copy of driver's license, birth certificate or pass¬port) to Eastern Airlines, Department 350,10 Rockefeller Plaza, N. Y„ N. Y. 10020With your Youth ID Card, you can getan Eastern ticket for half fare. No advancereservations are permitted. But if there's aseat free at departure time, after passen¬gers holding reservations and military per¬sonnel have been seated, you can fly toany Eastern city in the United States. Andlook down on all the drivers.r S EASTERN NUMBER ONE TO THE FUN the United States.”The debate will be at 8:30 pirFriday in the Cloister Club. Admission is 50 cents. Hecklers are we!come.dreamingaboutyour future?then stop!Here's a once in a lifetimeopportunity for adventure andchallenge.,A civilian career with theArmy Recreation or LibraryProgram in Europe or the FarEast.If you are single, a U.S. citi¬zen and have a degree inRECREATIONSOCIAL SCIENCEARTS * CRAFTSDRAMATICSMUSIC ORLIBRARY SCIENCEcontact the Office or Career Counselingand Placement for an appointment witha Special services RepresentativeON CAMPUS INTERVIEWSNOVEMBER 2, 1966Special Services Section, IRCBDepartment of the ArmyWashington, O.C. 2031S4 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 4, 1966Viet Expert and ProfStress Pole for NLFSpeaking to an audience ofabout 150 Wednesday night atTemple Sinai, Pham Khac Rau,former ambassador to thel nited Spates from South Vietnam,and Bernard Fall, Professor of In¬ternational Relations at HowardUniversity, painted a bleak pictureof the Vietnamese war.In a subdued, but emotionalspeech. Pham told the audiencethat “If we destroy all the Viet¬cong. the country would be left inruins.”Originally from North Vietnamhimself, Pham thought the mainroadblock to achieving a politicalsolution to the war was a rule by aminority of Northerners in the Sai¬gon Government.THE RECENT elections of dele-;gates to a Constitutional Assemblywas not a step in the right direc¬tion. Pham said, because overone half of the elected representa¬tives are natives of North Vietnam.The only hope for peace which hesaw was an approach by a civiliangovernment made up of Southern¬ers to the non-Communist elementsin the Vietcong. If offered a realrole in a Government, Pham said,“the members of the N.L.F. would ,be glad to get rid of the Northernelements.” However, Pham contin¬ued. none of this could be done by the Ky government which wouldcollapse if it approached the Viet¬cong.Local Rule EndsFall, although in basic agreementwith Pham, adopted a more cynicalview of the war as a whole. One ofthe stupidest things done in Viet¬nam in the last ten years, heargued, was then President NgoDinh Diem’s decision to abolish lo¬cal self government in 1956. Priorto that time the Vietnamese had ahistory of self-government datingfrom 1500. Diem’s appointment ofgovernment officials to replace lo¬cal authorities provoked a wave ofvillage chief killings in the years1957-59 and led to Vietcong con¬trol of the countryside.Fall stated that he did not think! there were any good solutions leftto the war. If an honest and sweep¬ing land reform program were car¬ried out, he said this might help toregain the support of the peasants.But such a step would be virtuallyimpossible with the war as large asit is at present.LIKE PHAM, Fall thought thatrather than trying to deter NorthVietnam from supporting the Viet¬cong, we should try to detach non-, Communist elements in the N.L.F! by offering them a real role in lo¬cal self-government and civilianrule.National UC Produced Radio ProgramFocusing on Problems of Cities in Nov.The UC-produced radio pro !gram “From the Midway” isfocusing on problems of citiesIbis month from four direc¬tions.Featured will be a UN adminis- itrator, a US Senator, a collegedean. and a go verne r-turned educator. At the end of themonth the topic will switch to cur¬rent trends in education.“FROM THE Midway,” broad¬cast throughout the country, isheard on Chicago radio Sundays onWFMF <7:30 am) and on WAIT(10:00 am). This month the pro¬grams will consist of: on “Current Trends: A Superin¬tendent’s Perspective.”OTHER PROGRAMS the Univer¬sity is connected with are “Night-line.” “Faith of Our Fathers,” and“Read Me a Story.” This last isbased on new’ children’s books. It ispresented on WMAQ-TV (channel5) Sundays at 8:30 am.“Nightline” (on WBBM, 780 kc,Sundays at varying times from 8:10to 11:30 pm) is a series of discus¬sions between UC professors andguests on a range of current topics.“Faith of Our Fathers” (WGN, 720kc) is a broadcast (Sundays at 8:30am) of the preceding Sunday’s ser¬mon at Rockefeller Chapel.• November 6—David Owen, Co-administrator of the UN Develop¬ment Program, on “Urbanizationin the Developing World.”• November 13—Senator JosephS. Clark (D—Penn.) discusses “TheNew Urbanism: Fiscal, Environ¬mental, and Political Aspects.”Martin Meyerson, Dean of theSchool of Environmental Design atHerkeley speaks on “National Ur¬ban Policy.”• November 20—Terry Sanford,former Governor of North Carolina,now Director of Duke University’sStudy of American States, on “TheCities and the States: The Unfin¬ished Agenda.”• November 27—Lyle M. Spen¬cer, President of Science ResearchAssociates, Inc., an IBM subsidi¬ary. examines “The New Social-Industrial Complex.” Paul Briggs,Cleveland Schools Superintendent,REYNOLD’S CLUBBARBERSHOP7 BarbersOnly Shop on CampusAPPOINTMENTS IF DESIREDREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT57th and UNIVERSITY, EXT. 3573M-F B Itn-S pm, Sat. I am-1 amUC's Track TeamScores Double WinUC’s cross country track team,sparked by Pete Hildebrand’s rec¬ord-breaking performance, scoreda double victory over the University of Wisconsin (Milwaukee cam¬pus) and Marquette University in ameet at Washington Park on Octo¬ber 29. The results were 21-36 and24-31 respectively.Hildebrand ran the 4-mile race in20:11.7, averaging 5:02.9 per mile.Chuck Stanberry, Bob LaRoque.Rick Skaloud and Bob Chafferounded out UC’s top five finishers.Bradley University’s teamspoiled UC’s bid for a sweep bybeating Coach Haydon’s team 30-25.The cross country team’s recordis now 6 wins and 3 losses. It's trade-in timefor tired old myths.Like the one about business. Especiallybig business. That it is beyond the ruggedindividualist’s wildest daydream to enterthis holy of holies because he’ll lose some¬thing that’s very sacred — like his inde¬pendence.Sure, it can happen. If a guy or galwants to hide, or just get by, or not acceptresponsibility, or challenges.We’re not omniscient enough or stupidenough to speak for all business, but at acompany like Western Electric, brightideas are not only welcome, they are en¬couraged. And no door is shut. Create alittle stir, go ahead, upset an old apple-!cart (we replace shibboleths at a terrific' pace — we have to as manufacturing andsupply unit of the Bell System — in orderto provide your Bell telephone companyI ' with equipment it needs to serve you.)There’s an excitejpient in business. True,^ we’re in it to make a profit, but working to find new and better ways to make thingsthat help people communicate is very re¬warding and satisfying. Did you ever hearthese wry words of Oliver WendellHolmes? “Never trust a generality — noteven this one.”That’s how we feel about the generality ]that claims you’ll just become a little cogin a company like Western Electric. Youmight, of course, but if you consider your¬self an individual now, odds are 10 to 1that you'll keep your individuality. Andcherish it. And watch it grow. Even at big,big Western Electric.You know, that’s the only way we’dwant you to feel. If you feel like comingin with us.Western ElectricMANUFACTURING & SUPPLY.UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEMNovember 4, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Strodbeck Speaks at HendersonHugger Button-DownGant “Invented” the Hugger shirt for menwho want to look trim, slim and neat. Thefit Is as precise as a custom shirt. Addedniceties: Gant’s superior cotton oxford, theInimitable flare of Gant’s softly rolled col¬lar. In white, blue, maize, linen and bamboo.$7.00(WW * Stety,-2»mmt Sc GJatnpaa £>t}opin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th St. Phone 752-8100 Gangs Bored—Commit CrimesDelinquent gangs commit violent crimes to relieve theboredom of slum living, according to Fred Strodbeck, directorof the Social Psychology Laboratory here and author of GroupProcess and Gang Delinquency.Speaking Wednesday evening atone of a series of discussions oncrime in American life sponsoredby Henderson House, Strodtbeck ex¬plained that unemployment leavesgang members too much time tostand on street corners waiting forsomething to break the monotony.An opportunity for any group ac¬tion-such as robbery—generatesimmediate response, he said. Theleader in such activity is usuallythe person who can fight better,faster, and harder than the others.He constantly finds himself forcedto preserve and augment his pres¬tige to assure his continued leader¬ship.Strodtbeck cited the case of a gang leader whose organization losta pool match against their rivals.In order to recover the self-esteemlost in the match, which had as¬sumed disproportionate importancein the minds of the gang members,the leader instigated a strong-armattack on an elderly man.Fear of Punishment OutweighedEmphasizing the need for com¬mon experience filled by the gangcrimes, Strodtbeck noted that forevery incident which results in ser¬ious injury or property loss thereare perhaps 30 or 40 in which noserious consequences threaten theparticipants.He explained that the desire to be able to join in the post-morterand reminiscences about the indent far outweighs the fear of pnishment by authorities which mresult.Strodtbeck told how the YMthas organized groups of detachworkers who ride around the strecorner meeting places of the ganjgathering information and attemiing to avert incidents. The gan<he said, after initial attemptssupply the workers with narcoticprostitutes, homosexuality, or othillegal commodities, accept tworkers and sometimes cooper;with their efforts.HOWARD SINGLETON, a leadof one of the detached groupsworkers, told students that thehave been no major changesgang patterns as a result of tgovernment’s anti-poverty pigram.University To Host Science StudentsMore than 1200 Midwestern high school students and teach¬ers will be guests of the Division of Physical Sciences for theUniversity’s twelfth annual Science Open House this Saturday.Students selected by their high schools for their interest inscience will spend the day gainingsome familiarity with the Universi¬ty's research facilities as they at¬tend some of the demonstrationsand lectures which will be present¬ed by 53 faculty and staff mem¬bers."THE OPEN House is an at¬tempt to interest people who arenow in high school in the physicalsciences,” commented A. AdrianAlbert, dean of the Division ofPhysical Sciences and host of thisyear’s Open House."We hope to acquaint thesepromising students with our sci¬ence program and generate interestin Chicago throughout the commu¬nity.”Several morning lectures havebeen scheduled, but the programYou won't have to put yourmoving or atoroge problemo#f unlit tomorrow if youcoll mo today.PITER SON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.IMII I. Doty Am.•44-4411 will not officially begin until 1 pmat Mandel Hall where Albert andUniversity President George W.In announcing the award, RobertCleland, Chairman of ChicagoSANE stated, "We are delighted tohave the occasion to recognize Pro¬fessor Morgenthau’s tireless lead¬ership in delineating constructivealternatives to the Administration’sAsian policy.”Past recipients of the Jane Ad-dams Peace Award have includedDr. Eric Fromm, Dr. BenjaminSpock, Norman Thomas, and in1965 both Dr. Howard Schomer, for¬mer President of the Chicago Theo¬logical Seminar, and Rabbi JacobWeinstein of K.A.M. Temple andPresident of the Central Conferenceof American RabbisAmong those involved in theSANE annual dinner are ProfessorPHOTOGRAPHY Beadle will extend an official wcome.The principal speaker on the pigram will be David Atlas, prof<sor of meteorology in the depament of Geophysical Sciences. Itopic will be "Angels, InsecBirds, and Air: Radar Fluoroscoof the Atmosphere.”Saul Bellow, Honorary Chairrmand Ruth Adams, chairman of tDinner Committee and co-editorThe Bulletin of the Atomic Sci<tists.Sydney Harris of The ChiosDaily News will be the mastof ceremonies. The major speak<will be Professor Franz Schimann, Director, Center for ChimStudies, University of CaliforniaBerkley, and Congressman JoConyers, Jr. (D-Mich.).Tickets for the dinner, which vbe held in the Grand Ballroomthe La Salle Hotel, are $7.50 fperson, and can be purchasthrough the office of ChicaSANE, 410 N. Michigan ave., orcalling 427-0290.EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESChicago SANE Will Award Peace PrizTo UC Professor Hans J. MorgenthauHans Morgenthau, UC Professor of History and PoliticScience, will receive the Jane Addams Peace Award for 19from the Chicago Committee for a SANE Nuclear Policy at torganization's Ninth Annual Dinner on Saturday, November 1THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWN - $1.00Michelob and Budweiser on TapiDon Hamilton Now Playing For Your Pleasure and Dancing Easy Inexpensive Enjoymentwith an Instamatic Camera.Simple to use.We now have the new Flash-Cube Instamatic. Takes fourflash pictures without remov¬ing the cube.Come in and see them.Try them.THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE. DR. KURT ROSENBAUK/Optometrist. 53 Klmbark Plaza1200 last 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372ttwfent m4 Faculty Ditto untJoseph H. AarorConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-106OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SHORELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-TOOO6 • CHICAGO MAROON * November 4, 1966UC Faculty Oppose Degree Between Masters and Doctorate'- T T/^1 r O ^>1 1 1 f \r IYi A 1a A r'f* fjftpf A n nnAwrl m rV l .1 J _ a • anMost UC faculty membersdislike the idea of filling theno-man’s land between mastersand doctorate with a new de¬gree.Such a degree, essentially a doc¬torate without dissertation, is beingoffered at the University of Michi¬gan this year. doctorate, according to several de¬partment deans, remains the timeit takes. According to Dale John¬son, dean of the social sciences di¬vision, the problem can be alleviat¬ed at UC by granting more finan¬cial aid to students, thus allowingthem to study full time. uation of department requirements,such as the sociology departmentconducted two years ago could alsobe helpful.Will the new, neither fish norfowl degree ever be instituted atUC? In the mathematics depart-1ment, according to Adrian Albert,1, v» avvuiumg nut ldll rtUlCl l,Johnson indicated that a reeval-fdean of the physical science divi¬ sion, there was talk of grantingsome kind of certificate of thissort, although there are at presentno plans for it. Albert is a memberof the Committee of the Mathemat¬ics Association of America, whichis currently completing a report rec¬ommending requirements for sucha degree. The faculty interviewed allagreed that the degree would beuseful in easing teacher shortagesin small liberal arts or teachers’colleges where teaching and no re¬search would be required, but theywere dubious that such a degreecould be used for university teach¬ing at a place like UC.In a series of interviews with im¬portant graduate faculty members,the Maroon found that most of themwere extremely reluctant to tam¬per with the present degree system.• I would be inclined to be skepticalabout the new degree,” said RobertStreeter, dean of the humanities di¬vision. ‘ Doctoral theses are workof a substantial sort. They repre¬sent a sustained piece of thinkingand writing that is terribly crucial.” |Not only is such a thesis neces¬sary, Streeter continued, but it isnot as difficult as it might be, sincein a number of fields “the notionof a doctoral dissertation as a tot¬ally new contribution to knowledgehas gone down the drain." Now, ac¬cording to Streeter, these essays,must only “throw a new kind oflight on subject matter that is notfresh.” jThe great stumbling-block to theUC Trustee WoodsNamed PresidentOf Art Inst. Bd.Frank H. Woods, a trustee of theUniversity and a prominent civicand cultural leader, has beennamed president of the Board of,Trustees of the Art Institute of Chi¬cago.A member of the Art Institute’sBoard since 1955, Mr. Woodsserved on the Institute’s Executive.Finance, and Building committeesbefore being elected to his new of¬fice.Woods is president of the SaharaCoal Company, Inc. Presently he isalso director of Harris Trust andSavings Bank of Chicago and chair¬man of the board of directors ofLincoln Telephone and TelegraphCo. of Nebraska and of Addre&so-graphil Multigraph Co., Cleveland.Elected to the board of trusteesof the University in 1962, Woodsalso holds trusteeship in WoodsCharitable, Inc. and the ChicagoHorticultural Society.Ml 3-31135424 S. Khnbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restUNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK■BW CAB LOANSat low os1194 BAST 55H» STREETMU 4-1200■ml >i PMC. What you do onNovember 22may affectthe rest of your life!That’s when the IBM interviewer will be oncampus. When he’d like to talk with you-whatever your area of study, whatever yourplans after graduation.You’ll find job opportunities at IBM in six ma¬jor areas: Computer Applications, Program¬ming, Finance and Administration, Research and Development, Manufacturing and Mar-,keting.Some of these areas may not mean much toyou—now. But just let the IBM interviewerexplain a few of them. One may be just thecareer you're looking for. It could be the startof something, big—your future with IBM.Whatever your immediate commitments, whatever your area of study,sign up for your on-campus interview with IBM, now.If for some reason, you aren’t able to arrange an interview, drop us a line. Write to: Manager of College Recruiting,IBM Corporation, 100 South Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer.November 4, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Reynolds ClubEvening Hours a Musi most of the creative arts {music tion.excepted), UC students are notably “ambinactive, but I cannot believe that Yeswith our selective admissions poli- conte:cy we have shut out the artistically workcreative to let in the socially crea- tionslive. Certainly the quality of the policySocial Sciences department is re¬flected in the large number of stu¬dents who are “socially aware”, A.Jbut does this exclude being artis-tically aware? I cannot believe so. TO TProperly regarded, art can be Tuethe supreme social comment. The Douglangry and the dissident, the highly othermotivated and the unconventional fromcould have no better nor more di- my Mrect mode of communication than Manxsatire, poetry, fiction, pornography the Ui(thank you, Mr. Lowinsky) or plain Thaprose. These forms can all be vig- from .orously alive. paringWhat we need, then, is a place Douglfor these modes of expression and reportany others that can be dreamt up. mentsThis publication should be deliber- read <ately fugitive, shunning the glossy ing haformality of the Phoenix, which that honly served to emphasize its lack gotiat:of content. It should be extremely tion t«broad and progressive in selecting beforecopy, especially encouraging the paign“far out” approach, and avoiding Atlantlike the plague the staid or “cute” with tattitudes of its predecessors and cent fcontemporaries, just thFinally, it should have the organ- Percyizing drive behind it to establish it ence Ias a regular and expected institu- moretion. It must develop a bureaucra- alliescy which can survive changes of vietnastaff and Summer interims: it tally,must become a going concern. nian AThere is not only room for some- j a gr0lthing along these lines, there is a ; jentedcrying need for it. I doubt if anyDraft ResistersTO THE EDITOR:In a broad view, the current sit¬uation of the anti-war movementin this country presents a bleakpicture. It seems fairly clear fromthe state of the war and the reac¬tion of the President to protest overit that little visible progress hasbeen made. We are demoralized bythis state of affairs. Some youngmen have felt it necessary to voicetheir despair by burning their draftcards or refusing induction, but forthe most part, their actions havelittle effect. In fact, these actionsusually arise from a personal re¬solve rather than a primary con¬cern for political effectiveness.All of us and many others havemade the personal decision that wecannot in good conscience go toVietnam. We intend to express thisresolve in such a way that it willhave a political effect. We wish tomeet with other people who feel aswe do. in order to discuss a draft-resistance program that we havedeveloped. Others of like mind mayjoin us at Ida Noyes East Loungeat 8 pm. Monday November 7.KEN KR1CHCHARLES DONAHUERICHARD McMILLINDONALD ANDERSONERNEST DORNFELDPAUL BOOTHTHOMASGUSHURSTRICHARD ATLEEJEFF FALKGARY BENENSONSTEVE GOLDSMITHThe administration’s tentative decision to keep the Rey¬nold's Club lounge and pool room open until midnight week¬days deserves restrained applause.Such a decision is long overdue, yet even now Dean of Stu¬dents Warner Wick claims that he is not satisfied that there isenough student support to make such a move. He wants to waituntil he is convinced that students would use the ReynoldsClub during its extended hours.Rather than wait for students to sign petitions and organizead hoc committees to accomplish something that should bedone, we would recommend that the University go throughwith its proposal now and then see what happens. Otherwisethe Reynolds Club could become another Ida Noyes cafeteria,for which plans were postponed for years.The only tangible obstacle to keeping the Reynolds Clubopen later is the old problem of security. In this case securitywould involve paying a student to sit at the Reynolds Clubdesk two hours longer and locking the side door so that unau¬thorized people cannot get in without going by the desk.The University’s decision to seriously consider providing amore nearly complete student gathering place is commendablein the sense that it represents an awakening of sorts to some ofUC’s serious social problems.A Second PrizeThe Nobel Prize in chemistry granted to Dr. Robert Mullik-en yesterday assures the University a dominant place at theaward ceremonies later this year. Coming less than a monthafter the Nobel Prize in medicine was granted to Dr. RobertHuggins, Dr. Mulliken’s award leaves little doubt that the Uni¬versity of Chicago occupies a leading position among tha na¬tion’s universities in the field of scientific research.As remarkable as the University’s performance has been inthis year’s Nobel competition, it should not be allowed to ob¬scure Dr. Mulliken’s personal contribution. It hardly need besaid that the Nobel Prize represents the height of recognitionfor any scientist, and for Dr. Mulliken it caps a long career ofdedicated research and brilliant analysis.Whether society will choose to use Dr. Mulliken’s researchin its own best interest remains an open question. But thatsociety should choose to recognize his contributions simply be¬cause they add to our wealth of knowledge about the nature ofthe universe is at least an encouraging sign. A Creative Voice?TO THE EDITOR:Benjamin Lowinsky’s letter ofNov. 1 raises an important issuefor the University of Chicago: canwe really afford to be without aneffective and established voice forcreative student writing? Withinthe last year we have seen threeattempts at filling the need—theresurrection of the Phoenix, thecreation of the Maroon Magazine,and the publication of Other. ThePhoenix seems to have returned toits ashes after two moribund edi¬tions; the Maroon Magazine hasdied too, presumably from lack ofmaterial and funds; Other wasstill-born. So nothing remains.It is commonplace to say thatthese ventures died (or are in theprocess of dying) from a lack ofstudent interest “You know where I stand.“I want to prevent World WarIII, not start it.j “As I said early in this cam¬paign—on September 7 at RockFalls, Illinois—I oppose escalatingj this war into an atomic war withI China or North Vietnam, and 1 op¬pose the use of the atom bomb inthis war. * ' '“I oppose a land invasion ofNorth Vietnam.“I oppose the bombing of civiliantargets or open cities.“I oppose the mining of the harbor of Haiphong (something Percyhas called for.)“Those statements are on the record—and nothing can changethem—not even the distortions ofRepublican orators or the Republican press.“And despite the best efforts ofthe Republican press to convey adifferent impression, the publicshould know that my opponent hasnot opposed any single step of esca¬lation adopted by our government.And, unlike me, he has never setforth any limits to escalation suchas I have done repeatedly.“I want to make one thing quiteclear. I am unalterably opposed toone-sided withdrawal or what iscalled “unilateral”Chicago Maroonthe real questionis why has there been this monu¬mental lack of interest? It is tooeasy to condemn student apathy,and not entirely accurate. I wouldblame as well the organizers of thepublications and the nature of thepublications themselves.The Phoenix was produced withan air of futility. It was a hot-houseplant—a venture in pure art. It wasunrelated to Chicago or to mean¬ingful reality as experienced by ourstudents. Now, such abstract workis always needed and valuable, butat UC at least, it alone cannotmake an exciting publication.The Maroon Magazine, on theother hand, was too limited in theother direction: the socially orient¬ed articles were the most success¬ful and the most interesting, buttheir exhaustive nature (look at theamount of research that must havegone into Satter’s piece) precludedthe barest hope of filling a regularmagazine with them. A hopefulventure, it was too identified withthe establishment Maroon in staffand format to be truly anothervoice.As for Other, the less said thebetter. It has at least succeeded inraising the issue.So what do we need? Something,I think, which will reach and stim¬ulate all the “mute inglorious Mil-tons” who have been frustrated bythe limitations of the previous pub¬lications. It is a painful fact that in. .David A. Satter... Boruch GlasgowDavid E. Gumpert. David L. Aiken. .Peter RabinowitzDavid H. RichterJoan PhillipsNew$ Editors .Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanFeature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryar. DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyPolitical Editor , John BremnerEditor Emeritus .Daniel HertzbergEditorial Staff—John Beal, Kenneth Simonson, Eleanor Kap¬lan. Slade Lander, Gary Christiana, Ellis Levin, Richard Ra-bens.News Staff—John Moscow, Elaine Hyams, Harold Sheridan,Angela DeVito, Robert Skeist, Ina Smith, Seth Masia, VivianGoodman, Cathy Sullivan, Jeffrey Blum, Sally Yagol, LeanneStar, Maxine Miska, Alfred Marcus, Marge Pearson, LeslieRecht, Helen Schary, Ann Garfield, John Welch, T. C. Fox,Gloria Weissman, Marlene Proviser, Ilene Kantrov, JamesRubinstein, Roger Black, Harold Kletnick, Larry Hendel,Anita Grossman, Larry Struck, Lynn McKeever, SanfordRockowitz, Peter Stone, Susan Loewy, Noralyn Newmark,David Jacobson David F. Israel Jr.Photographers—Jean Raisler, Bern Myers, Charles Packer, H.David Alley.Staff Artist—Belita Lewis.The Chicago Maroon, founded 1892, issued every Tuesday and Fridaythroughout the University of Chicago school year, except during thetenth week of the academic quarter and during examination periods,and weekly for eight weeks during the summer, by students at theUniversity of Chicago. Located in rooms 303, 304, 305 Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago. Illinois 60637, Distributed without chargeon campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood. Subscriptions by mail** per year. Charter member, United States Student Press AssnPublishers of the Collegiate Press Service;Editor-In-Chief .......Business ManagerManaging EditorExecutive EditorAssistants to the Editorwithdrawal. Wemust not do that for the Commitriists would then take over all ofSoutheast Asia and push their con¬quests elsewhere.“But it is also true that what Iam for is as important as what 1am against.“I favor the mutual de-escalationof the cruel conflict in Vietnam.“As I said on the floor of theSenate in September, I believe weshould stop bombing North Viet¬nam provided we are assured thatthis would be answered promptlyby a corresponding and appropriatede-escalation on the other side. AndI mean that we should reduce ourtroop levels if the North Viet¬namese make a correspondingequal and proportionate reductionin t.\eir troops.“And I mean that we would bewilling to withdraw from Vietnam,but only after aggression from theNorth stops, infiltration ceases, andviolence subsides—provided thereis a strong international force tofill the vacuum to maintain law(Continued on Page Ten)More on the EditorialTO THE EDITOR:I must strongly dissent from yourendorsement of Charles Percy forU.S. Senator.Ultimately it does not mattervery much what a senator’s standon the Vietnam War is. Schlesingeris right. Just as the administrationgot us into this war, it will be theadministration which will get usout.I grant you that dissents from thewar such as those from Sens.Gruening, Morse, and FulbrigKhave been most effective in theanti-war effort.But, how can one who is interest¬ed in social progress vote for aman who, when the war is over,will vote conservatively?You admit Percy believes in bal¬anced budgets. You admit he is notwholly for social welfare legisla-November 4, 1966Protestor: Conference Manipulative; Tax.- SAR Misunderstands(Continued from Page One)ence who wrote the letter, the mainreason that SAR members decidedat their October 27 meeting not tonominate a member was that themembers felt the conference woulddraw away attention from their de¬mands for reform in UC’s relationto the Selective Service system."IN THE political situation of theuniversity, the conference repre¬sents an attempt to dampen stu¬dent demands by giving theimpression that these demands arebeing dealth with by the confer¬ence,” Hobson said. ‘‘To take partin the conference would be allowingourselves to be used by the univer¬sity in an attempt to undercut thebasis on which we stand,” he con¬tinued.Hobson’s letter also charges that‘ the conference itself” is ‘‘manipu¬lative,” since ‘‘ordinary young peo¬ple who are hit by the draft—inparticular non-continuing highschool graduates and the poor—will be barred by the require¬ments.”THE LETTER also states thatthe connection between the draftand the war in Vietnam will be ‘‘ig¬nored” in the conference. ‘‘At acrucial cost to Its intellectual cre¬ dentials, it takes the war as a‘given’—is concerned only with howbest to meet its requirements,” theletter charges. ‘‘We have no inter¬est in helping to devise more palat¬able ways to wage an imperialistwar,” it continued.Tax Rebuts ChargesTax said he regarded the SARcharges as a ‘‘misunderstanding”of the conference’s scope.Representatives of a wide rangeof viewpoints will speak at the con¬ference, Tax said, and not all ofthem will take the stand that mili¬tary manpower necessarily has tobe raised by a draft system. Forexample, one of the main speakerswill be Milton Friedman, Tax said,who advocates a professionalstanding army.JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAP "THE ONLY thing we’re leavingout of consideration is whether peo¬ple support the war. We’re notgoing to be talking about whetherpeople should lie down in front oftroop trains,” Tax commented.The conference is designed, hesaid, to bring together people whohave given a great deal of thoughtto the matter. It will be open onlyto these selected participants be¬cause ‘‘people are supposed to bechanging their minds during theconference,” and it would impedefree discussion to open it to allcomers, he said.'Not A Rally'‘‘This is not a rally,” Tax com¬mented. “It is supposed to developongoing prob¬new solutions forKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856An Open Meetingof tho Orientation CommitteeTil ore., Nov. 10, - 7:30 pml«la Noyes LibraryAll undergraduates, especially first yearstudents are invited te participate in acritique ef the past Orientation Boardand begin plans for next year. HONDA - Fantastic Savings& Best BargainsSEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES-SERVICE - PARTSe PICK UP & DELIVERYe EASY FINANCINGe LOW INSURANCE RATESCALLMl 3-4500Chicago's Largest and Just Around The CornerBOB NELSON MOTORS6136 S. COTTAGE GROVE lems. It should be genuinely educa¬tional for those who participate; itshould be scholarly, not political,”he said.IN THE letter to student editorsTax wrote, “Tne conference as¬sumes that some form of militaryestablishment will exist, for whichmanpower will have to be obtainedthrough:1. Some form of selective service,possibly within2. A system of universal or na¬tional service, or else by3. A system of economic motiva¬tion which could maintain a volun¬tary, professional armed force.“Our problem then is to describeand to analyze the entire range ofalternatives and to ask in eachcase how feasible it Is for the mili¬ tary, yet how suited to our demo¬cratic system, and how each af¬fects the national economy, socialstructure, and education,’’ Tax’sletter said.Sixty PanelistsOf the 125 participants, about 60will present papers, while the resttake part in the discussion. Taxtold the Maroon he hopes to havestudents make up about ten percentof the participants.SAMUEL A. BELL'BUY SHELL FROM BELL'SINCE 1*26PICKUP A DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200ASAMATTEROP... 8tf* Llfb Ibiurtnc* l» t tufa wajfto financial uidapandanca tor ytoi□ Aa a local Sua LMa representative, mayI aaN upon you at year convenience?One North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,othors by appt.•UN Lira AMURANCf COMPANYA MUTUAL COMPAMT CANADATOMORROW NIGHTThe Inter Fraternity CouncilandEnterprise ProductionspresentHOWLIN’WOLF350 POUNDS OF LOVE & JOYThe Chicago Blues: Music of the SoulMANDEL HALL — Sot., November 5tb. 8:30 p.m.Tickets $3.00, Students $2.50Mandel Hall Box OfficeTOAD HALL. 1444 E. 57th. BU 8-4500November 4, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9i~ - '*Letters to the Editor11 i mm sm i$*$$ mm m' mm'>. s- ' v5-- 'wr > ' i .. < . i i i • * ■ ■'^ ' < v mm' ■'Twai'?^(Continued from Page Eight)and order, and enforce the peace.But that force must be strongenough to do the job.”These same points have beenmade by Douglas piecemeal on thefloor of the Senate and in previousspeeches throughout the past year.The (‘‘more conciliatory”) Re¬publican. presumably more concili¬atory because he declared to theCivic Club on the same day that Iinterviewed him. that his currentposition on any issue could not beconsidered binding on his future ac¬tions. has responded to the escala¬tion of the Vietnam war not by sug¬gesting any means to end the war,but with the general statementthat, ‘‘if we must escalate the war,let us also escalate the search forpeace.” His alternate urging ofmore forceful military action andlouder peace moves hardly quali¬fies Him as the hope of peace andthe voice of opposition in the Sen¬ate. Even Wayne Morse this Sun¬day said that immediate U.S. with¬drawal would invite unparalleledslaughter in South Vietnam andthat an international peace-keepingforce would be necessary. The prin¬ciple voice of opposition in the Sen¬ate sounds much more like SenatoriDouglas than it does like CharlesPercy.At any rate, we can concludethat preference for Percy on thegrounds of foreign policy is as mis¬taken as endorsing a man whowhen running for Governor of Illi¬nois said “We—the UnitedStates—are still the best hope onearth,” who advocated “an immov¬able resistance against every Com¬munist aggression” because “thestruggle against Communist expan¬sion is the first order of business inthe world”, and who declares that“the United Nations cannot be re¬lied upon as an effective force toprevent aggression,” over the manwho sponsored the empoweringresolution for the nuclear test bantreaty. ' If peace is not the distinguishingissue in this campaign, the electionshould be decided on the basis ofdomestic issues. Today, civil rightsspelled O-P-E-N-O-C-C-U-P-A-N-C-Yvs. B-A-C K-L-A-S-H is the domi¬nant domestic issue in California,in Massachusetts, in Georgia, inArkansas, in Maryland, and in Illi¬nois. When Charles Percy told theCivic Club that he reserved theright to switch his position, he ob¬viously meant to exercise thatright. The following week, he wastelling suburban audiences that hewas opposed to open occupancy inbuildings with less than six livingunits. Kenilworth, it seems, shouldremain a closed community if Per¬cy has his way. his rapid vacilla¬tion has proved too much for hisprinting presses. They are still dis¬tributing a pamphlet, in the Negroprecincts only, which has him “foropen occupancy” with no modifiersor qualifiers. Douglas has neverswitched on civil rights and, as myinterview indicates, doesn’t intendto even in the face of substantialreaction in the so-called “back¬lash” districts. Indeed, he wants togo back to the Senate specificallyto pass open occupancy legislation.In the meantime, when it is aquestion of what shall be sacrificedto pay for the war in Vietnam,Douglas has been unequivocal inhis determination not to sacrificevital social legislation and funds.For example, when Johnson elimi¬nated funds for the school milkfund, it was Paul H. Douglas wholed the drive to replace thosefunds. It was the same story withschool lunches, aid to elementaryeducation, and the vital rent-subsidy proposal. The latter is an¬other Douglas originated measurewhich he lectured on at BreastedHall last spring.And what would Mr. Percy sacri¬fice? Public works and welfare leg¬islation.It is unfortunate that the Maroon(did not wait until it had the opin¬ ions of Senator Douglas on tape,as I have them now, rather thanbelieve the interpretations given byMr. Percy to the distortions of thecommercial press.Mr. Percy’s major TV spot says“Vietnam drags on, civil rights re¬main unsettled. What should agreat United States Senator be intimes like these?” I think we needsomeone whose views are more de¬veloped and more vigorously heldthan a candidate who can say onlythat Vietnam drags on and civilrights remains unsettled. With theurgent needs for peace abroad andprogress at home, we need leaderswhose sights are set on progess,not men whose sails are trimmedby the breezes of public opinion.Paul Douglas is better qualified byexperience, position, and characterto be our Senator. He knows wherehe is going and is determined toget there.ELLIS LEVINThose Sandwiches!TO THE EDITOR:Occasionally, in the rush of aca¬demic activities, I find it conven¬ient to join the mob at the book¬store for a quick sandwich atlunchtime. Today was such an oc¬casion.For over a year now, I’ve man¬aged to down the bookstore's crum¬mytasting, virtually meatless hum-burgs. But today I figured I’d hadenough; it was time to try a cheesesandwich for a change. After all,what can they do to ruin a cheesesandwich?Looking forward to a refreshingexperience, I bit in. Oog! To mydismay, the inside of the sandwichwas padded with extra bread crust.I don’t know why the mobs keeppouring into the bookstore. I guessit must be the service.R. RUGGGeography DepartmentThe University of Chicago9th CONSECUTIVE SEASON1966 ORATORIO FESTIVAL 1967Rockefeller Memorial Chapel 59th Street & Woodlawn AvenueSunday Afternoons at 3:30DECEMBER 11 - MESSIAH, G. F. HandelJANUARY 29 - MESSA DA REQUIEM, G, VerdiFEBRUARY 19-SOLOMON G. F. HandelMARCH 19 - B MINOR MASS J. S. BachMAY 7 - HARMONIEMESSE F. J. HaydnNAENIE, J. BRAHMSCONCERTO FOR ORGAN, STRING ORCHESTRA,AND TIMPANI, F. PoulencVIRGIL THOMSON CHORAL WORKCommissioned in celebration of the 75th Anniversaryof the University of ChicagoROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIR RICHARD VIKSTROM,with members of the Director of MusicCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA EDWARD MONDELLO, OrganistPre-Series Concert: DECEMBER 9 at 8 PMHANDELS MESSIAHSEASON TICKETS (5 CONCERTS )Reserved $15.00Gen. Adm. $12.00UC Faculty/Staff $10.00Student $ 7.00 INDIVIDUAL CONCERTSReserved $ 4.50Gen. Adm. $ 3.50UC Faculty/Staff $ 3.00Student $ 2.50TICKETS ON SALE AT: Cooley's Candles, 5210 Harper CourtWoodworth's Bookstore, 1311 E. 57thDowntown Graduate Business School190 E. Delaware PlaceUniversity of Chicago BookstoreMail Orders to: ORATORIO FESTIVAL, 5810 S. Woodlawn, Chicago 60637Please make checks payable to the University of Chicagoand enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope. Former UC Professor Benjamin NelsonComments on Sociology in America“A funny thing happenedwhen Durkeim, Weber, andSimmel were transported tothe United States,” stated Ben¬jamin Nelson, former UC professorand currently professor of sociolo¬gy and history at the New Schoolfor Social Research in New York.Nelson spoke Monday at thefirst of a series of forums called“Exploring the Disciplines ’, spon¬sored by the Social Sciences Col¬legiate division in social sciences122."WHAT HAPPENED to Dur¬keim, Weber and Simmel,” Nelsonsaid, “was that the governingframes of reference and the centralpurposes of these men were fore¬shortened in the hope of establish¬ing a strict structure that wouldprovide launching pads, as itwere.”While the pioneers in the earlydisciplines of sociology were work¬ing toward a series of interrelatedsocial sciences, the prices paid forthis were many theoretical transla¬tions and the confusion that result¬ed from interpretations of notionsand terms.Nelson commented that much oftoday’s empirical research, espe¬cially in the sociology of religion,was not using careful linguisticanalysis and mathematical proce¬dures.Researchers often attempt to de¬rive generalizatons from limited re¬search in single areas, he charged.“But what direction should sociol¬ogy take?” Nelson asked. Instead ofaccepting the opaque terms that so¬ciology uses, he suggested, sociolo¬gists have to examine their “ana¬lytic tools with strictest care.” Tocope with the “inability to do jus- necessary to study the social scienc¬es without theoretial assumptions,on commented. “In sociology thereis too little theory, not too much.”he said.Airline Travel MayBe Safer in FutureCommercial air travelthrough storm areas may bemade safer in the future be¬cause of research now beingconducted by Tetsuya Fujita, pro¬fessor in the Department of Geo¬physical Sciences.Fujila’s research has included in¬terpreting satellite photographs efcloud formations in order to detectwhere a storm is located. He isdoing the work for the NationalAeronautics and Space Adminis¬tration NASA and the US WeatherBureau.FUJITA STATED that he istrying to distinguish between pic¬tures of storm clouds and those ofordinary clouds. This distinction ismade, he explained by figuring thetemperature of the cloud and itsshape.NASA is using such satellites asESSA Satellite No. 213 and NimbusSatellite No. 2 to photograph potential storm clouds with an alti¬tude of as much as 40,000-50.000feet, according to Fujita.When Fujita has completed hisresearch, the Weather Bureau willbe able to use these types of photo¬graphs to predict the location of astorm in order to warn commercialairlines.tice to frames of reference in sociol¬ogy.” Nelson recommended an im¬proved theoretical procedure andcareful mathematical procedures.Sociology, like science, he urged,should continually reconsider itstheoretical concepts. Too many so¬ciologists presume that it is notHuggins To ReceiveGairdner Med PrizeThe Gairdner Annual Awardfor excellence in medical re¬search will be awarded to UCprofessor of surgery, CharlesB. Huggins, the winner of thisyear’s Nobel Prize in medicine, onNovember 18, in Toronto.Huggins is receiving the Gaird¬ner Award for his research on therole of hormones in prostrate can¬cer, the same research for whichhe was awarded the Nobel Prize.Huggins and six others will re¬ceive their awards from OntarioPremier John Robarts at a formalceremony. Following his receipt ofthe $5,000 award, Dr. Huggins willpresent, along with his fellow lau¬reates, an informal paper on thework for which he received theaward.The award was made possible byJ. A. Gairdner, Toronto financierand industrialist. The GairdnerFoundation was formed in 1957 toreward medical scientists for theiraccomplishments and has nowreached international recognitionas Canada’s “Nobel Prize.” Theaward this year went to research¬ers from several countries. Mulliken's Work AddsTo Biological Knowledge(Continued from Page One)liken’s work will soon enable scien¬tists to predict properties of mole¬cules before they are synthesized.This, said Nacbtrieb, will lead to abetter understanding of biologicalprocesses since molecular structureis the ultimate basis of biology.Mulliken has served in both thedepartments of chemistry andphysics here, and has received anumber of honorary degrees andawards. “It is always been a ques¬tion whether he should be honoredin chemistry or in physics,” notedMark Inghram, professor andchairman of the department ofphysics.ACCORDING to Adrian Albert,professor of mathematics and deanof the physical sciences division,Mulliken studied the structure ofthe molecule not only in terms ofstructure but in the way moleculesbehave.Commented President GeorgeBeadle, “So intense has been hisconcentration, so creative his re¬search, that he is known amongscientists throughout the world as‘Mr. Molecule.' ’’* ,.r: ••CareerssmmmNovember 8Federal Water PoUution Control Ad¬ministration - Washington D C. and 31states. All degree levels in Chemistry.Math, Statistics, Microbiology, Geology,and Soil Sciences.Environmental Science Services Ad¬ministration - Washington D.C. and na¬tionwide. SB. candidates in Chemistry.SB., SM and PhD. in Math and Physics (Cosmic Radiation. Solid Stab*,Plasma, S.M. and Ph D. in Geophysi¬cal Science. (Schedule permitlng, stu¬dents will be interviewed for summerpositions.)November 9Radio Corporation of America - Van-ous cities in New Jersey, Indiana, Mas¬sachusetts, and Pennsylvania. Pn ucandidates in Math, Inorganic or Phy*1'cal Chemistry; Atomic or Solid statePhysios.November 11 .United Aircraft Research Laborato¬ries - East Hartford, Connecticut b.Mand Ph D. candidates in Chemistry, adegree levels in Math or Statistics oiPhysics (Atomic, Solid State. Plasma)10 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 4, 1966&$88aSSCalendar of Events MUSTANGS - TEMPESTS • FORDS • PONTIACSRENT-A-CARif- % - *Friday, November 4CONCERT: Chamber Music Series:"Early Music Quartet,” Mandel Hall,t> 30 pm.LECTURE: David Bakan, professorDept, of Psychology, "On Suffering andSacrifice: The Book of Job” HillelHouse. 5715 Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: David Stonach, Director,The British Inst, of Persian Studies,"Excavations at Parsargadae,” Breast¬ed Hall, 8:30 pm.FILM: "Los Olvidados", Luis Bunue),Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.LECTURE: Dr. Fenn, "RespiratoryGases in Hydrospace and Aerospace,”Abbott 133, 8:00 am.LECTURE: Mr. Hammes, "RelaxationMeeting of DraftResisters MondayThe first public meeting ofa group of students who areopenly stating their refusal togo to Vietnam will be heldMonday, November 7, in the EastLounge of Ida Noyes Hall. M SSpectrometry and Enzymatic Mecha¬nisms,” Abbott 101, 12:30 pm.SEMINAR: Dr. David Schachter, Co¬lumbia University, "Vitamin D and theMolecular Mechanism ot CalciumTransport”, Research Institutes 480, 3:00pm.LECTURE: Sidney Brennen, CambridgeUniversity, "Suppressors,” Ricketts 1,4:30 ptn.LECTURE: J. W. Montgomery, Profes¬sor, Trinity Evangelical School, “Philos¬ophies of History: A Christian Perspec¬tive.” Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.PARTY: Fund Raising for Peace Candi¬dates. $2.00 students: $1.50, 4921 Dor¬chester, 8:30-1:00 am.SPECTACLE: on the Chicago River atSo. Canal Street Bridge (Cermak Rd.and So, Canal Street) 9:00 pm.Saturday, November 5TOUR: Guided walking tour of thequadrangles. Leaves Ida Noyes Hall at10:00 am. No reservations necessary.FILM: “Lower Depths” Kurosawa, So¬cial Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.Sunday, November 6RADIO SERIES: “From the Midway”WFMT, 1-11.3 Tnc. 7:00 am. “Urbaniza¬tion in the Developing World” DavidOwen, Co-Administrator, United NationsDevelopment Programme.RADIO SERIES: "Faith of Our Fa¬thers,” VVGN, 720 kc.. 8:30 am. TheReverend Edward C. Hobbs, Professor of Theology, Church Divinity School ofthe Pacific, delivers the sermon.TELEVISION SERIES: "Read Me aStory,” WMAQ-TV, Channel 5, 8:30 am.Reading and discussion of children'sbooks with primary-school .students fromthe Laboratory School.RADIO SERIES: “From the Midway,”WAIT, 820 kc., 10:00 am (See Above)CHESS EXHIBITION: Kate Sillars,Western Women’s Champion; MikeDay, Chess Club Champion, 3:00 pm,Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall.OPEN SING: Fifty-Seventh StreetChorale, First Unitarian Church,5650 Woodlawn Ave., 8:00 pm, Mozart,“Requiem”. Christopher Moore, direc¬tor; Margaret Hillis, guest conductor.LECTURE: John Gerassi, author ofThe Great Fear in Latin America on“Guns, Gringos & Guerillas in LatinAmerica.” 3rd Floor I.N.H. 7:30 pm.BAKE SALE: at St. Thomas the Apos¬tle School, 5467 S. Woodlawn Ave., 7:00am-l:30 pm.SERVICE: Annual University memorialService: The Reverend Joseph Sit-tler, Professor of Theology, The Divini¬ty School, "The Nimbus and The Rain¬bow,” Rockefeller Mem. Chapel, 11 am.Monday, November 7LECTURE: Hans Johas, New Schoolfor Social Research, “Jewish and Chris¬tian Elements in the Western Philosoph¬ical Tradition," Social S'cience 302, 8:00-“pm. BYVoikswagens $3.95 for 12 Hrs.Plus 6c 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 3-1715The group feels that recentanti-war protests have failed tohave a noticable impact and theirpurpose is to challenge the FederalGovernment directly.The meeting Monday is for menof draft age who have alreadymade their own decision not toserve in Vietnam.The latest thing in student accessories. It comes halfway up to regularJet Coach fare, but it covers you all the way home.To qualify, you mustbe young—under 22. You must be able to fill out a simple form.Then ifyou have $3, you’re halfway home at half fare. You’re a member ofTWA’s 50/50 Club.. .eligible for Mini-fare everywhere we go in theU. S. Stop in at your nearest TWA office for a fitting. •♦Service mark owned exclusively by Trans World Airlines, Inc.Welcome 'TWA)to the world ofTrans World Airlines* (November 4, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Music ReviewSG Vacancies‘Computer Dance’Chicago will again be the scenefor an historical event on Sun¬day, Nov. 13, when DatelineElectronics Research, Inc., ispresenting the world's first"computer dance," in honor of-its first anniversary.The couples attending thedance, which is to be held atthe Ascot Motel, will be match¬ed by a computer which utilizesdata supplied from questionnair¬es which each guest has pre¬viously filled out. Informationabout questionnaires and ticketscan be obtained from DatelineElectronisc, P.O. Box 369, Chi¬cago. Several vacancies still exist inthe Student Government (SG) as¬sembly.In order to qualify for filling avacancy, a student must have agrade point average of 2.0, musthave been a UC student for at leastone full quarter, must intend to bea registered UC student for at leasttwo of the next three quarters, andmust be affiliated with the elector¬al unit which he seeks to represent.There are vacancies in the schoolof social service administration(SSA), the graduate humanities di¬vision, the graduate social sciencesdivision, and the College at large.The vacancies will be filled bythe SG executive committee. Any¬one interested in applying for theseats should call X3273.(OPEN DAWN TO DAWN)Hobby House Restaurantw1342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER"The Best of All Foods" Symphony: Good over EvilTwo weeks ago, the Chicago Symphony performed threemusical portraits of death. Last week, in an extension of thistype of thematic programming, they provided a plot—thetouching, but tasteful, tale of the triumph of good over evil.The hero was soloist Leonid Ko¬gan, whose performance of theShostakovich Concerto was, quitesimply, the most magnificent violinplaying I have ever heard. Many ofhis virtues, of course, were expect¬ed from his local performance ofthe Beethoven two years ago. Heboasts an uncompromising tech¬nique, and although he lacks thesheer muscle of Oistrakh, his soundis strong enough to soar over Shos¬takovich’s often juicy scoring. Un¬doubtedly the most lyrical of allcontemporary violinists, his toneretains its purity even in the mostraucous passages.THERE WAS AT least one sur¬prising ingredient, however—thedramatic impact of his interpreta¬tion. While his Beethoven had amystical, relaxed quality, from hisfirst entrance in the Shostakovich,he seized the listener and stretchedhis nerves almost to the breaking point. An artist who can attain thiskind of intensity in a work whichis, at best, only a minor master¬piece, is the rarest kind of genius.Cast in the role of villain wasnone other than our own associateconductor, Irwin Hoffman. A con¬ductor modest only in ability, henone the less rose to the challenge,turning in performances nearly asimpressive as those of his soloist.The program began with the tra¬ditional outrage—the rape of ayoung virgin. For his victim he se¬lected the youthful Serenade No. 1by Brahms^ She was* systematicallysubjected to every atrocity—rigid,heartless baton beatings; calculat¬ed compression of her dynamicrange; sadistic slowing of her alle¬gros and acceleration of her adagioeternum; and a sonic suffocationwhich transformed her youthfulglow into a haggard, rings- under-the-horns greyness.WE ALL KNOW, of course, thatsoul is more important than body.Thus, if his maltreatment of chasteSerenade was a capital crime, hisspiritual corruption of the WebernSymphony must be classed a mor¬tal sin. As if trying to reconcileWebern with Rachmaninoff.Hoffman conjured up the smuggesttone of an over-expanded stringsection, ignoring every element ofthe work except for pitch (andeven that was only approximated'.It was like a performance of Hamlet with nothing but the ghost; andyet there was something philosophically sinister about it all. For ifHoffman can pass himself off as ahigh priest of Webern, then IvanKaramazov was right: everythingis permitted.AS IN ALL melodramas, the herntriumphed and virtuosity was rewarded. Those of us who are openminded enough to recognize that aconcert should have less of thechurch and more of the circusfound every moment a sheer dolight. Peter RabinowitzMALE STUDENTASSISTANTS NEEDED*'Center For Research Libraries, 5721S. Cottage Grove Starting Salary$1.50/hour. Reading knowledge ofFrench or German desired.MU 4-4545Life InsuranceSeniors & grad, students have lifeinsurance protection now. Pay yourfirst premium four years later. Forinformation call collect The Instituteof Insurance Planning Lake Forest. national security agencyannounces the1967 SUMMERLANGUAGEINSTITUTECE 4-8858 Far Eastern andMiddle EasternLanguagesELIGIB9LITY: Far Eastern and Middle Eastern language majors(or those possessing equivalent proficiency) who will have com¬pleted three years toward the undergraduate degree by June 1967,and have at least a “B” grade average.ASSIGNMENTS: Students will participate in a 10 to 12-weekprogram of classroom training, on-the-job assignments includingarea studies Involving translation of texts, and general research.SALARIES: Salaries will be determined by educational leveland experience.TO APPLY: Complete Standard Form 57(Application for Federal Employment), whichmay be obtained from your Placement Officeor from any U.S. Post Office, by 21 October1966. Mail both the Form 57 and a copy of yourcollege transcript to: nsaNational Security AgencySuite 10, 4435 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W.Washington, D.C. 20010ALL CANDIDATES ARE SUBJECTTO A THOROUGH BACKGROUNDINVESTIGATION AND APHYSICAL EXAMINATIONAPPLICANTS MUST BE U.S. CITIZENSAn equal opportunity employer, M&F12 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 4, 1966CLASSIFIEDS' mmmmmmMPERSONALSWill do typing—term papers, manu¬scripts, etc. Standard rates, extension2420H >m-mate wanted to share 5 bedroomapt with 3 other girls. One block fromlake in Hyde Pk Call 684-7586 eves.Chinese History Students: Mao’s Select¬ed Writings are now available at theGreen Door.Piano lessons by Mrs. Renate Thileniusat 6842 Chappel. 363-0321, former stu¬dent of Dr. Rudolph Ganz and experi¬enced in teaching and performing.W riter’s Workshop PL 2-8377KAMELOT Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st. sF.10'7- discount for UC students.Test your skill! Simultaneous chess ex¬hibition Sun. Ida Noyes 3 PM.Co-op clearance sale starting November10. The Co-op will sell a select list ofGen. Ed. Texts at greatly reducedprices, and some will be given away. Ifyou don’t want your books sold at theprices listed on the Co-op bulletinboard, please withdraw them now.Libido Twiching? Come-Pot Party Fri.B J., KNIGHTS OF SOUL.Student Co-op has the largest selectionof science fiction, mystery and westernpaper bac4os in Hyde Park, at the low¬est prices.KNIGHTS OF SOUL do it better be¬cause they do it more often!!!THE OTHER SIDE Coffee House—Live fold & baroque music—open everynight ’til 2 am. 1603 E. 53rdCreative writers who want to start bullsession group call 324-6037Fund raising party for Maxwell PRI-inack, Fri., Nov. 4, 4021 Dorchester.8:30-1:00 Donation: $2.00 students $1.50cheetah + phoenix = CHEEN1X Sat.Nov. 12. |POLL WATCH FOR THE INDEP. VOT¬ERS OF ILLINOIS. Bipartisan slateTues. Election Day. Attend Instructionmeeting Sunday 3 PM, 1420 E. 56th orcall 667-7837 ILife Stops: Death? Jean-Paul said if allSee NO EXIT: TONIGHT Dance ReviewHarper Dancers —Past Dancing Days“There has been a slight error,” explained the half-nude,antler-topped dancer.Agreed. Unfortunately, this “slight error” developed intoone gross catastrophe at the Harper Dance Festival’s most re¬cent offering. The dual program ofDaniel Nagrin and Lotte Goslar’sPantomime Circus only served todouble the measure of mediocritypresented. Unless you're a connois¬seur of sloppy contortions and ama¬teurish slapstick, an evening atHarper Theatre this week wouldprove totally unbearable. Asidefrom offending the taste of theviewer, the selection of this sort of“dance” program could lead to thedemise of the sometimes promisingHarper Dance Festival.THIS DISASTROUS evening isonly beginning when Nagrinprances onstage in his antlers and is only half-over when, clad in pais¬ley pajamas, he demonstrates how“Our vanities seduce us into ‘ideal’images of what to be and do withour floundering selves,” as statedin the program. The “slight error”that he acknowledged in his firstperformance will probably not beincorporated into future programs(although it was definitely the high¬light of the evening); the “error”was merely an unplanned technicalfailure of the music. But the techni¬cal failings of the dancing wereprobably, sad though it may be,planned and practiced. Poor Nagrin must accept the en¬tire responsibility for hs shoddyperformance, whereas the sevenmembers of the Goslar troupe canshare their guilt. Instead of grovel¬ing in their shame, however, theyproudly announce that theirs is a“happy show.”ALTHOUGH THE program statesthat Miss Goslar is self-taught, westrongly suspect that she is one ofthe less brilliant prodigies ofBozo’s Circus. Her entire knowl¬ edge of dancing centers aroundwalking, grimacing, skipping, gri¬macing, flapping, grimacing. Thetraining of the remainder of thetroupe is less extensive.Improvement would be too im¬possible a suggestion for any ofthese dancers. There is only onesolution: that they turn in theirtights. Or, to quote the inimitablebard,” For you and I are pest ourdancing days.”Itene Kanfrov and Leanne Starcheetah + phoenix =: CHEENIX Sat.Nov. 12JOBS OFFEREDi men to work afts 2 or 4 days a weekw boys 6-8 yrs. of age. MI 3-4062FRENCH'”* SPANISH FREE-LANCE \WRITERS. Original stories wanted forehiigdren age 11-16 at $40-$100/selection.Write for details: Foreign LanguageEditor, SRA, 259 E. Erie, Chicago,60611. |Studentt wanted to help w/sick childrenin their home. 2,3, or 5 week days: hrs.flexible; time off for classes, free lunch& breakfast, and you can get in somestudying on the job. DO 3-8TC67.WAITERS or WAT1RESSES-3 or moredays wk. 11:30 AM-2:30 PM. good in-{come, exper. preferred. Gordon's Res¬taurant. 1321 E. 57th Street, Call afts. j752-9251FOR SALERepeat sale of used furniture by Serv- jice Bureau Saturday, Nov. 5, 10-1 jo'clock at 5316 Dorchester (Gaylord Ad¬mittance by Univ. I D. Card only. Cash •and carry.I’m tabic typewriter $50.00 or bargain. 5trail 42 Snell eves.64 V W. excellent cond. W.W. blue 17.- j1)00 $850 752-9784 M. Stokes 8-9:30 P.M.Harpsichords, by Sabathel. Beautiful in- jstruments at reas. prices. 363-9558TO RENTRoom-mate wanted to share 5 bedroom japt. with 3 other girls. One block from ilake in Hyde Pk. Call 684-7586Wanted: Roommates to share 21 roomHouse excellent location near campus,reasonable costs. Inquire PL 2-9874. Ask 1for Rick.Room private bath, minimal eveningbabysitting. KE 8-13245 large rooms, natural wood burningfireplace, 2 large bedrooms. 4 clothes jclosets, pantry, linen closet. Neat shop- ;ping center, ’T.C.”, C.T.A. and lake, jSuitable for business or professional Ipeople $175.00 per month |i room apt. sublet December 20-March 120 Fully furnished $108/month. 55th and !Kunbark. Call 288-1632 |s Shore, 212 rms. unfurn. 2 & 3rd floor, ;’ <’ar 1C., near lake. SA 1-0315Hyde Park. rm. & bath for mature stu- j'lent in exchange for approx. 20 hrs. Iitting/wk. Must like small children.363-5450 evenings.Horn. apt. avail. Nov. 1—lF2 rm., $90,53rd & Blkstne. Nwly painted modernwkdays RA 6-1235. A. Weber.Nearby unfurn. apts. 2-3 rms. $75 up. >Free utils. Williams 6043 Woodlawn—jQuiet, econom.WANTED TO RENTf acuity member desires to rent furnished or unfurnished house or apartment (minimum two bedrooms) for permd January 1 through June 30. 1967Must be in Hyde Park area. Call Ext•M47.Studio Space—Must be heated- Comm.A rt 1 - I - X3753—Barry.FOUND•tl Oct. black male kitten at 5800 Ellis.Owner Call 324-0306W omen’s glasses 54 & U. 967^3472LOST‘i’ACOMETTI LITHOGRAPH OF WO*IKN Please call 363-3578. reward.^IACOmett1 I.ITHOGRAPI! OF WO-Please call 363-3578. reward,o 1 Liter in Kent. Initi on fronit-f-L-f- * reward. 363 9777. P. Fos¬ter. Mian'per. Surf. JESSELSON’SMR VINO HYN PARK FOR OVtR »0 YIAMWITH THI YtRY MTT AND FRISMtSTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 1-9184 1840 E. SMDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 do 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Discount CONTACT LENSESHyde Park Medical LaboratoryOpen 9 am-9 pm, 6 days a week5240 S. Harper 493-2000(Corner 1400 E. 53rd St.) In 1986Halley’s Cometwill be droppingaround again.*Let’s plan abig welcome.♦Watch this paper fortime and place.ANHEUSER »U3CH, INC. • 8T. LOUIS • NEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTONYou Can Have Color Pizza In Your Home Tonight!Nicky’s Pizza And Restaurant"ROYAL PIZZA BY NICKY THEUNCROWNED PIZZA KING"Fast Delivery Hot from the Oven1208 EAST 53RD STREETNICKY'S TAKE-OUT MENUAssortments Small Medium LargeCHEESE . . . 1.40 2.20 3.20SAUSAGE . . . 1.65 2.50 3.50ANCHOVIE . . . 1.65 2.50 3.50ONION . . . 1.50 2.30 3.30PEPPER . . ./ . . . 1.65 2.50 3.50MUSHROOM . . . 1.65 2.50 3 50BACON .... * . . . 1.75 2.60 3.60HAM • . . . 1.75 2.60 3.60CHICKEN LIVERS . . . 1.75 2.60 3.60PEPPERONI . . . 1.85 2.85 3.85SHRIMP . . . 2.00 3.00 4.00GROUND BEEF . . . 1.65 2.50 3.50COMBINATION . . . 2.50 3.75 5.00EXTRAS ADDED . . . .35 .50 .75RIPE OLIVES EXTRA . . . .35 - .50 .75ONIONS EXTRA 15 .25 .35We Put Cheese on All Our PizzasWe serve Royal Crown Cola, Diet-Rite Cola and Nehi flavors. rCallFA 4-5340November 4. 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13Culture Calendar* v ' MMARTART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO —Treasures of Poland: Firstexhibition of major art treasurers fromPolish national collections featuringpaintings, sculpture, tapestries and reli¬gious regalia: thru Dec. 24; adults, $1:children and students; $.50. Japan ArtFestival; One of the largest collectionsof contemporary Japanese art ever as¬sembled. including paintings, wood¬block. prints, calligraphy, sculpture, ce¬ramics, lacquerware, ironware and tex¬tiles, representing the works of 85 ofJapan's leading artists: Nov 4-Dec 4.Color photographs by Chester Danett:thru Nov 13. Exhibition of Jewelry byFridl Blumenthal, Textiles by ClaireZeisler and Mosaics by Arnold Zweerts:thru Dec 18. Daily, 10-5. Thu. 10-9:30.Sun, Noon-5. Michigan & Adams.CONCERTSCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA—Sixth Week—Fri & Sat, Nov 4-5—JeanMartinon, cond. Wilhelm Kempff, piano.Haydn: Sinfonia Concertante. Kay:Serenade for Orchestra. Schumann:Piano Concerto.Seventh Week—Thu & Fri, Nov 24-25.Jean Martinon. cond. Willard Elliot,basson. Emil Gilels, piano, Ma'rtin: LesQuatre Elements. Elliot: Bassoon Con¬certo. Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 5.Thur-Sat Concerts: Thu, 8:15; Fri, 2;Sat, 8:30. $2.50-$6.00. Fri, gallery seatsfor students $1.50 (available until 1 pmonly). Orchestra Hall Box Office: Daily,9:30-6; later on concerts nights. Sun,1-4. Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michigan. HA7-0362; Sun & Hoi after 5; HA 7-0499.THEATERHALF A SIXPENCE — Musical come¬dy starring Dick Kallman. Opens Nov.1. McVickers Theatre. Madison nr.State. 782-8230.HELLO DOLLY! — David Merric-k’sBroadway production starring BettyGrable; Gower Champion, dir. Nightly,8:30; Wed & Sat Matinees, 2. ClosedSun. Nightly, $3.50-$9; Matinees. $3.50-$6Schubert Theatre, 22 W. Monroe. CE6 8240.I FOUND APRIL—Starring JeanneCrain. Thru Nov 6. Nightly, 8:30; Sat, 6& 9:30; Sun, 7; Closed Mon. $3-$4.Ivanhoe Theatre, 3000 N. Clark. Tele¬phone reservations accepted. 248-6800.LIFE WITH FATHER—Comedy star¬ring Tom Ewell.Nov 8-Dec 4. Nightly,8:30; Sat 6 & 9:30; Sun, 7; Closed Mon.$3.00-$4.00. Ivanhoe Theatre, 3000 N.Clark. Telephone reservations accepted.848-6800.THE MAD SHOW—Musical review byLarry Siegel and Stan Hart based onMad Magazine and originally per¬formed off-Broadway. Music by MaryRodgers: Lyrics by Marshall Barer,Larry Siegel and Steven Vinaver. Night¬ly, 9; Fri, 9 & 11:30; Sat, 6, 9 & 11:30;Sun, 6 & 9; Closed Mon. Happy MediumTheatre, 901 N. Rush. DE 7-1000.MARAT/SADE — Chicago premiere of“The Persecution and Assassination ofJean-Paul Marat as Performed by theInmates of the Asylum of Charentonunder the Direction of the Marquis deSade" by Peter Weiss, starring DonaldDavis and Jerome Kilty. CharlesMcGaw, dir. Thru Nov 13. Nightly,7:30; Fri & Sat, 8:30; Closed Mon.Nightly $3.50; Fri & Sat $4.00. GoodmanTheatre, Monroe & Columbus. CE 6-2337.NINA—A comedy by Andre Raussein. Nov 2-Dec 11. Nightly. 8:30; Sun, 7:30Closed Mon. Lew Musil’s Tale Tellershave announced six plays to be present¬ed for children. “The Wizard of Oz"Nov 12. Sat, 11 & 2; Sun. 2. Old Or¬chard Country Club. Rand & Euclid,Mt. Prospect. CL 9-5400.THE ODD COUPLES — Neil Simon’snew comedy hit starring Dan Daileyand Elliott Reed Mike Nichols, dir.Nightly, 8:30, Wed & Sat Matinee, 2Nightly, $2.75-$5.00: Fri & Sat, $3.50-$5.95; Matinees. $2.50-$4.50. BlackstoneTheatre. 60 E. Balbo. CE 6-8240 .SECOND CITY—New 23rd satrical re¬view “Enter from Above.’’ Sheldon Pa-tinkin. dir. Cast includes Bob Curry,Sandy Holt, Sid Grossfeld, Jon Shank,David Walsh, and Penny White. Tue-Sun at 9: Fri, 9 & 11; Sat, 9, 11 & 1.$2.50; Fri & Sat, $3. 1846 N. Wells. DE7-3992. MO 4-4032 after 7:30.TARTUFFE—Richard Wilbur’s newAmerican version of the Moliere come¬dy starring Jerone Kiltv. John Reich,dr. Nov 25-Dec 18. Nightly. 7:30; Fri &Sat, 8:30; Closed Mon. Nightly, $3.50;Fri & Sat $4. Goodman Theatre, Monroe& Columbus. CE 6-2337.THE THEFT OF THE BELT—A come-dy starring Julie Newmar. VernSchwartz, dir. Nightly, 8:30; Sat 6 and9:30; Sun, 7; Closed Mon. $2 25-$3. Fri-Sun, $2.75-$3.50. Matinee. Wed at 2:30;$2.50-$3. Drury Lane Theatre, MartinqueRestaurant. 2500 W. 94th PI., EvergreenPark. PR 9-4000.UNIVERSITY THEATRE—Brendan Be¬han’s “The Hostage”. James O'Reilly,dir. Nov 18-20 at 8:30. Fri, $2.00; Sat.$2.50; Sunday, $1.75. Discount of 50c tostudents. Mandel Hall, 5706 S. Universi¬ty. MI 3-8000, ext. 3581.THE LAST STAGE—“Vlach,” an origi-nal play by James Redfield. WilliamBezdek, dir. and “The Door Should BeOpen or Shut” by Alfred de Musset.James Redfield dir. Nov 4-Dec 4 Fri &Sat at 8:30; Sun at 7:30. Fri & Sat, $2.Sun, $1.50. 1506 E. 51st St. OA 4-4200.ENCORE THEATRE — “Carousel” byRodgers and Hammerstein. Charles E.Laingent, dir.. Thru Nov. Fri at 8:30:Sat at 8; Son at 7. $2 25 $3.50. 1419Wells. 664-5533.HULL HOUSE THEATRE—“The Birth¬day Party” by Harold Pinter in anAmerican premiere. Robert Sickinger,dir. Fri & Sat. 8:30; Sun, 7:30. Fri &Sat, $3 90, Sun$3.90. 3212 N. Broadway.348-5622.UNIVERSITY THEATRE—Tonight at8:30 presents a reading of “No Exit”Friday and Saturday Nov. 4-5. 8:30.Tickets: $1.50, Student Tickets $1. Theater ReviewBest of Mad in 'Mad Show'The Mad Show, now appearing at the Happy Medium, is mad enough, professional enough,tuneful enough and funny enough to put most other musicals and musical revues in Chicago toshame. The production is slick, the satire is consistently on the mark, and the cast gets quitea chance to display its diverse talents.MUCH OF THE material in theUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingV990 I. !M St. m 5-MO* Mad Show is taken from Mad mag¬azine, and it is by far the best ofMad. The dialogue from thesketches in Mad is surprisinglyalive on stage, and the attractiveperformers, cartoon-like in pop artcostumes, are well directed by Ste¬ven Vinaver.Like the magazine, the MadShow with a book written by LarrySiegel and Stan Hart, illuminatesthe follies of America with a light,usually unselfconscious touch. Themusic, by Mary Rogers, who wrotethe wonderful score for Once Upona Mattress, is bright and melodic.Like many musical comedy songs,these provide the perfect vehiclefor pointing out the absurdities ofdaily life.Of the sketches, the most enjoy¬able were “Academy Awards,” (inwhich mothers duplicate theiraward-winning performances insuch scenes as “So you’re homelate again!”), “Getting to KnowYou,” (in which a highly competi¬tive girl meets a highly compeboy and is bored by speed reGone With the Wind in a mspecial brotherhood show),“T.V. Nik,” (in which a ncman tries to stop his wife, m<in-law and son from condifamily life like a. television show)."ECCCH," AND the “Hate !are particularly appealingtunes, bdearing sentiments. “Thetern of musical biographiesThe Eddie Duchin Story and T1Jolson Story, that is the limpressive combination of sTOAD 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 HALT1444 E. 57th ST. BU 8-4500 and song. For the Irving Irving | magazine, or deplore seeing Amen-Story brings the development of eana knocked, then the Mad Showmusical biographies to its logicalmodern culmination, the musicalbiographical extravaganza basedon the life of an advertising jinglewriter!IF YOU DETEST musical come¬dy songs, could never abide Mad is not for you. If, however, you en¬joy any one of these national insti¬tutions, the Mad Show presentsthem in a smooth-running, spark¬ling, unpretentious revue.Mark RosinAMERICAN 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% ditcounl to ihidtitti with 10 cardt!| CUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD1 PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHING1CALI MRS. BUXT AT 782-2118\ FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATE7R. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES. INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTSPi 33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. 60602AMERICAN AUTO PARTS7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3614MUFFLER HEADQUARTERS'GUARANTEED m Writing Againsti BLOW-OUT, RUST, EVERYTHINGF«r As lam * Yw Own Taw CaHInstalled Free While You WaitComplete Line of Auto Partsfor Do-It-Yourself MechanicsBrakes Installed SHOCK absorbersFACTORYAUTHORIZCOSERVICI *19>95 ALL FOURWHIRLSUmlmg & Labor—-ford t Clary IRAN*NRWFOR MOST m <-£TUNE-UP SPECIALInckidaa Champion A.C„ Ant*.Lfto Spark Plug*, Points, Rotor,Condansar. Adjust »M AAECarburator and fin®*Timing Whila Tom I EWait. . ■ v- All 4-avL aoH Ittl to ltM REAR SPRINGSINSTALLEDWHILE YOU WAIT *** “*12-American Auto Parts7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-361414 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 4, 1966HAMILTON THEATRE2150 E. 71st ST. HY 3-1121STARTS FRI., OCT. 28EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENTiyiflNNEft OF B ACADEMY1 AWAHPqfKM>«lUmMra«^ACW)KlMHaJU!nONDAVID LEANS FILM crnBimam,DOCTOR ZHflftGOM PANAVISION* AND METROCOIORFEATURE TIMES — ALL WEEK1:30 - 5:00 - 8:30AAKDVARK CINEMATHEQUEPresentsAWARD-WINNINGEXPERIMENTAL ANDUNDERGROUND FILMSTONIGHT—7, », U PMAT SECOND CITY1844 N. Wells, Chica9»—Admission $1.50No l.D. Required—Reservations: DE 7-3992d'F£ JAPAN FILM FESTIVALpresentsLOWER DEPTHSKUROSAWA-DfrectorSoc. Sci. 122 — Nov. 57:15 & 9:30ADMISSION: SERIES MEMB. « TICKET. • SINGLE MEMBERSHIP $.75 Ciral'sHouse of TikiOpen Thanksgiving Day,Thursday, November 24. inaddition to our regular menu,we offer a complete dinnerof Roast Turkey and Dressingor Baked Ham $2.25Ciral's House of Tiki51st and HarperLI 8-7585 “YOU ARE GOING TO ENJOY 'ALFIE’ VERY MUCK”!paramount PICTURES presents’ MagazineALFiER.EC0I4MENDE0 FOR MATURE AUDIENCES ggH TECHNICOLOR" §MEET THE GANG ATSMEDLEY'S PUB"Home of English Ale & Guinness Stout on top.WORLD'S BEST CHILI, Lge. 12 oz. bowlSPAGHETTIS, Meat Sauce & Garlic BreadFancy Choice STEAKBURGER, Lettuce & TomatoLge. 67 oz. PITCHER SCHLITZ on TapSEE YOU SOON . . . OK? 60c*J1075c$£355239 S. HARPER AVE. NO 7-5546 JEFFERYTHEATRE1952 E. 71st ST. HY 3-3333NOW PLAYINGEXCLUSIVE EXTENDEDENGAGEMENTIN ERNEST LEHMAN S PRODUCTION OPEDWARD ALBEESA tet StirringGEORGE SEGAL- SANDY DENNISOiKtedby MIKE NICHOLS BftlPRESENTED BY WARNER BROS. MiNovember 4, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15Book Sale99' to $9.95Brand new editions from leading publishers at tremendous savings!Come in early for best selections. All subjects.ONE WEEK ONLYAll these, and many more titles which we do not have room to list.THE WISDOM OF JFK. Ed. by T.S. Settel. An inspiring book for allwho cherish the memory of JohnFitzgerald Kennedy.Pub. at $3.00 Sale .99THE EVERLASTING COCKTAILPARTY—A Layman's Guide to Cul¬ture Climbing. By Peter Blake andRobert Osborn. Devastating picturesatire on the cult of modern living.Brilliantly illustrated.Pub. at $3.75 Sale .99THE PRICELESS GIFT—Love Let¬ters of Woodrow Wilson & EllenAxson Wilson. Ed. by Eleanor Wil¬son McAdoo. With photographsfrom the Wilson album.Pub. at $6.95 Sale .99The Dialogues of ARCHIBALDMACLEISH & MARK VAN DOR-EN. Ed. by Warren V. Bush. Illus.with Photos. Pub. at $5.95 Sale .99WOMEN OF ISRAEL. By SamWaagenaar. Candid glimpse, inwords and over 100 evocative pho¬tographs, of Israeli womanhood.Pub. at $3.95 Sale .99Who Lied? OPPENHEIMER: THESTORY OF A FRIENDSHIP. Haa¬kon Chevalier’s own story of thefamous “incident” that caused theA.E.C. to banish Oppenheimer in1954. Pub. at $5.00 Sale .99THE COMPLETE ESSAYS OFFRANCIS BACON. 59 beloved clas¬sics of English literature and philo¬sophy. Pub. at $4.95 ....Sale .99MR. CHURCHILL IN 1940. By Isa¬iah Berlin. A portrait of a greatman at a great moment.Pub. at $3.00 Sale .99RELAX WITH YOGA. By Arthur |Leibers. Contains all the breathing 'exercises, diet principles, show-howphotographs of all postures.Pub. at $2.50 Sale .99ERASMUS DARWIN. By DesmondKing-Hele. Vivid biography ofCharles Darwin’s grandfather, whowas famous as the finest doctor ofhis time, a best-selling poet, a pro¬lific inventor, and a propounder ofmany scientific theories—most no¬tably that of evolution.Pub. at $3.95 Sale .99WHEN F.D.R. DIED. By BernardAsbell. A poignant account of theevents and world-wide reactionssurrounding the sudden death,inApril 1945. 17 photos.Pub. at $4.'99 Sale .99Jeffersoniana—THE BARONESSAND THE GENERALi By LouiseHall Tharp. Illus.Pub. at $6.50 .....Sale .99MARSHALL OF FRANCE in theAge of Louis XV. By J. M. White.Amazing life, times, and loves ofMaurice de Saxe, companion ofboth Louis XV and Frederick theGreat. Brilliantly captures theglitter, decadence and immoralityof European royalty. Illus.Pub. at $6.00 Sale .99THE WORLD in 1964—The AP’sreference chronicle, in 50 main ar¬ticles and hundreds of photographs,of one of the most exciting andmemorable years of the century.9”xl2” Sale .99YOUR MEMORY. By O. W. Hayes.Develop a super power memory inless than seven days! Indispensablefor business and social success. Il¬lus. Pub. at $2.75 Sale .99 THE LAST YEARS OF BRITISHINDIA. By Michael Edwardes. Abrilliant analysis of the backgroundand events following the grantingof independence to India and Paki¬stan in 1947. Pub. at $5.95 Sale .99Isaac Don Levine—I REDISCOVERRUSSIA, 1924-1964. Closeups of Le¬nin, Trotsky, Stalin, Krushchev,others; new light on Gorky’s mys¬tery-shrouded death and thepurges; Soviet life today and Rus¬sia’s “new look’’ toward the West.Pub. at $4.95 Sale .99ONE LEG: The Life and Letters ofHenry William Paget, First Mar¬quess of Anglesley (1768-1854). Bythe Marquess of Anglesley. Col¬league of Wellington, hero at Wa¬terloo. Paget’s life brimmed overwith heroism, adventure and nota¬ble friendships. Illus.Pub. at $1.50 Sale .99The Anatomy of Pretending—ROETHENSTART (1786-1854), byGeorge Sherburn. Scholarly biogra¬phy of the “last of the Stuarts,”illegitimate grandson of PrinceCharles Edward Stuart.Pub. at $5.50 Sale .99PSYCHOANALYSIS: Evolution andDevelopment. By Clara Thompson,M.D., with the collaboration of Pa¬trick Mullahy.Pub. at $3.00 Sale .99$1.49 & $1.98 EACHGertrude Stein & Alice Toklas—WHAT IS REMEMBERED. AliceB. Toklas’s entertaining account ofher life with Gertrude Stein. 32photographs.Pub. at $4.00 Sale 1.49Henry Ford's Partner — INDE¬PENDENT MAN. By Harry Bar¬nard. Biography of James Cou-zens, business genius and Michi¬gan’s maverick Republican Sena¬tor. Pub. at $5.95 Sale 1.49PROUST'S BINOCULARS. By Rog¬er Shattuck. A study of memory,time and recognition in “Re¬membrance of Things Past,” bring¬ing into focus aspects of its image¬ry derived from photography, thecinema, and stereoscopy. Essential“key-book” to Proust’s master¬piece. Pub. at $3.95 ....Sale 1.49TECHNIQUE FOR PERSUASIVETHE NEW SPEECH-O-GRAMPUBLIC SPEAKING. By C. R. VanDusen & H. Van Smith. Sure-firemethod for selling yourself andyour ideas. With practical exam¬ples and model speeches for all oc¬casions. Pub. at $5.95 Sale 1.98BONJOUR PARIS. By FrancoisBrigneau. Sparkling text and 92sensational color photoraphs byEurope’s leading camera artists.etc. Reg. $4.95 Sale 1.98LES NUITS DE PARIS or TheNocturnal Spectator. By Restif dela Bretonne. Intro, by Jacques Bar-zun. Journals of a great social his¬torian prowling the back-streets ofParis and recording the personalhabits of its odd ones, wild ones,perverts, and criminals. Concludeswith a remarkable man-in-the-street account of the fury ofthe French Revolution.Pub. at $5.05 Sale 1.98 SUPERMEN, HEROES ANDGODS. By Walter Umminger, En¬thralling account of the humanneed to excel at feats of skill andstrength: ancient gladiators andcharioteers; the lancers of the Mid¬dle Ages; big game hunters andbloody bull-fighters; daredevil rid¬ers, spacemen and scores of othercontestants through the ages whohave risked their lives to set newrecords. Pub. at $7.95 Sale 1.98THE HISTORY OF THECHRISTMAS CARD. By GeorgeBuday. Origins, development,changing fashions. Over 200 reprod¬uctions, many in color—many de¬signed by celebrated artists.Pub. at $4.00 Sale 1.98A JOHNSON READER. Ed. by E.L. McAdam, Jr. & George Milne.Delightful anthology of Dr. SamuelJohnson’s best writings. With wittynotes by both Johnson and the edi¬tors. Pub. at $6.50 Sale 1.98THE FINE ART OF LITERARYMAYHEM—A Lively Account ofFamous Writers and Their Feuds.By Myrick Land. Illus.Pub. at $5.00 Sale 1.98THE LIBERAL DILEMMA. ByHarvey C. Bunke. Analyzes the gapseparating economic thought fromsocial values and proposes that lib¬eral capitalism set up a dynamicprogram of vast economic and po¬litical improvements.Pub. at $6.95 Sale 1.98BERNARD SHAW'S READY-REC¬KONER—A Guide to Civilization.Ed. with intro, by N. H. Leigh-Taylor. A handy compendium ofextracts from Shaw’s writings, of¬fering a concise encyclopedia of hisopinions, judgments, reflections,prejudices, jests and arguments onevery subject.Pub. at $4.95 Sale 1.98THE SHORT STORIES OF HEN¬RY JAMES. Ed., with intro., byClifton Fadiman. Excellent collec¬tion, offering a profile of his devel¬opment: Includes “The RealThing”, “The Beast in the Jungle”,“he Middle Years”, mny others.644 pp Pub. at $3.00 ....Sale 1.98THE CRISIS OF POLITICALIMAGINATION. By Glenn Tinder.Shows how and why traditional lib¬eralism, democracy, socialism andconservatism have failed the indi¬vidual in the post-Marxian worldPub. at $7.50 Sale 1.98THE FRENCH ARMY: A Military.Political History. By Paul-Mariede la Gorce. A definitive history ofthe French Army over the past 90years. Pub. at $10.00 .. Sale 1.98THE OTHER MR. CHURCHILL: ALifetime of Shooting and Murder.By Macdonald Hastings. Absorbingbiography of the great English gun-maker and ballistics specialist,Robert Churchill. Photos.Pub. at $5.00 Sale 1.98Murray Kempton—AMERICACOMES OF MIDDLE AGE. The150 “best” Kempton columns from1950 to 1962. Pub. at $6.50 .Sale 1.98RADICAL DR. SMOLLETT. ByDonald Bruce. Sensitive study ofTobias Smollett, long-neglected 18thcentury novelist, satirist and re¬former. Pub. at $4.95 ....Sale 1.98 THE DEVELOPMENT OF THEAMERICAN ECONOMY. By A. C.Bolino. 610 pp., illus. Major analy¬sis of the underlying economic andhistorical forces responsible for therapid growth of American capital¬ism, Colonial times to the presentday. Pub. at $10.00 Sale 1.98THE USELESS SEX. By OrinaFallaci. In shocking verbatim inter¬views, women of New York, Tokyo,Pakistan, Malaga and other coun¬tries reveal their hitherto secretfeelings about love, sex, the fam¬ily, etc. Pub. at $4.95 .. Sale 1.98South Africa—WHITE MAN'SGOD. By Rhona Churchill. Out¬standing reporter - photographertakes us to the kraals of the Trans-kei Reserve, to Sophiatown, Jo¬hannesburg and elsewhere—andshows how the black natives liveand react under Apartheid today.42 photos.Pub. at $4.50 Sale 1.98THE THINKING ANIMAL. ByMorton M. Hunt, noted authority onmodern psychology. 32 brilliant es¬says on Love and Marriage, Mari¬tal Difficulties, Child-Rearing. TheWorld of Psychological Illnesses,The Mind-Healers, etc. 424 pp.Pub. at $6.50 Sale 1.98THE NAVY LEAGUE OF THEUNITED STATES. By Armin Rap-paport. Dramatic history of thefirst American “preparedness so¬ciety. Illus.Pub. at $7.50 Sale 1.98A BRIEF HISTORY OF BRAZIL¬IAN LITERATURE. By ManuelBanderia. Pub. at $3.95. Sale 1.98AR E N A OF DECISION—LatinAmerica in Crisis. By Irving P.Pflaum. Full of “inside” revela¬tions on the extent of the Commu¬nist threat, and with lively profilesof leaders on both the “right” and“left”. Pub. at $6.50 Sale 1.98CARLOS: The King Who Would NotDie. By John Langdon-Davies. Car¬los II (1661-1700), the last of theSpanish Hapsburgs, is portrayed inall his sterile degeneracy. Illus.Pub. at $4.95 ..Sale 1.98Three-Term Governor—ALEX J.GROESBECK: PORTRAIT OF APUBLIC MAN. By Frank B. Wood¬ford. Life and career of Michigan’sinfluential Republican leader, fromthe era of Wm. Howard Taft to hissupport of G. Mennen Williams in1948. Pub. at $6.50 Sale 1.98THE MARCH OF MEDICINE. ByH. S. Glasscheib, M.D. Dramaticaccount of the conquest of diseasesthat have ravaged the human race.Illus. Pub. at $6.95 Sale 1.98THE INTELLIGENCE OF LOUISAGASSIZ. A Specimen Book ofScientific Writings. Intro, and notesby Guy Davenport Exhibition ofAgassiz’ rare enthusiasm for natu¬ral history—and the dazzling preci¬sion, imagination, brilliance andbeauty with which he was able tocommunicate it. Illus.Pub. at $5.00 Sale 1.98THE APOCRYPHA, Ed. by M.Kamroff. The King James versionof the fourteen noncanonical booksof the Bible Special 2.98The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE. THE WORKS OF LI PO, THECHINESE POET. Translated, withbiographical and critical appreciations, by Shigeyoshi Obata. 124poems by China’s greatest poet—the largest collection ever present¬ed. With the original Chinese textsPub. at $5.00 Sale 2.98THE WORKS OF RABELAIS.Complete and un-expurgated. Theincredible adventures and amazingfeats of Gargantua and Pantagrucl.the lustiest, most uninhibited characters in world literature. Unsurpassed satire Only 2.98DICTIONNAIRE DE LA PEINTURE MODERNE. Ed. by F. Hazan. 350 reproductions, 270 in fullcolor, 250 biographical and criticalarticles (in French) by leading au¬thorities. Pub. at $7.95. . Sale 2.98FELIX MENDELSSOHN AND HISTIMES. By Heinrich E. JacobScores of musical examples andperiod illustrations.Pub. at $6.95 Sale 2.98$3.98 EACHAUTO-UNIVERSUM 1966: Internaitonal Automobile Parade. Vol IXof the world authority on auto design and production. Special fea¬tures include 450 illustrations, mostof them in color; $12.00. .Sale 3.98THE UNKNOWN SHORE—A Viewof Contemporary Art. By Dore Ash¬ton. Illustrated with 41 fine reproductions of paintings by Klee. Pollock, Tobey, de Kooning, Giacomet¬ti, et al. Pub. at 6.95 Sale 3.98NO. 10 DOWNING STREET. By IIJ. Minney. 200 eventful years ofBritish history as viewed from thevantage point of the official homeof the Prime Ministers.Pub. at $6.95 Sale 3.98THE UNGUARDED MOMENT-APhotographic Interpretation. ByFrederick Plaut. 72 exquisite por¬traits of Einstein, Piaf, Picasso. Al-bee, Casals, Horowitz, EleanorRoosevelt and many other famedpersonalities. With biographies andanecdotal comments. 9Vi”xl2l/2”. inslipcase. Pub. at $15.00. Sale 3.98John Dewey—PHILOSOPHY, PSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIALPRACTICE. Selected, with a fore-ward, by Joseph Ratner. 18 essayscontaining the key ideas of JohnDewey’s philosophy.Pub. at $5.95 Sale 3.98THE ROOTS OF EVIL—A SocialHistory of Crime and Punishment.By Christopher Hibbert. Case de¬viation from the gibbet at Tyburnto the controversial execution ofCaryl Chessman in 1960. 524 ppPub. at $6.95 Sale 3.98PAGES FROM TARUSA—NewVoices in Russian Writing. Ed. byAndrew Field. Outstanding stores,verse and memoirs by Kazakov,Vinokurov, Balter, Okudzhava,Koblikov, Mayerhol’d (appearing inprint for the first time in decades)and many Others.Pub. at $7.50 Sale 3.9SFREE ARTIST—.The Story <"Anton and Nicholas Rubinstein. BuKatherine Drinken Bowen.“Anyone, whether musical or not.will find this fadnating”—The At¬lantic Monthly.Pub. at $6.00 Sale 3 9816 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 4, 1966