o Maroon MIDWEEKEDITION75th Anniversary YearThe University of Chicago Tuesday, November 22, 1966Beadle Reveals TuitionHike Likely Next YearUdall Urges ReformIn CongressionalCommittee SystemSenator Morris K. Udall(I). Ariz.) yesterday called fora revamping of the seniority*system in Congress.VUdall, speaking at the LawSchool in a talk sponsored by theCenter for Policy Studies, sug-1gested that each house elect thechairman of each committee fromamong the three most seniormembers of the committee. Thisproposal, which he termed a com¬promise would, he said, make com¬mittee leaders more responsibleto Congress.Udall also suggested other Con¬gressional reforms such as holdingsessions on a full time basis and !making extensive use of electronicequipment for gathering data.The new Congress will be a“stale-mate congress," said Udall,“since so many Republicans—newand retread—were elected.”Only a week remains untilthe Dec 1 deadline for theannual Blackfriars’ originalmusical comedy script com¬petition. For information, callMark Rosin at MI 3-0800, x.3542 after 5. Increase PracticallySure; Psych. Dept.Quoting $2010 Rateby David E. GumpertTuition in the College andgraduate divisions will almostcertainly be increased nextyear, the Maroon learnedyesterday.The Department of Psychologyhas been informing returning stu¬dents and students interested in ap¬plying for admission that Universi¬ty tuition has been increased to$2,010.While the University administra¬tion denies that a decision to in¬crease tuition has even beenmade, it was learned that notice ofa $100 per quarter increase waspassed on to the Department ofPsychology earlier in the quarter.The department had requested jnext yar’s tuition figures so thatit eould supply the U.S. govern¬ment with the information andthus meet its deadline in applyingfor grants for graduate publichealth traineeships for next year.“We were told by the Universitythat there would be a tuition raisefor the purpose of applying forthese grants,” said one official inthe Psychology Department. Thenew tuition is listed on applicationsfor the traineeships, according tostudents who have applied so far.The offices of admissions for bothundergraduates and graduates ap¬peared unaware of the informationgiven the Psychology Department.According to Provost Edward H.Levi, “The deans and officers ofthe University have been debatinga tuition increase for some weeks,but any increase has not yet beendetermined.” The discussions have“tried out” a variety of figures andplans, Levi said,Another meeting of the deans andofficers will be held a week fromtoday, at which time the questionof a tuition increase will again bediscussed, Levi said. After theyhave come to some agreement,President Breadle will make 'thefinal decision.In any case, at least 30 percent oftuition will continue to be used for UC President George Beadle. (For excerpts from the text of Beadle'sunprecedented address to the student body, see page five.)it was increased from $720 to $840 ayear. In 1960 it was increased to$900, in 1961 to $1050, and in 1962to $1410.•>*. .'. .. . jNo Friday Maroon! ’There will be no Friday |Maroon this week, becauseof the Thanksgiving holi- |:day. The Maroon will pub¬lish twice during the ninth f|week of school, on Tues¬day and Friday. The Friday,f| December 2nd issue willbe the last Maroon of the|| quarter. Normal advertis- |: ing deadlines will apply.unrestricted student aid, Levi not¬ed, as it has in the past.Levi commented that many“outsiders” may say that UC doesnot receive a large enough propor¬tion of its income from tuition, butdid not intimate that the proportionwould be raised with the tuitionraise. Tuition now accounts forabout 15.9 percent, or 16.3 milliondollars of UC’s 'annual income.Over $6.7 million or 6.6 percent oftotal expenditures goes to studentaid.The last tuition increase came in1964 when tuition was raised from$1410 a year to $1710 a year. Before1964, tuition had been increased al¬most yearly beginning in 1959 whenPoor Are Subject of UC CCU Conference“The poor and their problemswere the subject of a confer¬ence entitled “Chicago Days:A Conference on the Crisis inthe City” at Ida Noyes Hall Fridayand Saturday.The meeting was sponsored bythe Conference on the City and theUniversity (CCU), a group repre¬senting campus organizations in¬volved with community problems.It was highlighted by a series of panel discussions on housing, edu¬cation, and crime.SPEAKING AS part of a panelentitled “U'p Against It In Chicago”held Friday night, Clark Kissinger,of the Committee for IndependentPolitical Action (CIPA) spoke ofhis problems in trying to run anindependent candidate in theforty-ninth ward.Election rules definitely favor thepolitical machine, he said, makingit very hard for independent candi¬dates to take part in the democrat¬ic process. Peggy Terry, a poor white fromAppalachia who moved to Chicago,talked about the problems of thepoor in Chicago.Segregation in the Chicago Schoolsystem fell under heavy attack intwo panel discussion on educationheld Saturday morning.“Education in the ghetto doesnothing but perpetuate the ghetto,”said Leon Harrison, a tutee of theStudent Woodlawn Area Project(SWAP) and a student at HydePark High School. Harrison was speaking as part of a panel dealingwith “Growing Up in Chicago: Ed¬ucation in the Ghetto.”(Continued on Page Four)Sorry! There was an error in lastFriday’s Maroon. Tickets for theWilliam Vaughn Moody Commit¬tee’s presentation of YevgenyYevtushenko (reading from his ownpoems on Tuesday, Dec. 6, at 8:30p.m. in Mandel Hall), will he dis¬tributed free beginning today, Nov.22, at the Reynolds Club Desk. AnnouncementDuring Speech toStudents at MandelBy Richard RabensUC President George Beadletold students Friday that theUniversity will probably raisetuition next year.Beadle made the announcementduring a 45-minute address to stu¬dents on the “state of the Universi¬ty.” Slightly over 200 students andfaculty attended the late-afternoonspeech.His talk was similar in content toan address Beadle made earlierthis quarter to the faculty.“THE UNIVERSITY gives thehighest priority to faculty strengthand salaries.” Beadle said. The av¬erage salary of the faculty, basedon nine-month service with fringebenefits, is $17,400, third highest inthe nation— “considerably behindHarvard and slightly behind Par¬sons College,” he added.Consequently, he continued, UCis a “high-cost institution” whichdemands high-cost facilities. Thebudget for this year is $56,-300,000, Beadle warned, and theforeseen deficit of $2,500,000 mustbe met. But is there is a tuitionrise, Beadle added, there will be acorresponding rise in student aid.UC “RENAISSANCE"Beadle said that the founding ofUC as a university “complete in allits parts” was “one of the outstand¬ing events in nineteenth century ed¬ucation.” After a difficult periodfollowing World War II, “the Uni¬versity is now experiencing whatthe Ford Foundation called a ‘re¬naissance’,” he said.UC was rated the best universityin the nation, and the 1957 Ken-niston report, which ranked UCsixth. A recently published 1964survey of college teachers ratedUC “strong” in every departmentbut “distinguished” only in thedivisions of the physical and socialsciences—and, in general, fifth,behind Harvard, Berkeley, Yale,and Princeton.BEADLE SAW the 1964 survey asa “reversal of a trend,” which“catches us on the way up.” Healso mentioned the shortcomings ofa survey which tends to become a“popularity contest” in which the“old and conventional tend to beoverrated” in relation to the newand innovating.The Campaign for Chicago, afund-raising project launched bythe University last October to raise$160 million in three years, is “vi¬tally needed,” said Beadle. Eightyeight million dollars will be neededto build new facilities—new labora¬tories for science instruction andresearch, new athletic facilities,residence halls, music and artcenters, a theatre, and institues forbusiness and international affairsresearch. In addition the new $18million Joseph Regenstem Librarywhich will house 3 million volumes,11 major reading rooms, and spacefor 2500 persons must be built.(Continued «n Page Five)a ;I 'Depres Comments on Electionduring the Thanksgiving holidaysplan to visit our comprehensiveUNIVEPSITY SHOPYou’ll find a wide choice of suits, tweedsport jackets, topcoats and warm outer¬wear in sizes 36 to 44... all with our dis¬tinctive styling and taste. Also furnish¬ings, skiwear and other items.Our 3-piece Suits, $75 to $85Tweed Sport Jackets, $55Topcoats, $ 85 * Polo Coats, from $ 100Tropical Worsted Tuxedos, $80Outerwear, jrom $37.50Price* slightly higher West of the Rockie*.istabiishw wijertuGCOTHINOfIfens Zj $oys fUrnisbitigs. ff ats ^ $hoe<74 E. MADISON, NR. MICHIGAN AVE-,CHICAGO, ILL. 60602MEW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • LOS ANCELES • SAN FRANCISCO Ogilvie Seen as Threat to Daleyby Ellis LevinTo Fifth Ward Alderman Leon M. Despres, an important result of the November ele^tions is the emergence of Richard Ogilvie, newly elected president of the Cook County Boardof Commissioners, as “the most formidable antagonist to Mayor Daley.”Despres, who was interviewed by the Maroon last week, also said that the elections esta¬blished the suburbs as “the politi¬cal enemy of the inner-city ma¬chine.” Despres noted, however,that the Democratic machine isstill strong in the city.DESPRES called Ogilvie much jmore formidable than past CookCounty Republicans “because ofhis organizing abilities, and the jfact that the basis of his supportlies in the suburbs.” Despres saidthat “the Daley-Machine is unableto reach the suburban voter be¬cause of its dependence on patron¬age and other traditional means oforganization. The Machine, |Despres said, slaps down new men1 like Abner Mikva.” The suburban |! voter, according to Despres, wants jto see new men and new ideas in jgovernment, and in addition is j! more issue-oriented.Despres AgreesDespres, however, agreed withMayor Daley’s analysis, that the1 elections did not break the Demo¬cratic core of the city or spell de-j feat for Daley if he should chooseto run for an unprecedented fourthterm as Mayor in the Spring of1967. “He will put on a business¬like campaign and easily win,”said Despres.- “While .the Demo- Leon M. Despres•- -Edmund Kucharski, current Republican undersheriff of Cook Coun¬ty under Ogilvie and the man whodefeated Marshall Korshak, FifthWard Regular Democratic Commit-cratic organization lost a signifi- teem an for the post of Countycant number of patronage jobs with Treasurer, disagreed in part withthe loss of the County Board Presi¬dency and other County offices, the‘biggest chunk’ of patronage is incity jobs, many connected with theoffice of the Mayor, the Park Dis¬trict, the non-teaching positions inthe Board of Education, and withthe Chicago Transit(CTA).”Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3*259MSA Discounts Despres’ analysis. Reached by theMaroon on Wednesday, he main¬tained that the Democratic Partyneeds jobs to run its organization,especially if it has to find captainsfor 5000 precincts in Chicago. TheParty, he said, cannot rely on vol-Authority unteers to staff its precincts; a pa-j tronage job, however, makes theparty worker more interested inprecinct politics. The loss to theDemocratic party of patronage jobswill cut down the effectiveness ofthe regular organization.”KUCHARSKI ITEMIZED theThe University of Chicago1906 Oratorio Festival 1907ROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPELTwo PerformancesFriday EveningDecember 9, 1966 Sunday AfternoonDecember 11, 196659th STREET AND W00DLAWN AVENUEHANDEL’SMESSIAHRICHARD VIKSTR0MDirector of Chapel MusicTHE ROCKEFELLER CHAPEL CHOIRwith 27 members of theCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRASOLOISTSNeva Pilgrim, Soprano; Charlotte Brent, Mezzo-Soprano; Walter Carringer, Tenor;Henri Noel, BaritoneTickets: Reserved $4.50, General Admission $3.50, UC Fac/Staff $3.00,Students $2.50ON SALE AT:University of Chicago Bookstore; Chapel House, 5810 Woodlawn;Cooley's Candles, 5210 Harper Court; Woodworth's Bookstore, 1311 E. 57th St.;Series Tickets (5 Concerts) still availableat $15.00, $12.00, $10.00, and $7.00For further information callMl 3-0800, Ext. 3387 Democratic patronage loss as f0I-lows: 1) 365 plus jobs in the CountyTreasurer’s office, 2) between 7000and 9000 jobs filled by the CountyBoard President, 3) another 500the two Republican candidates forCounty Board of Appeals are elect¬ed (that election is still undecided).Commenting on Daley’s chances; for re-election in the Spring, Ku! charski said that “the Democraticmachine is still powerful, but Daleyi is weaker than the Democratic parj ty.” Kucharski pointed out thaI when Adamowski ran againstley for mayor in 1963, there wasonly one Republican office holderon the county level—Ogilvie whohad carried the county with aplurality of $30,000. This yea)Ogilvie won by about 180,000 votes.A similar trend might ocurr in ’hecity, Kucharski said to the detri¬ment of Daley in his race for re-election.More Civil ServiceThe Treasurer-elect went or tosay that he intends to initiate andpush for legislation to institute :iv$service in the Treasurer’s office,except for key administrative per¬sonal. He indicated that he wouldtake such a request to the Illinoislegislature, which controls changesin County civil service, just asOgilvie had done in the Sheriff’soffice, when be successfully placedmuch of that office under civilservice.Kucharski added that civil serv¬ice was especially important in theCounty Treasurer’s and Sheriff'soffices to insure continuity, becauseof the constitutional fact that Sher£iffs and County Treasurers cannotsucceed themselves. This, Kuchar-ski said, results in a constant turn¬over in these departments witheach election.Rar6 Bird,the perfect gift,is here omong the largestvariety of house plantsand one of a kindcontainers in theChicago area.■EWTS AUYS >. Harper CourtOpen Thanksgiving DayNotice About Autumn TextbooksOn Friday November 25th, it will be necessary for the Text¬books Department of the Bookstore to begin removingAutumn Quarter textbooks from its sales-floor shelves, inorder to provide space for incoming Winter Quarter books.Before November 25th please try to purchase any AutumnQuarter texts which you may still require.Textbook DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue2 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 22, 1966orth of Teenage Gangs Debated atlU "Youth in the Ghetto7' SeminarVhether teenage gangs areurbers of law and order or»ntial sources of leadershipcan be channeled into con-ctive activities was debated inliscussion on “Youth in thetto” held Saturday afternoonpart of the “Chicago Days”erence sponsored by the con-nce on the City and the Univer-larles Livermore, executive di-»r of the Chicago Commissionfouth Welfare, took a sympa-c but firm stand.a physical sense, Livermorerved, “the city is wearing’ He pointed out that mosthborhoods have housed “threeour” ethnic groups, with var-institutional structures. Nowj worn-out neighborhoods areing Negroes. Livermore contin-who have the added disadvan-of an “institutional deficit,” aof cultural characteristics that'd give young people a positiveok.ETTOS CAN BE viewed Liver- ^> suggested, as “frontiers” which offer challenginglems that can be conquered.rermore, who is white, was>ptimistic about working withs. A basic prerequisite for im¬ proving acommunity is the es¬tablishment of law and order, heinsisted. He called for more policeand parole officers to protect thepeople from gangs,UC sociologist Earl Doty, whohas worked with ghetto kids, talkedof gangs in different terms. Hespoke of two societies—“the largersociety” and “the inner city socie¬ty,” which have quite differentstandards.Doty, a Negro, explained that inthe inner city “delinquency” ispart of the accepted way of life. Heexpressed hope that the organiza¬tion and dedication of gangs likethe Blackstone Rangers can bechanneled into efforts for improv¬ing housing, education, and govern¬ment.Functions of ViolenceViolence in Negro ghettos serv¬es three positive functions, Dotycontended:• As a catalyst, by dramatizingthe need for change in the commu¬nity, it mobilizes and unifies localorganizations and pressure groups.• As a warning signal, it lets cityofficials know that real problemsexist and real danger is imminent.• As a way of achieving socialstatus, it fills emotional needs andestablishes certain individuals aspotential leaders for worthwhile ac¬tivity. Panel Considers Slum Educationby Rob SkeistThe child growing up in aNegro ghetto is up against alot concluded citizens and stu¬dents participating in “ChicagoDays—A Conference on the Crisisin the City”, held here last Fridayand Saturday.ALONG WITH discussions onhousing, seminars were sponsoredby the Conference and the Cityand the University (CCU) to bringabout, according to a CCU coor¬dinator, “a greater awareness ofthe problems on the city, speciallyWoodlawn.”Saturday morning FlorenceHowe, of Upward Bound, a waron poverty project for elementaryschool children on the panel for“Education in the Ghetto,” em¬phasized the importance of a stu¬dent’s sense of identity. She notedthat she has taught in many educa¬tional environments, and claimsthat in one sense her students atGaucher College are more deprivedthan these at a Mississippi “free¬dom school.”“These college students didn’tknow their own feelings,” MissHowe claimed. “They had beentold what to think.” The MississippiNegroes she knew seemed morewarm and natural.“Authoritarian structure” is com¬mon to all schools, Miss Howe as¬serted and involves teaching chil-Clement Examines Schoolsmes Clement, formeriber of the Board of Edu-;n, opened a discussion ofwing up in Chicago” atday morning’s session of there nee on the City and the jtrsity with a presentation of>resent status of the publicIs. Asserting that the Chicagoc Schools should instituteams to reach gifted children.?nt argued that simultaneous-nassive program of compensa-education is needed in manyin of the conference on theand the University with antation of the present statuspublic schools. Asserting thathicago Public Schools shouldite programs to reach gifted i MEYER WEINBERG, editor ofIntegrated Schools, and anotherpanel member stated, “The schoolsystem is in a state of dynamicinaction.”He suggested that a good schoolsystem now depends on the civilrights movement, which shook thecity out of its complacency abouteducation in Chicago. Also, any at¬tempt to do anything significantmust come up against political con¬siderations. A fundamental factorin change will be organizedparents.“Where the money is going is aprior question,” he claimed. Theproblem is not to get more money,if the money already there is divid¬ ed up in a foolish way. Tax assess¬ment is another problem.”Weinberg claimed that there isno evidence to suggest that a seg¬regated school system can be im¬proved, and that compensatory ed¬ucation will not solve the problemof integration. “We must improveeducation by changing the educa¬tional system,” he concluded.Bruce McPherson, member ofUC’s Department of Educationalpsychology stated the crucial issuesin Chicago were:• Use of federal funds. The Ele¬mentary and Secondary School Ed¬ucation Act suggests strong federalcommittment. McPherson suggest¬ed that Chicago has made little useof funds provided under this act.• The question of integration.“Education is the best hope for in¬tegration,” stated McPherson. dren to accept rules andmethods—to dull their curiosity.For a Negro in a ghetto school,the problem is greatly increased.“His world is not taught in school,so he feels he is wrong.” He ismade to feel “ashamed,” MissHowe continued, “that he is notmiddle class.”Too many educators get upsetover Negro dialect, she said. “Youare your language,” she main¬tained. “If that’s warped and twist¬ed when you grow up, you're twist¬ed.”Head Start, the federal educationproject, was criticized by MissHowe for trying to destroy the Ne¬gro culture and replace it withmiddle class standards. “The peo¬ple I knew in Mississippi hadvalues I wouldn’t change for anymiddle class values. They didn’tcare about money, prestige, fancyhomes. . . .They cared about hav¬ing lives that were meaningful anddignified, and for their children tohave this,” Miss Howe said emo¬tionally. She stressed the impor¬tance of teachers respecting theirstudents as individuals.Mattie Hopkins, a Negro Chicagoteacher and representative ofTeachers for Integrated Schools,complained that, “Children come toschool and meet with so much rac¬ism that it is hard to say where itcomes from.” Teachers assumethat Negroes are poor students,and the children soon learn that notmuch is expected of them. MissHopkins remarked. “Teachers ac¬cept. to a large extent, behaviorthat isn’t even acceptable athome.”SOMETIMES attempts of teach¬ers to relate bo the students arecarried to extremes, Miss Hopkinsimplied. With a sad smile, she said.“They get mushily sentimental anddecide that all the children reallyneed is love. So they put their arm around a dirty little child, and latergo home and gaze in sorrow'.”When a teacher becomes criticalof a pupil’s clothing or cleanliness,Miss Hopkins maintained, it is thepupil’s parents w'ho are then reject¬ed by “the system,” and the childrealizes, and is hurt by this con¬demnation.“The reason children do notlearn is that they are not taught,”insisted Faith Rich, who has doneeducation research for civil rightsgroups, continuing the criticism ofteachers. Older, more experiencedteachers request transfers from“inner city” schools, resulting inquick turnover and low quality ofteachers for Negro schools. “Anaverage of $22 more per student isspent for teaching each w'hite childthan each Negro child in Chicago,”she declared.THE PTA should be strength¬ened, so parents have some controlof their children's education, MissRich continued. “It doesn’t have tobe just for tea-drinking.”Classroom instruction would befurther improved, Miss Rich em¬phasized, if Chicago hired more“paid volunteers” as teachers’aides. She said that federal pro¬grams provide funds for this, whichChicago is not taking advantage of.SWAP representative Leon Harri¬son noted that he spoke from ex¬perience. He said he went to ghettoschools, and claimed that “Educa¬tion in the ghetto does nothing butperpetuate the ghetto.” Teacherscome to school “with the attitudethat they are stuck with lousy stu¬dents,” and the kids get a feeling"THE SCHOOL has no meaningof inferiority, he maintained.whatsoever,” Harrison said bluntly.He suggested that Chicago’s Boardof Education sponsor teaching pro¬grams geared specifically to teach¬ing in ghetto schools.We Deliver — 35c Delivery ChargeMR. PIZZA.*4/159 E. Hyde Park Blvd.Prompt & HotDelivery Phone Orders Accepted for Carry OutsPrompt & HotDeliveryHY 3-8282BOXES of CHICKEN: 10 pieces $2.55 1$ piece* $3 85 20 pieces $4.85BOXES of SHRIMP: 1 Lb Jumbo $2.25 ’/a lb. Jumbo .......$1.35Va lb. lake Perch $1.00PIZZA 1 lb. Lake Perch $1.75SPECIAL TREATSFor 2 For 3 For 4 For 4 Partyr>d Beef 1.65 2.15 3.15 4.15 5 159* 1.65 2.15 3.15 4 15 5.15i Pepper 1.65 2.15 3.15 4.15 5.15oom 1.65 2.15 3.15 4.15 5.151.65 2.15 3.15 4.15 5.151.65 2.15 3 15 4.15 5.151.65 2.15 3 15 4.15 5.151.65 2.15 3.15 4 15 5.15t Half 1.65 2.15 3:15 4.15 5.151.65 2.15 3.15 4.15 5.15r Island Pitca 2.50 3.00 5.00 6.00 7.002.15 2.65 4 15 5.15 6.15P 2.15 2.65 4.15 5.15 6.152.65 4.15 5.15 6 1550 .50 1.00 1.00 1 00SANDWICHES AND SIDE ORDERS Broasted Chicken Dinner 1.54Shrimp Platter 1.54Perch Platter 1.35Bar-B-Cue baby back ribs 2.75Rib Dinner 2.10Rib-Chicken Combination 2.10All of above fncl. Cole Slaw, FrenchFries, Bread and Sauce.Spaghetti (homemade meat sauce) ..$1.00with meat balls, saus, or mush. 1.35Ravioli (with meat sauce) 1.00with meat balls, saus, or mush 1.35Mostaccioli (meat sauce) 1.00with meat balls or mushrooms 1.35Call HY 3-8282Meat Ball ... 60c — Italian Beef ....70e — Sausage ....60c — Cheeseburger ....60c — Hamburger ... 50cFrench Fries (order) 25c Broasted Potatoes (order) 35c Cole Slaw (pint) 50cSalad (ga-lic or French) pint 50c Peppers (order) 50cSpwmoni (per pint) 05c — SOFT DRINKS t COFFEE — Cannoli 35cNovember 22, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3wv -• i £* < 1 • /9'.\| w Si V V^Vs" | , SpS $ J^v,.'. H |US§ ,Sl.onelm.'i.s. fear. Itfnoraoce in 'he «.rM cren la,Ber *han Isine<|ualu>. ami <kvhne char- ||f(. ,„ Rll^». n1ain,ail),acterjze the plight ot Soviet Liberman is dying The Soviet re§§§|| - - ~ g.me ho. consciously attempted toeliminate any new Jewish leader-Jews wi# fhh impulse to survive., that he defini\\u graver books cannot >jK0£l days being the Czarist era,,sa:man. Soviet Jews weredo.n-oyed. but the spJudaism remainedtheir Judaism is heir ^ lies winCnTrechoagn1zeV,ethfsUtrole!°? | The Jew s were the only educatedde- ' People in Russia besides the a nsare tocracy, and they therefore were. ays the original academicians and techdoes not long for ni(.,;ins ()f the. Soviet .tale.• ,hC themiTsm cannot be Russian people themselves are notophv 'of militant sincc the time of Trotsky's banish' Dr mo. have been Stalin says Libel-Sirsrrr::stamped, on the his upbringing in the Ukraine, the:l.,r ,.v,.ry Hu..,.,n mo., vi,a,HrSrmilic Hrs:.::- Es/r *.,oi..o'sii:K„;rSI».ir™;resizes the uppor e^r, a m^cultured individualant the Jews played in the who may respond to the pressure .■arh (lavs of the Russian Revolt! I of world opinion.. Liberman said.. ■' ' ■- '■ - ' ■, e. : ■ • '>./■ /-■ / g.i; Hi Pag# One)of Teachers for„speaking on theii -pos*sibil.t.v of failure, and eonseriucmeverything seems to work tow.-o.thisTrsard," she said. ■ALSO ON THE »r„. Ience Howe, an l pward Round •„■)r, and Faith Rich of the?ss ottaeial Equality Thewas^chairgd^by Ted RrornirnT,";mn^:-I Speaking on the panel “-Growingup m Chicago: The Chicago SchoolSystem,'• Bruce McPherson, of theDepartment of Educstinn here.Called education the best hope m;integration.”" ^feyer Weinborg. editor of Ini*.—«■ ■TWA%CtUB1 r-|iiaugif'yy which he said .hakes the till o«. :tts complacency about edue.im iSPEAKERS IN ,m afternoonel "Housing m Chicago The ! ,1 niv to substantial change Liberals, £K\ a> s fa v or reform. • how e\ er.in the ba.ic soc iaf.t: wetm ,•'Daley Machine” ,. r,-?p?00y <taB-porous in this. ros|>t‘o!, iht• hccau.e it is acl.pt m giving •!„liberals the impre.Mon that f« formr' | is taking place. >The c onfen-u e cln.cd with wmk... v shops dealing With piobleiifcMrfed.ucation. public aid;, urban n n, ■and poll.ical ormani/al ion.yft*^^*^**^ ' 1--r**s ”lry^ —-r,.m?cV- *<?'S ,«^v ‘ •'?-?U;.;. ;iif*UNIVERSITYBANKMN^ttwrM«4rl?00-~>b- mmJoin TlVA*sJet Coach fare.• '3& easy. 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Inf* CM 271-3133—f •;'• . • • - 'CHICAGO MAROON • November 22, 1966• ~ 1._Excerpts from Text of President's SpeechOn May fifth, 1967, our Univer¬sity will hold a special convoca¬tion to celebrate its 75th birthday.* * *The founding of the Universityof Chicago, as a great private uni¬versity, complete in most of itsparts, with an emphasis on gradu¬ate education, as well as on anundergraduate college, was one ofthe outstanding educationalevents of the nineteenth century.For reasons largely beyond itscontrol, this University wentthrough an exceedingly difficultperiod following World War II andthrough most of the fifties. TheUniversity’s decline was such thatit took the utmost skill, persever¬ance. and sheer guts to keep theinstitution from disappearingfrom among the ranks of first-rate universities. The decline wasreversed. The University hasbeen reestablished, and onceagain stands in the forefront ofAmerican higher education. In its75th year, the University is expe¬riencing what the Ford Founda¬tion has described as a renais¬sance.• * *This, then, is a particularlygood time to take stock.The American Council on Edu¬cation during the past year re¬leased a report on the standing ofAmerican universities in certaingraduate departments. A some¬what similar study, although notby the Council, had been made in1925. Under the 1925 results, Chi¬cago ranked first, Harvard sec¬ond, and Columbia third. In 1957,there was another report—theKeniston study. This placed Chicago sixth, after Harvard, Califor¬nia, Columbia, Yale and Michi¬gan. The conclusions of such stud¬ies. of course, are always subjectto doubt. Furthermore, they areusually out of date, because thereputation of a school lags behindthe actual. Nevertheless, the Ken¬iston study is one mild indicationof the downward trend in whichthe University w'as caught.The results of the most recentreport, based upon broad apprais¬als made by thousands of facultymembers in 1964. were disap¬pointing to many friends of thisUniversity. While the Universitywas characterized as at leaststrong in every department in¬cluded in the study, we were rat¬ed as distinguished in only twoout of the four graduatedivisions—social sciences andphysical sciences. Only eight de¬partments—anthropology, eco¬nomics, geography, history, poli¬tical sciencie, sociology, astron¬omy and mathematics—w ereplaced in the top category. Yet incomparison u'ith those universi¬ties coveredTn the prior studies,and on the basis of the ratings ofdepartments in the four graduatedivisions. Chicago placed fifth, af¬ter Harvard, Berkeley, Yale andPrinceton. The study did not in¬clude professional schools, otherthan engineering, which of coursewe don’t have. You may say thatWOMEN'SCLOTHESDISCOUNTEDSalesmen's sample jackets,slacks, skirts, blouses, overblouses and sweaters.sixos 7-12HRS: SAT. 3, SUN. UNTIL XMASEVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT«4#T SO. CONSTANCE 375 3329 an improvement of one place inrank since 1957 is hardly a dra¬matic comeback. But it is in factone bit of evidence of a remark¬able reversal of a trend, for the1957 study caught us on the waydowm, while the present studybased on 1964 data catches us onthe way up.* * *You may ask whether it isn’t adistortion of the goals of educa¬tion and research to treat univer¬sities as though they w'ere en¬gaged in some kind of a sweep-stake. Of course this would bewrong. But an emphasis on thepursuit of intellectual excellenceis not wrong, and particularly forthis institution.* * *The reason for the creation ofthe University of Chicago and thepurpose in its continued existenceis to set a high standard of intel¬lectual excellence and innovation.* * *If this University loses the abili¬ty to deliver as a pioneer on thetop intellectual level, then exceptfor a kind of momentum whichmight tide it over short periods ofdullness, it will be through. Forthis reason, the Universitythroughout the years has giventhe highest priority to facultystrength, and, as a consequence,to faculty salaries. Chicago wasone of the few institutions whichdid not cut faculty salaries duringthe great depression. In recentyears, in addition to faculty sala¬ry support, we have emphasizedconsiderable scholarship and fel¬lowship aid to students, and ma¬jor support for the library, in aneffort to make up for the alarm¬ing deterioration which took placeduring a long period of financialstringency. These priorities are amanifestation of our central aims.Two consequences of thesepriorities are as follows: First,Chicago is a high-cost institution.Second, our facilities, includingscientific laboratories and studentresidence halls, have lagged be¬hind. We realize these deficienciesand their importance. The Uni¬versity, as it will appear, is mak¬ing great efforts in these areas tocatch up. But despite the discom¬fort, even the sacrifices, and thevery real loss in strength to theinstitution. I am sure you willagree we have put the emphasison the appropriate priorities.* * *Faculty salaries at Chicagohave increased about 13V2 percent in the past two years. Theseincreases have been essential tomaintain the strength of the insti¬tution. They are not out of line. Infact, we wish the increases couldhave been even greater. We parti¬cularly wish the increases couldGOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED!"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559l Eat More For Less ITry Our Convenient Take-Out Ordershave been greater at the juniorlevels, where the increase hasbeen only slightly in excess of11 Vi per cent.Along with the relatively highfaculty salaries, the University,when all sources of student aidthrough the University are takeninto account, has been providingmore than eleven per cent of itstotal budget in various forms ofstudent assistance. So far as Iknow, this is unequalled in anycomparable institution. In dollaramounts, this means that Chicagois putting back in unendowedscholarship aid about 30 per centof the tuition it receives, or ap¬proximately $4,000,000, and thenadding another $8,000,000 for stu¬dent aid in various forms fromrestricted sources.The regular adopted academicbudgets of the University have in¬creased in the past two yearsfrom $46,288,029 to $56,-344,372—almost a 22 per cent rise.* * *The money which the Universi¬ty has been receiving in regularcourse, through endowment in¬come, gifts, tuition, and othersources, has been insufficient tomeet the needs of this expandingbudget. As a consequence, lastyear the regular budget resultedin a deficit of $1,193,000. This wasconsiderably better than the defi¬cit which had been originally pro¬jected at $2,921,000. The deficit inthe current regular budget year isnow projected at about $4,500,000.The probability is that, at theend of the fiscal year, this deficitmay be down to about $2,500,000.These deficits have to be met outof special underwritings using en¬dowment or other funds not nor¬mally used for this purpose. Be¬cause of rising costs and theneeds which must be met to keepour current academic programsstrong, it probably will be essen¬tial to raise tuition starting withis necessary to raise tuition, stu-the Autumn Quarter of 1967. If itdent aid funds will be increasedalso, so that our program toremove financial need as a bar¬rier to an education at Chicagowill be maintained. The decisionon a tuition increase will be madewithin the next tew weeks.* * *The Campaign for Chicago, asit is called, is vitally needed forall kinds of academic purposes,touching every area, of the Uni¬versity. Eighty-eight million dol¬lars are required to help fund newfacilities. In the University’s ef¬fort to upgrade its facilities, since1960 some 17 new buildings havebeen completed or are under con¬struction at a cost of about $40,- $iqce 1960, Beadle continued, 17000,000. Among the additional? fa- new buildings were completed orare now under construction—including a new geophysicalsciences building, the S e a r l echemistry laboratory, and a restor¬ed Cobb Hall. He also pointedto remodeling in Hutchinson Com¬mons, Pierce Tower and WoodwardCourt, and the acquisition ofGeorge Williams College and theBroadview Hotel.cilities which we must have arenew laboratory buildings for theBiological Sciences, a CardiologyCenter, new operating rooms forsurgery, research facilities formedicine and psychiatry, a physi¬cal science building, a science li¬brary, further renovation of KentLaboratories, the remodeling ofbuildings for the Business School,new athletic facilities, including amen’s gymnasium and swimmingpool, residential units, a musicbuilding, a center for art. a thea¬tre, new centers for the collegiatedivisions, an international studiesbuilding, and a new communityresearch facility for the School ofSocial Service Administration.* * *We are well aware of the needto add to the number of unitsavailable for student housing.Last year we added both GeorgeWilliams College and the Broad¬view for single student housing,adding 293 units, and we also ac¬quired and remodeled 53 apart¬ments for married student hous¬ing. The renovation of the 78apartments for married studentsin the Piccadilly should be com¬pleted this year.We are endeavoring to completeplans for a six-story building con¬taining 24 three-bedroom apart¬ments, to be located at 57th andDorchester Ave. We hope thisbuilding will be available for sin¬gle student housing by next Octo¬ber first. In the meantime, thearchitects are busy with plans tofurther implement the report ofthe Blum committee for the clus¬ter of undergraduate housing—theso-called village plan—on thefour-block area west of Green¬wood and south of 55th. Presentplans call for the construction ofunits which will house approxi¬mately 720 undergraduate andwhich will also have twenty town-houses for faculty or graduatestudents. We are trying to developthis area so that it will includealso the much-needed new musicand art building, and the theatre.These facilities, a short distancefrom the Regentein Library, willgive to the University an unparal¬leled center for the Humanities;at the same time they will relatethe new residence halls to the cul¬tural life of the University.* * *As of October thirty-first, thetotal funds pledged toward the160-million-dollar drive amountedto $68,706,556. We have a long wayto go—more than $90 milLion.The University is very much aware of the problems of the in¬ner city, and the opportunity of¬fered to be a good neighbor. Overthe years, since 1950. the Univer¬sity has given more than $30,-000.000 to urban redevelopment.What this has meant to the Uni¬versity in the depletion of its re¬sources can be seen when it isrealized that a substantial part ofthe funding for the Blum villageresidential plan for students, themusic, art, theatre buildings, theScience Library, key units of theScience Center would have beenprovided by these funds. Put dif¬ferently, each one of the colle¬giate divisions could have the en¬dowment of $5,000,000 which weare seeking for them, and fundswould be left over.We are now spending $525,000annually to provide supplementa¬ry policing for the Universityarea. This is the annual incomeon about $13,000,000 of endow¬ment. As can be seen, much ofthe $160,000,000 drive is madenecessary because of the fundswhich this University gave and isgiving in the struggle to stay inan urban environment. The con¬tributions made by this Univer¬sity to urban fedevelopment willbring to the City of Chicago inmatching Federal grants $42,000,-000, to be used for urban renew¬al anywhere in the city.At this time I want to point outthat, contrary to a rumor some¬times heard, the University ownsalmost no neighborhood propertythat is not used for student-faculty housing or strictly aca¬demic purposes. For example,aside from one vacant lot on loanto the Chicago Public Schools, weown no property in Woodlawnsouth of 61st Street.The University, to the extent ofits ability, is anxious to be onwith the job of helping in the solu¬tion of inner city problems. Wehave indicated our desire to de¬velop an experimental school andresearch center, tc join with thepublic schools and community or¬ganizations in this endeavor, and,in any event, to make use of facil¬ities which we have established orare establishing for specific com¬munity purposes in medicine, so¬cial service, education and law.We have established an UrbanStudies Center, and the work ofour faculty including very partic¬ularly the work of Julian Levi, isincreasingly recognized to be inthe forefront of the most hopefuldevelopments.Beadle Discusses State of University(Continue! from Page One) ful. stable, integrated neighborhoodin this country.” It is true that theUniversity has “created an islandin the middle of a depressed area.”he stated but “the alternative is notto have the island at all.” The Uni¬versity simply lacks the resourcesto expand the island. “But in thisisland we can demonstrate whatcan be done and how to do it,” hesaid.Citing other areas of student dis¬content, Beadle mentionedstudent-faculty committees, such asthe Page committee on student-faculty relations, and the commit¬tee on the Bookstore, and the Fiskecommittee, as evidence of im¬proved University policy. Beadlesaid that since World War II “noclassified work has been under¬taken on the University campus —and very little at Argonne.” the na¬tional laboratory which the Univer¬sity manages for the Atomic Ener¬gy Commission.Beadle stated that review of Uni¬versity selective service policy isnow going on. with meetings byeach department, division, andschool to express a decision “asmorally sound and as wise as canbe.” Beadle expressed his desirethat student opinion be taken intoaccount before University policy isset.Campaign oF NecessityAs of October 31, $68,700,000 hasbeen raised for the Campaign. “Ne¬cessity sets our sights high,” Bea¬dle said.In relation to the inner city,Beadte explained that the Universi¬ty has given over $30 million forurban development and spends$525,000 each year for supplemen¬tary policing of the Universityarea. He stated that the Universityowns no property in Woodlawn, be¬yond 61st Street,BEADLE REITERATED theUniversity’s policy of resisting anygovernmental attempt to influencethe University in any way. But hestated that the University hasworked with the city in building upHyde Park into “the most success-November 22, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Tuition IncreaseNext year’s tuition may be over $2,000 and there is reasonto believe that it may be raised even higher in the next fiveyears.The administration contends that there is simply nothingelse that can be done in the face of mounting costs and theyare no doubt correct.President Beadle and Provost Levi have both been quickto point out however, that student aid will be adjusted tocompensate for any tuition increase, so the increase mightclearly be said to affect only those who can afford it.It would be easy to brush off an increase, then, as a kindof necessary ‘‘tax on the rich”. Money will be taken from thosewho can most afford it, those who need assistance will beprovided for, and the University will have more to spend.This would be an acceptable situation were it not for a thirdcategory of students. These are the students whose familyincome is between $10,000 and $15,000 a year.These students may not qualify for aid but the $4,000 UCwill cost a resident student next year will be a tremendousburden.We suggest as a possible solution a “graduated tuition,” sothat very wealthy students would end up paying considerablymore than $2,000 a year in order to help not only the studentbarely disqualified from receiving financial aid, but theUniversity’s finances as a whole.While* we endorse any tuition increase that is needed tokeep the University from slipping in quality, we would urgethe administration to seriously consider some means of pre¬venting college expenses from becoming really crushing formany.Beadle's AddressThere are two things worth noting about President Beadle’saddress to students last Friday.First and most important is the fact that there really was anaddress. The talk represented recognition of the serious com¬munications problem that exists between students and adminis¬trators. Beadle’s decision to address students, was a construc¬tive step tow ard establishing communication.Beadle's address was significant in the second place becauseof some of the things the President of the University said bothduring the address and in the question period that followed.He agreed that students should have more say in Universitydecision-making and appeared favorably disposed to the idea ofa referendum on the issue of male class ranking.We look for more efforts at restoring communication be¬tween students and the administration, and also for concretesteps toward action on some of the questions that Beadle com¬mented on in his speech.'» v ♦Chicago MaroonEditor-in-chief ..David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanFeature Editor ........ .Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyPolitical Editor John BremnerEditor Emeritus Daniel HertzbergEditorial Staff—Kenneth Simonson, Slade Lander, Ellis Levin,Richard Rabens, Joe Lubonow.News Staff—John Moscow, Harold Sheridan, Angela DeVito,Robert Skeist, Ina Smith, Seth Masia, Vivian Goodman,Cathy Sullivan, Jeffrey Blum, Leanne Star, Maxine Miska,Alfred Marcus, Marge Pearson, Leslie Reeht, Helen Schary,Ann Garfield, John Welch, T. C. Fox, Gloria Weissman,Marlene Provider, Uene Kantrov, Roger Black, LarryHendel, Anita Grossman, Larry Struck, Lynn MeKeever,Sanford Rockowitz, Peter Stone, Susan Loewy, David Jacob¬son, Sydney Unger, Michael Krauss, David F. Israel.Photographers—Jean Raisler, Bern Myers, Charles Packer. HDavid Alley.Staff Artist—Belita Lewis. ’T#.CHICAGO MAROON • November 22, 1966 David A. SatterCities Need Saving fromModern Know-NothingsThis weekend's conference onthe “crisis in the cities” revealedto me that there is one crisis no¬body gives enough attention to.I’m slowly becoming convincedthat somebody is going to have tosave the city from its eager “sav¬ers”.My view of the conference wasfrom the panel which I moderatedon housing in Chicago. The dis¬cussion was supposed to deal withthe question of residential segre¬gation but shifted instead to aconsideration of the whys andwherefores of slum housing—anarea in vv1' 1 have had someexperience.ONE OF THE speakers wasLawrence Landry, the nationalchairman of ACT, a group ofblack nationalists who do theirlevel best to scare whites. Lan¬dry, who I suspect is really arather amiable fellow, arrived atthe conference wearing a Mal¬colm X button and snarling at ev¬erybody in sight. Clark Kissinger,smiling weakly, asked Landry toput in a good word or two forwhite revolutionaries. “I don’tknow any white revolutionaries,”Landry replied.Landry was right of course.When you come right down to it,Clark Kissinger doesn’t know anywhite revolutionaries either.Landry addressed the audiencewith a style polished by constantpractice. “America is a racistcountry,” he said. And then helooked down at the audience men¬ acingly lest anyone disagree.Landry explained that under¬standing slums is really no prob¬lem. “Negroes live in slums, sothe white man can get rich andlive in the suburbs,” he said. Lan¬dry went on to explain that land¬lords and storeowners in cahootswith politicians and just about ev¬ery other white person aroundmust keep Negroes in slums toprotect their own priviledged po¬sitions. Landry wound up with aparticularly in-depth piece ofanalysis, pointing out that slumswere not going to be ended untilwhite America decided to stopmurdering its black citizens.I ASKED FOR questions figur¬ing that a group of University ofChicago students and facultywould tear Landry into littlepieces. I was surprised to findthis wasn’t the case and I thinkeven Landry was a little disap¬pointed by the sterility of thequestioning. The only really de¬cent question came from a Negroin the audience who apparentlywas one of Landry’s acquaint¬ances. The questioner pointed outthat one explanation of why slumdwellers—Negro and white—paymore for food than do othersmight be that being poor they buyfood in .smaller quantities andalso there is considerable shoplift¬ing in slum neighborhoods.The session ended with littlecontroversy as the panelists andthe audience agreed on the sameold platitudes with only slight in¬terference from the impartialmoderator and the one or two thinking members of the audi¬ence.Our session decided that we canblame slum housing on landlords,storeowners, the city, and the oth¬er omnipotent forces that be andthese simplistic findings bring meto my fear for the city—this cityand others. My fear is that unlessthe city savers start to thinkthere may be little hope of eversolving the monumental problemsbefore us.If an audience of University ofChicago students can sit back andaccept drivel the average elevenyear old wouldn’t accept, then weare indeed in serious trouble.I DON'T KNOW how to attackthe hackneyed analyses of urbanproblems that I see everywhere,but one way might be to get peo¬ple to automatically question ananswer that’s too simple.Simple answers are convenient.Want to end slums? String up theshopkeepers and the landlords;guarantee an annual income of$10,000 a year. Don’t clutter yourmind with facts that don’t fit.When you’ve got all the answersyou don't have to think.The only trouble with simple so¬lutions is they don’t work.When we stop tailoring the evi-d e n c e to fit pre-determinedanswers and start realizing thatthe problems of cities are bafflingand complex, it will no longer hepossible to accept the modernKnow-Nothingism of a LawrenceLandry and we can start workingfor real solutions to some impor¬tant problems.Letters to the EditorFrom HeagyTO THE EDITOR:I always hate writing letters tothe Maroon. However, since theMaroon has neither accuratelynor comprehensively quoted mein its articles, I w-ould like tomake a few points both to Mr.Livernash and to the Maroon:1. Most of Mr. Livernash’scharges relate to matters of fact,which if true could have been ver¬ified by the Maroon. Instead, theychose to waste their space with“charges” and “denials” to thedelight, no doubt, of some people,but really rather silly. A little in¬vestigation by the Maroon wouldhave prevented this entire epi¬sode.2. Most of his charges are threeor four years old, have beenmade before, and answered be¬fore.3. The reason Student Govern¬ment advertises in the Other rath¬er than the Maroon is that it costsless. It will take a ehange in theMaroon’s ad rates—not an edito¬rial—to change that.4. The reason Student Govern¬ment allows the Other to use itsoffice is that they haven’t foundone of their own yet. One of theother Student organizations thathas used SG office space this yearis the Maroon—I hope we don’tget an editorial from the Otherabout that.(Editor's note: The Maroon hasnever used Student Government of¬fice space,)5. The present Student Govern¬ment policy on group flights is torun anything anybody wants. Theonly limitation is that under CABregulations we must have at leasttwenty-five persons on eachFlight. We have solicited for peo¬ple interested in group flights tocontact the SG office and for ev¬ ery city (without exception) thattwenty-five or more people ex¬pressed an interest in, we haveset up or endeavored to set up agroup flight.6. A charter flight is differentfrom a group flight in that it re¬quires about four times as manypeople and is less expensive. Italso requires (in all the cases 1am discussing) a substantialnon-refundable deposit to the air¬line from SG. The only domesticcharter flights SG has ever runhave been to New York.In order to secure a plane toNew York this Christmas wewould have had to sign a contractin mid-summer. Because of theexistence of excursion fare (75%),the Charter Flight Committee de¬cided not to risk it."In running charter flights SGsimply must act very conserva¬tively. An unsuccessful charterflight not only loses SG consider¬able money, it creates ill willfrom the airline—making futurecharter flights difficult — andcauses great inconvenience tostudents who bad planned to useitAs soon as it was announcedthat classes will start January 3,rather than January 2, we at¬tempted to set up a charter toNew York to return the eveningof January 2. ( With classes start¬ing a day later, the charter has agreat advantage over excursionfare, on which one must return onJanuary 1.) However, it was toolate to do so.7. The question of dividing Stu¬dent Government expenses amongthe various projects is the onlyreal issue raised by Mr. Liver¬nash. It is, as he admitted, verydifficult.In the past there have beenquestions raised as to the ap¬propriateness of the manner inwhich some of the funds were ap¬ portioned. However, this year weare using a new accounting sys¬tem that systemized it and makesit easier for an outsider to under¬stand what’s going on. As aconsequence, I hope this will notbe a problem in the future.8.The reason admission ischarged to most SG sponsoredspeakers is that our $1,500 subsidyfrom CORSO does not cover our$13,000 in projected expenses forthirty speakers. No money fromCharter Flights is subsidizing theSpeakers Program. What Mr. Liv¬ernash was probably referring towas the suggestion that if the re¬serves were built up sufficientlythis year, the Assembly mightnext year appropriate some mon¬ey out of it to help subsidize theSpeakers Program.0. The Maroon’s comment onthe referendum to abolish SG isinvalid. Last year’s referendumwas proceeded by one in 1902. Thenumber of students favoring abo¬lition during these four years of“declining SG prestige” de¬creased 1%.10. Finally, I would like to pointout again that SG’s books are au¬dited monthly and are open to allUC students including Maroon re¬porters; that the legality of ourprocedures are always checkedwith the University’s legal office,and that UC has a reputation forthe fact that our charier flightprogram is run in an exceptionally scrupulous manner. In the future the Maroon should investi¬gate wild charges before printingthem, rather than adopting the attitude that SG’s guilt is propor¬tional to the number of unsubstan¬tiated charges against it.THOMAS C. HEAGYPRESIDENTSTUDENT GOVERNMENT(Continued on Page Eight)Representative to Russell War TribunalAttacks US Asian Policy at Hillel HouseRobert Stetler, U S. repre-, Minh.”. ... „ . , „ Stetler said that Diem wassentative of the Bern and Rus- ■ placed in power by the U.S. be¬cause he was a man “who would befriendly to the West and yet ac¬ceptable to most Vietnamese na-sell Peace Foundation, tracedorigins of American involve¬ment in Vietnam and outlined LordRussell’s proposed War Crimes Tri¬bunal before a small audience Sun¬day at Hillel House.Scheduled to meet in Paris be tiorialists.”"Highly Reputable" BoardHe sketched the coming WarCrimes Tribunal as a “reasonablyobjective” board composed of CALENDAR OF EVENTSV. . v\, .>ginning March 1967, the Tribunal is i “highly reputable” people. Each of jan attempt to determine the extent the members, who are geographi- Ithe U.S. is responsible “for crimes cally representative, was invited to >against humanity in Vietnam.” Ac- j participate by Bertrand Russell, hecording to Lord Russell in an ar- j said.licle in the National Guardian, 1 According to Stetler, the TribunalPresident Lyndon B. Johnson would has already met for several days tobe among those tried“THE UNITED STATES bearsprimary responsibility for the pre¬sent situation in Southeast Asia,”Stetler charged, explaining thegrounds for the Tribunal.“Most people still attempt toplace the beginning of American in¬volvement in 1954,” he said. “Our determine procedureHe said it will hear a large jamount of personal testimony fromVietnamese and Cambodiansbrought in by teams of investiga¬tors.“Paris was chosen as the site be¬cause we wanted a spot easy fornewsmen to get to where it wouldinvolvement really goes back to the not be difficult to obtain visas for jSecond World War. At the end of j North Vietnamese,” Stetler ex- ithe war Truman’s government had plained.a choice between supporting the HE SAID the work of the Tribu-French in their fight to recover In- nal will be financed through pri-dochina and recognizing the Viet vate contributions. A large numberMinh nationalist.government in Ha¬noi.“Because the strongest factionwithin the Viet Minh was the Com¬munist organization, he continued,“the U.S. opted to support theFrench. Because it did not want toappear to be aiding a colonial war,the American government createdan image of the war as an anti¬communist crusade.“The purpose of the war was os¬tensibly to establish in power thetrue’ nationalists, while the ‘true’nationalists were really the Viet of French artists have donatedpaintings, the sale of which shouldprovide a significant portion of theTribunal’s revenue.Full transcripts of the proceed¬ings will be available in this coun¬try, he said.Members of the Tribunal includeStokely Carmichael or some otherrepresentative of SNCC, Simonede Beauvoir, Jean-Paul Sartre, aformer president of Mexico, a iNobel Prize-winning Japanese!scientist, and a member of theTurkish parliament. Tuesday, November 22Magnetic Crystals,” D. S. McClure, Pro¬fessor, Institute for the Study of Metalsand Department of Chemistry, Re¬search Institutes 480, 4:15 pm.LECTURE!: “The Cohomology of SomeHopf Algebras,” Nobuo Shimada, Pro¬fessor, Oklahoma State University, Eck-hart 206, 4:30 pm.LECTURE: “Mitochondrial DNA andOther Low Molecular Weight DNAs,”John Sinclair, graduate student. Dept,of Zoology, Zoology 14, 4:30 pm.FILM: “The Magnificent Amberson,”Orson Welles: “The City,” Pare Lor-entz, Soc. Sci. 122, 7 and 9:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: International HouseAssembly Hall, 8 pm.MEETING: SDS Univ. CommitteeMeeting, INH, 3:30 pm.MEETING: SDS. Chapter Meeting,Greg Clavert, SDS National Secretary,Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30 pm.COURSE: “Sensory Discrimination,”William D. Neff, Professor, Dept ofPsychology, Indiana University, Abbott133, 8 am.Wednesday, November 23MEETING: of the Faculty of the Divin¬ity School, Swift Common Room, 3:00pm.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins,University Carillonneur, RockefellerMemorial Chapel, 5 pm.DANCE INSTRUCTION: Ballroomdancing, International House AssemblyHall, 8 pm.FOLK DANCING: English CountrySEMINAR: “Religion and the presentDancers, Ida Noyes Hall, 8 pm.State of Poetry,” Henry Rago, VisitingProfessor, New Collegiate Division, So¬cial Science 108, 8 pm.LECTURE: “The Isoxazole Synthesis ofPolycyclic Compounds”, Gilbert Stork,Department of Chemistry, ColumbiaUniversity, Kent 107, 8:15 pm.LECTURE: Professor H. G. Creel,“Wesetrn Chow Government”, EastLounge, Ida Noyes Hall, 4:30 pm.RADIO SERIES: “From the Midway”, :WUCB, 7:30 pm. Thursday, November 24SERVICE: Community and Thanksgiv¬ing Service. The Reverend Jack A.Kent, First Unitarian Church, “Harvestand Seed Time,” Rockefller MemorialChapel, 11 am.Friday, November 25LECTURE: "Philosophies of History: AChristian Perspective”, John WarwickMontgomery, Professor of Church Histo¬ry and Christian Thought, Trinity Evan¬gelical School, Ida Noyes Hall. 7:30 pm.LECTURE: “Nostalgia and Nightmare:Readings from S. Y. Agnon, HillelHouse 5715 S. Woodlawn, 8:30 pm.COURSE: H. Burr Steinbach, Professorof Zoology, Chairman of the Depart¬ment, The University of Chicago, “ThePrevalence of K," Abbot 133, 8 am.NOW SERVING THEU OF C COMMUNITY . . .Knox Named Assistant VP for PlanningUC has found a co-ordinatorfor its vast, diffuse physicalexpansion program.He is Naphtali H. Knox, ap¬pointed assistant vice-presidentfor physical planning.KNOX, 33, has been universityand community planner at theUniversity of California for thepast three years. He was in Icharge of community planning atnine existing campuses and mostrecently been involved in prepar¬ing development standards andselecting sites for two new cam¬puses.Knox will coordinate the plan-jning for UC’s current physical ex-!pansion program. He also willrecommend long range plans forthe campus.Knox was a city and regional iplanner from 1960 to 1963 with the {San Francisco consulting firm ofLivingston and Blayney.IN 1963, he was appointed as ■the first university and communi¬ty planner for the University ofCalifornia and served in the office of the Vice President for physicalplanning and construction.Knox was born June 4, 1933, inSt. Paul, Minnesota. He receivedhis Bachelor of Architecture de¬gree in 1955 from the Universityof Minnesota and his Master’s inCity Planning in 1957 from theUniversity of Pennsylvania.From 1957 to 1959, he servedwith the Air Force Academy Con- :struction Agency at ColoradoSprings, Colorado. He was chiefof Advance Planning for the city ;of Des Moines, Iowa, from 1959 to1960. SHAPELY SHIRTSFOR MENYou'll love the way these new per¬manent press shirts stay fresh andunwrinkled through a busy day.You'll love the way they launder andcome out of the dryer ready forwear without ironing. You'll love thewide stripes, pastels, and paisleypatterns as well as the basic white,all with button down collars. You'lllove our price of $5.50 when youcompare it with others.Men's Wear DepartmentThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. the book center“in Harper Court"5211 5. HARPER AVENUECHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615Ml 3-1880 Ml 3-1881• CITY LIGHTS, SAN FRANCISCO,PUBLICATIONS• POETRY• DRAMA• FICTION• PSYCHOLOGY• PHILOSOPHY• SCIENCE FICTION•(MYSTERIESWE'RE NEW.We're Anxious to Please.Browse-in.Help Us Become AGreat Bookstore.Open 7 Days 'til MidnightBOOKSSTATIONERYGREETING (ARDSk k k k k kTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student DiscountASAMATTERn*nm... f oft Lift Inwuranca H a aura wayla financial independence for youand your family.A* a local Sun Life representative, mayI eall upon you at your convenience?One North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OP CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY AMERICAN AUTO PARTS7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3614MUFFLER HEADQUARTERSilimillllTGolden SilenceLow «'$065 MUFFLERSPA* Advertised In LIFE ««d POSwrawarrwrrr************?<;GUARANTEED m Writing Against*1..AUIAIIT DUCT FVERYTHING tMO WAITINOItakes onltIS MINIITEM As Advertised le LIFE eed POST• GUARANTEED in Writing Against; j BLOW-OUT, RUST, EVERYTHING .i; fir b Lm« M Tn Oes Yssr Ced Zw >»#*#** w»e*»ee»**##*»***r>Installed Free While You WaitComplete Line of Auto Partsfor Do-It-Yourself MechanicsBrakes Installed shock absorbersFACTORYAUTHORIZEDSIRVICI *19 OR ALL POUR* WHEELSLl»/a« * Labor—Perd 6 Chevy NEWFOR MOSTCARS $y96TUNE-UP SPECIALIncludes Champion A.C., Auto-Lit* Spark Plugs, Points, Rotor.Condenser. Adjust O4 AQCCarburetor and W| y9®Timing WhiU You | MmWait.. AN 4-cvt. cars 1942 h 1962 REAR SPRINGSINSTALLEDWHILE YOU WAIT*121*American Auto Parts7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3614 ■■. <, 7in GERMANY0 Lufthansa j skWenn Sie18 JahreOder altersind undeinigermassenmit IhremDeutschzurecht-kommen,dann sendenSie diesenGutscheinein.ErkonnteIhnenVergniigenundvielleichtsogar Nutzenbringen!| Lufthansa German Airlines, Depl. UX122• 410 Park AvenueI New York, N.Y. 10022J Bitte senden Sie mir ein Antragstormular| und Informationsmateria! uber Arbeits-I moglichkeiten fur Studenten wahrend der| Sommerferien 1967 in Deutschland.LufthansaNovember 22, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7• ■........ out of the frustration of those who Tax is wrong to say that “(Ifee only which should!m Page Six) find themselves .faced with the peoptewho won't be at ihiMUru- ';#jjg bul it'sfalse necessity of participating i« versify^) conference are the onesan absurd and paranoid war in who say T don't want to talk be consideredSoutheast Ask. loose who cannot aboiit any thing’, or who would lie . ^in good conscience participate in in front of a troop train”. IWhat they belltws to be the wouldn’t He in front of a troop to ”e an emass capital punishment df inno- train and I do want to talk about gether for yocent and equally frustrated fellow things Unfortunately the things I publicity stunhuman beings. The coining “stu- want to talk about are not going tH’e servicedettt^ conference vnouli have ma to be discussed at Mr. Tax’s com wrongly quoteteriali/ed with or without the ex- ference. The Tax conference Tul- Fridays Maroistence of the Tax conference. Sol fills a needed function (something a« a concern* philosophydraft resist, forms, itsatihn to thehoped thatUniversity's•articipate innee open toTO THU EDITOR;f write in aa attempt to clarifyShme- apparent misunderstand*ings.The “anti-drafT' conference didnot arise out of a desire to attackthe Unlwfarsityts eenftmer.ee butT Was Surprised to discover poliCe demanding University ID ’sat Ida Noyes last Saturday nighiI had gone there with severalliM-ndx »f mine to dig the blueswith Magic Sam. Shaky Jake andthe boys in the band. My friendsaren’t students. So the Ueslap.-says. Sony. University potievOnly students allowed i».” Whv?Um sure that the answer wouldbe “to keep out rowdy undesirftbtes * And since, naturally, thepbbplc who cause Trouble aroundhere are black, live in the ghetto.m*I don’t t9 to the University ofChicago, demanding an T.D keepsthem out And that of coursecould not bee a lied racial discrim¬ination, because whiter like mvfriends happened to be. are keptout too.f mifestiott this policy ODWtersi-ty administration or otherwise),•whether its intent is to keep outblack *‘hoOdlulhs’’ or is the pureand virtuous desire to keep nicestudent affairs lor student enjoyment only. Though I doubt the lat¬ter since lectures and plays arefree or are open to anyone whocan buy a ticket. If the policy ismotivated by exclusiveness, thatis a repugnant principle. Whyshould we eare if non-studentscome to our dances? UC studentsare only a small minority in thelarger community of Hyde Parkand Woodlawii, .~Wt happen tohave the facilities and orgamzation to get people like Magic Samto play. We can afford to be generous To repeat a tired but truecliche of social morality, we haveto be aware of our responsibilitiesto the larger community.• -These last - two Saturday nightthings are particularly irritatingUO organizations import blackmen if make Mack music. Why?Because Mack music has moresubstance and reality to H thanthe typical White ttiyia—literallymore soul. Yet, the students whoran these dances either willinglybarred the Wood lawn kids or al¬lowed the University to keep themout. ,If the administratidn or whoev¬er makes the policy wants to prevent robberies and disturbance,let them use the four cops towatch the crowd rather than thedoor. I know what the dangersare. f live in Woodlawrt. I hearthe shots every night. But let thepeople be imi?peenf until shownguilty. If crime is prevented byvisible police presence (as someclaim), then there should be littletrouble, the police being vigilantThen anyone can listen whowants, and the music scene wiltbe cooler too.Perhaps 1 am wrong, but 1 findit hard to believe that student;are aware of this situation antyet allow it to exist. Certainly themost perfunctory student opposetion. like even a statement by SGshould be enough to change thispolicy.EARL TURN ERContinued expansionof our military and commercial businessprovides openingsfor virtually everj technical talentAt you contemplate one cf the most important decisionsof your life, we suggest you consider career oppor¬tunities at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft. Like most everyoneelse, we offer alt of the usual “fringe” benefits. In¬cluding our Corporation-financed Graduate EducationProgram. But, far more important to you and your fu¬ture, it the wide-open opportunity for professionalgrowth with a company that enjoys an enviable recordof stability In the dynamic atmosphere of aerospacetechnology.And make no mistake about It.. . you’ll get a solidfeeling of satisfaction from your contribution to ournation’s economic growth and to its national defenseas well.Your degree can be a B.S., M.3. or Ph.D, In: MECHAN¬ICAL, AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, CIVIL (structure*oriented). ELECTRICAL, MARINE, and METALLURGI¬CAL ENGINEERING • ENGINEERING MECHANICS,APPLIED MATHEMATICS, CERAMICS, PHYSICS andENGINEERING PHYSICS, Take a look at the above chart then a good long look atPratt d Whitney Aircraft—where technical career* offergrowth, continuing challenge, and lasting eta-1WIMy-where engineer* and scientists are recognized a*tire major reason for the Company’s continued success.For further Information concerning a career with Pratt& Whitney Aircraft, consult your collage placementofficer—of write Mr. William L, Stoner, EngineeringDepartment, Pratt & Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford,Connecticut 06108. SPECIALISTS m POWER . . . POWER FOR PROPULSION-POWER for auxiliary systems. CURRENT UTILIZATIONSINCLUDE MILITARY AND COMMERCIAL AIRCRAFT, MISSILE*,SPACE VEHICLE* MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.TO THE EDITOR :I believe the point of Mr.Yakes-Reno’s letter, “All ToeTypical,” (Maroon—November 8and November 15) went acros;the first time it was publishedHarold sheridan(Editor's note: tye ate appropriate¬ly mortified.)Pratt & Whitney Aircraft division or unit*o aipcoai-t connCONNECTICUT OPERATIONS EAST HARTFORD. OONNECTtOVTFLORIDA OPERATIONS WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA Pm «<»«•» Opportunity Employ*1CHICAGO MAROON • November 22, 1 DS*./:;v .wEight U.S. Composers Commissioned ToWrite Works Honoring UC AnniversaryEight American composers have been commissioned towrite works to honor the University’s 75th Anniversary year.These compositions will be performed during the 1966-67concert season at the University.Richard Wernick’s Aevia, com- — „missioned by the University, will I THP pprirD.M . ,receive its first performance at a ■ u , , „ to he presentedconcert by the University Sympho- :'"lh”“Dde'. H,a"'. is,opeJ ,0 'heny Orchestra on Saturday, Deccm- w,thout ,,ckel and wllhoutber 3, at 8 30 pm, Wernick is an Ea»|f Blackwood ^ B ,ass,slant professor of music and ,s sha h„ wri„en a Par(ila £conductor of the Orchestra The music haveremainder of the program will con- sion(.d „ Universjt ,0 wri,ses,st of the Mahler Symphony N. works Blackwood's work will be1; Haydn, Concerto for C.llo, and for soprano and chamberStravinsky, Greeting Prelude. 01 ... _ ® Classified Ads-PERSONALS4 Semitic gastronomes and 1 Ecumeni¬cal epicure. Nov. 30. Ida Noyes.Fiddler on the Roof, McVickers Schoolrates, limited. $3 & $4. RE 1-8043.3 cornered Latke is an unacceptablecompromise. Nov. 30.A H. get your photo back—Bob.Har^antash live.Studio Space—Must be heated—Comm.Artist—X3753.NEED A ROOM-MATE? I NEED APLACE TO LIVE. VICKI 684-8184.Shapey has written a Partita forViolin and 13 Players.The Fromm Music Foundationhas commissioned two off-campuscomposers to write works in con¬nection with the 75th Anniversaryobservance. Mario Davidovsky, of: the Columbia-Princeton Studio forElectronic Music, has written In¬flexions for 14 Players, a non¬electronic piece. George Rochberg,of the University of Pennsylvania,has written Music for the MagicTheatre, a work for 15 players.These four works will be present¬ed by the Contemporary ChamberPlayers, conducted by Shapey, thegroup’s musical director, at a con¬cert early in 1967.Thompson's "Nativity"The Women’s Board of the Uni¬versity has provided funds for theRockefeller Chapel Choir to com¬mission the internationally-knowncomposer, Virgil Thompson, towrite a work. Nativity. It will alsobe performed early next year. Guarantee Handsome price for GaryCollins/Dick Butkus pictures fromStandard Oil contest; write Dick Le¬vine, 4621 Cooper, Lincoln, Nebraska.Russian by native, experienced teacher.Rapid method. Trial lesson No Charge.CE 6-1423 . 9-4 PM.SKI COLORADOdec. 17-24. $119.90 incl. round trip trainto Denver, round trip bus to Vail, lodg¬ing for 5 days & nights—tow tickets for5 days. Call Marge Abrams betw 6PM-11 PM at 328-2368.Writer’s Workshop PL 2-8377.Registration's ComingIt’s already time to think aboutregistering for next quarter.Undergraduates should receiveregistration materials in the mailtoday. Graduate students in resi¬dence should receive them nextMonday, according to Maxine Sulli¬van of the registrar’s office.If a student expects to be regis¬tered and does not receive the in¬formation he should pick it up atthe registrar’s office.Time schedules will be distribut-eded Wednesday. Procedures willbe generally the same as Autumnquarter. KAMELOT Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC students. jRoom-mate wanted to share a five bed- jroom apt. with 3 other girls. One blockfrom the lake in Hyde Park. Call 684-7586 eves. ’57 Olds, $125, Good cond. Call X2438 MMU 4-5760 aft. 5.CO-OPS COND. FOR SALEUle me par esse deus videtvrIlle si fas st superare divosQui sedens adversus identidemSpectat et auditDulce ridentem Well located^ Co-ops & Condominiums inHyde Pk. 5-7 rms, low assessments,reasonably priced. Call Mr. Rogers atDO 3-6204.TO RENTRIDERS WANTED 5*2 rm. apt Dec. 1. 363-7375 aft. 5.Urgent, need riders who can drive 3.\way of the way East. I leave for Syra- [cuse, N Y , Wed. 3 PM., back again byMonday P M. Martha—HY 3-9166.FOR SALEGibson banjo-uke, case. $25. BU 8 2718’56 Buick, 46K Miles; new tires, goodbody, runs great, must sell! $200, 375-5777.To see the doncaster collection jf cus¬tom made suits and dresses, call 324-8907. Wanted: Two people outside UC housingto assume contract for 3V2 room apt. at5400 Greenwood starting January 1. Call684-3991.5 large rooms, natural wood burningfireplace, 2 large bedrooms, 4 clothesclosets, pantry, linen closet. Near shop¬ping center. “I.C.”, C.T.A. and lake.Suitable for business or professionalpeople. $175.00 per month. MU 4-8222.ROOM-MATE WANTED2 fern, grad students desire 3rd to shareapt. Dorchester & 55th. Own room,furn. 288-3950 aft. 6 PM.HONDA - Fantastic Savings& Best BargainsSEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES-SERVICE - PARTS• PICK UP & DELIVERY• EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESCALLMl 3-4500Chicago's Largest and Just Around The CornerBOB NELSON MOTORS6136 S. COTTAGE GROVEBOB NELSON MOTORSImport Conti*6052 So. Cottage Grove AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to Rtudent* with ID card*SKIXMAS in COLORADO- 119»°leave cmi. oec. me *-.m pmARRIVE BACK IN CHI. OEC. 24MIIncludes <H train a bus IraespertatlM.all lodging £ tow tickets.NORTHWESTERN UNIV. SKI GROUPCali Marye Abrams between4:to nm * I«:«e pm at MC-23M CUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCALL MRS. BUXT AT 782 21 ISFOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATE •R. SKIRMONT t ASSOCIATES, INC.COMPUTKR APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. 60602 1. Um... uh... now that we knoweach other a little, I was won¬dering if, uh, you think I’m thetype of guy you could go for?I could go for areal swinger. 2.1 have an exciting pipecollection.I want to be wherethe action is.3.1 know some daring chessopenings.I want a man who’smaking it happen. 4.1 read all about it in TheNew York Times.I want to do ‘in’ thingswith ‘in’ peoplein ‘in’ places.5.1 spend a lot of time inthe library.My motto Is fun todayand fun tomorrow. 6. Then I guess you wouldn’t beinterested in someone like mewho has landed a good-payingjob that will let his familylive well and who, in addition,has taken out a substantialLiving Insurance policy fromEquitable that will providehandsomely for his family if,heaven forbid, anything shouldhappen to him.How's about shewing■be that pipeeolUctiee. awing—fFor information about Living Insurance, see The Mae from Equitable.For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, —write: Patrick Scollard, Manpower Development Division.The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United StatesOIhk IMS Av«. of fit Aatricti, New York, N. Y. Mtlt BlfdliMt 1PMAn Liquid Opportunity Employ*, M/9 .Ar - : p '> r-Theatre ReviewThe production of No Exit at the Reynolds Club Theatreillustrated a couple of hard theatrical facts.It showed, for one thing, that solid dramatic situationsaren’t used once and then forgotten. No Exit was firststaged in 1044. but set it beside Vir Poetry Reading ReviewNo Exit’s Naked Souls Moody Reading Disappointing9*n'a Woolf, for example, and j Friedman (Estelle), whose pres-what have you got? The child ence ,an(j technique were magaifi-that’s the father of the man.Only with Sartre we’re on firmerphilosophical ground, He sets thescene in hell, and shades out theaccidentals of ordinary life — likedrinking and screwing — thatmean much to Albee. What wehave in No Exit is people cut downto a fraction of their original stat¬ure, then dramatically blown upinto evil phantoms. None of Albee’sacademic charicatures here, justnice palpable wickedness. cent. Mary Callisen (Inez) startedlow and, despite an annoying habitof staring vacantly into space whilenot delivering her lines, got muchbetter — fiendishly so. But JohnGuardalabene (Garcin), who blewhis cool the moment of his firstThe play’s short action describesa kind of downward spiral. Trap¬ped in their Second-Empire inferno,the three damned souls give upgradually the protection of self-deception. Each, we see, is pitiablebut unable to give pity — a roughsituation when no one else isaround to soak up the emotionaloverflow. When the wraps are fi¬nally off, we see three souls nakedof everything but their repulsive \vices. The necessary secret ingre-1dient now is affection, but there’s jnone left, jAs a matter of fact, Sartre;seems to be saying that there nev- jer was any. Inez, Estelle and Gar- !cin are gutless parasites. One, in jpalmier days, manipulated weakerpeople, the second lived off blindsexual attraction, the last rejecteda devoted wife to chase tail and:flee moral decision. If most people !can be reduced to these terms—and :the implication seems to be that|they can — renter is indeed lesautres. And whether or not we buy jthis intellectually, there’s no doubt Iwe must believe it, in this instance, Jdramatically.All of which leads to the secondhard fact: plays meant to be actedare tough to bring off in “stagedreadings.” This UT productionworked about half the time. To¬ward the beginning the actorsmoved ai-ound some. But as theplay wore on and tension in¬creased, everyone stayed put in hischair. Thus Garcin’s attempt tobreak out by wrenching open thelocked door lost any dramatic ef¬fect because it just didn’t happen.And Estelle's gesture to stab Inez(like a similarly unfortunate bitbetween Corday and Marat in theGoodman’s Marat Sade failed fromlack of blocking and — most impor¬tant — lack of a visible weapon.The acting, too, was half-and-half.. High honors go to Liz entrance, never quite regainedcomposure enough for his despica¬ble, hard-nosed character. His per¬formance was uniformly unbeliev¬able. As the Valet, NicholasPogany looked good and soundedbetter, apart from an evidentlyfierce case of nerves.But, after all, full staged produc¬tions are time-consuming enter¬prises. Within its necessary scopethis No Exit provided some excit¬ing theater, the more so since theperformers had Sartre’s talkyscript to wrestle with. Often theycame out on top.Prank Barber Friday night’s latest install-,ment of the William Vaughn jMoody Lecture Series, which!was to have been a programof readings by “Two Poets and aPoet in Prose” was marred by theabsence of Katherine Anne Porter,who was unfortunately ill andhence unable to attend this lecture.Her telegram of apology for herabsence, read by Henry Rago, edi¬tor of Poetry magazine was un¬doubtedly the high point of the eve¬ning.The two poets referred to in thetitle of the presentation were An¬thony Hecht and W, D. Snodgrass,who each read several of their re¬spective writings. Mr. Hecht pre¬sented new poems from his soon-to-be-released The Hard Hours. TheHill, his first selection, was a fairlypowerful portrayal of instantaneousnausee and longing after the inno¬cence of youth.Unfortunately, this was Hecht’sbest effort in a serious vein. TheLetter was simply abrupt and a bitamateurish for a man of Hecht’saccomplishment; The Vow (a poemabout a miscarriage turned me offfrom the start as a poor imitationof Dylan Thomas, and More Light,More Light, with a fleeting refer¬ence to Goethe, and an ali-too-EARN UP TO $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or Full-shift adjusted to your school schoduto, day, might, or waeVandWORK FROM GARAGE NEAR HOME OR SCHOOL21 OR OVER, HAVE DRIVER'S LICENSECA 5-6692 or applyYEUOW CAB CO.—120 E. 18th ST. prolonged reference to the barbarities of Nazism, was simply vapid;mass murder is merely banal with¬out the powerful imagery of, say,a James Dickey (as in his recentFirebomb), and, alas, Hecht’s im¬ages do not have that same coldforce which Dickey so effectivelydisplays.MR. HCCHT, HOWEVER, re¬deemed himself with two humor¬ous poems: The Man Who MarriedMagdalene, (which was extremelyfunny; it was unfortunate the audi¬ence was too self-sonscious to givethis poem the reception it de¬served) and The Dover Bitch, awonderful parody of Matthew’ Ar¬nold’s all-too-f a miliar work. Thesewere interrupted by a lesser work,a mournful Behold the Lilies of theField, and w’ere followed by severalmore heavy-handed efforts. I foundHecht far more effective in humorthan in despair.Following Hecht’s reading, Mr.Snodgrass’ selections were quite disappointing. Leaving the Moteland A Friend, which Mr. Snodgrassintroduced as “love-hate poems.”were insufficiently conceived depic¬tions of the ambiguity of interper¬sonal emotions (Robert Greeley, toname only one, deals with this" top¬ic much more effectively, Regrad-uating the Lute was glib, and Mo¬net ■* Diatoms, preceded by someinsufferable bullshit about ClaudeMonet and his effect on the world,was dull and lacking in strong im¬agery.THE POET'S best presentationwas Spinoza vs. the Killer, in whichtines from the philosopher are in¬terposed with a remembered con¬versation in which the poet wastold by a marine how to gouge aman to death with bare bands—thisat least achieved a slight black hu¬mor. Mr. Snodgrass concluded witha few translations of Christian Mor-gonstern’s works, which are pettyenough in either language.Robert HavenCottlidbeauty salon.Jr ExportPermanent WavingHair CuttingendIff# l Stud ft. NY I4S01PHOTOGRAPHYEASY INEXPENSIVEENJOYMENT WITH ANINSTAMATIC CAMERASimple to use. We now have the newFlash Cube Instamic, Takes four flashpictures without removing cube.Come and see and Try them.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue Does beerimprove with age?0 definitely 0 definitely net 0 not indefinitelySome people have the notionthat the longer beer is aged,the better. But ask our brew-master and he’ll say, “Only upto a point.”He puts it this way: “Just continuingto store beer in layering tanks at a brew¬ery will make it continually older. Butnot continually better. Storing a case ofbeer in your basement for a couple ofmonths won’t help it any either. What’sreally important is how the beer Is aged.”If it's Beechwood Aged, it’s beer thatcan’t get any better.Of course, that rather limits thenumber of beers that qualify. In fact,you can count ’em on one finger.BudweiseiiKINO OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. . ST KKHtNEWARK • LOS ANSEIES * TAMPA * HOUSTON LAW STUDENTSGet a free copy of “The Good Samaritan And The Law’’, . . 300-page report on a symposium at the Universityof Chicago and suggested by Sentry Insurance, No obli¬gation. And you’ll also learn how to save up to $50 onauto insurance by taking a simple questionnaire, Call:JIM CRANE 374-03508124 S. Woodlawn Ave.sentrytTinsuranceTf»<» OfguAi/utionNavalResearchLaboratoryWASHINGTON, D.C.An Equal Opportunity Employer IThe Navy’s Corporate Laboratory—NRL Isengaged in research embracing practicallyall branches of physical and engineering sci¬ence and covering the entire range frombasic investigation of fundamental problemsto applied and developmental research.The Laboratory has current vacancies and acontinuing need for physicists, chemists,metallurgists, mathematicians, oceanogra¬phers, and engineers (electronic, electrical,mechanical, and civil). Persons appointedreceive the full benefits of the career CivilService.Candidates for bachelor’s, master’s and doc¬tor’s degrees in any of the above fields areinvited to schedule interviews with the NRLrepresentative who will be in theplacement office on *V. Those who for any reason are unable toschedule interviews may write to The Direc¬tor (Code 1818), Naval Research Labora¬tory, Washington, D. C. 20300. ,10 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 22, 1066LizbitesBurtonElizabeth Taylor bites RichardBurton. She pulls his hair,screams at him and spits in hisface. This is the way Shake¬speare wrote “The Taming ofthe Shrew,” and this is the wayLiz plays it in the movie theBurtons are making in Italy.Get an.intimate, on-the-setpeek-watch the tempers flareand feathers fly-in RussellBrandon’s piece in the currentissue of The Saturday EveningPost. Is Liz, the shrew, reallyoverpaid, overweight and un-dertalented? Study her pictureon the cover! Also read JohnPfeiffer’s account of his Afri¬can visit to Drs. Louis andMary Leakey, who are diggingfor traces of our pre-humanancestors of 15 million yearsago. (This article is a shortcourse in Prehistory and Pale¬ontology. )- Follow navy flierLt. j.g. Dieter Dengler in his22-day escape from a Vietnamprison camp. Wind up withthe story of Joe Namath, the$400,000 Alabama quarter¬back of the N.Y. Jets, who atage 23 is thinking of retire¬ment. All this and more in theDecember 3 issue of the Post.Buy your copy today. Theatre ReviewCan Someone Get Tired of Ireland?Considering the number and volume of the Gaelophiles on this campus, it may be dangerousto suggest that The Hostage is not a vt.y good play, but it is the simple truth. There are manymoments of unaffected fun in Brendan Behan’s second (and last) play, and the Irish variety ofsalty wit is certainly refreshing after a round of contemporary Theatre of the Depressed. Moreoften than not, however, the musi¬cal bogs down in its background,the ins and outs of Irish historyBehan’s weary and ironic ap¬proach to the Easter Rising, theTroubles, and the latter-day activ¬ities of the IRA is simply not thatfresh—we’d been through it be¬fore with W. B. Yeats—and thewistful narratives on and aboutthese events become inexpressi¬ bly tedious. One wonders: is therea literate Irishman who is notsick to death of Ireland? I forone—though acquainted withthese matters only at second- it a fair chance. For one thing,the cast needed at least anotherweek of rehearsals. Line afterline went uncapped, which accen¬tuated the loose and baggy naturehand—am through with that is- j of Behan’s play. Then again, fewland’s brutal brouhahas for life. J of the cast spoke loud and dis-Despite the play’s Longeurs, one tinctly enough for me to hear, sit-cannot say that the UT production j ting in the rear of Mandel Hall;of The Hostage last weekend gave | this, in a play which is filledmainly with talk, is unforgivableas one might ex¬pect from the number of familiar- I liiaxiu v wuxi tainStudent Composers To Present Works UHLAmcTr„i _Three UC graduate students j Tape study No. 10 by Edward I faces on stage, was considerablywill provide over half the pro- Zaida, a rerent gra<juate of De-( above UT’s average. We haveJ , i Paul. The concert is being held J come to depend on Julia Fremongram m an evening devoted to under lhe auspices of lheiIn,er.:l0 turn in a perr„r„,a„ee orthe best representative works campus Committee, Chicago Chap- professional calibre, and she didter of the International Societyfor Contemporary Music. The eve¬ning, which promises to offer aninteresting array of musical ideasby young Chicago area composers,of Chicago-area student composers.The program, to be presented atthe DePaul University CenterTheater, 25 E. Jackson, on Mon¬day, November 28 at 8:15 pm, willfeature Chamber Piece for Flute, will begin at 8:15 sharp. AdmissionCello, and Piano by Suzanne Eigen, j is free.Attraction for solo flute, and |Quartet for Piccolo Violin, Violaand Piano by Laurie Efrein, andString Trio No. 1 by Joseph Olive.Other works on the program willbe Ocfet for various instruments,by Thom Mason of NorthwesternUniversity, Saxophone Quartet byJared Spears, also of Northwest¬ern, and an electronic tape piecePOSTOfl SALE NOWSAMUEL A. BELLBUY SHELL FROM BELL'SINCE i«»PICKUP ft DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 PIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall ms today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.IM91 L Defy Ave•44-4411RESERVED SEATS NOW AT BOX-OFFICE OR BY MAIL■INTHCTMISIMR/IXIMK NOW PLAYINGWITH AN INTERNATIONAL AIL STAR CAST • PAHAVISIOH*Mr*, f he. A Mew.. Bale.KVCtj Mon: thruThura., Sun. SIN $2MRVKS.I hi. Sat AHoi. avaa. SIN SLSOMata.: Morvthru ML $2.99 11.80Mata.! fun. A Hola. $3 60 02.20 110 N. DEARBORN STREET•t Owner of lake St)fftenei I7M871Jananese Film FestivalPresents13*£it£ WOMEN OF THE NIGHTMIZOGUCH I-DirectorSAT., NOV. 26SOC. SCF. 122 7:15 8 9:3075c 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 Tikiu51st and HarperLI 8-7585 not disappoint us. Her singingvoice, unfortunately, has a heavyvibrato in the upper register,whose effect has more of the si¬mon-pure soprano than of the lowtrull she was playing. EdreneFurman was simply magnificentat showing us the two sides ofMiss Gilchrist—the social workerand the “sociable worker.”The cast’s good qualities quiteequalled their bad ones. Whatswung the balance to the debitside was James O’Reilly’s direc¬tion. Given a long play with largesmatches of unrelieved dialogue,he did nothing to liven it up. TheHostage cries out for com mediadell's arte s c h t i c k, but no:O’Reilly allowed characters to troll on and on in droning Irish accentswithout giving the audience any¬thing interesting to look at. Per¬haps O’Reilly thought that he wasbeing “true” to the playwright’sintentions; if so, be was sadlymisguided. Whatever his faults asa dramatist, it is clear that Behanwanted The Hostage to be fun,and O’Reilly gave us far too littleof that commodity.EVEN THE BLOCKING wasnoticeably clumsy. David Katzivehad designed a flexible set for theplay, utilizing two sets of steps.Unfortunately, O’Reilly’s idea ofwhat to do with the extra levelswas to get his extra actors off¬stage by means of them. So theblocking was just a matter of“upstairs, downstairs, in mylady’s chamber.” All of it com¬pletely unmotivated, of course:when the five girls playing a cho¬rus of whores are not needed, up¬stairs they go. Unaccompanied,whores mind you. I suppose theystairs they go. Unaccompaniedtheir rooms. . .So, all in all, The Hostage wasa drag. The cast worked bard, butnot long enough, while O’Reillyworked long, but not hard enough.The human material for a reall.yfine show was undoubtedly there,perhaps for the first time in agood many years. And yet I' lookforward to next quarter’s Lysis-trata with a bit of anxiety, for ifO'Reilly doesn’t dream up tentimes better stage business forthe next play, he will have an ab¬solute bomb on his hands. JuliaFremon or no Julia Fremon.David H. RichterMUSTANGS - TEMPESTS - FORDS - PONTIACSRENT-A-CARBYVofkswagens $3.95 for 12 Hrs.Plus bf, 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 M» 3-1715THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWN - $1.00Michelob and Budweiser on Tap!Don Hamilton Now Playing For Your Pleasure and DancingNovember 22, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Cambean RoomCocktail lounge at theSHERRY HOTELOpening under new management.ah football games televisedin color.Entertainment nigtitly.1725 E. 53rd ST. THE BEST SOURCE FORArtist’s MaterialsComplete Picture FramingServiceMounting; Matting Non-GlareGlass - School SuppliesBE SURE TO ASK FORWEEKLY SPECIALDUNCANS1305 E. 53rd HY 3-411110<\> STUDENT DISCOUNTON $10 OR MORE Koufax Quits BaseballMaroon Editors in ShockUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1201) East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty Discount You could almost cut thegloom with a knife. The type¬writers were silent, the phones| were still, and nobody said aj word.“I just can’t believe it,” saidMaroon managing editor DavidGumpert, ‘‘He was the best pitch¬er in baseball, the greatest whoever lived, he was my idol . .A YOUNG STAFF member en¬tered the office and sensing thedespair left the editors to them¬selves. “Koufax Quits Baseball, that'swhat the headline says,” moaned jMaroon feature editor Mark Ros¬in. “I always had a tendency toidentify with him.” Maroon musiccritic Peter Rabinowitz was in¬consolable, he just kept repeating,“First Hank Greenberg, nowSandy. .Maroon editor David Salter sug- ;gested a nationwide campaign tobring Koufax back. News editorMike Seidman said they could callit the “Maroon Save Sandy Move- jment”, but nobody got very excit¬ed. "LET'S FACE it,” said Musiceditor Ed Chikofsky, “It’s the endof an era. He was a sort of ‘boyfrom Brooklyn makesgood.’”Maroon executive editorDavid Richter sadly shook hishead, “The news knocked meover, he was like one of the guvs,a member of the tribe.”Only executive editor, David L.Aiken could smile. “Koufax?? 1have my mind on higher things.”he said.- •• .-w .> - -A *>:■••• ■ .Culture CalendarOFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SHORELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000 ARTART - INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO —| Treasures of Poland: First exhibition of| major art treasurers from Polish na-I tional collections featuring paintings,i sculpture, tapestries, and religious rega-j lia: thru Dec. 24: adults SI: childrenj and students; $.50. Japan Art Festival:' One of the largest collections of contem-j porary Japense art ever assembled, in-I eluding paintings, wood-block, prints,! calligraphy, sculpture, ceramics, lae-j querware, ironware and textiles, repre-1 senting the works of 85 of Japan’s lead¬ing artists: Nov. 4-Dec, 4. Exhibition of Jewelry by Fridl Blumenthal. Textilesby Claire Zeisler and Mosaics by Ar¬nold Zweerts: thru Dec. 18. Daily. 10-5.Thur. 10-9:30. Sun, Noon-5 Michigan &Adams. Exhibit of the works of Joa¬chim Probst Nov. 19-Dec. 17, at 2-5 pm.Baptist Graduate Student Center. 4901S. Ellis.CONCERTSCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA—Seventh Week—Thu & Fri. Nov. 24-25.Jean Martinon, cond. Wiliiard Elliot,basson, Emil Gilels. piano, Martin. LesQuatre Elements. Elliot: Bassoon. Con¬certo, Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 5.(OPEN DAWN TO DAWN)■loblif House Restaurant1342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER"The Best of All Foods"ORSON WELLS’ THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERS0NSPlus Pare Lorenti' THE CITY. Tonight at Dec Films. At Social Sciences 1M, 5*th A Umversity. At 7:1$ A t:»5 pm. M cents.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th StDO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLEO CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty DiscountJimmy’sand the University RoomRMMVBO EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNtV*«*ITY CWfNTiUPMty-Fifth end WenRemi Am. Hyde Park Medical LaboratoryOpen 9 am - 9 pm. 6 days a week5240 S. Harper 493-2000(Corner 1400 E, 53rd St.)THEATRE FIRST, INC.PRESENTSEdward Albee'sWHO'S AFRAID OFVIRGINIA WOOLF?Friday & Saturdays 8:33 p.m. — Sundays 7:30 p.m.November 18, 19, 20, 25, 24, 27, December 2, 3, 4.General Admission $1.75 — Students $1.13THE ATHENAEUM THEATRE2936 N. Southport Avenue LA 5-9761LAKE MEADOWS ICE SKATINGRINK and SKATING SCHOOLCHICAGO'S LARGEST ARTIFICIALLYFROZEN ICE SURFACE.NOW OPENPUBLIC sessions dailyClosed MondayPrivate & Class Lessons AvailableAdmission $1.00 Children 50cSat. & Sun. $1.25 and 75c33rd Street and Ellis Ave.3 Blocks East of South ParkwayPhone VI 2-7345 JESSELSOTSSMVIMe MYM PAUL POft OVtt M YIAMWITH TIM YUY MST AMO FftCSHOTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2 2870, PL 2-8190, DO 1-9186 1840 I. 59rdPEOPLE WHO KNOW CALL ONCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANINGAll Pressing Done on PremisesSilks Hand FinishedExpert Alterations and Repairs1363 E. 53rd St. PL 2-966210% STUDENT DISCOUNTNEW BOOKS OF CURRENT INTERESTThe Age of Keynesby Robert Lekachman .$6.00Greek Political Reaction to American andNato Influences by Theodore Cauloumbis $7,50Winds of Changeby Harold AAacmillan $10.00General Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. Thur-Sal Concerts: Thu, 8:15: Fri. 2Sat 8:30. $3.50-$$.00. Fri. gallery .seat-,for students $1.50 (available until 1 pmonly). Orchestra Ball Box Office: Daily9:30-6; later on concerts nights. Sun1-4. Orchestra Hail. 220 S. Michigan H\7-0362: Sun & Hoi after 5; HA 7-0409THEATERHALF A SIXPENCE—Musical eomedvstarring Dick Kailman. Opens Nov iMcVickcrs Theatre. Madison nr. State782-8230HELLO DOLLY! — David Merrick ,Broadway production starring Bet tvGrable: Gower Champion, dir Night IV8 30; Wed & Sat Matinees, 2. ClosedSun. Nightly. $3 50-$9: Matinees. $3.50-$6Schubert Theatre. 22 W Monroe. CE6-8240LIFE WITH FATHER—Comedy starring Tom Ewell. Nov. 8-Dec. 4 Nightly.8:30; Sat 6 & 9:30: Sun, 7; Closed MonS3 00-$4.00. Tvanhoe Theatre, 3000 NClark Telephone reservations accepted248-6800TYPEWRITERWe rent portable and office type¬writers and give you an option tobuy after three month*.We maintain complete *ervice for anytypewriter whether foreign or domes¬tic.Please secure information from theTypewriter Department.The University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue715 NORTH MICHIGAN AVE.CHICAGO12 • CHICAGO MAROON • November 22, 1966