Chicago Maroon FAREWELLEDITION75th Anniversary YearVol. 75-No. 60 The University of Chicago Friday, May 26, 1967Poll Finds 7% of StudentsHave Tuned in to LSDby Slade LanderAn estimated 7% of the University’s population have usedLSD, according to a recently completely Maroon survey. Alarger number, about 19%, have used other drugs such asmarijuana. , : Bookstore To Add Books;Will Close Out on ClothesThe estimates are based uponquestionaires sent out to 220 ran¬domly selected students in the Uni¬versity. One hundred twenty stu¬dents replied. The UC bookstore will beremodeled to display approx¬imately 10,000 more generalbooks by fall quarter.An area in the southeast sectionof the store will be reworked for| the new display. The stock ofAmong those students who had me“ s and women’s clothing curnot taken LSD, the use of otherthree of their six closest friendsalso taking the drug.there is beingrently displayedclosed out.According to Frederick Hughes,manager of the bookstore, theEMPTYING OUT: Bras and Levi s wiland Levi-Strauss. r " f ,soon make way for Balzacdrugs strongly influenced their de-The survey indicates, that the sire to take LSD. Eleven of theuse of LSD is confined to a small twenty-four students who had usedsegment of the University popula- other drugs said they would like to clothes will be moved out within ation. Seventeen percent of the re- take LSD while only twelve of the month. Half the stock has alreadyspondents said that they had had ninety-four students who had not been sold.the opportunity to take the drug, taken other drugs said they would HUGHES SAID that estimatesOnly 20% said that they knew of like to take LSD. ! would be obtained soon from Build-any other students who had taken There is also a strong correlation' *?g ?nd Glrounds 00 the F,051,0^ re' lmISD mere is aiso a strong correlation piacmg ^e present wall shelves , . . ... . ,’ between the use of other drugs and book fixtures Racks will also ' larged and improved display of. store committee, remarked, Er-Howevcr, 20% of the respondants the opportunity to take LSD. But, . . . .. jor step in improving the present | eryone agrees that we need a newwho had not taken LSD said that; surprisingly enough, almost halL .<There will be some decrease in enterPise ”they would like to if the opportuni- the students who take other drugs fjf „ „ h noted ut there general books grew out of a seriesty presented itself. Some stipulated) and who have had the opportunity P ’ . 8 satisfaction for the of meetings between the student-that they would only take the drug| to have declined it. >> n aid the chan«e over *acuby committee on the bookstoreunder medicine supervision. There campus, tie saia cne cnange-over < representatives of the storedefinite correlation between No student claimed that he had a would permit more categories and ana representatives ot cne store- bookstore. However, the student-faculty committee and the book¬store believe the present one canbe made much better. This is amajor step in improving the pres-the number of LSD users a student desire 1° experiment with addictive titles to be placed on the floor.knows and his desire to take LSD.Or. in other words, the more usersa student knows the more likely itis that he will want to take LSD.But strangely enough, the num¬ber of close friends does not seemto influence susceptibility to thedrug. Even among the LSD users,none claimed to have more than drugs such as heroin RICHARD C. WADE, professor of en* enterPr»se.”1 Besides the remodelingThe recommendation for the en-' history and chairman of the book-To Advise on Campus Student LifeNew Student-Faculty Committee OK’dby John MoscowPresident George W. BeadlePass-Fail Suggested approved, Wednesday, thew creation of a new faculty-stu-For Common Core denl c«mmittee k> deal w“hnon-academic student affairs. Thea ■ f committee, to be called the Advi-AflCl Uther V.0UrS6S sory Faculty-Student Committee onCampus Student Life, was recom-The Committee on Grades mended by the Council of the Facul-has recommended that a num- ^ Senate as a result of the Page! Committee report.ber of measures involving pass That report called for greater(P) and no credit (N) grading student participation in all areas ofbe implemented in common year, I lenity life, with students fur-divisional core, and electivecourses in the College.The recommendations were madein the Committee’s second and fi¬nal report on grading in the Col¬lege, which was submitted yester¬day to the College Council. Accord¬ing to Dean of the College WayneC. Booth, approval or rejection ofthe report will come at the nextCollege Council meeting.THE COMMITTEE'S first report, nishing information to committees,and sitting on those committees aswell. In its reference to a campuslife committee the Page committeesaid: “In those areas in which stu- work,there will be some work on thefood section to improve the appear¬ance of the repairs installed lastmonth. The repairs 'were madeafter pile-driving on an excavationbehind opened up cracks in thewall and ceiling.Hughes and University architectJ. Lee Jones both said that thebuilding is stable now. Jones said.“There is no problem whatsoever”about further damage to the build¬ing.George W. Beadle Robert G. Pagedents are most affected and mostcompetent, this committee would another wasted advisory committee proposals. On a substantial and sig-establish policy, subject to the tbrown as a SOp to the students,! nificant area of University life theusual review mechanisms of the wbo are demanding legitimate pow- Council did act. The CommitteeUniversity. In other matters^ the j er jn [be University.” j will be what it makes of itself. If itcommittee would be advisory.” As GEORGE J. STIGLER, econom- does a good job then we’ll see whatestablished by the President, the jcs professor and spokesman for we can do, about expanding studentcommittee will only be advisory. the Councjif disagreed. “The com-1 power.approved bv the Council earlv this IT WILL CONSIST of five faculty mittee report was merely a state- Dr. Robert Page, chairman ofquarter had concluded hat grades members’ the Dean of Students ment of goals, and ends for the, the Page committee, agreed withquarter, nan conciuaea mat graces who will serve as chairman, and 1 — *in the College are lower than j five students, to be elected by somegrades at comparable schools and undecided method. It willhad recommended some alteration! ^ tQ meet early next autumn>unless delays occur.Students CriticalStudents on the Page committee University, not a set of concrete (Continued on Page Seven) Bookstore Stinks—But Cause Is BombThe air of dissatisfactionthat generally surrounds thebookstore changed mysterious¬ly Thursday afternoon into anunavoidable and disagreeable odorthat drove the customers away in, crowds.i The odor was first noticed shortlybefore thy noon rush, and effective-, ly cleared the store in a matter ofminutes. Its origin was unknownbut employees fleeing down thestairs from the office maintainedthat the air was worse up therethan on the first floor. Other strongpockets were noted in the book andlamp departmentsASKED to comment on thesource of the odor John Rule, sta-(Continued on Page Eleven)in the College’s grading policies.The second report, completed lastmonth, specifies exactly what thealterations should be. Seminar on Middle East Setthe second report, changes in cur¬rent grading practices may go intoeffect as early as the coming aca¬demic year.Specifically; the report recom¬mends that: • The Center for Policy Studywere extremely critical of the wm hold a special seminar onCouncil’s actions in “merely” es- pIIrrpnt Arah-Tsrafdi crisistablishing the one committee. Jeff j current Arab Israeli cr S SBlum, SG President, said “The re-'on Thursday, June 1, in thesponse to the Page Committee re¬port by the President and the Coun¬cil of the Senate is a totally inade¬quate response to a basically inade- Weymouth Kirkland Courtroom ofthe University’s Law School.The seminar will begin at 4:30„ . . pm. Speakers will include Leonardshould offerC°”mryearlonr“ce 1 The Pa8e slated explicitly Professor and chairman of j members of the faculty to provide Jlions in which the erodes used for that the Standing Committee on! «“ of political science , forum for he examination ot ma.jalstudenU are P Jd N Each sto- i Student Affairs •‘would establish1 and WtUiam R. Polk -Professor of | jor issues affecting the nation. Dur- jdent should lie eoUtied to take one Policy subject to the usual review history and director of the Center ,„g the past year, the Center hassuch course Of his OT-nchoostagi mechanisms of the University” tol*>r Middle Eastern Studies at the | sponsored an intensive studySections should be small in sizewith close personal evaluation ofeach student’s performance. are expected to participate in the, Near and Middle Eastern history,seminar, which will be open to the: languages and cultures. He speaks,public. Charles U. Daly, Vice- reads, and writes Arabic fluently.President for Development andPublic Affairs and director of the j.Center or Policy Study, will pre-11side.Both Binder and Polk are fellowsof the Center for Policy Study,! ||which was established in 1966 by 29ofsome matters. The Council of the | University, and director of the Ad- china.Senate has turned this paradigm of j lai s^e' ®n^on InstlUlte °* Inteina-moderate action into an “Advisory tional Affairs.Faculty-Student Committee on Stu-I A number of off-campus experts Binder is a specialist in NearEastern and Middle Eastern poll- |tics and in Islamic culture and po- j. This is the last issue ofthe spring quarter. TheMaroon will publish fourissues during the summer—Friday, June 30 and everysecond Friday thereafter.Standard advertising ratesand deadlines will apply.The Maroon will resumenormal publication for the1967-68 academic year onFriday, September 29.A ULUItJ-UUIUtlU VUUUUIVIVG — *■ * . _ II • Ulo f(Continued on Page Seven) ' dent Affairs/' which will merely be on the Near and Middle East also; 1 ticai thought. Po k is a sc r ..-.vXv.-r-wwWiS. African Prof PredictsDemise of Apartheidsaid Hutt, “not con-by Alfred Marcus \ judice,”A former South African uni- demned.”versity professor and member Hutt said the origin of South Afri-Of the Progressive Party there can prejudice is intimately connect-A . , ,. . ed to developments in the South Af-t°ld a s p a l s e audience at rjcan jabor movement. Both theBreasted Hall Tuesday night that 1907 and the 1926 Colored Bar Acts $250,000 for Summer Health ProjectOEO Awards Grant to UC 'by Jessica Siegel out-patient departments, and pri-1 of SHO’s took place in Los Angelof!The Office Of Economic Op- »*» physicians to engage in all as. | i" October 1965. Soon after that UkT'* I nontc nf nmaltn C31*€ 111 Ch)C3S^ S ^H«i rvf nhifadn tvAC tArmod“South Africa is going to have . , , . . pects of healthportumty has awarded a grant (siUms.of $250,000 to the University’sStudent Health Organizationfor a Summer Student Health Pro¬ject to focus on the problems ofhealth and health care of the urbana! were passed because of extensive p^,.Head Start is appropriating$160,000 of the money and theNeighborhood Youth Corps the re¬maining $90,000.genuine multi-racial society in the labor agitation, he said,future.”William H. Hutt, a visiting pro- "W. H. ANDREWS. THE longfessor of economics at Rockford time President of the South AfricanCollege, made the prediction while Communist Party while it wasspeaking on “The Economics of still legal,” said Hutt, “consideredApartheid.” the 1926 Colored Bar Act the great-"THE FUTURE prosperity of est triumph of his life.”South Africa, Hutt said, will de-. During the boom of the 1930’s,pend on racial integration. There jjutt said, the economic conditionare 17 billion people in South Afri- 0f jj,e Africans started to improve,ca, he explained. Of these twelve Their women started working as Fifty high school students fromthe Neighborhood Youth Corps pro¬grams will also assist as salaried“interns.” These students are inter¬ested in science careers and willattend a special biomedical careersseminar program.Student Involvement SHO of Chicago was formed.Last summer, the University ofSouthern California Medical Schboilsponsored the first Summer Sliltdent Health Project. This year theLC School of Medicine and Albert;'Einstein College of Medicine- inNew York are sponsoring similafprograms. ] *and a half billion of them are Africans, and only three and a half mil¬lion are whites. The rest of the peo¬ple Hutt said, are of mixed ances¬try or are Asiatics. Only the smallminority of full whites are given allof the priviledges of citizenship inSouth Africa.Trade Important“Japanese,” said Hutt, “carrylittle cards and are given the statusof honorary whites because SouthAfrican trade with Japan is veryimportant.”Among the whites there are twogroups, said Hutt. Forty five percent are the descendants of Englishsettlers and speak English whilethe other fifty-five per cent are thedescendents of the earlier Dutchsettlers and speak Afrikaans.The Afrikaaners, according toHutt, are very religious people andthey receive a powerful religiousconfirmation for their prejudice.“They are to be pitied for this pre- THERE ARE now organizations:Students will be Involved in lead in Boston, Cleveland, San Francis®ITTeStudenTHealth Organizations l>°iso,ning detection and prevention, | co, and Palo Atlo, as well as Lo||(SHO) is a nationwide nZork rt \ ™>rk with 1Angelos, Y°rk and Chicago.students of nursing, medicine, den-1 ce”ts' and programs on housing, ^hicag<).s Summer Student, and sanitation. Many of the sum-1 v-nicago s summer siuuent,.tistry, dental hygiene, and social m<vr antivities will he continued af Health Project is being runswork. The local branch is situated <merf.acr Ues „ . ^°nU u, ~. at" ;0;miv bv Dr Robert G Pase *•>■#o« CaIiaai h«ra ter the Summer Project is ended. joimiy oy ur. nooen u. rage,san|at the School of Medicine here. associate professor in the Depart :v-DURING the Summer Project, The Student Health Organization ment 0f Medicine and Fitzhu ’H100 students will be placed with of Chicago was formed two years. Mullen, a third-year medicaldomestics and because of the great; Head Start schools, Chicago Board ( ago to involve health-science stu- dent. .£.demand for labor their men found of Health facilities, neighborhood dents in public health care prob-jit easier to find jobs. | health centers, University and city lems. The first national assembly According to Mullen, “SHO is aneffort to involve health-science stu.dents in an interdisciplinary ajproa eh to com munity health prob■ lems.SG Loan Fund Ended for this YearThe Student Government(SG) loan fund has been discon¬tinued for the remainder ofthe quarter, but will be backin operation, next fall, accord¬ing to SG academic affairschairman Ed Birnbaum. IBirnbaum said that it was nor¬mal procedure to close the fundearly in the spring quarter so thatall outstanding loans may be col¬lected. He said that the entire $2000fund had been loaned out. So far, I$800 has been returned to the fund.Under current practices, themoney for the fund is withdrawn by the SG president from the bursar.The president is personally chargedwith returning ail of the money atthe end of spring quarter. But theonly means he has for compellingstudents to return their loans is tothreaten them with a delay in reg¬istration until the loan is repaid.SG is investigating alternativeways by which the loan fund can befinanced and operated, Birnbaumsaid. One possibility is for the bur¬sar to run the service, but Birn¬baum termed this “doubtful.’*He said that the bursar’s officewould probably have to hire anoth¬er employee if it were to handle theservice. Presently the bursarmakes only emergency loans to students. It takes two days to pro-1 cess an emergency loan.The student co-op and a new rec¬ognized student organization, theChicago Student Agencies, havei both volunteered to do the job.Birnbaum said the co-op wantedi the service in order to attract stu¬dents to its bookstore in the Rey¬nolds Club basement. Chicago Stu¬dent Agencies, which is run by agroup of former SG officers, hasalso offered to run the charterflight service on contract to SG.According to Birnbaum, the mon¬ey for next year’s loan fund willprobabiy come from either the bur¬sar or charter flight reserves. “S'tudent Health Project is aimedas both a service and an educational experience—service in the sense'of developing new and radical ap-proaches to community healthproblems, education in the sense^o.developing expertise on a studentand university leve in problem.sjofAmerica’s poor communities.'7th INTERNATIONAL FESTIVALHyde Park Methodist Church(54th and Blackstone)Cuisine—Fashions—EntertainmentMay 26 and 27—5:30 to 9 p.m.■m .} v "IThe Spring Quarter Examination Schedulefry:' : \ V:.;;',: *~**\,, ' „ t&KMfmHmxfh *The time and place of examinations not listed below will be< ‘announced by instructors. Evening anc 1 Saturday classes, unlessotherwise announced by the instructor ■, will have examinationsduring regular class hours. Please note room assignments forsit examinations listed.Art 233 Thur June e 4-6 Lx6■Art 234 Wed June 7 1:30-3:30 GoH 209Art 240 Mon June 5 8-10 Cl 10Art 250 ; Fri June 9 10:30-12:30 E 139Biology i 13 Fri June 9 10:30-12:30 STL 8Biology 114 81 Fri June 9 10:30-12:30 SS 107Biology 114 02 Wed June 7 1:30-3:30 K 110Biology 115 Thur June 8 8-10 A 201Biology 116 Wed June 7 1:30-3:30 K 103Biology 117 Thur June 8 10:30-12:30 J 105Biology 118 01 & 02 T ues .'une 6 8:30-10:30 Z 14Biology 119 Thur June 8 10:30-12:30 SFL 8Biology 120 Thur June 8 1:30-3:30 SFL6Biology 121 Moo June 5 8-10 Rks N-18Biology 150 Wed June 7 4-6 Ro 2Biology 200 Fri June 9 8-10 B 106, Z14Biology 203 Mon June 5 , 8-10 B 106Eotany 206 Wed June 7 1:30-3:30 8 105Chemistry 107 t Fri June 9 8-10 E 133Chemistry 133Chemistry 222 Fri June 9 8-10 K 103Thur June 8 18-10 K 103Chemistry 243 Fri June 9 1:30-3:30 GHJ208Chemistry 263 Mon June 5 8-10 K 100Chinese 116 Fri June 9 10:30-12:30 Ro 26Chinese 203 Wed June 7 1:30-3:30 Ab 133Chinese 213 Mon June 5 8-10 Or 210Chinese 246=History 290 Thur June 8 4-6 Ry 358Czech. 203 Mon June 5 ' 8-10 F 407English 203 91 Mon June 5 } 10:30-12:30 SS 105Wi English 221 Thur June 8 ; 10:30-12:30 Cl 20English 229 ■ Wed June 7 : 4-6■ Wb 200English 237 Tues June 6 8-10 S 106English 240 Tues June 6 12:30-2:30 ::0«7 SS 105English 246 ’ Wed June 7 1:30-3:30 i ‘ Ro 27English 255 Wed June 7 8-10 Wb 202English 265 ' Mon June 5 8-10 S 400English 273 Fri June 9 • 1:30-3:30 , Cl 10' English ^®5 r Fri June 9 . 10:30-12:30 Wb 102English ~9 Thur June 6 4-6 Cl 20French 1 TuesJune 6 M 5 K 107- French 1-11 ' Tues June 6 '■■-:■■ S 106French H Tues June 6 3-6 Cl 11French III Tues June 6 3 6 Ry 251French 205 Fri June 9 8-10 SS 107■ French 209 Tues June 6 12:30-2:30 G 8 116French 217 Wed June 7 1:30-3:30 SS 108French 236 Mon June 5:\ 1:30-3:30 Wb 103Geography 202 Fri June 9 1:30-3:30 Ro 28Geography 256 Thur June 8 8-10 Ro 41Geography 22. Thur June 8 n* >7.' o?l Ro 28Geophysical■ - Sciences • 33 . Fn June 9 • 0 Ro 27GeophysicalSciences 229 Fri June 9 10:30-12:30 Ro 33• Geophysicalv Sciences 236 Fri June 9 10:30-12:30 W 204..V>; ; GeophysicalSciences 274 ' -Tues June 6- ; 12:30-2:30 ' Ro 27GeophysicalSciences 283 » Ro 39 ■ ■ -History 131-132-133History 203History 213History 247=Soc. Sci. 247History 2S0=N.C.D. 250History 253=N.C.D. 219=Phil. 21*History 263History 273History 276History 283=Soc. Sci 242History 290=Chinese 246History 294Humanities 103Humanities 105Humanities 106Humanities 109 01Humanities 109 92Humanities 206Humanities 209 Mon June 5Thor June 8Tues June 6Thur June 8Mon June 5 1:30-4:308-1012:30-2:301:30-3:308-10 LMHSS 108S 106SS 106Ro 3Fri June 9Mon June 5Wed June 7Fri June 9Tues June 6Thur June 8Wert June 7Wed June 7Wed June 7Wed June 7Wed June 7Fri June 9Wed June 7Wed June 7 1:30-3:308-101:30-3:301:30-3:308:30-10:300-100-100-101:30-3:3010:30-12:308-1010:30-12:30Humanities 232=MusicHumanities 237=Art 233=Mus 264Humanities 239Humanities 242 01Humanities 242 82Humanities 267Humanities 286=1 & MIdeas 8< Methods 213=Hum 286Ideas & Methods 253Italian 101 91=1-11Italian 205 126 Fri June 9 10:30-12:30 L* 3S 106Ato 101Ro 27ro aRy 350F 103LMlHK 103E 130K 304K 304■ B 106Var A:K 100. Ro 2Var B: K 107Lx 5Thur June 0Thur June 8Mon June 5Thur June 6Thur June 8213 Fri June 9 4-64-60-101:30-3:301:30-3:301:30-3:30 Lx 6Lx 4Lx IWO 103Lx 3BE 100Fri June 9Wed June 7Wed June 7Wed June 7 1:30-3:3010:30-12:304-60-10 EE 100Ro 26BE 17C» 10Japanese 113Japanese 203Japanese 213Japanese 257 Fri June 9Wed June 7A/ton June 5Thur June 8 10:30-12:301:30-3:306-1010:30-12:30 F 300Or 200Or 226Or 200German 103 ~- GwminliwfGerman 232German 233German 290Greek. 103 01Greek 103 02G reek 206Greek 2’7 Tues June 6T ues June 6Fri June 9Mon June 5Wed June 7Mon June 51 Fri June 9Tues June 6Mon June 5 3-6 . ,V.10:30-12 30,-1 30-3:308-101:30-3:3012:30-2:30 *1:30 3:30 : LMHMb 202.Wb 203Wb 207Ab 133BE 17Wb 103Cl 16Clio Latin 103Latin 206Latin 265MathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematics 102 51103 11103 12103 21103 31103 51103 61151 51152 12152 21152 32152 42153 12153 21153 31153 32153 41153 42153 51153 53153 61153 71203 61204 52205 41205 42205 51250 11251 32252 51253 21253 42261 12280 11285 41 Mon June 5Fri June 9Wert June 9Mon June 5Fri June 9Thur June 8Mon June 5Fri June 9Wed June 7Wed June 7Tue9 June 6Thur June 8Mon June 5Thur June 8Thur June 8Thur June 8Mon June 5Fri June 9Thur June 8Tues June 6Wed June 7Wed June 7Wed June 7Wed June 7Fri June 9Wed June 7Thur June 8Tues June 6Mon June 5Mon June 5Fri June 9Thur June 8Thur June 8Mon June 5Fri June 9Thur June 8Fri June 9Tues June 6 8-1010:30-12:301:30-3:30 Cl 16Cl 26SS 107 Music 126=Humanities 282 Fri June 9 10:30-12:30 Lx 5Music 132 Wed June 7 10:30-12:30 WWis 20Music 137 Tues June 6 8-14 Mos 101Music 142 Wed June 7 1:30-3:30 Mus 181Music 147 Thur June# 1:30-3:38 Mus 10®Music 153 Thur June 8 48 Mus 101Music 203 Mon June 5 8-10 Mus 20!}:Music 213 Thur June 8 1:38-3:30 Mus 20Music 223 Thur June 8 46 Mus 201Musilc 233 Thur June# 8-18 Mus 201Musk: 264=Art 230= Hum 237 Thur June 8 48 Lx*.N.C.O. 113 Wed June 7 1:383.30 BE "l0N.C.D. 204 Thur June# 1:308:38 RO 27-N.C.D. 219=Hist 253=PhM 219 Fri June 9 1:383:30 Lx3N.C.O. 222 Thur June 8 10:3812:30 Ro 2N.C.D. 223 Thur June 8 1:383:30 BE 17N.C.D. 240=Phil 240 Thur June 8 10:3812:30 Ry 362N.C.D. 252 Thur June 8 44 RO 2N.C.D. 255=History Mon June 5 810 Ro 2}Norwegian 103 81 Wed June 7 46 Wb 103Philosophy 219=N.C.D.2l9=HiSt 253 Fri June 9 1:383:30 Lx 3Philospphy 233 Wen June 7 1:383:30 BE 9Philosophy 236 Thur June 8 10:3812:30 AC 133Philosophy 240=N.C.D. 240 Thur June 8 10:3812:30 R y: 34C<'i:Philosophy 253 Thur June 8 4-6 ci h;Philosophy 262 Thur June 8 1:383:30 K 183Physical Science 107 Mon June 5 10:3812:30 LMH*Physical Science 110 Tues June 6 12:382:30 Ro 2rPhysical Science 117 Thur June 8 810 ' E 133Physics 113 Mon June 5 10:3812:30 E 133Physics 123 Wed June 7 1:383:30 E 133Physics 133 Thur June 8 10:3812:30 ■' t:Physics 217 Fri June 9 10:3812:30 E 203Physics 227 .Mon June 5 810 ■- . E 202Political Science 201 Mon June 5 10:3812:30 Wc 2;Political Science 205 Mon June 5 810 K 10Psychology 203 Thur June 1 810 Psy B 102IU.OV-J4. JV :8-10 E 308 Sociology 202 Mon June 5 810 Psy B108810 E 200 Psychology 231 Thur June 8 1:30-3:30 Psy B .'<18;.8-1010:30-12:30 E 203E 305 Public Affairs 212=Econ. 200 Thur June 8 10:30-12:3010:30-12:301:383:30 £ 202E 207 Russian 103= l-G Tues June 6 3-5 K 18312:382:30 K 103 Russian 153=I-S Mon June 5 810 Cljl'lfi8-10 € 207 Russian 203=11-111 Fri June 9 10:30-12:30 Ry 358;8-10 E 300 Russian 206 Fri June 9 10:3812:30 fi10:30-12:30 E 203 Russian 259 Wed June 7 1:383:30 Lx 44-6 E 308 Russian 276 Mon June 5 4-6 Ct 108108-10 E 305E 206 Social Sciences 111-112-113 Tues Jure 6 8:3811 LMH10:30-12:30 Z 14 Social Sciences 125 Fri June 9 4-6 ‘ • = LMH8-10 E 312 Social Sciences 242 Tues June 6 8:30-10:30 Ro 212:30-2:30 E 203 Social Sciences 247=Ab 13310:3812:30 E 203 Hst 247 Thur June 8 1:389:3010:30-12:30 E 305 Social Sciences 252 Wed June 7 1:383:3010:30-12:30 Ry 251 Social Sciences 263 Thur June 8 810 ■■1 383:30 Ry 358 Social Sciences 274 Thur June 8 1:383:30 SS.:or1:383:301:30-3:30 E 207Ry 291 Social Sciences 279=Econ 290 Tues June 6 12:30-2:30 Rt1:30-3:3012:30-2:30 E 305Ry 358 Sociology 2i72=Psychology 220 AAon Juno 5 8J0 Psy B ,10710:30-12:30 E 202 Sociology 211 Wed June 7 4-6 At)10:3812:30 Z 14 Sociology 213 Thur June 8 10:3812:30 SS 1728-10 E 203 South Slavic 203 Tues June 6 12:30-2:30 ■-. K 30410:3812:30 E 207 Spanish 1, I II Toes June 6 3-6 A4 6 E 206 Spanish Ml Tues June 6 3-6 Cl 208-10 E 305 Spanish 209 Wed June 7 4-6 Wb 4021:30-3:30 Ry 251 Statistics 200 01 Wed June 7 1:30-3:30 ' Rp 78-10 E 206 Swedish 103 01 Fri June 9 810 Wb 1C-810 E 207 Swedish 203 Fri June 9 1:383:30 Wb 409A12:30-2:30 Ry 362 Swedish 235 Wed June 7 4-6 Wb 20/Dean Playe Spells Out PolicyUC Will Not Allow Pot in Dormsby Roger BlackGeorge L. Playe, chairman of the committee on undergraduate discipline and dean ofundergraduate students, declared Tuesday that the University will not allow the use of LSDor mariuana in University housing. Speaking before 150 students in Reynolds Club, Playesaid flatly that taking drugs is “not appropriate to the academic community.’'He would not, however, say whatwill happen to students caught withdrugs. The University has no abso¬lute policy on drugs and, accordingto Playe, recommendations that thecommittee makes to the Dean ofStudents vary with the circum¬stances in each case.PLAYE INDICATED that stu¬dents will not necessarily be sus¬pended for a first offence, but thatsuspension probably would resultfrom being caught a second time.The disciplinary committee metwith students in response to grow¬ing uncertainty resulting from thesharp rise in drug cases and the'rumors of inconsistent treatment ofthem. It is the policy of the com-1mittee not to discuss any particularcase without the consent of the stu-1dent involved, and Playe repeated¬ly refused to give details of the re¬cent decisions.Playe showed surprise at the con¬fusions among students presentover what to expect from the Uni¬versity. He said that marijana andLSD were dangerous drugs, and inbuying them, students establish un¬fortunate connections with the un¬derworld, and draw police to thecampus George L. Playedent, challenged the idea that thedrugs are dangerous, at least ascompared to cigarettes or alcohol.He asked Playe why he was smok-Later Playe said that a clearer j ing a pipe. Playe replied, “Unfortu-statement of University policy on nately I am hooked—I make nodrugs than was made last yearwould be made during OrientationWeek next fall.Students at the meeting objectedstrongly to Playe’s statement thatLSD and pot were not appropriatejto UC, and to the allegation thatthey were dangerous drugs. One istudent said that these drugs, infact, added to the academic experi-1ence. He asked Playe and JamesE- Newman, the outgoing assistant!dean of students, if they had evertried them. They said that they hadnot.'I am Hooked/ Dean SaysSteve Kindred, a fourth-year stu- bones about it.” Playe and Newman cited the factj that LSD has tripped off latentpsychoses in some cases. Dr. Rich¬ard H. Moy, director of UniversityHealth Services, estimated that ahalf a dozen students have beentreated for “toxic reactions” toLSD during Che last two years.Newman commented, “If youwant to commit suicide, then thatisn’t your business.”How the Committee WorksAccording to a statement read by} Playe at the beginning of the meet-, ing, students violating Universityregulations come to the attention olthe disciplinary committee throughan agent of the University (e g., afaculty member, dean, residenthead, or campus policeman) whorefers them to the dean of undergraduate students (Playe). He mustalso inform the student and reportto the dean what the student said.The dean then decides whether thereport is founded on more thanhearsay and whether the commit¬tee should act on it.A student questioned Whetherresident heads should be allowed toenter a student’s room without hisknowledge. Newman answered, “Iwrote a letter to the Maroon a cou¬ple of weeks ago at the time of the(Continued on Page Eleven)MEET YOUR PERFECT DATE!You too can be amongst the thousands of satisfied adults. LetDateline Electronic computers programmed for women ages 18 to45 and men 18 to 55 take the guess work out of dating.Continuous matching with a new, expanded program with enroll¬ment fees reduced to $3.00 for adults ages 18 to 27, and $5.00 foradults over 27.For quick results send for your DATELINE ELECTRONICquestionnaire today. No obligation. RESEARCH INC. (CM)Strictly confidential. P.O. Box 369,Name „ Chicago, III. 60645Address .. For Add. Info. CallCity State Zip Code.... 271-3133IMAGEA FUTURISTIC SYNTHESISFROM LONDON AT UC l HYDE PARK BOOKSHOPSIN ORDER TO ALLOW TIME FOR UTMOST CARETO BE LAVISHED UPON ITS PRODUCTIONCAP & GOWNThe University of Chicago YearbookWILL BE DISTRIBUTED IN THE FAU. BOOKS Will BE MAILED FREE OFCHARGE TO STUDENTS WHO HAVE PURCHASED THEM AND WHO WillNOT BE HERE AT THAT TIME. PLEASE SEND NAME AND AUTUMN ADDRESSTO C & G OFFICE, INH, OR CAll STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE, X3591. Paper Staff PicketsIn DePaul Protestby David E. GumpertNearly sixty DePaul Univer¬sity students halted two daysof picketing and sitting in atthe Downtown campus Wed¬nesday after the university agreedto examine the circumstances sur¬rounding the appointment of thei student newspaper’s next editor-in-chief.MOST OF THE demonstratorsj were members of The DePaulia,j the student newspaper at DePaul.They were protesting the method ofi selection of next year’*, editor, con-11 tending that the paper’s faculty ad-| viser had ignored the editors’ rec¬ommendation and instead chosen| someone who had less than a yearof previous newspaper experience.Picketing outside and a sit-in inthe university president’s office be¬gan Monday afternoon after De-Paul’s vice president for studentaffairs, Father Theodore Wengler,refused a student request to form a student-faculty committee to lookinto the appointment. According toFather Spengler, the reason it wasturned down was because “itturned from a request to a demandand the university will not take ac¬tion under demand or threat.”The current business manager ofthe DePaulia, Garlan Conley,claimed, however, that FatherWengler turned down their requestfor a student-faculty committeefirst, and that only after his deci¬sion did they threaten to picket andsit in.THE DEMONSTRATION waspeaceful and orderly, and the uni¬versity made no attempt to removeapproximately 25 students whospend Monday and Tuesday nightsin the president’s office. The stu¬dents left Wednesday afternoon fol¬lowing a promise by Father Wen¬gler that more meetings would beheld with the students to considertheir grievances.NEW AND INTERESTING NOVELSDiary of a Mad Housewife by Sue Kaufman $5.95The Plot by Irving Wallace $6.95The Thousand Hour Day by W. S. Kuniczak $7.95Other People's Money by Jerome Weindman .... $6.95General Book DepartmentUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEDON’T READ THIS AD!!(Or You'll Never Know Who# ThisFM Radio Sounds Like)$79.95LISTEN TO IT!!(It's Just the Best FM Radio Made)AtJlhuiOiaft48 E. Oak DE 7-41502035 W. 95th St. PR 9-6500May 26, 1967 CHICAGO MAROON • 3Former Senator Speaks at law SchoolAcademics Forget Equity and Justice—Douglasby Sydney UngerFormer Illinois Senator Paul H. Douglas lashed out at his academic colleagues Wednesdayfor “forgetting equity and justice and thinking only of economic growth.” Douglas spoke on“The Problem of Tax Loopholes, or My Eighteen Years in a Quandary and How It Grew,”at the Law School.The venerable ex-Senator empha¬sized that “academic scholars donot step in to help the victim (theAmerican public), but teach theable minds of the nation how tomake money by helping wealthyclients avoid taxes and beat thegovernment.”DOUGLAS, WHO served on theSenate Finance Committee from1955-1966, called the tax code “notunderstandable as it is written”and stressed that it is “riddled withinjustices.” Three times during hisspeech before an audience of about;200 people in the Law School audi-;torium, Douglas stated that he hadcontinually fough* for one basicprinciple—“that people with equalnet incomes should pay equal tax¬es.”Correcting AbusesDouglas also told of the efforts bythe then Senator Humphrey andhimself to correct the “abuses thatwere arising in the tax code.” Theseabuses vyere a result of changes‘necessitated by the increase in theMilitary Budget (from $14 billion to$42 billion)” due to the KoreanWar. Douglas noted that their chiefopponents were Senators WalterGeorge, Eugene Milliken and TomConnolly. Connolly, (Dem.—Texas)according to Douglas, “treated dis¬senters, especially those from theNorth as pre-Civil War slaves fromthe ‘Cotton Kingdom’.” Douglasstated that later, when he joined theSenate Finance Committee, his chiefally was Sen. Albert Gore (Tenn.)Douglas claimed that the tax sys- Paul H. Douglastern appeared to be “retrogres-sive.” He noted that in 1955, “onlyone-half of the Public Income wassubect to taxation and the basic$600 exemption made up only asmall part of this percentage.” Inhis investigations he found that oneman who had earned $26 millionand five others who had earned $5million, had paid no taxes, and“one man who had earned $1 mil¬lion a year since 1948 had not hadto pay any taxes.” Douglas saidthat “the uppermost income groups(over $200,000) actually paid only25% of their income and not 90 or95%.” THE FIRST ABUSE Douglas not¬ed was “the Failure to Report Divi¬dends and Interest.” In a study hemade in 1959, Douglas found thatthis practice cost the governmentclose to $1 billion in revenue. Com¬menting on reaction to the proposal(made by Sen. Gore and him¬self) to use a withholding plan (20&of all interest and dividends wouldbe withheld) to aid in governmentcollection. Douglas stated that hereceived 65,000 letters—“thelargest number of letters since thePresident (Truman) fired Mac-Arthur.” Many of the letters calledhis action “a communist scheme toconfiscate all capital.” “The fact| that most people had been lead tobelieve this was a new tax wasproof that they weren't presentlypaying it.” He recalled that theproposal was defeated in the Fin¬ance Committee (5-11) and then re¬ceived only twenty votes in theSenate. The fact that no Econo¬mists spoke up for the proposalmade him feel “that Senator Goreand I had been allowed to die on aeconomic Berlin Wall.”O. I AllowanceThe second abuse listed was theThe secod abse listed was the“Accelerated Depreciation Allow¬ ance” given to certain indus¬tries—in particular the oil industry.The attempts or Douglas and Goreto eliminate this abuse were so“snowed under in the finance Com¬mittee” that Douglas claims he gotthe feeling new Committee mem¬bers had to “take a secret vow touphold the Depreciation Allow¬ances.” Douglas noted that the reac¬tion of Economists to this abuse Jwas “pleasure that one group hadbeat the government.” He statedthat he was about as popularamong businessmen as revenueagents trying to put down moonshin-ing in Appalachia” Each time he jbrought up this issue, Douglas felthe was “marching brave soldiershis supporters into the Valley ofPolitical Death.” He noted that inorder to shield his supporters hebegan calling for a voice vote rath¬er than a roll call vote. Otherabuses listed by Douglas were:• Capital gains tax• Loss of revenue due to non¬taxation of the increased value ofproperty that is being inherited• Stock Options—which he called“an anti-social use of the Capitalgains principle.”• Excessive depreciation allow¬ance on buildings and other realestate• Excessive allowances for traveland entertainment• The non-taxation of imputedrent • Abuses in joint-income tax re¬turns—Douglas commented that“matrimony appears to be moreblessed to millionaires than to theaverage man.”• The non-taxation of profitsmade by religious institutions.In speaking of the excessive al¬lowances made for travel and en¬tertainment, the former Senatorcited an instance in 1962 where anundertaker had written off ayacht as tax-deductable because heused it to “entertain prospectivecustomers.”DOUGLAS FINISHED his speechby saying that the “eighteen yearshave been disillusioning; the quan¬dary is now even bigger.” He com¬pared “the able minds of the coun¬try “to the Spaniards who con¬quered the Aztecs of Mexico andthe Incas of Peru—although outnumbered they “are better organ¬ized and better armed for thestruggle.” Douglas noted that theaverage man is not interested incertain abuses because “they meanmillions for a few and just a fewpennies for millions.” “Where,” heasked, “are the champions of thepeople?”Douglas, who raught at UC for28 years, was glad to be back.“The Hyde Park area is one of thedearest spots on Earth of Mrs.Douglas and me,” he said. It wasin Chicagos' Fifth Ward that Doug¬las launched his political career.WORK THIS SUMMER FORPEACE IN VIETNAMTABLES FRIDAY BOOKSTORE A HUTCH COMMONS—INFO A CONTRIBUTIONS—or Call 288-5414 (Mario Martin) or 752-4347 (Lloyd Anderson)JOIN POLITICS FOR PEACE IN COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONAPP1NESS perracing for *15®!eedway stock car racesJ Order one, save $21. Order two. save $47 Order three, save $73■ Make your check or money order payable to N Perry luster Enclose a■ self-addressed envelope Remember children under 12 free limitthree season tickets per buyerTO N Perry Luster. National Racing Affiliates. Inc135 S. LaSalle St.. Chicago. Illinois 60603|~~~| Send me one book oi season tickets lor $15^ Send me two books of season tickets for a total of $25| | Send me three books of season tickets for a total of $35★ Season ticket saves you $21^★Brand-new Superspeedway trackOnly US AC-sanctioned* stock car races in Chicagoland* Indianapolis "500” drivers ★ Biggest parses in Chicago* Family fun! Children under 12 freeFinally Big-time stock car racing has cometo Chicago. Sanctioned National Champion¬ship races every Saturday night from June 3through September 9. Plus three events onThursday nights.There’s a $5000 guaranteed purse every nightplus 40% of gate. More than any other trackin Chicagoland. Every night there'll be some¬thing different, something exciting, somethingbetter than you expected. Fireworks, 50, 75,even 100-lap feature races. Infield shows.You’ll have the time of your life.Admission is $2.00 Your book of season tickets saves you a fat $21.00. Use it for leasthan half the races, and you’re still moneyahead. Better yet, order two season ticketsnow and save $47. Or buy three for a whop¬ping $73 savings.Chicago’s greatest racing spectacle is on—at Soldier Field. And you can. be right in themiddle of it.So hurry. Mail the coupon back. Today* USAC Is the United States Auto Club—thatsanctions the Indianapolis “500”, Milwaukee,and other major races.H. PERRY LUSTER PRESENTS AT SOLDIER FIELDUSAC t»4 IMCAtMttionH Itttmtltl»(•<* ttt rtttt. Jem J-SiftimtM tClass of '63 StudyPersonal, Emotional Difficulties Boost College Drop-Out Rateby David L. AikenThe basic factors behindmost drop-outs from the Col¬lege are personal and emotion¬al difficulty and an inability toadjust to a seemingly “impersonal”atmosphere, according to astudymade two years ago by Mary AliceNewman, former Assistant Dean ofUndergraduate Students, and wifeof Assistant Dean of StudentsJames E. Newman.Relying primarily on interviewswith 55 of tihe 218 students in theclass of 1963 who had withdrawn,Mrs. Newman reported that per¬sonal problems were primarily re¬sponsible for 69 percent of the drop¬outs.Reports of interviewers indicatedacademic difficulty and discourage¬ment accounted for 22 percent ofthe withdrawals, and circumstan¬tial factors, such as changes infamily situation, for twelve per¬cent.MRS. NEWMAN'S study wasconducted in 1964 and 1965, in anattempt to find reasons why 39.8percent of the class of 1963 had notgraduated even by June, 1964, fiveyears after they entered. Of thatclass, 43.8 percent graduated infour years, 56.4 percent graduatedwithin five years, and an additional3.8 percent were still studying inthe College five years after theyhad entered.The interviewing connected withMrs. Newman’s study was support¬ed by a grant from the U.S. Officeof Education. Although the study was completed in 1965, it has justrecently been publicly circulated. Acopy was obtained in the Educationlibrary in Judd hall.After studying the results of theinterviews, she concluded that,While some of the dropouts fromUC would “have had trouble any¬where,” because of emotional prob¬lems, there was a large proportionwhich “had specific trouble in func¬tioning and studying at Chicago,their interaction with the Chcagoenvironment aggravating their spe¬cific problems.”This group accounted for almosthalf of those who, in the judgmentsof the analysts for the study, hadleft because of personal problems.DROPOUTS' perceptions of theCollege community were morestrongly negative than those of the“persisters,” Mrs. Newman report¬ed. Among the differences werethese:• Forty-two percent of the drop¬outs said they got little* from thecurriculum, while 92 percent of the persisters said they found atleast some of their courses stim¬ulating.• Eighty-three percent of thedropouts described UC as “diffuse,impersonal, unsupportive.” Al¬though this view was shared by asmuch as 52 percent of the “per¬sisters,” Mrs. Newman points outthat this sort of environment isparticularly “taxing. . . for theuncertain or immature students.”This, her study showed, is a de¬scription that fits a large proportionof those students who left for per¬sonal reasons. They had more trou¬ble than others in establishing inde¬pendence from their parents, orwere more vague and ambivalentabout their interests, plans, andabilities.• Most faculty seemed to be una¬vailable to 92 percent of the drop¬outs, while 77 percent of the per¬sisters found them unavailable, orwilling bo see students only if thestudents took the initiative.• College advisers seemed to be useless to 71 percent of the drop¬outs, 46 percent of the persisters.• Resident heads and assistantheads in the dorms appeared to beuninterested to 43 percent of thedropouts, 20 percent of the persis¬ters.• SIXTY-FIVE percent of thedropouts admitted that they studiedlittle, or only erratically, while anidentical percentage of the persis¬ters said they studied fairly regu¬larly. A significant number of bothdropouts and persisters, however,said they studied regularly, andwere found to have ability, butwere disappointed with theirachievement. Twenty-eight percentof the dropouts and 19 percent ofthe persisters fell in this category,the latter showing signs of disaffec¬tion, discouragement, and doubtabout whether UC was the rightchoice, but nevertheless pullingthrough.In presenting recommendationsbased on her findings, Mrs. New¬man commented, “What is wanted is a more meaningful opportunitywith faculty and other significantadults, more opportunity forgrowth through social experience,more chance to know older stu¬dents who are dealing and havedealt successfully with problems ofintegration and identity.”More specifically, she urged thata re-appraisal be made of themeans then current for co¬ordinating the work of faculty andother staff, including residentheads and advisers. She also sug¬gested more attempts by admis¬sions officers to match students tothe environment.STUDENT HOUSING, she said,was one problem often brought upby both dropouts and persisters.She noted “the enthusiasm of manygraduates for the antiquated,roomy, private, non-antiseptic resi¬dences, in contrast to their indiffer¬ence and critisim of the new,cramped, noisy, sterile dorms ofrecent vintage.”(Continued on Page 13)PAULBUTTERFIELDJAMESCOTTONJEFFERSONAIRPLANEJUNIORWELLSOTISRUSHQUICKSILVERMESSENGERSERVICEMUDDYWATERSANDMANYMANYOTHERSPSYCHEDELICPOSTERSDIRECTFROM FILLMORE AUDITORIUMNOWONSALEATTOADHALLONEDOLLARANDTWENTYFIVECENTSEACHTHREEFORTHREEDOLLARSANDTWENTYFIVECENTSBRINGAFRIEND A Plaster Saint Wearing a Hell’s Angels Helmet Carrying a Ladies HandbagIs your Guide ToU.C.'s only MagazineOf Student Art & LiteratureTHEPHOENIXNOW ON SALE AT THE BOOKSTORE50cPoems, Short Stories, Photos, and GraphicsWhat the critics are saying:"Packs an emotional Wallop"—Leo Wentzler"The Hottest thing since Ed Levi'slast memo hit campus"—William Russell"Eastern Influenced Western Art"—Doctor Odlid"Like Stepping into a room full ofChicago Cops, but you can't put it down"—Magnolia Butterworth"Garbage"—Dan Conrad Jimmy'sand the University RoomMSIftVBO 1XCLUSIVFLY FOR UNfYfRSITY CLICNTCLIFttty-FtWi wkI WoodlovN Arm.THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde Park .. ■ Un jour, votre famllle aura besolnd'argent lorsqu'elle n’aura plus votresalaire, ou bien vous aurez vous-memebesoin d’un revenu pour votre retraite.L'assurance Sun Life peut vous pro¬curer les deux.En tant qua reprdsentant local da la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter k un moment devotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE DU CANADA, COMPAGNIE D'ASSURANCE-VIIUNE COMPAGNIE MUTUELLETHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWNMichelob and Budweiser on Tap!Piano Selections Friday & Saturday evenings J NOW! is the time for Box StorageSAFE - INSURED - COLD STORAGE FOR ALL YOURWINTER WOOLENSFURS CLEANED GLAZED & STOREDProtection from Moths - Fire Heat or Theft!FOR BORGANA-OLLEGRO AND ALL FUR-PILE GARMENTSPELT-RENU CUSTOM FUR CLEANINGINSURED PICK-UP & DELIVERYjames Schultz CleanersCUSTOR QUALITY CLEANING1363 East 53rd Street PL 2-?66210% Student Discount with I.D. CardMay 26, 1967 CHICAGO MAROONHum Collegiate Division Gets Ford GrantFor New Courses in Experimental MusicThe Humanities Collegiate music. The grant was made in con-nivicinn has rprpivpd a Prant! nection with the course to be givenDivision has received a grant by Jeanne Bamberger in the Win_from the Institute for Music ter and Sprirg quarters next year.in Contemporary Education (a The course is described by Mrs.Ford Foundation project) to en- j Bamberger as follows:courage expermental courses in “Music 103-4 will be experimentalin at least two senses: 1) StudentsC* + Dl will be expected to experiment withDiq jlSTGf | mil all kinds of sound making mate-**. 'rials; at first, perhaps, only non-Cpf O-Wppk pitch instruments, then instruments 'I l/l \s~ ffCCIx | with limited pitch possibilities, and jEntering women next year later their own instruments. They°. . , ,. will be asked to improvise and then jwill benefit from orientation conipoSe simple pieces withinall year, and not just during various limitations devised byO-Week, if a plan of two un- themselves in order to explore the, ’ r . . ! particular rubric under considera-1dergraduate women is implement- Uon at a given monient.ed.Shelly Waldman and Pat Doede 1 "2J STUDENTS WILL BE encour-are co-chairmen of a new group a§ed to discover for themselves“to encourage integration of first-1 categories of perception whichyear women to the UC surround- seem to be consistent with theirings.” Upperclass women would in-!own exPerience of niusic. The pro-vite freshmen to dinner in their cesf w.^. *Jom hstemng, to con-apartments, on shopping trips, and ceptualizing, to making then backmher aptivities to listening. In the last phase stu-d ?',>• w idents will be asked to discuss!According to Miss Waldman, the, worjjS 0f their own selection which“roup will “provide a program that; - NSA's Head to Speak Today on Reforms;National Congress and Projects PlannedW. Eugene Groves, Presi¬dent of the National StudentAssociation, will speak this af¬ternoon at an open meeting ofthe UC NSA Committee. Groves,formerly SG president at UC, willdiscuss efforts to reform the na¬tional association of student gov¬ernments. The meeting will be at4:30 in Ida Noyes. All students areinvited.STUDENTS WHO are interestedin attending this summer’s NSA na¬tional congress are also invited toapply for appointment. The annualcongress, which will formulate na¬tional policy and begin to plan localprogramming, will be held at theUniversity of Maryland beginning August 11, until August 25Any student who can attend asizeable portion of the conference,and pay for his own transportation,should contact NSA delegate DavidAiken at 288-7961. Room and boardat the congress will be paid fromthe delegation’s budget.NSA is also offering this year aspecial arrangement for studentswho wish to view Expo ’67 in Mont¬real. For a flat rate of $31, studentsat NSA member schools can obtain jfour nights accomodation in Mont-real, three day-long passes to the :fair, four breakfasts, one dinner, iand a half-day tour of the city of jMontreal. Interested students;should contact the Student Govern-;ment office, ext. 3272. Koga Gift ShopDistinctly* Gift Items Prom Th*Orient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856SATURDAYMAY 27Everyone Id and olderis invited to o giantmight lead to a reformulation ofwill encourage upperclassmen to the& initial concepts and this, inhelp first-year women learn about turn to further experimentation,the campus, the community, and j “jn ^be second quarter more em¬it16 city—-not just during O-Week, - phasjs wil, be p]aced on perfor.but through coirespondence duringj rnance. The ultimate purpose of thesummer before they come and j course js to develop active ratherthroughout the whole first year. than passjve listening through par-Tentative plans are to assign one ticipation in all the activities ofor two incoming students to eachparticipant.Interested undergraduate womenshould call Miss Doede at 3406Flint. music and with an underlying ap¬proach encouraging individual dis¬covery, experimentation, and thesharing of teaching and learningexperiences.” IBM EXECUTIVE TYPEWRITERS$ 199 95FULLY REBUILTGuarantee: NEWLY PAINTED90 days parts & labor5 years partsWe Rent and SellPortable, Manual, Electric TypewritersTOAD HALL1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500Thank youYou've made this the greatest year in Dot Films' 26-year history. We'll be back at the same old stand next year with an even better program, including Chicagopremieres, double features, and films in Cinemascope. Thanks for your support. See you in the fall. •IBE-IN(DANCE)from 8:30 p.m. until 1:00 o.m.in the Crystal Room ofPIONEER COURT401 North Michigan AvenueThe mujor contribution fromour hip subculture so f.»r thisSpr i i»f* appears to be some¬thing called a "He-In.**It is difficult to say exactlywltat a Hc-ln is. You mi>>tircall it an cxist.mce celebrationor perhaps a demonstration o!the desire to continue exist¬ing. At any rate, being is theonly prerequisite for attending;and tens of thousands have al¬ready attended them in YewYork and California, where theyseem to have been born.Our lle-ln will be very muchlike a dance. In fact it will bevery much like two dances,featuring...TWO BANDS!A populor “rock” group in oneroom — ond simultaneously —the slow, romantic sounds ofour other bond in the bar.Dancing in both rooms!• BALLOONS'• INCENSE!• PAPER FLOWERS’•* CONTESTS'• PRIZES'CASUAL DRESSlike sweaters, slacks, etc.Suits ond dresses ore O.K,, too,STAG OR DATESslog preferred.If you need more informationcall 726 -3285Were you at the Liberal Arts Conference?YOU'LL WANT THIS BOOKYou missed the Conference?DON'T MISS THIS BOOK!& ^ran M@mnE)<§i mm mmmedited by Wayne C. BoothCONTENTSIs There Any Knowledge That a Man Must Have?Returning Coals to NewcastleThe Instruments of Mental ProductionA Transatlantic View of "What Knowledge Is Worth Having"Sir John CockcroftUndergraduates and the Scientific EnterpriseDiversityEducation and the Contemporary WomanPlatonic EducationThe Battle of the BooksThe Role of a Liberal A rts College within a University ,, Wayne C. BoothF. Champion WardNorthrop Frye|. A. SimpsonJohn R. PlattAnne Firor Scottlames M. RedfiefdRichard McKeonEdward H. Levi •m-Paperbound $1.95•• /^ It;*' j . ” ^ * *Clothbound $5.95At focal bookstores now/ t \*V-AL -vUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESSsi. -* ■: *:>' •:• .%6 CHICAGO MAROON May 26, 1967Maroon SportsBetter Things To Come“As strong if not strongerthan last year’s club” com¬mented Coach Bill Vendl whenasked about UC’s 1967 VarsitySoccer Team.UC will lose 6 graduating seniors,among them Co-Captain RickStone, goalie Doug Petersen andlettermen Knight Coolidge andSean Cardenas. Coach Vendl is con¬fident that returning lettermen andother players with prior experiencewill be able to fill the void createdby graduation. The 1967 schedule is |printed below:Oct. 4 Kendall CollegeKendallOct. 7 Shimer CollegeOct. )1 Notre Dame UniversityOct. 14 Aurora CollegeOct. 18 Northern Illinois Univ.Oct. 21 Wheaton CollegeOct. 25 Lake Forest CollegeDct. 28 Principia CollegeNov. 1 George Williams College 3:00Nov. 5 Northwestern University 1:00 HOMEHOMEHOMEHOMEHOMEAWAYHOME1:30 AWAYHOMEHOME3:301:303:302:003:302:003:30Nov. 3 Roosevelt University 2:45 AWAYNov. II Ball State University 10:00 AWAYThe first three games of the sea¬son could determine how the year will go for UC. Coach Vendl feelsthat if Chicago wins its first twogames the team members will bepsychologically up’ for the NotreDame game. Vendl stressed theimportance of a good start “a win¬ner tends to keep on winning” andstated that he felt UC had lost 1 or2 games last year because teammembers were at a disadvantagepsychologically.Although Notre Dame will be themost outstanding game of the sea¬son, Wheaton and Lake Forest willbe Chicago’s toughest opponents.Last year Chicago was plaguedby serious injuries. Junior MikeSchechtman suffered a neck injury,Petersen suffered three broken ribsand Stone injured his back.Because the Soccer Team beginscompetition during the first weekof the school year, Coach Vendlemphasized the importance of teammembers staying in shape over theinterim. Mike Nemoroff will becaptain of the 1967 team.Calendar of EventsFriday, May 26MOVIE: “Two Tars” nd “Big Busi¬ness”. Laurel and Hardy. B-J FreeCinema. Judson Dining Room, 9 pm.CONCERT: UC Concert Band, Hutchin¬son Court. 12:30 pmDRAMA: UC Renaissance Players pres-sent “A Mery Play Betweene Johan,Johan the Husbande. Tyb, His Wyfe.and Syr Johan, the Preest,” and “Mun-dus et Infans; ” Ida Noyes CloisterClub. 8:30 pm. Tudor music by the Col¬legium Musicum. Tickets $1 for stu-dents. $2 for others.CONCERT: Chicago Symphony orches¬tra. Jean Martinon, conductor. MandelHall. 8:30 pm.MEETING: Students Against the Rank,Reynolds Club South Lounge, 3:30 pm.Saturday, May 27■MEETING: Canvassing Politics forpeace. Leave Ida Noyes, 1 pm.MEET: Track. Stagg Field. 10 am.DRAMA: UC Renaissance Players, IdaNoyes, 8:30 pm. I CONCERT: Chicago Symphony, Mandel1 Hall. 8:30 pm.Sunday, May 28RELIGIOUS SERVICE: “The ProudTower,” Rev. E. S. Parsons, Dean ofthe Chapel, Rockefeller Chapel, 11 am.The Office of Admissionsand Aid has announced thatdue to a rise in the cost ofliving the budget for fra¬ternity and off-campus resi¬dents will be $3500 whilethat for on-campus studentswill be $3700. Upperclass¬men now on financial aidshould plan accordingly.- * - « , ***>TONIGHT, MAY 26:FEAST OF DELIAN APOLLOORPLATO'S BIRTHDAYSATURDAY, MAY 27:SOCRATES' BIRTHDAY Pitcher of Beer*1.35with this AdTimmy's invites you to join in the weekend festivities.The Woodlawn Tap, 1172 E. 59th St. -WTDCSup for your next evening on the town.There’s not a drip in the house.m ram HumanWhere the time of your life is right under your nose.BANJOS, BEER & B0 DEE-0 D0865 N. State St. 329-0193 Grading Committee Reports(Continued from Page One)• Some required core courseswithin the collegiate divisionsshould similarly be designated asP-N courses.• In the last two years of a stu¬dent’s program he should be al¬lowed to take a number of electivecourses on a P-N basis if he wish¬es.• Tutorials, small seminars, andindependent study within a stu¬dent’s major field may be offeredwith a P-N grading.• The decision whether in a par¬ ticular course P-N will be used forall students, whether it will be usedonly for students who ask for it, orwhether it will not be available,will be made by the instructor andannounced before the period of reg¬istration.• Limits of one P-N course perquarter and 25 percent of allcourses supplying credits for grad¬uation will be fixed, and the stu¬dent will determine his programwith close assistance by an advisorin his field. • P and N grades-should not beused in determining grade-pointaverages.• If the recommendations are ac¬cepted, a formal review of gradingpractices should be made withinthree years after a program is ini¬tiated.The six-member Committee onGrades, chaired by Professor ofEnglish and Humanities David G.Williams, was established in thefall quarter by Booth.A brief memorial servicefor the late Professor Will¬iam A. Irwin will be held at4:00 pm on May 25, 1967 atBond Chapel. Professor Ir¬win was professor emeritusof Old Testament Languagesand Literatures in the Feder¬ated Theological Faculty, theDepartment of Oriental Lan¬guages and Civilizations, andthe Oriental Institute from1930 to 1950. Ranger's Musical Held Over Extra WeekThe Blackstone Ranger-OscarBrown, Jr. musical, “OpportunityKnocks,” was such a box officesuccess last weekend that the pro¬gram will be repeated this week¬end.Three of last weekend’s five per-jformances at the First Presbyte-;rian Church, 6400 S. Kim bark, werecompletely sold out.Five performances will again be given this weekend, with afternoonperformances on Saturday at 2 pmand Sunday at 4 pm, and Friday,Saturday, and Sunday evening per¬formances at 8 p.m.Tickets are $1.25 for children,$2.50 for general admission, and$3.50 for reserved seats. Ticketsmay be obtained at the box officeat the First Church.S G Summer Folk SeriesIan & SylviaJune 6 Judy CollinsJune 20Josh Whitecommitted to appeardate indefinite~End of July-beg. of Aug.ALL CONCERTS WILL BE AT 8 P.M. IN THE FIELD HOUSE (OR OUT OF DOORS,DEPENDING ON THE WEATHER).TICKETS. .-$2.50 $3.50. .-$2.50 $3.50 cent. .-$2.50 $3.50 discount to UC Students. .-$6.00 $9.00 $1.75 discount, UC StudentsMail orders to:Summer Folk Series1212 E. 59th St.Chicago, III. 60637orFaculty Exchange(enclose stamped self-addressed envelope) or purchase(After June 19)at the:Student Co-opReynolds Club Basement5706 S. UniversityNO TICKETS AVAILABLE AT SG OFFICEMay 26, 1967 CHICAGO MAROON • 7David L. AikenThe Middle EastWAR IS CLOSER TODAY in the Middle East than it hasbeen at any time since 1956. Egyptian President Nasserhas carried out his threats to mine the Gulf of Aquaba and theworld waits anxiously while world figures work to avert actualfighting.War, if it comes, could be disastrous for both Israel and theArabs. Military experts like Hanson Baldwin predict that Israelcan withstand an attack by virtue of the Israeli military’s espir-it de corps alone, but they are quick to add that the Israeliswill be facing a far more formidable foe today then they dideleven years ago in Sinai.The whole crisis for many has been puzzling. There is nological reason for Nasser and the Arabs to want war withIsrael at this time. Yet Arab policy can only be described asthe most precarious brinkmanship, if it is to be characterizedas anything less than a policy deliberately aimed at provokingwar.The root of the problem, it seems to us, lies in a very simplefact. The Arab states surrounding Israel, with the possibleexception of Lebanon, are unwilling to accept the fact thatIsrael is a nation whose territorial integrity and right to existmust be respected As long as the Arabs vow to someday pushthe Jews into the sea, there can be no permanent peace in theMiddle East.THIS LATEST CRISIS is merely an unsurprising develop¬ment in a situation that cannot help but generate crises. Israelcannot forever sit idly by in the face of the organized terrorthat Arab states carry on within her borders. It is unfair forIsrael to expect its people to accept as part of their lives thatthey or their families may be murdered by Arab felaheen, andit is equally unfair of the world to expect Israel to allow Arabterrorism to continue indefinitely with impunity.The answer for this crisis and for the Middle East is for allof the countries in that part of the world to accept the presentterritorial status quo. Israel has no aggressive designs on theArab states. Arabs and Israelis have every reason to be friendsand if relations are ever normalized both Arabs and Jews^ouldbenefit from that friendship.The unfortunate thing is that recognizing the fact of Israel'spermanent existence is something that Arab leaders can illafford to do. Conditions in the Arab world are too desperate,the condition of the Arab people is too abject for Arab leadersto consider throwing away the one device they have for divert¬ing the attention of restless masses away from them. Corruptleadership is the one factor Arab leaders don't want their peo¬ple to start thinking about. To the amazement of the world andto the delight of Arab despots who live like kings off of oilmoney they did nothing to earn, the state of Israel has becomea symbol of the frustrations with which the average Arab can¬not cope.IT IS ALMOST ludicrous to think that the average Arabbelieves he has something to gain by the destruction of Israel.Yet that is precisely what Arabs all over the Middle East havecome to believe, and as long as they are led by men who feel itis in their interest to find someone or something for the massesto hate, there will be no permanent peace in the Middle East.Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor ...... David E. GunapertNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanKenneth SimonsonExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterFeature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyAssistants to the Editor Peter Rabinowitz* £‘< • Joan PhillipsEditor Emeritus ..Daniel HertzbergThe Chicago Maroon, founded 181)2, issued every Tuesday and Fridaythroughout the University of Chicago sehooJ year, except during thetenth week ol the academic quarter arid during examination periods,and weekly for eight weeks during the summer, by students at theLn'versuy of Chicago Located in rooms 303, 304, 303 Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E dtith Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637, Distributed without chargeon campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood. Subscriptions by mail*6 per year. Charter member. United States Student Press Assn.Publishers ol the Collegiate Press Service.CHICAGO MAROON May 26, 1967 Result of Years Efforts:A Minimum of ProgressLast spring, students hereplanted a seed of protest with theAdministration Building sit-inover the decision on ranking.Since then, other issues have ari¬sen on matters that affect stu¬dents, such as grades. After ayear of development, this seedhas borne some promising firstfruits, but no structure to supportfurther growth has yet arisen.These matters have two as¬pects: the substantive questions,such as ranking, housing, andgrading, and the procedural ques¬tion of where students fit into thedecision-making process.Several student-faculty commit¬tees have discussed these mattersover the year. Among the fruits oftheir labors are: indicated by last week’s referen¬dum, there is still a great deal offeeling that any class rank is in¬appropriate in a College which ex¬pects students to seek knowledgewithout external goals. Both theCollege Council and the Council ofthe University Senate have an un¬mistakable mandate to review thequestion of ranking from theviewpoint of its educational valueas well as that of its function ofproviding information to the draftsystem. volve students, was none too pow.erful a document in the firstplace. The decision of the Councilof the University Senate to cx.tract the most insignificant n e-ommendation of the Page Com*.*'mittee for a pproval —t he.student-faculty committee on stu¬dent affairs—almost entirely’emasculates any force the PageReport may have exerted for ear-’,ly recognition of the principle ofstudent participation on a broacf’range of matters.• Some progress toward a grad¬ing system more suitable to UC’shighly selective admissions poli¬cy:• A slight improvement in thestock of books in the Bookstore,through the efforts of the commit¬tee headed by Richard C. Wade;• A seeming “victory” for Stu¬dents Against the Rank, thoughnot entirely a satisfactory one. As On these issues, then, the var¬ious powers-that-be have muddledthrough to a provision a little bitahead of where they were lastyear, but have shown no signsthat they are in any mood to takedecisive steps, such as that takenby the Columbia University trus¬tees i« ending ranking, or thaturged by the A.C.L.U., of refusingto release ranks.We see even less progress onmatters of involving students inthe procedures of decision¬making. The Page Committee’sreport, urging free and open deci¬sion-making in most matters, andoutlining possible means to in- At the very least, the Council;could have endorsed the Page Re.port’s basic contention that o]kiidecision-making and opportunityfor full discussion of issues arevital for intelligent decisionsjjThat they did not do this is sim:ply further evidence that themembers of the Council are con¬tent to take the smallest steps*possible, to give an illusion of sigf§nificant progress. If anybodfjcherishes any illusions that stu||dents are satisfied with what h;®been achieved this year, thevtfwould be well-advised to avoid®resting too firmly on their lauu N-.-'lest they be stung by thorns.Letters to the Editor iStMwGrin and BaralTO THE EDITOR:As a Barat graduate and cur¬rent student at the UC, I am dis¬mayed by the concern expressedby some UC students over thepossible Barat invasion. It has theusual naive quality of the beard¬ed, would-be pot smokers . . .“Don't let those little girls comedown here on our campus, we’retoo mean.” Come on now, fellows,we're not quite that protected.Sex and pot for the long-hairedbearded ones—Ivory towers andtunnels for the Barat girls? For¬get it, Junior! We’d probably dieof neglect.JUDY ALBRECHTSchool of Social ServiceAdministration at least a misunderstanding, ifnot an actual distortion on thepart of reporters who only lis¬tened for what they expected (orwanted) to hear, or editors em¬ploying a similar criterion incom [riling the article.I hope that this needless lack ofcommunication will not inhibit thepossible complementary associa¬tion of two schools that have somuch to give,KAREN EIDSONLake Forest, 111. there is going to be more trauma;thar Barat girls in Woodlawn bifljfore it dqes. I believe both school Jwill be surprised, profitably, b||jthe change. I;It comforts me that the iss.ut|gwill be resolved by men and womjen more disinterested than the’*!aristocratic adolescents who have?so far been heard on behalf of UCand the Maroon. I also hope 1 hatMother Burke and Barat will In¬patient with us in our liberalismGEORGE N. SCHMIDTSNor Is UC If the Shoe Fits . .Barat No WombTO THE EDITOR:While speaking with two of the“intrepid Maroon Staff Members”who came to Barat last Wednes¬day, I was impressed by their ap¬parent intention to give yourreaders a total picture of this par¬ticular small women’s liberal artscollege. Consequently, we tried toexpress comprehensively andrealistically the situation at Bar¬at. Only our negative commentswere used in your admittedly“combined and condensed” arti¬cle. Barat, like the University ofChicago, is too often judged onthe basis of its traditional reputa¬tion and an occasional cursory in¬quiry.It would be misleading to pro¬tect your representation of BaratCollege and its students on thegrounds that the opinions whichyou portrayed do not exist here.On the contrary. However, formost of its students, Barat is notthe womb-like bastion of upper-middle class conservatism as youso vividly presented it. It is ap¬parently necessary to suggest inthe interest of responsible jour¬nalism that it is impossible togeneralize about the character ofan entire college on the basis oftwo visits or a selective readingof its political temperature.Deficiency of the Maroon’srepresentation of Barat indicates TO THE EDITOR:1 hope that neither the Maroonnor the letter of messrs. Kocherand Yakes is representative of Uof C's attitude towards Barat andthe proposal. The Kocher-Yakesletter, for all its good points, isunfortunate for its glib accusa¬tions about our “whores and ouranti-Catholicism.” I doubt eitheris true and hope the two gentle¬men substantiate their statementsbefore restoring to such bugaboosin the future.There is much to be said aboutthe Barat issue, but the Maroonhas said little of relevance sofar. Your patronizing interviewtells more about your methods ofreporting than it does about theschool. Moreover, your samplingof UC opinion missed all of myfriends. I hope it wont’t be takenas objective. If it is, it is an un¬fortunate reflection on the alti¬tude of my school.In a way, this issue is testingour committment to the principleswe mouth endlessly here. SmallCatholic colleges have been fac¬ing a problem for years, but onlythe past few years have seenthem trying to solve it. MotherBurke’s action is not unique, butpart of a larger attempt to reinte¬grate Catholic higher educationinto the higher learning in Ameri¬ca. Implicit in this is the admis¬sion that things have been theway the Maroon glibly says theyare, but that things are trying tochange.If UC really believes in theegalitarian and intellectual princi¬ples it exists for, then UC shouldbe trying at least as hard. TheCatholic stereotype is dying, but JO THE EDITOR:I’m not a Catholic. I’m anti-religious. And my intellectual ami.social life revolves, I freely ad¬mit, primarily around people ’whose values and interests do notclash seriously with my own.I have never been to Baral Col¬lege. I have no real idea whetherthe girls at Barat conform to theimage that many seem to have ofgirl students at Catholic collegesObviously if Barat moves to this -community, then Hyde Park willbecome their community too, andBarat’s students must be made tofeel free to worship as they see titand to live according to the die-tates of their own consciences.Who knows—maybe the MotherSuperior would dig a Hyde Parkparty! '* #But if anyone, no matter whathis religious affiliation, seeks meout—if he buttonholes me on th|§tcampus and requests my views oivf;chastity—and if he disapproves pf|Jthe views that I express, I hope#that he will be gracious enoughnot to call me a dirty person a...or my apartment, which he ahas never seen, a dirty apartment >... or my girlfriend, whom .he#*has never met, a dirty whore. ;' |MICHAEL L. FLE1SHEROn Playe, NewmanTO THE EDITOR:A few of us, finding we were#;experiencing some degree of dtfl.i*||cully in interpreting what is right |and wrong on this campus, decid^ed to hear Dean Playe and Dean#Newman on “Drugs, Students^and Discipline ” The reason fo|*J|(Continued on Page Nine)- . • :v (7? .' mLetters to the Editor of the Maroonings, it is very likely that at least(Continued from Page Eight)this was that several of ourfriends and acquaintances hadbeen suspended from thisschool—two of them left schoolunder the impression that theyhad been relieved of their aca¬demic duties for the use of LSD.This conception was shared byseveral members of the housestaff involved and all the studentsat the house involved. Among thepieces of information we werepresented with by the deans atthe meeting were:1.Students could be justifiablysuspended for use of LSD. (Thereasons for this were not clear—itseemed to be either to protect thestudent from himself or becausethe act can have bad publicconsequences. The many studentsin Billings for taking I-SD werecited by the deans.) 2. Dean Newman stated uncon¬ditionally (and reiterated thefact) that no resident head hadever entered a student’s roomwithout either the student beingon hand or having given his per¬mission.3. Dean Playe mentioned sever¬al times that he was glad to sayhe had had to vote (to break atie) on the disciplinary committeeonly once in past 8 years. (PTayealso said that he takes people attheir word in admission or denialof guilt.)SEVERAL POINTS might bemade about these revelations, asregards the effect of the meetingin clarifying what students canexpect in the way of discipline.1. Personal use of LSD is onlymentioned in Federal Law, a lawwhich explicitly states that no oneshall be punished under its arti¬cles for possession for use byhimself, his family, or (!) hispets. As for the students in Bill¬ as many students have beenplaced in Billings and other Chi¬cago hospitals for the use of alco¬hol by themselves or others. Yetthis other act with bad socialconsequences is openly sponsoredby the University in sherry hoursand beer blasts, in direct violationof state and local law (unlikeLSD). So we suppose it can't bethe bad social consequences ofLSD that make it grounds for sus¬pension. Can it be rather that theUniversity is interested in pro¬tecting students? Probably not,since they have refused to ac¬knowledge in action that studentswill take it, regardless of beingtold only of its horrors. No con¬structive action has yet beenpublicly planned. Under any cir-.cum stances, suspension is not away to protect someone. Whythen can people be suspended forLSD?2 We can only say this on DeanNewman’s point: one of us has stood in a dorm hall and watcheda resident head, after pounding ona door and receiving no answer,use his pass key to unlock the stu¬dent’s room and enter it, and thenleave, locking the door after him.(The student says the residenthead later denied to him that hehad done this.) Many incidents ofdorm resident heads entering stu¬dents’ rooms without either per¬mission or presence have oc¬curred in at least the past fouryears. The importance of roomsearches is clear when a persondoes not know what he can orcannot do.3. DEAN PLAYE, regardless ofhis voting record, has a decidingsay in whether a student's caseshould be brought before the dis¬ciplinary committee. Therefore,Dean Playe’s stated willingness totake people’s word on their guiltis important. Both students sus¬pended admitted taking LSD. andultimately felt their punishmentwas for telling the truth. Thisseems clear. The point is, that the reasonsome of us attended the meetingwas only compounded by thatmeeting: nobody knows what toexpect. It was pointed out that alogical consequence of this atti¬tude, Dean Playe could be “sus¬pended” for smoking his pipe,since a) he was endangering him¬self and b) he was committing anact (as an influencer of students)with bad social consequences.WE CAN ONLY conclude (real¬ly, truly, and honestly) that a bet¬ter detail of what constitutes anoffense on this campus ought tobe presented. The two men stillaren’t aware that they weren’tsuspended for what they thoughtthey were are an excellent testi¬mony to this fact.MARTIN J. BUOHTERLLOYD JOHNSONRICHARD ATLLEEMICHAEL KALOSHBuses to O'HareWORLD S GREATEST BUS SERVICEStill Only $2.50WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY FINAL WEEK JUNE 7, 8, 9, 104 Buses Leave On Wednesday8 Buses Leave On Thursday 8 Buses Leave On Friday5 Buses Leave On SaturdayNO Reservations NecessaryBuses Will Stop AtAll Boarding PointsDesignated On Map27 CONVENIENTSTOPS Within TheCampus AreaMarks Each Boarding PointBUS SCHEDULEWednesdayThursdayF r idaySaturday LeaveArriveLeaveArriveLeaveArriveLeaveArrive 11:3012:467;462:157:462:158:4610:00 2:153:3010:1511:3010:1511:3011:0012:15 4-456:1511:3012:45.11:3012:461:302*45 7:308461:002:151:002:153:455:00 2:153 302:153306:157:30 3 455:003:455:00 4: *56:>64:456:15 7.308:467.308:45 Buses Originate at Pierce Tower (55th and Univer¬sity) and Proceed Along Route as Shown on Map.Expect Delay Proportionate to Distance from Pointof Origin.Our Credo: “People who want to understand democ¬racy should spend less time in the librarywith Aristotle and more time on bus¬ses. .Simeon Strunsky, Feb. 1917For Information Call Hitchcock Hall ext. 260: Askfor I.J.C.May 26, 1967 CHICAGO MAROONNext semester,your reading assignmentswill probably requirearound 500 hours of your time.Would you liketo make it120?• * ' ■ > V i « ‘Or 100? Or 80?Other students have learned how todo it. And so can you, at the EvelynWood Reading Dynamics Institute.Our course, founded by Evelyn Wood,a prominent educator, is the same onePresident Kennedy recommended. Thesame one that congressmen, senators—and thousands of other students likeyourself have taken.It’s the course that guarantees to atleast triple your reading speed with equalor greater comprehension or your moneywill be refunded.How does the course work? Well,first off, we tell you to forget the slow,old-fashioned way you learned to readin grade school. The way that makes youunconsciously say each word to yourselfas you read.With Reading Dynamics, this sub-vocalizing is out. Instead, your eyes work directly with your mind. You takein whole groups of words, even sentencesand paragraphs, at a glance. You get thetotal impact, just as you do when yousee a picture or a painting for thefirst time.Result: you’ll find yourself reading 3,5, even 10 times faster than before. And,even more important, you’ll very likelyunderstand and remember more of whatyou read.The Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics Institute180North Michigan Avenue,Chicago, Illinois 60601Please send me additional information and a sched¬ule of the orientations in my area.NameAddress.CityState Zip Code. So you see, as a college student, thiscourse can make your life a lot easier.If you’re worried about the cost, don’t.We have special rates for students, andyou can charge the whole thing with aMidwest Bank Card.Classes begin June 19. They consistof a 2lA hour session once a week for 8weeks. In the early part of June,orientations explaining the course infull will be held in your area. For aschedule, just mail the coupon. Orphone: In Chicago, 782-9787; inRockford, 965-9532; in Milwaukee,272-1780.CHICAGO MAROON May 26, 1967Council Declares That It Has a DesireTo Use Student Knowledge and Interests(Continued from Page One)Stigler. “The report was a series ofsuggestions, many of which mustbe implemented by the faculty inthe various divisions and depart¬ments.”In its statement calling for theestablishment of the advisory com¬mittee the Council said in part “Weshare the evident desire of thePage Committee to make use ofstudent knowledge and student in¬terests in those areas where stu¬dents have the most to contribute.The long-run welfare of the Univer¬sity demands that the participationof students be in a resonsible man¬ner; modifications of the Universi¬ty’s structure must be made in thelight of experience.”Open Decisions?There was no mention in the re¬port of the Page Committee’s re¬quests that decisions be madeopenly, with as much advance no¬tice as possible. There was also nomention in the report as to whatthe fate of the rest of the Pagecommittee report might be, al-Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259NSA Discount*SAMUEL A. BELL'BUY SHELL FROM BELL'SINCE 1924PICKUP ft DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998OPEN SUNDAYS 11-4DIRECT MILL OUTLETOpen Sundays from 11-4Has what you need from a $10 Used 9X12Rug. to a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants ft Mill Returns at fractionof the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY though Stigler hinted that the Coun¬cil wanted to try implementing onepart at a time.This led Jerry Hyman, first yearstudent in anthropology to issue ablast at the committee."I THINK THE Council’s state¬ment is tragic,” he said. “When astudent-faculty committee afterhalf a year comes out with a reportpleading for such mere tokenism asbetter communication (with specif¬ic recommendationss for imple¬mentation) and when the Councilrises to the occasion by seizing onthe only petty, trivial recommenda¬tion in the report, that is tragic.”Hyman continued, “When a stu¬dent-faculty committee pleads for aCommunity of Scholars and theFaculty Council responds, in effect,by defining students as inferiormembers of that community, thatis tragic. Arid when another facultycommittee responds to an inquiryon admissions policy by replyingthat, at this university, it is thefaculty and administration that de¬fines “the orientation, social mis¬sion, and intellectual goals of thecommunity, that is even more trag¬ic.” Hyman was making a refer¬ence to the statement issued whenadmissions director CharlesO’Connell was accused of politicalbias in admissions. He went on,“Its tragic because some of the jfaculty seem to view the University ilike an Oil Company, as Chancellor!Kimpton once put it: they seem tobe management and we seem to belabor- But you see there’s only oneway to deal with that sort of men- Jtality. You have to shut the place ]down. Its the only thing they seemto respond to or respect. And that’stragic. But, you see, its the facultythat’s drawn the line.” Student Tells Story of Pot in Dorm(Continued from Page Three)Great Fear, Resident heads do notinspect rooms without the studentpresent.”Students, according to the state¬ment Playe read, have certainrights when they come before com¬mittee meetings:• The committee will take noaction until all the facts are known.• The student can state his easeat length, and may comment onany information introduced at themeeting.• The meetings are private.Records are confidential and donot become a part of the student’sregular file.• Normally the student is in¬formed of the committee’s disci¬plinary recommendation within aweek.• Students are free to ask anyother person to appear in their| behalf.• Two SG student observers canbe present at the meeting, at therequest of the student.• Students may appeal the com¬mittee’s recommendations to theDean of Students.THE STATEMENT explains that,“because of the nature of the com¬ mittee and the University community, however, the protection of thestudent’s interests cannot take theform of prosecutors, defense attor¬neys, and confrontation of witness¬es. And in no sense does the Com¬mittee or a member act as a prose¬cutor.”Playe said that in the six yearshe has been chairman, there havebeen few questions of guilt or inno¬cence. The committee generally ac¬cepts the word of students whocome before it. “Anything elsewould be impossible in an academ¬ic community,” he said.A Particular CaseThough Playe would not discussindividual cases at the meeting,one student who has gone beforethe committee, was willing to dis¬cuss some aspects of his case.“I was accused of smoking mari¬juana in the dormitory system,” hesaid, “and myself and two others,after meeting with the director ofstudent housing, Mr. (Edward)Turkington, were sent to the com¬mittee”The student said that he wasbrought to the attention of the resi¬dent head of his house by other stu¬dents in the dorm. “They wererather self-righteous people whoEmployee Helps Out with Cologne SprayUTY SAXONExpert *Permanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting>990 I. srinl It- m f-0909 (Continued from Page One)tionery department manager said,“I haven’t any idea at all.” Lower¬ing his voice he added, “I have asneaking suspicion that it is a stinkbomb. It smells like limburgercheese!” Although he had hardlyconsidered who might have beenthe culprit, he asked, only half injest, “Are you sure it wasn’t one ofthe Maroon staff?”The employees volunteered moreimaginative explanations. Oneclerk confided to some customers,“A man just walked in, stood righthere, and suddenly began to smellfor no reason at all.” Over near thelamp and pen counter, a woman muttered from behind a hankie,“Last week it was a rabbit!” An¬other helpfully sprayed men’s co¬logne (“Pub” by Revlon) aroundthe back room.Rule showed how a “stink bomb”might have been put into the air-conditioner from the roof, but heremarked that there is no way ofgetting on the roof.RUMORS that Mandel Hall wasalso affected were disproven uponinvestigation. A slight mustinesswas attributed to the Chicago Sym¬phony, whose gear come packed inold boxes and trunks stored tempo¬rarily in the north lounge of Rey¬nolds Club.tSftVINfl HYDf PARK FOR OVIK 10 VtAMWITH THE VERT BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODM. 2-28TO, PL 2-8190, DO I-918S 1*40 *. 5liX DR. AARON ZIMBLER. OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 i. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudont and Faculty Discount were, as they said, concernedabout my welfare and theirchances for securing house autono¬my,” he noted. The student said atthat meeting of his house’s council,at which he was rot present, accu¬sations were flying. “They said,and told the resident head, that,among other things, we were homo¬sexuals, drug adducts, and seducersof little innocent University Highgirls.”A FEW DAYS BEFORE, accord¬ing to the student, “Some friendscame over asking if they couldsmoke in my room, since they hadno other place. 1 said okay andjoined them. There were a lot of usand, I guess, by making a lot ofnoise, we were infringing upon therights of those who were trying tostudy,” he said.According to the student, theResident Head later confronted himwith the accusations of his fellowhouse members, after he hadcalled Turkington. “I freely admit¬ted what actually happened,” hesaid, “hoping for mercy or some¬thing.”After seeing Turkington, the stu¬dent went before the Committee,but declined to have two SG ob¬servers sit in on the hearing, hop¬ing to preserve his anonymity. “Igot a haircut, shaved and put a suiton,” he said, “and went to Mr.Playes office, where the Discipli¬nary Committee meets on Tues¬days. There was quite a crowdthere,” he added. “I was not ex¬pecting to be punished too severely,since I wasn’t caught in the act, Ididn’t have any pot of my own, andhadn’t turned on that many times.”He said that he was afraid thatthe Committee would choose him toset an example for other students.“I was really shocked when I wentin there,” he said. “There was abright light above me, and themembers of the Committee werescanning their notes. I immediatelystarted sweating.”The student was reluctant to givedetails of the hearing, but told theMaroon that, “I was very effective¬ly brow-beaten, almost to the pointof tears.” He said that he was de¬prived of basic rights that would begranted outside the University. “Idid not have a lawyer,” he said,“and as far as I know there wereno records kept of the hearing.”The student has been placed onsocial probation for the rest of theyear. He said, “If my residenthead hadn’t interceded at the meet¬ing, I probably would have beensuspended.”BE -INfor this weekendRent A Cor •aL> Take A TripFriday — Saturday — Sunday(Return Monday)V.W. $16.88 + 6c/mi.Tempest $19.88 + 8c/m».Mustang or Camaro $20.88 + 9c/mi.KING RENT-A-CAR>330 E. 53rd St. Ml 3-1715 CLOTHING CLOSE OUT SALEWhat's going on at the bookstore? Yes, we do know that we're practically givingthis merchandise away. We're selling out. . . ,and shirt.Men's WearPerm. Press Shirts Were $5.50Cotton Shirts Were $4.00Slacks Were $7.00Slacks Were $5.98Socks .... underwear . .. . . belts . . . ties . . pajamas down to the last blouseWere $5.50 Now $3.85Were $4.00 Now $2.40Were $7.00 Now $4.90Were $5.98 Now $4.18. . cotton knit shirts. 20% offWomen's WearBlouses 40%Slippers .... bras , . . girdles .... nightgowns ....petticoats .... pajamas .... jewelry 30% offDon't miss our Vi price bargain tableNew items added daily.GIFT DEPT.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.May 26, 1967 CHICAGO MAROON 11rWUCB Will LaunchRadio Play Seriesby T. Edward HearneSome fresh new talent inthe University wants to “knockShakespeare off the air” andproduce r^dio drama w-hichwill speak to a modern audience.John Kleinband, director of theoffice of Radio and Television, andMichael Miller, director of pro¬gramming, announced today thatthey will launch a new' series ofradio plays this summer to bebroadcast on WUCB’s “From theMidway” program, on the147-station National EducationalRadio network, and on prominentFM stations from coast to coast.MICHAEL MILLER, the artisticdirector of the series, wants to con¬centrate on modern plays. “I wantto do all of Samuel Beckett’s work,and some plays with racialthemes,” said Mr. Miller, He saidhis plans include Strindberg’s MissJulie (“That's the oldest play we’lldo”); Michael Shurtleffs play CallMe By My Rightful Name, a storyof an inter-racial love affair; andHome Free, by Lansford Wilson,which recently won the Elmer RiceDrama Desk Award in New York.Francesca, a current play by KeithNielson, written in what Mr. Millercalled a “neo-elizabethan style,”and The Laundromat, by RogerCornish, will complete the summer season’s schedule,i Kleinband and Miller stressed,however, that they hope to continuethe series beyond the summer.“This won’t be just an eight-weekproject said Miller, “We want touse this as the basis of a perma-! nent company.”Miller has just recently joinedthe office of Radio and Televisionat the University, but has had ex¬tensive dramatic experience. Healso works with Second City, andwill direct one of their plays whenthe cabaret moves into the HarperTheatre in the fall. Before SecondCity, Miller worked with TyroneGuthrie at the Guthrie Theatre inMinneapolis for six months andfounded the Hull House Parkwaytheatre on 67th St. One of his playsthere, Alan Paton’s Sponomo, wonhim Henry Hewes’s citation in TheBest Plays of 1966-67 as “one of thebest new American directors.” Andbefore that? “I dug ditches anddrove cabs,” said Miller.AUDITIONS FOR the series willheld this Saturday, May 27th, from10 am to 1 pm, in the Radio-Television studio in the basementof Center of Continuing Education. I“These are open auditions,” saidMr. Miller. “I’m looking for alivepeople, who can contribute ideas aswell as their voices.” None of theparts have been cast yet, he said,and “anything goes.” O'Connell Non-CommittalBlum Asks Access to UC DocumentsGottschalk, Authority on Isotope Use,New Head of Argonne Research Hospital Student Government Presi¬dent Jeffrey Blum has askedPresident Beadle to make avail¬able to him University docu-Awaiting a DecisionOn Ranking—BlumStudent Government Presi¬dent Jeffrey Blum has calledthe results of last week’s rank¬ing referendum “a clear indi¬cation of the strong feeling of stu¬dents and faculty that rankingshould not be provided to draftboards.”He claimed that the vote “repre¬sents the sentiment of the appropri-at decision making body on thismatter,” and said he was “await¬ing the manner in which the Col¬lege administration will implementthe decision.”Blum said he regarded the voteon last week’s National Student As¬sociation referendum as “a vote formajor reform of NSA.” But he wasunconvinced that any real chargecould take place in the organiza¬tion.IN ANOTHER issue, the SG as¬sembly has called the refusal oftenure to Assistant Professor ofHistory Jesse Lemisch “a graveviolation of academic freedom anddue process.”The assembly has requested theUniversity to officially rehire Lem-1isch. ments currently available only toadministrators and select facultymembers.Blum’s request was met with anoncommittal response from Direc¬tor of Admissions CharlesO’Connell.IN A LETTER dated May 17,Blum said that “an increasingnumber of students feel that theirinterests are not significantly con¬sidered when decisions are made,”and that “student opinion must beheard for the University to functionproperly.”Citing the Page Committee’s rec¬ommendation that the flow of infor¬mation and views be widespreadthroughout the University commu¬nity and that decisions which aremade be explained, he requestedaccess to the following documents:• The Blum Committee report,and all documents and correspond¬ence relating thereto, except thosepertaining to land which the Uni¬versity is interested in obtaining.• All documents relating to theimplementation of the Social Rules(Mentschikoff) Committee report.• Minutes of the Council of theUniversity Senate for the pastschool year and all future minutes.• A list of all planned building bythe University, the stage of theDr. Alexander Gottschalk,an authority on the use ofradioactive isotopes in medi¬cine. has been named directorof the Argonne Cancer ResearchHospital, which is operated by UCon its campus for the United StatesAtomic Energy Commission.Dr. Gottschalk is an associateprofessor of radiology and chief ofthe section of neclear medicine atthe University.Dr. Leon 0. Jacobson, the JosephRegenstein Professor of Biologicaland Medical Sciences and dean ofthe division of the biological sci¬ences at the University, has beendirector of the hospital since its es¬tablishment in 1951.Dr. Jacobson will now devotefull-time to his responsibilities asDean, a post he assumed on Janu¬ary 1, 1966, and to his research,teaching and clinical activities.Dr. Gottschalk was a resident inhe department of radiology at UC.since he had bee able to cary asection of nuclear medicine.Dr. Jacobson said that he did not expect the post would cut into Dr.Gottschalk’s research time much,since he had been able to carry afull load of research, teaching, andconsultations in his 16 years as di¬rector.UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor CINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANACADEMY AWARDWINNER"A MAN & A WOMAN”Anouk AimeeIn ColorSun-Times * * * *AMERICAN—For anyone whose ever been in loveStudents $1.50 with I.D. card every daybut Saturday.Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. & Sun.open 1:30 Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 plans, the projected use of the fa-cilities, the degree of flexibility 0fthe plans, and the estimated cost.• A list of what ad hoc faculty orstudent-faculty or administrationcommittees exist, who the mem.bers are and how they were chosen, copies of the charges to themand the stage of the deliberationsas far as has been reported formal,ly to you or to the charging body.• A copy of the University budgetfor 1966-67, and the projected budget for 1967-68.O Connell, to whom Beadle referred Blum’s letter, said in a let¬ter dated May 25 that he would “behappy” to talk with Blum about hisspecific requests. He noted, howev¬er, that “when information and do¬cuments pertaining to Universityaffairs are made available to thegeneral University public “theywill be made available to StudentGovernment.”He said he thought the newlyformed Advisory Faculty-StudentCommittee on Campus Student Lifeshould be consulted.STATIONERYBOOKSGREETING CARETS* ★THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% StucUnt DiscountElizabeth Qordon Hair Designers, inc.1620 East 53rd StreetBU 8-2900-01-02 MALE OR FEMALE21 Years Old?DRIVE A YELLOW CABTHIS SUMMERfull or part time-work near your homeUC Students Earned More Than$25/day Last SummerFor information Call CA 5-7440GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELEDI"A Gold Mine ol Good Food”10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559IB at More For Less!Try Our Convenient Take-Out Orders UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO DEPARTMENT OF MUSICand theORCHESTRAL ASSOCIATIONpresent theCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAJEAN MARTINON, ConductorIRWIN HOFFMAN, Associate ConductorA PROGRAM OF TWENTIETH-CENTURY MUSICFRIDAYMAY 26. 1967 SATURDAYMAY 27. 1967MANDEL HALL, 57th & University8:30 P.M.Admission: $2.00; students, $1.00. All seats reserved. Tickets at Concert Office,5802 Woodlawn, or at Mandel Hall box office on evenings of performance.12 CHICAGO MAROON May 26, 1967Emotional Problems SaidTo Cause UC Drop Outs Nappy VacationFromS.S.ToU.C.She urged, “Basic questions needto be raised about the goals, objec¬tives, and purposes of student resi¬dences, and decisions in all areasbrought in some congruence withthese goals.”\. ' .. rc j ♦ ,The Chicago Symphony Or¬chestra, in conjunction witha Rockefeller Foundationgrant and the UC music de¬partment, will give theirthird series of concerts de¬voted to new contemporarymusic this Friday and Satur¬day nites, May 26 and 27, inMandel Hall, at 8:30 pmeach nite. The program, con- 'ducted jointly by Music Di¬rector Jean Martinon andAssociate Conductor IrwinHoffman, will consist ofDonald Martino’s Mosaic andGeorge Crumb’s Echoes ofTime and the River, bothworld premieres and com¬missions of UC. Completingthe program will be the firstChicago performance of Irv¬ing Fine’s Symphony (1962).Tickets, priced at $2 ($1 forstudents) are available at thebox office in Mandel Corridorprior to each concert. Another StudyMrs. Newman’s study differs in;methodology and, to some extent in Imajor conclusions from a recentlyreported study by William G. Spa-|dy, PhD, candidate in the Depart- jnent of Education. Spady adminis- jtered questionnaires about personalattitudes to every member of the jclass of 1969, and compared the re-1sponses of those who were stillhere after two years with thosewho had left.Mrs.. Newman’s report basedmost of its findings on the personalinterviews, conducted after the stu¬dents had dropped out—in somecases, presumably, up to fouryears after they had dropped out. $ RENT A002 TRUCKPer HourDO-IT-YOURSELFTRUCK RENTALSO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hour AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH —— NEW A USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes — Batteries10% discount to student* with ID cardsHAVE A NICEVACATIONcompliments ofTHE CATHOLICSALVAGE BUREAU3514 S. MICH. 10 F. 41st ST. Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the reslforeign cor hospital“If YOU happen to be browsingat the Faculty Lounge of theFirestone Library at Princeton Uni¬versity, and want to pick up alittle information on current affairs,you v'ill find available: Time,Harpers, Atlantic Monthly, theEconomist, the Times LiterarySupplement, the New Republic, theNation, the New Statesman, theProgressive, and I. F. Stone’s Weekly.When leaving,you exit, appro¬priately, on theIelt.” I for • frs« copy of tk#current issue of NA¬TIONAL REVIEW, writeto Dept. CP-6, 150 E.35 St., N.Y., N.Y., 100161967 SUMMER FOOD SERVICE SCHEDULEATHUTCHINSON COMMONS ANDWOODWARD COURTDining Room"C" Shop Hutchinson Commons Woodward CommonsSat. June Open 8:00 AM Closed Breakfast-Board Contractto Mictnite Only Lunch-Cash CafeteriaLunch-Cash CafeteriaSun. June 11 Closed Closed 11:30 - 1:30 PMWeek of: Open: Closed ClosedJune 12 - 16 7:00 AM to 3:30 PM Open:Mon. ttiru Fri. Breakfast 7:30 - 9:00 AMLunch 11:30 - 1:30 PMSat. & Sun. Closed Closed Cash Cafeteria-Mon. thru FriJune 17 «. it Closed ClosedWeek of: Open: Open:Breakfast 7:30 - 9.00 AMLunch 11:30 - 1:30 PMMon. thru Sat.June 1* - 24Sun. June 2JWeek of: Closed 7:00 AM to 3:30 PMMon. thru Fri.Thru Sept. 1, 1967Sat. & Sun.-Closed CosedOpen - Board ContractClosed See Above ScheduleJune 26 - Aug. 4 Students & Cash CafeteriaBreakfast 7:15 - 9:00 AMLunch 11:30 - 1:30 PMDinner 5:15 6:30 PMMon. thru Sat.Sun.Breakfast 8:00 - 9:30 AMDinner 12:0C - 1:15 PMNo meal Sun. eveningSat. Aug. 5 Closed Closed Open:Breakfast 7:00 - 9:00 AMBoard Coniract andCash CafeteriaLunch 11:30 - 1:30 PMCash Cafeteria OnlySun. Aug. 6 Closed Closed ClosedWeeks of: Closed Open: Open:Aue. 7 ttiru Sept. 1 7:00 AM to 3:30 PM Lunch 11.30 - 1:30 PMMon. thru Fri. Cash Cafe'eria OnlySat. Sept. 2) Closed Closed Mon. thru Fri.Sun. Sept. 3) ClosedMon. Labor Day)Sept. 4)Toes. Sept. 3thru Open:7:00 AM (0 3:30 PM Closed ClosedSat. Sept. 23 Mon. ttiru Fri.Sun. Sept. 4 Closed Closed Open - Cash Luncheonette11:30 -1:30 PMDinner - OrientationWeek of: Students & Staff OnlySept. 25 Open on Regular Open on Regular Mon. Tues. Wed.ttvru Oct. 1 FaH Schedule Fall Schedule Sept. 25 thru Sept. 277:00 AM to Midntte for Lunch Only Orientation - Students OnlyMon. thru Fri, 11:00 AM to 2:00 PM No Cash Cafeteria8:00 AM to Mon. thru Fri, Thurs. Sept. 28:11:00 PM Sat. Only Fall Schedule Resumes4.00 PM to 8:00 PMSun. Onty Contract Students OnlyBreakfast & DinnerMon. thru Sat.Breakfast & Dinner SundaysCash CafeteriaMon. thru Sat.Lunch 11:30 - 1:30 PM Slim and sleek - _For surfing or sunning \The Hawaiian length HarpoonMade of Elasticized faille,it flexes and flows with your every move.Solid colors: Deep Orange and Deep BlueSizes: 28-36 $6.00• POHTOWtAN fONjantzen6>V Stoty,-STmmt Sc (Campus S’fjoplit the New Hyde Perk Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55th SI. Phone 752-8100May 26, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • if■Computer SculptureMost people, when confronted with the idea of computersculpture, are dismayed. Art is for people, they say, notmachines. And they are right.The difference between this and the show of “computer- ; <s w? "Culture Calendarstimulated” .sculpture by JohanSevertson (in the SSA building, El¬lis and 60th, until June 11) is thatSevertson is a person who usescomputers as a tool to make sculp¬ture. and not tlhe other way around.THE SHOW consists of sculptureswhich are of relatively the samfeform: flat steel black squares, rec¬tangles, and circles, welded togeth¬er In pairs, adorned with strips ofanodized aluminum, occassionallyadorned with painted bands of col¬or.All of the works in this show arein the same ”3:4” series, that is,the proportion of the sizes in thetwo planes is 3 to 4. or else theproportion of the individual planesis 3 to 4. Working within thisframework, Severtson gives thecomputer various elements—thealuminum strips and colorbands—which are combined in ev¬ery way possible.Every five tries or so, the com¬puter prints out a design to showhow the combinations are progress¬ing. Severtson watches these, tries 1to visualize what they would looklike in three dimensions, builds amodel if necessary, adjusts the pro¬gram. and keeps a record of all the!data so that it can he run throughagain.THE ADVANTAGE of thesystem is that it eliminates some !of the mechanical effort involved increating a work of art by present-,ing the artist (or programmer)with a great number of differentarrangements. (It can be arguedthis stage is always something ap¬proaching trial and error—whatdistinguishes an artist from an arti¬san is his eye and mind, not hishand.) An additional advantage isthat some of the combinations thatthe computer comes up with wouldnever have occurred to the artist HHiM is-:/--./Art! by himself, because of his preju¬dices or training. This may be forI better or for worse, but it allowsmore possibilities.The problem of course is the art¬ist. The computers are simply| tools: they can only do so muchwith what the men put in. This per¬haps is what is wrong with theshow at the SSA. Severtson has notput very much in. It may be thathe has too many elements to jugglefor the computer he is using (whichleads to the question, why, then, ishe using a computer?) The non-'sculptures in the show (‘‘draw-'ings”) are much more interestingthan the sculptures. They are,frankly two-dimensional, black with!one other color, on aluminum. Thedesigns seem to float against gravi-!ty on the metal, and Severtson has!hung them so that they can turn j1360 degrees. Roger Black ART INSTITUTE OFCHICAGO—Andrew Wyeth Retrospec¬tive: Thru June 4. Annual ExhibitionSociety for Contemporary AmericanArt: Thru May 21. Rembrandt Etchingsand Drawings from A. I. collection:continuing. Photographs by Jonas Dovy-denas: May 13-July 9. Japanese ActorPrints y Sharaku: Thru May 28. Ce¬ramics by Marc Hansen, Earl J. HooksSc Toniiya Matsuda: Thru May 14.Wyeth exhibition: Adults $1.00: Students;Sc Children 50c. Daily 10-5: Thu. 10-9:30: jSun. Noon-5: Wyeth exhibition openTues. till 9:30. Michigan & Adams.„ ConcertsProfessionalCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAJUNE FESTIVAL—Jean Martinon, Mu¬sic Director.Thu. June 1-Jean Martinon. cond; Ste-:ven Staryk & Samuel Magad, violins;Donald Peck, flute: Kenneth Gilbert,harpsichord. All-Bach program: SuiteNo. 1 in c; Flute Violin & Clavier Con- jcerto in a; Violin Concerto No 1 in a;Suite No. 3 in D.Fri. June 2—Henry Lewis, cond: Mar¬ilyn Horne (Isabella); Teresa Orantes(Elvirat; Carol Cornelisen (Zulma);Ken Remo (Lindoro); Theordor Upp-man (Taddel); Charles Van Tassel(Haly); Ezio Flagello (Mustafa): Chica¬go Symphony Concert Cho. Rossini:‘L'itailana in Algeri.”Sat. June 3—Jean Martinon cond:Donald Peck flute: Kenneth Gilbertharpsichord; Steven Staryk & Victor Ai-tay, violins. All-Bach program: Suite No. 2 in b. Clavier Concerto in d: TwoViolin Concerto in d: Suite No. 4 in D.All performances begin at 8:30$2 00-$4.50. Orchestra Hall, 220 S. Michi¬gan HA 7-0362.TheatreFIDDLER ON THE ROOF—The Bock-Harnick musical starring Luther Adlerand Dolores Wilson. Matinee star, Paul iLipson. Nightly, 8:30: Matinees Sat. &Wed. at 2. Closed Sun. Evenings, i$3.00-$9.00. Matinees. $2.50-$5.00McVickers Theatre, Madison nr. State.782-8230.THE ODD COUPLE—Neil Simon’s newcomedy hit starring Dan Dailey and El- :hot Reed. Mike Nichols, dir. Nightly, I8:30; Wed. & Sat. Matinee, 2. ClosedSun. Nightly. $2.75-$5.00: Fr & Sat,$3.50-$5.95. Matinees $2.50-$4.95. Black-stone Theatre, 60 E. Balbo. Cl 6-8240,OH, WHAT A LOVELY WAR!—StarringTerry Lomax, Patrick Henry, dir. Thefirst" musical production in Goodman iTheatre’s history. May 5-28. Tue-Thu &Sun, 7:30; Fri & Sat. 8:30: Thru, May11 & 18 at 2. Colsed Mon. Nightly (andmatinees) $3.50; Fri & Sat. $4.00. Good¬man Theatre, 200 S. Columbus Drive.CE 6-2337. |SECOND CITY—24th satirical revue‘‘The Return of the Viper.” Paul Sillsdir; Fred Kaz. music. Cast includes J.J. Barry. Martin Harvey Friedberg,Burt Heyman, Sandy Holt, Sid Grosa*field, David Walsh and Penny White.Sun. & Tues-Thu 9; Fri. 8:30 & 11: Sat. 8:30, 11 Sc 1. Closed Mon. Nightly $*> >o-Fri & Sat. $3.00 (1846 N. Welis DE7-3992 MO 4-4032 after 8:30.WAIT UNTIL DARK—Starring ShirlevJones and Jack Cassidy. May 1-June 3Call theatre for information. StudebakerTheatre. 410 S’. Michigan 922-2973,College and CommunityHULL HOUSE THEATRE‘—"Pic Dev-ils” by John Whiting. Robert Sickingerdir. Thru May. Fri. & Sat., 8:30; Sun7:30. Fri. & Sat. $3.90; Sun. $3 40 JaneAddams Center, 3212 N. Broachvav348-5622.“My Sweet Charlie” by David Westh-einer, Dick Gaffield. dir. May 12-28 Fri& Sat, 8:30; Sun, 7:30. Fri & Sat $2 05Sun. $2.00 Students $1.00 Fri & Sun.Parkway Community House, 500 E67th. 324-5622.HULL HOUSE UNDERGROUND THE¬ATRE—“If I had a Hammer” by GeraldWallace. Mr. Wallace, dir. Thru May.Fri. & Slat., 8:30: Sun. 7 30$1.00-$1.50. Henry Booth House 2250 S.State 326-1887.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO RF.NA1SSANCE PLAYERS-present ’AMery Play Betweene Johan, Johan, theHusbande, Tyb, His Wyfe, and Syr Joban, the Preest.” Directed by PaulD'Andrea, starring Kenneth Northcott"Mundus et Infans." Directed by AianNelson. Tudor Music by the CollegiumMusicum. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. May 26. 27 Sc 28, in the CloisterClub. Tickets: $1.00 for students, $2.00for others.GIRLS!summerbunnyWhen you set asideyour books, don apair of ears! Topearnings, fun andglamor are yours atPlayboy. Contact theBunny Mother at thePlayboy Club® near¬est you.ATLANTADinkier Motor Hotel♦BALTIMORE28 Light StreetPLAYBOY OF BOSTON54 Park Scp»“r® ,♦CHICAGO116 East Walton StreetCINCINNATI35 East 7th Street♦DETROIT1014 East Jefferson StreetKANSAS CITYHotel Continental, 22nd floorLOS ANGELES8560 Sunset BoulevardMIAMI7701 Biseayne Boulevard♦NEW ORLEANS727 Ruo Iberville♦NEW YORK3 East 59th StreetPHOENIX1081 North Central AvenueST. LOUIS3914 Lin dell BoulevardSAN FRANCISCO736 Montgomery Street♦18 is minimum ege.21 is minimumin ell other Club*. Offer endsMay 31st.You have until May 31st to get all the travelers checks you want-up to $5,000 worth-for a fee ofjust $222. At banks everywhere.You can save real money bybuying First National CityTravelers Checks now for yoursummer vacation trip. Readhow.Normally travelers checks carrya fee of a penny a dollar. It costs $1for $100 worth of checks, $2 for$200, $10 for $1,000, and so forth.Now, during May only, you canbuy any amount you need — up to$5,000. worth — for only $2, plusthe face value of the checks. Youcould save up to $48. (For less than$200 worth, of course, the fee is lessthan $2.)If you're planning a trip toEurope, what you save from thisoffer could pay for an extra day onthe Rhine. Or dinner and Shake¬speare at Stratford.Or a patch of grass at the New¬port Jazz Festival, if you're stayingcloser to home.Welcomed everywhereFirst National City Bank hasbeen in the travelers check busi¬ness for 63 years. Our checks areknown and accepted in more thana million places throughout the world — airlines, car rental agen¬cies, steamship lines, hotels, mo¬tels, restaurants, stores, etc.You can spend them as easily atLe Drugstore as at the drugstore.And they’re just as convenient ona weekend trip as on a world tour.Fast refund in case of lossThe greatest advantage of FirstNational City Travelers Checks isthat you get your money backpromptly if they’re lost or stolen.We’ve built a security network of25,000 banking offices around theworld where you can get lostchecks refunded fast. On the spot.How do you find the nearest re¬fund offices? In the ContinentalU.S., call Western Union Operator25. Abroad, we’ve supplied everyprincipal hotel with a list of thenearest offices.No wonder we're called theMaximum Security travelers check.Buy now, travel laterBuy your travelers checks now— at a saving — and use them later.Many people, in fact, keep sometravelers checks on hand as insur¬ance against the day when they mayneed cash in an emergency. Offer good only in U.S. andPuerto Rico, May 1-31,1967Never before has such completeprotection for your cash been soinexpensive. So act fast. Get yoursummer supply of First NationalCity Travelers Checks now. Theycan be bought at most banks andsavings institutions.If your vacation money is in yourlocal bank and you won’t be homeuntil after May 31, you can stilltake advantage of this offer. Justmail this ad to your parents and askthem to send your money to you.Note to all banks andsavings institutionsDuring the month of May, we'remaking this unusual introductoryoffer to your customers at no costto you. Your customer gets the sav¬ing, but you earn your normal com¬mission.FirstNational CityTravelers ChecksMember Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.d>1967 First National City Bank, New York.14 CHICAGO MAROON May 26, 1967miMAROON CLASSIFIEDS% vPERSONALS ■ : V ■■Hail and Farewell—until June 30Holder of the One: Beware! lit will notbe used in elections!—the Last.Tutoring in Latin, German. Call even¬ings WKS. 314-5547.Lost: MIT ’66 class ring on Pierce Tow¬er Athletic Field. If found please callStan. 684-1396.KATE: Come live w/us and be ourroommate. RSVP Sept. Love, s,j, and b.Witnesses to the cycle accident at 53rd& Woodlawn. 4 pm last Monday, pleasecall Chuck, 684-3940.A Hippy vacation to all from Toad Hall.Lost: in winter quarter—gold bracelet1906 engraved inside—three ornate ini¬tials engraved outside. Ample reward.Call 363-4884. Buy a Fhoenix-50c”—Eilen Lewin’s His¬toric address to Hutch CommonsLOST: argus camera last qtr. MI 3-6000x229CUC orchestra members are entitled tofree tickets to the Saturday night Chica¬go Symphony concert. Contact anymember o< the new orchestra commit¬tee.JOBS. OFFEREDAdvertising salesman needed for sum¬mer months. Oppty. perm, prt-time. Re¬quire intelligence, aggressiveness, accu¬rate follow-up. Work 1st V2 of mo.850/mo. guarantee, 15% commission.Write HPK Voices Rm 920, 1525 E. 53rdChicago 60615.Research assistant—two pleasant andunattached researchers are needed forsummer employment. Approximately 15hrs. per wk. (arranged) with pay about$2.10/hr. IDEAL CANDIDATE should beable to write summaries of numericalall your courses.Happy Birthday y<I still Love younn’ro flunking ! trends, type and calculate percentagespu re nunKing y Niedeerhoffer at 643-8992 after 11 pm carpet, desks etc. MI 3-3135.8 rm Georgian house (82 & Cramden),completed basement, 3 bedrm., IY2bath. Fireplaces, gas heat. 2 car garage. By appointment. ES 5-6938.Bookcases, chairs, tables, desks, dres¬sers, books, books, books. 324-5751 eves.Zenith 23” television $60. 324-5751 eves.bed 815, stuffed chair 85. Single bed $:dresser 88- Aluminum bookcase 83 Call324-1163 eves.Sofa, bureau & mirror, 2 small bureaus,door desk, accordian. 288-4534 bet4-7 pm. ,1966 TR4 A ind. rear suspension, over¬drive. Cali 667-5895Set regulation pocketMike, room 104, G.W. billiard balls.fer. 667-8450.’64 Volkswagen 2 dr. immaculate cond.Like new—low mileage. 8900 or les19173.Honda sport 50 cc—good condition 150mgp, does up to 50 mph. great for cam¬pus driving. Asking 8165 Call 288-2959.Giant BOOKCASES 9 ft.COUCH. Make us an offer! 752-3950.Sunday and there-after or at X4261 late 1965 Yahama, medium weight, Good aptParty for people interested in UC Committee for Women’s Rights. 7:30 Sat.,May 27, 1419 E. 53rd. apt. 26/18. Kantabutka, FA 4-8200, rmLeave message.KAMELOT Restaurant. 2160 E.~710% discount for all UC students.Great new guitar instruction book'Masters of Instrumental Blues Guitar”Rev. Gary Davis, Mississippi JohnHurt, John Fahey, etc. TOE FRETSHOP1 at THE FRET SHOP"•finest in compact stero••it. Harper Court, natch!The Shire Typing Service Mss. Theses,mi sc. 288-2639.3 going to SF June 8th. Join us—our caror yours. Fast trip Michael 373-7404.1 st, 2nd. 3rd YEAR WOMEN: want tohelp incoming women learn about thecampus, community, city? "adopt” 1 or2. Correspond during this summer be¬come friends next year. Participate inthe ONGOING ORIENTATION PRO-GRAM for women. If interested leavemessage with name, summer message,and intended next yr s address at 3406New Dorms. •But Michael, I thought you were goingto San Francisco!SAR meeting 3:30 today Reynolds ClubSpring reunion, SAR: bring own cookiesand punch.SRA: Students lor a responsible admin¬istration.just cleverer than the rest.ummer.Good night, David.David? Where’s Chet?Who says culture can’t be purdvased?he PHOENIX only 50cMaurice and Richie are horny toadsDrive to SF June 9? Phiilippe FA4 8200, xS71Buses to O’Hare rides again!!!Power when you need it the most:TOE PHOENIX—50cWorld’s greatest bus service!!!in past year. Stouffer’s Restaurants and1 he Other Side Coffee Shop togetheriave served more than one million per¬sons. The Other Side thanks you foryour support and announces that it willhe open eves, throughout the summer.603 E. 53rd St.Help me get to my brother's gradua¬tion—ride wanted to RI June 7th-9th.Call Pam 1413 X W allace.Jerry, Steve, May .Sue. Angie, andThanks and Good Luck!!Mushroom LadyBaruch BabyRest rooms on all buses to O'Hare.Support the dwindling arts on campus.Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweat¬shirts, rain parkas, tennis shoes,underwear, jackets, "levis,"camping equipment, wash pants,etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd St.PL 2-4744Open Sundays 9:30 • 1:M Hyde Park—Kenwood needs you as part 1| time volunteer or staff for program of 11 varied summer happenings with Kids1 13-17. Interest in working with cross-1; section of teens only prerequisite. Comej to meeting June 1, 8 pm, 5480 S. Ken-1j wood (Hyde Park Neighborhood Club) 11 For information call AT 5-5664 or LIj 8-2066! Part time cocktail waitress for lounge \with entertainment. Call Mrs. Bradley j1 288-4485.Typist, 5-day, 40 hr. wk, good fringe1 benefits. Must have good general intelli- i1 gence, ability to type minimum of 50 jwpm. Starting salary $345-$80/mo.. de-pending on qualifications. Pleasant!1 work environment. UC campus location,' nr- IC Phone Mrs. Shefcik, 324-3400,X2381 Part-time clerk-typist, 20 hrs./wk. Abili-j ty to type minimum 50 wpm. UC cam- ,1 pus location nr. IC Phone Mrs. Shefcik,324-3400, X238. <I Honda S-90, late '65- 1700 mi., fine cond. ■j best offer. Art. MI 3-1014. IFOR SALE sHonda 50, 1964 (c-100) less than 600 j Imiles on re-built engine, modified to 65 a! cc. $150. 288-8738 5-7 pm. sA book SYNTHESIS AND EXTRAC- ITIONS OF ORGANIC PSYCHEDELICS.$2.00, write the Psychedelic Shop, 5600 j1 S. Drexel. ^! 2 single beds $15 684-7927 Karen or Ii Gail. °Honda 50 econ. transp $150. 288-2959. ‘\ '59 Chev. Impala conv. Cheap. BU a8-2959. 41 KNIHGT 20 W Mono Amp $25 C! Knight AM-FM tuner $30LENCO-Bogen manual t. table $20 aHeathkit mono amp $12j BOGEN mono amp $10 *: BELL P-238 stereo tape deck $80 1VIKING 85 stereo tape deck 9i $90 Everything in perfect condition! 463-3585 or 521-0400 jFurniture—cheap: 3 beds (2 doube), Iscouches, tables, dressers, desks, farm-’chairs, record player. BU 8-7491. 4Students' furniture for sale. Reasonable, iCall 867-2145. fMen’s bike. Jerry. $20. 324-5751 eves.j Chairs, tables, dressers, bookcases,books, books, books. 324-5751 eves.Beige sectional sofa, antique whiteI large buffet (credenza) full size bed.j All in exc. cond. 221-6844.Fine condition bed inner spring, mat-1 tress, chest, shelves, desk, chair cur-| tains. Call BU 8-4099| ’61 Ford Galaxie convertible "RED”1 power this and power that. 8350/best!offer 324-9020.Furniture, radio, record player, paint* ji ings by artists, art objects, miscella- !I neous May 27 and 28, noon to $ pm. 17229 Constance, NO 7-8148 eves.’66 Honda CB 160. Just broken in. Only1 1000 miles. Perfect running cond. $450| ext 260 rm 69.Six rooms of student type furniture for jsale. Some nice beds, tables, couch, • sofa, black & white slp-Arttiur Krim. full fret, 870.00 643-9326speed tape recorder, good condition;all 752-7366.FOR RENTShore nr. Rainbow Beach. 3*2 rms.►1, unattached bldg. Furn.. dishesopt. 892 50/mo 374-4334 eves, (and/view. 8165. Utils, inc. Call 288-3205.5 rm apt to share 752-6620-rms unfurn 54th & Harper. Avail-lg. rms, 2 bedrms, semi-furn. 60 and 1 7I 4 (IlC/mn UV O OIAO 1 painted, $60/mo. 493-6415 after 7 pm.Rmmte to share 4 rm apt. nr 53rd Har¬per. Summer and/or next yr. Frank,684-4279.Fem. rmmte needed July 1-S’ept. 30 apt.at 57th and Dorchester. Call room 408Blackstone Hall.55th & Wdlwn. Very lg. rm. 684-7545.Male and/or females for 13 rm apt, 5bedrm, 3 bath, 51 & Ellis, $45/mo CallSteve 324-7261.2 grad students want 3rd person toshrae 6 rm apt for summer $45/mo.Own bedrm. Call 288-3728 or 324-0293.Roomates wanted 58th and Kenwood,$47.50 per month for summer and/ornect year. Call FA 4-9226.WANTEDNeed graduation ticket tor Sat. X 3744next year. Call FA 4 9226.Shirley Rm 403.Furnished apts or houses for families ofhigh school teachers coming here forNat. Science Foundation Summer Pro¬gram, June 23-Aug. 5. Call Keiling UCX 2747 or 493-7789.Effic. apt for summer and/or next yearat modest rent. MI 3-6000, X 332 even-j ings.! Art Institute student desires 1 bedrmi apt Cheap. Walking distance IC667-5944.Visiting prof, w/4 childern wants lg apt.or hse nr. campus for July-Aug. CallOVADIA HY 3-5704.1 will pay for tickets to College gradua¬tion June 10. Call FA 4-8200 X 526 andj leave message.! Would like to rent hse for summer. Am jI teacher with 2 school age children 2nd!! wk in June till mid-August. Call collect;| as soon as possible, 312-339-2672 or writeFRED GEORGE, 806 E. 163rd St. S.J Holland, Illinois.| I’ll pay $6 for ticket to June 10 gradua-[ tion/Charlie. 1710 Pierce FA *.-950<L2 visiting prof w/small fam wish furnhousing for next yr. MI 3-0800, X 3883.Woman wanted to share attrac apt.Own rm, Nr. 53 & Harper $50. 751-7267.1st yr. female grad desires apt nr. cam¬pus to share next yr. Write: MarleneBagoff, 325 W. 108th St. New York, NY j10025Resp. family needs 2 bedrm hse or apt ■by Aug 25. Rev Robert Newton, camp-bell College, Bull’s Creek, No. Carolina.2 Dutch Montessori teachers need 2/3bedrm. furn. from of Sept 67-1 July 68Call 924-2356 ( 8:30-4:00) or 538-2574. Central air new 8 rm. 3 bedrm, study684-2307’alk UniV’ 6/15'9,30 *2o0/mo.2 lg rms, furn, «qr cond. 1 blk frombeach. Conv. trans. to Hvde Park288-8036 after 7 pm.5 rms. 2 bedrms, furn.from UC $100. 752-8881. 6/15-9/30, 2 blks4 large rooms, furnished, $75 Mid-June-Sept. 363-0151.4 lg. rooms, cool bsmt., furn. $90/moJune-Sept/Oct. 684-3472.10 rm hse RNT 1-6 bdrms., kitchennewly remodeled, furn. 56 & Maryland.FA 4-9500 rm 1819, 1920 X. 1805 X7 large furn. rooms: 3-4 bedrms. nearcampus & shopping. $153/mo 643-66694 rm nicely furn apt, 53rd &~Blkstn.July-Aug -Sept. Call BU 8-0675.Coach house: 2 bedrm balcony garagegarden 6/12-9/15. $135/mo. 624-46556/15-10/1 two bedrms. $85/mo. Call JoeMI 3-6000, ext 810 BFurn apt 2 bedrms $95/mo. Jur.e-Sept.Laura 493-2040 or Ann B. 288-5045.6104 Ellis. 5 rooms $97/mo. Call MI3-1014 from 7:10 pm.4»2 rms on North Side >2 hi. fromlake, avail. July 1, with option to renewLg. 3 rm furn. corner,mo. 6/9-9/30 684-7884 . lakeview, $100.3 bedrooms—furn. 54th & Univ. 288-3576.Modern furn. efficiency good kitchenette—2 blks from campus. 6/12 9/12-667-6622.2 bedrm. apt on Woodlawn at 54th,J avail, for summer. Need person toshare with. Call 288-5650.June 15-Oct. 1 in heart of Hyde Park.1155 E. 54th St. 4 rooms $110/mo. CallMI 3-9386.$40/mo. own rm in fully furn 7 rm apt,1 blk from IC in Hy. Pk. Open occupan¬cy. Avail, now MI 3-3603.3 bedrm. apt. furn newly painted nr.us. $100/mo. 288-8347 after 6 pm.5, 4 bedrms. 2 baths, spacious 51st& Kimbark. Call BU 8-6610, X 1107,3328X1967. Pup tent rentalReservations re- or 2 resp. stud to drive station wagonto NYC on or around 6/15. All expenses 4 ]ge rms jlge rms for summer. 51st & Univ.Gary. 493-5360 or 643-5541.BARGAIN! Aug W-SeptT lo or Oct. 1. 55& Kenwood. 3 rms furn. BU 8-6610, rm1210.& fee paidings. 493-3506 mornings or even-rooms- Married student HousingWANT A ROOM WITH SEXil? private, spacious, and fur-1; delicious, home-style cooking inJy student-run building on cam-FOR SUMMER OR NEXT YEARrmmte grad stud. Fall. $48PIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT Going on Vacation? Reliable youngSwedish businessman in Chicago, June-Aug will look after your house or apt.Have refs. Call 645-0843. 2 bedrooms, fully furn.One block from campus. June 12-Sept.25. Only $93.50. Call 667-6594.So. Shore apt. $105/mo.Leena MU *-5600. X 286. 3‘,'2 rms. CallRoom available for summer. $65/mo.Call Rob or Peter 363-6043.2l,i rms. 54th & Wdlwn. June-Sept.885/mo. 288-5742 or MI 3-5516 lu msg.Grad students Amer. hist, to start studygroup during summer session to pre¬pare for exam. US hist. 1603-1865 CallMU 4-1309 after 6 pm. So. shore studio apt, 2 rms, $85, garage$15 reward for info, leading to an ac- i 310 June-Sept. 15 John Ward MI 3-5516,ceptable 1 bedrm apt in Hyde Park for I leave message.occ. 9/1/67 Phone 643-5697.2 renting car in Europe need 3rd 6/21.I 895/mo. 752-4546.288-2959 or 684-8480. 5 rms. furn for summer. 6110 S. EllisSUBLETS312 rm apt in So.year. 221-3475. Effic. apt. on Lake at 57th. 6/10-9/30.Furn, 324-1409 after 6 pm. or X 3675.7 rms- 60th and IC (across from IntShore. Avail, next Hse.) $140/mo. MI 3-0236.6/10-8/15: furnished 31a rms. 1 bedrmnear Co-Op. IC, Lake. 667-4590 or X3484. Furnished apt, 6 rms, 4 bedrms, 2porches $200/mo. Good neighborhood55th & Dorchester, Nr campus, shop¬ping Call 288-5639.COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTGREEK SALADS7100 S. Yates Free Parking Room in town bouse, washing machine,beautiful back yard; 2 blks from cam¬pus, reasonable. 684-4999.ROOMMATES WANTEDTHE BEST SOURCE FORArtist's MaterialsAcross 53rd Kimbark PlaxaComplete Pic.-ire FramingServiceMounting; Matting Non-GlareGlass • School SuppliesBE SURE TO ASK FORWEEKLY SPECIALDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3 411110% STUDENT DISCOUNTON $10 OR MORE MR. KIMBARK SAYS! TRY THESE EXTRASPECIALS ON '64 VINTAGE IMPORTED^ I GERMAN ESTATE BOTTLED WINES53fd K|MBARK UQU0RS1214 E. 53rd ST. 53-KIMBARK PIAZAHY 3-3355 FREE DELIVERYErbacher Honigberg(Rhine) (O. A. Schluss Reinhartshausen)Reg. 2.79 5th *2 29Schloss Volrads SchlossabzugRed Seal (Rhine) (O. A. Graf Matushka-Greiffenclav)Reg. 3.29 . . . , 5th $2.79Oberemmeler Scharzberg Spaetlese(Moselle) (O. A. Kloster Kellerei)Reg. 2.69 5th $2.19Wiltinger Klosterberg Spaetlese(Moselle) (O. A. Pfeifer)Reg. 3.39 ' . 5th $2.89 You won't Save to put yourmoving or otorogo problemoff until tomorrow if youPITERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Defy Am444-4411 Great loc. 57th & Kimbark, fem toshare apt w/2 grads for summer. BU8-6592. ■*_Male for summer; own bedrm in 7 rmfacilities, great location. 54 & Univ.288-6102UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKstrong Bowie**NEW CAR LOANS$450 per hundred1554 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200Member F.D.I.C. Mlae for summer; own bedrm in 7 rmapt nr Point, two baths, full’ kitchen,$56/mo. 493-0326.Air cond apt $41. Own rin. 363-3814.Fem. rmmte for summer With optioni for next year. Near campus, nicely fur-! nished. 667-0271. $49/mo .2nd male for 5 rm apt 1 blk from cam-pus. Sum. 835/mo. MI 3-8000 rm 82.Apartment close to campus, 5 rms, furn838/mo. To share with males, 752-9512,Roger.2 fem for summer $47. 667-2145.Male for Summer and/or next yearSpacious, sunny 7 rm apt. 1635 53 BU8 5554. _JOne male roommate wanted. Apartmentclose to campus, 5 rooms, furn shed,$38/month plus share of utilities. Roger.752-9512.2 fem. to share apt. on Harper Court 2rms/ea. $50/mo. HY 3-1171.1 or 2 female roommates for summerOwn furnished rm. 6 rm. apt. w/porch,convenient location. $85/mo. DO 3-7682.| Male, pref grad stu, to share w/same.Quiet, air cond 6 rm apt in Fac bldg. 5min walk to Harper, Lake or IC.$55/mo. Summer, poss next year684-4039.YAl-5AM-\5MNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTIpstlellsliig laCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. U> 9:45 f-M-ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1118 la* 43 rd S*. MU 41042May 26, 1967 CHICAGO MAROON 15The Party MartHeadquarters for all party needsChristmas is overjj si* GREAT VINTAGES atOURDOUBLE DISCOUNTS1960 Vintage PortThe finest vintage in the last decade. Rich, robust body, witha velvety finish.Port is becoming more popular all over the world. It has becomean everyday wine, because it is delicious anytime, during theday or night.1962 Vintage Chateau Lafitte Grand Cru $2.981964 Graves Superior Rouge $1.981964 Beaujolai's Brouilly $2.191964 Beaujolais St. Amour $2.191964 Chabli Grand Cru Vaudesir $4.491964 Liebfraumilch Spatlese $1.98BUY 6 BOTTLES GET ONE FREEDO US A FAVOR COME IN ANDSAMPLE OUR CHEESE!There are 225 different cheeses from 17 different countries,available af The Party Mart.SPECIAL OF THE WEEK;Buy $300 Worth OfCheese XTRASPECIALSB and LSCOTCHimportedfrom Scotland$2»8 fifthHEUBLEINCOCKTAILS$279But people are still drinking Port. 18 YEAR OLDRUMFifthBUDWEISERcase of 24 12-oz. cans$379CANADA DRYGinger Ale0 PACK 39CPlus DepositHAND MADEIMPORTED CRYSTALSTEMWARE49c.2 FREEWith A DozenGET 1 BOTTLE MAJORETTE FRENCH DRY WINEFREECelebrate Wedding Receptions orGraduation Parties with the Best for LessGRANDINThe Champagne of Anjouextra drydemi secpinkImported from FranceCase of 12 - $34.983 for s10 CELEBRATIONSparkling BurgundyImported fromFrance $098case of 12$33.00 2 FIFTHThe Party MartOpen Daily 10 a.m. -11 p.m. - Sunday 12 Noon - 9 p.m. 2427 E. 72l116 CHICAGO MAROON May 26, 1967