The Chicago Maroon FOUNDEDIN 1892VOL. 76 NO. 3 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1967 12 PAGESSILVER ANNIVERSARYIT To Hold Nuclear ReunionCampus To AcquireA New LandmarkNearly 25 years ago—onSeptember 10, 1942—chemistshere first weighed a pure com¬pound of a new and promisingelement: plutonium.The silver anniversary of thismajor step in the development ofnuclear energy will be observed bymembers of the original researchgroup on Sunday afternoon, Sep¬tember 10, 1967, at a brief cere¬mony.At that time, Room 405 of theJones Chemistry Laboratory willbe formally designated a nationalhistorical landmark by the U.S. De¬partment of the Interior.Speakers at the informal ceremo¬nies will be:• George Boyd, assistant labora¬tory director, Oak Ridge NationalLaboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee;• Milton Burton, professor of Nobel Laureates To Speak at Observance“The Italian navigator has landed in the New World,” re¬marked Nobel Laureate physicist Arthur Holly Compton overthe telephone.“How were the natives?” asked James B. Conant, presidentof Harvard. i ~~“Very friendly,” replied Comp¬ton.That improvised conversation,which has become perhaps the bestknown secret code of the 20th cen¬tury, signified the successful com¬pletion of the first controlled re¬lease of nuclear energy on the siteof Stagg Field on December 2, 1942.Compton was in charge of Man- Cockcroft, Churchill College, Cam¬bridge, England (Physics, 1951);Willard F. Libby, University of Cal¬ifornia at Los Angeles (Chemistry,1960); Glenn T. Seaborg, Chairmanof the U.S. Atomic Energy Com¬mission (Chemistry, 1951); EmilioSegre, University of California atBerkeley (Physics, 1959), and Eu¬gene P. Wigner, Princeton Univer-' Chicago Park DistrictAuthorizes Music AreaThe Chicago Park Districthas set aside an area at thetip of the 55th St. Point formusic playing between noonand 8 p.m, daily.The action came after a disturb-ance at the Point as police triedJuly 4 to break up a crowd of 200people listening to bongo and fluteplaying.- Playing music in city parks with¬out the permission of the park dis¬trict is against park regulations.The area set aside is on the pointk between the park’s fieldhouse andthe lake.The music area was requested byAlderman Leon Despres, DanielBrenner of the parks and recrea¬tion committee of the Hyde Park-> Kenwood Community Conference,and by a committee of Hyde Park-, ers formed after the Fourth of Julyfracas. THE MEN WHO DID IT: Enrico Fermi, Arthur Compton, and Law¬rence Kimpton speak to reunion on 10th Anniversary of firstnuclear self-sustaining chain reaction.chemistry and director of the Ra¬diation Laboratory, the Universityof Notre Dame;• Charles Coryell, professor of(Continued on Page 3)hattan Project operations here and <,uv rphvsics 1963)ChnfntThW“.Me Pr0jeCt’l °.reral‘ Twelve other distinguished seien-c„h‘ef Tl;e “Italian navigator was ; and scho,ars havJ been invjtedCh‘cago s Enrico Fermi, who de- tQ participate in the two.day obser.signed and executed the expen- vanc6) which was announced in De-m®nt’... , . ~ cember, 1966, on the 24th anniver-Twenty-five years later on De- o[’the experiment They are.cember 1 and 2, 1%7, the Umvers!- /Edoardo Xmaldi, Institute dity will hod an anniversary obser- Fi d ..Guglieimo Marconi,"vance of the event. Among speak-1 j^omeearly period of plutonium research ers will be six Nobel Laureate . A’ si d Eklund secretar,also have been invited to Chicago chemists and physicists. general, International Atomic En-to attend the anniversary. Norman ; List Speakers erey Agency Vienna-H. Nachtrieb, a professor and They are Melvin Calvin, Univer- • Crawford H Gre’enewalt chair-chemistry, the Massachusetts Insti- chairman of the Department of sity of California at Berkeleytute of Technology; (Continued on Page 3) '(Chemistry, 1961); Sir John• Burris B. Cunningham, profes- ~sor of chemistry, the University of NEW POLITICS IN CHICAGOCalifornia at Berkeley;• Arthur Jaffey, group leader andsenior chemist, Argonne NationalLaboratory;• Isadore Perlman, professor andchairman of the Department ofChemistry, the University of Cali¬fornia at Berkeley;• Walter Pozen, assistant to th<Secretary of the Interior;• Louis B. Werner, vice-presi¬dent, Isotopes, Inc., Palto Alto, Cal¬ifornia; and• John Willard, Vilas professojof chemistry, the University of Wiscousin.President Beadle will welcome'the participants and Glenn T. Sea¬borg, chairman of the U.S. AtomicEnergy Commission, will make in¬formal remarks at a dinner in theevening.About 200 other scientists andtechnicians who took part in the Fighting the Power StructureBy REBECCA FISHER“Most of the groups havegrown out of the anti-war andblack power movements. TheyI are oriented toward channel-1-ling power directly. What it’s aboutis developing an alternative move¬ment that can fight the powerstructure,” said Paul Booth of themore than 200 national and localNew Politics organizations thatye been invited to attend a con¬vention to be held at the PalmerHouse in Chicago over the LaborDay weekend.Booth, former national secretaryof Students for a Democratic Socie¬ty and presently a member of the convention steering committee, de¬scribed the convention as “the firsteffort to get together local politicalorganizations.”The convention is being organ¬ized by the National Conference fora New Politics (NCNP), which wascreated in the fall of 1965 by differ¬ent activists from the variousbranches of the protest movementas a leadership conference.It was called with the idea of de¬veloping an alternative to the pro¬grams of the Democratic and Re¬publican parties in the 1968 electioncampaigns, and the formation of abroad-based, co-ordinated nationalstructure of the New Politics.THE CONVENTION will beNo Position For Lynd; Charges BiasBy DAVID L. AIKENStaughton Lynd, a Yale historian who has been vocal in his opposition to the Vietnamwar, has been shut out of the Chicago-area colleges to which he has applied for teachingpositions.The Board of Governors of Chicago StateCollege (formerly called Chicago Teachers Col¬lege—South) voted July 16 to reject,recommendation that Lynd be recommended his appointment, buta one-year appointment as the administrations rejected therecommendations.thegivenassociate professor of history.According to Lynd, the college’sdean of arts and sciences had writ¬ten him in May, saying, “Our com¬mitment to employ you is alreadyfirm,” but noting that there wouldbe a “necessary formality” of sign¬ing the contract.Earlier, Lynd said, he had ap- North Vietnam TripLast year, Yale granted Lynd aleave of absence with pay so thathe could do research. For the com¬ing school year, Yale granted hisrequest for another leave, withoutpay. During the Christmas recessof the previous year (Decemberplied to Northern Illinois University 1965). he went on a trip to South-in DeKalb, also a state institution, east Asia, including North Viet-nnd to the Chicago Circle campus nam, with Tom Hayden, a commu-°f the University of Illinois. At both nity organizer in Newark, N.J. Heplaces, he said, the members of the has also spoken at several anti-warhistory departments unanimously programs. Members of the Chicago StateCollege board cited his visit toNorth Vietnam as the main reasonfor their rejection of his appoint¬ment. His scholarly and teachingabilities were not in question,board members conceded.“Probably I will sue for financialdamages on the ground that therehas been a breach of contract,”Lynd said in a written statement,“But money is only one part of theproblem. If one teacher cannotteach because he has done unpopu¬lar things outside the classroom,then all teachers are threatened.(Continued on Page 5) Staughton Lynd Evergreen kicked off with a rally at the Coli-i seum on August 31, with Dr. Mar¬tin Luther King as keynoter. It willbe preceded by two days of precon¬vention sessions during which is¬sues and alternatives will be clari¬fied by the steering committee andrepresentatives from each group.“Who runs the American pres¬ent?” demands the Call to Conven¬tion in the New Politics News.I “We do not feel that we now cangovern our government ....I “Who decided to put a man onthe moon, to give 80 billion a yearto the military establishment, in¬stead of making our countryhealthy and creative place to liv<and raise children? We didn’t.“Whoever runs America, it isnot the American people ....| “We intend to end the destructionof Vietnam ....“We intend to end poverty, fear,and despair at home ....1 “We intend to make the electionprocess meaningful again ....“We will not be trapped insidethe old parties; and we will not betrapped outside them.I “And if we should build a party,it will be not merely a party, but amovement.”Some IssuesA third party is only one of themajor policy decisions to be dis¬cussed at the convention. The pri¬mary purpose will be to discussand debate objectives, politicalstrategies and perspectives of theNew Politics in conjunction withthe 1968 election and beyond.Among the issues: offering athird party ticket to Martin LutherKing and Dr. Benjamin Spock; run¬ning “favorite son” candidates in afew key industrial states iir the(Continued on Page 5) /University Ends Male Rank After Draft Law ChangeThe squabble over whether the spirit of the Faculty’s resolu- exempts all full-time registered un-tho ITnivprsitv should commie 'tion of February 21> the University dergraduates, without reference tothe University should compile of chicago is not a rank class rank Use of maIe classa male-only ranking of class 0f male students.” criterion for selectingstanding is over The final decision to end male raak as a cnterion tor selectingStanding s . ;rank was made at a July 14 meet-j sudents to call for the draft had^ean „° Students Charles >. . 0f the Committee of the Council been announced in Spring 1966 byOConnell issued the following * ^ senate. Selective Service Director Gen.statement last week: j t pw;s Hershev“In light of the changes incorpo- Follows New Law Lewis H«rsney.rated in the new Selective Service This followed enactment of the j In May 1966, following Chicago sAct, effective July 1, 1967, and in new federal draft law, which now [ resumption of male ranking in re¬ sponse to Hershey's regulation, stu- When a student referendum indents staged a sit-in at the Admin- May showed that the bulk of underistration Building.After a report graduates favored end of malerank however, members of Stu-from student-faculty committee appointed tostudy the question of the Universi-; dents Against the Rank decided toty’s relation to the draft, the gov- stage a “study-in” at the Adminis-erning Council of the Faculty Sen- j tration Building to protest lack ofate voted last February to end j action. Fifty-seven of those whomale ranking as soon as students j participated were later suspended,who might have needed to use such! although about half of the suspen-More Dorm Singles For FallThis Fall the University will con- ert, he said, which is the largest means that undoubled rooms invert 20 double rooms into singles in; house and currently has the fewest PierC€ Wl11 now cost 1216 *** quar'single rooms.Rates for these rooms and thePierce Tower and Woodward Courtand reduce rates in these and allother undoubled rooms, Dean of .Students Charles O’Connell told others previously undoubled will beThe Maroon Wednesday. dropped from the current specialEight of the rooms to be made undoubled rate to the University ssingles are in Pierce Tower, ac- “double-as-a-single rate. This iscording to Edward Turkington, di-1 the rate which a resident of a dou-rector of Student Housing. Two new ble-room pays if his roommatesingles will be made in each house. I moves out and he wants to keep theThe majority of Woodward’s | room as a single,twelve new singles will be in Rick-' The “double-as-a-single” rateCollege Deans To Clarify Drug PolicyThe University is planning a con-1 versity policy on the use of theseference on psychedelic drugs early drugs by students,next Fall, Dean of Students Charles • O’Connell said he wanted the con-O’Connell announced Wednesday. I ference to deal mainly with two;After the conference, he and Dean topics: the effects of drugs onof the College Wayne C. t®°?Lb ^jl health and the impact drug-use canjhave on a university community. IThe statement of disciplinary at¬titude will be directed mainly to-j wards entering students (about athird of the College), O’Connell In¬dicated. In the Spring George a ranking had been able to registerfor the Selective Service Qualifica-jtion Test, which had also been usedas a criterion for continued studentdeferment.Delay Brought ProtestWhen Hershey then announcedthat the test would not be giventhis year, the Committee of the sions have not been enforced.ter rather than the previous $235The University charges $178 aquarter for Pierce double rooms council decided not to take any ac-and $185 far Regular smgles. JHie tion on the question of male rank-new rate at Woodward will be $209 ■ until the new draft legislationper quarter. was enacted.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 I. 55th St.DO 3-7644 00 34866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FXAMESStudent and Faculty D it countrelease a statement of official Uni-USEDHI-FI and STEREOEQUIPMENTGUARANTEED$10 AND UPCALL 463-3585 or 521-0460 Playe, dean of undergraduate students, told them that marijuanause is inconsistent with the life ofthe mind.TOAD HALL Sells records atdiscount pricesALL DGG List $5.79 NOW $4.051444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500 ! StudentCo-op Bookstoreyour student service center12,000 titlesbooks boughtJosh White ticketsJobsapartment filerides and ridersReynolds Club Basementweekdays 10-5:30, Sat. 12-5 * - -v, •'§§***' THE CLIMATEFOR EDUCATIONIS PROGRESS ... & Jthe techniqueis innovation"FloriHAS A PLACE FORELEMENTARY,SECONDARYTEACHERSWant more facts?SEND FOR FREE COPY14 PAGEBOOK INCOLOR!&GETTHECOMF1 ETESTORY I J'/ •''a****"where the action is!'J. W. BURT, Tuachcr RtcruitmunfKnott Bldg.Statu Dapt. of EducationTeliahottoo, Florida 32304City Sfo (•ZipThe Other Side(COFFEE HOUSE)1603 E. 53rd ST.Friday Toby HobbsandCraig Anderson|Saturday - .Walter Lowe(finishes his 21-weekstay at The Other Side)Sunday - TROUBLE ilAlan Bard & Bettsie BondineTuesday - Doreen Triber plus auditions(Audition night every Tuesday night) HUTGHINSOH COMMONS HOW OPEN!Enjoy the University's new food service operation at HutchinsonCommons, now open to the University community from 7 am to 3:30 pm,Monday thru Friday.EGGS - PANCAKES - ala carte or Complete BreakfastSOUP - SANDWICHES - or Complete LuncheonBREAKFAST served from 7:00 am thru 10:30 amLUNCH served from 10:45 am thru 2:00 pmCOFFEE BREAK from 2:00 pm thru 3:30 pmCompletely air conditioned for your comfort *CAUCASIANCHALK CIRCLE BRECHT COURT THEATREOPENS FRIDAYTHREE WEEKENDSTHRU AUGUST 13fhTICKETS: REYNOLDS CLUB DESKor Ml 3-0800 EXT. 35812 THE CHICAGO MAROON July 28, 1967U Faculty Second Best Paid In Countryn'llP Ilniversitv of ChlC3?0 $17.37fi And P^PQAnc fhird txrifni oil i m niici P T~> „ U i. ~ i a a ..... . i ! ~The University of Chicago j $17,376 and Parsons third withhas edged above Parsons Col- $17 268lege to become the nation’s1 (Parsons, sometimes calledsecond-highest-paying institu- “Drop-Out U” by its critics be-tion in terms of ave age (acuity cjeS) Wednesday lost its attempt incompensation. . .. U.S. District Court to retain ac alumnustrusteesfight began.)$1000 IncreaseMillard G. Roberts, by of 6.8 percent represented a con-1 S t a n f o r d, Caltech, Claremonta er the accreditation_ siderable drop from last year’s re-1 Graduate School and Researchcord figure of 7.3 percent. A 7.2 Center, and MIT, from $16,000 topercent annual gain would have $16,999.The figure cited for Chicago re-1 been necessary for the doubling of ( Hebrew Union Colleget?.e^„an inCrease over lastJ?arls! faculty salaries within a decade, Cornell, Northwestern, (Ohio),Columbia,Harvard, this year again at the creditation by the North Central*! “E? °- W7* ffi8 *°al set in 1957 bV President j and Johns Hopkins, from $15,500 totop of the list, pays its full-time Association of Colleges and Second- Harvard1 experienced a similar in- Eisenhower’s Committee on Educa- $15 999.faculty an average of $18,700, ac- ary schools. (crease, from $17,600. tion Beyond the High School. j R ,cording to the June American Asso¬ciation of University Professors Rochester, Amherst, Princeton,The remaining institutions pay- Michigan, and the New School for. . . | Faculty at other schools made .r......K jBulletin. Chicago is second with; the wdw deSCCn<i" I Ssw ReSearCh> fr0m $15’°°0 t0P S. FROM WASHINGTOND.C/s Circle Rivals Them AllBy DAVID A. SAUERSpecial to The Chicago MaroonWASHINGTON—T h e an-influx of students hasnualbecome as ofasmuch a partsummer in WashingtonGeorgetown lawn parties.Thousands of them pour intogovernment internships offeringhigh pay, convivial companion¬ship, lenient hours and almost nowork, and find themselves livingnext door to each other in neigh¬borhoods that were almost de¬ signed with subletting in mind.Some live in the Capitol Hillarea, named for the distinctivepiece of architecture it surrounds.Others live in Georgetown. Most,however, find their way to Du¬Pont Circle, the area that wasonce Washington’s Gold Coast andis now a miniature Haight-Asbury.The Circle itself on any weekall over the Washington area. Pre-pubescent teeny boppers rub el¬bows with utterly unsublimatedQuaker Charges Costly Viet StalemateBy ROB SKEISTThe war in Vietnam is a“stalemate,” the people thereare sympathetic with the Viet in sewing and hygiene for mothersand young women. 'This community center was acooperative undertaking contribut¬ed to by the province, the U.S. septuagenarians, and groups ofNegro musicians play soul musicfor an audience that gathers easi¬ly and responds quickly with ei¬ther catcalls or applause.On weekends, students—and ev¬eryone else with any sense, forthat matter—leave the Districtfor one of the Maryland or Dela¬ware beaches, all of which are agood three hours away. It’s notthat the swimming is so great,it’s just that the city is so hot—and humid.Weekend evenings and studentsare usually associated with Mstreet, known locally as “TheStrip”. “The Strip” is the site ofan incredible proliferation of bars ACE Urges Protection For Students:No Membership Lists of Campus GroupsWASHINGTON—The Amer- when faced with future demands„ .. _, x- . ! “which challenge the fundamentalican Council on Education has^ principle of confidentiality” aboutdistributed to its more th1,500 members a “Statemeon Confidentiality of Student Rurging that colleges aords”universities not keep membershiplists of student organizations, espe¬cially those related to matters ofpolitical belief or action. student beliefs or associations. Itrecommends that institutions asktheir counsel “not merely to advisea prudent course, but to prepareevery legal basis for resistance.”According to a spokesman for the|tudent Activities Office here, mem-irship lists of organizations areipt but “under no circumstances”ire they available to investiga-The statement observes that stu- tors.)dents suspected of violating the_ ‘ j . e . ... Agency for International Develop-^ ong, and the rate of civilian ment and ^e u.s. Army andcasualties is growing steadily andappallingly, according to a Quakerwho called a downtown press con- law or thought to possess informa-;tion of value to an investigatory jcaterring to everyone from young body “can be directly approachedState Department types in suits in properly authorized ways. Thereand ties, to beer drinking, fun-!is no need to press the college orjuniversity into the doubtful role ofjinformant.”ference to tell of his 18 monthsspent at a Vietnamese hospital.Though he shied from makingany statements blatantly unpatriot¬ic. David Stickney, a 58-year-oldmember of the pacifist religiousgroup, claimed that more civiliansthan soldiers are being killed, andthat half of the casualties are chil¬dren.There were few babies at the Navy.Such dependence on military au¬thority seems in conflict with Quak¬er principles, Stickney acknowl¬edge!, but he claimed “the relief ofcivilian wartime suffering and de¬privation” received priority oversuch considerations.A key aim of “Quaker ServiceVietnam,” as the project wascalled, was to train Vietnamese forpositions in nursery, sewing, andhygiene schools. “Civilian hospitalsare desperately overcrowded and loving Georgetown University stu¬dents, who’ve been known to havetheir fun at the expense of theless light-hearted.Shriners, Too John P. Howe is Dead:Administrator, AlumnusJohn P. Howe, a formeradministrator whom Robert M.The document prepared by the Hutchins called “the leadingCouncil staff and endorsed by the! ,, ., ,, . ., ,,Council’s board of directors, points I authority on the university,hospital, Stickney noted, but sug- understaffed,” according to Stick-gested, “Maybe they just didn’t ney.survive long enough to get into the 'Not With Us'hospital.” Stickney referred several timesRepeatedly asked if he saw ex- to how the Vietnamese people “areamples of American atrocities, not with us.”Stickney replied, “Oh sure, but you He said they feel that they havecan’t get excited about it because no conti ol of the political or mili-this is war.” He spoke of seeing the tary moves, that “their future is insuffering victims of American na- the hands of the fates.” Also,palm and phosphorus operations, “there is some mysterious ingre-but was quick to mention that the dient the Viet Cong have that holdsViet Cong also commit atrocities. the hearts and minds of the peo-Community Center , pie.”Stickney and his wife were in the Speaking pessimistically about For part of the summer, stu- out that two universities a year ago died last Friday in New York,dents had competition from an- j complied with subpoenas issued by! Howe, who was 62, recently retiredother group that had taken Wash-! the House Un-American Activities as assistant to William Benton,ington by storm. These were the j Committee and furnished to thej publisher and chairman of the En-Shriners. j committee membership lists of cyclopedia Brittanica.On first noticing the Shriners in campus organizations known to op- j TT , . , , , , ,their colorful fezes, a long time pose United States policy in South- , Howe, who received a bachelor sWashington was heard to utter, east Asia. degree from Chicago in 1927,“The town is lousy with A-rabs.” worked in the University s adminis-And indeed it was a hell of a time Obligation To Protect tration from that time until 1945. Into he naradine down Pennsvlva-> 11041 he became an assistant to Wil-nia Avenue advertising yourselves H nbSa' Bent°n’ ? ^as the Cairo Temple from East t?005’ llke others, have an obliga- made vice president of the Univer-Neftiehnsh New Tersev The irn- tion to cooperate with committees | sity. Howe’s death ended nearly 30^ S the Shri. »< «» Congress." the statement de- years of association with Benton.ny, however, was lost on the Shri, , . „ • . „ dares, “they also have an obliga-1?erSi’ Wnht?i ri Lbn indent tion to Protect their students from As an undergraduate here, Howefun-loving as Georgetown students unwarranted intrusion into their was president of his junior classat their best, and in much the Uyes and from hurtful or threaten- and was a member of the Under¬same ways. ing interference in the exploration graduate Council and of Owl andBut conventions don t last for-; Qfe ideas and their consequences Serpent. He edited The Daily Ma-ever and the Shriners stay was h education entails. ... roon as a senior,mercifully short, as is, m fact, the. .stay of the student interns. It’s Except in the most extreme in- \ key assistant to Benton whilegetting late now and internships stances, a student’s college or uni- the latter was U.S. Senator fromwill begin running out. Slowly the yersity should never be a source of Connecticut from 1949 to 1953,student exodus will begin back to information about his beliefs or his Howe played a roled in Senatorthe colleges in every corner of the associations unless he has given Benton’s assault on the late Sena-country and by Labor Day Wash- clear consent to its serving this tor Joseph McCarthy’s anticommu-ington will have gone back to function.” j nist witch-hunt. Howe called it “thebeing the “best before dark town The statement also recommends j first systematic effort to containin the United States.” | that institutions obtain legal advice I McCarthy.”province of Quang Ngai, 350 milesnorth of Saigon, to set up a hospi¬tal-affiliated nursery school forpoor refugee children and classes American pacification efforts,Stickney bluntly asserted that “weare not winning the hearts andminds of the people.”Moore Sculpture 'Nuclear Energy' Will Be Dedicatedir . , n ~ 11 I Professor Of ooiiticai science um- 12-foot sculpture is being cast in “Nuclear Energy” will rest on groups requesting them to send(Continued from Page 1) Chicago bronze by Hermann Noack in Ham- the site of the 1942 experiment in representatives,man. E. I. DePont de Nemours and icinants in’ the observance burg, Germany. It will be shipped Stagg Field. Featured at the end of the obser-Company, Inc.; will hp welcomed bv President to Chicago through the St. Law- A reunion of scientists and tech- vance will be the world premiere of*. • W. B. Lewis, Atomic Energy of a 1958 Nobei Laureate in rence Seaway. nicians who took part in the origi- a documentary film on the develop-Canada. Ltd., Chalk River, Ontar- Seine and Physiology I nal experiment is planned, and spe- ments which led to the first nucleario: rELn nf the committee nlan- Henry Moore is regarded by crit- cial invitations will be extended to chain reaction. The film is being• Francis Perrin Haut-Commis- nine the 25th anniversary obser-! ics as one of the foremost sculptors the American Nuclear Society, the produced by the motion picturesaire a l’Enereie Atomioue Paris vance is Herbert I Anderson a of recent times. His work has been Atomic Industrial Forum, the In- unit of Argonne National Laborato-i AUander Sacr Tew Yo^k nmfessir oTihys cs and in the En displayed in major museums and ternational Atomic Energy Agency, ry, in cooperation with the U. S.City: ’ Hco FeJmi Institute for Nuclear art centers of the world. i»nri other scientific and technical Atomic Energy Commission.• Henry D. Smyth, Princeton, Studies. Anderson was one of theN*w Jersey. U. S. representative to group of 40 scientists under Fermi.the International Atomic EnergyAgency, Vienna, Austria.• Alvin M. Weinberg, Oak RidgeNational Laboratory, Oak Ridge,Tennessee;• Walter H. Zinn, CombustionEngineering, Inc., Windsor, Con¬necticut;• Harold Haydon, associate pro¬fessor of art, University of Chica¬go; Retrospective and prospectiveviews will be presented during theobservance, Anderson said. Theseinclude the implications of nuclearbiology and chemistry, nuclearmedicine in its diagnostic and ther- Visits Will Mark Anniversary of the Weighing of Plutonium(Continued from Page 1)Chemistry, has planned and coordi¬nated the observance.Included in the Unrverslty’s 25thapeutic phases, and the use of nu- anniversary ceremonies will be a _ - . .clear energy as a power source for visit to Roth 405 of Jones Labora- ™an bad his first look at plutoindustry and public utilities. tory, where the weighing took nium, the first synthetically-pioduc-Moore Sculpture al historical landmark on the cam- bers of the Manhattan Project,pus. comprised the scientific team un-First Weighing der the supervision of Seaborg thatThe first weighing of plutonium first saw plutonium on the fourthat Chicago took place 23 days after floor o{ Jones Laboratory.A highlight of the observance will• William H. McNeill, professor be the dedication of “Nuclear En-of history, University of Chicago; ergy,” a work by the British sculp-and - tor Henry Moore, which was com-• Albert Wohlstetter, University missioned for the occasion. The This original oxide has been pre¬place. The original tiny sample of ed chemical element. > served and is mounted on a plasticplutonium, together with a balance It was on August 18, 1942, that cylinder located at the Universitysimilar to that used for the first chemists got their first view of the q{ California at Berkeley, whereweighing, will be on display. man-made element that was to be <•«,. nfRoom 405 of Jones Laboratory known as plutonium. Chemists Cun- Cunningham is 1 * ’will be the fourth registered nation- ningham and Werner, then mem- chemistry.• THE CHICAGO MAROON •July 28, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3GADFLYPsychedelic Cult Destroys Communication'round, ’round,a million bright colorsexplode in your head.1 know you’re just blind;today you’re big,tomorrow you’re dead.—popular songTeeny-bopper is the new-crowned king,Uh huh.—popular songA new phenomenon has beensweeping the nation. I am speak¬ing of the use of the vast set ofpsychedelic chemicals andvegetables; LSD, mescaline, pey¬ote, marijuana, ad infinitum,Kile unthinking legislators andReactionary moralists have found'reason to be alarmed with theireffect on the nation’s youth, amore widespread yet more subtleby-product of this phenomenonhas been affecting our society andits values. My concern here is notthe substances themselves,nor with tneir imputed dangers orbenefits to individuals or man¬kind. My use of the category/‘psychedelic,” furthermore, is inall probability scientifically incor¬rect. But in as much as I will betalking of the effects of these sub¬stances on our culture and not thesubstances themselves, I hopesuch a generalization will be al¬lowed.By breaking down the time-space continuum, these chemicalsdistort cause and effect relationsand reorient perceptual process¬es. Normal sensory experiencesare heightened, thus bringing newand exciting dimensions to usual¬ly mundane subjects. While men¬tal images and physical percep¬tions are functioning at optimumlevels, the qualities of a cigarettepackage, for example, become ofequal aesthetic interest with a re¬production of a Michelangelo orRembrandt. This process of aes-'letic revolution is not objection¬able in itself: what is to be noted,rnwever, is that for the user ofpsychedelics, all objects are ofequal aesthetic value, no work ofarj can have for the viewer high-er qualities than any other (dueto the fact that each stimulatesah equally fantastic set of con¬templative images and forms)."New values must be created. Butthe new values cannot lie withinthe traditional concepts of form,function, or even beauty, for theseare but mental constructs of crit¬ics and intellectuals whose mindshave been fettered by a tradition¬al of “limited thinking.” What isof ultimate value, then, is the actof creation itself, and this only ifit is spontaneous. Consideredjacts, inasmuch as they conformto some rules or some rigid men¬tal constructs, are rendered1unauthentic.With the rise of spontaneitycomes the necessary downfall ofcommunication, or communica-:tion as we know it. To explain anact is to divest it of its sponta¬neous value. One usually hearsMarshall McLuhan . invoked atthis point. Only the medium car¬ries the message, not an eruditet-mortem. al to individual but are in a fluidstate within the mind itself. Theyshift as the object of speculationshifts and somehow the objectand standard always seem tocompliment each other.This is but a process of mentalmasturbation; a mind plays withitself and gratifies itself, all on itsown terms. Objects shift (mental¬ly) and new standards are creat¬ed (from within). The viewer con¬gratulates himself for gratifyinghimself in this way and whenasked to explain the wonder of itall, he is unable to relate. To ex¬plain is to crystalize a standard,yet the value of the standardcreated by mental auto-eroticismlies in its flux.>nce again I must anticipately critics. I am not against thecreation of new standards. But inorder for any standard to be con¬sidered seriously it must be de¬scribed. It must be capable ofself-defense. To retreat into men¬tal images only experienced andonly understood by oneself is nosubstitute for aesthetics. Its soledefense is its authenticity.V Perhaps I can best explain thispoint by relating a few eventswhich took place during a recentvisit to the “Balloon Farm” in theEast Village. This enormousdance hall featured the stockpsychedelic condiments: a blind¬ing strobe light, checkered anddotted black and white patternsprojected alternately on the sidewalls, and a constant flow of mul¬ti-colored amoeboid shapes ingen¬iously projected onto the stageand the performers themselves,the “Mothers of Invention.” TheMothers played various instru¬ments ranging from what seemedto be a Jew’s harp to what couldhave been a Chinese harpsichord. What the Mothers could havepassed off for novelty becamepure nonsense. Each Mother be¬came so engrossed in his ownstyle and musicianship and so fas¬cinated by the sounds he wasproducing (masturbation in thesense I have indicated) that thetotal effect, with each escalationof volume, went from noise, tochaos, to distortion. The point ofall this is not so much to criticizesuch music but to emphasize thatthey (the Mothers) had the audac¬ity to tell us (the audience) thatour somewhat less than enthusias¬tic response was due to the factthat we couldn’t understand“psychedelic music.” The leadMother then lowered his stand¬ards and patronized catered ourtaste. He began to play a fox trotwhile imitating with obvious dis¬dain the standard “box-step” (or¬der indeed, for the customary pat¬tern forms a “square.”)Later, conversing with the tick¬et-taker (while the guru himself,Tim Leary walked in) I happenedto ask him what he thought ofNew York, for the show had re¬cently arrived from the WestCoast. New Yorkers were inhibit¬ed, he informed me, while con¬stantly dancing with himself, be¬cause they were afraid of howothers looked at them while theydanced. I agreed, in order to fur¬ther the conversation. “Yes,” hesaid, “they don’t know how to doLSD dancing.” When asked justwhat that was, I was told that itwas “doing what you want”.The assumption seems to bethis: it is not enough to do whatone wants if the object of desirehas within it any rigidity or or¬der. To freely choose this is not tobe free at all. To be truly free onemust choose disorder and fluidity.To choose to dance the fox trot,HONDA SALEWITH THIS ADExample: 1967 NewCB 77 *675CB 160 *525BOB NELSON MOTORS6136 Cottage Grove Ml 3-4500As one begins to realize that or¬dained standards of taste are butthe results of a single way of jlooking at an object, new and var- iied standards emerge. But thenew standards remain internaland are, ift essence, non-communicable. The new stand¬ards vary not only from individu-Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items Prom TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 BE-INfor this weekendRent A Car <)!/> Take A TripFriday — Saturday — Sunday(Return Monday)V.W. $16.88 + 6c/mi.Tempest $19.88 + 8c/mi.Mustang or Camaro $20.88 + 9c/mi.KING RENT-A-CAR1330 E. 53rd St. Ml 3-1715 for example, is to patently contra¬dict the aesthetics of spontaneity.How can one be spontaneous wor¬rying where the left foot will fallon the next beat?LSD and similar psychedelicsubstances have in many statesbecome illegal. But while it isagainst the law to sell or consumethem, it is both legal and profita¬ble to exploit them. One doesn’thave to look or listen very long orhard to notice this trend. Almostevery discotheque features“psychedelic” lights. Many bou¬tiques sell “psychedelic” clothes,and vivid colors have appeared onmen’s and women’s fashions ofevery variety. A radio station inChicago features a “psychedelic”disc • jockey. Most mass-cirulation magazines have hadat least one feature picture article /on LSD, LSD art, or whatever,they think the current “under-/ground drug scene” is. Any halJhour spent listening to a ponulaimusic radio station will produceat least one commercial whichends in the phrase “Try it—itspsychedelic!” (This inexplicable\claim is attributed to the most di- \verse products and events—pants,drinks, dances, and even drag-strip races.)One finds a similar emphasis onthe importance of spontaniety. Inthe vernacular of those who ex-/ploit the teen-age market, it“in” to be spontaneous. Brandwe learn, is “happening all over.f’We should go to event Y becaus^“It’s what’s happening, baby.’'One soft drink offers a “Now”taste. One wonders how sponsorscan ask us to stop and considerlong enough to choose their goods. Where will the aesthetics ofspontaneity lead? Would it not bepossible for one to find aestheticbeauty in a spontaneous act ofmurder? The proposition is ex¬treme, but extreme exampleslead to pertinent questions, andthe aesthetics of spontaneity as away of life leaves many impor¬tant questions unanswered. Thechief question pertains to theplace of morality in such ascheme.What becomes of right andwrnng?NOf what importance is thewar in far off Vietnam to one whocultivates the pleasures and au¬thenticity of the moment? When Ivisited the Haight-Ashbury dis¬trict in San Francisco last springa local resident told me that Viet¬nam was a “bad trip.” I don’tquestion the sincerity of such ananswer, but I question the valueof such un-reason in analyzingmajor problems. To carry a daf¬fodil is lovely; but to invoke thedaffodil is another matter. Tobase one’s life on the aesthetics ofspontaneity is to step out of thepale in which human values areseriously considered. To step outof the pale in order to question isan important and valid act, but tostep out and fail to question atall, to merely act as a stylite ofunreason, is to maintain an ex¬tremely dubious stance.Alan Neal Sussman(Editor’s note: Mr. Sussman is agraduate student in the Departmentof Political Science).BANDERSNATCHSUMMER FILM SERIESAug. 1 The RavenAug. 8 Once More With FeelingOne Showing9:15 P.M. Ida Noyes CloistersAdm. 75cFEATURING VISUAL STIMULATION PLUSTHE BUFFALO SPRINGFIELDCARL HOLMES A THE COMMANDERSTHE ROVIN’ KINDTHE CHAMBERS BROTHERSTHE EXCEPTIONSTHE SEEDSAND MANY OTHERSPlus Color TV. Boutique and Head Shop, library. Bar. Soda Fountain. Scoprton«uTICKETS: $4.00 FRI., SAT. $2.50 WED., THURS., SUN. $1.50 STUDENT DISCOUNTftilt,^K'AlilURS-ADVANCEPR,CET,CKETS0NSALEAT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 NORTH MICHIGAN.CROUP SALES; Tt throw a party at Cfiwfch for 50-2C00, call Miss Prusa at M0 4 5051THE CHICAGO MAROON July 28, 1967LEFT GROUPS MEET IN FALLLynd Sees Bias .. .....in Contract Debat* NCNP Convenes in Chicagom 3" ^ m W (Continued from Page 1) I pendents of both parties. Without ceivablv endorse an indeoe(Continued from Page 1)‘ So there will probably be a sec¬ond suit, in which I and othereachers ask for an injunction re¬quiring Chicago State College to letne teach there.”Claims HarassmentLynd charged that his case ‘‘is»ne of many kinds of harassment‘onnected with the war in Viet-lam.” As other instances of har-issment, he included “draft broadsliving I-A classification to SNCCIrganizers and other radicals” andthe University of Chicago refusingo renew the contract of Jesse,emisch because he took part inhe sit-in against sending college;rades to draft boards in the springIf 1966.”Lemisch, an assistant professorf history, was denied tenure lastear by a vote of the tenured mem-iers of the Department of History,le was granted a one-year exten-ion of his contract to enable himo make other arrangements.Lynd remarked, “I’m staying in'hicago. I look forward to teachingbout how Sam Adams organizedhe American revolution, howlaves resisted slavery, how’ theWW put together ‘one big union,’iow Bob Moses organized COFO inMississippi.” Lynd has already ar-anged to conduct a graduate semi-ar in history at Roosevelt Univer¬ity. Lynd said that he came to Chica¬go in response to an invitation froma committee of the Union of Organ-! izers, a coalition of communityworkers with grass-roots neighbor-| hood organizations in Chicago. He; accepted their invitation, to teacha course in American history froma “radical perspective” at the sum¬mer “Free University.”Research on BlindThe University has received anj unrestricted grant of $5,000 froml Research to Prevent Blindness,Inc., (RPB) for the intensificationof eye research in the School ofMedicine. The funds permit eyej researchers wide latitude in ex-• loring promising new ways to pre-■ serve sight. RPB has made a $5,000I award to the University each yeari since 1960. (Continued from Page I)hopes of taking Democratic & Ne¬gro votes away from PresidentJohnson; organizing a nationallyco-ordinated campaign for localelections with candidates whowould express common oppositionto both major parties and adopt acommon platform which would givethe new politics a national expres¬sion; offering candidates at the lo¬cal level on the basis of politicalprograms that clearly offer alter¬natives to the platforms of the twomajor parties.As yet, many questions are open.As Gene Tournour, member of theNCNP staff put it, at the momentthe New Politics is not at the mo¬ment a third-party movement.It aims at presenting an alterna¬tive to the programs of the two ex¬isting parties, such as a programwhich could be endorsed by inde¬ pendents of both parties. Without1 support for fundamental socialchange at the grass roots level, theformation of a national third partyis premature.List EligibilityThe real issues before the con¬vention will be when to form athird party, how radical the pro¬gram that grows out of the conven¬tion should be, and what the organ¬izational structure should be—whether the New Politics shall be anational membership organizationor a coalition.Organizations eligible to vote, ac¬cording to the New Politics News,are those which (1) have a nameand exist; (2) are willing to con¬ ceivably endorse an independentcandidate at some time; (3) are; committed to some form of organ-| izing work in the community ; andI (4) make decisions democratically.Most of the groups invited are lo-! cal, community-based organiza¬tions, such as the West Coast Mig¬rant Farmworkers Organization ofCalifornia, the Lowndes CountyFreedom Organization of Alabama,or the Kenwood-Oakland Communi¬ty Organization of Chicago.National organizations like theCongress of Racial Equality(CORE), Student Non-Violent Co¬ordination Committee (SNCC), andStudents for a Democratic Society(SDS) were invited to send observ¬ers.Elizabeth Qordon Hair Designers, inc.PIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHIC, Seventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT are you moving?save time & troubleLYONS MOVERS & STORAGEa place to put things — your problemsocally — or further consider ourstorage facilities yes! we do coverfurniture and furnish cartons & wardrobesno! we don't charge a fortune servingthe University of Chicago area for FREEESTIMATE with no obligation callCALL363-41001220 E. 61st Street - Chicago MULL HOUSE at ParkwayFriday and Saturday Curtain 8:30—$3.00Sunday Curtain 7:30—$2.50Student Discount (with I.D.)Fri. and Sat.—$1.50Phone Reservations: 324-3880PresentsWESTHEIMERS"MY SWEET CHARLIE"". . . touching moments of drama witha pair of very interesting performances."Richard Christensen, Chicago Daily News500 EAST 67th STREETUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting1. Hr* S». MY 1-tSOX AUGUST UNION SERVICESROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL11 A.M.August 6 The Reverend Duncan Howlett, All Souls Church, Washington D.C.August 13 The Reverend Ralph G. Wilburn, Dean, Lexington TheologicalSeminary, Lexington, KentuckyAugust 20 The Reverend Buckner Coe, Minister, First Congregational Churchof Wilmette, IllinoisAugust 27 The Reverend Gene Bartlett, President, Colgate Rochester DivinitySchool, Rochester, New YorkTHE REVEREND EWELL J. REAGINAssistant to the Dean of the Chapel,Minister in Charge for the Chapel and Participating ChurchesParticipating Churches in Hyde Park:University Church of Disciples of Christ • Rockefeller Memorial ChapelHyde Park Union Church • First Unitarian Church. , , you can hear yourself think . , . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booze.Bass ale and Schlitz beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails . . , luncheon . . . dinner ... late snacks , . ,air conditioned5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933 1620 East 53rd StreetBU 8-2900-01-02Does growingup have to be absurd?Can you learnabout McLuhanthrough Aristotle?What kind of political lifeis plausible in Vietnam?What happens in a “happening”?• For the undergraduate who is unwilling to settle for easyanswers, who seeks relevance in his studies—there is nowa place.• There is a small college within a noted university in NewYork City. It has no “credit system” for measuringknowledge; no large lecture halls for one-way dialogues;no teaching assistants where the professor should be.• What it does have is a new program of study conceivedfor students who can best realize their intellectual poten¬tial by learning how to inquire, by seeking meaningfulrelationships between disciplines, by recognizing alterna¬tive modes of analysis and explanation. It has a facultythat is discussion-oriented, concerned with teaching —and learning — only through active participation of thestudent. It has a philosophy which views preparation forgraduate school as just one of several possib’? goals ofa liberal arts education.• the new school college offers a two-year course ofstudy (the third and fourth years of undergraduate work)leading to the Bachelor of Arts degree in the Humanitiesor the Social Sciences. It provides opportunities for spe¬cialized study and research through a tutorial programconducted within a broad liberal arts framework. Itgrants degrees only on the basis of comprehensive exam¬inations administered after completion of the course ofstudy. It is open only to students who have completedat least two years of college work at other accreditedinstitutions.For further information, please contact the Director ofAdmissions, The New School College, Room 200, NewSchool for Social Research, 66 West 12th Street, NewYork, N. Y. 10011, OR 5-2700. Interviews will be givenduring the Spring vacation period.THENEW SCHOOLCOLLEGEAdmissions Office ITHE NEW SCHOOL COLLEGE J», new School for Social Research j66 West 12th Street \New York, N.Y. 10011 |Please send me the Bulletin end application for the New 8choo! jCollege. jX am now attending |(Collete or University) aName.AddressCity. . . State. ZIP JJuly 28, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5. t i., *■¥^ ,.. ..,,The Chicago MaroonFOUNDED IN 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor John Welch>/ * Executive Editor.. .David L. Aiken 'Don't worry, they'll leave by themselves when it sinks.'Detroit Et AlPresident Johnson points his finger at Michigan GovernorGeorge Romney and “local officials.” The Republicans pointback at the President. The newspapers attack both politicalparties for attacking each other and attack the violence forwhat it is: mass rebellion from civilized society, disrespect forlaw and order that cannot be condoned, a series of criminal actsrepresenting the triumph of passion over reason. Congresslaughs down a rat-control bill designed to make ghetto life alittle less miserable, but in most cases legislation directed atthe urban poor, particularly the slum Negro, is being enacted.Everyone searches for reasons.What’s happening in Detroit, Newark, and a score of otherAmerican cities cannot be condoned, despite the arguments ofmilitant Black Powerites. At the same time, the present condi¬tion of the Negro American is far from one that can be tolerat¬ed.BEHIND THE VICIOUS CIRCLE that has kept stable theNegro's position as a second class citizen is the original victimi¬zation of the African slave. Newly made an American citizen,the Negro had not the advantages of the white to compete withhim in a white society. He had not the education, the training,yes, not the intelligence. So he failed to get the job. And hefailed to earn money enough to get his family out of the slum.Then because he was stuck in the slum, and without a job, hewas unable to support a family but had children anyway.At this point the skeptic inquires, “Well, Italians and Jewsand Poles had to live in the same kind of ghettos as Negroes,and you don’t find them rioting.” The difference is that theseethnic groups never quite occupied the same position as theAmerican Negro. Two hundred years of self-perpetuating so¬cial and economic inferiority which began with his originalstatus as a slave leads to a lack of motivation that is hard toovercome.The reason for Detroit and Newark is this perpetual victimi¬zation—which cannot be overcome simply by equal education,employment, and housing laws and the like. For even if theNegro has the opportunity, he will still lack the education; andey-an if he has the education, he will still lack the motivation.The only way of breaking the vicious circle seems to be toprovide not only equal opportunities, but a degree of selective/ favoritism to compensate Negroes for accumulated handicaps.Unless education, employment, and housing opportunities arecreated specifically for Negroes, for example, the cities inwhich they live can look forward to a series of long hot sum¬mers to come. DAVID L. AIKEN »i S 'Midpoint of Hot Summer:On Riots and ChildrenAnti-ThinkThe board of governors of state colleges and universities hasfearlessly struck a blow for mediocrity, timidity, and theclosed mind. By rejecting the recommendation of members ofthe history faculty at Chicago State College, that radicalscholar Staughton Lynd be given a one-year appointment, theboard has joined the forces of anti-think.They would deny a man his livelihood for holding beliefswhich dissent from those of the good, solid, “respectable” folkwho are comfortably in control of political institutions in thestate—including the state colleges and universities.The board’s own statement specified that they did not ques¬tion his abilities as scholar and teacher. Rather, they felt thatLynd’s visit to North Vietnam in December 1965, in defianceof the State Department’s travel ban, “goes beyond mere dis¬sent.”In addition to all the history faculty, the college’s president,and board of governors president both supported Lynd’s ap¬pointment. As Board President Richard Nelson commented,the appointment would help the school avoid a “course of con¬vention, conformity, and mediocrity.”We hope tht board of governors enjoy their trip down thatcourse.THE CHICAGO MAROON • July 28, 1967 Thoughts while waiting for theChicago riots of 1967:Fundamentally, the only way to“avert riots” is not to desperatelyapply cosmetics and band-aids tothe ugly body of American society.It is to transform that society intoone in which black people do notlive at the mercy of their whiteemployers, or the white welfare de¬partment, or at the whim of the.vhite-run police department.The extreme nature of racial vio¬lence is in harmony with the ex¬treme situation of those who en¬gage in it. Columnist Jimmy Bres-lin, reared on the streets of NewYork, was probably not far offwhen he compared the protectiongiven by black residents of Newarkto the small number of snipers onthe one hand, to the shelter giventhe rebels in Ireland by the ordi¬nary people on the other. Theywould not do the shooting them¬selves, but they sympathized withthose who were doing it. It was --and is -- a revolt against the colo¬nial power.IT IS NOT entirely clear whetherthis exploiter-exploited relationshipbetween white and black peoplecan be basically changed withoutan open disruption. In the ferventhope that it can be, we must lookaround for ways to keep thingscool, without depending on theservers and protectors of the statusquo, such as the police, the welfareagencies, even the “war on pover¬ ty” agencies. We must look to the“grass roots,” for a start towarddeep-rooted change.On an admittedly small scale, wecan make contact with the littlekids, who stand around on thestreet without much to do, and getinto trouble mostly out of sheeridleness. People in several groupsare trying to do something aboutthe kids, especially during the sum¬mer when school is out.ONE SUCH GROUP is STEP,students from the University whorun a study center in Woodlawnduring the school year, and arecurrently operating a summercamp of their own in Wisconsin.Counsellors at the camp report sev¬eral kids have really begun tochange their behavior in the re¬laxed farm atmosphere.This is one camp, however, thatis not financed by some foundationor government agency. People whowant to help STEP continue itswork should get in touch with MikeKrauss, 5519 S. University Ave.Similarly, SWAP is in great needof funds to continue its programsfor high-school youth from Wood-lawn and elsewhere in the city.Ever since federal “war on pover¬ty” funds were cut off, over a yearago, SWAP has needed private do¬nations more than ever. The SWAPoffice is at 1212 E. 59th St.THE HYDE PARK-KenwoodCommunity conference (HPKCC)has taken the lead in organizing a third effort to work with young peo¬ple in the area. The Conference israising money in the community topay the salary of a “street worker”who keeps in touch with teen-ageguys who are attracted to gangs.They also want to add two morepart-time men for the same pur¬pose.Clarence Reed, the full-timeworker who has already been oper¬ating for two weeks, and the twoyounger men who would work withhim, would probably be the first“detached workers” to be hired bythe people in the community them¬selves. The Conference is sdlicitingcontributions in a door-to-door cam¬paign, to raise the $5,000 needed topay the workers through the end ofSeptember. After that, a foundationmight be willing to help, but thecommunity itself must continue tobear most of the responsibility. Theconference’s office is at 5200 S.Harper Ave.I hi* Uii<‘U"o MaroonFounded in 1892. Published Tuesdaysand Fridays throughout the regularschool year and intermittently duringthe summer, except during the tenthweek of the academic quarter and dur¬ing examination periods, by students atthe University of Chicago. Offices inrooms 303, 304, 305 of Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E. 59th St., Chicago, Illinois 60637.Phone MI 3-0800, ext. 3265. Distributedon campus and throughout the HydePark neighborhood free of charge. Sub¬scriptions by mail $6 per year. Secondclass postage paid at Chicago, Ill. Char¬ter member of U.S. Student PressAssn., publishers of Collegiate PressService.Letters to th e Editor of The MaroonA ReplypThvtaliAd of \TO THE EDITOR:Mark Haller’s letter of July 14reflects thinking that has becomeouite familiar in the last year anda half. The frequency with whichwe hear rhetoric like Mr. Haller’sand Mr. Booth’s (as quoted inHaller’s letter), suggests how lit¬tle we have done to break throughthat mentality—the same mentali¬ty which, with almost neurotic in¬tensity, found the presence of fiftystudents in the ad building afterhours a crime against the so-called “community,” a threat to<o-called “free debate and discus¬sion,’’ behavior which isn’t “prop¬er” to academic institutions, butis rather to be expected of thedirty world outside the Ivory Tow¬er.One can only say of a man whothinks that “full debate by allmembers” is a meaningful realityto students that he is prone tovery creative fantasy. How canwe participate in this luxuriousand noble process if access to in¬formation about “community” is¬sues is so purposefully limited?Moreover, we should prefer ourspeaking out to be less than whol¬ly verbal masturbation—which isimpossible if we have no way ofknowing when to talk to whomabout what because they tell us“what” after “it” is decided.Why is it so difficult to pcsuade this administrative mentality that students are some kindentity within a community, whichis in need of a process for defin¬ing its own needs and interestsand that such a process is unrealizable unless such activity hasconcrete ends, and is not merelyVan exercise in democratic forms \for our entertainment, as aremost student “governing” bodiesJnow.Or is it that ignoring studentsas part of the polity of this Uni¬versity—a polity which Mr. Hallerpretends does not exist at all ex¬cept in the outside “politicalrealm”—is so habitual that thesegentlemen, knowing no other be¬havior, deem it “behavior” itself?Well, the students—or someNdthem—are demanding that you be\aware of them as part of that pol¬ity. The very presence of thesestudents betrays the reality of thething Mr. Haller believes non¬existent. Since he has decidethat “disruptive demonstrations’are not “proper” to the academy,'it becomes necessary to erasefrom reality the very thing whichmakes them understandable andeven inevitable. It becomes neces¬sary to talk about some imaginedcommunity, some ideal whichbears no relation to what the uni-versity is as a corporate institu-/|tion and as a group of executive/ ±and professionals with their inter-ests and psychological selves,■ "which even their well developedcerebral muscles cannot helpthem transcend. IIn reality, “disruptive demon\strations” are quite “proper” tothe University. They are as pro/FINAL SALE!50% or BetterWv\LU5210 Harper Court667-8250 er to this community as racial'ioting is tc the society: i.e., theyme. the inevitable product of asystem with which they are in¬timately bound, whose naturethey reflect, and from whose na¬ture they cannot truthfully beisolated.V There is something to be saidfor the notion that these thingsshould not happen in a university—they should not happen anywhere.They are not proper in the samesense that riots are not proper toa free democratic society—name¬ly, that if the system were whatit fantasizes itself to be therewould be no riots, and, in theuniversity, no “disruptive dem¬onstrations.” If Mr. Haller is con¬cerned that these activities maskthe majority feelings, let him sup¬port an effort to give politicalrights to all whose interests oughtto be protected and who ought toparticipate.Until students are deemed ajust part of the polity of the uni¬versity—moreover, until that poli¬ty is recognized and rationallycome to terms with—these gentle¬men’s rhetoric will only attesttheir hypocrisy. So long as freediscussion is so meaningless acliche’, your suspensions and ex¬pulsions will be about as convinc¬ing of the virtues of this commu¬nity, and as instructive as “prop¬er” behavior as is the policeman’snightstick to a black man on 63rd.There is presently no difference.JERKY LIPSCH, ’69NSA LinkTO THE EDITOR:Last Spring an attempt wasmade at Chicago to break affili¬ation with the National StudentAssociation. At that time I vehe¬mently opposed this break since Ibelieved that not very much con¬ crete proof had been given forending our 20-year relationshipwith NSA. On the other hand, Imust admit that not very muchmore evidence existed justifyingthe continuation of our affiliation;the time to get this evidencewould be at the National Congressin College Park, Maryland, begin¬ning August 11. At that time ap¬proximately ten elected delegateswould be exposed to NSA for twosolid weeks and would have thechance to see what NSA is reallylike now before passing judgment.Quite some time has passedsince the vote to keep our affili¬ation, and in approximately twoweeks the NSA Congress will beunderway. I would like, therefore,to take this opportunity to reaf¬firm the contention of the Univer¬sity of Chicago delegation to usethis experience to really investi¬gate NSA and to look into twofundamental issues.First of all, there is the natureof NSA itself. For years the lead¬ership has been elitest and seem¬ingly more interested in playingpolitics than in solving the prob¬lems of students. The questionthat is foremost in my mind iswas this situation a cause or aneffect of the CIA relationship. If itwas a cause, then by merely ex¬purging the CIA (as, for the mostpart, has already been done), NSAwill be internally reformed and itcan get down to the job of servingthe student population. If, on theother hand, the CIA deal wasmerely the effect of a situationwhere an inner non-student clique rules, then by the nature of theorganization there will always beCIA-type deals and our withdraw¬al from the organization is neces¬sary.Second, the nature of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, action and re¬sults through NSA involve (undereven the most ideal of conditions)a sort of a partnership betweencampuses where people put inmuch careful, hard work on theissues that affect them. They ex¬change information, run pro¬grams, take surveys, meet inseminars, and do other things of asimilar sort. But is this the sort ofaction students at Chicago want?I don’t know. This is a campuswithout a course evaluation book¬let, a place where “Days of In¬quiry” often become one-sidedpropaganda machines, and a col¬lege where 50 percent of the stu¬dents don’t even bother to vote onthings like a rank referendum.Chicago is marked by issues thatcross through it more like thefads of women’s clothing than likethe deliberative process of intelli¬gent beings. The question can tru¬ly be asked, “Are Chicago stu¬dents desirious of NSA-type ac¬tion?” If not, then our member¬ship in the organization is mean¬ingless and should be discontin¬ued. campus our views this fall. Theidea of disaffiliation from NSA isnot without merit, but the timefor such disaffiliation is only afterwe have learned the facts aboutthe organization. Last spring thecampus gave us some extra timeto learn these facts, and we of thecommittee pledge to use this timewell.ALAN BLOOM, ’68NSA CoordinatorFood DriveCARMEN MOVERS6060 S. COTTAGE GROVEUSED FURNITUREWE BUY AND SELLMU 4-8843 or MU 4-9003 At the upcominghave every hope thatwho are your NSAtives will find thethese questions andposition to reevaluatesity’s relation to NSA Congress Ithose of usrepresenta-answers toso be in athe Univer-and give the TO THE EDITOR:Newspapers and magazineshave recently been publishing re¬ports of terrible conditions of hun¬ger and disease among Negxoesip Mississippi and other states(see, for example, The New Re¬public’s issue of July 15). A reliefdrive is underway in Hyde Parkthis summer. Students can helpby doing one of the following: j• Write President Johnson, yoursenators, and Secretary of Agri¬culture Orville Freeman askingthat the price of federal foodthroughout the South and thatfree stamps be given at once tothose who cannot afford to buythem even at the lower rates.• Volunteer to sit outside theHyde Park Co-op to help withfood collections that will be takinjplace there this summer—helperare very badly need. (To volu?ter, call 752-7045.)• Send a check made out to TheDelta Ministry, P.O. Box 139,wards, Miss. 39066.PATRICIA COBURNUNUSUAL OPPORTUNITYTEACH IN CHICAGOImmediate enrollment in professional education coursesRequirements—Bachelor's degree from an accredited college— Willingness to teach every day in an elementary school where neededWRITE OR PHONE NOWDirector of Teacher RecruitmentChicago Public Schools—Room 1820228 N. LaSalle StreetChicago, Illinois 60601DEarborn 2-7800, ext. 648, 649, 650 TOAD HALLIBM EXECUTIVE$199.95SMITH-CORONAELECTRIC PORTABLESFROM $139.95HERMES MANUALSFrom $54.95OUR PRICE GUARANTEE.-1444 E. 57th St. RENTS AND SELLS TYPEWRITERSNEW - REBUILT - USEDReconditioned and painted90-day warranty on labor5-year warranty on partsChangeable keys—Repeat KeysPower Space—Pilot LightChoice of 10“ or 12” CarriageBest portable or full-sizemanual machines on the marketIf within 30 days of purchase youcan buy for less, we will refund thedifference.BU 8-4500mtiOXOOS-h xghjArj \irto3UH3VA 934RA1U30S.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 CallMR. COLE CA 5-6692OR APPLY IN PERSON< 120 East 18th Street HYDE PARK THEATERLAKE PARK AT 53rd STREETTel. NO 7-9071Starts Friday, July 28thBEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEARONE OF THEYEARS 10 BESTJuly 28, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7MAROON SPORTSTennis, Golf Lead 'U' Teams To Successful YearThe University has com-pleted one of the most suc¬cessful years in its recentathletic history.Seven of 11 varsity teams post¬ed winning records during 1966-67.Another, the fencing team, nar¬rowly missed, winning nine andlosing nine.During the year, six of the Ma¬roon teams posted winning re¬cords. The previous year, onlythree of the teams won more thanthey lost.Maroon teams won 77 victoriesin all sports, lost 70 and tied two.The most successful Maroonteams during the past year werethe tennis and golf teams. Thetennis team won six dual matches and lost two. The golf team won (nine matches, lost three and tiedone.The track team, with 14 victo-'ries and six losses, and the1cross-country team, with sevenvictories and four losses, were al¬most as successful.Winning records also were post¬ed by the wrestling, baseball andbasketball teams.Season StarsOne of the 1966-67 Maroon ath¬letes, Pete Hildebrand, a cross¬country runner, won All-American jhonors.Another Maroon star, fencer!Steve Knodle, finished 10th in theNational Collegiate Athletic Asso¬ciation’s national championships, |and ranked 9th as an epeeist inthe Amateur Fencers League of A m e r i c a’s Midwest regionalchampionships, held in Chicago inMay. He is expected to competein the League’s nrtional cham¬pionships in Santa Monica, Cali¬fornia, later this summer.Two members of the baseballteam—catcher Dennis Sienko andshortstop Bill Pearson—werenamed to the Chicagoland CollegeBaseball League’s all-star team.Both are Stagg Scholars.Among the larger schools whichwere Maroon opponents in var¬ ious sports during 1966-67 werethe University of Notre Dame,Northwestern University, TulaneUniversity, the University of Illi¬nois, Bradley University, Michi-1gan State University, Ohio State IUniversity and the University ofIowa.The intercollegiate teams andtheir 1966-67 records follow:BaseballBasketballCross-countryFencingGolf Gymnastics won 1, lost 12Soccer won 2, lost 9Swimming won 5, lost 6,Tennis won 6. lost 2TrackIndoor won 8, lost 2Outdoor won 6, lost 4Wrestling won 6. lost. 4won 9,won 9.won 7,won 9,won 9, lost 7lost 8dost 4lost 9lost 3. tied 1South Shore PatrolAids Police WorkSince its meager beginning—a few amateur radio enthusiastscruising to alert police to van¬dalism last Halloween — theSouth Shore Emergency Radio Discovers New Cancer-fighting Diet;No Permanent Cure But Yields Relief jA new diet which helps con- were unable to retain sufficienttrol cancer by “starving” can- amour,ts °f anY f°°d to maintain, . , , i adequate nutrition, Dr. Lorinczcer cells has been reported by sa^Dr. Albert B. Lorincz, a pro- 'Not a Cure'fesor of obstetrics and gynecology “The diet is not a cure for can-here. cer, but is an effective palliativeTwenty cancer patients using the regimen which is intended to pro¬diet for more than three months vide an opportunity to institutehave shown “objective remission” therapies not previously possibleof the disease and have been “rela-; with these patients,” Dr. Lorincztively free of disability” while on said. “A number of the patientspolice who were bogged down by i the diet, Dr. Lorincz reported. He have improved sufficiently so that tied 1A member of the varsity base¬ball team has been invited to tryout for the United States teamwhich will compete in the Pan-American games, to be held inWinnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, lat¬er this summer.He is Dennis W. Sienko, the Ma¬roon’s starting catcher, who willbe a junior next fall in the Col¬lege.Sienko, who is six feet, lourinches tall and weighs 215 pounds,was the Maroons’ leading batterin 1967 with a .306 average.boutn snore geuuy t nnlirpService has involved nearly 100; blocked streets. One unit’s workcaused police to capture three menbreaking into a store.After the tornadoes blew in frontwindows of many South Shore spoke at a Multidiscipline Research chemotherapy and irradiation couldForum held by the American Medi- be begun.”cal Asociation during its annual The new diet contains a strictlyconvention in Atlantic City. j limited amount of an essential nu-The patients were terminal can- tritional factor, phenylalanine. Itcer patients who could not be consists of a specially preparedwere able to cover. ... natrol-1 ra<^° un‘l areas with a minimum j helped by other treatment, such as protein material supplemented byarea people in suivei a. p .force, while concentrating on non- surgery, chemotherapy or irradia-, foods containing only small. . . f s surveillance areas. ■ tion. Eleven of the 20 eventually amounts of phenylalanine.c,Ihf in Lrc°pnnnpptpH hv ra- The protection this affords busi- j succumbed to the disease in spite The diet “starves” the cancera!!? ppnfrai HUnatrhPr The nesses led merchants in South of improvements in their condition, cells by depriving them of suffi-rL!L cLih shnrpPlatp at night!Shore to buy radios and add their brought about by the diet. ;cient amounts of phenylalanine,and earW in the morning reporting own cars soon after the first Patro1* I Ten other terminal patients un-[For reasons not yet known, thedliu Cd iy F o lJrw-r Karron loofr T nfor o fc%\xrsuspicious activities. The centralunit will, if the information indi¬cates a crime, call the police.However, “most of the patrollingis pretty routine,” says JulianKlugman, executive director of theSouth Shore Commission, whichsponsored the original patrol group.The cars rarely run across seriousthings, he added: most reports arejust of curfew violations.South Shore is a “low-crimearea” and not as heavily policedas, say, Woodlawn, he explained.Radio unit surveillance “extends ling began last Fall. Later, a few dertook the diet, but did not sur- cancer cells appear to be less ableblock groups joined the cruising vive beyond five weeks. The course than normal cells to adjust to theand added the cars that now cover of their illness was probably not limited amount of phenylalanineSouth Shore during week nights. 1 influenced by the diet because they provided by the diet. CINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANACADEMY AWARDWINNER''A MAN & A WOMAN"~tTAnouk AimeeIn ColorSun-Times * * * *AMERICAN—"For anyone whose ever been in love"Students $1.50 with I.D. card every daybut Saturday.Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. & Sun.open 1:30Researchers Study School Systems' Decision Making ProcessEducational researchers center on four cities—Boston, Chi-from the University will par- ca«0' |-os An«alea and <?ew Yo*„J r I “Urban school systems differticipate in a cooperative study from the small town backgroundsof the decision-making process- in which school boards originated.The struggle over important social,political, and economic problemsplaces great strain upon urbanschool systems and emphasizes thees of school boards and school su¬perintendents in four major U.S.police coverage since they respond cities.very quickly when we call.” other institutions participating in imi^ance** of "the ~ DoTicv-makine'Not Vigilantes' the study will be Harvard, New p™Pcess gMen in the cruising lookout cars i York University, Ohio State Uni-1! ‘are not armed and are instructed versity, and the Claremont Col-never to get out of their cars. “We leges.are not a vigilante group,” Klug-1 The study will be supported by aman stressed. “We are not looking $790,000 grant from the Danforthfor trouble.” ! Foundation. It will begin in Octo-He also stressed that the ber, and is expected to continue formake-up of the groups cuts across 127 months.•racial and class lines. About half Luvern L. Cunningham, a profes-the patrollers are white, and half; sor of education and director of theNegro, Klugman estimated. ,“We Midwest Administration Centerhave a dentist, an elevator repair- here, is coordinator of the project,man, an accountant, and the man- He commented:ager of a florist shop,” he pointed “The most difficult problems fac-out. - ing school boards and administra-He added that there were no ra- tors today are found in urbancial overtones to the surveillance areas. Therefore, our research willpatrol: “It’s the kind of thing hu¬man relations groups like to talkabout but rarely achieve.”Although the work tends to beboring, the patrols have been im- jportant and effective during com¬munity emergencies such as snow¬storms and the recent tornadoes.During the January blizzard, footpatrols with walkie-talkies helped You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 “Objectives of the study will beto identify the crucial questionsconfronting major city school sys¬tems, the general process of gov¬erning the systems, and relationsbetween school boards and schoolsuperintendents, mayors, city coun- EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East S3rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Storient ana Faculty DitcountTOAD HALL RENTS AND SELLSAMPEX-AR-FISHERHIGH-FIDELITY KENWOOD-MARANTZCOMPONENTS BOZAK—JBL—ALTECDUAl-BOGEN-EMPIRETELEVISION GARRARD-SCOTT-SONYFROM $98.88RADIOS PORTABLE AND PLUG-INFROM $9.95PHONOGRAPHS PHONOLA-ZENITH-VMTAPE RECORDERS FROM $39.95 TO INFINITYPsychedelicpostersfromfillmoreauditorium1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500(OPEN DAWN TO DAWN)MEET ME AT THEHobby House Restaurant1342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER"The Best of All Foods"TAHSAM-A56.NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecialixing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYIt A M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders To Take Out1318 EAST 63rd ST. MU 4-1062 AMERICAN AUTO PARTS7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3614GOLDEN SILENCE AS ,ow AS no waitingMUFFLERS £g *5As Advertised in LIFE and POST ^O.UJSHOCK ABSORBERSuowas $7.95 BRAKES INSTALLEDLOW AS $19.95TUNE-UP SPECIALALL PARTS neAND LABOR *14.73All t-cyl. cars 1942 to 1962 Rear Springs InstalledLOW AS $12.95 ea. ... L’assurance Sun Life est un moyen•Or d'obtenir I'inddpendance finan¬ce re pour vous et vcire familie.En tant qua reprdaentant local da la SunUfa, puis-je vous visiter l un moment davotre choix?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-VIEUNE COMPAGNIE MUTUELLE8 THE CHICAGO MAROON July 28, 1967JOSHWHITE JOSHWHITEJOSHWHITE JOSHWHITEJOSHWHITE JOSHWHITEJOSHWHITE JOSHWHITEJOSHWHITE JOSHWHITEJOSHWHITE JOSHWHITETOMORROW NIGHT-Rescheduled Concert-General Admission $3.50U. C. Students $2.50Only 300 Tickets AvailableTickets at Student Co-Op-In Reynolds Club, ext. 3561And At The Door it'Alice' Wows 'Em at Newport Folk FestivalThe festival this year somewhat only a vaguely human formde-e mphasized the city folk gulfed in a large stage.-“You can singers—Pfiil Ochs. Tom Paxton,! Some acts can overcome this:' Some MediocreFric Anderson Dylan were all ab- Baez, Buffy St. Marie, etc., do bas- Another disturbing factor seemedw a n t/At . Anderson, Dylan weie an an . theatrical music and can sue- ; to be a certain inclination to settle„ .sent. and even the stars who were Ceed here. New York City’s Bread‘for the mediocre, particularly inen-1 beautifully the importance of the stuff. Another case is the True Vineright setting for traditional music. Singers; surely something more in¬teresting could have been found inNew York’s churches.All of these seem like instancesin which a representative, an “ex-By BRUCE KAPLANSpecial to The Chicago MaroonNEWPORT, R.I.-get anything youAlice’s Restaurant . . .” there—Baez, Collins, Buffy St. Mar- and* Puppet Theater, with its nine- J fields that are peripheral to what is_..... e ie, Bikel, Seeger—were scheduled foot tall puppets, loud music, and considered folk music at folk festi-That is the refrain in a won- » & . . . ^ • ’ . fantastic out vaisi for onlv one evening performance orave imagination, is taniasuc ouiderful twenty minute song by Arlo . * there. Teatro Campesmo, the ac-Guthrie at this year’s Newport Folk , ^ors and singers from the DelanoInformal Workshops grape strike, also do well, withThe best part of the festival was their broad allegories about the pa-the Friday and Saturday work- tron and the worker,and the crowd made Arlo sing it shops. They were an opportunity to ■ gut the success that many of theover and over again. see great traditional performers at j traditional performers were able to_. . , _ close range, in a relatively relaxed have at the small Sunday morningIt was an appropriate theme for, atmosphere. No other festival of- religious concert—as opposed toas always, music of many kinds fers you a chance to see such a their failure even to hold attentionabounded at the festival, from the huge variety of traditional artists; at the evening concerts—illustratesarchaic hammered dulcimer of fe'ren same °* the worksh°Ps . kifWCCo w . ... tended towards coldness and for- AT IDA NOYESRussell Fluharty from West Virgin- mality_for example, Bruce Jack-ia, tc ' classical Chinese stylings son’s on blues—they were still fineof Chang Ming Quang and her ac- concerts in appropriate settings.Festival. And that song becamesort of a theme song of the festival, For example, Dave Dudley is notone of Nashville’s stars; he is defi¬nitely a second-liner, and peoplebeing introduced to a type of musicdeserve the best, or else they willfeel that flaws of the individualperformer are flaws of the wholemusical style.The same kind of thing goes forthe selection of the ChambersBrothers—definitely second-rate ample,” was picked to fill a hole inthe program, without really ade¬quate time being spent to find thebest available.There were good selections too.such as the Young Tradition fromEngland, a breathtaking group ofpeople who dress like mods andsing in a style which selects thebest from several aspects of Britishfolk-singing.All in all, there was plenty ofgood music this year, together withsome exciting innovations.companying musicians from NewYork’s Chinatown, to the city folkmusic of no less a leader in thefield than Joan Baez, to the Celticmouth music of Norman Kennedy, Friday, when there were 15 si¬multaneous workshops, all unam¬plified, with audiences rangingfrom 5 to 200, was a beautiful time.I’m going to remember sittingaround J. B. Smith and hearing THE Judy Collinsto the Nashville sound of Dave him tell old-time stories about Johnand the alligator for quite a while,Dudley and the Road Runners.Zoology Appointment as I will my chance to hear SaraCarter in her first public appear¬ance in 25 years.Large-Scale TheaterBut the evening concerts herea largeMonte Lloyd, an authority, onecology, has been named an associ- - are theater, theater onate professor of zoology here.; scaie, in a 15,000-seat outdoor are-Lloyd. u'ho previously had been an na, and even folk professionals likeassistant professor of zoology at the the Carter Family tend to findUniversity of California at Los An- themselves drowned and lost. Ageles, received the A.B. degree .folk artist can hardly establishfrom UCLA in 1952 and the Ph.D. meaningful communication if hisfrom Chicago in 1957. He studied at expression is vanishing in the unre-,Oxford from 1957 to 1962. cognizable distance, and one sees; For 20 minutes you arewith Judy Collins and BruceLanghorne, her accompanist,in their dressing room in thebasement of Ida Noyes Hall. Yourassignment: to discover a JudyCollins and a Bruce Langhorne asthey are, off stage.As you are forming your ques¬tions they begin to rehearse oneof their numbers, casually, aswhen friends join for an eveningof song. The music is absorbing.Soon you forget your questions,run out of film, and realize that itis stage time. She and Brucework on a last minute arrange¬ment, wondering what they willdo for their second set.< * ' ' x* , - M You are told that you can comeback for an interview during thefirst break. You go out into thedarkened audience.During their first set you havemade an important discovery. Re¬flecting on her interpretations ofold songs by Dylan and the Bea¬tles, you realize the Judy Collinsthat you could never achievethrough an interview’. The JudyCollins who recognizes and em¬phasizes the poetic anguish anddespair in the songs of our gener¬ation and the Bruce Langhornewho picks his way through themwith a delicate touch.You do not interview them dur¬ing the first break. —CT •\ ^ •t ?/ •f, M1 ^ i h, ‘^ 4!Ij 1lThe Chicago Maroon—Craig TravisJudy CollinsMaroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, staff.faculty-50c per line. 40c per line repeat.For Non-University-75c per line, 60c perline repeat.TO PLACE AD: Come to Ida NoyesHall 1212 E. 59th St. room 305.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: CallMI 3-0800, ext 3266DEADLINES: Ads must be in beforeThursday July 27, and August 10.HOURS: 1-5 p.m. MTW. 10-4 p.m.Thurs. Fri; weeks of July 24-28 andAugust 7-11.VOLUNTEERS WANTEDVOLUNTEERS are badly needed to sitoutside the Hyde Park Co-op and collectFood For Mississippi on Friday, August4, 3-5, Saturday, August 12, 9-11 and11-1, Saturday, August 19, 9-11, 11-1, 1-3, Iand 3-6.Also at the Kimbark Shopping Plaza onWednesday. August 2. 1-3:30. and 3:30to 6, and Saturday, August 19. 9-1L, H-l,1-4. and 4-6. CALL 752-7045.HELP WANTED APARTMENT TO SUBLEASESublease 4 Room, 1 BR Apartment frommid-August thru September with optionto renew. Rent $107.50 per month. Lo¬cated in Beautiful South Shore. For in¬formation, Call 734-6384.FOR SALELooking for a September job? HydePark family wants one or two girls tobaby sit from September 5-28 while par¬ents are away. Two School-aged Chil¬dren Call BU 8-7743.APARTMENT FOR RENT MUST SELL-Like New 1966 VW: Bluewith radio and heater. Call 642-9688.Mini-Freezer, Size 16” x 16” x 30”, ap-1 prox. two cubic ft. capacity. PERFECTworking order. With counter top. $80.00! or Best Offer. Possession on September| l . caU David at BU 8-0624.Hot? Humid? Asthmatic? Cool it with aGibson Air Conditioner, 6,300 B.T.U.| Will Sacrifice for $75.00 or best offer.J Call Jerry 493-1548 before noon or after! 2 a.m. or anytime at MI 3-0800, Ext.3266,KLH Model 11-FM, 6 months old withj dust cover. Best offer over $250.00. Sony; 250A Tape Deck. 1 year old. Best offerover $100.00. Phone Craig at 233-8282 or363-8021.I Tape Recorder $40.00 and RecordChanger $20.00. Both in good condition.; Call 285-5999 evenings. PERSONALSExcellent Apartment, 6 large rooms, 3Bedrooms, 2 Pantry/Closets, Tile Kitch¬en, Bath and Shower...South Shore loca¬tion...Adults preferred. Call 734-4707 af-ter 7 p.m.WANTED TO RENT ( Used MARTIN 0-18 GUITAR with hardcase $125.00...MARTIN 000-18 with hardcase $165.00... GIBSON CO-CLASSICGUITAR $65.00... Also-Fine RosewoodClassic Guitars $85.00 and UP. FRETSHOP at 5210 S. Harper.By September 1-Apartment or house,pref. 2 or 3 BR, for doctoral student,pregnant wife and house cats. Any loca¬tion OIC, pref. Hyde Park or SouthShore. Contact Dan Lester. 823 W. Lin¬coln, DeKalb, Illinois-60115 or call615-756-7047WANTED TO BUYMEN’S BIKE-at moderate price-Call363-6850 on weekends. LAMB R ETTA-150 cc SCOOTER. Call363-8021 after 6 p.m.’62 HONDA, 125 cc Twin-cycle in goodshape. Includes two helmets, tools, shopmanual. $200 or best offer. Call Tedafter 5 p.m. at 493-3750.20 inch window fan $25.00, desk chair$5.00, typewriter table $5.00, pole lamp1 $5.00, albums, your choice 25 centsj each, single bed and mattress $20.00,; antique rosewood headboard, footboard,double mattress and springs $50.00,chest of drawers $15.00. night table$5 00. desk $20.00. Call 667-24*24 before 8 QjWhat are you smoking boys???Don’t wait til the last minute! Woman flwill type Mss., Theses, etc. at BargainRates. Call up to 10 p.m. 731-5980.For “IS" and “IS NOT" though with wRule and Line,And “UP AND DOWN” by Logic I de- Rlfine, t>| Of all that one should care to fathom, TWas never deep in anything but-WINE. ^-ARCHIE. 11Mr. Jones-PLEASE take out the gar¬bage. SJOKAY-Spencer Davis at the Cheetah-on etFriday. in“THREE men in a tub!” cried Candy, _laughing in marvel at their immediaterapport. How simple! she thought. Howwonderfully, beautifully simple the im- tG! portant things are! vrI’ll let you be in my illusion if you let jme be in yours.....;....'... j ““What’s the matter?” asked Newt. “I ; gsaw Bokonon back there.” | ^There will soon be ROOM AT THE —BOTTOM!Congratulations J & M!Thank you Mr. Bell & Mrs. Almond.For Contermporary Jazz- see the Cal- jendar of Events.Lawrence Lipton Says-Support Radio !Free America.Penelope-Please clean up the office.Comrade delegates, the period betweenthe 22nd and 23rd Congresses of pur „Party has been packed with big and j —important events, both in our own coun- itry and in the international sphere.Plato and Schwartz wish to thank Louieand all who participated in the recent jFUND-RAISING. T.C.B. all.SHIRE TYPING S E R V I C E -M S s.,Theses, Misc....call 288-2369. Please return ring stolen from PARTYat 5307 S. Blackstone. No Questions. RIDES WANTEDN taught by highly experiencedRapid method. Initial trial les-Creation’s veinsg Quicksilver-likeyour pains;; all shapes from 1M’ahl. andhange and perishHe remains. Two girls to San Francisco around the1st of August. Share expenses. Call <L667-2424.Couple wants ride to N Y.C. August 24Will share Driving and Expenses. CallKaethe at 374-1958MARRIAGE PROPOSALSSMOKE POT NOT BABIEStu-quo vadis-whither tfhou goest- Man under 40 will SUPPORT anyWOMAN of any age, any race, any pastbackground. Call Frank Richards at472 3606HOUSE FOR SALELovely DUTCH COLONIAL HOME inJackson Park Highlands. Big Yard. Ga¬rage. Appliances. FHA Mortgage. CallMrs. Kahn at Mi-3-1713 or see at 6737Cregier Avenue.ow that we are all one. Spit outactions, good or bad, and neverof them again. What is done isA big ox plows a crooked furrow.SAMUEL A. BELL'BUY SHELL FROM BELL'since imPICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 TOYOTA1 yr. free maintenance1900 C.C. Sports Car Action.Auto. Trans. Avail.90 H.P,100 M.P.H.*1714SALES - SERVICE - PARTS247-1400 - 3967 S. Archeri wu nj'uc rain uuniLLiuiv..-n*uu.e ^work immediately-will do anything-call NEW BOOKS FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESSMELVILLE WESTON FULLERby Willard L. King $2.95THE ETHICAL ANIMALby C. H. Waddington $1.95THE MIDDLE AGES AND THE RENAISSANCEby Emile Brehier $1.95BLACK CHICAGOby Allan H. Spear $7.50General Book DepartmentUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUE10 THE CHICAGO MAROON July 28, 1967Papa Richter s Guide to Summer Fun and FroticBy DAVID H. RICHTERDespite the persistent de¬lusion common in these partsthat Chicago curls itself upinto a ball in July and rollsto the remoter reaches of Wiscon¬sin or Colorado, to return only af¬ter Labor Day when it begins tocool off, there are still a fewthings to do in the city. Some ofthem are even interesting.MusicIn this man’s town at least,“music under the stars” is playedby symphony orchestra with add¬ed percussion, to wit: noise oftrains, busses, cars, airplanes,and even an occasional sonicboom or two. Choral effects areadded by bawling babies and as¬sorted rude noises coming fromthe audience. Nevertheless, highfidelity fans jaded by the top-quality sound coming out of theirspeakers will find the Grant Parkand Ravinia Festivals a welcomechange.The Grant Park concert seriesis held, curiously enough, at thebandshell just north of the FieldMuseum in Grant Park. The mu¬sical director is the associate con¬ductor of the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra, Irwin Hoffman; theconcerts, sponsored by the Chica¬go Park District, are free.Time was when the Grant ParkConcerts used to feature the sortof dreck known euphemisticallyas “light classics”—warmed-overStrauss (Johann), Rossini, andthe more familiar symphonies ofBeethoven, Tchaikovsky, andBrahms. On the week-ends therewas “Rodgers and HammersteinNight,” “Lerner and Le oweNight,” and concert versions of“The Merry Widow.”Them days are gone, apparent¬ly forever. The closest approxi¬mation to the evenings of showtunes this year was a concertmade up of the theatre music ofLeonard Bernstein. The Vienneseoperettas have been replaced byVerdi’s “A Masked Ball,” (July29-30) and Mozart’s “The Abduc¬tion from the Seraglio” (August12-13).And the symphonic music,while still paying due respect tothe three Bees and the Roman¬tics, has begun to include suchnon-middlebrow works as theSchoenberg Violin Concerto, theBerg Chamber Concerto for Vio¬lin, Piano and Winds, Bruckner’sSeventh Symphony, and a slew ofbaroque concerti grossi.Grant Park concerts are givenWednesday, Friday, Saturday,and Sunday nights at 8; usuallythe Friday concert duplicatesWednesday’s program, and thesame goes for Saturday and Sun¬day. Get to the Bandshell by 7:40or so if you want decent seats.If you’re driving, take LakeShore Drive to the RooseveltRoad turnaround, and park in theField Museum lot. If you haven’tgot a car, take the IC to Roose¬velt and jog through the park.The Ravinia Festival presents amore varied picture. The sym¬phonic programs, presentedThursday, and Saturday nights,plus the “Four O’Clocks” givenon Sundays at 4 feature the Chica¬go Symphony Orchestra conduct¬ed (most of the time) by SeijiOzawa. Ozawa happens to be theTRUCKLOADS OFUSED FURNITUREARRIVE DAILYCatholic SalvageBureau3514 S. MICHIGAN10 E. 41st ST. only conductor regularly associat¬ed with the orchestra whom thecritics haven’t tried to run out oftown-on a rail.The Thursday/Saturday con¬certs tend to be symphonic stand¬ard, while the “Four O’Clocks”present such way-out modern mu¬sic as Earle Brown’s “AvailableForms” and Mercure’s “Trip¬tych.”On Wednesday and Friday aretwo jazz-folk series, featuringsuch all-time jazz greats as PeterNero and Pete Fountain. Folkmusic is represented by The KingFamily and The Serendipity Sing¬ers. Ah, suburbia!Monday and Tuesday nights area mixed bag of sweets, encom¬passing the Lenox String Quartet,a Kurt Weill songbag with MarthaSchlamme, and “Rodgers, Ham¬merstein and Hart Night” (im¬ported, no doubt, in tins fromGrant Park).Prices at Ravinia vary. Youcan get into the park and sit onthe grass or on benches near thepavilion for $2 a head; reservedseats cost from a low of $1 at the“Four O’Clocks” to a high of $4.50at the symphonic series. All thenight-time events begin at 8:30.Getting out to Ravinia is aproblem if you don’t drive. Youhave to take the IC to Randolph,walk or bus to Canal and Madi¬son, then take the Chicago andNorthwestern commuting-trainout to Highland Park. Cost: about$2. If you have a car, you takethe Dan Ryan-Kennedy-Edens Ex¬pressway to Lake Cook Road, jLake Cook east to Green Bay,Road, then turn north to the parkentrance. Parking is free.Incidentally, my experience is Ithat the Ravinia audiences arethe tiniest bit ruder than theGrant Park audiences. Perhapspeople become sub-urbane in sub¬urbia, perhaps they just feel thatthey paid to get in and dammit,they’ll talk during the concert ifthey want to. A word to the wise:in Chikofsky vs. Illinois the courtheld that killing a noisy concert-goer is second-degree murder,like any other crime of passion.TheatreThe University’s own CourtTheatre is operating as usual thissummer, with its usual proportionof two classics, one modem, andits usual resident director, JamesO’Reilly. The next three weekswill feature Bertolt Brecht’s “TheCaucasian Chalk Circle,” directedby Dennis Hayes. “Macbeth,” byyou-know-who, opens August 10thand closes September 2nd.Performances are eveningsThursday through Sunday at 8:30;prices are $2.50 (Sat.), $2 (Fri.), and $1.75 (Thurs. and Sun.) witha 50c student discount. Perform¬ances are given outdoors inHutchinson Court (57th and Uni¬versity), unless rain drives actorsand audience into adjoining Man-del Hall. Reserve tickets by call¬ing MI 3-0600, ext. 3581.A new theatre, the AcademyPlayhouse, has opened to ex¬tremely favorable reviews in sub¬urban Wilmette. July 13 wasopening night for “Rhinoceros”,by Eugene Ionesco, starring Chi¬cago alumnus (or drop-out) Sev¬ern Darden. “Rhinoceros” runsthrough the month of July, andwill be replaced August 2nd byWilliam Alfred’s “Hogan’s Goat.”Academy Playhouse runs nightlyexcept Mondays at 8:15. Ticketswill run you anywhere from $2.50on week-nights to $4.75 on week¬ends.Getting there is virtually impos¬sible without an automobile(there is public transportation,but you need the patience of asaint to use it, and it costs): takethe expressways to the Lake Ave¬nue exit on the Edens, go west toLaramie avenue (about a block or so), then north again to 1100 N.Laramie. For ticket informationcall AL 6-1100.If you’ve already seen “TheOdd Couple” or don’t care to,there’s nothing much else in townuntil near the end of the summer,when the American ConservatoryTheatre returns to the. MurrayTheatre in Ravinia Park. This isa superb repertory company un¬der the artistic direction of Wil¬liam Ball, with a host of youngactors, actresses and directors,all of them with fresh ideas.T h e y ’r e doing six plays:“Thieves’ Carnival,” “Long Day’sJourney Into Night,” “Two for theSeesaw,” “Charley’s Aunt,” “Be¬yond the Fringe,” and “DearLiar.” There’s a chance that theseason will be extended this yearas it was lasf, when tickets werein great demand.ACT runs from August 22ndthrough September 17th nightlyexcept Mondays and with twomatinees. Tickets run $5-$4-$3usually, a dollar more across theboard on Saturday night, a dollarless at the matinees. Series tick¬ets are available—four plays for as little as $6.40. This last deal iseven less steep than the concerts,because the Ravinia people letyou into the park free during therun of the repertory company.FlixRavinia also has two programsof “new cinema” July 17 and 31,the first showing films by Chris(“Soumiko Mystery”) Marker,Richard (“Help!”) Lester, andRoman (“Knife in the Water”)Polansky. The second showinghas a short by Jean-Luc Godardtitled “All the Boys Are CalledPatrick,” and three others. Bothof these are in the Murray Thea¬tre at 6:15 and again at 8:30;prices are $3 and $2.The Aardvark Cinemathequehas moved to the second floor ofPiper’s Alley in Old Town (that’ssixteen-something North Wells),and they’re showing movies everynight of the week and twice onSundays. As usual, the films tendto be avant-garde or classics, theprices reasonable, and the man¬agement good-humored. Aardvarkis Doc Films writ large, ast’were.Calendar of EventsBe Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of boots, over¬shoot, insulated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear, corduroys,"Levis", etc., etc., etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 4:30 • 1:00 Persons or organizations wishing toannounce events must submit typedcopy to The Maroon by 11 a.m. of theday before publication.Friday, July 28COL’HT THEATER: “Chalk Circle.” byBrecht. Hutchinson Court. 8:30 p.m.Saturday, July 29GUIDED WALKING TOUR OF THEQUADRANGLES: Leaves Ida NoyesHall at 10:30 a.m. No reservationsnecessary.COURT THEATER: “Chalk Circle,” byBrecht. Hutchinson Court, 8:30 p.m.CONTEMPORARY JAZZ PROGRAM:Anthony Braxton Quartet, Christ Meth¬odist Church, 0401 S. Sangamon (950West), Admission $1, 8 p.m. Sponsoredby SNOC and Chicago Area Draft Re¬gisters (CADRE).Sunday, July 30RADIO SERIES:”From the Midway,”WFMF: 100.3 me. 7 a m.. WAIT: 820kc., 10 a.m., WNIB: 97.1 me, 1 p.m.,WNUS: 13.90 me and 107.5 me. 11 p.m."Peasant Rising of Our Time.” WilliamMe Neill, Professor and Chairman, De¬partment of History.TELEVISION SERIES: “'Charlando,” aSpanish-language program on WGN-TV,Channel 9, 8:00 a.m. and after the Sun¬day night late movie.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIALCHAPEL: Religious Service, 11 a.m..The Reverend Ewell J. Reagin, Assist¬ant to the Dean of the Chapel.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: HillelHouse, 5715 Woodlawn Ave., 8 p.m.COURT THEATER: “Chalk Circle,” byBrecht, Hutchinson Court, 8:30 p.m. RADIO SERIES: “Nightline,” WBBM,i80 kc, 10:30 p.m. A public radio forumfor the discussion of current events.Monday, July 31 -LECTURE: “Reporting on the Develop¬ing Areas,” Aristide Zolberg, AssociateProfessor of Political Science; Soc. Sci105, 4 p.m.Tuesday, August 1TENNIS INSTRUCTION: 3 P.M. StageField.GOLF INSTRUCTION: 4 p.m., StaggField.FOLK DANCING: Assembly Hall, Inter¬national House, 8 p.m.BANDERSNATCH SUMMER FILMSERIES: “Once More with Feeling,”Ida Noyes Cloister, 9:15 p.m.Wednesday, August 2C A RILL ON RECITAL: RockefellerChapel, 7:30 p.m., Carillonneur, CarlBangs.FOLD DANCING: English CountryDancers, Ida Noyes Hall, 8 p.m. Thursday, August 3COURT THEATER: Chalk Circle,Hutchinson Court, 8:30 p.m.Friday, August 4COURT THEATER: 8:30 p.m.Saturday August 5COIR THEATER: 8:30 p.m .Sunday, August 6RADIO SERIES: (See last Sunday fortimes) “Alexis de Tocqueville MeetsNatty Bumpo: The Quest for AmericanIdentity,” Robert Streeter, Professor ofEnglish.Monday, August 7LECTURE: “Threat and Fear vs.Competence as Strategies in Public In¬formation Campaigns,” Fred Strodt-beck, Assoc. Prof, of Psychology and So¬ciology; Soc Sci 105, 4 p.m .Tuesday, August 8BANDERSNATCH SUMMER FILMSERIES: “The Raven,” Ida NoyesCloister, 9:15 p.m .FI-CORD BATTERY OPERATED DIC¬TATING MACHINE for sale. Like new,in r«ceHent condition. Ideal for Studentsor Faculty. Completely portable—3V' X4"—and Includes compact carrying case.Compatible with Grundig StenorefTeTranscribing Units. Will sacrifice. Con¬tact Mr. Greenspan, 174-7300.COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTGREEK SALADS7100 S. Yates Free ParkingJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualUfo Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a $10 Used 9X12Rug, to a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants a Mill Returns at fractionof the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY HELP MISSISSIPPIWanted-Food and VolunteersBring Canned Meat, Canned Vegetables, Can¬ned or Dried Soups and Powdered Milk (orAnything!) to theHYDE PARK CO-OPFriday, August 4, 9-6,' Saturday, August 12, 9-4,Saturday, August 19, 9-6AND TO THEKIMBARK SHOPPING PLAZA53rd and Kimbarkon Wednesday, August 2, 1-6and Saturday, August 19, 9-6Volunteers Needed for all Dates2 or 3 hour stretches-Call 752-7045Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE. AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH-- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on ail hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes - Batteries10% discount to *tudant» with ID card*July 28, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 11,!*:>&,Restaurant56th Street at South Shore DriveFine art, like good food, excites the appetiteof the discriminating connoisseur■< ffor Reservations Call BU 8-/400PRIME CHOPPED STEAK (16 o*.) 2.95ONE-HALF BATTERY RAISED ROAST CHICKEN ... 2.9SSPAGHETTI WITH MEAT SAUCE 2.95SPECIAL PETITE LADIES SIRLOIN STEAK 3.95BROILED FRESH LAKE SUPERIOR WHITEFISH ... 4.25FILET MIGNON 4.50with or without a delicatecovering of our Special Bleu Sauce — Garlic BreadROAST DUCK 3.95with Dressing and Orange SaucePRIME SIRLOIN 5.95PRIME ROAST BEEF 4.50 SUCCULENT MEATY BABY BACK RIBSServed with our Famous King Edward I Gourmet Sauce3.95nn —■MM MW MM UK ■=DQC=DOCSfetwedunlA en/beebSALAD BOWL A LA MORTONSorOCR CREAMY COLE SLAW or OUR NEW Octatiui l SALADor OUR NEW CREAMED GARLIC DRESSINGBaked Potatoes with Sour Cream and Chives. Special Potato Pancake withApple Sauce or our own delicious Spaghetti with Meat Sauce * Garden FreshVegetable • Our Daily Bread . . . hot from our OvenReprinted from the Sun-LimesNational Distribution lor Sauces and Dressings from Morton'sH't f.ihion.bl. and comforf.bl. in main dining room Morton «.Room oH.rt < d.lighrful viuw of L.k. Michig.n and traffic .long thadrive. Raitaurant'i ta»t> fara includes steeks, chops, chicken, seafood,ribs, end lata evening snecks. *1 - " — many ingredients rolled intoone smooth dressing.We sampled all these pro¬ducts on our last visit to thelovely lakeside restaurant,and enjoyed them all. Withsuch fine extras as thesesuperb creations, made inMorton’s own kitchens, thematchless South Outer Drivesetting and the lovely worksof art adorning the walls,no wonder Morton’s has be¬come a hallmark among fineeating places, a landmarkin the dynamic Hyde Parkcommunity.Morton C. Morton found¬ed his first dining spot overBy Smith W rightLong known throughoutChicago for gracious diningand grand hospitality, Mor¬ton’s Restaurant and SurfClub at 5600 South ShoreDrive has just added anoth¬er First to its credit withnationwide distribution of thehouse's salad dressings andbarbecue sauce.King Edward 1 Gourmet§auce beads the list of spe¬cialties now on sale at Mor¬ton’s Restaurant and shortlyto be sold throughout thecountry. This tangy,,savorybarbecue sauce has'alwaysbeen admired at Morton’s;now you may enjoy it in yourhome! Morton's fans willapplaud the decision to namethis flavorful fluid afterEddit Morton, the restau¬rant’s genial host, whoseimagination and ingenuity ledto these products being madeavailable.Morton’s famous saladdressings will also appeal tothose who enjoy somethingdifferent. Octavius 1 SaladDressing is a heady con¬coction of oil and venegarwith herbs, parmesancheese, and a touch of garlic . Creamed Onion and GarlicSalad Dressing is for thosewho want scents for theircentsl Morton’s Special{Dressing with Blue Cheese isa felicitous combination 30 years ago and built athriving business on the solidfoundation of delectable food,comfortable atmosphere andexcellent service. A person¬al touch was included byfavoritesG.ni.l Eddia MM« it the man to thank for the innovations atMorton's Restaurant, located at 56th Street and South Shore Drive.The bottling of Morton’s famous sauces is the latest of Eddie'sachievements, offering everyone the opportunity to enjoy these superbtaste treats at home. Pictured above are the salad dressings and barbeque sauce now available from Morton's.Long admired by customers, these gourmet specialties may now be purchased at therestaurant, and will soon be available throughout the countryto the menu, such as theSalad Bowl a la Morton,Arnolds Special Sandwich,Mrs. Morton's whippedcream cake, and the famousMortini.The entrees are many andvaried. Selections i nc 1 ud eprime steaks, chops, roastprime of beef, fried or roastchicken, lobster tails or alaNewburg, shrimp and Doversole with almondine sauce,roast duck with orangesauce, and many others. Anew addition to the menu islasagna, and customer ac¬ceptance is such that thereare over 500 orders perweek for it.Accompanying all entreesis the Salad Bowl a la Mor¬ton, a heaping mound ofcrisp, chilled greens,sprinkled with Roquefortcheese and topped with an¬chovies; oh, which saladdressing tochoose this time?In addition you may choosebetween baked potato withsour cream and chives, po¬tato pancake with apple sauce, or a side order ofspaghetti with meat sauce..Undecided about which ofthe entrees would suit yourfancy? Try the Fiesta Plate,consisting of 1/4 fried chic¬ken, 1/4 roast duck, 1/2order barbecued baby ribs(basted, of course, in KingEddie's marvelous sauce)and garnished with orangesauce, apple slice, pine¬apple, rice and mushroomring. All this plus salad andvegetable for just $4.50.The desserts, especiallyMrs. Morton's special whip¬ped cream cake, the straw¬berry cheese cake or short¬cake and flaming cherries orstrawberries Romanoff, areworth a try and especiallyenjoyable in the summer¬time.Dinners, served with thesalad, potato, vegetable,fresh hot bread and butter,are priced from $2.95. Dailyspecials, offering a differententree Monday through Fri¬day are just $2.95. Satisfying luncheons areoffered daily, and after 10p.m. a selection of latesnacks is featured. Thereare delicious salads, sand¬wiches, eggs, waffles, pan¬cakes and similar light or¬ders. A particular favorite(and a favorite of the par¬ticular) is the Colossal Ham¬burger, cooked to order andserved on black bread withpotato pancake, apple sauceand cole slaw for $1.50.Liquid refreshment can beenjoyed in the intimate Ca¬sino Bar, where Bernie Yuffyprovides piano interludes 5nights a week and Lee Steinon the other two nights.Banquets, celebrationsand dinners up to 80 areaccommodated in two privateparty rooms.Morton's is open from 7;30a.m. to 2 a.m. daily exceptSaturday, when it is open 'til3. An attendant is on handto park cars.For reservations callEddie at BU 8-7400.