ago Maroon FoundedIn 1892J\ 'C'C'KJVOL. 76, NO. 13 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1967 24 PAGES, 3 SECTIONS$ 1 MillionGiven forArt AreaIN PERSPECTIVE: Artist's conception depicts a roomy interior for the University's new art gallery.The facilities will be part of the Village building complex at Ellis Ave. and 55th St.TWO TALKS HEREColeman Opens Monday Lectures;Ayers Appraises Labor-Management By TIMOTHY S. KELLEYThe University’s Campaign forChicago was pushed past the $100million mark yesterday by a $1million gift from the Smart Fam¬ily Foundation, established by thefounders of Esquire magazine, forthe construction of an art gallery.The gallery will be part of a$25 million building complex whichwill also include new student re¬sidence halls. According to Nap-thali Knox, assistant vice-presidentfor physical planning, it is not yetknown when plans will reach corn- systems of rooms off a corridor,he added, allows more privacy andmore bedroom space.Each of the four central towerswill probably be a house of 60 stu¬dents with a heavy emphasis onsingle rooms. The remaining hous¬ing area could be adapted either toa house or a non-house arrange¬ment.In Early StageThe plans are currently in theschematic stage, the first of threearchitectural phases, to be fol-“Educational institutions are notdesigned to develop the motivationand personality for change, but toprovide the equipment — know¬ledge and skill — with which towork,” said James S. Coleman ofJohns Hopkins in the first of theMonday Lecture Series. Colemanspoke on “Conflicting Theories ofSocial Change.”Although individual motivationand personality are essential in atleast two of the four major theo¬ries of change, there is no appro¬priate institution for developingsuch motivation, he said. “Thisfact suggests that modern societyis not well-suited to change,” ac¬cording to Coleman.The goal of change, whether ofwhole societies or of minoritieswithin a society, Coleman sug¬gested, is an increase in control ofthe conditions of existence. He out¬lined two major classes of changetheories.Weintraub WinsHarbison GrantKarl J. Weintraub, an authorityon the development of historicalthought and the Thomas E. Don¬nelley associate professor of historyin the College, is one of 10 schol¬ars across the nation who havereceived the 1968 E. Harris Harb¬ison Award for DistinguishedTeaching from the Danforth Foun¬dation of St. Louis.Weintraub received the HarbisonAward at a dinner honoring the re¬cipients Wednesday evening inWashington, D.C. Recipients havethe option of selecting either a$10,000 cash grant, or a semester-long period of freedom from theirusual academic responsibilities forsuch study or preparation as theydeem helpful to their teaching andscholarship.Weintraub received the Univer¬sity’s Quantrell Award for excel¬lence in undergraduate teaching in1960. 1 pletion or when construction will J?wed by design development and£egin s finally the actual constructionThe architect for the new build-One class of theory sees change of the Commonwealth Edison j ings, which will cover the areaprimarily in terms of individuals; j Company, said Tuesday night in a j from Cottage Grove Ave. to Unithe other emphasizes change in so- speech here.eial conditions. “This distinctionmirrors the beliefs about changethat divide the Negro movementand leaders in developing nations,”Coleman commented.The lawyer’s theory of change isone of those that stress social con¬ditions. “If legal changes aremade, social changes will follow”is the basis of this theory.A second social theory of changethat Coleman presented was theeconomist’s theory, which “seesthe major social deficit as a defi¬cit of resources.” Economic aidand the Marshall Plan are relatedto this type of thought.The psychologist sees the changeof society as a whole as the sumof changes in individuals. Efforts,achievement, individual freedomand frugality are the valuesstressed.Coleman contrasted to this viewthe theory of the revolutionist, whosees change as a result of the col¬lective force of a collective grouprather than an aggregate of indi¬viduals. The total committment ofindividuals to the revolutionaryaim is needed here.“Both the revolutionist and psy¬chologist depend upon disciplinedefforts of individuals to producechange,” Coleman said, “but thesplit between individualistic vs.collectivist means is the split inthe Negro movement today.”Each of the four theories is in it¬self inadequate, Coleman con¬cluded. From the product of thefour, it might be possible to con¬struct “prescriptions that stemless from ideological or precon¬ceived notions but more from atheory of change itself.”Industrial RelationsThe growing public interest inlabor disputes puts a greater obli¬gation on labor and managementto make collective bargainingwork, Thomas G. Ayers, president While interruptions to vital serv¬ices put pressure on governmentto intervene, the surest road to in¬dustrial peace is a bargain thatsatisfies both parties, a negotiatedrather than a dictated settlement,he said.Ayers made the remarks in atalk on “The Changing Nature ofCollective Bargaining,” given asthe main address at the 33rd An¬nual Midwest Conference on Indus¬trial Relations in the Center forContinuing Education.The first third of this centurywas largely dominated by busi¬ness, and the second third hasbeen labor-oriented, said Ayers,but some believe that the prevail¬ing force in the remainder of thecentury is likely to be neither la¬bor nor business but the publicinterest.But while “we are finding our¬selves more and more dependentupon the vital services which bindour society together and less tol¬erant of strikes which interruptthese services,” government inter¬vention is not the answer, he said. versity Ave. between 55th and 56thSts., is Edward Larrabee Barnes,52, a native Chicagoan whose of¬fices are in New York.The complex, which will cut offEllis, Ingleside, D r e x e 1, andMaryland Avenues for regulartraffic, includes extensive housingfacilities, a dining area, a theatre,and music and art centres.To House 900Basic elements will be seven six-story towers, four large courts,and horizontal units throughout.The design of the Village, which meeting in New Yorkwill accomodate a total of 900 stu- John Smart, chairmanplans. Details on specific room de¬signs and common facilities areyet to be agreed.Knox indicated, however, thatthere would be a large variety offacilities such as snack bars andstudent-run co-ops.The art gallery is a portion ofthe center which will be situatedimmediately east of the housingunits, on Greenwood Ave. acrossfrom the Field House. It will benamed the David and AlfredSmart Gallery in honour of thefounders of Esquire.President Beadle announced theSmart Foundation gift after abetweenof Es-dents, is a combination of urban quire’s board of directors and ofand rural atmospheres.The choice of room arrange¬ments is intended to allow the stu¬dent to express his individuality toa great degree.Village accommodations range the board of trustees of the SmartFamily Foundation, and ProvostLevi.“The gift means that the city ofChicago will have an importantnew gallery, a gallery that will befrom one-room singles and doubles able to accomodate the finest trav-to suites for anywhere from two to eling exhibits from museums allsix students each. ! over the world,” according toThe advantage of the suite ar- ’ Beadle,rangement, Knox said is that stu- One year still remains in thedents will have mutual living room three-year, $160 million campaignspace shared by groups in addition for funds, which was initiatedto private bedrooms. Yet normal October 20, 1965.Students Lose Law AuditoriumThe Law School auditorium hasbeen closed to student groups thisyear by the Law School faculty,which voted to open the facilitiesonly to Law School business, aca¬demic University functions, andother events sponsored by a divi¬sion of the University.The Law School action has leftUniversity students SocialSciences 122, the Cloister Club, andthe larger Mandel Hall for non-academic events.The Cobb hall auditorium will beopen next quarter, according toDean of Students Charles D.O’Connell. Mandel has been closed thisweek in the wake of last week¬end’s fires but it will re-open Mon¬day for scheduled events. Hutchin¬son Commons will be open Sun¬day for a Social Sciences Collegi¬ate Division dinner, but the C-shopwill not resume evening hours un¬til the entire complex is back innormal operation.The closing of the Law School is claimed students had repeatedlybroken the fire laws by smokingin the auditorium and had burnedboth chairs and the carpeting. Stu¬dents had also spilled coffee andripped up the seats in the auditor¬ium during the year, he said.The Faculty Building Commit¬tee, chaired by Professor of LawWalter Blum, recommended lastJanuary that the auditorium nota result of alleged mistreatment of be opened to students in the fu-the building last year when it was ture*open to student groups. George O’Connell has asked that the LawFee, assistant dean of the Schooland dean of the students there, School reconsider its ruling but thecommittee has so far refused.Calendar of EventsPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must submit typed copy toThe Maroon two days before the day beforepublication.Friday, October 27FILM: (Doc Films), "The Blue Angel" byJosef von Sternberg. $1. Mandel Hall.7:15 and 9:15 p.m.DEBATE: "The Country Would Be Betteroff Without Corps, Courts, Jails, Judgesand Taxes" Joffre Stewart vs. Bill Mason.$1. College of Complexes, 105 W. GrandAve. 9 p.m.LECTURE: (Department of English), "Peg¬asus and the Dismal Science," by LouisLanda. Classics 10. 2:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Grad. Training Program: Bio¬logy), P. Robbins, "The Control of O-An-tigen Biosynthesis by Bacteriophage,"Abbott 101. 12:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Department of Psychology).Silvan Tompkins, "Romantic Love and aTheory of Mourning" Beecher Hall 102.3:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Microbiology Club), Dr. Ewing,"Antigenic Variations in Salmonellae."Ricketts North, Room 1. 4 p.m.LECTURE: (Zoology Club), Prof. Wilson,"Origin and Early Social Stagnation ofthe Ants." Zoology 14. 4:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Intervarsity Christian Fellow¬ship), Prof. Harris, "Modern Conceptionsof the Kingdom of God." Ida Noyes Hall.7:30 p.m.SEMINAR: Dr. Cohen, "Peritoneoscopy vs.Culdoscopy in the Infertile Female" MARP300. 12 noon.CHEST CONFERENCE: Billings Hospital,M-137. 5 p.m.RECITAL: Joan Benson, Clavichordist $1.00.Bond Chapel. 8:30 p.m.SHABBAT BERESHIT: A Study Evening.Hillel House. 8:30.TWIST PARTY: Billy Boy Arnold and hisSouth Side Blues Band. Cloister Club, IdaNoyes. 75c, men and women. 7:30-12:00.Saturday, October 28VARSITY SOCCER: Principia College atElash, III. 10:30 a.m.OPEN HOUSE: Billings Hospital. 40th An¬niversary.CONFERENCE: On Cardiac Catherization.Bobs Roberts Hospital, B-604. 9:30.WORKSHOP: (International Voluntary Serv¬ice), Painting, wallwashing at Tinley ParkMental Hospital. 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Call John Zurbrigg at 684-2820.FOOTBALL: Lake Forest. 1:30 p.m. At LakeForest.FILM: "Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam" presentedby the India Association. $1 for members;$1.50 for non-members. Judd Hall. 8 p.m.LECTURE: George Mahin, "How CrimeGets into Politics," $1. College of Com¬plexes, 105 W. Grand Ave. 9 p.m. Sunday, October 29RELIGIOUS SERVICE:11 a.m. Rockefeller Chapel.CHESS CLUB: Ida Noyes, Sun Parlor. 3-6p.m.CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robins. 3 p.m.PHOENIX: Important pre-Halloween staffmeeting. Everyone wishing to be on thestaff should attend. Ida Noyes Hall. 7 p.m.ANNUAL LUTHERAN REFORMATION FES¬TIVAL: Rockefeller Chapel. 7:30 p.m.FOLK DANCERS: Ida Noyes Hall, CloisterClub. 730 - 11 p.m.REPORT: Student Report on Washington atChapel House 6:15 to 7:30 p.m. Supper at5:30 p.m.CANVASSING: Politics for Peace. Meet infront of Ida Noyes at 12:45 p.m.FILM: (German and Swedish Film Festival),Carl Zuckmayer's "Captain from Kope-nick." Students 75c. Regular $1.00. IdaNoyes Hall. 7:30 p.m. RADIO SERIES: WFMF (7:00 a.m.) andWAIT (10:00). Ray Koppelman, "Biologyin a Historical Context.Monday, October 30MESA COLLOQIUM: Prof. Richard Atkin¬son, "Computer-Based Instruction andSome Problems in Optimization" JuddHall, Room 126. 3:30-5:00 p.m.SPORTS: Freshman Sophomore Cross Coun¬try vs. Wilson and Wright Jr. Colleges.4 p.m. in Washington Park.SEMINAR: (Psychology Club), GraduateStudies In Psychology. Ida Noyes Lounge.8 p.m.FILM: (VISA) Mental Illness and MentalInstitutions. Ida Noyes, third floor theater.7:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Adlai Stevenson Institute),"World Health and World Politics," byJoseph Handler, director of public infor¬mation, World Health Organization.Breasted Hall, Oriental Institute. 8 p.m.What kind do you smoke?FIFE TOBACCO1Whatever kind you smoke,you owe it to yourself to,try MONZA Pipe Tobacco.Your favorite pipe will giveyou more pleasure whenyou choose this importedblend of the world's finetobaccos.move up toTHE IMPORTED PIPE TOBACCOONLY 301 A POUCHFor a COMPLIMENTARY pouch of MONZA PIPE TOBACCO,send 10* to cover postage and handling with thiscoupon to:ROMICK’S INTERNATIONAL. INC.P.O. BOX 3033, DEPT. 151NO. HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. 91606(Please Print) NONZANameStreetState CityZipFOR THE UNUSUAL IN CHRISTMAS GIFTSFOR YOUR FAMILY AND FRIENDS IN FAR-OFF PLACES5300 S. LAKE PARK AVE.CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615Tel.: NO 7-4040gift items, complete line of home furnishingsTo All Our Customers (new and old):The CHRISTMAS MAILING PERIOD is rapidly approaching. To insure delivery before Christmas,the following mailing dates should be kept in mind:DOMESTIC MAIL:Gift parcels for distant States should be mailed before DECEMBER 4.Gift parcels for local and nearby areas should be mailed before DECEMBER 13.Greeting cards for distant States should be mailed before DECEMBER 10, and those forlocal delivery before DECEMBER 15.MAIL FOR ARMED FORCES OVERSEAS:The period October 16 to November I I has been designated for mailing Christmas packagesweighing over 5 pounds by surface transportation to members of our Armed Forces overseas. ForSpace Available (SAM) parcels, the period is October 21 to December I. For air mail parcels, theperiod is December I to December I I.CHRISTMAS GREETING CARDS AND PARCELS TO OTHER COUNTRIES:Mailing should be made no later than the dates shown below: SURFACEFAR EAST Oct. 15NEAR EAST & AFRICA Nov. IEUROPE Nov. 1SOUTH & CENTRAL AMERICA & WEST INDIES Nov. I AIRMAILDec. IDec. 10Dec. 10Dec. 10PLEASE REMEMBER TO MAIL EARLY IN THE DAY AS WELL AS EARLY IN THE SEASON.SPECIALSCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS will pack your gifts free of charge and handle all mailing -domestic and overseas.THE CHICAGO MAROON October 27, 1967 New Protest at Induction CenterNearly 40 University of Chicagostudents picketed the Chicago In¬duction Center early Wednesday ina show of support led by theChicago Area Draft Resistance(CADRE) for CADRE memberGunnar Knutson, 24, who tried butwas not able to refuse inductioninto the army.Selective Service officials re¬fused to induct Knutson, pendinginvestigation of his participationin the demonstration at the Fed¬eral Building October 16, a CADREspokesman said.He stated he would not file as a conscientious objector because todo so would be to go along withthe “system,” and would thereforelack protest.“The war in Viet Nam is illegaland immoral. I can’t participatein any way,” Knutson declaredshortly before entering the Centerat 615 W. Van Buren St. Knutsonsaid he thought that he might besent to jail. Demonstratorscheered, “We support Gunnar.”The demonstration ended soonafter Knutson entered the building,a little before 8 a.m. No arrestswere made.C&cft ffoddRunner!&ywr7tymoutf)I>ea/ers.% The new Plymouth Road RunnerJ now of your Plymouth Dealer 'swhere the beatgoes on.m©1967 Warner Bros.—Seven Arte, Inc..Can The Waldorf-Astoria, a solidlyentrenched memberof'the establishment9Initiate a meaningfuldialogue with dieyouth of America?We can try.By telling It to you like It 1$: If you want to enjoy Thanksgiving InNew York City, first check out The Waldorf's —mini-rate schedule for students$ 9.00 per person, 2 in a room$12.00 per person, 1 in a room$23.00 for 3 persons in a roomAt The Waldorf, you'll be right around the corner from the swingingEast Side scene of “nowness." Maxwell's Plum, Friday's, Mr. tails,and all those other friendly spots between 48th and 65th Streets arejust a short walk from our location on Park Avenue between 49thand 50th. That means you can stay at New York's finest hotel at bar¬gain rates and save a bundle on taxi fare. When it comes to eating,well, The Waldorf’s famed Oscar is a bargain, too. And wouldn'tyou just know...it's a Hilton. How’s that for a college try?Just call or write301 Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022 Tel. (212) 355-3000.I Davis Replaces Lynd in Liberation ConferenceRennie Davis, an organizer forthe Join Community Organizationwho recently returned from inten¬sive talks with the National Lib¬eration Front in Prague and Han¬oi, will speak on “Whites in theMovement—from Birmingham to Detroit,” tonight at 7:30 in JuddHall.His talk opens a weekend con¬ference entitled “Black Liberation—White Response,” sponsored bythe Conference on the City and theUniversity. Davis replaces radical historianStaughton Lynd, who will not givehis scheduled lecture because hewas unexpectedly called out oftown.Davis will discuss the changedrelations of whites and blacks toSG Approves CORSO AllocationsStudent Government (SG) ap¬proved the entire list of all locationsby the Committee On RecognizedStudent Organizations (CORSO) atits regular meeting Wednesday.The allocations are the onesprinted in the October 24 issue ofThe Maroon, but due to a print¬er’s error the 1967-68 column andthe 1966-67 columns were trans¬posed.The two major organizations yetto be decided upon by CORSO areSG and The Maroon. The difficul¬ty with The Maroon’s allocation,according to CORSO ChairmanMark Joseph, is that its requesthas changed due to substantiallyhigher printing costs this year.In his report Joseph stated thatCORSO has received approximate¬ly $40,000 in requests and that neworganizations will continue toStudents FileSuit AgainstWise. UniversityA temporary federal court in¬junction restraining the Universityof Wisconsin against expelling stu¬dents involved in last week’s dem¬onstration against the Dow Chem- jical Company failed to unite asplit between radical and liberalfactions on campus.Prior to last week’s demonstra- jtion, a group of students filed asuit against the University chal- (lenging the constitutionality of re¬strictions on student protests andobstruction of campus activities.According to Robert Taylor, assis¬tant to the president of the univer¬sity, the administration cannottake action against the 13 studentswho were suspended until the casehas been decided in court.The university is presently hold¬ing hearings against those in¬volved in the demonstration.A teach-in on Monday ended thetemporary coalition between radi¬cal and liberal factions on campus.Each blamed the other for the fail¬ure of the strikes against the un¬iversity — radicals accused liber¬als for undermining the strike byconcentrating on the issue of po¬lice brutality, while liberalsblamed radicals for attempting tocorrelate the police brutality withthe military action in Vietnam.About 10,000 students so far ex¬pressed disagreement — in peti¬tions and in the student strikes —with the administration’s decisionto call in city riot squads to quellThe Dow demonstration. drain the contingency fund thatCORSO reserves.As expected, the SG Assemblyapproved the allocations with amodicum of debate.SG also discussed briefly plansfor elections for first-year studentsthe week of October 30 to Novem¬ber 3. A standing committee ispresently deciding upon constitu¬ encies and issuing candidacyforms.Membership has been steadilydeclining in the face of resig¬nations by several members. Re¬presentation from the dorms isdown to two representatives at thepresent time, and only 30 mem¬bers remain in the entire SG As¬sembly.MAROON SPORTSBooters Bite the Dust TwiceThe University soccer team,badly weakened by injuries, sus¬tained twin losses to Wheaton andLake Forest in the past week’saction.Lake Forest scored in the firstperiod and kept the pressure on todefeat the Maroons at home onWednesday, 5-0. After a secondfirst period tally, the visitors wereheld to a virtual standoff until theypicked up that almost unbeatablethree-goal lead in the third quarterand put the game on ice.Last Saturday the Chicago elev¬en lost to Wheaton 7-0. TheMaroons were unable to moveagainst the well-balanced Wheatonmachine and simply couldn’t mounta strong attack.Cross CountryDual meet victories still eluded the grasp of the University cross¬country team, as the squad lost toBradley, North Central, and Wa¬bash in competition this week.Bradley took a 16-47 victory overChicago in Peoria on Tuesday. JeffMelby, top Maroon runner, fin¬ished fifth in the overall running;his time, however, was a merenine seconds behind the first Brad¬ley man.The Maroons did much better inthe North Central InvitationalTournament on Saturday. Althoughthey lost concurrent dual meetswith Wabash and North Central,the Chicago harriers placed fourthin the overall seven-team field.Melby took tenth in the overallcompetition, while Dave Murry,the second Chicago runner fin¬ished in the 20th spot.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESWe’re not in the bread businessSave yours attheCATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAU3514 SO. MICHIGAN 10 E.41ST. STREETMl 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell.the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospitol REYNOLDS CLUBBARBERSHOP7 BarbersOnly Shop on CampusAPPOINTMENTS IF DESIREDREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT57th and UNIVERSITY. EXT. 3573M-F' 8 a.m.-S p.m., Sol. 8 a.m.-12 p.m.A UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY FOR A GRADUATE STUDENTIN EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY OR COUNSELINGAND GUIDANCEInteruniversity organization needs a part-time coordinatorfor a national student recruitment research program. Ex¬cellent soorce of doctoral thesis and publications. Yourown hours. Hourly salary. Statistics and research meth¬odology required.Contact: Gary FiIerman/Suite 229/ Windermere Hotel/ 643-Association of University Programs in HospitalAdministration I 167 “The Movement” and to each othersince the days of Freedom Ridesand voter registration drives inthe South.Weekend ActivitiesThe conference will resume Sat¬urday morning at 10:30 in IdaNoyes Hall with a panel, “TheCrumbling Foundations of Ameri¬can Society.” Panelists includeRichard Flacks and Marlene Dix¬on, both faculty members here,and Linda Murray, a student andleader of the Society for the Pur¬pose of Lobbying in the Interestsof Black Students.The panel will analzye the en¬durance of poverty and racism inAmerica in the context of thiscountry’s fundamental values andpower structures.The afternoon’s program will bedevoted to the question “What isto be Done?” Veronica Lasky, aspokesman for the program’ssponsors, insists that the question is “even more pertinent todaythan in 1918.” This part of the pro¬gram begins at 1:30 p.m. with apanel describing new approachesto the problems outlined in themorning.At 3:30 p.m., workshops will con¬sider ways in which those attend¬ing the conference can work inThe Movement today.CADRE in CourtEighteen members and support¬ers of the Chicago Area Draft Re¬sisters (CADRE) will appear incourt November 2 on charges ofdisorderly conduct and resistingarrest which grew out of a demon¬stration at the Chicago InductionCenter last week.Witnesses to the arrests areasked to call the CADRE office at664-6895. Contributions toward thefines, which may total $5400, maybe sent to CADRE, P.O. Box 9089,Chicago, Ill. 60690.JESSELSON’S9MVIN€ HYM PARK POP OVH M WARSWITH TMI VWY POT AND FRBH0IFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870. PL 2-8190. DO 8-9180 1840 I. 5SMTHE BOOK CENTER5211 So. Harper Ave."in Harper Court”Ml 3-1880ST0KELY CARMICHEL & HAMILT0NS’Black PowerNow In StockThe Deptment of MusicpresentsJOAN BENSONfshay ClavichordistBond ChapelOCTOBER ?7 , 8:30 P.M.Adm: $1. Tickets at Concert Office, 5835 University;^o^t^BondChapeHjevemn^ol^concerU^^^^^^^^^CHICAGO PREMIERE“TRUDY and the MINSTREL”Rollicking New Musical for ChildrenNOW ON STAGE]Weekends performances iniu'ltec ~10Sat. lQ:30 a.m. 2:30 p.m. Sun. 2:30 p m.GOODMAN CHILDREN S THEATRE200 S. Columbus Drive • CE 6-2337CHICAGO TICKET CENTRAL212 N. MICHIGAN AVE.A Valuable Book inAny Library Is:My Religionby Helen Kellerwith an introduction byNorman VincentPeakLearn of her religion andphilosophy which has up¬lifted and sustained thisremarkable woman.For your free introductorycopy write: SwedenborgReading Room, 5710 S.Woodlawn Ave., Chicago,Ill. 60637 247, 248, 249, 250...there are 250 breath-fresheningsprays inWHISPER"new aerosol breath-freshenernow at your drugstoreUSV PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION800 Second Ave.. New York, N. Y. 10017October 27, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONRepresentationStudent Government seldom has been and is notnow a representative body at Chicago. It traditionallylends itself to domination by a small minority, and thisyear is no exception.It is certainly possible that the people elected lastyear were representative of the University. By now, how¬ever, 20 of the 50 representatives elected are no longerserving. Due to an amazing SG by-law, which states thatany representative who misses two meetings is suspendedfrom voting until his return, they no longer are countedtowards a quorum. Suspended members do not count forquorum requirements.At the Wednesday meeting of the Assembly, bindingvotes were taken — with seventeen representatives vot¬ing.In an Assembly of fifty elected members, it makesabsolutely no sense whatever to have seventeen of themclaiming to speak for all. Obviously the appropriate by-lawshould be replaced by a more traditional rule which de¬fines a quorum as a majority of the elected delegatesand not, as some have suggested recently, a majority ofthose present and voting.But what is needed almost as badly is a drastic re¬apportionment of the assembly along the lines of oneman-one vote. There is no reason to suppose, for example,that the apartment dwellers in the College, who numbera distinct minority, should have an equal number of voteswith the dormitory dwellers. There is even less reasonto give seats to those graduate divisions which fail toexpress interest in student government. Some four hun¬dred people voted in Woodward Court for three repre¬sentatives last spring; each of them had rather less in¬fluence than the three voters who elected the representa¬tive from the Graduate School of Education.Yet we cannot endorse the proposal submitted byPaul Burstein of the Inter-House Council that SG besplit into a graduate and undergraduate wings. It wouldbe far better to have all the students in the Universityrepresented in one body, so that the SG president cantruthfully claim to represent all the students on campus.Otherwise administrators could use the split as an excusefor constant delays in acceding to student demands. Forthe sake of facile communications with the faculty and theadministration, there should be only one Student Govern¬ment.It should be a relevant student government, how¬ever. After re-apportionment, SG should resume its pro¬gram of student services and its speakers program. Itshould have a close enough contact with dormitory stu¬dents to make IHC unnecessary. It should function as aneffective bargaining unit for students both in Universityhousing and in the Hyde Park and Woodlawn communi¬ties. It should attempt to exert some power over theforces that mold student lives.But it can do this only if it attempts those projectswhich will develop a student following for student govern¬ment. If it cannot do this, it should be abolished. Anystudent government that cannot justify its existence, butwhich spends $4300 a year, is too expensive a luxury forthis campus. Assault and BatteryJOHN WELCHThe American Press:Churning Them OutLast weekend’s march on thePentagon gave the Americanpress another chance to churnout its myths about what goeson here. And it gave criticalreaders a chance to react withincredulity, or disgust, or justlaughter.Essentially, we all knew whatthe newspapers would say, if wehad read them before. We knewthat James Reston and TheTimes would liberally agonizeover the tragic division slicedthrough concientious dissent by“extremists,” that only a fewminor injuries would be reported,that government forces wouldwin the hearts of newsmen withtheir restraint under terrible pro¬vocation, and that demonstrationwould be the story of a nice le¬gitimate dissent waylaid into ci¬vil disobedience by some shadycharacters.Because it has been the themeof almost everything written late¬ly in the daily press about theanti-war movement.And, not unexpectedly, the“truth” from newspapers, radio,and TV is only generally similarto stories told by people whowere in the demonstration at thePentagon. The press accounts oftear-gassings and the govern¬ment force’s handling of demon¬strators sitting around the Penta¬gon Saturday night are good ex¬amples of the methods used towrite news.NEWSPAPERS at first failedto mention the use of tear gas, but later blandly repeated thecontentions of “reliable Pentagonsources” (The Washington Post)that demonstrators had used teargas on themselves. Apparently,no reporters present when thisbit of whimsy was propoundedthought to ask why these fabledfanatic peaceniks would want tobreak their own ranks by firinggas at soldiers with gas masksand at demonstrators withoutthem.Still, editors need not have bur¬ied information by their own re¬porters who saw troops fire teargas.Nor did they need to bury andscatter reports of beatings Satur¬day night. Enough students heresaw enough fellow-demonstratorsdragged behind lines of MP’s andbeaten bloody that reporterscouldn’t have missed the degreeof brutality. But the press wantedto dwell on domonstrators’ abuseof MP’s.BUT, ACTUALLY, newspaperscannot be expected to write stor¬ies of objectors clubbed down bydisciplined Americanism, anymore than United Fruit can beexpected to admit that they runhalf of South America. Becausethe press, is as much a part ofthe American complex of corpor¬ations and institutions as GeneralMotors. Papers depend on adver¬tising for survival, which chainsthem to business. What threatensthe country’s social stabilitythreatens its economic stability,and, ultimately, its newspapers.We cannot expect them to be nobly objective toward people re¬volted by the American systemand hoping to revolt against it.The coverage of hippies, whiteradicals, and black nationaliststends to be similar — patroniz¬ingly contemptuous, or, if thegroup is felt to endanger insti¬tutional stability, simply dis¬torted.Furthermore reporters justcan’t understand these “extrem¬ists.” Having never been beatenby a cop, or felt poverty, or en¬dured a what-sort-of-insect-is-thisstare from a true American, areporter can’t grasp the mean¬ing of their disgust. And, beinga system man himself, he doesnot really understand someonewho would choose to live outsidethat system.Where does this leave news¬paper readers? Well, we canread for enjoyment, chuckle overabsurd stories, and play gameslike “What really happened inthe thing the story was about?”Sports coverage is usually prettyaccurate.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Press Service.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 27, 1967The Auditorium:A Chicago Phoenixby Roger Black>r thirty years the Audi-torium Theater sat in the middleof Chicago as one great romanticghost and was ignored.People walked by Louis Sul¬livan’s building on Michigan Ave¬nue without noticing it. The pro¬moter’s dream (a 400-room luxuryhotel and 165 offices that sup¬ported the Theater and drewprestige from it) came to be in¬habited by Roosevelt University(an occupant that prevented thebuilding from being torn downaltogether) but the students ofwhich, many of them, were un¬aware that they were neverfarther away than 50 feet fromthe greatest theater in the world.It is the greatest theater in theworld, though the last regularuse of it was during the SecondWorld War when the USO usedthe stage for a bowling alley. Thebeginning of its decline was whenSamuel Insull sought to memor¬ialize himself by building a newopera house on Wacker Drive(called by some, Insull’s throne)and moving the Lyric opera intoit.The Theater was first used forthe Republican Convention inMarch 1888 where Benjamin Har¬rison was nominated. A yearlater, on December, PresidentHarrison, along with 11,000 othersAdelina Patti, on one of her in¬numerable farewell tours, sing¬ing two verses of Home SweetHome. Seventy-eight years later,this October 31, the Auditorium ■will have its Grand Reopening Iwith the New York City Ballet. IThe size of the audience will be *nearer to the normal capacity ofthe hall, 4,237. The cost of theboxes is $1,500 instead of $2,100.But the importance for Chicagois just the same.The Auditorium was built safe- Ily before the advent of loud- Ispeaker systems and the demise Iof the art of acoustics. It has, Iwith few exceptions, perfect Isightlines. And it is beautiful. IThe beauty of it is because of ILouis Sullivan. It is just about Ithe best statement of Sullivan’s Itheory on architectural orna- Iment. (One reason it may be the Ibest is that it is the largest build- Iing he ever worked on, at 8,737,- I000 cubic feet, and the most ex- Ipensive, at $3,145,291 — about Iwhat it is costing to restore Ithe Theater alone.) IThe perfect acoustics and flsightlines, however, are due to ■Dankmar Adler, Sullivan’s rela- Auditorium Theater CouncilThe Maroon — MARC PoKEMPNER tively neglected senior partnerand one of the first architecturalengineers.Adler based his acoustics onScott Russell’s “isoucoustic”curve. The principle was simplythat as sound waves expandfrom the stage, the room shouldexpand with them, so that theycome into equal contact with thefloor surfaces — including theears of the listeners.This was accomplished withfour expanding eliptical arches— eliptical so that the soundwould not be reflected back intoone spot. He used arches insteadof a smooth cone so that thesound would be evenly diffused.The theater has a main flooror parquet with 1,442 seats, aneven larger balcony with 1,632seats, and two galleries, withseats for 526 and 427 people. In¬stead of closing off the back ofparquet, Adler left it open, allow¬ing the sound to travel back andup the stair cases to the balcony and the galleries, making for avery smooth reverberation.Adler also brought to the the¬ater some advanced a gadgetry,such as the stage with 26hydraulic platforms, much likethose in the new Met at NewYork’s Lincoln Center, with theexception that at the Met thefirst time the platforms wereused, they went berserk andcaused the stage to undulate likewaves, wrecking such havoc withthe mechanism down below thatit still hasn’t been repaired. TheAuditorium’s hydraulic platformswere dismantled in the thirties,and because of the expense in¬volved in reassembling them,only one has now been placedback in working order.Adler also devised movableTurn to Page ThreeMr. Black, managing editorof The Maroon, is a second-year student in the Collegemajoring in political science.The Chicago Maroon Assault and BatteryFounded In 1192Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger BlackExecutive Editors Michael SeidmanJohn WelchNews Editor John MoscowCulture Editor Edward Chikofsky Photographic Editor.. Marc PoKempnerAssociate Editors David E. GumpertDaniel HertzbergJoan PhillipsLiterary Editor David L. AikenEditor Emeritus David A. SatterRepresentationStudent Government seldom has been and is notnow a representative body at Chicago. It traditionallylends itself to domination by a small minority, and thisyear is no exception.It is certainly possible that the people elected lastyear were representative of the University. By now, how¬ever, 20 of the 50 representatives elected are no longerserving. Due to an amazing SG by-law, which states thatany representative who misses two meetings is suspendedfrom voting until his return, they no longer are countedtowards a quorum. Suspended members do not count forquorum requirements.At the Wednesday meeting of the Assembly, bindingvotes were taken — with seventeen representatives vot¬ing.In an Assembly of fifty elected members, it makesabsolutely no sense whatever to have seventeen of themclaiming to speak for all. Obviously the appropriate by-lawshould be replaced by a more traditional rule which de¬fines a quorum as a majority of the elected delegatesand not, as some have suggested recently, a majority ofthose present and voting.But what is needed almost as badly is a drastic re¬apportionment of the assembly along the lines of oneman-one vote. There is no reason to suppose, for example,that the apartment dwellers in the College, who numbera distinct minority, should have an equal number of voteswith the dormitory dwellers. There is even less reasonto give seats to those graduate divisions which fail toexpress interest in student government. Some four hun¬dred people voted in Woodward Court for three repre¬sentatives last spring; each of them had rather less in¬fluence than the three voters who elected the representa¬tive from the Graduate School of Education.Yet we cannot endorse the proposal submitted byPaul Burstein of the Inter-House Council that SG besplit into a graduate and undergraduate wings. It wouldbe far better to have all the students in the Universityrepresented in one body, so that the SG president cantruthfully claim to represent all the students on campus.Otherwise administrators could use the split as an excusefor constant delays in acceding to student demands. Forthe sake of facile communications with the faculty and theadministration, there should be only one Student Govern¬ment.It should be a relevant student government, how¬ever. After re-apportionment, SG should resume its pro¬gram of student services and its speakers program. Itshould have a close enough contact with dormitory stu¬dents to make IHC unnecessary. It should function as aneffective bargaining unit for students both in Universityhousing and in the Hyde Park and Woodlawn communi¬ties. It should attempt to exert some power over theforces .that mold student lives.But it can do this only if it attempts those projectswhich will develop a student following for student govern¬ment. If it cannot do this, it should be abolished. Anystudent government that cannot justify its existence, butwhich spends $4300 a year, is too expensive a luxury forthis campus. JOHN WELCHThe American Press;Churning Them OutLast weekend’s march on thePentagon gave the Americanpress another chance to churnout its myths about what goeson here. And it gave criticalreaders a chance to react withincredulity, or disgust, or justlaughter.Essentially, we all knew whatthe newspapers would say, if wehad read them before. We knewthat James Reston and TheTimes would liberally agonizeover the tragic division slicedthrough concientious dissent by“extremists,” that only a fewminor injuries would be reported,that government forces wouldwin the hearts of newsmen withtheir restraint under terrible pro¬vocation, and that demonstrationwould be the story of a nice le¬gitimate dissent waylaid into ci¬vil disobedience by some shadycharacters.Because it has been the themeof almost everything written late¬ly in the daily press about theanti-war movement.And, not unexpectedly, the“truth” from newspapers, radio,and TV is only generally similarto stories told by people whowere in the demonstration at thePentagon. The press accounts oftear-gassings and the govern¬ment force’s handling of demon¬strators sitting around the Penta¬gon Saturday night are good ex¬amples of the methods used towrite news.NEWSPAPERS at first failedto mention the use of tear gas, but later blandly repeated thecontentions of “reliable Pentagonsources” (The Washington Post)that demonstrators had used teargas on themselves. Apparently,no reporters present when thisbit of whimsy was propoundedthought to ask why these fabledfanatic peaceniks would want tobreak their own ranks by firinggas at soldiers with gas masksand at demonstrators withoutthem.Still, editors need not have bur¬ied information by their own re¬porters who saw troops fire teargas.Nor did they need to bury andscatter reports of beatings Satur¬day night. Enough students heresaw enough fellow-demonstratorsdragged behind lines of MP’s andbeaten bloody that reporterscouldn’t have missed the degreeof brutality. But the press wantedto dwell on domonstrators’ abuseof MP’s.BUT, ACTUALLY, newspaperscannot be expected to write stor¬ies of objectors clubbed down bydisciplined Americanism, anymore than United Fruit can beexpected to admit that they runhalf of South America. Becausethe press, is as much a part ofthe American complex of corpor¬ations and institutions as GeneralMotors. Papers depend on adver¬tising for survival, which chainsthem to business. What threatensthe country’s social stabilitythreatens its economic stability,and, ultimately, its newspapers.We cannot expect them to be nobly objective toward people re¬volted by the American systemand hoping to revolt against it.The coverage of hippies, whiteradicals, and black nationaliststends to be similar — patroniz¬ingly contemptuous, or, if thegroup is felt to endanger insti¬tutional stability, simply dis¬torted.Furthermore reporters justcan’t understand these “extrem¬ists.” Having never been beatenby a cop, or felt poverty, or en¬dured a what-sort-of-insect-is-thisstare from a true American, areporter can’t grasp the mean¬ing of their disgust. And, beinga system man himself, he doesnot really understand someonewho would choose to live outsidethat system.Where does this leave news¬paper readers? Well, we canread for enjoyment, chuckle overabsurd stories, and play gameslike “What really happened inthe thing the story was about?”Sports coverage is usually prettyaccurate.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265 Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago, III. Chartermember of U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lishers of Collegiate Press Service.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 27, 1967October 27, 1967 The Chicago Maroon Magazine of Culture, Dissent, and Satire Ed Chikofsky, EditorThe Auditorium:A Chicago Phoenixby Roger BlackF >r thirty years the Audi-torium Theater sat in the middleof Chicago as one great romanticghost and was ignored.People walked by Louis Sul¬livan’s building on Michigan Ave¬nue without noticing it. The pro¬moter’s dream (a 400-room luxuryhotel and 165 offices that sup¬ported the Theater and drewprestige from it) came to be in¬habited by Roosevelt University(an occupant that prevented thebuilding from being torn downaltogether) but the students ofwhich, many of them, were un¬aware that they were neverfarther away than 50 feet fromthe greatest theater in the world.It is the greatest theater in theworld, though the last regularuse of it was during the SecondWorld War when the USO usedthe stage for a bowling alley. Thebeginning of its decline was whenSamuel Insull sought to memor¬ialize himself by building a newopera house on Wacker Drive(called by some, Insull’s throne)and moving the Lyric opera intoit.The Theater was first used forthe Republican Convention inMarch 1888 where Benjamin Har¬rison was nominated. A yearlater, on December, PresidentHarrison, along with 11,000 othersAdelina Patti, on one of her in¬numerable farewell tours, sing¬ing two verses of Home SweetHome. Seventy-eight years later,this October 31, the Auditoriumwill have its Grand Reopeningwith the New York City Ballet.The size of the audience will benearer to the normal capacity ofthe hall, 4,237. The cost of theboxes is $1,500 instead of $2,100.But the importance for Chicagois just the same.The Auditorium was built safe¬ly before the advent of loud¬speaker systems and the demiseof the art of acoustics. It has,with few exceptions, perfectsightlines. And it is beautiful.The beauty of it is because ofLouis Sullivan. It is just aboutthe best statement of Sullivan’stheory on architectural orna¬ment. (One reason it may be thebest is that it is the largest build¬ing he ever worked on, at 8,737,-000 cubic feet, and the most ex¬pensive, at $3,145,291 — aboutwhat it is costing to restorethe Theater alone.)The perfect acoustics andsightlines, however, are due toDankmar Adler, Sullivan’s rela- Auditorium Theater Council•niiaLinhi 'TlWhW'l !iiriiMhum :The Maroon — MARC PoKEMPNER tively neglected senior partnerand one of the first architecturalengineers.Adler based his acoustics onScott Russell’s “isoucoustic”curve. The principle was simplythat as sound waves expandfrom the stage, the room shouldexpand with them, so that theycome into equal contact with thefloor surfaces — including theears of the listeners.This was accomplished withfour expanding eliptical arches— eliptical so that the soundwould not be reflected back intoone spot. He used arches insteadof a smooth cone so that thesound would be evenly diffused.The theater has a main flooror parquet with 1,442 seats, aneven larger balcony with 1,632seats, and two galleries, withseats for 526 and 427 people. In¬stead of closing off the back ofparquet, Adler left it open, allow¬ing the sound to travel back andup the stair cases to the balcony and the galleries, making for avery smooth reverberation.Adler also brought to the the¬ater some advanced a gadgetry,such as the stage with 26hydraulic platforms, much likethose in the new Met at NewYork’s Lincoln Center, with theexception that at the Met thefirst time the platforms wereused, they went berserk andcaused the stage to undulate likewaves, wrecking such havoc withthe mechanism down below thatit still hasn’t been repaired. TheAuditorium’s hydraulic platformswere dismantled in the thirties,and because of the expense in¬volved in reassembling them,only one has now been placedback in working order.Adler also devised movableTurn to Page ThreeMr. Black, managing editorof The Maroon, is a second-year student in the Collegemajoring in political science ■i;tIIi■: COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTGREEK SALADS7100 S. Yates Free Parking BAKLAWAH, MA'MUL,FALAFEL, TABBULEH...a very special bake sale ofMiddle East Oelicacies.International House, Saturday,October 28, I I AM - 6 PM.Proceeds to the refugees of theJune War. excellent foodat reasonable pricesThe Alps Restaurant2017 E. 71,-t ST.BILLY BOY ARNOLDandhisSouthside So Blues BandTonight: At The Folklore Society Twist PartyIn the Cloister Club, 7:30Adm.: 75$, members 503 ... Memberships on sale at the doorOPENING OCTOBER 20MOUERE'S BRILLIANT COMEDY“THE MISER"starringBRAMWELL FLETCHERwith DONNA HOLABIRDP*rf« thru Nov. 15-7 30 P M Tuts through Thurs & Sun8 30 P M. Fn. & S»L 2 P M Matinees Oct 26 & Nov 7GOODMAN THEATRE CE 6-2337Ticfcats atao on —to at Chicago Ticket Central212 N Michigan Awt. ft at all Montgomery Ward Store*STATIONERYBOOKSGREETING CARDS¥¥¥¥¥THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-751 I1540 E. 55th St.10% Student Discount Jim Langdon PresentsA TRIBUTE TO NEW ORLEANSNOVEMBER 3, 8:30 P.M., CIVIC OPERA HOUSEONE NIGHT ONLYMAIL ORDERS NOWMAIL ORDERS TO OPERA HOUSE, 20 N. Wacker 60606Plea se enclose self-addressed stamped envelopeOR ON SALE AT BOX OFFICE, 20 N. WACKER10 A.M. to 7 P.M.AND CHICAGO TICKET CENTRAL, 212 N. MICHIGAN AVE.$6.50 $5.50 $4.50 $3.50CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganAcademy Award WinnerCannes Grand Prize WinnerSTUDENT RATE$1.50 with I D. CardGood every day but Saturday10th MONTHAnouk Aimee-American"For Anyone Who Has everbeen in love"Sun-Times Four StarsIn Color"A MAN & A WOMAN”Mon. to Fri. starts 6:30 pm.Sat. & Sun starts 2 pm.UNIVERSTY THEATREannouncesA STAGED READINGof Ionesco’sTHE BALDSOPRANOThe First in a Series ofPLAY READINGSUT invites you to JOINthis group as a performeror as audienceCOME for thePLAY-COFFEE -DISCUSSIONSUNDAY-OCT. 29-3 PMIda NoyesCLOISTER CLUB I2 WEEKEND MAGAZINE October 27, 1967 '.‘jv yrersfc lool tjeayre bnuc! iAuditoriumContinued from Page Onescreens that could close off thegalleries to make the hall moreintimate. It was soon found,though, that the hall was inti¬mate enough with the galleriesopen, and since it took twelvemen to roll the screens intoplace, they were seldom used.T he person who first con¬ceived of the Auditorium wasneither Adler nor Sullivan, butFerdinand W. Peck, a city fatherand an early victim of the HogButcher for the World Paranoia.During the 1890’s, especiallyafter the Columbian Expositionin 1893, there was a talk espe¬cially among the social elite whofelt self-concious about Chicago’sbeing Second City, that Chicagoneeded an opera house. Theplans suggested were rathergrandiose, the idea being to out¬do New York, or Vienna, butnone became very popular untilPeck came up with the idea ofhaving a two week opera festivalin a temporary hall built in thehuge Exposition Building inGrant Park (where the Art Insti¬tute is now).Peck knew that Adler knewabout acoustics, and so he com¬missioned him and his new part-aer, Sullivan, to build the vast,5,000-seat temporary auditorium.(How many contemporary archi¬tects wished that they could havehad a full-scale model to experi¬ment with.) The Maroon — MARC PoKEMPNERThe Maroon — MARC PoKEMPNER The festival was such a successthat Peck got the idea of buildinga permanent theater, with a hoteland an office building to pay forit.Sullivan was one of the firstpromulgators of the idea thatarchitectural form should followfunction. But this did not excludefor him the use of ornament,which, in fact, he used a greatdeal. He elaborated his theory ina series of Kindergarten Chats,one of the important theoreticalbases of modern architecture. Itcan be boiled down to the rulethat ornament should be afurther articulation.Whether this theory is valid to¬day is open to question. In termsof the Chicago-Mies van der Roheschool of architecture, it definite¬ly is not. But in any case theTheater is brilliant expression ofit. The great room (what archi¬tects now call a “major space”)is tied together with an abundantuse of plaster reliefs, onyx panel¬ing, wrought iron railings, andgold stencil designs over theplaster (which in the presentstage of restoration are only indi¬cated.)The arches, stencilled with ela¬borate geometric designs andstylized foliage, were the centerof the design in both the tempo¬rary hall and the theater itself.The ornament is repeated on thewalls and in the ironwork. Inback of the fourth arch there arebeautiful golden stained glasswindows.Sullivan, an 1890’s modernist, made electric lights — 5,000 ofthem — a motif. In 1889 electriclights gave off a rather dimglow. But when multiplied 5,000times the glow becomes goldenand warm. The Auditorium re¬storers have been careful to re¬place them with the same kindof bulbs; though some of themhave not been because of the re¬wiring expense, the effect isabout the same.The final effect is one greatgolden overpowering room. Sul¬livan and Adler’s design is com¬pletely 1880’s — but, in contrastto the two side paintings and thefrieze on the proscenium arch,it is really 1880’s and not neo-15thcentury. It may be the onlybuilding in Chicago that is really1880’s, and for that reason aloneit would be worth far more thanthe $3 million Mrs. John V.Sprachner and the AuditoriumTheater Council were able toscrape together in the face ofcivic disbelief that it ever couldbe restored.AN APOLOGYWeekend Magazine apolo¬gizes for its printed versionof the tape "A Conversa¬tion with Luigi Dallapic¬cola," published Friday.Due to the late and abbrev¬iated editing, the printedversion should not be heldto reflect on the verbalcompetencies of Messrs.Dallapiccola, Northcott, Sha-pey, and Wernick.Josef von Sternberg’s THE BLUE ANGEIMarian* Dietrich in the film that mad* her a itar. What mora can you want? In IAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM at /:1 5 and 9:15tonight. $1. Doc Filins.WHAT BOOKS ARE MOST WORTH HAYIHG?ucipI I L LI The Uni versify of Chicago Bookstore Buy Its Book Stock. Fillout Form below and return to the Books to re.IF The Bookstore should carry:Author: Author:Title: Title:Pub. Pub.Author: Author:Title: Title:Pub. Pub.* Additional Forms Available at the Bookstore.you are interested in improving the Bookstore stock in a particular areaplease feel free to contact the student representive for that area*.IF NAME PHONE AREAAllan Abramson 493-4627 Chemistry, PhysicsBruce Carter 643t4628 MathematicsBernard Grofman 493-7372 Political ScienceHannah Hardgrave 684-3715 PhilosophyIssa Khalil Ke 6-9047 ReligionThomas Mullaney Bu 8-9815 International RelationsVirginia Rodes 324-2896 Romance Languages, LinguisticsAllan Saltzman 684-7391 BusinessDavid Silverman 363-2149 Art, ArchaeologyJohn Wallace 643-2231 Anatomy & Related AreasJerry Wasserman Bu 8-1100 Engl ishthere is no student representative for your area of interest contact Charles F. Hughes,Bookstore Manager, Ext. 3306. YOU MIGHT HAVE YOURSELF A JOB.October 27, 1967Yc^A ,vjoo*>0 WEEKEND MAGAZINE» \ Vi v i tv v ’ J (V v D *• • *1*^ »»♦*iThose people grabbers sure work, Marc.1106 W LAWRINCE CHICAGO IU 1 '-A*DANCE. DO YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANDS IN AMERICALIKKTHE BYRDSPAUL BUTTERFIELDNEIL DIAMONDCRYAN9 SHAMESBABY HUEYTHE BUCKINGHAMSTICKETS: $4.00 AT THE DOOR, $3.50 IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 NORTH MICHIGAN.GROUP SALES: Call Mr. Fox at LO 1 8558 to throw a party at Cheetah for 50 to 2000WIDB OPIN FRIDAY. SATURDAY. SUNDAY AT O P.M. Turin Bicycle Co*OpDon't Tread Upon Ladybird's Shrubs.Lowest prices for new Carlton. Raleigh.Falcon, Gitane, Ranger and Robin Hoodbicycles. Buy Your Bicycles from TurinToday. "Factory trained" mechanics.Used bicycles. Free delivery.1952 N. SEDGWICK WH 4-8865M-F 2:00 - 8:30 SAT. A SUN. 10-1Closed Thursdays.Friday, October 27TheBigChicagoBandAmerica's greatest new bigband sound Sixteen menplaying smashing modernarrangements of originaltunes for today's listeners.Two blocks west ofMcCormick Place311 East 23rd StreetFor Reservations call:225-6171tfaucr’*uMV in its entirety byChicago censor board - _-tfovj RELEASED fbR jftUjJ VlBTW" NI61ES ONLYSUN. on AARDVA'RKOCX, cinemathequePIPER s Ailtr* fcoa WELLS WARPER THEATRE5236 S. HARPkrflt>1 AS AftT" £V£RY M«FDAYMPnftttOL S "BAMNL’KENNETH M5ERS lEW WORK-IN-PRodSESS--“KUSToNKJR KumADos”kvcms "hold ms wiib rn iaked”Bol COIN’S "SoULFREEZE"ED EMSHWILLEU’S "SEIATIVITY"VOTERS-7.911 ETT oI.4 WEEKEND MAGAZINE October 27, 1967Letters'No Bias'We feel that Howard Barkan’sletter to The Maroon was bothincorrect and slanderous.Service to the young coloredboy was not refused.Mr. Barkan stated correctly inhis letter that the colored boyin question was seated in the bar¬ber’s chair. The controversyarose when the boy asked for aspecial type of haircut; that in¬cluded the partial shaving of thehair on his forehead.The barber was not familiarwith this hair style, yet he askedhis colleagues whether or notthey could give the above speci¬fied hair-style. Their reply wasnegative.Only at that point did the bar¬ber suggest the young coloredboy visit another barbershop,where the barber might be fa¬miliar with the part-shaved hair¬style.Obviously the question is notone of sneaky segregation butrather of an unfamiliar hairstyle.In conclusion, we wish to statecategorically that the UniversityBarbershop never refuses serviceto anyone because of race, color,nationality or religion.UNIVERSITY BARBERSHOPConfusionI was interested in the letter en¬titled “Barber Bias” which ap¬peared in The Maroon October24, 1967.Apparently, some have con¬fused the barber shop involvedwith the University of Chicagobarber shop in the basement aprivately owned barber shop inthe Hyde Park community.For the record, I wish to pointout to your readers that it longhas been the policy of the Univer¬sity of Chicago barber shop lo¬cated in the basement of theReynolds Club to have an “opendoor” policy. We are ready, will¬ing and able to cut the hair ofanyone who enters our doorswithout discrimination for race,color, or creed or any other rea¬son.As manager of the ReynoldsClub barber shop, I am proud ofour policy of non-discrimination.CARL ALKIREManagerReynolds Club Barber Shop Morgan's Certified Super MartOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd St.THE MONDAY LECTURESLaw Auditorium 8 PMOctober 30RICHARD C. LEWONTINEvolutionism as a World ViewOther lectures in the series will include:Nov. 6 Alvin W. GouldnerThe Romantic Movement & Social SciencesNov. 13 Leonard KriegerCulture, Cataclysm, and ContingencyNov. 20 Gerald HoltonOn the Irrelevance of Crucial ExperimentsSERIES ADMISSION $10.00 (no single lecture ticketsavailable). U. of C. students, faculty and staff mayrequest complimentary tickets by calling 3137 or fromthe information Desk, Administration Bldg. Ihe new Plymouth Foad Funnernow at your Plymouth Dealerswhere the beatgoes on. ff*1967 Warner Bros —Seven Arts. IncThe only way to catchthe 7toadRunner is. at,your Plymouth Dealers.Depends on the giant. Actually, some giants are just regularkinds of guys. Except bigger.And that can be an advantage.How? Well, for one thing, you’ve got more going foryou. Take Ford Motor Company. A giant in an excitingand vital business. Thinking giant thoughts. About develop'ing Mustang. Cougar. A city car for the future.Come to work for this giant and you'll begin to thinklike one.Because you’re dealing with bigger problems, theconsequences, of course, will be greater. Your responsibilitiesheavier. That means your experience must be better—morecomplete. And so, you’ll get the kind of opportunities only agiant can give.Giants just naturally seem to attract top professionals.Men that you'll be working with and for. And some of thattalent is bound to rub off.Because there’s more to do, you’ll learn more. Inmore areas. You’ll develop a talent for making hard-nosed, imagina¬tive decisions. And you’ll know how these decisions affectthe guts of the operation. At the grass roots. Because you’llhave been there.If you’d like to be a giant yourself, and your betterideas are in finance, product engineering, manufacturing,marketing and sales, personnel administration or systemsresearch, see the man from Ford when he visits your campus.Or send your resume to Ford Motor Company, CollegeRecruiting Department.You and Ford can grow bigger together.THE AMERICAN ROAD, DEARBORN, MICHIGANAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.Whatls it liketo workforagiaiit?FrustratedCongratulations to The Maroonfor surpassing both The ChicagoTribune and Dean Rusk in bla¬tant know-nothingism. Your cov¬erage of the peace march wastruly outstanding in terms of dis¬tortion and apparent outrightlies.The most significant achieve¬ment of your articles is the rev¬elation that you really don’t givea damn about ending this stupid,senseless war. I can’t tell youhow proud I am of you for mak¬ing it clear that your sole mo¬tivation is to convey your hatredand frustration with everything.ALLEN EMRICHDepartment of HistoryLetters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewitheld by resquest. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication. I'd like a big job please.October 27, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5L961‘LZ^qoiDOHOOVVWODVDIHD3IU9 Shake-APudd'n.It'ssomethingelse. Justputwaterandpowderinthecup, snapthelid,shakefor30seconds,letitset— andyou’vegotpudding. InChocolate,Vanilla,ButterscotchorBanana. EachShake-APudd’npackagecomescomplete withfourpuddings,spoons,lids,andthrowawayshakers. Everythingisdisposable. ButthebestthingaboutShake-APudd'nisthatyoucan hideitawayinyourroomuntiljusttherightmoment- say12midnight,rightbeforeabigchemistryfinal. 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XtjA|4isuaspueq4UjjeM •sndutea440pueuo ,,StU3AaSM3U„040604 6u!||imattaunjq4q6.11 aiuossjijataJd'4a -4JOqsjo„8,Saq4snw '4ue|S|sseaieutatspaau JaqdejBotoqdNOOdVW :savd398Vd9-31d03dNOOdVW 3H1WOdd031NVMI1VHM109I auoqd'99ZE4X3'0080-EAeMpiw :NOIlVWdOdNId3HianddOd aavaiaoaivsuoiteojiqndajotaqAepaqt40 •ureuAqu|aqtsmuspy:S3Nn0V30 utd0E>04uteoisAepxaa/wJSdnOH ZE909III'o6eoiqo"4sq46S 3ZIZl'll®HsaAoNepijofOGutooy'aoit -40ssauisnguoojewoQeoiqoaqAottuaut -AedqtjM|ieut40autoo:avHOVld01 teadajauujaddo9 'aui|Jad39/taiatuaipAtisjaniun-uoujoj •teadajaui)taddov'augtadDOS:44®4^pue 'Atinaet'stuapntsAtisjaniunJOd:S3lVd SjUdVUdSIJJdApypdlJISSDfJUOOJDJAI~~mba interviewsUNIVERSITY OFNOTRE DAMETHURSDAY (AM),NOVEMBER 2CAREER COUNSELINGAND PLACEMENTEYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StraatHYde Park 3-8372Student end Faculty DUcount BANDERSNATCHIDA NOYES5:30 PM-1:00 AMSaturday Night SpecialHALLOWEEN DINNER 990VIETN AM«CITY* RACE=ONE CRISIS?Do we overattack Mr. Johnson?Are marches just an emotional release?What are the moral objectives?"THE NATIONAL CRISIS AND ITS MEANING”Howard Radest, Exec. Dir., American Ethical UnionCHICAGO ETHICAL SOCIETY410 S. Michigan Ave., Suite 801Sunday, October 29, 10:45 a.m.(note new address: we’ve moved) C’ESTmFAT ... La protection flnancibre qua vouadonnez & votre famllle aujourd’huldevra lui 6tre procurde d'une autrefa^on demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certainement accomplir cettetAche & votre placesEn tant que reprgsentant local da la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter k un moment devotre choix?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyd* Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-4800 — FR 2-23*0Offica Hours * to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYBe Practical!Buy Utility Clothes\ Complete selection of boots,overshoes, insulated ski wear,hooded coats, long underwear,corduroys, “Levis", etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNOAYS 9:30 • 1.00Student discount with adMl 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restHair Cutting %endTintingIWUflMk BTI4MBEverything to MokeYour Child's Earlya SuccessI0(MEXICAN PINATAS1.000 PARTYFAVORS ONLYWE HAVE ALL MATTEL'STALKING TOYS, DOLLS.BOOKS. GAMES, RECORDS.BALLET SHOES. LEOTARDS.SCHOOL SUPPLIES.EDUCATIONAL GOODSWI ACCEPT ALL MIDWESTCHARGE CARDStoeeT®V*. Habhias \ Juvenile Fwraltaranoe-1710 \ East 79th St.*E 4-4510 ES 5-9*44Frss Parking Nasi Door SPLIT OUT.Well go 50/50 with you on the USA.TWA 50/50 Club: your half-price ticket to all the action, from coast tocoast. Most any time,anywhere—you’re onfor just half our regularCoach fare. And you’rein for the full treatment. Atmealtime, plenty of goodfood. On many long hauls,stereo and hi-fi music tomake time fly. On cross-country non-stops,new movies, too. There’s more: you’ll getreduced rates at all Hilton andSheraton hotels in the country.Plus a club Newsletter to fill youin on other discounts—hereand abroad. The whole dealwill set you back a grand totalof $3 for your 50/50Club card.If you’re under 22, move fast. Stop into yournearest TWA office and get your card, today.P.S. Attention College Bands, Combos, Vocal Groups. Don'tforget the National Championships at the 1968 IntercollegiateJazz Festival sponsored by TWA. For Information write:IJF, Box 246, Miami Beach, Florida 33139 Welcome TWAto the world ofTrans World Airlines...the all-jot airline♦Service mark owned exclusively by Trans World Airlines, Inc.Movies presented by Inflight Motion Pictures, Inc.October 27, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7ANDERSON’S BULKOSERVICE STATIONHighest Quality Gasolineat Lowest PricesFeaturing theBULKO PANTRYA Complete Grocery StoreOpen 24 Hours57th & Cottage GroveTAhffArM-YMCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A M. TO 9 P M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders To Take Out1318 EAST 63rd ST. MU 4-1062 We welcome Iona hair,We Jon ( cut it all off^*£)aniel o^ouclietYUen i ~JJair (Jultinq and ■Staling1541 €. MyJ. Park BtJ. PJU 2-9255appointmentsCELEBRATING THE 450th ANNIVERSARY OF THE REFORMATION(1517-1967)22nd Annual Lutheran Reformat ion FestivalatRockefeller Memorial ChapelUniversity of Chicago59th Street at Woodlawn AvenueSUNDAY OCTOBER 29 7:30 P.M.CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a $10 Used 9X12Ritg, fo a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants & Mill Returns at fractionot the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY after 450 years we begin again withTHE REFORMATION OF THE "NOW GENERATION"A New Fojk Song Moss: Missa Bossa Novaby Fr. Peter Scholtes of St. Brendan's Roman CatholicParish on Chicago's South Side, sung by 40 black teen¬agers from his parish. Guitars, bongo drums, etc.Cameo Presentations at the Five Parts of the MassKyrie: Pr. William Griffin (Cry from the Ghetto)Gloria: Fr. Peter Scholtes (Joy in the Ghetto)Credo: Dr. Martin Marty (Would You Believe?)Sanctus: Mr. Richard Virgil (Youth's Holy Commitments i HULL HOUSE AT PARKWAY500 E. 67th ST.P csents’THE LAUNDROMAT"ROGER COHNISHThrough Nov. 11 Friday and Saturday 8:30—$3.00Sunday 7:30—$2.50Student Discount. $1 00 off Phone Reservations 129-3810AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN ft ZENITH-— NEW ft USED —Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes - Batteries10% discount to student* with ID card*PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 For The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARdaily — WEEKLY — MONTHLYRAMBLERS — VALIANTS — MUSTANGS and DATSUNSAs Low As $4.95 per Day(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE!i HYDE PARK CAR WASH ji; 1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 jjartist: Karen Zielsdorf. For 450 years the WesternChurch has been separated yet joined by a zipper. Youtake it from there.Introductory Offer:DOUBLES&HSTAMPSOPEN 24 HOURSYour NameAddress _ with this coupon51st & Cornell60th & Cottage Grove56th & Cottage Groveor62nd & Dorchester An Historic Event! Order Seats Now!GRAND RE-OPENINGot Chicago's MagnificentAUDITORIUM THEATREThe Auditorium Theatre Council presentsFestival Week of BalletNew YorkCityBalletCompany of 100—Full Symphony OrchestraGeorge Balanchine and Lincoln Kirstein, DirectorsAuditorium Theatre Grand Reopening BenefitTuesday, October 31st, 1967/ 8:00 PJM."A Midsummer Night's Dream"Full-length BalletFestival PerformancesNovember 1 through November 5Wednesday, Nov. I, 8 30 P.M"A MIDSUMMIR NIGHT'S DRUM" (Full-length)Thursday. Nov 2, 8 10 P.M.''JEWELS'’ (Full-length Ballnt In 1 Acts)Friday, Nov 3 8:30 P MSwon Loke. Agon. Afternoon of « Foun, RaymondsSat. Mat., Nov. 4. 2 30 P.M"A MIDSUMMIR NIGHT S DRIAM"Sa* Eve Nov 4. 8 30 P.M.Roymondo. Agon, Stors A Stripe*Sun Mai Nov V 2 30 P M . L. .Swan Leke. Afternoon of a Foe*. Pas de Dee*, F'-ebirajn Eve Nov V 7 30 p M.JlWitS" CNete taHv Certain!Prog-am Sublett te ChangeSuBOXES It seal*)MAIN FLOOR''Special SectionParQue*Parquet Cirt*»Dress CircleLOWER BALCONYFirst SectionMiddle SectionRear SectionUPPER BALCONYGALLERYTickets an sale »t rir.kel Central et l esseMnnlfomery Ward end Crawford Stores. Die!nearest location Benefit Festival FestivaltHorryljnrn Evenings Matmeea1I.S00 no $100.00 $60 00250 no*.00200.00 12 50150.00 10.00 7.00ioo.no BOO 6 00soon 2 00 6.0035.00 6.00 5.0025.00 5.00 4.0015.00 3.50 30010.00 2.00 1 soi s. 717 N Mietilian end allT-l-C- K-F T-S tor yourBox office open. Daily 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.50 East CongressMail Orders to: Auditorium TheilreCminr.il. 70 C Couflrevs 81 S0S08rlease enelnse self-addressed stamped envelnne J8 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 27, 1967