^Archives/special issueIn Which Planning and Design at the University Are Examinedf The Expanding Campus: Gothic Is. ModernHenry Ives Cobb’s original plan for Chicago’s campus.any definition has to derive from physicalcomponents. The luxury of isolation in arural setting, providing for a formallymore unrelated campus, is, of course, im¬possible. If the buildings of an urban cam¬pus are designed without strict regard notonly for one another but also for the welldefined unity of the entire campus, thatcampus completely disappears. The esthet¬ic purpose, therefore, of a campus buildingmust be to enhance the whole campus. Itmust respond to an esthetic of context.How can this be done.There are a number of alternativeswhich alone or in combination can suggestin what direction architecture would go toachieve this cohesion.The first is stylistic uniformity. The stylechosen may be ecletic-Gothic or Georgianfor example—or it may be the style of acontemporary architect, modern architec¬ture being idiomatic essentially only withindividuals,—such as IIT or the ChicagoCircle campus of the University of Illinois.This latter possibility, however, is reallyonly a viable one where a school is beingbuilt from scratch. What then can a school,like Chicago, with an existing eclectic cam¬pus do? It can. of course, continue withneo-eclecticism, but this is stagnant andunacceptable. There is no reason to forcearchitects to abandon their own creativeabilities in deference to the pseudo eclec¬tic fancies of former generations. It canalso, however, continue in the spirit ofwhat exists but not in the style, continu¬ing the rhythm of the old but with the ap¬pearance of the new. This, clearly, is whatmust be done at Chicago.The specific kinds of respect which suchan organic plan must pay at the Universi¬ty of Chicago, are several. First and mostimportant, before architects even begin todesign individual buildings, a meticulous¬ly worked out master plan must be drawn.It must be a fully three dimensional planin order to preserve the existing sense ofscale and of space—both the space occu¬pied by buildings and, just as important¬ly. the negative empty spaces which thebuildings will define. At Chicago, the ex¬tension of the quadrangle form is absolute¬ly vital to the sense of campus. The indiv¬idual designers must respect this plan inorder to make their work merge spatiallywith the campus organism. A second de¬vice to foster a feeling of unity on exten¬sions of the Chicago campus is a consis¬tent use of material, in this case, of lime¬stone. This could not be taken to mean thateach and every building must, at the ex¬pense of any relief from the whatsoever,be limestone, but that it should be the ob¬viously dominant material. Hopefully ar¬chitects and administrators will be flexibleenough to allow variety when it is appro¬priate. A third important element in Chicago’s architectural background that mustbe extended into its future is the vertical¬ly of the Gothic. Chicago must continue tobe a vertical campus—the introduction ofhorizontally oriented structures would be(and has been) extremely destructive. Afinal consideration is the texture and va¬riety of Gothic. This is, needless to say, aquality which is impossible to describeand which the architect must intuit. Abuilding need not necessarily be physically“textured” to respect texture, but it mustbe aware of it. These elements, scale,space, material, verticality, and texture,should provide guidelines for the exten¬sions of the University of Chicago campusThey should not serve to inhibit an arch¬itect but to direct him. Nor should theybe regarded in any way as formulae. Eachnew building should be beautiful, but thatCan ChicagoBlow ItsGothic andKeep ItsCool?By Michael SorkinTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, throughthe Campaign for Chicago, is at the begin¬ning of the largest building boom in itshistory. In the next few years the face ofthe University will change radically. It isnow an opportune moment to do someaesthetic dermatology to see how the Uni¬versity. persuing itself in a mirror in 1975.will find its complexion.The original plan for University of Chi¬cago was drawn up by Henry Ives Cobbin the early 1890’s. It called for six quad¬rangles. each surrounded with buildings,leaving in the center a seventh, main quad¬rangle to give unity to the entire design.Late English Gothic was adopted as thestyle for the buildings and Indiana lime¬stone as the material. Although the Uni¬versity did not adopt the specific groupingsof buildings of the plan, the buildingserected did accord with the quadrangleform. Cobb himself designed all buildingsbefore 1900 and the Gothic style (withmany modifications) was used exclusivelythrough the 1940’s and in the hospital com¬plex until only a few years ago. This massof Gothic buildings comprises the architec¬tural heritage of the University of Chi¬cago. the heritage to which subsequent de¬signers must defer. The original quadran¬gles are. despite objections levelled at theireclecticism, the greatest architectural as¬set the campus has. Esro Saarinen, be¬fore his death the University’s consultingarchitect, wrote in 1960:Wandering in the University of Chi¬cago today, one is amazed at thebeauty achieved by spaces sur¬rounded by buildings all in one dis¬cipline and made out of a uniformmaterial; where each building isbeing considerate of the next, andeach building—through its commonmaterial—is aging in the same way. . .It is significant that on a smallcourt on the University of Chicagocampus (Court Theater’s) built be¬tween 1894 and 1930, three differ¬ent architects, Henry I. Cobb, Shep-ley, Rutan & Coolidge. CharlesKlauder built the four sides of thecourt. All are in the Gothic style,and the court today gives us abeautiful, harmonious visual pic¬ture.The cohesiveness of the old quadranglesdoes not rest entirely on the use ofthe Gothic style. It is also due in large partto the fact that these architects envisionedtheir buildings primarily as contributionsto a unity—they were able to see the cam¬pus as an organism, not merely as an ag¬glomeration of buildings. It is this organicconception of campus architecture thatmust be its dominant influence. Thissense of campus is particularly importantfor an urban university like Chicago whereTHE CHICAGO MAROONv »■ i1 v i '. \ j . j * .• / » .' j j March 8, 1968« 4 t 1v. IIIbwIBp fr I i— S 1 * V,' ' I * |_The Law SchoolSchmidt, Garden, &Erikson Design theUgliest Building onCampus, AreRewarded By AnotherC ontract, And Another,And Another, AndAnother, And ProveDecisively ThatPractice Does NotMake Perfectbeauty must be more than intrinsic, itmust also lie in the structures ability torelate beautifully to its surroundings.Has the University been able to obtainbeautiful yet compatible buildings sinceit gave up Gothic? An investigation pro¬vides an impression that is, at best,mixed. The association of the firm of Schmidt.Garden and Erikson with the universityhas been long and unfortunate. Their firstcontribution in the “modern” idiom was thebuilding to house the research institutes,completed in 1951. It is the grossest exam¬ple of the lack of sensitivity and taste thatthis firm carefully manages to preserve ineach of its subsequent efforts, at least tosome degree. The Fermi Institute does,however, concede limestone and some sillypeaked roofs to its environment. S.G.&Efollow this triumph in 1959 with the form¬less, trite, Mott Labor Relations Centeracross (the farther the better) the Mid¬way. Laboring under the impression thata dollop of limestone judiciously located.•an redeem anything, Mott is endowed withlimestone walls on its east and west ends.This firm’s work does show some improve¬ment in the recently dedicated Wyler hos¬pital which is, at least, a slick job andwhich is fairly compatible with its setting.But it is not a particularly good building.The powers that be in the university seem,however, less capable of learning from their mistakes than S.G.&E. They haveawarded this firm contracts for two pro¬jected components of the current Campaignfor Chicago, both of w’hich are extensionsto the hospital complex. It has been sug¬gested that this was done because ofSchmidt. Garden & Erikson’s expertize andexperience in hospital design. Are there nocompetent hospital desigers who are thor¬oughly good architects as well? One is in¬formed at every turn by University offi¬cialdom of the importance attached to thor¬oughly competent design. If this is the caseone cannot but wonder why this firm hasso repeatedly been used when its output isso consistently dismal.The University should, if it is not too late,find creative architects for its new hospi¬tals. But if the University is bound by someunbreakable bond to this firm, it ought tolimit their incursions to structures like thecentral underground animal quarters. Atleast they will not be visible. On secondthought, they should not even be assignedprojects such as these—it would be crueltyto animals. * ■*'**-Saarinen DesignsChicago’s Claim toArchitecturalGreatness and aHandsome DormitoryNo One Wants toLive InThe administration building is. accordingto a survey conducted by the editors ofthis supplement, the most universally dis¬liked building at the University. Its spirit¬ual relation to the Institutes is intimate—they share every fault.The administration building was, howev-2r, despite its actual obtrusiveness, pri¬marily to be a “neutral” building. The ar¬chitects, however, have confused a plainbuilding with a neutral one. The building,because of its size and because of its hor-izontality could never be neutral. But evenwere it scaled down, it would stick out. Aneutral structure must be designed as cre¬atively as a dominant one. It is this “cre¬ative neutrality” that almost every build¬ing designed to be neutral lacks. The les¬son has seemingly yet to be learned bythose who design the University. An uglybuilding can never recede into neutral¬ity—it is always obtrusive.Holabird & RootProvide in theAdministrationBuilding the PerfectComplement to theInstitutesIf Chicago has any building which canbe called great, it is Eero Saarinen's lawquadrangle. Little need be written aboutthis masterpiece which is also, accordingto a recent poll, far and away the mostpopular modern building on campus (thereis a corelation between the ability of thearchitect employed and the resultsachieved). It sensitively and elegantlyblends with the Gothic dormitories to theWest and the American Bar Center to theEast as well as with the spirit of the entirecampus is all the ways earlier discussed.Saarinen’s use of materials, not exclusive¬ly limestone and including a great deal ofglass, enhances the total effect of the com¬plex. This is the sort of architecture theuniversity should seek. The Law School isoeautiful—a tour de force—yet it pays com¬plete respect to its surroundings.Saarinen’s dormitory complex, if not ofthe calibre of the Law School, is still afirst rate building. Its only drawback is its»t»>I New Evergreenand Black Catpaperbacks from;kovi? pressB147. THE MASTER AND MARGARITA.By Mikhail Bulgakov. The completeedition, as originally published in Mos¬cow, of the great Soviet masterpiece,'•uppressed for 26 years. Vast and bois¬terous entertainment."—\ V. Times.95cPLAYS!B132. MACBIRD! 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Enclosed(No pleaseC.O.D.)B125 B147 E417 E442B132 B149 E425 E452B137 B155 E430 E453B141 B157 E432 E455B142 E403 E436 E456B143 E411 E438 E457B144 E413 E439B145 E414 E440B146 E416 E441NameAddressCity State ZipPayment must accompany order.(New York City residents pleaseadd 5% sales tax; New York Stateresidents add 2%).(t) tentative4 THE CHICAGO MAROON ■ March 8, 1968unlivability. This unfortunate flaw is dueto the penny pinching shortsightedness ofthe client. Saarinen himself writes, “I be¬lieve our universities are making the verygrave mistake of building on starvationbudgets. A policy of holding out for qual-ty would in the long run be wiser and moresuccessful, and would make possible build¬ings that would ultimately be lower inmaintenance cost ... too many universi¬ties have voted like building committeesfor schools. The purpose has been to buildfor the lowest price per square foot; or indormitories, the lowest price per studenthoused. This is, I believe, a very shortsighted policy”. Saarinen’s own work isthe best example of what he says. TheUniversity has already begun to make thefirst alterations on Woodward Court in or¬der to correct some of its admitted mis¬takes. Visually these dormitories are moresatisfying. Saarinens sensitivity to the cam¬pus is clearly shown in this handling ofWoodward Court.Pierce Tower: A NicePlace To VisitBut You Wouldn’tWant to Live ThereThe faults of Woodward Court are allpresent in Harry Weese’s Pierce Towerand for exactly the same reasons. I.W. Colburn, consulting architect to the Uni¬versity of Chicago, insists, however, thatit is the job of an architect to be creativewithin a budget and that if a building isultimately unsuccessful it cannotbe blamed on the architect’s inability todeal with the limitations of his budget.This is not entirely or even largely true,particularly in the case of Pierce Tower.A room of the size specified by the Uni¬versity for Pierce would be uncomfortableunder any circumstances. Weese, ratherthan failing to cope adequately with thecircumstances in which he was placed didrather well, considering the limitation.Pierce Tower is as livable or as unlivableas can be expected. Ignoring its functionalaspects (and there are a number of short¬comings for which Weese must take theblame.) Pierce Tov/er is quite pleasing. Al¬though the idea of a high rise tower at Chi¬cago is certainly a questionable one, its lo¬cation is sufficiently peripheral to preventany real conflict. Hopefully the towers inthe new Village will provide some balancefor its height. The use of materials is skill¬ful and it is the sort of textured, vertical,building that this campus demands.The School ofSocial ServiceAdministration:Mies Is MiesSocial Service Administration the Library will express, will doubtlessmake it a fine complement to the cam¬pus organism.Netsch will also design the Pahlavi Cen¬ter for Middle Eastern Studies. This workwill probably reveal many of the facetsof the stylistic change that has beenmarked in Netsch’s designs over the pastfew years. Interesting results can be ex¬pected.The Science CenterNapthali Knox, vice President of the Uni¬versity for Physical Planning, the man whois in charge of plotting the future course ofthe physical university, doesn’t like SSAbuilding. He feels that the building is inap¬propriate to its setting, essentially becauseof the materials from which it is con¬structed, and inappropriate to its function—he says it looks like an airline terminal andthat it never should have been built. A lotof people disagree with him. Joshua Tay¬lor. professor of art calls it a “really good”building. Walter Netsch of Skidmore, Ow-ings & Merrill calls it a gem but still con¬siders it quite a responsive work. I. W.Colburn considers it to be top notch. It isa fine work and an appropriate one. Itscritics are influenced by an overly rigidconception of the means for attainingcampus unity. It is especially unusual thatKnox should be so disappointing since hedefends in glossing terms the design forthe new physical sciences building.'Liis building is also to be of glassand is to be far larger and located ina far more prominant site. Such a peculiardouble standard is hardly explicable. But,all questions of critical consistency aside,it is perfectly appropriate and even neces¬sary for the university to build buildingswhich depart dramatically from someof the normal limitations. Such build¬ings belong only in very special locationsand can by the very exception they rep¬resent make a great contribution to the un¬ity of a campus. If the site is sufficientlydetached to permit it, major dramaticbuildings should be designed with this sortof emphasis. Knox and I. W. Colburn are dubious abouthow the library will turn out and refuse tomake any real qualitative commitmentsabout it. Colburn is inclined to regard Re-genstein critically because he feels thatStagg field—the most prominent site thatthe campus could offer—deserves thegreatest building the campus can obtain.The new library will not, taken in isola¬tion, be a great building. It will probablybe an excellent building in its setting.Netsch’s sensitivity to negative space isvery great. Regenstein will be a buildingset in a park but its visual relation to thebuilding near it, especially across 57thstreet will be handsome and precise. Thespaced created by this interplay will bedramatic and elegant. This subtlety ofspace will help hide the massiveness ofthe structure and make its apparent scalemore fitting. The use of textured limestonein a textured way will further enhance itsrelationship to its surroundings. All this,coupled with the clear verticality whichSearle: good neighbor? The Science Center:A Potential DesignFiascoFor some reason, the buildings put upfor the sciences seem to enjoy a higherincidence of ugliness than their humanisticcounterparts. There is no good reasonwhy this should be the case—good designis not incompatible with the ends of ascience building. Perhaps part of the prob¬lem, though by no means a central partor even a necessarily important one, isan over-emphasis on the reliance of formon function. This sort of emphasis withits attendant confusion of the beautifuland the practical is wrong. The estheticart is distinct from the scientific art.Blind deference to function is no positiveattribute. Architects who claim they havedesigned beautiful buildings because theyare efficiently organized (and this claimis made for more than one building inthe Science Complex) are confusing thepractical and the beautiful. If a buildingis efficiently laid out, this is a practicalarrangement, not a beautiful one.The long range planning for the sciencequadrangle is not good. The planners areoperating on Gothic terms with modernarchitecture and expecting Gothic results.It is infinitely easier to achieve a har¬monious effect by placing eclectic arch¬itecture around a quadrangle than bygradually filling one in with diverse mod¬ern works. It is not impossible, but al¬most. The University must take a largerview if they expect this center to achievebetter results. They must, because of thenature of the idiom, be willing to committhemselves to architects for much largerareas of responsibility than a single build¬ing. Otherwise, unity will be lost. Thereare indications that they are not alto¬gether unwilling to do this. The BarnesPlan for the North Quadrangle representsthe right sort of approach and will bediscussed later.The Refined Designsof Walter NetschWalter Netsch, a design partner in theChicago office of Skidmore, Owings &Merrill, is one of the leading designers andhis connection with the University seemsto be quite a fortunate one.His first campus building, completed afew years ago, is the Laboratory for As¬trophysics and Space Research. It is ahandsome, almost classical building whichprovides a strong statement, poised on thetop of a small hill, at the end of the courtformed by Greenwood Ave between the In¬stitutes and the Botany facilities. It goesa long way towards tying that strange col¬lection of buildings together.Netsch is also architect for the titanicnew Regenstein Library, which is dealtwith in a separate article. Both Napthali' Matcfh 8, 1968 • THE CHICAGO MAROON V 5magr^WR’BE PRACTICALBUY UTILITY CLOTHESComplete Selection ofSweatshirts, rain parkas,tennis shoes, underwear,jackets, camping equipment,wash pants, sport shirts,pajamas, hiking shoes,sweat pants, etc., etc., etc.,THE UNIVERSAL ARMYSTORE1364 E. 63rd. PL-2-4744Smith ShoreNURSERY SCHOOLApplications beingaccepted now forSummer and Sept. 1968.CHILDREN2*5 YRS.S A -1-510 373rd Street, East of ExchangeDirectors:June and Richard ParkerB. Ed.CINEMAChicago Ave. at MichiganAcademy Award WinnerCannes Grand Prize WinnerSTUDENT RATE$1.50 with I.D. CardGood every day but Saturday2nd YEARAnouk Aimee-American“For Anyone Who Has everbeen in love”Sun-Times Four StarsIn Color"A MAN lA WOMAN”Mon. to Fri. starts 6:30 pm.Sat. & Sun starts 2 pm.SUMMER JOBSOver 30,000 actual job open*ings listed by employers inthe 1968 Summer EmploymentGuide. Gives salary, job de*scription, number of openings,dates of employment, and nameof person to write. 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MU 4-1062 LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth Full-time and Part-time positions available for stud-dents and student wives.Telephone MU-4-4545.THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue Europe'68Why not use WHEELS to guideyou to those “in" and veryspecial out-of-the-way places?Travel with Oxford-Combridgeguides. Meet student hosts (whoknow where the fun is) in eachcountry. A new approach tostudent travel. And it swings IInterested or curious? Contact:Student Wheels Abroad, 555Madison Avo., N.Y., N.Y. 10022.(212) 688-5910.March 1968 ^^75 centsrpersJL magazineNorman Mailer’sB6sf WorkThe Steps of thePentagonA documentary report about the famousWashington weekend during which -thousands ofAmericans marched across the Potomac in thename of peace, and some- - the authoramong them—ended in jail. Along the way,many of our most "basic problems areilluminated, while a cast of 'brilliant andwonderfully entertaining characters playout their roles in the action.Rimaim.MQjMailer takes a journey to the core of contemporary life. He questionsthe intellectuals who marched: Paul Goodman, Robert Lowell,Dwight Macdonald, William Sloane Coffin, Jr.—and Norman Mailer.He dares his readers to match his frankness about fame, power, drugs,sex, the draft and the young. The whole scene.In Washington something happened to Norman Mailer. Somethingas vital as the World War II experiences which gave birth to TheNaked and the Dead. And we are running THE STEPS OF THEPENTAGON as the longest piece of original writing—93 pages—ever carried in a single issue of Harper s in the magazine’s I 1 8 years.Harper’s Magazine. March. 75 cents at your newsstand. 12 ISSUES AT Vi PRICE IHARPER’S MAGAZINE, Dept. C2 Park Avenue. New York 10016I want to take advantage of your special offer:a full year's subscription at Vi price, begin¬ning with March. Enclosed $4.25.NameMailing Address.Zip Code.♦Summer Address.♦Send us your summer address now. We willsee to it that the July and August issues getthere.6 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 8, 19Q8I Geophysical SciencesThe initial buildings constructed orplanned for the new center are so dismalas to suggest that the whole quadranglemay be lost. The Searl Chemistry Build¬ing, described by architect Colburn as“a dog,” caps off the Ellis avenue axisin the grand manner of its distinguishedpredecessors, the Administration Buildingand the Research Institutes. There is noexcuse for this building. It does nothingright and does that at the highest costper square foot of any building at Chi¬cago. Despite its obvious attempts at ver¬tically it is screamingly horizontal. Itshuge mass is miserably handled and doesnothing but add to the unfortunate feelingthat Ellis Avenue is fast becoming a lime¬stone canyon. Despite feeble and futile ef¬forts not to be, it is flat and withouttexture. Its crass handling of mas§ andmaterial destroys forever the possibilityof creating an interesting court behind it.Had the wing been sensitively placed andhad the building been delicately designedwith large expanses of glass in order tobe inviting and not repellent, a sense ofopenness could have been achieved. Herewas an advantage. One can only suggesttrials to advantage. One can only suggestthat ivy be permitted to cover Searl asrapidly as possible.Candill, Ronluff, and Scott have receivedthe contract for the design of a PhysicalSciences building to extend from the newGeophysical Sciences Building across 57thStreet to the Institutes. Preliminary de¬signs indicate that it will be a glass struc¬ture raised one story above the street oncolumns. Although the use of glass willhelp eliminate the Canyon feeling, thearchitects must guard against the hori-zontality which a long low flat buildingwill surely suggest. It should also be setwell back of geophysics to give Ellis amuch needed bit of spacial play.I. W. Colburn, consulting architect tothe University, has designed two of thebuildings to be erected in this complex-geophysical sciences and a basic Biologi¬cal Sciences Tower. Both have been de¬signed as efficient laboratories with allservice elements isolated in order to pro¬vide flexible working areas. Neither is abeautiful building.The functibal layout of Geophysical Sci¬ences is apparent from the photograph-all services are contained in columns onthe periphery of the work space. The im¬pression one gets of this building is nota coherent one. It appears extremely con¬trived— as if towers, turrets and windowshad simple been tacked onto a large lime¬stone box. It has none of the unity orgrace of Louis Kahn’s Richards MedicalResearch Building from whose towers Col¬burn derives some inspiration.fundamentally a box, its decoration ele¬ments seem trite because they are notesthetically integrated. The building has aclumsy massive indelicate air, more ap-parant on the building than in renderings.Colburn expresses a great interest in en¬hancing his architecture through the playof light and shadow but one gets the feel-*og that these textural aspects of the build¬ ing are as unintrinsic and superficial asits broader architectural feature. Colburn’suse of materials, however, is good. Theemployment of areas of brick out of re¬spect for the buildings handsome neighbor,the university of Chicago Press, is judi¬cious and effective.If the Geophysical Sciences Building hasits redeeming qualities, the projected Bi¬ology Tower has none. It is a monstrousdesign—insensitive and graceless. In scale,material and general aspect, everythingabout it is wrong. Colburn feels that asthe University begins to merge with thesurrounding neighborhood its buildingsshould employ increasing amounts of thematerial of the community—brick. Theuniversity, if the campus is to be mean¬ingful, must have an identity of its own,distinct from its community. Further, inan area which the physical communityis as unstable as it is in Hyde Park itis most dangerous to bank on its long¬term continuity as Colburn does in hisbiology tower. Colburn's specific use ofbrick is designed to present an essentiallylimestone building at the base and an es¬sentially brick one at the top. This strong,tall brick element is not compatible withthe nature of the skyline it will dominate—a most discordent note will be struck.In the biology tower as in the geophysicslabs, the service towers have an artificial,contrived, tacked on appearance. They donot relate to the structure of the build¬ings at all and in fact give the impres¬sion of being in imminent danger of fall¬ing completely off. Furthermore, thesetowers will detract enormously from theworking environment of the building par¬ticularly in the upper stories where sun¬light will reach the windows only withgreatest difficulties and where a scientistlooking out will be forced to peer througha narrow, fortress like slit which will rad¬ically impair the pleasurable views a tenthor eleventh story window would normallyprovide. Perhaps the building is designedto discourage gazers. University official¬dom is strongly urged to reconsider itsdecision before it goes ahead with whatwill surely be a grave mistake.The North Quad:Well Planned DesignBut Poorly DesignedPlanThe plan for the North Quadrangle asconceived by Edward Larabee Barnes inconsultation with a university committeerepresents the sort of far-sighted coordi¬nated design planning that should be con¬sistently pursued. It is this sort of plan¬ning that is notably lacking in the ScienceCenter. The practical aspects of this planare discussed several pages hence andthe specific design aspects will be con¬sidered in the Maroon as they are re¬vealed sometime next quarter. Suffice itto say here that the design is a highlyexciting solution to a broad range of aes¬thetic problems but that the university seems to be inclined to ruining it by thesame sort of short-sightedness with whichPierce Tower and Woodward Court weremade unbearable. It should be noted thatthe theater adjacent to the village is tobe designed by a different architect, notyet selected. However, Napthali Knox, uni¬versity planner, promises every effort willbe made to employ the best architectavailable.Ralph Rapson’sDebut ImpendsThe noted architect Ralph Rapson hasdesigned a building to house the Inter¬national Studies program to be locatedon University Avenue in the gap betweenthe psychology labs and Walker Museum.It will play a major role in unifying thatquadrangle by giving it complete defini¬tion and preventing its spilling out at thatempty corner. Preliminary designs indi¬cate that it will be a highly sympatheticpiece of architecture in all respects. Itshould prove one of Chicago’s bestbuildings.Hausner & Macsai,Perkins & Will, andEdward Durrell StoneRound Out theUndeniable MiscellanyThe Chicago firm of Hausner and Mae-sie has designed three undistinguished butinnocuous buildings for the university inrecent years: the National Opinion Re¬search Center; the High Energy PhysicsBuilding; and the projected Social ServiceCenter. All are comparatively small andare perfectly competent. The Universitycan do better. School by Perkins and Will is very good.Although it is of a different material thanthat of its setting it blends well and doesuse some stone where emphasis is neces¬sary. It captures the scale and rhythm ofits environment very well.Edward Durell Stone has contributedhis standard building to the University inthe guise of the Center for Continuing Ed¬ucation. This time it is clad in limestoneand concrete and decorated by a singu¬larly inappropriate moorish motif. It wascompleted in 1963.The important area in which the Uni¬versity of Chicago has fallen incrediblyshort is in both interior and exterior de¬tailing. There is little unity of detail onthe campus. There should be. Details skill¬fully and tastefully done can go a longway toward unifying a campus and canredeem a lot of larger errors. What arethe elements of detail?A Neglect for DetailMakes EverythingLook ShoddyA. Graphics: The university has noreal policy on graphics. It needs such apolicy and it needs a design consultantto insure cohesion of graphic design, in¬side and out. Chicago has abandonedeclectic architecture and it should aban¬don eclectic graphics.BiologyMarch 8, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7Junior YearinNew YorkThree undergraduate colleges offer studentsfrom all parts of the country an opportunityto broaden their educational experienceby spending theirJunior Year in New YorkNew York University is an integral part ofthe exciting metropolitan community ofNew York City—the business; cultural,artistic, and financial center of the nation.The city's extraordinary resources greatlyenrich both the academic program and theexperience of living at New York Universitywith the most cosmopolitan student body inthe world.This program is open to studentsrecommended by the deans of the collegesto which they will return for their degrees.Courses may be taken in theSchool of CommerceSchool of EducationWashington Square College of Artsand ScienceWrite for brochure to Director, Junior Yearin New YorkNEW YORK UNIVERSITYNew York, N.Y. 10003GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food10% Student DiscountCLOSED WEDNESDAYHYDE PARK’S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPER10% student discount on table service5% student discount on take-out serviceHY 3-2559(Eat More For Less)Try Our Convenient Take-Out Orders Why just dream about jt....4 bi-monthlydigest ojarticles andartu nrk fromUndergroundnewspapersacrossthe countryIJ Pi* YCA*Turn On To The CompleteUnderground Press(juagnuidDigest•OX Sit VILLA01 STATIONN. T. C. 10014Name —ADDRESS.CITY□ I enclose $3 extend subscription by one issue. □ Please bill me 2 Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856PEOPLE WHO KNOWCALL ONCUT OUT AND SEND CUSTOM QUALITYCLEANING1363 E. 53rd St.752-6933PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Ita'wjn FoodsCompare the Price!1480 E. 53rd StreetMl 3*2800How do you createa totally private villagesmack in the middleof Hyde Park?We did.We did it by raising ourproperty way over streetlevel, to create a privateplaza.There sits our village.Not just a hi-rise, a vil¬lage. Cornell Village.That includes a 27-storytower, 18 town homes,shaded sitting areas,sculpture, gardens andplenty of room to relax. Recause the buildings oc¬cupy only 35' \ of the site.To insure a village atmos¬phere, the tower is a con¬dominium. With pricesfrom #29,750. So the re¬sidents are real residents,not transients. With ahome-owners’ pride intheir community. •1 he 2, 3 and 4-hedroomhomes offer lake views. Private terraces. Sound¬proof construction. Andmore.The village offers a pri¬vate, heated pool. Saunabaths. And 100% under¬ground parking.It’s a unique concept,even for a unique com¬munity like Hyde Park.Visit us soon and see loryourself.CORNELL VILLAGEPlaza Living.. .a nice way to live in the city,Model homes at 5138 S. Hyde Park Blvd.,just off the Outer Drive.For more information, call 955-5000.Management by Baird & Warner, Inc.,, THE CHICAGO- MAROON < - - - - - March .8,.1968f\iWhy the UniversityGets What it Getsbias, exaggerated a bit when he said that“the greatest assets that a university hasare beautiful, harmonious, surroundings.In a sense, universities are the oases ofour desert like civilization. And, as themonasteries of the Middle Ages, they arethe only beautiful, respectable pedestrianplaces left." Everyone at the Universityof Chicago pays lip service to the ideathat architectural excellence should besought in each addition to the campus.If this is indeed the case, why is medi¬ocrity so dominant in recent buildings.Why is the university’s architectural fu¬ture as bleak (albeit with many excep¬tions) as it is? The fault lies clearly onthe shoulders of the university. It has notbeen a sufficiently creative client. It mustbe. It must be creative enough to be will¬ing to really make a fundamental searchfor solutions and for the underlying prin¬ciples which govern the application ofthese solutions. It must b? willing to beavant-garde and daring in the alternativesit considers. What can be done to injectcreativity into a planning system that hastoo often shown a willingness to abdicateits creative responsibility? First, univer¬sity officials must dramatically expandtheir vision of the problems of campusdesign. Second, a system of checks andbalances must be instituted to insure theexcellence of every design — the univer¬sity planner and the trustees have con¬cretely demonstrated their inability to con¬trol the quality of Chicago’ architectureby themselves.The situation is improving, however,with the installation of Naphtali Knox asUniversity Planner the prospects for moreconsistent excellence in design have in¬creased dramatically. However, the Uni¬versity still has a long way to go andmust see many changes in its modusoperandi.Specifically, the following are stronglyrecommended:1. University policy should shirk con¬servatism and approach its problems withan open, exploring, mind.2. The university should approach itsdesign problems in terms of the total cam¬pus organism and should neglect no detailthat might enhance that organism.3. The university should strive for bothaesthetic and practical excellence in everyproject and should acknowledge inherentdisadvantages of arbitrary cost cutting.4. The university should be willing, be¬cause of the unique nature of modern de¬sign, to commit itself to giving individualarchitects much larger areas of designresponsibility—the Barnes plan is particu¬larly commendable in this respect.5. The university should at all timesemploy a consulting architect of the high¬est possible demonstrated stature— what¬ever the cost. Eero Saarinen was such anarchitect.6. The university should form a boardof architectural review, representing di¬verse interests and including architects,designers, critics, faculty, and students, toevaluate and make recommendations onall proposed designs and to foster in¬creased communication with the entire uni¬versity—that is to say, with those peoplefor whom the buildings are built.B. Lighting: a simple globe light hasbeen adopted as the standard for all futuresites — dull but uniform.C. Furnishing and Interior Design:A top flight interior designer is needed tocoordinate all furnishings and appoint¬ments in university buildings. The univer¬sity is particularly weak in these areas.A consultant in this capacity would insurethat all furnishings are both intrinsicallyinteresting and complementary to theirenvironment as well as attending to theexecution of other normal interior alter¬ations. The services of such a designer tohelp regulate the forth coming renovationsof several older buildings would be mostuseful. The interiors of campus buildingsought to be interesting if not excitingplaces to be.D. Paving: More stone (cobble andflag) and less concrete and asphalt wouldadd much charm — brick paving mightalso be appropriate in certain areas.THE CHICAGO MAROONMarch 8, 1968JCSSELSON’SSSRVING HYDI PARK FOR QVIR BO YIARSWITH THE VIRY BIST AND FRESHISTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2 2870. PL 2 8190, DO 3-9186 1140 I 51 *4r" — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — -iJ College Relations Director -jj c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, O.C. 20008i Please send me ji a Sheraton Student 1S LEX so I can save up' to 20% oni Sheraton rooms.! NameAddress.I Reservations with the special low rate are confirmed in advance |■ (based on availability) for Fri., Sat., Sun. nights, plus Thank* _I giving (Nov. 22*26), Christmas (Dec. 15-Jan. 1) and July ■| through Labor Day! Many Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns offer I■ student rates during other periods subject to availability at time |j of check-in and may be requested. Ii Sheraton Hotels &Motor Inns(g) iI 155 Sheraton Hotels A Motor Inns In Major Cities JJE^equer-DrowAYThe actual English raincoat was designedfor a formal lawn party during a hurricane.Driway...theBritishline S3995pcfetotcfe, Util.Featuring the Finestin Natural Shoulder Clothing7104 SO.JEFFERY AVEIN SOUTH SHORE Phone DO 3-2700DAILY 9 30 - 6:00 AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3*9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -_____ _ NEW & USED -Sales and iervice on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders - Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Carriages - Tubes - Batteries10^> diuounl to >tud«nt( with ID cardsGOT A SAD PAD ?PITIFUL POCKETS ?try tneCATHOLIC SALVAGE BUREAU3514 So. Michigan Ave.10 east 41st street STATIONERYBOOKSGREETING CARDSTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-751 I1540 E. 55th St.10% Student DiscountDiscountART MATERIALS• PICTURE FRAMING• OFFICE 8c SCHOOLSUPPLIES• FILINGDUNCAN’S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111PRAXIS 48the electrictypewriter thatwon’t make mistakesRecognize typing thatlooks like this?crowding and pilngshading and ghosting^ lying Gapjta|sImproper SpacingThese are common typewriter mis¬takes — mistakes you’ll never see aPRAXIS 48 make. Why? BecausePRAXIS 48 has a Character Senserwith a Memory — a Memory thatnever forgets to remember. ■ Nomore needless errors that wastetime and cost money. ■ PRAXIS48’s Half Space key makes wordchanges ana word substitutionseasy and accurate. Notice the allnew keyboard on the PRAXIS 48,desigrieu exclusively for an electrictypewriter. Not only does it im¬prove typing rhythm, but it actuallyreduces the possibility of strikinga wrong key. ■ In addition, imaginethe luxiry of centering titles auto¬matically. No math — no mysteryon PRAXIS 48! The only mistakeyou can make is to try taking it a-way from a girl - once she discov¬ers it has made her letter-perfect.LOOK OUT FOR US AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S ELLIS FRIDAY MARCH 8. 1968 - ALL DAY1SITAR INDIAN MUSIC FESTIVAL FLUTEUSTAD GHULAMHUSAIN KHAN Leadrng Performers from India SRIMAN T. VIShANATHANand Party and PartyMarch 29 and 30 tickets Foster Hall 106 ext. 4340 April 610 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 8, 1968Regenstein Library: A Quiet GiantWHAT THE NEW Joseph Regenstein li¬brary is now — a huge excavated hole —is reflected in the complete but undeservedvoid of information and enthusiasm circu¬lating about it. Stagg Field has disappear¬ed, but in its place is being erected a grad¬uate library with a 3.1 million volume ca¬pacity, costing 20.5 million dollars, cover¬ing the largest area on the campus, havingmore than the square footage of HarperLibrary and the Administration Buildingcombined, and, hopefully, presenting a hu¬man design equally compatible to theGothic design vernacular of the campusand indicative of what is worthwhile inmodern architecture today.What the new Regenstein library will beis a responsive, powerful center of intel¬lectual activity. The hugeness of the newlibrary cannot be overstressed. The needfor new facilities has been acute for anumber of years and the response is com¬mensurate. In 1953, a tentative report is¬sued by the Commission on the FuturePolicy of University Libraries stated thatthe present library facilities had reacheda “critical point” and that “immediate ac¬tion” was necessary. A large and vital li¬brary collection is the foundation of a greatresearch community, yet today nearly250,000 volumes of the University’s 2.6 mil¬lions volume collection must be kept instorage. In addition, the collections aremore tightly shelved than is desirable, avariety of temporary shelving arrange¬ments have had to be devised, and there isno space to accommodate the furthergrowth of the collections. Prevailing highstack temperatures, no humidity control,and no air filteration are highly damagingto the life of book papers. The plan willbring into one building many of the exist¬ing departmental libraries. After 40 years, of the Regenstein family, Chicago will nowwith the aid of the $10,000,000.00 donationprovide excellent accommodations forreaders and the University’s distinguishedlibrary collection and hopefully the revi¬talization of it’s academic resources. Auniversity can not attract great scholarswithout outstanding research facilities; inthe scientific disciplines Chicago has nothad difficulty —the Regenstein library willnow be a new major force in the fields ofHumanities, Social Sciences, Education,Business and Economics, Oriental Studies,Library science, and related disciplines.The needs of the University’s 2.6 millionvolume collection are great, however, thedesign is responsive in much more thanjust physical capacity. It will not onlyprovide the resources necessary for re¬search and learning, it also promises tocreate the environment most conducive tohighest intellectual endeavor. The funda¬mental design criterion was to furnish forthe scholar the greatest accessibility to hisbooks, resulting in a horizontal alignmentof the stacks with the reading areas. Em¬ploying any of the typical plans with eith¬er the desks interspersed in carrelsthroughout the collection, with subjectreading rooms with stacks elsewhere, orgeneral reading rooms with the stacks en¬tirely separate, as in Harper, would notbe efficient due to the immensity of thecollection and the intensity of its use. In¬stead the 2,200 to 2,400 seats will be placedin subject reading areas horizontally adja¬cent to the stacks of the entire collectionof that discipline. On open shelves, adja¬cent to the seats, will be the major refer¬ence tools, bibliographies, indexes, andcurrent periodicals of the broad cluster ofrelated subject disciplines that will behoused on each floor. Easy vertical corn-interior of the Periodical Room Second Floor Planmunication in the book stacks will greatlyfacilitate access to materials from otherdisciplines.Emphasis has been placed on makingthe reading facilities comfortable and con¬ducive to their purpose: proper lighting,good ventilation, controlled acoustics, car¬peting, the possibility of smoking in cer¬tain areas, and most important, varietyin seating arrangements will hopefully pro¬vide the ideal surroundings within the li¬brary. In addition, in the East wing therewill be accommodations for 250 small fac¬ ulty studies, again a necessary asset fora total learning environment.The library also promises to be respon¬sive to the existing external environmentas well. The present eclectic university-policy of design and planning on the cam¬pus dictates a Gothic discipline, and en¬deavors to maintain this at the highestlevel by hiring outstanding “big name”architects for “big projects,” restrainingthem within the limestone and low-risecriteria, and hoping the results will al¬together provide a unified, distinguishedcampus. Choice of the architect in thecase of the library was paramount: itinvolved a $20 million endorsement ofuniversity policy and a $20 million invest¬ment in the design capacities of the arch¬itects chosen. By choosing the office ofSkidmore Owings and Merrill with WalterNetsch as the leading design partner, theUniversity safeguarded its investment withboth a distinguished reputation and thepractical stability which only such a largefirm can offer. They in effect chose anenormous firm for an enormous job: SOMis perhaps the largest architectural firmin the United States and its projects rangefrom the John Hancock megastructure now-emerging out of the Chicago skyline, tothe award-winning Public Library inSkokie, Illinois. Walter Netsch in particu¬lar presents strong credentials, especiallyin the area of educational facilities. Hehas planned and designed two completecampuses: the Air Force Academy andthe University of Illinois Circle Campus.The human qualities of either campus areless than desirable, but they represent pastphases in his career. He is also a veteranin the design of libraries at IIT, North¬western, M.I.T., Colorado College, Grin-nell College, and others.The design criteria which were pre¬sented to the architects did by no meansC ipn tMarch 8, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 11PATRONIZEOURADVERTISERSPre*tcA Pried SkrimfiAGoVdoriiJRESTAURANT132 1 East 57th ST.‘ INTERNATIONAL HOUSEGIFT SHOP1414 E. 59th StreetGIFTS FROMAROUND THE WORLD'T obacc os-Candies-StationeryNewspapers-Magazine s-CosmeticsOpen Monday-Friday 10:15 AM-5:45 PM.Saturday and Sunday Noon-5 45 PMUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietor<E%os‘oc3</)32£ Student Membership$12.50Special offer for University ofChi< ago students and farultyavailable through March 31st.The Museum of Modern Art invitesall students and faculty to becomemembers at the reduced annual rateof $12.50 instead of $20 00.Privileges include 4 free Museumpublications; 25-50'’= disc.oun's onMuseum books reproductions andslides; reduced subscription rates orart magazines; Members' Calendars;unlimited free admissionsDepartment of MemtThe Museum of Modf1 1 West 53 StreetNew York. N. Y. 1001Student MembershipAdd $2.50 if you wish an radmission pass tor husb;Application deadline: MeI onr lose my check for $made payable to The MuModern Art.Name (please print)Address $12.50.mnd or wifearch 31 in that wild,mixed-media, all-ele „total environment cal1106 W tAWfttHtl CHlCAf.U VDANCE. 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Black or pirategold. $24.95 <81. ^<7n<7wv4rbiXX»R><7vi7lDvvOl\M7fo<r(i(7V(7viTuon(i(rb<7v<7T>Jfuu|fu(7TiJ\Hyde Park Shopping Center Open Daily til 655th & Lake Park Thursday & Friday til 9City State Zip ATTENTION SENIORS!Become a MONTESSORI TEACHER!(demand is twice the supply)NEXT TRAINING PROGRAM:JUNE 24 — AUGUST 9 in CHICAGO(Leads to Nationally RecognizedAMS CertificateWrite: CHICAGO MIDWESTMONTESSORI TEACHER TRAINING1010 W. Chicago AvenueChicago Illinois 60622NEWMOODSCome select from ournew collection of moot!getting incense andincense burners. Manyexciting fragrances.Aromatic, long-lastingand effluvient.Imported from Africa,Mexico and India.Incense from.99Burners from$2.49slopesA ncu international arts and crafts centerJEWELRY • HANDICRAFTS • SCLUTIREHtirpcr C-ourt 5210 $. Harper 324-7266Convenient hours: Noon to 8 p.m. daily ; Noon to 5 p.ni. Sunday Kliira Madioansometimes truth is more excitinqAn extraordinary film that is beautifully simple and simply beau¬tiful. Rarely in motion picture memory has sight and sound playedso integral a part.”-Clifford Terry,Chicago Tribune. "Almostperfect.The joy and the sadness of life is in "Elvira Madigair, andit is beautiful to see.’ —Richard Christiansen, Chicago Daily News."★★★★. A great film. Remarkably beautiful—almost every framewould make a painting, and yet the film is alive and cinematic.-Rog er Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times.PLAYBOY VTHE ATE R 91204 N DEARBORN • PHONE 944 343412 THE CHICAGO MAROON March 8, 1968The proposed landscaping plan.emanate solely from the University policy.A faculty committee and the library staffunder the direction of Head Librarian Her¬man Fussier set to work studying the re¬quirements in 1963 and came up with adetailed program of demanding specifica¬tions. The library, of course, had to belarge enough to hold the present collec¬tions, provide space for future growth,and accomodate the necessary number ofreaders. There had to be an effective, sub¬ject specialized, intellectual and operation¬al plan to relate books, readers, and li¬brary staff for effective graduate andresearch service. It had to provide themost modern and efficient library equip¬ment available, including many floor con¬duits to connection to a library or centralcampus computer. And it quite necessar¬ily had to be flexible both to change func¬tions within the space as well as make itpossible to expand externally if the Uni¬versity should ever wish to do so.Originally the intention had been to sit¬uate the library in the main quadranglewhere the University Ave. tennis courtsare presently. In order to do this andmaintain the scale of the surroundingbuildings, it would have been necessary toconstruct two basement levels running un¬derground all the way up to the door ofthe Administration Building. It wasthen decided that Stagg Field was the only site large enough and most easily acces¬sible to the quads for a library of suitableproportions.This site, when the grey prison-like wallsare removed, will greatly enlarge the cam¬pus and will provide an attractive connec¬tion with the future north campus devel¬opment.The evolution of the design, as illustrated,shows the adaption of the form to its func¬tion and to its environment. The simplesquare would have easily taken.care of therequirements of the stacks, the technicalaspects, and even internal flexibility, butit would have been a monster adjacent toHitchcock and the other Gothic structuresof the main campus, and any additions tothe form would have looked artificial. Thefinal configuration fit the needs of the li¬brary facilities within environment de¬mands. The three slipped forms are aes¬thetically useful in hiding the bulk of thebuilding; they are a convenient form towhich later additions can be made; andthey offer “Gothic” surface irregularitiesconveniently suitable to the lightingneeds of a library. The material to be usedis of course limestone, but S.O.M. hascome up with an original treatment of it.The stone will be fluted, making a roughtexture particularly attractive for the de¬sign and scale of the building. Both par¬ties most closely involved in the design of the Regenstein library, the librariansand the architects at S.O.M., are partic¬ularly pleased with the final form that hasevolved, for it suits the needs of the libraryand presents a quiet but powerful architec¬tural statement.An important element in the dsign of thelibrary is the landscaping plan, by Kiley.The main campus is built around a quad¬rangle system, the greatest amenity ofwhich is the open green spaces. If theplans are carried out as sketched to thisdate, the Library w ill be situated within analmost lavish park. There will be a perim.meter of trees surrounding the site, and animportant garden around the Henry MooreAtomic Energy sculpture. Landscaping de¬serves the attention the planners have giv¬en it, and the library itself will suffer ifthe usual economic factors prohibit thecompletion of the proposed park.Netsch considers the Regenstein Li¬brary to be a “sleeper” architectuarally.It will not be a major forward step in ar¬chitectural design, but within the givencontext it will be successful. A more inno¬vative design w'ould have had a more dif¬ficult time responding to the existing en¬vironment. Although this is not to sav thatthere is no room for creative architecturein other purposes and locations of the Uni¬versity of Chicago campus. But just asNetsch did imply that the building was notgoing to be a major contribution to modernarchitecture, he is also quite confident ofits success: “because 1) it will not domin¬ate the area, 21 it will be responsive to thepark plan because the negative spaces areas much apart of the building as itself . . .and 3) it will be tougher, more responsiveon the inside than the outside.” HermanFussier shares Netsch’s confidence andconsiders the strengths of the building thepowerful design, the highly functional in¬ternal plan, the human scale of spaces de¬spite the size of the building, the internalflexibility, and again its responsiveness tochanging requirements.Regenstein Graduate Library deservesthe attention of every member of the Uni¬versity of Chicago community. As thebuilding takes from out of the existingvoid, enthusiasm should grow commensur-ately. Such a responsive and powerfulstructure of the immense proportions ofthe new library deserves response fromthe students it will serve. By the Fall of1969 when it is tentatively scheduled to becomplete, it will assume the position of themost important building on campus.This Report Was Prepared forthe Chicao Maroon By:Michael Sorkin—EditorMargo JonesJolm Siefert—ContributorsRoger Black—Managing EditorPhoebe Palmer—Ghost WriterAn artist's conception of the South entranceEvolution of a design.March 8, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONf* i'V» 6 v4 i y , i.’.vjij y r'/’i' 13Foreground: Chevrolet Impala Sport Sedan; right background: Chevelle Malibu Sport Coupe; left background: Chevy II Noya Coupe.English featherFor men who want to be where theaction is. Very racy. Very mascu-.line. ALL-PURPOSE LOTION$2,50, $4.00. $6 50 From the com¬plete array of ENGLISH LEATHERmen's toiletries.- I, —I ■ ■14 THE CHICAGO MAROON ’68 CHEVROLETprices start lower than any otherfull-size models. Look at it. Chev¬rolet’s 4-door sedan is roomier thanany other American car except oneluxury sedan. Drive it. You tell by itssmooth and silent ride that Chevroletquality runs deep. Buy it! Get a Chev¬rolet instead of a medium-priced nameand you can have, say, power steering,power brakes and a radio besides! ’68 CHEVELLEprices start lower than any othermid-size models. Obviously nothing’snewer in mid-size cars than Chevelle.There’s fresh styling, the long-hood,short-deck look. There are two nimble¬footed wheelbases now—both on awider, steadier tread. You get big-carpower, big-car ride in a quick-sizepackage. No wonder Chevelle outsellseverything in its field. ’68 CHEVY II NOVAprices start lower than any othereconomy car so generously sized.Nova is big enough for a family on va¬cation, yet it slips into parking spacesothers pass by. With its new widestance and computer-tuned chassis,Nova rides as silent and steady as carscosting a lot more, and it comes withthe biggest standard V8 in its field.Nova’s the not-too-small car.NOW-HMPALA V8 SALE! Save on specially equipped Sport Coupe, 4-Door Sedan or Station Wagons!March 8, 1968Car Buffs do it!SAMUEL A. BEU'BUY SHELL FROM BfttSINCE IruPICKUP a DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Perk493-5200 a Let It Cjordt2 edianeiair <*UeSiy tiers1620 E. 53RD BU-8-2900rflIIIIIIIllIllllIII. Please rush methe questionnairefor CUPID COMPUTERU. of C.’s computer dating serviceName ..AddressCUPID COMPUTERBOX 67,CHAMPAIGN, ILLINOIS 61820For The Convenience And NeedsOf The UniversityRENT A CARDAILY — WEEKLY — MONTHLYAs Low As $6.95 per Day - All 1968 Models(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE!HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 This “patch”identifiesthe world’s bestbeer drinkers!ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. - ST. LOUISDrive one of thesedressed-up Chevroletsinstead of a stripped-downsomething else.^ _^fgreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange—, 324-3313T_AUSTIN MUUYNorth Quad: A Planned EnvironmentTHE COMPUTERS ARE already grindingout the working plans for the first stageof the new North Quad—a 6-block, $24,000,-000 project which may take 15 years tocomplete. The Student Village, the Centerlor the Arts, and a vast athletic complexwill rise between 55th and 56th Streets,from Cottage Grove to University.Nine hundred students will live in theseven towers, eight lowhouses, and 32 town-houses which, along with recreational anddining facilities will make up the Village.Along the streets will be an outdoor cafe,a snack bar, a post office and a bookstore.Seven courtyards provide usable openspace and a view for every room. Theyare walled for privacy and safety, andlandscaped with shade trees, benches, anda central fountain. Half of the housing isplanned for undergraduates and half forgraduate students and married couples.To the east are two courtyard buildingsfor the Music and Art Departments. TheMusic Building will contain a 900 seat con¬cert hall with a stage large enough for a100 piece orchestra; a lobby and receptionarea; a large classroom-rehearsal areaand two smaller classrooms; music studi¬os; practice and listening rooms; facultystudies; and a music library. The Art(’enter will include 8,500 square feet ofgalleries for touring exhibits and perma¬nent collections and an outdoor sculpturegarden, as well as a large lecture hall,two classrooms, faculty offices, a studentlounge and an art library.Farther east, and not actually within theQuadrangle, will be a two-auditorium thea¬tre. The larger auditorium, with a 500-600capacity, will be used for professional pro¬ductions, film festivals, and the CourtTheatre. The smaller, seating 200, will beused for experimental plays.The athletic facilities will be built overa long span of time. There will eventuallybe basketball, squash, handball and tenniscourts; gymnastic, wrestling, judo, fencingand weight training room; fields for foot¬ball, soccer, softball and baseball; an en¬closed swimming pool; an ice skating rink;and a bowling alley.The North Quad originated with theFaculty Advisory Committee on StudentResidences and Facilities (known as theBlum Committee). Its 1965 report to thePresident laid out the general spirit plan¬ning should follow, as well as suggestingmany of the components since included in(he Quad. It also outlined specific mea¬sures to make dormitories livable. A Sub¬committee then worked with architect Ed¬ward Larabeee Barnes to realize theseconcepts within the limitations of spaceund cost. The Committee had been worriedthat the North Area would be developedpiecemeal and haphazardly. But the Uni¬versity had foresight. Comprehensive plan¬ning for the whole area by one architect allowed the unity and flexibility desiredby the Committee. According to the Uni¬versity of Chicago Record, “The BarnesPlan is a brilliant architectural statementof the Committee's recommendations." Onthe level of the overall plan this statementis unquestionably true, but considering theNorth Quad as a place to live, the state¬ment is just as unquestionably false.Undergraduates will live in the four cen¬tral towers, a single north tower and, per¬haps, some of the low' houses—all set upas dormitories. The towers are all iden¬tical. The first floors open into both thecourt yard and the two adjoining low-houses and may contain some commercialfacilities. The entire second floor is aformal lounge. Th*1 third, fourth and fifthfloors house 20 students apiece. The sixthfloor contains a penthouse for the residenthead and a house lounge. The typical liv¬ing floor consists of two five room suites,two doubles, four singles and a two roomsuite. Within the five room suite four bedrooms will open onto a corridor whichleads into a living room. Three of the fourbedrooms in each suite will be singles. Onewill be a double. Each suite will share abathroom with the occupants of four non¬suite rooms.Sound insulation will surround each suitebut not each room. “Because of the costof sound-insulating each room," saidNapthali Knox, Assistant Vice-Presidentfor Physical Planning, “the students ineach suite will have to live with their ownnoise." Knox added, however, that itmight also be possible to sound-insulatethe living room from the suite bedrooms.There will be a noise problem, not only be¬tween rooms, but with the lavatories aswell. The ten man communal bathroomshares a wall with the suite living roomdespite the Committee’s specific recom¬mendation that “the acoustics be such asto isolate the bathroom noises from theliving quarters." In general, the sound con¬ditions are hardly “superior” as asked bythe Committee. The other 24 bedrooms—eight to a floor-will open off corridors like most roomsnow do in the dormitories. Two of the cor¬ridor rooms will be doubles, four will besingles, and two will be arranged into whatis called a two-man suite—a bedroom anda living room for two students. The ideaof the two-man suite is to provide flexibili¬ty not found in Woodward Court or PierceTower. Supposedly the students might de¬cide to use one room for a study and oneroom as a bedroom. The single rooms in♦he suites will be 110 sq. ft.—slightly smal¬ler than a double room in Pierce Tower.The corridor rooms will be slightly larger35 sq. ft.—to compensate for a lack of aliving room. This is the size the Committeeasked for. The arrangement of the towersinto half suites and Jialf corridor roomsruns contrary to the original recommenda¬tions of the Blum Committee. “The oneroom double should be eliminated,” thereport insists. “There should be only twotypes of rooms—the one room single anda three room suite for two people.” Never¬theless. 40rr of the students in the towerswill be housed in doubles the Village Plau-ners at first recommended should neverbe built again. And there are no planswhatever for the three room doubles con¬sidered most desirable by the committee.The reason for this abrupt about face isthat the Committee changed its mind, des¬cribing an all suite arrangement as “tooatomized”. But the Committee never re¬vealed how a room off a corridor is lessatomized than a communal suite.Another reason the University gives forbullheadedly continuing to build doublesnobody wants to live in is that “universitystudies across the country show that fresh¬men often want and need roommates". Butwhat about this University’s own study bythe Consultant Board on Housing thatshowed that 70rr of the dorm population,largely freshmen, was unsatisfied withtheir present accomodations? Agreed,freshmen may need a firm helping handto get in contact with people, but in howmany cases is the unavoidable companyU,ffflJiAlJlJ l \ iLj l of an arbitrarily selected roommate want¬ed past the first few weeks. Besides, theuniversity draws heavily from the middleand upper classes and most children ofthese classes are accustomed to havingtheir own rooms. Privacy is not a luxurybut a necessity to them, particularly dur¬ing that traumatic first year. And after thefirst year, the only students who want toshare a bedroom are couples livingtogether.The final interior layouts are still underdesign. Furniture will consist of a bed,desk, and chests that can be stacked indifferent arrangement. The Village Planners hope to have a stock of furnitureavailable from which a student could se¬lect what he wants for his room. However,some of the rooms may have a part or allof their furniture built in.Sufficient electricity for a small refrig¬erator and a hot plate, as suggested by theCommittee, is not planned, although re¬frigerator lockers and a common kitchenwill be available two blocks way beneaththe Dining Halls, a vast system of tunnelswill link all the houses with the servicedeck, the dining halls, and the commonkitchens, however, the tunnels will be keptlocked. Students will not have access tothem. To get to breakfast, a student willhave to walk approximately two blocksoutdoors, no matter what the weather.The reason for comprehensive planning issupposedly to avoid such nuisances. Theadjoining low houses are all to be similaiin design but will vary in size, accomodat¬ing from 36 to 51 students. The floor plansfor the low houses are currently being re¬vised. The Village Planners are thinkingof placing undergraduate women in thetowers where security is easy to maintainand undergraduate men in the ground lev¬el low houses where control measures aremore difficult.The Blum Committee recommended thathousing be flexible and interchangable,equally suitable for graduate and undergraduate students. However ,the graduatehousing in the North Quad is considerablydifferent from the housing available toundergraduates. Graduate students will behoused in apartments in the two southtowers and in some low houses. Half ofthese apartments will be efficiencies for amarried couple or one single grad student;the other half will be one bedroom apart¬ment for a married couple or two singlegraduate students. These apartments arevery small to say the least. According toJeff Blum, president of the Chicago studentbody, “this new graduate student housingis particularly poor. I would think thatgraduate students find a room of their ownan utter prerequisite for their study andpersonal lives. In most cases their fellow¬ship money provides them enough for that,March 8, 1968X totalA THE CHICAGO MAROON/.ODPiAM 'j.'iW.’ iD a’.' '~'4* »)n'lihn»n -tUrw •*lrJr~A^^r,Calendar of EvenfsPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must submit typed copy toThe Maroon two days before the day beforepublication.Please consult the official University cal¬endar for lectures on academic subjects andregular events.Friday, March 8PLAY (U-High Theater Workshop): "Darkof the Moon," by Howard Richardsonand William Berney. Belfield Hall, 5815South Kimbark, 4 p.m.EARLY MUSIC QUARTET (Chamber MusicSeries: Music of the Middle Ages andthe Renaissance. Willard Cobb, SterlingJones, Andrea von Ramm, and ThomasBinkley. Mandel Hall, 8:30 p.m.SATIRE: (New Old Fashioned Baroque Com¬pass Players. Also folk singer AnglelaLee. Harper Theater Coffe House, 8:30p.m. Recommended by The Culture Vul¬ture.Saturday, March 9PLAY: See Friday, March 8 at 4 p.m. Tonightat 7:30 p.m.INDIAN MUSIC (India Association): Intro¬ducing the veena, the oldest Indianstring instrument, International House,Home Room, 8 p.m. Free.JAZZ: (Contemporary Music Society) An¬thony Braxton, New Jazz, Ida Noyes,8 p.m.FILM (SDS): Alice In Wonderland by WaltDisney. Mandel Hall 8:30 p.m. 75 cents.SATIRE: See 8:30 p.m. Friday.Sunday, March 10PLAY: 2 p.m.. See Friday, March 8, 4p.m. listing.CONCERT: Richard Vikstrom conductingthe Rockefeller Chapel Choir performingRandall Thompason's "The PeaceableKingdom," Paul Hindemith's "ApparebitRepenfina Dies, and Igor Stravinsky's"Mass." Rotxefeller Chapel. 3:30 p.m.Monday, March 11LECTURE (New Testament Club): Dr. Elie-zer Berdovits, Hebrew Theological Collegeon "The Concept of Justice in the Hew-brew Bible." Swift Commons,-7:30 p.m.FILM (Women for Peace): "Vietnam: HowDid We Get in and How We Can GetOut," directed by David Schoebrun. St.Paul's Church, 50th and Dorchester, 7:45and 8:45 p.m. $1. Students 50 cents.Tuesday, March 12PLAY: 4 p.m. See 4 p.m. listing for lastFriday.Wednesday, March 13PLAY: 7:30. See above to find what it is.Thursday, March 14PLAY: Ditto.SKI TRIP—TAOS (UC Ski Club): LeavingIda Noyes at 5:30 p.m.SATIRE (Harper Theater Coffee House):See last Friday and Saturday's listing.Recruiting VisitsRepresentatives from the following will bevisiting the Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club, Room 200:Teaching(For appts., call Ext. 3279)March 8—Lake Forest School District No.67, Lake Forest, Illinois. Elementary:K-6 positions. Junior high school: science,English, history, mathematics positions.Interested only in qualified candidateswho are eligible for teacher certification.Gross School, Brookfield, Illinois. Ele¬mentary teaching openings. Interestedonly in qualified candidates who areeligible for teacher certification.March H—Janesville Public Schools, Janes¬ville, Wisconsin. Elementary: K-6 open¬ings. Junior high and high school: Eng¬lish, mathematics, science, chemistry,Ziebartadds valueto your car.... up to $200 extra valueat trade-in time! Ziebarttotal rustproofing inner-coats as well as undercoatsyour new car. So complete,it's guaranteed for 5 yearsor 50,000 miles. Army,Navy, U.S. Post Officechoose Ziebart, world’slargest auto-truck rust-proofer. Win the war on rust:phone us today!ZIEBARTjtnmiruLwmri 4Superior Auto Service, Inc.8 538 S. South Chicago Ave.Phone 375-9300 physics, biology, French, Spanish, Ger¬man, music, librarian, reading specialistopenings. Interested only in qualifiedcandidates who are eligible for teachercertification.March 12—Highland Park-Deerfield HighSchool, District No. 113, Highland Park,Illinois. Openings in: art, English,French, Spanish, guidance, library,mathematics, music, science, socialstudies, special education. Interested onlyin qualified candidates who are eligiblefor teacher certification.March 13—School District of the City ofHighland Park, Highland Park, Michi¬gan. Lower and Upper Elementary:Openings in all areas. High school:mathematics, English, social studies,science, art, instrumental and vocal mu¬sic openings available. Interested only inqualified candidates who are eligible forteacher certification.March 14—Park Forest Public Schools, Park Forest, Illinois. Elementary: Vacanciesexist in all areas. Junior high school:English, reading, mathematics, sciences,French openings available. Other vacan¬cies: reading specialists and librarians.Interested only in qualified candidateswho are eligible for teacher certifica¬tion.March 15—Downers Grove Public Schools,Downers Grove, Illinois. Information onpositions not available at this writing.Business and Government(For appts., call Ext. 3284)March 8—Time, Inc., Chicago, Illinois. Su¬pervisory training program for womeninterested in the business aspects of pub¬lishing.United States Treasury Department, Of¬fice of International Affairs, Washington,D.C. M.A. and Ph.D. candidates ineconomics with training in international,financial, and monetary fields.Spring QuarterTEXTBOOKSNOW IN STOCKHum.Soc. Sci.West. Civ.Liberal Arts& etc.NEW HOURS: 9 am-10 pmweekdays12-6SaturdaysREYNOLDS CLUB BASEMENT ... La protection flnancifere que voutdonnez a votre famllle aujourd’huldevra lui £tre procure d’une autrafagon demain. L’assurance Sun Lifepeut certainement accomplir cettetBche a votre place.En tant que repr£sentant local de la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter i un moment devotre choi»?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 - FR 2 2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays t FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANYThe University of ChicagoRockefeller Memorial Chapel 59th Street and Woodlawn StreetSunday afternoon, March 10, at 3:30Rockefeller Chapel Choir Richard Vikstrom,with members of the Director of Chapel MusicChicago Symphony Orchestra Edward Mondello, OrganistAPPAREBIT REPENTINA DIES Paul HindemithChorus and Brass OrchestraMASS Igor StravinskyChorus and double wind quintetTHE PEACEABLE KINGDOM .. Randall ThompsonAk C0ppellctCANZON DU0DECIMI TONI ... Giovanni GabrieliOrgan and Brass OrchestraTickets:Reserved $4.50; General Admission $3.50:Available at: u.c. Fac/siaif $3 ooTicket Central, 212 N Michigan Avenue, and all Ward StoresKendall College, 2408 Orrinqton Avenue, EvanstohCooley's Candles, 5211 S, Harper AvenueWoodworth's Bookstore, 1311 East 57th StreetUnivers tv of Chicaao Bookstore 5802 S Ellis Avenue Students $2 5 0Tours for people who despise toursBalkansTurkeyHimalayasIsraelUSSR11 WEEKS: June 20 - September 4Inexpensive casual driving trips in small groups.Covers all expenses: Food, lodging and transportation.DOES include trans-Atlantic jet.Stopovers in Paris and Lisbon. $985 THE BALKANS Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Rumania, Hungary,Asia Minor, Istanbul$985 BALKAN DANCE Yugoslav dunce festivals and villagefests. Side trip to Bulgaria and Istanbul$985 TURKEY ft THE BALKANS Hitlile. Creek, Byzantine,Selcuk, Ottoman sites. Yugoslavia. Bulgaria, Rumania,Hungary, Czechoslovakia$1150 ISRAEL, THE BALKANS, ft FRANCE Yugoslavia.Bulgaria. Istanbul to Haifa by boat via Izmir. Rhodes andCyprus. Riviera, Provence, Burgundy$1250 HIMALAYAS Overland via Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan,Kashmir, Pakistanto the USSR — must know RussianAll USSR trips spend 0 of tlio 11 weeks camping in the SovietUnion: Caucasus, Ukraine, Moscow. Novgorod, Leningrad.$1200 USSR ft EASTERN EUROPE Czechoslovakia. Poland,Rumania, Yugoslavia$1200 USSR ft THE- ARCTIC Czechoslovakia. Poland. Finland,Norway, Sweden, Denmark$1470 USSR ft CENTRAL ASIA Tashkent, Samarkand, Bukhara,Alma AtaSTYLE I .eisuroly, to allow time for swimming, pickingfruit, stopping in villages or kolkhozes, meeting people.Two empty seals per vehicle for [licking up hitchhikers,No rush-—-11 weeks is a long lime.SIZE OF GROUP 17 people in a group, driving in 2microhusses and 1 sedan.MOBILITY The .'i vehicles travel independently and meetonce a day for directions and local information,TAKING OFF If a vehicle wishes to take off on its ownit will he provided with the resources to operateindependently.LEADERS know the area and speak the local languages.FOOD Local staples bought in markets and foodstores,LODGING Monasteries, villages, caravanserais, campgrounds, beaches.For information call or writeALEXANDER LIPSON(617) 547-112740 Dana St., Cambridge, Mass. 02138Indicate which trips interest youPROUDLY ANNOUCINGSpring Quarter WUCB will be broadcastingdirectly fromTHE BANDERSNATCH i16 THE CHICAGO MAKOON March 8. 1968so probably the only graduate students theundergraduates will meet in the Villageare the poorest.” In addition, Blum pointedout that apartments—the kind of housingmost desired by students in the College-will not be available to undergraduates inthe Village. According to Bernie Grofman,former president of Studint Government,students who appeared before the commit¬tee found it impossible to convince themembers of the extensive student interestin low cost off-campus apartments. Thedesigners of the Village apparently areless interested in student preferences thanin a) efficient planning and b) creatingwhat they consider an “appropriate” en¬vironment for students, particularly under¬graduates. In fact the Blum committee hasreported that a decision has been made tomake the college 75% residential. This iscompletely opposed to the trends studenthave set in the years since they have beenallowed to choose where they live.A decision to go ahead with the workingplans for the Village will be made in thenext six to eight weeks. Once these havebeen started, changes become extremelycostly and increasingly unlikely. The Uni¬versity’s major donors are now being ap¬proached for funds for the Village. ClearlyApril and May are the appropriate andtactically best months to press objectionsto the Village as planned.But before students voice their opinionon what kind of housing they want, theyshould know what President Beadle’s op¬inion of the validity of their complaint is.In his December 1967 State of the Univer¬sity address he said:“Some students are prone to com¬plain about University-providedhousing. Two mutually contradict¬ory complaints are: not goodenough and too expensive. Sinceall our student housing is subsi¬dized by writing off a fraction of,or all, capital costs, it cannot beimproved in quality without eithergreater subsidy or higher cost. Athird commonly heard complaint isthat there is a shortage of studenthousing. The fact is, last year the- - Housing Office made cash pay¬ments of $70,000 for unoccupiedrented space for students. At notime was University housing avail¬able to single students who desiredit, although it may not always havebeen exactly what the applicantsdesired.”It is strange that one of the places that‘commonly heard complaint’ is heard isthe recent November 1967 University ofChicago Magazine where, in their appealfor funds for the Village, the Universitysays, “The Student Village will answer acritical shortage in housing. Enrollmenthas been increasing, and housing has notkept pace. In the 1965-1966 academic year,800 more students applied for residencefacilities than the University could accom¬odate.” Not knowing whether to believethe University or the University, it seemsstudents will have to rely on their ownintuitions to decide if the Village is whatths campus needs. The College’s CobbTHE RENOVATION of Cobb Hall has beenone of the University’s few College-ori¬ented projects. $2,450,000 was spent on anunprecedented job of renovation. Construc¬tion time and costs were underestimated,and people have been waiting for the jobto be completed for over a year. The prin-ditioning—into one antiquated woodenGothic building. But Cobb Hall is the firstand perhaps strongest “campus Gothic”building on the campus, and it has greattrinsic historical value. People careabout what it stands for, and the reno¬vation represents an attempt of thosepeople to get students interested in itagain, by making it useful and attractive.Even President Beadle acted as an ex-officio job supervisor.The first floor was ready for use duringthe Fall Quarter, and the second and thirdfloor classrooms were opened for use thispast quarter. Coming back in the spring,however, students will get to see the wholething. Maybe then some reaction will beexpressed. The classrooms themselves are ratherbland: the notable lack of color is the big¬gest deficiency, and warmer materialswould have been preferable.The gallery is fine and an important ad¬dition; for some reason though, the de¬signers forgot to put in a projection boothwith the lecture hall and from now on DocFilms viewers will have to struggle to hearthe movies shown in it over the clatter ofthe 16mm projectors.The high Gothic ceilings and warm wood¬en details had to be sacrificed iw favor oftechnical modernity: air conditioning,proper lighting and suitable furniture.The renovation of Cobb Hall is the firstattempt at what promises to be a seriesof renovations. It has set the standardfor what will be done sometime in the fu¬ture to Walker, Rosenwald, Business East,and others of the Gothic “classics”. Im¬provements ought to be made to makethose buildings as comfortable in interiordesign as they will be technically.IF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOW THE C0MTEMP0RARY JAZZ SOCIETYPRESENTSRichard Abrams Piano and OthersAnthony Braxton Reeds and OthersLeRoy Jenkins Strings and OthersLeo Smith Brass and OthersSATURDAY, MARCH 9 TUESDAY, MARCH 12IDA NOYES HALL8:00 P M Admission $1.00Just telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY. NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school. DOW SHALTNOT KILLby Prof. Howard l innof Boston Universityfust returned from Hanoiin March 1968 issue of TWO DIALOGUESON JEWISH IDENTITY• Why I Am Not A Jewby Paul M. Kinburn (Harvard '63)• The Reluctant Jewby Morris U. Schappes(Historian-E ditor)JEWISH CURRENTS, A Secular MagazineSingle copy $ 40 Subscription $4.00 a yearSPECIAL OFFER TO STUDENTS ONLYSend iust 10 cents in stamps or coins for March issue to:JEWISH CURRENTS, Dept. 22 E. 17th St.. New York, N Y. 10003,, March 8, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON» o' :.v '• T.'t J j 1 17Get a whole term’s readingunder your beltin only one week!If you are an average student carrying a standardstudy load, you have the capacity to readin just one week—every single textbook forevery single course in your curriculum. What'smore, you will fully understand and rememberwhat you read for a long, long time.The way to this singular accomplishment isvia Reading Dynamics—the educationalbreakthrough that enables people to readthousands of words a minute without skippingor skimming, with great enjoyment andremarkable recall. Learning to read dynamicallyis like making the transition from a bicycleto a Jaguar XKE.Reading Dynamics really works. In fact, itworks so well and with such consistent successthat every course is backed by the Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics Institute’s guarantee toat least triple your reading efficiency or yourtuition will be refunded. (By reading efficiencywe mean a combination of speed andcomprehension, not just speed alone.)This is a minimum promise, for literallythousands of the Institute's graduates havelearned to read four to ten times faster. Theyread an average novel in about an hour—all thearticles in TIME Magazine in 25 minutes—textbooks at the rate of 15-20 pages a minute. These people aren’t “brains.” Many areindividuals who once read as slowly as you—poking along at the national average readingrate of 250-400 words per minute. So don't beembarrassed about your slow reading. Mostof your friends—even your parents and teachers—can’t read any faster.Reading Dynamics offers you a permanentescape from the sluggish reading rut and thenegative effects it has on your grade averageand free time.Although learning to read dynamically requiresno special talent or aptitude, mastering thiswonderful skill is a lot like learning to play amusical instrument. This means that justacquiring the simple, basic techniques won't turnyou into a speed reading phenomenon overnight.You have to practice every day—no greathangup since you can apply some of thisReading Dynamics “homework” to your normalschool or pleasure reading. Best of all, once you attain and continue to useyour new reading skills, your speed gains arepermanent. And once you take the course, you’reautomatically a lifetime member, which meansyou can make even greater gains in one of ourgraduate student programs, f ree.Reading Dynamics is the definitive rapidreading system in the world today. And the mostflexible. You can use it for all kinds of reading—even detailed, complex materials like science,history and economics texts—in one-thirdthe time it takes you now.Shouldn't you find out more about ReadingDynamics? You can, simply by coming to a freeone hour orientation.• You will see a documented film that includesactual interviews with Washington congressmenwho have taken the course.• You will also see a Reading Dynamicsgraduate read a book he has never seen beforeat amazing speed and then tell in detail whathe has read.• You will learn how we can help >ou to fasterreading, with improved comprehension andgreater recall.• Your evening will be an enlightening one. Andyou can leave as anonymously as you enteredwith absolutely no obligation. Plan to come.FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: ST 2-9787FREE ONE-HOUR ORIENTATIONSIn Chicago—at Reading DynamicsInstitute. 180 V Michigan Ave.. Suite fOOM.Fri.Sat.Mon.lues.Wed.Thur.Fri.Sat. March 8 -March 0 -March 11-March 12-March 13-March II-March 15- 12:15 X 5:80 I*1:30 P.M.K 5:30 I’.M.X 5:30 P.M.12:15 & 5:30 P.M.15 & 5:30 P.M.15 & 5:30 P.M.March 10-1:30 P.M.In Evergreen105 10 S. Western A\Sat. March 9 —Mon. March II —Sat. March 10— Park-e., Suite 1051:30 P.M.8:00 P.M.10:30 A.M. In Park Ridge—at Park Ridge Inn. Touhv at SummitThur. March 1 f— 8:00 P.M.Sat. March 10—10:30 A.M.In Evanston—at North Shore Hotel.1011 Chicago Ave.Sat. March 9 —10:30 A.M.lues. March 12— 8:00 P.M.Wed. March 13— 8:00 P.M.Sat. March It)— 1:30 P.M.In Oak Park — at ()ak Park Arm.- I lot el108 S. Oak Park \ve.Sat. March 9 —10:30 A.M.Mon. March 1 I— 8:00 P.M.Wed. March 13— 8:00 P.M.Thur. March 11— 8:00 P.M. I 0 The Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics Institute180North Michigan Avenue,Chicago, Illinois 60601O Please send more information.O Please send registration form and schedule ofclasses.I understand that I am under no obligation and thatno salesman will call on me.Name.Street.City. .State.Ziji1 e tin: (THE CHICAGO MAROON March 8, 1968Maroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents perline repeat.For non-University clientele: 75 cents perline, 60 cents per line repeat. Count 35characters and spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon BusinessOffice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADSFOR TUESDAY MUST BE IN BY FRI¬DAY. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS FOR FRI¬DAY MUST BE IN BY WEDNESDAY.NO EXCEPTIONS. 10 to 3 daily.for FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.The Maroon Business Office will again beopen for placing ads for the first issuebeginning Friday, March 29 at 10 A.M.LOSTMEN'S GOLD WEDDING RING. Inscribed"Estella, 6/19/65." Phone 288-2417. Reward.Yes, Santa Claus,I lost it.Love, VirginiaWANTEDTWO BEDROOM SUBLET for Spring Quarter.Call Fred at HY 3-8340 NOW.STUDIO or ONE BEDROOM APARTMENTin Hyde Park. SU 7-5560. Room 315. After 6P.M.Academic family wishes to rent or sub¬let COMPLETELY FURNISHED HOUSE ORAPT. (2-3 bedrooms) in Hyde Park FrimMid-June to end of August. M. Slater, Dept,of Math., U. Of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI 9-6822.Travel Bug seeks other insecta for TRIP inVW thru W. Virginia & Kentucky from NYC.,D C., etc.—week of 3/25—JOEL, Ml 3-3603.SOMEONE TO DRIVE A CAR from Chicagoto Miami over Spring Vacation. For furtherinfo., contact Mr. Richard Fine. CE 6-1995.A Great Liberal (LIBERAL!?) University(You can even skip the free society, sincewe know all about that anyway . . .).ROOM WITH FAMILY by responsible youngwoman, highest references. Rent or ex¬change duties. PI 8-8414.RIDERS WANTEDTO NEW YORK AND VICINITY, Fridaynoon, March 15th & returning Sunday March24thIsn't anyone going to California?APARTMENTS TO SUBLET1 -1 '2 ROOMS, Private and quiet, furnished,reasonably priced, avail, immediately, 6843721.LARGE, 3-'/j ROOM APT. avail. June to endSept, or immediately. Exc. Cond. V? blockf Lake Choice S. Shore Location. $108/month. 374-0151 after 6 p.m.FOR SALEEXTREMELY RARE ABYSINNIAN KIT¬TENS. Champion Stock C FA. Bred for ex¬quisite disposition as well as exotic beauty.MU 4-7838 anytime.OWN A CLASSIC (sic) TYPEWRITER!The Maroon now has only one 30-year-oldROYAL TYPEWRITER for sale. It is inworking condition but needs cleaning verybadly. Only $25.00. Contact the MaroonBusiness Office, Ext. 3266, for Details orcome to Ida Noyes, Room 304.MOBILE HOME! 48' x 10', 3 rooms, '57model, new furn. and appl., exc. cond. $2500.Lot 48, Sheffield Courts, Hammond, Indiana,219-931-8950. 17 minutes to U. of C.'61 VW. Sun Roof in Good Condition. $425.00.CA 5-4318 after 12 p.m., Saturday.'62 VW. $500.00. '66 Engine. Always Depend¬able. 667-7911.DESK, $15.00, OFFICE CHAIR, $5.00,SMITH-CORONA PORTABLE TYPEWRITER,$35.00, SKI RACK FOR VW, $15.00. Call 752-3339 or 752-6346.TYPEWRITER SERVICESExperienced Typist will do MSS. Electrictypewriter. Pick up on Campus. Reasonable.Call 568-3056 from 6 to 10 P.M.Last Minute Papers to be Typed? 90 wordsa minute. 2321 Rickert. BU 8-6610.ROOMMATES WANTEDGIRL WANTED to share apt. with 3 others.$50/month. Includes Utilities. 363-9112.FEMALE ROOMMATE. April 1—June 1.$50/month. Includes Utilities. 363-9112.PERSONALPEOPLE RUSH BY YOU AND SAY HIGH!"To desire that the individual should beimmortal . . .Really means to wish to perpetuate an errorinfinitely . . .I IS.Yentala—Cool it!1 week (6-9 days): $17.50Ski RentalsSKIS POLES & BOOTSFREE Delivery and Pick-up_for 5 or more sets.EVANSTON SKI SHOP•328-8958 or 328-8834 "INSIDE NORTH VIETNAM."Film by Felix Greene.Coming to Hillel House on April 21.Crushed France In 27 days.Avoid all the garbage in Underground News¬papers—Subscribe to the Underground Digest!Shag: Well, at least you won't bend in stiffwinds!My mother said,I never should,Play with the young boys in the wood.Handelsman will put a nectarine in everymouth.EAT at the KICKAPOO INN. Four Starsfrom P. Greenberg.Has anyone read JOY by W. C. Schutz?The cow I says Moo, Moo, Moo,Oh, Oh, you, you, you.CASTLES MADE OF SANDFALL INTO THE SEAEVENTUALLY.Alice's Restaurant doesn't serve yogurt.An eclipse would be right in your faceAnd you might see it.But you would know it's coolBy the vibrations it sends.PLEASEPLEASEPLEASEPLEASEPLEASEThe Business Office will be open definitelyfor Classified and other ads on Friday,March 29. Friday is the deadline for adsfor Tuesday's paper.STUDY BREAKApgela Lee/Baroque Compas PlayersFri, Sat at 8:30 P.M.—$1 StudentsHarper Theatre Coffee House5238 South Harper Avenueman of cad: who are you:I wish you wise beautiful springs always. SPSITAR-FLUTEIndian Music FestivalTickets now availableFoster Hall 106X4340Wednesday Evening. March 13th. Meglllahreading, skits, hamantashen, party (Conserva¬tive-Reform 7:30 p.m. and Orthodox at 6:30p.m.).HILLEL HOUSE 5715 WoodlawnThe first INTERNATIONAL BANDER-SNATCH was held in London in 1922.Interested in non cooperation with the draft?Come to a meeting Saturday at AFSC,407 S. Dearborn, 2 PM. If you can't come,call 493-8085.WHERE AM I?—Then you say Yes Yes Yes.PURIM NOISEMAKER CONTEST ATHILLEL.March 13thI thought I handled that beautifully.I said "Comment" or "No comment."Sub-cultures rubbing up against each other.SLF.STEVE FORDHAPPY BIRTHDAY, MARCH 28!Time will stop, NO NO NO, I'm not runningour out of time. This IS the fifth dimen¬sion."Those damned subsersive kikes."—Underground Digest—Sheriff HaasI see no reason why an artist should starve.I love Grandma and Auntie. M. SAVE STUDENT LIFE!Elect Bob Koss!If you think you're progressing forward,Maybe you might be seeing an illusionBecause there really isn't anything happeningUnless you make it happen.ML: You've been a great comfort.Are we going to have to switch roles again?MSL (P.S. Yes you may do Watson Please).To JRM and Uncle 'Max'Denn ich liebe dich am meisten!Mehr als jene Griechen goettin,Mehr als jene Fee des Nordens,Lieb' ich dich, du boese Juedin!Ja, ich liebe dich! Ich merk'esAn dem Zittern meine Seele,Liebe mich und sei mein Liebchen,Schoenes Weib, Potiphars Weib!JJH AUSTRALIAWANTS YOU!Government Assisted Passage. Unlimited Op¬portunities. Latest Government Information.$1.00 Austco, Box 3623-BB, Long Beach, Cali¬fornia-90803See Rabbi Goren at the Wall.Hillel. March 13th.Got to admit it's getting better . . .PSYCHOLOGISTS HATE PEOPLE.and echo answers "there is no appeal fromreason" (Freud)—you pays your money andyou doesn't take your choice.Aint freedom grand.BLACK NATCHEZ and STRIKE CITY. Filmsabout Blacks and Whites in Mississippi.Coming to Hillel House on April 7.BOB R.—Peace and Love.—M. Bus and I.C. Year lease beginning July 1.$130/month. A very attractive bargain. Call493-7608, 8 to 10 p.m. daily.CLOUDSCLOUDS COME FROM TIME TO TIMEAND BRING TO MEN A CHANCE TO RESTFROM LOOKING AT THE MOON.GRAFFITTITHINGS ARE RUNNING EVERYWHERE. . .BAAA-AAAAH-AICH!-Da! . . .My eyes are falling before my headBecause I see a whole lot of beautiful andtrue light.THIRD WORLD—BLACK PEOPLE FROMHERE TO THE END OF THE UNIVERSE.To finish MS in peace and quiet, U. of C.Prof will maintain house, apt. while you'reaway, now to August, Call Ext. 4038.That cat must have been on some D.MIXED FRUIT311 Grams 11 oz. Net Wt."(now the ears of my ears awake andnow the eyes of my eyes are opened"Bill—have a good time in Europe—the Busi¬ness Office.Dear Todd,I feel that the music must go on,the society stinks. Michael.DAVE BELL—contact your sister when youarrive in Chicago. Love!"The Big Nurse tends to get real put out ifsomething keeps her outfit from running likea smooth, accurate, precision-made machine." Handsome young man, 20, dark glossy hair,sensuous bod would like to hear from maleor female. I will send ail a Polaroid photo ofme taken by me with a time. Box BD,Panorama City, California, 91402.I spy.With my little eye . . .BORED!? LONELY!?—SPLIT. Chicago eats.Teaching YOUR thing? OURS, too. Find outabout our one-to-one approach to Master ofArts in Teaching degree. Elementary orSecondary. Lots of Scholarships. Write MAT,OBERLIN COLLEGE, Oberlin, ohio-44074.ALSO WANTEDCHEAP, WORKING TURNTABLE. Call Todd324-5751, from 9 to 10 p.m. or wheneverSteve isn't around.APARTMENT FOR RENT Shit Twice for Peace,Once for War,Woodward Cafeteria Will count the Votes.WHAT AM I DOING HERECAUSE I MAY HAVE SOMEPLACE ELSETO GO.POLITICALSave Student Life!Elect BOB KOSS!ANNOUNCEMENTCandidates for the FACULTY-STUDENTCOMMITTEE ON CAMPUS STUDENT LIFEmay have mimeo and ditto campaign litera¬ture run off at THE STUDENT ACTIVITIESOFFICE Free.GRAFFITTI"VIETNAM: Who Did We Get in and HowCan We Get Out," a film produced by, journalist-historian David Schoenbrun, willbe shown under auspices of WOMEN FORPEACE on Monday, March 11 at 7:45 p.m.and 8:45 p.m., at St. Paul's Church of the; Redeemer, 4945 S. Dorchester. $1 for Adults,! 50c for Students. Schoenbrun, CBS Paris cor-1 respondent for 15 years, was the only Ameri¬can correspondent to witness the battle ofDienbienphu, and was also present at theGeneva Conference. The film depicts his ex¬periences and is an historical document forworld archives."They're out there.Black boys in white suits up before me tocommit sex acts in the hall and get itmopped up before I can catch them."TO THE MAROON EDITORIAL STAFF—Have a wonderful Vacation!—THE BUSINESS STAFF.ACT WHITE,(To be enacted by 2 people)"The world is in a state of general throck-morton.""I'll f - - - to that."This University is caffein-free.Sho' nuff!The psychedelic elbow has something up hissleeve.We'd take a little lunch with us, and to tothe riots . . . and we'd call each other namesand every once in awhile stab each other.Then we'd all go to some club and get stoned.WANTED: John Dillinger for arson, murder,and attempted bandersnatch.His what? is in the Smithsonian?You don't giggle when a four-star generalgoes by. 6 ROOMS 71st 8, Merrill. Very near Campus THE PAUL BUTTERFIELD BLUES BANDWAS HERE. Summer 1967.0?J=H1!world istoo n luch with us."The world is tilting towards California andyou all gonna slide on in." Grant Rice.Yes, No, now I must dieAnd run around the purple-yellow sky.Maybe there is no cure.VEENA! ?!?!?!?!?!?!?Yes, Virginia, it is true.Veena is four thousand years old.All I can say is OLE.It's quiet and subtle but it's there. SLFitpurrs I say l am of the salt of the earth and hewouldn't know a decent man if he saw himunless a book said so.SKI TAOS7 DAYS SKING &LESSONS & TOWSBusorTrain$169 & Up All Meals, Snow,Transportation,Insurance,Lodging, Sun,Sauna, Etc.March 15-24U. of C. SKI CLUB 721-3603,uoou«jOOOOOOOlJOOOOOOOOf,0000000^00^,000000'^oooooo300000oooooc300000.OOOOOOcOOOOOOOv- ,oo30000000000OOOOOOOO'nnooeTHE PAIN OF BIRTH RAGEDTHROUGH HER BODY ASTHE JOY OF LIFE SPRUNGFORTHMarch 8, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 19/LOW COSTAUTO LOANSPerhaps the most attractive feature of obtaining your new car auto loanat University National Bank is our low, low 4% rate—only $4.00 per hundreddollars of loan per year.There are no hidden extras. No extra "service charges" or "filing fees". No ridiculousdown payment requirements.lust a simple, easy charge of $4.00 per hundred dollars of loan per year.And the service is fast—friendly—convenient.We regularly keep our Personal Banking Department open until 5 P.M. onMondays. Tuesdays. Thursdays and Fridays to serve you better, i And with advance notice.we ll even stay open later if it's more convenient for you.'Isn't this another good reason for doing business with University National7P.S. Creditor Group Life Insurance is available at a cost of 65C per hundred dollarsof loan per year-hut this is up to you. Such coverage isoptional—not mandatory-on our auto loans.P P.S. University National also extends credit on used cars. Just talk to a staff memberin our Personal Banking Department to make the necessary arrangements.UNIVERSITY NATIONAL BANK1354 EAST 55TH STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60615TELEPHONE MU 4 2000strength and service 111Q3 member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Chicago Clearing House Association Federal Reserve SystemTHE CHICAGO MAROON March 8, 1968