The University of Chicago Tuesday, May 3, 1966Vol. 74-No. 51 Statement opposing classranking signed by 232by John BealA statement has been signed by 232 undergraduate menand 20 faculty members opposing the formation of a ma1eclass ranking and refusing the use of their “educatiu.iaiefforts” in such a ranking.Largest demonstration in five yearsStudents protest housingby Mike SeidmanAn estimated 500 UC students gathered under threatening skies in front of the Ad¬ministration Building Friday night to protest University housing conditions. The meetingrepresented the largest student demonstration in at least five years.The demonstrators, organized by a group calling itself Students Interested in ImprovedHousing, demanded improvementin dorm conditions, more Universi¬ty owned and pre-leased apart¬ments. University police protectionfor north Woodlawn, campus busservice to South Shore, and hous¬ing within ten minutes’ walkingdistance of the Quadrangles.The protest was billed as a“sleep-in”, and a number of stu¬dents came equipped with sleepingbags and blankets. But a heavydownpour at about 1:00 am andnon-watcr-proof tent curtailed thedemonstration pre maturely.BEFORE THE RAIN CAME,however, the crowd heard a num¬ber of student leaders and facultymembers sharply criticize the Uni¬versity’s housing policy, and sever¬al administration officials, includ¬ing dean of students Warner A.Wick, call for a more sympatheticattitude towards U'C's financial dif- Students protesting housing conditions in front of the administra-ficulties. tion building Friday night.Shortly after the meeting began, - . —a red flag was raised on the flag- ... . . ... ,pole overlooking the demonstra- grants, the same money that is the The University is going throughtors. Flapping in the stiff wind, it backbone of our academic pro- a very difficult period, Wick con-remained hoisetd throughout much gram. Thus, housing is in direct the battle after a very serious cn-of the meeting. Finally, it was par- eluded. “We’re on the way to win sis.”tially lowered, raised again inwhat appeared to be a tug-of-war,and then completely lowered.Wick, who was booed and heavi¬ly heckled throughout his speech,stated that “whether you know itor not, the University does have ahousing program, and it’s a com¬prehensive one. And believe it ornot, the seven points you have onyour poster fit almost entirely intothe program we now have.”He promised the building of lowcost apartments, pre-arrangedleases for incoming students, theconversion of more townhouses inthe neighborhood, improved dormi¬tory conditions, and an effort toget more students within ten-min¬utes walking distance of the cam¬pus.WICK ALSO REVEALED thatthe cost of the planned studenthousing will come to about $45 mil¬lion. “That is a staggering figure,”he stated. “Although we agree withall your objectives, the phasing ofit will depend on how fund raisingdevelops.“The difficulty with money forhousing,” he continued, “is that itusually comes from unrestrictedDeadline for Prizeentries is extendedThe final date for submission ofmanuscripts for the Lowrey Memo¬rial Prize has been extended toFriday, May 6.Two prizes of $25 each will beawarded for the best poetry andthe best prose submitted by stu¬dents in the College. Entries willbe judged by a committee of stu¬dents from Shorey house.The av/ard established as an an¬nual event to stimulate originalprose and poetry from undergrad¬uate students is in memory of thelate Perrin H. Lowrey, associateprofessor of English and Collegehumanities, who died last summerin an automobile accident.All entries must be submitted toGates-Blake 132, the office of thedean of the College, before 5 pmFriday. The winner of the prizewill be announced on Monday, May23, by the Lowrey Prize commit¬tee.Additional Information can beobtained from Jack Kolb, 1914Pierce. competition with our most seriousacademic needs. Earlier, Wick had excited the vo-(Continued on page three) The statment, sponsored by Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society(SDS), is designed to inhibit Uni¬versity cooperation with the Selec¬tive Service system in regard towhat the statement calls “the re¬quirements of the war situation.”A meeting will be held Wednesdayat 7:30 pm in Ida Noyes hall for allwho have signed the statement orwish to do so to decide what furth¬er action should be taken with it.THIRTY graduate students havealso signed the petition and morethan 200 women have signed a sup¬port petition. According to StephenKindred, an initiator of the peti¬tion, the majority of the signa¬tories are not connected with SDSin any way.Kindred stated, “We had not ex¬pected this response, and any ac¬tion from now on will have to betaken by all of the signers.”He said that at the Wednesdaymeeting SDS will speak throughone spokesman so that they willnot monopolize the debate. “Wedon’t want to run the meeting,” hedeclared.Speaking of the purpose of thestatement, Kindred declared, “Weare worried. The administrationshould be held responsible for itsactions, but these people cannot betrusted.”“It is quite clear that Mr. Wickhas nothing to say except “no,” hecontinued, “and his statements arepure sophistry and contradictory.They are going to rank unless wedo something, and I am really hop¬ing that the meeting Wednesdaywill produce some action.”DEAN OF students, WarnerWick, commenting on the state-Satter new Maroon editorNews editor David A. Satter was elected Maroon editor-in-chief for 1966-67 at the staffelection Friday.Satter, a seven-quarter Maroon veteran, joined the staff in the fall of 1964 under theneditor, Robert F. Levey. He was appointed news editor in the spring of 1965 and has ser¬ved in that capacity for the last -four quarters. Satter also was theoriginator of the highly successfulChicago Maroon Magazino whichfirst appeared at the end of lastquarter.IN A TALK following his elec¬tion, Satter told the Maroon staffthat he looked forward to a year ofmajor change for the Maroon. Sat¬ter said that under any circum¬stances next year’s Maroon will begreatly expanded both in terms ofcoverage and in terms of numberof pages.Satter said he has confidencethat the Maroon can expand andpointed to the fact that for the firsttime in several years there will bemany staff members who will bereturning to work on the Maroonnext year. This means, he said,that the Maroon will have six orseven experienced editors handlingdeadlines, rather than the two orthree that have characterized pastyears.Satter also hopes to enlarge theMaroon staff by recruiting bothnew and returning students nextyear. In years past, he comment¬ed, the staff has dwindled as theacademic year progressed, result- kind of work the Maroon does moreinteresting. “I want to see theMaroon involved in real issues,” hesaid.“YOU CAN'T EXPECT studentsto invest the time involved inworking on the Maroon, unless thethings the Maroon is doing are vi¬tal and exciting,” Satter said. “Iwant next year’s Maroon staff totake advantage of the freedom in¬volved in student journalism at UCand go out and dig for stories thathave more than simply local signifi¬cance.”Satter told the staff that he’d liketo see the Maroon become a forumwhere questions of concern to thecommunity can be discussed andviewpoints can be articulated. “Ifwe can make the Maroon a dy¬namic institution on campus, Ithink our recruitment problem willbe solved,” he added.SATTER NOTED that technicalchanges for next year may includenew printing and engraving tech¬niques, a new make up and a gen¬eral reorganization. Satter saidthat there also is a possibility theMaroon will publish more frequent¬ly next year. Satter said that theMaroon Magazine and the Chicago, Literary Review will be main-Editor elect David A. Satter announced the appointment twined as regular Maroon features.Satter is currently a second yearstudent majoring in the socialsciences. He is the son of the lateMark and Mrs. Clarice Satter ofChicago.David A. Sattering in a relatively small core ofworkers being left to carry theball. Satter hopes he can reversethis trend by allowing staff mem¬bers to work in areas of primaryinterest to them and by making theGumpsrt appointed managing editorof assistant news editor, David E. Gumpert as Maroon man¬aging editor for next year at the Friday staff meeting.Satter called the post of managing editor, “the most im¬portant appointment I have to - - " ~make,” and said,” I think Gum-pert is, in terms of experience,dedication, and ability the personbest qualified for the job”.Gumpert, in accepting the ap¬pointment, said that he hoped towork closely with Satter in imple¬menting new ideas for the Maroon.Gumpert joined the Maroon staffduring the summer of 1965 aftertransferring to UC from the Uni¬ versity of Illinois at Champaign •Urbana. While at Illinois, Gumpertworked on the staff of the Daily II-lini. He was appointed Maroon as¬sistant news editor in December,1965.Gumpert Is currently a secondyear student in the College major¬ing in psychology. He is the son ofMr. and Mrs. Ludwig Gir t ofLincolnwood, Illinois. See page six for an excitingaccount of the Maroon post-election softball game. n.ent and the University’s draftpolicy, said, “I have been preparedto carry out the long standing poli¬cy of the University (which was fol¬lowed during the Korean War arithereafter), and when the properauthorities change the policy of theUniversity I will, of course, followit.”The full statement signed by themale students and faculty reads:“Since the formation of a classrank among males constitutes asignificant institutional st:p for¬ward in cooperation with the re¬quirements of the war situation,ar.d since it would require the useof my grades although I conscien¬tiously oppose such use, I stroiglyurge that such a rank not beformed and, in any case, refuse tehave the product of my educationalefforts incorporated into such adevice.”Senator Clark callsemotional conflictcrucial in the city“The most serious problemin urban affairs in the UnitedStates today is neither finan¬cial, political, nor environment¬al—it is psychological,” assertedSenator Joseph S. Clark of Penn¬sylvania. “We are still torn be¬tween our romantic dreams ofrural utopia and the crying needsof urban lift.”The democrat, a leading figurein urban affairs in the Senate andformer reform mayor of Philadel¬phia, spoke yesterday on “The newurbanism” in a lecture sponsoredby the center for urban studies.CLARK VIEWED America’s bas¬ic problem to be the fact that“we, as a nation, have gone off tolive in the wicked city and we’restill ashamed to write home andadmit that we like it.”Idyllic idealThe nation possesses, he contin¬ued, “a fundamental American biasagainst urban life, as somehowless pure, virtuous and ennoblingthan life on the farm.” He citedthe “nostalgic yearnings of the citydweller” for a return to the morewholesome rural life.On the other hand, he stated thatAmerican discussion about the(Continued on page four)Sen. Joseph S. Clark, demo¬crat of Pennsylvania and amember of the Senate foreignrelations committee, gave thisviews to the Maroon on thewar in Vietnam. He remarkedthat although there was “noeasy answer" to the present sit¬uation, he was basically in ac¬cord with the advice given byGeneral Gavin and AmbassadorKennan: “stay where we arear.d do the best with what wehave."He expressed concern overthe casualties incurred in “acause which is not for Americansecurity." He warned that con¬tinuation of escalation mightbring a serious over-all commit¬ment of the Ho Chi Minh gov¬ernment, the increasing involve¬ment of the Soviet Union, andpossible confrontation with Chi¬na.In his opinion, the Senateforeign relations committeehearings served the purpose ofproviding a forum for discussionof the “fundamental problems"of the nation.Students object to theselective service examTO THE EDITOR:We are not taking the SelectiveService Draft Deferment Examina¬tion. Each of us has concernedhimself with the examination in itsvarious aspects and decided that,for one or more of the followingreasons, he cannot participate inthat examination:(1) The examination divides stu¬dents by forcing them to competefor continued protection from serv¬ice in the war.(2) This test, an aptitude test,discriminates against students oflower socio-economic backgrounds.(3) Aptitude, as measured bythis type of test, is in any case aninappropriate criterion for studentdeferment.(4) Student deferment is itselfdiscriminatory; this test will beused to determine deferments.(5) The test will be used to draftmen for the objectionable war inVietnam.(6) The examination is part of apolicy of military conscription.(7) T a k i n g the examinationwould involve recognition of waras a legitimate human activity.Not all of us agree with each ofthese reasons. However, since it ispossible to withdraw from the ex¬amination even after registration,we encourage students to considerthese points before deciding to takethe draft examination, and we sup¬port those men who for reasons ofconscience must refuse to take thattest. We invite those men to meetwith us to discuss further actionthis Thursday night in the Hitch¬cock Lounge at 10:00 pm.ERNIE DORNFELDDONALD KASSROBERT FORMANGARY BENENSONGARY BENENSONSTANLEY TEPLICKBRENT KRAMERH. DAVID ALLEYJEFFREY FALKRONALD TABORERIC JOSEPHNaylor's account of SGmeeting "schizophrenic"TO THE EDITOR:If Mr. Naylor is intent on con¬tinuing his friends’ campaignagainst Student Government by be¬ginning the year with a schizo¬phrenic account of his first meet¬ing, it would be very much appre¬ciated if someone could invest anyfuture diatribes with at least amodicum of truth. For example,the statement that “we’ve alwaysignored that part of the by-laws,”attributed to me by Mr. Naylor,was in fact made not by me. In¬ stead, a statement vaguely similarto that one was made by DannyBoggs, who was unanimously re¬elected chairman of the election andrules committee with the supportof Mr. Naylor’s vote. It is not real¬ly my place to correct the rest ofMr. Naylor’s fabrications, but itwould be nice if he didn’t distortand manufacture facts to suit hispolitical purposes.JERRY HYMANSG REPRESENTATIVEP.S. Dues the Maroon have toprint every crack-pot letter it gets?Editor s note: Yes.Call dormitory feesincrease "unbelievable"TO THE EDITOR:The members of Tufts Housewould like to voice our most vigor¬ous protests against next year’srise in dormitory fees. We are al-r^rdy paying high prices to live indormitories that are often noisyand cramped, and the food we eatis sometimes really very bad. Toraise the prices even higher wouldimply that something has pushedthe prices up. We would like toknow what, if anything, it is.For the sort of money we will bepaying next year, it is certainlypossible to provide much betterliving conditions. There are privatedorms at many universities thatstand as witnesses to Chicago’s ex¬pensive management. For exam¬ple, the new private dorm atChampaign which will open nextfall will have plush carpeting,large single rooms, and food whichwill be sold only if it is good to eat.Prices will start at $1,250, whichincludes profits for the enterprise.Against that, our paying $1,20^, forfacilities such as Pierce Towerdoubles and food such as is served,is unbelievable.This money can’t all be neces¬sary for labor, materials, andoverhead. We request that theHousing Office publish a detailedbudget, so that we can see whereall of that $1,200 will be going. Thelime for saying, “We’re sorry, butyou’ll just have to put up with it,”is gone. If the University actuallydoes have some legitimate reasonfor charging us so much for so lit¬tle, we wrould most certainly like toknow' about it.TOM ALLENTUFTS HOUSE SECRETARYWhy is UC apathetic andinterested queries WeissTO THE EDITOR:Mr. Wolfson’s eloquent plea for aparticipatory community is verywell pointed by the Maroon's inclu¬sion of Tho Chicago Literary Review (Vol. 3, No. 5), another issiyJof book reviews, often by studer’sHEY MANNYGET THISA NEW MUSICALpresented byBLACKFRIARSMay 6-78:30 P.M.Tickets $2.00 - $1.50Students $.50 DiscountMoil Orders Tick*)* Available April 18th5706 Unhrartfty Av*. AM 3-0800 X-3711 in the departments of those whow'rote he books. Such a method ofchoosing reviewers insures that thereviews will read like those in theNew Yo.-k Times; it is not surpris¬ing that »*pe of your reviewers tookthe Time* review as his point ofdeparture. Surely by Vol. 3, No. 5it it time to raise the Review'sgoals to include criticism of ahigher level and perhaps evensome stories and poems. Or is thisreally too mu^h to expect from ourcommunity?Mr. Wolfs m is correct aboutBlackfriars $nd many other activi¬ties on this (and other campuses).They depend on the dedication ofone or a few and are appreciatedoften by only a few. The rare ac¬tivity is joined by the mass fromthe C-shop. Most activities arebarely kept alive, if somewhat dor¬mant, through generations of aver¬age talent and dedication waitingfor Wolfson, a Mike Nichols, oreven a Charles Percy. On a fewother campuses such types occurmore frequently. To expect muchmore of our campus is unrealistic:we would need the highly intelli¬gent academic leisure class that isbeing selected eut of our stock byadmissions requirements and nev¬er was present in numbers here.These are the people who edit andwrite the newspapers, plan thehappenings, write stories andplays, and act. The student whoprepares himself for graduateschool and works for grades sel¬dom will risk his future for thepresent and seldom has the sophis¬tication and imagination to engagein doing something himself.But having explained all thatneeds explaining—how can we ac¬count for the vitality and quality ofmusical life on the campus, strongnow for six years? An excellent or¬chestra, Collegium and Musical So¬ciety, and even now a chamber or¬chestra organized and conductedby a student with an active mem¬bership have all found a consis¬tently large and appreciative au¬dience. We must explain why ourcommunity is indifferent to somethings and not to others ratherthan why it fails at all things.While I deplore the frustration ofMr. Wolfson and the many otherswho struggle and lose, I will waitfor the explanation that accountsfor all the cases.ROGER WEISSASSISTANT PROFESSORSOCIAL SCIENCES DIVISIONAND THE COLLEGEMigrant's experimentsare frightening buf validTO THE EDITOR:At a recent talk by Harvard so¬cial psychologist S. Milgram, theresearcher discussed his experi¬ments on obedience to authority.This survey produced the frighten¬ing finding that average individ¬uals, instructed to perform an ac¬tion which they knew was inflictingharm on another, would follow theinstructions to the end.A still more frightening aspect ofthis talk was the reaction of mem¬bers of the audience, particularlyof several faculty members. Thesepeople voiced the bitter opinionthat Milgram’s experiment was“unethical” in regard to his manip¬ulation of the subjects of the ex¬periments. In truth, however theymay clothe their objections in thejargon of their trades or in moral¬izing homilies, the main objectionwas to the horrifying findings.These supposedly enlightened andopen-minded people were afraid toaccept the fact that people likethemselves—professionals as wellas laborers, Jews, Catholics, andProtestants alike—would blindlyfollow the wishes of their instruc¬tors.Those who doubt my attestionsof the validity of Milgram’s workshould refer to the account of it inthe Soc II syllabus. Milgram’s pre¬sentation of his findings evincedboth his personal eompassion andprofessional dedication. He, asmuch or more than anyone, washorror-stricken at his own findings.That this man should meet withthe hostility and reprehension of anaudience pathetically afraid to “think the unthinkable” deserves,along with the findings of his ex¬perimentation, the thoughtful con¬sideration of us all.ELLIE KAPLAN(CP reproduces musicof the mechanized worldTO THE EDITOR:Blam . . . zorch, etc. I imagineCCP reviewer Chikofsky chosethese words to write down on pa¬per his impression of some sec¬tions of the program he heard. Iwould like to see his written inter¬pretation of the sounds of down¬town Chicago at rush hour. RushStreet in the evening, the Garymills at night. We might very wellsee some similarity.He says that Johnston seems tohave lost his touch with reality.What can be more real than thesounds of our own time—the un¬rhythmic cacophony of urbanlife, the buzz of active living or thegrunts and roars of the mechan¬ized world?Stop and listen to the music ofthe city, and then go hear it ab¬stracted and painted in brilliantcolors by composers familiar withthe sounds in our modern lives. Itmakes for a stimulating evening.JOHN T. ROBERTS, INSTRUCTOR,DEPARTMENT OF LINGUISTICSRHYTHM A BLUESLivernash is concernedover SG's centralizationTO THE EDITOR:This is the fourth Student Gov¬ernment Assembly I have servedin, and I share your concern aboutthe danger of greater centraliza¬tion. During my terms as treasur¬er of SG, I noticed a number ofabuses of due process by those inpower. To publicize some of thesewould only serve to embarrassthose responsible; but there areother mistakes which, if notbrought to light are likely to be re¬peated. Since I wasn’t permitted togive a treasurer’s report at the SGmeeting, I feel they must be madepublic.1. International charter flightsare non-profit; any excess collect¬ed is to be refunded pro rata. How¬ever, we ask the participants towaive their refunds to the govern¬ment. Naturally we wish to maxi¬mize donations, but should the pas¬sengers be coerced and deceived inorder to increase giving? A yearago the solicitation was containedin the letter requesting full pay¬ment, which included the sentence“It will be necessary for you to re¬turn the waiver and your final pay¬ment before April 19th in order toinsure your seat on the flight.”Moreover the information bulletin Ihad mimeographed (giving finan¬cial details I felt were required bygovernmental regulation) was de¬stroyed, and another preparedwhich understated our adminstra-tive costs and omitted our reservefor unsold seats, making it impos¬sible to estimate the size of the do¬nation.Soon the 1966 passengers will beasked to waive their right to a re¬fund: how will this request beworded?2. In the past, Student Govern¬ment has attempted, with varying success, to have travel agents re¬ceiving commissions on SG flightsto provide services which benefitthe government rather than theflight participants. This year lhave tried to make arrangementswhich, although they may be indi¬rectly of benefit to SG as an organ¬ization, are primarily passengerservices, and which have been ap¬proved by the UC office of legalcounsel. While these arraagementsappear to be lawful, they are notabove criticism (would other serv¬ices be more valuable?), and soSG has never been willing to sub¬mit them to public scrutiny.A letter was recently sent to anairline designating a travel agencyto receive a commission withoutany discussion in committee as towhat the agent is to do to earn thiscommission. Will his function bedetermined once again by secretnegotiations by the new SG offi¬cers? Or has it already been deter¬mined by agreement with the old?3.In March one of eur two full¬time secretaries resigned, and areplacement was hired withoutconsultation of the executive coun¬sel, CORSO, or the student activi¬ties office. The by-laws state thatexpenditures over $10 must be ap¬proved by the exec, and thoseover $50 must be approved by theAssembly. This provision is usuallyignored, but here the magnitude ofthe violation is too great to beoverlooked. Also it was discour¬teous to the new government tocommit it to an expenditure whichit could not revoke (since the jobwas represented as permanent).Finally, the action reflected poorfinancial judgment: the airlines’youth fare, and our inability to se¬cure equipment for one projectedinternational flight, have reducedour administrative revenue byabout $3000. One wonders whetherwe can afford to continue spendingas though nothing had happened.Last week I learned that our newsecretary is resigning. Will the in¬coming president replace her inthe same routine fashion?It was argued last Wednesdaythat certain exec seats should beabolished because the last incum¬bents never did anything. This istrue, but it’s equally true of a ma¬jority of seats being retained, andso the problem goes deeper thanthe degree of interest in the variousSG activities. The ruling groupcreated a climate in which outsid¬ers could not exercise independ¬ence and responsibility (to max¬imize its own power), and hencelittle of the creative potential wasever realized. In the case of stu¬dent services (the area must sub¬ject to abuse because of the moneyinvolved), the duly constitutedcommittee could function effective¬ly if it were given the authoritynow held by the charter flightcommittee; but evidently discus¬sion by a committee of five (thepresident, the treasurer, the stu-dont services chairman, the flightDirector, and an ex-Vice-Presi¬dent) was too much, since the stu¬dent services area will cow be thepersonal responsibility of the vice-president. If this is the best wocan do, we don’t deserve to exist.STEVE LIVERNASHKEYPUNCHING• 500 CARDS OR MORE •• FAST TURN AROUND •FOR ESTIMATE CALLSHEILA BLIXT 332-4708R. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.33 NORTH USAILI STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS <0603COMPUTH APPLICATION CONSULTANTSCHICAOO MAROON • Mm3, 1*6*WMWMk JBBHlMBMk mmmm ^ Ik iJiBiu *1 M. ■ * jv tra■tap • . iStudents protest UC housing policy in demostration7 Friday(Continued from page one)cal disapproval of his audience bycalling the demonstration “thegreatest social event of the year.”“One of the things that bugs meabout my job,” he stated, “is thatI don’t have the freedom to hissthe administration.”Also representing the adminis¬tration was James Redfield, asso¬ciate dean of the College who in aone-sentence speech stated that hehad read the student demands,that he “understood that they al¬ready constituted administrationpolicy,” and that he “would like tothank the students for their sup¬port of that policy.”LATER, PETER RABINOWITZ,a first-year graduate student whoacted as master of ceremonies, in¬troduced James Newman, assistantdean of students. Newman statedthat he was glad that so many stu¬dents were interested in housingconditions and that the Universi¬ty’s attitude toward the problemhad changed.“It is only very recently,” hesaid, “that students have wantedthe University to take an interestin people outside the dormitorysystem, and the University hasdone so.“If you look at Pierce Tower,New Dorms, and the new residencehalls planned,” Newman contin¬ued, “you will see a tremendousimprovement in the quality of ourhousing plans. It takes more mon¬ey to do the kinds of things wewant to do. It may take time to getto the position we want to be in.But we’re going to do it. This is acommunity problem and I hope wewill procede in that spirit.”COUNTERING ADMINISTRA¬TION PLEAS for understandingwere a number of student speakerswho charged the administrationwith poor planning and lack of con¬cern.David Rosenberg head of the SGhousing committee began themeeting by commenting that “It isbetter to build than to destroy.It is also better to praise than toblame,” he said, “but few areblameless — particularly in the ad¬ministration.”He then went on to charge that the administration planned to ex¬pand the under graduate studentbody to 10,000 while providingroom for only 100 more students atGeorge Williams and 30 more intownhouses. “Even a student inMath 101 can figure out that thatwon’t work,” he said.As Rosenberg spoke, the crowdof students interspersed with facul¬ty members punctuated his speechwith cries of “give 'em hell” and“that ain’t just, brother.” Studentscarried placards reading “Aplague on all your houses,” “Endslums at UC,” and “I took twodesserts and got reclassified.”Following Rosenberg, Allen BloomSG secretary charged the Universi¬ty with building “concrete waste¬lands” and “cinderblock wilder¬ nesses,” and former SG presidentBernie Grofman stated “this Uni¬versity has been incredibly stupid—incredibly stupid for somethinglike fifteen years.”Among others to speak, PeterNasouraey recalled that over sixtyyears ago Thorstein Veblin hadpitched tent on the midway.“PERHAPS NEXT YEAR every¬one could withhold $100 from theirtuition,” Nagourney suggested. “Ifwe gave the money to Mayor Da¬ley, he would be influenced by thissmall sum to rewrite the zoninglaws and rezone and urban renewBeadle’s and Levi’s houses. If thisdoesn’t work, the next year wecould withhold all of our tuitionand contact President Johnson.”Later Richard Flacks, assistant professor of sociology, charged theUniversity with crushing studentmovements for house government,and William McGrath, assistantprofessor of history, read an origi¬nal poem on the housing crisis.But the speaker who received byfar the most sustained applausewas Gerhard Meyer professor ofeconomics. Speaking at the end ofthe meeting to the then rapidlythinning crowd, he stated, “Youknow that I am with you in yourconcern."BUT YOU SHOULD not talk ofthey and us,” he added. “The ad¬ministration is part of the Univer¬sity and we are part of the Univer¬sity. Errors have been made, buterrors are not the same thing asplots.Sociable social protest characterizes Friday's demonstrationby Slade LanderThe sleep-in on the quadrangleslast Friday night protesting stu¬dent housing was a cross betweena social protest and a social event.The cause was serious, yet the at¬titude was almost festive.Refreshments were sold under atent; a second-year College studentwandered through the crowd sell¬ing beer; the speeches were madewith humorous overtones; and itwas not until the end of dean ofstudents Warner Wick’s speechthat heckling became bitter.OF THE ESTIMATED 500 peopleat the rally, only three were hardyenough to endure the deluge andspend the entire night on the quad¬rangles.Approximately ten spent thenight in the cloisters by Bond Chap¬el. Those who sought refuge inKent Hall were driven out by cam¬pus police. The rest were drivenoff by the rain which began at 1:30am.Even the raising of the red flagof revolution on the campus flag¬pole by James Prier lacked radicalconviction. “It seemed like a goodthing to do,” said Prier.The protestors were comprisedof a cross section of faculty grad¬uate students, and undergraduates, all concerned with the housingconditions.“I’m in favor of oxygen, hygene,and all the right things,” said pro¬fessor of philosophy WilliamO’Meara, one of the faculty pres¬ent.THERE WAS a disproportionatenumber of first-year College girls.Because of this, the lack of protestspirit was blamed by the studentson the administration’s cancellingof woman’s hours for the night.The University was deliberatelyundermining the spirit of the pro¬test through this action, most ofthe protestors felt. “This protestshould be illegal,” said Steve Mor¬as, a first-year student in the Col¬lege.Peter Rabinowitz, spokesman forStudents Interested in ImprovedHousing (SIIH), took a more mod¬erate view. The suspension of girlshours showed that the Universityhas learned not to uselessly opposedemonstrations, Rabinowitz said.“It is very significant that all girlsare signing out to the flagpole,” headded.Wick merely commented that thehours were suspended “just to befriendly. It’s a tradition on cam¬pus.” Assistant dean of studentsJames Newman said it was com¬ mon to suspend hours for “commu¬nity affairs.”THE ATTITUDE of all of theprotestors concerning housing wasone of complete indignation. How¬ever, most of the students realizedthat the Administration was tryingto carrying through most of the de¬mands made by SIIH.They felt that it was the board oftrustees, by being reluctant to givemoney to student housing, that wasthe cause of the University’s fail¬ure to respond to the presenthousing crisis.Moras of Pierce Tower and Ca¬thy Sutter of New Dorms, bothfirst-year students in the College,spent the entire night on the quad¬rangles, sleeping in a pup tent.An unidentified boy spent the nightclose to their tent, sleeping in asleeping bag.“I enjoyed it much more thansleeping in Pierce,” Moras com¬mented. Unable to find housing ineither Hyde Park or Woodlawn,Moras is currently deliberatingbetween an apartment in SouthShore or pitching his tent in theQuadrangles.“I like to sleep in the quadran¬gles,” he said. “There would bemapy disadvantages to livingthere, but it would be close tocampus.” “It is quite clear from Mr.Wick's remarks,” Meyer contin¬ued, “that there are priorities andthat housing seems to fall belowsome other priorities. We mightargue that housing is complemen¬tary, to these other priorities. Wewill not get the quality of studentswe want if housing is not im¬proved.”University Theatrepresentsm i VIE V ] EA/*"1. \s ^ : Su 1 uR ] R.E 1 EinMANDEL HALLMAY 13th.~4th & 15thMATINEE: 14thx~x-x~x~x~x-x~x-x-x~x*First UT Shakespearein FOUR YEARS!!!•m;m;^mX~X~:-X"X"Xm;"Directed by VeeVeeVJAMES O'REILLYDesigned byVIRGIL BURNETTand FriendsTICKETS: :~x~x*Reynolds Club Deskimm>»•1■i :Iff Clark advises society to come to terms with city emotionally(Continued from page one)quality of life is increasingly in ref¬erence to “life as it is lived in themetropolitan area. In a nation al¬ready predominantly urban, andbecoming more so with every pass¬ing census, it could not long re¬ main otherwise. The grip of thepast is still firm in conservativecircles, particularly legislatures.”He saw three trends evidenced inAmerican urbanism. “First,metropolitan areas are expandingacross city, county, and state lines; second, local budgets, taxrates, and bonded debt are shoot¬ing steadily skyward; third, de¬spite these increases, the level ofpublic services is far from satis¬factory, and in many cases is dan¬gerously deteriorating.When school’s out,get in on a good deal.TWA 50/50 Club.TWA [5W CLUB Present this application to any TWA office. Or rrtail to:P. 0. Box 700, Times Square Station, New York, N. Y. 10036Mr.Mrs.1. Miss-3. Home Address. . City_ .2. Date of Birth.State .Zip Code.4. School or Occupation. .Class of-5. PROOF OF AGE Check type of proof submitted with this application. Send photostat, not original, with mailedapplication. □ Birth Certificate □ Driver’s License □ Draft Card □ School Record □ PassportOther (specify).6. Color of hair- .7. Color of eyes8. Enclose $3.00: □ Check □ Money Order (Not refundable. DO NOT MAIL CASH.)Make check or Money Order payable to Trans World Airlines, Inc.9. Signature—__— . ..TWA 60/60 Club i* not availmblo on November 23, November 27, December 16 through 24, 1868, end January 2 through 4, 1867.Vi off for travel in the USA! Going home or just going places, you can get50% off the regular Jet Coach fare in the U.S. when you fly TWA. Aslong as you’re under 22, you’re on-most any day of the year except a fewholiday peak-travel periods. Seats are on a stand-by basis-but serviceincludes everything: meals, movies and music, depending on the flight.Here’s all you do: fill out the application, prove your age, pay $3 for anID card. Call your nearest TWA office-and we’ll make it easy.We’re your kind of airline. MANY BILLICHS of t’ollarsmust come from somewhere to liftthe level of public services up towhere it ought to be.”The senator noted the inaction ofour affluent society in dealing withthe modern shame of the cities.The obsolete revenue structure oflocal government as well as its or¬ganization are in part responsiblefor urban conditions, he said. sary to finance services which canbest be administered at the stateor local level.“But one thing is clear: to pre¬vent vested-interest controlled citycouncils and state legislaturesfrom squandering federal fundsthere must be federally imposedstandards as to how the federalgrant is to be spent.”Economic causesHe particularly cited the “lackof adequate tax resources” in localgovernment. He explained that thisproblem arises from the propertytax which is today, as for 200years, the basic revenue source oflocal governments. Yet unlike pasttimes, today’s property tax favorsthe rich, because their accumulat¬ed wealth is no longer invested pri¬marily in real estate. Thus, he be¬lieves that the middle-income andlower-income groups, who mayhave all their wealth in mortgagedhomes, do, in effect, carry the bur¬den of local taxation.The situation on the state level issimilar, he added, as here the gov¬ernments rely on sales and excisetaxes.IN CONTRAST, he looked to thefederal tax system in which thecorporate and individual incometaxes draw upon the main earningswherever they occur in the econo¬my.Thus, he concluded a majorchange should be instituted: “Thefederal tax system, because of itsinherently superior capacity forraising revenue equitably and effi¬ciently, should be used to an in¬creasing degree to return to stateand local governments sums neees- Vietnam vs. Great SocietyClark pointed to the federal pro¬grams pending before Congress aspossible remedies to the presentsituation, lie cited the teacherscorps proposal, rent supplementand mass transit programs, andthe water and air pollution bills assteps toward changing the urbanscene. He added, however, “at themoment it seems unlikely that weshall be able to build much onthese beginnings because of the in¬creasing costs of the war in Viet¬nam. While I believe that we canhave both guns and butter so longas the level of escalation is holddown, which is not happening, anexpanding war will cut deeper anddeeper into the Great Society pro¬grams.”THE SENATOR admonishes so¬ciety to develop “a new mystiquebased on our coming to terms withthe city emotionally as well asphysically.” Besides the need toestablish “a new layer of govern¬ment coterminus with the metropol¬itan area” Americans muit real¬ize the need for admitting to them¬selves that they really like life inmegalopolis.”“Instead of looking backwardand finding our dream in the past,I propose that we look forward andfind it in the future. For lack of abetter phrase, I would call it ‘thenew urbanism’.”Calendar of Events. ?Tuesday, May 3SEMINAR: "Differential decline of rattestis interstitial cells and seminiferoustubules following hypophysectomy,”William Marovitz, University of Califor¬nia, Anatomy building, room 101, 4 30pm.FILM: "Casablanca,” with HumphreyBogart, Doc films, Soc Sci 122, 7:15and 9:15 pm.RADIO PROGRAM: one hour programon the great sleep-in, WUCB, 7 pm.MEETING: All sociology majors and faculty for general discussion, IdaNoyes hall, 7:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: International house,8 pm.LECTURE—DEMONSTRATION: 1 ’Cal¬culation and imagination in electronicmusic,” Henri Pousseur, composer andmusicia! theorist, Breaied hail, 8 pm.BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroComplete Repo inAnd ServiceNr All Popular ImportsMidway 3-45016052 So. Cottage Grove Wednesday, May 4CARILLON RECITAL: Daniel RobbinsUniversity carillonneur, Rockefellerchapel, 5 pm.FILM: Du sang de la volupte de lamort,” by Gregory Markopoulos, SocSci 122 7 and 9 pm.LECTURE: "The breakdown of com¬munication,” Robert Anderson, presi¬dent of the Chicago humanist associa¬tion. 1174 E 57th. 7:30 pm.LECTURE: "What is participatory de¬mocracy?” Richard Flacks, assistantprofessor of sociology, Thompson housePierce Tower, 7:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: Country dance socie¬ty, Ida Noyes hall, 8 pm.STUDENT READING: Poetry anddancing, interfaith committee, Swiftcoffee shop, 8 pm.COFFEE HOUR: Blackstone hall, 5748Blackstone Avenue, 9 to 11 pm.Thursday, May 5TRACK MEET: UC v Lake Forest.Stagg field, 4:30 pm.FILMS: "Un chant d'amour,” by Gen¬et, “Blow job,” by Warhol, doc films,Soc Sci 122 7 and 9 p.m.FOLK DANCING: Hillel house, instruc¬tion 7, general dancing 9 pm.ORCHESTRA HALLEnterprise ProductionspresentsBIGGEST SPRING BLUES CONCERTFRIDAY, MAY 6th AT 8:30 PMCHICAGO: FACES OF THE BLUESJunior Wells Blues Band Sallie Martin Gospel SingersSleepy John Estes Big Joe WilliamsArt Hodes Irwin HeiferTickets: $5 $4 $3 $2 Orchestra Hall Box OfficeMeil Orders: Enterprise Productions50 E. Chicago Avo. 337*4400Student Tickets are available at reduced rates atEnterprise Productions, 50 E. Chicago Ave. andToad Hall, 1444 E. 57th Street-\4' • CHICAGO MAROON • Mey 3, 1944GadflyFirst IHC meeting raises serious questionsThe minutes of the first two meetings of the newly-formed Inter-House Council (IHC) school garbage through peaceful a fulll realization of the organiza-give rise to serious questions which must be answered in terms of the purpose of the IHC, innocuous and timidly helpful tions potential, nor is it due merelyif the organization is to fulfill its potential. Those of us in the dormitory system expected suggestions. They are pedestrian, to the fact that the first two meet*that this body would engage in certain primary activities, whereas its attention in fact lias unimaginative and insipid. Theybeen drawn away to what we con¬sider are trivial side-issues.It was, we are sure, the expecta¬tion that any body which wouldrequest that representatives fromevery house be sent to it wouldseek to solve those problems whichthos houses faced in common. Thatthe biggest dormitoryare the lack of privacy heightenedbv unimaginative design, the lackof single rooms, the high and ris¬ing costs and the general quality ofboth the living accomodations andthe food, is not seriously ques¬tioned by any objective observer.These conditions approach the le¬vel of “intolerable” and it was thehope of many that the IHC wouldpress forcefully for some realisticalternatives. Such demands as thefollowing were to be hoped for:A hard-hitting examination witha demand for justification to deter¬mine why it will be necessary forroom and board rates to be sub¬stantially raised next year. A de¬mand, not a request, that Resi¬dence Halls and Commons (RHand C) be reorganized from top tobottom by the office of the Vice-President for Administration. Theinefficiency, waste and incompe¬tence which characterises this RHand C “ultimate in bureaucracy”has never been completely docu¬mented due to the University’s pol¬icy of keeping RH and C’s recordsclosed under almost all circum¬stances. Numerous examples, how¬ever, are well known to any stu¬dent who has remained in thedorms beyond a few years. Natur¬ally, as a result of these condi¬tions, such students (spendingmore th-n t" o in P'e Univer¬ sity’s housing system) are few innumber.THIS BRINGS UP the secondgreat purpose which, it appears tous, could be fulfilled by the body,and which we might well have ex¬pected it to be eager to fulfull.Considering the current seriousproblems shortage of acceptable housing fa¬cilities available to the studentbody, there are two clear lines ofattack: improve the existingdormitories and build more ofthem; or build and renovate moreapartments in the area for studentoccupancy.There is certainly no reason whythese two avenues of approachcould not both be tried. It would,again, have been expected thatsuch possibilities would find theirnatural vehicle of expression in theIHC, because, representing as itdoes students currently faced withthis problem (as opposed to SG,much of whose representatives livein apartments and represent otherapartment-dwellers, who have,essentially, solved their problem),it would have a natural impetus toseek answers.BUT, JUDGING from the min¬utes of the first two meetings, theIHC has chosen to tackle neitherthe problem of dormitory condi¬tions and their improvement, northe serious question of the decreas¬ing availability of housing outside of the dormitory complexes. Eachof these problems, so much a mat¬ter of concern to dormitory resi¬dents (and, in an ultimate sense,the concern also of every memberof the UC community), has beenleft unresolved.Why?Because the IHC, at the conclu¬sion of its first month of existence,had accomplished the following;• Proposed a campus fair, withHouse-sponsored prizes and booths,etc.• Encouraged the creation of aninformation center on Faculty-fel¬low programs, the establishment ofa series of debates, seminars andlectures, and suggested meetingsbetween cultural chairman.• Considered the possibility ofstudying the extension of the cam¬pus bus service and of placingmore phones in Harper Surf.• Asked, at the request of aWUCB representative, that eachHouse give at least $5.00 to WUCB.• Instituted study, at Mr. Vice’ssuggestion, as to means to stop thefights and thefts occurring at thedances held on campus.• Proposed establishment of amodel constitution for the indivi¬dual houses.These proposals, it appears tous, range from ludicrous grade-“IT IS GENERALLY KNOWN, or it oughtto be, that Arnold Toynbet’t ieworiginal ideas are Oswald Spangler's.Yet Toynbee, for rather inexplicablereasons, still enjoys a viable rep¬utation in the declining West, whileSpengler remains exiled in the deten¬tion camp the Anglo-Saxon Zeitgeistso strictly keeps for intellectualsof German extraction. But theNazis were indeed wrong — thereis no race ofUntermenschen,not even theGermans.” I The COURT HOUSE in Harper Courtoffers to students• Weisswurste with Potato Salad• A Stein of Imported Pschorr Munich Beerwith this ad, all for $1.50* (regular 1.80)•students under 21 figure less for soft drinksGood any evening in May, 9:30 PM • 2 AM, Closed only on MondaysFor a free copy of thecurrent issue of NA*TIONAL REVIEW, writ*to Dept. CP-2, 150 E.35 St., N. Y. IS, N. Y.TAl-SAM-YfcNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpaciaftminf laCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9:45 PM.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1S1I Eatf C3rd ft. MU 4-1062 GOD: DEAD OR IN ECLIPSEA CONVERSATION BETWEENREV. WILLIAM HAMILTON and RABBI RICHARD L. RUBENSTEINProf., Colgate-Rochester Hillel Director and Prof.Divinity School of French Literature,Univ. of PittsburghTuesday, May 10, 8:00 p.m. LAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUMAdmission Free 1111 E. 60th StreetAn annual lectureship presented by the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation andRockefeller Memorial Chapal in honor of Charles W. Gilkey, a former deanof tha Chapal.THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:Old Fashioned SauarkrautA Frankfurtars..... 49cEvary Tuasday Nignt You can havo a stoaktoo, or tko biggestitoakbuegor In town.Now-A Parade of Piano Artists for Your Measure and Dancing indicate no serious consideration(in fact they do not even indicatea warness) of the kinds of prob¬lems to which we have referredabove.IF SUCH CONSIDERATIONS asdormitory housing conditions,housing problems on campus andincreasing dormitory costs are notgoing to be met with tough propo¬sals backed by the individual dor¬mitory and house council units,and most importantly by the dor¬mitory residents in large numbers,conditions can hardly be expectedto change for the better as a resultof a beneficent administration. Ifthe IHC is not such a body, capa¬ble of channeling the mounting stu¬dent dismay and disgust at theseconditions into “hard-line” propo¬sals which will be acted upon, thenit should immediately disband.Its collapse into a trivia-orientedgroup of brownie-point seekers isnot, as some have claimed, merely mgs were held in an atmosphereunconducive to the sort of double-barrelled attacks on administrationpolicy which we feel are necessary(they were held, respectively, inMr. Vice’s and Dean Newman’sapartments).It is a shame and a disgrace,and it can no longer be tolerated.Michael D. RindA concert of traditional old-time mountain music will bepresented by UC folklore societyon Saturday, May 7, at 8:15 pm.The concert to be held at IdaNoyes will feature Roscoe Hol¬comb, of Daisy, Kentucky, andthe Camp Creek Boys, of Galax,Virginia.Tickets are $1.50, with a 50cdiscount for UC students, andmay be purchased at the MandelHall corridor box office.mmwamm*IH:-}k ■jxis.XsZ - ' ' REVIEW! A publisher's surveyof icliat's new in the wayof unrequired readingIn a world where the predominant philosophy is “ifyou can’t lick ’em, join ’em,” it’s refreshing to find amaverick legislator who believes “if you can’t join’em, lick ’em!” Last summer, when Congress refusedto hold Vietnam hearings, Wisconsin’s RepresentativeRobert W. Kastenmeier held them on his home ground.Vietnam Hearings: Voicet from the Gross Roots($1.95 Doubleday paperback) is a transcript of testi¬mony given at Mr. Kastenmeier’s hearings. “It is,"writes the reviewer in Harper's magazine, “an ex¬traordinary cross section of witnesses, committees,and individuals who took great trouble and thought toorganize and express their opinions.”Here is what professors, army officers, scientists,physicians, ADA members, Young Republicans, Amer¬ican Legionnaires, and people from every segment ofAmerican life say about the war. Every shade of opin¬ion is represented, giving full justice to both sides ofthe question. There’s a good deal of food for thoughtin this unique hearing which The New York Timescalls a “new political phenomenon.”Student freedom and student rebellion at the Uni¬versity of California at Berkeley were issues thatbrought one of the world’s most famous centers oflearning to the edge of collapse. Of lasting interestand value, The Berkeley Student Revolti Factsand Interpretations ($1.95, an Anchor Original) wasedited by two professors, then at Berkeley, SeymourMartin Lipset and Sheldon S. Wolin. It is particularlyinteresting because the editors themselves reflect sovividly the split in opinion of the faculty as well asthe students.“Mr. Lipset takes a dim view of the uprising,” writesA. H. Raskin in the N. Y. Times Book Review. “Hesees it as a portent that all universities may be forcedto capitulate to the coercive tactics of radical minori¬ties . . . Mr. Wolin seems to feel that such a develop¬ment would be far from disaster . .. Fascinating.”The N. Y. Herald Tribune, in discussing what they call“The Varsity Snag,” says, “The editors . . . seem tohave chosen to collaborate precisely because they tookopposite roles in the controversy and see its meaningdifferently. Their selections are indeed scrupulouslybalanced ... it amounts to a genuine documentary thatmerits close attention . . . The merit of The BerkeleyStudent Revolt, however, is that it is not bound by theperspective of either of its editors. Its selections pro¬vide the terms for subsequent debate about the broad¬est questions that grew out of the free speech crisis.”The two books roeitwtd abort art published by thttponton of thit tolumn, Deubltday Anchor Books, *77Park Avenue, Ntw York City and Doubltday A Com¬pany, Inc., Garden City, Ntw York. Yoh’II find thtm atont of tho best equipped bookttlltrt in tht country —your own edit go ttoro.o May 9, 1944 CHICAGO MAROONI *Iny| iB Egad! the Maroon plays ballSatter may be the new editor, but Hertzberg proved he isn’t washed up yet as Hertz-berg’s Hellions slaughtered Satter’s Red Devils by a score of either 25 to 3 (Hertzberg’s es¬timate or 19 to 16 (Satter’s estimate), in the Maroon post-election softball game.The game which was called after 2V.2 innings had all the makings of an epic from thevery first pitch. Satter, who insist¬ed he bat first, surprised everyone, sweatshirt doubled up with laugh- growing crowd of spectators liningincluding himself by hitting a ter he made # suggestion as to up to watch the Maroon play ball.deep (well, relatively deep) center what he could do to himself. “I’ve seen better baseball m kin-field. The game wore on with one stu- dergarten," one passerby said toTHE BOMBARDMENT contin- pendous onslaught at the plate fol- another. His friend just smiledued as Gumpert slugged * ground- lowing another. Before long, every- knowingly and said, “And youer through Levey’s .?gs, ad- one in the game lost score and wonder why they don’t covervanced to second on ldt fielder became more concerned with the snorts ”Chikofsky’s fumble a-id thenrounded third and came lome asHertzberg (backing up O*kofsky)threw the ball over Paul Matter’shead at home plate.Dave "the Kid" Satter gets ready to slug the next pitch while (I. to r.)Seidman, freed, Gumpert (looking away), a non-staff member,Lander, and Steiger look on in awe.. v. „ . r % wmt?* v /• - The Red Devils batted a.ound asslugger after slugger hi* groundballs to the infield. By the time theside was finally retired, <he RedDevils led by a Hell of a ot.Hear ERWiN 0. CANHAMEcliter-in-Chief of the Christian Science MonitorSpeaU onThe Spiritual RevolutionAire Crown Theatre, McCormick PlaceTHURSDAY, MAY Sth at « PM.Admission Free Hertzberg was undismayed how¬ever. The Hellions rejected Satter’ssuggestion that the game le playedon a pitcher’s hands out Unsis. “Ifyou want to get us out you 're gon¬na throw to first base,” Leveyscreamed.The Hellions went on to showwhere they came from by shellack¬ing Red Devil pitcher Seidman foreven more runs than the Red De¬vils had gotten — in much thesame way.Patronize Our Advertisers GUMPERT COMMITTED upwards of seven errors at third baseand when after making his sixtherror in a row, Gumpert noticed aboy with an Oberlin CollegeTake your good timegoing home.Fly half-fare onEastern via Florida.Florida swings in the spring — but it really swings in the summer.Lower off-season room rates are in effect. And Eastern will take you toDaytona or Ft. Lauderdale or even Miami for half-fare.So take a detour and enjoy it on your way home- Or go home first and downto Florida later.Just use your Eastern Youth ID card, or similar card from another airline. Ifyou don't have such a card, it's a snap to get one —provided you're under 22and can prove it. For the specifics, stop by a Travel Agent or any Eastern ticketoffice.Once you have your card, you can get an Eastern Jet Coach seat for half¬fare. You can't make an advance reservation. But if there's a seat available atdeparture time, you can fly to any Eastern destination within the continentalU.S. Including Florida.9 eastern NUMBER ONE TO THE FUNCHICAGO MAROON May 3, 1966 Why not have your roommato tape your lecture for you?Then you can listen to the soothing drone of a loved mentorwhile you lie in comfort under your electric blanket. Rent atape recorder fromTOAD HALL1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500STUDENT RELIGIOUS LIBERALSinvite you to hear:MAY 4"THE BREAKDOWN OF COMMUNICATION"Rob't. AndersonPres, of Chicago Humanist Ass'n.Meetings are held Wednesdays at 7.30 PM in the parlor of theFIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH1174 East 57th StreetNEW BOOKS BY CAMPUS AUTHORSVarieties of Political TheoryEdited by: David Easton - $4.95The StridersBy: A. K. Ramanujan - $4.25The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.TOYOTA1 yr. free maintenance1900 C.C. Sport* Cer Action.Auto. Trent. Aveil.*1714 90 H.P.100 M.P.H.SALES - SERVICE - PARTS247-1400-3967 S. ArcherPOWER YOUR PLAY BUY NOW.SAVE NOW.PAY LATER.Built-To-LastCHECKERwSedan* • Station Wagon*Limousine*CHECKER TOWNE SOUTH INC.3967 SOUTH ARCHER AVENUE147-1400 Sale* A ServiceA building full of exotic camels,big bulls, 6 foot giraffes, hugepandas, ferocious tigers, biggestlong hair dogs, monkeys, alliga¬tors, bears, and others.ANIMALWONDERLAND5960 W. OGDEN AVENUECICERO, ILL.OL 6-9854Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the rest^ tr.ASHAWAY PHODUCTS.1 INC . Ash.iway, Rhoile Island foreign c«f ho*pit°l **5?: tW Classified advertisementsPERSONALS LOST & FOUND SUMMER SUBLETSSTUDENTS get yoru own personalizedscratch pads. ..1.50 for 10 pads of 25.Larry’s 13156 S. Western Ave.Blue Island. Illinois•‘Everybody must get stoned!**Jews”Christians. Moslems. Unitarians!One week from tonight the fate of agood friend of yours may be sealed bytwo radical Irish clergymen (Rev.Hamilton and Rabbi Rubenstein). Willyou be there to see that justice is doneto him? God, Dead or in Eclipse. May10.Mushroom Man vs. the Snakes at theBat Cave. Sat.“LUV” Student Discount Coupons avail¬able in Student Activities Off.V ill the REAL Mushroom Man pleaseHELP me?If you’ve never had a Berliner Weisse,come down to the Courthouse Restau¬rant in Harper Court and try one!If you didn’t understand SWAIN weremystyfied by TWICE A MAN, then tryagain with DU SANG DE LA VO-LUPTE ET DE LA MORT. Doc. FilmsPRODUCTION UNIT is proud to pre¬sent this trilogy (PSYCHE. LYSIS, &CHARMIDIES) by America’s foremostexperimental filmmaker GREGORYMARKOPOULOS. Wed. May 4, Soc, Sci.J22, 7&9 pm. 75c. However, if you likefilms with MEANING, then by allmeans come see Genet’s UN CHANTD’AMOUR and Warhol’s BLOW JOB,Thursday, May 5, Soc. Sci. 122. 7&9 pm.75c Better yet, ignore this ad and comesee both.Taking a trip? Sale on Sugar Cubes!Doors Open 8:30, Sat. May 7 at PierceCommons.Blackstone Coffee Hour: cookies! Gold Ladies’ wristwatch lost in INH,Friday night. Reward. Call Penelope,MI 3-0800. X, 3265, days.Pair men’s blackframed glassesFOUND after protest rally, Contact D.Barone. Hitchcock 56.LOST; Male cat about 7 mo. old, orangestriped. Call FA 4-9274.APT. FOR SALE5527 S. University, Apt. 4w. Spaciousliving-dining rm., wood-burning fire¬place. Modern kitchen with washer. 2bedrooms, study (or 3rd bdrm.) Exc.nghbhd., bid., main., pking., publictransp. Must sell $11,300. Monthly as¬sessment $97. Will not rent or lease.Call 643-9592 or 363-2867.JOBS OFFEREDNeed part time waiters & waitresses &lunch hostess. Courthouse Restaurant inHarper Court. Ask for Hans Morsbach.Full-time Sect’y. wanted. Campus loca¬tion. Experienced, call 643-3022, JeanWalbridge.RMS. R APTS. FOR RENTMEET YOUR PERFECT DATEDatelme Electronic Research, Inc. Nowprogramming 3rd improved continousMATCHING series—A new, expandedprogram with enrollment fee reduced to$3 for adults aged 18-27 & £3 for adultsover 27. Questionnaires will be alongside the Maroon at your favorite sta¬tions starting Tues. 5/3. For info, writeDateline Electronic Research, Inc. POBox 369 or call 271-3133.Writer's Workshop (PL 2-8377)Blackstone Coffee Hour: girls!KAMELOT Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for UC students.EXHIBITExhibit of graphics, “The EmancipatedJew as Artist.” Through May 10th. Hil-lel House, 5715 Woodlawn, open daytimeand evenings. Mon.-Fri. & Sun.The Nobleman take on the terrors ofthe Screeming Sacroiliac. Sat. PierceCommons.Blackstone Coffee Hour: Wed. 9 pm.KARATE INH Mon 7 pm. Wed 8 pm-cont. thru summer-beginners welcomenow1. Call 684-3998 for Information. HOTEL SHORELANDSpecial student rate Hotel rms. withprivate baths. 2 students/rm. $4o/stu-dent per mo. Complete Hotel Service.Ask for Mr. N.T. Norbert, 5454 S. ShoreDrive.Wanted: Male grad Student to shareapt. with 2 others. S. Shore. $50/mo.,own rm. Furn. C. Detz, X4119Rm. avail, in exchange for babysitting.5714 Kimbark. Call 324-1396.312 rm. unfurnished apt. to rent startingJune 1st. $96/mo. walking distance toschool, 2 blks. to Point. 4 blks. to 55thSt. shoppg. MI 3-1808.HOUSE FOR SALERAY DISTRICT, Maryland bet. 57-58,excellent condition-new kitchen, patio,Iv. rm.. dn. rm., fam. rm., 3 bdrms., 3baths, fin. basement. $31,500. (incl.stove, refrig, air conds., dishwasher,etc.) Call 684-2867 or MI 3-0800, X 3630for appt. For rent. Charming old farm housemiddle of 15 wooded acres; 1 mi. fromTremont train station & 3000 acre Indi¬ana Dunes State Park. Nr. free publicbeach. 2 bdrms., sleeps 8. Furnished(includes TV) except for linens. 45 min.from U of C via train or expressways.May 15th to Sept. 30. $1,000. Includingall utilities even phone (local). Dial<219> 929-0058.ROOMMATES WANTED: 2 males forsummer. Your own rm. $44/mo. forlarge, clean apt. on 53rd. l»/2 blocksfrom Kimbark Plaza. Call MI 3-3135evenings.Ideal for 3-4. June 16-Sept, 25. 6 lg. furn.rms. + sunporch. Near campus, shop¬ping, IC. $150/mo. 5305 Woodlawn. 643-6669 after 5 pm.For 1-4 Studs, (own rms.) $32.50/per¬son/mo. 60th Wdlwn. FA 4-7431.This is what you’ve been looking for! 6rms., 4 bdrms., nr. campus, gd. shopng.IC 6/15-Sept, or October, 5309 Woodlawn.324-3111.ptlBrriiWMWI »Eugene Gendlin, St. ClairDrake, and Paul Lauter will| speak at an SDS foreign0 policy forum on "The MoralDilemma of Being an| American in a Revolution*| ary World" on Friday, MayI 6 at 3:30 pm in Judd 126.Gendlin will discuss,1 "Historical Determinism and| Personal Choice," Drakewill discuss, "The Legacy ofj Colonialism" and Paul Lau¬ter will consider, "Revolu¬tion and Violence."Admission is withoutI charge.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 go 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLEDNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Discount CONTACT LENSESDFG Accidental Film FESTIVAL!SOC SC1122TOYIGIIT: Bogart in C ASABLANCA6, 8 ami 10 PMWEDNESDAY: Markopoulos’ PSYCHE,LYSIS, and C HAHMIDES - 7:15 and 9:15 PMTHURSDAY: Warhol s BLOW JOB andGenet’s IX CHAAT D’AMOER-7:lJ and 9:15 pmFRIDAY: Belmondo inGodard's BREATHLESS - 6, 8, and 10 pmCOME EARLY AND OFTEN! DIRECTOR BUTTONS ALSO ON SALE AT ALL SHOWINGS.Who is your ideal date? Thousands use Central Control and its high-speedcomputer for a live, flesh-and-blood answer to this question.Your ideal date - such a person exists, of course.But how to get acquainted? Our Central Control computerprocesses 10,000 names an hour. How long would it takeyou to meet and form an opinion of that many people?You will be matched with five ideally suited personsof the opposite sex, right in your own locale (or in anyarea of the U.S. you specify). Simply, send $3.00 to CentralControl for your questionnaire. Each of the five will beas perfectly matched with you in interests, outlook andbackground as computer science makes possible.Central Control is nationwide, but its programs arecompletely localized. Hundreds of thousands of vigorousand alert subscribers, all sharing the desire to meet theirideal dates, have found computer dating to he exciting andhighly acceptable.AH five of your Meal dates will W delightful. Sohurry and send your $3.00 for your questionnaire.CENTRAI&ONTROL, lac.2Z Pak Avmm • MMnmCWi CM*** Beautiful, fully furn. (air cond.. TV.,Stereo) 4 rm apt. Must sublet this sum¬mer. 6730 S. Shore Dr. Call 363-8038 be¬tween 6&7 pm.3-6 studs., 7 rm. 3 bdrm. furnished S.Shore apt. TV, Lake 1 block, $160/mo.6/5 10/3. 288-7676 after 4 pm.5 large rms., sunporch, 2 baths, nr.Near Kimbark Plaza, campus, ideal for3-4, $130/mo. BU $-6610, 2415, 2418, or667-1824.4 rm. apt. furn. 6046 Dorchester,$95/mo. 667-7506 after 4 pm.Wanted: 1 man to share 5 rm. apt. forisummetr. Own rm. $38.33/mo. 5343Woodlawn, Roger Marks, MI 3-9326.4 rm. furn. sublet mid June thru Sept.2 bdrms., $100. 54th & Univ. call Val 363-5012.5V2 rms., 3 bdrms., furn. clean & sunnynr. shopping & campus. $115/mo. 1124E. 54 it. MU 4-8184.Live over Gordon’s this summer, 2 girlsneeded, furn. piano, TV, own room.$48/person. Call MI 3-0358, eves.FOR SALE’61 VW. conv., reas., 684-0954. • - -• *»»FOR SALEVW ’58 rebuilt engine, radio, heater,new brakes, top mechanica: shape butneeds muffler. Super dependable. Bestoffer over $400. 235-0825 after 3.iOn Friday evening, May 20, at8:15 pm, UC's folklore society willpresent a rhythm and blues festi¬val in Mandel Hall, featuring sev¬eral of the country’s top rhythmand blues bands. All tickets to theconcert are $2.50.The concert will feature JuniorWells, Buddy Guy and his band,the Little Walter Blues Band, OtisRush and his group, and J. B. Huttoand his Hawks with Big WaiterHorton. These are all professionalmusicians, who have recorded onmajor labels, including Vanguard,Chess, and Delmark, and who ap¬pear regularly at the bars andclubs which present this type ofmusic,’• -'.-.AS - 7<m9HONDASEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES - SERVICE - PARTS• PICK UP & DELIVERY• EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESMl 3-4500BOB NELSON MOTORS CHICAGO'S LARGEST &$136 s. cottage grove just AROUND THE CORNERSee th* MAROON classified for your campus sales ropreaentativ*Brush Stroke Point SaleMany remain at $1.98Frames $2.95 & up.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.The studentis thecentral figure in nnTHENEW SCHOOLCOLLEGEa junior/senior liberal arts program leading to the Bachelor of Arts degree• the new school college views general and special¬ized education as interdependent, with specializationmeaningful only when it is rooted in a foundation ©fliberal arts studies.• It restores to students full recognition of their indi¬viduality and of their role as the central participantin the educational process.• It treats the undergraduate experience not as a sepa¬rate entity, but as one which should be connected towhat is meaningful in the total human experience.• It regards as the goal of a liberal arts education, notonly the acquisition of knowledge but, more impor¬tant, the development of those orderly and critical1 habits of mind which are fundamental to all intellec¬tual inquiry.• THE NEW SCHOOL college is open to students whohave satisfactorily completed the freshman andsophomore years at recognized institutions of higherlearning. Courses of study are offered only in the areasof The Humanities and The Social Sciences. Thedegree is awarded on the basis of student perform¬ance in a comprehensive examination given after twoyears of study. Classes are held in the day hours atThe New School’s modern Greenwich Village campus.Admissions OfficeTHE NEW SCHOOL COLLEGEN*w School for Social RzsiaschW West 12th StreetNew York,N.V. 10011Pteoe* tend Me th* Bull*tie end application for th* New 8«h*e}College.Z am new attending,Nam*AddreatCky — 4 College or Vidvvtity)May», • CHICAGO MAIIOOWar! iWmMilMIIY . UNDERGRADUATE MALESDavid AbrahamIrwin AbrahamNeil AllenH. David AlleyRoger Charles AlperinH. Lenox S. AndersonE. AroninErnst R. BairdGeoffrey C. BallLon S. BannettDavid F. BaroneVictor BassJohn BealPaul K. BeckerGregory BellowRoy BellowsDavid BermanHarry J. BermanKerry BerlandStephen BerlinWilliam J. BerryEdward BirnbaumCharles BirdwellJohn BloomJeffrey D. Blum ~Christopher BoardmanMark BohnhorstStuart BormanLeon BotsteinMartin BoughnerJeff BowenRichard BretzAllan BridgeJonathan J. BuchlerMartin J. BuchterRichard ByrdEugene Caine qJeffrey Carp—.pw*Jonathan CarsonGary ChristianaAndrew ClarkIra CohenMichael Eugene CollinsDaniel J. ConradPhillip A. CraftsFred D. CrawfordDonico Croom Since the formation of a class rank among males constitutes a significant institu¬tional step forward in cooperation with the requirements of the war situation,and since it would require the use of my grades although I conscientiously opposesuch use, I strongly urge that such a rank not be formed and, in any case,refuse to have the product of my educational efforts incorporated into sucha device.245 undergraduate males and 20 faculty members have signed the above statement. This is a partial listing.Charles M. Cutler Gregory Gogo Jay Knox Louis MestichelliJames Culang Daniel Goldberg Steve Korwin Charles MetalitzJ. Danielson Dale Levan Good Brent Kramer Bruce A. MilliesRodger W. Davis Joseph Gordon Kenneth Krich Robert J. MitchellI. Walter Deitch Philip K. Gorny Edgar Kuschau Philip MogenDavid Dembowitz Harvey M. Greenberg Leslie Kutas Miles Mogulescu *—Dennis Dingemans William Gronfein George Lahti Nelson H. MorganErnst G. Dornfeld George Gruhn Slade Lander Steven L. MorseJohn M. Dyckman Charles Gutfeld Steven Landsman William E. Moss'Mark Edelman William Grice Ken C. Levin James Edward MyersFrederick Eggan Robert M. Hambourger Paul Levin Jerome NathansonHerman Ellman Andrew Harris Jerry A. Levy James M. NielsenJohathan Ende John C. Harris Lewis Likover Daniel J. NumrichJeffrey Falk Peter B. Hayward Jerald B. Lipsch** PaulM. O’ConnorMark Falstein Robert Hertz Iven Lourie Frank ParisMarc Fenton John D. Hicks Martin Lubin Ronald G. PellDaniel Field Leonard Jacobs David Lukoff Arthur PerloDavid M. Finkel Tim A. Janes Jerome McCann Richard PfileArthur Finkelstein Eric Joseph Juan C. McMillan Pierre A. PelmontRobert M. Forman J. Michael Jump Glenn A. Macbeth Marc J. PokempnerBenjamin L. Frankel Jonathan Stewart Kaplan Ira Machefsky Andrew PolonRobert R. Freedman Roger Kaplan Mark Manevvitz Christopher H. PooleRichard Freer Gerald E. Katz Bruce D. Mann James W. PrierStephen Freer Edward B. Kearl Jonathan Marvel Thomas PummerJoseph Friedman James R. Kelly Elliott A. Medrich James RialDavid Gale Steve Kindred •" Marc William Mercer Paul RochmesH. Robert Ganoe Gerald Kirk Michael Merritt John A. RogersMartin Gardner Charles Kleiman Edward Messing David RosenbergFACULTYJoyce B. AdamsHoward BrofskyMichael CoplanM.V. DePorte John M. DolanGuido DoniniRichard FlacksWilliam FowlerGodfrey S. GetzCarol Gilligan Norton B. KnopfJesse LemischMario MartinRalph ShapeyHerman SinaikoJoseph Sittler Michael StockerAlvin R. TarlovLeo TreitlerNaomi WeissteinGeanne Bamberger Allen J. RubinRichard RubinAlan RubyRobert SalasinDavid A. SatterRobert SchreinerA. H. SchlickLarry SchwartzRobert SegalJohn J. ShaferJoseph ShayChuck SherMichael A. ShermanDavid R. ShumanLarry SilverPaul SilverDaniel H. SmithPhilip A. SmithRodney SmithMichael SorkinRichard SpeiglmanRick SpencerJerrold SpinhirnePeter StoneBert StarrMark SwirskyRonald TaborStanley B. TeplickPaul ThomasRichard ThompsonEarl A. TurnerRyan D. TweneySteven UngerJohn Lowell ViescosWilliam WareThomas Mattison WackerJames WarrenMiles WashingtonJoel B. WeberHart WeichselbaumAlex WeilandMark WeinsteinFred A. WellischWilliam WolfsonPatrick WoodallJames WrightRichard ZelmerFEMALESCarol J. AndersonNancy AbramsGail Arnold ... We strongly urge that such a rank not be formed, and we support thosemales who refuse to have the product of their educational efforts incorporatedinto such a device. GRADUATE MAL^Donald AttwoodJohn BellairsPeter L. CandellPennv Asbell Stephen FeldmanCarol S. AxlerodElizabeth Bachman 190 female sudents and 29 male graduate students have signed this supporting statement. This is a padial listing. Joseph FelsensteinMichael GoldfieldMartha A. Baechle James GreenCarol Barr Nancy Dickler Eileen E. Hanson Thora Loftsgaard Paula Rogovin Scott HarrisonMary Bayer Janet Donley Karen Harris Georgia Lind Carol Rubenstein Alan R. HindsJudith A. Beaird Karen Drigot P. J. Hartwig Jo Carole Mackay Karen Sabolsky Christopher Z. Hobson —►Ann L. Beckerman Diane Ducnin Nancy Hatch Gail Malmgreen Jeanne Safer Barton JonesJudith K. Beisser Carin E. Dugowson Barbara Herstein Bonnie McKeon Nancy Schaeffer Mark JosephMarianne Bell Marcia Earlenbaugh Dorothy Hirtz Jean M. Malley Sarah B. Schmidt Kenneth KipnisSherry Lee Bell Carol Edwards Claire Herzberg Gareth Mann Judith E. Schuppien Richard MartinMarilvn Bergstrom Karen Edwards Renee Hirschon Joan Mankin Marilyn R. Scholl Merrill L. NusbaumKatherine Binder Linda Ellman Eve Hochwald Lenore Matz Ann Schryver Philip OldenburgSusan Birndorf Lynda Erinoff Ruth Ann Hodel Mary Ann Maziak Francy Schwartz Alan M. PerlmanNorma Blasenstein Elizabeth Eson Dee Holisky Janna McKenzie Renee Schwartz Harry PerlstadtGinger Bramsou Courtney Nance Esposito Susan Honeycutt Deborah A. McPherson Suzanne Shepherd Peter J. Rabinowitz —Amy Bromsen Jeanne Fahrenwald Susan Horowitz Felice Merritt Sylvia Sieferman Philip RussellJanet Brown Miriam Farber Carolyn James Ann Meyerson Ellen Silon Michael S. SchullerMargaret Bruell Catherine Farrell Rita Jeruchimowicz Diane L. Mitchell Marion Sirifman Louis ShermanMartha Brumbaugh Margaret Farrell Teresa Jesionowski Eeda Jill Mondlin Beverly Smith David J. SookneSandra G. Bryan Sharon L. Fine Berta Josephson Michele Montllor Jane Spielman Stephen TallacksonElizabeth Burrill Kay Fingert Marilyn Kanner Tanya Morrow Julie Spain Bernard TurhmanRuth Cadwallader Katherine R. Fischer” Laura Kaplan Margo Movshin Mary Sprinson Charles VanTasselBarbara Castleman Rebecca Fisher Cynthia Kegel Debby Nason Diane StantonKaren Chamberlain Anne E. Fortune Janet Kelley Rosalinda O’Brien Jane Steinfels Jeffrey WeissSusan I. Chamberlin Miriam Fried Ellen Kesend Judith Ornstein Marie Stern Gideon WeiszLaura Chenven Marian S. Grebin Rhea Kessler Karen Orren Grazyna Stolz Julian WeitzenfeldBetty Chewning Jeanne Friedman Tobey Klass Carol Payne Susan StrippCarol Cohen Jeanne Friedman Jennifer A. Knapp Joan Perz Kathryn Suter Jane WildMargaret L. Cott Barbara Friedman Nancy Knight Joan Phillips Alice SucherAnn L. CousensZelma Crandall Susan Friedman Marilyn Kolodziejczyk Karen Phillips LaVerne Thomas Chris WilliamsJanis G. Gilly Stephanie Lerner Susan Phillips Diana Tietjens Beverly WilsonKathleen Cranley Francine J. Glasberg Judith Lester Sally Pickhardt Heather Tobis Mary GardenJanis Leiza ZadelAlma Crews Peg Green Annalee Letchinger Phyllis Beth Rashbaum Nancy S. ToderRosanne Dalman Sue Hagstrom Lois Levitan Holly Reckord Janis TohinakaJulia Diamant Amy Hamburg Ellen Lewin Toni L. Reed Jessica Tovrov Karen E ZakBarbara Diamond Nancy Hampton Belita Lewis Phyllis Richmond Judy Van Herick Betsy ZanditonNaomi Diamond81; Mary Han Robin Liss Nancy R. Roemer Anita E. Weisbrod Elien Zucker ’1iNOTICE Return vie Fac. Ex. to Mites Megulescu, 23 SnellThe above petition was initiated by the University of Chicago Students for a Democrat¬ic Society. While it is clear that this matter cannot be allowed to rest here, we feel thatany further action must be initiated by the democratic decision of the signers. We there¬fore urge all signers and supporters to attend a meeting to consider what must bedone now. The meeting will elect its own chairman, and all practical proposals will beheard and freely discussed. To facilitate discussion in such a large group, we urge thatparticipants formulate their suggestions in advance. For anyone with concrete programproposals, there will be ditto masters and a typewriter in Hutchinson Commons from12:00 to 3:30 Wednesday (we will reproduce the masters). Attendance by all signersand supporters is absolutely essential. The University will act only if we demonstratethe seriousness of our convictions.7:30 WEDNESDAY—IDA NOYES Sine# the formation of a clast rank among males constitutes asignificant institutional step forward in cooperation with the require¬ments of the war situation, and since it would require the use ofmy grades although I conscientiously oppose such use, I stronglyurge that such a rank not be formed and. in any case, refuse tohave the product of my educational efforts incorporated into sucha device.signature name (print)□□ undergradmale addressfaculty-phono dept Mi v□□ female—supporting statementgraduate—supporting statement