for 'Wedding ofby Leanne StarIt was truly a gala affair.The “bride” wore a light greensportscoat and took largestrides down the ' aisle ofRockefeller Chapel. The “groom,” jin a coordinated tweed suit, wasbarely able to keep pace. But the jcouple went unnoticed as janitors'polished pews and adjusted speak-'■ers.NATURALLY, this was not thefinal version of the marriage be¬tween Sharon Percy and John D. jRockefeller IV, but merely a cas¬ual run-through. The part of thebride was beautifully acted by theRev. E. Spencer Parsons, Dean ofthe-Chapel, who will be conductingthe actual ceremony together withthe Rev. Robert J. McCracken,pastor of the Riverside Church ofNew York. Richard Vikstrom, Di-;rector of Chapel Music, was thesporting “groom.”The “members of the wedding”took a break at the alter to discussplans for the marriage, which will ! take place tomorrow at 4 pm.Vikstrom, who selected the musicfor the ceremony in accordancewith the tastes of the families,stated that the program would in¬clude many selections from Bach.Besides preparing RockefellerChapel for the wedding. Buildingsand Grounds crews have been hardat work cleaning (and occasionallyrenovating) Ida Noyes Hall, wherethe reception will be held.THE PREPARATIONS havebeen accompanied by certain in-conveniencies. For the several daysdevoted to stair varnishing, roomson the second and third floors ofthe building were most easily ac¬cessible by rope ladder and/or treelimbs. The stairs are now open, butthe building will be closed to every¬one but invited guests all day to¬morrow.Even if students wanted to getinto Ida Noyes on Saturday, theymight have a hard time gettingnear it. Everything but local trafficwill be barred from the area of 59th and Woo» lawn and the adjoin¬ing parking lot. Policing of thearea will begin at 6 am. Studentsh. ve not been forbidden to view thei wedding, providing they can find aplace. Perching on the bell towerhas been strongly discouraged.BUT INCONVENIENCE hasbeen surpassed by efficiency. IdaI Noyes Hall has been cleaned forthe first time since 1916. The Percyfamily has chosen new lamps for: the building th.t will remain in useafter the wedding. Almost every!inch of the area has been scoured.! “But,” lamented Maroon managingeditor Dave Gumpert, “I wish theywould get around to cleaning my• desk.”One University official suggestedthat the only way was to clean andrefurbish “slum areas” on campusmight be to hold weddings in them.His suggestion is valid, but onequestion arises: Would the Admin¬istration Building and the dormito¬ries be suitable locations for ex¬changing nuptials?University Braces Itself the YearON THE INSIDE: Rockefeller Chapel, where Sharon Percy will bemarried to John D. Rockefeller IV tomorrow.Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary Year WEEKENDEDITIONVol. 75-No. 45 The University of Chicago Friday, March 31, 1967Easier Grading DecidedBy the Soc II Facultyby Jeffrey KutaLast quarter’s batch of Soc II grades reflected the attitudeof the Soc II faculty that grading here has been too rough,according to Chairman Richard Flacks.Flacks said that 60 per cent of the winter quarter Soc 122grades were either A or B, as com¬pared with about 50 per cent in thepast. The decision to liberalize thedistribution was made on the basisof an ‘‘informal consensus” of thestaff, Flacks explained.This was in response to a reportby the Fact-Finding Committee onGrades, approved by the CollegeCouncil and distributed at the endof last quarter. The report conclud¬ed that the College’s grading pat¬terns are significantly more harshthan those at comparableschools—where the student SATmean is above 650—and recom¬mended that “appropriate steps betaken” to alter such patterns.OF THE SIX institutions the re¬port characterized as having a“high selectivity level,” percent¬ages of A’s and B’s ranged from ahigh of 72 per cent to a low of UC’s56 per cent. The next-to-lowest in¬stitution in the group granted 61per cent A’s and B’s.Thus the decision of the Soc IIstaff, were it repeated by all Col¬lege departments which currentlyNew School GainsUC Philosophy Prof,Hannah Arendt will leaveUC to accept an appointmentas University Professor ofPhilosophy at the New Schoolfor Social Research in the fall. Theappointment was announced byJohn R. Everett, President of theNew Sehool.During the fall. 1967 semester atthe New School, Miss Arendt willconduct a seminar in “Political ex¬periences of the Twentieth Centu-r.v.” She will also be engaged in thesupervision of doctoral theses inthe Graduate faculty. grade on a stiff curve, would re¬duce but not eliminate the disparitybetween grade distributions at UCand its counterpart schools.Many faculty observers, however,are pessimistic about the possibili¬ty of such a College-wide reap¬praisal of grading policies. Theopinion is that most other depart¬ments are not as liberal as the SocII department, and that in generalfaculty members are unlikely tochange their ways.Flacks said he did not know ofany other department which tookaction similar to his.IN OTHER Soe II developments,the staff has decided to base thisquarter’s Soc 125 grade on an essayor essay exam given by the individ¬ual instructor, as well as on the| traditional term paper and final ex¬amination. Each will be worth athird of the grade.Unlike previous quarters thisyear, the final exam will be com¬pletely objective. Although thetrend is apparently away from thesubjective (the fall quarter examwas all essay, the winter quarterexam half and half), Flacks main¬tains that there has been “an in¬creasing emphasis this year onmore essay, and less emphasis onobjective, multiple-choice ques¬tions.“It’s extremely hard, however,for the whole staff to grade atwo-hour essay test—we thought itbetter to grade some proportion ofthe exam objectively. Also, somestudents do poorly on essay testsand shouldn’t be penalized becauseof this. With some multiple choicequestions, they have a chance toshow that they’ve mastered thereadings.”Last year, Soc II grades werebased half on the term paper andhalf on an all-objective exam. Wick and Newman Tell PlansFor Increased Academic WorkDean of Students Warner A.Wick and Assistant Dean ofStudents James Newman will! continue to be very active afterthey leave their respective offices.Both plan to return to full timeteaching.Wick told the Maroon he has nospecific plans yet for his return toj teaching but stated that it “won’ti be too different from what I used todo.”BEFORE he became dean, Wickrecalled, he used to teach “quite arange” of subjects, including histo¬ry of philosophy, ethics, social phi¬losophy, and history of logic.Wick also said he will spend partj of his time doing research. Duringthe years he was Dean of Students,whatever he wrote was “on capi¬tal” Wick said that he simply didnot have enough time to read andhopes that now he will have thetime to catch up on his research.To Co-Edit EthicsCommenting on Ethics, the jour¬nal which he will co-edit with Pro¬fessor Charles Wegener, Wick stat¬ed that the periodical “interpretsethics broadly,” and therefore cov¬ers “a broad range of topics.” Warner A. WickOnce he is free from administra¬tive duties, Newman plans to finishhis doctoral thesis and begin teach¬ing full-time. At present he teachesonly one section of history.In commenting on his eleven;years as an administrator, New-!man said, “One of the things thatseemed to challenge me when Istarted out was that it was veryclear that there was a real need fora sense of community in the Col¬lege.”by David JacobsonJames Newman>$In the early 1950’s, he explained,students felt a “great bond of uni¬ty” because all students took four¬teen required general educationcourses. After the curriculum wasrevised in 1953, Newman stated,there was a need to create a senseof community among the students.One step that was taken was thebuilding of Woodward Court withits central unit, which Newman(Continued on Page Nine)Newman will be returning toteaching and research after a dec¬ade of administrative work.He explained that he “got startedin administration almost by acci¬dent.” “I started out to be a teach¬er,” Newman said. In 1956 the Di¬rector of Housing resigned andNewman was appointed head ofmen’s housing. He found that heliked administrative wrork, and in1957 accepted an appointment asDirector of Housing and StudentActivities. In 1958, he became As¬sistant Dean of Students for Hous¬ing and Student Activities.IN THE FALL of 1965, Newmantook a quarter off to work on hisdoctral dissertation. During thatperiod, he “found again how impor¬tant it is to me to be doing re¬search.” Last fall, he informed theUniversity of his desire to resign asDean. Milk Will Flow From Ad Building Steps;Students Show Sympathy With FarmersThe steps of the Administra¬tion Building may run whitewith Bowman’s milk at 11 amtoday.A group of ad hoc protestors willbegin dumping cartons of homogen¬ized grade A in a show of sympa¬thy with the milk-striking NationalFarmer’s Association.Steve Trimble and Steve Tallack-son. the two graduate students inhistory who are organizing the pro¬test, are telling sympathizers to“bring their own milk” and. ac¬cording tp Trimble, current Mayor¬ al candidate Dick Gregory mayshow up for five minutes, “To saya little something and do a littledumping.”“The purpose of the rally is to letthe National Farmers Associationknow that a lot of University ofChicago students sympathize withthem and disapprove of the U.S.government’s attempt to break thestrike,” said Trimble.The head of campus security saidthat this sort of thing used to sur¬prise him. “I don’t suppose we’lltake any action though, as long asit’s peaceful,” he said.'9' *.O'Connell Is Looking Forward To His New Jobby David E. Gumpert“I think I took this job because I simply couldn’t face another freshman class and tellthem they were the best class ever,” Charles D. O’Connell chuckled as he explained whyhe resigned his post as director of admissions to take on the duties of dean of students.O’Connell, who on the first Monday of every October for the last nine years has concludedhis formal involvement with each- -■entering class by substituting dif- j O’Connell observed that as direc- i his future duties, and also to spendferent statistics in the same sneech tor of admissions he knows a lot j as much time as possible confer-praising the class as the brightest j about students when they arrive ring with students, including spend*one ever at UC, in a more serious here and that his big task now willtone expressed genuine regret at be to assess how students feel afterleaving his post. “I enjoy being di-1 having been here a while “to see ifrector of admissions and am goingto miss it very much,” he said.“I want everyone to realize,though, that for three months yetI’m not dean of students,” he add¬ed. they think it’s like the catalogue.”IN THE NEXT three months,O'Connell plans to confer often withoutgoing Dean of Students WarnerWick and other members of the ad¬ministration to learn more about mg a week at Shorey House as aguest resident head. O’ConneMnotes that he does not know whatchanges he might make once he be¬comes dean of students because, ashe puts it, “I’m in no position tomake sweeping generalizations.”He does, however, see some tend¬encies or trends that he would like Charles O'Connell to reverse. “Maybe we should thinkof a simpler administrative organi¬zation, that is reduce the theater ofaction,” he suggested. “It strikesme forcibly that some universities,while very large, have managed,by appropriate stewardship of stu¬dent affairs, to convey the impres¬sion that they are small; others,although small, have managed toencumber themselves so thoroughlyin administrative machinery thatthey convey the impression ofbeing large.”“WE'VE BEEN suceessful inclasses in creating a feeling of; smallness,” he observed. “I’m notI sure if we’ve done this on the administrative level.”NO TAXES For The Undeclared And Barbaric War In VietnamAN OPEN LETTERAt this late date it is pointless to muster the evidence which shows that the war we are waging in Vietnam is wrong. By now you have decidedfor yourself where you stand. In all probability, if you share our feelings about it, you have expressed your objections both privately and publicly.You have witnessed the small effect these protests have had on our government.By April 15th, every American citizen must decide whether he will make a voluntary contribution to the continuation of this war. Aftergrave consideration, we have decided that we can no longer do so, and that we will therefore withhold all or part of the taxes due. The purposeof this letter is to call your attention to the fact that a nation-wide tax refusal campaign is in progress, as stated in the accompanying announce¬ment, and to urge you to consider refusing to contribute voluntarily to this barbaric war.SIGNED:Prof. Warren Ambrose Mathematics, M.I.T.Dr. Donnell Boardman Physician, Acton, Mass.Mrs. Elizabeth Boardman Acton, Mass.Prof. Noam Chomsky Linguistics, M.I.T.Miss Barbara Deming Writer, Wellfleet, Mass.Prof. John Dolan Philosophy, University of ChicagoProf. Jon Ek Anthropology, Long Island Univ.Martha Bentley Hall Musician, Brookline, Mass.Dr. Thomas C. Hall Physician, Brookline, Mass.Rev. Arthur B. Jellis First Parish in Concord, Unitarian-Universalist, Concord, Mass.Prof. Donald Kalisli Philosophy, U.C.L.A.Prof. Louis Kampf Humanities, M.I.T.Prof. Staughton Lynd History, Yale University Milton Mayer Writer, Deerfield Mass.Prof. Jonathon Mirsky Chinese Language and Literature,Dartmouth CollegeProf. Sidney Morgenbesser Philosophy, Columbia UniversityProf. Wayne A. O’Neil Graduate School of Education,Harvard UniversityProf. Anatol Rapoport Mental Health Research Institute,University of MichiganProf. Franz Schurmann Center for Chinese Studies,University of Cabf., BerkeleyDr. Albert Szent-Gyorgy Institute for Muscle ResearchWoods Hole, Mass.Harold Tovish . Sculptor, Brookline, Mass.Prof. Howard Zinn Government, Boston UniversitySOME METHODS OF NONPAYMENT1. For those owing nothing because of the Witholding Tax.Such persons write a letter to the Internal Revenue Ser¬vice, to be filed with the tax return, stating that thewriter cannot in good conscience help support the warin Vietnam, voluntarily. The writer therefore requests areturn of a percentage of the money collected from hissalary.Note: Of course, the IRS will not return the money. However,the writer has refused to pay for the war voluntarily andhas put it in writing. This symbolic action is not to bebelittled since anybody who does this allies himself withthose who will withhold money due the IRS.2. For those self-employed or owing money beyond what hasbeen withheld from salary.Such persons write a letter to be filed with the tax return,stating that the writer does not object to the income taxin principle, but will not, as a matter of conscience, helppay for the war in Vietnam. The writer is therefore with¬holding some or all of the tax due.Note: In all cases, we recommend that copies of these letters be sentto the President and to your Senators.Remarks: The Internal Revenue Service has the legal power toconfiscate money due it. They will get that money, oneway or another. However, to obstruct the IRS from collect¬ing money due (by not filing a return at all, for example)seems less important to us than the fact that each isrefusing to pay his tax voluntarily. With this in mind,some of us are placing the taxes owed in special accountsand we will so inform the IRS in our letters.Willful failure to pay is punishable by a fine of up to$10,000 and up to a year in jail, together with the costsof prosecution. So far, the IRS has prosecuted only thosewho have obstructed collection (by refusing to file areturn, by refusing to answer a summons, etc.). Usually,the IRS has collected the tax due plus 6% interest andpossibly an added fine of 5% for "negligence". The factthat the IRS has rarely, if at all, prosecuted tax-refusersto the full extent of the law does not mean they will notdo so in the future.Further questions about tax refusal can be directed toProf. John M. Dolan, Classics 17; his university exten¬sions are 3494 and 3855. Rev. McCrackin's Tax Refusal CampaignCopies of the open letter above have been sent to thousands ©fsigners of advertisements in the N.Y. Times protesting the war inVietnam. The nation wide tax refusal campaign that the open lettercalls attention to is being conducted by a pacificist organization,the "No Tax for War Committee", headed by Rev. Maurice McCrackin.Over three hundred persons have already signed Rev. McCrackin'sstatement; each signer (whether pacificist or not) commits himselfpublicly to the same refusal undertaken by the signers of theopen letter. The text of the statement appears in the box below.What Can YOU Do?• If you wish to sign Rev. McCrackin's statement, place yoursignature in the place indicated below, clip out the box and sendit to the address given. (Names of signers have been appearing inThe Peacemaker and will be published elsewhere on 15 April.)• If you wish to learn about the telephone tax refusal campaign,write to the Committee for Nonviolent Action, 5 Beekman Street,Room 1033, New York, N.Y. 10038.• If you wish to help pay for the cost of circulating Rev. McCrackin's,statement, make your check payable to "No Tax for War Com¬mittee" and send it to the Cinncinnati address given below.• If you wish to help pay for the cost of circulating the openletter, make your check payable to "Prof. John M. Dolan" andsend it to him in Classics 17.REV. McCRACKIN'S STATEMENTBecause so much of the tax paid the federal governmentgoes for poisoning of food crops, blasting of villages, na¬paiming and killing of thousands upon thousands of people,as in Vietnam at the present time, I am not going to paytaxes on 1966 income.SignatureName (Please Print)AddressSend signed statements to: NO TAX FOR WAR COMMITTEE,«/o Rev. Maurice McCrackin, 932 Dayton St., Cincinnati,Ohio 45214.CHICAGO MAROON • March 31, 1967tProtest March toNapalm Plant Setby John WelchA meeting of the UC Stu¬dent Mobilization CommitteeWednesday night, discussed aprotest march through a hos¬tile Polish neighborhood to a na¬palm plant, and heard a call byfive Cornell students for 500 peopleto burn draft cards at the April 15Mobilization March in New York.The 50 students who gathered inSoc 122 also discussed plans fortransporting Chicago area studentsto the New York march.DEMONSTRATORS FROM allover Chicago will meet in VittiumPark at noon of April 8 to marchabout two miles to Witco, the na¬palm plant which, said Dan Fried-lander who chaired the meeting,“makes the chemical that is addedto gasoline so it will stick better toskin.” At the plant, they will hearspeeches, including ones by GregCalvert (National Secretary of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society), awounded Negro Marine just re¬turned from Vietnam, and a soldierfrom the 5th Army Headquarterswho will refuse service in Vietnam.The UC Contemporary Music So¬ciety will provide entertainment,Refused PermitFriedlander mentioned that Cityauthorities had refused the demon¬station a parade permit, allowingthem to march in the street, “Theytold us that such a march wouldnot be in the public interest,” hesaid. He added that the leaders ofthe march and the American CivilLiberties Union expected to win acase reversing the City’s deci¬sion. and that even without a pa¬rade permit the protestors could le¬gally march on the sidewalk.There was, however, more con¬cern about the safety of the marchthan its legality. Several peoplesuggested that the sudden appear¬ance of sign-carrying war protes- jtors in the Polish working classcommunity would certainly bringhostility and could possibly bringviolence. In response to the possi¬bility. leaders from Roosevelt Uni¬versity, and University of IllinoisCircle Campus have agreed to pro¬vide “20 large, mean marshals,” jwho will break up scuffles duringthe march. EARLIER, THE DEACONS forDefense and Justice, a Negro groupspecializing in defending civilrights groups from attack, had of¬fered its protection for the march.Although a decision whether or notto accept the offer would be madeat a citywide meeting at RooseveltUniversity Thursday night, therewas considerable discussion at theWednesday night UC meeting.Some feared that the presence ofthe Deacons would only enrage theneighborhood, scene of open¬housing marches last summer. “Itcould be a travesty,” said SteveKindred, “if we have a race riot ona peace march.”Anti-Draft PlanHenry Balser. President of Cor¬nell SDS, announced the call for 500pledges to burn draft cards, withthe pledges binding only when 500people make them. At Cornell, hesaid, 50 students had alreadysigned pledges, and 150 Negromothers hud said they plan to burntheir sons’ draft cards. Asked howclose they were to the 500 goal,Balser answered, “pretty faraway,” but explained that thexpress had blacked out coverage ofthe call. Having just talked to stu¬dents in Cleveland, he admitted,however, that, “People just don’t ,seem to be ready yet for such astep against the draft.”SPEAKERS KNEW LITTLEabout plans for the New YorkMarch, beyond the drive to trans¬port Chicago students to New York,April 15. Buses will leave 59thStreet about noon of Friday, the14th and arrive in New York eight¬een hours later. They will leaveNew York midnight Saturday or 1pm Sunday. The fare is $27.00round trip for students, and $32.00| for non-students.CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a $10 Used »X1IRug. to a Custom Carpet Specialirirtg inRemanants 8. Mill Returns at a fractionof the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERYMG & AUSTIN HEALEYYOUR BESTDEAL IS ATBOB NELSON MOTORS6052 S. COTTAGE GROVEMl 3-4500 Vietnam Report: No. 3Viet Generals Discuss Civilian Ruleby Howard Moffett(Editor's note: Due to communica¬tions problems in both Saigon andWashington, the Maroon has onlynow begun to receive Howard Mof¬fett’s dispatches from South Vietnamregularly.Barring further complications, weplan to run Moffett's reports on aweekly or near weekly basis for therest of the academic year.Moffett, who is a former chairmanof the Yale Daily News, is in Saigoncovering the Vietnam war for theCollegiate Press Service.)SAIGON (CPS)—Americanofficials, the press, and Viet¬namese politicians are settingthe stage here for a dramatictransfer of power from militaryjunta to elected civilian govern-ment. South Vietnam’s new Consti- jtution will be ready by the end ofMarch. In April local elections will,be held in an estimated 39 per centof the country’s hamlets. By Sep¬tember the nation may have aduly elected president.The Constituent Assembly indowntown Saigon buzzes with ener¬getic speeches. Hopeful politicianssay the new Constitution could bethe first step toward true democra¬cy—if the military will guarantee honest elections. American officialstalk of a “new political atmos- jphere,” and point to the temporaryblocs in the Assembly as the seeds,of future political parties. TheAmerican press is already focusingon possible candidates for the pres¬idency.But make no mistake, the mili- jtary still runs South Vietnam. Be-jneath the surface of civilian poli¬ticking there are clear signs thatthe generals intend to play a domi-'nant role for some time to come.No one is better qualified tospeak for South Vietnam’s militaryestablishment than Lt. Gen. Nguy¬en Van Thieu. At 42 the French-trained Thieu is Chief of State, jCommander in Chief of the ArmedForces, and Chairman of the10-man National Leadership Com¬mittee (or junta) by whose graceAir Vice Marshal Gy governs. Hisfinest hour in combat came when,as a colonel, he commanded thetroops that assaulted Diem’s pal¬ace in the l.%3 Revolution. 'General Thieu spent almost anhour this afternoon talking off thecuff in his well-appointed office atGeneral Staff Headquarters. Whatemerged was a pretty clear pictureof how the generals size up the cur¬rent excitement about civilian rule.In brief, they aren’t nearly as ex¬ cited about it as the civilians.Q: General Thieu, are you satis¬fied with the present draft of theconstitution, or do you feel the leg¬islative and judicial branches havebeen given too much power? WillSouth Viet Nam need a strongerexecutive?A: Well, you know, some mem¬bers of the Constituent Assemblywant to run too fast toward democ¬racy. I think in general the Consti¬tution is taking shape well, butsome parts of the draft are notrealistic toward the real situationof the country. But we are contin¬ually talking with the Assemblymembers, and I think there will betime to explain to them and havethese parts changed.Q: What parts of the draft areyou referring to, specifically?A: Primarily the election of prov¬ince chiefs. This is democratic andidealistic, but it is not practical forthe present time of war, or formany years after the war. Theprovince chiefs will have to be ap¬pointed by the executive and co-or¬dinated through the central govern¬ment. We are a small country, youknow, and we cannot afford inde¬pendent states with elected gover¬nors like you have . . . For sometime more we will need to maintain(Continued on Page Nine)“If they knew me, I’m sure they’d ivcint me there”.. . Aristotle Swartz“So you weren’t invited to the wedding ... ”We haven’t forgotten you!Festive nuptial music will be featured on Satur¬day, April 1, in our component room. Guests mayaudition the AR 2ax speakers. They are finishedin oiled walnut and are on sale at $109.95 each.If purchased as a wedding gift or with a hi-fidel-ity system they are only $200.00 the pair. Ourushers will be happy to escort them to your wait¬ing Bentley or V.W.The AR xa turntable is available with the ShureM3D cartridge at $68.00. Brides appreciate itsdust cover. Glooms like it because it comes com¬plete with screwdriver, lubricating oil and a gramscale.When these components are coupled with aScott 342 65 Watt FM reciever the total purchaseprice is under $550.00, including tax.YOU ARE INVITED .. • DON’T FORQET US!TOAD HALL1444 E. 57th BU 8*4500March 31, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3• * * •} t i ii’ *,• >1 f ^ i ' iRed Guards Fighting Creeping CapitalismChinese PR Men Lay It on the Line“The proletarian revolution¬aries are wresting politicalpower away from a handful ofParty persons in authority whowere moving down the capitalistroad.’’ according to China Fea¬tures, a Peking based organizationwhich may or may not be theChinese equivalent of the USIA.The Maroon has been receivingreleases from China Features forthe past eight months.THE STRUGGLE IN China to¬day, continues the press service,“is a concentrated expression ofthe struggle between the two roadof socialism and capitalism. This poster called for the people tolake power out of the hands of theanti-party clique, headed by LuPing, the head of the University.Chairman Mao, says China Fea¬tures, called this poster “the Mani¬festo of the Peking People’s Com¬mune of the Sixties of the Twen¬tieth Century.” It prompted thecultural revolution to preparepublic opinion and to mobilize themasses for a seizure of power.THE CHINESE ARTICLE wenton to say that at the beginning ofthis year, a million working classrevolutionaries in Shanghi, in alli¬ance with the revolutionary peas¬ants, students, intellectuals, and cadres, created the “January Rev¬olution.” They took over allpolitical, economic, and culturalpower from the capitalist Partypersons in control and establisheda new order.Chairman Mao then requestedthe People's Liberation Army tosupport the proletarian revolution¬aries and assist them in theirstruggle to seize power. These rev¬olutionaries have risen up andseized power in many schools, fac¬tories, and administrative organiza¬tions throughout China, accordingto the Peking report. Spreading the Gospel of Chairman Mao to bus passengers some'where in ChinaAs Communist party ChairmanMao Tse-Tung teaches, “The basicquestion of revolution is politicalpower. He who has power has ev¬erything, he who is without powerhas nothing. . . There is still abourgeoise and the remoulding ofthe bourgeoise has only just star¬ted. The class struggle is by nomeans over.”“Since 1949 the constant endeavour of the bourgeoisie,” says Chi¬na Features, “has been to usurppower from the proletariat, usingfor their purposes the handful ofpart persons in authority taking thecapitalist road. . . Anti-communistelements masquerading as Partymembers had wormed their wayinto control in the world of litera¬ture and art.”THE PRESENT SEIZURE ofpower it claims, has been initiatedfrom below, not above. It is beingaccomplished by a mass move¬ment, called for and supported byChairman Mao.According to the press service,the present struggle for power be¬gan on June 1, 1966, when sevenrevolutionary cadres and teachersin the Philosophy Department ofPeking University put up what be¬came known as “the first Marxist-Leninist big character poster.”SAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"SINCE 1*24PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200BICYCLES —CHEAPWe subscribe to the current adminis¬tration's anti-inflationary guidelines.English Robinhood or Ranger 3-gearlightweights $40.00Raleigh, Carlton, FalconandGitane Touring and competition bi¬cycles at the lowest prices in Chicago.Adequate selection of used gearedbikes."Factory trained" mechanicsBicycle rentalsFREE DELIVERY IN CHICAGOTurin Bicycke Co-Op1952 N. SEDGWICK ST.WH 4-8865 or MO 4-9548Open M-F 2:00.8:30Sat-Sun-10:00-8:00Closed ThursdayHearWARDEN JACK JOHNSONSOCIETY AS THEHANGMAN:THE ISSUE OFCAPITAL PUNISHMENTat theChicago Ethical Society5480 S. KENWOODAPRIL 2 10:45 AM »TWA fhCLUB•—O'—K3—W. /*o« Mil t» TN»g atWith this cardthe bookworm turnsinto an adventurer.JolnTWA’j'* -*. * _ ' ^l*—50/50 Club and getup to 50% off regularJet Coach Care*'*4It’s easy. If you’re under 22,just fill out an application, buythe $3.00 IDcard-and you’re onyour way to any TWA city in theU.S. for half fare. Your 5Q/5QCIut>fare is good most all year*, whenJyou fly on a standby basis!VT° 8®t your card, call youxjravel£g£nt, or your nearest TwAofficflVe’re your kind of atrlin&Jt/Vorldwidoonand 27, Pec, IS thro & & 44 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 31, 1967SPAC Will Meet Saturday To ConsiderRunning Candidates for SG, NSA Races British Philosopher Lectures at BreastedThe Student Political ActionCommittee (SPAC), StudentGovernment’s left wing partya year ago, will meet Saturdayto discuss running candidates inthe SG elections this spring.Jerry Lipsch: SPAC Chairman,noted that the rise in importance ofthe student participation issue wasthe primary impetus for SPAC’s re¬considering the value of studentgovernment."THE CRYSTALLIZING of is¬sues like democratization, realhouse autonomy, the rank, the hir¬ing and firing of faculty, politicaldiscrimination in admissions to thecollege, curricular reform, and soon, makes discussion of using SGas a basis of attack worthwhile, atleast,” Lipsch said.'Oligarchial Approach'SPAC pulled out of SG a year agoon the grounds that involvementthere diverted the left’s attentionaway from the students and, ac¬cording to Lipsch, "redirected itinto a Gnosis-style program of end¬less, powerless negotiation.”"We got caught up in the'bureau¬cratic, oligarchical approach of theGNOStS-dominated governmentand lost consciousness of our owndistinct approach and purpose,”Lipsch said. GNOSIS is the partywhich shared power with SPAClast year and which holds themajority in SG now.Lipsch emphasized that if SPACran the government, "our wholeconcept of how SG should be run,its relationship to the student body,would be drastically different fromthe practice of the GNOSIS govern¬ments of the past.”Although there is no clear con¬sensus in the left about running.Lipsch noted that "there is somestrong feeling in favor of it.”SG—An AssetLipsch, who is presently CampusAction Chairman in the govern¬ment. said that the main questionto be discussed Saturday is "wheth¬er SG can be a useful strategic as¬set in our effort to organize stu¬dents to speak for themselves.”During the past year, manySPAC members have been activein left-wing campus groups, suchas Students for Democratic Societyand Students Against the Rank.One of the topics of tomorrow’smeeting will be the question of sup¬porting a slate for the National Stu¬dent Association NSA. Some mem¬bers are reported to favor with¬drawal from NSA because of itspast relationship to the Central In¬telligence Agency.The meeting is open to all stu¬dents sympathetic to SPAC’s poli¬tics. It is scheduled for 12:30 pm inSocial Sciences 305. John Wisdom Discusses Eternal LifeJohn Wisdom discussedeternal life in terms of mysti¬cal experiences on Tuesdayevening’s William VaughnMoody lecture in Breasted Hall.Wisdom is professor of philoso¬phy at Trinity College, CambridgeUniversity. His philosophy closelyfollows the tradition of More, Rus¬sel, and Wittgenstein, and hisworks include Other Minds, Philo¬sophy and Psychology, and Para¬dox and Discovery.Wisdom commented that he hadnot discovered a method by whichman could achieve eternal life, norwould he discuss eternal life interms of life’s duration."Through mystical experiences,”he explained, "a person gainsawareness of truths that are be¬yond understanding.” These experi¬ences bring to the person a newknowledge of the world aroundhim. this knowledge is an obscureknowledge that cannot be stated insimple sentences and propositions.It serves to change man’s view ofthe world in general rather than togive him insights into anythingparticular.These experiences make man seethe world in a different way, Wis¬dom said, but not necessarily in atruer or happier way. They can just as easily cause man to have adistorted view of the world as theycan cause man to have a true pic¬ture of the world.While the person undergoes thesemystical experiences, Wisdom con¬tended, time stands still for him.His life for a moment becomeseternal and he can see all of thepast, present, and future at thesame time.UC Receives $1,000,000 Gift from FundA grant of $1,000,000been made to UC by the WoodsCharitable Fund, Inc.This gift to the University’s$160,000,000 Campaign for Chicagowas announced by President Bea¬dle.There has been no formal deci¬sion on how the $1,000,000 gift fromthe Woods Charitable Fund, Inc.,will be used, but the Woods Fundhast porting the development of the pro¬posed Center for the Arts on thecampus.According to Wisdom, however, has expressed an interest in sup- The Center for the Arts will con¬sist of an Art Building, a MusicBuilding, and a Theater in ablock-long setting at the entranceto the University’s new NorthQuadrangel, South Greenwood Ave¬nue at East 56th Street. EdwardLarrabee Barnes, the architect,has created an overall plan for theCenter.Did you get your Doc Films calendar?It'* more important than tha univarsity time schedule, because this is the best quarter in Doc Rim*' history. Pick up your calendar tomorrow night at our showingof A HARD DAY'S NIGHT, or give us a call at extension 2898. And while you're at it, get a Doc films Associate Membership. Still only five dollars.DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644PRESCRIPTIONS PRIED EYE EXAMINATIONSNEWEST STYUNO IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Diecount DO 3-6866CONTACT LENSES MORE NEW VINTAGE BOOKSATOMIC DIPLOMACY; HIROSHIMA and P0TS0AMby Gar Alperovitz $2.45LITERARY CTITICISMby W. Wimsatt and C. Brooks $2.95STORY OF A LIFEby K. Pavstovsky $2.45PEDRO MARINEZ y.C.'BOS NELSON MOTORSImport CentreFree toChicagoStudents25<p to othersA new booklet, published by anon-profit educational founda¬tion, tells which career field, letsyou make the best use of allyour college training, includingliberal-arts courses —whichcareer field offers 100,000 newjobs every year —which careerfield produces more corporationpresidents than any other—whatstarting salary you can expect.Just send this ad with your nameand address. This 24-page,career-guide booklet, "Oppor¬tunities in Selling,” will bemailed to you. No cost or obli¬gation. Address: Council on Op¬portunities, 550 Fifth Ave.,NewYork 36, N. Y.. by Oscar Lewis $2.9*5I Junior 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 UNIVERSITY> New York, N.Y. 10003((* General Book DepartmentUniversity ot Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.WHY AU THE CONTROVERSY ABOUTLSD 24?MUSICRAFT GLADLY SELLS ITWe sett it because it turns YOU on—a $24.95 loudspeaker by KLH, goodenough to use in any smalt audio system yet priced sensibly enough to enablemany students to own hi-fi components for the first time. (1# case you'repuzzled, LSO stands for Loud-speaker Dynamics, a Musicraft front organization.)And would you believe KLH stands for Katz, Levin, and Horwitz?TAKE A TRIPMarch 31, 1967 • CHICAGO MAIOON • 5Weston Lab Head WilsonNamed UC Physics ProfRobert Rathbun Wilson, re¬cently appointed director ofthe national accelerator labor¬atory to be built at Weston,Illinois, has been named a profes¬sor of physics here.Wilson is now director of Cor¬nell’s Laboratory of Nuclear Stud¬ies and will be on leave from Cor¬nell when he comes to the Midwest.At UC, he will hold a joint appoint¬ment in the Department of Physicsand the Enrico Fermi Institute forNuclear Studies.WILSON VISITED UC last weekto complete plans to reside in theHyde Park-Kenwood community.He will formally take over direc¬tion of the Weston project and jointhe University’s faculty in eitherAugust or September.Wilson has been Professor ofPhysics and Director of the Labo¬ratory of Nuclear Studies at Cor¬nell since 1947. One of his primaryduties has been directing the de¬sign and construction on campus ofa 10 BEV electron synchrotron,which he expects to see through toits successful completion this year.He previously headed the Experi¬mental Nuclear Physics Division atthe Los Alamos (New Mexico)Laboratory of the Army’s Manhat¬tan District from 1944 to 1946.WHILE STILL A graduate stu¬dent, Wilson began his research onthe scattering of protons by pro¬tons. He went to Princeton Univer¬sity as an instructor in 1940 and soon was engaged, in collaborationwith the late Enrico Fermi, then atColumbia University, in some earlymeasurements of the neutron¬absorbing properties of the elementU-235.In 1941, he invented the “isotronmethod” for separating the iso¬topes of uranium. He then wasplaced in charge of a 50-man atom¬ic energy project at Princeton.When the Los Alamos Laboratorywas formed in 1943, Wilson and hiscolleagues moved to New Mexico tohelp in the formation of that labo¬ratory, where he served as directorof the cyclotron group. He wasnamed to head the ExperimentalNuclear Physics Division a yearlater and served until 1946, when heaccepted a teaching post at Har¬vard University.WILSON ASSISTED in designinga cyclotron at Harvard before leav¬ing in 1947 to direct Cornell Univer¬sity’s Laboratory of Nuclear Stud¬ies. There, he and his colleagueshave built a progression of electronsynchrotrons that started with apioneering 300 million electron volt(MEV) machine. They were thefirst to apply the strong focusingprinciple to an accelerator whenthey built a 1.2 BEV machinewhich recently was replaced by amore modern 2 BEV unit. Theynow are finishing a 10 BEV elec¬tron synchrotron that will be thelargest electron synchrotron in theworld. With these machines, Wil¬son's group has explored the struc¬ture of the proton.and "Cok«H on rtjltlind !rodt-m«rVi wMck MmM? #nty Dm ptfrct *» T»« C««-C«k Cw»k««T•V ;*!■: 'Let’s hearit for thecheerleaders!Everybody cheers for ice-cold Coca-Cola. Coke hasthe taste you never get tired of...always refresh¬ing,. That's why things go better with Coke •••afterCoke... after Coke.Bottled under the authority of the Coca-Cola Company by:The Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Chicago It's trade-in timefor tired old myths.Like the one about business. Especiallybig business. That it is beyond the ruggedindividualist’s wildest daydream to enterthis holy of holies because he’ll lose some¬thing that’s very sacred — like his inde¬pendence.Sure, it can happen. If a guy or galwants to hide, or just get by, or not acceptresponsibility, or challenges.We’re not omniscient enough or stupidenough to speak for all business, but at acompany like Western Electric, brightideas are not only welcome, they are en¬couraged. And no door is shut. Create aflittle stir, go ahead, upset an old apple¬cart (we replace shibboleths at a terrificpace — we have to as manufacturing andsupply unit of the Bell System — in order[to provide your Bell telephone company£with equipment it needs to serve you.)r ) There’s an excitement in business. True,• '’we’re in it to make a profit, but working to find new and better ways to make thingsthat help people communicate is very re¬warding and satisfying. Did you ever hearthese wry words of Oliver WendellHolmes? “Never trust a generality — noteven this one.”That’s how we feel about the generalitythat claims you’ll just become a little cogin a company like Western Electric. Youmight, of course, but if you consider your¬self an individual now, odds are 10 to 1that you’ll keep your individuality. Andcherish it. And watch it grow. Even at big,big Western Electric.You know, that’s the only way we’dwant you to feel. If you feel like comingin with us.Western ElectricMANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM6 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 31, 1967Maroon InterviewWanen 'Time for Change’/1' .7: 11 n II. ^ Committee Asks Student Aid(Editor's note: The following is theconclusion of an interview with Re-publican Mayoral candidate JohnH oner. the first part of which ap¬peared in Tuesday's Maroon.)Maroon: How would you handlesome of the problems of transpor¬tation faced by the city?Waner: I strongly believe that wecan no longer live along side ofthe automobile downtown. Weshould have a downtown restrict¬ed from private cars during theday. We could then create mallsand green in the area of the cen¬tral business district. We couldrestrict private traffic from thearea, possibly between the hoursof 8 to 4:30, provide for trucksto make deliveries at night, orperhaps provide access lanes fortrucks so that they can servicethe area by day.I have traveled all over theworld, and have seen finer sys¬tems of subways and mass transitin Tokyo, Russia and France thanwe have in Chicago, and mindvou. the only subways we have inthe city were built by Cermak in1933 1 think we should extend oursubway system to the far cornersof our city, to the far corners ofthe metropolitan Chicago. Wehave to move traffic under¬ground. We can no longer livealong side of the automobile. Webuild a new highway today, to¬morrow it is full. With just one ortwo inches of snow the Dan Ryanhas already become one of thegreatest parking lots in the world.The city should encourage peopleto leave their cars at home and totake mass transportation. Withthe rising cost of concrete, andland acquisition, let’s deempha-size the automobile. By develop¬ing mass transit services two pur¬poses are served. The car is thegreatest contributer of gas andnoxious fumes into the city. Wemake the streets more readily ac¬cessibly and our downtown areamore beautiful, and help clean upthe air. The only ones who wouldbe hurt would be the garage own¬ers. who are inevitably tied to theDemocrats. And they wouldn’t behurt too bad for after hours, theywould still be used by people com-.ing in to enjoy our shows and,theatres.Maroon: Why do you think that |many of the normally Republicanbusiness leaders of the city aresupporting your opponent?Waner: There are very few “nor-.mally Republican businessmen’’who live in the city. If you are!talking about “normally Republi¬can businessmen” fromI-ibertyville, Wheaton, Du PageCounty, and Winnetka that aresupporting my opponent, they findthat it is a lot easier to go alongwith the system then to fight it.They don’t have to live here!Maroon: Why are you running formayor in the face of such over¬whelming odds?Waner: To quote J. B. Priestly,‘ Not many of us are willing tofight for it, and if necessary todie for it, but you will find onehere, one there, till there are mil¬lions of us.” I feel that there areenough people in Chicago that feelas I do that it is time for achange, that we should end thissystem.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign car hotpital A faculty committee which hasbeen examining the role of Federalgrants and contracts to the Univer¬sity is interested in student view¬points.Committee Chairman H. StanleyBennett invited students to submitReverend Robert J.McCracken, minister of theRiverside Church in NewYork, will deliver a sermonon “Unconscious Christians”at Rockefeller Chapel nextSunday at 11 am.Rev. McCracken is a notedBaptist theologian, author,and professor of religion. Hismost recent book, What isSin? What is Virtue?, waspublished last year.On Saturday, Rev.McCracken will officiate atthe wedding of Sharon Percyand John D. Rockefeller TV. their opinions to the committee toenable it to determine the degreeof student awareness and concernabout Federal aid. The committeehas already met with student mem¬bers of the Page Committee.As part of its study, the commit- tual aspects of the situation and op¬inions of faculty members.Students who are interested in of¬fering their viewpoints to the com¬mittee are invited to contact Chair¬man Bennett in Experimental Bi-_ _ IMUU ucilltee has examined closely the fac-1 ology 105.Three Professors Win Research AwardsWanerMaroon: Would you briefly out¬line your background. Whatmakes you qualified to be mayorof the second largest city in theUnited States?Waner: I am a life long Chica¬goan, a tax payer, a businessman,in the city, I conduct successfulrelations with all of the people inmy area, participating in manysocial and service organizations.If we can make one community afine community, such as the oneI live in, we can make the city asa whole great community. Thisplus the fact that I know peopleand love this city, and am willingto put my money on the line in acampaign to which a good per¬centage of our Chicagoans seemto see as hopeless. . . If I havethe will to want to do somethingfor my city it is not for monetarygain, but because I want to leavesomething for my children andgrandchildren, to leave Chicagojust a little better place than Ifound it. I know it can be done. Isay that if we have to fight tomake things better for our kids,let’s fight to do it now! Two literary scholars here havebeen appointed William H. ColvinResearch Professors in the Univer-1 sity’s Division of the Humanitiesfor the academic year 1967-68.They are Edward Wasiolek, pro¬fessor of Russian and comparativeliterature, and Bernard W'einberg,professor and chairman of the de¬partment of romance languagesand literatures.In addition, the appointment ofthe 1968-69 Colvin Research Profes¬sor was announced. lie is Robert L.Scranton, professor of classical ar¬chaeology. The William II. Colvin ResearchProfessorships are awarded an¬nually to one or more faculty mem¬bers in the Division of the Humani¬ties who ..-re engaged in writingprojects. The professorships freethe faculty members from theirnormal classroom duties and al¬low' them to concentrate on theirprojects.DanishModem(Interiorby Carlsberg—IZO Years Old)Drink Carlsberg —the mellow, flavorful beer of Copenhagen.C**1**, IrHKiH, Cop*Ah»g*n. Dwimirt, • Clr'slerf Inc.. 104 E 40th St.. N.r Europe is waiting for you—Where the boys and girls areEuropean JobsLuxembourg—American Student In¬formation Service is celebrating its10th year of successful operationplacing students in jobs and arrang¬ing tours. Any student may nowchoose from thousands of jobs suchas resort, office, sales, factory, hos¬pital, etc. in 15 countries with wagesup to $400 a month. ASIS maintainsplacement offices throughout Europeinsuring you of on the spot help atall times. For a booklet listing alljobs with application forms and dis¬count tours send $2 (for overseashandling & air mail reply) to:Dept. M, American Student Informa¬tion Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte,Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy ofLuxembourg.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes - Batteries10% discount to itudont* with 10 cards... La protection flnanci&re qua voutdonnez & votre familla aujourd'huidevra lui dtre procurde d'une autrafagon domain. L’assuranca Sun Ufapout certainement accompllr catt#tflche & votre placa.En tant quo reprdsentant local da la SunLife, puis-je vous visiter A un moment davotre cholic?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., ClUOna North laSalle Street, Chicago *0402FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY BABY HUEYAND THETHE ROVIN’ KINDTHE CHAMBERS BROTHERSTHE BUCKINGHAMSTHE EXCEPTIONSAMO MANY OTHERSWide Open Wed. thru Sun. at 8 P.M.Plus Color TV! Boutique! Library! Soda Fountain! Bar! Scopi tone!Advance price tickets on sale at all WARD storesand at Ticket Central, 212 North MichiganTo throw a Cheetah party for 50-2000, call Miss Prusa at M0 4-5051March 31, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Dean NewmanAdministrators are often viewed with suspicion by studentswho wonder what they do all day and who resent their power.And administrators have a tendency to become more aloof andsecretive the longer they are in power.THE RESIGNATION OF James Newman as assistant deanof students will be a severe loss to the University’s administra¬tion, simply because Newman in many ways was an exceptionaladministrator.Newman is the kind of man who will stop a student and askhim how his courses are going, what he thinks of a recentdevelopment in the University, and whether his plans for thefuture have changed. He is the kind of man who can make astudent feel the University’s bureaucracy is really not as coldand large and unfriendly as it often seems to be.In the general course of events, Newman has remained dis¬creetly in the background, most likely because he prefers toavoid publicity and simply get things done in a quiet manner.As dean of housing and student activities, only a few peopleknow of the many times Newman has been roused out of bedin the middle of the night because a student has been arrestedor because a resident head is worried about a student who hasnot returned to the dorm.AND WE HAVE A FEELING that just as few people areaware of the role Newman has played in the University’s pro¬gress in housing and student activities over the last severalyears. Certainly no other administrator has been as keenlyaware of and concerned about how students felt and as sympa¬thetic to their views.Students will have lost a friend in power when Newmanleaves the administration July 1 to take on a full teaching loadagain. He will certainly be difficult to replace.Spring, Bah!Spring is in the air and after a long, cold, and very snowywinter, everybody seems to be pretty pleased that the weatheris turning warm, the birds are beginning to sing, etc., etc.What nobody seems to be taking into account is the fact thatspring in Hyde Park is a season fraught with literally a thou¬sand perils. For example, taking a stroll is infintely safer whenit’s 5 degrees below zero than when it's 75 and the sun isshining.THE FIRST WARM weekend of the year is traditionallymarred by a rape and/or mugging or two, as if the weatherbrings out the beast in people, although it probably only bringsout more people.The physical perils of spring aren’t all there is to worryabout. There is the unquestionable threat that spring poses todiligent scholarship. Nothing is more frustrating, for example,than writing a paper on Wordsworth when the sun is shiningand one’s friends are heading for an afternoon at the Point.THERE ARE PARTIES too. The sound of music filters outof open windows, or blares out of them, while hangers onpatrol the streets looking for the action.You can say all you want to about winter, but it must beadmitted that the season does have its advantages.Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief ..David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanKenneth SimonsonExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterFeature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsEditor Emeritus Daniel Hertzbergy •< .•< •.•>/ . y / vi/y/ v.-y.8 • CHICAGO MAROON • March 31, 1967 David H. RichterSome Thoughts on Cod,Freud, LBJ, Keats, ect.Thoughts I Didn’t Feel LikeWriting a Column About:When a woman says “thank-you” to a man—and really meansit_she is through with him.Some people try to live theirlives as though it were a lyricpoem, some as though it were aplay, some as though it were anovel. The first are the most in¬teresting, the second are the mostunhappy.Don’t we all know people whothink they are sophisticated, whenthey are only worldly.The price of political activismis the company you keep.“God is love”—or do not wemean it the other way around?When a man opens the car doorfor his wife, one or the other ofthem is new.Nowadays the word “honora¬ble” leaves a funny taste in themouth—which is why we all pro¬nounce it the way Marc Aritonydid.A woman will sacrifice any¬thing to her love—even its ob¬ject. A perfect memory meansmore to them than a tolerablematch. Our Department of “Defense”is conducting a “pacification”program in Vietnam. A sign that,linguistically at least, we are wellon our way to Nineteen Eighty-Four.Without meaning to, Freud andhis friends killed the notion of“evil” in the world. Once its de¬monic nature has been explained,its fascination is gone. And evena Hitler can be “explained”.“Chacon a son gout" is only acowardly excuse for not defendingone’s opinions. As a philosophicalposition, it makes a virtue out ofignorance and ill-breeding.It is too bad that it is no long¬er an insult to call a man a poli¬tician. Lyndon Johnson is a poli¬tician.Piety is a defense againstthought. And that goes for thepious about “causes” as well asthose old-fashioned enough to taketheir religion seriously.I was a happy child, and sowere you, because we were notconscious enough to realize thatwe were otherwise. Now my ig¬nominious memories torment me as they never did before.Tell the truth and shame thedevil—along with everyone else inearshot. Fortunately, we havemade it a dangerous practice andan extinct occupation.Once upon a time, one couldcompliment a work with thephrase “elegant in its simplicity.”Have all the simple things beensaid, so that the muddle is thehighest form of art?Keats may have thought he waswinking at Plato when he wrotethat “Beauty is truth, truth beau¬ty.” He was parodying Nietzsche.And I suspect that the ode ismore comprehensible now than in1820—now that we all base ourethics upon our aesthetics.Our psychologizing has gone sofar that unless we can identifywith the protagonist we will throwdown the book. Is that why Shake¬speare’s incomparable Coriolanusis so unpopular—that he leaves noplace to fix one’s sympathies?Editing a newspaper is the mostfrustrating, unrewarding activityin the world—except for readingone.David L. AikenModeration in PursuitOf Justice: Dean WickBERKELEY—Learning of theresignation of Dean of StudentsWarner A. Wick while visitingthis fount of student agitation, inthe land of the hippies by the bay,makes one think back on some ofthe more exciting moments of re¬cent years at Berkeley and atChicago.“Comparative Administrators,”today’s lecturette could be called,or, “A Tale of Two Sit-ins, with aSit-down Thrown in.”Perhaps most indicative of onedifference between the two insti¬tutions is the difference in causesof the Sproul Hall melee in 1964 inBerkeley, and the 1966 Ad build¬ing marathon at Chicago.BERKELEY'S TROUBLESarose from completely arbitrary,repressive bans on speakers orliterature tables on campus. Dem¬onstrations began when police ar¬rested students caught passingout political literature. (The re¬strictions, reportedly enforcedafter Oakland Tribune publisherWilliam Knowland complainedabout picketing of the Republicanconvention in San Francisco, havesince been considerably relaxed.)It is rumored that there aresimilar restrictions somewhere inthe Chicago rulebooks. When oc¬casions have arisen which mighthave called for enforcement ofsuch rules, however, Wick wasamong those willing to overlookthem.CHICAGO'S OWN sit-in result¬ed from simple lack of fore¬thought, mainly on the part of theFaculty Council, which allowedmale class ranking to be resumedwithout much consideration ofLettersThe CO ColumnTO THE EDITOR:I don’t have time for a detailedessay, but I feel Michael Seid-man’s column entitled “CO’s andthe Army: A Neglected Inequity” students’ attitudes. When theproblem was thrown in the laps ofadministrators (or quite literallythrown at their feet, since theypractically had to step over dem¬onstrators to get out of the build¬ing), there was a display of con¬siderable cool.No state police were called todrag people down the steps. (Fuzzwas rather scarce during thewhole affair, in fact.) When thesetactics succeeded in getting peo¬ple out of the building, the basicissues were thrown right back atthe faculty, where they belong.Throughout the various trouble¬some times. Wick has (usually)kept his cool. Perhaps the one ex¬ception was his request that citypolice escort a small group of die¬hard sitters-down from StaggField during the protest over analleged desire to bring back big-time football. Even there, Wickstopped police from bringingdemonstrators to the lock-up.In his long tenure as Dean ofStudents, Wick has continuallybeen an effective spokesman forthe interests of students in thecouncils of the administration.While Chicago is still lagging be¬hind some other schools (e.g. An¬tioch, Roosevelt) in bringing stu¬dents into positions with real in¬fluence in decision-making, anumber of advances have beenmade under Wick’s guidance. Stu¬dents, not the dean, now parcelout funds for student activitiesthrough CORSO, and students, notthe dean, now have primary(alas, not final) authority in set¬ting house social rules. Smallsteps, but steps forward.which appeared in the Maroon ofMarch 28, calls for comment.The logic of the “justness” or“fairness” of a position of Con¬scientious Objection allows fortwo interrelated options:1) This first is the position ofSeidman, which at bottom is thatjustice implies an elimination ofall distinctions whatever. This po¬sition can be carried to the ex- Students have always been ableto get a fair 1 earing from Wick.He had a moderately disarmingway of listening to requests or de¬mands, however, which was mis¬understood by some. He wouldlean back in his chair, stare outhis second-floor window on thecomings and goings of people onthe quadrangles, puff on his pipe(usually not lit), and ponderawhile. No heated arguments forhim.When he did speak, however, itwas often (perhaps too often)something outrageously quotable.“Hell, no. Studepts don’t run thisuniversity, and it’s about timethey learned it.” “Maybe I'm abigger bastard than Jim New¬man.” These are some of thememorable ones. His rhetoriccould often be misleading, andcreate unncessary antagonism, aswhen he seemed to imply that onestudent was “blackmailing” theuniversity by asking for specialfinancial aid—then came throughwith the money.WICK'S DECISION to step outof the dean’s office is no surprise.He has been in a long time, andfew faculty members really seekout such a demanding job as deanof students. Only a man with con¬siderable dedication to improve¬ment of student life would answerthe call of his colleagues and per¬form his task so diligently.Wick had such a sense of dedi¬cation. We are sure that CharlesO’Connell, a warm, personableman who has shown considerableenergy and skill as admissions di¬rector, will prove a worthy suc¬cessor.treme of elimination of militaryranking, promotion of absolutedemocratic decision making, etc.The fact that the general princi¬ple allows such extreme mea¬sures makes it imperative thatwhen one argues for the elimina¬tion of some, but not all distinc¬tions, some other principles or ar¬guments must be used to justify(Continued on Page Ten)I‘We Want Peace, Quiet’ - Gen. Thieu, (Continued from Page Three)army officers as province chiefs.This is a difficult job, and it re¬quires a man of action, a militaryman.* « I asked a series of questionsabout the progress of the war. Gen¬eral Thieu replied, “It is very clearthat for a year the Viet Cong havehad no momentum. They have nof.1 » more hope of winning large battlessuch as in 1964 and 1965. Theywon’t seize any provinces. Theyare still infilitrating, of course, butwe can handle this problem.”j • 0: General Thieu, there has beenmuch talk of peace in recentweeks. Do you see any chance fornegotiated settlement at the pres¬ent time? Are there any circum-♦ 4 stances under which the govern¬ment of South Viet Nam might en¬ter into peace talks with Hanoi orthe NLF?A: We have to be frank and just, jJ■ *• \vTe have been at war for 20 years, jThe reason we are fighting, and the |reason America is fighting with us,'is that we do not want a Commu- jnist invasion. But we want peace, j’ ^we want South Viet Nam to be jquiet. We would accept a just and. . Prize To Be GivenBy FOTA, MaroonThe Festival of' the Arts1 (FOTA) Board announced to¬day that this year’s programwill include a poetry contest,sponsored by the Maroon. A first j* prize of $25 will be awarded, andthe four best poems will bepublished in the Maroon. In addi¬tion, the prize-winning poets willj read their works during an open-* ’ house coffee hour which will take[ place during FOTA, at the end ofApril.Judges of the contest include: 'Randall Reid, assistant professor of |English and College humanities, jBryan Dunlap, editor of the Chica¬go Literary Review, Penelope Glas-;gow, sculptress, poet, and officemanager of the Maroon, Edward| Hoarne, editor of the Chicago Liter¬ary Review, Jack Kolb, chairmanof FOTA; and Mark Rosip, feature jeditor of the Maroon,i Any registered U’C student mayenter, and any type of poetry will jbe considered, as long as it is orgi-1nal. Poetry must be submitted tothe Maroon office by April 20, 1967.msSTUDY INSOUTHERN FRANCEA University year in Aix-en-Provence underhit auspices of the University of Aix-Mar-seille (founded 1409).EUROPEAN AREA STUDIESFRENCH LANGUAGEAND LITERATUREHONORS PROGRAM(courses in French University exclusively)ART AND ART HISTORYSOCIAL SCIENCESMEDITERRANEAN AREA STUDIESClasses in English and French satisfying5Bnlc.u um.and credit reQuirements of overbo American Colleges and Universities,j ents live in French homes. Total costsquivalent to those at private universitiescolleges in the United States."SEMESTER PROGRAM IN AVIGNON""SUMMER PROGRAM»N AIX-EN-PROVENCE"Write:institute forAMERICAN UNIVERSITIES(founded 1957)u. A'XENpROVENCE. FRANCEPhone: France (Code 91) 27.82 39or (Code 91) 27.69.01 honorable peace, if Hanoi wouldstop its invasion. But there are nosigns yet that Hanoi wants peace.They are still convinced they canwin—not so much militarily now,but politically. So I see no movetoward peace yet. Remember too,they may be under pressure fromChina to continue the war, even ifHanoi might want peace.Q: But General Thieu, thereseem to be signs now that Ho ChiMinh might settle for les§ than avictory. It is well known that Rus¬sian supplies for North Viet Namhave been stopped at the Chineseborder, and the recent chaos inChina may mean that China will nolonger be able to pressure Hanoiinto continuing the war. A newspa¬per report yesterday cited NorthVietnamese sources in Hong Kongas saying that Ho Chi Minh nolonger feels he can win the war andis looking for a possible negotiatedpeace, in which the National Liber¬ation Front might have the minorshare of a coalition government.Would terms like these be accepta¬ble to South Viet Nam?A: Up to now we do not recognizethe possibility of the NLF as a po¬litical entity in a coalition govern¬ment. When Hanoi is feeling weak,then it will withdraw its forces, andthen I believe the NLF will col¬lapse. They are not strong enoughto continue fighting by themselves.Q: Suppose a future civilian gov¬ernment were to seek peace nego¬tiations? Would the military feelcompelled to prevent it?A: We do not feel a coalition gov¬ernment would be acceptable to theVietnamese people. All people inViet Nam—students, politicians, all of them—are afraid of a coalitiongovernment because our politicalstructure is not yet strong enoughto counter the political forces of theViet Cong organization. We are notwell enough organized.Q: General Thieu, how long doyou think it will take to organizepolitical parties that may stand upto the Viet Cong?A: That will be a very long pro¬cess—perhaps ten years. You mustremember that we have never hadan opportunity to organize demo¬cratic parties in Viet Nam. (Tie cit¬ed conditions under the French,Diem, etc.) But we cannot have atrue democracy without strong po-.litical parties. One of the jobs ofthe future government should be tohelp parties to organize andstrengthen themselves. The onlyparties we have now are very oldand fragmented.O: Does this mean you think thenext government should subsidizepolitical parties with public funds?A: Possibly funds. Other kinds ofsupport, too. Eventually we shouldhave just three of four—maybe justtwo—strong parties. This is theonly way to counter the Commu¬nists. The only two organizedgroups now are the Communistsand the army.Q: Do you mean to imply that thearmy might serve as a possiblebase for one of the strong politicalparties you envision?A: I am against political partiesin the army. On the other hand, ifany retired military men wanted toorganize a party using other re¬tired army men, that might begood. Army discipline would givethem a strong organization.GOLD CITY INNCOMPLETELY REMODELED"A Gold Mine of Good Food"10% Student DiscountHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3-2559l Eat More For LesslTry Our Convenient Take-Out OrdersIT’S A GAS"IN THE PRESIDENT’SAND MT OPINION...”by Donald PearceIllustrated by Arnold RothAn uproarious collection of hip andheady reflections on life, love and the"scene" from the heartfelt prose ofhundreds of college students — whoshall remain nameless. Would you be¬lieve i "Remember that Snow Whitewas living with those dwarfs, Is thatInnocent?" Want more? Get it!at your College Bookstore. $2.95Englewood Cliffs, Students Need Places To Meet WithFellow Students Face To Face-Newman(Continued from Page One)feels was “the closest thing to astudent union that we’ve had.”“Students need places to meetfellow students face to face,” New¬man feels. Other steps toward thegoal of a community that were tak¬en while Newman was in office,were the reopening of HutchinsonCommons, the renovating of theC-Shop, and the opening of the Ban-dersnatch.NEWMAN DISCUSSED the at¬tempts that were made during hisadministration to improve the con¬dition of student housing. When itwas found that Woodward Courtwas unsuitable, Newman said, theUniversity “spent a lot of money tomake it a better place.” The accou-stices problem was dealt with, thebasement rooms were fixed up, andlibraries and floor lounges wereadded. Also, the large houses werebroken into smaller units.Newman also said that variousefforts are presently being made toprovide more housing for students, such as the building of new apart¬ment.Succeeded WifeNewman succeeded his wife ashead of student activities. The twoNewman administrations found theuniversity “still recovering fromthe effects of World War II,” herecalled. Many activities had beendiscontinued during the war.Eventually, traditional activities,such as Cap and Gown, and Black-friars, were revived. In the early1960’s SWAP, STEP, and VISAwere first established. These lastthree, Newman feels, are “of themost significant developments instudent life here.” While he wasdirector of activities, Newman alsohad a hand in revitalizing the Uni¬versity Theater.NEWMAN OBSERVED, “Thesehave been years in which studentinstitutions have reully _/.'■•> wn andbeen strengthened ... and it isthrough the existence of student in¬stitutions that you get a communi¬ty.” W\ beautiful 96-page catalogue of table topfashions is yours by sending 23£ to DanskDesigns Ltd., Dept. C3, Mt. Kisco, N. Y. 10549March 31, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9_Spring Bringing Activitity on the LeftSpring has come to Chicago,and perennial trouble is brew¬ing on the new left. This weekwill see a proliferation of leftwing meetings, rallies, and generalrabble-rousing — presumably inpreparation for the Percy-Rocke-feller wedding.Festivities will begin this after¬noon at 4 pm when StudentsAgainst the Rank (SAR) will holdits first meeting of the quarter.Last quarter, SAR voted to concen¬trate future efforts on the demo¬cratization of the University, parti¬ cularly as it relates to decisions onco-operation with the SelectiveService and faculty appointments.These decisions will be reviewedand possibly expanded today.ON SATURDAY, THE StudentPolitical Action Committee (SPAC)will hold a caucus at 1 pm in SocialScience 305 to decide whether torun a left-wing slate in the upcom¬ing elections for the Student Gov¬ernment Assembly and the Nation¬al Student Association Congress.Last year SPAC withdrew from theSG elections, claiming that SG hadceased to deal with real problems.After a brief respite Sunday, left-wing activities will be resumedMonday afternoon at 3:30 pm witha meeting of the We Won’t Go Con¬ference. A group of former Cornellstudents who were expelled for“illegal acts” will address themeeting on organizing a nationaldraft card burning movement tocoincide with the anti-Vietnam pro¬gram scheduled for later thismonth.FINALLY. ON MONDAY night.Students for a Democratic Societywill hold its first chapter meetingof the quarter at 7:30 in Ida NoyesHall. Plans for the coming quarterwill be discussed.Letters to the Editor(Continued from Page Eight)the drawing of the line. Seidmanis not at all explicit about theseother principles, and if one at¬tempts to read between the lines,it seems to me one can concludethat he is quite confused as towhat they are. I take it his thirdparagraph was an attempt tomake clear the “philosophical”difficulties of a CO position. Hisargument seems to be based uponsomething called “majority deci¬sion”. Quite apart from the prag¬matic difficulties and the absurdi¬ty of calling legislation enactedby the Congress of the UnitedStates a “majority decision”,Seidman’s argument puts the cartbefore the horse, for since thesupposed majority has made pro¬vision for CO, and probably willcontinue to do so, to make use ofthe provision is not to disobey the“majority will”. In addition, toequate military service with thepayment of highway taxes is tomake a mockery of the moral di¬lemmas involved in the willfuldestruction of human life on amass scale. Lastly, with refer¬ence again to majority decision,one would assume that after theexperience of Nazi Germany, theproblem of the justness of a deci¬sion because it represents the“majority will” would be one no¬body could ignore-yet Seidmancertainly does.2) This second option, onewhich is not at all considered bySeidman, is that justice entailsnot the elimination of all distinc¬ tions, but the making of distinc¬tions in a meaningful manner,which in one segment of Westernpolitical tradition, has meant res¬pect for distinctions which are inturn duly respectful of the basicdignity and moral autonomy ofhuman beings, and the attempt,within the bounds of such respect,to eliminate those distinctionswhich promote results contrary tosuch respect. This concept is re¬lated to the first because it main¬tains distinctions which are not sojustifiable are to be eliminated onthe grounds of justice. On this ba¬sis one can still argue that COstatus as it currently is formulat¬ed is, for many of the reasonswhich Seidman notes, unjustifi¬able (though this does not implythat men who attempt to makeuse of the current provision areacting contrary to the principlesof justice); but one can contendthat this calls not for the elimina¬tion of CO status, but for chang¬ing it from a narrow’-minded reli¬gious orientation to a broadly con¬ceived status grounded upon clearconceptions as to the limitationsof government or “majority” in¬terference with the lives and mor-TYPISTSHyde Park. Girls apply to suite #631,Hyde Park Bank Bldg., 1525 E. 53rdSt. for interesting jobs:— 2 or 3 days/wk. or full time— choice of neighborhood ordowntown— top wages $75 bonusElaine Revelle Inc.contact Yvonne Chambresat: 684-7000 ality of individual citizens.To speak, as Seidman does, ofthe “honorable” position of im¬prisonment w'hen the individualhas overriding moral objectionsto some actions of the “majori¬ty”, is to ignore the question ofthe justice of such objections. Ifthey are just, does not justice, orfairness, demand they be respect¬ed?JEFFREY FALKNo NeedTO THE EDITOR:There is no need for two police¬men to guard the entrance-way toFlint House at Woodward Courts;one will do. Maintaining a patrolof two officers is a waste of mon¬ey. The University should spendonly that amount of money whichis necessary to maintain a vitaloperation; the stationing of morethan one patrolman in WoodwardCourts is not vital.J. NATHANSONEYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StrsstHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty Discount\V" Help keepAvis batteries fromgoing dead this weekend.Ife'll make itrorth vyur *hile Avis doesn’t give specialson weekdays because wc don’thave to.We hardly have enough carsto handle all the businessmenMonday through Friday.But weekends are a different story.You can gel a Plymouth for the rale of *20plus Mileage from Noon FrL to Mon. Noon.We don’t make much on a deal like this.But it’s better than having our cars sit around,collecting dust.F*r More loformobosSMd Reservations. AVISRENT AC** Call 7CZ-0I80CONVENIENT LOCATION 1616 E. 53rd ST. Duo-Pianists inRecital TonightAs part of the University’s Cham¬ber Music Series, Milton and PeggySalkind. duo-pianists, will present arecital in Mandel Hall, this eve¬ ning, at 8:30 pm. The program willinclude works by Chopin, Debussy.Clementi, Felciano, Hindemith!Schubert, and a work by RalphShapey, Seven for Four Hands,commissioned by the Salkinds.Tickets, priced at $3 ($1 for Stu¬dents) are available at the MandelHall box office before the concert.On Campus withMaxShuIman(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!",“Dobie Gill is," etc.)WHO’S GOT THE BUTTON?I’m sure it has not escaped your notice that underlyingthe adorable whimsy which has made this column such ap<rpular favorite among my wife and my little dog Spot,there is a serious attempt to stay abreast of the problemsthat beset the American college student.Many a trip have I made to many a campus-talking toundergraduates, listening to their troubles, hearing theirgrievances, reading their buttons. (Incidentally, the sec¬ond and third most popular buttons 1 saw on mv last tripwere: “WALLACE BEERY LIVES” and “FLUORI¬DATE MUSCATEL.” The first most popular button was,as we all know’, “SCRAP THE SCRAPE” which is worn!as we all know’, by Personna Super Stainless Steel Bladeusers who, as we all know, are proud to proclaim to theworld that they have found a blade which gives themluxury shave after luxury shave, which comes both indouble-edge style and Injector style, which does indeedscrap the scrape, negate the nick, peel the pull, and oustthe ouch, which shaves so closely and quickly and trulyand beautifully that my heart leaps to tell of it. (If per¬haps you think me too effusive about Personna, I ask youto remember that to me Personna is more than just arazor blade; it is also an employer.)But I digress. I make frequent trips, as I say, to learnwhat is currently vexing the American undergraduate.Last week, for example, while visiting a prominent Eas¬tern university (Idaho State) I talked to a number ofengineering seniors who posed a serious question. Likeall students, they had come to college burning to fill them¬selves with culture, but, alas, because of all their sciencerequirements, they simply had had no time to take theliberal arts courses their young souls lusted after. “Arewe doomed.” they asked piteously, “to go through lifeuncultured?”I answered with a resounding “No!” I told them theculture they had missed in college, they would pick upafter graduation. I explained that today’s enlightenedcorporations are setting up on-the-job liberal arts pro¬grams for the newly employed engineering graduate-courses designed to fill his culture gap—for the truly en¬lightened corporation realizes that the truly cultured em¬ployee is the truly valuable employee.Tb illustrate, I cited the well-known case of ChampertSigafoos of Purdue.When Champert, having completed his degree in wingnuts and flanges, reported to the enlightened corporationwhere he had accepted employment, he was not rushedforthwith to a drawing board. He was first installed Inthe enlightened corporation’s training campus. Here hewas given a beanie, a room-mate, and a copy of the com¬pany rouser, and the enlightened corporation proceededto fill the gap in his culture.First he was taught to read, then to print capital let¬ters, then capital and small letters. (There was also anattempt to teach him script, but it was ultimatelyabandoned.)From these fundamentals, Champert progressed slowlybut steadily through the more complex disciplines. Hewas diligent, and the corporation was patient, and in theend they were well rewarded, for when Champert fin¬ished, he could play a clavier, parse a sentence, and nameall the Electors of Bavaria.Poised and cultured, Champert was promptly placed inan important executive position. I am pleased to reportthat he served with immense distinction—not, however,for long because three days later he reached retirementage.Today, still spry, he lives in St. Petersburg, Florida,where he supplements his pension by parsing sentencesfor tourists. * * * O >**. Hoi MmIm*Here's a sentence that's easy to parset Subject—“you."Verb—“dou ble." Object — “your shaving comfort whenyou use Burma-Shave, regular or mentholf along withyour Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades,"CHICAGO MAROON • March 31, 1967■WMHMHOMOver 2,000 Meet In ChicagoEducators Discuss Students, ProblemsBy David L. AikenEducators gathering in Chi¬cago for the annual get-togeth¬er sponsored by the Associa¬tion for Higher Education(AHE) did not quite have studentson the top of the list of items fordiscussion, but various proposalsfor finding a place for students—or for keeping them in their place—did keep popping up.Over 2,000 deans, administrators,and faculty members—and even ahealthy sprinkling of graduate stu¬dents who are “associate mem¬bers” of the AHE—came to townMarch 5-8 to hear talks about“Leadership and Change.”THE GREATER PART of theprogram was designed to offer ad¬vice on how to find leaders—or justThe University of ChicagoannouncesTHE OLGA AND PAUL MENNFOUNDATION PRIZESfor the academic year 1966-67A first prize of $1,000 and asecond prize of $500 in each ofthe following categories:an originalSHORT STORY or NOVELan originalPLAY of one or more actsan originalMUSICAL COMPOSITIONCompetition shall be open toUniversity of Chicago students:1. who are at least twenty andnot more than twenty-fiveyears old on June 30, 1967.2. who are members of thegraduating classes of theUniversity of Chicago, as re¬cipients of Bachelor's de¬grees, during any of the fourquarters in the school yearpreceding June 30, 1967, ORstudents who are not candi¬dates for Bachelor's degreesbut who are candidates forthree-year Master's degreesprovided they have three ormore quarters of work (withfull registration) remainingbefore completion of theMaster's degree.3. who have carried full-timecourse registration at theUniversity of Chicago for atleast six quarters (not neces¬sarily consecutive ones) priorto the date of the award.Each manuscript must be type¬written. Each musical score mustbe written in Ink. All entriesmust be submitted under a penname and accompanied by asealed envelope containing thecontestant's real name.Manuscripts must be submit¬ted to Mrs. Sally Richards, De¬partment of English, WieboldtHall, Room 205, not later thanApril 21, 1967. Awards will beannounced before the end of theSpring Quarter, 1967.Any or all of the six prizesmay be withheld if manuscriptswhich are submitted are judged!° be no* of sufficient merit totestify the awards as announced.If in the opinion of the judgestwo or more entries are of equalmerit, the prize will be divided.Further information concern-mg the competition can be ob¬tained from Randall Reid Gates-Blake, Room 305.Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA*342 I, 55 HY 3.925*NSA Discounts plain teachers—and how to bringabout any number of changes, fromusing the latest educational mediato revising the whole curriculum.A significant chunk of the four-day proceedings, however, was tak¬en up with discussions of a topicthat seemed to worry many of theconferees—how to deal with de¬mands for more influence by bothstudents and faculty.Tripartite CouncilsPerhaps one of the most forcefuladvocates of students’ place in de¬cision-making was a researeherfrom Berkeley. Warren B. Martin,research educator with the Centerfor Research and Development inHigher Education, urged that stu¬dents be full members of tri-partitecouncils to govern units of universi¬ties.Students, faculty and administra¬tion should work together equallyon these boards, he urged, w'hichshould be set up for units of nomore than about 1,000 students if auniversity is particularly large. Anall-university council with studentsas members should co-ordinategeneral policy, he suggested.The most frequently mentionedmodel of full-cooperation amongstudents, faculty, and administra¬tion was Antioch College in YellowSprings, Ohio. Indeed, it was aboutthe only place anybody could thinkof where all three groups had equalstatus on bodies with final deci¬sion-making authority.ANTIOCH WAS represented by,among others, student Danny Al¬bert, Community Moderator of thecollege’s community government,and Algo D. Henderson, formerdean and president of Antioch, nowa colleague of Martin’s at the High¬er Education Center at Berkeley.Henderson said that the tradition¬al business-like model of a univer¬sity as a bureaucratic hierarchymight be applied to supervision ofjanitors, but not of teachers andstudents. Likewise, he said, al¬though the university may be a setof sub-groups which deal with eachother through negotiations, use ofsuch “confrontation tactics” asstrikes lessens unity and emphasison educational goals. .“Group participation” Antioch-style was the model Henderson rec¬ommended. Viewing the universityas “overlapping circles” of thegoverning board, administrativestaff, faculty, and students, Hen¬derson urged an effort toward “consensus” and full participationof all groups in decision-making.Roland Liebert, former Environ¬mental Studies Director of the U. S.National Student Association, nowback at the University of Wisconsinas a graduate teaching assistant,doubted the effectiveness of studentgovernments.To Pester DeansWhile such governments could“experiment usefully with theirowm educational reform visions,” ifgiven more resources, there wouldstill remain “a significant numberof non-legitimate leaders, trouble¬makers, and the like,” to pesterthe deans, Liebert commented.Robert S. Fogarty, professor ofAmerican Thought and Languageat Michigan State University, re¬minded the educators that such stu¬dents may not express their unrestin fully articulate terms, but theynevertheless seek a “something”which they cannot define “becausethey have never come in contactwith the real university of theirministrators, Fogarty urged “thatall three groups stop lying to onedreams.”To establish communicationamong faculty, students, and ad-another and the general public.”Administrators, for example,should “cease the publication of‘slick’ magazines which simple-mindedly present the university asa paragon of virtue,” Fogarty said.HE ALSO STRUCK at “facultywho profess an interest in educa¬tion yet do not have the time totalk to students,” and at studentswho do not admit “that they findthe university a good place to besimply because they have no placeto go.”While others were pointing outthat some student leaders do not fitinto “the system,” E. G. William¬son, the University of Minnesota’sDean of Students, described a suc¬cessful program to “train” studentleaders with the help of the “ma¬chine.”Since 1956, he reported, Minneso¬ta has held weekend retreats for“high-ability freshmen” who areinvited to come and discuss issuesof current interest with faculty andoutside'experts. “This kind of ex¬tracurricular experience triggers inthe student aspiration to becomemore involved in these matters,”Williamson commented. Clabaugh Act StirsU Of I ControversyCampus activity is at an all-time high at the University ofIllinois in Urbana.The controversy centersaround the Clabaugh Act, a 1947law which states that “No trusteeofficial, instructor, or other em¬ployee of the University of Illinoisshall extend to any subversive, se¬ditious, and un-American organiza¬tion, or to its representatives, theuse of any facilities of the Universi-1ty for the purpose of carrying on,or advertising or publicizing the ac¬tivities of such organization.”Several organizations havesprung up on campus in oppositionto the act. The student senate, thefaculty senate, and the faculties of;the schools of law and liberal artsand sciences all opposed the law. ,DEMONSTRATIONS and ralliesbegan at Urbana March 1, fol¬lowing a sit-in at the Chicago Cir¬cle campus against the banning of Herbert Aptheker from the Circlecampus.The demonstrations culminatedlast week with a speech by LouisDiskin, self-proclaimed member ofthe Communist Party. The Daily 11-lini estimated that over 2000 stu¬dents heard Diskin’s speech onThursday, March 23, the last daybefore vacation.The administration took the viewthat his speech did not violate theClabaugh Act because he did notadvocate violent overthrow of thegovernment.A Daily Ulini spokesman calledthe issue “The most exciting bigissue we’ve had since I came here14 years ago.”Currently the university is on va¬cation, but more activity is plannedwhen school resumes next week.UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANK**« strong bank9*NEW CAR LOANSas low as$450 Pt hundred1954 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200iber F.D.I.C. MEN UNDER 25!To find out how you mayqualify for savings up to*50 or more oncar insurancecallJIM CRANE374-03508124 Woodlawn Ave.SENTRY.INSURANCEHardware Mutuals • 8entry LifeSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER SO YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 i. 51rdTomorrow is a HARD DAY’S NIGHTThe Beatles in their first film, directed by Richard Lester. At Doc Films, Saturday, April 1. Law School Auditorium, 60th and Greenwood. 6:30, 8:30, and 10:30pm. 75 cents.PIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff untH tomorrow if youc«U we today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.IMIS I. Dot, Avo.046-4411Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of boots, over¬shoes, insulated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear, corduroys,"Levis", etc., etc., etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 24744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:10-1:00 RENT A TRUCK$2^00 Pcr HourDO-IT-YOURSELFTRUCK Hi:.\TAI.SO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hour THEATRE FIRST, INC. presentsHENRIK IBSEN'S IMMORTAL MASTERPIECEPEER GYNTDIRECTED BY JEANNE EPPERSON & NANCY KOLEMarch 31, Apr. 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 14, 15, 16Fridays, Saturdays 8:30 pm. Sundays 7:30 pm.Gen. Adm. $1.75, Students (ID) $1.10ATHENAEUM Theatre2936 N. Southport Avenue LA 5-9761KARATBeginners ClassIDA NOYES HALLMonday - Wednesday — 7:00 pmMarch 31, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11Theatre ReviewA Delicate Balance:Splendid ProductionEdward Albee's A Delicate Balance now playing at theStudebaker, strikes a balance between the extremes of toneand style found in the playwright’s other recent works. Itdoes not achieve the surface brilliance of Who’s Afraid ofVirginia Woolf, nor does this playslide into the sludge of opaquenessand stifling symbolism of TinyAlice. A Delicate Balance concealsbeneath a somewhat flashy surfacea depth which merits prolongedconsideration.Superb performances and direc¬tion characterize this splendid pro¬duction. The story concerns a cou¬ple, Agnes (Jessica Tandy) and To¬bias (Hume Cronyn), and whathappens to their household whentheir best friends move in for sev¬eral nights to escape “the terror”that has descended upon their ownhome. Living with Agnes and To¬bias is Agnes’ alcoholic sister,Claire (Rosemary Murphy), whoacts as the play’s fool. The dis¬tance and tension that Miss Tandy,Miss Murphy and Cronyn createamong themselves almost makesvisible to the viewer a large, pro¬tective sphere surrounding each ofthem.Effectively completing this fami¬ly of non-interacting members isAgnes and Tobias’ daughter, Julia(Kathleen Maguire), who has re¬turned home after the break-up of;her fourth marriage.THE INTRUDING FRIENDS,1Harry (Philip Bourneuf) and Edna(Dortha Duckworth) provide themedium through which the othercharacters relate to each other. Itis only in attacking or defendingHarry and Edna that the familymembers awake from the numb¬ness with which they usually greeteach other and begin to relate in ahighly intense way—apparently theonly way possible. Miss Duckworthand Mr. Bourneuf are perfect asthe couple who take control of ahousehold into which they have noteven been invited.Director Alan Schneider makesAibee’s special, brilliant little mo¬ments sparkle. The first act has a generally slow pace, until the ap¬pearance of the unexpected friends.At this point everything speeds upand the act seems to end quite sud¬denly, but by creating a tremen¬dous amount of involvement in avery short time, the slow bulk ofthe act and the speedy coda bal¬ance perfectly.ALBEE WEAVES many themesinto A Delicate Balance, and theseare not new themes in his works.We find individuals who trampleand those who let themselves betrampled, we find individuals act¬ing in the tangle of human respon¬sibilities.Here, these themes are moreused than explored: their impor¬tance in the play is their impor¬tance to the characters, providingthe characters with motivationsand a universe in which to act, andproviding the play with its basis inreality. What Albee does is to setcharacters in motion and then tolay bare the structure of the rela¬tionships that connect one charac¬ter with another. “Themes” be¬come incidental. In A Delicate Bal¬ance, painful human connectionsare the point of focus.Barry SalinsTHE BEST SOURCE FORArtist's MaterialsAcres'; 53rd Kimbark PlazaComplete Picture FramingServiceMounting; Matting Non-GlareGlass - School SuppliesBE SURE TO ASK FORWEEKLY SPECIALDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3411110% STUDENT DISCOUNTON *10 OR MOREWhat about saltin beer?tWe have nothing against salt.On radishes. Or french fries.But not in beer.Putting salt in your beer,some say, perks up the head... or livens up the taste... or makesthe beer “drier.” With Budweiser,though, all salt can do is make it salty.Budweiser is complete ... a ready-to-drink beer if there ever was one.Wonderful clarity. Beal beer aroma. Ataste and a smoothness we know of inno other beer.So save the salt for the popcorn. Weput heart, soul and our exclusiveBeechwood Ageing into Budweiser. Allyou need to enjoy it is a glass... anda taste for the real thing.Budweiser.KING OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. . ST. LOUISNEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA * HOUSTON “Since taking Reading Dynamicsmy grade average lias gone upabout one lull point!**This is what Charles F. Shelby, a student fromLemont, Illinois says about Evelyn WoodReading Dynamics:“Thanks to Reading Dynamics, I can digestprodigious amounts of material in a very brieftime. Since taking the course, my grade averagehas gone up about one full point. This is dueto both the wider reading I can do, and theefficient methods of taking notes presented inthe course.”Would you like to raise your grade averagea point? Charles Shelby is just one of hundredsof thousands of Reading Dynamics graduateswho have profited tremendously from theirnew-found reading skills. People who start ataverage speeds of 250 to 350 words per minute,finish the eight-week course reading at speedsof 1,500 to 2,000 words per minute — manyread even faster.But there’s more to Reading Dynamics thanjust being able to read fast. Reading Dynamicsis unique in that it develops comprehension andrecall skills as well. Our graduates show anaverage increase in comprehension and recallof 6%. Imagine what that could mean to youin your studies.Unlike other “speed reading” courses, Read¬ing Dynamics does not depend upon mechanicalaids as a pacer. Your hand is your pacer. Con¬sequently, your reading abilities don’t sufferthe minute you leave the machine. Actually,they improve with practice.Figure it out! The more you read, the moreyou know. If your future depends upon whatyou learn in school (as it does for most stu¬dents), next to college itself, Reading Dynamicscould be the wisest investment that you’ll evermake.FOR MORE INFORMATION, PHONE782-9787OR MAIL THIS COUPON!Coupons answered same day receivedEVELYN WOODReading Dynamics Institute180 North Michigan Avenue—Chicago, III. 60601OTHER INSTITUTES:Evergreen Park, Evanston,Oak Park, Avrora, Rockford Results Guaranteed! To prove that yotoo, can become a rapid reader, ReadiiDynamics guarantees in writing to at leatriple your present reading speed wiequal or better comprehension, based <beginning and ending tests, or we’li refillyour tuition payment in full. Find out £about it.FREE ORIENTATION CLASSESATTEND A FREE ORIENTATION! Gthe full details on how Reading Dynamiworks. See a dramatic movie showing sentors, congressmen, successful people taknthe Reading Dynamics course. Hear thetell what it has done for them. Find owhat it can do for you. No reservatioineeded. No obligation. Next classes staApril 12 through April 18 near you.IN CHICAGO:READING DYNAMICS INSTITUTE1M North Michigan A VMMMon., April J—12:1S, S:30 pm.Tue., April 4—8:30 a m., 11:15, 5:30 p m.Wed., April 5—12:15, 5:30 p.m.Thors., AprH 0—0:30 a.m., 12:15, 5:30 p m.Fri., AprH 7—12:15, 5:30 p.m.Mon., AprH 10—12:15, 5:30 p.m.Toe., April 11—12:15, 5:30 p.m.Wed., April 12—12:15, 5:30 p.m.EVERGREEN PARK19540 Sooth Western AN., Sotto 405Mon., AprH 3—0:00 p.m.Toe., AprH 11—0:00 p.m.IN OAK PARK:OAK PARK ARMS HOTEL400 Sooth Oak Park Ava.Wed., April 5—0:00 p.m.Sat., AprH I—10:30 a.m.Toe., April 11—0:00 p.m.EVELYN WOODREADING DYNAMICS INSTITUTEIN Nprlh Michigan Avenue—Chicago, IN. 40M1 —□ Please send complete information and otass sdtedoles,□ I can't make Nie orientation; please call me atNamaAddressCity Stale Zip CM 3-3?12 • CHICA GO MAROON • March 31. 1967Music ReviewMahler Scores A Triumph Over Toscanini CentennialLast Saturday marked the 100th birthday of Arturo Toscanini, and with all the attendantcommemorative hoopla that took place, the cities of New York and Chicago seemed to bemore interested in playing on the irony of the anniversary by performing two major works ofGustav Mahler, a man whom Toscanini loathed and whose name alone was enough to provoke]L MAESTRO into one of hisworld-famous temper-tantrums.It was Toscanini who wrested ar-iistic control of the MetropolitanOpera from Mahler during the1910-11 season, and, while it isprobable that no one will everknow the complete story of the in¬ternal machinations and intriguesthat went on backstage, the resultwas that Mahler was forced out,Toscanini subsequently never per¬formed any of his music, and wereone fool hardy enough to mentionMahler’s name before the “oldman”, the only reply he’d receivewas a cryptic: “Poor man. . .hewas a-sick.”SICK HE WAS, and, because ofthis, his penultimate swan-song,Das Lied Von Der Erde, is, inmany aspects, a sick score. Thefeeling of death as leave-takingfrom his beloved Earth pervadesits whole, as befits a man sufferingfrom a life-long death obsessionwho had just been informed by hisdoctors that his time had indeedcome.Was this what attracted him tothose poems of Li-Tai-Po andWang-Wei in Hans Bethge’s collec¬tion The Chinese Flute, poems athousand years old and yet time¬less in their mood of world¬weariness and resignation? ForMahler, who had spent his entirecareer “in pursuit of the Everlast¬ing,” the Everlasting was suddenlycoming up to meet him square in the face. Perhaps this was whatprovoked the stylistic about-facethat is Das Lied. Suddenly, Mahler,the vast over-orchestralor andover-emoter has turned to the inti¬macy and plasticity of chambermusic in fashioning a symphony oflieder which still remains unparal¬leled.BRUNO WALTER, Mahler’s disciple and chief lieutenant duringhis lifetime, describes Das Lied ashis ‘‘most personal utterance, per¬haps the most personal utterancein music.” Why “most personal”?Most personal because Mahler hadat last succeeded in his habitualquest to fuse the Lieder, the art-song of Schubert, Schumann, andWolf, and the Symphony, the tradi¬tional orchestral form of Haydn,Beethoven, Brahms, (and Mahler,who expanded its size to its outerlimits); most personal because,while the work is structured intosix separate lieder, they representone continuous experience ratherthan six discrete ones; most per¬sonal because, while Mahler’s crea¬tive life had been an abstractstruggle against the inexorableforces of fate, it wasn't until DasLied Von Der Erde that the strug¬gle became a real one, with the endvisibly in sight.It was this aspect of struggle thatmarked Leonard Bernstein’s pow¬erful reading of the score with theNew York Philharmonic. Perhaps “terrifying” would be a betterword, for Bernstein did not fill hisconception with leave-taking, butwith a steadfast refusal to acceptthe inevitable cataclysm. It was aDas Lied suffused with more throb¬bing life than any previous perfor¬mance I have heard, filled withthat overt sentimentality which isBernstein’s trademark and which,for me, is no defect.“Is it at all bearable? Will itdrive people to do away with them¬selves?” Mahler asked Bruno Wal¬ter of the score on his death-bed.After hearing Bernstein’s movingreading, and especially baritoneDietrich Fischer-Dieskau’s ineffa¬bly poetic rendering of Mahler’s fi¬nal farewell, Der Abschied, I’m al¬most inclined to agree.BUT, DAS LIED, for all its pessi¬mism, also contains the lines “theEarth ever blooms anew, inSpring”, and if one felt oneself indespair by the too real and too, toopersonal reflections containedtherein, one was both renewed andassuaged by the Chicago Sympho¬ny’s tremendous performance ofhis Symphony No. 3, in D-minor;for, if the poetry promises perpe¬tual rebirth, then the Third Sym¬phony is the graphic fulfillment ofthis promise.Completed some thirteen years!before Das Lied, in 1896, the ThirdSymphony is Mahler’s mammothpastoral symphony, so fecund awork that it is his most extendedsymphony—1 hour and 45 minutesof the most serene, joy-filled musicCalendar of EventsFriday, March 31MEETING: SAR Exec. Ida Noyes Hall,3:00 p m.Saturday, April 1MEETING: SPAC. 1 pm Soc. Sci. 305.HEM: A Hard Day's Night", LawSchool Auditorium, 6:30, 8:30, 10:30. Ad¬mission: 75cWEDDING: Sharon Percy, John D.Rockefeller IV, by invitiation only.Sunday, April 2l OEK DANCE: Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30.25c. SERVICE: Rockefeller Chapel, Rev.Robert J. McCracken.Monday, April 3FILM: Song of Ceylon”, Soc. Sci. 122.| Free.LECTURE: “A comparative analysis of! Hagia Sophia and the Imperial Ottoman JMosques” Breasted Hall Lecture Room, jI 8 pm. Aputullah Kuran speaking.: WORKSHOP: Nonviolence, Ida Noyes jI Hall, 4 pm.MEETING: "We-won't-go-conference”; i3:30, Soc. Sci. 305.* MEETING: SDS, Ida Noyes Hall, 7:30.Jimmy'sand the University RoomRiSIRVKD EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY ClIINTiLIFifty-Fifth and Woodlova Ava.STUDENT CO-OP BOOKSTOREText books, general readingPart time employmentBaby-sitting serviceBooks bought & soldHours: 10-5 M-F12-4 Sat. *CHILDRENS CAMPCOUNSELLORSA private, co-ed, summer camp nestled deep in theheart of the Adirondacks on beautiful Lake George, hasstaff openings for qualified, mature, male college andgraduate students. Interested parties should write toCamp Arcady, 1481 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10036 Permanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting1990 E. 53rd St. HY 3-3101now in paperbackDefinitive Bookon theKennedy Years• Pulitzer Prize¬winning book• Winner of NationalBook Award"The book we have allbeen waiting for.”—Tli* New York Time*Wherever paperbacks are soldm< -only *1.65Fawcett Publications, Inc., Groonwich, Conn. he was to turn out, penned duringone of the few periods in •whichMahler was at peace with himself.In many respects, it representsthe perfect foil for Das Lied VonDer Erde: Nature and Earth in theidealistic conceptualization v s.Earth in the real, physical sense.Like Das Lied, it is also in sixmovements (it was the precedent-setter), and its various sections de¬pict the different aspects of naturethat touched Mahler: steeple-bells,the night, birds in trees, and, againlike Das Lied, it culminates in anextended Adagio-Finale, subtitled“What Love Tells Me”, Mahlerequating “Love” with “God”.The work is a real endurance test j(both the first and last movements!are each as long as Beethoven’s jFifth Symphony in its entirety) andthe performance by ConductorJean Martinon and the CSO was IKoga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856 one to cheer. Mahler has alwaysbrought out the not-inconsiderablebest in Martinon, pulling him up tothe music’s heights, as it were, andafter hearing his latest Mahler per¬formance, one is tempted to saythat “for this alone let ail thy ethersins be forgiven”; if only he couldbring such obvious conviction tobear on all his musical conceptions.Perhaps the “Final Solution tothe Martinon Question” entails hav¬ing him conduct nothing but Mah¬ler symphonies, delegating the bulkof the repertoire to guest conduc¬tors. What a season that would be!!Ed ChikofskyTAhSAM-VfcNCHIN ESI . AMIRICANRESTAURANTIpailulfclm laCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYM A.M. to 9*9 PMORDERS TO TAKE OUT1111 latfffrdft. MU 4 -1062MEET YOUR PERFECT DATE!You too can be amongst the thousands of satisfied adults. LetDateline Electronic computers programmed for women ages 18 to45 and men 18 to 55 take the guess work out of dating.Continuous matching with a new, expanded program with enroll¬ment fees reduced to $3.00 for adults ages 18 to 27, and $5.00 foradults over 27.For quick results send for yourquestionnaire today. No obligation.Strictly confidential.Name DATELINE ELECTRONICRESEARCH INC. (CM)P.O. Box 369,Chicago, III. 60645AddressCity State Zip Code.... For Add. Info. Call271-3133March 31, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 13rPOLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENTChicago’s Dynamic MAYOR...Best by every test!Vote forRICHARD J.DALEYLeadershipPraised by civic leaders for having done more to make Chicago a betterplace in which to live than any other mayor in history. During Mayor Daley’sadministration Chicago has earned international recognition as bestgoverned big city in the world.ExperienceBorn, raised and educated in Chicago; law school graduate. Service at all levelsof government—city, county, state legislature—prior to election as mayor.His record proves that he has the “know-how” to get things done. He acquired itthrough long years of experience coming up the ladder one rung at a time.ProgressThat Mayor Daley is a man of progress is shown in his record which has broughtChicago national recognition for cleanliness, police and tire protection, street andalley lighting, lowest traffic death rate, air pollution control, neighborhood revitalization,and countless other improvements. He pledges continuation of a vigorousprogram of community improvements benefiting all people in all neighborhoods.IntegrityRespected for integrity, sincerity and dedication to job by members of bothparties. A family man who has lived all his life in the same Chicago neighborhood.FOR A DYNAMIC CHICAGO, MAYOR DALEY IS THE BEST MAN TO KEEP CHICAGO THE BEST CITY IN THE NATION.VOTE DEMOCRATIC APRIL 40 RICHARD J. DALEY 0 JOHN C. MARGIN 0 MARSHALL KORSHAKmayor CITY CLERK CITY TREASURERThis advertisement paid for by ALL-CHICAGO COMMITTEE...RICHARO J. DALEY FOR MAYOR, James E. ChairmanCHICAGO MAROON • March 31, 1967i > :> ;» iri u: '-» mmm ' m mmmmmum mm *■ -., '"" "**J' ' ' ;•;:;s:f:;■■;■■>; : ■;.;■: ** :Classified AdsPERSONALSMan Caucasoid, will marry any woman!, >„> is non-religious and opposed to,var, violence, deceit, and wage slavery., if such a womaii exists in this corruptcciety!) Frank Richards, 472-3606. T> <■ < ' ” ,c , -AR turntable w/cartridge. 1 mo. old$60. 463-3585 or 521-0460.photos for all occasions (passports,graduation, etc.) by fine arts photogra¬pher. High quality work guaranteed,l ow costs. Call 752-4312 for appt.I he new (autumn!) issue of LEFT &RIGHT is finally in the bookstore.j Charlie Chaplin films and the Tenderl'rap, Friday-9pm. FREE at B-J Cine-V ietnam-Pro and anti-war films will be,hown by Hillel on April 9.Bandersnatch Dance of April 1 post¬poned until April 8. Miracord pw-lOH w/base f cartridge$70. 463-3585 or 521-0460.Desk-clerk, switchboard and light cleri¬cal work. 3 nights/wk., 4pm-midnigh,tNo experience necessary. Meal includ¬ed. Applicant must plan to stay at leastone year. Apply Quadrangle Club, 1155E. 57th St.*cture: "Liberal Modernity and theJews.** Prof. Joseph Cropsy, dept, ofwily. sci. Friday evening, 8:30 Hilleldouse,Passover reservations for Seders and>ther meals now being taken at Hillel.Deadline-April 18th. Work for a swingin mag of 50,000 pluscirculation. THE CHICAGO LITERARYREVIEW has openings for volunteers atall levels, from major editorial positionsright down io no-experience-necded of¬fice help. We want a high-level editoras well as some people who can handlelight accounting and typing. Start yourmeteoric career now with CLR. Stop upand see us in Ida Noyes 304 Monday,Wednesday, or Friday from 11:30-2:30.Or call 285-0825 early evenings.Fem. student to sit Tues., Wed. & Fri. 9pm-noon; 1.25/hr. 643-8022lodern Dance Classes taught by Sus¬an Loren Tues. evenings 7-8. Call84-2726.VON-PARANOID HEADS: donate yourrips to humanity through anonymousmd confidential interview with psyehol-gy student studying the use of LSD onam pus. Call Slade Lander, 5447 Wood-awn, 324-3034. Library assistant. South Side ResearchLibrary. Pref. college grad, and 1 for¬eign language. 684-4545.Pt. time or full time secretary for doc¬tor’s office. 723-1009Two male students want 3rd to shareapt. at 54th and Wdlwn. Own rm, $45.Call x 3561 or 493-7538 for Mike Powwel.Men’s bike-must be in good condition.324-5751Vriter s workshop. PL 2-8377 !xAMELOT restaurant. 2160 E. 71st St.10°. discount for UC students-Sweet, Little. Pickled, Peppercorn:dimnmm Your local cabbage head.Feel helpless about the war in Viet(am? One Organization on campus isicing something to institute a change inidministration policy. Citizens’ Forumbuying radio commercial time to ln-luence public opinion on the war. Meet-ng: Mon., APR 3 at 7:00 pm. Eastlounge, Ida Noyes • discussion of alational petition against the war.vOINONIA: tonight at Chapel HouseJinner (75c. at 6 pm. Then .... AprilFool’s Day Eve Surprise.X)ST: Gold, butane lighter inscribed4CRUMPUS GRADUATUS. Sentimental, alue. Anita -x. 3220.MY—LONDON and AMSTERDAMound trip fane $206. Sept. 2 • Sept. 25iia PAN AM Jet. Call 363-6451We can only afford a mini-ad-to wit:?7ood folk sounds this Fri., Sat., andsun. nights at the Other Side, 1603 E-xlrd St.Ida Noyes Discotheque moves to Hitch-sock Hallll One Nitell Sat. Apr. 1,>12:30 pm. Men 50. Woman 25c.IXJST: small, green cloth coin pursev watch and 2 rings. Call 493-0603. RE¬WARD!!"'G ELECTIONS—Will the left run?Help us decide at a SPAC meeting, thisMit , April 1 in Soc. Sci. 305. at 1:30cm. If you are in sympathy with theuoals and approach of the left wingearly and would consider running forthe Student Government, we invite youto attend.FREE! Kittens. Satisfaction guaran¬teed. 324-5751Fonie to UC Concert Band rehearsals,> 6:30 Thurs. Belfield 245.1’he Maroon regrets to announce thatthe FUGS CONCERT had been oan-- filed. Those holding tickets will beleimbursed. Bring your tickets to theMAROON OFFICE on Tues. or Wed. oithis week (10 am-5 pm for cash refundt>r mail them to us (be sure to includeleturn address CHICAGO MAROON,FUGS CONCERT 1212 E. 59th, 60637,Self Defense Class • 4:30-6:00 MWFBasement INH.April Fool’s Day Party at Phi Psi Sat¬urday, April 1st at 8:30 pm. Music bythe Noblemen, Males bring UC ID.APT. BLDG. FOR SALEfor the young couple with $5000. 6 apt.hidg. with family atmosphere. IncomePays taxes, mtge. Owner lives renttree Owner has choice of 3. 2, 1 bedrm.;‘pt. 2 car heated garage. Fenced back¬yard. Gardening area. Jeffrey Blvd.Gall 288-6757.CINEMAIHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANCannes Prize Winner In Color"A MAN ft A WOMAN"TSun-Times * * * *daily news—Director Should be Saluted.”,,,. 4 Academy Award Nominations.udents $1.50 with I.D. card every daybut Saturday.weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. 4< Sun.open 1:30 Swinger who likes jazz, filet mignon,sports cars, some travel-write me, NUgrad, 33 yrs-average looks-ready . . . .Curtis Andrews Box 117, Riverside, Illi¬nois 60546.Fem. rmmte. wanted to share largewarm, friendly apt. Own rm. $60/mo.Ideal loc. in Hyde Park. Call eves.643-7362Prof, wants furn. 2-bdrm. apt. nearcampus for sum. qtr. C. Horejsi, 5D1bldg. Univ. of Nebraska, Lincoln, Ne¬braska.3*2 rm. apt. needs second fem. grad. Ifinterested call 643-4127-Linda.Sixteen years ago, during the climate ofMcCarthyism, Morton Sobell was Im¬prisoned and the Rosen bergs were elec¬trocuted on charges of delivering intothe hands of the Russians the plan forthe A-bomb. Now the basic pieces ofevidence have been proven false, insuf¬ficient, or possibly forged.Help us in our struggle to obtain a newhearing; we need thousands of dollars.Help to right an injustice, long hushed.Please write letters to the AttorneyGeneral. Washington, D.C., asking for anew trial or send contributions to:Committee to Free Morton Sobell150 Fifth AvenueNew York, N.Y. 10011or contact:Elaine Hyams1218X New DormsInformation will be sent to you on re¬quest. Thank you.Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-106060NTACTWhy-C:: Chttmifor youlens insolutio• probletease w d a wholeI of potionslenses?ne, is the oner lenscarryingbottle. TO RENT6900 S. Cramden Avenue. Deluxe Hi-Rise. 1 bedrm. apts. from $120. Parquet !floor. See Mrs. Haley or call MU 4-7964Nicely furnished room for employedgentlemen or older male student. 1block from UC campus and IC. Avail¬able now. 288-4329 7-9 am.2',a rm. furn, apts. Reasonable for stu¬dents. FA 4-5538.Rm. & brd., male undergrads. Inexpen- ,sive, close to campus. For spring, sum- Imer or next year. BU 8-8495 or 643-9220.4 Ig. rms. w/bath, unfurnished, HydePark, $95/month. Will also sell all myfurniture (modem) for $150. Beautifulblond floors, modern kitchen, quietwell-kept building, \2 block from IC andbus. Sublet May 1 with option to renew.Miss Yaeger, 321-6687, 288 8447. MUSTANGS - TEMPESTS - FORDS - PONTIACSRENT-A-CARBYsAk,HBHHnVolkswagen? $3.95 for 12 Hrs.Plus per Mi.Includes Gas and InsuranceRent A Volkswagon For That Special Date Tonite.Cheaper Than A Honda And A Heck Of A LetMore Comfortable.LOCATED AT:HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd Ml 3-1715THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWNMichelob and Budweiser on Tap!Piano Selections Friday & Saturday evenings ..-JTHE JAPAN CULTURE SOCIETYOF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOannouncesJAPANESE FILM FESTIVALSPRING QUARTER SCHEDULE:I WAS BORN, BUT . . . May 13OxuYOJIMBOKirosowa April 15HUMAN CONDITION April 29Kobayashl *7:15 and 9:30 Social Sciences 122Winter Series Membership—$1.50Single Membership—$.75Tickets at the doorMarch 31, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • ?5PARTY MART SALEPARTY CHEESE:There are 225 different cheeses from 17 different countries available at the Party Mart.U.S. GRADE A SWISS CHEESEHard, presses-curd cheese with an elastic body and a wild, nut-like,sweetish flavor.Sensationally priced. 59c per poundENGLISH STILTONConsidered to be the finest English cheese. Hard, mild, blue-veined,cow's-milk cheese. Milder than Roquefort or Gorgonzola. It wasfirst made about 1750.$1" per poundNEW YORK HERKIMER-2 Years OldA fairly dry cheese with a crumbly texture and a sharp flavor.99* per poundPARTY WINE: SPRING WINE SALE DANISH MUNSTERSemisoft, whole-milk cheese which was first made in the vicinity ofMunster, West Germany.$139 per poundALPENJOY CHEESE with or without SalamiSoft mild cheese with a distinctive flavor. Available with Salami also,which gives an added piquant taste to the cheese.$149 per poundNORWEGIAN BLUEBlue, Blue-mold, or Blue-veined cheese is the name for cheese ofthe Roquefort type. It is made from cow's or goat's milk.$125 per poundSelect your party wines from the 1400 different kinds of wine always in stock.1964 VINTAGE CHATEAU DU JUGE BARSACModerately sweet with velvety softness. It's the Paragon of thesmall wines of this district. Serve chilled with light foods.$249 3 for $669MAY WINESpecially selected German May Wine far above an ordinary wine.Serve it straight, in punch or with strawberries.$198 3 for $5391962 VINTAGE CHATEAU GISCOURSA Grand Cru Classe Margaux. Rich with body and vigor, lively with _much finesse. 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Serve with red meats.$198 3 for $5391964 VINTAGE CLOS PRINCE POMERALThis wine has body, color, generosity and an agreeable savour aswell as distinctive bouquet. Serve at room temperature, with roast*249 3 for s6691964 VINTAGE BEAUJOLAISBest when young. In France this wine is used up before it is fouryears old. A clean well made wine to serve with the average meal.M98 3 for s5391962 VINTAGE FRENCH SAUTERNESA regional wine selected for it's specially rich flavor. Serve chilledwith fruit and desserts etc. Sweet taste with grapey richness.•1” 3 for ‘5”DOUBLE DISCOUNT PARTY SALE BUY 6 BOTTLES CET 1 FREE1962 VINTAGE CHATEAU LAFILLE GRAND CRUNot to be confused with the wine of a somewhat similar name. Thiswine does not require the tremendous age or price. Delicate, soft,and very pleasing to the taste. One of the best buys in it's kind.$298 1 free with 61964 VINTAGE ST. JOHANNER KLOSTERGARTEN SPATLESEBlending of grape types has enabled the grower to create a master¬piece of the vinter's art. This is a great wine for the price.$298 1 free with 61964 VINTAGE GRAND CRU VANDESIRThe field is the rarest of the grand growths. The wine is very elegant,aromatic, the best of its kind. Great wine and a great vintage.$449 1 free with 6PARTY GLASSWARE:25* each. BUY 12 GET 2 FREEBlue, Gold and Olive TIARANew color and shape, new textured optics.Available in 11 oz. on-the-rocks and in 14 oz. beverage.Prince of PilsenThe new elegant 14 oz. Beer Glass.The ExecutiveExquisitely exciting new glasses.25* each —BUY 12 GET 2 FREE! 1964 VINTAGE LIEBFRAUMILCH SPATLESESpecially late picked grapes are selected from wine covered hillsidesto bring this naturally slightly sweet yet delicately dry table wine.$198 1 Free with 61964 VINTAGE CHATEAU DE VERNEUIL BEAUJOLAISA fresh fruity parish Beaujolais with a nice bouquet. Serve withcheese or red meat.*219 1 free with 61964 VINTAGE CHATEAU DE VERNEUIL BROUILLYThis parish wine of Beaujolais is the best of 175 kinds. Light in fruit,tartly dry, pleasant tasting everyday wine. Should be drunk withcheese or red meat.$219 1 free with 6PARTY BEVERACES:CANADA DRY GINGER ALE12 oz. bottles6 pack 39*PARTY LOANS:The Party Mart will lend our customers at no cost all the glasswareneeded for any kind of party. Quantities must of course be comparedwith the amount of purchase. Full refund is immediately made onany excess beyond your party usage. plus depositOpen Daily 10 a.m.-ll p.m. PARTY MART2427 E. 72nd (at Exchange) Sunday 12 Noon-9 p.m