The Chicago MaroonLAST TIME: April Mobilization Marchers gather in New York'sCentral Park. The upcoming march will attempt a massive sit-inat the Pentagon beginning Saturday, October 21.$200,000 per YearFor von Karajan?By EDWARD CHIKOFSKYCulture EditorSpeculation is mounting as in¬formed sources continue to reachThe Maroon on the rumoredappointment of Herbert vonKarajan as music director of theChicago Symphony Orchestra.According to the latest word, theOrchestral Association is supposedto have offered von Kaiajan a con¬tract for $200,000 per year, withthe likelihood that he would con¬duct but ten weeks of the gener¬ally 30-week season. (Normally, amusic director conducts somewherebetween 15 and 18 weeks of a regu¬lar season, but this is not a hardand fast rule.)When queried yesterday morningabout the rumors, several membersof the Orchestra] Association deniedany knowledge of the appointment.Louis Sudler, member of the Or¬chestra’s Board of Trustees andpresident of the Orchestral Asso¬ciation, while averring that no de¬cision had yet been reached, refusedto state categorically that von Kar¬ajan would not become the nextChicago Symphony Music Director. ^ Similar comments were receivedby several other members of theBoard of Trustees. Sudler did say,however, that he had read the ac¬count in the Friday Maroon’s Week¬end Magazine that the OrchestralAssociation was taking due cog¬nizance of such matters of Kara¬jan’s past as they deemed relevantto their decision.When a final decision or an¬nouncement is forthcoming is un¬known, but Sudler speculated onthe possibility of a season of guestconductors if the matter is not set¬tled in due course.In something of a turnabout ofevents, however, a New York ex¬ecutive of RCA Victor, which cur¬rently records the Chicago Sym¬phony, admitted that while Victor,too, had heard similar rumors per¬taining to von Karajan’s appoint¬ment, and concommitantly, to hisDeutsche Grammophon recordingcontract, he would only opine thatsince RCA Victor holds an exclu¬sive long-term contract extendingfor an indefinite period, it wouldnormally expect the Chicago Sym¬phony to fulfill all of the agree¬ments of exclusivity stated therein. MobilizationWeek NearsBy MARIO ROBERSONWith the anti-draft campaigns moving tow ard a fall climax later this month, a graduatestudent here burned his draft card at a peace rally held in Hutchinson Court Sunday.Paul O’Brian, who is active in Chicago Area Draft Resistors (CADRE), an anti-draft organ¬ization, lit his card from a Peace Torch that originated in California and will be carried throughcities and small towns to Washing¬ton on October. 21.Although O’Brian’s gesture ofdefinance was the most dramaticdevelopment in the anti-draft cam¬paign last week, it formed only apart of the increasingly feverishpreparation for the day ahead.Three ProgramsStudent resistance to the war inVietnam will culminate this monthwith National Non-cooperation Day(October 16), followed by Stop TheDraft Week (October 16-21), and aNational Mobilization to the Pen¬tagon (October 21-23).National Non-cooperation Day isorganized on a nationwide basisunder the direction of The Resist¬ance, an organization whose pur¬pose is to help young people againstthe draft. With the assistance ofThe Resistance, CADRE is organiz¬ing rallies at universities and withinthe community in the Chicago areafor the execution of Lhe NationalNon-cooperation Day. Ori tins day,Stop The Draft Week will officiallybegin in Chicago.CADRE’s aim is to help make itimpossible for the United States tofight the war in Vietnam by cuttinginto the pool of manpower fromwhich the military draws itssoldiers.Thursday Teach-InTogether with several professorsand clergy, CADRE will explain thepurposes concerning the politicalrole of draft resistance and thefunction of Stop The Draft Weekat a fceach-in Thursday tt 7:30 p.m.in Mandel Hall.Guests speakers are StaughtonLynd of Yale; Howard Zinn of Bos¬ton University; Richard Flacks of Chicago; Vere Chappell of Chicago;John Wilson, from the Student Non¬violent coordinating Committee; SidLens, New York labor leader; DeeJacobsen, from Students for a Dem¬ocratic Society; Jeff Segal, sen¬tenced to four years in jail for in¬duction refusal; Paul O’Brian, fromThe Resistance and from CADRE;Gary Rader, chairman of CADRE;Daniel Stern; Robert Freeston; andDavid Greenburg.Preview Last WeekA preview of what is to cometook place last week at the pre¬induction physical of Carl Davidson,national vice-president SDS, whichled to a demonstration at the Chi¬cago industion center Friday.Members of the University’schapter were joined by representa¬tives of the national SDS organiza¬tion and CADRE. The demonstra¬tors infiltrated the induction center,passed out leaflets, and spoke tothe inductees.About thirty people took part inthe demonstration. No incidentswere reported and Davidson wasnot asked to leave the inductioncenter. Similar demonstrations,sponsored by CADRE, have beenheld at the center almost weeklyduring the summer.Don’t CooperateOn October 16 each Chicago-areaschool participating in NationalNon-cooperation Day will hold arally—at Chicago, the time is 8:30a.m. in front of Ida Noyes Hall.Then, students will march fromeach of the more than half-dozencampuses, converging on the down¬town Federal Building at noon. Alarge demonstration there will in¬clude handinng of draft cards. Two women’s groups have com¬mitted their support to Stop TheDraft Week. They intend on com¬mitting civil disobedience Wednes¬day by closing down the inductioncenter.On Thursday, activity at the in¬duction center will be coupled witha rally at the Civic Center for menalready in jail for induction refusal.The names of these men will beread publicly.On Friday, many Chicago peoplewill leave for Washington and theOctober 21 National MobilizationMarch.A Motley CoalitionLike its predecessor, the April Mo¬bilization, the Washington march isa volatile coalition of many leftistgroups. Stemming from the energiesof moderate groups (SANE, certainNew' York labor unions, Veteransfor Peace), this alliance is aimedat producing the largest possiblemass of protestors to petition theirgrievances writh the Johnson Ad¬ministration. It is seen by the mod¬erates as a forceful witness of con¬science and concern, this one allthe more powerful because it willmarch directly to the Pentagon andaddress itself to those who arecarrying out the war.What makes this march differentfrom all others is the prospect ofmassive civil disobedience at thePentagon beginning on October 21.Jerry Rubin, a director of the Na¬tional Mobilization Committee(NMC) and a militant in its con¬text, is thinking in terms of thethousand or more sit-down pro¬testors who will block the above-Turn to Page 5Housing Is Tighter Than Ever HereBy JOHN WELCHManoging EditorThe University has openedits new apartment building forfemale students, and convertedthe Eleanor Club to Universityhousing but non-dormitory hous¬ing seems to be as scarce asever.In fact, with Lutheran Sem¬inary students being moved intoapartments in Hyde Park, andwith the beginning of demolitionfor the University’s South Cam¬pus project in Woodlawn, off-campus housing is, if anything,tighter than it was last year.The new apartment building,at 1400 E. 57th St., contains 23units, rented to from three tofive women. Edward Turkington,director of student housing, esti¬mates that 92 students now livein the building. Another 95 un¬dergraduate w’omeri, he adds, arehoused in the Eleanor Club, at1442 E. 59th St.University-owned housing nowserves roughly 1600 undergradu¬ate men and women and 550 gradstudents. This means that about900 undergraduates live in apart¬ments or commute, while about4500 grad students live in apart¬ments.Grumblings ContinueWhen students drew lots lastspring for the privilege of living in the new apartments, there was1 some grumbling heard about thehigh rent—$260 per month forsix rooms, or about $100 morethan clean six-room apartmentsrent for elsewhere in Hyde Park.Now residents are wondering howmuch of this rent is to coverthings no student would need,such as the building’s air con¬ditioning system.“I guess it’s supposed to keepus comfortable during the lasttwo weeks of the school year,”commented one girl.‘‘But why does an apartmentbuilt for students need a masterbedroom?” intejected her room¬mate.Turkington did not know whenthe proposed “Village” dormitorycomplex could be started, sincethe Board of Trustees has notyet agreed to the full plan.Dorm of the FutureThe Village, which would bebuilt along 55th St. somewherebetween Ellis and Cottage GroveAves., would contain low-rise,“cluster” housing for studentsand possibly younger facultymembers. Plans call for buildinga theater and music complex aswell as recreational facilities.When built, the Village couldprovide housing for more than500 students.How'cver, off campus studentsnow are feeling more and more squeezed by the high price andscarcity of housing in Hyde Park.In the years just prior to HydePark’s urban renewal, studentswere easily accomodated there.With middle-class whites leavingthe community, buildings de¬teriorated into student price lev¬els, and owners in Hyde Parkpreferred students to lower-classNegroes, who were moving intothe neighborhood.Neighborhood DesiveableUrban renewal wiped out muchavailable housing and rents inwhat was left have driven veryhigh. “Once again Hyde Park isdesireable,” comments the reportof a Student Government (SG)housing committee, made avail¬able last spring.“In a competition with middle-class families,” it added, “stu¬dents are bound to lose.”Real estate companies operat¬ing in Hyde Park claim not todiscriminate against students,but the problem, explains a manat McKey and Poague, is thatthe building owners for whomthe companies operate refuse torent to students. “Students aredestructive,” the owners find.Another reason for the hous¬ing shortage, the SG reportfound, was that the Universityhas, since urban renewal, soldmuch of the property it hadTurn to Page 5 COMING DOWN: These Woodlawn buildings will soon disappearfor urban renewal and the University's South Campus.'SDS Shelves Plans to Harass MoulderBy JOHN SIEFORTThe plans of Students for aDemocratic Society (SDS) toharass Professor of MicrobiologyJames Moulder have been tempo¬rarily shelved, according to SteveKindred, president of the SDS Cam¬pus chapter.The matter was first raised atan SDS organizational meeting byChris Hobson, an SDS leader. Aftera brief discussion members decidedto table the question. But Kindredsaid that the matter will almostcertainly to be taken up later in thequarter.According to Kindred, SDS mightleaflet Moulder’s classes and issueRemedial ProgramA remedial tutorial program hasbeen established to help first-yearstudents in their courses..Designed to aid those studentswith inadequate backgrounds fortheir common-core courses, the pro¬gram will be fairly small, usinggraduate and fourth-year studentswho did exceptionally well in gen¬eral education courses as tutors.Students needing assistanceshould call Assistant Dean of theCollege Karl Bemesderfer at Ext.2823. a public statement denouncing hisstand on biological warfare.Moulder, who is chairman of theDepartment of Microbiology, is un¬der attack by SDS for having ac¬cepted Pentagon support for basicresearch done on what SDS feelswas a restricted basis. Moulder isalso under attack for having servedas a consultant on scientific ques¬tions related to biological warfare.Moulder freely admits that he hasreceived Pentagon support for hispast work. “I sought and receivedsupport for my research in 1951,”he said. "But the main support formy work has aKvays been theHealth Service. And I severed myPentagon relationship two yearsago.”Began New RoleMoulder ended the support con¬nection when he became chairmanof the Committee Advisory to theU. S. Biological Laboratories of theAmerican Society for Microbiology.He severed the Pentagon connec¬tion so that he could perform freelyin this new role.This committee, formed by theSociety at the request of the De¬partment of Defense, gives scien¬tific advice to the Department onrequest. But the Committee is anarm of the American Society forMicrobiology, not the Department of Defense. It reports to the So¬ciety, not the Army. And Moulderis not, as claimed, chief advisor tothe Army on biological warfare.Moulder also denies that his pastwork under contract to the Depart¬ment was done on a semi-restrictedbasis. “All my research was open.All was published. And if the Pen¬tagon assigned any security classi¬fication numbers to this work theywere purely technical.”Moulder flatly denied the SDScharges: “I have never received orproduced classified materials.” Andwhat is true to him personally,Moulder said, is true of his wholelaboratory.The work in question. Mouldersaid, was started before Pentagonfunding and would have been com¬pleted with or without Army sup¬port.Cites Personal ConvictionsMoulder did not deny, however,that his work has potential use inbiological wrarfare. “But there isno philosophical reason to assignan ‘acceptibility’ rank to differentways of killing people. They areall equally had,” he said.“I engaged in this research be¬cause of some very strong personalconvictions of my own—-convictionsapart from scientific inquiry,” hecontinued. “It is very easy to turnHUTCHINS TO FOLLOWBenton Speaks on UNESCOWilliam Benton, publisher andchairman of Encyclopedia Bri-tannica, Inc., will speak here to¬morrow in the first of a series oflectures sponsored by EncyclopediaBritannica. Former Chancellor Rob¬ert M. Hutchins is scheduled tospeak later in the fall.Benton’s talk, entitled “U.N.E.S.-C.O.: The Dream Comes of Age,”will be presented at 8:15 p.m. inSERVICESMemorial services forJohn Patrick Howe, a re¬tired publishing executiveand former aide at theUniversity, will be heldThursday at 4:30 p.m. inthe Joseph Bond Chapel.Speakers at the serviceswill be William Benton,former Senator (Democratof Connecticut), publisherand chairman of Encyclo¬paedia Britannica, and aformer vice-president ofthe University, and Hein¬rich Kliiver, the Sewell L.Avery distinguished serv¬ice professor emeritus inthe Biological SciencesDivision. the Law School Auditorium.The 1967 series, on the generaltopic “The Intellectual Life—Out¬side the University,” is being pre¬sented in connection with the 200thanniversary of the EncyclopediaBritannica.The lectures are free and opento the public.Other lectures in the series are:• October 18: "Intellectual Lifein the Commercial Section,” Mau¬rice B. Mitchell, former presidentand editorial director of Encyclo¬pedia Britannica, Inc., and nowchancellor of the University ofDenver.• October 25: (Topic to be an¬nounced later), Warren Pbeece, amember of the Board of Editorsof Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc.,and senior editorial executive forthe Encyclopedia Britannica.• November 1: “Literature in theIce Age,” Clifton Fadiman, essay¬ist, critic, and member of the Boardof Editors of Eeyclopedia Britan¬nica, Inc.• November 7: “The Truth Aboutthe Center,” Robert M. Hutchins,president of the Center for theStudy of Democratic Institutions,former president and chancellor(1929-51) of the University, andI <7/ ?S *-Tlou>erS la ART MILLER'Sf BEACH FLOWER SHOP) n 10% Discount to 0. C. Students,Faculty, Staff1551 Hyde Pork Blvd. ftFA 4-4200 —FA 4-4201—Ml 3-3361 % chairman of the Board of Editorsof Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc.• November 15: Full of Noises:Formation of Opinion and Culturein Britain,” Sir William Haley,newly appointed editor in chief ofthe Encyclopedia Britannica, formerchairman of Times Newspapers,Ltd., former editor of The Timesof London, and former director ofthe British Broadcasting Corpora¬tion.All of the lectures, with the ex¬ception of that by Hutchins, willbe delivered at 8:15 p.m. in theauditoiium of the Law School.Hutchins’ talk will be delivered at8:15 p.m. in Rockefeller MemorialChapel.Benton, a foimer United StatesSenator, is an honoi’ary trustee ofthe University. He served as vice-president of the University from1937 to 1945.STAMP IT!IT'S THE RAGERP«ULARMODELANY sri3 LINE TEXT (CmThe fine** INOE'truCTIBLE METALPOCKET RUBBER STAMP. I 2".Send check or money order. Besure to include your Zip Code. Kopostage or handling charges. Addsales tax.Prompt shipment. Satisfaction GuaranteedTHE MOPP CO.P. 0. Bo* 18623 Lenox Square StationATLANTA, GA., 30326Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the rest Morgan's Certified Super Martforeign car hospitalWe Invite You to Examine jthe Samigon Auxiliary IFISH EYE LENS( I 80 degree lens)The University ofChicago BookstorePhotography Department5802 S. Ellis Open to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd St. away from biological warfare andpi*etend it doesn’t exist. But wecan’t do away with it by fiat.”SDS is categorically opposed toany further directed research onbiological weapons systems. “Theonly way to see that we never usethem,” said Kindred, “is not to havethem.”Asked to comment on possibleSDS action against him. Mouldercharged that harassment is improp¬ er in a university community. “Itinterferes with free inquiry,” hesaid, “and inhibits free expression.”Moulder said he would have towait and see whether he would re¬quest University action againstpossible disruptive demonstrationsaimed against him. Kindred said itwas unlikely that his group,woulddisrupt Moulder’s classes or demandthat he he fired.Western Civ, Bio:£!iiiiMiiiiiiiiimimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiimii!iimiiiiiimiiimiiiiK= THE STUDENT HOUSING OFFICES ANNOUCES =THE AVAILABILITY OF SPACES IN THE UNIVERSITYHOUSE SYSTEM PRODUCED BY LAST MINUTE CANCEL¬LATIONS. ROOMS ARE AVAILABLE TO—UNDERGRAD¬ATE MEN AT PIERCE, WOODWARD, BURTON-JUDSON,GREENWOOD, BOUCHER; UNDERGRADUATE WOMENAT WOODWARD; GRADUATE WOMEN AT HARPER.SHARED APARTMENTS OFF CAMPUS ARE AVAILABLE TOGRADUATE MEN.INTERESTED STUDENTS SHOULD INQUIRE AT THESTUDENT HOUSING OFFICEADMINISTRATION 201riiiiiiiiimimmiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijr Registration SnafuedA surplus of students strainedthe resources of two courses thisquarter due to registration mix-ups or unexpected demand.A lack of IBM cards during pre¬registration last spring led to amix-up in Biology 105. Accordingto Gerson Rosenthal, an associateprofessor of biology and ehaiiTnanof the course, every student in thecourse signed up for class and labsections last spring, but there wereno IBM cards to keep a record ofwho signed up for what.“Thus, we held places for every¬one signed up, but, unfortunately,some didn't honor the sign-up,”Rosenthal said.Some changes were made in bi¬ology requirements this year, Ro¬senthal said, and thei-e have beensome “minor difficulties.”Those who have taken only Biol¬ogy 111, Rosenthal said, will now-take Bio 106 and 107. Those whohave taken both Bio 111 and 112will now have a choice of 200-levelcourses, most of which are essen¬tially equivalent to the former 100-level electives. “Since we try to keep the sectionsize below 30, this necessitated theopening of new sections,” Wein-traub said.Maxine Sullivan, the University’sregistrar, said that a few “mix-ups” following spring pre-registra-tion are not unusual.“Sometimes,” she commented,"eoui’ses are listed in the spring hutthen cancelled for some reason.Also, a course might be conceivedafter the Time Schedules go topress.”Next year, she said, pre-registeredstudents may not have to drop byBartlett Gym to fill out cards withthe address and phone number, asthey did this year. “Our major goalat this point is to try to get pre¬registration to mean just that,” shepromised.Western Civ Pack ex 1Karl J. Weintraub, chairman ofthe Western Civilization course,said his course is handling morestudents than ever before, due tostudent demand.Weintraub estimated there are as ,many as 700 students now in thecourse. This was reported to beabout 200 more than last year and I300 more than the year before. CHICAGO PREMIERE“TRUDY and the MINSTREL”Rollicking Now Musical for ChildrenOpening October 7Weekends Performances thru Dec 10Sat. 10:30 a m. 2:30 p.m. Sun. 2-30 p.m.GOODMAN CHILDREN'S THEATRE200 S. Columbus Drive • CE 6-2337CHICAGO TICKET CENTRAL212 N MICHIGAN AVESOCIAL SCIENCE 125 MAKE-UPEXAM WILL BE GIVEN ON MON¬DAY, OCTOBER 16, 1967 from / to5:30 P.M. in Swiff 208. SIGN-UPNOW IN GB 212. Test Administra¬tion Office by October 12, 1967 toregister for exam and pick up examticket. UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESIF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALE,HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILY/DRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.THE CHICAGO MAROON October 10, 1967LEMISCH CHARGES:Levi Rejected Original ReportBy MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorThe University History De¬partment, already weary fromthe series of controversies whichhave surrounded its operationsin the last six months, reluctantlyfaced a new battery of charges thisweek.In a letter published in today’sMaroon, outgoing Assistant Profes¬sor of History L. Jesse Lemischcharges that the original recom¬mendations of the faculty commit¬tee responsible for considering the renewal of this contract did noteven succeed in convincing the Pro¬vost’s office.“Even the History department, itnow emerges, had difficulty in ar¬ticulating their reasons for gettingrid of me,” Lemisch states. “When(Provost Edward) Levi received myfolder (dossier? IBM card?) fromthem last November, he remarkedthat the case they made againstme was not sufficient justificationfor dropping me and sent it backto them.”Recommendations on questions ofcontract renewal and tenure aregenerally made by tenured mem¬ bers of the department, but thefinal decision is made by the Pro¬vost. Untenured faculty membersare usually given three year con¬tracts. After six years, a facultymember usually either receivestenure or is asked to leave.Political Bias?Lemisch, who failed tb win a sec¬ond three-yeaf contract, has main¬tained that he was victimized bythe political bias of the Universityand that, in particular, his supportof the 1966 Administration anti¬rank sit-in cost him his job.“In ethics, standards, and intel-*A MISUNDERSTANDING'Price Rises Explained by ViceAccording to James W. Vice,assistant dean of students, theCRAP (Committee RejectingAbsurd Prices) bag-in in Hutch¬inson Commons last week was just•'a misunderstanding.”“Food service operation in Hutchwas closed for a few years,” ex¬plain Vice, ‘and a student-facultycommittee, when considering its re¬opening, decided that, for variety’ssake, it be operated by a privateconcern.” Stoffer’s Restaurantswere selected by the committee.Since it had to begin serving foodin record time, said Vice, the pricesand menus were makeshift andtemporary. “Then as now, he not*ed, "prices and menus were sub¬ject to University review."But what about the price in-increases? First of all, there was achange of management, according to a Stouffer spokesman. The newmanagers decided that they couldno longer served canned food. Andbegan using Stouffer’s food, “‘whichnaturally costs more to prepare,”the spokesman explained.Inflation ProfitInflationary problems have creat¬ed a 7 percent increase in raw foodcosts. “Don't forget,” Vice pointedout, “that Stouffers is also a pro-fit-making organization, thoughthat profit is not great.”Eugene L. Miller, business man¬ager of campus operations, claimsmuch progress in meetihgs with theStouffer management on prices andmenus.CRAP’s informational leafletstated there was an unusual dis¬crepancy between prices at Hutch¬inson Commons and a restauranton 53rd St. Hutch being more ex¬pensive by as much as 25 cents perNew Evidence Given on LSD UseLSD users may be riskingbirth defects in their childrenand their children’s children, ac¬cording to a panel of researchscientists. They may also be ex¬posing themselves to an increasedrisk of concer and early aging.Scientists report the drug causesbreakage of human chromosomes,the hereditary material found in allthe cells of the body. While someehromosome - breaking agents areknown to cause birth defects andcancer, scientists do not yet knowif the breakage itself is the cause.LSD has, however, producedbirth defects in mice and rats. Thusfar, children of LSD users exhibitno abnormality except for an in¬creased chromosome breakage. Sub-' ■> . ' w>. ~NSFThe deadline for Hie re¬ceipt of Nationol ScienceFoundation fellowship ap¬plications is December 8,1967. For regular post¬doctoral fellowships, thedeadline is December 11.Application materials andfurther information may be |obtained from the Fellow¬ship Office, National ’Research Council. 2101Constitution Ave., N.W., §|Washington, D. C. 20418.FREEIn the history ot American CinemaRobert Flaherty's "Nanook of theNorth" CHINES forth Thursday. »:39p.m.. October 12, Judson DiningRoom.FREE tier effects, however, may showup in the future. Scientists see apossibility that babies with exces¬sive chromosome breakage maygive birth to defective children.Although proof that LSD actual¬ly causes these conditions is not yetconclusive, scientists warn men andwomen in their reproductive yearsto avoid the use of the drug.Psyche Another MatterIn contrast to the medical warn¬ing, three psychiatrists claim thatLSD cannot be blamed for themental illness which hospitalizes afew of its users.You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today. breakfast.A survey by The Maroon showedthe difference to be usually five orten cents.Vice said the Student-FacultyCommittee on Campus EatingPlaces will probably reconvene soonto consider the whole matter.Law School TestPRINCETON—The Law SchoolAdmission Test, required of candi¬dates for admission to most Ameri¬can Law Schools, will be given atmore than 250 centers throughoutthe nation on November 11, 1967;February 10, 1968; April 6, 1968,and August 3, 1968.FULLBRIGHTSNovember 1, 1967 is thedeadline for completedFulbright Fellowship appli¬cations. Application formsare available from Mrs.Pyle in Room 203 of theAdministration Build¬ing, Eext. 3236. lect, this place partakes more ofthe spirit of Johnson’s Washingtonthan a University,” he states in hisletter.“Those who keep silent or equivo¬cate contribute to the onward rushof MeCarthyism which calls itselfliberalism. The only appropriateresponse to this latest obscenity isto call it ©scene.”Although no one in the Provost’soffice was immediately available toconfirm or deny the assertion thatLevi had returned the history de¬partment’s original recommenda¬tions on the Lemisch case forfurther substantiation of their de¬cision, rumors to that effect havebeen widely circulated and they arebelieved to have come from anauthoritative source.Confusion PersistsMembers of the History Depart¬ment who took part in the Lemischdecision and who could be reachedfor comment yesterday did little toclear up the confusion surroundingthe case. Reached at his home,William McNeill, a professor ofhistory and chairman of the De¬partment at the time Lemisch'scase came up, asserted that thecharge was “not exactly true.”But McNeill refused to be morespecific in discussing what hadtaken place last year. “I don’t real¬ly want to live over the troublesof the past,” he stated, “and I’msorry Mr. Lemisch wishes to. Thereare processes of decision-makingwhich cannot be carried out inpublic, and this is one of them.”Richard Wade, another professorof history who took part in theLemisch decision, was more vehe¬ment in denying that the “Depart-m iPETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 FREE - EDISON LIGHTBULBS with billEverything for your apart¬ment, over 35,000 items instock.BERMAN'SACE HARDWARE1377 E. 53rd Street University TheatreNew MembersOld MembersOPEN HOUSETO-DAYOct. 10 from 4 p.m.Reynolds Club Theatre ment’s recommendation had initial¬ly been rejected. “To the best ofmy knowledge, it never happened,”he stated.Wade emphasized, however, thathe was not chairman of the de¬partment and that there could havebeen an interchange between Mc¬Neill and Levi which he was notaware of, although he would havecertainly known if the matter wasresubmitted to the department foranother vote.Wade asserted, however, that itwas not unusual for the Provostto return faculty recommendationson contract matters and that theLemisch case was not handled dif¬ferently than other cases of itskind.Lemisch, in charging that thefaculty recommendation on thiscase was originally rejected by theProvost, is presumably arguing thatthey were of a political nature, andthat it was only after Levi rejectedthe original recommendations thatthe faculty inserted anything moresubstantive in its report.Errors in The MaroonAn editorial in last Tuesday’s edi¬tion stated that fornication be¬tween consenting persons of agewas not illegal. In Illinois it is amisdemeanor punishable by fine,imprisonment or both.Due to a typographical error astory on Assistant Professor of So¬ciology Richard Flacks’ impressionsof a meeting with National Libera¬tion Front representatives in Fri¬day’s edition incorrectly read thatthe North iVetnamese delegationclaimed to have official status;they did not claim to have officialstatus.Ii«w .yooflcan life*»LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-timepositions available for stu¬dents and student wives.THE CENTER FORRESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cotage Grove Ave,PHOENIX, the University of Chicago Li¬terary Magazine, is now ac¬cepting contributions of PO¬ETRY, PROSE, GRAPHICS, andPHOTOGRAPHY for it's Win¬ter issue. All items should besent to Ida Noyes Hall via Fac¬ulty Exchange. SEMINAR ON OVERSEAS DEVELOPMENTFOR RETURNED PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERSAND INDIVIDUALS FROM SIMILAR GROUPSAs in previous years a non-credit seminar will be held everytwo weeks in tbe evenings to discuss the problems of under¬developed areas.Interested in Attending?LEAVE YOUR NAME AT JUDD 322OR PHONE: Ml 3-0800, EXT. 2921 WHAT IS GOOD?How does it happen?Nobody seems to have enough,but people have all kinds ofthoughts about it. Is it a thing?an event? an idea? Perhaps it’sjust being close to God.St. Paul said, "He be not far fromevery one of us.”YOU CAN HEAR a searching lec¬ture on man's potential for good byFRANCIS WILLIAM COUSINS,C.s.b., an experienced teacher andpractitioner of Christian Sciencefrom Manchester, England,and member of the Board ofLectureship of The First Church ofChrist, Scientist, in Boston, Mass.NO COLLECTIONS ARE TAKEN,no registry to sign. This is not asermon or a church service, but apublic lecture ranging from thenature of good as a divine force,to the practical rules for spiritualhealing. You will be most welcome.TITLE: Christian Science Revealsthe Good That Is Available toMankind.Christian Science lectureSunday, October 15, 3 P.M.Tenth Church of Christ, Scientist5640 S. BlackstoneCare Provided for Small ChildrenAdmission Free • Everyone is welcomeOctober 10, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONtest-Calendar of EventsPersons or organizations wishing toannounce events must submit typedcopy to The Maroon by 11 a.m. olthe day before publication.Tuesday, October 10THE RENAISSANCE SOCIETY: Mod¬ern Makonde sculpture from the pri¬vate collection of Izaak and PeraWirszup. Goodspeed Hall. Exhibitcontinuing through November 9. Ad¬mission free.COLLOQUIUM: (The James FranckInstitute): •The Measurement of I reeRadical Dipole Moments by ElectronResonance Spectroscopy." ProfessorDonald Levy. Research Institute 4isO.MOVIE: "Citizen Kane” with OrsonWelles. Soc Sci 122. 6. 8. 10 p.m.FILM: Undergraduate Psychology Clubpresents "Out of Silence.' Free.Beecher 102. 7 p.m.POLITICS FOR PEACE: Meeting forinterested persons. Ida Noyes Hall.7:30 p.m. x. ,YOUNG REPUBLICANS: Meeting ofinterested persons. Ida Noyes Hall.7:30 p.m. _ . .1 ECTURE: "British Tolicy East ofSuez ” bv Mr. William T. Rogers,Under Secretary of State for ForeignAffairs in Great Britain. Presentedby Norman Wait Harris MemorialFoundation in International Relations.Breasted Hall, Oriental Institute. 8p.m. ...LECTURE: "On the Exhibition ofMakonde Sculpture.” by J. AnthonyStout. Classics 10. 8 p.m.DEMOCRATIC SOCIALIST CLl B:Organization and planning meeting.Ida Noves Hall Library. 8:15 p.m.MOVIE: B-J Cinema presents RobertFlahertv’s "Nanook of the North.”Free admission. Judson Dining Room.8:30 p.m. LECTURE-RECTAL: Luigi Dallapic¬cola will lecture and conduct hisworks. Mandel Hall. 8:30 p.m.Wednesday, October 11SOCCER GAME: Against Notre Dame.North Field. 3:30 p.m.LECTURE: "US. Policy TowardsGreece—W. W. II to the MilitaryCoup.” Elias Thermos, Professor ofPolitical Science at Roosevelt Univer¬sity. Sponsored by SDS. ReynoldsClub. South Lounge. 3:30 p.m.LECTURE: "The L-alglycerphosphateTegulon in Eseheria coli,” NicholasCozzarelli. Stanford University Medi¬cal School. Abbott 101. 4 p.m.LECTURE SERIES: WHITEHALLPUNDITS A N I) MIDDLE EASTPROBLEMS: "The First Problem:Self Assertion." Allan Cunningham.Head, Department of History, SimonFraser University. Soc Sci 122. 4 p.m.KARATE CLUB: Ida Noyes Hall,Cloister Club. 7-10:30 p.m.MOVIE: "Red River,” Soc Sci 122.7 and 9:30 p.m. COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances fromthe British Isles and Scandinavia. IdaNoyes Hall, Dance Room. 8-10 p.m.Thursday, October 12FACULTY MEETING: Humanites Fac¬ulty. Classics 10. 4:30 p.m.MEMORIAL SERVICES: For JohnPatrick Howe, former aide at the Uni¬versity. Joseph Bond Chapel. 4:30 p.m.LECTURE: "The Developmental Regu¬lation of Enzyme Activity in theSlime Mold,” Dr. Robert Roth. Bran-deis University. Zoology 14. 4:30 p.m.PANEL DISCUSSION: "What WeDid Last Summer: A Report on Chi¬cago Student Health Project,” pre¬sented by the Student Health Organi¬zation. Billings 117. 4:30 p.m.TEACH-IN: Staugliton Lynd. HowardZinn, Richard Flacks, Vere Chap¬pell, and members of CADRE. SNCC.and SDS. Admission: $1.00. MandelHall. 7:30 p.m.'SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT'LAYAWAYFORJUNENOW!! LAYAWAYFORJUNENOW!!PHILLIPS JEWELRY COMPANY"50% OFF ON ALL DIAMONDENGAGEMENT & WEDDING RINGS'67 £. Madison Room 1101 DE 2-6508Campus Representative: E. GLASGOW—Ext. 3265 or 324-9020 MAX KAHN "Rooster on the Town"MARGO HOFF "Birds in Mountains"JEAN ARP "Free Form"All part of the "Art to Live with" Program, Oct. l6-20th,Ida Noyes Hall.HYDE PARK T.V. RENTS jJsVi w«kr°Mradio loi $5.00 amonth.HYDE PARK T.V. SERV,CEScoiders. etc.HYDE PARK T.V. SELLS K£iMotorolaGrnndigHYDE PARK T.V. offers yonmention this ad.1463 East 53rd Street PL 2-2700Howard Hawks’ RED RIVER1 lie CITIZEN KANE of the Western, with John Wayne and Montgomery Ulifi!In Soe. Sci. 122 Wednesday at 7:00 and 9:30. 75c. Presented by Din1 Films.Special!For Back-to-SchoolStyle Cut—Requires No Setting!10% Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8MOST COMPLETE PHOTOAND HOBBY STORE OHTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259Student Discountsr Charlie Brown,must t{ou alu/aqstake me soliterallq?YOU’LLFLIP,CHARLIEBROWNTHE NEWPEANUTS9CARTOON ROOK!by Charles M. SchulzONLYHolt, Rine$1inenart a! your collegebookstoreand Winston, Inc, “Ah, to be young again!To fly Ozark at Vi off!”Fly Ozark Youth Fare and save 33V3% ... with confirmedreservations. If you’re under 22, write or call Ozarkfor a $10 Youth I.D. Card application.(Travel under plan not applicable during major holiday periods)CALL —726-4680 go-getters goOZARK SPECIAL MATINEE FOR THEUNIVERSITY COMMUNITYDuke EllingtonAND HIS ORCHESTRAAt KoeheSeller 3lemorial ChapelCONCERT OF SACRED MUSICSunday, October 15, 3:00 p.m.Members of the OrchestraStephen Little, Aaron Bell, Johnny Hodges, Russell Procope,Jimmy Hamilton, Paul Gonsalves, Harry Carney,"Cat" Andersoni Herbert Jones, Mercer Ellington,"Cootie" Williams, Lawrence Brown, Buster CooperCharles ConnerSoloistsJimmy McPhail, Dorothy King, Tony Watkins, vocalsBuster Brown, Dance_ TicketsAll seats $2, unreserved. Available at Student Co-op; Stu¬dent Activities Office, Classics 13, Chapel office.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 10, 1967Students Losing Hyde Park, Woodlawn HousingContinued from Pape 1owned in Hyde Park. A few yearsago it sold apartments across55th St. from Pierce Tower forconstruction of the LutheranSeminary. The apartments weremarried students housing. Inspite of student protest, the ten¬ants were evicted and theirbuildings demolished. Over 90student families were crowdedonto the housing market.More Land GrabsThis fall, another block onceavailable to students—54th PI.between University and Wood- lawn Aves.—has been taken overfor the Seminary. The Seminaryhas bought up the buildings andreplaced the old tenants withtheir students.Last spring an official from theSeminary assured The Maroonthat ‘‘not many” University stu¬dents would be affected by thetake-over, but added that moststudents had already moved out,after learning that their leasescould only extend through thissummer. He could not say howmany students had once lived inthe buildings.Pentagon March Will Be DisruptiveC'onti iiu«mI from Page Iground entrances to the Pentagonfor up to three days.‘‘They may arrest us or they mayjust let us sit,” Rubin says. ‘‘Nomatter what, it’s going to be prettydisruptive.”Nevertheless, he declines to pre¬dict what exactly will happen.‘‘Hopefully, everybody will do hisown thinking,” says Rubin, ‘‘What¬ever stages they’re at.” Rubin him¬self plans to defoliate all the cherry trees near the white house.Rubin and Cornell University Pro¬fessor Robert Greenblatt, a co-chairman of the NMC, are quick todefine their ultimate goals and theirreasons of staying within the NMC.“We are not petitioning the Pres¬ident for an end to just this war,says Rubin. “If the war ended to¬day, it still wouldn’t change any¬thing fundamentl in the society.We’re trying to build a mass rev¬olutionary movement that will beable to assume power.” Other students have alreadylost, or will soon lose apartments,in Woodlawn’s South Campus.The city’s urban renewal depart¬ment has already bought nearlyhalf of the non-University build¬ings between 60lh and 61st Sts.,and Cottage Grove and Stony Is¬land Aves. Demolition has al¬ready begun on many buildings,and Don T. Blakiston of theSouth East Chicago Commission,which acts for the University inurban renewal matters, advisesthat acquisition, relocation ofresidents, and demolition of SouthCampus apartment buildings willSTEP MEETINGThere will be an impor¬tant organizational meet¬ing of the Student TutorsElementary Project (STEP)Thursday at 7:30 p.m. inthe Reynolds Club SouthLounge. All who wish toparticipate in STEP duringthe year should attend. “accelerate” in the next fewmonths.Students living in that area re¬port that when they signed leasesthey were told to expect to va¬cate within the next year.The cleared land of SouthCampus will be turned over tothe University, which intends tobuild additions to the hospitalsand other University buildings, aswell as some middle-income hous¬ing, according to the SG report.Non-student residents will be re¬located in a community-run proj¬ ect developed by The WoodlawnOrganization.Turkington did not know ofany University plans for relo¬cating its students moved bySouth Campus, but felt that thenormal housing market and dor¬mitory system could accomodatethese people, if they did not allneed housing at once.He added there was space forabout 50 students in Universityhousing, if people displaced bySouth Campus wanted to moveback into dormitory housing.Anti-War Action GroupsAre Active Around Area ! For The Convenience And NeedsPolitics for Peace, an anti-war ^group committed to using the;electoral process as a means ofprotest, is holding a meeting at7:50 tonight in Ida Noyes.The group has been working withpolitical organizations in the 2ndCongressional District (the SouthShore) in the hopes of finding apeace candidate who could be sup¬ported by Negroes and whites.Independents have traditionallyfaired well in the 2nd CongressionalDistrict.Politics for Peace began lastspring as a student organizationsponsored by individuals such asHans Morgenthau, Milton Cohen,Al Raby, and Staughton Lynd. Of The UniversityRENT A CARdaily — WEEKLY — MONTHLYRAMBLERS — VALIANTS — MUSTANGS and DATSUNSAs Low As $4.95 per Day(INCLUDES GAS, OIL & INSURANCE)HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd ST. Ml 3-1715 The only wav to catchthe "RoadRunner & atyour Plymouth Dealers,% The new Plymouth RoadRunnernow at your Plymouth Dealer 'swhere me beatgoes on. v01367 Vamor Bro».~ Seven Art», Tna»THE BALANCE OF POWERIS CHANGING . . .THE SHIBBOLETHS OF THE COLDWAR ARE OUTDATED . . .THE EURAMERICAN ALLIANCEIS UNDER FIRE . . .a multi-national magazine ofEuropean/American affairs chartsthe dynamic movement of the newtechnological societies. Though writtenentirely (and entertainingly) in English,INTERPLAY draws upon the thinkingand experience of seers and punditsfrom both shores of the Atlantic—university dons and deans,international affairs experts,Industrialists, government officials,journalists, philosophers, not onlyfrom English-speaking countries butfrom all the countries of the Continent,ff you are concerned about thefuture that is going to be theinheritance of those coming after, youwill welcome the intelligent andsprightly thrust into the EurAmericanfuture that INTERPLAY will presentten times a year.To take advantage of the Chartersubscription rate of $6.00' (regularly $7.00). please fill outthe attached coupon.•INTERPLAY •# 800 West 57th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 #• Please enroll me as a Charter subscriber ^* to INTERPLAY at the special rate of: #« O 1 year (10 Issues) $ 6.00 #" " 8 years (20 issues) $11.00• Q 3 years (30 issues) $15.00 •• Q Payment enclosed □ Please bill me •• Name , . , *(Address.! City .State, .Zip.• •• •••••••••••••••• BANDERSNATCHCHECK OUT THESE DINNERSFish 'n Chips 55c(Rule BritanniaICub Steak 1.25I Salad & Fries ISirloin Steaks 1.65I Salad & Fries I(Bandersnatch ExtravaganzaIBagles and Cream CheesefOi veh, BandersnatchIIda Noyes Hall GOLDIE OLDIE TYMEZAP, OOF, POWSerial CityCHARLIE CHAPLINW. C. FIELDSMASTERS OF VENUSTUES. 8:00 & 11:00WED. 11:00THURS. 8:00 & 11:00FRI. 11:005:30 p.m* to 1:00 a.m,BANDERSNATCH“Chicago Kick: Old Movies at the Bandersnatch ” Esquire MagazineOctober 10, 1967. THE CHICAGO MAROON. SRoadblock'*r •; :The Chicago MaroonFOUNDED IN 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy. Business ManagerManaging EditorsExecutive EditorsNews EditorCulture Editor Roger BlackJohn WelchDavid L. AikenMichael SeidmanJohn MoscowEdward Chikofsky Photograph Editor Marc PoKempnerEditorial Assistants David E. GumpertDaniel Hertzbergv Joan PhillipsLiterary Editors ... Ted HearneBryan DunlapEditor Emeritus David A. Satter" c ' i '' tUncomfortableLike Vietnam and the cost of living, the Hyde Park housingsituation just gets worse and worse. Even McKey and Pogue,who along with the other real estate agents in the area hasbeen making a small mint out of the housing shortage, startedmaking noises the other day about how the University shouldreally build more apartments for its students.Indeed, it hardly requires a degree in social planning to seethat the University housing policy is in serious trouble. Statedin the simplest possible terms, there are more students thanthere are houses to put them in, and the proportion is growingmore lopsided every year.Moreover, far from coming to grips with the problem, theUniversity has aggravated it in the past and, remarkably, re¬mains blase about it even in the face of an obviously impendingcrisis. Within the last year, the Luther Theological Seminaryhas displaced several hundred students, and by a year from nowthe urban renewal between 60th and 61st Sts. will have displacedhundreds more.YET APPARENTLY the University remains unconcernedabout where these people are going to live. Its housing activitieshave been confined to the building of one apartment buildingand the acquisition of a fewT townhouses—measures which ob¬viously have not made a dent in the problem—and no plans havebeen announced for any future construction.In the peculiar world of University real estate officials, thesepolicies mean only that the dry equations of “units” and “appli¬cants” are slightly more difficult to balance. But for studentsliving in Hyde Park, the results range from one student whoreportedly holed up in the attic of Rosenwald Hall for six monthsto countless others who are the victims of outrageous rents,substandard apartments, and landlords who flourish in com¬munities where demand far exceeds supply and the demandersare among the least powerful members of society.In a University where the administration considers itselfresponsible for everything from when its female students go tobed to what they do when they get there, it is monstrous tohink that Chicago has effectively dissociated itself from the onearea where the welfare of its students is clearly and tangiblythreatened. Yet in retrospect, it is quite clear today that somecareful thinking about the problem a decade ago might haveprevented the present mess, and indeed, it is still possible thata thoughtful reappraisal of University Housing policy can savethe situation.WE REALIZE, OF COURSE, that the University is inserious financial straits, and that there are other priorities thatdo—and should—come before housing. But to the best of ourknowledge, the effective allocation of available resources doesnot necessarily constitute financial irresponsibility. If Chicagois to be a residential University, then there is no reason whythe money that is now' going into the upkeep of apartment cannotbe used to build truly livable dorms. Or, conversely, if Chicagois to be a more decentralized, apartment-oriented community,it can reserve the dorms for first-year students and spend themoney now used for dorm upkeep to provide decent apartmenthousing.The present administration seems to favor the dorm-centeredresidential College, despite the obvious preference of the studentsfor apartments. That the present policy is a failure can be seenfrom the large number of students presently living in SouthShore, where they are isolated 1n a very real way from the extra¬curricular academic life of the Hyde Park community.If the College is to be dorm-centered, some vast changeswill have to be effected before many students will be walling toabandon apartment life, and not all of these changes are physicalones; the concept of house autonomy, for instance, must becarried through to its logical end.It is only by following a policy that is neither fish nor fowlthat the University has managed to bring matters to a statewhere in a national survey last year, Chicago was ranked withWest Point as the most uncomfortable campus in the country.Following a policy that can only be described as a model ofineptitude, the University has first constructed cheap, largelyuninhabitable dorms, and then taken only a few piecemeal meas¬ures when, to virtually no one's surprise, students, refused tolive in them.It is probably unfair to continue criticizing these mistakes,made ten years ago and now generally conceded. But Chicagodoes not seem to have learned. The administration continuesmaking minor improvements in the dorms, then balancing themwith minor improvements in the neighborhood.Until housing officials make up their minds one way or theother and concentrate their resources in some kind of an effectiveprogram, the University will continue to be plagued by its hous¬ing disgrace. DAVID L AIKENEvanston's Student Power:Nascent hut Still GrowingUp on the distant lakeshore ofdarkest Evanston, some recent de¬velopments have offered hope thatNorthwestern University’s imageas “Country Club U.” is now farfrom appropriate. Fortunately,however, things are not all chang¬ing in the ways the institutionalpublic relations men would like.Last spring, a drama studentfrom Dallas by the name of EllisPines decided he had had enoughof the rather phony atmosphereof rah-rah frat life and sandboxpolitics which seems to engagethe attention of so many studentsat a number of universities, ofwhich Northwestern seems to beone.Pines banded together with asmall.group of other malcontents,some of whom he had not knownbefore, to stage a whirlwind three-day campaign for the presidencyof Student Senate. They held“bitch-ins” every noon at a cen¬tral gathering spot on campus;they received an audience withNU President J. Roscoe Miller,who is alleged to grant such fa¬vors very rarely; they talkedabout correcting all evils aboutwhich students had grievances,and establishing something called“Student Power” at Northwestern.FOR SOME reason, whichneither Pines and his followersnor anybody else have quite fig¬ured out, Pines won. Maybe histwo opponents were simply so“colorless,” as both pro- and anti-Pines observers have suggested,that anything with a spark ofimagination was likely to catchfire.After his election, Pines calleda number of bitch-jns to protestsuch things as campus discrim¬ination, lack of an open housing ordinance in Evanston, etc. Therewas a bitch-in to protest whatwas alleged to be administrationpressure on a graduate teachingassistant to resign from Pines’Student Power Movement. Whenone of Pines’ friends and advisersthought up the idea of flying anAmerican flag upside dowm as asignal of distress over the matter,however, all sorts of people mis¬understood, the Tribune’s wrathwas aroused, and the matter wasrather hastily dropped.Meanwhile, Pines was presidingover a Student Senate which con¬tained perhaps one, at most, sup¬porter of Pines and his independ¬ent Student Power Movement,under whose aegis all the bitch-ins, etc., had been held.FINDING HIMSELF inside an"establishment” which was per¬haps basically alien to his way ofdoing things, but .which mightpossibly offer a convenient plat¬form and supply of resources,Pines decided to stay where hewas. The Senate issued a state¬ment divorcing itself from theStudent Power Movement, whichhad been using its mimeographfacilities; Pines announced he wasquitting the Student Power Move¬ment.By the end of the summer,however, it appeared that thedecision to work within the Stu¬dent Senate, rather than a fifthcolumn, was in the process ofbeing reversed. Pines decided thathe would get together with someof the people who had supportedhis Student Power Movement andorganize a “counter-orientation”for entering freshmen (labelleda “dis-orientation” by some.)Staughton Lynd was one of theirfeatured speakers, helping to start off “The Real University of Evans¬ton," as Pines and his accomplicescalled their nascent “Free Uni¬versity.”WELL, PINES’ himself is nowcompletely outside both the “es¬tablishment” of the Student Sen¬ate and of the University itself.His school decided they wouldn’tallow him to make up work in aspring semester course in whichhe missed most of the work; this,plus another failing grade, puthim on probation, so he couldn’tretain his post as Senate presi¬dent.Then his parents decided theyweren’t going to subsidize himanymore unless he quit messingaround in politics. So now he’smoving to Washington to writefor the Washington Free Press,an “underground” newspaper.But it appears that somethinghas been planted up there inEvanston that won’t stop growing.It is not likely any major revo¬lutions will be forthcoming fromthe shores of far-off Evanston, butit is encouraging that the nation¬wide germ of students’ desire forpersonal autonomy has caught oneven there.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Univer¬sity of Chicago students on Tuesdaysand Fridays throughout the regularschool ye a.r and intermittentlythroughout the summer, except duringthe tenth week of the academic quar¬ter and during examination periods.Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and SOS ofIda Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3265. Distributed on campus andin the Hyde Park neighborhood freeof charge. Subscriptions by mail $6per year. Second class postage paid atChicago, Ill, Charter member of U.S.Student' Press Assn., publishers ofCollegiate Press Service.6 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 10, 1967Letters to the Editor of The MaroonSocial MissionLast spring the University ad¬ministration’s response to the rev¬elation of Mr. O’Connell’s politicaldiscrimination in admissions wasa ringing endorsement of his con¬duct: a special faculty committee(Professors Binder, Boorstin, etal.) asserted the University’s rightto pursue a “social mission” de¬fined in accord with an alleged“general value consensus prevail¬ing our society’’ and its right to“perpetuate” that mission andthat consensus “through thechoice of the succeeding genera¬tion of scholars.”That is the University’s publicstand, and that is precisely whatthe University does. It did it whenit refused admission to a studentwho did not fit into Mr. O’Con¬nell’s conception of the generalvalue consensus. As Professor SoiaMentschikoff read the generalvalue consensus, it would be per¬fectly respectable academic prac¬tice for her to judge a man un¬suitable for a faculty appointmentin part because his support of the1066 sit-in indicated that he was“lacking in judgment.” Other fac¬ulty members acted in accord withsuch a standard when they de¬cided to try to remove the Col¬lege^ history group's chairman-designate (who had let out thesecret about O’Connell’s conduct).My contract was not renewed be¬cause, from the point of view ofthe History Department’s concep¬tion of the general value consen¬sus, "your convictions interferedwith vour scholarship.”NOW THE SAME standard hasbeen applied to Staughton Lynd.Would he have had “bad judg¬ment” had he supported MarshalKy, or Lyndon Johnson, insteadof me? Would they say a manhas poor judgment, don’t theysimply mean that he is not askillful careerist, and that theyprefer academic entrepreneurs totruth-seekers? One of the indica¬tions of the enormous gap be¬tween pretense and practice hereis that Marshall Hodgeson an¬swers the claim that Lynd’sstatement about me was a factorin his failure to get a job at theUniversity by saying, in effect,yes, but only a little bit. How much evaluation of a prospectivefaculty member’s political opini¬ons and statements is a properamount in this citadel of purelearning? Apparently a smallamount is acceptable.Hodgson also says that a spe¬cific individual among those whofelt that Lynd had bad judgmenthad “personal knowledge of” mycase. He also tells us that thisindividual is not in the HistoryDepartment. How, then, does hehave "personal knowledge” of thecircumstances of my non-renew¬al? Hearsay plus bias. His opinionis worth no more, perhaps no less,than Lynd’s, but it is Lynd’s judg¬ment which is labelled poor.(Even the History Department, itnow emerges, had difficulty inarticulating their reasons for get¬ting rid of me: when Levi re¬ceived my folder [dossier? IBMcard?] from them last November,he remarked (hat the case theymade against me was not suffi¬cient justification for dropping meand sent it back to them. Theyapparently did better the secondtime.)THOSE SCHOLARS at the Uni¬versity of Chicago who haveworked for the Democratic Party,or endorsed decision-making byelites without “disruption” frombelow, are no more “neutral” thanthose scholars—not at the Uni¬versity of Chicago—who have en¬dorsed civil disobedience. The for¬mer act to preserve things essen¬tially as they are; the latter tryto change them. Writing booksabout the peculiar virtues ofAmerican democracy is no more“objective” than is Lynd’s state¬ment (in the Journal of NegroHistory) that it is “grotesque” forhistorians to see equality as acentral theme in American his¬tory. Both are statements from aparticular point of view, and bothcontribute, in different ways, tothe advance of learning. It is de¬structive of learning to accuseradical scholars of present-mind-edness without noting the enorm-out dedication of non-radical his¬torians to the present system andtheir repeated explicit commit¬ment to the values of the Ameri¬can "mainstream.” It is a pollu¬tion of language to say “badscholarly judgment,” when we simply mean that we disagreewith a man’s statements on con¬temporary issues.The standards applied toStaughton Lynd—and to me—donot mean that present-mindednessis being eliminated from the Uni¬versity of Chicago faculty; rather,it is being reinforced, and theUniversity is becoming more ar¬rogant about it. They are makingit all the more clear that, farfrom being neutral, or balanced,or even pluralistic, this Universityis a very partisan institution in¬deed, ardently pursuing a “socialmission”—to “perpetuate” thingsas they are. In ethics, standards,and intellect this place partakesmore of the spirit of Johnson’sWashington than a university.Those who keep silent or equivo¬cate contribute to the onwardrush of a McCarthyism whichcalls itself liberalism. The onlyappropriate response to this latestobscenity is to call it obscene.JESSE LEMISCHAssistant'Professor of HistoryFarewell, AlanIt was with a profound sadnessof heart that I read Miss Phil¬lips’ article reporting the end ofthe galactic political career ofAlan Bloom.This is truly a loss of monu¬mental dimension and import toall of us who were so fortunateas to have seen in action thiscourageous, indefatigable and per¬petual warrior for truth, light,and left-handed desks.Alan Bloom’s impeccable rec¬ord of distinction, dedication, andsheer commitment spans fourglorius and catharctic years. Fouryears of successes, setbacks, greatinternal struggles, and eventualresolutions for Mr. Bloom. Thisgreat crusading spirit, this mightycorporeality of zeal, has now fall¬en victim to the prostitution ofexpediency.To match his immense re¬sources of energy, which enabledhim to initiate and develop asmany as three different crusadesper day, Alan was gifted with anOlympian eloquence, which add¬ed celestial fire to the unmatchedrhetoric he employed. COURAGE, Energy, Commit¬ment, and Eloquence—four majorattributes that make a great man,when combined in the proper pro¬portions—yes, Alan Bloom hadall four, enough alone to elevatehim to the ranks of the preciousfew. However, there was evenmore to this unique personality.For it is compassion, the abili¬ty to feel for someone else, thatis the one, major quality thatdifferentiates titans from all less¬er men. And very few people Ihave ever encountered possessedas much compassion as AlanBloom. In his later years, Alan—after all his initial efforts hadcrowned him with success—fromthe awesome heights of the Stu¬dent Government Assembly, fromthe even higher rostrum of theInter-House Council, and—everhighest—from the Caucus Roomsof Chicago's NSA delegation,could always be heard to say,periodically, with a tremor ofemotion in his legato voive:“The little people—I love ’em!”AND IT WAS the “little peo¬ple” who mattered most to thissparkling gladiator in the politi¬cal arena, who could alwaysemerge with an unsullied togaafter doing battle with both lionsand SDS members. From his verybeginning in campus politics with-'in the political crucible of ShoreyHouse, to his present position,gazing down from the firma¬ments of Lower Flint, Alan hasalways manifested a 25-hour-a-day concern for his fellow stu¬dents. Today, for example, stu¬dents can proudly say, “It w'asAlan Bl°om who got us papertowels in all the johns.” How¬ever, to enumerate all of Bloom’smajor accomplishments wouldrequire more pages than, I fear,a moderate-sized publication, suchas the Encyclopedia Britannica,as revised.Thus, all of us in the academiccommunity must give pause now,as we face the coming year, de¬void of our ebullient, inimitablechampion. We must survive insome way, for that is what Alanwould have wished of us. Forti¬tude, strength, and the will to*see all things through must beour mainstays in the months ahead. And, after all, in thosedarkest hours, we will always beable to turn to the sublime mem¬ory of Alan to give us the need¬ed stimulus to succeed.For myself, I feel an unfathom¬able sense of loss. For I servedby Alan’s side in Student Gov¬ernment two years ago, servedwith him on the Inter-HouseCouncil last year, and, together,we experienced the great rigorsand challenges of the vita activaat the University of Chicago. Hewas my friend, my soul, and,most of all, my batteries, overthe years. His departure for theElysian fields of Hospital Admini¬stration most clearly has broughtto mind the words of the poetwho said:"Farewell, A long Farewell toAll my Greatness!’*PETER L. RATNER, ‘69Open DoorYour account of last week in¬dicates that the local chapter ofSDS has decided to place the re¬sponsibility of the non-renewal ofMr. Jesse Lemisch’s contract onone member of the History De¬partment. As everyone knows,that, decision was based on theprofessional judgment of the De¬partment, not the political opin¬ion of any member. If there areto be any “targets” for leafletting,etc., I hope to be included amongthem. I am out of residence thisquarter, and hence have no class¬es. But my office is 319 in theSocial Sciences building, and Ihave an open door on Mondaysand Fridays.RICHARD C. WADEProfessor of HistoryLetters to the editor must hesigned, although names may bewithheld upon request. TheMaroon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering meaning.Typed copy must he submitted by11 a.m. of the day before publi¬cation.GADFLYEducation Business': the Status Quo and PassivityBy CHARLES S. ISAACSThe chief wonder of Educationis that it does not ruin everybodyconcerned with it, teachers andtaught. —Henry AdamsFor people supposedly dedica¬ted to the education business, theencouragement of analyticthought, and the necessary con¬nection to action, those involvedin the current debate on univer¬sity management have providedsurprisingly poor examples ofthese qualities in their past state¬ments and conduct. The promiseof higher education is embodiedin a few fundamental principlesto which few educators or stu¬dents would object. The thought¬less subversion of these principlesin higher education today and theresulting miseducation is the sub¬ject of this paper.THE OBVIOUS first basis ofuniversity management is thecommunity nature of the univer¬sity. The university’s purpose is toeducate thereby contributing tothe welfare of the members ofthe community, not to makemoney. Its values include freethought, open inquiry, and parti¬cipation—not efficiency. Its mem¬bers are the teachers and thetaught, neither exclusive of theother—not cogs in a corporatewheel; the responsibility of eachmember is to himself as well asto the community. This is an in¬disputable, or at least thus farundisputed, definition of the uni¬versity for the purposes of itsgovernment. Let each universitypresident who has not labelledhis domain a “community ofscholars” at least seven times ineach of his speeches please rise!Before a government can bedevised for the university com¬munity, one thing must be un¬derstood about its constituency.This is that it is adult, students as well as faculty members. Stu¬dents, as well as faculty, have ademonstrated ability to think, orthey would not be here. Stu¬dents, as well as faculty, are bio¬logically mature. Students, morethan faculty, are eligible to becalled upon to serve their coun¬try. Students, as well as faculty,have the responsibilities attend¬ant to voting, driving, marryingwithout consent, consuming alco¬hol, signing contracts, and con¬forming to the laws of the land.Students, and faculty too, havedemonstrated the connection be¬tween thought and action by ahistoric social commitment, hereand abroad. Few administratorswill, at least publicly, take thestance that his students or facul¬ty are children or adolescents.It has become accepted inAmerica that the government ofa community must derive itspower from the consent of theadult governed. Show me anAmerican who does not believein the principles of the Declara¬tion of Independence, a corpora¬tion executive who does not ac¬cept the responsibility of ac¬countability to the stockholders,a constitutional theorist who be¬lieves that government shouldusurp its power from the people.If the university is by its na¬ture a community, if the mem¬bers of the community are adults,and if a just government derivesits power from the consent ofthe governed, certain things mustnecessarily follow. Possible waysto govern the university by theseprinciples are numerous; I shallnot go into the mechanics here.What does not follow is the man¬ner in which higher educationis managed in the United Statestoday.IF THOSE WHO CLAIM to ac¬cept the above principles are serious, they should have takena hard look at the American uni¬versity long ago. Today educa¬tion as a purpose has gone outthe window. Students are alter¬nately considered as customerswho buy credits and save upenough to trade them for a de¬gree, much like S&H GreenStamps, or as products movingdown the assembly line, beingstamped “4-credit” by the in¬spector at each station, and fi¬nally being labelled “Degree”when the end of the line isreached and the product suffi¬ciently conforms to its specifica¬tions. Faculty members areawarded elite status (called “ten¬ure”) depending on whether ornot they have written books andtechnical articles for esoterictrade publications. The fact thatthey have or haven’t educatedsomeone is not relevant.The curriculums are designedby computers on a standard ofefficiency, measured by thingslike space-utilization and time-study, again elements of the pro¬ductive factory. At Berkeley be¬fore the Disturbances, 1500 stu¬dents were crammed into onelecture each week, classes werelabelled with the name of ascholar and taught by graduatestudents, and one social scienceprofessor had been giving thesame lecture, word for word, eachweek since 1946.The new purpose of the uni¬versity is making money. Princi¬ples are compromised, schools aredisbanded and created, buildingsare built, research is done, all forthe sake of the Almighty Dollar.Important positions in the Univer¬sity heirarchy are filled withfund-raisers. President Beadle hasbeen praised left and right forhis fund-raising activities, butnot a woi’d has been said about his contribution to the develop¬ment of higher education.Rather than government withits roots in the constituency, theuniversities have adopted top-down straight-line decision-mak¬ing patterns. The Board of Trus¬tees (businessmen) tell the Presi¬dent (fund-raiser) who tells theProvost who tells the Deans whotell the faculty who grumble andmutter. Occasionally the studentsare privileged to hear about animportant administrative deci¬sion through the new consulta¬tive process called Press-Release.The main center of Long IslandUniversity is in the process ofbeing sold to the City Univer¬sity of New York and the stu¬dents and faculty only found outabout it after negotiations werewell under way. The slogan ofthe student movement at theLondon School of Economicsserves as both a statement offact and a warning: “Beware thePedagogic Gerontocracy.”The gap between these pat¬terns of governance and opera¬tion, and the principles articu¬lated by their promoters and per-petuators is obvious. The tragedyof this gap lies in its results.THE SUBVERSION OF thepromise of higher education hasresulted in a strange pattern ofnon-thought which serves to per¬petuate that very process. Thisis best shown by considering whatpeople in power are allowed toget away with. They justify theircorporate monopolies with theterm “Free Enterprise.” Theystifle the American ideal of freespeech by calling for “Patrio¬tism.” They equate maintenanceof the status quo with the “Con¬tinuing American Revolution.’*They advertise “Academic Free¬dom” even as they are severing the connection between thoughtand social action. They includeSpain, Greece and South Koreain the “Free World.” They define“Education” as adjustment tosociety, as assimilation, as sociali¬zation. And they are allowed toget away with all of it, veracityintact.Worst of all, of course, is thatmembers of the university com¬munity allow its corruption tocontinue. Yes, the disturbances atBerkeley stimulated some crea¬tive thought as to what was hap¬pening on the campus. Yes, thestudents at Catholic Universitystruck that their academic free¬dom be defined honestly. Yes,the students at Long Island Uni¬versity’s Brooklyn Center closedthe campus for two weeks ratherthan be participants in thefarce that was going on there.Unfortunately, however, passiveacceptance is still far too preva¬lent. When students at a majoruniversity accept the suspensionof their collogues for participat¬ing in a peaceful demonstration,when they sit back, collect theircredits, and watch their univer¬sity become a bigger and biggerbusiness, when they allow a warto consume an increasingly im¬portant influence in universitypolicy, the students of that uni¬versity have still quite a bit ofthinking to do. They should re¬member that freedom cannot begiven; it must be taken. And theperpetuators of the status quoshould not take heart at my an¬alysis.Mr. Isaacs, a first-year studentin the Law School, was studentbody president at Long IslandV niversity, Brooklyn Center,where he led a two-week studentstrike.October 10, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7SIMILAR TO CHICAGO'SCornell Assays New Pot PolicyBy RICHARD ANTHONYCollegia* Press ServiceITHACA, N. Y. — A special!commission at Cornell Univer-1sity has recommended that theuniversity give up its law en-:forcement activities on campus, andrestrict its disciplinary authority jover students "solely to acts of mis- |conduct damaging to its (the uni¬versity’s) educational objectives.”Previously the university has;helped local law-enforcement au- Ithorities apprehend law-breakers at;Cornell, particularly marijuanausers.The commission’s lengthy report,released today, also called for agreater student voice in disciplinarymatters on campus.Now that the report has been jmade public, there will probably beseveral months of discussion and jdebate on campus before faculty,administration and student groups |put its recommendations to a vote. !There are already indications, how¬ever, that some parts of the report jface tough sledding.On the question of marijuana, the jcommission found that "The be-1haviour and attitudes accompany- jing student usb of marijuana”1 were damaging to the university’s report, particularly the section thateducational environment, and thattherefore the university shouldhave regulations against the “pos¬session, use or sale" of it.In the view of David Radin, ed¬itor of the Cornell Daily Sun, sucha marijuana policy would be insome ways a retrogression from theprevious policies."It appears to me,’’ said Radin,"that the commission approachedthe issue with the idea that mari- recommends an end to universityhandling of civil cases involvingstudents."This means that a student whogets arrested for being drunk down¬town won’t have his case turnedover to the university," Radin ex¬plained. “He’ll have to. go to court.It ends the privileged position ofstudents."The commission, which includesfaculty, administration and studentjuana had to be kept off campus." representatives, was set up lastHe added that the Sun would def- spring after months of growing stu-initely come out against that partof the report.Another of the commission’s rec¬ommendation's that may come it.for criticism is the one calling for dent unrest over the administra¬tion’s disciplinary policies, particu¬larly with regard to outside au¬thorities.The administration’s aid to lawfaculty review of eeitain cases authorities included allowing onefldindir>flted hv the students Con- I gfate agent t(J ^ as a studenlin order to investigate marijuanause on campus, and turning overnames of students suspected ofmarijuana use to local authorities.Students were unhappy aboutthat policy. Many of them also pro¬tested when the university triedto curtail the activities of an SDSgroup that was recruiting studentsto go to New York and burn theirdraft cards.adjudicated by the student’s Con¬duct Board. According to the re¬port, the faculty board should beable to review the student board'sdecisions under “extraordinary cir¬cumstances," when it is necessaryto "rectify any gross miscarriageof justice."Radin says that the faculty boardshould not be able to initiate sucha review. He believes the facultyshould review only those cases thatare appealed by defendants.Radin praised some parts of theDesigned Surveyer InstrumentA chemical analyzer designedfor the Surveyor V moon probeby Anthony Turkevich, theJames Franck professor ofchemistry, has sent back strongevidence that the moon is or mayonce have been a “live” planet likethe Earth.The analyzer, a small, gold-platedLaw School ConferenceThe Law School's twentieth An¬nual Federal Tax Conference willbe held at the Prudential BuildingWednesday, October 25, throughFriday, October 27.More than 500 lawyers, tax ac¬countants, and corporation execu¬tives across the country will attendthe conference.Initiated in 1947 to provide aforum for discussion of problemsrelating to tax law, administration,and legislation, it is the oldest suchconference in the Midwest. box, found an abundance of ele¬ments similar to that of basalt, the jmost common form of volcaniclava on Earth. The analysis gives |support to the theory the lunar Iseas were once lava flows.Dr. Donald Gault of the Ames iResearch Center of Moffet Field, |California, quoted in The Chicago jSun-Times, hailed Surveyor’s analy- jsis as "one of the greatest scientific!achievements of the civilization ofman."Surveyor was launched Septem¬ber 8 and landed on the moon twodays later. Turkevich’s analyzer |had 14 days to gather data fromthe moon’s surface before all in¬struments on the craft were shut jdown.Turkevich began work on the!design of the analyzer in 1959. The Jhardware itself was built at theLaboratory for Astrophysics and jSpace Research of the Enrico jFermi Institute.'- / "% ^ifyeauttj and (Cosmetic5700 HARPER avenue onFAlrfax 4-2007 • -. <*Catch theftedRunner!ztyourTtymouth fieaters.~Ih& new Plymouth Jtodd Runner\J now of your Plymouth Dealer's.s where the heat goes on. mOliMT lirmr »r.i -Urn tft), ! STATIONERYBOOKSGREETING CARDS******THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55* ST.10% Student Discount Right on Campusfor your travel needs large or smallair. Steamship, tours, railMIDWAYTRAVEL SERVICElobbytel. Ml 3-0800 administration buildingext. 2301. 2302, 2303no charge for our services exceptnominal fee for rail tickets.-0-THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOTHE 1967-1968 ENCYCLOPEDIABRITANNICA LECTURE SERIES"THE IHTELLECTUAL LIFE - OUTSIDE THE UHIVEHSITT”\ *SENATOR WILLIAM BENTON—"U. N. E. S. C. D.: The Dream Comes of Age"Publisher, Encyclopedia Bri+annica. Inc.October 11, 1967, WednesdayLaw School Auditorium, 8:15 p.m.MAURICE B. MITCHELL—"Intellectual Life In the Commercial Sector"Chancellor, University of DenverOctober 18, 1967, WednesdayLaw School Auditorium, 8:15 p.m.WARREN PREECE—To Be AnnouncedEditor-in-Chief, Encyclopedia BritannicaOctober 25, 1967, WednesdayLaw School Auditorium, 8:15 p.m.CLIFTON FADIMAN—"Literature in the Ice Age"Author, CriticNovember 1, 1967, WednesdayLaw School Auditorium, 8:15 p.m.ROBERT M. HUTCHINS—"The Truth About the Center"President, Center for the Study of Democratic InstitutionsNovember 7, 1967, WednesdayRockefeller Memorial Chapel, 8:15 p.m.SIR WILLIAM HALEY—"The Isle is Full of NoisesFormation of Opinion and Culture in Britain"Former Director, B.B.C.November 15, 1967 WednesdayLaw School Auditorium, 8:15 p.m.8 THE CHICAGO MAROON October 19, 1967' ", ' * , - ! M , MMaroon Classified Advertisements ' ifHOUSES FOR SALE4 Bedroom douse located in South Shoreonly 10 ntin. from Campus. Two wood-burning Fireplaces. 2 car garage. Under¬ground lawn sprinklers. Also fully carpetedwith a finished basement. $30,000. For ay-pointment, call 643-3168.WORKOAL FKIDAY. Std. and non-managingdirector of newly formed company seekspart-time aide. Ideal candidate should havesecretarial skills, arithmetic aptitude andflair for writing. Hours are flexible,ca. $15/weelt. Pay negotiable, but good.Contact Mr. Niederhoffer at MI-3-0800,X4264 or 643-8092 late evenings ormornings.Church Secretary needed. Part-time. Hardwork, low pay manage office, type, somedictation. Flexible schedule. Near NorthSide. Call for Appointment between 7-9PM at 528-6344.FOR SALETR 4A with wire wheels. Low miles . . .Toneau cover . . . white soft top ... Inperfect condition. $2000 or best offer. CallTed at 285-0825.SINGLE MATTRESS & SPRINGS, CALL684-8165.Leather Topped Desk. $10.00. Phone MI-3-0800, EXT. 3595.Finriar Stratogasser With Amp & Speakers$350.00 or Best Offer. Call 324-5751evenings.LOSTWire-rim glasses for man. October 2. be¬tween New Dorm & Medici i along Wood-lawn & 57th). Call Marianne at Ext. 3266Ml-3-0800, REWARD.ROOMMATE WANTEDLOOKING FOR MALE GRADUATE STU¬DENT to share spacious two bedroomapartment in South Shore with a Law Stu¬dent. $67..V)/month. Call Irwin at 374-1636.APARTMENT WANTEDOne Bedroom Apartment Wanted for Winter& Spring Quarters. Pref. Hyde Park Area.Call 731-5740 evenings.ROOM OFFERED PERSONALSCAP AND GOWNThe first staff meeting of the U. of C.yearbook will be held tonight at 7 PMoutside the CAP & GOWN office, thirdfloor, INH. All interested students areurged to attend. If unable, please contactSuellyn Hetrick, 1313 Wallace.HYDE PARK DIGGERS??? RICH—752-5383.POLITICS FOR PEACE, speciul massmeeting for all interested in political actionfor PEACE, Tuesday, Oct. 10, 7:30 PM,Ida Noyes Hall, Cloister Club.POLITICS FOR PEACE has been buildinga political base in South Shore for halfa year. Our purpose is to inform thePublic about the WAR and to create thepolitical means to oppose the WAR.How can this be the BEST OF ALL POS¬SIBLE WORLDS without your BluckfriarScript?CAP & GOWN IS HERE!Hear her plans for a mock political con¬vention on this Campus, hosted by theU. of C. Young Republicans. Meeting to¬night. at 7:30 in Ida Moves.READY TO BREAK OUT AND MEETTHE GROUP? Come to Upper Flint’sCoffee Hour, October 11, Rickert Lounge,Woodward Court, 9-11.ROOMMATE NEEDED — three bedroomsapartment needs roommate — call TIMafter 11 PM at 288-1307.We’re Cheap And Proud Of It.BANDERSNATCH The Young Republican Club invites you tohear and meet Milton Friedman at ourfirst meeting of the quarter, tonight at7:30 in Ida Noyes.WRITERS’ WORKSHOP PL-2-8377Want to be an Off-Broadway Playwright?Contact Blackfriars.LECTURE BY EARL fmole hole) SEGALOF OLD TORN. “CAN HIPPIES MAKEA HAPPIER WORLD?’’ Friday, October13, 9:00 PM. Also “UNFIX ABLE QUIZGAME . . . everybody plays” on Saturday,October 14, THE COLLEGE OF COM¬PLEXES, located at 105 W. Grand. $1.00.All Minors Welcome.<’AI* & GOWN 19)17WILL BE DISTRIBUTED today throughThursday at Ida Noyes, 10 AM - 4 PM.Students who have paid for books are re¬quested to pick them up. A limited numberare available at $6.00.SOCIAL SCIENCE 125 MAKE-UP EXAMWILL BE GIVEN ON MONDAY, OCTO¬BER 16, 1967 from 4 to 5:30 P.M. inSWIFT 208. SIGN-UP NOW IN GB 212,Test Administration Office by October 12,1967 to register for exam and pick upexam ticket.. . . and no she said no I’ve seen it twicealready she said no; and I went alone—who are you child? MP.Write a play for Blackfriars—More funthan Bear-Baiting.CAP & GOWN IS HERE!PARAPSYCHOLOGYCLUBIda Noyes5:30 P.M.Today, Tuesday, Oct. 10May we suggest that you find CAP &GOWN 1967 well worth waiting for. Comeand have a look—The Editors. nets of silver and gold have wesaid wynken,blynken,and nod.ALAS—I hate this job.BABYSITTINGStudent wanted to babysit in exchange forroom and board, near University, call HY-3-4122.Free room and bath and board in exchangefor sitting and minor household tasks. Idealarrangement for serious female student.Close to University. East Hyde Park loca¬tion. Call 643-7807.tact RAMI RABBY at 321 6508, 5519 S.Blackstone Avenue, Apt. 101. RIDES AND RIDERSP.IDERS wanted to share driving and ex¬penses to New York, Oct. 14. Call 752-3936evenings.Girl wants ride to October 21st WashingtonMarch. Will pay half expenses, drive part¬way. Room 2321, Rickett House.VOLUNTEERS NEEDEDBLIND STUDENT of Business Administra¬tion is looking for volunteers to read tohint. The material will be both of aquantitive nature as well as of a morestraight forward literary type. Please con-JBL 131 15" WooferJBL Metal HornJBL Cross-over NetworkTransformer2 Sets Available at $65 eachCall 256-4785 or 521-0460 KNIGHT KG870 70WSolid-state amplifiedperfect condition $65.00call 256-4785 or 521-0460NEW BOOKS JUST RECEIVEDThe Limits of Power $J"95by Eugene J. McCarthy 9 *The Confessions of Nat Turner $#95by William Styron OThe Difference of Man & The Difference it Makes $^95by M. J. Adler §GENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENTThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis AvenueROOM for girl in private home at $10 <10 ,per month, Call MU14-5076 between 5-9 .PM or anytime on weekends. Orscn Welles’ CITIZEN KANEin Sot’. Sci. at 6, 8, and 10. 7!)i’. Join ihe search for Rosebud tonight.HELLO IVEW FACULTY AND STUDENTSWELCOME TO HYDE PARK-KENWOODHYDE PARK FEDERAL SAVINGSis celebrating NEWCOMERS MONTH just lor you!Slop by HYDE PARK FEDERAL SAVINGS, say "Hello” ami pick upthese wonderful “WELCOME GIFTS*’• Your own savings account at Hyde Park Federal with the firstdollar deposited for you.• One year's free subscription to the Hyde Park Herald.• Your Newcomers guide full of maps, announcements, everythingto acquaint you with your community.• lly depositing $500 in your new accountor by adding $500 to your present account,we offer everybody in October this qualitybathroom scale.All Accounts Insured to $15,000HYDE PARK FEDERAL SAVINGSIn the Hyde Park Shopping CenterOctober 10, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON Ss-®H» MOVIE REVIEWil Bonnie and Clyde" Scores With Humor, ViolenceBy T. C. FOXStaff Write*Arthur Penn, has an obses¬sion. The more he looks atAmerica the more violence hefinds. He found it in our legendof the west (“The Left-HandedGun”); He found it in the stateof Texas (“The Chase"). Hefound it in the world of thenightclub performer and in thecity of Chicago (“MickeyOne" >; With “Bonnie and Clyde"Penn has found it in one ofAmerica’s most cherished leg¬end’s — the depression bankrobber.The tities of "Bonnie andClyde” are introduced alongwith WPA-style photographs of“dust-bowl refugees.” It is thisOklahoma, the Oklahoma ofWoody Guthrie and Tom Joad,from which Clyde Barrow isgoing to appear. He is just outof jail for armed robbery andhe teases along Bonnie Parker. She taunts him and he finallycommits another robbery toprove that he is what he claimsto be.It is a small grocery storerun by two men. While one ofthe them gives him the money,the other sneaks up behind witha meat cleaver. Clyde sees thisin time and gets away, but onlyafter giving the man a terrificgash on the head. Immediatelythe film is focused. Bonnie andClyde, whether they wish it ornot, have committed themselvesto a life of unreality and vio¬lence.AS THEY KIDE away fromthe first episode we hear Flattand Scruggs picking in thebackground. This is the arch¬type of American folk-music.Bonnie and Clyde have becomefolk-heroes. They come out ofthe depression and they rob therich bad banks without harm¬ing the poor. They are the leg-MAROON SPORTSSoccer Squad Wins AgainChicago’s soccer squad scoreda stunning 5-0 victory over Shi-mer College Saturday for theteam’s second straight win of theyoung season. Coach Vendl’s ganghopes to continue its streak as itfaces the powerful Notre Dameeleven tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. infrom of Pierce Tower.Heading the Maroon attack wasMike Manowitz ‘68, who pickedup a three-goal hat-trick and anassist. Paul DeGrazia. a promisingfreshman, notched Chicago’s othertwo scores. Scoring assists wereCaptain Mike Nemeroff, '68, PeteRichardson, ‘70, and Mike Mc¬Lean. ’60.Coach Vendl gave his squadhigh praise for their perform-Blackfriars ContestThe University may be far fromBroadway, but Blackfriars has pre¬served the tradition of original stu¬dent musicals for 50 years. The mu¬sical comedy organization is nowoffering a cash award for scriptsand/or music ta thcan be used inthis spring's annual production.The deadline for synopses or out¬lines of scripts is November 27, andfor completed material January 5.To submit prospectuses, or for anyinformation, contact Scribe JoanTapper, BU 8-2134. ance, claiming that the team is‘finally playing as a completeeleven-man unit for the first timein three years." The game to¬morrow will require all of IheMaroons' skill, as the alwaysstrong Notre Dame squad scoreda 5-1 defeat over Chicago lastyear.• • •The cross-country team scoreda tight 27-28 victory over Grin-nell College in conjunction withthe October 7 Les Duke Invita¬tional Tournament at Grinnel. Inthe overall 13-school tourney theMaroon runners took ninth place.The Chicago runners took sec¬ond. third, sixth, seventh, andninth places against' Grinnell tosecure the one-point margin. JeffMelby, ‘71, topped the team witha time of 23:13; he was followedby Pat Murray, Steve Kurey, andMike Ravworth, all ‘69, and TedTerpstra, '68.The University Harriers playone of the toughest schedules ofany Chicago team, taking onsuch powers as the University ofIllinois, the University of Wis¬consin, and Valparaiso Univer¬sity, one of the most powerfulsmall cross-country schools. Theteam's next outing will be in theannual Spring Arbour InvitaionalTournament on October 14. end typified in the late WoodyGuthrie’s ballad “Pretty BoyFloyd.” It is the American Rob¬in Hood, a Robin Hood bornout of desperation and con¬demned to a violent death.The deeper Penn goes intothis legend the uglier it be¬comes. Even respecting the poorbecomes a fraud.“Take a good look, Paw. I’mBuck Barrow," says Clyde’sbrother during one of the hold¬ups. Bonnie and Clyde havegrown up in America and inAmerica the movies reign su¬preme. They are showmen andtheir refusing to take a farm¬er's money during a bank hold¬up is simply a p a r t of thisshowmanship. This too is partof America, a part that is thesame today.S II O W M EN KNOW thattheir show is false. Bonnie andClyde begin by not believing inthe deaths they cause. It is notuntil Buck is killed in a feroci¬ous blood-bath that they recog¬nize the reality of their ac¬tions. They began by living alegend. But the legend wasfalse.Penn is not content, how¬ever, with simply debunking alegend. He is making a filmrelevant to American life to¬day. He is going to show thatBonnie and Clyde are integralpart of American society andnot simply a perverse out¬growth of it.So he gives us the two mostviolent scenes in the film. Thefirst is not red but white. Ittakes place in the jail hospitalwhere Buck’s wife Blanche isbeing held. She had neverwanted to be a part of thewhole business. Perhaps she wasthe only member of the gang towhom the blood was real.Now her husband is dead andshe is sitting with a head com¬pletely covered with bandagesand her eyes shot out. In comesa Texas ranger. Earlier thegang had mocked him. He de¬cided upon a vengence — thecomplete destruction of thegang. He refuses Blanche anycomfort or medical aid untilshe betrays Bonnie and Clyde.His action in this scene is themost inhuman we have seen.THE SECOND MOST violentscene is the last. It is also theranger’s scene, although we never actually see him. Whatwe see is Bonnie and Clyde be¬ing gunned down. Their bodiesbounce as if being kept alive bythe bullets. Suddenly the filmis over. The law is invisible butpresent. And the law is as reck¬lessly violent as are Bonnie andClyde. But the law is more thanthat. The law is viciously vin¬dictive. Bonnie and Clyde arenothing but a noimial part ofAmerica. America is the violentsociety.The film has a tremendousamount of humor and charm.The fact that it charms us is rather terrifying in the end,which is, of course, exactlywhat Penn wished to do. Thelegend has not died. It is livingin the audience watching themovie.“Bonnie and Clyde" starsFaye Dunaway and WarrenBeatty. One look should dispelany doubts as to either’s abil¬ity as an actor. Micheal J. Pol¬lard as C. W. Post, the fifthmember of the gang, gives whatcan only to be described as thebest comic performance of theyear. It is now downtown atthe Oriental. -Medical Lectures StartThe third annual '‘Frontiersof Medicine” series for practic¬ing physicians will be presentedat the University Hospitals andClinics beginning October 11. 1967.The series is designed to givephysicians who have been in prac¬tice for several years a comprehen¬sive view of recent developmentsin various areas of medicine withparticular attention focused on'clinical applications.The series is accredited for 24prescribed hours by the AmericanAcademy of General Practice.Individual programs in the serieswill be presented the second Wed¬nesday of each month throughMay, 1968. All sessions will beginat 2 p.m. in Billings P-117.Programs scheduled are as fol¬lows; t•October 11. 1967 — DiabetesMellitus, Common GynecologicalProblems;• November 8, 1967 — ClinicalAllergy and Immunology;•December 13, 1967 — Shock;•January 10, 1968 — Mental Re¬tardation, Modern Approaches; • February 14, 1968 — Some NewViews in Dermatology;• March 13, 1968 — Managementof Inoperable Cancer;•April 10, 1968 — Treatment ofCardiac Emergencies; and• May 8, 1968 — Eye Disease,Where Do We Stand?Peace Corps RecruitersPeace Corps recruiters will visitthe University of Chicago duringPeace Corps Week, October 9-13, aspart of the largest Midwestern re¬cruiting campaign in the agency’shistory. This area, which includesIndiana. Illinois, Iowa Michigan,Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio and Wis¬consin, last year contributed 3,618Peace Corps volunteers.The recruiting drive is based inthe Chicago Peace Corps office.Since its opening last year, this of¬fice led the Peace Corps’ SchoolPartnership Program throughwhich thirty schools have beenbuilt overseas by eighteen Chicago-area schools.for the undergraduateOUR GOOD-LOOKING BLAZERSShown is our new double-breasted modelof wool cheviot in a steep twill weave. Itis tailored with side vents and brass but¬tons in navy, and will...as with our clas¬sic single-breasted wool flannel model...serve handsomely with our plaid andchecked Odd Trousers.Our Double-Breasted Blazer, $70;Shigle-Bre^sted, $60 j Cotton Corduroy, $50Odd Trousers in Patterned Worsted Flanneltjrom $26.50} Solid Colors, $23.501Calvary Twill Worsted, $25}Others, jrom $ 14UTAIlltHIO Ilia^I|oy8?urn(smng0,|fat0 *r9hot*14 I. MADISON ST., NR. MICHIGAN AVI., CHICAGO. ILL. 69603NfW VORK . BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • ATLANTA•AN t RaNCUCO • LOS ANCELBIMOVIE REVIEWThe War Game Is No Fun To Play or To WatchBy ALFIE MARCUSStaff Writer"Why, it’s impossible. There’llnever be a nuclear war,” assertsa citizen in the streets of London.Her response is one that is typicalof most people’s. The horror ofnuclear war is too awful for us tocontemplate. It- cannot happen,we think. Our civilization is safeand the future of man is secure.People will always be able to livereasonably sane and noma! lives.This feeling of security is a hor¬rible illusion, The War flame, amovie at the World Playhousetells us. The truth about atomicwarfare is that it is almost sureto occur in the very near futureunless there is some type of dras¬tic change in the present trendof events.The War (lame has dared totell the truth when everyone elsehas spent so much time and ef¬fort suppressing this truth. It isthe most important film made formodern viewing, brilliantly donebecause it is factual. Thermo¬nuclear warfare is portrayed forwhat it is — the most agonizingmass human suffering imaginable.THE WAR GAME overcomesthe cliches of the politicians, ofthe scholars, and of the massmedia ami shows the actual uglyreality. There is no glamour innuclear warfare — only pain,death, and destruction.This remarkable film should berequired seeing for every humanbeing. It should be an essentialANDERSON’S BULKOSERVICE STATIONHighest Quality Gasolineat Lowest PricesFeaturing theBULKO PANTRYA Complete Grocery StoreOpen 24 Hours57th & Cottage GroveFranklin Food StoreOriental Foods & Gifts1309 E. 53rd StreetTHEBANDERSNATCH ISnowacceptingAPPLICATIONSfor thepositionofMANAGERandASSISTANTMANAGER part of the education of modernman. A private showing should begiven at the White House forthe President, State Department,and the Pentagon and the filmshould then be shown to all ourtroops.The War Game shows howeasily under existing political con¬ditions thermonuclear holocaustcould occur, that a setting forthis lype of catastrophe alreadyexists. Something could reallyhappen tomorrow or the dayafter, an incredible and unbeliev¬able massacre.THE WAR GAME succeeds bestwhere another picture may havefailed in that it shows whatatomic warfare would actually belike for the citizen who experi¬enced it. The startling realism ofthe film compels the viewer tocontinually empathize with thevictims.The War Game, in this respect, is the most violent film I haveever seen. The violence is shownfactually for what it really israther than in a glamorized orglorified manner. The film showshow fragile people are — theycannot be violently disturbed. Ifthey are, as they would be in anatomic war, they lose all sense oftheir humanity.“The survivors will envy thevictims,” says The War Game andthis would certainly be true. Mostof the survivors would be serious¬ly injured in some hideous way.All of them would constantly beexposed to radiation.WATER, FOOD, shelter, propersanitation would not be available.People would not be able avoidtheir own filth. They would bedrinking, cleaning, and excretingin the same >&ater..The simple and unequivocalmessage of “The War Game,”therefore, is that we can no long¬ er affox-d to be lackadasical. Wemust l’e-examine certain preceptsthat have always been acceptedand understand that they arenow ridiculous.War, in an atomic era, doesnot make sense because it is sui¬cidal. A nation can no longer af-ford to have enemies because afight with these enemies meansmutual death. No longer canthei-e be a victor. Both sideswould be scaiu*ed and deformed.The powerful would not prevail.All would be equally and com¬pletely devastated.One cannot see The War Game. without having his previous moraland political outlook severelychallenged. I left the movie veryfrightened and disturbed. 1 wond¬ered how I could have ever eventhought that the bombing ofNorth Vietnam might be just orthat the atomic bombing ofHiroshima and Nagasaki mayhave been proper. I was amazedthat the destiny of mankind wasbeing toyed with by self-centered,egocentiic politicians. All I couldthink of was the anguished cryof a soldier in the film. “God helpus all,” he said.Jimmy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE. Chicago Region B'NAI B'RITH Young AdultsPRESENTS ITSANNUAL YOM KIPPUR NIGHT DANCEfeaturing Lou Browne and his OrchestraONOCTOBER 14, 1967-8PMINThe Avenue West Room of thePICK-CONGRESS HOTELwe werenappywith the worldthe way it is,we wouldn'tneed you.Kids choke on polluted air. Streets are jammed bycars with no place to go. Italy’s priceless art andlibraries are ravaged by floods. This is the way theworld is, but it’s not the way it has to be. Air pollu¬tion can be prevented. Better transportation canbe devised. Something can even be done about theweather. Many people at General Electric arethready working on these problems, but we needmore. Wo need help from young engineers and scientists; and we need help from business andliberal arts graduates who understand people andtheir problems. If you want to help solve importantproblems, we’d like to talk to you. We’ll be visitingcampus soon. Drop by the placement office andarrange for an interview.GENERAL® ELECTRICAn equel opportunity employerOctober 10, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 11Sophomore Joe Stirtused to lose sleep over hisreading assignments.Now he can breeze through themduring his lunch hour.He’s a Reading DynamicsgraduateJoe Stirt. college student from Milwaukee,is one of the more than 140,000 studentswho have taken the Reading Dynamicscourse."I now read 10 times faster than be¬fore,” says Joe. "Another benefit is thatfaster reading helps me to concentratebetter. I find I can remember the materialthat really counts.”Our average graduate reads atleast 4.7 times fasterBob Hansen (Northwestern ’70) says:"Reading Dynamics raised my readingspeed from 368 words a minute to over1450. I enjoy reading more and I remem¬ber more. Big books don't scare me likethey used to.”John Tabian (Illinois ’69) says: "Myreading speed went from 287 words a min¬ute to over 1500 words a minute. I thinkthe course is fantastic. I'd recommend itto any college student.”Recommended by PresidentKennedyIn 1961, the late President Kennedy in¬ vited Evelyn Wood, founder of ReadingDynamics, to the White House. At his re¬quest, she taught the course to membersof the Cabinet and the White House Staff.Since then, many top public figureshave taken the course, including SenatorsEdw ard Kennedy and W illiam Proxmire.Time magazine says, "Washington hasseen nothing like it since the days whenTeddy Roosevelt read three books a dayand ran the country at the same time.”No skipping, no skimmingLnlike any speed reading course you’veever heard about, there is no skipping or skimming involved in Reading Dynamic*.Nor are there machines or gimmicks. Youread every word, and you do It with aflexibility that allows the material you’rareading determine your reading speed.Money-back guarantee*You must at least triple your present read¬ing efficiency (a combination of readingspeed and comprehension), or the coursewon’t cost you a thing.All we ask is that you attend classes(they meet once a week for eight weeks)*and practice one hour a day.NFree 1-hour orientationsYou can learn more by simply attending afree orientation. You’ll have the ReadingDynamics method explained to you in de¬tail. You'll also see a graduate read a hookat amazing speed and tell you what hehas read, aud a documented film that in¬cludes interviews with people who havetaken the course.It's interesting, educational—and you’llbe under no obligation. So cheek the sched¬ule and be sure to attend one of theseorientations.For more information, mail the couponbelow or call: ST 2-9787.FOR INFORMATION, CALL:In Chicago180 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60601ST 2-9787In Milwaukee208 East Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202BR 2-1780 The Evelyn Wood m io-ioReading Dynamics Institute180North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60601□ Please send more information.□ Please send registration form and schedule ofclasses.I understand that I am under no obligation and thatno salesman will call on me.In Rockford206 West State Street, Rockford, Illinois 61101WO 5-9532 NflITW*S treetCity State Zip.1? THE CHICAGO MAROON October 10, 1967