Harper LibraryV 61 Archives Unlv. of Chgo.L Chicago, Ul* 60657The Chicago *!?“ ‘ Pyof« Org. 1V‘ 5. POSTAGE Ipaid II Cticacro T];{_„.r, 3 ' •l*iXE01S?*T2Jit ]^0> gpo-jVOL. 76, NO. 37 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1968 Foundedn 18928 PAGESSalinger AddI ressesPrivacy ConferenceBy TIMOTHY S. KELLEYStaff Writer“If we fail to use our law-mak-| j ing talents to achieve the proper* I balance between science and pri-| vacy, the historians of 2000 may beThe Maroon — david travis writing about an interesting butHEADSCAPE extinct system of government —Chicago sculptor Stephen Urry's undulating, self-generating sculp- constitutional democracy, de-ture, "Headscape/' appeared in front of Goodspeed Hall Saturday dared Alan F. Westin, professor ofnight. Made entirely from aluminum, it was assembled from seven public law and government at Col-rosin-bonded sand-molded sections that Urry had cast, ground, umbia, speaking at a conferencepolished, and sprayed with vinyl plastic. here Saturday.Policy Unclear on Drugs'Bad Trips7 Cause MisinterpretationBy JOHN SIEFERTEditorial AssistantNo split exists between the ad-minstration and housing authoritieson enforcement of University drugregulations, Dean of StudentsCharles O’Connell said yesterdaymorning.Despite this. O’Connell met inthe afternoon with Meyer Isenberg,dean of undergraduate students,Marilyn McCormick, associate di¬rector of student housing, JamesVice, assistant dean of undergrad¬uate students, and Edward Turk-ington, director of student housing.The deans met to prepare theirposition on drugs to present at ameeting of the University housingstaff Monday evening.At a meeting of the Universityhousing staff last week, it was re¬portedly decided that a student ona “bad trip’’ who asked for helpfrom his resident head would notbe reported to the DisciplinaryCommittee.However O’Connell, fearing thatstudents would fake “bad trips” totake drugs without worrying about jthe housing staff, announced Fri¬day that he had reversed this po¬sition. According to O’Connell,“our students cannot take pills andthen sit in their resident heads’rooms to see if they are going tohave good or bad trips.”Resident Heads DisagreeSome resident heads have statedprivately that students are unlike¬ly to fake “bad trips” in order totake drugs. They fear, however,that students who are genuinelyhaving a “bad trip” will not beable to seek medical aid or getto Billings Hospital without assis¬tance. One resident head also men¬tioned the danger of students com¬mitting suicide under those circum¬stances.Reached at his office, Turkingtontermed the difference in views a“misunderstanding” rather than asplit. Turkington said that O’Con¬nell had taken steps to “clarify”his policy. O'Connell said that he plannedto meet with Student Governmentofficials Friday or Monday to dis¬cuss enforcement of drug regula¬tions.Disciplinary Cases SoarAs a result of the new drug pol¬icies initiated by O’Connell, thenumber of cases appearing before Ithe Disciplinary Committee hasjumped drastically in the last quar¬ter. During Fall Quarter, the Dis¬ciplinary Committee met twicewhile this quarter it has met morethan once each week.Since 1962, the Disciplinary Com¬mittee has met approximately 19times each year, primarily on mat¬ters of theft, plagarism, and so on.This quarter, the Committee hasshifted its attention to drugs.Half the cases have resulted instudents being suspended fromschool. Half have resulted in stu¬dents being placed on probation.“If the Disciplinary Committeefeels that some kind of violationof privacy has taken place,” saidIsenberg, who, as acting dean of See editorial on Page 4.undergraduate students is chair¬man of the Committee, “they willtake that into consideration. TheDisciplinary Committee feels verystrongly that the lines of commun¬ication between students and res¬ident staff must be kept open. Oc¬casionally these lines of communi¬cation are threatened.”In one case in which a girl wentto her resident head in confidenceafter having taken a doctored drug,the Disciplinary Committee ruledthat the case did not fall under itsjurisdiction.Isenberg Calls for PolicyIsenberg said that the wholehousing staff must decide on guide¬lines to govern under what circum¬stances they will refer students tothe Disciplinary Committee andunder what circumstances they willnot.He added it was unfortunate thatsome students’ confidence in theTurn to Page 3Meal Contracts May See ChangeBy JOHN RECHTEditorial AssistantA change in the present mealcontract system may be in the off¬ing for students in the dormitories.Three proposals to change thesystem have recently come to lightafter spending two years in files.The proposals, drawn originally byProfessor of Economics MiltonFriedman, were approved by acommittee of administrators in Oc¬tober, 1966, but they were shelvedwhen then vice-president for Ad¬ministration James L. Ritterskampleft for Vassar.Efforts of Karl Bemesderfer, as¬sistant dean of the College, andMitch Pines, ‘69, president of Inter-House Council, resulted in the re¬vival of the proposals:• Permit any student on a mealcontract to eat his contract mealsin any dormitory and, at the same time, pay the dormitory kitchenmanagers on a salary plus com¬mission basis.• Make all lines cash lines. Ifthe University wanted to subsidizestudent eating, it could do so byselling discount meal tickets to stu¬dents and charging cash to every¬one else.• Get the University out of thefood preparation business altogeth¬er. One way would be to have threedifferent caterers in competitionproviding food for cash at differ-ent University kitchens after bid¬ding for franchises.Since students are exempt fromminimum wage legislation, the Uni¬versity could continue to providestudent help at less than that wageby making employment of studentsa condition of a franchise. StudentsTurn to Page 3 The conference featured promi- jnent lawyers, government officials,and educators discussing thetheme “Privacy: Policy and theLaw,” at tne Law School Fridayand Saturday.Pierre Salinger, former pressj secretary to Presidents Kennedy! and Johnson and for a short timea U.S. senator from California, ad¬dressed a dinner session Saturday| evening in the main dining room1 of the Center for Continuing Edu-I cation.Two Kinds of Privacy| Salinger, 42, differentiated be-j tween two kinds of privacy. “Onesubject is obviously the privacy ofthe President as an individual,” heexplained. “There is also the sub¬ject of the privacy of the acts ofgovernment.”On the former topic, Salingerdescribed six areas in which theprivacy of the President is threat¬ened: freedom of movement, reli¬gion, personal economic condition,health, family life, and the free¬dom from what he called the “pos¬thumous invasion of the privacy ofthe President.”Salinger reminisced on the “pho¬tographic invasion of privacy”(the desire of the press to photo¬graph the late President attendingmass and his children playing onthe White House lawn), as well asthe exploitation of Jackie Ken¬nedy’s name by fan magazines.When the privacy of the Presi¬dent is violated, Salinger con¬cluded, he usually has little prac¬tical recourse. Only once, accord¬ing to Salinger, did Kennedyconsider filing a libel suit —against columnist Drew Pearsonwhen he said Kennedy had not ac¬tually written “Profiles inCourage” — and he decidedagainst it.Desire for PopularitySalinger also observed thatPresidents sometimes violate theirown privacy because of their de¬sire for popularity and acceptancein a democratic political system.“The current President,” he said,“probably has done more to violatehis own privacy than any Presi¬dent in a long time.”Turning to his second theme, thecontroversial question of the ex¬tent to which the government hasa right to withhold news from thepublic, the former press secretaryexpressed the belief that “it wouldbe an unfortunate day” if govern¬ment were ever given a free handby a “totally compliant press.”However, Salinger did defendthe government’s right to withholdinformation in the interest of na¬tional security. While making itclear that he was not blaming thepress for the Bay of Pigs incident he commented that “the Bay ofPigs was the most highly adver¬tised covert operation in the his¬tory of mankind.”“Can a free and open democraticsociety such as ours become in¬volved in covert operations?” heasked, pointing out that other pow¬ers use them, and that to abandoncovert operations would be “tofight the current struggle aroundthe world with one hand tied be¬hind your back.”Salinger called the decision towithhold the news of the Russianmissiles in Cuba in October, 1962“one of the key elements in thesuccess of that operation.” Final¬ly, he praised the privacy of theKennedy-Krushchev correspond¬ence of 1962, attributing to it “allof the major preparatory work” forthe Nuclear Test Ban Treaty of1963.Aspects of PrivacyThe Friday afternoon session ofthe conference featured EdwardShils, 57, a professor of sociologyand member of the Committee onSocial Thought here, and a fellowof King’s College, Cambridge, whospoke on “The Zone of Privacy.”“The Constitutional Right to bePrivate” was then discussed byLouis Henkin, Hamilton Fish prof¬essor of international law and dip¬lomacy at Columbia. He was fol¬lowed by Marc A. Franklin,professor of law at Stanford, des¬cribing “A Legal Map for Privacy.”The evening session began withan address by Arthur R. Miller,professor of law at the Universityof Michigan, who warned that “thecomputer, with its insatiable appe¬tite for information, its image ofinfallibility, its inability to forgetanything that has been put into it,may become the heart of a surveil¬lance system that will turn societyinto a transparent world in whichTurn to Page 7Pierre SalingerChances Slim for Congress vs. Draft Policy FightBy RICHARD ANTHONYCollege Press ServiceWASHINGTON (CPS) - Thechances that Congress will fightthe Johnson Administration’s re¬cently announced policy on thedraft can be described in a word— slim. Last Friday the Administrationlet it be known that almost allgraduate deferments were beingeliminated, and that the long¬standing policy of drafting the old¬est draft-eligible males first wouldbe retained.Since then there have been pub- News Analysis'm MRMfflfflM"*>5' MMWlie statements by individual mem¬bers of Congress opposing the pol¬icy. Sen. Edward Kennedy (D.,Mass.), for example, told a Bos¬ton audience last week that heDefoliants, Tear Gas DeadlyCrop Destroyers May Be DangerousUse of defoliants and tear gas bythe United States in Vietnam couldlead to all-out biological andchemical warfare, including “en¬ormously deadly” nerve gases,a distinguished biochemist predict¬ed Sunday night.John T. Edsall, professor of bio-logical chemistry at Harvard,questioned the use of such wea¬pons as he appeared on “The Uni¬versity of Chicago Round Table,”the weekly panel discussion tele¬cast at 5:30 p.m. Sundays onWTTW.Edsall said that while mildchemical agents like “super teargases” have been used in Vietnam,there are nerve gases which are“enormously deadly and can inminute amounts kill great numb¬ers of people in a matter of a fewminutes.”In commenting on the severityof the problem, Edsall said:“The question that is most seri¬ous is whether, by starting the useof agents that appear to be mild,one is opening the way to furtherescalation of their use by our ene¬mies now or by people later onthat may lead to the use of theseweapons, which are really wea¬pons of mass destruction, and tothe biological weapons, the powerof which no one really knows asyet.”Appearing with Edsall to discuss“Chemical-Biological Warfare”were Richard C. Lewontin, profes-SG Plans SurveyOf Draft ResistanceStudent Government (SG) is cir¬culating a questionnaire on thedraft among College seniors andfirst-year graduate students. Thequestionnaire, modeled after oneused in a Harvard survey lastmonth, will seek to determine whatpercentage of Chicago studentswill resist the draft.According to Jeffrey Blum, ’69Student Government president, thesurvey will be the most compre¬hensive of its kind in the country,if there is a favorable student re¬sponse. Blum said he expects theresults to be similar to those ofthe Harvard survey.Harvard found that 11 percent ofits graduating seniors planned togo to jail to avoid the draft andthat another 11 percent planned toleave the country. Fifty-nine per¬cent said they would “make a de¬termined effort to avoid militaryservice.”Results should be tabulatedsometime early next quarter, Blumsaid. j sor of biology at Chicago, and: Leon LeBeau, associate professorof microbiology at the Universityj of Illinois Medical Center.‘Irreversible Danger?’Regarding defolants, Edsallsaid: “We have destroyed crops inVietnam over areas several timesthe size of Rhode Island . . . Thereis very serious danger that thewidespread use of these methodsmay cause a permanent irrevers-j ible danger in the ecology of a| whole region and that we aredoing something that is potential-i ly far more dangerous than mostpeople have considered.”He urged that secrecy in re-| search on chemical and biological; warfare be kept at a minimum,i saying, “We must let the worldknow what is going on and haveactivities in this field — as far aspossible — subject to public scru¬tiny.”Edsall pointed out that the Unit¬ed States is enormously vulnerableto chemical and biological wea¬pons. “These are weapons thatcan be manufactured quite easily,”he warned “A relatively weak andundeveloped country can still turnthese things out on a large scale.“If we encourage the use ofthese weapons by using them our¬selves — even the milder ones —they are giving encouragement toother countries to develop theseand perhaps in the future to usefar more deadly ones against us.”Diseases Spread FastLeBeau added, “Not only do wehave urbanization, but we haveextensive rapid communicationwhere people can move back andforth to spread diseases in otherurban populations. Our food proc¬ essing is centralized. Our herdsare located in certain areas of thecountry that could be infected.“The significance of this is whenyou consider that our society isbased on key personnel. You knockout the key personnel, and youknock out a very important as¬pect of a given plant that may bemaking a critical item.”100 Law Students plans to submit a bill that wouldbring about basic changes in draftprocedures, and two New YorkCongressmen said in the Housethat day that the new policy wouldseverely retard the nation’s edu¬cational progress.These men, however, are not inpositions to get Congress movingon the draft. The real power inquestions connected with the mil¬itary rests with legislators likeRep. Mendel Rivers (D.— S.C.) andSen. Richard Russell (D. —Ga.),chairman of the armed services; committees in their respectivebranches of Congress.Neither has referred publicly tothe Administration’s new policy.An assistant to Rivers, however,has pointed out that the policycomes close to what his committeerecommended after its draft hear¬ings last year. One of Russell’saides said that as far as he knewthe senator has no plans to recon¬sider the draft question.- . Mail from CriticsProtest InOICtmentS Another crucial figure in thematter of possible Congressionalaction on the draft is Rep. EdwardHebert (D.—La.), who chairs aHouse subcommittee that studiedthe draft last year. Hebert, ac¬cording to one of his aides, hasbeen deluged with mail from crit¬ics of the Administration's draftpolicy.One hundred Law School stu¬dents today protested the indict¬ments of Dr. Benjamin Spock andRev. William Sloane Coffin “as anattempt by the government tostifle legitimate dissent againstthe war in Vietnam.”In a strongly worded letter toAttorney General Ramsey Clark,a graduate of the Law School, thelaw students charged that the in¬dictments are political in nature,and are an abridgement of Consti¬tutional rights and liberties.“When the state, in the name of‘justice’, attempts to brand menof highest moral conscience as fel¬ons, it is cause for alarm.” saidthe students.They further charged that “theopen support given by Spock andCoffin to those young men of draftage conscientiously opposed to theVietnam War was no conspiracyand is no crime.”The Law School enrollment isabout 425.The letter was circulated byDavid Blodgett, a second-year stu¬dent in the Law School. Nevertheless, the Congressmanhas come out publicly in favor of| the new draft measures. In a state¬ment prepared Tuesday he said,“It would be absolutely intolerableto continue to insulate graduatej students from the hazards of com¬bat which we require other youngj men to face.”Hebert cited some Defense De¬partment statistics suggesting thatonly one-quarter of the draft-agemen who have graduated from col¬lege would be taken. He concludedfrom the statistics that graduateschools would not be as badly hurtas they think, and that collegeI graduates would not be taken in! disproportionate numbers. The statistics, however, are misleadingfor several reasons.The Administration has said thatit will need 240.000 draftees duringthe fiscal year 1969. But if theVietnam war continues to escalate,the number of needed draftees islikely to grow substantially.Further, if local draft boardsdecide to continue most occupa¬tional deferments (which are nowa local-board option, under thenew ruling), then the burden willfall more heavily on college gradu¬ates than present estimates sug-: gest.A Controversial QuestionIn spite of the fact that the De¬fense Department’s statistics aremisleading, however, members ofCongress can be expected to fallback on the Defense Department’sfigures to put off angry constitu¬ents. During a shooting war, withelections only months away, mostof them will try to stay away fromcontroversial questions like thedraft.There are a few ways this situ¬ation could be changed. First, it’sconceivable that a mass letter¬writing campaign by students, educators, and others concernedcould stir Congress to actionConceivably the Army couldbring pressure to bear on itsfriends in Congress to change thedraft policy. Army officials havetold reporters that they don’t wanta high proportion of college gradu¬ates coming in as drafteesGREAT NEWS!The most prized tape record¬er 'IHER 40°"' "cr>ORT LNow at a $ 100 savingsto you."OWN THE BEST"\The University of ChicagoBookstorePhoto Dept.5802 S. Ellis Ave.EfF EXAMINATIONSfASHION EYEWEARCONTACT IENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbjrk Plaza• 200 East 53rd StraatHYde Park 3-8372 Examinations for Teachers’ Certificates:Chicago Public High SchoolsExaminations Given in ChicagoBUSINESS EDUCATIONHigh School AccountingHigh School Business TrainingHigh School Stenography-Gregg*High School Stenography-Pitman*MUSICInstrumental Music-Grades 7-12*PHYSICAL EDUCATIONHigh School Physical Education-Men*High School Physical Education-Women*SCIENCEGeneral Science SOCIAL STUDIESHigh School HistoryVOCATIONAL AND PRACTICAL ARTSHigh School Drafting*High School Auto Shop*High School Electric Shop*SPECIALTeacher Social WorkerLibrary Science-Grades 7-12*Practical Exam-April 24 & 25Date of Examinations: Tuesday, April 23,1968Deadline for Filing: Tuesday, April 2,1968, at 12 Noon C.S.T.(Applications postmarked April 1, 1968 will be accepted.)Special Notice with Reference to These Certificate ExaminationsA candidate for a teaching certificate may make application forthe examination if he has courses in progress leading to the awardof a Bachelor’s Degree, and which will make him fully eligible byJuly 1,1968; or if he possesses a degree from an accredited collegeor university and will complete all requirements, including stu¬dent teaching, to make him fully eligible by July 1,1968. Evidenceof registration in courses designated above must be presentedby April 15, 1968.Documents Needed at Time of Application:Application form (Ex-5), official copy of birth certificate, statementfrom candidate showing classes in progress and date of gradua¬tion, official transcript sent by registrar showing all work com¬pleted up to current term.FOR INFORMATION WRITE TO: Board of Examiners, Room 624Chicago Public Schools228 N. La Salle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60601or the Office of Teacher Recruitment, Room 1820or details in the Teacher Placement Office ST. MARGRET’S CHURCHThe Episcopal Church of South ShorelJ.r).r).r) E. Seventy-third Si. BA 1-550!)SUNDAY SERVICES8:00 a.m. Holy Communion9:00 a.m. Family Eucharist and Church School11:00 a.m. Choral EucharistASH WEDNESDAY SERVICES9:30 a.m. Imposition of Ashes andHoly Communion6:15 p.m. Imposition of Ashes and HolyCommunion followed by dinnerTRYOUTS FOR UNIVERSITY THEATREMajor Spring Quarter ProductionCAMINO REALby Tennessee Williamsdirected by Andy KaplanMANDELL HALL MAY 10, 11,12OPEN CASTING FOR 38 PARTS -18 MAJOR ROLEStryouts in reynolds club theatreThurs. 7-10Sat. 1-5Sun. 1-52 THE CHICAGO MAROON February 27, 1968 • •Students Protest Vote Allotment for FSACCSLThe Dean of Students Office has dacy will be March 1 at 5 p.m.issued a clarification of the regu- The forms, which require 40 signa-lations governing election of stu- tures from the student’s consti-dent members to the Faculty-1 tuency, are available at the DeanStudent Advisory Committee on of Students Office.Campus Student Life. j Ballots will be mailed to all stu-The regulations state that each dents on March 9 and 10, to arrivestudent will vote for one candidate bY March 11. The voting deadline called the method “manipulativefrom his constituency. Of eight *s March 15 at 5 p.m. and the re- and undemocratic.”student members of the Commit- su^s be announced at the be-tee, three will come from the Col- ginning of Spring Quarter,lege, one from the Division of the Student leaders have been pro-Humanities, one from the Division testing procedures for electing rep-of the Social Sciences, one from resentatives to the Faculty Student See Editorial on Page 4of the Committee’s eight studentmembers drew the heaviest criti¬cism. Jerry Lipsch, ‘68, vice-presi¬dent of Student Government (SG),Mitch Pines, ‘69, president of In¬ter-House Council, said the one-votepolicy “makes it very difficult foranyone to be elected legitimately.It makes the elections almost athe Division of the Biological Sci- Advisory Committee on Campus farce.” Bill Phillips, SG represent¬ative, called for three votes for ev¬ery College student.Bemesderfer CommentsAlso*under attack was the sched¬uling of the election for tests, stating that he had not beenaware of dissatisfaction and that hehad not noticed the distributionof votes when he gave his assentto the election procedure.O'Connell said the decision to to get the election set up, O’Con¬nell said, “It took longer that Ithought and I’m sorry about that.It was not deliberately stalling.”Other aspects of the Committeeand of the election that were criti-schedule the election for exam cized included the method of vot-week had depended upon The Ma¬roon printing schedule and thatpostponing the election until nextquarter would have involved a con¬flict with the Liberal Arts Confer¬ence ing, which Phillips claimed couldlead to fraud, and what SG Presi¬dent Jeffrey Blum, ‘69, called the“elitist attitude about this thing.”ences, and two from the remain- Student Life,ing six professional schools. The allotment of one vote per Col-The deadline for filing for candi- lege student towards electing threeHealth Service Is OutsideO'Conneirs Jurisdiction Blum stated, “I object up anddown the line to every possible fac-Commenting on the time it took et of the committee as it is set up.”LAC Week To See Bowl, Creamexam A Chicago-style debate and a 1 Also, a student group named Re-, T. , _ , , . student-faculty college bowl con- vitalization has obtained Theweek. Karl Bemesderfer, assistant test are among the events just add- Cream, a pop music group, fordean of the College, agreed that it e(j to the third annual Liberal Arts Thursday night, April 4, in Mandelwasn t a very good idea. I recom- Conference^ according to Assistant Hall. They will follow the Secondmend waiting until next quarter. Dean 0f the College Karl Bernes- i City company. Tickets for the com-Continued from Page 1housing staff had been shaken. Hedenied rumors that members ofthe housing staff had entered stu-Hyde Park GroupPlans Heal Co-op; vacy. If a student’s room isAn effort is being made by Hyde searched it must be done with hisPark students and residents callingthemselves fhe Community Service.Co-op iCSC) to organize a co-opera- Lipsch. who is chairman of the {jerf, . , .,. , ,. . . Student Political Action Committeedents rooms w.thout their permis- (SPAC). a|s0 objected tbe |ate. The debate wffl dea| wjth the top.ness in the quarter of the election, ic, “The Life of the Mind is Not“If a member of the housing explaining that “It doesn’t give peo- Worth Living.” Invitations to thestaff wants to enter a student’s > pie a chance to campaign. The debate, as well as invitations toroom,” Isenberg said, “he must whole question of one vote and the the faculty representatives for theget that student’s permission. This lateness of the election casts new college bowl contest, are in theis our policy and any other policy ! doubt on whether SPAC is going to mail, Bemesderfer said. The stu-would be a serious breach of pri- participate in the election.” dents in the college bowl will be theDean of Students Charles O’Con- team selected to represent Chicago I|YYUI . , ,nell countered some of the pro- in The College Bowl TV program, j Pn anbined performance are expected tobe on sale for about $2.50.Other entertainers possibly in¬cluding Jean-Luc Goddard are alsoexpected to attend.Students are continuing to ar¬range seminars for the Conferenceby talking to whomever they wantto direct the seminar and reservingrooms in Cobb Hall for afternoonspermission and in his presence.”‘Student Health Confidential’tive health service.The group, which wants to serveas a model for similar co-ops inWoodlawn. plans first to organize adrug co-op to obtain quality gener¬ic drugs at low cost, a spokesmansaid. The CSC then plans to set upcooperative medical, dental, andoptical plans.The Community Forum, meetingat 8 p.m. this Thursday in the HydePark Co-op basement, 55th andLake Park, will concern itself with“Organizing Community Control ofHealth Service.” On the panel wi Isenberg also stressed the confi¬dential nature of a student's rela¬tionship with the Student HealthService. “Dr. Richard Mov. direc¬tor of Student Health, has beentrying for years to convince stu¬dents that their relationship withthe Health Service is confidential.The health service DOES NOT fallunder the jurisdiction of Dean O'¬Connell."O'Connell admitted that the res¬ident heads' role as advisers wasbeing undermined bv his newbe representatives of national policys on drugs, but stated that Pubbc notice at a meeting of thehealth organizations, doctors, phar- this was unavoidable. “Of course ntpr-Hnnsp fnim^ii in«t rhnrcHavmacists and local residents. there is a conflict.” O’Connell said.The forum is sponsored by the “but I cannot be a confessor thatCSC and the Student Health Organi- students can tell things to in con-cations. fidence.” IHC Plans 3 LAC ProgramsContinued from Page 1 .with the Blum Committee mem-could be subsidized through the bers on their report, and an invi-meal ticket arrangement. | tation t0 promi„ent speakers in theAccording to Pines, however. Hyde Park area to come to the“It's an awkward time to get more dorms to speak,private groups in. Stouffer's wantsto pull out of Hutchinson Commons UIC also passed a motion to in-because they aren't making mon- vestigate the possibility of trans-ey. It may be possible to subsidize ferring the dorms to legal apart-these groups with a board con- men, s|a(us and es(abHshed a com.mittee under Steven Cope, 70.IHC also unanimously passed in- jtervisitation hours for two dormhouses — Blackstone from 12 noonto 3 a.m., and Vincent House from9 a.m. to 3 a.m. SCHOLARSHIPSStudents wishing to applyfor scholarships or to renewtheir present grants mayafter March 1 pick up ap¬plication forms in the Schol¬arship Office on the secondfloor of the AdministrationBuilding. The deadline forupperclass applications willbe April 1.tract. 'The proposals again came toSoc Sci To Offer 4 Tutorials Inter-House Council last Thursday.In other action, the IHC plannedthree programs for the LiberalArts Conference this April: a dis¬cussion on psychoanalyses withChicago faculty, an open forum Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.10 yrs. expMANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.The Social Sciences CollegiateDivision is offering four group tut¬orials during Spring quarter:• “The Welfare State: A SystemApproach” — Odin Anderson prof¬essor of sociology;• “Anarchist Thought” — RalphAustin, assistant professor of his¬tory ;“Images of the Future: Recent Krueger, professor of economics.Students wishing to participatein these tutorials are asked to signup on a list outside the office ofthe master on Gates-Blake 430.Registration will be limited tothird- and fourth-year students inthe Division until Friday, March 1.Thereafter, second-year studentsin the Division and students in oth¬er collegiate divisions may sign upLiterature on the Projected Shapeof American Society” — Richard for any open places.Flacks, assistant professor of so¬ciology; and• “Readings on Poverty. Classic¬al and Contemporary” — Maynard STATIONERYBOOKSGREETING CARDS*****THE BOOK NOOKMl 3-751 I1540 E. 55th St.10% Student Discount^ _ foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113^^new! new!^ ^foreign car hospitalSales7326 Exchange324-3313 DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTERDO 3-7644PRESCRIPTIONS FIUED 1510 E. 55th St.EYE EXAMINATIONSNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES DO 3 6866CONTACT LENSESBLACKFRIARS WANTS YOU!Do your port for AMERIKA.our original Spring Production..1968TRYOUTSWednesday Feb. 28 7:30 P.M.Friday March 2 6:00 P.M.Sunday March 4 8:00 P.M.Reynolds Club TheatreFor more information, call 288-2134- in that wild,mixed-media, all-electritotal environment cal1106 W lCWCAGIJ. to ] HbfxDANCE. DO YOUR THING TO THE GROOVIEST BANDS IN AMERICA* Rip out this ad now and bring it to m11 Cheetah this weekend for a u\ SPEC! UNIV. of CHICAGO j; STUDENT DISC0UNT-$3.00 ;amuuummmum ■■■■■■■■■■■■TICKETS: *4.00 AT THE DOOR, *3.50 IN ADVANCE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 NORTH MICHIGAN.GROUP SALES: Call Mr. Foi at LO 1-8558 to throw a party at Cheetah for 50 to 20U0_ Of«M FRIDAY. SATURDAY. SUNDAY AT.S f4l#s , .February 27, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROONfThe Chicago MaroonFounded in 1897Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiefJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerI Heads and Drugs“A policeman’s lot is not a happy one,” as Sir Wil¬liam Gilbert once phrased it, and the University is be¬ginning to find out just how unhappy a lot it is. If resi¬dent heads are to take Dean O’Connell’s new “clarifica¬tion” of Chicago drug policy seriously, apparently theirrole as policeman is to take precedence over their roleas sympathetic advisor to students.We have never been especially enthusiastic aboutChicago’s decision to add its own enforcement machin¬ery to the already harsh regulations society imposes ondrug users. But even if the University decides that itmust enforce an anti-drug policy, it still does not followthat a student suffering from a “bad trip” must risksuspension or expulsion in order to get help from hisresident head.Ironically, Chicago has long recognized the prin¬ciple of immunity in other areas of the University. Stu¬dent health records are kept strictly confidential —even when they clearly reveal a violation of Universityrules — under the sound principle that in certain in¬stances the physical well being of the student is moreimportant than the enforcement of rules.We see no reason why the same principle shouldnot be applied to dealings of between students in trou¬ble and their resident heads. It would be tragic indeedif some student suffered serious physical or emotionalharm because he could not go to a resident head forhelp while on a “bad trip.” While we are sure that DeanO’Connell is not insensitive to such a possibility, itnevertheless appears necessary to remind him that ifsuch a tragedy occurred, the guilt would fall squarelyon his shoulders.If, as the University continues to insist, studentsreally do need guidance in the houses, then the residentheads should get into the business of guiding theircharges when they need help most.Political NaiveteWhile the date of the elections for the Faculty-Student Advisory Committee on Campus Student Lifeis poorly selected, the method of choosing the Collegerepresentatives is marvelous in its political naivete.It should have been fairly obviously to all partiesconcerned that Chicago students have better things todo during exam week than to listen to candidates run¬ning for office. Even those candidates would do betterto study than to explain their position on campus issues.Even worse than that is the idea of having threepeople elected by the College, but allowing each stu¬dent only one vote. It is very likely that one or twocandidates will present themselves to the majority ofCollege students as the best candidates. They will bevoted in by healthy pluralities. But then the vote ofthe majority will be used up, and the remaining seator seats will fall to whatever faction in this atomizedCollege can muster the required handful of votes tobeat the next minority.Perhaps even more impractical is the method ofpolling people. With ballots mailed out and most likelythrown in the nearest garbage can, anyone can stealthe election just by picking through the trash, despitethe minimal precautions planned.With two quarters spent planning the elections,a few more days could have been spent assuring bettervoting dates, methods, and more honest elections. Letters to the EditorsIvory PowerI suppose, as a member of thePage Committee and as presidentof Student Government, I shouldhave given up on expecting Chi¬cago to deal reasonably with legi¬timate student interests in anyway other than denying their ex¬istence. Still, I remain interestedin the Faculty-Student Committeeon Campus Student Life (FSCCL)(not the “Student-Faculty Com¬mittee,” as The Maroon called it;a small difference, but a niceone).I am not now complainingabout the fact that the Page Com¬mittee faculty members wouldonly go along with a recom¬mendation for a committee onstudent affairs which made policyonly “in those matters in whichstudents are most affected andmost competent,” as if the com¬mittee’s name did not clearlystate that its role was to be in allsuch areas.I am not now complaining thatthe Council of the University Sen¬ate then emasculated the StandingCommittee on Student Affairs,deprivingit even of those partialpowers the Page Committee rec-commended and establishing itprovisionally for two years (atHarvard a sit-in on Dow recruit-depriving it even of those partialers resulted in a permanent ad¬visory Student-Faculty-Admini¬stration committee: not goodenough, but better; who woulddeny that “coercion” at leastbrought Harvard into tht 19th, ifnot the 20th century).I am. further, not now com¬plaining about Dean O’Connell’sdilly-dallying before appointingthe “temporary” student mem¬bers of the FSCCSL( a groupwhich neither the Page Commit¬tee nor the Council of the Univer¬sity Senate seems to have feltnecessary, but whom the Deanwanted to insure “fair” elections,even if they had to be heldoff for most of a school year.I AM NOT even complainingabout the specific electoral con¬stituencies the recommendationscall for; they resemble the Stu¬dent Government constituencies; Ithink both are terribly artificial.What I am complaining aboutis the timing of these elections,and the way they are being con¬ducted. Given the widespreadcampus interest in the FSCCSL,as expressed by the dozen or sostudents who showed up for itsopen meeting at the beginning ofthis quarter, springing a call foran election on Tuesday of theeighth week pretty much insurespeople who didn’t already knowabout and care about the Commit¬tee will run for it. (The posters topublicize the election were stillsitting in the Student ActivitiesOffice on the 21st, although theyannounced filing for candidacyfrom the 19th to the 28th.).Then on March 4, Monday ofthe tenth week, after the lastMaroon of the quarter would no-mally have been published, thenames of the candidates will bereleased. Of course, candidatescan already have begun cam¬paigning, during the ninth week,when they have a lot of time andwhen people are always very in¬terested in discussing the state ofthe admissions policy or whether Earo Saarinen should havedestroyed the plans to NewDorms when he found out whatChicago was going to do withthem.FINALLY we will get to vote during exam week, as kind ofcomic relief from studying forwhat do not turn out to be thelast of the graded exams in theCollege. (I admit it, I am mixingissues. No doubt intellectuallyshoddy but closer to reality).I heard during the discussionabout this election that the fac¬ulty members on the Committeewanted to keep the Committee“apolitical.” Well, they have man¬aged to do it, and in the processthey have managed a noteworthyfeat: they have found somethingelse to emasculate in this al¬ready impotent Committee.To do this they have struck atthe most basic fact of politics:they have denied any effectivepossibility of convincing people,of talking to people, of generaldiscussion among the constitu¬ents, of groups forming aboutcertain ideas and working to¬gether to bring out those whoagree with them.The open-minded liberal Uni¬versity has again established aprocedure which prevents peoplefrom knowing what they are sup¬posed to be deciding about, orhaving pretty much any way tofind out. All hail the entrance ofthe ivory power into the politicalsea.JEFFREY BLUM, ’69PresidentStudent GovernmentPrimary PoliticsI hate to inject a note of prac¬ticality into a sea of polemicism,but I would like to remind mem¬bers of the University that presi¬dential primaries are coming upin a number of states in the nextfew months.Quite conveniently, an interimis also coming, which will affordan excellent opportunity formany to go home and register toreceive absentee ballots. Sincethese are for primaries, it willbe necessary to declare party af¬filiations, and thus an “in-person”registering is suggested.ALAN BLOOM, ’68A GuaranteeDear Mr. O’Connell:On one interpretation, your let¬ter to The Maroon (February 23)was meant to offer draft resist¬ers readmission to Chicago, butwithout sticking the University’sneck out by offering a clear com¬mittment. On another interpreta¬tion. Chicago is offering vagueassurances as a cover for retain¬ing the prerogative to refuse re¬admission to some or all draftresisters—particularly if the pol¬itical tenor of the country or theUniversity is more repressivesome years hence.Institutional ambiguity, foreither reason, serves only theGovernment’s purposes. Studentswho face the draft without COclassification must choose amongspending up to five years in jail,leaving the United States indefi¬nitely, going underground, orknuckling under. The possibilityof being unable to continue theireducation after returning fromjail or abroad can be one morepressure to knuckle under.This is why the governmentwouldn’t want universitits makingclear commitments to re-admitdraft resisters. But students fac¬ing difficult choices need an un¬ambiguous statement on which tobase future plans.Therefore let us ask the follow¬ ing question — will you guaran¬tee the readmission of studtntswho resist the draft and go tojail, leave the country, or go un¬derground? Please answer yesor no.CHRISTOPHER Z. HOBSONDepartment ofPolitical ScienceSTEVE ROTHKRUG, 70Socratic QuestionI trust that readers were puz¬zled by the fourth sentence of myintroduction, “For Leo Strauss:A Leave-taking,” published in theFebruary 16th issue of The Ma¬roon. It should have read, “AsMr. Strauss himself once advisedme in circumstances far sadderthan these, propriety requiresthat certain ceremonies be pro¬longed, that it is better in suchcases to err on the side of excessthan of deficiency.”Mr. Strauss’s impromptu re¬sponse to my introduction bearsrecording as a rather nice reflec¬tion of the man: “I must say afew words about the remarks ofMr. Anastaplo. If one may com¬pare a lofty thing with a thingthat is not so lofty, Mr. Anastap-16’s remarks reminded me of averse which some of you mayhave heard: ‘If you’re out ofSchlitz, you’re out of beer.’ Thatis an exaggeration. We all knowthere is Pabst and Budweiser andLowenbrau and quite a few oth¬ers. Someone might say, ‘But itwas Schlitz that made Milwaukeefamous.’ To which I would reply,‘There are other brands whichmade other places famous — forexample, Berkeley or Harvardand some other places.’“BUT TO speak somewhat moreseriously, it is an embarrassingsituation: if I agree with Mr. An¬astaplo — then I would be justlyaccused of lack of modesty; if Idisagree with him, I accuse himtacitly of lack of judgment andnot only him but, in a way, eventhe University of Chicago — andthis would seem to show lack ofcivility.“What then should one do?Now, some of my teachers — theywere Islamic philosophers in the12th Century or thereabouts —found a way out of a comparablealthough not identical dilemma.They began their books in aboutthis manner: After the praise ofGod (of Allah), I say that it is myintention to explain the intentionof Aristotle’s science of prior an¬alytics.“So I will say, after my thanksto Mr. Anastaplo, that it is my in¬tention to explain the Socraticquestion.”GEORGE ANASTAPLOLecturer in the Liberal ArtsDowntown CenterLetters to the editors must besigned, although names may bewithheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean¬ing. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Universityof Chicago students on Tuesdays and Fri¬days throughout the regular school yearand intermittently throughout the summer,except during the tenth week of the aca¬demic quarter and during examinationperiods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 305of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3265. Distributed on campus and in theHyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $6 per year. Non¬profit postage paid at Chicago. III. Chartermember of< U.S. Student Press Assn., pub¬lisher^ fojlegiate Press ServkfcTHE CHICAGO MAROON February 27, 1968« «•»*MAROON SPORTSCagers Beat Denison College in Overtime, 55-53By JERRY LAPIDUSEditorial AssistantChicago’s rejuvinated basketballsquad pulled off a fantastic over¬time upset of Denison College onSaturday, 55-53.Down almost from the openingwhistle, the Maroon five constantlykept pace with the strong Big Redsquad, tied the game at the end ofregulation play, and went on toscore their thirteenth victory in thefirst overtime period.Coach Joe Stampf called thisgame “the best we’ve played inmany a year.” He said that despiteDenison’s constant edge during thecontest, his team kept completely-to their plan and worked it to per¬fection.With this victory the Maroons snapped a nine-game Big Red winstreak and won their first in threegames. Denison, already Ohio Ath¬letic Conference champion, is now13-4, while Chicago stands at 13-5.The University will complete theregular play of the 1967-68 seasonSaturday at home against IllinoisCollege.WrestlingJim Casper came through with avictory in the 177-lb. division, butthe University team as a whole didpoorly in the Lake Forest Invita¬tional Wrestling Tournament heldF’riday and Saturday at Lake For¬est.Only three other Chicago grap-plers managed to place in this ex-Chicago Gets New ProfessorshipChicago announced yesterdaythat it is setting up a John A. Wil-;son professorship of oriental stud- 1les at the Oriental Institute, made jpossible through an anonymous jgift of about $600,000.The professorship is named for |John A. Wilson, the Andrew Mac-Leish distinguished service profes-!sor of Egyptology at the Institute.Wilson is an authority on thecultural history of ancient Egyptfrom 3500 to 1000 B.C. His books |include “The Burden of Egypt”(1951) and “Signs and WondersUpon Pharaoh” (1964).In announcing the professorship,President Beadle said that “JohnWilson’s impeccable scholarship isitself an institution. Through his jresearch and teaching, he has jbrought many honors to the Orien- !tal Institute and tp the Univer¬sity.” Early last December the govern¬ment of Iran announced a $3 mil¬lion gift to the University on be¬half of its Shah, Mohammed RizaPahlavi.One third of the gift was desig¬nated for a chair in Persian civi¬lization. The rest is for the Pahla¬vi Center for Middle Eastern Stud¬ies, to be built adjacent to theOriental Institute.Professor Wilson has been onthe faculty at Chicago since 1931and a professor since 1936, whenhe succeeded James H. Breatedas director of the Oriental Insti¬tute.dizabeth CardenJ4air 2) esicjners1620 E. 53RD BU-8-2900 tremely hard-fought tournament.Ted Petersen, 167 lb.; Steve Biggs,137 lb.; and Dave Clark, 127 lb. allfinished fourth in the competition.The L.F. tournament was the fi¬nal outing of the season for theMaroon wrestlers.TrackThe first and second-year mem¬bers of the University track squadpicked up victories over Wilsonand Wright Junior Colleges in atriple meet last Thursday.Chicago’s trackmen racked up atotal of 55 points, while WilsonManaged only 28. In 13 events, theUniversity took first in five, secondin six, third in four, and fourth inanother four.In the entire meet the Universi¬ty failed to score in only one event,the 60-yd. dash. Chicago took allbut fourth in the high jump andlost only third in the shot put.Members of the track squad al¬so competed in University TrackClub action over the weekend. TedTarsptra ran in a winning relayteam Saturday in the IllinoisTrack Club relays, while elevenother trackmen competed in theUCTC open meet Saturday.CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETH.*s wtiat you need from 9 J10 Used 9X12Rug, Jo a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants & Mill Rc’-jrns at fractionof tfie Or gmal cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 1 O'.u Discount wild this Ad.FREE DELIVERYNOTICE ABOUT WINTER TEXTBOOKSOn Friday March 1st., it will be necessary for the Textbooks De¬partment of the Bookstore to begin removing Winter Quarter Text¬books from its sales-floor shelves, in order to provide space forincoming Spring Quarter books. Before March 1st, please try tolurchase any Winter Quarter texts which you may still require.Textbook DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. GymnasticsChicago finished on the losing endof a four-way gymnastics meet inthe team’s final competition of theyear. George Williams College andCentral Michigan University dom¬inated the meet, while WheatonCollege nudged the Maroons intofourth place by 20 points.Taking lone firsts for Chicagowere Don Mars in the long horsevaulting and Glenn Grobbs in thestill rings competition.FencingThe Maroon fencers droppedcontest with Ohio State and theUniversity of Iowa in home actionon Saturday.Against the powerful Ohio squad,the Chicago squad was able to winsix of 27 bouts and lost 21-6.Chicago was more effective inthe Iowa contest as the nine-manteam narrowed the gap to 18-9.The University came within a sin¬gle bout of winning the foil compe¬tition, losing 4-5.SAMUEL A. BELL'BUY SHELL FROM BUL"SINCE ItUPICKUP B DELIVERY tERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 IntramuralsHenderson South and Phi Gam¬ma Delta scored victories in theI-M free-throw contest concludedlate last week.Henderson defeated “sisterhouse” Henderson North for thetitle in the College House division,while Phi Gamma overcame AlphaDelta Phi for the frat title.Individual champion was MikeMcllhany of Dodd House withChuck Birdwell and Dennis Cullenclose behind. Irl Extern of Vincenttook fourth, and Alpha Delta’sRichard Schmalbeck finished fifth.The IM badminton tournamentswings into real action this weekwith finals to be held tomorrowand Thursday.1 PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 IAttention Candidates for Teaching Positionsin Chicago Public SchoolsNational Teacher Examinationsfor Elementary (K-8)and Selected High School AreasThe National Teacher Examinations will be administeredApril 6,1968 on 400 college campusesChicago Public Schools will use the scoresas part of their 1968 certificate examinations forKindergarten-Primary Grades 1-2-3(N.T.E.-Early Childhood Education)Intermediate and Upper Grades 3-8(N.T.E.-Education in theElementary School)High School English(N.T.E.-English Language andLiterature) High School Mathematics(N.T.E.-Mathematics)Art-Grades 7-12(N.T.E.-Art Education)Homemaking Arts-Grades 7-12(N.T.E.-Home Economics Education)Industrial Arts-Grades 7-i2(N.T.E.-Industrial Arts Education)All Candidates Must Take the Common Examinationand the Teaching Area Examination Relevant tothe Certificate SoughtApplicants for teaching positions in theChicago Public Schools should:1. Register with the Educational Testing Service, Princeton, NewJersey to take the common examination and the relevant teachingarea examination. Registration closes March 15,1968.2. Indicate on the N.T.E. form, line 11, that scores should be sub¬mitted to the Chicago Board of Examiners, Chicago Public Schools.3. File application for certification examination (form Ex-5) withthe Board of Examiners. The following credentials should accom¬pany the application (Ex-5), if not already on file: official copy ofbirth certificate, official transcript of aM college work attempted.Credential Assembly Deadline Date:Tuesday, April 2,1968, Noon C.S.T.For additional information: Board of Examiners, Room 624Chicago Public Schools228 N. La Salle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60601or the Office of Teacher Recruitment, Room 1820or details in the Teacher Placement OfficeSKI ASPEN$175.00 The Bandersnatch Proudly Announces ItsLeave Chi. March Hi, 1:30Arrive hack in Chi. March 24.Includes all Irani, bus, deluxe - FIRST BIRTHDAY(|iiad loom priv. hath (no dormsl«>n this trip), all low tickets, out-<loor pool, taxes, skiint; vail andAspen. 6 Full Breakfasts. HAPPY BIRTHDAY BANDER!Call Dick 764-6764 or 7.62-3765 Wednesday night 9:00pm7 t } ' ; e J J i * -MV , / H* - I ' 1 ' < ‘ » » » 1.)February 27, 1968 v 3 , THE CHICAGO MAROONBookstore Makes EffortOn Space, Staff ProblemsThe University Bookstore hasmade definite steps toward solvingits fundamental problems of space,selection, and staff, according toRichard C. Wade, professor of his¬tory and a member of the Student-Faculty Bookstore Committee.Wade’s comments come after aMaroon editorial charging that nosignificant stop-gap measureshave been taken to alleviate Book¬store inadequacies.Wade cited several areas inwhich he said recommendations ofthe Committee have been applied:• Space. In order to create morespace, the Bookstore removed theclothing, although it was a greatsource of revenue, Wade said, re¬sulting in 20 to 25 percent morespace for the display of titles.• Selection. The Bookstore hashired graduate students to contactfaculty members and studentsabout reorganizing each section ofshelves and collect reading listsfor all courses, as well as help-or¬der books.• Communication. The Bookstorehas hired 20 students to act asliaisons between the Bookstore andthe community. Their work in¬cludes encouraging the faculty toget their book lists in soon enoughand doing sales work.• Inventory. The Bookstore is get¬ting a new kind of inventory sys¬tem, so that when a book is sold,it is immediately reordered. When4*VC 1KJ/~sComM 3Lut >;mM 1645 E. 55th STREET W.2 CHICAGO, ILL. 606152 Phone: FA 4-1651 W$ $ 3$ jlfc ^ 30?You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until fomorro/V if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.1 2655 5. Doty Ave.646-441 1SERVICEto your satisfactionni AIJTY WORKon nilforeign and sport s carsby trained mechani*fiody work ~s paintingTO" I \r,Free Estimates on ALL Work326-2550-ESLY IMPORTS, INC2235 S. MICHIGANAuthorizedPeugeot DealerService hours Daily 8-7Sat. 9-510% Student Discounton Repair Order Parts.Convenient to all majorexpressways, Lake Shore-Drive, 1C, and ‘‘El”. a book is bought, an IBM card istaken out providing for immediatereplacement which would result ina better check on the kinds ofbooks selling.Also, Wade said, a suggestionbox has been added so that stu¬dents can make general stockingsuggestions rather than special or¬ders. And the Bookstore now re¬mains open weekday evenings dur¬ing t he first few weeks of thequarter, when most students buytheir books.According to Wade, “It’s tooearly to tell the effect of the pro¬grams ... But we’re always inter¬ested in improving the logistics ofthe Bookstore.” IPersons or organizations wishing to an¬nounce events must type information onCalertdar forms available at The Maroon Of¬fice, Ida Noyes 303. Forms must then be sentor brought to the Office at least two daysbefore date of publication.Tuesday, February 27BIOCHEMISTRY OF CANCER CONFER¬ENCE: (Pathology), "Chemotherapy ofCancer I," Charles Heidelberger, profes¬sor of oncology. University of WisconsinMedical School. Billings P-117, 3 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (The James Franck Insti¬tute), "Local Magnetic Movements inDilute Alloys," Seth D. Silverstein, Re¬search and Development Center, GeneralElectric Company. Research Institutes480, 4:15 p.m.SEMINAR: (Anatomy), "The Plasma Mem¬brane Ultrastructure in Frozen-DriedBrains," H. David Coulter, Departmentof Anatomy, University of Tennessee.Anatomy 104, 4:30 p.m.FOLK AND SQUARE DANCING: AssemblyRoom, International House, 1414 East59th St., 8 p.m.MEETING: Women's Radical Action Prolect.Ida Noyes, 7:30 p.m.DISCUSSION: (Alice's Restaurant), on lifein federal prisons. Ida Noyes, 8:15 p.m.Wednesday, February 28FILM: (Indian Civilization), "Trance andDance in Bali." Rosenwald 2, 12:30 p.m.mm mmmmm s mm m mCalendar of EventsINVITATION LECTURE SERIES: (BusinessSchool), "How to Succeed by Really Try¬ing," Commander Edward Whitehead,president of Schweppes, New York. Busi¬ness East 103, 1 p.m.LECTURE: (Biochemistry), "Genetic andChemical Alteration of RNA Structureand Specificity," John Carbon, AbbottLaboratories. Abbott 101, 4 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from theBritish Isles and Scandinavia. Ida NoyesDance Room, 8 p.m.LECTURE: (Middle Eastern Center), "Eco¬nomic and Social Change in ModernIran," Peter Avery of King's College,Cambridge. Cobb 302, 4 p.m.MEETING: (Second Congressional DistrictVoters Committed To Change), for any¬one interested in sending anti-war dele¬gates to Democratic National Conven¬tion. Call Karl Figlio at 363-7375.TRYOUTS: (Blackfriars), Spring musicalproduction "Amerika." Reynolds Club,7:30 p.m.MEETING: (Special Vietnam ConvocationGroup). Reynolds Club, 7:30 p.m.Thursday, February 29BIOCHEMISTRY CANCER CONFERENCE:(Pathology), "Chemotherapy of CancerII," Charles Heidelberger, professor ofoncology. University of Wisconsin Med¬ical School. Billings P-117, 3 p.m.SEMINAR: (Anatomy), "Evidence for thePhylogenetic Relationship of Tree Shrews,Based on the Placenta and Fetal Mem¬ branes," Dr. W. P. Luckett, Universityof Wisconsin. Anatomy 104, 4:30 p.m.REHEARSAL: (UC Concert Band). LabSchool, Belfield 244, 5 p.m.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Requests and in¬struction. Hillel House, 5715 WoodlawnAve., 7 p.m.NATURE OF SYMBOLIZATION LECTURE-(New Collegiate Division), "Phenomenol¬ogy and Mythology," Charles H. Long,associate professor. Divinity School. IdaNoyes Library, 7:30 p.m.CONCERT: Persian music by santour vir¬tuoso Kiu Haghighi. Lexington Hall, 5831University Ave., 8:30 p.m.MEETING: (Revitalization). Ida Noyes, 9p.m.COMMUNITY FORUM: (Student HealthOrganization and Consumer ServiceCorp ), "Organizing Community Controlof Health Services," panel discussionwith doctors, pharmacists and healthprofessionals. Hyde Park Co-op, 55th andLake Park, 8 p.m.MOST COMPLETE PHOTfAND MOB8Y STORE OfTHE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E 55 HY 3 925%Student DiscountsShaw’s SAINT JOAN, Scene ivReading and discussion presented FREE by UT Reading Group. Thursday, C-SHOP. 9:30-t .Whatthe interviewerswon’t tell youaboutGeneral ElectricThey won’t tell you about all the job opportunitieswe have for college graduates — engineers, science,business and liberal arts majors. Not that theywouldn’t like to. It’s just that there are too manyjobs and too little time. In a half-hour interviewour man would barely have time to outline thescope and diversity of the opportunities we offer.That’s why we published a brochure called “Start¬ing Points at General Electric.” In plain language it will tell you exactly how and where a person withyour qualifications can start a career with GeneralElectric. Pick up a copy at your Placement Office.Then arrange for a productive session with ourinterviewer. He’ll be on your campus soon.GENERAL® ELECTRICAn equal opportunity employerTHE CHICAGO MAROON February 27, 1968Democracy Demands Balance of Science, PrivacyContinued from Page 1our home, our finances, our assoc¬iations, our mental and physicalcondition are bared to the mostcasual observer.Computer Threat“It is important for all of us,”he concluded, “to recognize thedimensions of the threat the com¬puter poses in order to mobilize our best efforts in framing an ade¬quate response that will notcastrate the desirable aspects ofthe technology as well.”Westin spoke in the same vein.Although he dismissed the ideathat surveillance will lead directlyto a “1984”-style totalitarianismbecause “the United States is notlikely to be taken over by a malevolent dictator and hisThought Police,” he did warn that“our menacing prospect is that hu¬mane and well-meaning authoritiesin government and private organi¬zations will convince the publicthat new surveillance methods arenecessary in order to build astronger democratic society.Weston concluded with a chal¬ lenge to today’s democratic gov¬ernment to achieve a “proper bal¬ance between science and privacy”in order to preserve its democracy.More AspectsThe Saturday afternoon sessionincluded Robert J. Levy, professorof iaw at the University of Minne¬sota, discussing “Privacy and theWelfare Recipient,” and MitchellCollege to Give Credit for AP Exam ScoresBy BARBARA HURSTEditorial AssistantDean of the College Wayne C.Booth has approved a recommen¬dation from the Faculty AdvisoryCommittee on Admissions and theCurriculum Committee of the Col¬lege Council to change Universitypolicy to give credit and advancedstanding for scores of four or fiveon College Board Advanced Place-ent exams.Chicago will accept all AP testscores, with the exception of theEnglish and History exams. This iexception, according to Director ofAdmissions and Aid, Anthony T.G.Pallett, was made because Chicagodoes not have an English composi¬tion course for which the AP Eng¬lish exam was designed.One of the problems with the APexams, said Dean of StudentsCharles D. O’Connell, until last yeardirector of admissions and aids, is that “they are too specialized formost of our general education pro¬gram. I would like to see AdvancedPlacement tests in inter-disciplin¬ary fields.”The Magic FourGenerally, a score of four will, allow a student to place out of the! first sequence of a field. There aresome specific exceptions:• A four in mathematics will al¬low the student to place out of Math151 while a student receiving a fivewill get credit for both 151 and 152.Regardless of his score on the APexam, each entering student musttake the College’s placement testin math as a high score on theplacement test may win him addi¬tional credit.• Credit for Physical Sciences 105-6-7 will be given to any student re¬ceiving at least a four on either thechemistry or physics exams. Any student partially placing out I' of any requirement will be given jthe option to take the University’splacement test to improve his!standing.Losing Students“We felt we were losing some po- j1 tential students because of our fail¬ure to give advanced standing on jthe basis of AP exams,” said Pel-jlet. “If a student has a choice of jone school which will give creditfor his AP scores and one whichwon’t, this could affect his decision, lespecially if he is on the fence.”O’Connell's reaction was also fa¬vorable. “I’m very happy,” hecommented. “I think it will be aconsiderable help in indicating toI schools doing incredible work intheir curriculum that we recognizethis. I think some very able stu¬dents might have been discouragedfrom applying to Chicago because we did not accept Advanced Place¬ment scores.”‘Impetus from Faculty’Asked why the change had notcome earlier, O’Connell replied,“The impetus for this came fromthe faculty. There was less reasonwhile we had such a completebattery of tests.”“I don’t think this change willaffect a great number of students,”said Professor of English MarkAshin, chairman of the five-mansub-committee which originallymade the recommendation, “butperhaps it will be a little more gen¬erous to students who have takenAdvanced Placement exams.”Chicago is not as liberal in itshandling of AP exam scores assome other institutions which giveadvanced standing for a score ofthree or greater. But. said Pallett,“these institutions are generallyless competitive than Chicago.” Rogovin, assistant attorney gener¬al of the United States, speakingon “Personal Privacy and the Pub¬lic Purse.”Bennet Boskey, of the Washing¬ton law firm of Volpe, Boskey andLyons, also commented on thelack of privacy of government of¬ficials: “Thomas Jefferson onceremarked that ‘when a man as¬sumes a public trust, he shouldconsider himself as public prop¬erty.’ Indeed, in view of the natureof our institutions, it may be awonder that any privacy at all isleft to the government employee.”Government AssurancesPhilip M. Hauser, professor ofsociology, director of the Popula¬tion Research and Training Center,and former acting director of theCensus Bureau, pointed out that“as realms previously private arenecessarily open to governmentscrutiny in the interest of societyas a whole, the safeguards whichhave developed must be furtherdeveloped and strengthened to pro¬vide assurance that no informationprovided by the individual to thegovernment can be used in anymanner inimical to his interests.”At a panel discussion concludingthe conference Saturday evening.| Bruno Bettelheim, professor ofeducation, psychology, and psy¬chiatry pointed out the psycholog¬ical dangers involved in too muchprivacy and called for “a modelof privacy which does not rest onrepression.”Maroon Classified AdvertisementsIF YOU WOULD MAKE YOURDREAMS OF TOMORROWA REALITYYOU MUST BEGIN TO LIVETHEM TODAYRATES: For University students, faculty, jand staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents per i .| line repeat.j For non-University clientele: 75 cents peri line, 60 cents per line repeat. Count 35 j ]; characters and spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay- I |I ment to The Chicago Maroon Business {I Office, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 |E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADSFOR TUESDAY MUST BE IN BY FRI¬DAY. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS FOR FRI¬DAY MUST BE IN BY WEDNESDAY. 1NO EXCEPTIONS.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.WANTEDTUTOR NEEDED in Political Science. Callafter 6:30. 777-0058.NEW DEAN OF STUDENTS. No ExperienceNecessary. Sanity required.NON-DORM STUDENTS! Room availableimmediately in Greenwood at reduced rataCall Joe Bigelson, Ext. 3541, room 31.APARTMENT WANTED, Before March 10.3-6 Rooms. Hyde Park. BU 8-7358.ASSISTANT TO ENGLISH TEACHER (grad¬ing themes, etc.). PL 2-8377.ROOMMATE WANTEDNEED F. ROOMMATE. 45/mo. Call 363-2445.THREE ROOM APARTMENT TO SHARE.Near Campus. Furnished. Inexpensive. $45.HY 3-3714.FEM. $20/month. Nice Place. 288-8347.NEED THIRD ROOMMATE for Elegant 6room Victorian Apt. N. North, $51/month.944-5377 after 5:00 P.M.RESPONSE TO THE DRAFTPersons with personal committments concern¬ing the draft who are willing to discussthem with interested students in dormitories,etc.. Please come to a planning meeting at7:30 at 5738 S. Kenwood or contact LouisCrane, 684-2153, evenings.LOSTONE UMBRELLA, in Hutchinson Commonson Jan. 27. If found, return to KathleenStieber, 465-9467.TYPISTTYPIST AVAILABLE. Electric typewriter.Standard page rates — flexible. MSS pref.90 words/minute. 2321 Rickert, BU 8-6610.YOGAYOGI SRI NERODE teaches, besides Hattra,Mantra, and other Yogas, breath orientedmeditations, as taught by Buddha to hisson Rahula and by Sri Krishna to Ariunain Bhagavad Gita. This practice eases anx¬iety, nervousness, tension and depression.Hyde Park. DO 3-0155. RIDERS WANTEDWest Palm Beach, Florida over Spring Vaca¬tion. Instrument Rated Commercial pilotflying Well-Equipped BEECH BONANZA hastwo seats still Available. Share Expenses,Max. of $100. Round Trip. Norton Richards,324-8787.PERSONALSRussian taught by highly experienced na¬tive teacher. Rapid Method. Trial lesson atno charge. Call CE 6-1423 from 9 a.m. to5 p.m.Revitalization meeting for Student Mobiliza¬tion Committee tonight at 7:30 in Ida Noyes."I was so much older then,I'm younger then than now."—the BandersnatchABOC — Anybody But O'Connell.ALICE'S RESTAURANT: Discussion of lifein federal prisons. Tonight at 8:15 in IdaNoyes Hall.Resolved: the life of the mind is not worthliving. Or is it? Find out at the LiberalArts Conference. April 3-7.Dump O'Connell.SING, DANCE — Only in AMERIKA.Nadine: Serdechno pozdravlijajut tebja cdnem rozhdenija MD, RS, W & MC, MB,MH, DF, VW, TN, JK, LW, BS, DN, RM,JA, JR i dr.Do your thing — organize a seminar forthe Liberal Arts Conference. Call KarlBemesderfer, Extension 2823.The best scene in Shaw is free — Scene iv.SAINT JOAN. Thursday, C-SHOP, 9:30.No, Clydie doesn't work here anymore —but come anyway, we have other attractions.—The BSAnathematize your resident head.Writer's Workshop. PL 2-8377.What are the myths and realities of collegelife? What is college. What is life? LAC-lll.PJM — Call home (you have been in greatdemand both on Virginia Avenue and inGary.) MSL.SKI VAIL AND ASPEN. All transportation,breakfasts, tows, room, poo', March 16-24,$175.00. Dick 764-6264 or 262-3765.We make giant picture posters of you whileyou wait at $4.95. FINE ART PHOTO¬GRAPHY. 5210 S. Harper. Ml 3-6996. 1-8 P.M.What goodness lurks in the hearts and mindsof men? The Liberal Arts Conference Knows.Dump the dean of students.SPECIAL VIETNAA^CONVOCATION GROUP:Meeting Wednesday, at 7:30 p.m. in Rey¬nold's Club.National Student Protest and Action againstdraft of Grad students and teachers. Indi¬viduals and organizations, contact Ron Pa-ransky, 138 W. 15th Street, NYC-10011. 212-989-2521.Then I Fall to my knees and pray fiercelyfor twenty-two minutes that the ceiling shouldnot fall on me or my heart should notattack me.STOP THEM BEFORE THEY BUST US ALL! LA COLOMBEthe Movement's only monthly$5.00/year. Alum Creek Press2024 N. Fremont, Chicago, Illinois 60614I want to be in AMERIKA — Don't you?WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY. Student Rates.Thomas Hocker. I IT Photography Grad. Stu¬dent. Call 842-5425, 7-8 p.m."Animal crackers, loved by children, aresignificant remnants of early cannibalisticfantasies." Otto Fenichel, M.D., THE PSY¬CHOANALYTIC THEORY OF NEUROSIS.The facts, ma'am, nothing but the facts: theLiberal Arts Conference will be held April3-7.A cake with candles ... Come see theBandersnatch light up on his first birthday— Tomorrow. The reports of my death have been greatlyexaggerated — L.A.C.Bicycle Across Europe: An extraordinaryway to travel thru & be a part of Europe.You don't have to be a muscle-bound hero,just a good sport and an inquisitive traveler.$698 for 47 days (7 countries); $1148 for 58days (13 countries); $1498 for 70 days (14countries). All hotels and transportation,most meats. Air fare to Europe not included.Grad and undergrad and young teachersonly. Call Dick at 764-6264 or 262-3765.Now is the time for all good men to cometo the aid of the College by partaking ofthe Liberal Arts Conference.Stop the Disciplinary Committee.Thank you Anne and Kristen — J.S. 2.Eight cases in ten days. God help us. Fight it!Sit-ins have been an annual event. Let's notdisappoint our deans.DL — HAPPY BIRTHDAY. I LOVE YOU. M.Better to wind up in the AdministrationBuilding than wind up in jail.Want to have a faculty member to dinnerduring the Liberal Arts Conference? The Col¬lege will pay you SI.25/person to do it.BQS, Dive, even if your scope's up.j LEAP YEAR RALLY FOR DRUG POWER,j Community Health Services Co-op, SHO,Hyde Park Coop (55th & Lake Park). Thurs-| day 29th, 8 P.M.Get out of our lives.| Help stamp out Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.I love you.ACCORDIANIST desperately wanted for ethicorchestra. M. Barthelemy, 493-2107.THE MAROON NEEDS A MUSIC CRITIC(DESPERATELY). CALL ROGER BLACKEXT. 3265.FOR SUBLEASEJUNE TO END OF SEPT, or available forimmediate occupancy. Large 3Vs rooms. Exc.Condition. Vi block from Lake. Choice S.Shore Location. $108/month. 374-0151 after6 p.m.4 ROOM APT. $105.00/month. 1519 E. 54thStreet. Phone 325-2352, before March 1.RENTUnfurnished BASEMENT. 4 rooms. $85 493-4909.TWO ROOMS FOR MALE STUDENTS. $155and $180 per Quarter. Board ContractsAvailable. PL 2-9704.l'/j room turn. apt. in S. Shore. Close toCampus Bus. $77.50/month. Call Judy daysand weekends MU 4-5600, Ext. 230 or 324-1009 . 5 to 8.ANNOUNCEMENTSTUDENTS NOTE: Steve Kindred told theguard in Ida Noyes that he wouldn't showhis I.D. card, and they could take him tothe Security Office if they wanted to. SkipLandt told the guards not to check his I.D.Student, you can do the same!!FOR SALEHI-FI COMPONENTS: Garrard Turnable,AR-2a Speaker, trans & amp, at least $150Call eves. 324-3905.DRUMS - COMPLETE SET! $125.00. CallVARE 624-0505.1962 PLYMOUTH. 4 door SEDAN. ReasonableOffer. Call 375-5616 after 6 P.M.FRIENDLY BABY GERBILS, very reason¬able rates — Call Peter, 684-9549, after 10p.m.LECTUREWilliam H. McNeill, "The Cold War andthe Historian as Maker of History," HIS¬TORY CLUB, Wed., Feb. 28, Soc Sci 305,7:30 p.m.February 27, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7One thing Hyde Parkcan do withoutis just another hi-rise.We’re building a village.A village is a hi-rise. Plus.Plus town homes, trees, shaded sitting areas, pools,sculpture, grass and gardens. W ith plenty of room to build snowmenand listen to outdoor concerts.'That’s Cornell \ i 11 age, where the 27-story hi-risecondominium and IS town homes occupy only35', ot the land.And where the whole thing is on a raised private plaza,way over street level. So it’s quiet, secure and secluded.Above it all. W ith 100'« oft-street underground parking.We call it Plaza Living.And we’ve made it a condominium so theresidents are real residents, not transients. With home-owners’pride in their community.Cornell Villagers w ill also take pride in their2, 3 and 4-bedroom homes. W ith lake views throughtinted glass walls. Private terraces. Italian marblethresholds and windowsills. And soundproof construction.There’s more. A private, heated pool. Sauna baths.Private sundeck. Hospitality center, l.quipped play area.24-hour doorman and stab. Plus all that Hyde Parkand the University offer.Just another hi-rise? Not hardly. Cornell Village is a community,a concept. Something Hyde Park can do with.Prices from *29,750. Come see us this weekend.Grand Opening!CORNELL VILLAGEPlaza Living ... a nice way to live in the city.Model homes at 5138 S. Hyde Park Blvd., just off the Outer Drive.For more information, call 955-5000.Management by Baird & Warner, Inc.THE CHICAGO MAROON February 27, 1968