Univ. of Chicago LibrarySerial Rec* Dept*Harper M22Chicago,111, 60637 Non-Profit Oig-U. S. POSTAGEPAIDCbictgo, IllinoiBPosmit No- 7931 j\st© MaroonVOL. 76, NO. 48 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1968$750,000 DRIVE FoundedIn 18928 PAGESFunds Will Go To Recruit BlacksThe Maroon — MARC POKEMPNERANTI-WAR DEMONSTRATION: Marchers set out Saturday after¬noon in Chicago's Loop to re-name Civic Center.Loop DemonstratorsPlan Legal ActionBy DAVID L. AIKENStaff WriterLegal action and a march areplanned to protest police treatmentof marchers in Saturday’s anti¬war march.Some 76 persons were arrestedat the Civic Center plaza whenpolice began pushing at demon¬strators who were milling aroundthe plaza following the end of amarch from the Grant Park bandshell.About 25 were reported treatedat the police hospital for injuriesinflicted by policemen. Police saidseveral of their number were alsotreated for injuries caused by sign-wielding demonstrators.The Chicago chapter of StudentsThe Maroon — BILL NOWLINSIDELINE: Marcher is aided bytwo comrades.* for a Democratic Society and theSpecial Vietnam ConvocationGroup have called a meeting to¬morrow night at 7:30 p.m. in IdaNyoes to discuss plans for pro¬testing the police attack.Saturday MarchPresent plans call for a marchSaturday leaving at 11:30 a.m.from the University of Illinois Chi¬cago Circle campus and going tothe Civic Center.The Chicago Mobilization Com¬mittee has announced it will filethree suits this week. They will beagainst the Park Dept, for failingto install sound equipment at theGrant Park rally; against the city,Mayor Daley, and Police Commis¬sioner James Conlisk for personaldamages; and against individualpolicemen and the Police Dept, asa whole for the attacks andarrests.The American Civil LibertiesUnion will help in the defense ofthose arrested.The National Mobilization Com¬mittee, co-ordinators of the Satur¬day march, is taking statementsfrom those arrested and will helpin their defense.Court appearances were set forWednesday for most of thosecharged, but continuances wereexpected to be granted so a de¬fense could be prepared.Most charges were for disorderlyconduct and resisting arrest. Bondfor almost all was set at $1000.Booth Provides BailThree Chicago students and afourth person who was not a stu¬dent were bailed out by Mobiliza¬tion with money from Dean of theTurn to Page 6 By MICHAEL SEIDMANExecutive EditorThe University announced thismorning a sweeping new four-yearprogram to provide scholarshipsand extra training for Negro stu¬dents. The program will cost $750,-000 and will be financed largely outof general University funds.As announced, the plan will havefour major elements:•A tutoring program for fresh-!man entering the College this au¬tumn whose previous educationalpreparation make them “risks”;•A special recruiting programfor freshman to enter the Collegein 1969, 1970, and 1971. This pro¬gram will involve special Saturdayprograms on campus for these stu¬dents and a one-to-one sponsorshipby current students in the Collegefrom backgrounds similar to thoseof the high school students;•Special scholarships from theUniversity itself and from assuredsources outside the University tomeet the need of indigent black stu¬dents. An average scholarshipwould be for $2000; and• A special summer program forone hundred students from inner-city schools on the South Sidestaffed by eight faculty membersand ten current students. This pro¬gram had been announcedpreviously.Negro RecruitmentIn past years, the University hashad consistent problems in attract-Election ValidationBallots in last week’s StudentGovernment (SG) elections arestill being counted, an SG spokes¬man said yesterday, due to a mis¬hap by which some ballot boxeswere left locked and overlooked attheir locations over the weekend.According to early tallies re¬leased yesterday, however, the ing Negro students. According toWayne Booth, dean of the College,about 206 Negro students have beenadmitted as freshman in the pastfour years, while only 75 acceptedtheir admission. Sixty-nine of theseare still enrolled.No University official could bereached who would estimate whatincrease there would be in thisnumber. “The ability of these stu¬dents to complete a demandingacademic challenge has beenthoroughly demonstrated,” Boothstated.“As we step up our alreadystrong recruiting efforts in thisarea, we are determined, for thesake of the students and the Uni¬versity, to continue to avoid a di¬luted program, or subjecting un¬prepared students to programs inwhich they can only flounder.”Reached for comment, MichaelClaffey, director of public informa¬tion, said that the program couldbe viewed as an extension of thesmall-town recruitment programwhich attempts to attract studentsfrom sparsely populated areas whowould not normally apply toChicago.Claffey also indicated, however,that the new programs wererelated to the University’s generalefforts to improve racial relations,”he stated, “and I think in a certainsense it’s an obligation of the Uni¬versity to try to ease tensions.Long in PreparationsUniversity officials emphasizedthat the new program has been inpreparation for some time and thatStill Not CertainStudent Political Action Committeecandidates had a clear lead in thefield, with Jerry Lipsch, ’69, lead¬ing the voting. In the NationalStudent Association delegation bal¬loting, John Moscow, ’69, led othercandidates.Full results will be availablewithin another day, said thespokesman.MAY 12 REMATCH it is not directly related to recentracial unrest in Hyde Park andWoodlawn. According to Charles U.Daly, vice-president for develop¬ment and public affairs, the newprograms come partly in responseto rejection of similar programs byfederal agencies. “Of course,” Dalyadded, “the vulgarity of the Kingmurder makes us realize that thereis much more we will have to do.”Administration officials are alsoconcerned about how they will fi¬nance the new programs. Although$75,000 will come from a just-an¬nounced grant from the Olin-Math-ieson Chemical Corporation to helpindigent students, most of the mo¬ney will probably have to comefrom general funds, Daly said.Maroon StaffHolds ElectionThis FridayThe Chicago Maroon will holdelections for next year’s editor-in-chief this Friday at 4 p.m. in IdaNoyes 303.Also scheduled for the meeting,the second general staff gatheringof the year, are proposed changesin The Maroon Constitution and avote on the endorsement of eitherSen. Robert Kennedy (D, N. Y.)or Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D,Minn.).All members of the staff areeligible to vote and are urged toattend, according to the editors.Preceeding the elections, a teamo f four Maroon whiz kids willmatch memories and responsemechanisms with the TV CollegeBowl team, at 3 p.m. in the Quan-trell Auditorium in a contest opento viewing by the public. Imme¬diately after the elections, the edi¬tor and the editor-elect will choosesides in the annual softball gameheld on the Midway.A post-election party, for whichinvitations will b e mailed, isscheduled for a week from Friday.Chicago, Brandeis in Dubious BattleThe Chicago College Bowl teamlucked out Sunday.The victory was awarded toBrandeis University at the end ofthe game, 225 to 205. But, it turnedout, Brandeis won 25 of theirpoints by a foul.The culprit was Eric Wexler, ofEvanston. The shifty-eyed Wexleridentified a • painting by BernardBuffet as the work of Jean Du¬buffet.“Uh, Buffet — you’re right!”Robert Earle, the referree said.Immediately calls poured in to the NBC headquarters in NewYork, protesting that Chicago de¬served to win.RematchA tape made of the program forrebroadcast in California wasflown in to New York Mondaymorning. NBC officials decided tohold a rematch of the game in twoweeks.The rematch cannot be held nextweek because NBC has scheduledan animated film, “The Ballad clSmokey, the Bear.”Chicago has previously beaten teams from Immaculata Collegeand Loyola University in, Los An¬geles. It has won $6000. No deci¬sion has been made on how to pre¬sent prizes for Sunday’s game.In Other ActionThe Chicago team, in a letterprinted in today’s Maroon, haschallenged The Maroon to a Col¬lege Bowl-type game. The Maroonhas graciously accepted, and thecontest is scheduled for 3 p.m. onFriday in the Quantrell Auditoriumin Cobb Hall.JAMNESTY AN ISSUEColumbia Students DividedNEW YORK — Columbia stu¬dents and faculty are widely splitover the demonstration that hasparalyzed the campus since lastTuesday night.Faculty and student opponentshave blocked demonstrators insideLow Library, the administrationbuilding, refusing to allow support¬ers to pass food into the building.The supporters countered by throw¬ing food through second-story win¬dows.All Columbia buildings, exceptdormitories, were closed Fridaythrough Monday. It was expected that they would remain closedtoday.Demonstrators occupy six build¬ings. One of them, Hamilton Hall,the main college classroom build¬ing and location of the dean’s of¬fices, is held by the all-black Stu¬dent Afro-American Society.The main object of the demon¬stration, the halt of the construc¬tion on the controversial gymnasi¬um in the public Morningside Park,has been granted, at > leasttemporarily.There is general oppositionamong the administration and fac¬ulty to granting the demonstrators’More Buildings BlockadedIn Student Demonstrations send students. There will be aboutFrom College Press ServiceThe seizure of a school’s admin¬istration by students as means ofdramatizing their grievances wasa tactic first used two years agoby Chicago students opposed tomale class rank.Since the Chicago take-over, useof the tactic has spread. First itwas adopted mainly by students atblack colleges, such as HowardUniversity, but last week it spreadto several white campuses as well,although black students were in¬volved in almost every instance.Besides the well-publicized Co¬lumbia and Boston University pro¬tests, students at Trinity Collegein Hartford, Conn.; the Brooklyn,N. Y. campus of Long Island Uni¬versity; and Ohio State Universityin Columbus, chose to take overbuildings as a means of protestingracial issues.Some of the protests were rela¬tively short-lived. At Trinity, forexample, about 200 students en¬tered the administration buildingTuesday evening, and barricadedPresident Albert Jacobs and sever¬al members of the school’s boardof trustees in a room there.After they released the schoolofficials, Jacobs met with leadersof the protest to discuss their de¬mands. He and the trustees agreedto the student’s major demand,which was to set up a programthat would provide full scholar¬ships for at least 15 disadvantagedstudents. At the Long Island Universitycenter in Brooklyn, N. Y., mem¬bers of the Student Organizationfor a Black University (SOBU) en¬tered the administration buildingThursday morning and trapped theschool’s provost, William Leh, inhis office.He remained in his office aboutnine hours. The students did allowhim a one-hour break for lunch —on the condition that he return.Late Thursday night several schoolofficials met with leaders of SOBUand agreed to six of their sevendemands.They would not promise to stopthe sale of the campus to the CityUniversity of New York, but theyagreed to set up a scholarship fundfor ghetto residents; establishcourses in black history, Africanculture and other areas relatingto black people; promised higherwages for school employees, andto add more black professors; toset up a liberation school to teachcourses for residents of the sur¬rounding community; and agreedto give SOBU equipment for usein community organizing. second demand, which would be anamnesty on discipline for the par¬ticipants in the demonstration.Students Participate inPoor People's MarchWASHINGTON (CPS)-Studentsare expected to play a significantrole in the Poor People’s Cam¬paign which begins here this week.Seven schools — the Berkeley,Los Angeles, and Santa Cruz cam¬puses of the University of Califor¬nia, Stanford, Michigan, MichiganState, and Gammon TheologicalSeminary in Georgia will give stu¬dents credit for participation inthe Campaign. Stoney Cooks, stu¬dent co-ordinator for the SouthernChristian Leadership Conference,200 students involved in the proj¬ect.Cooks, who dropped out of Indi¬ana’s Anderson College in 1965 towork for the SCLC, began organ¬izing the program this winter. Hecontacted students on several ofthe campuses and they went towork persuading faculty membersand administrators to have theirschools participate in the program.These students will be workingin offices, working with varioussupport committees set up in Wash¬ington. and planning and partici¬pating in many of the demonstra¬tions. They will live in the shantytown which the poor people willbe building in a prominent placein Washington.Cooks said the assassination ofSCLC founder Martin Luther Kingis the main cause of this upsurgein interest. The assassination, saysCooks, “made a lot of folks askthemselves if there was anythingthey could do.’’CANOE TRIPSCruise and explore the Quetico-Superior wilderness by way of theOjlbway and ^.Voyageur. Fish vir¬gin lakes, relax, and have fun!Only $8.00 per diem, less forgroups of 10 or more. Write: BILLROM, CANOE COUNTRY OUT¬FITTERS. BOX C. ELY, MINN. 'p'tied StiritHfuqcrVdon'4?RE57AUkANT1321 East 57th ST. You wonlt have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow if youcall us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THCNEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT TENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMES^ r%foreign car hospitalService5424 KimbarkMl 3-3113new! new!foreign car hospitalSales LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positionsavailable for students and student wives.THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue The Maroon — DAVID TRAVISAMERIKAIn a scene from the new Blackfriar's musical of the absurd,"Amerika," Robinson (Bryan Dunlap) has made it big as a servantof the world's richest and most vulgar opera singer, Brunelda(Susan Scheid). Opening Thursday at Mandel Hall.Presidents, Editors Score WarNEW YORK (CPS) - Studentbody presidents and campus news¬paper editors from more than 500colleges have condemned the waras “immoral and unjust” and saidthey believe they “should not beforced to fight” in Vietnam.The signatures of about 640 stu¬dent presidents and editors from 49states appeared in the April 28edition of the Sunday New YorkTimes in a four-paged ad. Thesigners represent most of the ma¬jor colleges and universities in theUnited States.The Rev. Robert M. Hundley,who gathered the signatures forClergy and Laymen ConcernedAbout Vietnam, said most of theExpert Typing ServiceFast, Accurate, Hasste-lessJudy 858-2544 signers “have not been active inanti-war activity hertofore.”Hundley, a student at Union The¬ological Seminary, added, “Manyof the student leaders who havesigned this statement recognizethat they may be placing their fu¬ture careers in jeopardy.” He saidthey may face “punitive action”by “the capricious Selective Ser¬vice System.”CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a $10Used 9x12 Rug, to a Custom Car¬pet specializing in Remnants &,Mill Returns at fraction of theOriginal Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities.Additional 10% Discount withthis Ad.FREE DELIVERYWe hove thenew Volvo 144.WE OFFER TOP $ FOR YOUR TRADE INEUROPEAN DELIVERY SERVICEEXCELLENT SERVICE DEPT. & BODY SHOPOUR PERSONAL ATTENTIONVOLVO SALES & SERVICE CTR..INC.1120 S. Stony Island Ave. ChicagoRE 1-3800P.S. We have all the other Volvos too!7326 Exchangem Minnelli’sTWO WEEKS IN ANOTHER TOWNKirk Douglas, Edward G. Robinson, Cyd Charisse, In CinemaScope. Minnelli’s vision of realized and thwarted dreams.Tomorrow night. At 9:00 only. In Cobb Hall. 75<. But come early for experimental at 7:15. Doc Films.2 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 30, 1968SDS Teach-In To Question Electoral PoliticsStudent radical leader MarioSavio and Sam Brown, student co¬ordinator for the McCarthy cam¬paign, will be among the speakersat a teach-in to be held in Hutch¬inson Quadrangle on May 10 to dis¬cuss the theme “Can America Be Salvaged?”Negro comedian Dick Gregorymay attend, according to MichaelGoldfield, a graduate student inpolitical science and a member ofStudents for a Democratic Society(SDS), which is sponsoring the event. Other speakers expected in¬clude Staughton Lynd, a radicalprofessor at Chicago State Teach¬ers’ College and Roosevelt Univer¬sity; Allard K. Lowenstein, a NewYork Congressional candidateprominent in the McCarthy cam-Police Deny Coed IncidentChicago police told The Maroonyesterday that last week’s Sun-Times story referring to an alleged the shotgun murder of Roy D. Gut-mann, ’68, was inaccurate.“I was misquoted,” said Policeincident in which a University of; Sgt. John McMahon, one of the of-Chicago coed refused to cooperate j ficers attached to the case. Accord-in identifying a possible suspect in ing to McMahon the girl came toRace Petition Circulates,Asks Specific PoliciesA group of about 40 white stu¬dents and faculty members issuedyesterday a set of demands to topUniversity administrators yester¬day, calling for a racially “re¬sponsible and representative Uni¬versity community.”The group, the newly-formedCommittee for a Responsible Uni¬versity, is circulating the demands,in the form of a petition, through¬out the campus this week.The petition, a revised version ofa statemEnt the group made twoweeks ago, lists specific demandsin several areas:Housing•The University should providealternative housing at equal costbefore continuing with demolitionin Hyde Park and Woodlawn.• Developmsnt plans should bemade public.•The community should be in¬cluded in planning.• Low-cost apartments should bebuilt instead of the Student Villagecomplex at 55th St., and Ellis Ave.Enrollment• Black students should compriseabout 20 percent of incoming fresh¬man classes.•Summer institutes should be es¬tablished for entering black fresh¬men who would need them.Curriculum• Courses on black American his¬tory and culture should be insti¬tuted as required coursES in the so¬cial sciences and humanities.• Courses on Afro-American his¬tory, culture, and society should beestablished.Facilities• University IDs should not be re¬quired for entrance to Ida NoyesHall and Bartlett Gymnasium.The Committee for a Responsible University is planning to set uptables on the campus and to holdcoffee hours in the dormitories to: discuss the petition. They intend to| circulate the petition from room toroom in the dormitories.A spokesman said that the grouphad discussed their petition withmembers of the Black Student Al¬liance, but that the black group de-! cided not to endorse the petition.The petition demands that Uni-j versity officials respond to the peti¬tion at an open meeting on Tues¬day, May 7. A spokesman for thegroup said that this ultimatum wasset at such short notice becausethey wished some action before theend of the Spring Quarter. police of her own volition toannounce that she had seen a mandismantling a shotgun but to saythat she didn’t have any idea whathe looked like.Other police sources said that thegirl first stated that it went againsther grain to aid the police, but thenfurnished them with all the rele-vent information she knew.In another security development,the temporary lights that had beenerected between Woodlawn and Uni-j versity Aves. along 58th St. havebeen taken down.According to Napthali Knox, as-' sistant vice president for physicalplanning, the lights were erected in! violation of the city building code: and when The Chicago’s American| ran a picture of the lights in itsFriday editions, Knox was told bythe city that the lights had to comedown.Both the deputy commissioner forlighting and the chief electrical en¬gineer for the city made separaterequests to the same effect.According to Knox, the tem¬porary lighting is being replaced asquickly as possible with permanentfloodlights which will meet thebuilding code requirements. paign; and Andrew Kopkind,Washington correspondent for TheNew Statesman, formerly with TheNew Republic.‘Heightened Interest’“There’s a heightened interest inelectoral politics because of theemergence of Kennedy and McCar¬thy,” Goldfield commented. He in¬dicated that the two main concernsof the teach-in will be the ade¬quacy of suggested political andsocial reforms and the validity ofthe democratic political process,specifically the Democratic Party,as a means to achieve peace andsocial change.“We don’t think that either rad¬icals or people working for Ken¬nedy or McCarthy have thoughtthrough these things and discussedthem,” Goldfield said.Tom Hayden, former SDS Pres¬ident; Arthur Waskow, a Demo¬cratic peace delegate from Wash¬ington; Abby Hoffman, leader ofthe “Yippies;” Mike Spiegel, na¬tional secretary of SDS; and HalDraper, a member of the Inde¬ pendent Socialist Club from Berke¬ley, will also speak at the teach-in, which will begin at 3 p.m. andcontinue until late evening.Chicago SpeakersSpeakers from the University ofChicago faculty will include Rich¬ard Wade, professor of Americanhistory and director of Illinois Ken¬nedy for President, and RichardFlacks, assistant professor of Soci¬ology.Savio, who is a Peace and Free¬dom party candidate for the Cali¬fornia State Senate, is expected tocriticize the Democratic Party andexpress his preference for thirdparty efforts for raising issues.McCarthy campaigners Brown andLowenstein and Kennedy insiderWade, on the other hand, are ex¬pected to defend political actionwithin the two-party structure.According to Goldfield, the teach-in will be publicized on a city¬wide basis and several thousandpeople from this campus and theentire city are expected to attend.Schools Assure Grad StudentsWASHINGTON (CPS) - A num¬ber of universities, most of themin the Ivy League, are planning toreadmit graduate students who aredrafted out o f school next year.Some of the schools have alsodecided to readmit graduate stu¬dents who go to jail for resistingthe draft, a position urged by theAmerican Civil Liberties Union.Beginning in June there will beno deferments for any graduatestudents, except those in the sec¬ond year or further years of studyand in medical and dental fields.Harvard, Columbia, Yale, Princ-ton, and Duke Universities will ad¬mit students who are drafted or goto jail. The Universities of Chica¬go and Rochester will readmit stu¬dents who are drafted but havemade no definite statement o nthose who are jailed.The University of Iowa will givepartial credit to students who areO'Connell Vetoes No-Hours PlanFreshman Women’s hours will i poll freshmen women aboutnot be abolished this quarter, Deanof Students Charles O’Connell toldFriday’s meeting of the Faculty-Student Advisory Committee onCampus Student Life (FSACCSL).O’Connell claimed he didn’t feellike going against the recommend¬ations of the Committee of WomenHouse Presidents, which have beenin effect less than one year.The Dean presented the advisorygroup with a letter which heplanned to send to freshmanwomen Monday in reply to the pe¬tition which Ruth Hazzard present¬ed to FSACCSL at its last meeting.The petition called for FSACCSL to women’s hours and that the Inter-House Council consider a sign-outsystem “that will adequately serveas a security measure.”O’Connell announced that hewould ask the newly electedwomen house presidents in Octo¬ber to “take up the subject againand to meet with a group of spe¬cially elected freshmen womenand with an informal committeeof faculty women. This should en¬sure a broad spectrum of viewsand experience.”He will ask for their recommend¬ations early in the Winter Quarter. drafted in mid-semester. Massa¬chusetts Institute of Technologyhas asked for occupational defer¬ments for its teaching and re¬search assistants.The Federal Interagency Com¬mittee on Education has also an¬nounced that Federal fellow schol¬arships to students who are draft¬ed or volunteer for military ser-J vice will be reinstated wheneveri possible. The policy only applies tofellowships awarded on the basisof national competition. Individualuniversities will decide on thosewhere they select the participants,although the committee is urgingindividual institutions to conformto the national standard.Grad Schools CouncilAgainst TA DefermentsWASHINGTON (CPS) - TheCouncil of Graduate Schools in theUnited States has issued a state¬ment that “there is in our judg¬ment no justification for generaldeferment of teaching and re¬search assistants.”The statement, submitted to Se¬lective Service Director LewisHershey for use in formulatingguidelines for local boards, alsosaid that in some cases a graduatestudent’s “services to the universi¬ty are essential and in such casesdeferments may be appropriate inindividual instances.”Massachusetts Institute of Tech¬nology recently announced that itwould ask for occupational defer¬ments for 1,600 teaching and re¬search assistants, who will not beable to get student deferments af¬ter June. The council and severalother education associations havebeen discussing this possibilitywith Hershey. STUDYING ABROAD?Students who’ve been there,tell students who are goingOn a rock-bottom budget (wellunder $7 a day!) in Europe, the Ba¬hamas, Bermuda, Jamaica, PuertoRico, the Virgin Islands, and Hawaii• In this totally new guidebook, students whohave lived and traveled in the countries theywrite about give you personal, detailedl-was-there reports on the Inplaces f.or the high spirit,low budget jet set. They tellyou where the fun is — j|<where to go, where to eat, ifwhere to stay, where to ||shop, where to play, where |to meet people. Where to Ifswing: bistros, coffee- |houses, ski resorts, surfing $beaches, non-sightseeing 1sights. Plus straight facts 1about local life and local jcolor and how to live with |it. Price $2.95 I ' This guidebookis not for people over 30COMPLETE INFORMATION ONSTUDY ABROADPan Am’s® NEW HORIZONS IN EDUCATION(222 pages, $3.95) gives you everything youneed to know about 258 schools and uni¬versities in Europe, Middle East, Far East,Latin America: Summer courses, Year-roundcourses, Language and culture programs;admissions requirements, costs, accommo¬dations, language of instruction and muchmore.Where The Fun Is, Pan Am’s Young Traveler's Guide writtenby Students and Pan Am’s New Horizons in Education areavailable at all bookstores or at your local Pan Am office.Published by Simon and SchusterApril 30, -1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 3* «The Chicago MaroonFounded in 1892Jeffrey Kuta, Editor-in-ChiejJerry A. Levy, Business ManagerManaging Editor Roger Black |Executive Editor ....Michael Seidman jNews Editor John MoscowPhotographic Editor David Travis ! Literary Editor David L. AikenAssociate Editors ... David E. GumpertDaniel HertzbergEditor Emeritus David A. SatterBlack RecruitingLike their counterparts elsewhere in the academicworld, students at Chicago are demanding that theUniversity concern itself more directly with the prob¬lems of the ghetto neighborhood that is its neighbor.The official University may comply with the de¬mands wholeheartedly, in which case the matter willdrop there; of course, this is unlikely and would befoolish as well. It may completely ignore the petition,in which case the threat of disruptive protests such asColumbia’s will loom large; but this also is improbable,we should like to think. For despite some demands thatare objectionable, unfeasible, and irresponsible, thesubstance of the petition represents intelligent andforceful arguments that are being made — and oftenaccepted — in one fashion or another at many collegesand universities nationwide.It is clear, for example, that Chicago has mademistakes in the past and that it must take greater carein the future to see that a better rapport is achievedwith the black community, particularly regarding re¬location and renewal; as for student housing, it haslong been obvious that unless dormitories can be con¬structed and operated in a more liveable fashion,Chicago should construct more low-cost apartments.Possibly the worthiest demand being made is thatblack students should be sought after more aggressive¬ly, particularly through summer institutes; the IvyLeague schools have for too long a time now beendominating that field, but, more important, it is un¬fortunate that the College, which initiated the SmallSchools Talent Search program, has until this time notsearched thoroughly its own backyard.African and Afro-American history and culturecertainly are valid disciplines hitherto all but neglectedby most institutions; in view of Chicago’s strength incivilizational studies, it is hard to see why more op¬tional programs than the present African Civ couldnot be established if the interest is present. But requir¬ing a 20 percent quota for any ethnic group is unthink¬able and a parody of the kind of built-in discriminationactivists are fighting.Finally, opening the doors of University facilitiesto the public-at-large merely would detract from theuse for which the facilities were intended. The questionof the extent to which the University should be itsbrothers’ keepers when the nation’s white masses re¬fuse to finance anti-poverty measures is a difficult one,but it seems that an augmentation of the University’sseveral programs in Woodlawn would be a more prac¬tical way of showing concern than, for example, mak¬ing the Bandersnatch more crowded in the eveningthan it is now.We are more heartened by the University’s mostrecent responses to the racial situation than by the ap¬parent lack of strong constructive proposals by blackor white students here. Its announcement of a sum¬mer recreational program for disadvantaged youthshas just been topped by the remarkable news that Chi¬cago will be spending $750,000 on black recruitmentand scholarships, and without too much optimism onecan guess that Chicago is presently concerned enoughto make good on many of the current suggestions. >» Hyde Park Survival SuitTIMOTHY S. KELLEYStevenson and McCarthy:Can Liberal Idealists Win?“Win or lose, Sen. Eugene J.McCarthy is the most excitingthing that happened to the Demo¬cratic party, at least in Washing¬ton, since Adlai Stevenson 16years ago.”With these words the SeattlePost-Intelligencer recently ex¬pressed the comparison which is,like the similarity between John¬son’s withdrawal and that of Tru¬man, also 16 years ago, a favor¬ite idea making the roundsduring this election year. Steven¬son and McCarthy are oftenlinked as idealistic, liberal intel¬lectuals whose honesty and moralcourage invigorated the Demo¬cratic party no end, but who, ofcourse, could never actually beelected President.“HE REFRESHED a politicalparty that was down-at-heel,” thePost-Intelligencer continues, dis¬cussing Stevenson, “and laid thepolitical base for John Kennedy.”Obviously, the popularly ac¬cepted cliches would have it, thefunction of Eugene McCarthy thisyear is to refresh the party andto lay the political base for some¬one whose political liberalismcan actually triumph at the polls.And who has been standingaround, since four days after theNew Hampshire primary, wait¬ing to benefit from the initialcourageous action of McCarthy?None other than the political heirand Hatchet Man Emeritus to theKennedy electoral machine —Bobby. AND BOBBY does indeed mani¬fest liberal convictions similar tothe ones McCarthy expressedwhen he stuck his political neckout last November, at least, mostof the time. Of course, he mustsoften certain of his liberalstands once in a while. He must,in a radio commercial, announcewhile reviewing possibilities forending the Vietnam war that“one is the possibility of with¬drawing and I’m against that.”He must appear to defend the bas¬is of the American commitmentto the South Vietnamese govern¬ment, implying its purpose (con¬trary to the Geneva Conventionrecommendations) with thephrase “so that they are not tak¬en over by a foreign power.”These things are necessary in thegame of practical politics and ofthe realities of electoral success,a game which the Stevensons andMcCarthys have never learned.Or so runs the popular myth.Is practical politics really asimmutable as the Kennedy sup¬porters would have it seem? Andis it so impossible for an “egg¬head” liberal idealist like Steven¬son and McCarthy to actually beelected? The answer to bothquestions is no.IN THE ONLY major electionin which Stevenson faced an op¬ponent other than the phenome¬nally popular Eisenhower (towhom either of the brothers Ken¬nedy would certainly have lost),he became the third Democraticgovernor in the history of Repub¬ lican Illinois, winning by the larg¬est margin in the state’s history.Gene McCarthy, too, has prov¬en himself a winner in repeatedvictories in Minnesota, culminat¬ing in his record-breaking 1964plurality. Certainly he has provensomething with his stunning suc¬cesses in New Hampshire andWisconsin. Most important of all,the latest Gallup poll shows thatamong Democrats, Republicans,and Independents, McCarthy (33percent) leads Kennedy (23 per¬cent) and Humphrey <25 percent).The man who risked his politi¬cal life to challenge a mightyLyndon Johnson last November isalso, then, the man who at thispoint seems most able to win theelection if nominated. McCarthycan and will triumph, but heneeds help. The primary battle inIndiana is underway, and Mc¬Carthy student volunteers mustcounteract Kennedy money. Thereis one more weekend to go.Mr. Kelley, ’71, is an edito¬rial assistant on The Maroon.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 34)800. 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¬lishers of Collegiate Press Service.4 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 30, 1968Letters to the Editors of The MaroonMaroon BowlThe members of the Universityof Chicago College Bowl teamhave endured your slanders longenough. The sly innuendo, (“lazyhare,” indeed!) the barbed com¬pliment (“haltingly, but halting¬ly”) and the air of assumedsuperiority have done their work:we are offended. Therefore wechallenge the staff members ofThe Maroon to a public contestto be held in Quantrell Auditori¬um on Friday, May 2, at 3 p.m.To whet your appetite for bat¬tle, the dean of the College,George M. Pullman, professor ofEnglish, has agreed that in theunlikely event of a Maroonvictory, you will be awarded apurse of $50 to be applied to thereduction of the mammoth deficitrun up by a long line of incompe¬tent Maroon editors. Should youlose, as you most certainly will,we ask only for a groveling, self-abasing apology in the pages ofyour rag.The gauntlet is flung (1), the dieis cast (2), the ballon has goneup (3). You may accept by retrieving any of these objects.THE COLLEGEBOWL TEAM(1) Dueling expression(2) “Alea jacta est”, Caeser,“Commentaries on the GallicWars”(3) Announcement of the inva¬sion of Normandy according toJames Coburn in “The American¬ization of Emily.”The editors reply:You can’t fool us, Karl Bemes-derfer, signing your letter “TheCollege Bowl Team.”We’ll meet you guys any time,any place — 3 p.m. Friday in theQuantrell Auditorium will do fine.If you thought Brandeis wastough, just you wait.Action PlanIt is interesting that Mr. Etz-kowitz finds the University’s“one response to the crisis hasbeen a teach-in.” This would ov¬erlook the work of many withMr. Pitcher in Operation Bread¬basket; of the SSA research faci-ity being planned on 61st St.; ofMr. Tax’ work in community or¬ganization in which Mr. Etzko-witz himself has been brought here to participate, of the sever¬al collaborations with TWO insecuring Federal funds for job¬training programs; and in theproposal for an experimentalschool at 61st St., on land that isin the University’s South Camp¬us.My list is of the activities thatcome immediately into my mind;a little investigation would turnup too many more to be includedin a letter. But it is enough toshow that the first response tothe crisis did not come eitherfrom enclaves or from Mr. Etz-kowitz’ arrival in Chicago.BEFORE THE Universitychanges its policy toward theghetto, I would like Mr. Etzko-witz to tell us more convincinglywhat its policy has been. Andeven more important, I wouldlike Mr. Etzkowitz to set downfor us what it is that the Uni¬versity is to do in the future.Shall we abandon the graduateschools or turn them all to thetraining of Negroes and theirteachers? Shall the urbanstudies center develop a plan forthe renewal of Woodlawn? Whatof participatory democracy and the non-interference of the Uni¬versity in Woodlawn’s affairsthat we heard so much aboutquite recently? Or shall the Uni¬versity’s endowment funds bediverted to the welfare of Wood¬lawn?There are hundred of studentsand staff of this University whohave worked and will continue towork for Woodlawn. If Mr. Etz¬kowitz has a plan it should bediscussed. If he has not, h eshould avoid nonsense about en¬clave theories being bankrupt orthat the University is playingfortress politics. Until we findourselves in the peaceable King¬dom, every community in Chica¬go needs official and private po¬lice protection. The events of thisweek show we need more ratherthan less.ROGER WEISSAssociate Professor ofthe Social SciencesRipped, TornThe well-kept secret of theRegistrar’s involvement with thefriendly Selective Service, andthe ensuing logic, (“Either we cooperate with the Selective Ser¬vice, or we don’t cooperate” —O’Connell) justifying that in¬volvement has ripped, torn, anddemolished my virginal-type in¬nocence.In accepting my under-grad¬uate deferment with a simplesignature, I was not quite awareof the latitude of power I hadallowed the Registrar. I hadthought that I would be told ofany additional arrogation of pow¬er, as I unfortunately believedthat the administration was onthe side of the good guys, i. e.,students, me. Bullshit, pure un¬adulterated bullshit.Loss of innocence comes uponme rather difficultly. But, truth,as we are told at Chicago, isthe final goal. Truth does not im¬ply innocence, and so I standtruthfully yours.HOWARD GUTNICK, ’69Letters to the editor must besigned, although names may bewithheld by request. The Ma¬roon reserves the right to con¬dense without altering mean-ig. Typed copy must be sub¬mitted by 11 a.m. of the daybefore publication.1 Co,nJl3U>t *'M 1645 E. 55th STREET W.2 CHICAGO. ILL. 60615 gg2; Phone: FA 4-1651 'm! John Ford’sTHE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCEJohn Wayne, Jimmy Stewart, Lee Msrvin, and Vera Miles in Ford’s nostalgic look at the past, 9:15 only. 754 Cobb Hall. Butcome early for YOUNG MR. LINCOLN at 7:15. Doc FilmsFRANZ KAFKA’S“This show will makemusical history!”- Barry Salins, Composer “The dialogue sparkleswith wit!”-- Jonathan Ward, Author “SPECTACULAR!!!”- - Ken Pierce, DirectorAMERKAAN ORIGNAL MUSICAL!!! THE 1968 BLACKFRIARS SMACH!THURSDAY! FRIDAY! SATURDAY!at 8:3011!nooTiiiv.I'zisvinU yd bsn>-T bnr .’YbbiwTlootoe T3!up:vrnmu? srtT tuorieuifi bdi lo rMandel Hall57th & University Tickets: $2.50, $2.00with 50< Student Discount Reservations:Mandel Hall Box OfficeMI-3-0800, Ext. 3580April 30, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5Police Blockade Civic Center, Violence ResultsContinued from Page 1College Wayne C. Booth and hiswife, who were contacted by oneof the students, Robert Siska, 71,at about 4:40 a.m.“I was shocked to see policebeating people who were obeyingdirections and trying to leave, tosee a girl kicked by a sergeantwhile she was on the floor of acell, to see police denying prison¬ers of their rights,” said RobinKaufman, a graduate student insocial sciences and former newseditor of The Maroon, who wasarrested while standing at Clarkand Washington Streets.According to Clark Kissinger,chairman of the April March Com¬mittee composed of many peacegroups, problems started whenmost demonstrators were not ableto hear announcements that therewould be no speeches at the civiccenter plaza, as had originallybeen planned. Park dept, employ¬ees had refused to install soundequipment for which the Mobiliza¬tion Committee had contracted.Legal SettlementThe changes in plans had comeas a result of a legal settlement between the parade committee andthe city, which had tried to banthe peace parade because it wouldhave conflicted with a “LoyaltyDay” parade of veterans groupsthe same day.Kissinger said that when thefirst marchers reached the plaza,they found the main plaza ropedoff. so that workmen could repairthe pavement.Kissinger said he had seen agroup of Shriners with motorcyclesbeing photographed on the plazaSaturday morning, and no sign ofworkmen at that time. PoKemp-ner said he did see a small groupof workmen on the plaza, but “itdidn’t look as if the plaza reallyneeded repairs,” he said.The demonstrators were forcedto march around on the 12-footwide sidewalk surrounding theplaza.Kissinger RebuffedKissinger said he repeatedlytried to persuade city Police Com¬missioner James Conlisk to permitmarchers onto the main plaza, butwas rebuffed. As the crowd grew, a fewmarchers broke through the ropebarriers and went onto the mainplaza. Arrests reportedly startedat this point.Soon policemen formed lines andproceeded to run into clumps ofdemonstrators who were standingnear the corners of the plaza.Brutality ChargedA1 Shpuntoff, 71, said he hadleft the plaza and was looking fora place to eat on State St. whena 30-man police wedge ran upThe BulletinCALENDAR items should be typed onforms available in The Maroon Office,Ida Noyes 303, and submitted two daysbefore publication. They appear onlyonce.GENERAL NOTICES should be submittedin typewritten form two days beforepublication. They may appear a maximumof twice on request.RECRUITING VISITS are scheduled bythe Office of Career Counseling andPlacement, Reynolds Club 200, with repre¬sentatives of recruiting firms at thatlocation.NEWS BRIEFS are composed by TheMaroon Staff.CALENDAR OF EVENTSTuesday, April 30FILMS: (Doc Films), "Young Mr. Lincoln"and "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance."Cobb, 7:15 and 9:15 p.m., 75 cents.MEETING: (Chicago Science Fiction So¬ciety), Ida Noyes, sun parlor, 7:30 p.m.SPEBSQSA: (The Society for the Preserva¬tion and Encouragement of BarbershopQuartet Singing in America). WoodlawnResidence, 5544 S. Woodlawn, 7:30 p.m.SEMINAR: (Biophysics), "Studies on theSex Factor in E. Coli," David Freifelder,Brandeis University. Ricketts North 1,2:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Biochemistry), "Absorption andOptical Activity as a Probe for the Struc¬ture of Biological Macromolecules," DanW. Urry, Professorial Lecturer In Bio¬chemistry. Abbott 324, 3 p.m.SEMINAR: (Committee on Southern AsianStudies), North Indian Music III, UstadGhulamhusain Khan and Party. FosterLounge, 8 p.m.FOLK DANCING: Assembly Hall, Interna¬tional House, 8 p.m.LECTURE: (Committee on Social Thought),"Grounds of Knowledge and Discovery,"Michael Polanyi, F.R.S., Merton College,Oxford. Social Science 122, 8 p.m.COLLOQUIUM: (James Franck Institute),"Anomalous Properties of Pure and DopedEuropium Chalcogenides," S. von Molnar,I.B.M. Watson Laboratories, New York.Research Institutes 480, 4:15 p.m.SEMINAR: (Microbiology Club), "ViralProducts from Productive and AbortiveInfection with Herpes Virus," Susan Spring,Microbiology. Ricketts North 1, 4:30 p.m.Wednesday, May 1DISCUSSION: (VISA), "Changing MentalHealth Legislation in Illinois," VISA mem¬bers and interested students. ReynoldsClub South Lounge, 4 p.m.CONCERT: (Musical Society), Brahms "Trioin A Minor, opus 114," Jannon Fuchs(clarinet), Jim Spikes (piano), Bill Cer-nota (cello). Mandel Hall, 12:30 p.m. Free.FILMS: (Doc Films), "The Pleasure Gar¬dens" and "Two Weeks in Another Town,"experimental films. Cobb, 7:15 and 9 p.m.75 cents.LECTURE: (School of Business InvitationalSeries), C. Lee Walton, Management Con¬sultant, McKinsey and Company. BusinessEast 103, 1 p.m. LECTURE: (Biochemistry), "The Biosyn¬thesis of Unsaturated Fatty Acids in E.Coli," Leon Dass, National Institutes ofHealth. Abbott 101, 4 p.m.MEETING: (SVCG and SDS); To discussprotests of police brutality at Saturday'smarch. Ida Noyes East Lounge, 7:30 p.m.COUNTRY DANCERS: Dances from theBritish Isles and Scandinavia, Ida NoyesDance Room, 8 p.m.Thursday, May 2CONCERT: (FOTA), Madrigal Concert. SwiftPatio, 12 noon. (Originally scheduled forTuesday.)PLAY-READING: (University Theater), " 'IRise in Flames' Cried the Phoenix," byTennessee Williams. Blue Gargoyle, 9:30p.m.LECTURE: (Biochemistry), Dan W. Urry.See Tuesday's listing,LECTURE: (Middle Eastern Center), "Con¬flicts and Tensions in Islamic Jurisprud¬ence: Authoritarianism and Libralism,"N.J. Coulson. Law School Seminar RoomD, 3:30 p.m.COLLEGE FACULTY MEETING: QuantrellHall, 4 p.m.FILMS: (B-J Cinema), "Daybreak Express,"Help! My Snowman's Burning Down,""Very Nice, Very Nice," and "BoiledEgg." Judson Dining Room, 8:30 p.m.REHEARSAL: UC Concert Band. Lab School,Belfield 244, 5 p.m.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: Requests andInstruction. Hillel House, 7:30 p.m.LECTURE: (Advanced Genetics), "Pharma-chological Tools in the Study of BrainChemistry and Behavior," Daniel X. Freed¬man, Department of Psychiatry. Ricketts7, 4 p.m.LECTURE: (Chemistry), "Ring Whzzers andOther Fluxional Organometallic Molecules,"Kent 107, 8:15 p.m.Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specificationsAlso tables and charts.10 yrs. exp,MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. RECRUITING VISITSTeaching(For appointments, call Ext 3279.)MAY 2 & 3: A representative of the Cityof Chicago TEACHER CORPS Programwill interview interested persons in thisoffice, Career Counseling and Placement,Reynolds Club, Room 200. They are seek¬ing June graduates who have not majoredin the field of education, but who wouldnow like to teach disadvantaged children.The TEACHER CORPS combines profes¬sional training with service in schools indisadvantaged areas.NEWS BRIEFSTwenty-seven women in the College of theUniversity of Chicago have been electedto membership in Nu Pi Sigma, the Uni¬versity's honor society for third and fourthyear women students.PIZZAPLATTERPizza, Fried Chicken,Italian FoodsCompare the Price!1460 E. 53rd StreetMl 3-2800 ti State toward Randolph, clubbingpeople on the sidewalk.“I was hit on the back, knockeddown, then hit on the head as Itried to get up,” Shpuntoff said.After managing to get acrossState Street, and resting, Shpun¬toff was put in a cab by a by¬stander and taken to Wesley Mem¬orial Hospital, 250 E. Superior.There, after he and four otherswere treated, police came in, al¬legedly to question them. Aftersome delay, they arrested the five for “mob action,” and took themto the 11th and State St. policelockup.One of those with Shpuntoff wasa shopper who had been on thestreet at the wrong time, Shpun¬toff said.Although Mark Haller, residenthead of Thompson House, was unsuccessful in an attempt to preventShpuntoff and the others at thehospital from being taken to thepolice station, none of them wasbooked.OVER 150,000 COPIES SOLDStill the most importantand influential statementof dissent on Vietnam,on American foreign policy,and on the -this nationis moving.Cloth $4.95; VintageBook paperback $1.95Now at your bookstoreRANDOM HOUSESend TheMaroonHome!John Ford’slYOUNG MR. LINCOLNHenry Fonda as Lincoln before politics. The film Eisenstein said he would have liked to make. Tonight at 7:15 only. 75<tCobb Hall, and then stay for THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCE. Another Doc Films double feature! COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTGREEK SALADS7100 S. Yates Free Parking6 THE CHICAGO MAROON April 30, 1968MAROON SPORTSTennis Team VictoriesBy JERRY LAPIDUSEditorial AssistantThe University tennis quadnotched its sixth victory againstonly a single loss Friday bysmashing Marquette University 7-2at home.In a match which Coach BillMoyle called “the best the team’splayed all year,” the netters sweptall but the fifth singles match andthen went on to completely humil¬iate Marquette by taking two ofthe three doubles matches. Moylewas especially happy with the per¬formance of the doubles teams andcommented that this apparent im¬provement indicates that the teamwill “have much more depth” inthe future.Chicago took all their victoriesin only two sets and forced thevisitors to three before droppingthe first one. Tom McCroskey atfirst singles led off with a 8-6, 6-1triumph; following were Dick Poz-en, 6-3, 6-3, Mike Koch-Weser, 6 4,6-2, and Don Mars, 7-5, 7-5.Bruce Simmons suffered the onlysingles loss, taking the first set 6-4but dropping the second and third,6-4, 6-3. Mike Koss then scored thematch-winning fifth victory in along 6-3, 10-8 contest.In doubles McCroskey and Pozenwon their match easily 6-2, 6-l;theMars and Koch-Weser team had nomore trouble in their 6-3, 6-2 win.But Simmons and Earl Evteen hadtrouble with their Marquette oppo¬nents and lost the Maroons’ second,6-2, 6-0.This afternoon the Universitynetters will oppose George Wil¬liams College at Downers Grove,Illinois.BaseballChicago was not quite so lucky,however, on the baseball field.Playing all away games as theywill throughout the season due tothe non-completion of new StaggField, the teams lost 18-6 to theUniversity of Illinois (Circle Cam¬pus) and dropped both ends of adouble-header to Lake Forest.In the first contest on Thursday,UIC jumped on Chicago mound aceDennis Cullen for nine runs in thefirst inning. The Maroons werenever quite able to recover, and re¬lievers Eric Furtkamp and John Ryan were both unable to stop thehome squad. Chicago wound upwith nine hits but committed fivecostly errors, while UIC had 19hits and committed only threeerrors..No University players were ableto hit consistently against Illinoispitching, although Jim Stankewitzconnected for two singles and Cul¬len managed a clean triple.A six-run fourth inning led tothe LF victory in the first game onSaturday. Although the Forestershad only nine hits off Chicago hurl-er Ryan, they managed to com¬bine these with five walks andthree University errors and to¬taled ten runs against six for Chi¬cago.The University’s sextet came ona total of ten hits including doublesby “Wink” Pearson and Furtkamp,a triple by Tom Zeason, and twinsingles by Jim Bartlett.Pearson put in a fine perform¬ance in starting and finishing hisfirst game on the mound in thesecond contest but still lost an 8-4decision. He allowed only three hitsand struck out ten LF batters; tenwalks, however, plus untimely Ma¬roon errors allowed the homesquad to score three runs in thesecond and fourth innings and addsingle scores in the first and sixth.Roger Vice, Furtkamp, andBartlett picked up Chicago’s threehits but the team was unable tocapitalize on them and scored twoin each of the first and seventhinnings.The University team will attemptto get back into the groove witha return match against UIC at theCircle Campus this afternoon.OthersChicago’s other two varsitysquads will return to regular ac¬tion today as the gold teams playa dual match against ChicagoState College and the Illinois In¬stitute of Technology at the Mid¬west Country Club while the tracksquad faces Bradley University atElmhurst, Ill.Intramural action continues thisweek with competition in the soft-ball leagues and in the table ten¬nis, horseshoe, and squash tourna¬ment. Information will be releasedsoon concerning the IM bowlingtournament.The University of ChicagoROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Woodlawn AvenueMAY 5SUNDAY AFTERNOON at 3.30BUDAVAR1TE DEUM SAMUEL A. BELL“BUY SHELL FROM BELL’’SINCE 1926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 PETITION FOR A RESPONSIBLE UNIVERSITYThe death of Martin Luther King, and the ghetto's response, have made many of us more awareof the reality of racism; not to act is to perpetuate it.As th«> Kerner Report has shown, American institutions, educational, governmental and business,have done little to eradicate the causes of racism in our society. In fact, they have most often acted toperpetuate and aggravate them. Educationally, the University of Chicago has ignored these problems. Andin its policies of expansion and self-preservation it has deprived community residents of both their homesand management of their own affairs.The white members of the University, students and faculty alike, are often unconcerned or un¬conscious of these consequences. But we can no longer allow the University's interests to be so narrowlydefined as to reject the demands of the Black community. We, as whites, must find it to our own im¬mediate and long-range advantage to take the first steps toward the creation of a more responsible andrepresentative university community — a community which embodies those basic human values so oftenexpressed, but, as the recent rebellions have shown, never realized.As students and faculty our greatest strength lies in our power to remake our universities. This iswhere we can most readily begin to change the fundamentally racist character of our society. The follow¬ing proposals only begin to do this.A. HOUSING1. The university should recognize the injustice of the use of its considerablepower and resources to remove its neighbors. Instead it should admit to a largersocial responsibility. We demand that the University cease all destruction ofhousing in Hyde Park and Woodlawn until it has provided adequate substitutehousing in the immediate vicinity at the same or lower prices for Universityemployees, community residents, faculty and students.2. The University should abandon all secrecy in its arrangement of rede¬velopment plans for Woodlawn and adjacent poor areas, and make its plans,formal and informal, open to the public at large, and to the residents of Wood¬lawn in particular.3. All further plans must be made in cooperation with and ultimately underthe control of the people of the community. This means abandoning the pretensethat secret deals with The Woodlawn Organization represent real communityparticipation.4. Instead of a student village conceived as a-dormitoried fortress, the Uni¬versity should build low-cost apartments open on an equal basis to urban re¬newal victims, students, faculty and employees. The other facilities planned forthe village, such as the Student Union, should remain a part of the plans.B. ENROLLMENT1. The education of white students must be morally bankrupt, if theireducational institutions do not seek to combat the sources of racism in America.Ideals are meaningless in a vacuum. The University of Chicago should aggres¬sively seek out Black students to comprise approximately 20% of incomingfreshman classes. Each year, this would increase by 5% the enrollment of Blackstudents in the College as a whole, and in four years would make the College20% Black. Because the University has debts particularly to the surroundingBlack community and the Chicago area, this should be the focus of its recruitingefforts. To enable these students to attend the University, adequate scholarshipsshould be provided.2. To accompany this plan, pre-freshman summer institutes or equivalentprograms should be established to compensate for the poor education givenmany young Black people.C. CURRICULUM1. White students suffer from the narrowness of an education which ignoresthe role that Black America has played in the development of this country. Wemust not remain ignorant of either the contribution of Black America to Americanculture or the conditions of white racism which both oppress black people anddistort for all of us the values of this society. The history and culture of BlackAmerica should be included in presently required courses in the fields of SocialSciences and Humanities.2. In all appropriate fields, courses on Afro-American history, culture andsociety should be made available. The University should hire competent facultyto teach these courses.D. FACILITIESUniversity facilities should be open to the community, and programs bedeveloped to this end with the help of the residents of Hyde Park and Wood¬lawn. As a first step, there should be no requirement of University identificationat Ida Noyes and Bartlett Gymnasium.We call for the Council of the Faculty Senate to hold an emergency meetingand petition the following officials to make clear their response to these demandsat an open meeting, to be held by Tuesday, 7 May. The meeting must be heldat this early date because of the proximity of the end of the school year. The- remainder of the school year must be spent in finding ways to implement theabove proposals.Zoltan Kodaly Health Professions Resistance UnionMASS IN F MINORAnton Bruckner(First Chicago Performance) The April 27th Peace MarchWHAT HAPPENED? UNIVERSITY THEATRE PRESENTSTHE IMPORTANCE1EARNEST'RICHARD VIKSTROM,Director of Chapel MusicTHE ROCKEFELLERCHAPEL CHOIRwith 50 members ofTHE CHICAGO SYMPHONYORCHESTRAEDWARD MONDEL LO,organistPeggy Smith, sopranoPhyllis Unosawa,contraltoRobert Bowker, tenorHenri Noel, baritone Discussion on police brutalityTHURSDAY MAY 2, 4:00 P.M. Billings Hospital, P-117All InvitedAMERIKATickets: $2.50 for students of allcolleges and universities$3.00 UC Faculty/Staff$3.50 General Admission$4.50 Reserved SeatsOn Sale at: U. of C. Bookstore,5802 Ellis AvenueWoodworth’s Bookstore,1311 E. 57th StreetCooley’s Candles,521 I Harper AvenueTicket Central at 2 12 N. Michiganandatall Montgomery Ward Stores Opening Night SpecialKRAUT AMERIKANGERMAN CHOCOLATE CAKEIntermission Extra Dame KuchenTHE HUTCHINSON GALLERYApril 30, 1968 THE CHICAGO MAROON 7Maroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, faculty,and staff: 50 cents per line, 40 cents perline repeat. For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents per line re¬peat. Count 35 characters and spacesper line.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail with pay¬ment to The Chicago Maroon BusinessOffice, Room 304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212E. 59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.No Ads will be taken over the phone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIED ADSFOR TUESDAY MUST BE IN BY FRI¬DAY. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS FOR FRI¬DAY MUST BE IN BY WEDNESDAY.NO EXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO 3P.M. DAILY.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: PhoneMidway 3-0800, Ext. 3266.APARTMENTS TO SHAREthe Quarter. Call 324-7637.WANT ONE GIRL to share fully furnished5 room apt. w/one other, June-Oct. Large,elegant room w/unusual features. Ideal loca¬tion. Call evngs.: 324-3623,2 Male Grads NEED 2 ROOMMATES, Sum¬mer &/or Aut. Have huge turn. apt. in So.Shore. $48/month. 324-2671WANT 1 or 2 FEMALE ROOMMATES forsummer and/or next year to share 6 roomapt. Own bedroom(s). Kimbark 8. 54th. 363-7682.WANTEDLaw Prof. & family seek comfortable, furn.,2 or 3 bedroom air cond. (at least part.)apt. for 1st or last 10 days of June. Wifarrange fair payment. Contact RayParnas, 116 Virginia, Fayetteville, Arkansas-72701, with details.If you NEED 2 ROOMMATES (MALE) forsummer & next year or have an apartmentavailable in June for 2, call Mike or Jeffat 752-9511. Hyde Park only..eaving your car HERE this summer? Will>ay for minimal use. 648-4119.RIDE WANTED: Will share driving andexpenses to Northwest coast to arrive Mayfirstish. Phone Karl Simon. 643-5649.MALE OR FEMALE STUDENT to do eve¬ning babysitting and dinner dishes in ex¬change for room and board starting now orin Summer Quarter. Call Cohn at FA 4-0329.CAMPAIGNERS for KENNEDY in Indiana.Call BU 8-6610, Ext. 3129.MORE SUBLETSSUMMER SUBLET. Fully Furn. 6 roomAPT. 1 block f. campus. Dishwasher. Study.3orch. Yard. Garage. Reasonable. 324-8592.June 15-Sept. A-Vi LARGE ROOMS. 55th 8.ngleside, $125/mo. Couple Pref. 493-6831,■venings. FURNISHED 6 ROOM APT. 2 baths. 5427S. Blackstone. 363-5780. | Why is Uncle Jacob stiff5? See AMERIKA.AGAIN IN PRINT! ! !"The Synthesis & Extractions of OrganicPsychedelics." Contains detailed procedurefor sythesizing LSD, DMT, Psilocybin, Psilo-sin, Mescalline, Tetrahydrocannabinol, ex¬tractions of cannabis, Peyote, oloiugui, morn¬ing glory seeds and many more. Send $1.35to:Karma Grafics and Trading Co.Box 3826Chicago, Illinois 60654DEALERS INQUIREAPT. available June 15-September. 3-4 bed¬rooms, furnished, near 58th 8. Kenwood.684-0579.Summer Sublet. LARGE, 1 BEDROOM APT.,fully furnished, Lakeview, Doorman. $150.Call 288-0790.SUBLET: 2 Vi ROOM FURNISHED APT.June-Sepf. $116. Call 684-2134.June-Sept. at 5423 Dorchester, 4 ROOMS.FURNISHED, includes queen-size bed andbeautiful refrig. $105/mo. Will bargain. 655-0672 or leave message at Ml 3-6000, Room336. What is Therese doing between the sheets?See AMERIKA.Decadence spreads like fire! In AMERIKA,May 2, 3, 4.June 10-Oct. 1, SPACIOUS, completely fur¬nished, 3 bedrooms, 5810 S. Harper, 752-7689. Can AMERIKA be salvaged—Tune in May10th.SUMMER SUBLET at 56th 8, University, 2girls, 924-9213. The above is not an ad for Blackfriars.WANTED: Tuba player to play with well-known banjo band, 1 or 2 nights per week.Pay scale. 825-5283.SUMMER SUBLET. Large, 1 bedroom APT.Furnished, good location. 363-2963.June 15-Sept. 15. Completely furnished, 2 bed¬room APT., South Shore, $135. 375-9425. Eve¬nings. What's going on inside the elevator?See AMERIKA, May 2, 3, 4.WHO OWNS TONY VARGAS?AIR CONDITIONED 5 room apartment tosublet June to Sept. $200. 324-1120.UNKNOWN MAKE OFFICE MODEL TYPE¬WRITER. $25.00. Will Bargain. Call Ext.3269. — Ask for Steve.SUMMER SUBLET. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths$120/month. Greenwood nr. 52nd. 752-7669.Say no more.APT. TO SUBLET. 53rd 8. Dorchester. Juneto Sept. Call 955-0817 after 10 P.M."It is time now to turn with all the purposeat our command to the major unfinishedbusiness of this nation. It is time to adopt jstrategies for action that will produce quickand visible progress. It is time to makegood the promises of American democracyto all citizens." From the REPORT OFTHE NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMISSIONON CIVIL DISORDERS.SUBLET. Fully furn. 6 rm. apt. Porch, tree,1 blk. f. Campus. June 10-Sept. 15. Reason¬able. 684-3839.1 THREE ROOM ENGLISH BASEMENT. Sub-! let til Sept. Exc. South Shore location, nearbut. A super-pad. $81.50. Call 324-6259 and| keep trying.Somebody send Mayor Daley a copy .. .SUBLET 7/1/68 to 6/15/69—6 rooms, com¬plete furnished, 2 baths, wshr., dryr., aircond., bedrm., nice yard. Ideal location.Pref. fac. or grad couple w/o or - 1 kids.$190/mo. plus deposit. HY 3-8099, evenings. What KIND of exotic pictures?See AMERIKA, May 2, 3, 4.IS AMERIKA SPECIAL?Come to the HUTCH GALLERY and see.ESCAPE CHICAGO SRH — JHS: Why not stay young?Go with Marco Polo Travel. 288-5944. THE MAGICIANEven Brandeis admits they had all the easy ]questions.EUROPE: 13 countries including Spain andYugoslavia, 50 days, all hotel, transportation,3 meals daily—a very special economy tourusing delightful inns and guesthouses insteadof the commercial budget hotels that mosteconomy tours use. $785. Transatlantic jetnot included. Call Dick at RO 4-6264. Can clean GENE stop the War Machine?May 10.Doesn't GENE know the secret of deliveringspeeches yet? — DYNAMISM — that's theanswer — not the historical/political/socio¬graphic approach in the tone of a WesternCiv. Lecture.FOR SALELuggage racks for VW's and Sports Cars.Suitcase type/$6.00 each. Call GA 4-1184. Does it only SOUND like a cat house?AMERIKA, May 2, 3, 4. What was so memorable about the BlueGoose Inn? See AMERIKA.DAVID SCHOENBRUNLAUGHING GAS Is A Gas. Complete in¬structions for producing it from commonhousehold things. SI .00, Box 79521, SanfordStation, Los Angeles 90005, Calif.KAFKA AND KRAUTFrom THE NEW JOURNAL:Alan Simpson arrived at Vassar in 1964from Chicago. Witty and urbane, Simpsonat 55 speaks with an English accent 22years after leaving England. He's a wryman who once told a startled alumnaegroup, "When Vassar women are middle-aged they should have something better todo than play bridge and fornicate." A res¬pected historian, Simpson had been an ef¬fective dean at the University of Chicago,but he came to Vassar tired of universitiesand their emphasis on professional scholar¬ship. "He'd had it with Chicago," a friendremembers.BS reaction to FOTA — The continentalBANDERSNATCH on Friday night.ANDY WARHOL will debate LYNDA BIRDJOHNSON on the subject "A BeautifulAmerica" — May 10th.Some of me comes out better in type, Andsome of him understands that way.Thank you for all the inquiries about whathappened to "ESCAPES, PART II," on lastFriday. They WILL appear this week, Editorsand other Hip Persons not withstanding. 6 pairs nylons for 6 minutes of work. KIMHOSIERY, Box 571, Taft, California 93268."He took off his pants so we could ..What's AMERIKA coming to? Find out at8:30 on May 2, 3, 4.CO-OP CONSIGNMENTS held over 1 yearsubject to Vi price cut, over 2 years, be¬come the property of the CO-OP.Bavarian Bagels? Nope.German Chocolate Cake.T. SHUTKIN IS A SUPER DELIVERY BOYFirst SOUTH SIDE SHOWING. David Schoen-brun's film, "Vietnam:. How Did We GetIn? How Can We Get Out?" Schoenbrun,journalist-historian, was an eye wit.ness to the history of Vietnam since WorldWar II, when Ho Chi Minh was an ally ofthe U.S. As CBS correspondent (for 15years), he was the only American corres¬pondent to witness the defeat of France atDien Bien Phu and was present at theGeneva Conference in 1954. See this important film at the Blue Gargoyle, May 1 or 2at 8 or 9:15. Also "Who Owns Tony Vargas," and "The Magician." Admission 75cProfit to CADRE.FESTIVAL OF RECREATIONAL ARTSBegins May 1stCo-ed Swimming nightly, Ida NoyesALL FREE!Going to Indiana? See AMERIKA first!Thursday, May 2.Free CO-OP SERVICES — Babysitting, jobs,rides.FOREIGN CAR HOSPITAL is here to serv¬ice your little car or sell you one. Call forWHAT IS YOUR STANDARD FOR LIVING? , APP°intmen*- Ml 3-3113.RENTFOUR ROOM APT. Avail in May. U. C.Married Student Housing. $99/month. 820E. 61st Street. 324-6597.CONDOMINIUM APT. AT HYDE PARK 8,55th. 6 8. 7 ROOMS. 2 baths. Price $205.008. UP. DO 3-6842.WORKFULL-TIME WAITRESS. Must be able towork lunches.Good tips. Pleasant work. Goodmusic. COURT HOUSE RESTAURANT. 5211S. Harper.WAITRESS WANTED. Full or part-timeweekends. APPLY IN PERSON or call 643—6131-32. 1962 RAMBLER CLASSIC, 4 door, red-white,radio, new tires. Must sell quickly. $150 orbest offer. Call Bob at 643-8948 or 324-1633.CAMERA. 35 mm. f 2.8 lens, built-in light-meter, viewfinder (not a reflex), with case.About $30. PHIL at HY 3-3982.FURNITURE: Must Be Sold by May 1st—Double bed (with box springs, etc.) —$20Couch—converts to single bed $152 Armchairs, each for $5CALL 493-0144, Evenings.1964 CHEVY II ST WGN. Radio, heater; ww,exc. cond. 493-5472.BEAUTIFUL dbl. bed, chest, table, 3 gallonsof Benj. Moore Paint. 955-3049.RADIO STATIONSTEACHERS WANTEDSouthwest, Entire West and Alaska Areas |Salaries $5600 8. UP.Free Registration.SOUTHWEST TEACHERS AGENCY1303 Central Ave. NEAlbuquerque, New Mexico—87106DANCEBEAUX ARTS MASQUERADE BALLMay 3 at 8:30, Ida NoyesMAHOGANY HALL BLUES BANDFREE TICKETS available atReynolds Club Desk.Students and Faculty.ROOM FOR RENTGroovy little room available NOW for groovyroommate. (Male, ANY SIZE). Call Scott at324-3111.HORSEBACK RIDING SCHOOL WHPK FM 88, 3, U. C.'s voice to the world.We go on at 4:30 P.M. (earlier on week¬ends)—with folk-rock and/or R 8, B untilnews at 7. Classical music and commentaryfollow at about 7:25, then news again at 10,then jazz or, on weekends, the undergroundsound. We'll have a complete program guideout as soon as we have enough ads for it.WHPK is student-operated; new memberswelcome, no experience required. Call Ml3-0800, Ext. 3588. Who owns Tony Vargas?The Magician?David Schoenbrun on Viet-nam?THE BLUE GARGOYLEMay I & 2,9 and 9:15 P.M.Admission 75c Profit to CADRE Writer's Workshop (PL 2-8377)Should slaves elect their masters? May 10.How did Brunelda make Karl feel at home?SEE AMERIKA."I just got into town and all I hear is shitabout somebody planning to rip off some¬body else."DEADLINES IS DEADLINES. SLF.TAB: HAPPY ANNIVERSARY!I LOVE YOU!MARRY ME? TABJ. H.: I'm right where I've always been.D. Q.CAMPAIGN FOR KENNEDY IN INDIANA!Call BU 8-6610, Ext. 3129.Call for information about NEW and USEDHI-FI EQUIPMENT FOR SALE. 256-4785after 7 P.M.MARCH VOLVO SALES topped by 28% theprevious record set in the same month lastyear. March sales also topped February 14%.EAT ONLY AT AHMAD'S10,000 PERSIANS CAN'T BE WRONG"If you need the services of the MaroonBusiness Staff this summer, try Matala",Crete; Venice, California; or Tangiers."Enough jokes about the Business Staff —in jokes are a bore — isn't there anyoneelse on this campus with a sense of humor?What is Karl's new position?See AMERIKA, May 2, 3, 4.HURRAH, HURRAY, The First of May,Outside f starts today!— Courtesy of Greg and PaulaDoes RFK need LOVE'S BODY? May 10.We have some madrigals to sing for youat 12 NOON on Thursday, May 2, on SwiftPatio. FOTA.Can the DEMOCRATIC PARTY bring PEACEAND FREEDOM? Ask Mario Savio — May10.PERSONALSLong may our land be brightWith Freedom's holy light. . .SCHOOL owned and operated by Hyde Parkgroup for superior instruction. For begin¬ners and advanced. Jumping and Dressage.Also, Horses Boarded. Telephon Ml 3-0800,Ext. 3247.YOGAExercises, concentration and meditation liftsconsciousness beyond existential hope anddespair to tranquility and ecstasy. Yogi SriNerode. DO 3-0155.FREE CONCERTMUSICAL SOCIETYBrahms Trio Opus No. 114Wednesday, May 1Mandell Hall 12:30 P.M.SUBLETSublet with option to renew Oct. 1. ONEGIGANTIC ROOM in basement. Completekitchen. Available June 15. $75/mo. In SouthShore. Campus Bus Stop on corner. MU4-5949, evenings. Don't miss the grooviest 45 cut in years! ! !Done by Cab Driver "Little" Mack Sim¬mons and his family. On side one is ATribute to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,subtitled "STOP LOOTING AND RIOTING".On the other side is "GETTIN' OUT OFTHE GHETTO." The only way you can hearthe songs, at this printing, is to get a ridein a cab driven by "Little" Mack. . .ON THURSDAY EVENING, May 2 at 8P.M., in the Ida Noyes Library (FREE! ! !)MUSIC will be played by the Stan Teplick —Todd Capp — Chuck Sher — Douglas Ewart— Michael Cooper — SOUL — JAZZ —ROCK — FOLK (wait, not much FOLK) —LOUD — SOFT — NOISE — SILENCE —FAST — SLOW — COOL — HIP — NEOP¬SYCHEDELIC SOUND complete with bells,drums, piano, horn, cymbals — eratic andstrange, disfunctional and beautiful. Don'tmiss it! ! !e. pluribus yum-yumAMERIKA SPECIALMADRIGAL CONCERT postponed to Thurs¬day, May 2. We sing at 12 NOON on SWIFTPatio. FOTA.Who's disturbing who's peace? See AMERI¬KA.ML — If a slum kid waxed philosophical,would he stay, or leave, or fight?"THE BANDERSNATCH — I can say nomore" SAMUEL A. BELL“BUY SHELL FROM BELL”SINCE 1926PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200MOST COMPLETE PHOTOAND HOBBY STORE ON ■THE SOUTH SIDEMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259Student DiscountsGROUPStud/ {roup or 21 students, sev¬eral research advisors will goon camping tour in NepaleseHimalayas for 90 days startingmid-January 1969 aiming to doresearch in Earth Science,Biological and MeteorologicalFields.FOR FULL INFORMATIONWRITE TO ORGANIZER;R. Rendale Leathern of Huc-klyberry Hill, R.F.D. #|Lincoln, Mass. or SpecialTours and Travel, Inc. 6 No.Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. ’60602 ’ JOHN MARTIN —room, call me. SA. I Will it make any real difference which ofthese clowns we elect PRESIDENT?My Sincere Thanks to all the BeautifulPeople in the Maroon Business Office forthe Many Kindnesses extended to me.Much luv,PAUL AND RICCan we STOP the war machine?Since the Maroon Business Office ComputerDating Process was declared legally obsceneand therefore unprintable in the Maroon,we are prepared to inaugurate (next Tues¬day) a Personal Problems Clinic. We willformally welcome all problems and ques¬tions — send them to Ida Noyes Hall, Room304. Naturally we'll try to answer ALLquestions especially the obviously controver¬sial and ridiculous. No name if you desire.The Maroon Editorial Staff hereby disasso¬ciates themselves from any connection, oralor otherwise, with this project. We will doour best to help, with the help of our staffof doctors, lawyers, and psychiatrists, plusour collection of 27 8x10 color glossy photo¬graphs with circles and arrows and aparagraph on the back of each one explain¬ing what each one is . . .If you still want theShould we clean for Gene, lobby for Bobby,or WHAT? May 10.FoodDrinkPeople311 E. 23rd Street2 blocks W. of McCormick PlaceTelephone: 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed SundaysParty facilities to 400J&merfc Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service7646 S. Stony Island 734-6393Ml 3-4020Wjitzie i 3toner Si, op“FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS”I 308 EAST 53RD STREET CHICAGO. ILLINOIS 606 I 5FOTA’s S&rtdFREE TICKETSAvailable at Reynolds ClubDesk for students and faculty.Tape Recorder Rental ServiceWollensack-Martel-Panasonic-Portables and Office UnitsAll First Class like new EquipmentTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 S. ELLIS AVE.THE CHICAGO MAROON April 30, 1968