THE CHICAGO MAROONMaroon — DAVID TRAVISCHIEF EXECUTIVE: Provost -nd President-designate Edward H. Levi relaxes in his office and discusses plans for his upcom¬ing inauguration.SDS Plans Dinner ProtestPlans for an inaugural banquet at theConrad Hilton which 2,000 supporters of theUniversity and public figures are expectedto attend have evoked protests from stu¬dents on the left.Members of a committee connected withStudents for a Democratic Society (SDS)have called a meeting for 8 p.m. Tues¬day in the Blue Gargoyle coffee house,57th and University, to discuss plans for ademonstration at the hotel during the din¬ner Wednesday evening.Those invited to the banquet include Uni¬versity trustees, members of all the vis¬iting committees for the various units ofthe University, city and state officials,some national political figures, and severalstudents. /McGeorge Bundy, former adviser toPresidents Kennedy and Johnson afid nowPresident of the Ford Foundation/will bemain speaker.The University is understood to have is¬sued invitations to the dinner last April,and to have planned the guest list in keep¬ing with the traditions for such events setin past inaugurations. “This banquet is no tame social gather¬ing. It is the University cashing in on itslong-term commitments to these powerfulmen and the interests they regard as im¬portant,” commented Len Handelsman, agraduate student in sociology.“The interests of the men at this dinnerhave become the interests of the univer¬sity—to build and sponsor certain kinds ofconstruction and research projects in theuniversity, to make it necessary to destroylow-rent housing in Hyde Park-Woodlawn.”Tentative plans for the protest, whichwill coincide with the dinner at> 6 p.m.Wednesday, call for a picket line in frontof the Hilton and verbal protest inside thedinner. Students outside will stage guer¬rilla theater impersonations of the dinnerguests to expose their corporate and mili¬tary ties.SDS leaders planning the meeting em¬phasized that plans for the demonstrationare still tentative and subject to change bythe open meeting.Handelsman called for students not to letthis event pass without registering theiropposition to the university’s alliance with these powers. “The dinner is crucial to theuniversity. We can’t let it happen withoutmaking strong protest to what is happen¬ing inside the Hilton,” Handelsman as¬serted.“It’s no accident that only a token hand¬ful of students are invited to that dinner,”said Sally Yagol of SDS. “We had no voicewhatsoever in choosing Levi as the presi¬dent and he is not responsible to the stu¬dent body in the slightest degree.”Prominent guests among the 2000 invitedincluded seven members of the Rockefellerfamily; Avery Brundage, chairman of theU.S. Olympic Committee, who expelled twoblack members of the Olympic team forgiving a black power salute; and MayorRichard Daley.Daley has notified the University that hewill not attend.In spite of the planned SDS demonstra¬tion, no special security precautions areplanned. Director of security at the Hilton,Richard Kamper, said, “We’ve had peoplelike Ted Kennedy in here before and nospecial precautions were made.” Edward H. Levi will be formally in¬augurated as President of the Universityat a special convocation at RockefellerCnapel Thursday. The ceremony will cli¬max a week of events connected with theinauguration.These events include a dinner for 2,000 atthe Conrad Hilton Hotel, which will featureMcGeorge Bundy, president of the FordFoundation, as main speaker; a corner¬stone laying of the Joseph Regenstein Li¬brary; faculty, student, and alumni recep¬tions and luncheons; a panel discussion on“The Role and Future of the Private Uni¬versity”; an art exhibit; and a faculty-stu¬dent “musical event.”Levi will become the University’s eighthchief executive officer. The first alumnusin the University’s 76-year history to benamed president, he succeeds GeorgeBeadle, who is retiring in his 65th year.Levi was born June 26, 1911, in Chicago.A Lab School graduate, he received hisPh.B. (1932) and J.D. (1935) degrees fromThe University of Chicago and his J.S.D.(1938) from Yale University.Levi joined The University of Chicagofaculty in 1936 as Assistant Professor ofLaw. In 1945 he became Professor of Lawand in 1950 was appointed Dean of the LawSchool. He held this position until he be¬came Provost in 1962.Levi will be the fourth university chiefexecutive officer to be inaugurated inRockefeller Chapel. The three previousPresidents or Chancellors inaugurated inthe Chapel were George W. Beadle (1961),Lawrence A. Kimpton (1951), and RobertM. Hutchins (1929).The four other chief executive officers ofthe University, inaugurated before theChapel was dedicated in October, 1928,were Max Mason (1925), Ernest DeWittBurton (1923), Harry Pratt Judson (1907),and William Rainey Harper (1891).A tradition dating back to the 12th Centu¬ry will once again be part of the academicprocession at the Inaugural Covocation.The academic gowns, caps, and hoodsworn by the various marchers will tellwhat degrees their wearers have, andwhere they earned them. They also will, ifthe day is cold, serve their original pur¬pose — to keep the wearer warm.Caps, gowns, and hoods for academicpersons became popular in the 12th Centu¬ry. Teachers wore them to keep warm inthe drafty, chilly buildings of that time.Since 1894, traditional American academ¬ic garb has included black gowns, bandedhoods, and mortar boards with colored tas¬sels to indicate degrees earned.In the spring of 1965, The University ofChicago adopted a new alternate academicgown for some of its degree holders. Theolder style gowns are still permissable ifthe wearer so chooses. The new gowns aremaroon, rather than black and the sleevesare large and full. The hat is a beret-type,rather than a mortar board. Officials weargold tassels; all others wear black tassels.These new gowns and berets may be wornby holders of the Ph.D., M.D. and J.D.degrees. All other degree holders wear theold gowns.Nine distinguished men are scheduled tobe present to receive honorary degrees atTurn to Pago FiveMother Challenges Selective Service System l T?SAN JOSE, Calif. (CPS)-Does ErikWhitehom, 18, own primary obligation tothe orders of Gen. Lewis B. Hershey andthe Selective Service Act or to the instruc¬tions of his mother?Erik has thrown this question into thecourts from two directions. His mother,Mrs. Evelyn Whitehorn of Palo Alto, Calif,claims that Erik as a minor, cannot regis¬ter for the draft without her consent, andthis week filed in federal court for a re¬straining order to prevent officials, fromSelective Service Director Hershey rightdown to the local draft board members,from acting against Erik. The board, Selective Service Board 62 ofSan Jose, Calif, has notified Erik that itwill declare him delinquent Nov 12 for fail¬ing to register as an 18-year-old and willput his case in the hands of US Attorney inSan Francisco, Cecil Poole, for prose¬cution.The Whitehorns’ attorney, Aubrey Gross-man of San Francisco, filed in San Fran¬cisco asking the federal court to prohibitpunishment of Erik for offenses that are,Grossman claims, the responsibility of hismother.Grossman’s brief explained that thepleading for Erik is filed in his mother’sname since both state and federal law do not give persons the right to litigate untilthey are 21, just as they cannot vote, serveon juries, marry, or even keep their ownearnings. He points out, “a young mandoes not acquire any basic rights until hehas reached the age of 21.”The Whitehorn case, in effect, challengesSelective Service treatment of all youngmen under 21, Grossman points out. Thoseunder 21 who are able to attend college fulltime have usually been able to obtain a “2-S deferment,” a type of deferment thatmany groups claim operates to the dis¬advantage of those unable to attend collegeor unable to finance full-time attendance.Erik’s older brother, Robert, a San Fran-Adlai Stevenson Institute Adds Fellows to MembershipThe appointment of fourteen new fellowsto the Adlai Stevenson Institute of Inter¬national Affairs was announced at the In¬stitute’s Robie House headquarters by itsdirector, William R. Polk.Joining the Institute are: Thomas C. So¬rensen who formerly served as ClarkKerr’s vice president for University Rela¬tions at the University of California in Ber¬keley and as deputy director of the UnitedStates Information Agency; Ernest Dich-ter, president of the Institute of Motiva¬tional Research; Sidney Hyman, Europeaneditor of the Saturday Review, and authorof the book The American President; Che-rif Guellal, first ambassador of Algeria tothe United States, Mexico and Canada andformer political advisor to Algerian Presi¬dent A. Ben Bella.Also Eqbal Ahmad, former professor inthe School of Industrial and Labor Rela¬tions at Cornell University; Thomas J.Boodell, Jr., a lawyer and publisher ofNew City Magazine; Salah Dessouki, for¬mer governor of Cairo, Egypt, and am¬bassador to Finland; Jerome Fried, mem¬ber of the Policy Planning Council of theU.S. Department of State; Edward Gude,professor of sociology at Dartmouth Col¬lege. And, Kenneth Hansen, former assistantdirector of the U. S. Bureau of the Budgetand vice president of Syntex Corporation;William Kornhauser, professor of sociolgoyat the University of California in Berkeley;Philip Merrill, former special assistant toundersecretary of state Chester Bowles;Joseph Muskrat, former assistant attorneygeneral of the State of Oklahoma and alawyer representing the Cherokee Nation;Simon Williams, associate director of theInternational Marketing Institute and for¬mer consultant to the Organization ofAmerican States.Fellows will individually and collegially evolve practical programs within the In¬stitute’s four general areas of concentra-t i o n : Consequences of Rapid SocialChange; Regional Economic Development;the Transmission of Knowledge; and theBalance Between Population and FoodProduction.Specific programs to be undertaken thisyear are: Desalinization of Sea Water; TheCity — Multinational Problems and Solu¬tions; the Dynamics of Political Modern¬ization; Family Planning in India; Agr¬arian Reform and Corporate Investment;Freedom and Order in the University;Economic Integration in Africa.Humanities Department To Sponsor Luncheonsnities will be discussed.The humanities collegiate division andits student council will sponsor a luncheonfor students and faculty in the English de¬partment Tuesday noon at the QuadrangleClub.The luncheon is one of a series plannedfor students in the humanities division.They will give students an opportunity tomeet and talk informally with other stu¬dents and some faculty in their field ofspecialization. The possibility of in¬troducing courses in photography and filmand Black American and African huma-Willi am H. McNeill: The Rise Of The West,National book award for history in 1964. Toread it is a great experience.Claude Levi Strauss: TheSavage Mind, Everyoneinterested inhistory mustread it.Mark Bloch:Feudal Society,Shows us theliving and vitalizing forcewhich shapedsociety inEurope for fourcreative centuriesGerald D.Suttles: SocialOrder Of The SlumsHe lived for threeyears in Chicago’sWest Side Slums.^ must for soc¬iologists.Helen F. PerlmanPersona, For theordinary readerseeking betterunderstanding ofhis social roleALLDeluxe EditionsALL On Hand ATUniversity BookstoreELLis at 58 St. Other humanities department luncheonswill be sponsored on the following dates:undecided and history majors, Tuesday,Nov. 12; art and music, philosophy, ideasand methods, and New Testament majors,Thursday, November 14.General studies, Friday, November 15;classics, far Eastern languages and civ¬ilizations, Germanic languages and liter¬ature, Romance languages and literature,and Slavic languages majors, Monday, No¬vember 18.Upperclass humanities majors who havenot received invitations to luncheons havebeen asked to inquire in Gates Blake 107.v v *v"k v Ha*' *.* t t tit * t *cisco State College student, has turneddown a 2-S deferment and on Oct 23 re¬fused induction as an act of conscience.Grossman claims that the draft puts tominors ‘‘overwhelmingly important anddifficult ethical and moral decisions” ifthey have moral reservations about theVietnam conflict and “dictates of con¬science as to the participation in it.”“If there is to be any punishment visitedupon anyone it should, following the theoryof this pleading, be imposed upon EvelynWhitehorn; not in addition to, but in thestead of punishment upon her son,” Gross¬man’s brief states.“It is well established in law that theparents of a young man are entitled tomake all decisions concerning him, his lifeand conduct, and there is imposed on hima reciprocal obligation, enforced by thegovernment, to obey these orders of hisparents,” Grossman’s brief explains.Grossman claims that any law whichpunishes a young man because of the in¬structions and upbringing of his parents“inhibits and intimidates parents in themoral education of their children—themost important form that freedom ofspeech could possibly take,” violating boththe first and fifth Amendments. The draftlaw also violates the fifth Amendment, hesays, by “imposing serious burdens on oneclass or group of people and exempting an¬other.” While Erik can be jailed for up tofive years for his failure to register, Gross-man points out, older persons who holdsimilar views are not punished.Erik challenged the authority of his Se¬lective Service Board when his mother re¬fused to give permission for her 18-year-oldson to register on grounds that, as a minorin her custody, he is legally incompetent tosign what amounts to a contract.Erik wa$ placed in his mother’s custodyafter being found guilty in a case resultingfrom his participation in a peaceful draftprotest demonstration in Oakland, Calid. ayear ago. He is on probation after a juve¬nile court proceeding finding him guilty of“failure to disperse,’’ that is, sitting in thedoorway of the Oakland induction centerwhere his brother a year later staged hisown individual protest.you can Hear yourself think . . . and if you don’twant to think, there’s good booze.Bass ale and Schlitz beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails . . . luncheon . . . dinner . . . late snacks . . .5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933The Chicago Maroon November 12, 1968> * > \ t Autumn 1968 MONDAY LECTURESLaw Auditorium • 1121 East 60th • 8 P.M.Nov. 18 - FRITZ MACHLUP (Princeton)Some Aspects of Academic FreedomNov. 25 - VALENTINE TELEGDI (Univ. Chicago)Through the looking Glass: MirroringSpace CHARGE and TimeADMISSION Series tickets S7.50 by mail only (call FI 6-8300). A limitednumber of complimentary tickets for U. of C. students and faculty areavailable at Central Info. Desk in Adm. Bldg., or at University Extension,Room 121, Center for Continuing Education (Ex. 3137).’ * ■* ♦ » *SG Election Winners Announce PlansHalloween Party candidates took onlytwo of the eight freshman seats in StudentGovernment.Results of the late October electionswere announced Saturday.Sarah Glazer, Juan Jewell, Tom Bierste-cker, Jerome Culp, and Richard Flemingwere declared victors for first year repre¬sentatives.The winners of seats created by dormito¬ry vacancies were Verne Culberson ofWoodward Court, Stephen Chatzky of Snell-Hitchcock and A1 Shpuntoff of Pierce Tow¬er.The Halloween Party, formed at thefreshman caucus earlier this quarter,called for the expansion of SG activities toareas not conventionally considered in theUniversity’s domain. These issues includethe draft and sub-standard housing.The two Halloween Party winners wereSarah Glazer who drew 123 votes and JuanJewell who received 167.Miss Glazer stated that politics playedonly a minor role in her victory. Althoughshe said she considers herself a novice inSG affairs and seeks a greater degree oforientation, she intends to work for the im¬plementation of the Halloween Party plat¬form. Jewell could not be reached for com¬ment.Bierstecker, an independent who re¬ceived 130 votes, said he wishes to depola¬rize the campus by compromising theviews of both the Halloween Party and theindependents. He said he intends to focusthe activities of SG on large issues in addi¬tion to intra-campus matters.Culp, an independent with 135 votes, saidhis election refutes the radical positions heclaimed SG has been tending to takerecently, and that he will attempt to limitactivities solely to campus affairs. Culp said he believes that SG should influencesuch matters as curriculum, but “have nooverwhelming say.”Fleming, with 121 independent votes,said he is primarily concerned with SG’sinefficiency. He favors such measures as-the institution of bi-weekly meetings withmandatory attendance.In the election for the seat left open by avacancy at Snell-Hitchcock, Stephen Chat¬zky, an independent, emerged victorious.Chatzky, who received 40 votes, said he has three major objectives. He favorshouse autonomy. “Kids should determinetheir own lives so long as they don’t inter¬fere with others—not administrators.” saidChatzky. He also wants restructuring of SGtoward a more meaningful function, andSG involvement in the community, so longas the issues are directly related to stu¬dents.A1 Shpuntoff won the vacant seat fromPierce Tower with 55 ballots. He plans tostrengthen SG by focusing student atten¬ tion on definitive action taken by the orga¬nization on housing and curriculum re¬forms. He said he will work for the earlypassage of the proposed two house amend¬ment.In the contest for Woodward Court repre¬sentative, 146 ballots were cast for VerneCulberson, who contends that the electionswere poorly run, especially at Woodward.She favors the two-house system, a moreeffective speaker program, and a more ef¬fective SG.Teach-In Explains Draft Resistance“I quit school to take up living, and thegovernment called upon me to take up kill¬ing and dying,” said a University of Chi¬cago student Friday to more than 600 per¬sons at a teach-in on draft resistance.John Welch, ’70, was one of four youngmen who explained their decisions to resistthe draft, at the program in the University Church of the Disciples.Staughton Lynd, a radical historian for¬merly at Yale, also spoke about the impor¬tance of making decisions of conscienceand confronting such authoritarian systemsas the draft.He described the movement in the Neth¬erlands in 1941, in which acts of resistanceHPADU Plans Resistance Ceremony“To resist the oppression in Vietnam, wemust first resist the arm of it that op¬presses us,” state a group of Universitystudents who are returning their draftcards to the United States governmentThursday as part of a “national day ofresistance.”November 14 was named a day of resis¬tance several months ago by The Resis¬tance, a group of young men and womenworking to. build a national movement ofnon-cooperation with the Selective ServiceSystem. A total of 3000 men have cut theirties with the draft on other days of resis¬tance.The Hyde Park Anti-Draft Union said itwill hold the ceremony at the same timeEdward H. Levi is inaugurated as Univer-Schedule of Inauguration Weekwill be. onEllisTuesday, November 12The "Exhibition of Contemporary Art from Chicago Collectorsshown from noon to 6 p.m., Tuesday through Friday, and noon to 5 p.mSaturday, at the Bergman Gallery of Cobb Lecture Hall, 5811-27 SouthAvenue.2-3 p.m. Reception for the College to meet the new president in thefourth floor of Cobb Hall in the Bergman Gallery.3-4 p.m. Graduate students reception for the president in the SouthLounge of Reynolds Club.4-5 p.m. Professional school students will meet the president in the lobbyof the Social Service Administration building.7:30 p.m. The Civic Dinner at the Conrad Hilton Hotel will feature Mc-George Bundy as the principal speaker.Thursday, November 1410:30 am Convocation in the Rockefeller Memorial Chapel.12:30 pm Luncheon following the Convocation in Hutchinson Commonsof Reynolds Club, 1135 East 57th Street.2 pm Panel discussion in Mandel Hall, 1135 East 57th Street. EdwardShils, professor of Sociology at Chicago, will present a paper on "The Role andFuture of the Private University." Participants will include: Nathan M. Pusey,president of Harvard University; Kenneth B. Clark, president of the Metropoli¬tan Applied Research Center; Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, president of theUniversity of Notre Dame; Jerry Lipsch, president of Student Government atChicago; Robert Bruse McPherson, a graduate student in education at Chicago;and Michael L. Mussa, a graduate student in economics at Chicago.5 pm Reception and dinner for Chicago's faculty. The dinner will be fol¬lowed by a performance by the New York Pro Musica in Rockefeller Chapel.Friday, November 153:30 pm Cornerstone laying of the Joseph Regenstein Library, East 57thStreet and Ellis Avenue. Following the ceremony, a reception will be held inReynolds Club, 1135 East 57th Street.8 pm Alumni Cabinet dinner and a reading by Saul Bellow, author andprofessor of English at Chicago, in the auditorium of the Law School, 1121East 69th Street.Saturday, November 168 p.m. Musical event by University faculty members and students inMandel Hall. sity president “to contrast the spirit of theact with Levi’s conception of the student inthe University.”“We are choosing to act on the idealsthat Levi tells us to merely study. It isimpossible for a male student in this wartime to remain neutral, and follow an aca¬demic career pursuing footnotes and aca¬demic degrees,” explained John Welch, amember of the Hyde Park Anti-DraftUnion who will be one of those returningtheir cards.“Young men are only allowed to attendcolleges because others are found to taketheir places in the army. Our opposition tothe war is deferred and hushed, and madeinto mere Assent by our accepting prive-leged status within the system perpetratingthe atrocity that is Vietnam,” he contin¬ued.The resisters will return their cards at aceremony beginning about 10:30 a.m. onthe lawn of Woodward Court, about thesame time the inauguration will begin.Earlier, there will be a silent vigil alongthe route of the inauguration procession toask participants to attend the resistanceceremony rather than the inauguration.Following the ceremony, the resisterswill ask their supporters to sign a com¬plicity statement committing the signers tochanging their “country, community, andlives” along the principles of brotherhoodfor which the resisters are acting. against the Nazis by students, professors,and clergymen led to a general strike ofall workers.Noting the parallels between the Dutchsituation and that of today, in which stu¬dents and clergy are taking the lead inanti-draft activity, Lynd suggested thepresent movement could succeed in at¬tracting wide support.Efforts for social change in the UnitedStates, he said, have turned from “peti¬tionary non-violence,” such as the civilrights marches in the early ’60s which fo¬cused on demands for legislation, to “non¬violent resistance.”Three young men besides Welch ex¬plained why they chose to resist.Chris Hannafan ,’72, who recently turnedage 18, said he decided not to register forthe draft after a visit to Germany in whichhe saw in an East German cemetery astatue of a Russian soldier with the in¬scription:“This is dedicated to the brave Russiansoldiers who gave their lives to free Ger¬many from Fascism.”Michael Presser, a former student in theclass of ’70, said the act of resistance canbe effective as a form of moral witness,and that even soldiers in the army can bereached with calls to resist authority.Rob Skeist, ’70, said draft resistance canincrease the practical effectiveness of theanti-draft and anti-war movements, be¬cause it deepens the commitment of thosewho resist, and puts them in a better posi¬tion to reach people who are themselvesnot eligible for any deferments.The teach-in, designed as a prelude toThursday’s ceremony at which resisterswill announce their resignation from thedraft system, also included several smallgroup discussions of prison life, con¬scientious objector status, and other topics.Keep "Kool” i*Joke’s Warn WearDrastic ReductionsonWinter CoatsJockey BrandTurtlenecks S 1.98Wrangler Blue JeansWide Whale Corduroy Jeans& Jackets just arrived.JOHNN’S MENSWEAR1459 E. 53rdDiscountArt Materials jCes!\f Sntporls, 3nc.• school, office & • » rS\(?s>2235 So. MICHIGAN AVE.filing supplies• drafting materials Expert foreign je|. 326-2550 C/AvOcar service. (J D• mounting - matting -• framing Val Stoecklein is 1Duncan’s here on radio |1305 E 53rd HY 3-411 1 FoodDrinkPeople311 E 23rd Street2 blocks W ot McCormick PlaceTelephone 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/'clbsed SundayParty facilities to 400Waiter!Most complete photoand hobby store onthe South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Student Discounts Cl DOCCENTRO INTERCUITURAL 0E 00CUMENTACI ONWINTER QUARTERJANUARY / MARCH 1969 IN CUERNAVACAACCREDITED COOPERATIVE PROGRAM: MUNDELEIN AND CID0C• Mundelein College grants 9 to 12 credit hours• Cost of Winter quarter: $700.- $900.• Includes room, board, tuition far 9 credit hours, and round-trip trans¬porta t ionINTENSIVE SPANISH• Tutorial drills three hours daily, 3-h students per class• Supervised laboratory and theory classes in addition• Experienced Mexican instructors• Registration for one month or moreINSTITUTE FOR CONTEMPORARY LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES• Choose from 26 courses in socio-economic change in Latin America, LatinAmerica Literature, Linguistics and language teaching, and Church history• Combine language studies with social science or humanities courses• Approval of combined programs by Mundeleiri academic advisor-in-residencehours north of AcapulcoLIVE IN MEXICO• Cuernavaca is one hour south of Mexico City, th• Balmy climate 4,500 feet above sea level• Accommodations with Mexican family, or in dorms, bungalow, or hotelREQUEST CATALOGUE AND APPLICATIONFORMS FROM;Prof. Carlos Mart inMundelein Col lege6363 North Sheridan Rd.Chicago, I I Iinois 60626 CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT WITH:Prof. Larry GrimesCID0C Chicago OfficeTel.: 226-6642? •* ' J ' .’WJ*November 12, 1968 The Chicago MaroonNext week Edward H. Levi will be inaugurated president of theUniversity. For some time, students have had a number of opinionsuf him, most of them strong. The Maroon is compiling informationfor a special report on wThe New Administration" in next Friday'spaper. We would appreciate responses to the following questions.1. What do you think of Edward Levi?2.What do you think will be the difference between his andGeorge Beadle's administration?3.What would you like to see Levi and the administration do overthe next few years?4.What do you think Levi's attitude towards students is? Whatshould it be?Fold into eights, staple & put into Fac Ex BoxThe MaroonIda Noyes—303Faculty ExchangeThis is not a jokeIThe Chicago Maroon' * r «»*♦»» i • # r t November 12, 1968•' >1 4 l/.l . ’4 »T l| 'v *.• I [ij (u > V ,* I'll Li’ fcainVJ #«f7■ ■■ - •<u ;,“von SRISlant or d Examines PoliciesBy Phil SemasCollege Press ServiceSTANFORD, Calif. (DPS)—Stanford Uni¬versity may be moving toward a change inits relationship with the Stanford ResearchInstitute (SRI), which is known to do mili¬tary research.Acting Stanford President Robert J. Gla¬ser has set up a committee of five facultymembers, five students, and two adminis¬trators to study Stanford’s relationshipwith SRI. The Institute is an independent,non-profit organization affiliated with theUniversity. Glaser announced his plans for the studyat an unusual appearance before the stu¬dent legislature. He said the relationship“is one of concern to many members ofthe faculty and student body,” but added,“The issues are complex, with many rami¬fications, and are not the kind that can beresolved overnight.”Earlier, in an interview with the Stan¬ford Daily, Glaser said the relationship “isa legitimate issue to examine—not one tosweep under the rug and say it doesn’texist.” Kenneth Pitzer, supports the study. SRIExecutive Vice President Weldon Gibsonsaid the Institute would “co-operate fully”with the study, which is supposed to becompleted by April 15.Glaser’s announcement came shortly af¬ter the Stanford chapter of Students for aDemocratic Society (SDS) had demandedthat the University, SIR, and “all membersof the University community immediatelllyhalt all military and economic projectsand operations concerned with SoutheastAsia.”He said the incoming Stanford president, SDS nailed its demands to the door ofStanford Group Proposes ReformBy Phil SemasCollege Press ServiceSTANFORD, Calif. (CPS) A faculty-stu¬dent committee has recommended a vastoverhaul of undergraduate education atStanford University, an institution usuallyregarded as one of the nation’s most pres¬tigious but also one of the most traditional.The recommendations emphasize inde¬pendent study, small classes, and congesin the academic calendar and the gradingsystem.A preliminary summary of the proposalsreleased by the campus newspaper, theStanford Daily, outlines these changes:Every entering freshman would par¬ticipate in a tutorial program in which theprofessor would teach and advise no morethan 12 students. This would eliminatefreshman English and western civilizationcourses, two mainstays of undergraduateeducation on most campuses, as univer¬sity-wide requirements for freshmen. Theteaching resources now used in .thesecourses would be shifted to the tutorials.Foreign language and laboratory sciencecourses would also be eliminated as uni¬versity-wide requirements, although theymight still be required by student’ majordepartments.The A-B-C-D-F grading system wouldbe replaced by a system under which stu¬dents would receive only an A, B, or C.Students who fail courses would simply notget credit for that course. A student couldbe flunked out of the university only if hewere falling behind in the number ofcourses he was gaining credit for. Becauseof its selective admissions policies, how¬ever, Stanford loses only a few studentseach year for academic reasons.A one-week reading period would beadded prior to each finals week. It wouldbe free from all classes and tests to allowtiie students to review their work duringthe preceding weeks. Stanford would alsochange from a quarter to a semester sys¬tem.A department could prescribe onlyhalf a student’s workload, leaving the restfree for liberal studies and independentwork.All undergraduates would have the option of designing their own majors, sub¬ject to the approval of a faculty memberand the dean of undergraduate studies.Two other recommendations to en¬courage independent work would permit upto 10 students in each class to participatein an honors program free of all courserequirements and establish a general edu¬cation college to offer a common one-yearprogram for no more than 75 students.By Mitch BobkinThe Daily Cardinal, the student news¬paper of the University of Wisconsin,Madison campus has met with oppositionfrom Wisconsin’s board of regents.The Daily Cardinal has been asked toappear before the board of control by theirJanuary meeting to explain “unaccep¬table” language in the paper.Gregory G. Graze, editor-in-chief of theCardinal, said that the controversy settledaround two stories printed in the paper.One of them from College Press Servicedealt with the national meeting of SDS inColorado and quoted one member as usingthe word “mother-fucker.” The other ar¬ticle dealt with a Milwaukee draft resistorwho used “slang” terms.The Wisconsin board of regents at itsmonthly meeting in October reprimandedthe Cardinal for this language and askedthem to appear before the board of controlby January to explain its actions.“Originally they threatened to expel oureditor-in-chief and managing editor,” saidGraze, but the threat has since been re¬tracted. However, the university does havethe power to lock out the paper if neces¬sary, he added.The Daily Cardinal is a self-sufficient or¬ganization but it does use the University’soffice space and typography lab for a flatrate. Graze said, “It is not inconceivablethat they might lock us out.”If that should happen, the Cardinal hasinvestigated legal and extra-legal actionsthat it can take. Graze said “We are ready The report, first of 10 to be released thisfall by the Study of Education at Standard,will be considered by the faculty later thismonth. "The steering committee of the study,headed by Vic Provost Herbert Packer, in¬cludes six faculty members and three stu¬dents. More than 200 students, faculty, andstaff worked on the study.for a confrontation.”In its November 5th issue, The Cardinalprinted a front-page editorial signed by allthe available staff members which basical¬ly told the University to “keep its handsoff” the paper.Graze said that the University is just us¬ing the “obscene language” in the Cardinalas an excuse to intervene in student af¬fairs. As Graze put it, “If it wasn’t theCardinal and not obscenity, there wouldhave been something else.”The Cardinal is now printing and doesn’texpect any furthur action until the Decem¬ber meeting of the Board. They also do notnow plan to attend the January Board ofControl meeting as they have been askedto do.Inaugural ReceptionsAs a part of the inauguration of EdwardH. Levi, receptions will be held nextWednesday to give students the opportun¬ity to meet the new president.The reception and tea for the students inthe College will be held from 2 to 3 pm inthe Bergman Gallery, fourth floor CobbHall. The reception for Graduate Divisionstudents will take place from 3 to 4 pm inthe South Lounge of the Reynolds Club.The reception for the students in the Pro¬fessional Schools will occur from 4 to 5 pmin the lobby of the Social Service Adminis¬tration building.Levi will meet informally with studentsat each of the receptions. the Board of Trustees office. It also de¬manded that all contracts, classified andunclassified, be made public, including thevalue of the contract and individuals per¬forming the work; that Stanford and SRItrustees make public all their corporateand government connections; and thatStanford faculty also make public theircorporate and government connections.Glaser claimed his decision to call for thestudy had nothing to do with SDS’s de¬mands.SDS seems to have little support amongthe student body. A rally they hald to sup¬port the demands drew only about 200 ofStanford’s 11,300 students. And a StanfordDaily poll, based on a computer-selectedsample of 123 students, showed only 23.5per cent of the student body support theSDS demands, 66 per cent oppose themand 10.5 per cent are undecided.Stanford student body president DenisHayes would also like to see some changesin campus war research. At a meetingheld shortly after Glaser announced hisstudy, Hayes asked the Board of Trusteesto use their influence to get SRI to refuseto accept new research contracts involvingchemical, biological, or counter-insurgencywarfare research until the study is com¬pleted.In making its demands, SDS chargedthat SRI does chemical and biological war¬fare research, including tear gas and cropdefoliation; has a staff of 55 doing counter¬insurgency work in Thailand since 1962; isperforming cost analyses of alternativebombing sites in North Vietnam; and isdoing long-range surveys of investment op¬portunities in Southeast Asia for U.S. cor¬porations.In a study published last December, VietReport magazine documented some of thewar research being done at SRI.SRI has denied only that it is studyingbombing sites in North Vietnam. RudolfBrunsvold, SRI’s vice president of planningand co-ordination, says, “As an institutionwe don’t take a view on the rightness orwrongness of the established government.”About half of SRI’s projects are initiatedfrom within the Institute, which has a re¬search staff of 1,836. The other half aretaken on contract from governmentagencies or corporations. Any researchermay decline to work on a certain project,according to SRI officials.SRI is presently conducting about 700 re¬search projects worth about $65 million.About 73 per cent of its support comesfrom federal, state, and local government,the other 27 per cent from private clients.About one-third of its projects are classi¬fied. Vice President Gibson said “a hand¬ful” are so secret that even their existencecannot be revealed.About 50 Stanford professors serve asconsultants on various SRI projects and al¬most 20 SRI staff members lecture andteach at the University.Wisconsin Student Paper BattlesAdministration Over Slang TermsChicago Awards Honorary DegreesContinued from Page Onethe inaugural convocation.The nine men and the degrees they arescheduled to receive are:• Bertrand H. Bronson, Professor ofEnglish at the University of California atBerkeley, Doctor of Humane Letters.• Elias J. Corey, the Sheldon EmeryProfessor and Chairman of the Depart¬ment of Chemistry at Harvard University,Doctor of Science.• Murray Barnson Emeneau, Professorof Linguistics at the University of Califor¬nia at Berkeley, Doctor of Humane Let¬ters.• Raymond W. Firth, Professor in theLondon School of Economics and PoliticalScience at the University of London, Doc¬tor of Humane Letters.• Fleming James, Jr., Sterling Profes-] sor of Law at the Yale University LawSchool, Doctor of Laws. • Glen A. Lloyd, a partner in Bell,Lloyd, Haddad and Burns, Chicago, a LifeTrustee of The University of Chicago andformer Chairman of the Board of Trusteesat the University, Doctor of Laws.• Robert K. Merton, the Giddings Pro¬fessor of Sociology at Columbia University,Doctor of Laws.• Dr. George E. Palade, Professor andChairman of the Department of Call Biolo¬gy at Rockefeller University, New YorkCity, Doctor of Science.• Kurt Weitzmann, Professor of Art andArchaeology at Princeton University andMember of the Institute for AdvancedStudies, Doctor of Humane Letters.Among those invited to attend are dele¬gates from institutions of higher learningand learned societies, representatives ofgovernment, business, and labor, and dig¬nitaries from throughout the nation andabroad. Fairfax M. Cone, Chairman of the Boardof Trustees at the University, will presideat the Convocation.The art exhibition being held in con¬junction with the inauguration will includeworks by Joan Miro, Marisol, Pablo Pi¬casso, William de Kooning, and other re¬nowned artists. The display of contempo¬rary art will consist of 14 sculptures and 31paintings that have been loaned especiallyfor the exhibition of art colllectors in theChicago area.Among the works will be “The HolocaustMaker,” a tempera bv Paul Klee; “Jockeya Cheval,” a drawing by Henri de Tou¬louse Lautrec; “Moon Mad,” a bronzesculpture by Max Ernst, and “Snow Flur¬ries,” a mobile by Alexander Calder. Otherartists represented include Ivan Albright,Jean Dubuffet , Alberto Giacometti, andJacqtlte Lipchitz.’ Maroon — DAVID TRAVISPROVOST EDWARD H. LEVISoon to be PresidentNovember 12, 1968 The Chicago Maroon 5EDITORIALSEdward LeviThe University approaches the inauguration of Edward Leviwith a great deal of curiosity and not a little excitement. As Provost,Levi has been careful not to overshadow the President; he has notmade a lot of noise. But his influence has grown steadily duringthese six years, and this week it seems the University will not somuch undergo a change of drivers as a shift in gears.Quiet as he has been, circumspect as he has been not to assumethe presidency before his inauguration, he has given us only asmall sense of what he has done and the barest idea of what kindof administration he will have.Presumably he will clear some of this up in his inauguraladdress Thursday. But no one really expects an announcement ofstartling new programs and Levi has said as much.The administration, the course of the University will not bedrastically altered from Wednesday to Thursday. Yet, in the nextmonths and years, we can expect Edward Levi to extend his in¬fluence and his mind through the University of Chicago. Thedirection of the University will be more nearly his responsibility.And as he has shown himself to be an innovative administrator, afine teacher, and a man who believes in the concept of a freeuniversity, we can expect a great deal.The University is at a crucial point in its history. It has survivedan extremely difficult period with its academic strengths intact.But it now will face even greater problems, assaults from withoutand within. There is undoubtably no more qualified man to leadthe University in these next few years. We wait impatiently to seewhat he will do.The DinnerA great deal of furor has been generated by one event in EdwardLevi’s inauguration, the “civic” dinner Wednesday night.Radicals on campus want the dinner to be canceled, becauseit “is a testimonial to all that the University of Chicago stands for.”The radicals would rather the University have no truck withthese entrepreneurs and capitalist pig dogs. They think it is pros¬tituting itself through the system, the establishment, the powerelite. If the University is to be used for anything, they say, itshould be used for social change, if not revolution.Unfortunately, the radicals have not offered any examples ofthis prostitution. They cite no specific instances of research theUniversity has conducted which has directly aided “the war inVietnam, preparations for counter-insurgency around the world,and the exploitation of foreign countries by American corporations.”Certainly such examples might be found. But of all universities inthe country the University of Chicago is perhaps the most carefulin its approach to research. Virtually all (if not all) of the researchit undertakes is initiated by the faculty, not ordered by governmentor industry. And it prides itself on the fact that for the most part,it conducts theoretical, rather than applied research.In place of the University, the radicals want to build an institu¬tion dedicated to social change. The fact that most of the faculty(having no food to feed their families) would flee to Harvard orBerkeley, does not seem to indicate to them that building then anew institution on the ruins of the old one would be extremelydifficult. The fact that the new institution would be too weak tobring about much social change does not seem to bother them.What is important, they say, is that the corruption be destroyed.We see the University as a place where people can come togetherand freely exchange ideas. There would be no room for biologistsand physicists in an institution for social change. But there is roomfor revolutionaries in the University). Certainly we must be vigilantto keep the University free and independent: our commitment isto an institution of free inquiry. The proposed demonstration at theWednesday dinner is an attempt to destroy it.The Chicago Mar6on LETTERS• CommitteeWe read with interest the letter fromRichard Flacks in last Friday’s Maroon.We believe that the letter might lead tosome misunderstanding about the civicdinner being given in honor of EdwardLevi’s inauguration as president of theUniversity. A dinner of this type is a Uni¬versity tradition. Moreover, it is an appro¬priate means of reaffirming the Univer¬sity’s relationship with the community. Itwould be strange indeed if the Universityof Chicago were not recognized as a cultur¬al center of which any city would beproud. No one should fail to understand thededicated role that a large group of cultur¬al, civic and professional leaders from Chi¬cago and the midwest has played in mak¬ing the University of Chicago strong.In large measure, it has been trusteesdrawn from this group that have given theUniversity its unique freedom. This wasespecially true during times of great stress— in the days of the Broyles Committeeand Joseph McCarthy. These men defend¬ed the rights of the faculty as individualsand the University as a whole to pursuetheir life of scholarship and teaching, andtheir right to express their personal viewson society. This service should not be tak¬en lightly.The dinner is being given under the aus¬pices of the board of trustees and wasplanned by a faculty-trustee committee.Those invited include faculty members,students, alumni, members of the variousvisiting committees, friends and supportersof the University from a variety of back¬grounds. As always, a number of electedofficials, local, state and national, havebeen invited.The arrangements for the hotel and thedinner were made early last spring and atthat time many of the invitations — in¬cluding all those sent to elected officials —were sent out. A call to the inaugurationoffice would have been enough to informanyone that Mayor Daley had already senthis regrets at being unable to attend.The three speakers at the dinner need nodefense. They are Lawrence Kimpton, for¬mer professor of philosophy and formerPresident of the University; George Stig-ler, a member of the faculty and spokes¬man during the past academic year for thecommittee of the council; and McGeorgeBundy, former dean of the faculty at Har¬vard, former government official, and nowpresident of the Ford Foundation.We, the faculty members of the In¬auguration Committee, hope Mr. Levi willfeel honored by the dinner.Robert AshenhurstJulian GoldsmithGwin KolbJohn A. SimpsonBoothThe impassioned letter by Mr. Flacks inTHE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor; John RechtNews Editor: Barbara HurstPhotographic Editor: David TravisNews Board: Wendy Glockner, Carolina Heck,Paula SzewezykSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaAssistant to the Editor: Howie SchamestContributing Editor: John MoscowNews Staff: Walter Cipin, Caroline Daffron,Debby Dobish, Ann Goodman, Bruce Gres-sin, Con Hitchcock, C. D. Jaco, StephanieLowe, Chris Lyon, Bruce Norton, DavidSteele, Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift.Production Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Sue Loth,David Steele, Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift.Sunshine Girl: Jean WiklerFounded In 1892. Published by University ofChicago students on Tuesdays and Fridaysthroughout the regular school year and inter¬mittently throughout the summer, except duringthe tenth week of the academic quarter andduring examination periods. Of fices in Rooms303, 304, and 305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3269. Distributed on campus andin the Hyde Park neighborhood free of charge.Subscriptions by mail $7 per year. Non-profitpostage paid at Chicago, III. Subscribers toCollege Press Service.e * 4 1 ^ * * ) , last week’s Maroon cannot be met impas¬sively. If his facts and principles are right,and if his reasoning is correct, no one of uscan honorably sit by while that banquet isheld, let alone attend it. Fortunately or un¬fortunately, depending on whether onelikes to deal in neat dichotomies of goodand evil, the scenario is rather differentfrom the brilliant melodrama presented byMr. Flacks.Fact No. 1: Mr. Levi is not, as Mr.Flacks claims, “holding the affair.” Thebanquet was planned by a faculty-boardcommittee. As is always true of such occa¬sions, the president-elect had nothing what¬ever to do with the planning and was ofcourse not informed of who was being in¬vited to honor him.Fact No. 2: An uninformed reading ofMr. Flacks’ letter would assume that theCivic Dinner is the only or the main eventof the inauguration. Events within the Uni¬versity community are numerous—too nu¬merous in my opinion, but anyone lockingat the events for the week could not mis¬take the intentions of the planning com¬mittee to symbolize the inauguration pri¬marily with events strictly within and per¬taining to the University proper.Fact No. 3: Contrary to Mr. Flacks’claim, the invitations to “outsiders” andthe choice of site were completed lastspring. I have many things to protestabout in this world, but one of them iscertainly not a committee’s lack of pro¬phetic ability. Should they have to refusean invitation to someone (who isn’t cominganyway) on the grounds that four monthslater he was going to offend us? His of¬fense when it came was to me a verygrave one, one of the worst political acts inthis decade of appalling political acts. ButI would feel a little foolish carrying a pla¬card saying “committees should be pro¬phets.”Fact No 4: The dinner is not for “fatcats,” however that juicy category mightbe defined. I haven’t seen the list of in¬vited guests, but I have taken the troubleto talk with a faculty member on the In-If Mr. Flacks or the SDSever achieve their idealuniversity... they willfind themselves givingsuch dinners ....'auguration Committee (as Mr. Flacksmight have done) and it is clear that thediners are by no means confined towealthy givers, much less to wicked ones:faculty representatives from every recog¬nizable category; more than one hundredstudents (several of them from SDS, cho¬sen not because they represent SDS butbecause they belong to Student Govern¬ment or Maroon Key or whatever; dele¬gates from other universities (of in¬determinate political stripe); trustees, vis¬iting committees; an assortment of “civicleaders” (can anyone really imagine giv¬ing such a dinner, in any country in theworld in any age, without inviting these?);some who were known to be personalfriends of Mr. and Mrs. Levi, (financialstatus and politics uninvestigated); theseand I’m sure others I have not heard aboutobviously include many who have nevergiven money to us and who could not givemuch if they tried. I have no doubt thatprominent donors have also been included:I certainly hope so. If Mr. Flacks or theSDS ever achieve their ideal university, wecan be very sure that they will find them¬selves giving such dinners (or perhapssome more imaginative equivalent) and in¬viting to them those whose support theydepend on.Principle No. 1: Mr. Flacks feels that itis morally wrong to dine with the “fatcats” and moral lepers he thinks make upthe invited list. Since my own salary, likehis, comes in part from these and similarsources, it is presumably also tainted. If itis wrong to dine with them, it is wrong todine on them. But only a moral absolutismTurn to Page SevenNovember 12, 1968LETTERS TO THE EDITORHere is the letter by Richard Flacksthat evoked the flood of mail.Not even the crudest political carica¬turist could have imagined a blunter ex¬pression of all that is rotten about theAmerican university than the one de¬signed by whoever planned the Hiltondinner to celebrate the inauguration ofPresident Levi.It would have been sufficient for sucha caricaturist merely to depict thescences of celebration by the assembledfat cats, politicians, and other dignitariesin the midst of the opulent (if sagging)Hilton, interspersed with images dis¬playing the massive indifference andcynicism with which the inaugurationwas greeted by the student body and thesurrounding community. A piece ofguerilla theater containing such sceneswould be a neat way of symbolizing thefact that the loyalties of the universitypresident are neither to the scholarlycommunity, nor his students nor to thepeople who live under the shadow ofhis institution — but rather to thewielders of corporate wealth and politi¬cal influence. But even the blackest ofhumorists would have thought that theinclusion of Mayor Daley and McGeorgeBundy as celebrants too gross a way tomake his point.After all, he would have reasoned, itwould hardly be credible for MayorDaley to be present a such an affair —not after dozens of students at the Uni¬versity had been brutalized on hisorders; not while some of these studentswalk the campus still bearing the scarsof back-alley beatings at the hands ofthe cops; not while students and facultyand university employees continue to beharassed in the streets around thecampus by these same representativesof the mayor; not after most of thei major learned societies in the nation hadvoted to avoid holding their conventionsin Chicago during the mayor’s term inoffice; not when the intellectual com¬munity of the city, the nation — indeedthe world — has come to view the manas the latest symbol of all that they mostdespise.As for McGeorge Bundy — equally in¬credible. After all, he was the chiefintellectual architect and justifier of theContinued from Page Sixof the kind that nobody could live with fora minute would say that Mr. Flacks shouldrefuse his monthly check, or that portionof it which he thinks comes from taintedsources. Those who give the money haveone thing in common: they assume thatmuch of it will go to people, who disagreewith them 1n politics, economic theory, re¬ligion, and theory of the novel—to name afew. That’s what the tradition of the Uni¬versity and its precarious private supportmeans. (I asked a student whether Ishould send this letter, and he said thatwhat I have just written is sure to be inter¬preted by SDS as a threat to Mr. Flacks,since I am an “administrator.” But I’mleaving it in, as an act of blind faith: sure¬ly nobody at Chicago is silly enough to be¬lieve that an intended threat would be giv¬en in this public form, or that I haveenough power to carry out a threat if Imade one.)Principle No. 2: Mr. Flacks thinks that itis wrong for the University to “depend forits survival on the beneficence of fat cats,and gangsters and war criminals.” So do IIf Mr. Flacks will show me where there isanother kind of university, one that willstill provide, as this one does, opportunitiesfor him and me to pursue our educationalobjectives freely, but unlike this one hav¬ing no contact with or dependence on per¬sons he or I might object to, I’ll followhim; But he knows that such universitiesexist only in his imagination of an improb¬able future. Meanwhile, here we both are.Principle No. 3: Mr. Flacks believes thatthe University should choose its associatesand participants (not just its benefactors,but its “dining companions” on politicallines. There are some universities in the Vietnam war; he had three years agoon national TV used lies and innuendoto insult the integrity of a distinguishedmember of the University faculty; hehad recently declared for a de-escala¬tion of the war in order to better prolongit! he was widely seen internationallyas a war criminal.Well, now we read in the Maroon thatsuch crudities are, in fact actually tobe staged by the University trustees: theinauguration of the new president reallywill be celebrated in person by the na¬tion’s rich and powerful, with MayorDaley and McGeorge Bundy (and otherswith similar records) in active attend¬ance.It is, of course, Mr. Levi’s privilegeto feel honored by such an occasion.Moreover, if this is anyone’s university,it is certainly his — his family has beeninvolved in its affairs ever since thebeginning, and no one can match hisintimacy with the place over the years.So it is surely his prerogative to hold anaffair depicting with such clarity theinstitutional connections and loyalties ofthe University. (One might only wishthat he would resolve, after this dinner,to abandon the usual cant about the“neurality” of the University).However, it does seem necessary forthe substantial number of members ofthe University who feel dishonored bythis occasion and who have loyaltiesquite opposed to those of Mr. Levi toregister this fact. SDS’ call for a massiveprotest at the Hilton is entirely right.We ought to say, by the most effectivemeans possible, that we regard thesocial order presided over by the menat this banquet to be intolerable andillegitimate; that we intend to continueand intensify the effort of end the Daleydictatorship, to stop the war in Vietnamand to make new Vietnams impossible;that we want a society in which all mencan come to the banquet, a universitywhose president is chosen by and re¬sponsible to the faculty and the students,and a “life of the mind” which doesnot depend for its survival on thebeneficence of fat cats, and gangstersand war criminals.Richard FlacksAssistant Professor of Sociologycountry which agree with him, universitieswhich choose faculty according to politicalopinion and prevent visits or speeches bymen exhibiting tainted views or actions.Not infrequently these days ignoramuses ofthe political right suggest that universitiesshould withhold degrees from those whohave not proved, by their actions and opin¬ions, that they are “properly educated.” Sofar as I know, no one from outside theUniversity has protested the presence onThursday’s inauguration panel of a mem¬ber of SDS, or the invitation to the CivicDinner of several SDS members. But ifanyone did, he would get nowhere with us.We would resign, whether as adminis¬trators or professors, before we would al¬low political pressure from anyone to de¬termine whom we teach or dine with. Iwish that Mr. Flacks would explain theprincipled grounds he would use, in argu¬ment with such a person, if that personwere to say, “Ah, but you refused to inviteX, Y, and Z to your banquet because oftheir political beliefs and actions. You areafter all politically committed.” As a per¬son and as a faculty member, Mr. Flackshas a right at such a moment to say, “Myposition is not really based on principlesabout how to maintain freedom within theUniversity but rather on my personal polit¬ical convictions.” But he cannot expect theUniversity to risk his right to be among us,with his splendid needling, by setting prec¬edents for his enemies.None of this settles the question of whereany of us should land on Wednesday night,whether inside dining, outside protesting,or studying Phy. Sci. But I should hopethat wherever we are we would want thechoice to be based on facts not hearsay,and on moral principles that we can apply to ourselves as well as to our worstenemies.Wayne C. BoothProspective Full-Time Non-AdministratorSchwabMy loyalty to the scholarly community,its students and other people who look to itfor responsible utterance demands re¬sponse to the recent letter in The Maroonattributed to Richard Flacks. Three partsof its content appear to me unforgiveableon the part of one who is supposed to ex¬emplify and convey responsible intellectualwork.First and least offensive is the vague in¬nuendo beginning, “his (Mr. Levi’s) familyhas been involved in its affairs. . .” Isfaculty affiliation involvement with affairs?Or is “affairs” to function as an ink blotfor every paranoid imagination to fill in asit pleases? Does Mr. Flacks know how andto what extent Mr. Levi’s family has been“involved” or are the facts of the casemerely irrelevant?Second, Mr. Flacks dares tell us “thefact. . about Mr. Levi’s loyalties. Howdoes Mr. Flacks know this fact? Hypnosis?'Or is 'affairs' to functionas an ink blot for everyparanoid imaginationto f ill in as it pleases?'interview under pentothal? long and in¬timate association with the man? respon¬sible study of his actions and choices? Ithink not.Third, Mr. Flacks dares speak withoutqualification for the intellectual community“of the city, the nation—indeed, the world.. .’’By what warrant could this possibly bejustified? Or is it that oldest of dema¬gogues’ tricks by which “every-right-think¬ing man agrees with me”—since by defini¬tion any offe who disagrees is not right-thinking?Am I to suppose that Mr. Flacks usescanons of evidence and of responsible ut¬terance when he publishes scholarly work?Then must I suppose him to hold that inmatters of morality and moral judgement,analogous canons do not apply, that innertensions and unexamined indignations aresufficient?Joseph J. SchwabWilliam Rainey HarperProfessor of Natural SciencesProfessor of EducationLewontinIn last Friday’s Maroon there appeareda bitter letter by Richard Flacks on thesubject of a dinner. For him, that celebra¬tion with the presence and participation ofRichard Daley and McGeorge Bundy is aclear sign oi the loyalty of the Universityto such men and the elements in societythat bear and nurture them. But DickFlacks is wrong. It is a sign of a muchdeeper and, to me, vastly more frighteningphenomenon—the awful insensitivity andpolitical unawareness of good and in¬telligent men.After learing about the plans for thisdinner at which I, too, was to be a guest, Iasked myself, “Can it be that the plannersof our celebrations did not realize in whata dilemma they placed me and others?Can it be that they did not understand theintensity of our feelings about the August'We have forgot thatpolitical action is the mostimportant expression ofour communal lifein society.'events and the civil authorities responsiblefor them? Can they be so blind to the de¬testation we have for our criminal adven¬turism in Asia and for all those men whowere active in promoting it? Did they notsee that our desire to symbolize our sup¬port of the University and its new Presi¬dent is utterly thwarted by asking us tohonor by our presence and attention as¬pects of society that are anathema?” I amafraid the answer to all these questions is“Yes.” It simply did not occur to them that political issues were that important,that we would not let “bygones be by¬gones”, that we would not, gentlemen tothe last, submerge our merely politicalconvictions in a moment of good feeling,like Mr. Nixon and Mr. Humphrey joshingeach other in Opa Locka.But the organizers of this event are notchiefly to blame. It is the members of ouracademic community themselves who havecreated this attitude. Qow many facultymembers of the University of Chicagobanded together to make a public denun¬ciation an t a demonstrative oposition tothe monstrous behavior of our Mayor? Howmany were moved to political activity andagitation after August? How many liberaltongue-cluckers and head-waggers have in¬vested time, money, energy, their reputa¬tions, their popularity to help young menavoid having their legs torn off? For in¬tellectuals, as for other Americans, politi¬cal life is not really serious. The very word“politics” has been corrupted to meanthat vacuous activity engaged in beforeelections, or the wheeling and dealing inCongressional lobbies. We have forgot thatpolitical action is the first and most impor¬tant expression of our communal life insociety. This devaluation of politics to thebanal is the most frightening aspect of ourpresent condition.Dick Flacks, like others, calls our gov¬ernment and its authority illegitimate.Alas, the real horror of our situation isthat it is a supremely legitimate govern¬ment, deriving the authority for its immor¬al acts and its terrible indifference and cy¬nicism from a massive consent. Last Tues¬day 70 million people, including millions ofblacks, again asserted the legitimacy ofHumphrey-Nixon and Richard Daley. Oneof our colleagues, with great imagination,opened the little window in the voting ma¬chine and wrote simply “No.” (I, with lessimagination, simply left it blank.) Wasthere a massive nay-saying by the Univer¬sity community? I think not. They, too,have given their consent, despite theirgrumblings.Men with serious political convictions,who will engage in the kind of radical po¬litical activity needed to reform societyare rare indeed. That they are as rare in¬side the University as out, is said but notunexpected. That, of course, does not makeit any less disheartening.- Richard LewontinProfessor of Biology andMathematical BiologyMentschikoffThe letter from Mr. Flacks in Friday’sedition of The Maroon fills me with in¬dignation and sorrow that any member ofthis faculty could be so ignorant of themost elementary facts about Mr. Levi andthis university.Let me start with the man. I have knownMr. Levi for almost twenty years now, andI have seen him under conditions of stressand trouble as well as under conditions ofelation and pride of accomplishment. Thething that has emerged with clarity is thatno sense of person has ever intruded on hisdoing of the job ,and that the ideals andaspirations of the man for the institutionhave never waivered. These can be statedsimply as the creation of a relatively smallbut unique center of excellence in whichall ideas can be dispassionately and hon¬estly explored. As I see Mr. Levi, he viewshis own role in the effort to achieve such aninstitution as one of making it possible,freeing and protecting members of the fac¬ulty engaged in their own individual vari¬ations of the search for truth and justiceand of providing students with the in¬tellectual wherewithal to in turn contributeeither to that search or to the implementa¬tion in the world of affairs of the productsof that search. This university is seen as acenter for new knowledge and ongoing de¬bate about values and the problems of im¬plementing values in society. And I suspectMr. Levi is willing to persuade, beg, fight,and bleed to implement his vision of whatthis university ought to be while simulta-* Turn to Page 117November 12, 1968 The Chicago Maroon« i. t 1*1Pro/s Conclude Insufficient Evidence in Lynd CaseBy Barbara HurstTwo members of the American Associ¬ation of University Professors (AAUP), in¬vestigating Roosevelt president Rolf A.Weil’s veto of the appointment of Staugh-ton Lynd to the history department there,have concluded that there is insufficientevidence to support the charge of a viola¬tion of academic freedom in Weil’s deci¬sion.Weil vetoed last April the unanimousrecommendation of the history departmentand the dean of the college of arts and sciences. In response to a faculty petitionin protest of the decision, the local chapterof the AAUP appointed history ProfessorC. William Heywood at Cornell College andpolitical science professor David Cooper-man from the University of Minnesota,both members of AAUP, to investigate. Ac¬cording to the AAUP report, the primarypurpose of the inquiry was “to advise theassociation’s general secretary as towhether or not in their judgment theRoosevelt University administration’s de¬nial of a full-time appointment to ProfessorStaughton Lynd . . . constituted a violation of academic freedom.”The two-man committee judged bothwith respect to academic freedom and tothe procedures employed in Weil’s veto. Itconcluded that while “President Weilshould have accepted the judgment of thehistory department and the dean of the col¬lege of arts and sciences in the matter ofProfessor Lynd’s fitness, (it has) not foundthat improper elements in Professor Weil’sdecision can be demonstrated beyond areasonable doubt.They further concluded that there is “in¬adequate evidence to support a charge that President Weil acted in bad faith.”Bernard J. Farber, editor of the Roose¬velt Torch, says that the issue is now“dead” at Roosevelt. Farber stated thatWeil has issued an “unspoken and unwrit¬ten directive” to this effect. “I doubt any¬thing will come of it,” he said.The history department, according toFarber, will re-open the issue in spring,’69, when they re-recommend Lynd for ap¬pointment to the department. However thistime, Farber added, the recommendationwill not receive approval from the collegedean.Moscow Answers Critics of AppointmentB^hehsi ^ cim* *7•Oo asked IM Cap 4 settle the* prabl—m aad all jriMim cmtmm I win ■— « ft My — are can put har W M4 wift attar —tartyaba* matter* at *a Uni vanity aft h wtti the book ft «wy deride la publishara bmp earned la aft— I an sup- bo* partiaa know whet ttt ta 1 nghi af ttt Uawnty la mas* Mai hefty I oauM a* aaft «ban ipproarhad me wftb problem thai I ftiall br dealng wttt. aad aoi be aMt to ftp theft pfc instead I a| (ram die raw of pay > «* ftdrty awe that if I sun la Ube to reetrrt my activities la soKuign. la pear aftvtoertag to pnefttaaa on mrnrn that an We bread I ftimbfy as possible - the tamer■ wMch wftl Hie Uai varsity l» *e time aTHE CHICAGO MAROON•*“ 77 « ■>'_'* IM> It I ttt fwm I,I,,.. M h*.200 Tent In' To ProtestLack of Suitable Housingftp testers Merit j -|re* hMdred stuftsnu attended a "to*-to’ TftflBHOUSINGCRISISam Alltaace ifHAi grew am of jParents, Trustees, AlumniFriends,Neighbors,Sugardads:Keep trackof theUniversitythrough theMaroon. Andhelp theMaroon atthe sametime. Oanr> rrartaeder .ht bat just retaroadTW, ban b. —anu pushed tsNftpr.Iht official name for Hue |taal • was Wayne C Booth dean of theCettege I really have nothing w say'Booth said This m a peaceful demonstrauon If they warn to get together toBoycott Endedhorcaa af the C ftop and Hutrhmaon Wednesday they wouM be f irft d raugtft.-.-mens supporting a strike by sa C Ukag bft. aft a, worker* aalbad etft£jp workers was called off Thursday the sa ne daynight as the sinkers began negotiations The stnkars said they coonder the miswith union representative. *nd Unfvmrty and ihe penally ndtodou* I ran t under*uad ehy we can t bava a pure of p»The boycott was called Wednesday by or a glass of milk without paying theseStudents for a Democratic Society high prices 'protested <aw Krik*The strike centered around complaint. 'At one ume the workers had free loodof the worker* over the high prices ef said an official of the worker* uuksi,ood Loral mi American frderatiaa of Statetravae SOS spokesman dins Hobson said that County and Municipal Employee* AFLautowlng By lha boycott would he resumed ft nc«ou» CIO But the worker* took a pay raiseMaroonINH 3041212 E. 59th St.Chicago, III. 60637Send me the Maroon for one year.I enclose $7 ( )Send me the Maroon for two years,henclose $12 ( ).w.'/M -V *•*■*'* *■* *The Chicago Maroon * * V < ,November 12, 1968i Power Elite Shapes University PolicyBy David Klafter and Chris Hobson‘ The sources of power of a great univer¬sity should not be misconceived. Its pres¬tige and influence are based on integrityand intellectual competence; they are notbased on the circumstance that it may bewealthy, may have political contacts, andmay have influential friends.”These are inspiring words, but we be¬lieve them no more now than we did lastfall, when they first appeared as part ofthe Kalven Committee’s report on The Uni¬versity’s Role in Political and Social Ac¬tion.Tomorrow night, the University and itswealthy, politically important, and in¬fluential friends will dine together at theConrad Hilton in honor of incoming Presi¬dent Levi. Those invited include: NelsonRockefeller, Governor of New York; DavidRockefeller, a prime mover behind nearlya half billion dollars in American loansto South Africa, and President of theChase Manhattan bank, Winthrop Rockefel¬ler, Governor of Arkansas and a leader ofefforts to bring Northern businesses to thestate; four other Rockefellers; RobertMcNamara; McGeorge Bundy, architect ofUS Vietnam policy; Avery Brundage, whowants to keep the Olympics “non-political”by including South Africa and expellingtwo black athletes for giving a black powersalute, and who is a hot prospect for fund¬ing UC’s new $3 million gymnasium; Rich¬ard J. Daley; about 1,000 of Chicago’s busi¬ness and industrial leaders — and a hand¬ful of students.The dinner makes it obvious that to whatever extent a power elite exists in thiscountry, the university carefully cultivatesrelations with it. These are the men onwhom the University depends for financ¬ing. That the relationship involves obliga¬tions in return is evident from the mem¬bership of the Board of Trustees, filled asit is with corporate leaders. Although theymay leave the University alone in its day-to-day operations, they have final authorityin all decisions concerning the directionand policy of the University. Such deci¬sions include those on the destruction ofhousing in the South Campus area; thechoice of a new president; what new aca¬demic and research facilities are built; co¬operation with Federal aid programs, andwith the controls they impose; and evenstudent housing — the trustees, for ex¬ample, rejected a low-cost plan for studenthousing at 57th and Dorchester becausethis would lower property values.These decisions are not socially or politi¬cally neutral, and the University knows it.“Within the framework of the law,” report¬ed a faculty committee appointed in 1967 toreport on the disclosure of a case of politi¬cal bias in admissions policy, “and in cog¬nizance of the general value consensus pre¬vailing in our society, it is the right of theUniversity faculty and administrativeofficers to determine what shall be the ori¬entation, social mission, intellectual cul¬ture, curriculum, and educational goals ofthe University.” This was to be done inpart “through the choice of the succeedinggeneration of scholars.”This value consensus — not really a gen¬Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarHyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393STARTTOMORROWTODAYStart now to prepare fora good career at a goodsalary! COMPUTERPROGRAMMING . . .the NOW profession withthe big future.8 0UT0F10QUALIFYEigni out of ten highschool graduates qualifyfor computer programmingtraining. Call, write orvisit us and get your freeaptitude test.DO ITTODAYMake up your mind totake a long look at yourfuture. Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.**-*-■"* 'i4- T THE130 MPH TIREFor people who don’t do over 70, but want a ridiculousmargin of safety.A Pirelli Cinturato can do 130 mph. For 24 hoursStraight.It can cut corners at speeds your car can’t muster.It’ll stop your car faster than any other tire made.It’s less prone to skid than any other tire on theroad. Wet or dry.How do you make a tire as safe as this? Easy.You build a tire for American cars to Ferrari GTtolerances.Other radial plies use tubes. We're tubeless.Other radials use two plies at the sidewall. Weuse three.By the time we’re finished laboring over aCinturato, it’s tough enough to withstand three timesmore road impact than an ordinary tire.Someday, every car will come equipped with atire as safe as the Cinturato. But until that dayyou can get it from us. ■ 1 ———jp■ IRELLIFRONTENDBRAKE-MUFFLERSERVICE9200 STONY ISLAND AVE.CALL 374-1500 eral one, but that which is shared by thoseat the top of our society — is the consensusof those who plan the Vietnam war, lendhundreds of millions of dollars to South Af¬rica, and fund counter-insurgency researchfor use in US ghettoes as well as in the“third world.”It operates not only through specific de¬cisions, but through fostering a general at¬mosphere in the University — an atmos¬phere friendly to Morris Janowitz’s “SocialControl of Escalated Riots” and hostile toJesse Lemisch’s “Merchant Seamen in thePolitics of Revolutionary America.”This atmosphere shapes us as studentsand guides us toward roles we are in¬tended to assume in later life — rolesfriendly to the ultimate purposes ofMcGeorge Bundy, Richard Daley and sev¬en members of the Rockefeller family.We don’t think that the University of Chi¬cago serves purposes different from thoseof other American universities — or that these purposes make it in any way moresacred than any major American corpo¬ration. Like any institution in our society,this one is defensible to the extent that ithelps restructure our society to satisfy theaspirations of those at its bottom, andthose in other countries whom it milks forits prosperity. To the extent that it doesnot do this — indeed, serves purposesdirectly opposed to these — it is subject tocriticism, and to attack.It does not do so now. We do not regardthe Hilton dinner as a harmless socialevent, but rather as a meeting of ourenemies and the enemies of dominatedpeoples throughout the world. These menthreaten us. We cannot let their threat gounchallenged.David Klafter is a fourth-year student inthe College and a member of SDS. ChrisHobson is a graduate student in the socialsciences division and a member of SDS.IF THERE BE FAULTPLACE IT ON THYSELFAND PLACE THYSELFWITHIN REACH OF ITSCORRECTION i:II>9mmimih that onceYOU COULDNT REMEMIERREFLECT UPON THE TIMEWHEN YOU WIU FORGETAMO SEE THE WEALTH OFTODAYII II II II INoveitiAer 12, 1968v • The Chicago Maroon».r•rrrr* M ' •’ „ fDR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 FREEMUSICAL SOCIETYCONCERT:1. Chamber Brass Players2. Electronic Compositionby V. BarnettWed. 3:30 P.M.Mandel Hall SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and Relatives FacultySingle rooms from $8:00 dailyTwin rooms $11:00 dailyLake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveThe Chicago Maroon November 12, 1968 theCAT PEOPLEJackques Tourneur’s tale of suspenseful terror7:I5&9:00 doc films Cobb HallAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3*9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.’s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos -» AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount to students with ID cardsauthorized SMC sales & servicemi 3-31135424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, Illinois 60615_ 1 foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.Jean-Claude Killy talks shop.Chevrolet Sports Shop(Freely translated from the French) “I am a man who drivesfor sport... for fun, you know? This is why I am telling youabout the brave new Chevrolet and its Sports Shop.“Only in the Chevrolet Sports Shop do you find carslike the Camaro Z 28. Ah, the Z 28. Camaro with302 V8, more muscular suspension and Hurstshifter. Only Z 28 offers 4-wheel disc brakeslike Corvette, also in the Sports Shop.“You will find, too, the Camaro SS,Chevelle SS 396, Nova SS and the bigImpala SS 427.“The Sports Shop. Part of theSports Department at yourChevrolet dealer’s.“But of course.”Putting you first,keeps us first.THE KLH* MODEL ELEVEN-FMThe Model Eleven-FM adds a high-performance FM multiplex tuner to the basic Model Elevenphonograph to provide a complete stereo music system in portable form. Like the rest of theEleven’s circuitry, the tuner is fully transistorized, and it adds only a pound to the weight of thesystem. But it performs as well as component tuners of several times its size and cost.The KLH* Model Eleven is the first high-performance stereo phonograph in easily portable form.Only 28 pounds, the Model Eleven is small enough and light enough to travel wherever there is anoutlet. And it can fill a living room with the kind of sound once available only from a massive andexpensive sound system.ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak St.-OE 1-4150 -/VM MM A MM fW fM M M 2035 W. 95tn St.-779-6500MiuiViaftMusicraft SpecialReg $269.95See the Super Sports at your Chevrolet dealer’s Sports Department now.'69 C(imam Z/28 SendTheMaroonHome!Jean-Claude Killy, winner of three goldmedals in the 1968 Winter Olympics.• Birnbaum Letteril LETTERS Thompson Stifles MeadContinued from Page SevenTo suggest that such a man, and a uni¬versity building in the image of his dream,are unworthy of respect and support is todisplay either complete ignorance of thefacts or to express a view that the dreamMr. Levi embodies is not worthy. I hesitateto attribute to Mr. Flacks an attack on thedream, for it seems to me self-evident thatin the troubled and value tom epoch inwhich we are living at least one universityand one university president must stand upand be counted as unalterably dedicated towhat Mr. Flacks describes as the “cant ofneutrality,” but which in reality is the pro¬vision of a forum for free debate and thesearch for truth and justice. I have pre¬ferred to think that he has written out ofignorance and that, if he were to under¬stand the reality, he, as I am. would beproud to rejoice in Mr. Levi's in¬auguration.The participants at the dinner are. ofcourse, a varied lot. Mr. Flacks does notlike Mayor Daley, who was invited asmayor of this city; he does not like Mr.Bundy, a distinguished scholar and presi¬dent of the Ford Foundation, attributing tohim evil motives without evidence; he doesnot seem to like anybody else who hasbeen invited, but I take it that that dislikereally cannot extend to the students, fellowfaculty, trustees, and friends who are at¬tending, perhaps, because they share Mr.Levi’s dream. Mr. Flacks and the Studentsin S.D.S. can, of course, picket the hotel,and, because I believe in Mr. Levi’sdream. I am prepared to defend that ill-advised action, in court or out, as a part ofthe freedom the dream entails. I wouldhope, knowing the hope is vain, that in¬stead they would become parts of thedream.Soia MentschikoffProfessor of Law Levi has always held the big lickin’ stick),nor from his acute analysis (since this wasneither expected nor received of him), butrather because Beadle chose to declareopenly and with pride that the most impor¬tant activity of his career as President ofthis pristine institution of higher learninghad been political.It is a fundamental tenet of this Univer¬sity’s ideology that it is politically neutral.When representatives of the graduatingstudents approached University officials torequest that the graduates themselves bepermitted to choose the speaker for theConvocation, they were told that thespeaker at all convocations must be theUniversity President to ensure politicalneutrality. Naturally, many graduates con¬sidered themselves betrayed when Beadle’sspeech was a rebuttal of their political po¬sition to a captive audience. He might in¬stead have delivered an innocuous paeanto the beauties of the life of the mind.We must realize, however, that Beadlesimply brought to the surface the truththat lies buried under the ideology and rit¬ual pervading this institution. The mostimportant achievement of Beadle’s term ofoffice was not educational, but the removalof thousands of poor people from this neigh¬borhood, accomplished through the concen¬tration of political power. The President ofthe University, be he Beadle or (!) Levi,not primarily an educator, but a politicalfigure, and one who is not responsible toany of the large numbers of people—neigh¬borhood residents, students, and othersaffected by the University’s power.Therefore, the President should be treat¬ed not as an educator but as a politician,and he should be dealt with like any otherpolitical tyrant. Like Humprey, Nixon,Wallace, or Daley, he should not be per¬mitted to speak on campus unless invitedby students, and he should not be permit¬ted to assume office unchallenged.Ed Birnbaum, '68 Mead Hou:e, charged up from lastweek’s victory over Tufts North in the firstplayoff game, was still unable to stop thepowerhouse offense generated by Thomp¬son North, as that team clinched the col¬lege house football championship 13-12.In the fraternity competition Phi Gamwon the championship in a bloody battlewith Psi U by an identical score. The twochampions meet tomorrow for the all-Col-lege title.In intramural wrestling. Tufts Northout-grappled Flint I to take the Collegehouse meet. Psi U overwhelmed all com¬petition to win the fraternity champion¬ship. Outstanding Wrestler awards went toWrobel of Mead and Stauffer of Psi U.The pre-Christmas basketball tourneygot underway yesterday with a record 64teams participating. The turkey trot comesup Thursday with three 18 lb. turkeys to begiven to the first place finishers in the col¬lege houses, fraternities, and divisions.FootballRebounding from their 25-0 victory overMarquette last week, the Maroon footballclass was ground into the turn Saturday byLake Forest, 26-6.No doubt a big factor in Saturday’sgame was the loss of all but one of the scorers from last week’s game: McGree(two TD’s), McClellan (one TD), and Allen(PAT). The only surviving scorer wasMike Burger, who ran back a pass inter¬ception. Against Lake Forest, the only Ma¬roon tally game in the second quarter withan 18-yard pass, Stankiewicz to Miller.Head Coach Walter Haad said that theteam although handicapped played ex¬ceptionally well, especially in the secondhalf (the half-time score was 26-6). Asagainst Marquette, the defense over¬whelmed the Lake Forest running attack,holding Lake Forest to a total of 44 yardson the ground. This game closes the seasonwith a 2-3 record.SoccerThe Maroon soccer team, continuing intheir losing ways, ended their dismal sea¬son this weekend, getting crushed 6-0 byLake Forest last Wednesday, and 2-0 byAurora on Saturday. This brought theirrecord to a tearful 2-9-1. Last year theteam finished with a winning 6-5-1 record.With several starters being lost throughgraduation, Coach Bill Vendl lamented thatthe only ray of hope for a better seasonnext year could be found in several first-year students who were unable to come outthis year, but might next year.Tuesday, November 12An incident that occurred at last June'sregular Convocation (graduation) ceremo¬ny deserves mention now because of thepresent controversy over Urban Renewaland Edward Levi’s upcoming “inaugura¬tion” as President on November 14.At that ceremony, outgoing PresidentGeorge Wells Beadle made his address onthe topic of Urban Renewal. This drew itssignificance not from the speaker’s power(since it was well known that Beadle heldonly the orb and scepter of his office, while InternshipsApplications for summer intern¬ships in various Washingtonagencies are available in the Officeof Career Counseling and Place¬ment, Reynolds Club, Room 202. |All students are eligible for theprogram. Application deadlines fornecessary tests are near. Applynow. RECRUITING VISIT: American Institute for ForeignTrade. Call ext. 3282 for appointment.FILM: "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre" withHumphrey Bogart. Judd 126, 2:30-5 and 5-7:30pm.SEMINAR: "Membrane Properties of a BarnacleMuscle Fiber," Dr. Susmu Hagiwara, ScrippsInstitute of Oceanography, University of Cali¬fornia at San Diego. Abbott Hall, room 324,3 pm.MEETING: University Council, Business East 106,3:40 pm.SEMINAR: "The Role of Religion in the Formation ofBalkan and East European Nations," Dr.Emanuel Turczynski, Munich University, Cobb103, 4 pm.LECTURE: "Moralists vs. Immoraiists: The GreatBattle in Scandinavian Literature in the 1880's,"Dr. Elias Bredsdorff, University of Cambridge.Classics 21, 4 pm.COLLOQUIM: "Pseudopotential Band-Structure Calcula¬tions for Semiconductors: The State of theArt and Specific Comments on the Spinel-Structure Compounds,' Thomas K. Bergstresser,James Franck Institute. Research Institute 480,4:15 pm.DOC FILMS: "Ball of Fire" by Howard Hawks, CobbHall, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.LECTURE: "Common Sense View of a Good Life andthe Objections to It," Mortimer Adler. Quan-trell Auditorium, 8 pm.FOLK DANCING: Internationa Folk Dancing. Inter¬national House, 8-10:30 pm.LECTURE: "Underwater Archaeology in the MayaArea," Stephen F. Borhegyi, Director of Mil¬waukee Public Museum. Breasted Hall, 8:30 pm.Wednesday, November 13SEMINAR: "The Diffusion of Salts and Water Across Interphases," Dr. Dewey F. Sears, TulaneUniversity School of Medicine. Abbott Hall,'room 324, 3 pm.MEETING: Faculty of the Divinity School, SwiftCommon Room, 3 pm.CONCERT: Music for brass instruments and an elec¬tronic piece for tape. No admission. MandelHall, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: "Role of Oxygen in the Enzymic Reduc¬tion of Cytochrome c," Irwin Fridovich, DukeUniversity. Abbott Hall 101, 4 pm.REHEARSAL: University Symphony Orchestra Re¬hearsal, Mandell Hall, 6:30-10 pm.DOC FILMS: "The Cat People" by Jacques Tourneur,Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.LECTURE: "Psychology and Alchemy,' Dr. JamesHillman, Kent 107, 8 pm.FOLK DANCING: British and Scandinavian CountryDancers, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.Thursday, November 14325TH CONVOCATION: INAUGURATION OF PRESI¬DENT EDWARD H. LEVI, Rockefeller Memo¬rial Chapel, 10:30 am.RECRUITING VISIT: Atomic Energy Commission, opento M.A. candidates in econ., history, inter¬national relations, and political science. CallAnita Sandke for appointment.PANEL DISCUSSIONAL: "The Role and Future ofthe Private University," Kenneth Clark, so¬ciologist; Nathan Pasey, President of Harvard;Theo ore Hesburgh, President of the Universityof Notre Dame; Edward Shils, social thought.Handel Hall, 2:15 pm.LECTURE: "Recent Advances in the Analysis of theSecretary Process." Dr. George Palade, Rocke¬feller University. Academy 104, 3 pm.COLLOQUIM: "Simple Thoughts about Superconducti¬vity," Victor Weisskopf, MIT. Eckhart 133,4:30 pm.DOC FILM: "Red Line 7000" by Howard Hawks, CobbHall, 7:15 and 9:15 pm.r&prjf* r9£*r9e\e9{)rSf\r&(*f-inrSt*ricivjw JJw JJC* wp* vj* JJw wjvSpecial!Style Cut —Requires No Setting!l(f/0 Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0777-8SjCtOji ^The Odd Shopat THOMAS IMPORTSJewelry - African ClothingRobes - Black PaintingComing: Books from Africa10% Student Discount'352 East 53rd 684-6370 You won’t have to putyour moving or storageproblem off until tomor¬row if you call us today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.12655 S. Doty Ave.646-4411 all MBA’Sare net me sameInvestigate Washington UniversityAll M B A. programs are not alike. The Master ofBusiness Administration Program at Washington Uni¬versity has an experienced and nationally known fac¬ulty Big enough to offer the very best in graduateinstruction, it has been kept small enough to permitattention to the needs of individual students.The Graduate School of Business offers a uniqueM B A. program designed especially to meet the needof graduates of non-business undergraduate schoolssuch as engineering and liberal arts.Scholarships and assistantships are av";|able. Send foran illustrated brochure and discover mat all M.B.A.programs are not alike.yTv Dr, Gilbert Whitaker will be oncampus Thursday, November 21,9:00 a.m. to noon interviewingstudents at Office of CareerCounseling and Placement. (VOLVO)Volvos last an averageof 11 years in Sweden.They average about aday and a half in our showroom.Tin* l»r-t reason l«»t I min ini: .t \ol\n i* lioan^r it l.i^U so Ion*:.I\\.nil\ liow loin: \\«• doti I uuaianlrr. lint wo do know tlt.it over- o| .ill lit*- \nl\o* rruMrrrd in tin* l nilt*«J Stair* iii tin* hist1 I yrar* an* *till on tin* road.Tin* Im•*»! iv.i-on lor lm\ inti a \ol\n now. i* I mm au-r wr liaxra lew in *lork. \nd I rank I \. w<* don t r\prr| to liavr lln*maround too loir*!.\\ liidi lirinii* it|> an inlrnMinj: paradox alxml \ol\o>. ( hitriistoiin*i> like to Ini\ tin ill l»rrail>r l!n*\ la-t. Wr likr to >rlltlicm Im*« an*c llirx don*!.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE.CHICAGO, ILL. 60649 RE 1-3800November 12, 1968 The Chicago Maroon 11* »v*t<November 12, 1968TUTORSFrench Tutor — Parisian — PhDcandidate in Rom. Lang. 3 yrs.U.S. college teaching. KE 6-4300Apt. 508 after 7 P.M.Having trouble with German? Ex¬pert tutoring. Reasonable rate. Con¬tact 721-1138.FOR SALE'62 PEUGOT 404 Reasonable 375-9264.'64 VOLVO B18 Jim Johnson 288-9268.MG 1100 1965 Good cond. F.M. $650or offer. 752-1361 or 375-5340.Cures man and beast. Jarman andMitchell, Ida Noyes, 7:00 Sat.FREE: lovely black male cat., 6mo. old, needs home. Call Hasel288-1099, MU 4-9137, Ml 3-0800X4356. Leave message.Three year old Automatic WASHER.$70 or best offer. 955-1795 after5:00 P.M.Brand new London Fog raincoatwith Alpaca Lining: Black, 36 reg(for sizes 38-36). 493-7622 evenings.Just drafted—double bed. Brandnew. $75 or best offer. 752-4733.Amplifiers, turntables, loud speak¬ers in various conditions. Used tape.All priced to walk out with. OnlyWednesday and Thursday, Nov. 13and Nov. 14 at the Department ofMusic, 5835 University Ave., be¬tween 10:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M.Cannon Guild Harpsichord; 2 yearsold; excellent condition. ContactPaula Shevick: 955-3768 or 1-219-883-1400.Good Used TVs. Reconditioned.$24.95 and up. American Radio 1300E. 53rd, 53 Kimbark Plaza.Used AR Turntable. Good cond. $40.Call Chris 324-3005.Hi Fi Somponents1,000s to choose from:AR2a Speakers: $60.00DYNA Power amps: $40.00MCINTOSH pre-amps: $22.50AR Turnfables: $47:50FM Tuners: $12:50 up.BELL Stereo tape transport: $40SONY 200 Stereocorder: $95.00SCHWARTZ BROS.1215 E. 63rd St. FA 4-8400EARSSympathetic ear: 643-7178.PEOPLE WANTEDSenior or Graduate Student wantedto lead a humanistically orientedjunior high group Sundays 10:30to 12:30 A.M. Call 922-5561 or 643-4753.DESK CLERK (male) 3 nights perweek 12:00 Midnite until 8:00 A.M.Do not apply unless you plan tostay thruout summer of '69. Apply:The Quadrangle Club, 1155 East57th St. •Need SITTER for delightful 9 mo.old occasional Wed. mornings. 550Dorchester Ave. Ph. 955-4966.PEOPLE FOR SALEI will REPAIR anything! Cheaprates. Guarantee. Myron 955-0076.Minnette's Custom Salon. Altera¬tions, Dressmaking. 1711Vi E. 55th.493-9713.Expert Typing Service. Rush Jobs.Judy 858-2544.May I do your typing? 363-1104.PERSONALSStudents for Israel presents SimchaDinitz of the Israeli Embassyspeaking on origins of the conflictin the Middle East. Monday, Nov.25, 6:45 P.M. Hillel House, 5715 S.Woodlawn.Who is JONI MITCHELL anyway?Who JONI MITCHELL is:She wrote Judy Collins' hits: BOTHSIDES NOW and MICHAEL FROMMOUNTAINS. JONI sings thesewhen in concert.Psychological terror abounds inTourneur's classic CAT PEOPLE—tomorrow at doc films (you, too,are perhaps one of THEM!)."There seems to be a peculiardivision of labor here in Washington.The President makes peace speechesand the Pentagon makes foreignpolicy but the unpleasant task ofdeclaring war is left to the poorState Dept."I. F. Stone, June 9, 1965.The above quote was taken fromI.F. Stone's IN TIME OF TOR¬MENT, available in paperback atthe Book Center in Harper's Court.Stone is the only real critic of oursociety left now that Lenny Bruceis dead. SAY WHAT?The Blue Gargoyle speaks. Wednes¬days at 9:00 P.M. on WHPK, 88.3FM.Introducing the newest group oncampus—STUDENTS FOR ISRAEL—come meet us and hear SimchaDinitz, Mon. Nov. 25, 6:45 P.M.FOTA 69—Meeting. Tuesday, Nov.12, 8 P.M. Reynolds Club Lounge.All Welcome.President Nixon—I told you so!L. HolowinskiJARMAN and MITCHELL are com¬ing. 11/16 Ida Noyes Hall. 8:00P.M.Tuss Kababe, Luleh Kababe, Shish-Kababe. Dancing girls? No, silly,they're on the menu at Ahmad's.Go there and check them out.Tickets for Nov. 18 JONI MIT¬CHELL CONCERT at Mandel HallBox Office from 11 A.M. to 2 P.M.daily. Reserved seats: $3. Others$2.50, $2.LIFE IS TOO SHORT FOR GAMES.Wld like to meet or corr w warmwhlsm yng worn w strng snse humvals. Am grad stud, 28. John Er-skine, 123 Wlnspear Ave. Buff.N.Y. 14214.The Middle Eastern Conflict—howdid it all begin? Find out Mon.Nov. 25 6:45 P.M. at Hillel House.In the afternoon of November 19, 1968, Mr. Richard Boardman, As¬sistant Professor of Law, The Col¬umbus School of Law, The CatholicUniversity of America, Washington,D.C., will be visiting the Universityto recruit students for next Sep¬tember.The curriculum is independent ofsectarian control and is orientedtoward the practice of law. Theyare interested in students of allbackgrounds and traditions.For appointments with Mr. Board-man, please contact the Office ofCareer Counseling and Placement.Come to Room 202 in the ReynoldsClub, or call extension 3282.WRITERS' WORKSHOP—PL 2-8377.. . and the aborigines turn outsome surprisingly cute-lookinggirls.—'"Richard Joseph in Esquire.They work hard at it.Who JONI MITCHELL IS:She wrote Dave Van Ronk's hits:CLOUDS and CHELSEA MORNING.She sings these songs when in con¬cert."Forty magazines exist today inthe undergraduate world, with atotal circulation of 250,000 permonth. The trend is to generalinterest, thoughtful articles, seriousshort stories, sensitive poetry, eru¬dite film and BOOK REVIEWS (myemphasis—ks). They are pompousand polished, doubtless doing agreat job in training college stu¬dents for a life work of editingcorporation house organs." —fromEsquire. They wouldn't be talking aboutany one WE know, would they?MARCO POLO can get you any¬where. 288-5944."There is a temptation to compareJONI MITCHELL to JUDY COL¬LINS 8. JOAN BAEZ, and it mustbe a comparison weighted in MissMitchell's favor." See her in con¬cert at Mandel Hall next Monday,Nov. 18, 8:30 P.M.Interested in Israel? Come hearSimcha Dinitz Nov. 25, 6:45 P.M.RED LINE >000 (or, the poorman'sGrand Prix), Howard Hawks' highlyunderrated adventure-drama, atdoc films Thursday (soc. sci. 122).You see, it's all about these menwho think that they are cars.RUSSIAN Taught by Native Teach¬er. Rapid method. Free trial les¬son. CE 6-1423, 9-5.SKI ASPEN. 8 days, 9 meals, alltows, round-trip jet, taxes, Dec.14. $199. 764-6264.YOGA—transcend depression, an¬xiety, ennui. Sri Nerode DO 3-0155.God gave us two ears for StereoListening. Don't abuse your gift.MUSICRAFT for A. R. DYNA, KLH.Campus rep. Bob Tabor. 324-3005.Christian Science Meeting, Tues.7:15, Thorndike Hilton Chapel. AllWelcome.Who JONI MITCHELL is:She wrote Ian 8< Sylvia's hit:CIRCLE GAME. She'll even singthis song Monday Night.RATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:75 cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 30 charactersand spaces per line.All ads must be prepaid.TO PLACE AD: Come or mailwith payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637.No ads will be taken over thephone.DEADLINES: ALL CLASSIFIEDADS FOR TUESDAY MUST BEIN BY FRIDAY. ALL CLASSI¬FIED ADS FOR FRIDAY MUSTBE IN BY WEDNESDAY. NOEXCEPTIONS. TEN A.M. TO3:30 P.M. DAILYFOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-M00, Ext. 3266.THINGS TO DOLOWES is having a sale for Maroonreaders only. You get a buck offany record in the store when youbring in a copy of their ad in lastFriday's Maroon. The sale ends onNov. 15, so hurry.If you can't decide which albumto buy, take my advice, get thescore from CHAPPAQUA, composedand performed by Ravi Shankar. Ifthat doesn't turn you on, get theChambers Brothers "The Time hasCome:" its a trip.Buy used electronic equipment andtapes at the Department of Music, Check out what's happening at theFourth Chicago International FilmFestival. Especially the portrait ofVanessa Redgrave on the insideback cover of the program guide.Call the number under the pictureon this page, ask for Marian, andwatch out.For other things to do, check outthe Personals.LOSTBiology Notebook in Cobb 11/4/68.Call Yondorf 324-6786.Grey Kitten with brown collar.11/3/68 53rd & Dorchester—RewardMl 3-1960.My heart in S.F.ROOM WANTEDFml trans student needs ROOMnext Va call Jack 410 Ml 3-6000.FOR RENTRoom and bath in large house forstudent or couple (grad, pref.) inexch. for babysitting 2 children.Hours, food, kitchen priv. & possiblepay all open. East HP on Campusbus rt. 363-5450 after 6.SUBLET: immediately; 2536 E.76th, 3 rooms, $100/month; safeand sedate, 3 blocks from I.C.,along campus bus route, 375-2949,Scott or Bill.Short-term lease, 2 weeks free,cLet QameS cBegiiiCALL (312) 225-18505835 University Ave., on Wednesdayand Thursday, Nov. 13 and Nov. 14between 10:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M.Priced cheap enough to walk outwith.BALL OF FIRE pits Barbara Stan¬wyck as a girl of questionablevirtue against a group of stodgylexicographers—all with the HAWKScomedy touch shown in Bringingup Baby—TONIGHT—doc films (soc.sci. 122).Intercollegiate Karate. See the UCKarate Team (rumored to consistof The Hulk, Batman, and Conan)defeat (i.e. stomp) teams fromother universities. Invited to thetournament: U. of I. Circle Cam¬pus, U. of I. Champaign, N.I.U.,Ohio U., South Dakota State, and5 or 6 others. 2 P.M. SaturdayNov. 16 at Boucher Hall, 915 E.53rd St., Admission by I.D.Indulge your oral fixation at theBlue Gargoyle. nearby, economical, newly dec. un-furn. apts. 2 & 3% rms. $75, $89.50.Free gas and elec. Clean, Quiet.Wiliams, 6043 Woodlawn.Furnished room: 493-3328.Need 1 grad. stud, to share 3-manapt. in Hy. Pk. $50/mo. Call 5-7P.M. 684-3644.MUSICMusical Society Concert — Free.Brass Players and electronic piece.Wed. 3:30 P.M. Mandel Hall.Folk-singer, composer JONI MIT¬CHELL will present a live. In-person concert at Mandel Hall,Monday, Nov. 18 at 8:30 P.M.Tickets are available at the Man-del Hall Box Office, 11 A.M. to2 P.M. GWRy'doesa perfect size7look perfectonly~21day§everymontfi?It has nothing to do withcalories. It’s a specialfemale weight gain...caused by temporarywater-weight build-up.Oh, you know...thatuncomfortable fullfeeling that sneaks upon you the week beforeyour menstrual period.This fluid retention not Jonly plays havoc with jyour looks but howyou feel as well.(It puts pressure ondelicate nerves andtissues, which can leadto pre-menstrualcramps and headaches,leaves emotions on edge.)That’s why somany women take PAMPRIN'.It gently relieves water-weight gainto help prevent pre-menstrual puffiness,tension, and pressure-caused cramps.PAMPRIN makes sure a perfectsize 7 never looks less than perfect.Nor feels less than perfect, either.Hawks: 1 RED LI INE 70007:00 & 9:30 doc films Soc. Sci. 122 \ 75<tHawks: BALL OF FIREGary Cooper & Barbara Stanwyck at doc films, tonight, 7:15 8r 9:30~Soc. Sci. 122MAROON CLASSIFIED ADS12 The Chicago Maroon