.w ? < n\ ^• ^ ,3i Student -Rolei in ' 'FacultyAppointments m *( 4: , ■4^. ^Philip LathropStudents Sit In for DixonPago Throe What is the Radicals Plan?Pago Four 1 Philip LathropWelch Celebrates BirthdayPage TwoUNI VERS\ OF CHICAGO[Archives A Radicals View of the Dixon CaseBy Len HandelsmanIn the end, every state seeks the causeof its ills in accidental or intentional de¬fects of administration and therefore seeksthe remedy in reprimand of the admini¬stration. ... If these modifications arefruitless, then the social ill is a naturalimperfection independent of mankind, alaw of God, or else the will of private in¬dividuals is too corrupted to advance thegood aims of the administration. . . . Themore powerful the state and hence themore political a country is, the less it isinclined to seek the basis and grasp thegeneral principle of social ills in theprinciple of the state itself, thus in theexisting organization of society of whichthe state is the active, self-conscious, andofficial expression. (In such a situation),political thought is political precisely be¬cause it takes place within the bounds ofpolitics. The more acute, the more vig¬orous it is, the more it is incapable ofcomprehending social ills.—Karl Marx, in the "Vorwarts" (1844)Where the fulfillment of the calling can¬not directly be related to the highest spirit¬ual and cultural values, or when, on theother hand, it need not be felt simply aseconomic compulsion, the individual gen¬erally abandons the attempt to justify itall. .. . For of the last stage of this cul¬tural development, it might well be trulysaid: “Specialists without spirit, sensualistswithout heart; this nullity imagines thatit has attained a level of civilization neverbefore achieved.”—from the most unread page inMax Weber, "The Protestant Ethic"This article is a personal answer to thetwo front page articles by Mike Ducey andElihu Gerson in last Friday’s Maroon.These articles, I think, are good examplesof how a reactionary ideology and mode ofthinking — though of two different styles— permeate the supposedly “objective”work of sociology. I hope it will be usefulto deal with these articles point by point toget out the reactionary thinking fromwhich these articles proceed. After my re¬sponse, I briefly raise some other issuesthat are involved in the Dixon case.First to Mr Gerson. Those who wadedthrough the unending jargon, reduction-isms (both economistic and psychological),and the moral disgustingnesses were re¬warded with a glimpse of vulgar sociology,a facsimile of which no radical could everhave laid out so well. For those unfamiliarwith sociology, for those who think that MrGerson’s article is an exception, let me as¬sure you that his thinking is in the main¬stream of sociology, and is reflected, forexample, in professor of sociology PhilipHauser’s out-going presidential address tothe American Sociological Association.To the specifics. Mr Gerson tells us thatgestures, turns of the phrase, and othernormally minor acts on the part of the ad-ministration and faculty are mis- fHowie Schamest interpreted by the students, and vice-ver¬sa. The faculty walk-out of Johnson’s meet¬ing, for example, “was interpreted simplyas a convincing demonstration of arro¬gance, contempt, and indifference to stu¬dent interests and student problems.” Ifthis was a misinterpretation, I would cer¬tainly appreciate someone telling me whatactually happened other than the facultyonce again acting arrogantly, con¬temptuously, and indifferently with respectto student interests.And these “misinterpreted” interactioncues, Mr Gerson tells us, are especiallyexacerbating when the common culturalvalues disintegrate and we find ourselvesin an anomic situation (i. e., a situation inwhich there is an absence of norms toguide social behavior). The specter of“anomie” haunts reactionary sociology.When an oppressed people’s social move¬ment attack their oppressors, sociologistsperceive the situation as the disintegrationof the culture. This is a view from thedoddering top. A view from the bottomwould show the development and consoli¬dation of new norms and values to defineand focus the dissatisfaction they have feltthe suppression of insurgent ideas andabout the complex reality of their impo¬tence.What is Mr Gerson’s explanation for stu¬dents’ demands? We supposedly come frommiddle-class homes and suffer downwardmobility in dealing with landlords, mer¬chants and lower-grade administrative per¬sonnel. In the community we supposedlyform a lumpenproletariat, lower even thanthe local civil service blacks. Reductionismof reductions — both economistic and psy¬chological in the same breath. Aside fromthe fact that responsible scholarship fromMarx to Rude has shown that lumpenprole-tarians don’t exactly make the revolution,is anyone to take seriously the notion thatstudents do not understand that within afew years of graduation they are worth$10,000 a year?Secondly, we students supposedly resentthe upward mobility of the working classbecause working-class people compete withus for good positions. What upward mobil¬ity? And where are all the working-classpeople at Chicago, or Columbia, or Har¬vard, or Stanford? Mr Gerson is absolutelyright that the majority of students havestrong anti-working class values — valueswhich are reinforced in social psychologyand political sociology classrooms wherestudents are taught to think of workingclass people as authoritarian crazies in¬capable of running their lives or govern¬ment.The point is that radical students, espe¬cially in the past two years, have begun tothink seriously of a working-class revolu¬tion in this country. The truth (as Mr Ger¬son might have known had he read almostany issue of any New Left publication) isthat radicals are trying to reach out to the“Polacks,” as Mr Gerson refers to theContinued on Page Seven■Ik-ift;.,*•# 4. /« V« V ‘v By Sue LothBetween 20 and 25 students will be ad¬mitted to the divinity school’s class of73 doctor of ministry (DMn) program,divinity school dean Jerald Brauer an¬nounced Friday, two weeks after students‘■mourned” the threatened death of theprogram.Other plans for the program, Brauersaid, are to “provide supervisory work forthird-and fourth-year students in role in¬volvement, provide for clinical experiencefor third-year students, and to carrythrough the first two years completely aswe have done during this academic year.“We also hope,” Brauer said, “to be ableto find a new (black) associate director(for the DMn program), though this is avery late date to begin the search. Never¬theless we are prepared to provide thekind of supervision for their role ex¬perience demanded by our academic pro¬gram.”Changes of the school’s 1969-70 budget,for which negotiations began in early De¬cember, made the plans feasible, Brauersaid. Early pessimism about the budgetoutcome led to a faculty decision Dec. 19to declare a one-year moratorium on theDMn program if financial needs were notmet.Brauer’s announcement came at the di¬vinity school policy committee’s first jointmeeting since faculty agreed to grant stu¬dents “increased and meaningful votingrepresentation” on four of the school’sstanding faculty committees: DMn, AM-PhD, admissions, and policy. Student parti¬cipation on these and a fifth committee,reorganization, (sub-committee of the pol¬icy committee) will be discussed by a fac¬ulty-student negotiating committee, formedlast week as a court of appeals for theother committees.Each committee now has an equal num¬ber of students and faculty, and operateson the “one man, one vote” principle.Dean Brauer enjoys an ex officio member¬ship on each of the committees. Lowell Livezey, president of the divinityschool (student) association (DSA), said“I think it’s extremely unlikely that therewould be a program” if students had notdemonstrated their concern for the pro¬gram’s future.Livezey added that a sense of commu¬nity has developed in the school since thecontroversy began: “People are takingeach other seriously, responding to eachother’s thoughts and concerns.” AlthoughWelch andMore than 300 persons joined former UCstudent John Welch Sunday at the BlueGargoyle in celebrating his 21st birthdayand his recent indictiment and arraign¬ment for draft refusal.Welch refused to accept induction atOakland, Calif, last June, and was ar¬raigned last week. His trial is scheduled tobegin in April, but pre-trial motions arelikely to delay hearings until May or June.After Welch, Maroon contributing editor,explained his analysis of the resistancemovement, David Aiken, former managingeditor and executive editor of the Maroon,announced his decision to turn in his draftcards.The selective service system, like otherrepressive institutions in society, tries toforce persons into dealing with it individ¬ually, Welch said. But, he pointed out,there is nothing one person can do tochange the system.“If we think, feel, and act collectively,we can sustain ourselves in resisting thewar, the draft, and, in fact, all the impe¬rial institutions we face in America,” hesaid.The draft system is similar to the largersociety, he said, because in both “you cansee the same kinds of sham freedoms,”such as the “freedom” to obtain a defer¬ment.THIS WEEKAT DOC FILMS:Tonight, Preminger'sTHE CARDINAL; To¬morrow, The greatW.C. in IT'S AGIFT,* with Baby Le-Rov. Thursday, Ma-moulian's 1931 gang¬ster pic, CITYSTREETS; and Friday.. .well, come and be sur¬prised.* plus a Roadrunnercartoon!. < there are factions' within the school, hesaid, “there is a sense of common destiny,of going on together to solve problems.”The policy committee’s first concernswere for the future of the DMn program,the number of PhD admissions next year,and the appointment of black faculty.Alan Stone, third-year graduate studentand member of the DMn committee, saidthat Brauer’s announcement Friday satis¬ fied the committee’s immediate demands.Of the student body, Stone said;,“The moreradical elements are more than satisfied.Students on the right are somewhat dis¬satisfied (thinking students have beengranted too much power).”Chris Gamwell, AM-PhD committeemember, said “None of us think studentsought to have equal status with faculty,but there are good reasons for having stu¬dent participation.”Aiken Hail Resistance“Just as in dealing with the draft youmust be prepared to go to jail if you wantto make your own choice, so in dealingwith other institutions, to be truly free youmust conflict with those institutions,”Welch said.Aiken, 23, until last spring a graduatestudent, in education described his decisionover the last six months to withdraw anapplication for conscientious objector stat¬us from selective service.“I decided that my original idea of try¬ing to play their game and beat them at itwas not the way I wanted to live my life. Idecided that the game was a deadly one —the losers come home in pine boxes.”DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lenses “So today I took the final step. Just assome games of chance are ‘void whereprohibited by law,’ this game of chancewith life is void where prohibited by con¬science.”He then handed over his cards, marked“void,” to Welch, who will keep them untilAiken has written a letter of resignationfrom the system to his local board.The ceremony concluded with a rousinground of the local theme song of the resis¬tance movement, “Amazing Grace.”Following the song, two men from theaudience, — Alfred Marcus, 70, and Ber¬nard Robinson, a student at YMCA college—also briefly announced decisions to resist.in theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 “NOT SINCE WATERLOOhave Swedes/ Soiled them¬selves with martial deeds./ Noone seemed to suffer pains/Watching Bismark rape theDanes./ Similarly, Swedenpassed/ When the crazyKaiser massed. / Nor didNorway's awful fate/ Makethe ^Swedish escalate./Finally, they've struck ablow!/ Swe- m f" * «ijr of. ■ Wm F Buckley iden s recogmz- ■ national »eini Ho " I Vltw- d,p'* | I, ISO E 35 Sir..'■■■■■■■■■■I N. 10016.Its almost Too Late..The end of your college careermarks the real beginning of your life.And there is no better symbol of thefuture than a college ring—your silentdiploma.Order NOW to insure graduationdelivery of your personalized collegering. Choice of weights, stones andstyles . . CREATED BY JOHN ROBERTSNow Available.IN THE GIFT DEPARTMENTTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE58th at EllisDeanBy Richard ParoutaudSome 150 students Monday jammed theoffices of D Gale Johnson, dean of thegraduate social sciences division, to pro¬test the decisions by a unit in the divi¬sion not to rehire assistant professor Mar¬lene Dixon, noted for her radical outlook.Mrs Dixon was formally notified Decem¬ber 15 that she would not be rehired by thedepartment of sociology.Students crowded into Johnson’s inner of¬fice. room 111 of the social sciences build¬ing. after one of them had obtained a keyto the outer offices in the suite.Johnson soon appeared and asked “Howdid you get in?”‘ We don’t know,” he was answered.Johnson sat in his desk chair, parryingquestions from the 45 students in his office,while chairman of the department of soci¬ology Morris Janowitz stood on a table andargued with some 75 students in the outeroffice.Plans for the two-hour sit-in were setlast Wednesday at a meeting of concernedstudents. Many of the students at lastweek's meeting and at Monday’s sit-inwere members of the campus chapter ofstudents for a democratic society.The demonstration began at noon. At1:55 pm, five minutes before the scheduledend of the sit-in, copies of a mimeographednotice from dean of students Charles DO'Connell were passed around, warning thedemonstrators that they were engaged in a"disruptive” action which was an “inter¬ference with the normal functioning of theUniversity.”The notice threatened “disciplinary mea¬sures” if the action were continued.Students in the offices decided the noticewas irrelevant at the time, and left theoffices anyway, singing “Avanti Populo,”an Italian revolutionary song.Students plan to meet Wednesday at 3pm in Kent 107 to discuss future plans forpushing demands that Mrs Dixon be re¬hired, and that students and faculty shareequal power to hire and rehire faculty.Mrs Dixon had no comment on the sit-in.While it was being held, she said, she wasteaching a course on occupations and pro¬fessions across the hall in room 108.During the confrontation between John¬son and the students, the focus of dis¬cussion shifted from the issue of Mrs Dixonto that of whether the students should at¬tempt to obtain files in Johnson’s privatefiling cabinet.Christopher Hobson, a graduate studentin political science, glanced through onedrawer of the cabinet while Johnson wasnot looking, and discovered files labeledHand Corp” and “Woodlawn.”Students demanded to know why they, asmembers of the University, should not knew about Johnson’s involvement in suchmatters, and be allowed to examine hisfiles. He consistently refused to allow themto do so, asking how they would respond ifhe were to attempt to break into theirfiles.After lengthy discussion on the relativeimportance of the files and on the effect oncampus opinion of obtaining them, voteswere taken among the groups of studentsin each of the offices in the suite. The votewas in favor of the action, but the groupsdecided the margin was not great enoughto warrant carrying out the action. The is¬sue of obtaining files was dropped.Students agreed among themselves, how¬ever, that they felt they retained a “right”to examine the files, but were dropping thequestion as a matter of tactics.During the discussion on the Dixon caseand hiring policies, students tried to getJohnson to specify how much weight, ifany, student opinion on Mrs Dixon’s abili¬ties was taken into account.“That’s difficult to answer,” Johnson re¬plied. “It’s like asking you to state whatweight you give to each factor in everydecision you make.”He also remarked, “I think we try ashard as we can — but who knows how wellwe succeed — to not take political consid¬erations into account” in decisions on hir¬ing and rehiring.He said he had reviewed Mrs Dixon’s fileafter the original decisions by tenuredmembers of the two departments had beenmade, and that he had concurred in theirrecommendations that Mrs Dixon not berehired.Asked what factors had entered into hisdecision, he said it was a matter of “eval¬uating the quality of scholarship and re¬search at the graduate level.”Asked why no students had been appoint¬ed to a special faculty committee, appoint¬ed by vice president John T Wilson to re¬view the decision on Mrs Dixon, Johnsonresponded that he had not appointed thecommittee, and would not feel it proper totake a hand in appointing a committee thatwas to review his own decision.Commenting after the sit-in, Johnsonsaid, “I think it was roughly the same asthe meeting on last Friday. I didn’t get afair dialogue, I didn’t get much chance tospeak after the first hour.”Johnson said he was “not against studentevaluation of teachers,” but “to let themdecide whether or not to rehire facultywould be one of the quickest ways to havea third-rate university.”“Students do have qualifications to judgeteaching ability,” he said, but “whatteachers will be contributing to teaching inthe future must also be considered.”The following is the text of a statementmade by D Gale Johnson, dean of the so-Students Asked To GiveViews about Dixon CaseThe faculty committee, chaired by his-[y Professor Hanna Gray, to review theMarlene Dixon case has invited students to■’ibmit written statements of their views ofle issues posed by the Marlene Dixon^ase and their proposals for the resolutionthese issues.Mrs Suzanne Rudolph, associate profes-^or in political science, the wife of LloydHudolph, an associate professor in thesame department and a member of the(>mmittee said, “The committee is very|dger now to have the views of students'i!u ,aculty presented in our effort to can-ass student and faculty opinion as fully asPossible within the time limitations im¬posed by a prompt report.”f aur constituted student groups have‘H‘"n invited to meet with the committee tort >ent their views on the issues raised byil‘ Dixon case: the stpdent advisory, coun-1 (,t the social sciences collegiate divi-°n.; ,tlle graduate student council of theviai sciences division, the society for so-a ,esearch (department of sociology), and the student organization in human de¬velopment.The following is the complete text of thestatement issued by the committee:We wish to invite student organizations and individualsat the University of Chicago who desire to do so, tosubmit to us in writing their views of the issues posedby the Marlene Dixon case and their proposals for theresolution cf these issues.This request for written statements is one of severalsteps which we are taking in our effort to canvass stu¬dent and faculty opinion as fully as possible within thetime constraint imposed by the need for a prompt re¬port.We are inviting four constituted student groups, thestudent advisory council of the social sciences collegiatedivision, the graduate student council of the social scien¬ces division, the society for social research (departmentof sociology), and the student organization in human de¬velopment to meet with us to present their views on theissues raised by the Dixon case.Our central responsibility is the review of a decisionreached on a specific member of the faculty. Fairness toall individuals involved requires that we fulfill thischarge as expeditiously as possible. But we do hope thatour report can at least identify some larger questionsthat arise out of the Dixon case. We hope this will con¬tribute to the on-going consideration by students, facultyand administration of how the University should proceedtoward the improvement of current practices.We wiH be able to make the most use of statementsthat ate as specific as possible both in the identificationpf issues and-dfelineation of proposals. Please include thename, address and telephone number of the author ofthe statement, or, in the case of organizations, the sameinformation for the officer of the organization who isauthorized to represent its views. Statements should bemailed to Professor Hanna Gray, department of history,Gates-Blake 504 as soon as possible, but should reachher no later than Monday, Feb 10. Phil LathropMORRIS JANOWITZ: Janowitz, chairman of the sociology department, an¬swers his critics in dean Johnson's office on Monday.cial science division, concerning the sit-inin his office on Monday:“I think it is important that the Univer¬sity community receive a factual accountof the events in the social sciences buildingon January 27. I likewise think it impor¬tant that I make clear my reasons for be¬lieving that the situation on that occasionwas not productive of useful discussion andwhy moreover it has raised grave ques¬tions.“The office of the dean of the divisionwas locked at noon as it normally is be¬tween twelve and one each day. Returningto the building at 12:10, I observed the sit-in taking place in the lobby under circum¬stances which I should hesitated to calldisruptive. I likewise observed, however,an attempt being made by two persons topick or force the locked door of my office— an attempt which they ceased upon myrequest that they do so. Returning to thelobby I shortly afterwords observed amovement by the protesting group towardmy office and, on my arriving there, I dis¬covered that the office had been forceablyentered, that the room was fully occupied,and that a file drawer had been openedand one person was engaged in examiningits contents.“I was allowed entrance to my officeand was able to occupy my own chair. Theoccupants of the room announced theirwish to discuss the case of Mrs Dixon butat the same time made it entirely clearthat they were also considering taking thecontents of the file. In fact, during thehour and forty minutes during which theyremained in the office, two votes were tak¬en as to whether the file should be seized;although a majority voted for this move, itapparently was insufficient to prompt theactual seizure of the file. It was, none theless, made clear to me that such a stepmight be taken at any time and I wasasked what I should do if such an attemptwere made. If the discussion of Mrs Dix¬on’s case proved unsatisfactory, I was toldthat the question of seizing the file wouldbe resumed at once.“In effect, I found myself surrounded forthe period between approximately 12:20and 2 pm, by uninvited intruders inmy office and threatened by the possibilitythat the contents of the files would be re¬moved at any time during that period.During this time my telephone was underthe control of the students. It was madeclear that I could not leave the office withany insurance that the contents would berespected. Indeed, while I was there, arti¬cles in the offices were broken and dam¬aged. At approximately 1:55, written noticewas served to those engaged in the demon¬stration that their conduct was regarded as D GALE JOHNSONA Cool Administrator Phil Lathropdisruptive. My office was vacated and thedemonstration terminated by 2 pm.“The forceable entry into my office, thelimitation upon my personal movement,the unauthorized inspection of personalfiles, and the suspension of the conduct ofordinary business within my office all con¬stitute, in my opinion, the behavior whichwas disruptive of the University’s properoperation. Equally important, from thestandpoint of the University’s welfare, andthe possibility of continuing open dis¬cussion upon rtiatters of common concern,the actions in my office led to no usefulresult.“During the past several weeks, the fac¬ulty of the division of social sciences hasmade continuing efforts to engage with stu¬dents in the discussion of the principlesand practices implicitly raised by the caseof Mrs Dixon. I remain willing as do myassociates in the faculty in the division ofsocial sciences to participate in open pub¬lic discussion of those questions of policywhich concern both students and facultyalike. Such discussion cannot proceed un¬der threat, physical constraint, or circum¬stances under which civil rights are vio¬lated. I hope, most earnestly, that they willproceed under circumstances marked bythe good faith, responsibility, and concernfor justice which are characteristic of thisacademic community.”January 28, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3EDITORIALSome Questions✓Two weeks ago the Committee of 85, the radical coalitiongenerated by the Marlene Dixon case, issued its demand that stu¬dents be given equal power in the hiring and firing of faculty.Since then this has been repeated a number of times, along withthe demand that Mrs Dixon be rehired, but it has never beenelaborated. Presumably the idea is to have as many students onthe “personnel” committees of the various departments as profes¬sors. The students would have the same number of votes as thefaculty, and thus an effective veto.The Committee of 85 has, so far, not explained how much thestudents would do on such committees. Would they simply approveor reject the appointments the faculty might make? Or wouldstudents elected to the committees (they would be elected?) berequired to read the literature pouring out from other campuses,and their own departments? And if they weren’t required to pre¬pare themselves as the faculty does before deciding appointments,then how could they be expected to arrive at half-way intelligentdecisions; and how could the professors up for reappointment beexpected to accept them? And what assistant professor would sub¬mit to a decision by students on whether he was worthy for reap¬pointment or tenure?Someone might interpose here: But what’s the diffeience be¬tween students saying to an assistant professor that his scholarshipis not good enough and the faculty saying it? The difference isthat the students just haven’t gotten as far into the discipline;they haven’t had the experience in the “profession.” They arestill looking around, they are still reading their way through thebasic material in field, still sorting out theories Students reallydon’t have the time to keep up with all the new work that is beingdone in a field, and they don’t have the knowledge to judge it verycritically.Well, the question might be raised, how do you insure that adepartment does not become overpopulated with one particularschool of thought, how do you stop the tenured faculty from ap¬pointing only their own? The answer is; that is why you havedeans. They are the people who are supposed to make sure thatdepartments are free and growing, and that the divisions are open| to new disciplines. And if the deans are somehow in cahoots withthe reigning department cliques? Then there is the dean of thefaculties. (And the precedent is fairly strong for deans of faculties— provosts, as they used to be called — to send recommendationsfor appointments back for reconsideration.) And if the dean of thefaculties is corrupted, there is the president.But to return to the issue, the immediate faculty appointments:the Maroon has already come out for student participation in thehiring and firing of professors, because we think teaching is anintegral part of the scholarship at the University of Chicago (seethe editorial for Jan 24), and students are really the only ones whocan evaluate teaching very well. The paper proposed that thestudent councils should have as part of their official function con¬sulting on faculty appointments. There should be such councilsin every department and every division, and they should be electedby their constituent students. Ideally, the consulting would takeplace all the time (or at least every week), rather than in the monthbefore appointments are made. It would not work to put a noticeon the bulletin board that such and such a professor was up forreappointment, so everybody send in their comments. (If we werethat professor, we would probably head for the nearest think tank.)The councils should make an effort to collect student opinion ofprofessors, but the opinion should be honest, and unbiased by thefact that the man is being considered for reappointment or bypolitical heat.That is our plan. If it had been effective over the last year,we don’t know if Marlene Dixon would have been reappointed, butwe would have known that at least her qualities as a teacherwould have been taken into account. Whether this plan is feasibleremains to be seen; we are waiting to hear criticism of it. Andwe are still waiting to hear the plan of the Committee of 85.i4/The Chicago Maroon/January 28, 1969 ABOUT THE MIDWAYSay What?Students, faculty, and administratorswere all surprised Monday morning toread in Irving Kupcinet’s column in theChicago Sun-Times that there had been athreatened black student sit-in on campus.Edward Levi, president, also had the op¬portunity to learn that “he’s studying thelist of demands submitted to him.”Kupcinet later explained that the itemappeared in his column through a misun¬derstanding of information about Monday’ssit-in in the social science building in pro¬test of the decision not to rehire MarleneDixon.Ong Speaks“World as View and World as Event”was the title of Father Walter Ong’s lec¬ture last night, in which he contrastedworld view in oral-aural cultures with thatof more visually-oriented cultures.The lecture was second in a series offour on the general topic “Word and Real¬ity: the Evolution of the CommunicationsMedia”, given by Father Ong. Willett vis¬iting professor in the humanities collegiatedivision. Father Ong traced the history ofworld view through audial-oriented cult¬ures — “perceiving the harmony of theuniverse, the universe held together in themanner of a symphony” — to our tech¬nologically-oriented culture where “theuniverse is something you can draw a pi¬cture of”.Ellison To SpeakHarlan Ellison, outspoken leader of the“new wave” school of science fiction, nov¬elist and short story writer, screen andteleplay author, and winner of the best TVanthology show of the writer’s guild ofAmerica, will speak in Mandel Hall at 2pm Sunday, Jan 26.Mr Ellison, who lecture is being spon¬ sored by the University of Chicago sciencefiction society, has credits on such tele¬vision shows as “Burke’s Law”, “StarTrek”, “The Bob Hope Chrysler Theater ,Tickets are available from any Univer¬sity of Chicago club member or may bepurchased at the Reynolds Club desk.UC TVThe challenges facing the Nixon admin¬istration in dealing with the urban criseswill be discussed on “Perspectives” WLSTV at 6:30 am Monday through Wednes¬day, Jan 27 to 29. Featured will be JackMeltzer, professor and director of the center for urban studies, and Harold Rich-man, assistant professor in the school ofsocial service administration.Confidence ManA confidence man is currently workingthe Hyde Park neighborhood, victimizingapartment dwellers.Operating under the alias FredericJames, the man is black, about six feettall, with high cheekbones, a thin nose,close cropped hair, and wide eyes. Heweighs about 175 pounds and wears aBrooks Brothers suit.James’ story is that he is a law studentat Northwestern and a newcomer to HydePark, and he needs money to bail out abuddy for driving without a license. Heuses a traffic ticket and a checkbook foridentification, and he tells his story in avery straightforward, disarming mannerHe sounds honest and seems nervous.Neither the Evanston nor the Chicagocampus of Northwestern law school has aregistered student named Frederic James.Police detectives are currently questioningJames’ victims.BULLETIN OF EVENTSTuesday, January 28DISCUSSION: "Anti-Communism as the goal of recentAmerican historiography", Jesse Lemish, 2:30,INH Cloister Club.SWIMMING: College of DuPage, Bartlett Gym, 3:30.COLLOQUIUM: "Wavelength-Derivative Spectra andExchange Splitting of Parabolic and HyperbolicExcitons", Jack Rowe, Department of Physics,Brown University. Research Institutes, 480, 4:15.THE-: CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyManaging Editor: John RechtNews Editor: Caroline HeckPhotography Editor: David TravisNews Board:Student News: Wendy GlocknerAcademics: Sue LothThe Movement: Paula SzewczykCommunity: Bruce NortonSports: Mitch KahnSenior Editor: Jeffrey KutaContributing Editors: John Welch, Michael Soi-kin, Jessica Siegel, John Moscow, RobertHardman, Barbara Hurst, David Aiken.News Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Marv Bittner, Deb-by Dobish, Chris Froula, Jim Haefemeyer,Con Hitchcock, C.D. Jaco, Kristi Kuchler,Chris Lyon, Richard Paroutand, Sylvia Pie-chocka, Leslie Strauss, Robert Swift, Leo¬nard Zax.Production Staff: Mitch Bobkin, Leslie Strauss,Robert Swift.Photography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Howie Schamest.WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during the tenthweek of the academicquarter and during exam¬ination periods. Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and305 of Ida Noyes Hall. 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 50637. Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext.3269. Distributed on campus and in the HydePark neighborhood free of charge. Subscriptionsby mail $7 per year. Non-profit postage paidat Chicago, III. Subscribers to College PressService. LECTURE: "Mitochondrial Structure and Cell Growth",Dr Hewson Swift, Professor, department ofbiology. Billings Hospital M 137, 4:30.OPENING: An open house will begin the new exhibitat the Rosner Gallery. Wayne Source—photography; Georgia Wulff—ceramics; Diane Craig—weaving and textiles; Leif Brush—printmaking; Roger Gleason—painting; Jim Peterson—sculpture. Rosner Gallery, 235 E Ontario, 5 pmDOC FILMS: "The Cardinal", Cobb Hall, 8 pm.LECTURE-RECITAL: Music of the West: Jazz andContemporary music. From the Improvisationin music: East and West lecture-recital seriesco-sponsored by the fine arts program of theDowntown College. Breasted Hall, 8 pm.DANCING: Folk dancing and square dancing, Inter¬national House assembly hall, 8 pm.Wednesday, January 29LECTURE SEMINAR: "Renal Transplantation", DrTheodore Pullman. Moderator: Dr RaymondPeterson, Dr Frank Stuart, Dr Adrian Katz.Billings Hospital P117, 12:30.LECTURE: "Retail vs Industrial Selling", John Rosenheim. President of the Universal Training Systerns Co, Skokie, Illinois. Business East 103,1 pm.LECTURE: "Studies of L-Histidine Ammonia Lyase",Dr Allen Frankfater, University of IllinoisAbbott Hall 101, 4 pm.SEMINAR: "Nonadiabatic Transitions", Dr EugeneNikitin, Institute of Chemical Physics, Academyof Sciences, USSR. Kent 103, 4 pm.REHEARSAL: University Symphony Orchestra re¬hearsal, Mandel Hall, 6:30-10.DOC FILMS: "It's a Gift", Cobb Hall, 7:15 and 9:30DANCING: Country Dancers, Dances from the BritishIsles and Scandinavia, Ida Noyes Hall DanceRoom, 8 pm.Thursday, January 30RECRUITING VISIT: Univac Data Processing Division,Suburban Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. BA andMA candidates in mathematics, statistics, anocomputer science. Reynolds Club, room 200.RECRUITING VISIT: Battelle Memorial Institute, Col¬umbus, Ohio. MS and PhD chemists, mathe¬matics, physics and statistics at all deglevels; library science. .LECTURE: "Youth as a Stage of Life", Kenneth Kernston. Department of Psychiatry, Yale Universi yCobb 209, 11:30.SWIMMING: Wheaton College, Bartlett Gym, 3 pmWRESTLING: UICC, Bartlett Gym, 4:30 pm.COLLOQUIUM: "Galactic Electrons: A Probe for meOrigin of Cosmic Rays", Peter Meyer, EnricoFermi Institute. Eckhart 133, 4:40.MEETING: Open meeting of the college adv'sorycouncil' on GEN ED BIO. Faculty will hepresent. Quantrell auditorium, 7 pm.FOLK DANCING: Israeli folk dancing, Ida Noyes Han,FORUM:' "The Woman Question in Academia", Mar-lene Dixon, Jean Bamberger, Naomi Weisstei .Blue Gargoyle, 7:30. , in.,0SMOKER: Delta Upsllon,' 5714 S Woodiawn, 7:30-io .w-DOC FILMS: "City Streets", Cobb Hall 8 pm.By Mitch BobkinAlan Jaffe, a graduate business studentand chairman of the official student hous¬ing committee, presented the statistical re¬sults of the students questionnaires filledout at registration at a join meeting of thefaculty student advisory committee oncampus student life (FSACCSL) and theopen housing coalition (OHC) on Thurs¬day, January 23.Jaffe presented a twenty page paper giv¬ing over sixty vital tables that were formu¬lated from the 2700 responces to the ques¬tionnaires that his committee received. Asample of the survey was taken and fed toa computor at national opinion researchcenter. One out of every nine graduate re¬sponses and one out of every three under¬graduate responses were used in thesample. Freshmen were not included in thesurvey due to a lack of experience con¬cerning university housing.Among the more important statistics un¬covered by the cross-tabulation of the re¬sponses are:• While 75% of the second year studentsresponding lived in university residenthalls last year, only 14.7% were very satis¬fied with the living accommodations.• As the number of years the studentspends on campus increases, the desir¬ability of living in Hyde Park instead of oncampus also increases.• When asked to rank high rise apart¬ments, walk-ups and townhouses as to de-sireability, townhouses came out aheadamong all age categories. • Over 70% of all students asked saidthat they preferred their own bedroomover a double situation.• Over 73% of all students felt that fresh¬men should be required to live in dorms.• 53.7% of all students asked stated thatthey were very dissatisfied with university,resident halls.• 52% of all students stated that dormfood should be rated as “poor.”Jaffe and his committee have been work-inp since September in an attempt to getall the meaningful material out of thequestionnaires that they possibly can andnow have amassed a total of 1900 differenttables.A position statement on the Barnes planwas also presented by the OHC at themeeting. In the paper, OHC stated thatthey feel that the student village is, inprinciple, a good idea, but certain changesmust be made.Among the recommendations of the OHCfor the student village are:• An increase in the number of suitesover single rooms.• There should be more corridor doublesof the kind found in the present housingsystem.• Living rooms of the suites should beplanned to accommodate small gatherings.Small lounges on each floor would be un¬necessary, since students would use theirliving rooms.• Bathrooms should connect with eachsuite. The “gang” bathroom should beavoided. • Accoustics should be better than thosepresently available in the housing system.• There should be a house lounge largeenough to hold all the residents of thehouse.• A dining hall should be built adjacentto Pierce to take advantage of the under¬utilized kitchen facilities already availableat Pierce.• There should be a student center toStudent discontent with the common corebiology and physical science 116 courseshas led to student-faculty meetings to dis¬cuss possible curriculum changes.A committee of some 20 students takingPhysical Science 116 will present a list ofrecommendations to change that courseat a class meeting Tuesday. Students dis¬content with the course have already metwith R. Stephen Berry, professor of chem¬istry and the head of the course thisquarter. Berry said he will report to theclass Tuesday the extent of changes thatthe department will allow within the coursestructure.The student advisory committee to thedean of the college is sponsoring a meet- provide a social focus for the student vil¬lage. This center should contain a coffeeshop with a ratskeller capable of seatingover two hundred people, and a dining hallfor student activities. Facilities in thiscenter should include lounges, TV, darkrooms, workshops, studios, practice rooms,a bookstore, seminar and meeting rooms,a game room, student offices, radio station,and Maroon and student government of¬fices.ing to discuss deficiencies of biology onThursday, at 7 pm in Qanutrell Audi¬torium.Committee members say the meetingwill offer students an opportunity topresent objections as well as suggestionsfor improvement to faculty members.According to A1 Spuntoff, ’71, who is or¬ganizing the meeting, the common-yearbiology was chosen for discussion becausethe dean’s committee has received morecomplaints about the course than any oth¬er. Most students complain that in the lastyear classes have been changed fromsmall recitation sections to a large lecture.A number of students have also been dis¬satisfied with the use of undergraduatelaboratory instructors.Students Demand AlterationsIn Bio and Phy Sci CurriculumThIORIENTAL PHILOSOPHYCENTER55 E. Washington St.Rm.1139LECTURE SERIESEvory Tuos. & Thurj.at 6:30 p.m.The Importance of food in spir¬itual development* The Philosophy of the Far EastThe application of traditionalprinciples to modern living.For further information call641-0121 or come by Mondaythru Saturday between 11:00and 5:30.TheRenault 1(SSedan-Wagon.The Renault 16 Sedan-Wagon isa sedan that can change into a station wagon, and back again to asedan whenever you want.It has front wheel drive.4-speed synchromesh transmission.4-wheel independent suspension.5 main-bearing engine.5 doors (the 5th door is in the back)W et cylinder sleeves.Rack and pinion steering.A sealed liquid cooling system.Disc brakes up front.Self limiting drum brakes in back.Up to 42 cubic feet of haulingcapacity (when it’s a station wagon)Fully reclining seats.It can get 28 miles to the gallon.And costs only *2445 P.O.E.BUM. .-£**ly 'Sntpcrts, v9wc.2-235 So. MICHIGAN AVE.Tel. 326-2550 Mr. Lowes has the Latestfrom ColumbiaDOLLAR OFF ANY PICTURED LP WITH ADLook to Lowes for service ... selection ... savings1538 Iasi 55th STREETMUs.um 4-1505 MON.-FRI. 9:30 to 9SON. 13 to 5January J8, 1969/The Chicago Mfroon/S*r—rThe view from Chicagois as wide as your world Before the 1880’s, when the Chicago School of Architectschanged the face of their city, windows were narrow slits in brickbuildings. The “Chicago Window” let the light in and expandedthe view. It’s a tradition we still uphold in the books we publish.■ WTOLSTOY ONEDUCATIONTranslated by Leo Wienerwith an introduction byReginald D. ArchambaultLong out of print, these es¬says reflect Tolstoy’s philos¬ophy of education (hefounded an experimentalschool and a pedagogic mag¬azine). The essays have spe¬cial relevance today when, asin Tolstoy’s time, there is acritical gap between school¬ing and life.Cloth $6.00; Paper $2.95 Joseph J. SchwabrmRICH SCHOOLS,POOR SCHOOLSThe Promise ofEqual Educational OpportunityArthur E. WiseThat parental wealth andgeographic location of a fam¬ily too often determine thequality of a child’s educationis in clear violation of deci¬sions by the Supreme Court.But disturbing differences doexist, and Arthur Wise be¬lieves that states can be com¬pelled to provide all childrenwith equal opportunities.$9.00 Some aspects of student protestare contemptible, somelaughable, and some boring.The same may be said ofeducation. But there is muchthat is admirable in both, andthis timely book is not intendedto abolish protest or education,but to recommend specificchanges. The author sees protestas a result of deficiencies ineducation, and he sees theignorance that often manifests itselfin protest as the fault of curriculum.He examines the resources available tocorrect the ills, showing how to draw onthose resources. He feels that only effectiveprotest, not wildly paranoid behavior, canbring about change in which students andeducation itself will be the beneficiaries. $4.95 UNIVERSITYOF CHICA60 PRESS5750 Ellis Avenue,Chicago, Illinois 60637 AMERICAN HIGHEREDUCATION:A Documentary History,2 VolumesEdited by Richard Hofstadterand Wilson Smith“A carefully selected body ofdocuments which is certainto be a standard source ofscholarly reference, as wellas a source of pleasure andinstruction for many years tocomc."—Educational Forum.“A must for students in thehistory of education.”—Edu¬cation. Paper: Vol. I, $2.95;Vol. II, $3.45;Also in cloth, $15.00 setCLINICAL STUDIESIN READING IIIWith Emphasis onDifferential DiagnosesHelen M. Robinsonand Helen K. SmithThis third monograph, by thestaff of the Reading Clinic atThe University of Chicago,examines the problems in¬volved in diagnosing retardedreaders. It also includes re¬ports on new research andmakes available the proceed¬ings of the 1957 conferenceon retarded readers who arebrain damaged. Paper $5.00UNIVERSITY THEATRE*jean genet'sTHE BALCONYdirected byrichard rub infriday: jan 24, 31sat: jan 25, feb 18:30 pm, $2, 1.50InReynolds Club Theatrepreview thurs.jan 23, $.75 i SH0RELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and Relatives FacultySingle rooms from S8:00 dailyTwin rooms from $11.00 dailyLake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-10005454 South Shore DriveI £Y tickets on saleHE YNOLDSCLm^MOMStirblaze§ i§ bi o ire <§>Coming soon from Doc Films and*Joseph Losey M. BERGFUR SHOPUnclaimed used furs, s25 up to MOO. Settle for charges,values up to 51000. Also fabulous mink coats and stoles.Tremendous values. We also clean suede coats andknitted goods. N1619 East 55th Street HY 3-9413Same Day 5 Hr. Cleaning No Extra ChargeJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERSCustom Quality Cleaning1363 E. 53rd 10% Student Discount 752-6933 This investmentstarts paying dividendsin three years.Mo>l cars Iasi aliout as lung as the loans that pa\for them: three years.In Sweden, where it's tough heing a ear. Volvolasts an average of ! I vear*.And while we don’t guarantee that a Volvo willlast 1 I years in America, we do know that over95'' of all the \olvos registered here in the last11 years are still on the road. 1So if yon Iniy a Volvo from ns now. it’ll still heworth owning three years from now when von gelit paid for. Ym II he aide to stop making car pay¬ments and start making payments to yourself. Andinstead of paying Interest to the hank, you’ll heaide to have the hank |my interest to you.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE RE 1 -3800Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarVW’s encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanicshave joined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & oi’ change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393 STUDY AT TEL AVIV U!Representative at Hillel,5715 S. Woodlawn5—6:30 P.M., Tuesday; Jan. 28For further informationcontact Sabi at 288—07906/YRil thicafcb Marobn/January 28,Continued from Page Onewhite working class. If he had been in¬volved in any meeting during which thedemands around Marlene Dixon were for¬mulated he would realize that there is aorowing feeling that it is unprincipled todemand only “student participation,” that• student participation” does not speak tothe problem of how the University and its•intellectual” work serve the interests ofdominant groups in society. In fact, thediscussions around the Dixon case haveled to the first serious generalized discus¬sion of how the university can be revolu¬tionized to operate in the interests of theworking class.Finally, Mr Gerson suggests that a com¬mittee of three elected graduate sociologystudents be established to make formalrecommendations to the faculty on re-ap¬pointments, promotions, and, to some de¬gree, on recruitment. From this, Mr Ger¬son concludes quite rightly that “studentstherefore would have only such power overfaculty selection and promotion as the fac¬ulty felt morally obliged to bestow at anyone time.” Were such a system in ef¬fect,” Gerson continues, “I suspect thatthe recommendations of the board wouldtend heavily toward the more ‘profes¬sional’ and less ‘political’; I am morallycertain that Mrs Dixon . . . would havegained little or no comfort from the reportof such a board. The overwhelming major¬ity of students in the department are ‘con¬servative’ in that they would agree withthe substance of [Janowitz’sl statement,and probably would use it as a guide line;the chances of a ‘radical’ group gainingcontrol of the board is extremely small.The creation of the board would seriouslyundercut the actual and potential supportof the radicals in the department; give stu¬dents a formal voice in the selection offaculty; and thereby tend very strongly torestore equanimity m the affairs of the de¬partment. There are those who will cry ‘to¬kenism’ and they will, of.course, be cor¬rect. They will also be without the political support necessary to do anything about it.”Wow! Gerson’s plan amounts to a littlewindow dressing for business as usual. Thefaculty retains its power and its ability tosuppress radical ideas, and in fact, will beable to use students to enhance its powerand ability to suppress. Mr Gerson hascommunicated to us all what the Left hasnot been able to get across to students foryears: namely, the built-in reasons why atoken voice means absolutely nothing.Mike Ducey’s article is sympathetic tothe demands around the case of Mrs Dix¬on, but I found it difficult to understandhow it had very much to do with thestruggle in which we are now embroiled. Ialso had trouble distinguishing it from anarticle “In Praise of Young Revolution¬aries” by John D. Rockefeller IV in a re¬cent Saturday Review. The problem in MrDucey’s article reflects back on the in¬ability of reactionary sociology to dealwith the entire question of power. One wayout of this problem is to redefine the wholeDixon issue so that power never comes up.Thus, in spite of the fact that the con¬troversy over Mrs Dixon has been ex¬plicitly political (to varying degrees, grant¬ed), Mr Ducey tells us that “Much of theconfusion injected into the Dixon con¬troversy has come from the fact that wehave considered it to be primarily a politi¬cal struggle whereas it is in fact a culturalone. . . The counter-culture has a culturalarm (those of the hippie style), and a polit¬ical arm (the members of the movement,the radicals of SDS), but it is a unifiedchallenge to the values of the common cul¬ture of middle-class America.” Back to theexalted level of Parsonian generalities.Never mind the fact that the hippies don'ttotally dig SDS, and vice-versa; they areunified in their assault on middle-class val¬ues.The problem in dealing with faculty, asMr Ducey sees it, is that “If you shout atthem that they have no value, they willrespond by the instinct for survival: walkout, hide, make emotional appeals adYou 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 Phones: 536-1415or 536-4300*ED ADAMSComplete Beauty ServiceMADISON PARK HOTEL13SO E. Hyd« Park BlvdTheses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables ard charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED866 664-5858No. W aba sh A ve .PLANTS ALIVE!HARPER COURT Thismessageis aPublicService hominem, and if continually pressed onthis, will eventually use all the power theypossess to rid themselves of you. But ifyou simply tell them they have made amistake, and that whereas you understandmistakes, this one must be corrected now,then perhaps you have a basis for collabo¬ration.” Another window-dressing theory.We are now caught in the somewhat ridi¬culous situation in which the faculty havethe power and students are supposed totreat them with therapeutic tolerance as ifthey were fragile, emotionally-disturbedchildren.The solution for Mr Ducey is that thefaculty will just have to take the concernsof the student movement seriously, andthat we should all get together to sellsomeone like the Ford Foundation (thedeus ex machina of the social sciences) thestudy of the radical criticism of Americaninstitutions. This is almost embarrassinglynaive. Does Mr Ducey believe that the fac¬ulty is going to change when it has foughttooth-and-nail to protect its monopoly overhiring and firing and over the definition of“professional” qualifications? Does Mr Du¬cey believe that the likes of the Ford Foun¬dation is going to finance scholarshipwhich has as its watchword “the destruc¬tive criticism of a destructive system”?Does he believe that Ford would give mon¬ey to the study of the military-industrialcomplex, a study with* an eye to in¬capacitating the military-industrial com¬plex?Let me deal briefly with four issues thathave come up around the Dixon case:• It is peculiar that the sociology de¬partment defends its actions on thegrounds that it wishes to preserve the com¬munity of scholars. This is peculiar be¬cause a community of scholars involves aguild consciousness, whereas the sociologydepartment is steeped in a feudal structurebased on the hegemony of a few researchbarons. These barons have their own man¬ors and fight to get the best graduate stu¬dents; in fact, the department is notoriousfor the possessiveness of its professors.With few exceptions, the graduate studentslike good vassals get to keep part of theirproduce for themselves (i.e. an M A ordoctorate) but pass the majority of theirwork up to the lord.• Many students who don’t know MrsDixon refuse to support her because they don’t know first-hand whether she is a goodteacher. (After last Friday’s Maroon inter¬view with Mrs Dixon, there shouldn’t betoo much doubt whether she is a goodteacher.) How would these students eval¬uate whether Joshua Taylor were a goodteacher? I presume by asking his studentswhether Mr Taylor helped them to developtheir ideas about art and helped them tothink about things they thought important.Somehow the same evaluative paradigm isnot applied to radicals, probably becauseradicals and the concerns of radicals arenot considered to be real or worthy of pro¬longed attention. Radical ideas are, by andlarge, to be tolerated or put up with, butcertainly not the basis of a worthwhile in¬tellectual development. Thus, when MrsDixon’s students claim she is a good teach¬er, the response is: the radicals want herjust because she is a radical.. • It is high time that sociologists stoppretending that their discipline is just likemathematics. Professor of sociology PeterBlau in last Friday’s Maroon, for example,asked Mel Rothenberg of mathematics:“Would you have voted to recommendMarlene Dixon for an appointment in . . .the department of mathematics”? The an¬swer, of course, is no. But sociology is notmathematics. The content of sociology isthe study of social reality and the study ofhow to validate what is real about the so¬cial world. The sputterings of main linesociology that the qual v of sociologicalwork is above the level of politics andmale chauvinism is just a tired cop-out onthe problem of facts and values and moreto the point, whose values get asserted inthe social sciences.• The faculty and administration do notaccede to student demands on the groundsthat they do not want to wreck the in¬tellectual quality of the departments. As Ilook back, as honestly as I am able, overmy two years at Chicago — and I can saythe same thing with a high degree of cer¬tainty for my radical friends in the socialsciences also — I cannot think of one valu¬able idea I learned from a member of thesociology department. I cannot think of oneway that I have grown intellectually frommy association with the faculty. Behind theGreat Books facade of the University Ifound an intellectual bankruptcy. My ex¬perience with the sociology faculty is on^of intellectual stultification.INTERNATIONAL HOUSFGIFT SHOP1414 E. 59th STREETGIFTS FROMAROUND THE WORLDTobaccos-Candies-StationeryNe wspapers-MagazinesCosmeticsAre you interested in college teaching? Or, if you are nowteaching, are you interested in relocating? The Co¬operative College Registry, a non-profit organization of¬fering FREE SERVICE TO CANDIDATES assists some 300liberal arts colleges and universities in finding faculty andadministrators. Ph.D.'s and those in the doctoral programneeded for over 1,200 positions. 62 senior positions callingfor faculty of high professional standing and collegeadministrators of long and successful experience. Write forone page registration form and list of member colleges.COOPERATIVE COLLEGE REGISTRY (CN)600 LAND TITLE BUILDINGPHILADELPHIA, PA. 19110 acoursein...JEWELRY: Fob. 4th-April 8th on Tuesday nightsfrom 7:30-10:00, $35.00ENAMELING: Fob. 6th-April 10th on Tuesday nightsfrom 7:30-10:00; $35.00to register call 493-6158Richard Abernethy prop.ax Sroohrr.CLEANERS O TAILORS O LAUNDERERS ^ ,Phones: serving campus since 1917Ml 3-7447 1013- 17 E. 61st ST., near EllisFA 4-3500 1 l”4 E. 55th ST., near Woodlawnauthorized BMC servicemi 3-31135424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, illinois 60615foreign car hospital & clinic, inc Special!Style Cut —Requires No Setting!IQP'o Stuilent Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3*0727-8 DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC =„d FINE ARTS PROGRAMpresentA Concert of Jazz ImprovisationBUNKY GREEN SEXTETSATURDAY. FEBRUARY 1, 1969.8:30 P.M.MAN DEL HALLAdm: $2.50 and $2.00(50 e discount to UC faculty and students)Tickets at Music Dept.,5835 University Ave;or Downtown College, 65 E. South Water St.January r 28, 1969/The Chicago Mnropn/76--* ;VWg!W JtRavBOt - ■■up II 1,1f. . ' '■***“(The Maroon Classified Ads)MORRIS JANOWITZ EAT YOUR HEART OUTFOR RENT PEOPLE WANTED "UNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO2'/2 room*,, close to campus. 324-1426,eve. $77.50. Need babysitter — 10 hrs/wk ex¬change for 3 rooms/bath. 924-6098. Robert Shaw is coming up fromTexas to play his blues piano onthe Mandel Hall stage: Folk Festi¬val, Feb. 7-9. Unaccompanied ballads by SaraCleveland, Folk Festival, Feb. 7-9.BRENT APARTMENTS: 2’/j roomturn or unfurn., near transp. $100.1030 E. 47th, 427-4821. Drivers for Mr. Pizza, part time,good pay. HY 3-8282.Single in Snell. Peggy. S. 12. Free lan.ce writers to review plays,books, music,.etc. Call 829-0248 . 9-5. OTIS RUSH CAN BE HEARDSOON on Atlantic Records, or Feb.1st from 9-1 at Ida Noyes for abuck. Student Clubs—too late to nominateyour candidate for Miss UniversalCunt. "He's a really super doctor—in thegood old days, he outfitted everygirl in New Dorms with a dia¬phragm." Maynard Hutchin ssed. —RoberOUTING CLUB—Lives! Meeting,Slide show, Wednesday Ida Noyes.8 P.M. "You can always tell which girlsare wearing the transparent blousestheir elbows are glued to theirhipbones. . ." "Cocaine is the most incrediblaphrodisiac."Nice clean room for rent near cam¬pus. Call Ml 3-9257.ROOMMATE WANTED People wanted with imagination andtalent in decorative arts to createa festive atmosphere for F.O.T.A.Beaux Arts Ball Call Chmn. PeterRatner 493-4148. "Gary Curtis Sucks"—the men ofTufts. Trip out with Marco Polo—326-4422. Except for Chris. "Everyone has the right to theiown preiudires"—a new Hyde ParJewelry Store.Women should go to college andimprove their minds but if you'reso smart why aren't you married? WRITERS' WORKSHOP—PL 2-8377.2 girls need third to share attract¬ive apartment. 363-1245. PERSONALSGrad std wnts rmmte. Lg apt. ownrm. 955-1242. The Medici is peace. Contrary to popular belief the ZBTSmoker will be Wed. Jan. 29. 5472S. Ellis. SKI! Jackson Hole Wyo. GREAT.Mar. 21-30. Ski Club. All inclusive$173. Peg. McQ. 684-5388 eve.Did you leave your keys in theMaroon office about a week ago?Spacious, need third. Own room.5810 Harper. 955-3325. REVITALIZATION PRESENTS THEOTIS RUSH BLUES BAND thisSaturday, 9-1 at Ida Noyes. $1.Roommate wanted: female grad toshare $67/mo apt. 56th & Kimbark.Call Paulette: 493-3284. A woman's place is barefoot andpregnant in the kitchen. Hear Richard P. McKeon speak on"Humanities and Liberal Educationat Chicago: The Origins and Fu¬ture" at an open meeting of theHUMANITIES STUDENT COUNCIL,Friday, January 31 in Social Sci¬ence Bldg. 305. All are welcome. Anyone who still thinks SamGoody's sells records for less thanwe do should take a good closelook at his price list.Rockowitz—now at the StudentCoop.Roommate wanted: 3 female gradsneed 4th. 57th ft Dorchester. S65/mo.Call 493-3284. TIM HARDIN concert (at North¬western) tickets available at theMaroon Business Office. $3 now.$3.50 at the door.Fern. Beautiful, spacious 4 rm. apt.own room. 54th St. 8* Harper. 493-5015.1 or 2 fulltime undergrad fern,wanted for Blackstone Hall any¬time. Rent negotiable. 667-3667. Freddie King, Reno Si Harrel, Ed8, Lonnie Young, and George Arm¬strong, together for the first timeon one stage, Feb. 7-9, MandelHall. All invited to open meeting on GenEd. Biology—Thursday, Jan. 30 at7 P.M.—Quantrell—C209. Meetingsponsored by College Stud. Ad¬visory Comm. OVERHEARDMale to share one bedroom apart¬ment. 643-3088. Everyone with an interest in GenEd Bio will be at the open meetingin Cobb 209 Thursday Eve Jan. 30— 7 P.M. on. Come! and bringopinions. Ladies—about this Women's Libera¬tion shit—don't worry your prettylittle heads about such matters—a woman's brain is between herlegs. At Station JBD: "If a student doesperfect on this test, the highestgrade I'll give is a 75.biology prof obviously on the make."That's the problem withMAROON—always bad - mouthingsome poor asshole. Don't those stu¬dents have sex lives anymore?"LOST$Reward. Grey fur woman's hat.Lost on Univ. Ave. 324-5950 6:00P.M.-12 P.M. 1 or 2 girls wanted for immediateoccupancy of furnished apartmentat 5744 Kenwood. $57.50/month. Call324-6370 evenings. Jet to Europe for the ENTIREsummer. June 21-Sept. 20. Chicago-London-Paris Rt. $265. Call Ext.3598 1-5:30 P.M. "Hour of the Wolf was .'he besthorror movie I ever saw."GREEN WALLET. Reward. 955-0459. She has a good body. . . andbrains too! SKI ASPEN. Round trip jet. 7nights, hotel, lifts, taxes, bus. $194.Feb. 8 or Mar. 15. 764-6264 Tom orDick. "If there's anything I can't stand,it's seeing some guy with a longercock than mine who thinks he's agirl."REWARD She has brains. . . and a goodbody too!ANYONE HAVING EVIDENCELEADING TO ARREST AND CON¬VICTION OF PERSON RIPPINGOFF THE MAROON BUSINESSOFFICE BETWEEN THE HOURSOF ONE P.M. AND FIVE P.M. ONFRIDAY, JAN. 24. PLEASE CALLKEN AT EXT. 3266. Do you feel unrepresented by anypresent campus group? Come to ameeting Wed. Jan. 29 at 4 in CobbBasmt. and help start a newcampus party. Nebulous Leftistsand Radical Middlests Arise! t "Roger's OK—but he's a GraphicsArtist, not a writer. . . any news¬paper he does should be a gas-no words."STUDY IN ISRAELRel Aviv University rep. AmnonLivanon at Hillel, 5715 WoodlawnTues. Jan. 28, 5-6:30 P.M. Inforabout frosh, soph, junior yearabroad. Study. For further infocall SABI SHABTAI 288-0790. Buck half-fare abolition. Studentsinterested in Charter flight to La-Guardia for spring break, callFA 4-9500 (Pierce Tower), ext. 1720or 1722. Leave name 8> number. OOO °°°.O I VYellow Submarine, new George Harmon,new John Lennon, THE BEATLES all in stock(and cheap!) from r/h at the Student Coop. "I keep hearing about all thesehippies 8. shit who were workingon the Maroon to change it intoan "underground" newspaper. Shit,man, it ain't nothing now but aconservative Sun Times with acouple of dirty words and sometasteless quotations and alwayssome crap about Canada. The onlychick I know who digs the classi¬fied now thinks the border betweenthe U.S. and Cuba should be pa¬trolled by mounted minutemen."—mlnaturallySave *50 to *70 on KLH Special System!UniversityTheatreOPENCASTINGGoldoni—ComedyServant of2 MastersReynoldsClubTheatreTuesday,Jan. 287:30-9:00 PJH.Mandel HalProductionFeb. 21-23FOR SALE4 piece premier grey schimmerdrum set. hardly used by stud wholeft me without paying rent. $300or best offer. 752-6286.Antique fur coats for sale. Somereal beauts. James Schultz Cleaners,1363 E. 53rd. 752-6933.Kenmore automatic electric dryer.Slightly used. Excellent condition.288-7629.STEREO COMPONENTS new &used at Discounts. All used equip¬ment 90 day guarantee. SCOTT,AR„ DYNA, FISHER, DUAL, atMUSICRAFT. Campus rep. BobTabor 324-3005.Steno mach. for a court reporter.Excel, buy — 752-3393.PEOPLE FOR SALEMay I do your typing? 363-1104.Fourth year grad student in chemi¬cal physics will tutor undergradand H.S. in chem. and phy. sci.A. Hinds, 363-1994Complete Stereo System—AM/FM Receiver, Speaker & ChangerNothing more to buy! Even the changer base and dustcover are included Quality you can count on from KLH.The Model TWENTY-SEVEN receiver is a most compact yetextremely attractive unit with power to spare with its 75watt solid state engineering and design by KLH If youdemand perfection from your stereo system don't settlefor less. You could spend a lot more for a receiver and stillnot get the quality of performance possible with the ModelTWENTY-SEVENTake your choice of speakers. The KLH Model SIX with its12 inch accoustic suspension type low frequency speakeror the Model SEVENTEEN with its 10 inch bass speaker Both are capable of re-creating the most complex orches¬tral sounds with astonishing detail and clarity.The automatic turntable is precision crafted to KLH specifi¬cations by Garrard and is equipped with a PickeringcartridgeKLH Special System complete withModel Six Speakers Reg $658.00Now $588.00Model Seventeen Speakers vReg $529 95Now $479.95Come in and hear the differenceDE 7-41502035 W. 95th StTOTAL SOUND SYSTEMS FOR EVERY BUDGET WITH OUR GENEROUS TRADE-IN ALLOWANCETpes., Wed, Fri, Sat. 10 A M -6 P.M : Mon & Thurs. to 9 P.M. Daily DeliveryON CAMPUS CALLBOB TABOR 324-3005 FREE LP| We will send you the Yoko Ono/John Lennon Two Virgins album as a gil| when you join THE UNDERGROUND READERS CLUB for 6 months. As <I member you will receive your four different underground publication.each month—THE RAT from New York City, THE RAG from Texas, THISCREW from Kansas, THE SEED from the Grey City—24 differenmind-benders filled with news, photos, editorials, satire, book & movii| reviews, poems, fiction, cartoons, comics and classifieds (you think th<I Maroon is good!). Plus monthly specials on records, books and postersI Join an underground club today. (The Maroon Business Office is rep| resenting a New York based club).■ send me four (4)I different undergrounds| each month for the next| 6 months - PLUS FREE| JOHN & YOKO ALBUM . . .| ..... send me four (4)| different undergrounds| each month for the nextI 3 months - who cares about| j°hn & yoko with no clothes1 CHICAGO MAROONj 12121.59th St.2 Chicago, Illinois 60637II Make check or M.O. payable te the Chicago MaroonPrint NameAddress.....City, .State. T»P-8/The Chicago Maroon/January 28, 1969