Kalven Report Curtails Students RoleBy Sue LothStudents should have equal membershipwith faculty on certain disciplinary bodies,the Kalven committee on disciplinaryprocedures says in its report to be releasedTuesday.The nine-man committee, chaired by lawprofessor Harry Kalven, was appointed bydean of students Charles O’Connell lastMarch to study and recommend changes inUniversity discipline.For the report to become law, O’Connellsaid, he must first present it to the com¬mittee of the council of the all-faculty Uni¬versity senate, which must present it tothe senate itself to be passed into law.In the eleven-page report, the committeerecommends that the University define twomajor categories of disciplinary in¬fraction:• “Offenses against the mission of theUniversity,” ie, “The deliberate inter¬ference with the mission of the Universityin teaching activities, research activitiesor supportive administrative or operationalactivities, in an effort to coerce Universitydecisions.”• “And offenses against Universitylife.” including infractions involving sex, alcohol, and drugs which endanger “thecommon environment.”To handle cases of the first type thecommittee recommended a University¬wide institution comprised of seven to ninetenured faculty members appointed by thepresident. It would include student observ¬ers.For the cases against “University life”the committee suggests “regional” (theCollege, individual graduate and profes¬sional schools) institutions consisting offaculty and students in equal numbers,with a permanent non-voting member ofthe administration to provide continuityfrom year to year.The committee leaves recommendationson house discipline within the dormitorysystem to the jurisdiction of the director ofstudent housing and the dean of students,“with the hope that there will be furtherevolution of local house government sys¬tems.”Because offenses against the “mission”of the University would in general begraver than offenses against Universitylife, the committee says, such punishments(“sanctions”) as suspension would prob¬ably be more frequent. The committee suggests that the dean ofstudents be given “single and final powerover appeals” in all disciplinary cases, butthat he have no power to “enlarge or makeharsher any initial disciplinary judgment.”It recommends that disciplinary bodiesmake decisions subject to appeal, ratherthan make recommendations to the dean ofstudents, as is currently done.Five thousand copies of the report willbe distributed to the campus Tuesday.O’Connell received the report, submittedin letter form, Jan 31, 11 months after ap¬pointing the committee and one day afterthe administration building sit-in began.In light of the sit-in, O’Connell asked theKalven committee to review and submit anaddendum to the report.The faculty-student advisory committeeon campus student life is now reviewingthe report and will submit further recom¬mendations to O’Connell.O’Connell said he thought the report was“well done.”Other members of the committee were:Benson Ginsburg, Harper professor ofbiology; Robert Platzman, professor ofchemistry and physics; Harry Roberts,business professor; Reuben Smith, assis¬ HARRY KALVENCommittee Chairmantant professor of history: Mrs Janice Spof-ford, research assopiateand associate pro¬fessor of biology^ Jamet yiceNassistantdean of students/ Charles Wegener, profes¬sor of humanitWeintraub, Doijiof history.THE s af$ NGjp’i and Karlneljey associate professorUNIVERSITYOF CHICAGO iVolume 77, Number 45 The Chicago Maroon Tuesday, February 25, 1969New Summonses Result From MarchBy Jim HaefemeyerSome 30 students were identified for dis¬ciplinary action after demonstrating atPresident Edward Levi’s home and at theQuadrangle club Monday, dean of studentsCharles O’Connell said Monday night.The dean said he expected that the stu¬dents who have not already received sum-mones for the two-week sit-in in the admin¬istration building which ended Feb 15,would be summoned to appear before theBy Leslie StraussThe University disciplinary committeehas left the law school following studentdemonstrations and pressure from law fac¬ulty.Three students charged with taking partin the administration building-sit-in ap¬peared before the committee Monday whenit met in Abbott Hall. Rulings were handeddown in the three cases, but officials de¬ special disciplinary committee.At the president’s house 100 demonstra¬tors scuffled with O’Connell, broke a glassdoor, and stapled a petition to the innerdoor Monday night.At the Quad club, more than 50 demon¬strators invaded a buffet but voted three-to-one to leave after 30 minutes.After leaving a Mandel hall rally at 5:15pm, about 115 persons marched to Abbotthall to present the petition demanding adined to make the decisions or the stu¬dents’ names public.Dean of students Charles O’Connell saidMonday that following a student demon¬stration at the law school Thursday nomore hearings will be conducted there.More than 250 students marched from theadministration building to the law schoolThursday and attempted unsuccessfully toContinued on Page Two Today I Am a Man“It was pretty scary,” said MichaelLevi, Edward Levi’s thirteen yearold son, after demonstrators had sur¬rounded the President’s home Mon¬day night.“I didn’t know if they were goingto get in,” he said.Michael, his mother, and a coupleof the household staff were the onlypersons in the house at the time.collective defense to the disciplinary com¬mittee.Marchers were turned back at Abott byCapt Michael S Delaney, director of uni¬versity security, who told them the dis¬ciplinary committee had just adjourned.About 100 then proceeded to the Presi¬dent’s house, surrounded it, and poundedon doors and windows, demanding that Ed¬ward Levi receive the petition. Levi wasnot home, but Dean O’Connell and Univer¬sity counsel Raymond Kuby, who had fol¬lowed the march from the quads, offeredto receive the petition.“Is there anyone here who’ll speak tome?” O’Connell pleaded. One demonstratorissued him a mock summons.Shouting “let’s go in!” demonstrators be¬gan pushing O’Connell and Kuby.“We’re sick of giving petitions,” HowieMachtinger, suspended graduate sociologystudent shouted. He grabbed O’Connell byhis coat and pulled him from the steps.A girl, one of many pounding on the doorto the beat of the chant, kicked in theglass.Robert Salasin, suspended ’69, crawledthrough the locked doors and admittedabout 15 demonstrators to the entry. Thepetition sheets were stapled to the lockedwooden door inside.When O’Connell called on Capt Delaneyand nearby plainclothes security men toclear the porch, demonstrators overheardthe order and left without force.After someone shouted “Quad club,”they marched to the Quadrangle club,through the back door, upstairs, and intothe dining room. Demonstrators sat down at tables at 6pm and began munching before-dinnercrackers. Buffet food was snatched awayto the kitchen.For thirty minutes the sitters-in gavemock speeches and harangued facultymembers who appeared at the door. Pro¬fessor Morris Janowitz, chairman of thesociology department and a member of thecommittee of the council, stood a few feetwithin the door writing out names. Somemen took photographs.Plainsclothes security entered the diningroom, but did not force students to leave.Amid cheers, officer Samuel Evans ap¬proached a leader and asked him whatwas going on.“I’ve just told him we came to dinner,”the leader said.After the vote to leave, demonstratorstook up a collection for thp dining roomhelp and marched out.“This is the most mindless, the mostsenseless, and the most child-like behaviorI’ve ever seen on the part of studentshere,” O’Connell said later.He said he had gone to the President’shome because he was concerned that MrsLevi and son Michael, 13, were the onlyones there.Half Fare FightStudents concerned about the pos¬sible death of student half-fare onnational airlines do not just haveto wait for rigor mortis to set in andprices to go back up.The Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB)is now holding hearings to decideif half-fare is discriminatory but inthe meantime, students can mailpetitions asking for the reinstate¬ment of half-fare to the CAB, JohnH. Crooker, Jr. chairman, 1825 Con¬necticut Avenue, Washington DC.Rep. Arnold Olsen (D Mont) and24 of the House have introduced abill recommending continuation ofhalf-fare.Western Union opinion telegrams of15 words can be sent to Washingtonfor $1.Law School Will No LongerBe Site of Student HearingsStudents Across Country Press for ReformsBy Mitch BobkinDecisions from ruling bodies on threedifferent campuses over the weekend haveresulted in two gains and one loss for thestudent movement.At the University of Pennsylvania inPhiladelphia, a six-day sit-in ended Mon¬day with the administration agreeing tothe following students demands:• A $10 million fund raising drive forurban renewal be started to be led bytrustees of the University.• A commission of students, faculty,trustees and community leaders be set upwhich will have a veto power of all Univer¬sity development.• The University will pay the commis¬sion administrative costs of $75,000 a year.• The University will replace all demo¬lished buildings. The commission has agreed to meet withSecretary of Housing and Urban Devel¬opment George Romney to discuss the Uni¬versity’s renewal programs.A Massachussetts judge has declaredthat colleges and universities should not beable to oust students without due processof law.Suffolk County Superior Court judgeFrancis J. Good made the assertion at thetrial of a student’s suit against Boston Uni¬versity’s Board of Trustees Friday in Bos¬ton.Recent developments in civil rights lawraises a question as to whether “a univer¬sity can make charges against a studentand expel him without following due pro¬cess of law,” said Judge Good.The student, 20-year-old Frederick C.Sturm, was expelled for what the univer¬sity called breach of conduct in a biologyDiscipline ScoreboardHere is a breakdown of action takenby the special disciplinary committeeas a result of the two-week sit-in andrelated action:Students summoned to appear beforethe committee: about 160 (countingMonday night’s action)Students suspended (temporarily) af¬ter refusing to report to the committee:86.Students given interim suspensionswho have now appeared before thecommittee: 21. (Some of the suspen¬sions have been lifted by the committeebecause the students received sum¬monses after the deadline set to reportfor a hearing.)Cases decided by the committee: 35.Here are the recommended sentences:No discipline: 13.TIBETAN BOOK OF THE DEADjosEPHJARMANCO.The Chicago Maroon presents a multi-media ballet withvisual effects by New Vista Audio-Visual.8:00 P.M. Sunday, March 9 MANDEL HALLTickets 2.50, STUDENTS $1.50Available at the Maroon Business Office, Room 304Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., or at the door.Suspended for two quarters, with thesecond quarter a “suspended” suspen¬sion: 6.Suspended for two quarters, with allbut two weeks “suspended”: 4.Two quarter “suspended” suspen¬sions: 3.Suspended for one quarter, with allbut two weeks “suspended”: 2.One-quarter “suspended” suspension:2.Two-week “suspended” suspensions:2.Three-quarter suspension: 1.Probation through June: 1.Note: Most of the “radicals” havenot appeared before the committee.Where the committee has given “sus¬pended” sentences, they are usually ac¬companied by probation over a some¬what longer period than the suspen¬sions. examination. He charges that he did nothave an opportunity for a hearing or achance to confront the professor whobrought disciplinary charges against him.At Berkeley, the Board of Regents or¬dered the administration of the Universityof California, Berkeley, to suspend studentsfor an interim period whom they believeare participating in a demonstration whichhas been classified as a state of emergen¬cy by the governor of California.The interim period has been defined as atwo-week period during which studentsmust be given a hearing. Any guilty stu¬ dents must be suspended for at least onequarter or expelled.The regents also demanded that financialaid be removed from all suspended stu¬dents and that University buildings not beallowed for use to students planning dis¬ruptive actions.The national guard were still keeping or¬der as of Monday night at Berkeley. Thestudents will insist that the Universitycreate a college of ethnic studies, thatmore minority students be admitted andthat more minority faculty members behired. - *' *. * * .Hearings Proceed PeaceablyContinued from Page Onehand committee chairman Dallin Oaks apetition demanding a mass trial for ac¬cused students.Hearings for the three were the firstpublic committee hearings since Thursday.The hearings were not interrupted Mon¬day. The committee asked its standardquestions: “Were you aware the sit-in hadbeen declared disruptive before you en¬tered the building? Were you present ateither the Mandel hall or the Kent meet¬ings on the Wednesday before the sit-in be¬gan? Were you in the sit-in at deanJohnson’s office two days before? Didyou view the sit-in as the only way to opendiscussion, or as a way to get demandsmet?”. On Monday, about 20 faculty membersand half a dozen security with walkie-talk¬ies stood in the hall leading to the roomthe committee was using for hearings. Onefaculty member said that he and otherswere there to protect the committee if theneed arose, but another, who stood in thehall outside for an hour and inside thehearing room about five minutes, said hewas there because he was curious aboutwhat the committee did in its hearings.After the two public hearings, the roomwas cleared so the committee could hold aprivate hearing. Abbott hall was then lock¬ed, and only people who said they workedin the building were allowed to enter.The next public hearing is scheduled for3 pm Thursday.MUSICRAFT SPECIALSCOTT deluxe stereo compact Save $120was$470 NOW ONLY $349.50This is Scott’s topK compact. The 2503 boasts all the features ofLillllll the other two Scott compacts, with the im-portant plus of greater tuner sensitivity andmore power. In addition, the 2503’s precision magnetic cartridgeincorporates a stylus cleaning brush to keep your records cleanand new. Big Scott S-10 extended range speakers are standard *equipment, giving you the deep and vibrant sound associated.withmore costly equipment. Optional smoky-gray plastic cover pro¬tects your compact while in use.INCLUDES: AM/FM stereo tuner with FET's 40 watt amplifier.2 Airsuspension speakers with 10 inch woofers.Garrad changer with Pickering cartridge.ON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-300548 E. Oak S1.--DE 7-4150 2035 W. 95tn SI.-779-65002/The Chicago Maroon/February 25, 1969■■■David TravisCLOSED MEETING: Guards block off disciplinary hearing in Abbott 101. Bauer’sf;1 f ijtpI I \ W*. I h) i* vFORCE OF EVIL/Abraham Polonsky: A wealthy but unscrupulous lawyer betrays his brother,a poor (but hopest!) numbers-racketeer. Thursday.Doc Films. 75£. Cobb Hall Auditorium 8:00 311 E. 23rd Street2 blocks W. of McCormick PlaceTelephone: 225-6171Open 11 am to 9 pm/closed Sundays“If an institution of higher education de¬termines ... that such individual attending... has willfully refused to obey a lawfulregulation or order of such institution ...and contributed to a substantial disruptionof the administration ... then such in¬stitution shall deny, for .. . two years ... further payment to such individual underany of the programs specified) (above).”University officials have expressed con¬fusion over what they are supposed to dounder the law, and since the law doesn’tsay, they have done nothing as of yet.Colloquium Hits RacismAlleged University racism was the focusof SDS’s two day colloquium on “What CanBe Done to Fight Racism” Friday and Sat¬urday.Harold Nelson, an orderly at BillingsHospital and steward of Local 1657 of theservice employees union, said that the Uni-v e r s i t y systematically discriminatedagainst its black employees.He said that while 80 percent of hospitalemployees are black, only one percent holdsupervisory positions. Those black super¬visors do not receive pay comparable tothat of white supervisors with similar posi¬tions, he charged.Hospital personnel officer Ronald Two-mey, however, told a Maroon reporterMonday that “ho differentiation” is madeamong registered nurses on the basis ofcolor regarding jobs or salary. He saidthat nurses are paid on a regular salaryscale with increases based on longevity.Twomey said that Nelson’s charge of paydiscrimination against black supervisors“isn’t true at all. There is no differ¬entiation as to the salary level of blacksupervisors,” he said.Other colloquium speakers included radi¬cal journalist Clark Kissinger, discussingUniversity trustees, and Mrs Lois Dobray,discussing Hyde Park High.Other events included a debate betweenNoel Ignatin, PL member and skilled la¬borer at International Harvester, and EarlSilbar, SDS member; workshops on educa¬tional racism; and a concluding meeting atwhich participants presented demands forthe end of destruction in Woodlawn, in¬creased black and working class admis¬sions, a free day care center for the chil¬dren of employees, students, and faculty,and a department to study oppressedpeople. The SDS colloquium was organized afterthe Beardsly Ruml colloquium on whiteracism scheduled for Feb. 14 and 15 waspostponed after SDS threats it would bedisrupted.Senate ReaffirmsPrevious PoliciesThe 51-member council of the Universitysenate meeting Sunday afternoon reaf¬firmed its stand on student disruptions in¬cluding the current demonstrations at thedisciplinary committee hearings.In a statement the council said, “TheUniversity will vigorously defend the rightsof all members of its community to dissentand protest. But dissent and protest cannot be deemed to include harrassment orcoercion of individual members of the Uni¬versity community or other activitieswhich interfere with the normal operationsof the University.“Participants in conduct violating thisfrequently announced policy will subjectthemselves to disciplinary measures,” thestatement continued.The council discussed the Kalven com¬mittee report on disciplinary procedureswhich had been received by O’Connell onJan 31 and sent back to the committee foradditions based on the sit-in and its after-math.The council decided that the reportshould be made public immediately to dis¬pell any rumors that the report containedanything which the University would betrying to hide due to the current dis¬ciplinary actions.February 25, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3Students concerned that their federalgrants might be cut because they partici¬pated in the two-week sit-in in the ad build¬ing will have to keep worrying for a whilelonger since Congress has made no provi¬sion for the laws to be enforced.Federal laws that cut off funds to stu¬dent protestors cover:• National defense loans (National De¬fense Education Act of 1958): . • • Education opportunity grants (HigherEducation Act of 1965).• Student loan insurance program(Higher Education Act).• College work-study program (HigherEducation Act).• And fellowship programs carried outunder the Higher Education Act and theNational Defense Education Act.An amendment to the 1965 Higher Edu¬cation Act states:Councils Debate ReferendumADVISE AND CONSENT/Otto Preminger: The President wants to appoint Henry Fonda asSecretary of State, but Fonda was once a Commie at UC, so Southern Senator CharlesL,aughton opposes the appointment with all the power-techniques at his disposal. Tonight. Food, Drink & PeopleThe joint student councils will be askedFriday to consider organizing a studentreferendum on the faculty disciplinary\ committee, according to councils presidentLowell Livezey.I The referendum would be in the form ofa questionnaire to elicit student opinion onspecific aspects of the disciplinary com¬mittee and its procedures.A sub-committee of the joint councils isalso working on detailed critique of the dis¬ciplinary committee and general universitydisciplinary procedures, which may beready in time for discussion at the councils■ meeting, Livezey said.The joint councils meeting is scheduledat the blue gargoyle from 1 to 3 p.m. Fri¬day.The questionnaire was prepared by thedisciplinary sub-committee of the joint councils on the recommendation of thesteering committee, Livezey said.It includes such questions as:• Are the present constitution and proce¬dures of the Oaks committee proper inyour eyes?• Should a significant percentage of thevoting members of all disciplinary com¬mittees be students?• Should an appeal board be formed toreview decisions of all disciplinary com¬mittees? (and further questions as to theconstitution of such a board )• What should be the maximum penaltyimposed for sitting in?The questionnaire, if approved by thejoint councils, would be taken to studentdepartmental representatives to the coun¬cils, each of whom canvass his own depart¬ment.WHAT CHICAGO RADIOSTATION GOESUNDERGROUND FROM SIXTO 8:45 MONDAY THRUFRIDAY EVENINGS?k fin 88.3SKIING atm.fJUat . Always More FunWi Honor MlMidwest lankC*ar*e Cards Always Plenty of SnowSKIING 1 DAYS A 7 NITES A WEEK12 RUNS TO 2,100 FEETALL DAY SKI-BUS PACKAGEtrow CHICAGO EVERY SATUR0AY t SUNDAYRound Trip—Tow Ticket—Lesion—LunchGROUP &STUDENT RATES Only 75 Miasln from CAJcagoFor Information EA 7-1220MT. FUXr lake Geneva, Wis. 414 248 6553 Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave.■aEDITORIALA Year for This?The Kalven committee report on discipline is out. It willplease faculty and distress students, and neither side will be ableto understand the other’s feelings. In one way, the Kalven com¬mittee report is an excellent document. It is dead wrong in itsrecommendations, but it crystallizes the basic difference betweenfaculty and students.The Kalven committee’s recommendations are based on adivision of offenses into two categories. There are what the reportcalls “nuisance” offenses against “the life of the University” andthere are more serious crimes against the “mission of the Uni¬versity.” For the former, the report recommends that students actas judges along with faculty. For the latter, the judges should betenured faculty. Period.Both recommendations are woefully inadequate. As far as the“nuisance” crimes go, offenses concerning liquor, sex, drugs, book¬store thefts, these are things that affect students only. The reportdefines this category as “linked to the protection of the commonenvironment for the sake of other students.” We can think of nobetter way to end students’ criticisms of their common environmentthan to let them regulate it themselves without faculty.The second recommendation reveals a split between studentsand faculty that is enormous. That the University conceives ofitself as having a “mission” that is sacrosanct beyond criticism andstudent interference is exactly what students cannot agree to. Thevery fact that the Kalven report uses the word “treason” — albeitwith reservations — is the grounds of a disagreement so profoundthat it appears irreconcilable. As far as students are concerned,the entire concept of an infallible academic mission just doesn’texist, and until the faculty and administration realize this, thereare going to be sit-ins, there are going to be disruptions, there isgoing to be “treason” — and such activity is moral, in the eyesof the students.It is amazing to us that a University community, supposedlycommitted to constant inquiry, can bind itself so blindly to an in¬fallible papacy which they call the “intellectual mission of theUniversity.” Could it be possible that it is actually the students, notthe faculty, who are willing to question everything, who are willingto examine old traditions, who are willing to entertain criticismsof even the things closest to them? It is rather ironic that it isactually students, not faculty, who are leading the full “life ofthe inquiring mind.”As long as the faculty persists in their course of blind ad¬herence to the mystic ideal of the University, there is little chancethat they are going to recognize the legitimacy of student participa¬tion in all disciplinary matters. Kalven’s report “would vest juris¬diction in the tenured faculty as the most permanent part of theUniversity community.” Note that the report excludes not onlystudents, but also the junior faculty, who are more likely to besympathetic to students. What the report in essence states is thatonly those who have already accepted as a lifelong commitmentcertain ideas are capable of passing judgement on the validity ofthose ideas.When the Kalven committee was appointed as a private, in¬formal group presenting its opinions to dean of students O’Connell,no one even considered including students on it. When the needfor a review of disciplinary procedure became apparent, the com¬mittee assumed a more official status — but it still had no studentparticipants. How in the world does the University expect its stu¬dents to vest any respect in the reports of committees that influencetheir lives, but on which they are not represented? Finally, thereis the delay involved. We are not now referring to the two weekdelay caused by the sit-in, but the entire year that we have waitedto receive a report that states, “we have no sharp criticism of exist¬ing practices and procedures.”Well, most students certainly have sharp criticisms, and theUniversity knows this. They prefer to stick their heads in the sand,however, spending a year on a report that could have been madelong ago. It’s enough to make a person angry. It’s enough to makea person want to sit-in a building. PL vs MaroonWorker-student alliance people in SDSprotest your slanderous editorial, “Rumlvs PL.” Had you bothered to check with usbefore hitting the typewriter, you couldhave avoided telling such lies.First, you allege that “we planned to dis¬rupt the colloquium.” That is true in thesense that we weren’t about to allow racistideas to be presented without challengingthem; we will always “disrupt” thesmooth functioning of racism. But in thesense you meant “disruption” — hecklingspeakers, etc — we had actually opposedsuch tactics for the colloquium in at leasttwo sit-in meetings. Not because we opposedisruptive tactics in general — where theybuild the movement in a progressive direc¬tion, we use them — but rather because wefelt that a clear presentation of our ideas,in contrast to those of the official collo¬quium speakers, would be most effective inwinning students to fight for the three anti¬racist demands below. Only in the case ofJanowitz, whose racism has been suf¬ficiently exposed, did we gauge that wecould win the support of most studentspresent in keeping him from spreading hisracist crap.Secondly, your systematic confounding ofProgressive Labor Party with worker-stu¬dent alliance people in SDS denotes at bestignorance, at worst vulgar red-baiting.(We tend to believe that the latter is thecase, given the fact that various snide re¬marks managed to get printed in the lastissue of the Maroon, though this letter,which had been submitted for publicationover a week ago did not.)Worker-student alliance is somewhat of anew force in UC/SDS, though at otherchapters (e g San Francisco State, Har¬vard) our ideas are dominant, and nation¬ally we have begun to win major votes (eg on an anti-racism proposal). While welook to PL for leadership, most people whoadhere to worker-student alliance politicsare not in PL, and our politics is not neces¬sarily as comprehensive as the Party’s. PLput forth no independent position on theRuml colloquium.Worker-student alliance is a force inSDS, based on a desire to build SDS into amass, anti-imperialist, anti-racist, pro¬working-class student organization; ananalysis of America as a class society inwhich student struggles figure into the gen¬eral struggle between the working classand the ruling class, a struggle in whichstudents play a progressive role only in-THE CHICAGO MAROONEditor: Roger BlackBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyNews Editor: Caroline HeckManaging Editor: John RechtPhotography Editor: David TravisNews Board:Undergraduates: Wendy GlocknerGraduate Students: Rob CooleySpecial Effects: Mitch BobkinDisciplinary Committee: Leslie StraussAcademics: Sue LothThe Community: Bruce NortonNews Staff: Jim Hafemeyer, Sylvia Piechocka,Con Hitchcock, Steve Cook, Paula Szewzyk,Gerard Leval, Richard Paroutaud, AlfredRyan, Freida Murray, Marv Bittner, DebbyDobish, Blair Kilpatrick, Leonard Zax.Photography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,Howie Schamest, Steve Aoki, Ben Gilbert.Contributing Editors: Michael Sorkin, JessicaSiegel, Barabara Hurst, Robert Hardman.Production Chief: Mitch Kahn. Assistant: BobSwift. (Zowie.)Sunshine Girl: Jeanne WiklerFounded in 1892. Pub¬lished by University ofChicago students on Tues¬days and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolexcept during the tenth"vs ' week 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. 60637. 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. sofar as we ally with the working class;and a principled commitment to opposeanti-communism and red-baiting both in¬side and outside the movement, becauseanti-communism splits people strugglingagainst the ruling class from their bestleaders, namely, Marxist-Leninists (Com¬munists; in the U.S. that means PL’ers).Concretely, at this moment at UC, work¬er-student alliance politics involved fight¬ing racism, towards which we have raisedthree demands:• Stop destruction of Woodlawn — Be¬gin construction of good housing for dis¬placed families;• Admit Black and other third worldstudents (at least 35 percent of the nextundergraduate & graduate entrants, exceptfor the business school);• Form a day care center free for allUniversity employees, students and facul¬tyTo build the fight against UC’s racistpractices, we and other students — con¬trary to the implication of your editorial —held a colloquium on racism last Fridayand Saturday. Worker-student alliancepeople spoke on racism in education, on thehistory and class nature of racism, andour three demands.Unlike the Ruml speakers, however, weinclude no one who has called out the Na¬tional Guard against the black workers ofGary (Hatcher); no one who writes aboutriot control (Janowitz); no one who lec¬tures that ghettos arose because blackpeople liked to congregate in grog shops(Wade). We have no speakers from steeland auto companies (Bacons, Saltzman)who profit immensely from paying blackworkers less than white. We have nospeakers from the Board of Education whodeprive black high school students of thedecent education they demand (cf the boy¬cotts this fall), while channeling the tax¬payers’ money, meant for education, intothe richest banks for exorbitant interest(Bacon). In sum, no one from the veryruling class which depends on racism formaximizing profits and dividing the work¬ing class and its allies (including stu¬dents).Finally, the Ruml colloquium presentedno point of view which, in our opinion, isnot racist — in the sense that whateverits objective, in the real world, it per¬petuates the special oppression of blackpeople. Specifically, the colloquium speak¬er who was supposed to be the token “mili¬tant” (Barron) puts forth a position called“institutional racism,” not unlike the Ker-ner report’s “white racism” line. Thisview also has some currency in SDS. Itholds that whites in general oppressblacks, that “institutions” in general rath¬er than the ruling class perpetuate racism,that white workers benefit (if only in theshort run) from racism, and denies theclass basis of racism — that only rich busi¬nessmen like UC’s trustees benefit fromracism.The racist policies of UC are not deter¬mined abstractly by the “institution" ofwhich we are all “members” — but ratherby the trustees like Donnelly and Kennedywho, as directors of printing and tractor¬manufacturing plants, pay black workersless than whites, or Baird & Warner whoprofit from slum realty. The idea thatwhite workers gain from the oppression ofblack workers is used by these bosses tojustify their super-exploitation of blacks,and to keep whites from following blackworkers’ militancy against the bosses andtheir government.In the South, where racism has beenmost overt, wages and working conditionsfor all workers are the worst in the coun¬try; their racism hasn’t benifitted them.White workers, because of the racist ideasthey have been fed all their lives, can actagainst their own interests and be used bythe bosses to oppress black workers. Butthe main oppression of black workers —low pay, lousy jobs, high unemployment,rotten housing high interest, and inferioreducation (which among other thingsContinued on Page Seven4/The Chicago Maroon/February 25, 1969'^mi***m*,l*m***"~*m**^***^,!m+++++*t*+*l—*++—~r"V'L' I l l \ | I 1 1111 I I I FI M I 11|CAMPUSINTERVIEWSNEXT WEEKGraduates at all degree levelsare urged to investigatethe career opportunities atThe world’s largest centerfor conquest of diseaseand improvement of human healthThe National Institutes of Health—NIH—is the principal researcharm of the U.S. Public Health Service, and conducts many of themost advanced programs in medical science today. These pro¬grams require specialists in a wide range of disciplines. Ex¬ample: Right now NIH has openings in the following areas:CHEMISTS . . . BIOLOGISTS . . . NURSES . . . MEDICALTECHNOLOGISTS . . . SOCIAL WORKERS . . . LIBRARIANS. . . ENGINEERS . . . COMPUTER PROGRAMMERS . . . MATH¬EMATICIANS . . . STATISTICIANS . . . SYSTEMS ANALYSTS. . . MANAGEMENT INTERNS . . . PERSONNEL SPECIALISTS. . . ACCOUNTANTS . . . INFORMATION SPECIALISTS . . .MANAGEMENT ANALYSTS . . . CONTRACT SPECIALISTSThese are permanent positions that offer high professionalchallenge and the benefits of career Federal employment. Start¬ing salaries are attractive and opportunity for advancement isexcellent.CAMPUS INTERVIEWS MARCH 4An NIH representative will be visiting your campus next weekto discuss these positions with interested students. You mayarrange an interview during this visit by contacting the Place¬ment Office. Or, if you prefer, you may write or callCollege Relations OfficerNATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTHBethesda, Maryland 20014Phone: (301)496-4707An equal opportunity employer, M&F t . :SHORELAND HOTELSpecial Rates forStudents and RelativesSingle roams from $9.00 dailyDouble bed rooms from $12.00 dailyTwin rooms from $14.00 dailyLake ViewOffice space alsoAvailable from 200sq. ft. to 1800 sq. ft. Please call N.T. NorbertPL 2-1000.5454 South Shore DriveFinal ReductionUP TO50% OFFSince the Nehru& the Edwardian-Didn't you always suspect thatSomewhere there was someonewho had the same kind of tasteyou did? We suspect we're thatsomeone$tcfetotcfe, util.7104 SO.JEFFERY AVEIN SOUTH SHOREPhone DO 3-2700Open Dqily 9: 30 A.M. - 6:00 P.MmmIF YOU ARE 21 OR OVERMALE OR FEMALEHAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEDRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St.EARN MORE THAN $25 DAILYDRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSWork from garage near home or school.INTERNATIONAL HOUSFG,CT SHOP14i4 E. 59th STREETGIFTS FROMAROUND THE WORLDT obaccos-Candies-StationeryNewspapers-Magazines_ CosmeticsOpen M-F Noon -6:45 Pro Grafica ArtePrints — Pop/op and much other Stuff(friendly atmosphere)155 E. Ontario 642-0047BLACK FRIARS’ AnnouncesTRYOUTS“Charge of theNumidian Cavalry”An original musical drama based on the lile of LeoTolstoy, directed by Susan Specter.To be produced Spring QuarterI uesdav, February 257 - 10 P.\l. *, jIda \oves Theatre (3rd fl. I\H) DR. AARON ZIMBLEROptometristeye examinationscontact lensesin theNew Hyde ParkShopping Center1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 whatever is new in hairstyling . . .PERMANENTS a TINTING a CUTTINGWAVINGRANDELLBeauty and Cosmetic SalonAIR CONDITIONED— Open Evenings by Appointment —5700 HARPER AVENUE FAirf?x 4-2007Same Day 5 Hr. Cleaning No Extra ChargeJAMES SCHULTZ CLEANERS1363 E. 53rd Custom Quality Cleaning10% Student Discount 752-6933THE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBERPLAYERS OF THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGORALPH SHAPEY • Music DirectorandSEVERINO GAZZELLONIinternationally known flutistworks by Berio • Castiglioni • Chou Wen-Chung • WeinbergFRIDAY • FEBRUARY 28 • 8:30 P.M.MANDELHALLAdmission is free but with ticket.Available at Department of MusicConcert Office, 5835 University Ave.February 25, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5I i I * j - l 2 : I i i i I £ '»! H>H ttih\.v - III 1U4S)VKV ft «V.v, f.Sf.U'iVi/JlA.VUV.».//illlll TfTSXL\.\\ * i*f 'fXA&X .(The Maroon Classified Ads)Up Against The Wall, MotherchuckersRELIGIOUS MUSICMusic of the spheres: The EddiePerkins Jazz Trio again at Rey¬nolds Club Thursday. "C" Shop 8-11 P.M.SKI CLUB MEETINGFilm, Mar. 2 trip. All welcome.Feb. 25, Ida Noyes 3 fl. 8 P.M.FOUND AND LOSTFOUND on quad, 2/18 small, gen¬tle, Igt. brown, female dog. 324-6389. DEFINITIONBy Administrators — COERCION— more th3n 2 students in a group.FOR RENTLOST: REWARD for return of red,yellow, green plaid scarf lost in ornear Hutchinson Commons lastWed. Fred Meyer, ext. 4291.PEOPLE WANTEDRoom and board offered in ex¬change for evening baby sittingand help with dinner dishes. Maleor female. Starting spring quarter.Call Cohn, 324-8486.VOLUNTEERS (particularly wom¬en) who are interested in politicallyworking to repeal Illinois' abortionlaw. Contact: I.C.M.C.A., 5638 S.Woodlawn, 667-4943. 2 rm, sublet immediately, 5541Kimbark, $115/m, tel 667-2516.V/7 rm apt. $85, Ml 3-4914.Room for girl in private home.$40/month. MU 4-5076, 5-9 P.M.Sublet apt. spring and summer —option to renew lease in Oct. 55thand Cornell. Ml 3-8065.ROOMMATE WANTED4th rmmate for quiet, friendly E.HYde Pk. Apt. $52.00/mo. 684-3942after 4:30.1 or 2 roommates for beautiful, bigapt. NOW or next qtr. 324-6389.Female roommate wanted HydePark Blvd. and 55th. Call 667-8487.Roommate wanted for spring quar¬ter. Woodlawn apartment. Call 493-7698.Roommate for corner double inWoodward spring quarter, 1307 Wal¬lace, BU 8-6610.2 Fern, roommates wanted. Ownroom each. 56th & Univ. Av. spr.qutr. 643-6494.Rmmte wnted own rm. 955-1242. If Marlene looked like FarindaWest, they'd still be sitting-in.I loved it — P.B.S.NEWS ITEM FROM WCFL: "Po-lice fired two warning shots at aman fleeing from the scene of arobbery. The man was carryingtwo TV sets. When the man didn'tstop, the police shot him." end ofnews, no elaboration. What the hellis happening when cops shoot aman they don't bother to chase?Couldn't they catch a man carry¬ing two TV sets? I thought Daley'sshoot-to-maim order was rescinded.The Medici is peace.So you're wondering what "Mapi-tom'' means? (Ed. note: youshould live so long!) Come Sun.March 2nd and we'll tell you!The role of the CHICAGO CITYPIGS seems to have been takenover by the LAW STUDENTSTORM TROOPERS, which clear¬ly shows mentality is not a matterof I.Q. What hope rational dis¬course?DARKNESS — the shadow cast bythe grey city. Do you play a Russian instrument(balalaika, concertina); or mando¬lin, accordion, recorder and thelike? Play them in an original mu¬sical. Call Dave Zverow 493-3410.Were you FIRED because of thesit-in? Meet at the Blue GargoyleTonite at 6 to discuss what we cando to fight these political firings.The kingdom of God is at hand:Eddie Perkins Trio.REVITALIZATION meets tonight todiscuss spring quarter program ofdances, concerts, speakers, etc. IDANOYES 7:00. All new ideas andworkers invited.Don't you like the old ones?WANTED: artist-designer to createsets for original musical drama.Call Alan Rudnick HY 3-4516.DARKNESS — the state withoutsalvation.Yes, T.C.'s film WILL be shownthis quarter.The Jolly Green Giant is 46 ft.tall, weighs 54,000 lbs., lives in Le- Wednesday evening folk sinqs atThe Blue Gargoyle.WRITERS' WORKSHOP~I~ PT ,8377.Fantastic light show and Paul But",terfield Band, May 17, FOTA.Seur, Minn, and is probably Jewish. . .latest govt, figures.What's YOUR excuse? Get anyrecord at lower prices (most $3.19)from r/h — Student Co-op.And always wear a seat belt.The Chicago Maroon presents THETIBETAN BOOK OF THE DEAD,a multi-media ballet with KIM ONWONG and JOSEPH JARMAN tO.,Sunday, March 9 at Mandel Hall, hamanfreudo.8 P.M. $1.50 for students. Ticketsavailable at Maroon Business Of¬fice or in Mandel Hall Corridorstarting next week. Divine vibrations: the Eddie Perkins Jazz Trio.Think you'd make a wicked Harrvan? Come to Cafe Mapitom.Bible Study: Interested in startinga bible study and discussion grouphere on campus? Jim X8381 or924-6145.Ignore suspension notice — stayhere.Add a little oriental flavor to yourlife — try our felafel at Cafe Ma¬pitom.Trip out with Marco Polo. 326-4422. Cafe Mapitom returns to celebratePurim Sun., March 2nd at 6 00P.M. Featuring the Habonim Israe¬li dance group and other excitingentertainment. Prize for best Ham-an costume. Felafel, humus, ham-entashen etc. Costumes encouragednot required. 3rd floor Ida Noyes$1.25. Presented by Students forIsrael.Interested in attending health clubwith sauna, steam bath, sunroom,swimming pool, whirlpool bath 8,gym facilities once a month? Only$1.50 a visit. Contact Ken at 3266.Legit.PERSONALSMature grad student to spend afew hrs. a wk. (to be arr.) read¬ing to professor at his home. Maleor female; $2/hr. Call X4774 forfurther info.TUTOR needed for College Math,chemistry 8</or Biology — NEED-U Fr. Apr. '69 to Oct. '69. SMALLFEE — 752-3393.PEOPLE FOR SALEMinnette's Custom Salon. Dress¬making, alterations, sleeve shorten¬ing. 493-9713. 1711 Vi E. 55th St.May I do your typing? 363-1104.FOR SALEFrankin stove X8532.Bed, mattress, easy chair, likenew, 752-1429, 6-8 P.M.Nikon SP with 50 mm 1.4, 28 mm3.5, 135 mm 3.5 plus accessories.All in excellent condition. $250 firm.324-9358 evening.Stereo components: New Speakerson Special. Jensen X40 only $35.90.ADC 404 only $39.95. AR4x $48.00.MUSICRAFT on campus Bob Ta¬bor 324-3005.MOVING SALEDEMONSTRATORS**TRADESTV's, Recorders, Amplifiers, Tun¬ers, Changers, Speakers, Every¬thing must go. No Reasonable OfferRefused.Schwartz Bros. HiFi1215 E. 63 St. FA 4-8400Tibetan Tankas 373-6618. Butterfield Blues Band and LightShow. FOTA. . .FOTA. . .FOTA. . .The Ressurection of the Divine:The Eddie Perkins Jazz Trio againat Reynolds Club Thursday "C"Shop 8-11 P.M.Wanted: Liberal woman in need offunds in exchange for occasionalliaisons with discreet executive.Box M, Maroon.DARKNESS — the quality of black.4 out of 5 girls prefer Bat.What about the fifth girl?If you are interested in audition¬ing for the student-faculty recitalto be given May 4 during the Fes¬tival of the Arts please call KatieTolies 955-8571. Auditions will beheld during first week of SpringQuarter.BLACKFRIARS' tryouts for musi¬cal drama based on the life ofTolstoy Tues., Feb. 25. Directed bySue Specter. Ida Noyes Theater.7-10 P.M. Dependable Serviceon your Foreign CarYW’s encouraged now. 2 Factory trained mechanicshave joined us. Quicker service. Open til 8 P.M.Grease & <■>«’ change done evenings by appt.Hyde Park Auto Service • 7646 S. Stony Island • 734-6393Just ask P.B.S.Antique fur coats for sale. Somereal beauts. James Schultz Clean¬ers, 1363 E. 53rd St. 752-6933. MMSpecial!Style Cue —Requires No Setting!10To Student Discount5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-0727-8 Tins investmentstarts paying dividendsin three years.Most cars last alioitt as long as tin* loans that payfor them: three years.In Sweden, where it’s tough being a car, Volvolasts an average of 1 I years.And while we don't guarantee that a Volvo willlast 11 years in America, we do know that over95'' of all the Yolvos registered here in the last. 11 years are still on the road.So if you l»uy a Volvo from us now. it'll still lieworth owning three years from now when von getit paid for. You'll he able to stop making ear pay¬ments and start making payriieuts to yourself. Andinstead of paying interest to the bank, you’ll beable to have the hank pay interest to you.VOLVO SALES &SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVE RE 1-3800Keir Dullea ("2001: A Space Odyssey")inDAVID AND LISA(PLUS THE SHORT, ''CLAY”)‘•'t * •* ?WEDS., FEB. 26, COBB HALL, 7 & 9 PM, $1, CEF r*2 THE CLASS OF 68JOINEDPHILCO-FORD» , Hov/.Abdut You?. * '? V>j* «* jr ■ **, *If you are the "class" of '69 ! . . and want to be at the top of yourfield by '79. then join the company that offers graduates a realisticopportunity for self-realization Philco-Ford has the desire, the experi¬ence. and the resources to make the world a better place in which tolive. We'd like to talk to you and explain exactly where you can fitin one of our 11 diverse Divisions. Stop by and see us or write CollegeRelations. Philco-Ford Corporation. C & Tioga Streets, Philadelphia.Pa.19134.Philco-Ford will be here on Thursday, Feb. 17DIVISIONS: Aeronutronic • Appli¬ance • Communications & Elec¬tronics • Consumer Electronjcs- •Education'ahtfTfcchnical Services • TInternational • Lansdale • Micro- pi- a| _ ■electronics • Sales & Distribution |j—1• Space & Re entry • WesternDevelopment Laboratories An Equal Opportunity Employer6/The Chicago Maroon/February 25, 1969Continued! fMn Res# Four IttllMHiHfaii* i i a mTTTTTP : . ' I i 4 ' “* M r t f « ' * - T a » :: ft *LETTERS TO THE EDITORS OF THE MAROON ( | } —means little chance of a college education)_ is carried out diretly by the factoryowners, their allies at their government.Burt Michaels, SDS(The failure of the Maroon to print thisletter last week is obviously another in¬stance of political supression perpetratedupon the Maroon and an unsuspecting stu-dentry by the exploitative University(which only gave us $1250 this year) andthe exploitative capitalisis of Hyde Park(who don’t give us more ads) so we don’thave enough space to get on with the re¬volution—Editors. )ObjectionsThe undersigned students of the com¬mittee on social thought censure the identi¬fication of sitters-in by University facultymembers, and censure those faculty mem¬bers who chose to take part in such action.We believe that this action has seriouslyundermined the student-teacher relation¬ ship which, although it is not a privilegedone, is founded on mutual trust and open-mindedness. We believe that by becomingpolice agents of the University, teachersare cutting at the root principles of theirprofession. We fear that such action, ifallowed to continue and develop, will de¬stroy free discussion in the University.It will be objected that by entering theadministration building, students took acoercive action which made dialogue im¬possible. The crisis showed, however, thata large part of the faculty held to a narrowand incomplete definition of rational dis¬course which it refused to subject to a crit¬ique.We endorse the discussions now takingplace throughout the University concerningthe role of students, the organization andcurriculum of departments, and the idealsof the University.Since we believe that these discussionsgrow out of the sit-in, and since we believethe end of discipline to be education andnot punishment, we urge the immediateAAUP Outlines Discipline ProcedureThe special disciplinary committee is inconflict with several general guidelines onuniversity discipline set up last year by theAmerican Association of University Profes¬sors (AAUP).The AAUP recommends that:• A hearing committee be composed ofboth faculty and students.• The status of a student not bechanged until his case is resolved,• The student be notified of reasonsfor proposed disciplinary action withenough details and time to prepare for thehearing, and• Disciplinary proceedings be instituted only for violations of rules in which stu¬dents had a part in writing.Dallin Oaks, chairman of the all-facultycommittee refused to comment.The disciplinary committee was appoint¬ed by the committee of the council of theall-faculty University senate, according toprocedures formulated by the faculty andvoted by the trustees.As many as 80 students had been handed“interim” suspensions for refusing to ap¬pear before the disciplinary committee.Several of these have been removed be¬cause students had not received sum¬monses before the deadline set for them toappear.TYPEWRITERSFOR SALENEW & USEDREPAIR &RENTALADDING MACHINESFOR SALE - NEW & USEDREPAIR &RENTALTHEUNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE58th & ELLIS cessation of all disciplinary procedures.Lawrence P. Litzky, Rockwell Gray, Steven Most,Irwin Miller, Faith Rafkind, Mark A. Greenberg,Robert F. Cooley, Sheldon Frank, William Routt, JonahGoldstein, Tom Mandel, Arthur Morey, Michael Dol-liner, Michael Denneny, Jo Anderson, Paul Antze.We the undersigned students of the com¬mittee on social thought do not endorse theletter our fellow students have written. Wewish it were not necessary for us to takeissue with them, but we believe that theaims of mutual understanding are betterserved by discussion of constructive actionfor the future of the University.Joel Beck, Marc Cogan, Bernard Conroy, Stuart Don-neson, John Gittins, Charles Hollander, Michael Korn,Wendy Olmsted, William Olmsted, Molly Ramanujan,Judy Schavrien, Linnea Vacca, Robert Vacca, HelenLamdan.Political PurgeI would like to communicate the follow¬ing statement which was unanimouslyadopted at the NUC meeting last Fridayafternoon:There are a number of indications that apolitical purge of the left has begun on thiscampus. The most disturbing is the deci¬sion of the disciplinary committee not toaccept the collective defense desired by alarge segment of the demonstrators. Thisbreak with the procedure which was fol¬lowed after the last sit-in, combined withthe stated intention of high university offi¬ cials to expel the ringleaders, leads us tothe conclusion that the administration ishoping to exploit the law and order fervoramong many of the senior faculty to ridthe campus of the most outspoken and arti¬culate radicals. If this is true, it must beregarded as an attempt to cripple the left'on this campus. Such an attempt can onlylead to sharper struggle and greater dis¬ruption of campus routine.Melvin RothenbergAssociate ProfessorDepartment ofMathematicsNatural BeautyIt is distressing that so few students areaware of the natural charms of our cam¬pus in late February.What can be more refreshing than thefrozen brown tundras of our grounds? Howmuch more soothing than the overripelushness of the Bahamas, or the franticpace of a city like Rome, so tedious thistime of year.Let us rather count our blessings, andbe thankful that we are living here in thehomey groves of academe.Pumpkin Pieand Toots“I defyanyone to be luncomfortable !in this car.”Stirling Moss"I can’t recall a car in which theseats afford such an astonishingdegree of luxury. Correction. TheMercedes-Benz 600 does-but itwill cost you 10 times as much asthis one. Covered in leather-cloththe Renault 16’s seats are filledwith thick foam cushions and givefull support where you need it...’"The front ones are fully recliningand are adjustable through a multi¬tude of positions...”"The rear bench seat is also ad¬justable: in fact, you can take thewhole thing out if you want to.’(So said Stirling Moss in QUEENMagazine, a British publication.He was talking about the Renault16 Sedan-Wagon. The sedan thatchanges into a station wagon. Andback again, whenever you want.)“. . . and I would like to offer mycongratulations for producing thissensational motorcar for a verytow Price -RENAULT*cddesly imports,2235 SO MICHIGAN AVE CHlCAC MC..GO lil 404 4m 326 2550 University TheatrepresentsCain's Company inCUCHULAINan adaptation of three plays byWilliam'butlcr'ljeats‘Rockefeller Chapel‘Friday, ‘February 2sSaturday. ‘March /Sunday. ‘March ‘1and‘Friday,'March 7Saturday .‘MarchSunday,‘March g'Tiyht thirty in the eve mmOnly one hundred places mil be sold fin eachperform a ncc.'Jltt tickets are two dollars and canbe purchased at the 'Feryman tjallery or atthe ‘kpckefoller Chapel Office.Matching WeddingSets^loferte fashion / jewelersash for student discounts1422E. 53rd St. 363—0161authorized BMC service5424 s. kimbark ave. mi 3-3113Chicago, illinois 60615foreign car hospital & clinic, inc.February 25, 1969/Tha Chicago Maroon/7If you had todesign the idealcomputer organizationit wouldprobably look likeComputer Technology.Now, wouldn't youlike to joinyour dream company?We don't sell hardware. We don't lease back computers or rent machine time.We're the new company that cares about the user and the values he should be gaining from his computer installation, butprobably isn't.Our rapport starts with top management. We understand their problems and responsibilities, and we understand computers.We help management establish firm control of their data processing plans - plans that turn their computers from cost-reductiontools into profit generators.Then we help meet these plans through a process we call professional implementation.We implement our clients'total data processing plans from design through operation.This is where you come in.We're now building the best organization of computer and business professionals in the industry.We have opportunities in nearly every area of computer services, operations, sales and management — at facilities throughoutthe country.We also offer an unusual environment for developing broad business backgrounds in the areas of short and long-rangeplanning, creative financial management, acquisitions and evaluation of new-business opportunities.We're creating one of the finest professional climates,that a bright technical or business graduate will ever have the opportunityto share.And there's no better time to join us than right now.Make an appointment through your Placement Officer to see CT's employmentrepresentative when he visits your campus on March 3. Or write toGary Cadwallader, Corporate Director of Personnel, Computer Technology Inc.,65 E. South Water St., Chicago, Illinois - 60601.computer technology Incan equal opportunity employer8/The Chicago Maroon/February 25, 1969