Williams and Claffey Promoted Skeist on Draft ResistancePage Three Page Six Urban Renewal and UCGrey City JournalTHE MAROO o M3* p*-*• aso E-* tJfX> CDOq > TO *1o tr►H J3*•— H* CJ*I— < "5© PU 1The University of ChicagoVolume 77, Number 57David Travisy . • “-«■ :*xI - ;f. yf * 11 1 Jd? r. ' *'5 *r > ■ - j Hv„f • f I* »I, .'I»M*. J ft,* *i Campuses Through Country Hit By ProtestAmnesty Is Granted ToCornell Black StudentsReversing Earlier VoteBy Con HitchcockProtest by students hit six campusesWednesday and Thursday, most of themcentering around black students’ demandsand ROTC. Cornell and City College NewYork administrators discussed the issueswith black students while sit-ins at Prince¬ton and Fordham protested ROTC and mili¬tary research.The faculty of Cornell University votedWednesday to drop disciplinary actionagainst five black students, reversing theirMonday decision to punish the students.The students had occupied the studentunion building Saturday, armed with riflesand guns. They were demanding amnestyfor black students punished in previousdemonstrations. *On Sunday, the students occupying thebuilding signed an agreement with the ad¬ministration to surrender the building if nocharges would be pressed.Monday night the faculty overwhelmingrejected this agreement which had beensigned at gunpoint. Following this decisionthe students threatened to seize still morebuildings.The Wednesday vote was passed by anestimated 700 to 300 margin, and was re¬ceived with cheers by 7000 students outsidethe hall in which the faculty was meeting.Reaction by the faculty was mixed, how¬ever, as several professors called tlje vote“a complete capitulation” while the major¬ ity praised the decision as “an incrediblecleansing of the air.”Members of the Students for a Democrat¬ic Society (SDS) at Princeton blockaded theentrance to the Institute for DefenseAnalysis (IDA) Thursday morning protest¬ing the research going on in the building.The students were protesting the “partici¬pation of IDA in the war machine.”Following a brief clash with employees ofthe institute SDS returned to the campusfor a meeting to plan further action, sayingthat they had made their point. Police werepresent but were not used.Dean of students Neil Rudenstine whohad averted a dozen such confrontations inthe past week rushed to the scene, remind¬ing the demonstrators that the institute wasnot university-affiliated. In the struggle, hewas knocked to the ground.Administrators are also anticipating anSDS demonstration Friday when the annualreview of the ROTC troops will be held.City University of New York remainedclosed for another day Thursday as a stu¬dent blockade continued at the campus.President Buell G. Gallagher agreed totalk with the striking Negro and Puerto Ri¬can students demanding such things as adegree-granting school in black and PuertoRican studies, a separate orientation pro¬gram for black and Puerto Rican fresh¬men, and racial composition of futureclasses reflecting the minority populationof the high schools: 50 percent.At neighboring New York University(NYU) 100 students seized a building atdawn Wednesday after talks with heads ofthe English department failed to obtain re¬sults on the dismissal of an instructor fa¬vored by students. ON OTHERCAMPUSESFaced with the threat of a court in¬junction and academic punishments, thestudents left the building at 8:15 am, onehalf hour before the ultimatum from theprovost expired.Neither SDS nor black students were in¬volved in the protest over the firing ofNicholas Gordon, a professor of Americanliterature who had been active in theMcCarthy campaign last year. He deniedthat his politics were a factor, however.On Tuesday night 50 faculty membersFriday, April 25SEMINAR: "Alternatives to Isomorphous Replacement*',Martin Zwick, Stanford. Research Institutes 480, 2 pm.LECTURE: "Haydn's 'Sun' Quartets: Problems in theAssimilation of New and Contradictory Style Ele¬ments", Laszlo Somfai, assistant curator of Bartok Ar¬chives, Budapest, Lexington Studio, 3:30.LECTURE: "Did Victorian Britain Fail?", Donald NMcCloskey, department of economics. SS 108, 3:30.COLLEGE FORUM: "Rhetoric and Education", speak¬er: Kenneth Burke, discussant: Wayne Booth, moder¬ator: Eugene Garver. Quqntrell, 3:30.FILM: "Last Year at Marienbad," Cobb Hall, 7:15 and9:30.CONCERT: Anthony Braxton Quintet playing the musicof Eric Dolphy. Ida Noyes Hall Library, 6 pm.CONCERT: Solo Ensemble, Howard M Brown directingItalian music of the Middle Ages and Renaissance.Bond Chapel, 8:30.PLAY: "The Shoemakers," by Thomas Dekker acted bythe Renaissance Players. Cloister Club, Ida Noyes,8:30.DANCE: Chicago All-Stars Blues Band, Pierce TowerCafeteria, 8:30.LECTURE: "A Viable Jewish Community in the 58thCentury," Rabbi Zalman Posnes, Nashville, Tennessee.Hillel, 8:30.Saturday, April 26FOLK SING: "Whatever Happened to the American claimed that David Greene, chairman ofthe English department, was not “preparedor able to enter into a dialogue with thestudents.”At American Uhiversity in Washington30 students who occupied the adminis¬tration building were evicted shortly afterthey went in by 25 fraternity members. Thebuilding was cleared within 15 minutes andreturned to the administration who hadbeen forced out.A sit-in to protest ROTC on campus washeld at Fordham University in New YorkThursday as 150 students and faculty occu¬pied the president’s outer office where thesecretarial pool works. They called theiractivities “non-obstructive,” pushing asidefive campus security officers to enter theoffice. The president locked himself insidehis office, not responding to the sit-in.(protest) Folk Song?", a musical protest against thecold war. Ida Noyes Lounge, 3 pm.CONCERT: Solo Ensemble, Bond Chapel, 8:30PLAY: "The Shoemakers", Cloister Club, Ida NoyesHall, 8:30.Sunday, April 27UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE: "The Travail ofthe Mind", Philip M Dripps. Rockefeller Chapel, itam.SUPPER: Delicatessen at Hillel. 6 pm, $1.FILM: "A School for Scoundrels", 7 pm, and "TheFlim-Flam Man," 9 pm. Cobb Hall.LECTURE: "New Archeological Light on the Dead SeaCommunity," Hillel House, 7:30.FILM: "Bring Down Darkness", Kent 107, 7:30.PLAY:: "The Shoemakers," Cloister Club, Ida Noyes,8:3C. 'Monday, April 28'LECTURE: "Zen as Self-Awakening," Masso Abe,Kyoto, Japan. Swift Hall, 4 pm.MEETING: Learn Esperanto in one hour. Cobb 102, 7pm.DANCE: Square and round dancing. Ida Noyes Hall,7-9:30.FILM: "Bring Down Darkness", Cobb 209, 7:30.FILM: "High Performance Sail Boats," Searle 161, 8 30.LECTURE: Kenneth Boulding, University of Colorado, inthe Centralization vs Decentralization series BreastedHall, Oriental Institute, 8 pm.BULLETIN OF EVENTSAM/FM STEREO RECEIVERSolid State, FET Tuner90 Watts PowerIncludes Metal Cabinet was $340MOW *21995DISCOUNTS ON ALL CHANGERS A TURNTABLES WITH CARTRIDGESON CAMPUS CALL BOB TABOR 324-3005« E. Oak St.--DE 7-4150 ^/Vi it A it Jt StTT~ 2035 W. 95tn St.-779-6500« MuiiCiaftauthorized BMC servicemi 3-31135424 s. kimbark ave.Chicago, Illinois 60615toreigrvcar-hospital & clinic, incJ \t\ I > '* s2/The Chicago Maroon/April 25, 1969 JESSELSON'SiSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER 30 YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPI 2-2870, PL 2-8190, 002-9186 1340 2. 53rdMUSICRAFTpresents the KENWOOD TK 88 Cohn A Stem©mint & (JamtmaShopNEW HOPSACK BLAZERTailored lo our own specifications, this doublebreasted hopsack blazer is crafted with unusualattention to styling details. A try on? Our plea¬sure. Choose from tasty new shades... lemon,navy, light olive, royal blue. $55IN THE HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER55th & LAKE PARKopen Thursday & Friday eveningsLevi Names Two New Vice-PresidentsWilliams To Head Public Relations;Claffey Assumes Development PostAs Daly Leaves for Washington, D.C.STRIKERS FEAST: Rob Cooley ladles out the first meal for the hunger strikersafter nine days. By Mitch BobkinMichael Claffey and Eddie Williams haveadvanced to the posts of vice-president fordevelopment and vice-president for publicaffairs.The announcement, made by PresidentEdward Levi, made the new positions effec¬tive as of Wednesday, April 22. Claffey andWilliams, who had been serving as assis¬tant vice-presidents for development andpublic affairs, will succeed resigning vice-president, Charles U. Daly.Daly will be returning to Washingtonwhere he served as a congressional liaisonand staff assistant in the Kennedy adminis¬tration to head a new foundation. He hasagreed to remain at the University until theend of spring quarter.Claffey, 37, will be responsible for theUniversity’s development programs, in¬cluding the second stage of the University’sdevelopment programs, including the sec¬ond stage of the University’s drive to raise$360,000,000 in 10 years. The initial step, the$160,000,000 Campaign for Chicago, wasconcluded successfully in December, 1968.Williams, 36, will be responsible for thepublic affairs area of the University, in¬cluding the Office of Public Information,Discipline Discussed By FacultyProcedures First onAgenda; Booth, Levins,Lewontin Debate TopicBy Bruce NortonSome 100 faculty members met Wednes¬day at a forum called by the faculty peti¬tion group to discuss discipline proceduresat the University.Professor of geography Gilbert F Whitechaired the forum. Dean of the collegeWayne Booth, professor of biology RichardLewontin, and associate professor of biolo¬gy Richard Levins each presented theirviewpoints on University discipline and an¬swered questions from the audience.Students observing the forum out-Trustees ReformSenate StructureThe board of trustees of the University,acting under the recommendation of thecommittee of the council of the faculty sen¬ate and the unanimous recommendation ofthe council of the senate, has increased themembership in the senate by admitting as¬sistant professors with one-years service.The change, announced Thursday, April24 by President Edward Levi, will increasethe size of the senate by 145 new members.Previously, only assistant professors whohad completed three years full-time serviceon academic appointment were eligible formembership.Faculty members who hold rank of pro¬fessor or associate professor are automati¬cally admitted to the senate.The senate elects the 51-member council,the faculty’s chief legislative body on mat¬ters affecting the entire University. Thecouncil in turn, elects the seven-membercommittee of the council, the chief execu¬tive organ of the university.The senate only meets once each year tohear the annual report of the President andto elect the council. The council usuallymeets once each month to make decisionswhile the committee meets bi-weekly to in¬terpret the monthly decisions of the coun¬cil. numbered faculty members, for whom themeeting was called, by about two to one.Booth began by expressing concern aboutthe current state of the University. “I’vebeen living through what I consider to bethe worst period of my life,’’ he said. Hestated that the University “now suffersfrom an unprecedented breakdown oftrust.”Booth argued that the administrationtook the most acceptable of the alternativesopen to it in disciplining students involvedin the sit-in. He said that “to call in civilauthorities is to surrender the special char¬acter of a university,” and that on the otherhand a university can not allow a minorityof its members to coerce it. He believesthat the University can not rescind its dis¬ciplinary rulings, although he thinks thatstudents should be able to serve on dis¬cipline committees if they want to. “Ipersonally see no reason in principle whystudents shouldn’t be on all disciplinarycommittees, if and when they are readyto accept the responsibility . . hedeclared.The Oaks and Shireman committees,Booth continued, should not be blamed forthe level of punishment because expulsion was determined by the council of the sen¬ate, in a unanimous vote, as appropriatefor students who were identified early inthe sit-in and who did not appear before thecommittee after more than three weeks.Booth stated that a subcommittee of thecommittee of the council has ruled that ex¬pelled students will be eligible for consid¬eration of reapplication beginning in thefall of 1971.Lewontin objected to the University’shandling of discipline because he believedthat both the Shireman committee reportand dean of students Charles O’Connellhave indicated that the attitude of a stu¬dent was one of the main criteria in set¬ting the punishment. While that may be ac¬ceptable in a courtroom in the largersociety, “in the university it is a perniciousdoctrine”, Lewontin said, adding that nogroup in a university should have the powerto rule on another group’s attitudes.Lewontin did not believe that disciplinaryrulings should be rescinded, because it mayencourage people to take action harmful tothe University without seriously thinkingabout it.See Faculty, Page NineStudents End Hunger StrikeSeventeen Fosters QuitAfter Nine Lean DaysAnd No Faculty ActionThe nine day hunger strike and tent-in ofstudents protesting recent disciplinary ac¬tions came to an end Wednesday.The strikers decided to end their non¬militant protest after judging that they hadmade their point to the community and thatfurther fasting at the expense of theirhealth and studies would be pointless.The hunger strike began Monday eve¬ning, May 14, with 18 people. When it cameto an end with a fast breaking ceremony3:30 Wednesday, approximately 17 peoplewere fasting.Five students maintained the fast for theentire duration. They are Mary Sue Leigh¬ton, ’69. Sara Heller, ’69, Sue Loth, ’72, KenDunn, and Diana Burg, ’71. In addition to the hunger strikers, therewere five students who tented on the quadswithout fasting.The fast was broken with a ceremonyWednesday afternoon at which soup andhors d’oeuvres were served. A sherry hourwas held Thursday afternoon.After breaking the fast, at least two ofthe strikers became ill.The strikers met with the Committee ofthe Council Monday. A statement the stri¬kers issued Wednesday reported that“when we protested the Oaks and Shiremancommittees had been unfair, we weregreeted with looks of incredulity.”During the strike, some faculty membersstopped by the tents and spoke with stri¬kers. Sue Loth reported that Wayne Booth,dean of the college, stopped by Tuesday.1“He spoke with us so sympathetically,” shesaid, “and then when he left he said, ‘Well,if there’s anything I can do for you short ofgiving you what you want, let me know.’ ” the Alumni Association, the Radio andTelevision office and other related activi¬ties.Claffey made it clear that Daly’s positionis not being split between Williams andhimself. Daly, according to Claffey, onlybecame vice-president for development andpublic affairs during the Campaign whenthe position of vice-president for devel¬opment became vacant. The positions havebeen filled by two men in the past, Claffeysaid.Claffey said he expects to maxe no majorchanges in the development offices. “Weare continuing the effort that has been go¬ing on here for many years. We think wehave a good development program and get¬ting money for private institutions is noteasy,” he added.Claffey cited maintenance, faculty sala¬ries and financial aid as large expendituresof the University and said “The Universityhas an enormous amount of money toraise.”Williams could not be reached for com¬ment.Claffey holds a BA degree from AdelphiCollege and a MS degree in journalismfrom Columbia University. During 190-52he served in the US Marine Corps. Heserved on the faculty of Hofstra Universityduring 1957-58.From 1959 to 1964 Claffey was a reporterand editor with United Press in Europe,and in the United States with the Associ¬ated Press and The New York Journal-American. In the latter year he was publicinformation officer for Senator Pierre Salin¬ger. He has served as a consultant to oth¬er members of Congress.Claffey came to The University of Chi¬cago in 1964 as director of developmentpublications and assistant to the vice-presi¬dent for public affairs. He was named di¬rector of public information in December,See Appointments, Page SevenMICHAEL CLAFFEYDevelopment Vice-President* D 4 v L4it« - «iLyi EDDIE WILLIAMSPublic Affairs HeadApril 25, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/3liicjA \ noon M opt-jirO sdMl1. Wow! What is it?Python LTD.Fully equipped.2. What happened to your ViperMark IV?I just couldn’t identifywith that car. 3. That's what you said aboutthe Sidewinder Eight.But a Python is some¬thing else. Four-on-the-floor, six-barrel carb,console tach... andwhat a steal!4. Don’t you think you ought tohold onto a car more than amonth, Chet?When you see a greatbuy coming your way,you have to grab it. 5. That’s what I did yesterday-signed up for Living Insurancefrom Equitable. At my age thecost is low, and I get solidprotection now that will continueto cover my family later whenI get married. Plus a nicenest egg when I retire.With the right set ofwheels, you’ll go along way.For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable.For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, orwrite: Lionel M. Stevens, Manager, College Employment.the Jj; EquitableThe Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10019All Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F © Equitable 1968UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 I. 57th ST.FIVE 3ARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorHANDCRAFTED GOLD& CUSTOM SILVERJEWELRY5210 HARPER CT.667-8040 M 806Rodin's Thinker91/2"AP 902Darwin ApeW f749No matter the mood, there’s an authentic sculptured originalor replica to suit your needs. Many exclusive designs fromAfrica, Asia and Latin America. For home or office.ftkfc sal Aou.esInternational Arts and Crafts CenterJewelry—Handicrafts—SculptureHarper Court 5210 S. Harper 324*7600Convenient HoursShop at home: Ask lor our cataloguethe 21stedition ofthe completeguide to work, studyand travel abroadThe Student Traveler Abroadprepared by the United States National Student AssociationTells you how to get there, what to do, how much it will cost, andhow you can do it for less . . . it’s the official source book for overone million students in more than 300 colleges and universities.★ more comprehensive than ever before ... completelyup-todate’★ more detailed information on Australia and Japan★ a completely new section on Africa★ information on every important city, country, and continentto which an American student is allowed to travelat your college bookstore or use coupon:GROSSET & DUNLAP, INC.51 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010Gentlemen:Please send me| ABROAD at $2.50 per copy.| NameI Address.I CityTAhSAM-YMfCHINESE-AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. TO 9 P.M.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO ? P.M.Orders to take out318 East 63rd MU 4*1062 LIBRARY HELP WANTEDBoth full-time and part-time positions availablefor students and student wives.Telephone 955-4545THE CENTER FOR RESEARCH LIBRARIES5721 Cottage Grove Avenue4/The Chicago Maroon/April 25, 1969e.ijotrO -aHT'iW/f KnjA i- il . : > A Volkswagen dealerwill stake his reputation on it.No, ft jt's not a new model Volkswagen.That's an old model Something Else.And it's on our lot for the same reason anyother car would be on a Volkswagen lot.It's for sale. Along with most of the cars peopletrade in on new Volkswagens.So why buy a used Something Else from a VWdealer, instead of from Somebody Else?Buy it from a VW dealer, and you get the VWdealer's 100% guarantee for the repair or re¬placement of every major working part for 30days or 1000 miles. Whichever comes first.Engine. Transmission. Rear axle. Front axle as¬semblies. Brake system. Electrical system. Thoseare the parts covered.They may make boring reading. But there'snothing boring about laying out a lot of dough tofix one of them.That's why it's so nice to know that we'll takecare of anything like that on any car we guarantee.And that's why we’re pretty particular aboutany car we give a guarantee.When we finally give it the guarantee, it meanswe’ve checked out the car completely. And fixedwhat needed fixing to begin with.After all, a VW dealer has a reputation tothink about. We can't heve it known around townthat you drove off our lot with a lemon. Even if itwasn't a Volkswagen.SOUTH IMPORTMOTORSBUS-4900E. 71st and Stony IslandContact: George McClowry General ManagerTake the Illinois Central to Stony Island, walk acrossthe street to South Import Motors, and we willreimburse you for trainfare.Or, take a cab and South Import will pay thecabd river.Better yet, give George a call, and he will send aBeatle out to pick you up.Bring this ad along, and we will pay your way toSouth Import Motors.copy(ies) of THE STUDENT TRAVELER |State. FOR THE CONVENIENCE AND NEEDSOF THE UNIVERSITYRENT A CARDAILY—WEEKLY—MONTHLYVWSAUTO. • VALIANTS • MUSTANGS • CHEVY!!AS LOW AS $5.95 PER DAYPLUS 9*/mile (50 mile min.)INCLUDES GAS, OIL, & INSURANCEHYDE PARK CAR WASH1330E. 53rdST. MI3-1715! H i 3 . m; I III*• 3 1» V. i t Lav i 'J'Ten Professors Plan To Leave UCFaculty To LoseDept. ChairmenIn Four FieldsBy Mitch Bobkin and Leslie StraussTen tenured faculty members have madeit official that they will be leaving the Uni¬versity after spring quarter.Among those leaving are four departmentchairmen: Grant McConnell, past chair¬man, John Moscow. Thursday the Univer-Gilbert White, chairman of the committeeon public affairs; Mushin Madhi, chairmanof the near eastern languages department;and Grosvenor Cooper, chairman of gener¬al studies in the humanities.Only one of these men has been replaced.Aristide Zolberg was chosen to succeedMcConnell as political science chairman.Committees are presently considering suc¬cessors to the three others.Others planning on leaving include: Ben¬son Ginsburg. professor of biology; HerbertKlein, associate professor of history; C.Herman Pritchett, professor of political sci¬ence; Stanley Bennett, professor of biology,medicine and anatomy, Zvi Griliches, pro-Moscow Gives AnalysisAnd Chronology Of TheSit-In, Winter QuarterBy Sylvia Piechocka“Persuasion” appears to be the key wordin the quarterly report of student ombuds¬man, John Moscow. Thursday The Univer¬sity of Chicago Record published his pro¬administration analysis and chronology ofthe sit-in and the consequences.In his analysis Moscow discusses the legi¬timacy of disruptive action in connectionwith amnesty and clemency, disciplinaryaction, and the nature of the University.Addressing himself to the question oflegitimacy, Moscow says that while “every¬one should periodically look around and seewhat he is doing, see if it is good and see ifhe wants to continue.. ,.I would nonethelessquestion the utility of allowing any group of400 to dictate the behavior of 10,000 withoutpersuading them.”He further suggests that rather thankeeping others from “pursuing their desir¬ed avocations,” discontented students whofind the academic style of life irrelevant,should find another style.Moscow feels that political battles shouldbe fought in political arenas and that theonly battle appropriate in a university isone that deals with men's minds. fessor of economics, and Daniel Boorstin,professor of history.McConnell announced his resignation dur¬ing winter quarter. He plans on going to theUniversity of California, Santa Cruz nextyear, where he will accept a position on thepolitical science faculty. On March 1st hewas succeeded by Zolberg.White, a leader of the faculty group pro¬testing the University’s discipline, will be¬come director of the Institute for Behav¬ioral Sciences and professor of geographyat the University of Colorado. White hasmade it clear that he had decided to leavethe University before the sit-in occurred,and says that he is leaving because he is“attracted to the University of Colorado be¬cause of the opportunity it provides for re¬search and for teaching.”Mahdi will be going to Harvard next yearto be the Jewett professor of Arabic. He toohad decided to leave before the sit-in andsays that there are various reasons for hisdesire to leave Chicago.Cooper is attracted by the arrangementat UC Santa Cruz where he will teach nextyear. He says that it is an institution sim¬ilar to Oxford and Cambridge and he willbe a member of the fifth college next year.Ginsburg will teach at the University ofConnecticut next year where he will be thehead of a new department called Bio-Be-“Such actions are either those of truetwentieth century vandals or truly diseasedminds,” exclaimed Moscow, describing themarch on Pres. Levi’s house and the theftof photographs from Charles Daly’s office,showing him with John and RobertKennedy.He further states that attacks on adminis¬trators and faculty members who servedsummonses may succeed in deterring oth¬ers from filling the same function in thefuture.“One wonders about the utilitarian as¬pects of having an institution with no onetaking responsibility for any actions, orwith all conduct determined by the mostmilitant group on campus,” he continues.“If the style of conflict is to be as destruc¬tive as it was, and if the people in the com¬munity are about to tolerate that style ofconflict, only the physically strong andthose who like combat will be willing toexpose themselves in any executivecapacity.”A disussion of amnesty and clemencyfollows. Amnesty implies a political recog¬nition of legitimacy on the part of the Uni¬versity to those students who were chal¬lenging the legitimacy of the University.The only time amnesty can be extended isif the University is persuaded of the recti¬tude of the cause being backed by the sit-ters-in, Moscow asserts. DANIEL BOORSTINGoing to Smithsonianhavioral Sciences. The challenge of chair¬ing this new department was Ginsburg’s in¬centive to leave Chicago, not the sit-in andthe other demonstrations, he says.Columbia will be the site of HerbertKlein’s next teaching position where he will“Amnesty is granted only to successfulrevolutionaries!” exlaims Moscow. “Al¬though no one can deny the right of anyman to attempt to overthrow an existingorganization, no one can deny that organi¬zation the right to fight back.Clemency also cannot be granted unlessthe students have successfully pointed outan error on the University’s part whichwould otherwise have been overlooked.The only argument which falls into thiscategory for Moscow was the demand forMarlene Dixon’s reappointment — but to bea cause for clemency the sitters-in wouldhave had to persuade the community “ofthe justice of their cause.”The demonstrators were responsible fortheir actions because they were warnedrepeatedly and had the precedent of the sit-in in spring of 1967 as their guide. “Theirviews should be considered on the meritsof the ideas presented, not on the source.Their actions should likewise be allowed tospeak for themselves, without regard tosource.”With regard to disciplinary action, Mos¬cow feels that there are some legitimategrievances against the Oaks Committee forthe way in which it handled cases. He feltthat two students who participated equallyin the sit-in should be given equal punish¬ments.Moscow also regarded the randomness ofthe summonses as one of the true in¬justices. But, he says “that members of theCommittee asked improper questions doesnot detract from the final justice of theirresult.”The faculty runs the university, accord¬ing to the ombudsman. “Since Chicago de¬fines its stature in terms of the quality ofits professors, and since by rejecting goodscholars for political reasons Chicagomight be rejecting good scholars who wouldthen be lost to it, such a course of actionwould run counter to the interests of theUniversity, and of the faculty who identifywith it.”The second part of the statement dealswith a chronology of the events of the sit-in,documented with flyers, eyewitness ac¬counts, notes written at the time and occa¬sional use of University files.It ends with a report on two memorandawritten winter quarter which asked for in¬stituting a ‘suggested withdrawal’ fromstudies for a certain period of time, to beused for students who think they would likethe academic life to relate to them and fora cut in the college size to improve thequality of housing and teaching. ZVI GRILICHESGoing to Harvardbe instructing in Latin American history.Klein has been in Chicago since 1955 andthinks “it’s time to go now.” He also saysthat he finds New York very exciting.C. Herman Pritchett will be teaching atthe University of California, Santa Barbaranext year, where he will be a professor ofpolitical science. He too decided to leaveChicago before the outbreak of the sit-in.The University of North Carolina, ChapelHill has offered Bennett the position of Ke¬nan professor of biology and medical scien¬ces, professor of anatomy, chairman of theanatomy department and director of theLaboratory for Reproductive Biology,which he has accepted. The main reasonwhy Bennett decided to leave, he said, wasbecause Chicago couldn’t get enough fundsfor research and Chapel Hill has been givena $2,000,000 grant by the Rockefeller foun¬dation.Griliches will be teaching at Harvardnext year but he could not be reached forcomment.Boorstin, who announced his departurefrom Chicago early winter quarter, will beof the Smithsonian Institute.Students Join LeviFor Sunday ChatThe President’s seminar, a group com¬posed of one representative from each ofthe undergraduate, graduate and profes¬sional school’s student councils, and se¬lected faculty and administrators will meetwith President Levi Sunday to discuss thecurrent discipline crisis.The group, formed late in fall quarter,had been meeting steadily with the Presi¬dent until the outbreak of the sit-in and hasnot met with him since late February.The seminar has discussed finances, thesit-in and other pertinent matters with thePresident in the past few months. One sug¬gestion that came up at the finances meet¬ing, that of raising graduate tuition nextyears, has already been enacted.It has been rumored that Senator CharlesPercy, a Chicago alumnus, would meetwith the group Sunday, but Jerome Frese,assistant to the President, would not denyor confirm that report.President Levi has also met with each ofthe college student councils during the lastfew weeks, usually at breakfast, to discussstudents’ ideas and thoughts of collegereform.Tenters-lnAll tenters-in and loaners of equip¬ment thereto: if you came up short(or long) Ker Dunn’s VW microbuswill be parked on the circle in thequad today with all the extra stuffthat no one claimed; stop by to pickit up, or leave off anything you addedto your worldly possessions by mis¬take. Like that army sleeping bagof Rocky Gray’s. Thanks.David TravisON THE QUADS: Guerrilla theater presentedThursday for a watchful audience.Ombudsmans Sfatement IssuedApril 25, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/5EDITORIALand Public AffairsIn the general atmosphere of recrimination and vituperationof the last three months, one event that was rather significent tothe University was almost covered up. That was the resignationof Charles Daly, vice president for development and public affairs.Daly was brought by Edward Levi to the University from theWhite House where, with Lawrence O’Brien, he was a congressionalliason in the Kennedy administration. He came with a deep feelingof personal loss; he had been John Kennedy’s friend as well as amember of his staff. But somehow over the last four years hemanaged to transfer some of his commitment to the University ofChicago. He became one of Levi’s chief advisers. He developedthe Center for Policy Study, which has been pretty successful inthe exchange of ideas between thinkers here and policy makers inWashington. And in three years the Campaign for Chicago (aboutwhich, because of the ’66 sit-in, people were pessimistic in thebeginning) gained $180 million.Development means fund raising. And public affairs meansthe University’s relations with the outside world (the public in¬formation department comes under this category, and also thealumni association). And these are areas that some students havebegun to question.7f the University submerges its in¬tellectual purpose to a social pur¬pose, and if the social purpose isrevolution, who among the peopleand institutions in the country whohave money would give any to us?'The radical view is that the University should be used as atool in the revolution. Radicals find repulsive University connec¬tions with the various industrial, governmental, and cultural estab¬lishments. They tend to regard Charles Daly as a kind of pimp forthe University, a bootlicker of the Establishment, a hob-nobberwith fat cats. But so far they haven’t figured out how they willkeep the University going when they take it over. If the Universitysubmerges its intellectual purpose to a social purpose, and if thesocial purpose is revolution, who among the people and institutionsin the country who have money would give any to us? The FordFoundation? Certainly not. Cyrus Eaton? No. A rather large flawin the radicals’ hopes for taking the University for a revolutionarytool is that once they have it it will probably collapse.The University of Chicago’s relations to the establishmentmay not be the best but they are better than most. When UC hasa contract with the government it is to do theoretical work, andwork that faculty wanted to do and had sought the money to do.When money comes from corporations it is not to do their research(like finding better rubber for tires), and often it is in fields thathave nothing to do with them. Much of the money that the develop¬ment office raises has no strings attached. And more, like that forbuildings and professorial chairs has very loose strings.The important thing about the University of Chicago’s effortto support itself is that it tries very hard to make sure that themoney it gets is to pay for its own projects and not the projects ofthe people giving the money. Charles Daly understands this. Andit has been a policy he has worked to enforce, in public affairs(the Center for Policy Study, for example, gets its ideas andprojects from the faculty, and not the administration), and in de¬velopment. What it means is that the administration makes itpossible for the faculty and (to an unfortunately small extent)the students to do what they do best. And that is the only kind ofadministration to have. Charles Daly is that kind of administrator.VS^ppe.Edd^^WilUamssndJfic^elCl^ffey arg ^6/The Chicago Maroon/April 25, 1969 Struggle Must Be Expanded‘Draft resistance is still on appropriate, goodstand for middle-class student anti-war activity.By Rob SkeistLast Tuesday in Washington, more than 200 “student leaders” from campusesacross the country — including Maroon editor Roger Black — announced that theyhave decided not to enter the Army as long as the Vietnam war continues.“There is a time when you have to stand up against what you believe is verygravely damaging to your country ... in resisting the draft and refusing to participatein an unjust and immoral war,” Black said.That time is approaching for many young mea, soon to graduate from collegeand lose their student deferments, who are revolted by the thought of participatingin that war.But an even larger question presents itself to men who are trying to find a way tto deal with the war and the draft, not just by taking a personal stand, but also byworking actively to try to change the society which made possible the abominationof the Vietnam war.People trying to deal with that question may be interested in the direction inwhich the resistance movement has been moving since it began three years agowith “we won’t go” statements similar to the one issued this week.The Resistance was started by people who saw their refusal to cooperate with theSelective Service System as a moral necessity, often in the context of their desire tolead their lives by nonviolent principles. They organized mass draft card turn-ins.and hoped there would be escalating confrontation with the system. Eventually, theyhoped, enough men would resist the draft and cut into the military’s pool of manpowerthat the U.S. would be forced to end its adventures in Vietnam.At the same time, other anti-draft groups were being formed which had adiffeent emphasis. They agreed that the draft should be stopped and that it was agood issue around which people could be brought together to see their commoninterests, but they did not accept what they called the “moral witness” nature ofresistance.The Boston Draft Resistance Group (BDRG), for example, began to use the issueof the draft as a way to begin to talk with men in working class communities, helpingthem see the connection of the draft with other institutions in our society whichoppress people, especially working class people.In Chicago, Chicago Area Draft Resisters has since its start in 1967 combinedthese two approaches. Some of its early members turned in their cards, but not all itsmembers have done so. From the start, CADRE members have handed leaflets tomen entering the induction center, provided individual draft counseling, organizedanti-war agitation, and tried to establish organizers in selected communities.The Resistance has had to face the fact that the four nationally organized draftcard turn-ins — from October 16, 1967, to November 14, 1968 — have been drawingfewer and fewer men. The individuals who have turned in their cards more recentlymay feel more strongly committed than some of the earlier ones, but there havebeen fewer of them.CADRE, with many of its original members now in jail, is slowly evolving as newpeople begin to work with it and evaluate its program.I and many others still feel draft resistance is relevant to many of our concerns.It still expresses our rejection of the war and the draft. It still merits our personaldecisions with our political efforts to organize people for social change. It stillserves to oppose the class privilege of student deferments — which are given to thosewho can afford to go to college while others who cannot are drafted. It challengesthe draft system’s function of channeling men into places where somebody inWashington thinks they should be. It points up the connection between domesticpolicies such as the draft and imperialist activity in our foreign policy.That is, draft resistance is still an entirely appropriate, good stand for middle-class student anti-war activists.But it’s not right for every guy.Draft resistance, in our new perspective, is part of a larger movement for socialchange in America. To reach people other than college students, people in Chicago are• Working with anti-war GIs, by leafletting induction centers and train stations,distributing newspapers edited by men in the Army, and rapping with indivdual GIsabout ways to get out of the service and about the movement.• Working with high school students, by talking with groups, helping with highschool underground newspapers, and helping students organize around school issues.• Working with community organizations in working class neighborhoods, byliving there and talking with the residents.We think there’s a lot to be done in the resistance movement whichpeople interested in changing this country may want to help with.Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Blue Gargoyle, 57th and University, CADRE and theHyde Park Anti-Draft Union will have an hour-long teach-in to discuss our ideason new directions for the resistance, and on an anti-war demonstration we’re planning.We hope to emphasize the concrete things people can do this spring and summer.This discussion will be followed by workshops led by people who already haveexperience in the areas of work. We hope people will come who would like to dopolitical work, but haven’t been attracted by existing campus groups or issues.People who have questions can call me at home, 288-1609, or at Quaker House, 363-1248Rob Skeist, expelled 10, helped start Hyde Park Anti-Draft Union last summer,He is now classified 1-A and intends to refuse induction.Editor: Roger Black Senior Editor: Jeff KotaBusiness Manager: Jerry LevyNews Editor: Caroline HeckPhotography Editor: David TravisCopy Editor: Sue LothAssistant Editor: Mitch BobkinNews Board:Disciplinary Committee: Leslie StraussUndergraduates: Wendy GlocknerNational Student News: Con HitchcockGraduate Students: Rob CooleyNews Staff: Jim Hafemeyer, Sylvia Piechocka,Bruce Norton, Steve Cook, Paula Szewzyk,Gerard Leval, Richard Paroutaud, AlfredRyan, Freida Murray, Marv Bittner, DebbyDobish, Blair Kilpatrick, Leonard Zax.Phonography Staff: Phil Lathrop, Paul Stelter,3;i!:nm'']»t®fip;SlehaMHt, sum mm, Be* »murf.o'Mil a’ as SviaiTiri i jo: \1 xi t ” -nr -j ir\ tp 6 0 Contributing Editors: Michael Sorkin, JessicaSiegel, John Recht.Production Chief: Mitch Kahn. Assistant: Robert Swift. (Zowie.)Sunshine Girl: Jeanne WiklernO—Founded in 1892. Pub(|ished by university ofChicago students on Tuesdays and Fridays through¬out the regular schoolyear and intermittentlythroughout the summer,except during the tenthweek of the academe.—.. ^ quarter and during exarT1.ination periods. Offices in Rooms 303, 30J, ana305 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, III. 40637. Phone Business office: Midway3-0600. ext 3265. Editorial: ext 3260. Distributeeon campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhoodfree of charge. Subscriptions by mail S7 pe'l!UiWlJI||0 !trClass of '73 Will Be Eleven Percent BlackPallett Says RiseDue to Class CutAnd RecruitmentBy Jeff KutaThe percentage of black students in theentering freshman class may equal or ex¬ceed 11 percent, the nationwide percentage.Decentralization to the smallest politicalunit capable of performing required func¬tions is a “necessary step” towards the eli¬mination of discontent widespread through¬out the nation today, said Richard Good¬win, author and advisor to President JohnF. Kennedy and Senators Robert Kennedyand Eugene McCarthy, in Judd Hall Thurs¬day night.He said decentralization would not onlygive back to citizens the sense of controlover government, but would also eliminateinefficiencies which he said resulted fromcentralized control.Goodwin called the particularly intensediscontent within the universities a reflec¬tion of broader discontent in society.“There is,” he said, “a new group of thepsychically depressed,” whi he contrastedwith the economic depressed as defined byMarxist theorists. “This group, I think,forms a potential majority for fundamentalchange.”To produce this change, “the committedand the passionate thus develop an aware¬ness that democratic institutions are neu-1967, and served in that position until hisappointment as assistant vice-president lastyear.Williams slection to the position of Vice-President of the Unversity gives him thehiighest administrative position ever givento a black. He had also held the highestposition for a black previously as issistantVice-President.Williams received a BS degree in journal¬ism from the University of Illinois in 1954and did graduate study in political scienceat Atlanta University and Howard Univer¬sity.He has been a reporter with newspapersin Memphis and Atlanta and was managingeditor of the Memphis Star Times. Follow¬ing services as radar and executive officerwith the US Army, in 1958 Williams was Acceptances just sent to 949 out of 2,140applicants for admission to Chicago’s Classof 1972 include 107 offers of admission toblack students. Approximately 500 placesare available in the class, a cutback of 200from last year.“I’ll be very surprised,” said Director ofAdmissions and Aid Anthony T. G. Pallett,“if we don’t come in with at least ten toeleven percent of the class black.”Out of 2,122 applicants last year, Chicagoaccepted 1,264, including 76 blacks, for aclass of 734; thirty-six of the blacks mat-tral and can be mastered through a (politi¬cal) struggle.”In a question and answer period, he citedthe possibility of success in the fightagainst deployment of an ABM system asan example of how such discontent mightbe translated into a popular movement. Hecited the McCarthy campaign, on which heworked, as another example.He said that he did not approve of therecent actions by black students at Cornelland that he thought intended goals couldnot be achieved through such means.He contrasted the form of their protestwith that of less militant ones and added,however, that “at least they were sincereand, more important, courageous.”Goodwin spoke in the Center for UrbanStudies’ 1969 lecture series on “Central¬ization and Decentralization.” The nextspeaker is Kenneth Boulding, the noted pro¬fessor of economics at the University ofColorado, on Monday, April 28, at 8 pm inBreasted Hall. Admission is without ticketor charge.made a congressional fellow of the Ameri¬can political science association.During 1959-60 Williams was staff assis¬tant to the Senate Committee on ForeignRelations subcommittee on disarmament.He was research editor with a study groupin the House of Representatives during1960.Williams selection to the position of Vice-State in 1961 as a protocol officer. During1964-65 he was staff assistant to the assis¬tant Secretary of State, Bureau of NearEastern and South Asian Affairs. In Au¬gust, 1965, he was named director of theOffice of Equal Employment Opportunityand special assistant to the Deputy Under¬secretary for Administration in the Depart¬ment of State. riculated. The increased percentage of ac¬ceptances sent to blacks this year is due tothe cutback in the size of the entering classand an intensified black recruiting pro¬gram. Thus while the number of places inthe class was purposely decreased, causingoverall competition to increse sharply andought and any who the Committee on Ad¬missions felt could do the work were ac¬cepted. ‘ > |Much of the intensified black recruitingwas done by six black students serving asfull-fledged admissions officers. Four ofthese travelled for two weeks in September,the other two for two weeks later in thefall, among urban centers in the South. Theresult was hundreds of inquiries and 81completed applications from black South¬ern high schools.Picking from these was a problem, how¬ever. “We really didn’t know what it meantto be a valedictorian of an all-black highschool in the South,” Pallett said. The com¬mittee weighted leadership and aggressive¬ness heavily to compensate for lack of in¬formation about the schools and the un-The committee of 500 is planning a dem¬onstration Monday in the office of RichardG. Wade, professor of History.At a meeting Thursday in Reynolds Clublounge attended by some 60 students, theaction was overwhelming passed, thoughthere were many abstentions. A rally isplanned before the demonstration. No time100 SummonsedIn "Great Hoax"Over 100 summonses were sent outWednesday asking students to schedule ahearing for “action judged to be disruptiveof the university.” The letters were, how¬ever, a hoax.Under the signature of James W. Vice,assistant dean of students and dean offreshman, the students were instructed tomake appointments before 5 pm Friday.Several students believed their summonstrue and showed up at the office only to betold it was phony. Faculty exchange re¬ports 102 letters were intercepted beforethey could be delivered.Dean of students Charles O’Connell’s of¬fice confirmed the fact that the letters werenot authentic, adding that Dean Vice wouldnot sign them if they were. Furthermorethe letters were not sent on University sta¬tionery. O’Connell’s office added that thestand-in in Jack Meltzer’s office protestingalleged university racism in Woodlawn wasnot judged disruptive and that no sum¬monses would be issued.There would be no further summonsesfor partcipation in the Dixon sit-in, asboth the Oaks and Shireman disciplinarycommittees had completed their tasks andsubmitted their final reports. known bias involved in ivw prii scores. Ofthe 81, Chicago has so far accepted 38 andrejected 28; some applications are still in¬complete.Another part of the black recruiting ef¬fort has been the Urban Talent Search arecently established counterpart to theSmall Schools Talent Search. It involvesspecial tutoring and summer programs fortalented inner-city minority youths. A some¬what smaller percentage of matriculations,however, is expected from thes blacks,many of whom have applied to and will besought after by a number of prestigeschools.The probability of a doubling of blacks isnot the only unusual fact about the enteringclass.“We were put in the position of makingmore distinctions on non-academicgrounds,” Pallett added. “We’ll have morefreshmen who’ve been leaders in their highschools and communities.” Students with¬out “that spark that sets them apart fromothers” were often rejected despite ade¬quate grades and test scores, he said.has yet been set for the rally.Len Handlesman, proposer of the demon¬stration, noted that Wade’s involvementwith the Chicago Housing Authority andMayor Daley’s committee on urban rentand housing policies make him a target forthe committee of 500, which has adopteddemands dealing with University racism aswell as University disciplinary actions.Natalee Rosenstein, representing WRAP,asked the committee of 500 to support arally Tuesday demanding adequate daycare centers for all University personnel. Amarch to the School of Social Service Ad¬ministration is planned after the rally.In order to develop student support forthe Wade demonstration and the WRAPmarch, the committee of 500 is planning anintensive canvassing and petitioning cam¬paign over the weekend in dorms, at thetables in Reynolds club, and at the Kim-bark and Co-op shopping centers.Editors Resisting DraftTwo hundred student body presidents andstudent editors from across the countryhave announced their refusal to enter thearmed forces as long as the war in Vietnamcontinues.Among them is Roger Black, editor of the *Maroon.Nine of the group, in a Washington pressconference Tuesday, released a letter toPresident Nixon which asked for a meetingwith him on the war and the draft.There were reports that Nixon would re¬spond Thursday, but by late evening he hadnot.“There is a time when you have to standup against what you believe is very gravelydamaging your country,” Blacksaid at thepress conference.Goodwin Sees DecentralizingAs Aid in Calming DiscontentAppointments Continued from Page OneWilliams Becomes First Black VeepVOTES forFACULTY-STUDENT ADVISORYCOMMITTEE ONCAMPUS STUDENT LIFEDue in Registrars Office by 5 P.M. Today,-c it-i/» t \ ft-u ftit.1 ifApril 25, 1909/The Chicago AAaroon/7 j•wiO moil boundnc!' yrtusi.Student Health?The student health program at Billingshospital supposedly serves the medicalneeds of the students and employees of theUniversity of Chicago. When we look at thegeneral attitude of inefficiency and indiffer¬ence, we wonder exactly on what that sup¬position is based. Complaints about the en¬tire program are even more obvious ingynecology. Girls must wait weeks, if notmonths, to get appointments. These can bedangerous as well as painful weeks for agirl with a vaginal infection. After all, weall know infections spread and can even de¬stroy our nervous system if not taken careof in time.Girls have had cases of gonorrhea contin¬ue over a year although they were suppo¬sedly cured at Billings. So even once a girlgets an appointment, there is no certaintyshe will receive the attention she needs. Arape victim can hardly be helped by theadmonition to eat regular meals. Let’s behonest about this. We all know of girls whohave been raped (our friends, if not our¬selves), and we know how much some me¬ dical reassurance can mean. A girl havingpainful cramps should not have to answerquestions about her moral beliefs. Diag¬nosis involves the patient in an examinationof more than her medical symptoms. Theprescribed care also entails far more thanmedical advice.This paternalism is unhelpful and unde¬sired. We deserve a more adequate and ac¬curate health service. It is not free medicaladvice. Students pay indirectly through tui¬tion; employees pay directly. We all payalike in ways other than cash — in thelong wait, the moral examination, the doubtover the final diagnosis. In a medical pro¬gram, women need gynecologists. The twogynecologists in student health cannot pos¬sibly meet the needs of all the women whoseek their advice. Surely the universitycannot refuse to recognize the needs of itsstudents and employees for a more appro¬priate health service.Suffering Jesus, can’t a body find ahealthy doctor?Laura Holland, 71and 28 Other StudentsNow there is an addition in the Volvo family.We think you should see it... our new//"6 cylinder DeluxeMay we invite you for a test drive?V0LV04ALES & SERVICE CENTER, INC.7720 STONY ISLAND AVi ' • • * A RE 1-3000We specialize in European delivery — call usFEATURINGKIBBUTZ HOLIDAYS IN ISRAELand Optional Archeological DigCOlteSiflTeS 'BO-ea 117-25• 51 Day* Israel, Italy, Switzerland. France % 995• 52 Days Israel, Greece, Greek Isle Cruise, Italy 1195• 54 Days Israel, Italy, Switzerland, France, England 1095• 34 Days Israel and England 795. 22 Days Israel Holiday 599. 2? Days Israel, Italy, England 749• 45 Days Grand European Orbit (12 Countries) 1250• 22 Days Romantic European Swing (5 Countries) 599• 22 Days Classical Quest Italy and Greece 639rates includeALL TRANSPORTATIONMEALSACCOMMODATIONSSIGHTSEEINGTRANSFERS l MOREMail this coupon todayOR SEE YOURFAVORITE TRAVEL ACENT EASTOURS, Inc.11 West 42nd St.,New York. N.Y. 10036Without cost or obligation, pleas, rush ICollegiate Travel Guide to: 21D' EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372^Vpi„«HY 3-8282Italian & AmericanDishes SandwichesDelivery ServiceOPEN 7 DAYSCarry Outs1459 E. Hyde Park Blvd.I !| Address The AlternativeWell, it seems to be over. The amnestymovement is dead, and the Dixon sit-in andits aftermath have become historicalevents. And so the question arises: whatcan be learned Crom it all?When one compares the situation withthat on other campuses, two things standout: the restraint and non-violence of thestudents’ actions — if not their rhetoric —and the violence and over-action of the fac-u 11 y-administration response. CompareHarvard, where students took over the ad¬ministration building, forcibly ejected alladministrators, and immediately startedgoing through the files. Compare Berkeley,which recently sustained a militant strikeof fairly long duration. Compare Wisconsin,where obstruction of building entrances andmobile tactics were used. Compare SanFrancisco State. But what violence oc¬curred at Chicago? The sit-in was peaceful,the privacy of the files was respected, andthe last hours of the sit-in were spent clean¬ing up the building. The later incidents con¬sisted of a non-violent sit-in at the LawSchool, a demonstration at Levi’s housewith one window accidentally broken, and abrief, non-destructive foray into the Quad¬rangle Club.But in response, there occurred the mostsevere repression that any campus has ex¬perienced in recent years. If the amount ofviolence is measured by the effect onpeople’s lives, the University’s responsewas far more violent than the more usualreaction of calling in the police. The vio¬lence was heightened by the blatant unfair¬ness of the disciplinary proceedings (TheShireman Committee now flatly states (Ma¬roon, 4/18) that political views were con¬sidered in determining punishments) andthe refusal to respond meaningfully to anystudent appeals against discipline. The mood of cynicism and apathy which hasinfected the student body shows the effectof this violence. And as a final blow, whena few moderates with a continued faith innon-violence incredible (though beautiful)in the present situation conducted a hungerstrike in a last attempt to make their ap¬peals heard, Chairman Rosenheim pom¬pously pronounced: “They have presentedno new arguments.”It is hard to escape the conclusion thatthe non-violent methods which have beenthe mainstay of the student movement onthis campus will just not work. Most of themore idealistic students here have come tothis realization and are sickened by it.Some, from my experience mostly moder¬ates, will leave to find a less reactionaryschool. Perhaps the large mass of suchidealists — which studies have shown to beamong the most intellectually competentstudents — will leave, new acceptkceswill drop off, and the University will be¬come a second-rate institution. Judgingfrom O’Connell’s letter to perspective stu¬dents, this is what the admistrationhopes will happen, and the reduction in thesize of the college comes at just the righttime to conceal an anticipated drop-off inacceptances.Alternatively, enough students will real¬ize that in the last analysis there is noplace to hide and will stay but be preparedto use more militant tactics. Although it isdepressing to think about the levels of vio¬lence that will certainly occur under theseconditions, this seems to be the bettercourse, better not for the student move¬ment but for the University of Chicago. It isironical and tragic that Levi and company,in their attempt to crush student dissent,have created a situation in which these arethe alternatives.1 > ; David C. BrownGraduate StudentDepartment of MathematicsCity, Stete, Zip .8/The Chicago AAaroon/April 25, 1969 l jp* vjw Jp JQ* Jp* JQ* JR,C^ornefi 3/orht, '645 E. 55th STREET^CHICAGO, ILl. dud 15^Jfr Phone: FA 4-J65J “ty for discontented youth”“Professor Joseph J. Schwab has written a tough-minded, analytic, and prescriptive book that ismore humane and more generous than anyapologia of student protest now in print. Thereis not a university president, or member of aboard of trustees, or senior faculty member hid¬ing; behind his diminishing grants, or junior fac¬ulty member fearing both freedom and libera¬tion, who can afford not to read it and to studyit Perhaps, in place of a few of the academichqprts planned for this coming summer, itmight be more profitable, and far less costly, if afew beleaguered (and some of the as yet un¬touched) institutions were to build student-fac¬ulty seminars around the text . . . ProfessorSchwab has produced the definitive handbookfor creative academic revolution!*-PRANK 0. jenninos, Saturday ReviewCOLLEGE CURRICULUM^STUDENT PROTESTJoseph J. SchwabAt your college bookstore now $4.95UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESSS750 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637ook store58th &ellisFaculty Continued from Pago OneLevins, Flacks Charge Political PurgeLevins drew long applause for hisanalysis of the discipline as political actiontaken by one “estate” of the Universityover another. He called for rescinding pen¬alties. conforming to guidelines calling forstudent representation on disciplinary com¬mittees, and an investigation of all aspectsof the University’s “mixture of corporationand community.”Two additional speakers recognized fromthe floor were Richard Flacks, assistant professor of sociology, and Miles Moge-lescu, an expelled ’69.Flacks stated his belief that the disciplinewas political. “I am personally convinced”,he said, “that, consciously or uncon¬sciously, the University’s committees havebeen designed to rid the University of thepolitical left.” Flacks stated that What irri-ated him most about Chicago’s response isthe lack of discussion by the faculty of theissues that the students raise.Political Suppression Proven Mogelescu stated vehemently that DeanBooth was mistaken in maintaining tha po¬litical beliefs had not entered directly intothe committees’ considerations. He saidthat his father was told by Dean O’Connellthat he was expelled, while others with sim¬ilar involvement in the sit-in were not, be¬cause he has been in SDS for four years.As faculty members began to leave Mogelescu spoke militantly about racismand the University, quoting Eldridge Clea¬ver and warning the faculty that “youshould be glad .we’re still talking and notshooting.”The faculty petition group which spon¬sored the forum will meet next Monday at5:00 in Eckhart 206 to discuss further plans.English Students Petitioning'The most important question is who is to judge"acceptable interim behavior?" Does participa¬tion in peace marches and anti-U.S. demonstra¬tions disqualify a suspended student from re¬admission?'By Mitch BobkinWith the issuing last week of the report of the Shireman committee to dean ofstudents Charles O’Connell, many of the arguments that have been raised byadministrators, faculty and moderate students to defend the University disciplinaryactions have been proven untrue, unfounded and fallacious. With Shireman’s report,arguments that previously been nothing more than unsubstantiated charges havebecome stated facts. And even more importantly than that, the report also raises newobjections to the form of discipline that has been handed out.The argument that political suppression was used by the disciplinary committeesis only true if the committees were judging and questioning the beliefs of theindividuals appearing before them. Charles O’Connell in his report of April 8 made itclear that the discipline was based on the degree of participation in disruptveactivities, the response to the disciplinary summons and the previous record of thestudent. He made it crystal clear (at least to his own satisfaction) that there had beenno judging of people’s minds.Well, the Shireman committee report has made Dean O’Connell look like hedidn’t know what he was talking about. Shireman clearly states that one of the criteriaupon which discipline was based was “the extent to which the student, upon reflectionupon his participation in the incidents in question, assessed his behavior as beingjustified and proper or inapproriate to a University community.” In ordinary Englishthat means that the discipline was based in part upon whether the student said thatthe University was right or wrong and whether the student, at his hearing statedbelief in the principles of the sit-in (watch that word “justified). To my mind, thatsounds like a judgment of people’s beliefs and ideas. Well kiddies, now we know.A curious question is raised by the date on the Shireman report, March 17. So asof the end of winter quarter, O’Connell, who originally received the report, knew thatjudgment of beliefs has been done in the Shireman committee. Yet three weeks later,on April 8, he told us that there hadn’t been. Somewhere, a lack of communication orunderstanding developed within the administration. While it might not be fair toaccuse anybody of anything in this instance, the radicals now can say that O’Connellwas sitting on evidence that he knew supported the student’s charges.Now that it is evident that a judgment of people’s beliefs did occur at thedisciplinary hearings, a larger danger than just the present problem comes to mind.A form of precedent has been set by the Shireman committee. Now that it has becomelegal” to judge ideas and now that the administration has backed up the actions ofthe Shireman committee, what is to prevent other disciplinary committees fromjudging beliefs in the future? The door has been open by the Shireman committee. Upuntil this time, the reasoning behind discipline was very apparent. However, whatargument can a student use against a harsh punishment when he is told that his beliefspunished him? How can a degree of militancy in ideas be judged by any disciplinarycommittee? In a case such as this, political suppression will become the norm.This is not to say that the University will indiscriminately begin to weed out allpolitical radicals. However, Mice a disruptive demonstration has been held, what isto prevent the disciplinary committee from basing sentences upon, political beliefs?or example, let us say that next year there is a two day sit-in in the ad building.Once the discipline committee begins its hearings, it will become obvious that thedegree of participation is very hard to judge because of the short time period. However,some participants were leaders and some were followers. How can the committee findthe leaders if they don’t discriminate because of political beliefs? There obviously isno possible way and political discrimination will begin in force.The Shireman committee report also raises a new objection to the disciplinaryprocedure. In their decisions on suspensions, the committee states “it is recommendedthat all suspensions be for indefinite periods, the suggested minimum (theiremphasis) terms of which are noted below, with eventual readmission only uponpresentation of evidence of acceptable interim behavior (their emphasis .” If thesuspensions were only stated at a minimum what is to prevent the fifteen suspensionsof the Shireman committee from becoming expulsions?The most important question is who is to judge what is “acceptable interimbehavior?” Does participation in peace marches and anti-U. S. demonstrationsdisqualify a suspended student from readmission? If a suspended student goes toanother University and participates in a demonstration there, will that disqualify himfrom readmission? It seems that the University is trying to quiet dissent from thesesuspended students. That too is a form of political suppression.The argument for readmission had previously been that if the student showed truedesire to come back and a willingness to learn here, then readmission might beconsidered. But if the decision is to be based on the behavior of the individual, thenthe University is attempting to control students even when they are not here. If thatisn’t suppression, will someone please tell me what is?The Shireman report then, only proves what some people have been saying allalong. Yes Virginia, there is a form of political suppression going on here. Thechallenge to all students is now clear. What do you intend to do about it?Mitch Bobkin is a first year student and assistant editor of the Maroon.“ **” * •• •" ’»i4$4y«uutfu One hunderd forty students and a facultymember of the English department havesigned a petition calling for a rescension ofwinter quarter disciplnary action. The pe¬tition calls for a new disciplinary com¬mittee along AAUP guidelines which wouldre-try all cases, according to Mrs. Char¬lotte Hall.Mrs. Hall, a graduate student in the de¬partment, said the petition was signed byboth graduate and undergraduate students.Only one faculty member signed, she said,because about 11 departmental facultymembers had already signed the AAUP pe¬tition and felt there was no need to signanother petition with similar content.The petition has been submitted to Ed¬ward Levi, Charles O’Connell, Edward Rosenheim, and Gwin Kolb, chairman ofthe department, Mrs. Hall said.It grew out of a student-faculty depart¬mental meeting about two weeks ago, todiscuss University discipline, she said.SignersRichard S. Lindzen, associate pro¬fessor of geophysical sciences andRichard Lewontin, professor of biolo¬gy and a member of the committee onmathematical biology, did not signthe faculty petition as was reportedin the April 18th Maroon. However,Richard Levins, who holds the sameappointments as Lewontin, was asigner and his name was omitted.Theses, term papersTyped, edited to specifications.Also tables and charts.11 yrs. exp.MANUSCRIPTS UNLIMITED664-5858866 No. Wabash Ave. MORGAN'S CERTIFIED SUPER MARTOpen to Midnight Seven Days a Weekfor your Convenience1516 E. 53rd. ST.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items FromThe Orientfend Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.MU 4-6856COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTIn the heart ofSouth Chicago7100 So. Yates *63-9842The Carpet BarnA division of Cortland CarpetWe Have an enormous selection ofnew and used wall-to-wall car¬petings, staircase runners, rem¬nants and area rugs (a large se¬lection of genuine and Americanorientals).We open our warehouse to thepublic for retail sales on Sat¬urdays ONLY from 9 - 3.1228 W. Kinzie (at Racine)HU 4-1840 243-2771COLLEGE STUDENTSPart-time Employment2 to 10 P.M. Shift Only395 PER HOUR4 day min. per weekCALL 263-0618 Chicago Touring Europe in ’69?-LRememberCZECHOSLOVAKIA!It’s easy to go there!Meet the young people of Prague. See thehistoric landmarks: Hradcany Castle,Wenceslaus Square, the little Golden Streetwhere Kafka lived, the oldest university InCentral Europe. And gorge yourself ona feast of all the arts ... Mediaevalto multi-media, Baroque andRennaissance, Dvorak and rock,frescoes and films.Not more than ninety minutes from thefarthest point in Europe ... Prague isone of the most exciting capitals Inthe world today and Bratislava, theromantic capital of Slovakia on theDanube is just an hour's drivefrom Vienna.Group tours from $97 per personfor 7 days, all Incl.Visas issued within 48 hours.Contact your travel agent or writetor information:CEDOK CZECHOSLOVAK TRAVEL BUREAU10 East 40th Street, New York, N Y 10016Name:_City.State.My travel agent is: -Zip.The RESUME of DISTINCTIONYour *Trai neesPersonalized • Ylid. VlngtRESUME'““Written By Specialistscomposed, written, edited. printed.Bode Ison & Asso., Inc.221 N. LaSalle236-7480 AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH——NEW & USED—Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders - Phones - AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes - Batteries10% discount to studonts with ID cords4i. t ‘i April 25,’1969/ Tb? *Cb'M9° Mve«n/9(Maroon Classified Ads)WITH A HANDICAP LIKE MINE, WHAT CAN YOU EXPECT?RATES: For University students,faculty, and staff: 50 cents perline, 40 cents per repeat line.For non-University clientele:7S cents per line, 60 cents perrepeat line. Count 30 charactersand spaces per line.TO PLACE AD: Come with ormail payment to The ChicagoMaroon Business Office, Room304 of Ida Noyes Hall, 1212 E.59th St., Chicago, III. 60637. Mail-in forms now available at Cen¬tral Information, Reynolds Cluband all dormitories.No ads will be taken over thephone or billed.DEADLINES: For Friday's pa¬per, Wednesday at 4. For Tues¬day's paper, Friday at 5.FOR FURTHER INFORMA¬TION: phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3266.STILL MORE NEW MUSICAnthony Braxton plays the music ofEric Dolphy with Leo Smith, JohnGilmore, Malachi Favors, ThurmanBarker. Tonight at 8, Ida Noyes, ad¬mission $1.25.LOSTBlue Plaid BER&.T 419 Boucher,X-3565.FESTIVAL OF THE ARTSFOTA — An exciting program — themost comprehensive program of theperforming, graphic and plastic artsever to be presented at this Univer¬sity. OVER 60 EVENTS. Practicallyeverything free of charge & U.C.students.DRIVERS WANTEDTo St. PAUL (5 cars). Just pay gas.Also Washington, D.C., N.Y., Phoe¬nix, and Hartford. For details call939-3600.PERSONALSMAY 6—CHUCK BERRY concert.Folk dance in the quads by the ten¬nis courts. Sunday M3y 11. 1-6 P.M.Dunav Tamburitza orch. In case ofrain dance will be at Ida Noyes.AMERICAN PREMIERE of MichaelHastings' LEE HARVEY OSWALDby the Chicago Repertory Company.Weekends until May 10. Tickets forthe dinner-theatre may be purchasedat the Maroon Business Office, ext.3266. Contemporary Music Society firstbrought Jarman, Mitchell, McIntyreand Sam Lay here this quarter, sotrust us. Hear ANTHONY BRAX¬TON play Eolphy's music. Tonight,8:00, Ida Noyes.Why couldn't Meltzer answer anyquestions?ENJOY SAILING — exciting sailingmovie at Searle 161, Monday 4/28,8:30 P.M. FREE. Form a sailingclub at U.C., call 8288.MAY 19 — PHIL OCHS CONCERTYet another supper at Hillel. Sun¬day, 6:00 P.M.Dear Sam — thank you for lettingus in! Marianne and the Cascades.CANDLES STILL FOR SALE ATMAROON BUSINESS OFFICE til 6today.SUMMER ACHIEVEMENT: Doespoverty, religion, humanity interestyou? Creative intelligence — superbtyping, good English. Collaboratecompleting non-fictional biography.Work with a person of fine caliber 8<truly a refined gentleman—contrib¬ute on manuscript on final com¬pletion ready for presenting to publi¬sher. Work in your own privacy col¬laborating with writer 32 storiesover-looking Lake Michigan. Inde¬pendence and devotion for achieve¬ment. "Religious ability to 'slant'could be a vital asset!" Commis¬sion on royalties include movierights. Reply by letter to MaroonBox 42 giving phone number, age,full name and address, experience.FEMALE ONLY. You will be con¬tacted.DARKNESS descends this Sun Kent107.Seeking esoteria? Esperanto.See the GREAT LITERARY DE¬BATE between Tolstoy 8. Turgenev.CHARGE OF THE NUMIDIANCAVALRY. Tonight and tomorrowApril 25, 26; 8. May 2, 3. Price$2.50/2.00; stud/fac discount 50c onsale in Mandel Hall Box Office.Interested in teaching? Join a proj¬ect of teachers committed to educa¬tional political change. Projectsplanned in NYC, L.I., 8. D.C. Seerecruiter for The Teachers Inc. 1-5Sat. in Ida Noyes or call Steve Crys¬tal at 288-3954.Why does the "liberal" Dept, of Ur¬ban Affairs need pigs to protect it?YOU ABSOLUTELY MUST SEEWARRENDALE — ks. CHUCK BERRY — May 6.FEAR ITSELF. . WHPK5:00 P.M. SUNDAY, WEEKLYREVOLUTION IN WORDS.YOU HAVE NOTHING TO FEAR,YOGA: builds and corrects habits.Nerode: DO 3-0155. Grp., sngl.PHIL OCHS — May 19.Cut UN costs/Esperanto/Mon Apr28th: 1 hr crash class C102 7 P.M.Mrs. Gertie Spiller, a black aide atthe hospital, was suspended for _3days because she refused to be flltreated by her supervisors.Clarence Nelson, a leader in thehospital strike, has had severalthreats made on his life, and histires were slashed during a strikemeeting.The hospital is going to have a hardtime keeping quiet the racist in¬cidents and reprisals that have oc¬curred there since the strike.Ahmad's is the place to go for goodfood and company.WORLD PREMIERE! BRINGDOWN DARKNESS, a film by TCFox with Heit, Horowitz, Naylor,and McGann. Sun Kent 107, MonCobb 209 7:30, 9:30.HARPER THEATER COFFEEHOUSE, 5238 S. Harper, reopensApril 25. Shows Friday and Saturday9 and 11. No Charge. Donations.NUC — Anti-Cold-War FOLKSINGSat. 4/26 Ida Noyes 3 P.M.SOME SOUND ADVICEBuy your stereo components at MU-SICRAFT for lowest prices, free de¬livery. Scott, Fisher, A.R., Dyna,KLH, on campus call Bob Tabor,324-3005.LEE HARVEY OSWALD — ticketsavailable at Maroon Business Office,ext. 3266, see display ad in G.C.J.From a poor bastard in the Navy afew months, about MauriceMcIntyre's concert: "This is thefirst time I've felt like a humanbeing in months. When is the nextone?" Tonight at 8:00, Ida Noyes —Anthony Braxton plays Eric Dolphy.Esperanto smutt eludes prudes.PANTHER POWER TO THE VAN¬GUARD!Come see the denizens of the Clas¬sics Library — see SHOEMAKERSHOLIDAY. "Whatever happened to the Ameri¬can (protest) folk song?" It's at IdaNoyes n Sat. 4/26, 3 P.M. NUCWEEK AGAINST MILITARISM.ROOMMATES WANTED DANCEDance to music of CHICAGO ALL-STAR BLUES BAND TONIGHT atPierce Tower Cafeteria. 8:30 Admis¬sion $1.00.Summer sublet w/opt. for next yr.Washer 8. dryer, dishwasher. 6750Chappel (1 block east of Jeffrey)$55/mo. Dave( 493-8863.3rd fern to share apt., 53rd 8, Har¬per, for sum. 8, fall. Over 20 pre¬ferred, 752-1224. APTS. FOR RENTFANTASTIC: 2-br. apt. sublet June15-Oct. 1, with renewal. COM¬PLETELY FURNISHED: Hifi, TV,1-bl off campus bus, $150, 493-7622.Stay in Hyde Park this summer.Bed available in 4-rm. apt. nr Ken¬wood 8. 56th. No rent or sex ex¬pected, although preferred. (Maleinterested in female only.) Call 288-2270, eves. Eight room furnished apartment forrent from end of June to Sept. 1,dates flexible. Three bedrooms,study, washer-dryer, TV, etc. 51stnear Dorchester. $l80/mo. Call 536-0240.9 x"BAHAI YOUTH: MIRROR OF A NEW AGE"A SLIDE PROGRAM PRESENTED BY THEUC BAHAll FELLOWSHIPMONDAY, APRIL 28EAST LOUNGE, IDA NOYES HALLEVERYONE WELCOME2 male grad, students want 2 othersto share large South Shore apt.48.50/mo. summer and or nextyear. 324-2671.3 male grad stds to share 8 rm aptnr 51st Sum-next yr $45/mo. 324-7431 aft 7 P.M.Male for May or May-Sept, ownbdrm in big turn apt., 53 8, Wood-lawn, $45 month 752-4733.ROOMS FOR RENTRoomer wanted to share 5 rm apt.Avail, immed. 7852 Yates. Mrs. R.Gonsky, RE 4-7332 before 6 P.M. 4rm. apt. 57th 8. Drexel, $115, 6/69-9/69, Sandy, 684-7411.Apt. to sublet June-Sept. 7. Spaciousrms 58th 8, Kenwood 324-7417.Sublet 6/10-9/1. South Shore. 5rooms. One air-conditioned. Fullyfurnished with piano, books, paint¬ings. Beautiful courtyard. Nearcampus bus and 1C $!60/month.Call X2408 8:30-5:00 ; 493-9276 after 6.Looking for a groovy apt. for thesummer? l'/j rm. apt available June15 to Sept. 15. Comes complete withcat. Call 643-3088.Summer sublet, large, 4 room, fur¬nished air cond. Apt. for $153/mo.utilities paid. Walk to campus. 684-8788. Sum sbit 6/14-9/1;nished, sun porch,Hyde Pk; 752-7689. 3 spac rms, furair cond; 53rd &summer sublet May thru Sentinfo call Barry 752-7689. 0rSummer sublet: lg. 2 bath, 2 bdrmcorner apt 51st 8. Blackstone Fu?nished. 955-9256. Ur-Large 3 bedroom plus studysublet June 15-Sept 30. Front— walk to campus. Perfect forly or group of students. H08 E363-0565. apt.porchfami-53rdSo. Shore, 6 rms, porch$110, 221-4756 or X4121 days garage,8211 CRANDON. Ideal home for uniHOUSE FOR SALE8211 CRANDON. Ideal home for universify fmily. Custom bu ilt Geor-gian, 8 rooms, 3 large bedrooms, |y2baths, full completed basement, gasheat, 2 car brick garage. Reduced to$29,000 by owner Essex 5-6938.WRIGHT-STYLE prairie house, ESouth Shore. 10 min to campus via1C, Univ. Bus, 7 rm, 2 bth. Largelot, trees. Low int FHA mrtqe availX3857 or 288-7449WANTED TO RENTM.D. 8. wife desire roomy 1 or 2 bdrunfurn flat or apt within walkingdistance of UC Hosps. for June 1-25955-7180 eves, or wkend.REWARD: $50 dollar (yes FIFTYDOLLARS) for finding a 4 or 5 bed¬room apt. or house avail, startingnow. In the summer or in the fallfor next year. Better than weeweeing on TV set. Call 363-2235.Black male grad students NEEDSprivate room in larger apt. in HydePark area by May 15th. Call J.P onext. 4750.Young College professor and wifewant to sublet small house or townhouse June thru August, (no chil¬dren) turn, or unfurn. Call Ml 3-7582after 5 P.M.Wt 2 rms in apt Kathy/Amy x3755.PEOPLE FOR SALEAUTHENTIC CHINESE COOKINGtaught in lovely Chinese home. Tui¬tion and materials $30. Begin May19. Limited enrollment, 7 per class324-8070.May I do your typing? 363-1104Can’t find the seven subtle resemblances In the two draw¬ings? Turn to Page 18 for the answers.To all Game of Seven Resemblances fans: We’re sorry itdidn’t appear last week. Last-minute space problems forcedus to hold it Mt. But this week it’s back — and to stay.10/Ttio Chicago Maroon/April 25, 1H9•vonV d'j.U'O .i^AGame of seven resemblancesSUN LIFE DU CANADAfdeesPOUR LA PROTECTIONDE V0TRE FA MULESi vous avez de jeunes enfants aproteger, il faut d’autreassurance! Le supplement SunLife Securite familiale, annexe aune police de base, pourvoit a laprotection dont vous avez besoinmaintenant, a prix minime.Parlons-en un peu.Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle St., Chic. 60602FR 2-2390 — 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,Others by Appt. April 25, 26 and 27 (plus a matineeon SAT.)TONITE — THE ALL-STARS ATPIERCE. Nice clean room avail, nr. campusCal! Ml 3-9257.Furnished rm. 493-3328.By the RENAISSANCE PLAYERSAt the Cloister Club, Ida Noyes Hall1212 East 59th StreetThis April 25, 26 & 27 at EIGHT THIRTY o’clockAnd TWO THIRTY on the 26thTHESHOEMAKERSHOLIDAYORThe (gentle QraftWritten by Thomas Dekker QentDirected by Thomas Busch QentTickets may be purchased at the DESK in theREYNOLDS CLUB at 57th Street andUniversity Avenue and at the door ofthe THEATRE at a cost of $ 1.75$ 1.2 c for students.:—i- 1 ! 3-4 bdrm sum sblt Wdlwn nr 53rdturn, porch $160. 643-6669.5 rm sum sublt 2 bdrm balconyKenwd nr 53rd turn. 324-3623.Apt. available now and May 1. 4 rm8. lVi rm eff. Call Bill Stoll DO3-6200; Steve FA 4-0342.l'/z rm apt 52 8< Kenwood Sept. '69to June '70 ideal 1 pers, couple BU8-6669.2’/j room apt., 54th 8, Wood lawn, $87per mo., sublet w. option for nextyear. Avail. May 1st. 363-3689. PEOPLE WANTEDTEACHERS WANTED: Entire West,Southwest, and Alaska. FREE REG¬ISTRATION. Southwest teachersAgency, 1303 Central Avenue , N E.Albuquerque, N.M. 87106.Accurate typist, part-time, hrs. ar¬ranged. Call 288-0675.Responsible Receptionist required toshare 2-girl duties in Doctor's Pri¬vate Office nr. the U of C. Pleasantconditions. $500 plus to start. DO3-4133.com* to th*Black Panther RallyMonday, April 28, 7:30Mandol HallHear Fred HamptonHead of IllinoisBlack Panther PartyalsoNewsreelBlack Panther Film$1 contribution toPanther Defense/Breakfast for Childrenfunduc/SDSJ ui.li,.; , —* * ‘V'iVAM.WWM Vi'.*'.VA\YiV/MVlW.UV*W VAV.Y.V I W'rfJtXXi'tttXMS ...THEY JUST NEVER STOP COMING, I TELL YOUEDITORIAL ASSISTANT, lull-time.Secretarial skills. U of C Press. CallM. Fowler, ext. 3336.Male” <or yr. round teach, pos.(eiem grades) in H.P. B.A. needed,effect immed. $9,000/yr. leavename and tel. no. for Bob Herman643-730C.Want woman student to live Inhouse in Kenwood. Sitting, etc. inexchange for room, kitchen privi'leges. WA 4-1530. Also summer jobor house sitting.LIKE TO COOK? Resp. person towork nights 5 P.M. to 1 A.M. Fulltime pref. Apply at the Medici orcall 667-7394.Part-time office heip for humangrowth organization. 10-15 hours perweek. Must type. Call 922-8294 9A M. - 1 P.M.HORSEBACK RIDINGAnyone interested in horseback rid¬ing and in forming a riding clubplease telephone Madeleine Muetze643-6524 after 6 P.M. Beginners andadvanced; jumping and dressage.FOR SALEAir Conditioner 6,000 BTUs West-inghouse. Perf. cond. $100 or offer.684-7838.VW exc. cond. '69 engine; $800 . 734-6364. 6:30-7:30 M,W,Th,F,S.PIANO, upright, good condition andsound. Call 955-1776 or 684-1187.1965 MG-B; rebuilt engine; brg;wire wheels; good condition; 39,000miles; call Frank Leeds CA 5-7022weekdays or 684-6469.1965 PONTIAC LEMANS hardtopautomatic, power brakes, powersteering, AM/FM one owner, well-maintained, best offer over $800.Ron Moore 643-0304.USED VOLKSWAGENS'61 Bug'64 Bug'66 VW fastback very clean'67 Bug very cleanReasonable and haggelable. LeslyImports, 2235 S. Michigan, 326-2550.1949 Harley Davidson. "45" com¬pletely overhauled and restored.Ride it to believe it. 493-8726 eves.1961 Merc. 6 cyl. clean new tirescall BU 8-9106.FOTALook for our calendar of over 60events in Tuesday's Maroon. Thebiggest Arts Festival in the Midwesthere. May 1-17. ALMOST ENTIRE¬LY FREEH!MORE PERSONALS"A VIABLE JEWISH COMMUNITYIN THE 58TH CENTURY". Lectureby Rabbi Zalman Posner of Nash¬ville, Tenn. Sponsored by Yavoneh.Tonight, 8:30 at Hillel House.DARKNESS: the essence of the Uni¬versity of Chicago. BLACKFRIARS REGRETS that amistake was made on the postersfor CHARGE OF THE NUMIDIANCAVALRY. For four, count 'em, 4nights only — April 25,26, May 2,3 —tickets will be $2 8, 2.50 with 50cstudent discount besides. Tickets atMandel Hall Box Office.US Army's enemy lang — .Espe¬ranto.Defense Decision Making: "Defenseand Domestic Needs, the Contest forTomorrow.*' A challenging filmanalysis of the MILITARY-INDUS¬TRIAL COMPLEX produced byPublic Broadcasting Laboratory andsponsored by Chicago SANE andHyde Park NEW DEMOCRATS. Willbe shown Monday, Aprjl 28, 8:30P.M. in Soc. Sci 122. Goodbye folks, I'm leaving in June(graduating) No more goodies fromme — Mimi from Gold City.GAY POWER IN '69. Anyone inter¬ested in forming a Student Homo-phile League at the U of C pleasewrite Box 69, Maroon, for furtherinfo. All replies held in strict con¬fidence."Her husband is a young man andbut newly entered — but let thatpass." And that's one of the less ex¬plicit jokes in SHOEMAKERS HOLI¬DAY.She was his top agent. She thoughtshe was secure. Then she realizedhe couldn't let her walk on thestreet. BRING DOWN DARKNESS,Apr 28 and 27.THE COMFORTABLE CHAIRCandles, Incense, Jewelery & nice things from nice placesV5 5 0 3 Vi Hyde Park Blvd *"Never doubt — lovers are quicklyin and quickly out" SHOEMAKERSHOLIDAY, tickets in Reynolds Club. There are tens of thousands of kidsin Woodlawn. How come only 100 ofthem are going to get day-care?SUPPORT THE PANTHER 8< DE¬FENSE/BREAKFAST FOR CHILD-DREN FUND — come to the RAL¬LY MON 8 P.M. J.P. found love in Boston.THE PERSECUTION AND ASSAS¬SINATION OF JOHN MOSCOW ASPERFORMED BY THE INMATESOF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHI¬CAGO WILL BE PERFORMED AT4:00 P.M. FRIDAY on the steps ofthe Administration Building. BETHERE.Smile, Girl — my blessing is uponyou. g,dJoin the Marines — an equal oppor¬tunity destroyer.The Teachers Inc: a democratic cor¬poration of urban teachers. Summertraining, support during year. 1-5Sat. in Ida Noyes.THE CHICAGO ALL-STAR BLUESBAND:Louis Myers — harpBobby King — lead guitarDave Myers — bassFred Below — best blues drummerRap in any nation w Esperanto. 1 hrcrash class 28th C102 7 P.M. 444 copies of John's report will bepiled up on the steps of the AdBuilding. Neighborhood dogs will berecruited and radicalized and en¬couraged to express themselvesfreely upon said reports.Mr. David Nasgowitz of the OrientalInstitute Museum staff will speak onSunday at Hillel on "New Arch¬eological Light on the Dead SeaCommunity. 7:30 P.M.Fool the fuzz. Use Esperanto.ATTENTION PHOTOGRAPHERSWe are offering you plea¬surable weekend work pho¬tographing college parties; thepay is good and previous ex¬perience is not required; call685-7601 and ask for Bob.steakburgers pizzaSchlitz on TapFree PeanutsServing the Extra LargePitchers of BeerSMEDLEY'S PUBA real fun place to greet old and meet new friendsMusic by Seeburgchili spaghettiInquire about private roomOpen for Lunch5239 So. Harper Harper Courtparking in city lot at rear Marco Polo is ready to take you onyour trip. 326-4422.Protest militarism and the cold warmusically. FOLK SING, Sat. 4/26 3P.M. Ida Noyes. Join NUC's WEEKAGAINST MILITARISM.Coming Tues, May 6 — CHUCKBERRY in CONCERT — See Re¬vitalization ad in this issue.CHGO'S OWN SWINGERS CLUB.Send $1 for 52 page illust. magazine.100s of personals. MKS, Box 3806,CHGO 60654.Caroline Heck, Michael Sorkin,Jeanne Wikler, Jessica Seigel, TomBusch, Chris Lyon, David Travis'roomate, Bob Forman, the Maroondelivery man; the graphic work ofRoger Black — what is this, a Ma¬roon party? No it's SHOEMAKERSHOLIDAY in Ida Noyes (of allplaces, 2 floors below the Maroon of¬fice.W R I T E R S ' WORKSHOP — PL2-8377.CHICAGO ALL-STAR BLUES BAND— 8:30 P.M. Tonite, Pierce Tower.JOSEPH JARMAN COMPANY audi¬tioning dancers, actors, and othercreative people, for performance ofradical mixed-media music theatre.Call DO 3-0140 anytime, this week.$20 for make-up and she cleaned herroom?At least she didn't sleep with a ted¬dy bear like some people.End lang requirement Esperanto —1 hr crash class 28th Cl02 7 P.M. FOTA will shock this university intoa participation in its FANTASTICschedule of concerts, plays, art ex¬hibits, liberal arts conference 1969,gala performances, poetry readings,maypole dancing, chalk-in, paint-in,crayon in. Free use of film, clay,oil, jazz, folk, rock, blues, bands,Beaux Arts Ball, and many otherevents.NEW DORMS RESIDENTS — ifyou're frumious with dorm food orcan't make supper some nite, trans¬fer your meal to the Bandersnatch.Get 60c credit plus 10c towards anydrink. Any nite but Sun. or Wed. —check at the desk the day before.THE PHOENIX (U of C student lit¬erary magazine) is back! Typedcontributions of verse and offers ofartwork and photos should be sub¬mitted by May 3 to Phoenix, IdaNoyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St.See the transvestite boy bring beerto the swill-belly shoemakers inSHOEMAKERS HOLIDAY.Student discounts on renting andbuying cars in Europe. Call LarryGoldberg 492-8863.How come Kenwood-Oakland hadmore fires this winter than any oth¬er place in Western civilization?Coming Monday, May 19 PHIIOCHS IN CONCERT. See Revitaliza¬tion ad this issue.BELL BOTTOMS, WRANGLERJEANS $4.98, converse gym shoes$5.98. Limited supply. Johns MensWear 1459 E. 53rd. Beaux Arts Ball Tickets NOW ONSALE $2.50 each Mandel Hall BoxOffice 11-5 daily. This Dance in Bart¬lett Gym features Pul ButterfieldBand, Magic Sam Band and an un¬believable light show. Everybodyelse will be there. You?Dance to the beat of the best bluesdrummer — FRED BELOW, tonightat Pierce.Anyone wishing to read their poetryor short stories for a student read¬ing at FOTA contact Abby Freed¬man 51 Snell ext. 260.If these assumptions re reasonablewithin Man's current understandingof the ordinary laws of physics, thenthe single crucial question is:**Are you getting the kind of educa¬tion for your money which statesplainly and clearly that its primeobjective is to help you grow intothe above universe of discourse?***If not, why are you investing yourprime time energy in being "edu¬cated"? Do you know where andhow to get the best vailable knowl¬edge of.Self within Universe duringthis one-and-only chance at livingLife?Do your professors profess to beDoctors of Phileo Love of Sooh-ia/Wisdom?Physicians of Physis/Nature? to beWhat is wisdom?Is Michael Sorkin really the actorpar excellence? Is Jeanne Wiklerreally going to let that pass? WillCaroline Heck find true happinesswith someone named Lacey? OrTom? Is being a cobbler worth avacation? See the truth in Shoe¬maker's Holiday!May I have aFrench winewith TurkishiTalash Kebab?Why not?Your host, Murat Somay,with succulent foodsand memorable wines.Discover Efendi. Tonight.E&ridiRESTAURANT & LOUNGE53rd and Lake ParkUof C Tuesday Night Special20% reduction. The Efendiinvites students, faculty andstaff for memorable entrees($3.50-5.75) This ad entitlesbearer to 20% reduction ofdinner cost, includingcocktails and wines. Now you can geta Playtex* Bra fora ridiculous figure.Just buy a box of 30 Playtexfirst-day™ tampons and sendyour dollar, plus the words“30 Super” or “30 Regular”from the front of the package.A beautiful Playtex "Cross-Your-Heart®” Bra is yours.There’s no other tampon likePlaytex. Outside, soft andsilky, not cardboardy. Inside, Would you believe $1.00?so extra absorbent, it evenprotects on your first day.That’s why we call it the first-day tampon.In every lab test against theold cardboardy kind, thePlaytex tampon was alwamore absorbent. Actuallymore absorbent on the athan the leading regular tarppon because of the uniqueway it’s made. Actually adjuststo you. Flowers out, fluffs out,protects every inside inch of you.Try it fast. And use the couponto save on your Playtex Bra.avtcxtamponsHere's my $1.00, plus the words “30 Super" or "30 Regular" from the frontof a Playtex tampon package. My Playtex "Cross-Your-Heart*” Bra, pleaseCircle your Bra size here:32A 34A 36A32B 34B 36B 38B 40B32C 34C 36C 38C 40C IName. (please print)City. .State. .Zip.Mail coupon to: International Playtex Corporation, Dept. WV, 350 FifthAvenue, New York, N.Y. 10001. Offer expires July 1, 1969. Please allow fourweeks for delivery.•Playtf* is the trademark of UtU-rnational Playti Corp"'. Ooyer'del. *1969 lntern»tibnalT,layfe«'c6rp.April 25, 1969/The Chicago Maroon/11Golden Heritage—new, different, exotic 23 karat gold electroplated. Enrich those special occasion dinners with the splendors of gleaming gold.Golden* OpportunityWe’re celebrating our anniversary with a FREE GIFT for you!1969 marks University National Bank’s 50th year of service to the Hyde Park-Ken-wood community.To celebrate our Golden Anniversary we have a Golden gift for you—(or stainlesssteel, if you prefer)—FREE.Just deposit $50 or more with University National and you can have your choice ofthese magnificent place settings from world-famous International Silver CompanyFREE.• Open a new savings or checking account for $50 or more• Add $50 or more to a current savings or checking account... and you will receive FREE your choice of either the exotic 4-piece GoldenHeritage place setting or the elegant 5-piece Nassau Stainless place setting.For just $2.99—less than half the retail value—you can obtain an additionalplace setting of your choice each time you add $50 or more to yourUniversity" National savings or checking account. Accessory sets in yourchoice of Golden Heritage or Nassau Stainless are also available atspecial savings.Start your service for 8 or 12 today.And help us celebrate our Golden Anniversary by giving you a gift. *or STAINLESS STEELyour choice—FREENassau Stainless—new, sophisticated, eleganquality-crafted stainless steel. Enjoy the ultimatin beauty and functional utility for every meal.UNIVERSITY NATIONAL RANK1354 East 55th Street • Chicago, Illinois 60615Telephone MU 4-1200memKer: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation / Chicago Clearing House Association / Federal Reserve System<3S12/The Chicago Maroon/April 25, 1969 in strengthandserviceThe University’sBy Len HandelsmanSINCE A POLITICAL ATTACK on UCTs racist urbanrenewal policies is gaining motion for the first time onthis campus, it is necessary for people to learn the truehistory and scope of urban renewal and to reject thenonsensical lies that Deans O’Connell and Vice assault uswith regularly.The first installment of this article deals with thetrue story of Hyde Park Renewal, while the second innext Friday’s Grey City Journal will spell out the strate¬gy used to create a white belt in Southeast Chicago,including such sophisticated programs like Model Citiesand systematic arson.According to Charles O’Connell’s statistics in “Relo¬cation in the South Campus Area”: “Of 786 families tobe relocated, 333 (29 white, 304 nonwhite) as of Septem¬ber 30 had complefed relocation in the following ways:a 47 had gone into standard private rental propertyon referral of DUR.b 153 had gone into standard private rental propertyof their own choosing.c 5 had gone into standard sales housing on referralof DURd 32 had gone into standard sales housing of theirown choosing.e 71 had gone into public housing.f 12 had moved out of the city, too far away toinspect.g 3 had moved into substandard rental housing andhad declined further assistance.”Now, how is it that the Department of Urban Renew¬al (DUR) has such fine statistics for these purposes, butclaims not to be able to trace people when communitiesask to bring relocatees back for “substitution housing”?Aside from the very reasonable possibility that DUR fig¬ures are fabrications, they show that of 333 families, only52 were relocated by the DUR, 153 had to find their ownway, and 71 are now living in high-rise Chicago HousingAuthority prisons. Sample surveys done by students showthat many people have been moved from DUR buildingsto other condemned buildings.Dean O’Connell continues:“Areas of the city to which families and individualshave been relocated through the services of DUR includethe following: Lincoln Park, Near North Side, Loop.North Lawndale, Armour Square, Douglas, Oakland,Fuller Park, Grand Boulevard, Washington Park, HydeFark, Woodlawn, South Shore, South Chicago, Riverdale,Englewood, Greater Grand Crossing, and Auburn-Gre-sham.”These are of course many of the areas that are nowbeginning urban renewal projects so that in a few yearsthese people will be kicked out of their homes again.The Department of Urban Renewal’s activities are ofquite a different nature. They force people out, not nec¬essarily with evictions, but by turning off the gas, heat,and water. A tenant who withholds rent for this kind ofcondition loses his relocation rights. If these tactics donot work the DUR or its contracted wrecker simplytorch the building. Thus, while urban renewal areas havea high rate of fires due to poor maintenance, many firesare due to squatters in vacated but unboarded buildings,and due to institutionalized arson.Finally, what does the University want to prove withits “social” data (Shapiro report — 1964) on the SouthCampus? What else could people say after living in anarea where maintenance and capital input had beennonexistent since the University of Chicago and the Cityof Chicago began to negotiate on South Campus in 1960?What else could people say when they know about howthe DUR manages buildings worse than private slum-™ds? And what are we supposed to assume about thehigh” transciency rate in South Campus? That it’s fineto oppress these people because they have a lot of ex¬perience with oppression? Role inChicagoUrban Renewal‘Although the idea of “renew¬ing” cities is certainly a niceconcept, urban renewal was,from the beginning, a ratherdirty affair?In the early 1950’s, the University of Chicago (underits newly inaugurated president, Laurence Kimpton) de¬cided that it had to see through an urban renewal pro¬gram for Hyde Park-Kenwood. This policy fit into a gen¬eral perspective of the major institutions on the South-side — Michael Reese Hospital, IIT. UC — to reverse theinflux of the black belt into the southeast side of Chi¬cago. Ever since black people began migrating to Chi¬cago, they faced a severe housing shortage. Blackpeople, therefore, would live in subdivided, rent-inflatedapartments; and realtors, seeing the makings of a profit,accommodated the blacks with expensive, subdividedapartments. As blacks moved in, whites moved out. Theneighborhood around UC ceased to be a place wherewhite middle-class faculty could settle in comfort. (Thisis the basic thrust of the argument in Julian Levi’s —Ed’s brother — pamplet, “Ground Space for the Univer¬sity”). Faculty, the UC administration maintained,would not be attracted to a “transitional” area, andhence the University would face a decline in its prestige.(It is debatable whether faculty were actually leavingHyde Park; statistics in Rossi and Dentler Politics ofUrban Renewal show that there was no net loss of facul¬ty from the community.) The University also had needsto expand its physical plant, but these needs do not ex¬plain the urban renewal of blacks along the IC tracks. Inconsidering the Hyde Park renewal, it should be remem¬bered that this area, while perhaps not terribly attrac¬tive to middle class white faculty, provided some of thebest housing that the black population could have hopedto find in Chicago.Although the idea of “renewing” ctities is certainly anice concept, urban renewal was, from the beginning, arather dirty affair* stemming from the Housing Act of1949 (Title I). The unlikely (or perhaps all too likely) trio of Senators Wagner (New York liberal), Ellender (south¬ern racist), and Taft (Republican conservative) got to¬gether to deal with slum clearance. The genius of theirplan was that they found a way to give private devel¬opers a huge profit on cleared land by allowing them toput up luxury housing, commercial enterprises of in¬stitutional buildings — with a minimal substitution ofhousing for the displaced.Take a typical case. The University of Chicago wantsto have an adjacent plot of land developed. The citywould acquire this land by condemnation, for say, 41million dollars. The city would then sell the land to pri¬vate developers who (in addition to special bargain fi¬nancing rates) would buy the land at 20 million. The cityis then left with a deficit of 21 million. Title I stipulatesthat the Federal Government give the city 2/3 or 14million of its deficit (called a writedown). The city putsup the remaining 7 million.If you drove around Chicago for a while, you wouldprobably be struck by how much of the city is actuallyblighted or decaying. Yet the urban renewal sites existin relatively few places. These places are always nearbig institutions, or are in such desirable places (e.g. nearNorth) that a private developer could make a killing. Infact, one is often struck by how urban renewal occurs in •some of the better lower-income areas in the city. On theSoutheast side, urban renewal has occurred adjacent tothe three main institutions, Michael Reese, IIT, and UC.Now anchored around these institutions, and corporationson their Boards, urban renewal is destroying the entirepoor black community of Southeast Chicago.In 1952, the University committed itself to renewingthe neighborhood (See Julian Levi, “The NeighborhoodPlan of the University of Chicago” for Kimpton’sspeeches to this effect). Up until 1952, the University hadconfined itself to maintaining the illegal system of re¬strictive covenants and by strengthening the block groupsystem (surveillance to see if blacks were moving intosubdivided units.) Julian Levi would get a friendly insur¬ance company to foreclose its insurance on a particularbuilding, then get the city to condemn the building forlack of insurance. To carry out these piecemeal pro¬grams, the University collaborated with the Hyde ParkPlanning Association and the Hyde Park-Kenwood Com¬munity Conference (which had the block group struc¬ture). Neither of these organizations had the strength togive UC a base to launch the renewal program. UCneeded to generate what looked like a community organi¬zation to get the ball rolling.From the beginning, UC’s neighborhood policy-mak¬ing was centralized and highly manipulative:a. A mass meeting of the community (March 7, 1952)was held in Mandel Hall as a law and order response tothe community’s problems. The meeting ratified a Com¬mittee of Five, headed and effectively run by UC Presi¬dent Kimpton.b. Within seven months, the Committee of Five re¬ported back to a second meeting. The results:• a few reasonable crime prevention, tavern bustingmeasures;• the mobilization of the block groups to extendtheir vigilante surveillance to prevent people (mainlyblack) from moving into subdivided apartments;• the suggestion to rehabilitate the neighborhood byluring in capital; there was no mention of rehabilitationof residential units.• the formation of the Southeast Chicago Commis¬sion (SECC), headed by Julian Levi, 80% handpicked bythe Committee of Five, with jurisdiction over the entireSoutheast side of Chicago. The Commission was financedby a $15,000 grant from UC with subsequent grants.Within three months, UC had succeeded in setting upa strong, loyal broadscoped “community” organization.The SECC was highly centralized. The full member¬ship met only once a year. 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Intermittently rats scam¬per over them.FIRST MAN: Look Tom, don’t feel so bad, so you didn’tmake the big time in Stratford-Upon-Avon-that’s no rea¬son to jump in the Thames.SECOND MAN: It’s impossible for me to get producedwhen all anybody wants to see is that hack Shakespearewho sold out to the Queen before the first costume wassewn.FIRST MAN: It’s true that crowds just don’t windaround the block for Thomas Dekker like they do forthose sexy young boys in Tweltfh Night but now thatwe've moved into a smaller house we’re sme to be ableto fill it. I must say that the atmosphere here is notconducive to comedy but we can try.SECOND MAN: I don’t know — the next play I’m work¬ing on I decided to call Shoemakers Holiday. Do youthink we can get more than the groundlings to come?-FIRST MAN: Look I tell you what — we’ll premiere iton New Year’s day and we can get some big theatreparties to come — all those matinee ladies come slum¬ming to see how the other half lives.SECOND MAN: I don’t know maybe I’ll make the BigTime somehow — why don’t we pour poison into thatShakespeare’s ear?Thomas Dekker did make the Big Time after all.Renaissance Players presents Shoemakers Holiday di¬rected by Tom Busch April 25, 26, and 27 in Cloister Clubstarring Gerry Fisher, Jeanne Wikler, Michael Sorkin,Caroline Heck, Chris Lyon, David Pichette, Robert Swan,Arinin Barnett, Annallee Lechtinger, and all your otherfavorites.ilmFox Reviewed!AFTER READING T. C. Fox’s rather onery film re¬views in the Maroon for three years I was curious to seeif his own first attempt at movies jibes with his criticalsene (if that is the word). I am not sure, but I think itdoes.Fox is one of the UC Doc Films crowd who, ratherI than being prejediced toward the arty farty Europeanfilms, are prejudiced against them. They like instead thegood old fashion movies of Hollywood, what Judith Christcalls the yummy movie movies.His film, bearing the Premingerian title, Bring DownDarKiiess, is short and straightforward. It has none ofthe stupid brutalisms of most of the underground films;it is deliberately overground. And it avoids the pregnantbut mindless photography of Godard and his followers. Itis surprisingly technically competent. The lighting isgood (you don’t see the shadows); one scene where thegirl moves around an apartment with the morning lightstreaming in the window and through her hair, is beau¬tiful. The camera is steady; the frames are well com¬posed when they ought to be; but composition doesn’t getin the way of the movie when it shouldn’t.All in all, old T. C. shows a great deal of emergingdirectorial talent — in the sense that all the elements ofbis film (camerawork, acting, lightining, scenery) arebrought together and made to work. Where it suffers, itsuffers from lack of money. The movie is silent, and sothere is no dialogue. There is a bit of narration at thebeginning (40s Hollywood) and twice again, and there issome syrupy movie jazz (piano and flute) that occasion¬ally comes on to smooth out the cuts. (If you wonderhow hard it is to make a silent film, turn on a TV movie,leave the sound off, and see how inept the film looks.Ihe pre-talkie style was to speed up the action and getsomeone to bang on a piano, but the result was a bur¬lesque.)The best thing about Darkness is the fact that there isdrama; something the underground people usually leaveout. The story is about a UC girl (played beautifully byTamara Horowitz) and a UC boy (Dan Heit) who of7rse live together until one day Tamara disappears.Ihe drama is the boy’s efforts to find her around Hydeark (she has been carried off by a manufacturer ofmethedrine) and there are complications and even a cli¬max involving guns and murder.There is perhaps too much walking back and forth, but1 ie scenes in the various apartments in houses, the poolroom, the police station, are done well. It is amazinginw much of a character Dan can get across with ges-Tores and expressions, and with the way he talks, with¬out us hearing a word.All in all it’s a pretty good short film. Not perfect. Butotter and far more honest than the self-conscious firstV "ttemtps at flash and dazzle by most young-and-I struggling directors.1 \ Roger Black MusicAn Audience AffairAt CCP ConcertTHECONTEMPORARY CHAMBER PLAYERS’TRIPLE BILL in their “Music for the Theater” last Fri¬day evening at Mandel Hall was sparsely attended. Thecompetition offered by University Theater’s Lilion andby the Jarman concert over at the Gargoyle may havehad something to do with it, although in brutal truth theusual content of these concerts tends to keep away allthe aficionade. Friday’s program was deserving of awider audience than this, not only due to the greateraccessibility of such stage works, but also on the meritsof the compositions themselves and of the highly profes¬sional performance they received.Thomas Putsche’s chamber opera, The Cat and theMoon (1958), received its Chicago premiere. According tothe accompanying notes, the iioretto is based on Yeats’poem by the same name. This material has been turnedinto a little opera of some lyrical nicely, enjoyable enoughfor the moment, but one which (we regret to say) failedto make a strong impression one way or the other. Thestaging by James O’Reilly (except for a majority ab¬surdity, that of permitting the cripple to hobble at willaround the stage, thus rendering superfluous his sup¬posed dependence on the blind man) was workable, al¬beit betrayed by poor lighting. Elsa Charlston (soprano,as the Saint), James Mack (the sturdy baritone com¬ pelled to bear the tenor on his back) and Thomas Mac-Bone (said tenor, as the cripple) gave creditable per¬formances. The singers’ enunciation appeared tothe uniformly good and the balance between the voicesand the orchestra seemed to be about right, which ren¬dered all the more surprising that only Mr. MacBonemanaged to make himself understood most of the time.The conventionality of The Cat and the Moon, if any¬one doubted it, was thrown into stark relief by the nextwork, Pauline Oliveros’ Pieces of Eight. This piece (nopun intended) is a carefully controlled half-hour ofchaos, obviously of Cageian inspiration. The composer’sstatement of intention in the program notes (completewith references to “piracy on the high C’s”) left nodoubt as to the direction to be pursued and we noticedthat some members of the audience seemed tore sent it.Yet, for all that it is impossible (for this writer, at least)TO TAKE Pieces cf Eight seriously, it is equally impos¬sible to resist it — in its own perverse way, it is hugelyentertaining.The third and final work of the evening, DavidBurge’s Sources III, lent itself least well to staged treat¬ment — as a spectacle it had worn out its welcomewithin minutes of its setting — but this haunting duet forclarinet and percussion may well prove more rewardingon repeated hearings than its companions for the eve¬ning. Incidentally, we overheard at the concert that TheCat and the Moon was to have been recorded on Monday,April 21.In all, “distinctly satisfactory”, as Nero Wolfe wouldsay.William MurnaneCulture VultureThe Tipsy Worldof BesousagesIT’s BEEN A LONG TIME since I was last, this hungover. Yes indeedee, it sure has. After all what did thegood Lord make the old bod for if not for frequent andliberal besousages. But all this talk is no -more than anelephant and an elephant in sheeps clothing is nothingbut ten or twenty-five of the best or worst. But the spirit¬ed Vulture has a new format considerably indebted toL’Encyclopedia and the Maritime Register. It is, in itsgloriously bare essentials, a list. Not so new you chortle.No? Screw you. The Silver Screen:Tonight, Doc Films is showing Last Year In Passaic.But Sunday, Sunday, Sunday, Sunday and Monday, Mon¬day, Monday can be seen the new Twentieth CenturyFox Film, Bring Down Darkness. It’s super neetsy ultraspasmo infa nifty keen. (T.C. - T.C.) There are a lot ofmovies next week as well. Behind the Footlights:This is the weekend you’ve all been waiting for.Shoemaker’s Holiday is here at last. For the details seeelsewhere in this rag. Blackfriars has the misfortune ofthis competition and they have wisely scheduled per¬formances for next weekend as well as this. Blackfriarscast features a Father in the lead but Shoemaker has aFather and a Mother. Wholesome family fare to be sure.Assaults on the Ear:Folk, folk, folk. Bluesuesuesuesues. The New Univer¬sity Conference is having an Anti-Militarism folk singSaturday at 3:00 in Ida Noyes Lounge. It will be fun.Revitalization is sponsoring a dance featuring the Chi¬cago All Star Blues Band tonight in Pierce. Where weonce lived, remember . . . There is also serious musicdowntown. The Noblest Art:Incredible Poetry Reading, Just incredible. Ah, ter¬rific. Sunday 2:30. Bly, Creely, Starbuck, Gibson, BillKnott, Paul Carroll and more, more, more. A good thingit doesn’t conflict with Shoemaker’s Holiday.At Last:The Harper Theater Coffee House and Cabaret (sic)has pulled a phoenix and returned. You’ll love it as usu¬al. Yummy. Hahahahahahahah.Ivan Turgenev (Bryan Dunlap) and Leo TolstoyHearne) carry on a literary debate on a seesaw in scenefrom Charge of the Numidian Cavalry, Blackfriars, mu¬sical this year.April 25, Wa/Gjey Cit;- ,J»«rSal/3 )\SlSUNDAY, 4/27 — A CEF DOUBLE FEATURE FOR $1AT 7 PM (COBB)"SCHOOLFOR AT 9 PM (COBB)"FLIM-FLAMANDSCOUNDRELS // MAN //in Color & Cinemascope(PLUS "THE INTERVIEW") Held over 4»h Month„ CINEMAChicago Ave at MichiganACADEMY AWARDWINNERA bittersweet love storythat touches the heartCLIFF ROBERTSONCURE BLOOM"CHARLY"a 4 I* Student rate every>1.50 d<>r»|JTSo.u,d,y^ with I.D. CardI irCUADMCVJLKCnruvvciAOUlAl nUOtirshUBY MICHAEL HASTINGSAMERICAN PREMIERE PRODUCTIONFridays, Saturdays at 8:30Complete Steak Dinners $2.75!4 lb. Steakburger $1.40ADMISSION $3.00 Students $2.50Tickets available atMaroon Business Office Ida Noyes 304play house CHICAGO'S NEWESTDINNER-THEATER2515 West 69 th Si.Chicago 60629778-4240, 275-9078 “THERE’S NOTHING LIKE IT AT ALL!”GROVE PRESS PRESENTSJEAN-LUC GODARD SWEEKENDSIAM. MIREILLE DARC AND JEAN YANNE "A fantastic film in whichail of life becomes a weekend—a cataclysmic,seismic traffic jam. Thefilm must be seen lor itspower, ambition, humor,and scenas ot reallyastonishing beauty. Oneof the most importantfilms Godard has evermade. There's nothinglike it it all."—Renata Adler,New York TimesTHREEPENNYCINEMA2424 N Lincoln AvcnuoChicago. Illinois 60614phone 528 9126LAST DAYS! "Best film yet, by the world'sgreatest living genius of thecinematic art. "Four stars-Ebert | MAIL ORDERS NOW! Beg. 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Specializing in RemnantsMill returns at a fraction of the{original cost.'Decoration Colors and Qualities..I Additional 10% Discount with this,I Ad.FREE DELIVERY BEST PLAY OF 1968 5 WEEKSONIYDRAMA CtfTKJ AWARDTH* -TOMY- AWARD“VERY FUNNY, VERYBRILLIANT. A MOSTREMARKABLE ANDTHRILLING PLAY.”—Clive Barnes,N.Y. TimesStudent RatesGroups 15 or moreRpseNcipitzscmd GuildeNsteRN'Awe Dead'“A SUPERB PLAY.”- Wafts, Jr, N.Y. Post“A SOHO - BIG TIME HIT!" —Life Mag“A STIMULATING, FUNNY COMEDY . —Chapman, NewsPRICES: EVES. (8:30): Mon. thru Thurs. Orch. $6.00; Mezz.$6 00, 4 50; 1st Bale. $5.50. 4 50; 2nd Bale. $3.50. Fri. & SatOrch. $7.50; Mezz. $7.50, 5.50; 1st Bale. $6.50, 5.50; 2nd Bale.$4.00, 3.50. MATS. (2 PM1: Wed. & Sat.: Orch. $5.50; Mezz$5.50, 4.50; 1st Bale. $5 00, 4.50; 2nd Bale. $3 00. Enc.stamped self-addressed env. to Shubert Theatre, 22 West Mon¬roe, Chicago. For Group Sales and Special Student TheatreGroups call Blanche, CE 6-8240. Tickets also at 212 N. Mich¬igan and all Ward’s, Field’s 8i Crawford Stores.CUIIDCDT 25 w Monro. BOX OFFICE OPENSjnUPtK I CE6-8740 MON , APRIL 21TOYOTA - TRIUMPHSales - ServiceCOMPETITION MOTORS7729S.CottageGrove AvePhone:783-3716HYDE PARK STARTS FRI.APRIL 25thMGM presentsthe John Frankenheimer-| Edward Lewis Production ofthe fixerAbased on the Pulitzer Prize¬winning novel by [m|Bernard Malamud.°PWitzie J 3(ower Sit"FLOW ERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS'1308 EAST 53rd STREETWHAT CHICAGO RADIO STATIONKEEPS YOUUP TO DATEWITH WHAT’S HAPPENINGIN YOUR OWN COMMUNITY WITHFREQUENT ANNOUNCEMENTSAROUT UPCOMING EVENTS?88.34/Grey City Journal/Aprii 25, 1969* " ‘ ’ * * A.Jt, til I * . > • | ■ Hut*, i; Jfte4v4ifc Ag ' Vri-i 4 * ♦ lV»r»TheaterTHIS PLAY IS A FINE FANTASY, an antidote to thehyperrelevant that we are getting used to both in and outof the theater. Like The Fantasticks, it is a mixture ofsentimentality and archetype. Liliom, a carnival barkerand free spirit, leaves his art and his mistress to marrya servant girl; then, out of work, he falls into a life ofindolence until a criminal friend gets him to try robbery.Caught in the act, Liliom commits suicide, goes to thenext world, is tried by a Heavenly Magistrate, and getsto spend sixteen years in purgatory and then a day onearth, where he sees his widow, Julie, and his sixteen-year old daughter. Meanwhile, a subplot provides thecontrasting bourgeois courtship-and-success story ofMarie, an innocent rustic, and Wolf Beifeld, a porter onthe way up. It is not high seriousness, and most of theparts are mere types, but the role of Liliom is subtle andamusing. He is a person, who, like all of us, has two setsof conflicting dreams, the romantic and the bourgeois;the life of the carnival, the mistress, and the criminal onone side and the life of father and husband on the other.There is comic wisdom and high fantasy in the part,but the danger is that it could easily pass over into themere fluff and sentiment. Roger Dodds underplayed thepart in general, thereby avoiding that problem, but itcost him some of its richness. Liliom is a carnival bark¬er with a touch of the poet, and in Dodds’ performanceUrban Renewal6The most amazing fact abouturban renewal is that it was notsmashed..Continued from Page OneThe planning for Hyde Park-Kenwood renewal (ofwhich the first area was Hyde Park A and B — wherethe COOP and townhouses on Lake Park and 55th) wasdone by Jack Meltzer on Julian Levi's staff. Meltzer’smajor recommendation was his slick engineering of the“planning” around Michael Reese Hospital. The FieldFoundation (Field being on the UC Board) gave $100,000to the planning operation.Remember that in 1952 urban renewal was a newconcept and that the powerful groups in Chicago did notsupport renewal and the city of Chicago had not devel¬oped the administrative structure to expedite a renewalprogram. Two agencies were important in bringingaround the city of Chicago- to support the Hyde Parkrenewal. UC found a friend in James Downs, a realtorwho understood the financial advantages of urban renew¬al long before others, and in the ‘‘civic” association, theMetropolitan Housing and Planning Council ConservationCommittee which consisted mainly of UC-related people.The inquiries of the Conservation Committee were self-initiated, but were financed by the UC Board at a keytime. The Council also understood the value of reclaim¬ing the eastern part of the City from the lowei-incomeblacks in the interests of downtown business and thelarge institutions of the central city.In 1953, Julian Levi drafted and saw through an Il¬linois State Housing law. The law stated that a privateredevelopment corporation could acquire rights of emi¬nent domain over an area that was going bad — notnecessarily blighted. The final product was the Neighbor¬hood Redevelopment Corporation Act of 1953.From 1954 to 1956, the SECC set up two importantprivate corporations for Southwest and Northwest HydePark, respectively. The Southwest Corporation wasowned by the University; it called for the demolition ofthe area that will be the Student Village-Athletics Facil¬ities as well as further UC expansion. The NorthwestCorporation, directly north of the Southwest Corpo¬ration’s jurisdiction, which included an area with a rath¬er large middle-class black population, managed tochange Meltzer’s plans, so as to avoid the intrusion of aUC “research park” and “campus park.” The middle-income blacks got a compromise on UC intrusion byallowing the de facto expulsion of low-income blacksfrom the area.In 1958 UC incited other urban universities to join itin wangling privil ;ges from federal legislation. (See Ju¬lian Levi, “Neighborhood Program”). The result of coop¬erative university lobbying was the introduction of 3points into the 1959 Housing Act:a-that the requirement of residential use be elimi¬nated for projects involving institutions of higher educa¬tion;b-that such expenditures for campus expansion beconsidered like local grants-in-aide, and hence bematched by federal funds (i.e. matching funds from pub¬lic federal funds could be used to write down the univer¬sity’s private expenditures);c-that university expenditures made less than 5 years Liliom More ThanCarousel’s Grandfatherwe got a fine irreverent barker but not much of the poet.Despite this, however, Roger Dodds paced himselfwell, first underemphasizing the part so that I thought helacked the intensity to carry it; then, in the crucialHeaven scene, he came through very nicely, with theright expressions and reactions to indicate that his flip¬pancy is mixed with the vestigial knowledge that he isnot an island, nor entirely his own man, and that be¬cause of other people, our death is not the real end oflife.Since the idea of the play is the contrast between themodest domesticity of Julie, his wife, and the romanticrestlessness and impenitence of the husband, the part ofJulie has to be subordinate and unobtrusive. It is a cred¬it to Miss Joan Mankin that she maintained this Griseldarole without boring us, but I think the part could havebeen infused with a little more spirit without spoiling itsrelationship to the hero. It is very hard for an Americancollege girl to play a servant without condescending tothe part, and Miss Mankin did less condescending thandid Anne Weissman, who made the mistake of mockingthe part of Marie as she played it. An author can mockhis characters, but the actors should not. This was alsothe fault of Robert Swan, incidentally, who played theHeavenly Magistrate. He laughed at his own funny lines,which is the wrong thing to do in Heaven. If the production misconceived the title role, it didmanage to achieve a nice balance of the various parts.All were properly subordinated to Liliom, and yet sev¬eral managed good performances within their bound¬aries. Damian Barta was an appealing 1920’s Chicagogangster, appropriately out-of-place in suburban Hun¬gary, where the play is set. Elaine Cohen recreated Mrs.Hollunder as a vigorous Jewish mother and the charac¬ter succeeded, though the idea is a bit tired. I wouldhave preferred a vigorous Hungarian mother for achange. Phil Rosenthal plays a funny Wolf Beifeld, theparvenu husband of Marie, but because his is a contrastpart to Liliom’s, he has to be a bit dull. The obviousproblem with a play like this is that too many of themajor parts were written to be foils for Liliom and there¬fore come off too blandly even when done right.Despite these flaws in the conception and production, Iwas glad to see the play done, and, except for someshallowness in the title part, done as it should have been.The central idea of the play was maintained in almostall the roles, and the very emotional reunion at the end,to which the whole play leads, I found as moving in theperformance as in the reading. I would like to see moreof Molnar’s plays produced, so he will be known assomething more than just the grandfather of Carousel.William M. Carpenterbefore the approval of an urban renewal plan be deemedadmissible for such federal matching funds.Once this law passed, it opened the way for una¬bashed university expansion. In 1960, UC negotiated withthe City for the 60th and Cottage renewal sight (60th-61st,Stony to Cottage). UC, through the power of the Depart¬ment of Urban Renewal of Chicago, has been able toexpell 1700 units of mainly lower-income housing forblacks, mainly, but also poor whites and students. Thetotal number of expelled people from Hyde Park, Ken¬wood, and South Campus now exceeds 30,000.The renewal on South Campus is but the first thrustby UC to destroy Woodlawn to 63rd Street Chis strategywill be dealt with in next Friday’s article). The Directorfor Campus Planning told people, that one plot would beused for a “much needed” playground for the Lab Schoolof UC. Two days later, the Vice President for Financedenied this. The Left should always win such easy vic¬tories! On April 16, Dean O’Connell noted that the clear¬ance behind the American Bar Association would be usednot for a parking lot but an extension of the Bar Center.Just where will the parking for that facility go anyway?The School for Social Serivce Administration is ex¬panding its facilities to 61st Street. Gilbert Lee has thegall to pass off this expansion of a teaching and grant¬receiving unit as a day care center to serve Woodlawnwhen it will only handle 100 children — less than 1% ofthe needs of the community and will not be even a dropin the bucket for the working women of the Universityand the Hospital.The most amazing fact about urban renewal is thatit was not smashed by a supposedly progressive studentbody and community. The history of the Hyde Park re¬newal shows how white students and the communitywere perfectly willing to brutalize blacks, to use the copson them, to kick them out to preserve student safety, toprotect the elitist University. It is not that the “cause”of the renewal was white people’s attitudes; the “cause”was the centralized attempt by the UC Administration tocreate a “compatablfe” neighborhood for itself, by the downtown business interests which understood how prof¬itable urban renewal was for them, by the Daley oper¬ation which latched on to urban renewal to serve thedowntown business interests.But the fact remains: white students and communitypeople would not give up their privilege (some privilegeit turned out to be!) allied with the UC Administration,its police, its bulldozers, and failed to support the peoplewho were oppressed. Now that there is motion oncampus against urban renewal, which is tied to a politi¬cal attack on racism and political suppression, we wou-ddo well to remember the Black Panther Party’s words:“If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of theproblem.”m •-»* ■ . ■ • . .i ■ ‘4 c *~THE GREY CITYJOURNALHere is no continuing city, here is no abiding stay.IU the wind, ill the time, uncertain the profit,certain the danger.Oh late late late, late is the time, late too late, androtten the year;Evil the wind, and bitter the sea, and grey the sky,grey grey grey. T s EUotMurder in the Cathedral~ EditorMichael SorkinManaging EditorJessica SiegelStaff ExtraordinairePeter RabinowitzT. C. FoxThe Grey City Journal, published weekly in cooperation with TheChicago Maroon, invites staff participation and contributions fromthe University community and all Chicago. All interested personsshould contact the editor in the Maroon offices in Ida Noyes Hall.April 2$, 1969/Grey City JournaI/5The Seifs “What did you sayyour name was?”The Serfs stand proud nowIt is their landSounds of their livingAre the sounds of your lifeListen, bound to and transferredwith the soilNatural men singing of unrealizeddreamsSinking of love and jovThe Serfs, almost free nowRut never free of lifeMaking their musicOf this place, this timert?JTRUCKSFOR RENT WE RENTEVERYTHINGIN TOOLSUTILITY TRAILERSFOR RENTLAKE PARK RENTALS, INC.6633 SO. COTTAGE GROVE AVENUECHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60637DAILY 7 A.M. TO 8 P.M.SUNDAY 8 A M. TO 3 P M. PHONE667-8700PuricrsALi-Niem such3 PERFORMANCES FRIDAY 1 SATURDAY FOUOWING SAST REGULAR FUTUREApril 11Peter Sellers Stanley Kubrick sDR STRANGELOVEApril 12Robert MorseHOW TO SUCCEEDIN BUSINESSApril 18Steve McQueen James CoburiTHE GREAT ESCAPEApril 19Alan Arkin Audrey HepburnWAIT UNTIL DARK April 25Gregory PeckTHE GUNS OF NAVARONEuim<5k>April 26Maclaine lemmonIRMA LA DOUCETICKETS $1.50PLUS: FLASH GORDONAND THE CLAY PEOPLEEvery night a new chapterPLAYBOY 1VTMgATgR [I.'04 N 0IA&B0&N • PHONI 944 1414 May 2FellinisJULIETTE OF THE SPIRITSWSlMgV>May 3Burton Taylor Mike Nichol sWHO'S AFRAID OFVIRGINIA WOOLF?May 9Alan Bates de Broca sKING OF HEARTSMay 10LestersTHE KNACK Now thru April 26Paul Foster's"historical happening"Tom PaineStarring Michael Higginswith Ellen TravoltaGoodman Theatre200 S. Columbus Drive CE 6-2337Clark Ienjoy ourspecial studentrate7K t ataMf T timesfor college studentspresenting i.d. cardsat our box office• different double featuredailyODen 7:30 a.m.—lateshow 3 a.m.• Sunday film guild• every wed. and fri. isladies day—all gals 50clittle gal lery for galsonlyClark parking—1 doorsouth4 hrs. 95c after 5 p.m.write for your freemonthly program6/Grey City Journal/April 25. 1969• ■ - 'V \ -T. •> *!., ■ v There must be a safer way to meetgirls. Luckily for you, we put instruc¬tions on self-defense in every packageof Hai Karate1* After Shave andCologne. But even so, please be a littlecareful'how you use it. A good sociallife is fine, but the way you’re goingyou’ll be too battered to enjoy it.Hai Karate-be careful how you use it.©1969 L-HfT.rr Div., Chav Wi2"f & Co.. Inc.. in.Y., N.Y. 10017CENTER FOR URBAN STUDIESThe University of Chicago1969 Lecture SeriesCENTRALIZATIONVS.DECENTRALIZATIONAPRIL 28 KENNETH BOULDING, ECONOMIST,UNIVERSITY OF COLORADOMAY 1 SCOTT GREER, URBAN SOCIOLOGIST,NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITYMAY 8 JAMES FARMER. ASS'T. SECRETARY,DEPT. HEALTH, EDUCATION & WELFAREMAY 15 FLOYD HYDE ASS T. SECRETARY,DEPT. HOUSING & URBAN DEVELOPMENTPLACE: BREASTED HALL, ORIENTAL INSTITUTE1155 E. 58TH STREET (S. E. CORNER 58TH & UNIVERSITY)TIME: 8:00 P.M.ADMISSION FREE OF CHARGE*#* • » * « * • t50% Saleon all Humanities & Social Sciences HardboundBooksContinuesatStudent Co-OpHours: 9-10 Daily Reynolds Club Bsmt. THE NEW SCHOOL COLLE6Eis the senior college of the New School for Social Research, an urban universitylocated in Greenwich Village with all of New York City for its campus. Thereare three main New School units. One is the Graduate Faculty, a leading centerin the Social Sciences that offers training to 2,400 masters and doctoral studentsunder scholars like Economist Robert Heilbroner. Political Scientist Saul K.Padover, and Philosopher Hannah Arendt. A second is the New School eveningdivision, which provides a vast range of courses, workshops, and lectures forsome 12,000 New Yorkers annually, and serves as a major cultural center for the edmmunity-at-largc with programs of concerts, films, modern dance and art exhibitions. The newest unit is theNEW SCHOOL COLLEGEan undergraduate program, limited to 500 students. The College offers a two-year program forstudents who have already completed their sophomore year elsewhere, and who are interested inearning their B.A. with emphasis in humanities or social science, in a program which considersundergraduate education important in itself.Instead of lectures, every class in the College is designed as a seminar, with about twenty studentssitting around a table to learn through participatory discussion. Instead of textbooks, the studentconfronts the actual works produced by great minds of the past and the present-Aristotle andSartre, Freud and Erikson, Sophocles and Pinter. Marx and Marcuse. °hakespeare and Picasso,Joyce and Antonioni. Instead of requiring its teachers to engage in specialized research and publi¬cation, the College has a faculty whose primary commitment is to teaching, and it frees them fromextrinsic demands so that they can concentrate their talents on the instructional program. Insteadof taking a collection of unrelated courses, students take a Divisional Program-a set of coursesdesigned by the faculty to fit together into a total educational experience. And instead of a “major,”each student pury^his own Individual Study Program, in which he investigates, in considerabledepth and over a«g|-year period, a problem of his own choosing under the guidance of a tutor.The student takes three year-long courses during his first year and two year-long courses duringhis second. This constitutes his Divisional Program. The rest of his time is spent in Individual Stud¬ies, which he initiates during his first year and pursues for half of his time during his second year.THE DIVISIONAL PROGRAM: Unlike mostcolleges, we are not divided into specializeddepartments like English, History, or Psychol¬ogy. We have only two Divisions—the Humani¬ties and the Social Sciences. The enteringstudent normally elects to study in either thehumanities or the social sciences, but maychoose to work in both.The significance of this unorthodox Divi¬sional structure is twofold. It means that thestudent takes courses at an advanced level thatare genuinely interdisciplinary rather than nar¬rowly specialized. And it means that the studentis free, in the Individual Study portion of hisprogram, to investigate a problem that defiesthe boundaries of conventional departments,perhaps cutting across philosophy and drama,or psychology and economics.THE HUMANITIES: The humanities com¬prise all the creations of man-in music, paint¬ing, and literature, in history, science, andphilosophy. Yet at most colleges, a student whowishes to study these creations at an advancedlevel must limit himself arbitrarily to the studyof a single kind, and even to a single countryor period. There is no “department" at mostcolleges that will allow him to major in bothThomas Mann and Dostoyevsky, both Pinterand Proust. And even when he limits his studyto one of these figures, the intellectual toolsthat he requires for exploring the ideas of thatwriter in depth can only be acquired by takingcourses in still other departments-philosophyor theology or psychology. Similarly, a studentwho majors in the conventional philosophy de¬partment cannot develop, within his specializedcourses, the aesthetic sensitivity that he needsto penetrate fully the philosophy of thinkerssuch as Plato and Nietzsche and Heidegger,whose philosophic visions are expressed bymeans of image, myth, and dramatic action noless than by rational discourse. It is for thesereasons that our study of the humanities is in¬terdisciplinary rather than fragmented into de¬partmental “majors."We have designed a set of courses that fittogether into a comprehensive investigation ofthe creations of man. It is possible for us ina single course to juxtapose a treatise by Kant,a novel by Barth, and a movie by Godard inorder to deal fully with the problem under in¬vestigation. The emphasis is less on assemblinginformation about particular works than ondiscovering the methods of understanding andappreciation that can be applied to any work.The goal is to provide tools of analysis thatwill extend the student’s insight into the hu¬manities when he pursues his own IndividualStudy.THE SOCIAL SCIENCES: The most worth¬while research in the social sciences tends toinvolve two or more specialties simultaneously.Schumpeter was an economist, but Capitalism,Socialism and Democracy is as well philo¬sophic, political and historical. Myrdal is aneconomist, but The American Nepro draws onmany fields. Arendt is a philosopher, but To¬talitarianism is historical, sociological and psy¬chological. And current efforts to understandsuch diverse phenomena as the underdevelopednations, fascism, poverty, and hippies look toall of the social science disciplines. We havetherefore constructed an upper-level programin social science that is totally interdisciplinary.The emphasis is on formulating new prob¬lems rather than learning the answers to oldproblems, on mastering the methods by whichtruth can be discovered rather than memo¬rizing the truths already known, and on under¬standing the seminal concepts that have provedto be especially suggestive in illuminating so¬cial reality. The problems studied in this pro¬gram, as well as the readings, exhaust nouniverse, establish no canon, define no ortho¬doxy. They provide a strong foundation onwhich the student can build his IndividualStudy program. THE INDIVIDUAL STUDY PROGRAM:One-quarter of the junior year and one-halfof the senior year are reserved for individual¬ized study. The student pursues his own spe¬cial interests under the guidance of a facultytutor and by means of the analytical tools heis developing in the Divisional Program: hiswork generally culminates in a written paper.Some students form ther own seminars or en¬list members of the faculty to offer specialcourses; others take courses from the vastprograms, graduate, undergraduate, and adult,available at the New School for Social Re¬search-courses taught by such visiting special¬ists as Paul Douglas, Rollo May, Bayard Rustin,Leslie Fiedler. Lee Strasberg, Allen Ginsberg:and others choose to work independently ofany course structure, under the direct super¬vision of their tutors. The possibilities for In¬dividual Study are initiated by the studenthimself and limited only by his imaginationand intelligence.THE INTER-DIVISIONAL CORE: At thecenter of the Divisional Program are thecourses in which students and faculty fromboth of the Divisions come together for inten¬sive collaboration on common concerns. Per¬haps no other aspect of the College embodiesas radical a departure from the dominanttrends in American education as this one. whichwe call the Inter-Divisional Core. Its purposeis to discover new intellectual arts for dealingwith the problems men confront when theytry to know and act. We conceive these in¬tellectual arts as modern adaptations of theold “liberal arts,” whose original function wasto "liberate” men from old ways of seeingand doing.The readings in these courses are drawn fromall the areas of knowledge—humanities, socialsciences, natural sciences, and philosophy.Theyare selected to shed new light on some of thefundamental issues underlying all knowledgeand activity, issues like the relation betweenfact and value, theory and practice, subjec¬tivity and objectivity, thought and action. In arigorous and serious manner, the courses in¬vestigate questions like these: Are there “arts’of discovery-intellectual strategies for hittingupon new solutions to problems? Are thereany “hard facts” in the world-facts that can’tbe altered by the perspective from which theyare viewed? Is there a method for making one¬self into an innovator rather than a passivetransmitter of outside forces?THIS PROGRAM is now three years old. It hasdrawn students from over 300 colleges anduniversities throughout the U.S. Although itemphasizes the value of education for its ownsake, substantial numbers of its graduates havebeen admitted to top-ranking graduate schools.Tuition and fees are $1700. Most of the stu¬dents live in private quarters near the School.We do not provide housing. We have no gymnasium. Only teachers, students, classroomsand books.Admissions Office §SSfi&f* THE new schoolCOLLEGENew School fos Social Reseascm66 West 12th Street1 New York, N.Y. 10011Please send me the Bulletin and application tor theNew School College.I am now attendingNameAddressCity (College or University)State ZipV ' C/--.V .'/iVOApril 25, 1969/Grey City Journal/7: .: »&■:: ■' -,..' : " ■ ■ I . ‘i t . 'Mm;••. . ., &r. ,m. ; S'K'fcsif-V, %;p• .;.. "' ■: '., 5 ~... ; .;i* -i *y >": , :'i :■ &mm\p‘- f; i -Mtm., .iSst ,%--v ^8?. v 'X. I Dear Mr. Galvin:m j\ ^ . 7 i‘> * ,I speak of the future—thevacuumous invisibility of thef coming times. The future hasV one certainty f the totalacceptance by big business of7T,’i--the computer as a replacement "7for the office worker^ Businesshas followed the times, evenpaced the times. Therefore, the' speed, accuracy, and futurecreativity of developingcomputers cannot be denied by TBTfuture business. Ilia m-I' :^s ; ’ 5 .•7?7"' ::W7.* *,4';i ' ' " • ' '' ' ■ ' • :in: Mr. Galvin: Dear Mr. Shelby:— — - - — - Why should man fear the Its uses in long-range economicmachine? It s a tool for the - policy planning by governmentelimination of drudgery i . and business are infinite. Afor freeing people from limiting projection of population growthroutine. Each more sophisticated concentrations five years ahead.^ application opens another door . or twenty, will make possibler a a lief ir nlanc fnr 4 r\ rli'WlStiitlftt Iti0^ ■'} % ' : -iisy-K . 7:7 ;.c::■ 117;7>;■ 77 ;7 ■' •• '7 ' V,-jyy&iC ’■'' ■ ■ 'T7|;:7,7>' Mikcc- -sM tiMi*s rl/ -1 ’" f;'\;y *5 ’ : V t"' o 0.7V7' -7v'f-V71->■ ;7 ' ■7..7.'^ 7'.,.7;:'''> C V'" ‘r'*It'il: The clerk, the bureaucratic non-entity of business, will bereplaced by the complexity, yet r jpractical simplicity of thecomputer. A computer gathersand analyzes information fasterand more accurately than man.The memory lock of any computeroffers the most logical answerIto any given problem andtheoretically possesses an;Unlimited memory. And if sciencecan duplicate in the machine theDIM A code of the human, thecreative thoughts of the humancould be synthesized in themachine.The computer's primary, codecould essentially simulate man'slife controlling functionregulated by the mysterious DIMAamino acids code. Whenresearch, as at the Universityof Chicago, refines its DNAinvestigation and applies it tocybernetics, the machine couldachieve the creative function it 4„,oWSMhnow lacks. Thus, it is conceivable•“*-* “ iwmF*c *•' m or highway constructionAs to business' acceptance of the programs, or the thousands upon[■ apparent philosophical implica thousands of goods and services*1 1 tions of a machine being better requisite for further up-gradingk talented than man, let's expand our living standards,your question to include societyas a whole- Your suggested 7; And what about the computerized% M ~ 2 potential of the machined services touching all of us thatm|2|fl*|| I Ilf1 Z inventiveness, after all, would not already are taken for granted# only affect the structure of' f;T business and its practices butthe role of the jndividual in ^every institution of the com¬munity— education, government, individual income tax returns . . .the professions, in fact, man's : even notifications from jday to da|rTiving environment. insurance companie:Already many of these changes premiums are due./have been manifest. , y \ programming traffic lights tocope with rush-hour congestionV. . reconciliation of monthlybank:statements processingturnseven notifications frominsurance companies when"|| l%': §. § pAll of this is part of theThink of the brigades of increasingly fast-paced tempo ofbookkeepers trapped through the our times. Man now demandsyears into peering from under "more", and he demands ittheir green eyeshades at "faster." This posesmounting columns of figures requirements best met by widerWith perfection of the adding usages of computers, and inmachine and comptometer, their turn prompts the need for .working world assumed a whole computers with increasinglynew dimension. No more , sophisticated characteristicsscratching out monthly to keep pacestatements with a steel-tippedpen. Instead, many have assumed The point is that the philosophicfunctionally more interesting implications arising from themm' ■ 7 ' ; . .'7.' "7-‘'■ ■. : - _ ■ ..,‘ ' X (>•' y 11mmm item or develop a thought wellbeyond man’s creative limits.The final determining forceunfortunately is man's selectiveprogramming into the machine.Will man thus fear the power ofthe machine? Will computers bedeveloped to their fullestpotential, and allowed tofunction? More important, willbusiness accept the apparentphilosophical implications of amachine having better talentsthan man?than man?Yours sincerely,/Iah.■■■' -'l"'"-:.; m Arnold Shelby fiLatin American Studies;Tulane fm - * W responsibilities by applying the economic and socialskills, and wider knowledge, * consequences of computer dnppHpfl tn ikp thpQp tnnk As,a complexes already has beenaccepted by society. f4- • ; y ^ f n r“ • *tParadoxically, as computerizedneeded to use these tools. As a complexes already has been _the machine could invent an result, the individual gained accepted by society.a -ve|| | ■ : ^ v<.more capabilities, and industry,'■HWHHMMHHi more capacity. - Paradoxically, as computerize"’ -- functions broaden, job lossesThe computer has broadened the don’t necessarily follow. To thehorizon much further. With itscharacteristic abilities forsensing, feedback, and contrary, new fields ofemployment open, and peopiedirectly affected acquire newself-adjustment—the skills and abilities which improvedetermination of changing their earning capacities to therequirements without human extent that each utilizes theintervention masses of data can opportunities proffered. Isn’t thisbe digested and analyzed, and a capsulated instance of thecomplex calculations‘ HHmeet the needs for which force-drive for progress,it is programmed. and man's growth? ;Y'-■ / • ' • ' . '„ ' s, V - ,y. - '* . -.. .No one really knows to whatIts applications already have had exotic limits computers can bea profound effect on almost developed. The day may wellevery phase of our daily lives. come when "creative thought"Look, for example, at its is a characteristic. But I antemployment in teaching: confident that during theprogrammed lesson plans in a ■ intermediate evolutionary steps,dozen subjects that permit man's own intellectualstudent responses, and instant sophistication will continue tocorrection of errors, which outpace the machine, and assurejss to control over a product of his ownthe extent of each individual's making. Certainly there's no realcapacity And the day is not far cause for worry, however, untiloff when many university the machine learns how tolibraries will be linked togetherin a vast information retrievalsystem. A question fed into a plug itself in%i -* <u, 4 ',-''IS ANYBODY LISTEN I NGTO CAMPUS VIEWS?EN ARE society.. and from their perspective career in journalism. AH of these Dialogues will appear inas heads of major corporations are this publication, and other campusexchanging views through means of ln the course of the entire Dialogue newspapers across the countryvWHu&S* ^ r,v»r„ IX, „ - v;- newspapers across the country,40mr a campus/corporate Dialogue Program. Arthur Klebanoff. a Yale throughout this academic yearf+M* Program on specific issues raised by senior, will probe issues with Mr. Campus comments are im/itpd andThree chief executive officers —The leading student spokesmen. Galvin; as will Mark Bookspan, a should be forwarded MrGoodyear Tire & Rubber Company's Chemistry major at Ohio State, and DeYoung Goodvear Akron OhioChairman. Russell DeYoung, The Dow Here, Arnold Shelby, in Liberal Arts at David G. Clark, in graduate studies at Mr Doan Dow Chemical MidlandChemical Company's President. Tulane. is exploring a point with Mr. Stanford; with Mr. DeYoung, and ZchioTn' or Mr cZn 'l\An nrn a 'H. D. Doan, and Motorola's Galvin. Keenly interested in Latin similarly. David M. Butler. Electrical Tranlfn Park minot as Toroo iateChairman. Robert W. Galvin—are American Dolitical and social Engineering. Michigan State, and ' ' PAmerican political and social Engineering. Michigan State, andresponding to serious questions and problems. Mr Shelby toured various Stan Chess. Journalism. Cornell,ana #i .Jll-* A-i-jwra** *•»•* •*7 |: y:i- : ’