Faculty Senate to meetin extra session May 27A special meeting of the 800-member Faculty Senate hasbeen called for Friday, May 27th. The Senate normally meetsonly once a year to hear the report of the President. NoVol. 74-No. 56 The University of Chicago Friday, May 20,1966 a2enda has been set for the meeting.[ | Prior to the meeting of the Sen-Votes to boycott SG referendum ate, the Committee of the Council three meetings. The Committeeof the Senate will meet Saturday will report to the Council nextmorning with representatives ofStudent Government, StudentsAgainst the Rank, and Students fora Free Choice, to establish a tem¬porary student-faculty committeeon draft policy.THE COMMITTEE of the Coun-ments and against the present Selective Service System in general at a meeting Wednesday dentT'wnfiam*Zimmerman0 aP rep-afternoon of the Students Against the Rank. resentative of Students Against theThe group acted in response to the assertions of several student speakers that the anti- B^nk, kyan^Vogel,^ a 'spokes-^rank group was open to charges of ——Anti-rank group hits 2-Sby Gary ChristianaApproximately 250 students voted to take a position against the practice of student defer-self-interest in opposing class rank¬ing for the draft unless it publiclydeclared opposition to student de¬ferments.The Wednesday stand on 2-S de¬ferments was intended to be only aposition statement by the group, incontrast to its demands for actionby the administration to suspendany decision on ranking until thefall quarter and give students a le¬gitimate decision-making vote inthe ranking decision.EARLIER in the meeting, whichwas held outdoors on the quadran¬gles near the administration build¬ing. the group voted to boycott theStudent Government draft referen¬dum scheduled for May 25.The referendum was suggestedlast week by SG as a means of de¬termining student opinion on theuse of a class rank for selectingstudents to be drafted.Chris Hobson, a member of theexecutive committee of the Stu¬dents Against the Rank, cited someof the reasons for the group’s de¬cision to boycott the referendum.“Our demand was that the deci- man for Students for a FreeChoice, to send three delegates’ each to the Committee meeting.The committee to be established' would study alternatives for UCpolicy on draft deferments andclass ranks. It would prepare a re-" port for the final meeting of theI Council of the Senate on June 7.,According to Charles D. O’Con¬nell, director of admissions andsecretary of the faculties, the ac¬tion of the Committee was taken atmeetings April 12 and May 10.The special meeting of the Sen¬ate was called at the request of 78faculty members who signed a pe¬tition initiated by Marshall Cohen,associate professor of philosophy.Cohen said he felt issues were atstake “which should be discussedby a larger group than the Councilof the Senate.”The Committee of the Councilheld two extra meetings on Sundayand Wednesday of this week, in ad¬dition to its regular session onStudents at the outdoor meeting Wednesday of the Students Tuesday. Committee member AlanAgainst the Rank voted to oppose the practice of student defer- W. Gewirth, professor of philoso-t phy, said that the issue of defer¬ments had been discussed at all• { £■* % . Hta-.vsee “how a referendum can beconstrued as a threat by a groupthat believes in participatory de¬mocracy. The entire University isconcerned with the issue of rank¬ing, and this is a mode of expres- Divinity students attack deferments;support demands of anti-ranking groupForty students in the Uni- mands of the Students Against the. ....... n - , , v „ Rank. We call for a change in thesion (to rank) be put off to allow sion for those students who didn’t versity’s divinity school have official D0iicy of the University ofparticipate in the sit-in.” signed a statement expressing Chicago.”STUDENTS Against the Rank dissatisfaction with the present Last night Paul Lauter, a rep-also approved several other mo- policies of the Selective Service resentative of the Americantions at the Wednesday meetings, system, particularly the current 4- Friends Service Committee to-The group decided to take a posi- D deferment for divinity students. gether with professors David Bak-tion against the national draft The statement says, in part, “We an, Joseph Sittler, and Dona dions. “Remember that it took us exam, and to send letters to all take no comfort from the fact that tef a meeS ofmuch longer than that to formulate major newspapers to clarify their some of us have received special on me a a gclearlv our own position.” position. deferments and exemptions due to dl™^nfh°o1 StUdentS m bWlUHOBSON criticized the referen- The students also took a position vocational choices. We feel s-nwoauoi criucizta me reiereuo that this policy discriminates “We would like to get similardum for not expressing explicitly S 7. ® SR " aginst those who, for their own discussions going in all divinitythe opinion of those whom ranking lective Service purposes. But they per$onal reasons> cannot enter a schools, especially those connecteddirectly concerns, male undergrad- decided not to demand that the reiigi0us vocation in good faith.... with undergraduate student bodies,uates. As presently planned, the University refuse to furnish grades „|urthermore we& the such as at Columbia or Harvard,”S °n req ’ 38 aS ' rank We feel that ifTcational stated Ronald Saunders, first-yeardents to vote—male and female, students Against the Rank will choice is not acceptable as a cri- student in the divinity school.andgraduate and undergraduate. begin a daily newsletter to report terion of expendability, neither is one of the organizers of the move-He also attacked the referendum on recent developments in the anti- ciass standin« Both criteria not mentfor being mmbtading. “It's only an rank moveraen, starting today, at Zy ha^ dlficiencles! but bothopinion poll. We are demandin. a i pm. the newsletter will be deliv- are also irrelevant to militaryrole in decision-making. We al- erec[ orally on the grass near the duty.administration building. “Therefore, we support the de¬full and complete discussion Areferendum only two weeks afterthe sit-in seems to be rushingthings.”It is unlikely, he declared, that amajority of the students voting willbe expressing considered opin- Tuesday.GEWIRTH said he favors great¬er discussion of what role studentsshould play in decision-making inthe University. “I would welcomediscussion on how student parti¬cipation in decision-making shouldbe made more effective,” he said.“I want to get at the basic causesof the difficulties we have beenthrough.”Both Gewirth and Committeemember William H. Zachariasen,Ernest DeWitt Burton distin¬guished service professor of phys¬ics, said they had been discusingthe deferment issue extensivelywith students and other facultymembers. Zachariasen said theCommittee was seeking to set upa “permanent channel for student-faculty communication.”College faculty setsspecial talks Thur.on draft, gradingA special meeting of theCollege faculty to discuss grad¬ing and the draft will be heldnext Thursday at 3:30 pm inKent 107. Announcement of thismeeting came yesterday fromWayne Booth, dean of the College.Booth explained that many mem¬bers of the College faculty haveexpressed a strong interest in theassembling of such a meeting. TheCollege faculty ordinarily meetsonly once a year, official policy forthe College being set by the forty-man College Council. The facultycan be called together, however,either by the Dean or by the peti¬tion of twenty percent of the Col¬lege faculty.The campus-wide concern aboutdraft policy seemed to Booth tojustify the fullest possible discus¬sion by the College faculty. Howev¬er, any recommendation arrived atin the meeting can be transmittedto the University Council only asinformation, not as an official deci-ready have influenced opinion.If the results are unfavorable toour position, the administrationwill point to it and say the majori¬ty is against us. The referendum isloaded: it can’t help us, and it canhurt us.”Student Government PresidentTom Heagy said that he did not Meetings of the movement’ssteering committee were heldTuesday and yesterday to plan fu¬ture action. In calling the meeting, Boothstated, “Everyone I talk with, inthe faculty, in the administration,and among the students, agreesthat we must have a full reconsid¬eration of our draft policy iri thefall. There are many signs in thepast few days that Selective Ssrv-ice policy is being extensively re¬viewed, and nobody can predictwhat the situation will be by thetime we return in October.There will be no Tuesdayissue of the Maroon nextweek in preparation for thefinal issue next Friday. Wisconsin students re-enact UC sit-inSG schedules referendum on ranking;May 25 vote is open to all studentsStudent Government will conductIts student referendum on classranking for the draft next Wednes¬day, May 25. The referendum willbe open to all students—male andfemale, undergraduate and grad¬uate.May 25 is the latest possible dateon which the referendum can beheld under the May 13 resolution ofthe SG Assembly which authorizedthe ranking referendum. Accordingto Danny Boggs, chairman of theSG election and rules committee,the referendum was delayed to thelast day "to allow the fullest possi¬ble discussion of the issues in¬volved."Students Against the Rank has called for a boycott of the referen¬dum.Ballot boxes for the referendumwill be placed as follows:• 8:30 am—noon. Law school,business east, social science lobby,Bookstore, Harper Library, andMandel Hall.• 12:30 pm—4 pm. Medicalschool (until 2:15), anatomy (2:30-4), Eckhart-Ryerson second floor,social scienco lobby, Bookstore,Harper Library, and Mandel Hall.e 4:30 pm-—6:30 pm. Burton-Judson, Pierce, New Dorms, Book¬store (until 5), InternationalHouse, Mandel Hall (until 5).The full text of the referendummay be found on page six. MADISON, WIS.—Over 700University of Wisconsin stu¬dents here staged this weekwhat looked very much like are-run of last week’s UC sit-inagainst university co-operation withthe selective service system.Just like UC students, the Wis¬consin demonstrators were protest¬ing their university’s agreement tosend information on grades andplace in class rankings of malestudents with the students’ permis¬sion. They also included a demandthat UW not offer its facilities forthe national draft tests of students’ability.JUST AS at UC, they decidedthe best way to stimulate discus¬sion and action on their demandswould be to stage a sit-in at theadministration building. Theirspeeches were just as long-winded,sometimes just as fervent, and by David L. Aikenlasted as far into the moring as atUC, although not as many UW stu¬dents seemed to want to bring inthe larger political issues of theFaculty Senate Committeeasks national draft parleyThe Committee of the Council ofthe Faculty Senate has called for anational meeting this summer orfall on the draft, Provost EdwardLevi revealed yesterday.The conference, which would lastseveral days, would include nation¬al experts presenting "as manyviewpoints as possible," saidCharles O'Connell, secretary of thefaculties.O'Connell emphasized that no def¬inite plans have been made yet.He said the conference would aimat finding "the most fair and expe¬ditious means of operating thedraft." He said it would not belimited to any one aspect, such asclass ranking. Vietnam war to the discussion ofdraft policy.While the UW administrationbuilding, in contrast to the adbuilding at UC, is brand new andarchitecturally distinguished, thefloors at both buildings were notmade for sleeping. Blankets andbleary eyes were the typical adorn¬ment.Styled after UCThe Wisconsin sit-in began Mon¬day evening, and, according to aparticipant, was to a significant ex¬tent patterned after the UC pro¬test, which was just ending thatsame night after five days of defacto possession of the ad building.Lauren Charous, a UW studentwho formerly attended UC and hasbeen active in Madison’s Commit¬tee to End the War in Vietnam,said UW students were “resentful"about taking the draft exam in or¬der to retain their student defer¬ment status. The Thursday before(Continued on page five)Jltiers to the editor.vX< •Lowinsky against releaseof ranks to (haft bea dsTO THE EDITOR:, Whether students should bedrafted for service into the armedforces, or whether they should bedeferred as a matter of principle,is a question of national policy, theformulation of which is not in thehands of the universities. Butwhether students should be de¬ferred on the basis of their grades,whether the universities shouldsubmit a student’s grades or hisrank in class to the draft board,this is indeed a matter that affectsthe universities; it affects academ¬ ic work and standards and, lastbut not least, the relationship be¬tween teacher and student.Does the University dispose of itsobligation by passing on to the in¬dividual student the decisionwhether or not to submit hisgrades? Will not students with ex¬cellent grades normally request theUniversity to communicate theirgrades to the draft board? Will notstudents with poor grades tend towithhold permission to announcetheir grades? Is not the freedomof decision which the Universityostensibly grants to the student un¬real? Is it not passing on to thestudent the responsibility to faceup to a genuine academic problem and to take a stand on it?We all know the limitations andpitfalls of grading. Quite a few out¬standing men of our time, includ¬ing Albert Einstein, had poorgrades. Also, many students whostart out with poor grades in theirundergraduate years show a re¬markable capacity for growth intheir senior and graduate years.Grades and class standing meanone thing to an experienced teach¬er, another to a draft board offi¬cial.Most of all, the willingness of theUniversity to reveal the grades ofits students to the draft board, al¬beit by permission of the student,stultifies the learning process andPETERSON'SUltra-Modern Storage Facilities Protect Your PossessionsCONTAINERIZED CARE"withOur beautiful new warehouse features everyadvance in scientific storage . . alarm gong,anti-fire sprinklers, humidity control, insulatedwalls, dust-free floors ... to mention a few.PETERSON moving & storage eo.DAILY PICKUP IN UNIVERSITY AREAOur "Containerized Care" eliminates piece-by¬piece re-handling . . . assures maximum speed,safety, economy. Each item is wrapped, andpadded then packed in giant, sturdy containers.phone: 646-4411 Authorized Agent for United Van line*Serving tha Graator Hyda Park Araa Sene* 1919III. MC 1W1SUMMER JOBSFOR STUDENTSAPPLICATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTEDFOR SUMMER JOBSWITH MAJOR NATIONAL CORPORATIONSTUDENTS EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER WANTED TO LEARNMARKETING, SALES PROMOTION, AND BRANDIDENTIFICATION TECHNIQUES DURING THE SUMMER.HIGH LEVEL EXECUTIVE MANAGEMENT TRAINING COURSESGIVEN TO QUALIFIED APPLICANTS.SALARY $105 PER WEEK FOR THE FIRST THREE WEEKS.$130 PER WEEK AND BONUSES STARTING FOURTH WEEK.HIGH PAY TRAVEL SEE EUROPESCHOLARSHIPWork anywhere in theWin one of Earn at least $1,500 U S. or Canada. Win anfifteen $1,000 for the summer. Many all-expense-paidacholerships. students make $3,000 may work holiday in Europeand more. OVERSEAS for an entire week.BEST POSITIONS GOING FAST; CALL TODAY FOR APPOINTMENT!9:00 a.m. -1:00 p.m.Oak Park EU.6-8008Evanston 475-2543Chicago Loop North ST.2-4362Chicago Loop South 346-6108Hammond 931-4311Milwaukee and all of Wis BR.6 4119Grand Rapids and all of Mich 459-5079 subtly bul surely undermines therelationship of confidence betweenteacher and student. The studentwho prefers going to school togoing to war will tend to avoidtough courses and tough graders;the most honest teacher will findhis judgment consciously or sub¬consciously influenced by theknowledge of the consequences ofhis grading. The student receivingpoor grades would have to be su¬perhuman not to resent the teacherhanding them out. All students, ir¬respective of their grades, mustfind it hard to accord respect andconfidence to universities and uni¬versity teachers who lack the cour¬age to stand up to the Governmentwhen its policies infringe upon theacademic process and the relation¬ship between teacher and student.The Government can be pardonedif it does not know w'here to drawthe line. But if the universities re¬fuse to teach the Government in amatter vitally affecting academicwork, how is the Government tolearn?What I propose to the Universityadministration is something verysimple and something very conserv¬ative. Simple: that the Universitynot involve itself in the executionof the national policy on draft; con¬servative: that the University con¬serve, indeed jealously guard, theprerogative to determine academicprocesses by academic standards,to keep out all extraneous influ¬ences that would pervert theacademic process, and to allow nointerference between teacher andstudent, which means that the Uni¬versity decline compliance with therequest for grades and rank inPIERRE ANDREfoe# ffottorinfParisian chicton skHladtwtr atylMs at9242 Hyde Park PM.2291 K. 71* it.DO 1-072710% Student DiiceuntInternationalFESTIVALHyde ParkMETHODIST CHURCHFri. & Sat., May 20-21Food and Entertainment$1 don. admits both nightsOSCAR BROWN JR.Sat. Evening class on the part of the draftboard. The question whether suchaction is legal is not a matter to bedetermined by the universities; itwill have to be tested in the court*.If the Selective Service wishes tointroduce the question of intellec¬tual standards, let them determinethese standards through their owntests and devices. But let the Uni¬versity by all means steer clear ofinvolvement, let it preserve the in¬tegrity of the learning process, andlet it protect zealously this mostprecious thing, the relationshipbetween teacher and student.Finally, let the University makea clear public statement on its pol¬icy. The nation’s universities wouldwelcome such a statement. It is in¬cumbent upon a great private, in¬dependent university such as ourgto take the lead in a matter thatdeeply affects academic policy andteacher-student relationship.EDWARD E. LOWINSKYDEPARTMENT OF MUSICAnti-rank demonstration'most improper exorcise’TO THE EDITOR:I am an alumna of the College(1956), a current employee of theUniversity, and I am sensitive toand aware of the perplexing socialand moral implications of currentSelective Service policy. I alsohave profound doubts as to thewisdom of our course of militaryand political action in Viet Nam.But one thing I rtn not perplexedabout; In my opinion, the demon¬stration in the administrationbuilding was a most improper ex¬ercise in academic freedom, per¬sonal freedom, or any other free¬dom you care to bjjng up—exceptpossibly the freedom to cut offyour own nose to spite your face.For instance, does it not occur toany of these students that this willbe called simply a University ofChicago version of a rather com¬mon springtime phenomenon, thepanty raid? Who can take themseriously now? Quite apart fromthe public impression of irresponsi¬bility and intrasigence these stu¬dents have produced, there aresome other considerations to betaken into account.It may come as a severe shockto some readers of the Maroon thatthis University has a substantialnumber of serious, dedicated, andvery hard-working employees whotry to give our best service to stu-(Continued on page seven)MODEL CAMERAQUALITY 24 HR.DEVELOPING■(PUT PHOTO ADVICENSA DISCOUNTS1142 L 55H» HY 9-9219C^ltoir (Concertat theFIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH57tb and WoodlawnPROGRAMBrahms SchicksalsliedFour MadrigalsThompson Frostiana Country SongsSchumann Frauenliebe und -lebenJoyce Heinrikson, sopranoHanson Cherubic HymnHANS WURMANdirectorSUNDAY, MAY 22,1966-B PMa • CHICAGO MAROON May 20, I960ACE speaker backs draffby Slade UnderJohn Morse, a representative of the American Council ons Education (ACE), defended the council’s policy of support forthe present Selective Service system in a speech last Wed-N nesday at a panel discussion on the draft in Mandel Hall.The present Selective Servicesystem may be defective and bet- (hey are dea|jng wUh ,he meMS bylougS! Morsee5stJessed b“ unrn which the war ia hc stated'such an alternative is found the Janowitz said there was no mor-ACE must support the present sys- al basis for student deferment andtern. that the University has avoided the■ Also participating in the discus- ttues^°n of deferment. “I cannotSion were Bill Zimmerman of Stu- see the Present Selective Servicedents Against Rank, Lynn Vogel of syste™ being maintained verypro-ranking Committee for a Free 1°Q2< he added.Choice, professor of psychology Morse said the present defer-Milton Rosenberg and professor of ment system is based upon twoanthropology Morris Janowitz. principles. First, that all men ares THROUGHOUT his speech and subject of conscription, but thatthe questioning which followed, on*y a limited number are needed;Morse stressed that the criteria of an(* second, that some men canclass rank and testing were merely kest serve society in positions out-guidelines set up by the national s*^e army, such as by beingSelective Service board to aid local a student.boards in issuing deferments. No The present system of defer-university is compelled to comply ment, though imperfect, is the bestwith a request of the draft board, available, he said,but only with the request of an in- THE CRITERIA of grades, rank,dividual, he pointed out. and tests were set by the national“The university is not being used draft board so that local draftby the Selective Service system,” boards may be more uniform inMorse said. “The decision is beingmade by the individual.” The uni-^ versity is only serving as a con¬veyor of information, he added.Morse said that legal opinionheld that it would be illegal for aschool to withhold grade and rankagainst the wishes of an individualstudent. their policy of deferment. But thecriteria, Morse stressed, are only aguideline; the local boards canbreak them if they wish.He made several observationsabout the present deferment poli¬cy:• grades are the students prop¬erty and can be disposed of anyway the student sees fit;• students’ records must bemade comprehensible by theschools. Class rank is a means tothis end.• the university merely acts asa conveyor at the request of the in¬dividual student, not the local draftboards.• Selective Service tests areonly used to supplement the aca¬demic information.Of the possible replacements forthe present conscription system,Morse felt that the alternativeservice plan, by which all male cit¬izens could choose how they wouldserve their country, is the best.The ACE has approximately 1,-200 members made up of colleges,junior colleges, and universitifes.Its policies are not binding upon itsmembers. Booth forms student-faculty committeeto seek ways of improving campus lifeA new student-faculty com¬mittee on student life was an¬nounced yesterday by dean ofthe College Wayne Booth. Thenew group will concern itself withfinding facilities and arrangementsfor improving social and intellec¬tual life in the College community.Originally recommended by thead hoc student-faculty committeeon social rules, the formation ofthe committee is the result ofmonths of discussion.The faculty members who haveagreer. to serve on the committee,at the invitation of Booth and ofprofessor of English Stuart Tave,chairman of the committee of theCollege Council, are Joseph J.Schwab, professor of naturalsciences and education; HermanSinaiko, associate professor of hu¬manities; Joseph Smith, professorof geophysical sciences; Morris Ja¬nowitz, professor of sociology;John Cawelti associate professor ofEnglish and humanities; and Mar¬vin Mikesell, associate professor ofgeography. The first business of the commit¬tee will be determination of thebest way to select, or elect, sixstudent representatives. Sugges¬tions about finding a proper meth¬od of student representation arebeing solicited by Booth and thedean of students Warner Wick,both of whom will be ex officiomembers of the committee.British envoy lo speakSir Patrick Dean, the BritishAmbassador to the UnitedStates, will speak on “Prob¬lems in British foreign policy”Tuesday in Breasted Hall at 8:30pm.The lecture will be preceded bya reception and dinner at theQuadrangle Club beginning at 6:30pm. Students who would like to at¬tend can sign up in the StudentGovernment office, second floor,Ida Noyes Hall. Tickets to the re¬ception and dinner cost $4.75.Rosenberg, speaking afterMorse, said that the students whooppose the idea of student defer¬ment and ranking do so becausethey do not want to be involved inthe “discriminatory distribution ofdeath.”BY OPPOSING the SelectiveService system they are directlyopposing the Vietnam war, because JESSELSON’SSERVING HYDE PARK FOR OVER SO YEARSWITH THE VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 E. 53rdSAMUEL A BELL•Wn* 8hmU From BelP*SINCE 19264701 S. DwdinNf AmKEnwood 8-3150 HONDA SOUTH & SOUTH EASTSEE ALL MODELS50 C.C. TO 444 C.C.SALES • SERVICE - PARTS• PICK UP t DELIVERY• EASY FINANCING• LOW INSURANCE RATESMl 3-4500BOB NELSON MOTORS CHICAGO'S LARGEST &4136 s cottage grove just AROUND THE CORNERth# MAROON classified for your campus sales representativeMARRIAGE and PREGNANCYTESTSBlood Typing t Rh FactorSAME DAY SERVICEComplete Lab. EKG l BMR FACILITIESHOURS: Mon. thru Sat. 9 AM 10 PMHYDE PARK MEDICALLABORATORY5240 S. HARPER HY 3 2000EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty Discount KEYPUNCHING• 500 CARDS OR MORE •• FAST TURN AROUND •FOR ESTIMATE CALLSHEILA BLIXT 332-4708R. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.33 NORTH LaSALLE STREETCHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60602COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTSUNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKS itr> if kank"NIV OR LOANSat tow at$375.1194 BAST 55th STRUTMS 4-1200MU Battered Book SaleAs much as 50% and more ReductionOn shelf-worn and slightly soiled books.Art books, fiction, history, juveniles,paperbacks and many other categories.A great pre-inventory clearance ofour stock.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Eilii Ave. Action Against White Supremacyin RhodesiaTUESDAY, MAY 24 - 6:30 - 8 PMBREASTED HALL1155 E. 58th St.THE REV. KENNETH CARSTENS, SOUTH AFRICAPenal of Rhodesian StudentsMay 23, MONDAY LECTURELaw School Auditorium, 8 pmKENNETHBOELDING^Revolution andDevelopment"Sentry jjreportsgood news (at last!) aboutcar insurance savingsfor young menIf you’re a man under 26, or have a son whois, you know what a big extra premium you payfor car insurance. Now, Sentry Insurance offersa 15% discount for young men who qualify aasafe drivers. (This is in addition to Sentry’s 15%discount for driver education.)HOW TO QUALIFYYoung men under 25 qualify for the SentryPreferred Youthful Driver Discount on the basisof a simple questionnaire that takes only about20 minutes. It Is not a test of driving skill orknowledge. It is completely confidential. Therela no penalty for young men who do not qualifyfor the extra discount.ACT NOWFor full details about the Sentry PreferredYouthful Driver examination, call or drop a cardto me today.JIM CRANE8124 WOODLAWN AVE. 374-0350A MbSENTRY. fflNSURANCEHardware Mutual* • Sentry LifeMay 20, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 8, / r .v, 3W1': ’', V ,‘v ^ ~ \*.v ' Iav .'VIfit fs I■■. I. 1;h■■■ tf: j; i-r ii ,1i 4 SG to try course evaluation again;forms will be handed out next weekAfter two unsuccessful efforts, SG will once again attemptto put together a course evaluation booklet to be publishednext fall.A new questionnaire will be distributed and collected out¬side of 30 selected classrooms dur- Calendar of Eventsing the week of May 23, a methodof distribution designed to achievea maximum possible return in aprimarily non-residential college.The questionnaires, along withan instruction sheet, will be passedout as students enter the 30 class¬rooms on Monday and Tuesday,May 23 and 24. The completedforms will be collected as studentsenter those rooms for classes onWednesday, Thursday, and Friday.This collection will be followedup in the dormitories by a room-to-room pick-up on Monday evening,May 30.THE PROJECT is under the di¬rection of Cliff Adelman, a grad¬uate student in the committee onthe history of culture, who foundedand edited the Course AnalysisBulletin of Brown University.The new questionnaire is mod¬eled on the one used at Brown,but with a number of modificationsdesigned to fit the academic condi¬tions at Chicago.Adelman said he achieved a 40plus per cent return of these formsat Brown, and believes that thenew distribution and collection sys¬tem at Chicago, “far preferable to placing cardboard boxes in darkobscure corners,” will make a sim¬ilar return possible."OUR OBJECT," he said “is toprove to students, faculty, and theadministration that this thing canbe done, and done successfully andresponsibly. If we do it once, I’mconvinced the program will be self-perpetuating.”A list of 170 specified courseswill be presented to each student,along with six questionnaires. Hewill be instructed to fill out ques¬tionnaires for only those courseswhich he has taken which also ap¬pear on the list.Among the types of courses thatwill not appear on the list are alleiementary and intermediate lan¬guage courses, all courses mostlikely to be taken by concentratorsonly, and all courses undergoingmajor reorganization or change ininstructor for the academic year1966-1967.Deadline for copy for fho lastissue of tho Chicago LiteraryReview will be Friday, May 20.All copy must bo in on that data.Document Reproduction PlaquePermanent replica of treasured documents beautifully don* In stainless steel. Theprocess is photographic and does not harm or alter the original document inany way. The lettering is metal fused to metat ... is actually raised fromfhe surface. The finished plaque is mounted on hand rubbed walnut with bracketfor hanging.Size 11“ x 13“ $25.00THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO K00KST0RE5802 ELLIS AVE.-RIGHT ON CAMPUS-l FOR YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS LARGE OR SMALL- AIR, STEAMSHIP, TOURS, RAIL -MIDWAY TRAVEL SERVICELOBBY "Ad" BUILDINGTel. Ml 3-0800—Ext. 2301. 2302, 2303NO CHARGE FOR OUR SERVICES EXCEPTNOMINAL FEE FOR RAIL TICKETSNOW Storage Special!/You can have Ample Closet Space by using our Safe StorageFacilities for your Out Of Season Garments. Full protectionagainst . . .FIRE • THEFT • HEAT • MOTHSAsk about our Sensational Thrifty Box Storage.. .A RealMoney Saving Value!THE Wa> Kook CO.Cleaners • Launderers1013-17 E. 61st STREET Ml 3-74471174 E. 55th - FA 4-3500For Over Fifty Tears . . .FINE DRY CLEANING Friday, May 20LECTURE: “Th« genetic code,’' M.Nirenberg, National Institutes of health,Abbott 101, 11:30 am.LECTURE: “Contemporary Bengali po¬etry, with some asides on me harm doneby Allah Ginsburg,” Jyotirmoy Datta,poet, and journalist, Foster lounge, 4pm.LECTURE: “The fourth circulation,”Dr, J.M. Yoffey, professor of anatomy.University of Bristol, England. Anatomy101, 4 pm.LECTURE: “The United States andChina,” A. Doak Barnett, acang direc¬tor, east Asian Institute, Columbia Uni¬versity, sponsored by the academy forpolicy study, law school auditorium,4:30 pm.TRACK MEET*. UC vs. University ofWisconsin at Milwaukee, Stagg field,5:30 pm.FILM: “Ugetsu,” doc films, Soc Sci122. 7:15 and 9:15 pm.FESTIVAL: Rhythm and blues, folkloresociety, Mandel hall, 8:15 pm.LECTURE: "Buddhism and Judaism:some reflections and religion and soci¬ety,” Melford Spiro, professor of anthro¬pology, Hillel house, 5715 Woodlawn,8:30 pm.Saturday, May 21CONFERENCE. Guaranteed income forthe poor, with Robert Theobold, Rich¬ard Cloward, Reverend James Bevel.Leon Despres. Albert Raby, AbnerMikva, and others, law school, all daybeginning at 9:30 am.FILM: "Salt of the earth.” sponsoredby SDS, Judd hall, 5835 Kimbark, 7:30and 9:30 pm.MEETING: Congressman Barra ftO’Hara, Abner Mikva, and Philip H.Bixler, Republican for Congress, HydePark neighborhood club, 8 pm.CONCERT: UC symphony orchestra.Richard Wernick, conductor, Mandelhall, 8:30 pm,Sunday, May 22RADIO PROGRAM: “The collapse ofAmerican public education,” PhilipHauser, professor of sociology, WFMF,100.3 me. 7 am.UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE:“Ought we to be troublers or comfort¬ers?” Rev. Kenneth Carstens, theMethodist ehureh of South Africa, Rock¬efeller chapel, 11 am.CONCERT: Spring choir concert,church of disciples of Christ, 57 andUniversity Ave. 4:30 pm.FOLK DANCE: Instruction and opendancing, Ida Noye* hall, 7:30 pm. RADIO PROGRAM: “Slno-American re-lations,” a trans-Atlantic discussionwith A. Doak Barnett. Columbia Univer¬sity, Hans Morgenthau, professor of po¬litical science, and Reginald Maudling,former British chancellor of the exche¬quer, WBBM, 780 kc. 11 to 11:30 pm.Monday, May 23LECTURE: “The cities and the states:the unfinished agenda," Terry Sanford,director, a study of American states,Duke University and former governorof North Carolina, Breasted Hall, 10:30am.LECTURE: “Problems using stationarystate perturbation theory,” Robert Yar-is. professor. Washington University, St.Louis. Kent 103. 4 pm.DISCUSSION: "Mr. Darwin and theevolution machine,” with Evertt Olson,professor of geophysics, Judson lounge.Burton Judson court, dinner at 6, dis¬cussion at 7 pm.FILM: “The population explosion.”“Saga of progress,” and “Stranger,”Indian civ course, Rosenwald 2. 7:30pm.LECTURE: “Revolution and develop¬ment,” Kenneth Boulding, professor ofeconomics, University of Michigan, aMonday lecture, law school auditorium,8 pm.Tuesday, May 24LECTURE: “Neuroanatomical evidencefor the non-primate status of the tree-shrews.” Dr. C.BG. Campbell, depart¬ment of neurophysiology, Walter Reedarmy institute of research, Anatomy101, 4:30 pm.LECTURE: “Action against white su-premacy in Rhodesia," Kenneth Can-Stens and David Leonard, Rhodesianstudents. Breasted hail. 6:30 pm.MEETING: Sociology club, with PeterRossi speaking on graduate school# insociology. Ida Noyes hall, 7:30 pm.FOLK DANCE: International house, 8pm.LECTURE: “The causes for the presentcondition with an analysis of the factorsthat have brought about this condition,”Seyyed Hossein Nasr, University ofTehran, law school auditorium, 8 pm.LECTURE: “Unmarried mothers whokeep their children—a neglectedgroup,” Helen Wright, professor emeri¬tus of social service administration^school of social service administrationlobby, 8 pm.DEMONSTRATION: F6r a strongerBritish policy in Rhodesia. 58 and Uni¬versity Ave, 8 pm. LECTURE: Britain s role in the worldtoday,” Sir Patrick Dean, British am-bassador to the United States, Breastedhall, 8:36 pm.Wednesday, May 25HONORS ASSEMBLY: Tenth annualhonors assembly, awarding of studentprizes and Quantrell prizes, postponedfrom. May 19, Ida Noyes hauls pmLECTURE: “The mongol conquest ofthe West, and some of its conse-quences,” Denis Sinor, professor. Uni¬versity of Indiana. Soc Sci 122. 4-30 pmCARILLON RECITAL: Daniel Robbins'University catillonneur, Rockefellerchapel, 5 pm.FOLK DANCE: Ida Noyes hall. 8 pm.LECTURE: The spiritual crisis or mod¬ern man. Seyyed Nasr, University ofTehran, law school auditorium, 8 prn.Thursday, May 26SYMPOSIUM: Contemporary musicLeonard Meyer, professor of music’Eric Salzman, New York Herald Tri¬bune, Norman Lloyd, Rockefeller foun-iation, Kenneth Gaburo, University of II-linois, Seymour Shifrin, University ofCalifornia. Berkeley, and Ralph Shapev,assistant professor of music, Mandelhall, 5:30 pm.FOLK DANCE: Hillel house, instruction7:30, general dancing 9 pm.MEETING: College history club, dis¬cussion of graduate schools in historywith faculty members Richard WadePeter Sterns. Gerlad McGrath, HannaGray, etc., Ida Noyes hail, 7:30 pm.LECTURE: “Are atoms visible," DrAlbert Crewe, director. Argonne nation-al laboratory, Eckert 133. 8 pm,CONCERT: Chicago symphony orches¬tra Jean Martinon. conductor, Mandelhall, 8:30 pm.NOW! is the time for Box StorageSafe, insured Cold Storage for all your Winter Woolens. Furs Cleaned,Glased end Stored far Bergana • Ollagro end all Fur-pile garments, Felt-Renu custom fur cleaning. Insured pickup and delivery.James Schultz CleanersCustom Quality Cleaning1363 East 53rd PL 2-9662ASAMATTEROF... the financial protection you glv®your family today will have to be pro¬vided by some other means tomorrow.Sun Life insurance can certainly dothis job for you.As a local Sun Life reprRotative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUHyde Park Bank Building, Chicago 15, III.FAirfax 4-6800 - FR 2-2390Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays & FridaysSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA- A MUTUAL COMPANY Milton Singer, professor ofanthropology and chairmanof tho civilizations studiosprogram, and Jamas Radfield,master of tha now collegiatedivision, will meet with stu¬dent* interested in the civili¬zation* study program todayin the Rickert Housa Loungeat 4:30 p.m.Application form* and da-scriptive material on tha newcollegiate division may bapickad tip at Gatos Bioko 132,The closing date for appli¬cations to tha division is May23. Applications should boloft in Gate* Blake 217.Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweat¬shirts, "Levis," rain parkas,tennis shoes, underwear, jack¬ets, camping equipment, washpants, etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-100Student discount with adMl 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospitalWho is your ideal date? Thousands use Central Control and Its high-speedcomputer for a live, flesh-and-blood answer to this question.Your ideal date - such a person exists, of course.But how to get acquainted? Our Central Control computerprocesses 10,000 names an hour. How tong would it takeyou to meet and form an opinion of that many people?You will be matched with five ideally suited personsof the opposite sex, right in your own locale for in anyarea of the U.S. you specify). Simply, send $3.00 to CentralControl for your questionnaire. Each of tee five will boas perfectly matched with you in interests, outlook andbackground as computer science makes possible..Central Control is nationwide, but its programs arecompletely localized. Hundreds of thousands of vigorousand alert subscribers, all sharing the desire to meet theirIdeal dates, have found computer dating to be exciting andhighly acceptable. . a , #AH fivo of your Ideal dates will be delightful. Sohurry and send your $3.00 for your questionnaire.CENTRAL CONTROL, Inc.22 Park Avenut • Oklahoma City, OklahomaCHICAGO MAROON May 20, 1964 ; i if I .11 i , aH* i,» • • c • 1~UrV.*«■ >»Jv'4>i'll■: -uv President, chanceffor address rally of 6000Wisconsin draft sit-in spurs faculty action(Continued from page one) Harvey Harrington and Madison THEIR MAIN activity in thecampus chancellor Robben Flem- dayS before Monday’s faculty obstructing the building by demon- They gave the impression theystrators, nor did the administration were not aiming their protest atinsist on keeping the employees out the administration so much as atuntil every last remnant of a sit-in the draft system in general; atlast Saturday s exams (and the }ng reply to their demands. They .. , , .day after the UC sit-in began), promised nobody’s grades would meeting will be to drum up facutty _ „ _ V.W1H „ ..several dozen students were at- be sent to draft boards until the support Twenty-seven faculty had left> as uc>s administration least they had “nothin? personal**tracted to a meeting called by the faculty meets, “because such infor- rnefT1>bers have already signed a djd even affer the protesters here aMinst Adminctr»tnr«Committee to End the War in Viet- mati0n will not be available until petition to hold the faculty meeting had scaled down their forceg to tnam which offered practice in after final grades are recorded in ear^» an<* a number of professors small “information desk.**taking a test similar to that given june *» Final exams at UW are sP°he at the sit-in. Professor ofWil-by the Selective Service system.THESE STUDENTS began to askfor literature on the draft and thewar, Charous said. Friday after¬noon, a more or less “spontane¬ous” meeting of students botheredby the draft was held, at which .most participants decided they op- te ve oken tore©posed the whole system of student After the mass meeting to heardeferment on moral grounds. In the administrators, the protestersscheduled for next week.On the draft policy, Flemingmerely said, “We welcome recon¬sideration” of the policy, which hesaid “was set during the Koreanperiod.”further meetings, they prepareddemands that UW’s administrationnot allow the draft test to be ad¬ministered on campus, and beganto discuss the possibility of a sit-in,to dramatize their demands.Win faculty considerationThe protesters have successfullygotten the Faculty Senate to move marched back to the administra¬tion building, where they consid¬ered what their course of actionwould be. In a fourteen hour ses¬sion (with time out for almost ev¬erybody to go out for dinner), theyfinally decided to leave—youguessed it—a “token force” of stu¬dents in the ad building as a sortof “information desk.” The main history William Applemanliams, a noted supporter of radicalcauses, spoke both at the mass ral¬ly and the later strategy meeting,where he urged them to go homelest some faculty members reactnegatively to a continued sit-in.Different administration stylesWhile the demands, tactics, andeven the so-far inconclusive out¬come of the UW protest were verymuch like that at UC, the style ofadministrators in reacting to thetwo protests was most instructive.At Wisconsin, the president andchancellor did not try to oppose thesit-in and had constant communi¬cation with the protesters. At notime was the building closed. Per- against adminstrators.The sit-in was not the culmina*tion of a series of fruitless at-WISCONSIN students almost tempts to speak with adminis-unanimously expressed great ad- trators to change the policy, as Itmiration for the reasonableness of was at Chicago. Rather, It was theHarrington and Fleming, and their opening move in the protest cam-willingness to talk to students, paign.up its regular meeting, which had force started cleaning up at 5:30 sons with business in the building SWAP presentsOSCAR BROWN, JR.\v V' SUNDAY, MAY 22nd — 4:00MANDEL HALL"MR. KICKS" BRINGS JOY IN '66Student Adm. 1.50 Tickets: SWAPY3587IDA NOYES HALLbeen scheduled for Wednesday ofnext week, to next Monday. Theirdemands will be considered by thefaculty, but the state regents is thefinal policy-making body, whichmust act in this matter. The stu¬dents hope a faculty endorsementof their demands will help with theregents.WEDNESDAY afternoon, a totalof perhaps six thousand students,including both protest sympathiz¬ers and just onlookers, jammedonto a large mall sloping up to acentral building on the campus, tohear University president Fred am. Thursday. Most felt the ad- used a side entrance, or walkedministrators had made no real down a narrow aisle through theconcessions in their approval of an middle of the seated multitude,early faculty meeting. There was no really serious talk ofDR. AARON ZIM&LER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO Z6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS PULED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent t Fetuhy Discount - ' PHOTOGRAPHYSpeedy Photo Processing24 hour service on Kodachrome, ektachrome, movie film amiother services.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 EIJis Ave.classic poplin...in a class-by itself!$4795&a4nv JieftcAs * puts the classic poplin suit in aclass by itself. The fabric is an easy-carie blend ofDacron* polyester and cotton that rarely needspressing. The suit may be washed-aml-worn or dry-cleaned. And it comes in the correct natural shoul¬der model with all the refinements that identifyquality clothing!* Stety,NICOfmmt $c (EttmpttB £lppTHE STORE FOR MENin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center ;1502-06 E. 55th SI. Phone 752-8100 Lehnhoff School of Music & DanceAnnounces Summer Course of 6-WeeksBeginning June 27 thru Aug. 5Music FundamentalsFor boys & girls—5-7 yrs.Group study with Orft InstrumentsNote reading - rhythmEar TrainingEnsemble PlayingTwice a weekExcellent preparation forany kind of instrumental study. Private LessonsIn Piano - Flute • RecorderTrumpet - ViolinViola - Cello - ClarinetChamber Music ClassesFall Classes & Private Lessons begin Sept. 26Special Classes ^n Modern Dance for College StudentsCREATIVE DANCE FOR CHILDRENFOR MORE INFORMATION CALL OR WRITEBU 8-4347 1438 E. 57th St.COME DOWN TOTOAD HALL1444 E. 57th ST. BU 8-4500AND SEE THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A HIPPOPOTAMUS ANDA RHINOCEROS.IF YOU DON'T ALREADY KNOW WE WILL PROVIDE ATACTILE DEMONSTRATION.HI-FI. TYPEWRITER & TAPE RECORDERRENTALS, REPAIRS A SALESReasonable Rates, Courteous Servico, Quality EquipmentMay 20, 1964 • CHICAGO MAROON » •releastindividual 'oppor-decision-makingDisagree .r WHERETHE U. of C.MEETS TO EATGORDON'SRESTAURANT1321 E. 57th7jJ0 AM.-l AM.CONDOMINIUM HOMES OF DISTINCTIONA new concept H920-39 SOUTH CRANDON AVENUE • (dllC XCOMrs. Evelyn Echols,DirectressInternational TravelTraining School Let me Introduce you tothe Wonderful World ofTRAVEL....WHAT IS INTERNATIONAL TRAVELTRAINING SCHOOL?ITTS is the first training school of its kind in the United States.Students study all phases of the travel industry. This is not a lec¬ture series. You actually do all the work that you would do if youwere employed by a travel agency or a carrier.W HAT DOES THE CURRICULUM INCLUDE?100 working hours (6 to 9:30. Monday and Thursday evenings)beginning June 6th, taught by the training staffs and executive person¬nel of American Airlines. Olson Travel Organization, Pan AmericanWorld Airways, Cunard Steamship Co. Ltd., and P and O OrientLine.WHO ENROLLS IN ITTS?Students who, upon graduating from college, wish to prepare im¬mediately for a career in this fascinating ever-growing industry.Many are recommended to us by their college career counselors.W HAT ARE THE EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES?Trained people are desperately needed in this field. A recent govern¬ment survey shows that travel is expected to be the number oneindustry in the United States by 1970. Students who wish to workwhile still attending class are sent out on interviews as soon as theyhave completed the steamship section of the course, as they arethen capable of working in a steamship department. This helps paythe tuition. 75% of our graduates are now employed in the travelfield, either here or abroad. Our graduates are our best advertise¬ment. Note what leading travel agents say about them.Mr. William Westphal, Executive Vice President, Rotchford Travel:“The graduates of ITTS are of a very high calibre and certainlymake knowledgeable, fine employees in an industry that sorely needstrained, qualified personnel.”Mr. Maro Gucic, President, Maro Travel: “ITTS fulfills a vitalrole in the Chicago travel community. Students gain from eminentlyqualified instructors a vast amount of knowledge about travel agencyoperations. Agency managers are given an excellent opportunity toselect high calibre employees among the graduates of this school.We at Maro Travel have employed several graduates to our com¬plete satisfaction.”Mr. B. Needlman, President, Foremost Travel & Tours, Inc.: “It givesus great pleasure to write this note to you in appreciation of thefine job your school is doing in, training professional travel people.We have three graduates of ITTS on our staff now and hope toincrease the number very soon.”WHAT IS THE TUITION?A special rate of $400.00 is offered for college students with timepayments permitted. All material furnished.HOW DO I ENROLL?Phone 527-2125 to arrange the required personal interview. Enroll¬ment closes within ten days.J.X■/c m apartment ownersmpfor South ShoreThe concept of condominium ownership ofapartment homes has already attracted thou¬sands of families in the Chicagoland area,You have none of the maintenance chores as¬sociated with single family home ownership.Interest on mortgage and real estate taxes aredeductible for income tax purposes. You arefree to sell your unit at any time. The title toyour apartment home is insured by The Chi-cago -Title and Trust Co.Why is this the outstandingCondominium Value in Chicago?Simply because the quality and the price ofour offering cannot be matched,A deluxe 9 story fireproof and soundproofbuilding, circular driveway direct to entrance,beautifully landscaped court, attractive mod*era lobby, 3 passenger and 3 service elevator#,spacious living room (about 24 x 15J—formaldining room (about 16 x 13), high graceful ceil*Ings, large closet spaces including cedar cloj*ets, modem kitchen and ceramic tile baths,and attached heated garage with attendant*(optional at reasonable rates). Symphony will playfour premieres hereOne world premiere andthree Chicago premieres willhighlight a concert of con¬temporary music which theChicago Symphony Orchestra willpresent on Thursday and Friday,May 26 and May 27, in MandelHall at 8:30 pm.Ralph Shapey, assistant profes¬sor of music at UC, will be guestconductor in the world premiere ofhis Invocation—Concerto for Violinand Orchestra. The soloist will beEsther Glazer, the well-known Chi¬cago violinist.In addition to Shapey’s Invoca-tion, the program, which will bethe same both nights, will includethe Chicago premieres of Elegy forOrchestra by Kenneth Gaburo, pro¬fessor of music at the University ofIllinois; Variations, by Luigi Dal¬lapiccola, one of Italy’s foremostcomposers, and Three Pieces forOrchestra by Seymour Shifrin, whoteaches composition at the Univer¬sity of California at Berkeley.According to Leonard B. Meyer,professor and chairman of the de¬partment of music at the Universi¬ty, “This is the first in a series ofconcerts of contemporary musicwhich will be presented by the Chi-'cago Symphony Orchestra at theUniversity. As part of this pro¬gram, the University is planning tocommission works by Americancomposers. These works will beperformed in the concerts plannedfor 1967 and 1968.”A limited number of qualifiedstudents from other universitiesand colleges in the Chicago areawill be invited through their musicdepartments to attend. Admissionto rehearsals is by invitation only.General admission to these con¬certs is $2.50 ($1 for students).Tickets are available only at theUniversity of Chicago concert of¬fice, 5802 South Woodlawn Avenue,or at the Mandel Hall box office onthe evenings of the concerts. v. m i mm i mtmmmm -1 m v" m ■ - m* m mm «mReferendum text6 ROOMS3 BEDROOMS, 3 BATHS$14,000 to $14,800Down Payment — $3,500 to $3,800Total Monthly AssessmentIncludes mortgage, taxesand maintenance about $184.005 ROOMS2 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS$11,900 to $12,800Down Payment — $2,900 to $3,300Total Monthly AssessmentIncludes mortgage, taxesaad maiatenancB ........ about $156.00Inspection of model apartment by appoint,ment only. We shall be happy to mail youour brochur# detailing mort informationabout THE ORANSTON.Please ContaotSTANLEY REALTY COMPANYStanley J. Rubin, PreaidaatRealtor*Developing and Managing Agent*300 West Washington St„ Chicago 00408Phone RA 6-7055 (1) As a matter of standing policy, the University of Chicago ought torelease to the Selective Service System information about whetheran individual student is registered in good standing:(Check one)automatically, whenever such information is requested by the Se¬lective Service System.automatically, unless by e certain date the student hag requestedin writing that such information not be released,only upon receipt of a written request from the student to releasesuch information.under no circumstance*, regardless of the wishes of the individualstudent.(2) As a matter of standing policy, the University of Chicago ought torelease to the Selective Service System information contained oilthe official transcript containing grades of individual students:(Check one)automatically, whenever such information is requested by the Selective Service System.automatically, unless by a certain date the student has requestedin writing that such information not be released.only upon receipt of a written request from the student to releasesuch information.under no circumstances, regardless of the wishes of the individualstudent.(3) As a matter of standing policy, the University of Chicago ought torelease to the Selective Service System information about the classrank of individual students:(Check one)automatically, whenever such information is requested by the Se¬lective Service Sy n.automatically, unlc.> by a certain data the student has requestedin writing that such information not be released.only upon receipt of e written request from the student to releasesuch information.under no circumstances, regardless of the wishes of the individualstudent.(4) As a matter of standing policy, the University of Chicago ought torelease to the Selective Service System information aboutMALE class rank of individual students:(Check one)automatically, whenever such information is requested by thelective Service System.automatically, unless by a certain date the student hasin writing that such information not be released,only upon receipt of a written request from the student tosuch information.under no circumstances, regardless of the wishes of thestudent.Answer the following questions notwithstanding to your answers to theprevious questions.(5) The 1965-66 policy of the University on the above issues should bereconsidered for 1966-67 during the Fall Quarter 1966.Yes(6) “Shall the University comply with the request of individualdents to release male class ranks to the Selective Service Systemprior to the end of the Fall Quarter 1966?”My position on the draft, ranking, etc. notwithstanding, I believethat any future decisions the University may take about matters ofprimary concern to students should be preceded by adequatenity for discussion among students, faculty, andand that students should play a formal role in theprocess.AgreeYes(7)CoBEAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTinting!35r “. 53rd S*. HY 3-8302New Books on Politics in the NewsBehind Closed Doors: Politics in the Public Interestby: Edward N. CostikyanStrategic Power and Soviet Foreign Policyby: Arnold L. Horelick and Myron RushViet-Nam Witness, 1953-66 $6.95$5.95by: Bernard B. Fall $6.95Library Duplicate & Discard 10c Sale ends tomorrow.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111-TELEFUNKEN l ZENITH -- NEW A USED -Salo* and Service on all hi-fi equipment.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETapa Racordara — Phonos — AmplifiersNoodfos and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% discount »• stwdMta witk ID MrdtIMVICI CALLS - $8♦ • CHICAGO MAROON May 20, 1966(Continued from p«g« two)*1V dents and faculty alike. We, too,have to cope with the registrar’soffice, the comptroller’s office, thebursar’s office, and all the manyother offices in the administrationbuilding. It isn’t always easy towork through the bureaucracythere. But there’s one thing forsure: If the members of that bu¬reaucracy aren’t permitted to en¬ter their offices, it becomes impos¬sible to accomplish anything atin that direction. The students whoclosed down the administrationbuilding interfered seriously withmy right to do my work effective¬ly; as a consequence, they ham¬pered my services not only tothemselves, but to other studentsand to the faculty.When any group undertakes toarrogate to itself the extra-legaltakeover of an institution, frankly,I get very nervous. The young ladywho declaimed, with sweet dignity,“...of course you may disagreewith our point of view, but not dur¬ing our .demonstration, ” (italicsmine; spoken emphasis hers) overthe loudspeaker just after 1 p.m.on Thursday, simultaneously mademe laugh and gave me the shivers.It’s apparently perfectly OK forthis group to disrupt essentialfunctions of the University as itpleases, but anybody who inter¬rupts their protest is way out of line. It reminds me too much ofthings that went on in a well-known European country in the1930’s.The demonstrators have everyright to express their view-point(which I at least partially sup¬port). They were having—obvious¬ly—a wonderful time during theirdemonstration. But their irrespon¬sible and obstructive method ofdisplaying the pique is quite unac¬ceptable.MRS. CAROLYN H. STONE P.S. to the Demonstrators:The publicized justification forthis performance is that the ad¬ministration doesn’t talk to you.Let me make a suggestion: If youaren’t getting through to “the sys¬tem,” it’s far more effective tolearn the system and work withinit than it is to attempt to beat itdown by brute force. I feel sorethat a carefully prepared and doc¬umented presentation, sponsoredby a sympathetic and suitably cho¬ sen member of the faculty, androuted through appropriate chan¬nels, would have got your delega¬tion an appointment with almostanyone in the administration. Butthis is not something you can de¬cide upon and then 15 minutes la¬ter, do. It requires time, carefulthought, and a lot of follow-through. I admit it’s not as muchfun as singing anti-war songs andblocking elevator doors and gettingyour picture in the papers; but youmight try it sometime. I would be happy to discuss the tactics o! sucha dull and orderly approach to areal problem with one or two ofyou if you’re interested.Smith didn't sign petitionof anli-rank organizationReality is seen only through a spiritual sense of life,and is not discernible by the physical senses.Attend - .TENTH CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTISTCHURCH SERVICES READING ROOM5640 S. Blackstone Ave. 1443 E. 57th St.Sunday 10:45 am Weekdays 9 am - 6 pmSunday School 10:45 am Sunday and Holidays 2 pm -5 pra^ <JhadreB 3 to W) The Bible, the writings of MaryW ednesday 8:00 pm Eddy and ChristianCare provided for small Science literature may be read,children during services. borrowed or purchased.TRANSPORTATIONRailroad—Illinois Central to 55thCTA Bus—No. 1, 5 or 28 to 57th and Stony IslandNo. 55 to 55th and BlackstoneAutomobile—5700 south, 1430 east, 3 blocks west of Jackson Pk. mmmm mmmmmmkThe University SymphonyOrchestra, conducted by Rich*erd Wernick, will present itsspring quarter concert to¬morrow night et 8:30 pm inMendel Halt.Featured on the programwill be William Hayoshi,graduate student in the de¬partment of English, as pianosoloist in the Mozart Concer¬to No. 19 in F major. Theorchestra will also performworks by Hector Berlioz,Wallingford Riegger, and Ar¬thur Honegger. Admission isfree. TO THE EDITOR:My name was erroneously madea part of the “blue petition” circu¬lated last week by the StudentsAgainst the Rank. I was not per¬sonally asked to lend my name,and I regret that is the haste ofthe situation sueh as mistake wasmade.REUBEN W. SMITHASST. PROF. OF HISTORY5 - * ** -JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAP From TO am - 2 pm Saturday isSALES DAY atSCANDINAVIAN IMPORTS1601 S. Michigan Avenue, 4th FloorAlso M-F 9 am - 5pm842-1650 AAROVARKFILMS PRESENTSTheCONNECTIONa film toy Sblrtey Clark*scraanplay by Jack Gtlbar,adapted from hit play.MONDAYMAY 23at 7, 7:30 and Midnight - $1.30POOR RICHARD'S1363 N. SEDGWICKCHICAGOReservation*/l«f#rmatio«: 3*1-*5*tNo I.D. Required CINEMACMcaee Ave. af MlcMeanMargaret RutherfordIn her newest and fuametrAgatha Christie'sr« MURDER MOSTFOUt’New York Herald Tn* "Providesa tpecla* banaa far RutherfordStudent* $1.00 with IJP. <*rd*Every day but Saturdayweekdays epen 0 pm • Sat. a Sun.epee iiwTHECOURT HOUSEIN HARPER COURT• Lunches 11 A.M. -2 P.M.• Dinner from 5 P.M.• Our own Chef's pastries• Beef Fondue Served Anytime• Weisswurste with Potato Salad• Sunday Brunch from 8 A.M. -1 P.M.for lunch and after dinner ($1.10)DELIGHTFUL ATMOSPHERE - CLASSICAL MUSICDomestic & Imported Beer on tap Open till 2 A.M. Closed Mondays For the Convenience and Needs of the University,'66 Mustangs and TempestsKING RENT A CAR1330 E. 53rd ST.DAILY - WEEKLY - MONTHLYAS LOW AS $4.95 PER DAYIf you require a rental car for business, pleasure, or while yourcar is being repaired call us atMl 3-1715Why NotSit-in atSMEDLEYSthis weekend?Where the Action Is GOLD CITY INNMA Gold Mine of Good Food1110% STUDENT DISCOUNTHYDE PARK'S BESTCANTONESE FOOD5228 HARPERHY 3*2559 ALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from theSOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes.TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOUSUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yaki,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.After dinner don’t miss the newplays at the Last Stage. Join usfor cocktails at intermission andsandwiches after the show.ORALS HOUSE OF TIKIS1ST A HARPERFeed served 11 a.m. te 3 a.m.Kitchen closed Wed.LI I-758STHE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:Southern Fried ChickenIn a Basket... $1.50Generous Order Every Sunday Night You can have a steaktoo, or the biggeststeakburger In town•Don Hamilton Now Maying For Your Measure and DancingMay 20, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON, * fVflWMMMMmmmmmmmwKmmm> - * "■ " icClassified advertisements■pmmm* ^mmmm?-PERSONALS «Wanted—ticket to convocation Je.Contact Lisa Blair Blackstone 409. s. §81 SS&2 -9#*^ ' it f; - j11.T'he only way to defeat a patronagefed,machine organization is with counter-or¬ganization: volunteer support, officework, driving, & people working in theprecinct talking to the voters and onelection day seeing to it that they vote& that their votes are COUNTED. Thisis how LINDSEY won in NY and theMIKVA will win in Chicago. If you areInterested in working in the campaignafter exams or on election day June 14, Will pay for Saturday morning convoca¬tion ticket. Norton, 64.3-1895.Need 2 tickets to Je. 11th Convocation.Call Bruce Fried, Hitchock 29. MI 3-0800til 10:45 pm. after 10:45 pm PL 2-9354.Shavuot Teach-in-10:30 pm-? Tues. May24, Hillel House, 5715 S. Woodlawn.Writer’s Workshop (PL 2-8377)Kamelot Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount for students.The Shlomo Morag lecture to be giventoday at Hillel at 3:30 is CANCELLED. B & G has chased the ghosts out of IdaNoyes color TV. Yeah!’’Action against White Supremacy inRhodesia” Tues, 6:30 pm. Breasted.Wanted: Woman’s bike, 363-7558.Bill Sc Julie-Congrats! Don’t worryabout that incest bit-theres nothingwrong with starting a family business. Ad Lib Studio-5056 Lake Park—268-6910.Re-Opening special 10-20% Discount onSANDAL’S. 55 styles to choose from,good till May 31. 1966.College History Club: Richard Wade onGraduate Schools in History. Thur. May$6. 7:30 Ida Noyes. What will the British do next? HereRhodesians speak. Tues. May 24, 6:30Breasted Hall.LOST on campus Mon. Grey leather at¬tache case with Botond Varga writtenOn side. Reward. 684-3998. Majority rule for Rhodesia*SUMMER SUBLETSBill: at least she’s not your mother.UC STUDENTS AGAINST THE RANKwish to announce that the name of Prof.Reuben Smith was included on its list of85 faculty supporters by mistake.Brief but important CAP & GOWNmeeting Tuesday, 7:30, Ida Noyes. Newstaff members welcome.COME WHERE THE ACTION ISGive Illinois a strong new voice in theUS Senate. Help elect Charles H. Percy.Contact Dave Preston. Rm. 600, 100 \V.Monroe, Chicago. 346-3418.fring a gentle enigma into your life.ree Kitten. 748-3837.George Bernard Shaw’sDON JUAN IN HELLRuns May 6 through June 5. at THELAST STAGE, 1506 E. 51 St. Fri & Sat.8:30, Sun. 7:30. Res. OA 4-4200.Dierdre: Congratulations for striking ablow against aristocrasy by your por¬trayal of Lady Hurf. Some friends.Prepare! for the ‘Pataphysical reali¬zation. Contact UC Committee for Re¬search & Advancement of the ’Pataphy-sical Sciences (CRAPS)—138A Dodd—G.R.D., pataphysician.Volunteers are needed for Workcamps,2 wks-3 months. Physical labor or socialservice. Free board, room. Pay owntransportation. International VoluntaryService. 1116 E. 54th Place, Chicago,60615.“FRENCH-ENGLISH SOCIETY ANDTRAVEL ASSOCIATION is again organ,izing Junior year abroad and graduatestudies at the Sorbonne: total cost en¬tire school year $1235. Offer guaran¬tees: round trip flight New York-Paris,departing Oct 66 returns June 67. Mod¬ern apartment, 2 meals daily plus alluniversity fees. Write M.W. McIntosh.Kocktorpsvagen 57 A, Klinten, Sweden.” third,’ 3 large bedrooms, kitchen, bath,excellent condition, 5332 Greenwood,call 288-7961.For 1-2 males. TV, hi-fi. 1 blk. from Co¬op, IC, 53rd, campus bus in front 6/15-10/1, 667-2424 after 6 pm.Cool place for the hot summer. 1>2 rms.6/15-9/15, reg. rent 68.50 but I’ll dis¬count for summer tenant. Near HobbyHouse. Victor PL 2-9879.1 or 2 girls to share w/other spac. 5rm. apt. furn., 5411 Ellis. $40'per. 6/1-9/30. Nr. shppg. BU 8-6610, X2213.Not an apt. tent, or igloo but fully furn.7 rm. house. 2 males wanted, 6/1-10/1MI 3-6000 Rm. 547.At. 58th & Kenwood! Well furnisihed,private room, 3 roommates. June-Sept.55/mo. Dennis at 643-6842.Share apt. 53/Kenwood. $36.25 mo. ownroom. June pd. Call 684-3998.4 rms. for 2-3, $110/mo. 5410 Wood-lawn, 752-3229. 3-3)2 rms. furn. apt. $118/mo/best of¬fer. Je-Sept. must be student at UC. forsummer. 5220 S. Kenwood, 684-0302.Lovely furn. 2V2. 12’x20’ liv. rm., June15-Sept. 30, option for fall. 53rd & Dor¬chester^ BU 8-3629.Sublet w/WUFFLE 324-5263.7 rm, 4 bdrm, FULLY FURNISHEDapt. 1 block from campus. $135. 324-5263JOBS OFFEREDSUMMER JOBS. Male, female (16-40).Foreign and Entire US 1966 listings,$2.00 postpaid Summer job guide. Dept.C. 142 High St. Portland. Maine.Internationally famous club seeks at¬tractive girls; show business, singing,and dancing potential. Exc. financialpossibility. DE 7-1330, ask for Mr. ArtHern after 7 pm. wkdays.Auto drivers, male-female, 21 or over,You can earn $110/wk. or more drivinga YELLOW CAB. Apply now for sum¬mer work, full or part time. CallCA 5-6692 or apply in person 120 E. 18thSt. Work from garage near home.SUMMER JOBSAvailable to MATURE college & highschool girls. Survey-type assignmentsfor girls w/good personality. Also idealfor housewives & teachers. Some as¬signments available now. Phone Mrs.Baum: collect in Chicago at TA 3-6676or write Gracious Lady Service, Inc.1819 Kennedy Blvd. Philadelphia, Pa.(19193).Rm. & bd. offered in exchange for ba¬bysitting + dinner dishes for summerquarter. Call Cohn: EA 4-0329.Summer job. Student to care for imag¬inative children about 10/hrs/wk.morns. BU 8-4067 after 5 pm.Summer EmploymentCollege students & teachers: Demon¬strate stereo equipment to interestedparties. Salary + commission & freestereo if you qualify. For interview onlycall 833-6042.Full-time waitress wanted. 5nights/wk. 5-12 pm. The Eagle. 5311Blackstone. Call for appt. HY 3-1933. Mature student to exchange child care/ some housework for r b. Faculty fam¬ily. Start Sept/Oct. BU 8-4067 after 5.APTS. & HOUSES WANTEDFamily of 4 DESPERATELY needs apt.June 1st on, 363-7391.Summer sublet this side of Midway.Bess Miller: Ext. 3773.‘‘Would like to sublease apartment orhouse near UC campus June 26 throughAugust 5. References available. ContactRichard Furr, 7985 Pumpkin Court, Cu¬pertino, California.”Attending U of C June 20-Aug 27. Teach¬er and family of 3 needs furn. 3 bdrm.apt. or house. $150/m<T. Write: GrahamPorter. 3637 Bennet, Dearborn, Mich.FOUND ROOMMATES FOR SUMMER2 male grad studs need 3rd. 53'Ken-wood. Own lg. rm. w/cross vent inspac. furn apt. w/IV, porch Avail.immed.-10/l. $150/duration-324-3456.Male to share clean, well-furn. 7 rm.apt, approx. Je-Sept. 288-7731.2 males to share 6 furn. rms. $35/mo.5326 Greenwood. 363-3336. 6-8 pm.Female to share apt, in NYC this sum-mer-Mariam. New Dorms 2412 x.Set of 4 office keys on quads Mon. Cometo Maroon Business Office to retrieve.RIDESDrive ’65 Corvair to BERKELEY wk. ofJune 20th, Mr. Joseph PR 9-6060, 9 am-4 pm. Will pay for gas.Rider to Washington, D C. wanted. Lv.June 14-21. Share driving Sc expenses.288-1627, Nancy,FOR SALE RMS. & APTS. FOR RENTFern, to share 5 rm. apt. w/2 other.Summer Sc nxt. yr. Own rm. 1 blk. frompoint, campus bus. $45/mo. Karen rm.1108 or Judy rm. 1111, BU 8-6610.Need 3rd male for summer, option fornext year. Own lg. rm. Cammis 15 min.COOP, 1 blk. $ 40/mo. 752-6628.4 lg. rms. unfurn. 3rd fl. will decorate69th & Crandon, 221-7257.7 rms. 2 baths, $140/mo. 51/Kenwood,unfurn. 924-0451.Female needs to share big apt. ownbdrm. 54th & Kenwood, nxt. year too$57.50. 363-2367.2’2 rms. sublet July 1-avail next year,air cond. 643-7487.Atten: Bed Readers, for sale beautifulsingle bed back-board $15/best offer.Call Bruce Fried, MI 3-0800. Hitchcock29.’61 Sunbeam Rapier 2-dr sedan, exc.cond. 25,000. New disc brakes. $625 one.288-1632.Books, piano, music furnishings, cheap—RE 4-2371’58 TR 3 w/HT. exc. $485. ES 8-6713.Vintage townhouse. 2 males needed.Stereo, TV, own rm. $41/mo. + 1/3utils. 324-5751 evenings.For 1 ■ 2 people BU 8-8888Cool basement. 56th 1 blk. from Lake.Call 643-2516.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4 6856 There will be an importantmeeting of CAP & GOWN, theUC yearbook, Tuesday 7:30,Ida Noyes. Plans for next yearwill be discussed. New staffmembers, including photog¬raphers, are welcome. ’64 VW 2-dr. exc. cond New Chevrolettrade. Will be sold this weekend. Blu,radio Sc ht. Midway Chevrolet, 55th &State.’65 Musiang convertible! r-h, 3 spd.trans., must sell. FA 4-6080.’54 Olds, pwr steer, pwr brks, autotrans. R-H. Tires OK. runs OK Mustsell, need funds. Best offer over $65.752-7398, eves. late.1 mo. old Norelco 100 portable tape re-corder. Price new $99+. asking $70. 752-7393 eves, late. Must sell.JOBS WANTEDStudent’s wife six months exp. Seekskey punching job near campus.Full/part time. Temp/perm. FromJune. Call after 6 pm, 363-9149.STOLEN China forum tapedThe UC Academy for PolicyStudy will tape record a trans-Atlantic forum on Sino-Ameri-can relations today for broad¬cast in the United States and over¬seas.WBBM Radio, CBS Chicago, willair the program on its “Nightline”discussion series at 11 pm Sunday.John Callaway, director of publicaffairs for CBS-Radio, Chicago,and host of the Sunday eveningWBBM program, will be modera¬tor.Black attache case stolen from 107Kent, around 1 pm Mon. Please returnbooks Sc notes to Kent 111. No questionsasked. Joseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060THE CHICAGOSYMPHONY ORCHESTRAJEAN MARTINON, Music DirectorTHURSDAY FRIDAYMAY 26,1966 MAY 27,1966PROGRAMELEGY FOR ORCHESTRA Kenneth GaburoINVOCATION-CONCERTO FOR VIOLIN AND ORCHESTRA Ralph ShapeyEsther Glazer, violinistConducted by the composerVARIATIONS Luigi DallapiccolaTHREE PIECES FOR ORCHESTRA Seymour Shifrin _ /MANDLL HALL 8:30 p.mAdmission: $2.50, general (UC faculty, $2.00), and $1.00 studentTickets only at Concert Office, 5802 Woodlawn Avenue (60637); Ml 3-0800, extension 3886.8 • C H ICAGO MAROON May 20, 1966