Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary Year MIDWEEKEDITIONVol. 75 No. 16 The University of Chicago Tuesday, October 25, 1966Student Deferments Becoming Tighter Than Everby David A. SatterAt least some of the nation’sover 4.000 local draft boardsare only granting student de¬ferments until June, 1967,but. according to CommanderJohn M. Ham mack, director ofthe Illinois State Selective Serv¬ice, the August to August defer¬ment is still national policy.Hammack. speaking to the Ma¬roon from his Springfield office,said that Illinois undergraduateswho qualify for deferments on thebasis of their class standing orscore on the Selective Service ex¬amination are generally being de¬ferred until August.Hammack explained that Illi¬nois draft boards usually don’treceive the report on a students’class standing until from 35 to 40days after the end of the spring semester and that’s the reasonlocal boards usually don’t reviewfiles until August. Defermentsare then usually granted for ayear.SOME LOCAL boards, howev¬er, have indicated that theyaren’t willing to give a studentwho might be out of school inJune the benefit of avoiding re¬classification until August."Better Place"Cook County Area Office No. 2,in Desplaines, Illinois, an officewith jurisdiction over studentsliving in Chicago’s Northern sub¬urbs, is granting defermentsonly until June.According to one of the office’sclerks, “We have a war going onand we don’t want them (students)to sit around over the summer ifthey aren’t going back to school.We’ve got a better place forthem.” The Maroon first contacted Illi¬nois draft boards after learningof June deferments being givento UC students registered with lo¬cal boards in the Desplaines of¬fice.COMMANDER HAMMACK ex¬plained that each of the state’s—and the nation’s—local boards isfree to make its own policy re¬garding student deferments. Headded, however, that defermentsuntil June are the exception andnot the rule.Draft policy on student defer¬ments, according to Hammack, islikely to remain pretty much thesame this year as last. Undergrad¬uates in good standing, who aredoing satisfactory work and com¬pleting their education on sched¬ule are granted deferments for ayear, in August. The only usualexception to this is the graduat¬ing senior whose file is generally reviewed in June.Grad DefermentsGraduate students, who havebeen granted deferments on thebasis of being either in the upperquarter of their class or scoringabove 80 on the Selective Serviceexam, are usually allowed to fin¬ish grad school, Hammack said.“Students are being inductedevery day,” Hammack said, “butthere are not that many who areactually being pulled out of col¬lege. The bulk of those being in¬ducted are people who havefound some way to prolong theireducation.”HAMMACK EXPLAINED thata person who received his induc¬tion notice while still a full-timestudent in satisfactory standing(i.e. not failing any courses) canbe declared I-S-C. I-S-C is a de¬ferment good for the rest of thatperson’s school year. When the I-S-C deferment expires, a personmay still ask for a 2-S deferment,according to Hammack.In answer to a question, Ham¬mack said that he would not wantto say what action the IllinoisSelective Service would take re¬garding a student whose collegeor university refused to make in¬formation on class standing avail¬able. He did, however, mentionthat where class standing hasbeen unavailable in the past, lo¬cal boards have relied solely onthe results of the Selective Serv¬ice exam, reclassifying 1-A stu¬dents scoring below 70.In reference to the recent deci¬sion by Haverford College to nolonger make class rank availableto the Selective Service, Ham¬mack said, “I haven’t seen anyof their cases, although I thinksome of their students live herein Illinois.”Report On Student ViewsToward Rank Due Soonby David E. GumpertA report on UC undergradu¬ate male attitudes toward rank*ing for the draft should becompleted bv the end of No¬vember. according to DonaldFiske, chairman of the Fiske com¬mittee.THE REPORT will be based onthe results of a nine page question¬naire sent out to 400 of the Col¬lege's approximately 1450 males.The committee, composed of sixstudents and four faculty mem¬bers. has already received a ma¬jority of the questionnaires it sentout.All Replies Were Anonymous“We feel that data from thisquestionnaire survey is clearlyrelevant material to the Universi¬ty’s reconsideration of its policy,”said Fiske. “The more factual in¬formation that is available, themore reasonable the decision islikely to be.”The questionnaire deals withsuch things as students attitudestoward the submitting of classranks by the University, the rele¬vance of grades to a student’s fu¬ture. and the possible effects of theUniversity’s present policy. It alsoasks how the student has dealt un¬til now with his own SelectiveService board.FISKE EMPHASIZED that thecommittee’s role will be to consid-Only Faculty WillBe Reimbursed forDinners this Yearby Larry HendelThe Student Government(SG) program of student-facul¬ty dinners will be only a oneway proposition this year.According to Jack Kolb, chair¬man of the academic affairs com¬mittee. only faculty members willnow be reimbursed for sponsoringsuch dinners instead of both stu-{Continued on Page Eight) er a number of decisions the Uni¬versity might make and call atten¬tion to a number of consequencesof such decisions, all in light ofstudent feeling as shown in theanonymous questionnaire. Thecommittee will probably not makeany specific recommendations, henoted.Will Build on Dunham Report“We are going to build on, ex¬tend, and in some cases clarifywhat the Dunham committeewrote,” said Fiske.It is conceivable, said Fiske, thatthe University will have announcedits policy on ranking for the Selec¬tive Service on the basis of its re¬consideration by the end of Decem¬ber. This would be after the sched¬uled international conference onthe draft to be held here December4-6.The Fiske committee was ap¬pointed by President Beadle at theend of the summer and. accordingto Fiske, “We were asked to do thejob as fast as possible.” Open Session to Air GripesPage Group Sets MeetingStudents and faculty will have an opportunity to offer their own ideas on how to fostercloser student-faculty relationships at the first open meeting of the Page committee tomor¬row.All persons with ideas will be welcome to speak at this forum, to be held at 3:30 pm in theReynolds Club South lounge.The committee, officially knownas the Faculty-Student Committeeon Faculty-Student Relationshipswas established last spring, as anaftermath of the student sit-in atthe administration building. One ofthe issues that concerned partic¬ipants in that demonstration wasthe lack of dialogue involving stu¬dents on matters of University pol¬icy.DR. ROBERT G. Page, associatedean of the division of biologicalsciences and associate professor ofmedicine, is chairman. He and theother nine members were appoint¬ed by University President GeorgeW. Beadle. The five student mem¬bers were recommended by Stu¬dent Government.Discuss Student ParticipationAt the committee’s three meet¬ings to date, it discussed the ques¬tion of student participation in de¬cision-making on University poli¬cies. It has split its topic into threeareas—academic matters; the Uni¬versity and its relations with theEx-Candidate To Explain South's PoliticsCharles L. Weltner, who re¬cently withdrew his candidacyfor a third term in the U.S.House of Representativesrather than support a segregation¬ist for governor of Georgia, willspeak at UC on Friday, October 28.Weltner, a Georgia Democrat,will speak on “Southern Politics”at 4:30 p.m. at the Law School Au¬ditorium.WELTNER, 38, withdrew fromthe House race in Georgia’s FifthDistrict earlier this month, shortlyafter Lester G. Maddox, a segrega¬tionist, won the Democratic guber¬natorial primary contest, defeatinga racial moderate.The Democratic Party in Geor¬gia requires candidates for publicoffice to sign a loyalty oath bindingthem to support all of the party’scandidates. In withdrawing hiscandidacy, Weltner said he couldnot support Maddox. Weltner was first elected to Con¬gress in 1962 and was re-elected in(Continued on Page Five) community, including the federalgovernment; and non-academiccampus problems, such as housing,admissions, and facilities.It has decided to begin by con¬centrating on academic questions,although tomorrow’s meeting willcover all topics.THE COMMITTEE has definedsix locations of decision-makingpower in the University. These arethe trustees; the president andprovost; the divisional deans anddeans of students, along with thefaculty of each division; the de¬partments within divisions; the fac¬ulty senate, its council and com¬mittees; and the students.The committee will try to matchvarious types of decisions with themost appropriate decision-makingbody.Tomorrow’s meeting will be thefirst in a series of open meetingsdesigned to find what issues are of concern to students and faculty,and what solutions are possible.Some of the meetings in the futurewill focus on specific topics, al¬though tomorrow’s forum will beopen to discussion of all matters.SINCE THREE of its membershave been out of the city for pro¬longed periods, the committee willnot make its report this quarter, asit had hoped. It will make the min¬utes of each meeting public afterthey have been approved, however.Faculty members on the com¬mittee, besides Page, are PhilipHauser, professor of sociology,Norman Maclean, professor of Eng¬lish, Gerhard Meyer, professor ofeconomics in the College, andManley Thompson, professor ofpholosophy. Students are WarrenCoates, economics; Bob Sandy, lawschool; Jerry Hyman, anthropolo¬gy; David Greenberg, physics, andJeffrey Blum, College.Charles Weltner Adlai III To Speak HereAdlai E. Stevenson III, Dem¬ocratic candidate for statetreasurer, will speak tonight inIda Noyes Hall at 7 30 pm.Stevenson, son of the late UnitedStates Ambassador to the UnitedNations, served as an Illinois staterepresentative from 1964 to 1966.He co-sponsored every civil rightsbill introduced in the Illinois Gen¬eral Assembly and supported anti¬lobbying and conflict-of-interest leg¬islation.In recognition of his outstandingrecord, Stevenson was awarded the“Best Legislator” commendationby the Independent Voters of Illi¬nois, a non-partisan group.Stevenson, refuses to endorseportions of the Democratic Partyplatform. He opposes the proposedIllinois Revenue Article submittedby Governor Kerner.Stevenson fears that the new taxrates will fall most heavily uponthe poor and considers the present Adlai Stevenson IIIscheme of deferments for collegestudents “unwise and unfair.”He also wants the legal votingage lowered to 19 so young peoplecan help choose a new selectiveservice system.TAl-CCAM-\®*NCHINCH - 4MIKICANMMIMMTHmMMn ItCANTtNMI AimAMERICAN DISHESCMC IMLTII JLM. to 9r4f PMMDM 90 TAKI OUT1111 ■•««**. MU 4-1041At Ford Motor Company we’re always breakingmolds... when we find a better way to accomplishour objectives. If you like the idea of finding betterways, want to apply your imagination to the sort ofproblems that haven’t even been faced till now—youmight be our kind of man!You know, of course, we build cars and trucksand tractors. But did you know we’re also the nation’sthird largest producer of glass, a leading manufac¬ turer of steel and paint? We not only use computers,we design new ones. We’re Involved with space prob¬lems, ways of improving TV sets, and even a specialelectric car project.Whatever your interests or background, make adate to see our representa¬tive. He’ll be on campussoon looking for betterpeople with better ideas. Far fromstereotypedbut close to graduation?The man fro* Ford MotorCompany would like to talkto you if you fceve • yen tojoin the people who come upwith better ideas in almosteverything horn automotivemarketing so itoel makingto baste rtsurchWhaseuar your major—art*science or business—if youwant to wo* on « better idesteato we mm have a placeyovt Reatford MotorCompares.Call yoor placement officeright now ter an appointment.Date of visitation:November 8School Dedicates New WingPekow Hall, will now give the "Can Jews Coexist WithEach Other?” Rabbi Asksby Helen ScharyRabbi Max Kapustin, director of the Hillel Foundation atWayne State University, said that despite the fact that love offellow Jews is the cardinal principle of Judaism, there has beena deep estrangement of Jews among themselves. Kapustinspoke at the UC Hillel House Fri-The University’s SoniaShankman Orthogenic Schooldedicated a new building tohelp augment its work in car¬ing for emotionally disturbed chil¬dren, last Thursday.The new wing, named Philip school the facilities to specialize incaring for emotionally disturbedadolescents.Until now, the Shankman Schoolhad treated about 50 children of allages.THE NEW HALL will house six boys and six girls between theages of 14 and 17 years from var¬ious different economic and socialbackgrounds.Dr. Bruno Bettelheim, principalof the Shankman school and pro¬fessor of psychiatry here, ex¬plained the purpose of the newwing:"The adolescent gone astraymust be anchored in somethingthat gives him support in the pres¬ent, drags him out of his loneli¬ness, makes him become moreconnected; in short, something thatgives him a strong hope for the fu¬ture."The new building is designed topromote such anchoring in thegroup—hence, the unusually largeamount of space devoted to a vari¬ety of rooms, each different inpurpose and mood."ALL OF THESE rooms are de¬signed and will be equipped so thateach symbolically will representone particular step out of personalisolation and desperation toward alife that is positively connectedwith others.” day night."The Orthodox Jew, whose posi¬tion is not enviable either religious¬ly or humanly, has withdrawn intobis shell; he is subject to A greatdanger. Unconsciously he has be¬gun to think in terms of holier-than-thou, in terms of superiority,Msaid Kapustin. "The Reform Jew istolerant, he can afford to bo. TheOrthodox Jew cannot afford to heso tolerant.”"CHILDREN WITH aa Orthodoxeducation,” Kapustin said mustdeny themselves much of the freetime and unrestrictedness of child¬hood in order to learn and followtheir religion; eventually they beginto feel proud of this and H leadsthem to consider themselves the"Jewish elite.” The non-Orthodox Jew’s inabilityto understand the Orthodox Jew isaccording to Kapustin, "Born froma lack of Jewish instincts; he can¬not apply Jewish thought catago-ries” because he is ignorant ofthem. As early as 200 years agonon-Orthodox Jews in Americawere regarded in Europe as "spirit¬ual children,1* the Rabbi said. Headded that Christian thought how¬ever, must not be ignored. As evi¬dence of this, he noted that he him¬self holds a PhD in philosophyand in Near-Eastern Languages,which he received in Germany.To combat this "estrangement ofthe heart” which has led to an al¬most total lack of communication,Rabbi Kapustin offered these reme¬dies, formulated from his own ex¬perience:• Jews must work in the area ofhuman relationships; they mustforget their differences and find ahuman rational with which theycan move as human beings and asJews.• They must refrain from actionswhich hurt the feelings of otherJews who think and act differently."Nothing has separted Jew fromJew as much as the failure of someof them to keep kosher,” assertedRabbi Kapustin.• Stereotypes, "the worst thingsthat can happen to human rela¬tions,” must be avoided, and astudy of mutual positions substitut¬ed.• Jews must find areas of possi¬ble cooperation with each otherwithout sacrificing their principles.RABBI KAPUSTIN, an Orthodoxrabbi himself, asserted that thenon-traditionalist movements didnot arise from a desire to escapethe “yoke of the law,” but he ac¬knowledged that his treatment ofthe subject was personal and sub¬jective.The solutions, which he calledonly partial and which may seemto be simple, have benefited his re¬lationships and "it is the common¬place things that often work.”YOU AND COD >—A lecture on Christian Science—by Paul A. Erickson C.S.B., of ChicagoFriday, Oct. 28 4:00 p.m.Breasted Hall Oriental InstituteSponsored by Christian Science Organisation at U. of C2 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 25, 1966:■I4I Exams May Lower DiversityOver-emphasis on formal examinations to decide who succeeds in school, combined witheducational requirements for jobs, may “diminish the flow of diverse talents into the worldof adult life.” said C. Arnold Anderson, director of UC’s Comparative Education Center, inan address last night in the law school auditorium.Anderson presented the first in aseries of lectures entitled “Teach¬ing and Learning, 1991,” sponsoredby the Graduate School of Educa¬tion. Anderson’s topic was “Societyand Education. 1991.”According to Anderson, all mod¬ern school systems in the Westpromote students according tomerit, “thereby promoting mobili¬ty far more generally than criticsconcede.”Certificating Limits DiversityHowever, Anderson warned, “ByCertificating our occupationalstructure’’—i.e.. requiring formaldegrees and diplomas for jobs—*we will have a more equalitarianeconomy but we will probably havea less productive one.”“Schools are becoming related inmore complex ways to the stratifi¬cation and mobility systems of thesociety,” Anderson commented.The process of selecting and allo¬cating their pupils reacts backupon the teaching methods, cli¬mate of the school, and the esteemconferred upon teachers, he said.THE MOST widely used methodof selection is the use of examina¬tions, he continued. “There arepressures to make the examinationexternal and nationwide. This inno¬vation comes also from a desire toassure impartiality of selectionplus the usual vague notions aboutstandards. Efforts to improve thevalidity of present tests as predic¬tors and to widen tbe criteria ofselection have seemingly come to a dead end.*"OUR EFFORTS to makeschools more ‘efficient’ may back¬fire,” Anderson warned, as school¬ing is made more closely correlat¬ed with occupational success whilediminishing the flow of diverse tal¬ents into adult life.Especially “perplexing”, Ander¬son eaid, is the persisting inabilityto make the schools more autono¬mous, to insure that the outcomesof instruction will mainly reflectthe methods of instruction usedoutside school.Specialization a DangerOver-emphasis on specializedteaching of narrow subjects pre¬vents schools from encouraging so¬cial change, Anderson said. “In secondary and higher schools, iner¬tia. . .commonly reflects devotionto particular intellectual cults, usu¬ally also bolstered by assertionsthat familiar standards must beupheld. And so the more competentwe make teachers in their subject,the more elaborately they canvoice their resistance to newerpedagogical ways; hence the fam¬iliar pendulum in teacher trainingbetween subject and method,” An¬derson said.“It hs only in the unusual univer¬sity that we can expect an autono¬mous faculty to seek reform ratherthan comfortable routine,” he com¬mented.Instead of emphasizing “selec¬tion and allocation of pupils,” An-OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SHORELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000MONDAY LECTURESLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM, 8 P.M.OCT. 31 I. BERNARD COHENTypewritersWe are an authorized Olympiadealer for portable, standardand electric typewriters.We employ factory trained me¬chanics to handle any office ma¬chine repair.Typewriter Dept.The University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Ave.SNOOPYAND THEREDBARONby Charles M. SchulzIt's a war story filled withraw drama, romance, guts,•nd tears. And thereof a pic¬ture of Snoopy OR everypage.$2 at your college bookstoreHolt, Rinehart aedWinetea, Inc. Professor of History of ScienceHarvard Universityrri'The Creative Scientific Personality"Free faculty and student tickets at central information desk,Adm. Bldg., or Center for Continuing Education, Rm. 121.Phone 3137 for information.ProfessorJ. S. M. Moon asks:“Gee, how come in a masssociety like ours a premiumbeer gets to be the mostpopular? How come?”Aw, Prof...the answer’son the tip ofyour tongue.AN«(UU«-BUSCH, INC. . ST. LOUIS « RSWMMt • LSI AN#£LE» . TMtfA . HOUSTON Petition Against Rank Signed by MoreThan Six Hundred Students and FacultyOver 600 UC students and faculty have signed a petitionurging the University not to form a male class rank for theSelective Service. The petitionAgainst the Rank (SAR).As of yesterday, 303 undergrad¬uate males, 175 undergraduatefemales, 121 graduate students,and 11 faculty members had signedthe petition. However, an SARspokesman pointed out that reportsfrom canvassers in Pierce Tower,New Dorms, and some smallerdorms are not in yet. SAR has alsohad tables in the Hutchinson Com-derson urged, schools should give“close concentration upon generaleducation.” This, he said, will putthe emphasi-s more on “making theschool experience intrinsically re¬warding.” s being distributed by Studentsmons corridor at the Bookstore tofacilitate signing, and plans to es¬calate its efforts to get signaturesthis week.THE PETITION reads. “We, theundersigned, oppose the formula¬tion by the University Administra¬tion of a class rank of males in thecollege for the purposes of Selec¬tive Service.”SAR will have a meeting, Thurs¬day night to evaluate the successof the petition campaign. At thismeeting SAR hopes to determinewhat action it will take this fall.Philco is lookiNqfox people who doN'rIcNOW All vhE ANSWERSAt a major subsidiary of Ford Motor Company,Philco is Involved In virtually everything that mattersto people today. We are fast approaching $1 billionIn annual sales to consumer, industrial andgovernment markets. We design sophisticatedcommunications systems . . . research theunexplored use8 of miniaturization . . . create spaceage Instrumentation . . . develop televisiontechnology . . . and dlreot major operations Inforeign countries. But we don’t pretend to know•verythlng. If you want to help us find the answersto questions still unasked, then we have a placefor you. We will bs visiting your campus onOctober 28. Contact your Graduate Business SchoolPlacement Office. Stop by and talk to us aboutyour future or write to College Relations, PhilcoCorporation, C & Tioga Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. 19134.PHILCO WILL BK HERE ON OCTOBER 28Career opportunities available on the East Coast, tho Midwest, thoSouthwest, tho West Coast, and throughout tha world,OMs/onsi Aaronutronlo • Appliance • Communications A Etectrontos •Consumer Electronics • International • Lansdala • Microelectronics •Sales A Distribution • TeohRep • Western Development LaboratoriesPHILCOCORPOR ATION a auBaioiAPY Of*M EQUAL SfFORTUMITV EMPLOYES H/fOctober 25, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3- * * - -'-4Letters to the Editor^ ! s *s . . . ' '•' •' Ww <_ ■>■. Xv • Peter RabinowitzMartinon Seen as JanWick RepliesTO THE EDITOR:The letter to the editor in the Oc¬tober 21 Maroon attributed to “PaulHomas” (presumably either a nomde plume of Paul Thomas, thirdyear student in the College, or yetanother example of that issue’sinexcusably bad copy editing) isso confused as to call for comment.If, as I suspect, Mr. Thomas’s pre¬dicament indicates that emotionsaroused by the draft have made itimpossible for some students toread accurately or to think clearlyabout the problem, we face a sadsituation that will be with us aslong as students are subject to Se¬lective Service, regardless of howwe may resolve the issue aboutrank in class.Mr. Thomas takes me to task forsaying we have no evidence thatthe use of class rank by SelectiveService is any more corrupting ofeducational values than the compe¬tition for grades in applying tograduate school, and he allegesthat I must not have read the re¬port of the Dunham Committee onthe effects of ranking for SelectiveService purposes. In fact, I wasonly paraphrasing the Dunhamcommittee, which I now quote ver¬batim:“At the University of Chi¬cago, Selective Service policyhas not noticeably impinged uponstudent decisions through thethreat that some students withlow rank may possibly be draft¬ed. Of several adviser-s ques¬tioned, none felt that this aspectof draft policy had any signifi¬cant or noticeable effect. Rather, Selective Service affects studentschiefly by making it highly likelythat they will be drafted if theyinterrupt their education. Thishas caused a few students to pro¬long their undergraduate pro¬grams, influenced some to seekgraduate education when theymight not otherwise have doneso, but is most seriously seen inthe problem that some male stu¬dents are prevented from consid¬ering a moratorium from schoolbecause of the fear of militaryservice. This last problem is avery serious one for the Collegeand the students involved.”Of course the draft has unhappyeffects on the campus, but our re¬cent controversy has been aboutthe use of class rank and nothingelse, just as the recent action ofHaverford College concerned thatissue alone. My comment about Ha¬verford, to which Mr. Thomas tookexception, was also limited to thatpoint. To my knowledge, we haveStudents Against the Rank (SAR),but not Students Against the Draft(SAD?). Perhaps most members ofSAR are opposed to the draft assuch, but if so, they have not seri¬ously suggested that the Universityrefuse to provide any informationto draft boards in support of claimsfor student deferment.Finally, as to my personal viewsabout the question of class rank,the October 21 Maroon quoted meaccurately, but with such abbrevia¬tion as to leave my position anenigma to many readers. For therecord, then, let me say that I amopposed to the use of class rank asa guideline for draft boards. I hopethat President Johnson’s Commis¬sion on draft policy, perhaps in¬fluenced by our conference in De-Grinnel Brass Lose CoolDES MOINES, Iowa (CPS)—Stu¬dents refused an administrationdictum to cut an allegedly “grossand lewd” scene from their pro¬duction of Eugene Ionesco’s “Theand lewd” scene from their pro-ctober of Eugene Ionesco’s “TheChairs” at Grinnell College October6 and closed the show instead.At issue was a female charac¬ter’s pantomine of the sexual actwith an imaginary person. RichardMeyer, director of the College’sArena Theater and an associateprofessor, demanded that the scenebe toned down.THE CAST and student director,Dennis Rich, agreed to cancel theremaining performances ratherthan compromise.The play was performed October5 and was slated to run threenights, but at the second perform¬ance Rich announced, “Meyerand the administration feel that‘The Chairs’ as presented lastnight is not fit for the Grinnell au¬dience. . . Under the circum¬stances we feel we cannot honestlypresent the play and therefore re¬ gretfully announce its cancella¬tion.”Bonnie Tinker, a sophomorewhose performance precipitatedthe row, said, “I fully realizedwhat was involved in the role whenI accepted it. The effect we hopedto achieve was complete disgustand embarrassment on the part ofthe audience.”MEYER ASSERTED he had notseen the rehearsals and did notknow the interpretations of thescene until the first night’s perform¬ance. He declared that hissuggestions that the scene bechanged did not infringe upon ar-Grinnell President Glenn Leggetttistic freedom.commented, “My understanding isthat Meyer found the play artistic¬ally unacceptable and that wasenough for me. I will admit thatthe dividing line between artisticunacceptability and moral unac¬ceptability is a pretty fine line . . .but I think I am content (theplay) was judged artistically rath¬er than by the standards of middle-class morality.”Long Hair and Beard Are Court CaseNEW YORK (CPS)—The U. S.Supreme Court has been asked toreview the case of a RichmondProfessional Institute student whowas kept out of the college for hissenior year because he sported abeard and long hair.The Virginia liberal arts collegerefused to allow Norman ThomasMarshall to register in September1965 and Marshall is seeking an in¬junction to prevent the collegefrom requiring a shave and haircutas prerequisites.In a brief filed with the highcourt on his behalf, the AmericanCivil Liberties Union contendedthat the school’s “arbitrary, capri¬cious and unreasonable” action re¬fusing his registration on account of his grooming violated the consti¬tutional rights to free expression,due process of law, privacy andprotection against cruel and unusu¬al punishment.Marshall, a 26-year-old senior,resigned a scholarship and his postas editor of the college’s art andliterary magazine last year in pro¬test against the school’s “high¬handedness” in its “arbitrary” rul¬ings on student dress and groom¬ing.“There is no limitation on mous¬taches,” Dr. George Oliver, presi¬dent of the Institute, said at anearlier trial. “If a man wants totake a chance walking down thehalls with a quite long one, he cango right along.”H I C A G O MAROON • October 25, 1966 cember, will be a means of bring¬ing about a change. But if no |change in the system has occurredby the time students would be call¬ing upon us to provide rank infor¬mation for them next summer, Ibelieve that we have neither a legalnor a moral right to interfere witha student’s right to obtain an edu¬cational deferment. I don’t thinkwe ought to tie our hands in ad¬vance by deciding not to provideranks regardless of what happensto national policy.I believe it is wrong to indulgemy personal values at the expenseof the rights of the students whoare affected, especially when, as itis often so melodramatically said,it may be a matter of life anddeath.WARNER WICKDEAN OF STUDENTSChumsTO THE EDITORSome old college men have ob¬viously been together for too long.Faculty inbreeding has alwaysbeen a problem at the University,but not until last Friday’s Maroondid I realize the extremes it hadreached. The resemblance of SolTax to a certain vagrant scientistin the Dept, of Education is trulyremarkable. Now listen, chum. . .JACK KOLBEditor’s Note:Our apologies.Free UniversityBegun at StanfordAnother free university, this onetitled simply “The Experiment,”has begun at Stanford.Initiated for the purpose of“bringing the personal elementback into education,” The Experi¬ment attracted 70 students to itsfall course offerings. The seminarsinclude courses in “AmericanYouth in Revolt,” ContemporaryEducation, “Black Power,” and“Existentialism and Political Com¬mitment.”“The only requirement for ourseminars is a belief that every¬thing is not all right in our societytoday,” according to one of thefounders.The Experiment hopes to main¬tain a relatively unstructured ap¬proach to education, viewing itscurriculum as “fluid becomingrather than static being,” its publi¬cation declared.“Courses are not rigidly definedentities. Teacher and learner pro¬ceed together, not in a hierarchicalrelationship.”A completely demoratic struc¬ture is planned for the school. Astudent coordinating committee ofelected representatives will makeadministrative but not policy deci¬sions. Questions concerning policywill be determined by the entiremembership.Tax Conference SetFor Law SchoolThe Law School will open its 19thannual Federal Tax Conference onWednesday with addresses by Shel¬don S. Cohen, U.S. commissionerof internal revenue, and Lester R.Uretz, chief counsel of the InternalRevenue Service.The Conference will continue forthree days and will be held in theauditorium of the Prudential Build¬ing downtown.ATTENDANCE at the sessions isexpected to reach 500. According toJames M. Ratcliffe, assistant deanof the Law School and member ofthe planning committee for theconference, the audience will con-(Continued on Page Eight) Since I ignored the critic’s codeand actually attended last Thurs¬day’s Chicago Symphony concert,it would be unjust to review it; un¬der such circumstances, personalimpressions render objectivity im¬possible. Instead, as a filler, hereis a short parable from Plutarch’sLife of Solon:“It so happened that while Solonwas abroad avoiding the laws hehad inflicted on Athens, he cameupon the ancient City of the Lake,which was rent in twain 'by faction.Supporting two baseball teams, thecity had tribute enough for but onesymphonic ensemble. And two or¬chestras, led by identical twinsnamed Janus of Martinia, bothclaimed title to the city’s patron¬age.“Solon was renowned as alearned and just man willing toplay the scapegoat. The elderstherefore appealed to him tochoose the legitimate representa¬tive of culture. Solon forthwith pre¬pared a gala concert at which, un¬beknownst to the public, both or¬chestras would perform, the onereceiving the most tumultuous ap¬plause to be declared victor.“The first orchestra began withDeath and Transfiguration, thedullest of the Strauss tone poems,but a work which boasts a sonicluxuriance to try an orchestra’stonal richness, as well as contra¬puntal monkeybars on which aconductor can exercise his com¬mand of instrumental balances.Unfortunately, although thunder¬ous, the performance was ponder¬ous and wonderless. Soaring melo¬dies were mortared in place by anill-considered rigidity, while onetheme was inevitably emphasizedto the detriment of the rest of thecounterpoint. Flabby horns, out-of¬tune timpani, thick monochromatictone—altogether scandalous.“It is, of course, impossible torecreate the atmosphere of an en¬tire opera through a few severedchunks. This fact notwithstanding,the next work, three fragmentsfrom Wozzeck, promised much, forJanus I was a famed interpreter ofBerg. On this occasion, however,he perversely normalized the mu¬sic’s distorted qualities. The sar¬donic, sneering military music wasprettified to sound like Poulenc; while the climactic D-minlude was too hushed andleaving the audience unThe soprano, Bethanee oslee, was inaudible, and <orchestra’s improved plavinot compensate for the st<the reading and the absentnecessary oppressive weigh“The second conductorprogram more in keepingskills—two works by StrThe first, the brief ancVariations, seemed calculprove the orchestra's precis a serial work in whiclline, rhythmic pattern, andmust be exact; and whilewithout a score, was unjudge its accuracy, there wpie indication that this orhad, in terms of contrapuntnique, far exceeded its prsor.“The decisive maneuver,er, was the ballet Petrusblorchestral sparkle-bright vhorns, javelin-sharp woodwiibilant but never overpetrumpets—put the first comjto shame. Yet it was no mernical display, for with an ursense of tempo and color siJanus II evoked all the $fantasy of a fairy-tale, whiistantly reminding the anthat this was music not onlyheard, but also to be danced.“When the applause was 1the elders were grived to dithat the populace had been eenthusiastic about both grouif unable to distinguish b<them. And so a second tinuapplied to Solon, granting hisolute power to decide. Desirpunish the city for its unrtaste, Solon declared that bochestras should be maintainethat the public should not Iformed of the arrangement,both would continue to perfirst one and then the other,the polis recognized the dec<and ostracized the inferior 01tra and conductor.“The elders, furious at thipensive decision, avenged \selves by composing the sartditty, Solon, It's Been Goo-Know You; but unto this dayare two orchestras in the Cithe Lake.”Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief ..David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editor David L. AikenAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzDavid H. RichterDinah EsralJoan PhillipsNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanFeature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor ; Edward ChikofskyPolitical Editor John BremnerEditor Emeritus .....Daniel HertzbergEditorial Staff—John Beal, Kenneth Simonson, Eleanor Kap¬lan, Slade Lander, Gary Christiana, Paul Burstein, Ellis Levin,Richard Rabens, Judy Schavrien.News Staff—John Moscow, Elaine Hyams, Harold Sheridan,Angela DeVito, Robert Skeist, Ronald McGuire, David Chand¬ler, Ina Smith, Seth Masia, Vivian Goodman, Cathy Sullivan,Jeffrey Blum, Sally Yagol, Leanne Star, Maxine Miska, AlfredMarcus, Marge Pearson, Leslie Recht, Helen Schary, Ann Gar¬field, John Welch, T. C. Pox, Gloria Weissman, Marlene Pro-viser, Ilene Kantrov, James Rubinstein, Roger Black, DonaldPalombo, Harold Kletnick, Larry Hendel, Anita Grossman,Larry Struck, Lynn McKeever, Sanford Rockowitz, Peter Stone,Susan Loewy, Noralyn Newmark, David F. Israel.wmmm TfMHMrtgit mMMmmmmmmt&M&MClassified Ads■! t/£ , 3>PERSONALSCHESS CLUB1 Learn to play the RoyalGame Thursday 7 PM at Ida Noyes.See what girl’s can do to a boy’s dorm.One of the great innovations of the NewCollege. Tonight 9-11. Snell House Cof-fee Hour.Female grad, student wanted to sharelarge 3rd floor pad with same. 52 andDorchester. $60 a month. Call 288-4564afternoons.Snell’s Angels. Tonight 9-11.Piano lessons by Mrs. Renate Thileniusat 6842 S. Chappel 363-0321, former stu¬dent of Dr. Rudolph Ganz and exper¬ienced in teaching and performing.Come see our op art lounge. Come seeus! Homemade goodies, too. SnellHouse Coffee Hour. Tonigh9-11.REWARD1!Free mug of Tschorr Braeu (bght ordark) at the Court House Restaurant(Harper Court) for solving the beef fon¬due problem: The beef fondue is a mostexciting cook-it-yourself dish consistingof raw prime sirloin steak cooked at thetable in hot bubbling oil. The art of eat¬ing fondue lies in the creation of yourown sauces by combining any of elevenspices. How many different sauces canbe made firom these eleven spices? TheCourt, House is awaiting your answer.Contest runs through October.SERVICE BUREAU of Univ. of ChicagoSERVICE LEAGUE sponsors a sale oftised furniture Saturday Oct. 29 from 10to 1 at 5316 So. Dorchester (GAYLORDBldg.) Admittance by Univ. ID. cardonly. Cash and Carry.Kamelot Restaurant, 2160 E. 71st St.10% discount far UC students.DONCASTERCustom made casual & after five dress¬es, suits, coats. Call 324-890LWriter’s Workshop PL 2-8377.Roommate wanted to share large apt. -2 baths-own bedroom, quiet neighbor¬hood. 721-6857 after 11 pm. & before 9am. $60 month.A llalloween a Gone Gone Saturdaynite? With go go girls? It must be aFATE. Happening. But then who’ssure about anything these days?ZBT Rush Smoker 7:30 Tonight 5472 S.Ellis.SAR meeting Thursday 7:30 Ida Noves.Upperclass Men come see the fabulous,brand new, ZBT. chapter house 7:30 to¬night.CHEETAH + PHOENIX - ?~Sign the anti-rank petition.ZBT Tonight 7:30 5472 S. Ellis.CHEETAH ~ PHOENIX = ?mmmemAny students or facultymembers wishing to join aUnited States Air Force Re¬serve (USAR) unit whichmeets on campus, pleasecall ext. 2845.mp -'V -j # < WkMODEL CAMERAon the South SideMost Complete1342 E. S5 HY 3-9259NSA DiscountsUNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorStudent AccessoriesIf the first frosty mornings find youunprepared for the cold Chicago win¬ter (it's later than you think) don'twonder where to shop for warmgloves, wooly mufflers, and ear¬warming headwear. You will find aready supply to meet your needs atprices from $1.00 to $5.95.For men and women.Gift Dept.The University of Chicago,Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. Andy: Where in hell’s the film? John.John: SoonTYou’ll LIKE it. AndyTMeeting for all interested in working on75th Anniversary Wash Prom: Wed. 7PM. Ida Noyes.John Lion (that handsome young man)is back, in a new film also starringL.W., T.M., R.S., & A.F.!Great Bodily Essences! Bob Swam asGod Pop! How Omni can you get?SOON! On Campus! Omnisex! WorldPremier! POP SOC. POOP!Congratulations to Michael E. Haig onwaking up—Jealous friendJOBS OFFEREDStudent wanted to help w/sick childrenin their home. 2,3, or 5 days; hrs. flexi¬ble; time off for classes, free lunch &breakfast, and you can get in somestudying on the job. DO 3-8767.Rm. and Brd. in Hyde Pk. in exchangefor cooking & shopping for 4 grad, stu¬dents. HY 3-5245. Call after 6.STUDENT ASSISTANT NEEDED—Cen¬ter for Research Libraries, 5721 S. Cot¬tage Grove. St. Sal. $1.50/hr. reedingknow, of Fr. or Ger. desired. MU 4-4545.Free rm. & brd. for student to care for2 small children in S. Shore home; fa¬ther works nights: Call 536-1232 or 268-0856. Ask for Kerista.WANTED—Two Gutsy Salesmen of thePercy type who want to become tycoonsat an early age. Salary & comm. CallJack Klein, J. & J. Publications. 372-5914 for an appl.PATRONIZEOURADVERTISERS FOR SALEWhite 120-bass 3 step accordian goodcond. orig. $375/best offer. 288-5639.’60 Rambler, fair body, good engine,$300, best offer, Rm. 446 - 1 - House FA4-8200.Chest of drawers. Sturdy construction.Nine compartments. $20 Call 684-0974.WANTED TO RENTStudio Space—Must beArtist—X3753—Barry heated-Comm.Violinist wishes to rent room to be usedas practice studio. Call 288-0731.TO RENTOne bdrm. unfurn. apt. at 1633 E. HydePark Blvd. BU 8-1865.Economical nearby, newly dec. unfurn.apt. Students or Faculty. Quiet bldg.Owned by U. of C. Grad. 2-3 rms. $77.50up incl. free gas, electricity, parking,'Private bath, elec, refrig., selected ten¬ants. Openhousing.See Williams 6045 WoodlawnRmmte wanted fern. grad. stud, pre¬ferred. On campus, own room & bath.$60-8 rm. house. Cal! 643-525il. Conference on City Discussion ThursdayWanted: roommates to share 21 roomhouse at reasonable costs. Ask for Rick.PL 2-9874.Weltner...(Continued from Page One)1964. He was the only Congressmanfrom the Deep South who voted forthe Civil Rights Act of 1964. A-s amember of the House Un-AmericanActivities Committee, he success¬fully urged that the committee in¬vestigate the Ku Klux Klan.CUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCALL MRS. BLIXT AT 782-2118FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES, INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle ST. Chicago, Ml. 60602 The Conference on the City andthe University will hold the secondof its current series of discussionsThursday at 8 pm in the ReynoldsClub.Thursday’s discussion will pro¬vide an opportunity to exploreideas expressed at the first meet¬ing, held October 13, and to returnto issues for which time availablewas not commensurate with inter¬est expressed.These include university expan¬sion, community organization, andthe growth of gangs. Representingthe views of the residents of Wood-lawn on these issues will be par¬ents associated with various com¬munity organizations, includingPost Off’ce JobsThe Chicago Post Office is ac¬cepting applications for Christmasvacation work.. Applicants must beat least 18 years old. The rate ofpay is $2.44 per hour.Applicatio- s and informat:on areavailable in the office of CareerCounseling and Placement, Rey¬nolds Club, room 202.BOB BELS0B MOTORSImport Centro6052 So. Cottage GroveIn 1986Halley’s Cometwill be droppingaround again.*Let’s plan abig welcome*♦Watch this paper fortime and place*ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • IT. LOUIS • NEWARK • 10S ANGELES • TAMM • HOUSTON wnsu/le/fiedfixt/teifnaaaemeiIlFFANY&CO713 NORTH MICHIGAN AV ...CHICAGOFor Illinois deliveryplease odd 4% sales tax UC’s tutoring projects, SWAP andSTEP.GERMANYLufthansa /Wenn Sie18 JahreOder altersind undeinigermassenmit IhremDeutschzurecht-kommen,dann sendenSie diesenGutscheinein.ErkonnteIhnenVergniigenundvielleichtsogar Nutzenbringen!I Lufthansa German Airlin*s, Dept. UX122• 410 Park AvenutI New York, N.Y. 10022| Bitte senden Sie mir ein Antragstormuiar| und Infoimationsmaterial uber Atbetts-I mogliehkeiten fur Studenten wahtend der! Sommerferien 1967 in Deutschland.UNIVERSITAT:Lufthansa,October 25, 1966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5CALENDAR OF EVENTSm -•-• •Tuesday, October 25MOTION PICTURE: “Fury”, FritzLang; presented by Doc Films; SocialScience 122, 7:15 and 9:15.PANEL PRESENTATION; WoodlawnResidents—Conference on the City & theUniversity, 8 PM, Reynolds Club North,REHEARSAL: 57th Street Chorale 7:30pm in Woolman Hall, 1174 E. 57thStreet.MEETING: S.D.S. Topic: “The Aimsand Rationale of Radical Student Or¬ganizing”, 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes.LECTURE: David R. Reed, candidatefor Congress, First District, 4:30 pm,Calvert House, 6735 S. University.SPEECH: Adlai E. Stevenson III, Dem-ocratic candidate for treasurer of Illi¬nois, 7:30 pm, Ida Noyes Hall.Wednesday, October 26LECTURE: Dr Arthur Falls, Chairmanof Committee to End Discrimination inChicago Medical Institutions, on "Discrimination in Medicine”. 5 pm,Billings, P 117.ATHLETIC EVENT: Varsity SoccerGame, Stagg Field, 3:30 pm, WheatonCollege.MOTION PICTURE: “War!” Grand Il¬lusion by Jean Renoir. Doc Films SocialScience 122. 6, 8 and 10.PANEL DISCUSSION: “The Peace Is¬sue and the Senatorial Elections”, 8pm, 1st Unitarian Church, 57th andWoodlawn; admission $1.LECTURE: The Relations BetweenBarth and Bonhoeffer, 4:30, MandelHall.FORUM: “Privacy, Inquiry, and Activi¬ty”, with Eugene Gendlin, asst. prof, ofpysch. and philosophy, and William Mc¬Neill, chmn. of history dept. Hitchcocklounge, 8 pm.OPEN MEETING: Faculty-StudentCommittee on Faculty-Student Relation¬ships, 3:30, Reynolds Club South.DANCING: English Country Dancers, Ida Noyes dance room, 8 pm.DISCUSSION: “The Narcotics Problemand Public Policy”, 7 pm, 5th floorLounge, Pierce Tower, 56th and Univer¬sity.MEETING: Wash Prom Committee, 7pm. Ida Noyes Library.Thursday, October 27THEATER: An Evening of No Drama,8:30 pm. Mandel Hall.MEETING: S.A.R., 7:30 pm, Ida NoyesHall.MEETING: Inter-House Council, 7:30pm, Flint House Lounge.DISCUSSION: Conference on the Cityand the University, 3 pm, ReynoldsClub.MEETING: UC Young Republicans;speakers: Joe Woods, Republican candi¬date for sheriff of Cook County, and E.George Thiem. twice Pulitzer prizewinning journalist. 7:30 pm, Ida NoyesTheater. “No” Plays at MandelOne of Japan’s leading “No" drama troupes will perform two full-length “No” plays Thursday nightat Mandel Hall.The Hosho troupe from Tokyo,which includes seven actors andthree musicians, will be in Chicagoas part of a special U.S. tour ar¬ranged by the Japan Society ofNew York.THE PERFORMANCE, which issponsored by the Humanities divi¬sion, will begin at 8:30 pm. Ad¬mission will be free.This tour will be the first time inGRAND ILLUSION: Jean Renoir’s great anti-war film.At Doc Films, Wednesday, October 26. At Social Sciences 122, 59th and University. At 6, 8, and 10 pm. 60 cents. the many centuries of its existhat the Hosho troupe has leipan, according to Eric Ganglgraduate student in Far Ealanguages. Gangloff said theformance will be an “extr;nary event” for the troupeand for American audiences.The troupe will performfourteenth-century dramas, IKomachi and Tsunemasa. Acing to Gangloff, the Hosho semphasises the spiritual aspethese dramas, while otherschools emphasize movemerchanting.THE JAPANESE governhas designated the art of “No’“national cultural heritage,”has specified three of the actcthe Hosho troupe as “living cial heritages.”Although the performance win Japanese, program notes inlish will be provided.TWA^CLUBvMl MMMaiMMIMmssazSsijmL.With this cardthe bookworm turnsinto an adventurer. • ••join TWA*850/50 Club and gotup to 50% off iJet CoachItfs easy. If you’re under 22,just fill out an application, buythe $3.00 ID card-and you’re oayour way to any TWA city in theU.S. for half fare. Your 50/50 Clubfare is good most all year*, whenyou fly on a standby basis.'To get your card, call your travelftgent, or your nearest TWA office.We Ye your kind of airline*NiltonwfdoWorldwidedepend on\ TWiNo*. 23 am$37.Pec, tg thru & Jan. 2.3. 4 SDS Sets TalksOn Radical PolilUC Students for a DemocSociety (SDS) will be sponsoriseries of biweekly discussionradical politics, the first of vwill be held tonight at 7:30 itNoyes Hall.THE PURPOSE of the serito discuss long-range polquestions. Among the suggitopics are: black power and istudents, the value of electoralitics, the role of the Ameiworking class, and communityganizing in Chicago.SDS HOPES to attract <members of the campus comnty to these discussions. Thegram is part of SDS’s contirinternal education program walso includes a series of talkprominent radical scholars aipossible two-day conference diwinter quarter.PhotoWe will be happy to advise yon how to take or process ycpictures.We carry a line of well kno’chemicals and supplies.Photo Dept.The University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Ave.MEET YOURPERFECTDATE!You too can be amongst tthousands of satisfied adulLet Dateline Electronics co;puters programmed for wornages 18 to 45 and men 1855. Take the guess work outdating.Continuous matching withnew expanded program with erollment fees reduced to $3for adults ages 18 to 27, ai$5.00 for adults over 27.For quick results send for your questinairfc today. No obligation. Strictly cfidential.NameAddressCityDATELINE ELECTRONICP. O. Box 340, Chicago, IM.60645RESEARCH INC. CMFor Add. Info CoN 271-3133* • CHICAGO MAROON • October 25, 1966Conference Closes with Talk on Art's Functionby Mark Rosin“The arts have almost altogetherlost their function,” asserted Wil¬liam Arrowsmith, professor of artand humanities at the Universityof Texas, in his address that endedthe “Arts and the Public” Confer¬ence.Arrowsmith said that “nothingmore vividly exhibits this loss offunction than their instability, andtheir liability to universal ap¬propriation, to manipulation. Hav¬ing no longer any clear or endur¬ing function to perform, they canbe taken over by almost anyonewith a use for them.”ARROWSMITH'S paper was con¬cerned with defining the properfunction of art and the university’srole in educating the artist’s au¬dience.According to Arrowsmith, styleis now at a premium; art is decor¬ative, ornamental. But in the past,art was valued as the supremeeducator.Arrowsmith traced the artist’spreoccupation with education fromthe Greek poets to the present. Heemphasized that our failure is thatwe do not see that art is the high¬est educational effort, but in¬stead confuse it with didacticismand message, and make it un¬fashionable."THERE IS something more im¬portant than art,” Arrowsmithsaid, “just as there is somethingmore important than research orknowledge—and that is education."Art, in its “supreme complexity,delicacy, strength, persuasiveness,and clarity,” is a means which hasat stake “the greatest of ends. . .the future of the species, love forthe procreated, our own self-crea¬tion.”ARROWSMITH CLAIMS that itis through our own education thatwe acquire the power to educate |others. The artist is realizedthrough his art, and his self-mas¬ tery permits him to be an educa¬tor. Arrowsmith quoted Emerson’scomplaint that his culture was notmanworthy, that it omitted thevast and spiritual and thereby alsoomitted the practical and moral.Emerson argued that boys werenot taught to aspire to all they can,that they were not educated as ifthe society believed in their noblenature, in their potential to begreat-hearted men.“Let Emerson stand for a greatpart of my argument,” Arrow-smith said, “that our educationalinstitutions too have ‘truckled tothe times’ and create technicians,but not men.” Arrowsmith elab¬orated on Emerson’s complaints,bringing them up to date: “At pre¬sent our educational institutions do not educate, or educate feebly andineffectually, largely because theytoo are isubject to the enormouspressures that have fragmentedmodern culture into diverse andunrelated expertises. Scholarship issick,” he said, “and so is criticism;conscript scholars (the vast major¬ity) cannot realize themselves andtherefore cannot teach; uneducat¬ed, that is, unrealized, critics can¬not teach anything but irrele¬vance.’HE CONCLUDED by saying thatwhile giving students useless skills,alienating them from the cultureand depriving ourselves of futurelaymen of any great art and cul¬ture, “The universities and col¬leges remain committed, if only by tradition, to the idea that art adu*cates. ”As evidence for his contentionthat with or without the help ofuniversities the artist still doeseducate, Arrowsmith points to theBerkeley revolt which he charac¬terizes as an educated response tothe great crisis in higher educa¬tion: impersonality, bureaucraticinjustice and lack of concern forthe individual. Socrates, Thoreauand Camus were the educators ofthe rioters; whose estrangementeventually turned them against Ca¬mus and the other educated teach¬ers of the revolt."WHAT I AM trying to suggest,”Arrowsmith said, “is. . .that thecolleges and universities andsecondary schools offer u<s, as un¬ happy members of a sick and tech¬nocratic culture, our only largehope of ever recovering an au¬dience founded upon educatedmen.” Arrowsmith stressed that“we need men who can write asteachers of English. . . .Our de¬partments, especially in the hu¬manities are in the hands of menwho are mostly neither competentscholars, nor teachers, nor critics.The only thing that could conceiva¬bly improve them is the presenceof example ; it does the universityno good that it should have distin¬guished artists and writers whoteach five or six students a year,and graduate students at that.”Chaplin’s THE IMMIGRANT; Capra’s IT’S A WONDERFULL LIFEAt Dec Films tonight. At Social Sciences 122, 59th end University. At 7 and 9:36 pm. *0 cents.New Books by Campus AuthorsReligion in Japanese Historyby Joseph M. KitagawaThe Secularization of Modern Culturesby Bernard E. MelandOrganization for Treatmentby David Street, Robert D. Vinter& Charles Perrow $10.00$ 4.95$ 7.95$1.98 Brush Stroke print sale continues through Thursday.General Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.SAItMeeting 7:30 Thurs. Ida NoyesSign the slip:520 people, including303 college males havealready signed. WE THE UNDERSIGNED OPPOSE THE FORMULATION BY THE UNIVER¬SITY ADMINISTRATION OF A CLASS RANK OF MALES IN THE COL¬LEGE FOR THE PURPOSES OF SELECTIVE SERVICE.SignatureQ College□ Graduate□ College Faculty0 Other Faculty Name(Please print)AddressPhone #□ Male O FemekName authorised far publication Q Yes □ He • OVER YOURINSTRUMENTS• OVER AUDIENCKNOISEYour microphone is your linkwith your audience. Chooseit with care. Shure Unidynemicrophones project yourvoice over your instruments,and over audience noise ...YOU WILL BE HEARD. Theyare used by many of thewprld’s most famous Rock 'nRoll and Country ’n Westerngroups. Shure Unidynemicrophones help put youract across. Write: ShureBrothers, Inc., 222 HartrevAve., Evanston, III. 60204.<=; I—l E<s>UNIDYNEPROFESSIONAL ENTERTAINERMICROPHONES1ETA BETA TADUPPER CLASSRUSH SMOKER7:30 - 10:00 TONIGHTNEW CHAPTER HOUSE5472 S. Ellis NUCLEAR WARTHE CONTROVERSIAL SATIRE! The game to end all games and the world too!Features intercontinental ballistic missiles, supersonic bombers, anti-missiles,nuclear warheads, propaganda, top secret espionage, germ warfare, beat¬nik pacifists, etc. Includes plastic coated playing cards, population cards,and radio-active fallout indicator spinner board. ONLY $2.95VIETNAMTHE ULTIMATE IN COMPETITION! Buy this game for your 2-S friends!Realism guaranteed to motivate potential 1-A's to super high grade pointsfor this next semester. Features air strikes, coups, monsoons, ambushes,infiltratino, political instability, world opinion, etc. Includes 21 inch by27 inch three color game board and over 100 plastic pawns and playingpieces. JUST $4.95PLAY THESE MODERN GAMES TONIGHTUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueChicago, Illinois 60637October 25, T 966 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7SG Student faculty Dinner Program Revised(Continued from Page One)dents and faculty members as wasthe case last year."WE FEEL it is more impor¬tant to emphasize the aspect of fac¬ulty inviting students, becausethat way more students and morefaculty members will become in¬volved.” Kolb said. Also, if a stu¬dent really wants to invite a facul¬ty member over to his house, thecost of providing a meal for himwill not stop him.”By the end of this week. SG willhave sent out letters to all the Col¬lege faculty and most of the divi¬ sional faculty, asking each facultymember if he would be willing tohave dinner at his home for ap¬proximately eight students, sometime during the year.All faculty members who consentto hold dinners will be reimbursedby SG at the rate of Si to $1.25 perstudent invited.WITHIN TWO or three weeksstudents will be able to sign up forthese dinners at the SG office, on afirst come, first serve basis.Kolb -said that SG has severalreasons for wanting to set up aprogram of this type. The primary reason is, he said, “To get studentsand faculty who are not familiarwith each other to get to knoweach other. Wp feel that informaldiscussions, like these dinners, willbe more successful in this respectthan any formal committees orplanned discussions of a specifictopic in the Administration Build¬ing.”Presumably, he -said, these din¬ners would turn into discussions ofcurrent campus issues, such asclass ranking.IN ORDER to pay for the stu¬dent-faculty dinners, SG has re¬ quested $900 from CORSO. SG hasalready received $400 towards thisproject, and, according to Kolb,"hopefully we will get the remain¬ing $500 very soon.” Kolb also saidthat Wayne Booth, dean of the Col¬lege. has promised that the Collegewould match CORSO's grant.Another reason for initiating theprogram was the success of lastyear's student-faculty dinners.Kolb noted that SG wants thesedinners to be a part of this year’sliberal arts conference and to con¬tinue throughout the rest of theyear as w-ell.Continued expansionof our militaiy and commercial businessprovides openingsfor virtually every technical talentAs you contemplate one of the most important decisionsof your life, we suggest you consider career oppor¬tunities at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft. Like most everyone•pise, we offer all of the usual “fringe” benefits, in-’eluding our Corporation-financed Graduate EducationProgram. But, far more important to you and your fu¬ture, is the wide-open opportunity for professionalgrowth with a company that enjoys an enviable recordof stability in the dynamic atmosphere of aerospacetechnology.And make no mistake about it. . . you’ll get a solidfeeling of satisfaction from your contribution to ournation’s economic growth and to its national defenseas well.Your degree can be a B.S., M.S. or Ph.D. in: MECHAN¬ICAL, AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, CIVIL (structuresoriented), ELECTRICAL, MARINE, and METALLURGI¬CAL ENGINEERING • ENGINEERING MECHANICS,APPLIED MATHEMATICS, CERAMICS, PHYSICS andENGINEERING PHYSICS. Take a look at the above chart; then a good long look atPratt & Whitney Aircraft—where technical careers offerexciting growth, continuing challenge, and lasting sta-:bility—where engineers and scientists are recognized atthe major reason for the Company’s continued success. McNeill, GendlinSpeak at HitchciProfessor of history WilliairNeill and assistant profess<philosophy and psychology EiGendlin will be the featured iists at the “Sixth-College FcSession I,” at Hitchcock Hou:morrow rt 8 pm.I The theme to be discussed iij session is “Privacy, Inquiry! Activity.”| Norman Aronin, cultural; chairman of Hitchcock House; ed that “The Forum will be aportunity for all interested ij bers of the university to try tgin to formulate the scope of iity and involvement best suito an intelligent, satisfying, »sicant life in contemporary soci“The Sixth College,” establby this event, is to be an infcand flexible means of attaiproblems of common concer; UC students and faculty, thi| organized discussion,i All University students andulty are invited to participathis experiment.UC Campaign DrNears HalfwayPoint After YeaGaylord Donnelly, natichairman of the “Campfor Chicago ”, UC’s threefund raising drive, annouilast weekend that the camihad received $65,073,628 inand pledges.The total is 40.7 per cent o$160 million set last year as tlna! goal.Donnelly, in a prepared smen!, said “the targets of the <paign for Chicago are theest in American education,we observe the first anniversathis historic effort, I am grato report that thousands of incj uals. scores of corporationsmany foundations have madetributions toward the Univer;j support. It has been an imprebeginning.”The grant is part of a tenj program to raise $360 miJ which will finance 15 new endi! professorships, increased fa| salaries and -student aid, an| million graduate research liba science center, and severalvations. The money will als<used to build an experimtheater and a dorm complex.Taxation Talk Hi(Continued from Page Fosi-st of lawyers, accountants, c<ration executives with tax re;sibilities, and, as guests, memof the staff of the Internal RevService in Chicago.The Conference will dealvarious problems of federallion and is intended for peiwith -substantial background ineral tax matters. Papers wildelivered, and questions regalproblems touched upon in th<pers will be discussed. A pane:eussion will be held at the coning session, under the leadershProfessor Walter J. Blum ofLaw School.For further information concerning a career with Pratt& Whitney Aircraft, consult your college placementofficer—or write Mr. William L. Stoner, EngineeringDepartment, Pratt & Whitney Aircraft, East Hartford,Connecticut 06108* SPECIALISTS IN POWER . . . POWER FOR PROPULSION^POWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS. CURRENT UTILIZATION^INCLUDE MILITARY AND COMMERCIAL AIRCRAFT, MISSILES,*SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.Pratt & Whitney AircraftCONNECTICUT OPERATIONS EAST HARTFORD. CONNECTICUTFLORIDA OPERATIONS WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA _ UDIVISION OP UNITS© AIRCRAFT CORPfcn. An Equal Opportunity Employ*?? Ml 3-3113S424 S. Kimbwe sell the best,and fix the rest8 • CHICAGO MAROON • October 25, 1966