Chicago Maroon WEEKENDEDITION75th Anniversary YearVol. 75-No. 29 The University of Chicago Friday, January 13. 1967Both Right and Left RapLyndon’s New Tax HikeOpposition to President Johnson’s tax increase was heardfrom both sides of the political spectrum this week.While UC economist Yale Brozen, Professor in the GraduateSchool of Business, was questioning the economic necessityfor a tax hike, Students for a Dem- —ocratic Society national chairmanGreg Calvert was calling for‘ anti-tax unions” as a form of pro¬test."THIS IS the wrong time to in¬crease taxes,” Brozen commented,when the majority of economistsforesee a recession in the economy.Instead of raising taxes, Brozenurged, the federal governmentshould be cutting spending. Highfederal expenditures, he charged,have been “contibuting to inflationat this point.”Among the areas Brozen suggest¬ed as ripe for spending reductionswere the agricultural subsidy pro¬gram. and the program of land rec¬lamation. These two work atcross-purposes, he commented, thefirst attempting to take land out ofproduction, the latter to makemore land arable.These and other program cutswould result in decreases inspending which would total morethan the $4.5 billion a tax increasewould bring in.RICHARD FLACKS, AssistantProfessor of Sociology, opposed thetax increase from the viewpoint ofa critic of the Vietnam war, forwhich much of the revenue wouldbe used.“If I understand it right,” Flacks "Black Power Only Solution'Carmichael on Racismby Slade Lander and David E. GumpertStokely Carmichael, chairman of the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee, lastnight called Negro political power the only solution to “socialized racism” in the UnitedStates.Addressing an overflow crowd in Mandel Hall, Carmichael said that integration is notthe solution. Integration, he said,is based on the assumption thatthere is nothing of value in theNegro community.‘‘The Negro community must ob¬tain its liberation while maintain¬ing its cultural identity. I did not goto Mississippi to sit next to RossBarnett. I went to render thatcracker impotent over my life.”ACCORDING TO Carmichael, in¬tegration is based upon the as¬sumption that Negroes aspire towhite middle class values. ‘‘This isneither realistic nor is it particular¬ly desireable.”He blasted ‘‘the white powerstructure” for keeping Negroes asa group powerless. “Powerlessnesbreeds a race of beggars,” he ob¬served. ‘‘It is white power thatmakes the laws and white cops thatenforce the laws.”Carmichael explained thatNegroes are defined by twoforces—their blackness and theirpowerlessness. He pointed out thathistory shows that blacks haveUndergraduates at Chicago will face “The Challenge of New Knowledge” next month. been kept in their place, not neces-That’s the theme, Dean ot the College Wayne C. Booth announced yesterday, of this ^ ^ ^scriminatioa^a^instyear s Liberal Arts Conference (LAC 67) to be held Wednesday, February 8 through Satur- against Negroes as a whole.tax.” Flacks pointed out that “it’snearly impossible” to actually re¬fuse to pay taxes, but people could,if they want, avoid paying the fullrate on income on which the tax isnot withheld. The governmentcould then take action to collect therest of the tax, but the individualwould at least have made a ‘‘sym¬bolic protest.” Flacks suggested.Calvert said no definite protestactivities are now planned by SDS,but the New York chapter maystage demonstrations around thetime Congress is considering thesupplemental appropriations bill inFebruary. Stokely Carmichael, addressing overflow crowd at Mandel Hall.Booth Announces LAC Theme:'Challenge of New Knowledge'said. ‘‘One purpose of the increase | in a moratorium of classroomis to further mobilize the popula- | learning and an enthusiastic inquiry ;tion for the war. It has a political by students into the problems of Ipurpose as well as an economic j general education, undergraduateone. In fact, Humphrey was quoted c]asses have been canceled by the1recently as saying the people felt j College Council for the duration of'upset because they can’t partici- j >67pate in the war effort. Presumablythe tax increase is giving them achance,” Flacks commented. day, February 11. Booth revealed other recent developments in the planning of the four-dayintellectual trip.LIKE LAST year, when the origi¬nal “What Knowledge is MostWorth Having” conference resultedUnlike last year, participants inLAC ’67 will address themselves toBOTH Flacks and SDS chief Cal¬vert raised the possibility of pro- itests by refusal to pay the “sur the relation of recent developments| in the various fields of knowledgeto undergraduate education, Boothsaid. In effect, this means an in¬quiry into the problems of relatingspecialization to the liberal arts.Although there will be a numberof outstanding outside speakers,most of the speakers this year willThe Right Reverend James ?ravvn from the University’sfaculty.Former Bishop PikeHits Chapel SundayA. Pike, former Bishop of theEpiscopal Diocese of California,will deliver a sermon at Rocke¬feller Chapel Sunday, on “TheReal Conflict Between Science andReligion.”Bishop Pike, the center of a here¬sy controversy last year, has beenassociated with the Center for theStudy of Democratic Institutions,Santa Barbara, California, sinceearly 1966. He had served as bishopof the Episcopal Diocese of Califor¬nia from 1958 through the end of1965.FROM 1952 TO 1958, he was deanof the Cathedral Church of St. Johnthe Divine in New York City, thenation’s largest church.Bishop Pike has, in the past,been a controversial figure in theEpiscopal Church because of hisliberal religious views.In late 1966, an accusation of her¬esy made by other Episcopal bish¬ops against Bishop Pike was drop¬ped at the annual meeting of theEpiscopal House of Bishops. Acommittee of bishops appointed toinvestigate the accusation censured(Continued on Page Twelve) “Many of the participants will bemen who do not regularly teach un¬dergraduates and the conferencewill be an opportunity for the Col¬lege students to see these men inaction and to exchange ideas withthem in informal discussions,”Booth said.Four main speakers have beenscheduled:• Richard P. Feyman, professorof physics at California Institute ofTechnology and Nobel prize winnerin physics in 1964, who will speakon creativity in science. He willalso hold an informal discussionwith students over coffee in IdaNoyes Hall the afternoon of hisspeech.• Daniel Bell, professor of sociol¬ogy at Columbia University, visitingprofessor in the College and the de¬partment of Sociology here, and theauthor of the recent book The Re¬forming of General Education.Bell’s topic will be ‘‘New Know¬ledge of the Future.”• President George W. Beadle, Wayne C. BoothBeadle’s remarks will providebackground for a panel discussionof the concept of human racialdifferences which will immediatelyfollow his speech.• Robert E. Streeter, dean of the will speak on “Notes on the Hu¬manistic Curriculum.”BESIDES THESE formal pro-'grams, faculty members here andj guests invited from other institu-' tions will conduct approximately! thirty panels and seminars. Mostof these will be scheduled non-J competitively so that students will1 have the greatest opportunity toattend whatever events they like,Booth explained.Student Government, which isi again co-sponsoring the conference,j is arranging a series of dinners for! LAC ’67 participants in the dormi¬tories. ‘‘These dinners were a high-j ly successful feature of last year’sconference,” Booth said, “and wehope their success will be repeatedthis year.”Other planned LAC ’67 events in¬clude a demonstration of computermusic and the Chicago premiere of Two Types of RacismHe distinguished between individ¬ual racism and institutional rac¬ism. Individual racism might bethe bombing of a Negro church. In¬stitutional racism, on the otherband, affects Negroes as a group.“Society pretends it doesn’t knowabout this racism and it doesn’t doanything about it,” he said.Carmichael lashed out at wdiat hecalled the “w'hite press” for “dis¬tortions in the controversy, overBlack Power.” As a result of thesedistortions, he said, “the Americanpeople have gotten very little of thereal debate.”He claimed that the root of thesedistortions lies in the unwillingnessof the white community to admitthat social racism exists.READING A text which had ap¬peared in the Massachusetts Quar¬terly Review in the fall of 1966,Carmichael said he felt that thecause of the supression of the Ne¬gro was social racism rather thanindividual racism. The “silent vio-Jean-Luc Goddard’s film “Band ofOutsiders.” The showing, arranged lence” of the middle class to thewith the cooperation of the Docu¬mentary Film Group, will bring theconference to a close on SaturdayDivision of the Humanities here, evening inner-city Negro, he said, does infi¬nitely more harm than any overtindividual act of violence.(Continued on Page Sixteen)IHC To Debate Dorm Freedom BidThe Inter-House Council met j 2 am weekdays, and till 3 am week- Under the provisions of thoends. (Chamberlin House also1 procedure for autonomy, the IHCpassed those hours, but after the must review all proposals, and if itcommittee meeting.) The girls in approves them, send them on tolast night as the Maroon wentto press to determine the fateof the new house hours propos¬als. Although all but one of thehouses which submitted rules wonat least conditional approval in acommittee meeting last Monday,their outcomewas by no means certain. Harper Surf asked to entertain visi¬tors all evenings, and during theafternoon on weekdays.TWO HOUSES received only con¬ditional approval for their propos-in the "full * CoiuTcii | als* frrrom the IHC committee Rick-ert House is badly split between Wick. If it disapproves, for what¬ever reason, it must detail its ob¬jections and send them back to thehouse, which may either accept thechange or may send the rulesstraight to Dean of Students War-Nobel winner in biology in 1958, | library closes—during the week,who will speak on “Genetics and and until three am on weekends.Cultural Inheritance.” Professor Vincent will be open from noon till ner A. Wick, together with the IHCthe girls who want the house open objections.Three houses won unconditional j in the evenings during the week, THE OTHER house which wonapproval for rules that varied wide-j and those who want it closed all the only conditional approval wasly. 5400 Greenwood residents want ! time. Since neither side has been Hitchcock, which wants open hours,to be able to entertain guests from 1 able to come up with the com-1 It faces a severe fight in the fulllunch time to midnight—when the manding majority that the IHC Council, and may not get full ap-feels is desirable for rules, the! proval at all. According to somematter will probably be resubmit-j Hitchcock residents, they will sub-ted to the house. 1 (Continued on Page Thirteen)BANG - up after QUISTmas sale“Great to be Back ”HOMECOMING SALE(Cash and Carry)Seasick merchandiselist Price Seasick Price3 Barnes Sofas (converts to sleeper, covered in black skai $340 $ 904 Barnes Chairs to match 180 901 Oak sideboard 480 1491 Counselor sofa (Rastad and Relling design—blue fabric) 340 1402 Rosewood slat chairs (very seasick) 98 301 Moringren delux sleeper sofa 360 1653 Teak triangular tables with shelves 60 191 Lounge chair with ottoman (orange) 180 893 Reclining chairs with stool in blue and solid teak 200 1203 Bellevue chairs—upholstered in Skai 78 191 Hov desk 210 1202 1999 Rocking chairs in sol'd teak and red wool fabric 172 7995A group of odd chairs—list price as high as $38, all $5.953 large game tables—reversible tops 120 392 small game tables—reversible tops 98 292 teak dining room tables 120 39.951 formica top Swedish table with two extension leaves 86 29.954 round pedastal tables in teak 44" dia. w/plasticized tops 172 69.951 dozen square end tables in teak 39 14.952 sewing tables (very seasick) 78 14.951 Child's extension bed 36 51 Savoy dining table 178 653 Danish easy chairs (ship shape)— and many others — WHALE size deductions on teak tablesRegular Sale24 Cocktail tables-Model "Quist" $59.95 $44.9520 Cocktail tables-Model "Quist, Jr." 49.95 39.9524 End tables "Radio Tables" 27.95 19.9530 Square 36x30x17" Model "Milo" 49.95 39.9516 Round 36" diam.-Model "Centro" 59.95 44.9550 Danish T.V. tables with shelf 39.95 29 9512 Cocktail tables-Model "Kaptain" 76 00 57 9520 Dining Tables—Model "Mate" 114.00 79 95All of the above cash and carry—some in cartonsLounge chairs "rock bottom" prices — frames — teak —stained beach — fabrics very, very "ship shape". Allcash and carry:24 Low backs 76 48-5412 High backs 98 68 74100 Dining occasional chairs: Rosewood, finishesmohogany — black "skai" seat and back 54 29 95We still have 24 Moringen Delux Sofas (5 fabrics) instock bottom priced at: $265.00 (free deliverieson these sofas)Scandinavian Imports53rd & Lake Park Blvd.NO 7-4040Hours: Weekdays & Saturday 11-9, Sun. 12-6US South African Economic ActionExplained as the Key to Apartheid PolicyA reverse domino theory could be the key to majority rulein South Africa, said Richard Thomas of the American Com¬mittee on Africa at an SDS meeting Wednesday.Speakng on “U.S. Economic Involvement in South Africa,”Thomas explained that if the neigh¬boring Portuguese territories of An¬gola and Mozambique underwentrevolutions, the borders of SouthAfrica would then be exposed, sur¬rounding Africans under apart¬heid with Africans of political andsocial mobility.NOW IS THE ideal time to pres¬sure the whites into compromise,said Thomas, and that is one rea¬son SDS should carry out its planto demonstrate in front of the Con-jtinental Illinois National Bank,where University accounts arekept, January 23. American busi¬ness has involved the U.S. in :apartheid economically and Conti¬nental’s loans are a part of this in- jvolvement, he contended.Thomas suggested import taxesand consumer boycotts as possibleways of weakening the power jstructure of South Africa, in addi¬tion to demonstrations and indica¬tions of a lack of Congressionalsupport. will demand that either Continentalchange its South African loan poli¬cy or UC withdraw its accounts.SDS has already mailed letters toUC’s trustees explaining, “Thebanks bear partial responsibilityfor the confidence with which theSouth African government present¬ly pursues its chosen course.” Itasked the trustees to transfer UC’smoney to a different bank not mak¬ing such loans.The American Committee on Af¬rica last year helped bring aboutthe withdrawal of 24 million dollarsfrom New York banks makingloans to South Africa and Rhodesia. Freedman's Subcommittee Testimony‘No Constructive Personal LSD Use’by John Moscow“There is no constructive use for LSD on a personal basis,” according to Daniel X. Freed¬man, chairman of the department of psychiatry, and one of the nation’s leading experts onLSD. On the other hand, “it is an important research tool in psychiatry, and would be soeven if it had no potential therapeutic effects.”In testimony before Senator Rob¬ert F. Kennedy’s subcommittee in¬vestigating the use of the drug, Dr.Freedman criticized the atmos¬phere of sensationalism that hasgrown up around LSD. “Our presentneed is to convert alarm about theuse and abuse of LSD into the con¬tention to support informed and ef¬fective study,” he said.FREEDMAN insisted that LSD isuseful clinically, and for research.He told the committee that, “Weneed to know what the drug canreveal about behavior— about howKinoy Sees Possible End for HU ACby Barbara GoiterU-High CorrespondentArthur Kinoy, the AmericanCivil Liberties Union (ACLU)SDS’s demonstration will involve lawyer who was forcibly eject-several Clucago area colleges in e(j from House Un-Ameri-addition to UC. Placards in the jdemonstration will parodv Conti- j can Activities Committee (HUAC)nental’s own advertising jingle I hearings in Washington last sum¬reading “The bank with apart¬heid inside.”ACCORDING TO UC SDS spokes¬man Chris Hobson, a consortium of | mer, told an audience of U-Highstudents that the end for HUACmay be in sight.Kinoy, who spoke at U-High,ten American banks loan 40 million Wednesday, said that in his view,dollars a year to the South African ! the rights guaranteed under thegovernment. SDS contends that First Amendment are the ultimatemoral discrimination is necessary 1 control channels that the people being isolated from neighbors, hav¬ing one’s children boycotted, andone’s life generally ruined,” hesaid.Kinoy expressed optimism overthe chances of abolishing the Com¬mittee. He said that a lot dependson whether enough people will pro¬test to their Congressmen and urgethem to support the abolition of theCommittee. the mind is built, so to speak, andhow it functions—and for this, LSDis one of a range of tools that thebehaviored scientist can use.Mental Chemistry“What is often overlooked andwhat is very important,” he contin¬ued, is what “the drug revealsabout how the mental chemistryis—and is not—related to be¬havior.” This has, according toFreedman, been the subject ofinvestigations for ten years, with“a great deal” of success. “With¬in the next ten years it seems safeto say that we will learn muchmore about how various kinds ofchemical and phychological stressaffect quite different biochemicalsystems in the brain. We knowof drugs which produce an oddmental state quite different fromthat produced by LSD; these drugsin turn affect quite differentchemical systems. According adrug such as LSD offers a rarechance to gain a uniquely tangiblegrip upon the problem of how the biochemistry of (the) brain is relat¬ed to a specific kind of alteredmental state.”DR. FREEDMAN told the Ma¬roon that it was the unpredictab¬leness of the drug, together witheffects which depend largely uponthe size, purity, and quality of thedose which make the drug danger¬ous for personal use. In describingits effects to the Kennedy sub¬committee he said, “The reactionproduced by the drug is marked bya heightened and vivid awareness,but a diminished control over whatis seen and thought and felt. Thedrug produces an intensely vividexperience in which the normal(Continued on Page Thirteen)THE LAST STAGE1506 E. Hyde Park Blvd.Racine's TragedyANDROMACHEOPENING TONIGHTRESERVATIONS OA 4-4200in making economic decisions andHIM PhotographsHillel House has announced anexhibit of photographs taken by thelate Hyman Landau. Landau, a UCProfessor on the Committee ofMathematical Biology, died earlylast month.The pictures, which will be ondisplay for two weeks starting to¬day, were taken by Landau as ahobby. They cover a wide varietyof subjects, ranging from movingequipment to flowers and children. have in a democracy. Kinoy saidthat it is HUAC’s purpose to denysome of those rights to the people.According to Kinoy, a subpoenafrom HUAC means more thanbeing forced to appear before theCommittee. “It means losing a job,STUDENT POETRYREADINGHear many of your friendsat Jimmy's this Sunday.7:30 pm. Minors will be admitted.Rockefeller Memorial Chapel11 AM.BISHOP JAMES A. PIKECenter for the Study of Democratic Institutions at SantaBarbara Subject: “The Real Conflict Between Science andReligion."Open conversation with Bishop Pike from 2-4 p.m., Brent House, 5540Woodlawn.rLOOKING FOR SELF-FULFILLMENT?SHERUT LA'AM — ISRAELMAY BE YOUR ANSWERTo: Sherut La'am (Service to the People)515 Park AvenueNew York, N. Y. 10022I am a graduate—undergraduate (underline one) between 19-30and would like you to send me, without obligation, FREE informa¬tion telling how I can serve a full year in Israel for only $670which includes round trip fare. (A limited number of long-termloans are available). I understand a knowledge of Hebrew isnot a prerequisite.NAME (PLEASE PRINT)major field OF STUDY COLLEGE OR UNIV.STREET ADDRESS PHONE (OPTIONAL)CITY STATE ZIP A Major New Book by Dr. Bruno Bettelheimto be Published January 16,1967TheEmpty Urn"?,TlIlLniLinfwtilew^Infantile Autismand the Birthof the SelfA new work from the author of Dialogues With Mothers, Love is Not Enough,Truants From Life, and The Informed Heart, this major study sheds light onthe development of the mind through an examination of arrested mental growthin children. Dr. Bettelheim's investigation documents a unique "experimentin nature" and presents new insights into such questions as —■ Where does the human mind begin?■ What explains its near-total arrested in some human beings?■ Are the steps in personality development tied to a biologicaltime clock?Findings, based on twenty years of intensive research conducted at theUniversity of Chicago's Orthogenic School, leave the reader with a powerfulsense of discovery. A wealth of material including three extensive case historiesillustrate the nature of specific childhood aberrations, the growth and distortionof the personality in infancy, and the progress of therapy in working withthe young.Beyond the author's immediate conclusions rise the larger implications of abold search into extreme alienation.January, 1967 498 pages, illustrated $9.95A FREE PRESS BOOK now on sale at theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, 60637January 13, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Cnocturnal Gnash !Wade Terms Evans-Novak EvasiveA Afalter for StudyAlong with thumb-sucking,the effects of Crest toothpaste,and political opposition toflouridation of water, one ofdentistry’s major problems isBuchsism. Buchsism is the prac¬tice, or perhaps the art, of gnawingone’s teeth while sleeping.But since dentists are usuallydoctors who don't like night work,there has been little study of thisproblem. The lot has fallen to psy¬chiatrists to study Dr. GeorgesReding of UC’s Department of Psy¬chiatry has initiated a study onbuchsism.IN ACKNOWLEDGING the greatcontributions of previous experi¬menting dentists, Dr. Reding stat¬ed, “We are charting an unknownarea.”Proceeding with informationgathered from questionnaires, ob¬servations, and tape recordings of gnocturnal gnashing, Dr. Redinghas come up with little concrete in¬formation in the young study.He had hoped that there wouldbe some correlation with dreams,even a secret desire that, “Teethgrinders had cannibalisticdreams,” but there seems to be lit¬tle relation between the two.HE HAS FOUND that about 15%of the people are buchsists (possi¬bly buchsismers,; buchs if youknow them well) and that there isa decrease in buchsism with age,demonstrating that as one gets old¬er he loses the lean and hungryfeeling.Although the pay for human guin¬ea pigs, many of them Universitycoeds, is small, Dr. Reding is cur¬rently overstocked with volunteersfor the hazardous job of sleeping.While there are bonuses if awak¬ened, there are none for wearingbraces.Calendar of EventsmFriday, January 13FILM: “Tartuffe”, F. W. Murnau, Doc.Films Law School Auditorium, 6:30,8:30. 10:30, 60c.LECTURE: The Jewish Communities of;Eastern Europe, North Africa and Is¬rael. Report on a summer study trip by |Mr. Robert Krivoshey and Miss BatyaMiller, graduate students. 8:30 pm, Hil-lel House.ART EXHIBIT: Memorial Exhibition of;Photography by Prof. Hyman G. Lan- jdau, recently deceased faculty member, Idept, of Mathematical Biology. Hillel iHouse, 5715 Woodlawn. Jan. 13-31.CHAMBER MUSIC: Janos Starker,plays Bach, Kodaly. Mandel Hall, 3:30 ipm. $3 reg. SUstudent.VOLLEYBALL: Ida Noyes Hall, Men &Women, 7:30 pm.KOINONIA: Bill Bauridel discusses Ar¬tificial Intelligence, 6 pm. Chapel |House. Dinner (75c).DISCUSSION: UCSDS, “Black Power,Its Political Meaning and Implications; |Its Organizational Progress North andSouth”, 3:30, Reynolds Club S.PARTY: St. Vincent’s Day Party, Jud-son Lounge, BJ, 8 pm. 50c.Saturday, January 14CONCERT: Trombone-Baritone-TubaRecital, 8:15 in Law School Auditorium, jDean Hey of Lab School Music Dept, jperforms.DANCE: Reynolds Club Discotheque, !The American Blues Dream Band, 9-12weekends through February 5thJAMES BALDWIN'SBLUES FORMR. CHARLIEHULL HOUSE PARKWAY500 East 67th StreetReservations: 324-3880 pm, Reynolds Club Lounge. 50c.FILM: Yiddish Film Festival, “Tevya”,The Jewish Communities, Eastern Eu¬rope, North Africa, and Israel, 7:30 pm,50c.FILM: “Come Back Africa’’, UCSDS,8:30, 9:30, Kent Hall, 50c.MEETING: SAR Executive Committee.Reynolds Club South, 1 pm.OPERA: “La Traviata” by Verdi, theAmerican Opera Company, Tickets $4and $3, Mandel Hall, 8:15 pm.Sunday, January 15SERVICES: Rockefeller MemorialChapel, 11 am. Preacher: Bishop JamesA. Pike, Center for the Study of Demo¬cratic Institutions at Santa Barbara.“The Real Conflict between Science andReligion”.POETRY READING: of campus poetsat Jimmy’s, 1168 E. 55th Street, 7:30pm. Minors welcome.Monday, January 16PANEL DISCUSSION: Mental Hospi¬tals: Cure or Contagion? INH EastLounge. 7:30 pm.COLLOQUIUM: MESA, “Formal Mod¬els for a Central Prediction System”,L.R. Tucker, Prof, of Psychology, U ofIll. at Urbana, Room 134A Belfield Hall,U of C, 3:30 to 5 pm.MEETING: Political meeting of theConference on the City and the Univer¬sity, which sponsored the “ChicagoDays”. Reynolds Club, 7:30 pm.MEETING: South Africa Implementa¬tion Committee, Ida Noyes Hall, 3 pm.LECTURE “The Teaching of the Sci¬ences, 1991”, Law School Auditorium, 8pm. “I don’t think the columnaddresses itself to the substanceof my article,” said UC profes¬sor of history Richard C. Wadein reply to an Evans-Novak column| in yesterday morning’s Sun-Times.The column attacks an article inthis week’s Reporter in whichWade asserts that Senator CharlesPercy’s victory in November wascaused mainly by backlash.“THEY BRING forth no evidenceto disprove the body of my arti¬cle,” Wade said. “They just don’tlike my conclusion.”Evans-Novak suggest that theWade article is the “culmination”of a campaign by Douglas to telli “friends, politicians and journaliststhat his defeat was a byproduct ofthe backlash.” They claim the in¬terpretation by Wade, whom theycharacterize at one point as the, “chief anti-Percy hatchet man”and at another point as “an ob¬scure Douglas aide,” is “far fromreality.”The column argues that Percy' received three-fourths of his mar¬gin in downstate Illinois, “where1 the backlash was a tertiary issue.”By “Downstate.” Wade replied,I Evans and Novak mean everything' south of Cook County, including DuPage County, Peoria, and East St.Louis (both of which had open oc¬cupancy marches during the sum¬mer)."THE POINT of my article wasthat the backlash was not confinedj to those areas near the ghetto,” ex-i plained Wade. “It goes deeperstill.’’ The article described a “gen¬teel backlash.” The returns fromthe suburbs, he says, “demonstratethat racial fear is not the monopolyof one ethnic group or another.”The Evans-Novak column con¬cludes by defending Percy’s “con¬sistent position” on open housing.They claim that while Percy“sometimes wooed both segrega-jtionist and civil rights sentiment in 1964.” in 1966 he “never veeredfrom his conversion to federal openhousing legislation.” This Wadecalls admitting that Percy sinnedin 1964, but vowing that he is now achanged man.Furthermore, Wade adds, Per¬cy’s “conversion” is not a minorpart of his position. “The key thing in Percy’s attitude toward open oc¬cupancy is his change to exceptprivate homes.” He said, “I hopethat in the future Percy will aban¬don his present position on the bal¬ance between property rights andhuman rights, and come down sol¬idly for human rights and support ageneral open occupancy law.”SAMUEL A. BELL'BUY SHELL FROM BELL'since miPICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroCwnpUt* lUpotNAnd ServiceAH PopularMSdway S-4SM6052 So. Cottaae GroveSAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingE. 5Srd St. HY 3-8102 For Guidance in SelectingYour Stereo ComponentsSee yourSYSTEMS ANALYSTAT TOAD HALLOur SystemsSOUND BETTERThan I.B.M.'s1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500 On Campus(By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boys!”,“Dolie GiUis," etc.) withMax2hulmanIT S A NORTH WIND THAT BLOWS NO 000DCrushed between the twin millstones of Januaryweather and final exams, you are saved from total des¬pair, poor devils, only by the knowledge that winter vaca¬tion will soon be here.Where will you go this year? Will it be Florida again,or are you tired of jails? Then how about Puerto Rico?A most excellent notion, say I. A balmy and bounteousisland with long white beaches and blue, blue skies andgreen, healing seas. And, most pleasant of all, the warmand gracious people of Puerto Rico! You don’t even haveto know Spanish to communicate with this friendly folk.Just learn three simple phrases and you’ll get alongsplendidly: “Buenos dias” which means “Good morning,”“Gracias” w’hich means “Thank you,” and “Que serdsera’ which means “Your llama is on my foot.”In order to help you enjoy the fabled land of PuertoRico it would be well for me to supply a bit of historicalbackground. (It would also be well for me to say a fewwords about Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades be¬cause the makers of Personna Super Stainless SteelBlades pay me to write this column and they are inclinedto sulk if I omit to mention their product. Of course, theydon’t stay gloomy long, for they are kindly, cheery menfond of Morris dancing, spelling bees, and temperancepunch—fine, upright types, as true and gleaming anddurable as the blades they make. And if you’ve triedPersonna’s, you know how true and gleaming and durablethat is! And if you haven’t tried Personna’s, poor devil,you’ve cheated both your purse and face, for Personna’slast and last, shave after luxury shave, close, clean, nick¬less, hackless, tugless, gougeless, scratchless, matchless.Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades come in DoubleEdge or Injector style and are made only by the makersof Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades.)But I digress. Back to the history of Puerto Rico. Theisland was discovered by that popular discoverer Chris¬topher Columbus, incidentally, considering Columbus’popularity, it’s odd we know so little about him. What dowe really know? Only this:He was born in Genoa on August 25, 1451, the son ofRalph T. Columbus, a knee-cymbal vendor, and Eleanor(Swifty) Columbus, a low hurdler. He was an only childexcept for his five brothe'-s and eight sisters. From earlychildhood he was an avid reader and spent all his wakinghours immersed in a book. Unfortunately, there was onlyone book in Genoa at the time—Care of the Horse byAristotle—and after 18 years of reading Care of theHorse, Columbus grew restless. When rumor reachedhim there was another book in Madrid, off he ran as fastas his little fat legs would carry him.Disappointment, alas, awaited him there. The only bookin Madrid was Cuidar un Caballo, which proved to be noth¬ing more than a Spanish translation of Care of the Horse.Then one day Columbus heard from a traveller thatthere were millions of books in India, and he was in¬stantly ablaze to set sail. Off he ran on his little fat legsto the court of Ferdinand and Isabella (Columbus, thoughmore than six feet tall, was plagued with little fat legsall his life) and, as we all know, he persuaded the Span¬ish rulers to outfit him with three stout ships, the Flopsy,the Mopsy, and the Cottontail, and the rest is history!Well sir, now you know all about the origins of PuertoRico. So get packed and get going! You’ll love it! Stroll thebeaches, swim the coves, breathe the fragrance of hibiscusand bougainvillea. And remember always that the friendlyPuerto Ricans are delighted to show you their customs,teach you their language. Why, I’ll wager you’ll soon knowfar more Spanish than the three basic phrases. You’ll know“Hasta la vista” which means “See you later.” “Por fdvor”which means “Please,” and “El tren se paro en las esta-cion” which means “Your llama has eaten my passport.”* * * ©1986. Max Shulnwa(.ratios from the makers of Personna for giving ourhUitles such a cordial reception, and, por favor, howabout trying another of our luxury shaving products— Burma Shuve, regular or menthol?4 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 13, 1967Era of Guaranteed Income Near?The Judeo-Christian tradition that “those who do not workshall not eat” is the only remaining ideological barrier to theguaranteed annual income concept.This was the analysis presented by two faculty members ofthe School of Social Service Admin¬istration in a talk Tuesday tofirst-year SSA students.Edward E. Schwartz, Professor, prevention ofcommented.The basis ofpoverty, Schwartzthe proposal,and Alan D. Wase, Associate Pro- Schwartz explained, is the idea thatfessor, outlined the arguments in “property rights have a dynamicfavor of a plan to use the es- aspect.” The definition of personaltablished income tax system to pro- property has been expanded to in-vide payment to persons and fami- elude inheritance of wealth, notlies whose annual income falls be- just income produced by each per-low some line defined as the pover-' son’s own work.t> level. New Definition of WorkSUCH A SYSTEM would provide Wade commented that only 30efficiency, by avoiding establish- percent of the present U.S. popula-ment of any new agencies, Sch tion is engaged in “work” underwartz said. It would also have the old definition of “making andthe advantage of separating the growing things.” New definitions offunction of dispensing payments what constitutes services worthpaying for are needed, Wadeto alleviate “mass poverty” fromthe social service agencies. Theseshould concentrate on providing iurged.In reviewing the arguments..... . . . , which have been made against aservices on an individual basis, guaranteed income, Wade foundemphasizing rehabilitation and none that could not be rebutted. SOME "RADICAL friends ofmine” argue that “money is notenough,” Wade reported. This istrue, he commented, but a basiclevel of income is necessary beforemany of the other important thingsin life can be procured.Others insist upon the traditionalconnection of work with money.This should be re-examined, Wadesuggested, pointing out that therecould be as many as six millionnew jobs in the public service fieldwhich would call for little formaleducation, though they would needa certain amount of simple techni-!cal training.The notion that “giving peoplemoney will hurt them morally” isalso highly questionable, especiallysince the Federal government hasfor years been subsidizing subur¬ban homes for middle class fami¬lies, Wade remarked. “We shouldbe careful lest objection to theguaranteed income in so-calledmoral terms show prejudiceagainst the poor.” Annual UC Folk Festival Sets Plans forConcert Featuring Flatt and ScruggsThe seventh annual UC Folk Fes¬tival will be held on campus Janu¬ary 27th through 29th.Sixteen groups will be represent¬ed at the festival, which is spon¬sored by the UC Folklore Society.Among the performers are LesterFlatt, Earl Scruggs, and the FoggyMountain Boys; the New Lost CityRamblers; Charles Seeger; Ed andLonnie Young; and the Cook Coun¬ty Vocal Singing Convention, achurch choir from Chicago.The festival was originated in1961 by two UC students who hadbeen to the Newport Jazz Festival.Since then, many big-name folkand country music singers have ap¬peared at the festival. Several gavetheir first college performances oncampus.There are concerts at 8:15 pmeach evening, and at 3 pm on Sat¬urday, January 28th. Tickets forthe evening performances cost $3,$2.50, and $2. All tickets for the Sat¬ urday afternoon concert are $1.50.Information and tickets for all con¬certs, lectures and workshops areavailable from the Folklore Socie¬ty, ext. 3567.Graduate students in res¬idence in the Divisionsand students transferringfrom the College to theDivisions: Applications forfellowships and scholar¬ships are due January 15.Application forms are avail¬able in the Office of Ad¬missions and Aid.Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259NSA Discount*January 13, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5RENT A TRUCK00 Per HourDO-IT-YOURSELFTRUCK RENTALSO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hourMEET YOURPERFECTDATE!You too can be amongst thethousands of satisfied adults.Let Dateline Electronics com¬puters programmed for womenages 18 to 45 and men 18 to55. Take the guess work out **dating.Continuous matching with anew expanded program with en¬rollment fees reduced to $3.00for adults ages 18 to 27, and$5.00 for adults over 27.For quick results send for your question¬naire today. No obligation. Strict), con¬fidential.NameAddressCityDATELINE ELECTRONICRESEARCH INC. CMP. O. Box 369, Chicago, III.60645For Add. Info Call 271-3133CINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANCannes Prize Winner In Color“A MAN & A WOMAN"Sun-Times ****Daily News —"Director should be saluted."Students $1.25 with I.D. card every daybut Saturday.Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. & Sun.open 1:30STAND TALL!with the leaderBell System Companieswill interview on campusJanuary 19Would you liKe to work with a company that starts you in aresponsible position? Insists that you move up in your job?Promotes from within? Gives you a present, as well as a future?Then the Bell Telephone System may offer just the oppor¬tunity you’re looking for.You’ll learn the exciting field of communications . . . withadvancement dependent on your ability. You’ll develop yourability to direct and work with people . . . and you’ll be work¬ing with one of the fastest-growing, most vital industries inthe world.In your work, you’ll be associated with the companies thathave developed the Telstar satellite and the transistor.If you have a strong academic background — with either atechnical or a non-technical degree-Bell System interviewersare very much interested in talking to you. Simply make anappointment at your placement office.Bell System Team Interviews:Liberal Arts and, Sciences;Business Administration GraduatesJanuary 19Illinois Bell Telephone Company • Bed Telephone LaboratoriesEqual opportunity employersJa\ Illinois Bell Telephone^ * Part of the Nationwide Bell SystemNew Snack Shop Will Open SoonBandersnatch Coming to UCThe Bandersnatch is coming to the University of Chicago.The Bandersnatch is the name of the long awaited, student-operated snack shop in IdaKoyes Hall designed to fill the need for “somewhere to go” during evenings for food, in¬tellectual discussion, and sometimes entertainment.Originally planned to open in latelovember of last year, the newfiting place now appears to be^waiting only finishing touches.IT IS SCHEDULED for comple¬tion at the end of January andwill be open weekdays from 6 pmto 1 am, Fridays and Saturdaysfrom 5 pm to 3 am, and Sundaysfrom 4 pm to 1 am.“This place has class,” one stu¬dent remarked when he saw thenewly decorated shop in the base¬ment of Ida Noyes. The room iscarpeted and has hardwood tablesand chairs. A low bench spans thelength of the north wall, and lightshang low above the side tables. Inthe center of the room are largeround tables which bring the totalseating capacity to about 100.“We hope to serve special foodssuited to the esoteric and exotictaste of the University’s studentbody,” said David Kohl, chairmanof the student committee which ismanaging the Bandesrnatch’s pro¬gress. He gave this description ofother features of the Bandersnatch:• The menu will offer everything booked for the week ends if theproposal appears financially feasi¬ble.• Chess sets and playing cardswill be available free of charge atthe counter. A gigantic calendar onthe wall will provide a place wherestudents may write in comingfrom a snack to a meal. A Char-broiled steak and French fries willcost around one dollar. Kosher hotdogs, quarter-pound hamburgers,and a variety of submarine sand¬wiches will be featured. The com¬mittee is now discussing fountainand dessert items.• The Bandersnatch will serve events of interest.complete meals on Sunday nights j UNIVERSITY FUNDS have fi-when most dormitory students do j nanced the shop’s decoration andnot have food prepared for them, the stocking of china, glassware,Hoping to keep these meals out- silverware, and cooking untensils,of-the-ordinary, the committee will but the shop must become self¬invite a different chef to plan and operative once it is opened. All cm-prepare each Sunday dinner. | pioyees will be students, and the• An FM radio and a direct line general manager is also a student,from WUCB will keep the atrno- j The committee will continue tosphere lively. Old-fashioned serial meet after the shop is open. Themovies will be scheduled for cer- student manager, Carl Bangs, willtain nights, and live entertainment | report to them any administrativeof the coffee-shop variety will be1 problems. Leopold Klopfer Lectures Monday on1991 Teaching and Learning of ScienceLeopold E. Klopfer, assistant pro¬fessor of education here, will speakon the “Teaching and Learning ofScience, 1991” at 8 pm Monday, inthe Law School Auditorium.The lecture is the fifth in a seriesdesigned to show what teachingand learning may be like in 25years. The series is sponsored bythe University’s Graduate School ofEducation.Each lecture consists of a formal presentation of approximately onehour, followed by a critique of approximately one-half hour.The critique of Klopfer’s talk willbe offered by Ray Koppelnian, as¬sociate professor of biochemistryand master of the Collegiate Divi¬sion of Biology at the University.The lectures are part of the Uni¬versity’s 75th Anniversary observance, and are open to the publicwithout ticket and without charge.MUSTANGS - TEMPESTS - FORDS - PONTIACSRENT-A-CARBYVolkswagens $3.95 for 12 Hrs.Plus 6* per Mi.Includes Gas and InsuranceRent A Volkswagon For That Special Date Tonite.Cheaper Than A Honda And A Heck Of A lotMore Comfortable.LOCATED AT:HYDE PARK CAR WASH1330 E. 53rd Ml 3-1715 INTERNALREVENUESERVICEINTERNAL REVENUE SERVICERECRUITERS WILL BE ON CAMPUSFEBRUARY 7, 1967TO INTERVIEW LIBERAL ARTS MAJORSwho seek a career and a sense of purposeSign up for interview with»Mr. L. S. Calvin, Placement CounselorRoom 200Reynolds ClubMl 2-0800 Ext. 3284PIZZA, PIZZA, PIZZA, PIZZANicky's Pizza And Restaurant"ROYAL PIZZA BY NICKY THE UNCROWNED PIZZA KING"Fast Delivery Hot from the Oven 1208 EAST 53RD STREET,.V.V.\V.,.VAV.,.V/.,.V.V.,.V.,.V.VV.V.,,V .V.V.V.V.V.V.1 ■AV.'.V.V.V.’,NICKY'S TAKE-OUT MENUAssortments Small Medium LargeCHEESE 1.40 2.20 3.20SAUSAGE 1.65 2.50 3.50ANCHOVIE 1.65 2.50 3.50ONION 1.50 2.30 3.30PEPPER 1.65 250 3.50MUSHROOM 1.65 2.50 3.50BACON 1.75 2.60 3.60HAM 1.75 2.60 3.60CHICKEN LIVERS 1.75 2.60 3.60PEPPERONI 1.85 2 85 3.85SHRIMP 2.00 3.00 4.00GROUND BEEF 1.65 2.50 3.50COMBINATION 2.50 3.75 5.00EXTRAS ADDED 35 .50 .75RIPE OLIVES EXTRA 35 .50 .75ONIONS EXTRA 15 .25 .35 ■:We Put Cheese on All Our PizzasWe serve Royal Crown Cola, Diet-Rite Cola and Nehi flavors. CallFA 4-53406 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 13, 1967Bakan Cites A Procedural Revolution'In University's Conference on Draftby Rob SkeistParticipants in the recent UC draftin revolution” against restrictionsaccording to David Bakan, a UCattended the conference.Speaking at the first of a seriesof Wednesday afternoon discussionsat the Reynold's Club South spon¬sored by UC “We Won’t Go,” agroup of students who have pledgedrefusal to serve with U.S. forces inVietnam, Bakan described and in¬terpreted what happened at theConference."I FELT COMPROMISED by theassumption at the start of the Con¬ference that some form of draft isdesirable, and we must only dis¬cuss which is best,” Bakan empha¬sized. U.£. President George Bea¬dle, opened the December 4 sessionwith a statement asserting that!manpower was the only properarea for discussion, according to |Bakan, But soon there was reason 1for optimism, he said. “Very soonwe started breaking out in revolu¬tion.”The first speaker, UC Law Pro¬fessor Geoffrey Hazard, said that itwas ridiculous to discuss the draftoutside the context of the war inVietnam. Hazard saw it as just aproblem of arithmetic, Bakan said,since our involvement in a “limitedwar” requires that some men bedrafted; without a war there wouldbe enough volunteers, and with alarger war everyone would go.Introduction of the ranking issueand extended discussion on the def¬inition of conscientious objectionwere other aspects of this proce¬dural “revolution,” Bakan said.Support for a volunteer army byspeakers from the political left andright became clear on the secondday of the Conference, Bakanfc. " conference broke “outplaced on their discussion,professor of psychology whoclaimed. “There was a relaxedmood, almost as if the truth wasobvious.” Leftists don’t want to seeboys unwillingly turned into sol¬diers, Bakan indicated, and wouldlike the limitation a smaller, volun¬teer army would put on U.S. mili¬tary involvement."Cold but Convincing"Milton Friedman, UC Professorof Economics and generally knownas a strong conservative, urged avolunteer army with what Bakantermed “a terribly cold but con¬vincing argument.”Friedman spoke about the fearsome people expressed that profes¬sional army men might “takeover” the United States, Bakancontinued. Friedman said that thiscould happen, but that it would notbe due to the increased salary.Rather, he said, we are openingourselves to that danger by havingany sort of army.NO OFFICIAL proposals resultedfrom the Conference on the Draft,Bakan said, but of the 120 partici¬pants, 60 signed a paper advocatingabolishment of the draft and es¬tablishment of a volunteer army,he pointed out, asserting that notevery participant was reached andthat a definite majority supportedthis proposal.Hesitant to make predictions, Ba¬kan put forth the hope that al¬though the Selective Service Actwill probably be renewed when itexpires on June 30, provisions willbe made for a re-examination whenthere has been sufficient time fordiscussion of alternatives..Classified Ads; : m - - . ..... . ■ ' '4PERSONALSHabbits and free-folk, of Middle-Earth:Contact ARNOR; 831 B J.To see the doncaster collection of cus¬tom made suits and dresses, caU 3218907.KOXNONIA: Tonight, 6 pmy ChapelHouse. Special guests from ImmanuelLutheran Church. Bill Bouridel will dis¬cuss “Artificial Intelligence”.Student wife will sit by day or wk. reas.rates: 667 0724 aft 1 pm or 493-1366 aft 6pm.Folk Festival tickets now on sale! Man-del Hall Box OfficeFern. grad. stud, needs rm-mate. Rent*17.50 61st & Ellis. Call Jane363-5408 FOR SALEI960 Volkswagen, Black, Sun Roof, Ex¬cellent Condition, *450. CaU after six—643-73621949 Harley-Davidson 750 c.c., Newrings, valves, tires—transmission disas¬sembled. A really sweet machine.*250—324-5751 evenings.Selling to bare walls. Tons of hard cov¬er books 50c each antiques 50% off. 2915W. Surmach Rd. open ll-7pm. includingSunday, bring copy of ad.Male Rm-mate to share 1 bdrm apt. ',2bik from Rush St. 667-7495Good seats stiU available 7th annual Uof C Folk Festival. Mandel Hall BoxOffice; Ml 3-0800. x 3567Writer interested in interviewing peoplewho have taken LSD. Your anonymitywill be preserved. Call 528-1562 eves orweekends.Get tickets now for largest Folk Festi- jval in recent US history! Mandel Hall 1Box Office.Rm-mate wanted to share large apt inHyde Park. Own bedroom *60/mo. CaU643-7362 eves.Restore your youthful vigor: Paly vol¬leyball. Men & women wanted. Tues.8pm. Hyde Park Neighborhood Club.Fri. 7:30 Ida NoyesKAMELOT Restaurant. 2160 E 71st St.10% Discount for UC students. Heathkit 100 watt stereo preamp/amp:$75. Heathkit FM-AM-Stereo FM Tun¬er: *60. Knight (Rek-O-Kut) Turntablewith Rek-O-Kut arm and Shure StereoCartridge: $60. Two Knight (ev) 3-wayspeakers: *50 each. All this equipmentis in Excellent condition 324-5751TO RENTRm-mate or room-mates wanted toshare large 5 bedroom apartment. Ideallocation in Hyde Park. CaU eves: 643-7362To sublet now—Sept: IV2 rm. bsmt apt,52 & Blkstne, *60/mo. call 667-7246Ultra-mod, cor, brick, split-level, cent,air eond, auto gas heat, 8 rms. 2V2 colcer tile bths, tile cab kit; blt-in oven,dshwsher, garb disp, refridg, beaubrkfst rm, lrg wd panel den, 10 cists,carpet, wsher & dryer. & many extras,priced to seU. SO 8-8782More subjects needed at Sleep Lab.Pays. x2353.ALAN STYLER, PRINCIPAL BARI¬TONE OF DOYLY CARTE OPERACO., will be heard in two-part interviewon WUCB. 640 AM, with Mahonri M.Young and Mark Aronson Sun., Jan. 22at 9 pm both dates. Will discuss his 20years singing Gilbert and Sullivan,working conditions in the Company,opinions on producing G. and S., etc. 4<i large rooms furnished apartment.Newly decorated. 2 master bedrooms-natural wood burning fireplace. Suitablefor 3 professional or business men.Near 55th St. and Cornell. *180.00/mo.MU 4-82226900 SOUTH CRANDON Ave. DeluxeHighrise 1 bdrm. apts. from *120; par¬quet floor, see Mrs. Haley receivingrm. or security guard. MU 4-7964.LOSTOne set of Dodge car keys. Tag hasname but wrong address. Call 868-4427.RIDE WANTEDTo Ann Arbor any weekend 664-6906SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTSJOBS OFFEREDWaiter or Waitress. 5pm-9pm, good in¬come, experience preferred. Gordon'sRestaurant. 1321 E. 57th, call PL 2-9251Retired man to watch So. Side tax of¬fice and learn to compute simple in¬come tax returns—will teach. J, P. Cas-ner ST 3-6681Wanted: waiters or waitresses full orpart time must be over 21. *t.00fhr.P^s Ups. Apply Smedley's, 5239 S. Har- LECTURE: The Jewish Communities ofEastern Europe, North Africa andIsrael. Report on a summer study tripby Mr. Robert Krivoshey and miss Bat-ya Miller, graduate students, 8:30 p.m.Friday, Hillel House.YID DISH FILM FESTIVAL: Te vy aSaturday evening 7:30 p.m. HillelHouse. Admission 50cAHT EXHIBIT: Jan~i3 31. MemorialExhibition of Photography by Prof. Hy¬man G- Landau recently deceased fac¬ulty member, dept, of mathematicalbiology. Hillel House, 5715 Wood lawn andinvite you to nominate thebest dressed man on campus“Costly thy habit as thypurse can buy, but not ex¬press’d in fancy; rich, notgaudy: For the apparel oftproclaims the man.”Polonius' advice toLaertes.If Laertes didn’t takePolonius’ advice, he cer¬tainly should have, for thenas now nothing (well hardlyanything) proclaims theman as eloquently as doeshis appearance.Correct dress and goodgrooming are absolutelyessential ingredients in thechemistry of success. Car-sons and Esquire firmlybelieve this and they inviteyou to decide for yourself.You’ve heard it said thatthe well-dressed manstands apart from thecrowd.He does.And the rewards he reapsare great.They certainly are.Here's a singular case inpoint.'Carsons and the Editorsof Esquire Magazine areseeking the best dressedman on the nation’s twelveleading campuses to serveas members of a specialCollege Advisory Board.One student from theUniversity of Chicago-selected by his peers—willbe appointed to Esquire’sCollege Board.This fortunate (andfashionable) student will:^receive a gala, week-long,all expense paid trip toNew York City early inMarch '67 ...' '^appear in Esquire’s 1967Back-to-College Fashion Forum in New York ...*be featured in the edi¬torial fashion pages of Es¬quire’s September Back-to-College issue ...^receive a complimentaryEsquire College Board ap¬parel wardrobe—includinggift merchandise from someof the nation’s leadingmen's apparel and toiletrymanufacturers!MODUSOPERANDIRules? Just 3 of them, butthey are important:1) You may nominate anyUniversity of Chicago maleundergraduate.2) Any; student (graduateschool included) can vote.A sample ballot is ap¬pended to this column. Youmay use this ballot or pickone up at Carsons, StateStreet Store only. Writein your selection, and dropit in the ballot box at theStudent lounge right hereon campus.3) Ballots all have to becast before February 6.The 3 leading contenders,determined by your re¬sponses, will be interviewedon campus by Chip Tol¬bert, Esquire's CampusEditor who will select thewinner. The final selectionwill be made on the basisof general appearance,good grooming, wardrobecoordination, articulate ex¬pression, and fashionawareness.Carson Pirie Scott & Co,employees and their fami¬lies are not eligible.fAciuiTie / CARSON PIRIE SCOTT 1967Best-Dressed Man on Campus Nomination BallotPlease printI nominate the following student as Best-Dressed Man on the campus.His campus address is:I have nominated him because (keep it brief):My name:My campus address:All Nominations must be submitted on or before February 6. jj!l;.ji4jii!January 13, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON •v ‘ * a . •• J’ 1 .. r\ r . v . NjBlack Power—Beyond the RhetoricIn the months since the words “Black Power” were firstshouted on the Meredith march last summer, there has beenconsiderable debate over just what they mean.One result of this debate has been that the Student Nonvi¬olent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and other civil rightsgroups which have embraced the concept of Black Power, nolonger are able to count on the heavy contributions fromhites which kept them alive in the past.THIS WANING OF white support is unfortunate not onlybecause it makes the work of SNCC more difficult, but alsobecause it is a function of the confusion common to manyAmericans about just what Black Power is all about.The Black Power of Stokely Carmichael is. in one sense, themost profoundly conservative development in civil rights inthe last fifteen years. The talk of destroying Western civiliza¬tion. fighting whites in the streets, etc., is an elaborate camou¬flage for the fact that the Black Power civil rights groups arechannelling their energies in a new direction.Black Power, unlike virtually every other strategy in civilrights today, involves directing the work of the civil rightsmovement towards Negroes themselves rather than towards theoutside world. This is very similar to what conservatives havebeen advocating for some time. Black Power, with the possibleexception of the Black Muslims, is the most misunderstoodself-help movement in America today.THE MOST IMPORTANT reason that SNCC and Black Pow¬er are misunderstood is that Stokely Carmichael doesn't havethe necessary discretion to keep from alienating the people onwhom SNCC has been dependent in the past. This lack ofdiscretion, however, has a positive aspect. When Carmichaeltells warring Negro gangs that they're fighting the wrong peo¬ple. he is affirming the right of Negroes to say things that arenot consistent with what whites think Negroes ought to besaying. Bv clearly labelling the white man as the enemy, he isalso working against the factionalization of the Negro commu¬nity and working for the cohesiveness that may make organiz¬ing the Negro ghetto possible.Carmichael’s rhetoric is peculiarly appropriate for the lowerclass Negro and because this is true, Carmichael is offensive tojust about everybody else.A RATIONAL CONSIDERATION, however, seems to indi¬cate that if Carmichael is to be successful, he has little alterna¬tive but to spout the militantly anti-white line that he has beenrepeating for the last six months. By upsetting the Roy Wil¬kinses and Hubert Humphreys in the world he identifies him¬self with the aspirations and frustrations of the Negro slums ina way that no one who talks the white man’s language can.This does not mean that the things Carmichael says are true.For the most part, they are vast distortions and cliched over¬simplifications. It does mean, however, that by couching thedialogue in terms the slum dweller can understand, he has thebest chance of reaching the lowest of the low and this is what’smost important.Civil rights leaders are beginning to understand that in or¬der for concessions from the “power structure” to be meaning¬ful. Negroes must be able to take advantage of them. AndNegroes who come out of the highly atomized populations ofthe nation’s : lums simply don't have that ability.The only way to change this situation is to build a newenvironment in the slums, an environment that includes asense of community.THE TASK IS MONUMENTAL, but the work of SNCC inorganizing Negroes politically is a step in the right direction. Ifsome kind of social integration (i.e., the successful involvementof people in the institutions that make up their social environ¬ment) can be achieved in the slums, there will be the begin¬nings. at least, of a social situation that offers, among etherthings, opportunity.Carmichael’s rhetoric is significant, then, not because it rep¬resents the distilled social scientific genius of the ages—itdoesn't. It is significant because it provides a frame of refer¬ence for organizing poor Negroes to become conscious of theirown interests and individual worth. This organization is thebeginning of the long and necessary socialization process thatmay eventually result in the Negro slum developing into some¬thing akin to the slums of earlier newcomers to the bigcities—slums that are self-liquidating because they preparetheir residents for the wider life outside. David L. AikenBureaucracy at UC?An Academic Question"The University is a vast bu¬reaucracy.”—a UC student“This place is so unhnreattcratic,it’s hard to pin down just howdecisions are made. Maybe that'swhat fools many students into think-inf; everythinf> is decided bureaucrat¬ically.”—Dean of Students Warner WickThese two statements illustratethe current confusion over thequestion: is the University of Chi¬cago, and other institutions like it,typical of a bureaucracy?Part of the confusion, most like¬ly. arises from a colloquial use ofthe word “bureaucracy.” In every¬day parlance, it is often appliedto decision-making apparatusesthat typically take a long time tomake decisions, where officialsmust “go by the rules,” andwhere all authority is arrogatedto a set of “bureaucrats” w-hotake into account no one’s opinionbut there own.Often, the work is simplythrown out to disparage any offi¬cial decision with which the criticdisagrees.German sociologist Max Weber(yes, Soc 2 fans, he did writemore than “The Protestant Ethic. . .”) proposed what has becomethe classic definition of bureau¬cracy. His criteria include:* Fixed, permanent jurisdic¬tions, strict limitations on powerfor each official, and special re¬quirements of training for eachposition:* Hierarchical organization ofdecision-making:* Management as a full-timeoccupation:* Observance of general rulesfor the bureaucracy’s day-to-dayoperations.USING WEBER'S criteria, canwe say that UC is really abureaucracy?The answer is “no”—mostly.In most fields of decision¬making which affect the student,the process is distinctly un-bureaueratic. Most important ac¬ademic matters are decided byfaculty.Such matters as choosing newfaculty, and other strictly aca¬demic matters such as setting thecurriculum, are primarily in the hands of the faculty of each unit.Chairman, deans, and the provostmay review and approve suchmatters (especially when impor¬tant appointments are to bemade), but the collegial principleis adhered to strongly.Faculty control extends also tosuch matters as grades and whatto do with them—including rank¬ing.WHEN WE turn to mattersmore directly concerned withbuilding and maintaining build¬ings, and the care and feeding ofstudents, Weber-style bureaucra¬cy can be most clearly seen rat¬tling its files and passing itsbucks.In the dorm system, for exam¬ple, a division of labor producesan uneasy co-operation betweentwo hierarchies. One, the Dean ofStudents’ office, looks after dormresidents’ social and—to some ex¬tent-moral w’ell-being, throughthe system of house heads. Thehousing staff reports to the Direc¬tor of Student Housing (Ed Turk-ington), who reports to JamesNewmaan. Assistant Dean of Stu¬dents for Housing, who reports toDean of Students Warner A. Wick.While the Dean’s office is hier¬archical, it is not entirely bureau¬cratic, since none of the Dean orAssistant Deans hold these posi¬tions full-time. All are facultymembers, who have been enticed,cajoled, or otherwise hornswag-gled into taking on the duties ofDean. Most deans teach onecourse most quarters.The real bureaucratic hierarchyis seen on the “business side” ofthe administration.The most obvious examples, ofcourse, are the bursar’s and reg¬istrar’s offices, which performpurely bureaucratic functions,and are typically staffed withpure bureaucrats who w’ork 9 to 5,with an hour for lunch.Other bureaucrats in the classi¬cal sense are the director of Resi¬dence Halls and Commons, andmany other functionaries such asthe manager of the bookstore, re¬port to the Business Manager forCampus Operations, who reportsto the Vice President for Adminis¬tration, who is responsible to theProvost. Everyday matters are handledthrough rules sent down thischain of command. Special proj¬ects, especially those involvingcapital expenditures, must be taken up at the top level of vice-presidents, deans, and other offi¬cers. and cleared with the financecommittee of the very activeboard of trustees.Co-ordination between thesechains of command sometimestakes effort. While there is now astanding arrangement wherebyall decisions which will affect thelives and convenience of studentsare cleared with the Dean of Stu¬dents office, this has not alwaysbeen the case.Dean W’ick tells of a period inthe mid-50s, during which fundsfor all parts of the universitywere very scarce, and the list ofpriorities put the comfort of stu¬dents near the bottom. “Accord¬ing to a widespread myth, anedict—which must have started inthe chancellor’s office—ruled thatausterity wras to be the order ofthe day, and instructed RII&Cpeople not to ‘fraternize’ withmembers of the Dean of Students’office, lest they be tricked intomaking concessions.”IT IS our opinion that the imageof the university as a vast “bu¬reaucracy” arises from the un¬usually wide range of activitiesand parts of a students life whichare affected by decisions made byothers.Other people decide what curric¬ulum he is to be offered. Othersdecide how his living facilities aredesigned and operated. Others de¬cide what rules are to regulatehis social life.Not all these decisions aremade by bureaucrats. In fact,real “bureaucrats” have relative¬ly little to do with students’ lives.They may not be bureaucrats—but they’re not students, either.It is the sense that studentshave little influence in most deci¬sions—whoever makes them—thatlies behind most of the recent dis¬content and talk about “universitydemocracy.”Students must have some rolein the University. What role thisnow is, and what it should be, willbe discussed in a later column.8 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 13, 1967GadflyDraft Controversy: Time for Re-evaluationby David BakanProfessor of PsychologyThe draft law which is current¬ly in effect is due to expire onJune 30, 1967. On previous occa¬sions on which it has expired, ithas been quietly renewed. Howev¬er, current realities of the war inVietnam, and the varieties of ex¬pression of deep uneasiness rela¬tive to that war, have broughtthe draft to the forefront of theAmerican consciousness.FOR SOME people debating thenature of the draft is itself com¬promising. It is like entering afamily debate as to whether to goby train, car or airplane whenone does not approve of the tripaltogether. If there were no warat all, we should simply let thedraft law expire. If the legitimacyof the war in Vietnam were with¬out qualification at all, we shouldrenew the draft law, allowing per¬haps some minor reforms. But forthat group which questions thevery legitimacy or morality or even whether the war serves ourcountry’s self-interest, discussionof the draft is the discussion ofmeans serving a disapproved end.Since last May when SecretaryMcNamara let fly the trial bal¬loon in his speech in Canada, theidea of “national service” hasgrown in popularity. A recent re¬port of the Harris poll indicatedthat the idea of a universal ser¬vice program that would allowyoung men to choose between twoyears in the armed forces andtwo years in the Peace Corps orsome other form of public servicewas favored by nearly 4-to-l.Although the details of any kindof a program have hardly beenworked out, it is clear that theidea of “national service” has avery favorable aura associatedwith it. What is of particular in¬terest is that the idea is favoredby many who are far from en¬thusiastic about our involvementin Vietnam. To some of the op¬ponents of our Vietnam policythe idea of “national service” has appeared to provide a kindof honorable out for dissenters;for clearly accepting a “nationalservice” assignment is evidencethat one is not shirking one’sresponsibility to one’s country.THERE IS, however, some se¬rious misunderstanding. We haveto take Secretary Wirtz quite seri¬ously when he indicates, as he didin his comments on national ser¬vice on November 16, that thechoice of a non-defense programwould not exempt a youth fromthe military draft (“New YorkTimes”, November 17, 1966, p. 1).If the military needs require it,and there are not sufficient volun¬teers, there is little doubt but thatyoung people in such “nationalservice” would be prime eligiblesfor drafting into the military ser¬vice as compared, for example, tomen in critical occupations, menwith children or men whose ab¬sence would cause hardship totheir dependents. It is completelyunrealistic to imagine that anyonecould really choose non-defenseSermon SeriesISSUES OF LIFE AND DEATHFIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH57th and WoodlawnJack A. Kent, ministerSunday mornings at 11:00ALCOHOLISMDRUG ADDICTIONLSDSUICIDEALIENATION, ISOLATIONAND LONELINESS January 15January 22January 29February 5February 12Who Are These Unitarians?Three Sunday evening discussions led byJack A. KentMinister, First Unitarian Church8:00 p.m.CHURCH PARLOR-Entrance 1174 E. 57thtransportation from evening discussion meetings will be available.WHAT DO UNITARIANS BELIEVE January 15Unitarians do not have a creed. Do they consider themselves Chris¬tians? What do they believe about man, about God? What is theirsource of authority? Why are some Unitarians atheists?HOW UNITARIANISM CAME ABOUT January 22Many Unitarians have been important to the history of our country.To name a few: Jefferson, John Adams and John Quincy Adams,Clara Barton, Horace Mann, Ralph Waldo Emerson, John Marshalland Oliver Wendell Holmes, Joseph Priestly and Charles Steinmetz.How did Unitarianism develop in America?WHY A CHURCH? January 29Is Unitarianism a religion? Why is it organized in churches and fel¬lowships when the religious authority rests with the individual? Whatis its role in the community in civil rights, peace, and other pressingissues in today's world?Sponsored by the First Unitarian Church of Chicagoand The Student Religious Liberals service instead of military ser¬vice. The critical fact in the mat¬ter is that non-defense servicedoes not supply military man¬power, which is what the draftis all about.The idea of “national service”has been viewed as a way of re¬solving the profound dilemmasassociated with selective service.However, we need to appreciatethe fact that the dilemmas of se¬lective service are not failures inthe system but are the dilemmasintrinsic to any situation in whichone has to select someone fordanger while sparing someoneelse.The idea of “national service”has been viewed as a way to makethe draft “fair,” so that even ifone does not bear arms one hasat least “served.” The reply tothe fairness argument in this con¬text is perhaps best made simplyby reciting an old story of the“Wise Men of Gotham”:“ONE OF the streets of Gothamwas in bad condition. Each time awagon would pass it would throwmud at the people on the side¬walk, especially those close to thecurb. The Wise Men of Gothamgathered to deliberate whatcourse of action they should takewith respect to it. In the course oftheir deliberations it was pointedout that it was very unfair thatthose who were near the curbshould be splattered, while otherswere not. The Council of Gothamtherefore passed a law requiringall citizens on the street to line upat the curb whenever a wagonwas to pass.”In some way in many people asense of the fdegitimacy of thewar has been joined by a sense ofthe mequity of the draft to pro¬ duce a widespread support for apolicy of compulsory service forthe youth of America.Indeed, as soon as it is propos¬ed, the idea of “national service”quickly becomes the panaceafor practically all of the ills of oursociety: It will create in the youthof America a sense of involve¬ment with our total national desti¬ny; serve to overcome personalinterest and create national inter¬est; build character; make up forcultural handicaps of early child¬hood and correct educational de¬ficiencies eliminate iliteracv; re¬duce unemployment; take riotingyouth, both negro and anti-negro,off the streets; result in herniasbeing repaired, teeth fixed, andvision corrected; channel youthinto proper vocations; providebadly needed social workers,nurses, teachers, medical techni¬cians, etc.; spread birth controlinformation so as to reduce thepopulation explosion; prevent theevils of early marriage; reducepressure for housing so that theproblem of housing integrationmay be handled with greater lei¬sure; encourage integration; re¬duce poverty; reduce the guilt ofyoung men who have been grant¬ed deferments for going to col¬lege; provide adventure, travel,and new experiences; extend thetime before a youth must make adecision concerning occupation;get people from different parts ofthe country to know each otherbetter; and (considering thatthere are those who also advocate“national service” for women)make the sexes more equal.IN ORDER to achieve all ofthis we have simply to get over(Continued on Page Twelve)OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SHORELAND HOTEL55th at the Lake on South Shore DrivePRIVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000(OPEN DAWN TO DAWN)llobliy House Restaurant1342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER“The Best of All Foods", JESSEUON’SSCRVI MG HYDE PARK FOR OVER BO TSARSWITH THC VERY BEST AND FRESHESTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 3-9186 1340 I. 53rdCUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCALL MRS. BLIXT AT 782-2118FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES. INC.COMPUTER APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. 60602January 13, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9A banker today is a lot more than a moneySpecialist who waits for the community to cometo him. He’s a well-rounded, imaginative indi¬vidual who knows how to present a package offinancial services to fill his client’s needs. He’sprofessionally involved with every kind of busi¬ness, from government to space exploration toproblems of emerging nations. And he can’t bepigeonholed because versatility i3 one of thekeys to his success.He has job status and pride of profession.And his compensation and employee benefitsare the envy of many.His training is thorough and guided by expe¬rienced seniors who cushion the rough spotsand put him on the high road when he’s ready in his own mind and deed.Before you make your big career decision,take a long look at banking. Ambition is thekey, and the best way to check yourself out isto set up a give-and-take session with a ChaseManhattan Banker.One more thing.Modem banking is in. It asks for versatile,creative, imaginative men who want to rangethe community, the nation and the whole wideworld.Discuss the possibilities of a career in modernbanking. A Chase Manhattan banker will be oncampus soon. Your Placement Office will tell youwhen and where.THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANKNational Associatlon/1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, New York,New York 10015 • Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationAn Equal Opportunity Employer• CHICAGO MAROON • January 13, 1967* i n r ' ' •• ' -- : - "Letters to the Editorm - .v-s • & ‘ ffl Wilson Competition Doctorates GrantedGrows Still Stiffer Double in Decade$From MorgenthauTO THE EDITOR:I wish to correct the report inyour issue of January 6th inwhich under the heading of “Mor¬genthau Admits Offer of DeanPost” you embellish a misleadingreport which first appeared in theWashington Post of December18th. I have not received an offerfrom American University norhave there been several informalsoundings. There has been noth¬ing more than one informal ques¬tion to which I gave a non¬committal reply. This informal ex¬change, which is one of many Ihave had over the years with dif¬ferent institutions, has been blownup out of all proportions: first bysome indiscretion in Washingtonand then by inaccurate reporting.HANS J. MORGENTHAU(Editor's note: We apologize to Mr.Morgenthau for any misunder¬standing that may have resultedfrom the article in last Friday’sMaroon.We do feel, however, that thestory was essentially accurate. It |is not terribly far afield to call,TROMBONE • BARITONE • TUBARECITALby Lab School Faculty Member,Dean HeyJanuary 14, Saturday 8:15 PMLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUMnil E. 60th STREETFREEYom won't hovo to put yourmoving or atorag* problomoff MHttl l08^OTFO^6 if yowcoM m todiyPfTtftSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.IMfl L Ay*•44-4411 "one informal question to which lgave a non-commital reply" aninformal sounding.)Answer to LearyTO THE EDITOR:I read Dr. Leary’s interviewNov. 11 on LSD with great inter¬est and against the background ofall his other statements on thesubject. You are to be commend¬ed upon allowing Dr. Leary to ex¬press opinions and attitudes dia¬metrically opposed to informedprofessional opinions on this sub¬ject. The editorial in the same is¬sue of the Maroon tends to act asa buffer comment to some extent,but I think it would only be fair tothe student body and in the serv¬ice of objectivity to present theopinions of psychiatrists familiarwith the deleterious efforts to thistoxin, which it is not to Dr. Lear¬y’s advantage to emphasize.We in the Department of Psy¬chiatry of the Mount Sinai Hospi¬ tal, have become increasinglyconcerned over the number ofyoung people hospitalized foracute LSD-precipitated psychoticreactions. Dr. Leary’s blandequating of “psychosis” with “sinor mysterious possession” runscounter to a responsible profes¬sional conception of what this des¬ignation means. Even though helater contradicts himself by usingthe term “prepsychotic”, what heintimates is dangerously mislead¬ing to those who have no acquaintance with the devastating effectsof psyhcotic disorganization.I, therefore, would urge you, inthe interest of a more realisticawareness of the extreme hazardsinvolved in LSD ingestion, topublish an interview on this sub¬ject with a reputable psychiatrist.FRED BROWNPROFESSOR OF PSYCHIATRYMOUNT SINAI SCHOOL OFMEDICINE(Editor’s note: See the article inthis issue.) PRINCETON, N.J., (CPS)—Competition for graduate fel¬lowships continues to growstiffer, as an all-time record13,695 candidates were nominatedfor highly-coveted Woodrow WiisonFellowships this year.“The number of nominations isastonishing,” Woodrow Wilson Na¬tional Fellowship Foundation Direc¬tor Hans Rosenhaupt said. “Itmeans that there are eight candi¬dates for every Woodrow WilsonFellowship that can be offered.”Since 1958, the number of bache¬lor’s degrees awarded in this coun¬try has risen 54.6 per cent, but Fel¬lowship nominations have in¬creased by an “amazing” 142 percent, Rosenhaupt said.The Foundation director attribut¬ed the phenomenal rise in nomina¬tions to the growing interest ingraduate study, the desire of col¬lege seniors to win highly-competitive awards, and the teach¬ing profession’s interest in “self¬renewal.” WASHINGTON, D.C., (CPS)—The number of doctoratesawarded annually in the UnitedStates will more than -doublein the next ten years, according tothe U. S. Office of Education.The estimate for 1975-76 is 36,900doctorates compared to 16,467awarded in 1964-65.The Office or Education reportsan expected 80 per cent of the doc¬torates in 1975-76 will come fromthe fields of engineering, 7,310:physical sciences, 5,600; arts andhumanities, 4,500 education, 4,400;social sciences, 4,040; and biologi¬cal sciences, 3,820.In 1964-65, t«e schools grantingthe largest number of doctorateswere the University of California(all campuses), 1,048; Columbia,616; University oi Wisconsin, 531;University of Illinois, 493; and Har-1 vard-Radcliffe. 471.Attention: Students Interested In Foreign Service CareersIf you wish to be considered for the 1967 College Summer Intern Pro¬gram in the Department of State and meet the following conditions:1. Are a full-time college senior or graduate student2. Are returning to an accredited college or university in the fall of 1967for an additional full year of study3. Have PASSED the written Foreign Service Officer examination adminis¬tered on December 3, 1966please contact the Office of Career Counseling and Placement, ReynoldsClub, Room 202, immediately upon receipt of your examination score.Bring a copy of the examination results with you.New Books Just ReceivedLANGUAGE AS SYMBOLIC ACTIONby Kenneth Burke $10.00THE ART OF CONJECTUREby Bernard de Jouvenal' $ 7.50THE YELLOW EMPEROR'S CLASSIC OF INTERNAL MEDICINEby llza Veith $ 8.00GENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENTTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave., Chicago, III.MEET THE GANG ATSMEDLEY'STHIS WEEKEND.LARGE PITCHER OF SCHLITZ JEFFREY THEATRE1952 E. 71st HY 3-3334January 25-26Royal BalletWITHMargot Fonteyn and Rudolf NureyevINProkofiev's BalletRomeo and Juliet3 Performances 2 pm. - 5 pm. - 8 pm.STUDENT DISCOUNT TICKET $1.25 (ALL PERFORMANCES) REGULAR $2.00No Reserved Seats. Tickets Now on Sale at the Box OfficeJanuary 13, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • HBishop Pike - Controversial Theologianand Author - To Speak at Rockefeller Natl Service: A Misnomer(Continued from Page One)Bishop Pike but, in effect, criti¬cized both the Bishop and his accus¬ers by concluding, “We do notthink (Bishop Pike’s) often obscureand contradictory utterances war¬rant the time and the work and thewounds of a trial.”THE HOUSE of Bishops, howev¬er, voted to form a council of cler¬gy and laymen to “help rethink. . .and renew the church for life inthe world today.” This move wasconsidered a response to BishopPike’s theories that many of the church’s ideas are outdated.Bishop Pike is the author of nu¬merous books and articles. He iseditor and contributor to ModernCanterbury Pilgrims. For a num¬ber of years, he appeared on aweekly television program.He has served as a member ofthe graduate board of the Yale LawSchool and as a trustee of the threelargest seminaries of the EpiscopalChurch—General and VirginiaTheological Seminaries, and theChurch Divinity School of the Pa¬cific. (Continued From Page Nine)our revulsion towards impress¬ment and involuntary servitude.“Art To Live With'If last year is any guide, there will still be numbered registration cards atthe Ida Noyes desk at lunch time today; picking up one of these securesyour place in the distribution which will begin at 3:30.Works now on display for loan include those of Chagall, Kahn, Picasso,Braque, Rouault, and others. They may be taken out by students, faculty•nd staff for a charge of $1.50, covering their rental through the end of May. The positive aura which hasbeen associated with the idea of‘‘national service” is due in largepart to its having been associatedwith the high-minded PeaceCorps. Yet such a program of‘‘national service” would haveonly the remotest resemblance tothe Peace Corps. The PeaceCorps is voluntary. Peace Corpsmembers are characteristicallyhighly self-selected on the basis ofdedication; and they are highlyselected afterward for fitness forservice. The Peace Corps workeris characteristically well educat¬ed. On top of this the Peace Corpsspends almost 8000 dollars intraining him before he is sent outto work. Peace Corps workers to¬day, by virtue of background andtraining, including both what theybring and what is expended onthem afterward, are qualified forrendering service to others. Com¬pulsory “national service” wouldbring in more young people whoi THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL;THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWN-$1.00Michelob and Budweiser on Tap!Piano Selections Friday & Saturday eveningsSEMINARSWINTER QUARTER 1967Presented by the Ecumenical Christian Councilat The University of Chicagoopen to all studentsI. PHILOSOPHICAL ORIENTATIONS IN CONTEMPORARY THEOLOGYAn examination of key philosophical concepts informing recent theology.Leader; Rev. Thomas Munson, S. J.First Meeting: Wednesday, January 18 Chapel House4:30 P.M. 5810 South WoodlawnThis seminar will meet each week for six weeks.II. THE EUCHARIST IN CHRISTIAN CELEBRATIONAn examination of the biblical, historical and contemporary forms andmeanings of the sacrament of Holy Communion in Catholic, Orthodoxand Protestant traditions.Leader: Rev. John Pyle, Episcopal Chaplain at the University of Chicago.First Meeting: Monday, January 16 Chapel House4:30 P.M. 5810 South WoodlawnThis seminar will meet each week for six weeks.II. THE VISUAL ARTS AS A NEW WAY OF SEEINGThis seminar will be a series of discussions on paintings, films, anddimensions of esthetic experience as they relate to man’s quest formeaning.Leader: Rev. Larry Hill, Chaplain for the Porter Foundation, Universityof Chicago.First Meeting: Thursday, January 19 Calvert House4:30 P.M. 5735 S. UniversityThis seminar will meet each week for six weeks.CHICAGO MAROON January 13, 1967 should be clients for servicesrather than people who might beable to render them. The veryvoluntaristic character of thePeace Corps is what gives it itsidealistic appeal. Change it intocompulsion, and it becomes im¬pressment and a kind of slavery.IT IS, in point of fact, erroneousto call the kind of service beingadvocated “national service.” Itshould be called what it is actual¬ly intended to be, compulsorygovernment service. In a free so¬ciety, iany service which is ren¬dered, from nursing the sick tobaking bread, even to pumpinggasoline into trucks at a fillingstation on the highway, is nationalservice in the sense that it servesthe welfare of the nation. Thereare perhaps some occupations,especially illegal ones, which arenot thus national service. Butmost of what people do in theiroccupations can be considered tobe national service. That whichwould differentiate the proposed“national service” is that onewould be required to perform theALOHA 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.CIRALS HOUSE OF TIKI51ST A HARPERFood served 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.LI 1-7585 work, but not free to negotiate theterms of the employment and notfree to leave it, and the employerwould be the federal government.The management of the manythousands of such youth will re¬quire discipline and this disciplinewill inevitably involve punish¬ment. One form of punishment,which is characteristically used inother occupations, is dismissalfrom employment. However,since dismissal from employmentis practically impossible by thenature of the proposed “nationalservice”, other forms of punish¬ment will have to be developed.One fears to think what thesemight be. And one fears to thinkabout the question of who will bein charge of maintaining disci¬pline in living and working ofhundred of thousands of youngpeople who are impressed undercompulsion. All of the high-minded atmosphere of the PeaceCorps would soon be dissipatedand replaced by a foulness thelike of which the United States ofAmerica has never yet seen.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around Tho World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856HARPER THEATRE5238 S. HARPERONLY TWOPERFORMANCESJANUARY 16th & 23rd at 8:30BEVERLY YOUNGER"WOMEN OF THEGREAT SOCIETY"Orch. S3.00, Bale. $3.00, Students SI .00Reservations BU 8-1717HARPER THEATER5238 S. HARPEDnappr®,fendingtwo one act comedies by DOUGLAS TURNER WARDPerformances at 8:30 Tuesdays through Fridays, Satur¬days at 7:00 & 10:00, and Sundays at 2:30 & 7:30 Pricesare $3.25 Sundays through Thursdays, $4.25 on Friday& Saturday nights. Tickets at Lowe's Ticket Central, 212N. Michigan Avenue, all Montgomery Ward stores.50% student discountTelephone Reservation BU 8-17171wn‘Taiii£ai?iiuv'■err Freedman Criticizes Leary's MetivesFor Advocating Widespread Use of LSD(Continued from Page Three)constraints of logic are often sur¬rendered. It clearly does notenhance one’s ability to judge andweigh what is experienced. Fur¬ther, the same person can reactquite differently to the drug experi¬ence depending on dosage and cir¬cumstance. It is precisely becausejudgement as impaired and not en¬hanced and because the drug is un¬predictable that support and con¬trol should be provided during thecourse of the drug experience andfollowing it.”Dr. Freedman was critical ofTimothy Leary, the leading expo¬nent of the popular use of LSD.Refering to Leary’s proposals, hesaid, “There are so many waysto learn about yourself—why usethis one?”Critical of LearyDr. Freedman said in his Congressional testimony that thedrug was useful for some people“as a beginning.” “This is why,”he said, “the drug is being careful¬ly tested in certain difficult thera¬peutic problems.” He added, how¬ever, that “the self-knowledge thatsome people seem to arrive at un¬der the drug can be quite illusory,giving them the delusion that theyhave solved problems; such peoplecan replace good judgement withwishful thinking long after the drughas worn off.”DR. FREEDMAN told the Ma¬roon that he doesn't think TimothyLeary is a modern day prophet.“Why is he (Leary) making a reli¬gion out of LSD - except to make aliving?” “I think,” Freedman said,“that the problem with LSD lies ingullibility, overenthusiasm and ir¬responsible salesmanship.” Orthogenic School Gets $500,000TT^’o - i • _ ,UC’s Sonia Shankman OrthogenicSchool has received ia pledge of$500,000 to establish an endowed| professorship for its future princi¬pals from the Foundation for Emo¬tionally Disturbed Children.The Orthogenic School, at 1365East 60th Street, is a residentialschool and treatment center for 50 emotionally disturbed children andadolescents of average and superi¬or intelligence.Bruno Bettelheim, Stella M. Row-ley Professor of Education and pro¬fessor of psychology and psychia¬try, is the current principal of theOrthogenic School.President George W. Beadle called the gift “a tribute to the in¬spired leadership of Bruno Bettel¬heim.” He noted that “the gift re¬flects the 20 years of cooperationbetween the Foundation and theUniversity in efforts to help emo¬tionally disturbed children leadmaximally useful and rewardinglives.”IHC To Consider Additional Proposals(Continued from Page One) to this on several grounds, not themil their idea to Wick if it is re- Ieast of which was the concessionjected by the IHC. If Wick does not i of supervisory powers by both theveto it, at least two other housesplan to request open hours.The only house which got an un¬favorable recommendation wasLower Flint, which asked that thepower to make all social rules bevested in the House Council. Thecommittee members were opposedJOBS AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTSpart-time or full-timebusboysdishwasherswaitressesCall BU 8-7402, 9 am. to 5 pm. except Sundays.MORTON S RESTAURANT5600 South Shore DriveAMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes - Batteries10% discount to students with ID cards“BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! 19 N.Y,Post“A MOVIE FOR ALL TIME!”•—N.Y. World Journal Tribunt••*★**—HIGHEST RATING!”—N.Y. Daily Newf“A SWIFT AND VIVID STORY!"• —TimaCOLUMBIA PICTURES pnatnitFRED ZINNEM ANN’SrtLMnrA MAN£ ' - FOR ALL”*SEASONSV// From lh<* |>lay byROBERT BOI.Ttt*«w*!f.-.TREDZ!NNEMANN'Si»»ii‘AMAN FOR ALLSEASONS'L*.*,* robertbolt‘.u, WENDY HILIERLE0 McKERN ROBERT SHAVtORSON WELLES-SUSANNAH YORK[srd PAUL SCOFIELD»;th NIGEL DAVENPORT-JOHN HURT.-,>C0RIN REDGRAVE C/worksdurue - Vioiam tTiJtf • sobF?5x1 • mo 2innimmin?UCH«lCa«f | 4-ORDER YOUR TICKETS NOW BY MAIL!-ICHCOUie OF PRICES AND PERFORMANCESEVENINGS 1.30 P.M. SUNDAY EVE. *00 P.M.Mats. 2 p.m. (cut* s«t. a sun. M*t. s oo p.m.)Main FI. I Mm. HI.EVENINGS Sunday ttml Thursday.S? 80 *2 25Evenings Fri„ {at., a Hoi *3.50 *2 50Matinees wednasday 2 P.M....*2.50 *1.75MATINEES Saturday 2*5 P.M.. .*2.50 *1.75Matinees Sunday 2*5 P.M... ,*2.80 *2.25ALL SEATS RESERVEDrem THEATRE PARTY groups writeOR PHONE HARRIET A. WATT.Esquire theatre, Chgo • 312-332 0940MIDWEST PREMIEREWEDNESDAY, JAN.25 ESQUIRE THEATRE68 EAST OAK STREETCHICAGO, ILL. 60611Pitas* land m* ticket* f*f — .(data)tach. Matin** □ Ev«nln( □®lit ALT. DATE.NAME . 2nd ALT. DATE-ADDRESS-(mlos* self addressed stamped envelope withcheck er money ord«r payable t# Esquire Thealrd.A WALTER REAOE THEATREKT' * I O A K NEAR>• :j e. t MICH'NA.'I JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAP j IHC and the Dean of Students.! SEVERAL proposals were sub¬mitted to the IHC after the com¬mittee meeting, which the Councilalso considered last night. Amongthese was a proposal from CoulterHouse, a graduate dorm in Burtoni Judson which is entirely singles.Coulter wants “No social rides gov-[ erning their activities.”It seemed likely to several repre¬sentatives that there would bemuch less trouble with this propos-I al than with the very similar onefrom Hitchcock, due entirely to the; conditions in the various houses. Kalven, Zeisel, MaffickTo Appear on WFLD-TVThree specialists in criminal lawfrom the University will dicuss vio¬lence in American society and thejury system on the Bill Veeck tele¬vision program on Monday, Janu¬ary 16, and Tuesday, January 17.The Bill Veeck prorgam is pre¬sented at 10:30 pm every weekdayon WFLD, Channel 32.Harry Kalven, Jr., professor oflaw, and Hans Zeisel, professor oflaw and sociology, will discusstheir recently-published book, TheAmerican Jury, on January 16.SEMI-ANNUAL SALEALL SPORT COATSFormerly$42.5059.5079.50100.00 NOW$34.5047.50 & 43.5063.5079.50ALL SUITS79.50100.00125.00150.00 to 175.00 63.5079.5099.50119.50 to 139.50FLANNEL & WORSTED TROUSERSReg. 15.95 Now 12.95ALL OUTERWEAR-SCARFS-GLOVESREDUCED 20>!! SPECIAL!!VAN HEUSEN DRESS SHIRTSDISCONTINUED STYLESReg. $5.00 NOW *3.59 3 for $10.50meiUfattm $c (Eampttflin the New Hyde Park Shopping Center1502-06 E. 55lh Sf. Phone 752-8100January 13, 1967 CHICAGO MAROONPremieres at Chamber ConcertFour musical works will havetheir world premieres at the nextconcert of the UC ContemporaryChamber Players (CCP) in Man-dell Hall on Tuesday, January 24,at 8:30 pm. The works were com¬missioned by the University in hon¬or of its 75th Anniversary.Any recognized organizationwhich would like to submit arequest to CORSO for fundsmay do so before January 23.Ten copies of each requestI must be submitted; ditto ma-| terials will be supplied by it CORSO. For information con¬tact the SG secretary. The works will include MarioDavidovsky’s Inflexions for 14Players and George Rothberg'sMusic for the Magic Theatre. Davi-dofsky is known mainly as a com¬poser of electronic music, but In¬flexions will employ only standardorchestral instruments. Rothberg’sopus is based upon Hermann’Hesse’s novel, Steppenwolf, com¬bining contemporary idiom withquotation from the works of Mahlerand Mozart.The two other composers whoseworks will premiere. Easley Black¬wood and Ralph Shapey, are bothassociate professors of music here.Shapey’s Partita for Violin and 13Players is grounded in the tradition of Bach. Esther Glazer will solo.Blackwood’s Un Voyage a Cythereis based upon a text by Baudelaire.Soprano Neva Pilgrim will be thesoloist. Ralph Shapey, Music Direc¬tor of CCP will conduct the entireprogram.Admission to the concert is with¬out charge, but by ticket only.Tickets are available at the Admin-i s t r a t i o n Building Information”, f »>"DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St. .DO >7644 DO 3-6866 Reynolds Club Swings with DiscothequeCut-Rate Cheetah Every Saturday NightFlashing lights, pony-tails,groping hands, bell-bottoms,mod ties, stringy hair, SDSspectacles, heaving pectoriali-ses and baby, remember, it’s mylife and I’ll do what I want.And all for 50 cents, at the Rey¬nolds Club Discotheque.About 250 people showed for lastweek’s rave-up, and the same sy¬baritic delights will be offered to¬morrow night, and every Saturday,starting at nine and running untilmidnight. This week’s festivitieswill include cartoons and StanBraknage flicks projected on thewalls of the Reynolds Club Plea¬sure-dome.Music is provided by the Ameri¬can Blues Dream Band (formerlythe Hootchie- Cootchie Men), fea¬turing Jeff Carp (lead singer andmouth harp), Andy Paul (lead gui¬tar), Neil Allen (organ), Miles Mo-gulescu (electric bass), Clyde Stats(rhythm guitar), and Pete Wollans (drums).When interviewed, Moguleseu donied persistent rumors that Se:i.Everett McKinley Dirksen had ex¬pressed plans to visit the discothe¬que tomorrow night, but he said,“there’s no telling who might showup.” You never know. Anyhow, it’scheaper than the Cheetah.Careersmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ■ -Recruiting representatives of the following organizations will visit the Officeof Career Counseling and Placementduring the week of January 16 Interview appointments for 1966-67 graduatesmay be arranged through Mr. L. SCalvin, Room 200, Reynolds Club, Extension 3284January 16International Business Machines Corpo¬ration: field positions throughout theU.S.; laboratory positions primarily inNew York State - S B. and S.M. candi¬dates in Chemistry (inorganic) andPhysics (cosmic Mathematics and Sta¬tistics.PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED EYE EXAMINATIONSNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Discount CONTACT LENSES... Un jour, votre famllle aura besolnd'argent lorsqu'elle n'aura plus votresalaire, ou bien vous aurez vous-memebesoin d’un revenu pour votre retraite.L’assurance Sun Life peut vous pro*curer les deux.En tant que repr^sentant local de la SunLife, puis-je vou» visiter & un moment devotre choix?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN LIFE DU CANADA, COMPAGNIE D'ASSURANCB-VIIUNE COMPAGNIE MUTUELLS Sunday, January 15THE OTHER PLAYERSFormerly Readers from The Other SidepresentA staged reading of 2 P.M.KING LEARThe second in e winter series of Sunday readingsTHE OTHER SIDE1603 EAST 53rd ST.No cover, no minimum, no admissionNext Week: CHERRY ORCHARD January 17Inland Steel Company: Chicago, IIItraining programs in staff, marketingfinance, and production areas...January 18; Battelle Memorial Institute: ColumbusOhio: Richland. Wash. - all degree lev-; els in Mathematics, Statistics, Chemis¬try (analytical, inorganic, physical i! and Physics (cosmic radiation, solidI state).January 18Illinois Bell Telephone Company: Chicago and other Illinois cities - trainingprograms for both men and womengraduates of any department.Bell Telephone Laboratories: Napcrville, Illinois and various New Jersetlocations - S B and S.M in Mathematics, Physics, and Statistics.January 20Service Bureau Corporation: ChicagoIll.: New York, N.Y.; Boston. MassWashington, DC. - S B and S.M.Mathematics and Statistics; prospectivegraduates of other departments whopave had programming courses.THE MINNS LECTURESUnder the Auspices ofThe Trustees of the Minns Lectureship(King's Chapel and First Unitarian Church in Boston)BYTHE REVEREND JOHN W. CYRUSMinister, The First Unitarian ChurchMilwaukee, Wisconsinon the general subjectTHE LIBERAL MINISTRYThe Minister's Self-ExaminationLectures will be given in Hull Chapel of First Unitarian Church,57th and Woodlawn (chapel entrance 1174 E. 57th)at 8:00 p.m.The Search for CommitmentWednesday, January 18The Hazards of an Ego-Centric CallingThursday, January 19OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ALL ARE CORDIALLY INVITED11 * CHICAGO MAROON • January 13.1967Underground Film ReviewHandy Andy Romps in Chelsea“The Chelsea Girls” is a 210 minute romp through a working community of fags anddykes, sadists and masochists, junkies and acid-heads. Some are pleasant, some are funny, someless so: they are all just-plain-folks in Andy Warhol’s Our Town, the Chelsea Hotel.Watching the film is like peering through windows. People are doing and saying thingsthat apparently make a moderateamount of sense to them, while weare prevented from getting any¬thing but the most general idea ofwhat is going on—the picture is of¬ten slightly out of focus and the.sound is usually muffled. Thematerial is presented on two adja¬cent screens simultaneously, oneperhaps commenting on the other,perhaps not, the effect being toprovoke restless and obsessive in¬volvement on the part of the view¬er with what is set before him.Voyeuristic tension is even furtherincreased by Warhol’s whimsicallydevastating parody of film tech¬nique. One moment he dramatical¬ly zooms in on some totally insig¬nificant detail, and in the next in¬stant coyly lingers about someTROMBONE • BARITONE - TUBARECITALby lab School Faculty Member,Doan HoyJanuary 14, Saturday 8:15 PMLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUMnil E. 60th STREETFREE shape or configuration which is fi¬nally not what it seems.The two screens alternate in si¬lence and sound, and sequences be¬gin and end in a staggered fashion,competing for our attention with in¬timations that something is justabout to happen. One long segmentfeatures Nico, the Platonic Ideal ofJulie Christie endlessly trimmingher bangs with enough sweetness tojustify anything. In another scene,this time in color, a group o£ psy-chedelicized people on a balconyare concentrating on somethingjust out of our sight while makingcomments to each other that arejust outside our hearing range.Much of The Chelsea Girls isvery funny. A particularly cuddlybull-dyke traffics in drugs over thetelephone while attempting to se¬duce a reluctant girl named IngridSuperstar. Later on, Ingrid windsup in bed with a balding fag wholisps away indistinctly about theJohnson Administration to someothers while she pertly sneakslooks under his nightshirt in per¬ verse imitation of every Sweet Lit¬tle Child in the films of D.W. Grif¬fith.Th« Chelsea Girls is a large stepin the direction of a “cooling” ofthe movie medium signalled byMarshall McLuhan. Both the visualand aural information conveyedare low-intensity; we are forced toparticipate and fill in the gaps.More than has ever been the case,the viewer is given a set role toplay or duty to perform. And oncewe have been successfully hookedinto playing peeping-tom, it is easyto take Warhol’s people and situa¬tions in the unevaluative spirit inwhich he records them.Unlike Warhol’s previous lengthywitticisms such as “Blowjob",'Kiss" and "Empire", "The Chel¬sea Girls" is a major work, skill¬fully composed with goodly por¬tions of humor, pathos, whips, sex,and needles. In fact Life itself, in apeculiarly pristine form, touchinglyunfolds before Warhol’s eyes andours.Stuart A. Newman Janos Starker, CCP,Will Delight Music-Tonight, as part of the ChamberMusic Series, Cellist Janos Starkerwill give an unaccompanied recitaldevoted to Bach’s Suites no. 2 and 3and Zoltan Kodaly’s Suite for Unac¬companied Cello. The recital isscheduled for Mandel Hall at 8:30pm and, if you don’t already havetickets, you’re out of luck: com¬pletely sold out.Tuesday evening, the Contempo¬rary Chamber Players are present¬ing a recital by pianist EasleyBlackwood and violinist EstherGlazer in the four Violin and PianoSonatas of Charles Ives. Those whoremember Blackwood’s electrifyingperformance of Ives’ Concord Sona¬ta on campus last year, and MissGlazer’s equally impressive ac¬count of the Schoenberg Violin Con¬certo with the CSO, need no urgingto come to this recital. For the restof you, the implication is clear. Theconcert is without charge and iscalled for 8:30 pm in Mandel Hall.Starting next Friday evening,and continuing for two weekends isa production by the Collegium Mu-sicum of rare import: The firstAmerican performance of JacopoPeri’s opera Euridico, first per¬formed in 1600, and quite probablythe first modern day opera writtenas we know opera today. Moreabout this next week.And for those of you more inter- Collegium MusicumLovers This Monthested in making music than simplylistening to it, The UC SymphonyOrchestra has announced the de¬tails for its 1967 Concerto Competi¬tion. Those students who have mas¬tered the solo parts of a concertoand would like to compete on Sat¬urday, January 28, in Mandel Hall,are asked to contact Richard Wer-nick at the Music Department, ext3885, for more details. The winnerwill perform the concerto at theSpring, 1967 concert of the Orches¬tra in May.Dramatic MonologuesTo Open at Ihe HarperA series of original comic-dramatic monologues by BeverlyYounger will be presented at theHarper Theater on January 16 and23.Included in the program is TheDeath of Helen Grable, premieringat these performances. It is a suc¬cinct expression of the frustrationsof a meaningless existence, in¬spired by Hedda Gabler. MissYounger has written the portrayalof a woman whose life, once a shin¬ing star of youthful promise, hasTARTUFFEMohere's play as seen by F. W. Murnau, the master of the moving camera. At Doc Films tonight. At Soc Sci 123, Jtfh and University. 7:15 and *:15 pn*. StHI only *0 cents.mm?MANEUVERS UKE MAGICThrives on quick decisions...but so relaxing inside.Cheveile Malibu Sport Coupe with new standard safety features throughout.Glvs It a mile and it takes a mile. Run itthrough an s-curve and it comes out flat,smooth, and confident. Cheveile Malibu.The no-nonsense car from Chevrolet.When it comes to turning on the steam,Cheveile Is no slouch. Its Turbo-Fire 283provides plenty of zip when you need it. GMHUM OP tUCKUKNCl Inside, the Malibu Sport Coupe aboundswith rich, soft carpeting, a thickly paddedinstrument panel, and seats for five if youneed them.Visit your Chevrolet dealer's soon. Let amaneuverable Malibu bring out the drivingman in you.Now at your Chevrolet dealer's fallen to a middle-age of disap¬pointment and emptiness. She livesalmost non-existent, trapped bythat which is most indicative of herdisappointment, a large and emptyhouse in a typical middle-classAmerican suburb.Beverly Younger brings her pro¬gram of original charactersketches to the Harper, for twoconsecutive Monday evenings, Jan¬uary 16 and 23, at 8:30 pm. Ticketsare $3.00 on the their floor, $2.00in the balcony, and $1.00 for| students.For phone reservations call BU 8-1717Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection el boots, over¬shoes, insulated ski wear, hoodedcoats, long underwear, corduroys,"levis", etc., etc., etc., etc.Universal Armv Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9 30 1 00EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty DiscountPIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNTJanuary 13, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 15- Vi Cites the War in Vietnam M0y|e AimS TO ImDrOVe 64 ReCOrdAs Exsxss's *t International Racism J■r(Continued from Page One)According to Carmichael, the Ne¬gro is suppressed as a group andmust fight this suppression as agroup. The ghetto is the product offorces in the white community—orwhite power—who benefit from it.“It is as though a malignantplanning racist unit had plannedthe ghettoes.”White Activists' JobWhen asked what the white advo¬cates of civil rights could do to aidthe Negro, Carmichael said theyshould deal with the racism in thewhite community. “University ofChicago white activists can start inCicero,” he suggested.Carmichael criticized the alli¬ances between civil rights groupsand the white liberals as makingthe Negroes dependent on whites.He also criticized the idea asbeing devoid of hatred. “My hatredfor racism has me in the move¬ment. I'm going to smash it into amillion pieces.”CARMICHAEL described rebel¬lions within the ghetto not as theproduct of Black Power but as theresults of lack of effective organi¬zation of talent. The Negro must beable to be in a position to negotiatewith power so that they may beable to form and define alliances toobtain their desired ends, he said.“I think the real reason we stirup opposition is because we refuseto condemn black people who taketo the streets and riot.”Carmichael also noted that thereason police are concentratedmost heavily in Negro neighbor¬hoods is traceable to the “problemof property rights versus humanrights. Policemen are there to pro¬tect white property. . .If our housesget robbed, we can call the policetill we turn white.”He criticized the provery pro¬gram for concentrating on effectsrather than causes and being toolimited in scope.Confrontation of PowersCarmichael read an ad placed inthe New York Times of July 31,1966 by 75 members of the NationalCouncil of Churches which de¬scribed a confrontation of blackand white power as “a powerlessconscience meeting a consciouslesspower.”When asked to describe the mor- jals of Black Power, Carmichaelsaid, “I don’t think it’s right to askus to be the moral conscience ofthis damned country.”In universal terms, Carmichaelcalled the confrontation betweenblack and white power an at¬tempt by the United States to maintain its exploitive control overnon-white countries.HE CITED the war in Vietnamas an example of this, and calledi upon organized resistance to thedraft as the only effective meansfor opposing the war.“We cannot depend on the inter¬nal strength of the Negro but onthe external strength of the blackcountries who are going to over¬throw this country,” Carmichaelstated.Those interested maystill sign the letter urgingthe retention of ProfessorJesse Lemiseh. The letterwill be available on allSchooldays, from todaythrough January 20, be¬tween 12 and 1 pm in thecorridor of Mandel Halland in the lobby of SocialSciences.TAI-SAM-Y6.NCHIMES I - AMERICANRESTAURANTSptololfeln* Inr/UVTONESB ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILTT1 A M. »• 9t45 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUTISIS Io« Mrd »*. MU 4-1062 “We must build an independentpower so that people know that ev¬ery time they touch one blackthey've got to mess with 22 millionpeople.” by Syd Unger“This is primarily a youngteam with the potential to toplast year’s 6 and 4 record,”was the way Coach Bill Moyle,varsity coach of the swimmingteam, described this year’s team.THE MOST consistent winner onthe team is Dave Gagnon, accord-! ing to Moyle. Gagnon, a freshman,has broken the Bartlett Pool rec¬ord for the 200 yard freestyle fourtimes—his best mark being 1:58.4.In the last meet against Elgin Col¬lege he also broke the record forthe 500 yard freestvle with a markof 5:57.3.Gagnon is backed up by return¬ing lettermen Chuck Calef and Mike Koch-Weser, both of whomhave performed well thus far this ,season in sprint and relay races.Other starters on the team are |Mark Tindall, Carl Johnson, BobEvanders, Mark DeBoer, DennisSprinkle, Dave Ryder, Pete Swen¬son and Brent Carlson.THE SWIMMING team’s recordto date is 3 wins, 2 losses and 1 tie.UC opened the season with twowins, 70-21 over Shinier College and 68-26 over Wilson Junior College.Then Eastern Michigan and North¬ern Illinois University handed thevarsity 88 14 and 75 28 losses respeetively. After a 52-52 tie withLawrence University, Chicago beatElgin College 71-33 on Wednesday.The next meet for the swimmingteam is on Friday at BloomingtonIllinois. It will be a dual meetagainst Illinois Wesleyan Universety and Rockford College.HILARIOUS. sharp satire. That's what the Tribune said aboutTHE GRIMM BROTHERSTonight 9:30 and 11:30 atTHE OTHER SIDE1603 E. 53rd Street Hanes Annual SaleJanuary 14-21, 1967One week only to stock up on your favorite Hanes hosiery at reduced prices.Cantrece Regular Price1.65 Sale Price1.35ReinforcedSheer 1.50 1.25WalkingSheer 1.35 1.15THE GIFT DEPARTMENTUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave., Chicago, III.you sounded ,So depressed!I CAME A9 SOONAS » COUL-D INTERVIEWS, INTERVIEWSINTERVIEWS! botNOBODY UNDERSTANDS, AU_ IHEAR IS 'SALARy.'SECoRny“Opportun try.DON'T THEy KNOWi have to RELATE?I'va&crno findSomething- toIDENTIFY* rrn. NON, GR6G,lTCANT BE THAT0AQ. So you’REGETTING OUT oFCOLLEGE, NHAT’STO WORRY AOOUTSyou’RE GO IMG TOmake it gjgl MAy’BE you'RE RightVIVIAN. 1 JUST HAVEN’TF&UN dTH E COMPANYyET I’VE GOT TO hangIN THERE WHy PANIC?AFTER ALL, pm\ SMART ANDOF COURSE,SlLLy! quit GUESSINGABOUT VOURSELF. TURN ON THE OLDCHARM, rr WORKED FORHy BROTHER LAR«y,HE MADE IT 0lGrWITH THAT ELECTRICutil rry irvCLEVELAND Good looking-..you think“4 GcoDlooking-,DONTyouVlV?a imury!!! goodGOSH ALMIGHTYvtv, you wantTO PUT ME OUTtTO PASTUREAT THE RIPE AGEof22? I wantTO DO THINGS,Contribute1-.... \ WANT... 1 WANT TO ..1 WANT To RELATE’ 6o LARRy relatpd)LARRy AND CLEVELANDOrET ALONG-BIG- Cny SCENE!EVERYTHING- FROMBACH TO BERMANLARRVlovesLIVING:INCleveland SO THE TOWNS A O-ASSfcf?)WHAT DOES HE Do PROM%to5? change lightBULBS AND DESIGN _> NALL PLUGrSfVS) DonT KtD'W1- ME VIVIAN.G-KBG,you’RE FAST APPROACHING-&.y<THE IDIOT 2ONE. LARRyCONTRIBUTES, HE WORKSwrrH microwaves, rr’sTODAX..rightNOW!HLARRy SAySTHEy need ‘A lUTmoreGoodENGINEERS. I’LL ADMIT l t,c\JekthoughtOF WORKING FOR AN EUBCtRC,UTiLiTy VIVIAN, MAyfiE I"w- SHOULD WRITE TOthem, mavbe |OOUU) RELATE!-l wonder whatTHEIR’STARTING SALARIESARE? LARRy MENTIONAnything aboutretirement prdgraus?ANy opPoRruwrry Tt>ADVANCE? WELL GEE, VlV. you\/E GoTTo BE PRACTICALABout-thesbTHINGS,■ You too can relate with us. See our representative whenhe visits your campus or write to our Personnel Depart¬ment for information on career opportunities.THE CLEVELAND ELECTRIC ILLUMINATING COMPANYP.O.BOX 5000 CLEVELAND, OHIO 55101“INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS JANUARY 25“16 • CHICAGO MAROON • January 13, 1967