✓ol. 75-No. 32 Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary YearThe University of Chicago Tuesday, January 24, 1967MIDWEEKEDITIONRules on 1HC ProposalsWick Approves HoursChanges for Dormsby Michael Krauss 200 Picket Bank;Police Arrest 24MARCHING TO PRETORIA?Dean of Students Warner A. Wick announced yesterdaythat he has approved the hours proposals of six undergraduatehouses. by Michael SeidmanTwenty-four demonstrators were arrested yesterday as they blocked the entrance of the, , , , . . . Illinois Continental National Bank at 231 South LaSalle St. The demonstrators were pro-\I1 o t ie approve ours provisions were recommended to ■ testing the bank’s participation in a consortium of American banks loaning $40 million an-nually to the Union of South Africa.Wick by the Inter-House Council, atits meeting January 12. Wick ac¬cepted the IHC recommendationsin seven eases out of nine and ve¬toed one proposal which the IIIChad approved. was passed by the IHC because“. . .graduate students, over 21,living in singles, should have theright to govern their own social ac-IN ALL CASES the new rules 1 tivities.” Wick rejected it, however,represent significant increases inthe time during which residents areallowed to entertain visitors of theopposite sex in their bedrooms. Allo! the three proposals which wouldhave removed the decisions onhours from Wick's hands or thoseof the MIC were denied.Wick's ReasonsIn a formal statement to PaulBurstein, president of the IHC, jW ic k said “. . .people whose judg- jment 1 respect have advised me tove to most of the proposals. I havenot done so for two reasons. Thefirst is that no great prize, such as j „actual self-government would be, j l le llouse-can be achieved without a measureof faitli and courage; and to rebuffthese first efforts would not onlyinvite defeat but concede its like!ihood. My second reason is that bynot making an issue of clock hoursas such we may encourage every¬one to see them in a proper rela¬tion to the more important condi¬tions of a form of life in which wecan take both pride and pleasure.”Hours proposals from Chamber¬lin, Vincent, Greenwood, Universi¬ty. Harper Surf, and Blackstone,all of which had been approved bythe IHC, were approved by Wick.None ol them permit visitors after3:00 am. They all, however, permitvisiting hours during week days,perhaps the most radical changefrom the old rules.MOST OF THE proposals stipulate that infractions of the ruleswill be dealt with by the Inter-House Council or, if the violationsare ‘‘severe or repeated,” by thehouse resident head. Lounges andcommon rooms at Harper Surf andUniversity House will remain opento visitors 24 hours a day. feeling that the graduate status ofthe residents should not exemptthem from some University super¬vision.Hitchcock's proposal was basedupon the statement: “. . .our re¬sponsibility has not been put to thetest because we have had no oppor¬tunity to participate in formulatingthe rules we have been asked toobey. We make a confident predic¬tion that the extension of our auton¬omy will increase each individuals’sense of loyalty and responsibilityand enable us to deal with anyproblems that might arise withinRejected ProposalsCoulter House and Hitchcockboth submitted proposals request¬ing the abolition of all restrictionson visiting hours. Coulter’s requestClark Kerr Unemployed;Offered Position Ai UCAs Compensation—LeviClark Kerr, recently dis¬missed from the presidency ofthe University of California,has been offered a positionhere, according to Provost EdwardII. Levi.Levi, who himself was offeredthe chancellorship at California’sBerkeley campus two years ago,revealed the offer at a dinner Sun- IT WAS VETOED by the IHCand by Wick, who requested thatHitchcock submit a new proposal‘‘that is not based on appeals toabstract principle.”Lower Flint requested that theirown House council be allowed todetermine their social rules by amajority vote suject only to theveto of their resident head. Theirrequest was denied both by the IHCand by Wick. The gounds offeredby the IHC were that the decisionmade by a house council would beremoved from the influence of thehouse’s residents and would bypassthe IHC.Both Lower Flint and Coulterhave since offered alternative pro¬posals which would be within thelimits approved by the Inter-HouseCouncil. Wick has said that thenew proposals will have his sup¬port if the IHC approves them. onstrate in front of the Continental Illinois National Bank, 231UCS PHOENIXES ABOUT TO BECOME JAILBIRDS: 24 of thedemonstrators were arrested and charged with disorderly conduct.Vietnam Colloquium SlatedThe academics and the activists will get together this weekend for a student-faculty dis¬cussion of the Vietnam problem, in the first Beardsley Ruml Colloquium sponsored by theSocial Sciences Division.Participants will range from Hans Morgenthau, Professor of Political Science and Historyand a noted critic of present U.S.policy, to Tom Hayden, first direc¬tor of Students for a DemocraticSociety now leading the NewarkCommunity Union Project.ALL EVENTS EXCEPT a dinnerFriday will be open to students andfaculty only, in the Law School au¬ditorium.The Ruml Colloquia were an¬nounced last month as a quarterlyforum to bring students and facultytogether for a forum on majorpublic issues.The colloquia are named in honorof Beardsley Ruml, who was firstdean of UC’s Division of Social Sci¬ences and a Professor of Educa¬tion. after receiving his PhD in1917. After serving as consultantfor the U.S. government and treas-day, sponsored by the Collegiate urer of Macy’s in New York, RumlDivision of the Social Sciences. I died in 1960. Milton J. Rosenberg, Professor ofPsychology, has been chairman ofthe faculty committee planning thetopics for the colloquium. He ex¬plained that the colloquia are de¬signed :• First, to analyze the issues in¬volved and inform the community,because ‘‘there’s no more pressingsituation than the Vietnam war andour involvment in it;”• Also, to get the academic com¬munity ‘‘involved in some collec¬tive experience. He commentedthat students often complain theUniversity is uninterested in theworld at large and issues that in¬volve the lives of students.THE COLLOQUIUM will be astart in the direction of putting theUniversity’s resources to work on acurrent public problem. The demonstration, organized bythe UC Students for a Democratic’ Society (SDS), began at 12:25 whenfour lines, each consisting of about70 people, formed in front of thebank.TWENTY-FOUR of the demon¬strators, of whom all but three or, four were UC students, sat down infront of the Bank's main entranceand were immediately arrested andcharged with disorderly conduct,j There was no violence, and noI charges of resisting arrest. All but: one of those arrested posted $25i bond.Picketing continued undisturbed! after the arrests until 2:03 pmwhen the protestors dispersed.Kennedy and the BankThe demonstration culminated acampaign instituted by SDS toforce the Bank to withdraw fromthe consortium, and, barring that,to force the University to withdrawj its money from the Bank. UC isone of the Bank's chief depositors,and David Kennedy, the chief exec¬utive officer of the Bank, is a mem¬ber of DC’s Board of Trustees.According to Steve Kindred, anSDS leader, two consequences arelikely to develop from yesterday’ssit-in. ‘‘First, it is possible that thedemonstration will lead to astock-holders’ mutiny against theBank’s policies,” Kindred stated."IT COULD ALSO aid in raisingthe broader question of the rela¬tionship between US business andforeign affairs,” he continued.Although Kennedy could not bereached immediately for commenton the sit-in, they have indicatedpreviously that they consider theloans to South Africa a “necessaryposition” for the Bank to take.Ten - Bank ConsortiumThe Illinois Continental Bank be¬longs to a ten-bank consortiumwhich provides a $40 million self-renewing loan to South Africa.Late last year, an SDS demonstra¬tion in New York led to the with¬drawal of $24 million in depositsfrom the Chase Manhattan Bankin New York, a senior member ofthe consortium.Prior to the demonstration, mem¬bers of SDS sent letters to UC trust¬ee members urging them to depos¬it University funds in non¬consortium banks. In response tothe letter, UC President George(Continued on Page Eight)| ;»•*;,-< v, s - > »>.h 'M Students are urgently need¬ed to help the Co-ordinatingCouncil of Community Organ¬izations (CCCO) with voterregistration to be conducted >in several precincts this Fri¬day, Saturday and Sunday.People who are interested in -helping on any or all of thesethree days should call theStudent Activities office, ext.I 3591.Milton J. Rosenberg28 Aldermanic Candidates BarredMikva, Despres Blast Board Actionby Ellis LevinFifty-one independent aldermanic candidates, including La¬mar L. Hoke of the 4th Ward, have been denied places on theballot in the upcoming aldermanic elections by the ChicagoBoard of Election Commissioners.FORMER STATE RepresentativeAbner J. Mikva, who is serving asthe attorney for Hoke and other in¬dependents, told the Maroon Mon¬day that, “I wish I could say I wassurprised at the ruling of the Boardof Election Commissioners. Buttheir track record over the yearsmakes it clear that their decisionsare usually pretty ordained. (Aider-man) Holman (of the 4th Ward)had investigators out writing theirreports even before the objectionswere filed. The whole thing smacksmore of a Trujillo election than itdoes an American election. Thou¬sands of people have been deprived 1of the right to vote for absolutely Ino reason other than Holman does jnot want to let the people decide ' who the alderman should be. It isdisgusting.”No ReasonsOne of the most serious objec¬tions raised against the Board’sprocedure is its failure to revealthe reasons for the actions it takes.Hoke’s aldermanic petitions hadbeen challenged on the grounds of 1residence, that he did not live in jthe ward, and on the grounds thatone hundred of the signatures on |his petitions were invalid. Hokehad filed 1100 signatures, the law 'requiring about 350. When theBoard sustained the challenge iagainst him. it did not reveal on iwhat basis it had reached its deci- 1sion. j Stanley T. Kasper, Jr., attorneyfor the Chicago Board of ElectionCommissioners said yesterday thatthe Board had come to its decisionson the ‘‘basis of the challengesmade. The state law made no pro¬visions for reasons being given.”Legal action is now beingplanned by Hoke. He hopes to getthe courts to act in time for theFebruary 28 aldermanic primaryso that his name can appear on theballot. An appeal is being made tothe state courts, which in one simi¬lar case four years ago ordered theplacing of a candidate’s name backon the ballot. A number of the 51independent candidates thrown offthe ballot, including Hoke, are alsoconsidering appealing to the feder¬al courts, on the basis of violationsof the voting provisions of the CivilRights Act. The federal courts areempowered to enforce that act byordering a halt to an election ifneed be. iBrandt Speech SetFor Next Month)Willy Brandt, Minister ofPublic Affairs and Vice-Chan¬cellor of the Federal Republicof Germany, will be speakingin Chicago on February 10 as aguest of the Adali E. Stevenson In¬stitute at International Affairs. Theex-mayor of Berlin is expected todeliver a major policy address onthe reshaping and co-ordination ofcentral and western Europe. quarters in Robie House on TV'scampus, has announced two addi¬tional speakers for the program.James F. Oates, Jr., Chairman ofEquitable Life Insurance Companyand Chairman of the National Com¬mittee for the Institute, and DonaldM. Graham, vice-chairman of theboard of directors of the Continen¬tal Illinois National Bank, will aLogive addresses. Graham was re¬cently appointed as national chair-BRANDT WILL BE speaking at'man for a $10,000,000 fund-raisinga black tie dinner in the Sheraton-1 campaign in behalf oi the Steven-Blackstone Hotel at 7:30 pm. This son Institute,will be the first formal meeting of I , ,lf.CTC AXthe Stevenson Institute since its or-1 tUESTS AT ,he ll"mcrganization in 1965. Internationally be members of the Nationalknown political and business lead- ! Committee of the Stevenson Insti-ers and educators from all over the tute, members of the ChicagoWestern Hemisphere are expected Council on Foreign Relations, andto attend. J presidents of major mid westernThe Institute, which has its head- universities.WHY ARE THERE SO MANYYOUNG FACESAT HEWLETT-PACKARDMANAGEMENT MEETINGS?Responsibility— real responsibility— comes quicklyat Hewlett-Packard. Where you find responsibility,you find achievement, advancement. It’s that simple.Hewlett-Packard, a world leader in industrial,scientific and medical instrumentation, is growingrapidly. Some of our management-minded youngmen with particular interests specialize early in suchareas as marketing, finance, manufacturing and sys¬tems design, where they move ahead quickly. Manychoose a broader look at how a multi-million dollarelectronics corporation functions, and gather man¬agement experience in various key areas. Eitherway, advancement at HP comes rapidly becauseopportunity pervades an atmosphere of growth.Key positions are available at our corporate head¬quarters near San Francisco, and at other IIPdivisions in California, Colorado, Massachusetts,Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Come in and talkto the HP executives who’ll be interviewing atthe University of Chicago on January 31. It may turnout to be your first Hewlett-Packard managementmeeting. An equal opportunity employer.HEWLETT M PACKARDContinental Breakfast?Bank Debated After Dinnerby Jeffrey KutaA high-level debate over the University’s position in the Continental Illinois NationalBank situation found its way into a dinner discussion sponsored by the Collegiate division of(he Social Sciences.One side argued that the University must exist primarily as a forum for ideas, and that toa cl as a power structure by taking i — ——an economic stand on outside is¬sues would result in a hindrance offurther discussion.Another faction argued that theUniversity is not only a forum fordiscussion, but really exists also as ja power structure. Because of this jthe University faces the responsi- jbilily of using its power in the j“right” way.PROVOST EDWARD H. Levi,speaking at the Sunday dinner in jHutchinson Commons, disagreedwith students who advocate a with¬drawal of funds from the Bank be¬cause of its membership in a 20-bank national consortium thatlends money to South Africa. Thestudents object to the South Africanpolicy of apartheid.“Although well principled,” Levistated, “these students are makinga mistake in their conception of theUniversity’s relation to the commu¬nity. The University has to decidehow it will influence the communi¬ty—by ideas or by economic action.“When the activist says he’ll usethe University as an economic tool,he misuses, corrupts, and eventual¬ly destroys the University.”'Economic Coercion'He said that withdrawal of fundsfrom the Bank would be a form ofeconomic coercion. Besides ad¬versely influencing further free in¬quiry and discussion, it would in¬vite reciprocal coercion.lie cited as examples possiblewithdrawal of Maroon ads placedby the Chase Manhattan Bank, amember of the consortium, and thetermination of educational grantsby the Rockefeller Foundation.(The Rockefeller family owns amajority of stock in the Chasebank.)“If w'e then ask these peoplewhether they know what a Univer¬sity is for, they can reply ‘DoMILTON J. Rosenberg, professorof pyschology, argued that thereexists a “dichotomy of responsibili¬ty"—one must be responsible tohimself as well as to his institution.He said this is why he signed astatement demanding the Universi¬ty withdraw its funds from theBank.“A small part of my paycheckcomes from the current destructionof human beings in South Africa.I’m willing to give up that $2 50. orwhatever it is, if the Universitywithdraws those funds.”'Free Criticism'Levi explained that he alsothought that the University shouldn’t take a position simply outof fear of losing money. He added,“I think it’s wonderful that moneyfrom South Africa goes to Chicagoprofessors who can freely criticizethe Continental Bank policy.”“But the professors should talk toContinental with ideas, not force,”he added.Maynard Kreuger, an associateprofessor of economics, pointed outone instance in which the Universi¬ty took a stand on an outside issuewas against a post-World War IIatomic weapons bill which wouldgive the military complete control.He said the Council of the Uni¬versity Senate voted to oppose the standards in the nation as a whole,which might hit the black popula¬tion particularly hard.'Ratings' DiscussionThe debate over the Bank issuegrew out of a discussion on howUniversities should be “rated.”Many of the participants criticizeda recent American Council of Edu¬cation (ACE) survey in w'hich Chi¬cago was ranked approximatelyfifth in the quality of its graduateschools.According to President Beadle,“The ACE ratings lagged behindthe facts.” He noted that most ofthe respondents in the survey ratedschools on the basis of their experi- Manthei To Become NewCTS President Thursdaybill, which was subsequcntally de- j ences there as students,feated.Levi said that in this case, theissue “directly affected” the Uni¬versity, w'hich was involved in theManhattan Project.ACCORDING TO David Bakan,professor of psychology, in manysituations administrators cannotdeny the existence of the Universi¬ty as a corporate body. “By virtueof circumstances, the University isa party and must act on moralprinciples.”(At a student luncheon yesterday,Levi claimed that the amount ofeconomic power the Universitycould exert against the Bank“would be only symbolic.”)Lloyd A. Fallers, professor of an¬thropology, noted that the conse¬quences of a trade embargo onSouth Africa must be examinedcarefully in the light of circum¬stance in the country. He suggestedthat withdrawing investmentsmight result in a reduction of living He also pointed out that many ofChicago’s interdisciplinary depart¬ments were not rated in the sur¬vey, and that some departmentswhich were rated do not exist here.BEADLE NOTED that mostmethods of rating are inadequate.“If Nobel Prizes are used as a cri¬terion. for example, an institutionas excellent as MIT ranks verylow'. Not one MIT faculty membershas received the Prize for workdone while at MIT.”He said that 127 university presi¬dents had been associated with Chi¬cago at one time as either studentsor faculty members.Levi asserted that universitiesshouldn’t be interested in ratings.He said a high rating often prod¬uces “smugness” which results incomplacency and lowered qualityof instruction.Other discussion centered aboutdifferent types of student bodiesand different theories of education.mCalendar of EventsTuesday, January 24FILM: Horsefeathers. DocumentaryFilms. Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15pm.CONCERT: Contemporary ChamberPlayers. Mandel Hall, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: “How' to Breed Computers”Richard C. Lewontin, Professor, Depart-ment of Zoology. Kent 107 . 7:30 pm.LECTURE: “One Hundred Years ofMarxian Socialism,” Ludwig von Mises,Professor of Economics, New York Uni¬versity. Breasted Hall, 8 pm.MEETING: CGU, to form an indepen¬dent, anti-machine students' organiza¬tion. 5511 S. University, apt. 1, 8 pmWednesday, January 25FILM: Yampyr, Documentary- Films.Social Science 122, 7:15 and 9:15 pmLECTURE: "The View Through Philo¬sophical Psychology'.” Eugene Gendlin.Social Science 108. 8 pm.Thursday, January 26OPERA: Euridiee, Collegium Musicum.Ida Noyes Theater, 8:30 pm.CONCERT: Judy CoUins, Mandel Hall,8 pm. LECTURE: “The Government andMedical Education.” Dr. George A. Sil¬ver, Department of Health, Educationand Welfare. Billings P117. 4 pm.LECTURE: “The Classical TurkishLeague.” Dr. Fahir Iz. Foster Lounge,4:30 pm. Admission free. Edward F. Manthei will beinaugurated as the seventhpresident of the Chicago Theo¬logical Seminary (CTS) at 3 pmThursday in the Hyde Park UnionChurch, 5600 Woodlawn Ave.THE PRESIDENT of the UnitedChurch of Christ, Ben M. Herbster,will deliver the inaugural address.Jerald C. Brauer, dean of the UCDivinity School, will offer a greet¬ing on behalf of the University.Manthei, 52, graduated from theUniversity of Wisconsin. He re¬ceived his Bachelor of Divinity andMaster of Arts degrees from CTSin 1938 and an honorary Doctor ofDivinity in 1952.Since graduating, he has beenpastor of Congregational churchesin Colorado Springs. Colorado(1938-1944), Western Springs, Illi¬nois (1944-1960), and Denver(1960-1966).IN ADDITION, Manthei is a lead jer of the United Church of Christ.He is a member of the Commission jon Christian Unity of the Churchand belonged to the committeewhich prepared the Church’s state¬ment of faith. Manthei also holds a ;seat on the Board of the UnitedStates Conference of the WorldCouncil of Churches. In 1961 Manth- Iei served as a delegate to an as- |sembly of the Council in New Del- jhi.Manthei’s predecessor is HowardSchomer. Schomer was appointedexecutive director of the Special- jized Ministries Department of the jNational Council of Churches’ Divi¬sion of Overseas Ministries. He willassume his new office March 1.CTS was founded in 1855 byCongregational ministers and lay¬men. It is now affiliated with theunited Church of Christ. 125 stu¬dents attend its three-year gradu¬ate program.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856CUSTOM PROGRAMMINGCARD PROCESSINGKEY PUNCHINGCALI MRS. BLIXT AT 782-211»FOR A TIME AND COST ESTIMATER. SKIRMONT & ASSOCIATES. INC.COMPUTE. APPLICATION CONSULTANTS33 N. LaSalle St. Chicago, III. 60602 UNTRADITIONAL....When an insurance company suggests a symposium onthe Good Samaritan and the Law. Sentry did it and itwas held at the University of Chicago. The result is a300 page book describing morality and problems of aid¬ing those in peril. A FREE copy is yours without obliga¬tion. As a bonus, learn if you qualify for up to $50 sav¬ings on auto insurance. Fill in and send this Coupon toyour Sentry Insurance man orCALL 374-0350*"JIM CRANE8124 So. WoodlawnChicago 19, III.Sand men Free Book, Good Samaritan and facts on the Serubrjr.Preferred Young Driver tent.Name Age PhoneCftySENTRY.7J INSURANCEthe Martfwar* Mulusis Organization Edward F. Manthei1.50survivalkitFor your expensive contactlenses, the Murine Companymakes a rather inexpensivesurvival kit. It's Lensine, anall-purpose solution (orcomplete lens care. You nolonger have to keepseparate solutions forwetting, cleaning andsoaking your contactlenses. And on thebottom of everybottle, there’s aremovable lenscarrying case... an exclusivewith Lensine.Pick up a bottlefor about $1.50.There’s nothingelse like itat any price.for contactsJanuary 24, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3W■>'' s': Turmoil at CaEDuring California’s gubernatorial race, many were surprisedby the endorsement of Ronald Reagan by Robert Scheer andother Berkeley New Leftists.The endorsement shouldn’t have been totally unexpected,however, because there was considerable feeling in Berkeleythat Reagan's election would make recruiting activists far eas¬ier.NOW THAT Reagan is governor, the Berkeley campus maybe on its way to being totally politicized, a development thatmany think will be a good thing.The recent firing of Clark Kerr, however, represents anothertrend that may become noticeable at the Berkeley campus.This is a backward trend and it’s educational rather than politi¬cal.Reagan was elected governor at least in part by popularreaction against what many thought were the excesses atBerkeley. Reagan's pledge to do something about the Universi¬ty of California struck a responsive chord in the hearts of anawful lot of Californians and delighted the Berkeley activistswho saw the whole thing as playing into their hands.Their feeling of invulnerability may have been an importantreason for there being so little attempt to try to make theferment at Berkeley palatable to the California man on thestreet whose taxes were supporting the school.Now Reagan has begun to “do something" about the Univer¬sity of California. He has proposed an enormous cut in theUniversity’s allocation. He has called for the institution of tu¬ition, and last week it appears he was intrumental in the dis¬missal of Clark Kerr.REAGAN’S NEXT move is not precisely predictable, ofcourse, but there is every reason to believe that it will notcontribute to the academic well being of the University ofCalifornia.Already the University is suffering. Berkeley is a growingcampus—an education boomtown. To the distress of schoolslike the University of Chicago, Berkeley has been able to offerthe salaries, the research, the weather, and the academic at¬mosphere necessary to attract the best scholars. The schoolloses at lot of its attractiveness with Reagan as governor.In the last few years, the New Left at Berkeley has exerted alot of influence. It has also scared a lot of people. The averageCalifornian found the Berkeley Left threatening and inscruta¬ble, and this was reflected in the results of the Novemberelection.Robert Scheer may have outsmarted the rest of California byendorsing Reagan. There is now at Berkeley the beginnings ofa truly politicized campus. Unfortunately, there may be a heavyprice. The quality of the education offered at the Universityof California may not be the same four years from now.IF THIS becomes the case, there’s a lesson to be learned.The people of a state or a nation have to be taken into consid¬eration by New Leftists who want to be ultimately successful,and this includes taking into consideration people’s small-mindedness, their anti-intellectualism, and everything else.The New Left may find that an enraged and frightened publiccan do a lot of harm to a great University.We can only hope that the whole sorry chapter is at leastsuccessful in proving to self-righteous radicals that the rankand file doesn’t quite warrant the contempt that people likeRobert Scheer demonstrated when they endorsed Reagan.Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief ..David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanFeature Editor Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyEditor Emeritus Daniel HertzbergEditorial Staff—Kenneth Simonson, Slade Lander, Ellis Levin,Richard Rabens, Joe Lubenow.News Staff-—John Moscow, Harold Sheridan, Robert Skeist,Photographers—David Meserve, Jean Raisler, Bern Myers.Staff Artists—Belita Lewis, Arlo Larson. FOR EXRMPLETfe?£Ws..Michael SeidmanUC in the Bedroom:Rules and the RevolutionLike an innocent maiden who,at the climax of seduction says“no" but means “yes” the UC ad-ministration has stumbledthrough the quiet revolution in so¬cial rules upholding its moralityto the very end.Dean Wick accompanied hismemorandum endorsing the bulkof the Mentschikoff report lastyear with the admonition that theUniversity would not tolerate“sexual experimentation” amongits students. He supplimented hisendorsement of house autonomytwo weeks ago with a stronglyworded letter to the Maroon at¬tacking the value of “studentpower.” And now, he has found itnecessary to add to the latest ad¬ministration policy reversal therueful observation that socialhours extending to 2 or 3 am onweekdays are incompatible with“a hard working university.”It is easy to see why Wick hasfound euphemisms and denialsnecessary. It is hard for any insti¬tution to reverse openly a long es¬tablished position. Yet as the UCadministration emerges from thebedroom once again, it is difficultto take its innocence seriously.CLEARLY STUDENTS nowhave the freedom to endulge in“sexual experimentation” (what¬ever that is) behind the privacyof closed dormitory doors. More¬over, members of the Fiske andPage committees as well as mem¬bers of the Committee of theCouncil have repeatedly indicatedthat the new moves towards im-proved student-administrationcommunication stem directlyfrom needs demonstrated by last spring’s sit-in—the most dramaticexhibition of “student power” inrecent years. And finally, despiteWick’s paternalistic remarksabout hard working universities,house autonomy (even of the“constructive” variety) goes along way toward allowing stu¬dents to decide for themselveshow they wish to lead their pri¬vate lives.Obviously, then, a change hasoccured, and no amount of moral¬izing and evasion can undermineits significance. UC has becomethe first major institution in thiscountry to reject—definitively ifnot especially coherently—the hal¬lowed principle of in loco paren¬tis. The real importance of thenew double-veto system of houseautonomy is not the new hourswhich emerged from it, but rath¬er the fact that such machinerywas created in the first place. Byhaving students decide hours forthemselves rather than havingthem set by someone else, the ad¬ministration has tacitly admittedthat rules exist for the interests ofthe community, rather than tosatisfy some outside authority.It is true, of course, that thefinal veto allowed the Dean ofStudents somewhat lessens theimpact of so revolutionary a doc¬trine, but by using it to kill onlyone of the IHC-approved rules,Wick has clearly indicated that,for now at least, the veto is anoth¬er “no” that means “yes.”WHY DID THE administrationchoose to reverse itself so com¬pletely on the social rules issue?Dean Wick in his letter to the Ma¬roon of two weeks ago rejected outright the notion that thechanges resulted from “studentpower.” Yet clearly administra¬tors do not make decisions in avacuum. A variety of forces con¬tribute to any decision, and al¬though it is often difficult to iso¬late them, it is hard to deny thatthe climate of student opinion andthe way in which that opinion isbrought to bear on the adminis¬tration plays a significant role.PRESSURE POLITICS of thiskind is hardly, as Wick claims, anabdication of our rational tradi¬tion. All politics, whether on theinternational, national, or campuslevel, involves a coercive ele¬ment. If a majority of the voterschoose a candidate for public of¬fice, they coerce the minority toaccept their decisions throughpowers invested in the majorityby our laws.Coercion by a majority of stu¬dents is no less rational than theelectoral process. It merely takesa less socially acceptable formbecause the institutions for effect¬ing majority will do not exist onthe campus. By establishinghouse autonomy, the administra¬tion has taken a long first stridetowards creating such institu¬tions. What remains to be seen is,whether the administration means 1“yes” on majority rights in otherareas as well. If it does,—and theproliferation of student-facultycommittees gives some indicationthat this is the case—then the in¬stitutionalization of “student pow¬er” will carry the quiet revolutionfarther than any of its instigatorscould have imagined.Letters to the EditorTO THE EDITOR:University's FutureIn my 33 years of associationwith the University of Chicago Ihave not previously written a let¬ter to the Editor of the ChicagoMaroon. But the implications ofsome recent activities do concernme as they may affect the contin¬ued welfare and independence ofthe university. I therefore sharewith readers of the Maroon anightmare. In this fantasy theseparate categories of students,faculty, administration, board oftrustees, and the public interpene¬trate one another and becomemerged. The pioneer step was taken bya small group who attempted toinvade the legal and traditionalsphere of responsibility of theboard of trustees, the handling ofthe funds of the university. Thisventured break-through in areasof jurisdiction could suggest tothe board that it too should breakout of its self-imposed restraints,such as noninterference in studentand academic affairs. Should theboard attempt to regulate dormi¬tory hours, social rules, studentadmissions, editorial policy of theMaroon, faculty teaching, or the ,curriculum? An annual Blackfriars Reviewmight dramatize segments ofthreatened or imaginary history.An opening ballet, Berkeley blues,recounts how an activist groupprojected another university intopolitics and then how politicsmenaced the university, but some¬how the stars at the beginningare not there at the end. Thehighlight of the show, however,would come when a student cho¬rus surges forward from the stageto sit-in on the laps of the aston¬ished bankers on the front row tothe tune “Money talks.” The audi-(Continued on Pa~e S**'"*")Four from University ArrestedPolice Raid Michigan Film Societyby Sue GrossmanThe University of Michigan in Ann Arbor is seething over police seizure of an exper¬imental film and the arrest of the students showing it.The trouble began the night January 18, when a police officer stopped the UniversityCinema Guild’s showing of the film, “Flamir.g Creatures” after it had run seven minutes and*and confiscated it. i " " New Republic Editor Calls for ChangeIn Psychiatry at Student Forum Hereby Ina SmithTWO DAYS LATER four peopleinvolved in the showing were ar¬rested for violating an obscenitystatute. They are student co-chairmen of the Guild, Ellen P.Frank and Mary Barkey, Hugh Co-Inn. an English instructor and the sources, the regents were more up¬set about the film than about thearrests.The day before, Vice Presidentfor Student Affairs Richard L. Cut¬ler walked out of a stormy openmeeting with students. He coun- Chief Walter Krasnay indicatedthis his officers will review otherCinema Guild films during thecoming semester “on the basis of acomplaint or the advertised mate¬rial.”Police Lt. Eugene Staudenmeier,Boggs, Goldberg Debate Rankp's adviser, and projectionist tere(J their objections to the Uni- who seized “Flaming Creatures,”K-ilph Walda, a University employ- versity’s refusal to defend the after seven minutes’ showing, saide ’ j Guild members by saying that the, that he didn’t need to see “the en-University had “made no effort to tire film to decide if it was porno-Tlie four arrested turned them- prohibit the showing of the film.” i graphic. I saw enough.”selves in to the police on Saturday, j Two lawyers from Detroit, Wil- The principles of academic free-.January 21, and were released at liam Goodman and Dean Robb, vol- dom, civil liberties, and the First6:00 pni that evening, on their unteered to defend the four arrest- Amendment may be put to the testpromise not to jump bail. Hearings' ed without a fee. Robb, in charge at the trial of the Cinema Guildare set for January 30 in the Coun-A; of the case, is on the board of the leaders. As an editor of the Michi-ty Circuit Courthouse. Maximum American Civil Liberties Union. gan Daily, the student newspaper,sentence for violating the obscenity j Shows Will Go On put it, the question is “whether alaw is one year in jail and $1,000 in The Guild is continuing to show self-appointed public censor in thefines. | more experimental films. Wednes- j form of a police officer can legally_ , * u i 'day present “Scorpio Ris-; roam the University at will, haltingUC Refuses to Help | jng ” t0 be viewed by several the presentation of material which* Soon after the seizure the Univer- j classes at the University. Police he considers ‘objectionable.’ ”sity administration issued a state¬ment that it would not provide le-»al aid for the Cinema Guild lead¬ers. It said that “if public law is'allegedly violated, establishedprocedures should be used to makethe determination. When such vio¬lations take place, it is the respon¬sibility of the law enforcementagencies to take appropriate ac¬tion. . The question here is one ofcitizens’ rights and citizens’ respon¬sibilities.”, At that point the Student Govern¬ment Council voted unanimously tooffer the $1,000 bail to any CinemaGuild member arrested and ap¬proved a letter to the regents of the^University, calling the seizure ofthe film a “potential threat to theacademic life of the university.”The Campus Republican Club is¬sued a statement calling the sei¬zure “absurd” and asking city offi¬cials to drop charges against theGuild and return the film.MEANWHILE an ad-hoc studentgroup circulated petitions Friday,asking the regents to aid the Guild.A petition with 1100 signatures wassent to the Trustees, who weremeeting on Friday; they rejectedJt. According to high administration The challenge to modernpsychiatry, is to free itselffrom the crusty, dogmatic out¬look it has clung to for years,according to Dr. Robert Coles, apsychiatrist and contributing editorof Th« New Republic.Coles spoke at the Student Medi¬cal Forum at Billings Hospital lastThursday, on the relationship be¬tween psychiatric training and so¬cial change. He drew mainly frompersonal experiences and observa¬tions during racial crises in NewOrleans and Atlanta several yearsago.The former UC intern warnedagainst speaking about social path¬ology in psycho-pathological terms.People today, he explained, trans¬fer a psychological way of thinking,originally used to understand phob¬ias and anxieties, to social, eco¬nomic, and political situations—apractice which he feels does notpermit a thorough, modern in¬terpretation, but rather a pathologi¬cal and categorical one.Coles recalled how he found him¬self in the thick of the school de¬ segregation fight in New Orleansand later in the student sit-ins inAtlanta. In each crisis, he ob¬served that those people underpressure developed latent resourcesand strengths enabling them towithstand abnormal stress, a dis¬covery that prompted his apparentdissatisfaction with the psycho-pathological outlook.He talked extensively not only tothe four Negro girls chosen to inte¬grate the New Orleans school andto the student protestors in Atlanta,but also to members of white mobsin an attempt to determine whypeople form mobs, why they sit in,and what nonviolent protest doespsychologically to those directly in¬volved.CorrectionThe India Association of the Uni¬versity of Chicago will hold itscelebration of Republic Day, thisSaturday, January 28, at 6 pm atInternational House.The date of the celebration wasreported incorrectly in last Fri¬day’s Maroon.Rebel Marine TalksTo Anti-War GroupThe second in a series of WeWon't Go conferences will featurel4Barry S. Laing, a Marine corporalH'ho has refused all military ordersbecause of his opposition to theVietnam War, tomorrow in Rey¬nolds Club South at 3:30 pm.* Laing has already served time ina Marine stockade and his case iscurrently before a federal court.He will speak on “Resisting theWar from within the Armed/orces.”We Won’t Go is the group of UCstudents that has made public itsintention to refuse military servicein Vietnam. by Roger BlackDanny Boggs, a member ofthe Fiske and Dunham Com¬mittees, and Jackie Goldbergerstwhile chairwoman of stu¬dents against the Rank (SAR), ]crossed much like two ships in thefog at an informal debate last jThursday on the question. “Shallthe University Compile and ReleaseClass Rank?” Boggs said that theUniversity should continue ranking,Miss Goldberg, that it shouldn’t.MISS GOLDBERG opened the;discussion stating the basic pointsin her case:• There are too many ranks atthe University that interfere withthe education that is supposed to begoing on. “I think we’re over- jranked to begin with,” she said. j• The rank puts too much em-,phasis on grades, and makes stu- !dent rivalry bitter, since, with thewar in Vietnam, “students’ lives !are in the balance.”• Ranking puts an unusual pres¬sure on student-faculty relation¬ships. making both faculty and stu¬dents less likely to be honest intheir relations with each other.• Any educational exemption is ;unfair to people who for some rea¬son aren’t in school. And the defer- ,ment system as it is now predi- Icates the absurd contention that j“good students’ lives are more valu¬able than not so good students’lives.”• The way it is now, “Every stu¬dent has to be ranked, whether hesends it in or not.”• The University should not bean arm of the selective service sys¬tem.BOGGS, IN reply, reiterated the jtopic: “What we are concernedwith here,” he said, “is whatshould be the response of the Uni¬versity when a student requests hisrank.” His first point was that even ifthe University refused to sendranks to the selective service, stu¬dents who had friends in the ad¬ministration could get Universityletterhead and send their rank inthemselves.Among other points Boggs madewere:• Forbidding the University torank would make it a “censor forpolitical purposes,” rather thanstopping it from being an arm ofthe Selective Service.• Answering Miss Goldberg’scharges that ranking has harmfuleducational effects, Boggs cited theFiske Committee poll that foundthat only five percent of freshmenthought that the rank would affecttheir education. Thirty percent felt,though, that it might affect otherstudents. • Ranking is only one of numer¬ous ways the Selective Service de¬termines a person’s “status.”MISS GOLDBERG then attempt¬ed to show that there was nothingnew about universities acting as“political censors” as Boggs hadobjected. She gave as examples theuniversities that have done chemi¬cal warfare research for the gov¬ernment, and Michigan State,which has done work for the CIA.Boggs countered with the argu¬ment that since the Universityquite willingly gives information tothe IRS, why shouldn’t it supplyranks to the Selective Service.The debate was part of the seriesof “Open Forums” sponsored byStudent Government. Further dis¬cussions will be on University fi¬nances, faculty tenure, and studenthousing. There will be a Blackfriars'Coffee Hour Today, January24, 1967, from 3:00-5:00p.m., at the Ida Noyes Libra¬ry. Undergraduate and Grad¬uate students interested injoining, the Blackfriars (UC'smusical comedy society) arewelcome.TYPEWRITEROur typewriter department isequipped to make type changesto meet your needs—Mathemat¬ical, Statistical, Medical orLanguages.Please inquire at our typewriter coun¬ter.TYPEWRITER DEPT.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenueNOW AVAILABLE IN PAPERBACKTEXTUAL AND LITERARY CRITICISMby Fredson Bowers 1-65FROM PURITANISM TO THE AGE OF REASONby G. R. Cragg 1-75THE BRITISH CONSTITUTIONby W. Ivor Jennings 1-95STUDIES IN THE MAKING OF THE ENGLISH PROTESTANT TRADITIONby E. G. Rupp 1.75GENERAL BOOK DEPT.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave., Chicago, III. JEFFREY THEATRE1952 E. 71st HY 3-3334January 25-26Royal BalletWITHMargot Fonteyn auci 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 24, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 5Opera ReviewII Euridice" Offers Balm to Ear-Weary Opera-GoerAfter last week’s pointed example of what kind of opera is least worth hearing, the Colleg¬ium Musicum’s staging of the American premiere of Jacopo Peri’s Renaissance operaEuridice came as welcome balm to one whose conception of the glories(??) of the humanvoice had reached an unexpected low-point. For those of us unfortunate enough to have goneto the one. and truly fortunate in by his cronies, thereby making one zo Pitti in Florence, where the preof the first documented instances of rniere took place.having come to Ida Noyes Theaterfor the other. Howard Brown's sen-1sitively-coaceived production cameas Orpheus soothing the wild beasts!with his music; and one wild beast,in particular, who had almost for-!gotten that while there are ama¬teurs of low repute, there are alsosome extremely talented ones.The major interest in this perfor¬mance of Peri’s opera stems fromthe fact that, as far as musicolo-Jgists and scholars can be certain, itis quite probably the first operaever written. Vet, it has languishedunperformed and unknown to allbut the elitest one-upmen on the !Texaco Metropolitan Opera Quiz orthe brightest whiz-kid in Music 222.The only previous performances ithat I have been able to track downwere in 1916 and 1960, the latter in jRome, and never, until this week- [end, had it been given in the United \States.EURIDICE WAS WRITTEN in,the year 1600, by both Peri (1561-1633) and his court rival GiulioCaecini, both of whom were singersin the Florentine Camerata. to alibretto by Ottavio Rinuccini, apoet who wrote the texts of severalother period operas and who was asort of seventeenth century Hugovon Hofmannstal or Oscar Hain-merstein If. The occasion was themarriage of Henry IV of Franceand Marie de’ Medici, and, partlyas a result of the festive nature ofthe affair, the traditional story ofOrpheus and Euridice got changeda bit. with a happy ending interpolated and the setting a pastoralone.However, it is not with the pettyvagaries of plot that we are con¬cerned with Euridice, but ratherwith the important place it holds asthe pivotal vocal work of the earlyBaroque era, forming an importantbridge between the early rise ofpolyphonis vocal music and Claud¬io Monteverdi, the man who first ex¬panded the newly devised formwith a far richer musical contentthan could Peri, whose work mustbe considered a tentative and high¬ly successful experiment ratherthan a thoroughly conceived delin¬eation of a new art-form.PERI WAS ONE of several Re-Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259NSA Discounts naissance musicians who tried to sic reflected this freedom from therestore the declamatory mode that strictures of the old form and in hiswas then thought to have been pe- development of the so-called "Stileculiar to Hellenic tragedy, an at- rappresentativo" basically, a reci-tempt whose direct offspring was tative over a slow-moving bassBOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentroComplete RopofnaAnd ServicePer All Popular ImportsMidway S-4S0I6052 So Cottaqe GrovePHOTOGRAPHYTwenty four hour services oncolor slides.Try our custom black and whiteprocessing.PHOTOGRAPHIC DEPT.THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue the modern recitative. It was thisattempt which had earlier resultedin the development of monody, aparticular style of solo singing thatcould be used for dramatic pur¬poses and which clearly distin¬guished between vocal melodic lineand instrumental accompaniment,which was reduced to a few simplechords. without vocal ornamentation), heproduced the embryo of the laterdistinctions between the recitativeand such advanced musical devicesas the aria and choral segments ofopera.Peri, incidentally, sang Orfeo inthe original production, and it is aninteresting historical digression tonote that, because of his curlyAs is to be expected, Peri’s mu- locks, he was called "II Zaizerino' a composer’s friends calling him a“long-hair."PERI'S SCORE HAS never exist¬ed in any large-scale publishedform, and thus, it was as a resultof the researches and reconstruc¬tions of Musicologist HowardBrown that Conductor HowardBrown was able to present the thework in its now—apparently—definitive version. The Collegiumensemble was a small one: two vio¬lins, ’cello. 3 recorders, harpsi¬chord, and small Baroque organ,approximating the instrumentationemployed at the first performance, The performance itself was anextremely convincing one. Thestage and the actors’ movementswere simply conceived and withoutpretentions towards elaborate gesture and the singers delivered generally even performances, some, infact, quite impressive.The production as a whole wasan artistic triumph for HowardBrown, in particular, who provedwhat he had set out to prove: thatEuridice is no mere quaint curio ofan ancient era, but an extremelypersuasive piece of living music. Itis to be here for three more per¬formances: Thursday, Friday, andand Ida Noyes Theater was specifi- Saturday evenings, and it is warmcallv chosen because of its spatial ly commended to your attention,proximity to the room in the Palaz- Ed Chikofsky/We’re neglecting football for educationDean Groucho Marx and Harpo and Chico bring football back to Huxley College in HORSE FEATHERS. At DocStill only A0 cents. Films tonight. Sec Sci 122, 5*th and University. 7:15 and »15THE JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTERS OF CHICAGOOffer Summer Employment Opportunities In Social WorkOriented Day and Country CampsDAY CAMPS located throughout ChicagoPositionsCAMP CHI Counselors — Male onlySupervisory StaffSpecialiseslocated 50 miles North of Madison and theUniversity of WisconsinPositions: Counselors — Male & FemaleSupervisory StaffSpecialistsWaterfrontCampcraftArts & CraftsDriversNursesCooksSCHOLARSHIPS FOR GRADUATE EDUCAUOHinStudents receiving their Bachelor's DegreeJune who are interested in advanced study lead¬ing to a Master's Degree in Social Group Workwill be interviewed for Scholarship Awards of$2,100 per year for each of the two years of study.If you are interested in any of the above, please call ST 2-3085, CampChi, to make an appointment for an interview. Interviews will be held onTuesday, January 24,1967, at the Hillel Foundation, 5715 S. Woodlawn.CHICAGO MAROON • January 24, 1967GADFLY - *s "5, ■* $ > / ^ ^'V'„ „ : ' '**31' *' ^.X':' ‘ ;yi..*'.x «■;>.•■•: :<;y.Half-Baked Role for UC? Letters To The Editorby James RedfieldMaster, New CollegiateDivisionI wonder if I may make a fewcomments on the current contro¬versy involving the University’sinvestments in the Continental Il¬linois Bank? Everyone feels, Ithink, that there is an element ofartificiality in this issue, that weare not talking about the sub¬stance of power but rather ofmatters of principle and attitude.Certainly the line of moral infec¬tion which leads from Johannes¬burg to the treasurer’s officeseems to be stretched very thin; Iwon’t have lunch with HeinrichHimmler, and I’m not too sureabout Heinrich Himmler’s clean¬ing lady, but I feel no particularobjection to Heinrich Himmler’scleaning lady’s hairdresser. Mon¬ey has a fluid impersonal quality,and if we take responsibility forevery institution with which theUniversity deals and for the finaldestination of all funds disbursedwe may find it hard to locate aclean corner of the market. Inany case (probably) we owe theContinental Illinois money; I sus¬pect that should we disentangleourselves pressure would be ex¬erted on no one but ourselves. Iimagine no one really expects thebank sit in to be a first step to¬ward the overthrow of the SouthAfrican Government; it is diffi¬cult not to suspect that the realaim of the whole enterprise, ofthe bank sit-in and associatedevents, is to involve the Board ofTrustees in dialogue with the stu¬dents.BUT WOULD this really be de¬sirable? Dialogue is a two-waystreet; we might not be sopleased if the Trustees began toexpress themselves on matters ofstudent discipline. One of the glo¬ries of the University of Chicagois a Board of Trustees which docsnot interfere with academic mat¬ters. But this non-interference isbased upon a clean line of demar¬cation between responsibilities.Ihey trust us to be sensible andmoral in the conduct of the Uni¬versity community; we trustthem to be sensible and moral inhandling the University’s invest¬ments. And it seems to me thatthey’re doing at least as well aswe are.If the controversy really turnson a matter of principle, let usask: what principle? That theUniversity should take a corpo¬rate stand through its institutionalacts on the great issues of publicpolicy—in this case, on apartheidin South Africa. 1 would ask theUniversity community to give thisprinciple some thought. 1 believeit to be in error; 1 believe that apolicy of public involvementwould be destructive of the Uni¬versity. If it is not too much of a paradox, let me say that the Uni¬versity can meet its responsibili¬ties to society only by cultivatinga degree of corporate social irre¬sponsibility.UNIVERSITIES have a tradi¬tion of academic freedom, bywhich we mean (among otherthings) that members of the aca¬demic community are allowed tosay and publish what they likewithin very broad limits. Sincethe more senior of them hold ten¬ure positions in a tax-exempt in¬stitution they are, in effect, li¬censed by the society to a degreeof liberty not enjoyed by others.And we would all, I think, see thevalue of this. But this liberty ofthe individual academics is se¬cured precisely by the institu¬tion’s neutrality on the issues.“We do not endorse these re¬marks,’’ the institution says, “wetake no stand; we simply culti¬vate the widest possible discus¬sion of the issues.” The functionof the University is not, corpor¬ately, to make policy, but to en¬able policy to be made in an at¬mosphere of enlightenment andrationality.After the Continental Illinoisbank, what? Should we lire mem¬bers of the faculty who supportapartheid? (I don’t know of any,but I can't see any reason whythere shouldn’t be some.) Shouldwe suspend scholarship funds ofstudents who will not sign a dec¬laration against the South Africangovernment? I assume the libraryis buying South African books—atleast I hope so. Should this cease?And so on.The universities are under re¬current pressure to take a standon public issues, to involve them¬selves in the politics of the day.Twenty years ago this pressurecame largely from the right andfrom outside the academic com¬munity—from the newspapers andstate senators who urged the uni¬versities to denounce communismin the class room and excludefrom the academy those whoseloyalty to the government was du¬bious. Today these pressurescome from the left and from with¬in the academic community; theyare not less destructive for that.The Continental Illinois Bank is¬sue is only one of a series of is¬sues which have been and will beraised in a persistent effort to po¬liticize the University. I wronderhow many agree with me thatthis whole enterprise is misguid¬ed, that a politicized Universitywould be a university no longer,and that the movement for politi¬cal activism on the part of theUniversity is carried on by mem¬bers of our community who do notreally understand or care for thelife of the mind?INTERNALREVENUESERVICERECRUITERS WILL BE ON CAMPUSFEBRUARY 7, 1967TO INTERVIEW LIBERAL ARTS MAJORSwho seek a career and a sense of purposeMr. L. S. Calvin, Placement CounselorMl 2-0800 Ext. 3284Reynolds Club Room 200> (Continued From Page Four)ence responds with the refrain“You can bank on us.” A newsense of social purpose infuses thefinancial community. It begins toutilize money not for investmentbut to express social approval. Tothe shock of many, the new view¬point takes on an unexpected butdramatic turn as financial sup¬port is used to discipline the char¬acter and morals of students onscholarships. To the suggestionthat the pressure of money hasrun amok, S. Carmichael comes infrom the wing chanting, “Bankpower, bank power.”In such a show faculty and stu¬dents devoting full time to politi¬cal revolutions off campus haveno time left for academic study,research, or classes. Eventuallynew appointments have to bemade to maintain the operationsof the university. The key postmay become that of Dean of Stu¬dent Activities. The world author¬ity on student activism, MaoTse-tung, is appointed. Endow¬ment funds of the university areused to advanpe social and politi¬cal goals arid income declines.The old tradition of wives workingto support academic husbands,formerly common among stu¬dents, spreads to an impoverishedfaculty. One politically activecandidate for the chairmanship ofthe Committee on Racial Thoughtpoints out that his wife can sup¬port him from her income as gov¬ernor of Alabama, a post he him¬self once held.An aged janitor might thenmumble something about thiswhole revolution having started inthe right direction but with an en¬tirely different end in view. A stu¬dent who has just read Lewis Car-roll (C. L. Dodgson), Albert Ein- jstein, and George Orwell explains jthat in a politicized universe if' ■ ty"'.&i ?■ sty:?'■ ■ i,'.one follows a straight line to infin¬ity he may indeed come back tothe starting point but possiblywith an inverted position.CHAUNCY D. HARRISPROFESSOR OF GEOGRAPHYDefending StokelyTO THE EDITOR:After reading the Maroon edito¬rial on “Black Power”, we werecurious as to whether the editorialwas intened to apply to StokelyCarmichael’s speech Thursdaynight, or to his “rhetoric” in gen¬eral, or what.For instance, the editorialstates that Carmichael’s “rheto¬ric” is appropriate for “the lowerclass Negro” and “offensive tojust about everybody else”. We’resorry, we’re ashamed - we’re twomiddle class people, one black,one white, and we are not offend¬ed. Not only that, others wetalked to were not offended. Sowhat is wrong with us? Ah, per¬haps we speak the language ofthe “slum dweller”, the “lowestof the low”. We are susceptible,perhaps, to Carmichael’s “vastdistortions and cliched oversim¬plifications”, Personally, wedidn’t think any of his statementsexhibited these characteristics.From your own reporter’s ver¬sion of the speech:“The Negro community mustobtain its liberation whilemaintaining its cultural iden¬tity.”This seems to us to be a clearbuy by no means an oversimpli¬fied statement. It expresses oneof the major goals of the BlackPower Movement. , • " - ”■•’E • v'>;. ■>“Powerlessness breeds a raceof beggars.”Look at the crumbs tossed toBlack People by the United .StatesCongress and you know this istrue.Carmichael mentions the “prob¬lem of property rights versus hu¬man rights. Policemen are thereto protect white property. If ourhouses get robbed, we can callthe police till we turn white.” Any¬one who has lived in or near aNegro “slum” can testify to theabove fact (with the possible dele¬tion of the last word).“We must build an indepen¬dent power so that peopleknow that every time theytouch one black personthey’ve got to mess with 22million people.”This would seem to be a reason¬able goal to aim for, after theBlack People in this country haveendured 350 years of racism.These are, incidentally, the samethings that Carmichael tells “theslum dweller.”But maybe we're wrong, maybewe just don’t measure up to theintellectual (?) standards of the 'American middle class.Black Power is a clear and ef¬fective strategy and Carmichaelespouses that strategy in clearand accurate terms. We don’tthink we’re wrong in believingthat Carmichael’s “rhetoric”reaches quite easily to the middleand upper classes, or is, at least,available to them. Carmichaelisn’t talking sociology, he’s talk¬ing facts, the way things are. Hereaches anyone who cares to lis¬ten.BARBARA ALLENDOUGLAS POWERFrom MotherTO THE EDITOR:Dear David,It was awfully nice of you toname your new paper after me,but why did you have to wrap itwith the other twelve pages of pa¬per?MOTHER WANT TO JET FREEto Europe Next Summer?Earn University credits abroad plus your 1967 summer vaca¬tion at little cost. Let your normal university club contactsdo most of the work for you. Your jet transportation FREE.No extra-curricular effort required from you on the trip.Write: Tom Turner, P.0. Box 59-2482, Miami, Fla. 33159.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospital THEATRE FIRST, INC. presentsBertolt Brecht's only comedySING A SONG OF SAUNA.A POCKET FULL OF SCHNAPPSDirected by Bradley M. NystulJan. 27, 28, 29, Feb. 3, 4, 5, 10, 11, 12Fridays and Saturdays 8:30 P.M. Sundays ‘ 7:30 P.AA.Gen. Adm. 1.75 Students (ID) 1.10THE ATHENAEUM2936 N. Southport Avenue LA 5-9741ZETA BETA TAURUSH SMOKERWEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25ANDTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27:30-10:00 P.M.5472 S. ELLIS AVENUEJanuary 24, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 724 Demonstrators Deposited in Bank Wick Accepts New(Continued from Page One)Beadle wrote “It is clear that thematter of boycotts of the kind youpropose is very complex with manyimplications. There are arrange¬ments under way for discussion of these by faculty and students, in- The lines of picketers, extendingeluding knovvledgable and experi-1 all the way down La Salle streetenced persons in political science, and down Jackson Street as well,economics, and international rela- consisted almost entirely of UC stu-tions. . .1 hope concerned students j dents who were discribed by an ob-wiM use this opportunity. . .to con- server as orderly and well-dressed,sider all aspects of involvement in Many carried placards reading Rules for Dormsactions of the kind you propose.”IN RESPONSE to the same let¬ter, Kennedy stated that “it is en¬couraging to me to see the young “Continental Bank—Partner t oApartheid’’ and “Don’t Bank onRacism.”In addition, a crowd estimated atpeople in our colleges and universi- 200 gathered to watch the demon¬ties expressing their concern for strators. The crowd was generallysocial justice, a concern, I should quiet, but occasionally insults wereadd, which is shared fully by the shouted at the picketers.management of our bank and to “Why don’t you get a haircut,”which we try to give tangible sup- one man was heard to shout. Aboutport.” ‘ 25 policemen were on the scene.Classified AdsALL KINDS OF SIGNS: The signscarried by the demonstratorswere many and original.Continental Won'tWithdraw LoansAs far as the ContinentalIllinois National Bank is con-cerned, the question of whet l SITTING DOWN ON THE JOB: This gesture on the part of theer the bank should withdraw demons! ators turned out to be the prelude for the arrests.from the consortium of U.S. banks i ..... ..............loaning money to South Africa isclosed.“We have no Intention of chang¬ing our policy,” said Roger Ander¬son, a senior vice president for thebank. “We have had a number ofdiscussions within the bank. Ourmaking of loans abroad is part of awell thought out policy of thebank.”Anderson also explained that thebank works within government re¬gulations and guidelines with re¬gard to granting loans abroad.“Within these regulations we makeour decision without making moraljudgments as to the policy of thecountry involved,” he said.On the question of demonstra¬tions by UC students for a Demo-,cratic Society (SDS), Anderson ob- ^ 10% discount for uc students.Served, We have no desire to have Discount rate to all UC students for Sat.the demonstrators arrested, but on afternoon Folk Festival Concert! Flattthe other hand, if they interfere ^Scruggs, skip James_with us serving our obligations tothe public, we have no choice but The following arc the houseproposals upon which DeanWick ruled yesterday.Chamberlin: noon—3 am. Fridayand Saturday; noon—2 am, oth¬er days; sign-in sheet; violationsto be handled by a house com¬mittee.Vincent: noon—3, Friday andSaturday; noon—2, other days;honor system; infractions to bepunished by Vincent HouseCouncil.Greenwood: 11—3, Friday andSaturday; 11—midnight, otherdays; violations punished first]by council—severe or repeatedinfractions handled by the resi¬dent head.Harper Surf: 4—midnight, Mon¬day—Thursday; 4—3, Friday;1—3, Saturday; 1—midnight,Sunday; lounges always open.Blackstone: 4:30—midnightMonday—Thursday; 4:30—3,Friday; noon—3. Saturday;noon—1, Sunday; sign-in sheet; jenforced by council and, if in¬fractions are severe, by resi¬dent head.University: noon—10. Sunday—Thursday; noon—2:30 Fridayand Saturday; common rooms—all day.Hitchcock: r>o restrictions; for-PERSONALSPhipm. Delta Theta Smoker, Wed., 7:30History Club Discussion: Dept, of Histo¬ry in the Modern World. Participants:L. Kreiger. B. Cohn, P. Stearns, B.Gale, Ida Noyes, Tues., Jan. 24, 8:00pm. ^“Fraternity ’67”-Come see for yourselfat the Zeta Beta Tau. 7:30 Wednesday.5472 S. Ellis.Whole bunches of fun at typical partytonight.Pan and his boys, better known as theNobleman, join D. U. in Reverie, Jan.27 8:30 pm.to have themhave done.” arrested. This we The new look in fraternities. ZBT. 5472S. Ellis. Wed., 7:30 pm.Railroad slides: Chicago Cuatla, Cum-bres, Thurs. 7:30 pm. Ida Noyes.Phi Sigma Delta cordially invites allfirst year men & undergraduates to aSmoker. Wed., Jan 25. 7:30 pm. 5625 S.Woodlawn.Would whoever found a red wallet atDanny Field’s party Sat. night pleasereturn it to me. Desparately need myidentification. Call 752-3324. Reward ifreturned intact.The Michigan Daily, student s?e! Hear! Magic Sam and Shaky JakeJ ', t plug m and turn on. Sun night Jan. 29newspaper of the University UC Folk Festival. Tickets now onOf Michigan, became the first ZBT be’ieves that it is possible to join anpwcnanpr in thp rountrv last fraternity and still remain an individual,newspaper in me cuunuy last If y(H1 do stop by Wednesday betweenweek to come out editorially in fa-1 7:30 & 10:00 Pm- Free balloons! Free food! Free peoplethe Blown Balloon, a Hot-Air heavenwith Snell’s Angels. Tonight 9-11.February 18 is the day!Alpha Delt rush party,pm. 5747 S’. University. Saturday 8:30Midwest Socialist ConferenceJan 27, 8 PM: The Canadian Labor Par¬ty. Speaker: John Riddell. Editor,Young Socialist Forum. Jan. 28, 4 PM:The American Working Class In TimeOf War. Speaker: Frank Lovell. Mich.Chairman, 9WP. Jan. 28, 8 PM: TheStruggle For Black Power. Speaker:Derrick Morrison, National Committee,YSA. Jan. 28, 10:30: Party-Entertain¬ment. $1 Jan. 29, 11 AM: The Viet NamWar And American Politics. Speaker:Jack Barnes, New York Organizer,SWP. Registration $2 or 75c per session302 S. Canal St., Chicago. WE 9-5044.Ausp. Socialist Workers Party andYoung Socialist Alliance. Gibson C-6 Classical Guitar, new, withcase. Call 324-6730, evenings.TO RENTFern, rm-mate wanted. Private bed¬room and bathroom. $48.75/mo. Call684-83282 girls seek 3rd rm-mate for apt. 54thand University. $4o/mo. call BU 8-2832Marlene or Lynda.Female room-mate wanted to share slarge warm friendly apt. Own room 160/mo. ideal loc in Hyde Park. Callevenings. 643-7362Fern. grad, student to share 6-rm. apt.Available immed. $47tno 324 3054.U. of Mich. DailyFavors Drug Usevor of the legalization of marijua-i LSD: a psychology student is studyingthe use of LSD on campus. He wouldna. | )}ke to interview students who have hadThe editorial, which was writtenby the Daily’s trouble-making edi¬torial director, Harvey Wasserman,said marijuana is a “minor drug”which has “acquired a big label.”The editorial said that there aretwo possible justifications for mak¬ing the use of a drug illegal. Thefirst is if it provokes dangerousanti-social behavior in the user andthe second is if it has dangerouseffects on the physical health ofthe user.The editorial argued that mar¬ijuana doesn’t seem to cause anti¬social behavior and is considerablyhealthier than alcohol.The Daily concluded that, “Thisis not the time to flood the areawith law enforcement officers in avain attempt to stop a naturaltrend; the time has clearly come toquestion the validity of the law it¬self.” experience with the drug. All interviewswill be confidential and anonymous:they will be arranged at the conve¬nience of the interviewee. Call SladeLander, 324-3034.7th Annual UC Folk Festival. Jan 27-29.Avoid the last minute crush-tickets nowat Mandel Hall Box Office. Buddy Guyon Fri., Flatt & Scruggs on Sat., Sevenacts on Sun.Helping to sponsor the Great Escape-with an excellent meal program andnew house. ZBT.Girls! We want you! Come to the bigRush finale-Mortar Board luau. AlphaDelta, 5747 S. University, 6:30 pm.,Wed.Blow your balloons!Decorate your balloon!Pop your balloon! Alpha Delt rush party. Saturday,pm, 5747 S. University.JOBS OFFERED 8:30Part time job for someone who has aknowledge of taperecorders. Hours flex¬ible - evenings preferred. 684-0051.Genr’l office help. Fern, Some typingNeat & Efficient. Call Kathy 363-4100Night desk clerk, 3 nights a wk., 12:00 to8:00 am.; switchboard and light ac¬counting. Work can be done in 3 hrs.rest of time can be used for studying.Apply only if interested in staying atleast one year. Quadrangle Club: Mr.Fulop.Bartender, over 21, neat appearance,4:30 pm.-8:30 pm., good pay plus meal.Apply only if interest in staying at leastone year. Quadrangle Club: Mr. Fulop.Secretary for psychology prof. Half orfull time. ext. 4771.FOR SALE1966 Volvo pl22s. Beautiful condition.Extras. Priced to sell. 363-2592 or 663-8760.4 tik. UCLA vs. Loyola 752-9619 marc.Grundig Majestic Console: FM-AM-SWbands: record changer in excellent con¬dition. $75 324-5751Ultra-mod cor brick split-level, cent, aircond., auto gas heat, SVs rms. 212 colcertile bths., tile cab kit, blt-in oven,dishwasher, garb, disp., refrig., beau,brkfst. rm., large wd. panel den, 10cists, carpet, wslier & dryer, priced tosell, & many extras, $6,800 down.SO 8-87821965 VW/ black, sun roof, radio, heater.Excellent mechanical condition. 684-1544.Sony 500 tape recorder. Four track ste¬reo with detachable speakers. Good con¬dition. 493-9384 UNIVERSITY THEATRETrron I*100%AN ORIGINAL PLAYWRITTEN & DIRECTED BYRICH VERTEL3 ONE ACTS BTIONESCOdirected byANDY KAPLANWED.. THURS., FRI.JAN. 25, 26. 277:30 pmREYNOLD'S CLUB mation of a committee (hous¬ing staff and residents) to cousider grievances.Coulter: no restrictions becauseof their status as graduate stu¬dents over 21, all living in singles.Lower Flint: decisions shouldbe made by House Council inmajority vote and subject toveto of resident head.Lower Flint revised: as abovewith these limits: Sunday—Thursday, not more thannoon—2; Friday and Saturday,not more than noon—3.Coulter revised: 11—3, all days.“An Affair to Remember” ar¬rives on campus February 18.The 75th annual WashingtonProm is scheduled for 8 pm thatevening.Tickets for the Prom cost $5per couple. They may be pur¬chased from the bookstore, theReynolds Club desk, or campusrepresentatives.Despitefiendish torturedynamic BiC Duowrites first time,every time!bic’s rugged pair ofstick pens wins againin unending waragainst bail-pointskip, clog and smear.Despite horriblepunishment by madscientists, bic stillwrites first time, everytime. And no wonder.bic’s "Dyamite” Ballis the hardest metalmade, encased in asolid brass nose cone.Will not skip, clogor smear no matterwhat devilish abuseis devised for themby sadistic students.Get the dynamicbic Duo at yourcampus store now. fen! mWATERMAN-IIC FIN CORF.miuord. conn. i COBICMediumFaint 10*SIC fin* Point 25cThe Blown Mind: VAMPYRLi s 9*e-J biucol.. Picture. At Doc Films Wednesday, January 25. At Soc Sci 122, 50th and University. 7:15 and 9:15. still only 40 cents. Come blow your mind-8 CHICAGO MAROON • January 24, 1967