aroon WEEKENDEDITIONVol. 75-No. 41 bulk RATE (|h- s ~uo&Tags { "versa ry YearPAID )•?" Qy ILL 1 lHy °f Chica®° February 24, 1967But Male-Female Ranking To Continue 6444UC Abolishes Male Class RaSelective ServiceConfused by NewUC Ranking Policyby David E. GumpertStudents aren’t the onlyones thoroughly confused bythe University’s decision todiscontinue male class rankingand instead rank males and fe¬males together.So is the Selective Service.Of four local boards contacted inthe Chicago area, three said theywere not sure whether they woulduse UC’s ranking system to deter¬mine eligibility for a student defer¬ment One indicated that the com¬bined rank “will mean nothing tous” because it violates SelectiveService guidelines calling for amale class rank.IN WASHINGTON, a high rank¬ing spokesman for the SelectiveService said that it was up to theindividual draft boards to decidehow they want to use UC’s rank.The spokesman noted that this newrank is not in conformity with na¬tional guidelines set down lastyear, “In the absence of any othercriteria they may use it.”He added that, “The Universityof Chicago actually may be hurtingthe boy since by ranking him withgirls he could rank lower than hemight have had he had been rank¬ed only with other males.”The Chicago area boards that ex¬pressed uncertainty about how toapply the new ranking system saidthat they expected to receive direc¬tives from the Illinois SelectiveService office in Springfield, butthe director of the Illinois SelectiveService System, Commander Ham-mack, said there would probably beno directive forthcoming. “Wemight call their attention to it, butthat would be all,” he said."I'M SORRY they took that ac¬tion,” Iiammack added. “My ad¬vice to the students there is thatthey take the Selective Servicetest.”lie also reiterated what theWashington official said about thepossible side effects of the Univer¬sity’s action. “The girls ninechances out of ten are going torank higher than the men,” he ob¬served.The Washington spokesman alsonoted that ranking is “designed toaid the local board decide whoshould go and who shouldn’t. Asthe calls get heavier on the board,more guidelines are needed ”HE SPECULATED that calls willgo up later this year. “The boyscalled in ‘65 are going to be re¬leased soon,” he said. “That meansmore boys are going to be needed.And if problems continue in Viet¬nam, calls will go up. If they’rehigh enough, they might have tostart dipping into the collegesmore.” Demonstrators waiting outside Tuesday's council meeting for newsof a decision.The only view of Tuesday's Council meeting that students couldget—through the crack in the door. Decision Announced afterTuesday Council Meetingby John WelchThe Council of the Faculty Senate voted Tuesday in aclosed meeting to abolish the male class rank, but to continuean all-students rank in the College.The long awaited decision apparently brings to an end thecontroversy which began last Springwhen the University decided toform a male rank in compliancewith Selective Service guidelines.Students Against the Rank (SAR)responded by sitting in the Admin¬istration Building to protest thedecision and the secrecy with whichit was made.The action is the first by a majoruniversity to reverse a decision es¬tablishing a rank specifically forthe Selective Service System.PRESIDENT BEADLE'S official!announcement Wednesday of thechange in policy read, “I have re¬quested implementation of the fol¬lowing recommendations made tome yesterday by the Council of theFaculty Senate:“1. That the University continueto rank all students and make theseranks and/or transcripts availableto the students.“2. That the ranking of male stu¬dents be terminated.“3. That this decision become ef¬fective with the first date at whichstudents who have not yet regis¬tered for the national SelectiveService examination will be able touse this procedure to apply for mil¬itary deferment.”SAR, which had collected over1000 signatures of students in theCollege on an anti-rank petition,claimed Wednesday that the Uni-Change Result of SAR Action, They SaySAR Declares Rank Victoryby Rob SkeistStudents Against the Rank(SAR) has declared victory.The end of male rank for theSelective Service System,voted Tuesday by the Council ofthe Faculty Senate, is a result ofSAR actions, the group claimedWednesday night.In other action taken Wednesday,SAR• Approved the termination ofthe male rank, while reserving com¬ment on the University’s decisionto continue to rank all students.• Gave the SAR executive councila mandate to publicize the end ofmale rank as widely as possible.• Disaproved strongly the waythe decision was reached, callingfor a more significant studentvoice.• Made it clear that the studentswho worked against the rank feelthat many associated problems stilldemand action. Many students atthe meeting expressed determina¬ tion to oppose the United States’role in Vietnam and to work for“democratic decision-making in theUniversity.”SAR EVIDENTLY did not fore¬see the possibility that even afterthe male rank is ended, the Univer¬sity will supply the all-student rankto the Selective Service, at the re¬quest of individual students. Doesthe Council’s decision meet any ofthe real demands of SAR?Jerry Lipsch, third year studentin the College, said no. Although itcomplies with SAR’s specific de¬mand that the University stop com¬piling a male rank for the purposesof Selective Service, the education¬al and moral implications of rank¬ing are unchanged.What the Council passed was a“non-compromising compromise,”according to Jeff Blum, spokesmanfor SAR at the Council meeting. Itwas designed t quiet down SARwhile really doi nothing to effectthe rank situatio he claimed.SAR Goofs"“We goofed. . We left a loophole . . .We cannot say we have beentricked when the Council has infact done what we asked,” saidSteve Kindred, fourth year studentin the College.Roger Hildebrand, professor ofphysics and member of the Councilof the Faculty Senate, was at themeeting at the request of Dean ofthe College Wayne Booth. For closeto an hour he explained the Coun¬cil’s decision and answered ques¬tions.“You students should recognizethat this is a change which youhave brought about. You shouldconsider it a victory,” Hildebrandasserted.Many at the meeting criticizedthe decision on “bi-sexual rank.”Hildebrand defended it, claimingthat this rank is necessary for edu¬cational purposes, such as graduateschool applications, and the Univer¬sity does not have the right to tellstudents which ways to use theirrank.Hildebrand said he approves of(Continued on Page Eight) versity only made it seem that theyhad abolished the rank. At an openSAR executive committee meetingJeff Blum read Beadle’s statementto students eating in HutchinsonCommons. “What does this mean?”he demanded.Most members of the executivecommittee felt that the Universityhad made an empty gesture byabolishing male ranks while contin¬uing to compile an all-College rankwhich they believed draft boardswould accept if the male rank werc-not available. “We got a lousydeal,” said Paul Thomas, a mem¬ber of SAR.A statement issued by SAR Wed¬nesday night, however, claimedvictory for the anti-rank forces.Faculty reaction to the rankingchange, was generally favorable-Most faculty members contactedThursday saw the decision as a jus¬tifiable action to establish the Uni¬versity’s neutrality toward the Se¬lective Service System. Generally,they thdught that a male class rankserved no adademic purpose."Victory for SAR"Richard Flacks, a sociology pro¬fessor and friend and advisor ofSAR, said, “I personally consider ita victory for SAR.” He explainedthat the University’s decisionmeant that it “would not cooperatein computing data on students thathad no academic validity. On asymbolic level it is a recognition ofthe justice of students’ criticism. Ina sense, the Council fulfilled thestudents’ formal demand.”Concerning student fears that theCouncil’s decision to stop male(Continued on Page Throe)SG Denounces RankChange at MeetingThe Student Government(SG) Assembly last night votedunanimously to condemn thedecision of the Council of theFaculty Senate to continue classrank while discontinuing male rank.SG called the decision “one basedon political expediency, not prin¬ciple, and one which exacerbatesrather than ameliorates the con¬troversy caused by ranking.”SG also voted strong disapprovalof the way in which the decisionwas made. SG declared that anydecision concerning rank in anyacademic unit “should be made bythe students and faculty of thatunit.”Winter Quarter CollegeThe time and place of examinations not listed be¬low will be announced by instructors. Evening,and Saturday classes, unless otherwise an¬nounced by the instructor, will have examinationsduring regular class hours. Please note room as¬signments for examinations listed. History 202History 212History 234History 238 01History 238 02History 241 =Soc Sci 271History 246 :=Soc Sci 246 Thur Mar 16Mon Mar 13Wed Mar 15Wed Mar 15Fri Mar 17 8-10 SS 10810:30-12:30 SS 1074-6 Ro 2710:3612:30 Ab 1014-6 SS 105Mon Mar 13 1:30-3:30 S 106Fri Mar 17 1:30-3:30 SS 105History 249 Mon Mar 13 4-6 LAW BAnatomy 205 = History 252 =Zoology 205 Fri Mar 17 1:30-3:30 Z 14 N.C.D. 218 Mon Mar 13 1:30 3:30 BE 10Anthropology 212 Fri Mar 17 1:30-3 30 Ro 26 History 259 Tues Mar 14 A6 BE 9Anthropology 215 Tues Mar 14 4-6 Cl 16 History 262 Fri Mar 17 8 10 S 106Anthropology 260 Thur Mar 16 1:30-3:30 Cl 18 History 272 Fri Mar 17 1:30-3:30 BE 103Art 220 Wed Mar 15 10:3612:30 Cl 10 History 275 Mon Mar 13 1:30-3:30 Ro 26Art 251 Mon Mar 13 10:3612:30 Cl 10 History 277 Fri Mar 17 4 6 Lx 5Art 260—Chinese 251 Fri Mar 17 8-10 Cl 10 History 282 =Soc Sci 241 Wed Mar 15 1:363:30 Ro 2Biology 112 Tues Mar 14 1:363:30 History 289 =Variant A: K 103. E 133 Chinese 245 Tues Mar 14 4-6 Ry 358Variant B: Ab 101 Law 1 Humanities 102 Thur Mar 16 10:3612:30 LMHVariant C K 107 Humanities 105 Thur Mar 16 10:3612:30 K 107Biology 202 Fri Mar 17 8-10 B 106 Humanities 108 61 Fri Mar 17 1:30-3:30 K 304Botany 201 Thur Mar 16 1:363:30 B 206 Humanities 108 62 Wed Mar 15 10:3612:30 K 304Chemistry 106 Mon Mar 13 8-10 E 133 Humanities 205Humanities 206 Thur Mar 10Wed Mar 15 10:3612:308-10 LAW 1LMHChemistry 132 Mon Mar 13 8 10 K 103 Variant B Wed Mar 15 8-10 K 103Chemistry 221 Thur Mar 16 8-10 K 107 Hum atiiflec 91A «—Chemistry 262 Fri Mar 17 8-10 K 103 iiuiiiaiLiuco «iv —-English 220 Fri Mar 17 1:30 3:30 S 106Chinese 112 ©1 Fri Mar 17 8-10 Ro 26 Humanities 231 = Wed Mar 15 10:3612:30 Lx 5Chinese 115 Fri Mar 17 8-10 J 110 Mus 125 Fri Mar 17 8-10 Lx 5Chinese 202 Fri Mar 17 1:30-3:30 Cl 18 Humanities 241 BAChinese 215 Thur Mar 16 8-10 Cl 10 Humanities 241 FE Thur Mar 16 1:30 3:30 LAW BChinese 245 — Humanities 254 =History 289 Tues Mar 14 4 6 Ry 358 1 & M 212 Mon Mar 13 1:363:30 G B 321Chinese 261 Wed Mar 15 10:3612:30 Or 210 Humanities 257 =Chinese 277 Mon Mar 13 1.363:30 F 307 1 & M 292 Mon Mar 13 1:363:30 K 103Humanities 271 Fri Mar 17 1:363:30 Ab 133Economics 202 01Economies 202 02Economics 240Education 288 —English 204English 204 =Educ. 288English 208 01 =English 309English 208 91 =English 309English 220 —Humanities 210English 234English 237English 238 91English 240English 264English 272English 276English 277English 289English 295French I. MI, IIIFrench 204French 208French 216French 233French 258Geography 201Geography 205Geography 253GeophysicalSciences 132GeophysicalSciences 202GeophysicalSciences 228GeophysicalSciences 268GeophysicalSciences 280German 101German 102German 105German 213German 238Greek 102 01Greek 102 02Greek 205Greek 214Greek 230 Fri Mar 17 8-10 SS 302Tues Mar 14 10:3612:30 S 106Fri Mar 17 8-10 LAW CThur Mar 16 8-10Thur Mar 16 8-10Wed Mar 15 4-6Wed Mar 15 4 6Fri Mar 17Mon Mar 13Tues Mar 14Wed Mar 15Wed Mar 15Thur Mar 16Mon Mar 13Wed Mar 15Fri Mar 17Fri Mar 17Tues Mar 14Tues Mar 14Wed Mar 15Mon Mar 13Fri Mar 17Wed Mar 15Mon Mar 13Mon Mar 13Tues Mar 14Wed Mar 15Mon Mar 13Tues Mar 14Mon Mar 13Fri Mar 17Wed Mar 15Mon Mar 13Tues Mar 14Tues Mar 14Mon Mar 13Mon Mar 13Fri Mar 17Mon Mar 13Mon Mar 13Mon Mar 13Tues Mar 14 1:363:301:363:304-61:363:3010:3612:301:363:3010:3612:304-64-6 Wb 103Wb 103K 10BE 24S 106Cl 18Cl 18Cl 18A 104LAW CS 106Wb 102SS 305Wb 102 Ideas Sc Methods152Ideas Sc Methods212 = Hum 254Ideas & Methods252 = N.C.D. 246Ideas & Methods262Ideas & Methods292 = Hum 257Italian Ml. 91Italian 20410:3612:30 Cl 118-101:30-3:3010:3612:301:30-3:304-6 K 107K 304K 304Ab 420SS 10510:3612:30 G-B 1161:30-3:304 6 Ro 27Ro 4110:3612:30 Ro 418-10 Ro 27 »10:3612:30 Ro 3910:3612.30 Ro 334 6 E 30610:3612:308-108-108-108-1010:3612:308-101:30-3:3010:3612:3010:3612:3010:3612:30 Ro 33K 10LMHWb 103Wb 203Wb 103Cl 21Wb 10GCl 26Cl 21O 26 Japanese 112Japanese 202Japanese 212Latin 102Latin 205Latin 246Linguistics 221MathematicalBiology 261MathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematicsMathematics 151Mathematics 151Mathematics 151Mathematics 151Mathematics 152Mathematics 152Mathematics 152Mathematics 152MathematicsMathematicsMathematics 152Mathematics 152Mathematics 152Mathematics 152Mathematics 152Mathematics 153Mathematics 203Mathematics 204Mathematics 240Mathematics 204Mathematics 205Mathematics 241Mathematics 251Mathematics 252Mathematics 252104102102102102102102152152 Fri Mar 17Mon Mar 13Mon Mar 13Thur Mar 16Mon Mar 13Fri Mar 17Mon Mar 13Wed Mar 15Fri Mar 17Fri Mar 17Fri Mar 17Wed Mar 15Wed Mar 15Tues Mar 14Mon Mar 1351 \\ ed Mar 1511 Mon Mar 1312 Mon Mar 1621 Fri Mar 1731 Wed Mar 1551 Wed Mar 1561 Fri Mar 1712 Thur Mar 1621 Fri Mar 1732 Tues Mar 1442 Wed Mar 1512Thurs Mar It21 Fri Mar 1731 Wed Mar 1532 Thur Mar 141 Mon Mar 1342 Wed Mar 1344 Wed Mar 1551 Wed Mar 1553 Wed Mar 1561 Fri Mar 1771 Fri Mar 1351 Wed Mar 1551 Wed Mar 1531 Wed Mar 1541 Mon Mar 1342 Wed Mar 1511 Mon Mar 1341 Mon Mar 1371 Mon Mar 1321 Fri Mar 1771 Mon Mar 13 46 Lx31:30 3:3© G B 32110:30-12:30 LAW C1:30 3:30 Lx 41:30 3:304-64 6 Ro 2BE 9Ab 420t i10:30-12:301:30-3.300-108-1010:30-12:30 Cl 2110:3612:30 Cl 2610:30-12 30 Ro 26F 308Or 208J 105Cl 26464-68-108-108-1010:30-12:304 61:30-3:308-108-1010:30-12:304-68-108-1010:30-12:308-1010:30-12:30♦ 64 64-84-61:363:301:30-3.304 64 610:30 12:3010:30-12:304-68-1010:30-12:301:30-3:308-101:363:30EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd Street „HYde Park 3-8372Student and Faculty Discount OFFICE SUITES AVAILABLEfrom $110SH0RELAND HOTEL55th at the lake on South Shore DrivePR IVATE ENTRANCECall Mr. N. T. Norbert - PI 2-1000BOB NELSON MOTORSImport CentraComplete RepetmAnd Servicefor AH Popular Import*Midway S-48MTHE BEST SOURCE FORArtist's MaterialsAcross 53rd Kimbarlt PlazaComplete Picture FramingServiceMounting; Matting Non-GlareGlass - School SuppliesBE SURE TO ASK FOR' WEEKIY SPECIALDUNCAN’S1305 E. 53rd HY 3 411110% STUDENT DISCOUNTON ilO OR MORE a cure formentalvirus!Take thesnow cure.Just whatthe doctorordered.LATE REPORT (802)422-3333VERMONT4 mountains, 34 trails, 11 lifts / Ski weeks and lodging! call (802)422-3333 Mathematics 253 42Mathematics 281 51Music 125 =Humanities 231Music 131Music 136Music 141Music 146Music 152Music 202Music 212Music 222Music 232Music 290NOD 112N C D. 152 =I A M 152N O D. 203N.C.D. 212N.C.D. 218 =Philosophy 218N.C.D. 221N.C.D. 225N.C.D. = I Sc M 252N.CD. 250 =Anthropology 260Norwegian 102 01Norwegian 202 01Philosophy 205Philosophy 215Philosophy 218Philosophy 225Philosophy 232Philosophy 239Physical Sciences Wed Mar 15M ed Mar 15Wed Mar 15Wed Mar 15Thur Mar 16Fri Mar 17Thur Mar 16Tues Mar 14Fri Mar 17Thur Mar 16Tues Mar 14Thur Mar 16Tues Mar 14Fri Mar 17Fri Mar 17Thur Mar 16Thur Mar 16Mon Mar 13Tues Mar 14Thur Mar 16Mon Mar 13Thur Mar 16Fri Mar 17Wed Mar 15Tues Mar 14Wed Mar 15Mon Mar 13Thur Mar 16Tues Mar 14Tues Mar 14Fri Mar 17A 104, 4-64 6 S 106E 30010:30 12 30 Lx 58-1010:30-12 301:30-3301:30 3:3©4 68-101:30 3:304-68-10 Mus 304Mus 101Mus 101Mus 101Mus 101Mus 201Mus 201Mus 201Mus 20110:30-12:30 Ida N Lib1:30-3:30 BE 104 61:363:301:30-3:30 Lx 3Ro 27O 16BH W265BE103Ro 2E 308E 203E 203BE 16E 305E 312Ry 251E 305E 207E 207E 308S 106E 206E 203E 306E 312Ab 133Cl 10E 308E 308E 206E 133E 305Ab 133E 305E 308E 306B 106Ro 2Ry 251 Physical Sciences109Physical Sciences116Physics 112Physics 122Physics 132Physics 201Physics 212Physics 216Physics 222Physics 226Physics 236Polish 287Political Science 235Political Science 238Political Science 256Political Science 261Political Science 262Political Science 292Psychology 204Psychology 205Public Affairs 299Russian 102 = I-GRussian 152 — I-SRussian 202 = IMIIRussian 205 01 Sc 02Russian 256Social Sciences 112Social Sciences 122Social Sciences 241Social Sciences 246= History 246Social Sciences 264Social Sciences 271= History 241Social SciencesSociology 203Sociology 204Sociology 206Sociology 218Spanish ISpanish I-IT, IIISpanish 208Spanish 216Spanish 250Statistics 200 01Swedish 102 01Swedish 202 01Swedish 234Zoology 202Zoology 205 —Anatomy 206 1:30-3:3© BK 1©10:3612:30 Ab 10110:30-12:30 Cl 1010:30-12:3© LAW C1:30-3:30 Cl 184 6 Wb 20210:30-12:3© Wb 10010:3612:30 LAW C1:30-3:30 LAW C1:363:30 BE 101:30-3:30 Cl 114 6 ci 2010:30-12:30 Ry 36210:3612:30Ab 101, Ab 133, B 106 Cl10, K 107,Ro 2Mon Mar 13 10 30-12 30 Ro 2Thur Mar 16Fri Mar 17Fri Mar 17Tues Mar 14Wed Mar 15Fri Mar 17Wed Mar 15Fri Mar 17Mon Mar 13Wed Mar 15Thur Mar 16Thur Mar 16Mon Mar 13Thur Mar 16Tues Mar 14Fri Mar 17Tues Mar 14Thur Mar 16Thur Mar 16Wed Mar 15 8 1010:30-12:3©1:30 3 3010:3612:3010 :30-12 308-101:30 3:301:30-3 3010:3612:3010:30 12:308-108-104-61:30 3:3©4 61^:363:34 61:30-3:304-68-10 E 133E 133E 106E 133E 133E 202Ry 251R y 251E 202E 202B 10655 302S 10656 105Ab 101LAW 1Wb 203Psy B 102Psy B 101Cl 10Tues Mar 14 -10 B 106Mon Mar 13 10:30 12 3© S 204Wed Mar 15 10:30-12:30 Cl 16Cl 20Ry 251LMHLMH, E1 30-3 30 Ro 21:363:30 SS 105Wed Mar 15 8-10Mon Mar 13 8-10Sat Mar 11 612Mon Mar 13 4-6Wed Mar 15Fri Mar 17275 Fri Mar 17Mon Mar 13Wed Mar 15Tues Mar 14Mon Mar 13Fri Mar 17Tues Mar 14Tues Mar 14Tues Mar 14Mon Mar 13Wed Mar 15Mon Mar 13Fri Mar 17Mon Mar 13Mon Mar 13Fvi Mar 17 8 101:363:3010 30 12:3010:3612 301:30-3308-104-08 108-108-1010:30-12:3010 :30-12 3©1 30-3:308-101:30-3 3046 G-B 437S 106Ro 2SS 106SS 306SS 106K 1)0S 106SS 302S 100W b 401a liE 202Wb 103Wb 409AWb 207Tues Mar 14 10:30 12:30 Wh 2i«Fri Mar 17 1:363 30 Z 14TONIGHT AT 8:30OH bM*A NEW PlAY WRITTEN AND DIRECTEDby RICHARD VERTELANDTHREE ONE-ACTS BYIONESCO'..it- MAID TO MARRY,MOTOR SHOW and LEADERDirected by ANDY KAPLANFEBRUARY 17-18, 24-25REYNOLDS CLUB THEATREGeneral Admission $1.25Students and Faculty $ .75Tickets on Sale at the DoorMale Class Rank Terminated by Council;V- * ■ LCombined Ranking Kept in Faculty Voterank was a compromise calculatedto pacify anti-rank people withoutreally changing anything. Flacksobserved, “T>ie cynicism of a lot ofstudents here is very profound.”McKim Marriott, professor of an¬thropology, called the decision ‘‘anexcellent policy.” He said thei change would have no effect, inreality, on student deferments. ‘‘Itmainly establishes the University’sseparation from the Selective Serv¬ice System. The one action thatwas taken was a non-compliant ac¬tion.” Marriot was among SAR’sseverest critics during last Spring’ssit-in.He defended formation of anall-College rank by saying “Thebusiness of a university is learning.We must evaluate learning, and doit by the best means. The bestmeans is by giving grades, andranking students on the basis ofthese grades.” Grades and ranks,he said, are the most objective wayof representing student perfor-, mance.UNIVERSITYNATIONALBANKNEW CAR LOANSat low at “IT WAS A COMPROMISE,"said Herman Sinaiko, associateprofessor of humanities. “It repre¬sents an attempt by the Universityto disengage itself from the Selec¬tive Service System.” At the sametime, the University could not abol¬ish all class rank, he said, because“the idea of ranking is implicit inIBM machines.”SAR should not be too dissatis¬fied, Sinaiko added, since “Interms of what they wanted lastSpring, the University has donejust what they asked.” The deci¬sion is not a mere symbol, he con¬cluded. “The University is refusingto do what the Selective ServiceSystem wants it to do.”At a rally outside the CouncilMeeting Tuesday, Steve Kindred ofSAR suggested that the abolotion ofrank at UC could be the first stepin building a national movementagainst ranking. He listed suchschools as Columbia, Harvard,CCNY, and Michigan as placeswhere anti-rank movements had al¬ready started.“It's reasonable to assume that,should UC take the leap, otherplaces could come back to life,” hetold the more than 100 people whowere later turned away from theCouncil of the Faculty Senate meet¬ing.You won't have to put yourmoving or storage problemoff until tomorrow If youcall m today.PETERSON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.isass f. Doty AmPM-4411I 1354 EAST 55th STREETMU 4-1200mmmktf PMC(OPEN DAWN TO DAWN)lloliliy lloiiMk Restaurant1342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER“The Best of All Foods"How aboutfoam on your beer?n non#? Q 1 Inch? Q] IV* inchos?You’ll hear some people saythere shouldn’t be any headat all. They say phooey on thefoam ... where’s the beerlThey shouldn’t. Not whenthe beer is Beechwood Aged, anyway.Budweiser is brewed so it will kickup a good head of foam. Those littlebubbles add to the taste, the smooth¬ness, the drinkability. So pour yourBud* with about an inch-and-a-halfcollar. Two inches if it’s a tall glass.Now let the foam tickle your nose... and your taste.BudwefeenKINO OF BEERS . ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INO. • ST LOUISNEWARK * LOS ANGELES • TAMPA • HOUSTON4* . f. Committee Members CommentRationale Behind the Council’s Actionby Jeffrey KutaTwo principles figured in Tuesday’s decision on ranking, say members of the Commit¬tee of the Council of the University Senate—the right of the student and the nature of theUniversity.According to Chauncy D. Harris, professor of geography, “We’ve asserted the right ofeach student to his academic tran¬script or any meaningful segmentof that transcript, such as his rankin class. This information should beavailable to the student for what¬ever purpose he wants.“The general principle involved,however, is that this would not be aspecial purpose compilation—suchas the male class rank—but part ofthe University’s general academicrecord-keeping. We’re simply goingabout our regular business.”HARRIS ADDED that he thoughtthe relationship between the Uni¬versity and the Selective ServiceSystem should be further definedthrough political and administra¬tive processes rather than by theUniversity.In response to Students Againstthe Rank, who expressed their dis¬appointment with the decision at aWednesday night meeting, econom¬ics professor George J. Stiglerclaimed that the Council took ac¬tion “because it felt that this wasright, not because the admisistra-tion had worked out a clever com¬promise.“If I ever wanted to get into asinister plot, I wouldn’t use GeorgeBeadle,” he said.Strong VoteStigler indicated that the CouncilJIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAP vote for the decision was strongand that it represented the generalfeeling of the Council at large. Henoted that Beadle and Provost Leviwere silent during most of Tues¬day’s meeting.According to physics professorRoger Hildebrand, abolishing themale class rank was a symbolicgesture that will cause hardship tofew or no students.“The only ones inconveniencedwill be those who do not take theSelective Service test and whosedraft boards refuse to accept themale-female class rank.”HE ADMITTED that the questionof whether the combined rankwould be accepted by the localboards was speculated on by theCommittee, and that “the impres¬sion was that quite a few would,but that there would be no guide¬lines.”Harris agreed that he hadthought “the vast majority ofboards” would accept the male-female rank.All Committee members the Ma¬roon contacted said that the Coun¬cil’s decision will re-establish theranking situation that existed priorto the 1965-66 academic year, whenthe Selective Service made andwas granted its request for a maleMost Complete■ on the South Side gS MODEL CAMERA J■ 1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259 m class rank.“What the decision means is thatwe will compile the informationwe’ve always compiled, and wewill make it available to studentsto use as they need,” said Dean ofthe College Wayne C. Booth, amember of the Council but not ofthe Committee.“I’m personally convinced thatthis decision is the right one, and Isuppose that it would have been ar¬rived at last spring if the sit-in hadnot occurred.“I don’t quite trust my reaction,”he added, “since I recommendedthe new policy at an open meetingmore than a year ago and I amtherefore biased.”Three RankingsAccording to Dean of StudentsWarner A. Wick, three kinds ofranking have been made since1962-63, when the University beganto use mechanized data processing:• All-College rank, giving pre¬sent college-wide rank and presentand past grade point averages;• Rank by major field, givingpresent rank and grade-point aver¬age among all students in each de¬partment;• Class rank, giving present rankand grade-point average among allstudents in each class by year ofentrance.The University had also compileda male class rank from the begin¬ning of the Korean War through1962-63, Wick said, “for no goodreason other than that the SelectiveService kept asking for it. Ofcourse, the draft wasn’t such anissue then.”He interpreted the Council’s deci¬sion as an elimination of the maleclass rank only, and said that theother kinds of ranking would proba¬bly be continued for such routineuses by the student as in graduateschool and job applications.Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restRENT A TRUCK$ooo Per HourDO-IT-YOURSELFTRUC K RENTALSO 8-98008150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hourBe Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of boots, ovor-shoos, insulated ski wear, hoodedcoets, long underwear, corduroys,"Levis", etc., etc., etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30 100NSA DiscountsDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 do 3-6866PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED EYE EXAMINATIONSNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty Discount CONTACT LENSESPEOPLE WHO KNOW CALL ONCUSTOM QUALITY CLEANINGAll Pressing Done on PremisesSilks Hand FinishedExpert Alterations and Repairs1363 E. 53rd St. PL 2-V66210% STUDENT DISCOUNT(TESTIIPUT ... (.'assurance Sun Life est un moyen•Or d'obtenir I'inddpendance finan¬ce re pour vous et votre famille.En tant quo repr6sentant local do la SumLife, puis-ie vous visiter A un moment devotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOna North LaSalle Street, Chicago 40602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.SUN UfE DU CANADA, COMPAGNIE D'ASSUR ANCE-VIIUNE COMPAGNIE MUTUELLEFebruary 24, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3Maroon Interview r tUC Student Discusses His Experience with LSDby Slade Lander(Editor's note: This interview witha student who has used LSD is thesecond article in Slade Lander's se¬ries on LSD use at UC. The inter¬view is being printed with the stu¬dent's approval and is intended torepresent this student's views only.)Maroon: How did you first comein contact with LSD.Student: I first came in contactwith drugs like marijuana myfirst year. My first year I tookmarijuana mostly in the contextof meeting some friends whowould invite me to try it. I usedmarijuana and I liked the experi¬ence of it. Later a chance camefor me to use peyote and I talkedit over seriously with a friend ofmine who had taken it and hesaid his experience had been asignificant experience and that Imight find it worth while to un¬dergo.Maroon: How old were you?Student: Eighteen. My secondyear in school I came into contactwith two or three other friendswho had taken LSD. Now theseguys were taking it for reasonsthat were not my own. But frommy experience with peyote whfchI had liked I decided I would takethe LSD. The social pressuresreally weren’t there. It was moreor less my own curiosity and ifthere were any pressures theywere of my own making, ratherthan other people putting pressureon me. The first time I took itwas with two friends. It was in alight dose, a hundred micro¬grams. A hundred micrograms issomewhat akin to taking an awfullot of marijuana. I had what Iwould call an enjoyable trip. Andthen later I talked with otherfriends and they told me how dif¬ferent doses and the circumstanceaffect the trip. I took largerdoses. First I think two hundredmicrogram doses. Then I got afriend who got some LSD thatwas abnormally strong. In spiteof the microgram reading it hadthe effect of even more LSD. I’mnot sure if the composition of theactual LSD was different or ifthat that I had been taking pre¬viously had disintegrated some¬what. But, I Look what was anequivalent of about seven hun¬dred fifty micrograms. Now Ididn’t have any trouble with it.I didn’t have a bad trip, but itwas a very intense trip; it tooka long time; I was very ex¬hausted afterwards. After thatI took two more two hundredmicrogram trips and by that timeit was the summer after my sec¬ond year. Then over the summerI took LSD about every otherweek and in varying doses up toapproximately six hundred micro¬grams.Maroon: Did you have any appre¬hensions . the first time you tookLSD?Student: The first time I was alittle bit nervous, a little curiousabout what I was getting into. Ijust didn’t know what it was like.My friends had assured me thatthe dose I was taking wouldn’t beserious and I wasn’t seriouslyconcerned with the effects of abad trip. I simply had not had theassociations with people who hadhad a bad trip.Maroon: How many times haveyou taken LSD?Student: Approximately fifteen.Maroon: Generally speaking un¬der what conditions do you takeit?Student: Well, that is extremelyvaried. Usually I’ll try to haveone or two other people with mein a somewhat secluded or set-offplace, like an apartment, withthings like colored lights, music,and generally things of a sen¬suous nature to the eye, the ear,maybe the touch, and with twofriends who have a good under¬standing about the use of LSD. Maroon: Would they be on LSD?Student: Usually yes. There’s avast amount of difference be¬tween going on a trip with peoplewho are on LSD and going on atrip with other people around whoaren’t on LSD. There’s usually atendency to feel a brotherhoodthat we all go through a relatedexperience and if there’s anotherperson outside who's not taking atrip you’re conscious of the factthat you’re in practically a worldapart. You can become concernedwith this so that your own experi¬ence is muted and you worry toomuch about where he is andwhere you are and the fact thathe’s not there.Maroon: Can you describe in anyway what a trip is like?Student: Well there is a sensuousexperience of the high that is feltin your whole body which is moreor less the context in which thewhole experience is made. Thingscan occur in a variety of ways.Just looking at the objects aroundyou in bright lights will be verydifferent than in darker light orwith colored lightbulbs. In dark orcolored lights you begin to see co¬lor in everything. Suppose youhave a fabric which is dull, drab,but still has several colors in itsfabric. Suddenly these colors willbecome very intense and you be¬gin sensing colors in patternsmoving in the fabric. Often if youlook at a colored light, usuallypure red, it will glow intensely.But then if you continue lookingat the red lightblub you will seeblues, violets surround it, changein the red. Concentric circles willbe formed which will break upinto beads of pure color. Thesewill begin moving. Rhythms willbuild up in the colors. You can letyourself go and watch them oryou can make them move, al¬though you can’t make yourselfsee what you want to see. Nowthere’s another thing you can dowhen you’re on LSD, that is totake on object and concentrate onit. You can look at something likea clay pot and you see the round¬ness then you become sensitive tothe roundness and it becomesvery enthralling. Another thing isyou can simply close your eyesand in front of your mind, againsta pure black background, willcome very well defined colors,patterns. Now these patterns canchange and take the form of hal¬lucinations. You can see mon¬sters, beasts. You will see any¬thing. These things are not underyour control. These demons arenot static. Let’s say you see awolf. Now that wouldn’t stay awolf, this wolf will continuallyevolve and change its form.Maroon: Have you ever had abad trip?Student: No I haven’t. I’ve hadtrips in which I guess I couldhave been frightened by them butI simply was mixed in with whatwas happening and I realized allthe time that what was happeningwas a hallucination. I did not be¬lieve that what I was undergoing necessarily represented realityoutside me or within myself.Maroon: Have you ever had anycontact with psychotherapy?Student: No.Maroon: Why do you feel youtake LSD?Student: It’s simply that some¬times it’s nice to take LSD simplybecause it’s a nice experience togo through, more than nice, sig¬nificant. You come back fromworking hard all week and yousay tonight I’m going to do some¬thing different which will beworthwhile. So I go and take LSD.Maroon: Do you feel you’ve bene¬fited from the drug?Student: In a way, yes. Some of itis philosophical. Not that I foundany new truths or insights intomyself because of this trip. I finda lot of people who find LSD bor¬ing simply because they take LSDthinking that it’s supposed to bethe answer—something that willmake life worth living. I foundthat LSD can be an experienceand like any other experience youstill have to evaluate what is hap¬pening, what it means to you, andwhether you’re going to continueit and why you’re doing it.Maroon: Has it changed you as aperson?Student: I really don’t think so.Maroon: Do you feel the fearsconcerning LSD are valid?Student: Yes. A trip increasesyour sensitivity and it not onlyincreases your sensitivity but itdoes it to such a degree that yourability right then and there toevaluate what you’re goingthrough can be dangerously re¬duced. A couple of times I’ve sud¬denly found tendencies to be sud¬denly taken by experiences andalmost overwhelmed by them andalso sometimes feelings of broth¬erhood, or wants, or needs, orgrief will reinforce themselvesuntil suddenly there’s a chancefor it to become bigger than you.I have had friends that have hadtrouble on trips. I know this hap¬pens, I’ve seen it happen, but Iam not sure why it happens tothem. I would say the difficulty inwhat happens to them on trips isnot so far removed from the diffi¬culty when people, say, havesomething like a very bad loveaffair with a girl and they crackup under that strain. But I have had one friend who committedsuicide because of LSD.Maroon: Was he on LSD at thetime?Student: He was on LSD at thetime. I’m not too sure whether itwas LSD or whether the factorswere already present in him. Hewas suicidal before. Maybe hesimply took LSD because hethought it’s going to change meand I’m not going to be so re¬sponsible for my actions; hecouldn’t quite face the responsi¬bility of killing himself. Orwhether the LSD simply reinforc¬ed his suicidal tendencies andthey overwhelmed him.Maroon: Will you continue to takeLSD?Student: I probably will, but LSDis not that important to me. Inother words, if LSD can serve afunction, OK, I’ll take it. If I don’thave time for it, if I get boredwith it, I’ll toss it away very easi¬ly. I don’t have any psychologicalneed for it.Maroon; Have you had any con¬flicts with the University overyour use of drugs?Student: I have a suspicion thatthe TTniversity has searched myroom twice. I haven’t had anytrouble. Maroon: Has LSD interferedwith your studies?Student: In a way it has but notin any way that girls and drinkingwouldn't.Maroon: What do you think ofTim Leary and his League ofSpiritual Discovery?Student: As far as I’m concerned,I wish Tim Leary would slowlyfade away into the sunset. I thinksomeone could just as well advo¬cate alcohol as the answer to ourproblems. In making it popular,too many people are going 1ostart taking LSD. LSD can havepretty bad consequences.Maroon: What role do you thinkdrugs will play in the future ofthe society?Student: I think they’ll becomemuch more widespread. I think itwill be used for rebellion. For oth¬er people concerned not with re¬belling but with setting up theirown standards, LSD can help es¬tablish themselves. Then thereare other people that are completely alieniated, and they cando nothing but react against whatthey see society as being, and inthese terms LSD becomes an es¬cape and the only thing theyhave.CRISTAL MEYERSunderwent open heart surgery yesterday.She is eight years old.Please help her get well.YOU may donate blood in her name at BillingsHospital by calling ext. 5579 to make an appoint¬ment.REMEMBER CAP & GOWNThe University of Chicago Year BookDuring the forthcoming confusion of registra¬tion - remember to take your CAP & GOWNorder card with your $5.00 to the Bursar. Thiswill be your last chance to reserve a copy of the1967 book for $5.00.4 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 24, 1967J Role of Independent Alderman Often Frustrating for DespresUNITED STATES AIR FORCEBox A. Dept. SCP 72Randolph Air Force Base, Texas 78148Name.(please print)College.Address.by Ellis LevinThe lot of an independentalderman in Chicago is a hardand often frustrating one. Ifyou don’t believe it, ask FifthWard alderman, Leon M. Despres,who has engaged in more than oneshouting match with Mayor Rich¬ard J. Daley on the floor of theCity Council in his twelve years asan alderman.In the outgoing council 41 of thealdermen were “administrationaldermen.” that is members of theregular Democratic organization ofwhich the Mayor is chairman. Thecouncil is made up of 50 aldermen.DESPRES DECLARED that thepre-election period is a particularlydifficult period for him. The May¬or, Despres says, keeps everythingquiet around elections. All contro¬versial matters are pushed asideand not taken up again until afterthe April Mayoral election TheFifth Ward alderman also indicatedthat the Mayor liked to take creditfor important or successful ordi¬ nances passed by the City Council,and tries whenever possible to deny jcredit to independents like Despres jfor any important ordinancespassed.Proud of AccomplishmentsYet Despres is proud of what hehas accomplished in his twelveyears on the City Council. He hasintroduced ordinances dealing withdiscrimination in hospital staffingand care, issuance of driveway per¬mits, the creation of an architec¬tural landmarks commission, dis¬crimination in urban renewal, ele¬vator safety, abandoned automobilepolicy, use of meter maids, the In¬diana Dunes, low rise public hous¬ing, compensation for businessesdisplaced by urban renewal, motorboat safety, open occupancy, andgun control.Although Despres’ driveway per¬mit ordinance, which he proposedin 1955 and which took the issuanceof permits out of the hands of theCity Council, where it had been Leon M. Desprespartment of Streets, was quicklymarked by repeated political abuse j passed, most of what he has pro-and bribery, and gave it to the De- posed has not been readily accept-The Air Force doesn’t wantto waste yourcollege educationany more than you do.Are you afraid of becoming partof the woodwork on a job? Yourcareer stunted by boredom? Fewpromotions in sight?You didn't go to college for that.And it needn't happen, either.Because you can pick the UnitedStates Air Force as your employer.Career opportunities are so vast...you'll get a better chance to spe¬cialize where you want...in theforefront of modern science andtechnology. Suppose, just for example, youwanted to be involved in Elec¬tronics. This area alone includesCommunications-Electronics, Mis¬sile Electronics, Avionics, andothers. And these, in turn, involveadministrative, research, and othertechnical aspects.That’s just a tiny part of thewhole Air Force picture. Justone brilliant opportunity areaamong many. You'll enjoy good pay, promo¬tions, chance to travel, active sociallife, fine retirement benefits. Andyou’ll be serving your country, too.Or maybe you want to fly? That'sgreat. The Air Force is certainly theplace to do it.As a college graduate you wantsomething extra out of life—to aimat an exciting goal. So send Inthis coupon.Make sure you don’t get stuckwhere nothing much is happening. ed by the city administration. “Ihave to be persistent,” Despres de¬clared, “and keep up the pressure,taking advantage of every oppor¬tunity to exact some leverage. I of¬ten offer the legislation in severaldifferent forms.” He said that hefirst introduced an ordinance tooutlaw discrimination in the selec¬tion of hospital staff in 1956. Heoffered it again in 1957, and in adifferent form in 1959. It was not,until 1962 that it was finally passed, iSimilarly, he said, he introduced a istrict elevator safety code in 1958 'after a Negro child died in the |Fifth Ward. According to Despres,jit took the death of a white child in1963 to get his legislation passed.NOR DOES THE administrationlike to allow him the credit for anordinance it does accept, Despresindicated. He cited as an examplethe employment of meter maids towrite tickets for autos and to col¬lect money from parking meters-“At the 1965 budget hearings, I sug¬gested that meter maids might beused instead of the police to collectmoney and ticket cars. I had talkedto the engineering firm which su¬pervised parking meter collections,and was surprised at the poor col¬lection results. With the police tick¬eting cars for parking meter viola¬tions, the chances were three in 100that you would get a ticket for aviolation. The money from parkingmeters is used to defray the costs Jof needed parking lots. I had thelegislative reference bureau draftan ordinance on meter maids.”Despres said that the ordinancewent to committee, where it wasdiscussed, and subsequently, sentto a subcommittee where it was discussed further and buried.” Twomonths later, the Mayor introducedlegislation which was substantiallymy ordinance with changes a sub¬committee might make. I was de¬lighted to see the ordinancepassed.”Watered DownIn another type of situation, aocording to Despres, his ordinancesmay be accepted, but highly wa¬tered down. “In 1964 I introduced abrokers (open occupancy) ordi¬nance, which was referred to asubcommittee, of which I wasmade the chairman. We held openhearings on the proposed ordi¬nance. I tried to encourage those infavor of the legislation to testify.We then reported back to the fullcommittee. The chairman of thecommittee subsequently set up anew subcommittee to redraft thelegislation. I was not appointed tothat three man subcommittee. Itwas an effort to keep me out of thefinal action. I asked to be allowedto attend the subcommittee, whichI had a right to do as an alderman,but was told by one of the mem¬bers appointed to the subcommitteeto let them do it. The subcommit¬tee took the legislation and wateredit down. They made important pro¬visions of the ordinance part of thepreamble, removed most of the pu¬nitive and enforcing provisions, andlengthened the administration hear¬ing procedure.TODAY THE MEMBERS of thatsubcommittee take credit for draft¬ing that legislation. On the floor, Itried to amend the ordinance tostrengthen it. Except for my ef¬forts, the ordinance might hra#ebeen weakened still further.”, JESSELSOTS9MYIM* HYDC PARK FOR OVCR N VRAMWITH THI WRY BIST AND PRBSHHTFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 8-9186 1840 I. 53rdAMERICAN 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 ttudonto with ID cardsFor the InterimRent A T.V. from UsOr Come buy a tape-recorder or deckToad Hall1444 E. 57th BU 8-4500l.'—rr?—The New RankThe University’s decision to formulate only a combinedmale-female class rank next year was, as far as we can tell, anattempt to mollify both sides of the ranking controversy. In theprocess not only has no one been mollified, but the worstpossible course of action has been chosen.The formulation of a male-female class rank is no stand onp inciple; at the same time it may very well work to the ex¬treme disadvantage of students registered with local boads9 n'ch have difficulty filling their draft quotas.BECAUSE THE SELECTIVE Service System is so decentral¬ized, the new UC ranks will not be treated the same by everydraft board. What appears most likely is that some draftboards will accept the new male-female rank as criteria fordeferments and others won't.National draft officials in Washington are as confused aboutthe meaning of the new ranks as most students are and a pollof state draft boards by the Maroon seems to indicate thatsome boards will refuse to look at the new male-female rank atall and that other boards, not attuned to the subtleties of Uni¬versity of Chicago politicking, won’t notice the difference be¬tween the new ranks and what they’d been getting before.The practical consequences of this situation are that not onlyhas the University passed up a chance to take a stand onprinciple—which incidentally, they could have done by decid¬ing either to rank or to completely abolish rank—but the Uni¬versity has denied to its students both the advantage of beingable to present a rank and the opportunity to study in anatmosphere free from the pressures that ranking excerbates.The critical variable is no longer the principled stand of auniversity indignant about a clear violation of its neutrality;the critical variable is no longer the efforts of individual stu¬dents working for high grades. Instead, the critical variablehas become the whims of the hundreds of local draft boardsscattered all over the country, which will soon determine theconsequences of University of Chicago draft policy.The formulation of the new male-female rank was un¬questionably the most spineless decision the Council couldhave possibly made. In an attempt to pacify all parties to thecontroversy, it has satisfied no one, stood up for nothing, andforfeited a chance to make a real contribution to the growingbody of anti-draft measures taken by colleges and universitiesaround the country.IT SEEMS CLEAR to us that the new male-female rank wasdecided on in an attempt to maintain ranking, while convincingSAR and other dissident elements that the University was ac¬tually thumbing its nose at the Selective Service. It seemsequally clear to us that the reason decisions like this are madeis because there are no institutionalized channels throughwhich students can make decisions or take part in makingdecisions on questions that vitally affect their lives.If there had been a means for students to help decide Uni¬versity draft policy, there never would have been a sit-in in thefirst place. Unquestionably there wouldn’t have been a needtoday to pacify potentially disruptive elements because the fo¬cus of pressures would have been the duly constituted repre¬sentatives of students. A decision made democratically wouldhave been unassailable, because all interested parties wouldhave had a hand in making it. *Perhaps more important, a democratic decision would mostlikely have been a right decision, right, in that unlike theCouncil’s male-female rank, it would have been a decision thatwas made on the basis of the interests of all parties concernedand not just based on the University’s desire to restore theequillibrium by satisfying all the unrepresented pressures atone time.Chicago MaroonSditor-in-Chief • -David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor . David E. Gumpert |The ChicnRo Mnror>n, founded 1892. issued every Tuesday and Friday ||throughout the University of Chicago school year, except during the §:tenth week of the academic quarter and during examination periods, ||and weekly for eight weeks during the summer, by students at the pUniversity of Chicago. Located in rooms 303, 304, 305 Ida Noyes Hall, ||1212 E. 59th Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Distributed without charge 1on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood. Subscriptions by mail$6 per year. Charter member. United States Student Press Assn. |§Publishers of the Collegiate Press Service.6 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 24, 1967 Letters to the EditorNSA and the CIATO THE EDITOR:All the rationalizations in theworld do not change the fact thatthe National Student Associationhas taken money on the sly fromthe Central Intelligence Agencyfrom the time it was founded untilthe present. This alone is enoughto demand the end of NSA, butthe additional fact that some offi¬cers each year knew what wasgoing on and did not tell all totheir constituents and insteadchose to play secret agent issuch an abomination as to shakeeven the strongest faith in electedstudent leaders.The argument that UnitedStates students should be repre¬sented at student conferencesabroad, and would not be were itnot for CIA money is fallacious.Those of us who have lived in aforeign country know that foreignstudents have orders of magni¬tude more to say than Americanstudents, and specifically Ameri¬can student association represent¬atives. We do not have to go toanother country to learn this les¬son—that we should work on ourown country before trottingaround the world on CIA money.Some reports have it that theCIA used American student“leaders” and “representatives”to gather information on foreignstudent leaders and representa¬tives. This is practical from theCIA point of view, for somedaythese students will lead thosecountries—and then the CIA willfind it very useful to have a fulland complete dossier. But fromour standpoint, it is immoral—wedo not like the FBI to keep re¬cords on us, Student MentalHealth to hand out information toemployers, our role in a sit-in tobe thrown in our face twentyyears from now. So why shouldwe let the CIA bribe us intospying on fellow students? Can webe bought that easily?Another point brought out in thecurrent controversy over the NSAis that its leaders have receiveddraft deferments from the Selec¬tive Service System under pres¬sure from the Central IntelligenceAgency. If true, this is one of thefirst cases of corruption on thepart of the SSS. Previous to this,even if a person was morally op¬posed to what they were doingand why they were doing it, hewas felt secure that at least itwas not dishonest, not capable ofbeing bought off. Now the wholesituation has changed, and thequestion arises: how many youngmen have been bribed into joiningthe CIA with the promise of adraft deferment? Regardless ofwhether what the CIA does ismoral or immoral, it is repugnantthat in this country, where evenunjust laws are theoretically ad¬ministered with equal injustice toall, such a situation could comeabout.MARC BRENMANRangerette at HeartTO THE EDITOR:I was somewhat disturbed byMr. Gumpert’s assertions in lastweek’s Maroon that the Rangersbecame what they are because ofa need to assert their masculinityin the only way they know how-through violence. I was equallydisturbed by his inability to seepeople who make up the Rangersas anything other than “streetbrawlers and muggers”, and Iquestion the validity of his cate¬gorization of them as “alientatedyouth”. i&SISis:v’y. I'-y■■■■ i'>§?■:?:;HFor urban ghetto teenagers vio¬lence is hardly a means for as¬serting masculinity (there areenough other cultural outlets forthat) so much as it is a means forexpressing hostility against a so¬ciety that is hemming them in.Before any value judgements aremade, I think it is necessary tosee these teenagers as youths whoare forced to function in a societywhich attaches different values todifferent racial groups, the lowestof which is attached to Negroes.Every day of their lives theymust encounter the negative sym¬bols which communicate the atti¬tudes of so racially conscious asociety. These significant symbolstake the forms of such institutionsas segregated and hence inferiorschools, segregated residentialareas wherein there are highrents for the lowest quality hous¬ing, discrimination in jobs, andthe mass communication mediawhich places a premium on white¬ness. Few children, even, couldbe insensitive to such racial sym¬bols so prevalent on the Americanscene, for many youth this verysensitivity breeds hatred for thosewho directly or indirectly controltheir lives from the outside andthe symbol of that control, theubiquitous “cop”.It is hardly a joking matter orone to be tossed aside when it issaid that policemen in Negroareas are there more for the pro¬tection of property rights than hu¬man rights.Police intimidation is an actu¬ality. They can exercise abusiveauthority for trivial reasons thatform no basis for arrest, or for noreason at all. This was revealedto me personally in a casual con¬version that I had with one SouthSide Chicago policeman. These in¬timidations, in some cases are abasis for violent retaliation sincesociety on the outside refuses todo anything about it.Negro youth and their parentshave many of the same valuesand aspirations as middle classAmerica. However, they are toopainfully aware that they are gen¬erally denied the opportunity toparticipate and compete in the ac¬tivities that society places thegreatest value upon—social andeconomic success. They realizethat because of their race, theyare restricted to certain livingareas, that their parents mustwork at some menial tasks, thatthey must attend overcrowdedand understaffed schools whereguidance counselors give not adamn about them. Superior ad¬vantages and power, both ofwhich are essential to successfulcompetition in American culturehave been systematically elimi¬nated in their community byforces from outside. No wonderthe hostility.Today the Blackstone Rangers,are more than just “muggers orstreet brawlers”. They are agroup of teenagers, many verytalented, who are united for thepreservation of race solidarity(precious to youth estranged fromthe larger society) and for the es¬tablishment by their own initia¬tive and industry, of recreationaland other facilities for their ownand community’s benefit. The res¬taurant plan provides an oppor¬tunity for many of them to usetheir talents and skills. And forthose not able to participate, itssuccess will offer more than justa symbol of hope for the Blackcommunity, but also an exampleof what may be achieved underunited effort, and an inspirationfor achievement for other youth. From my personal communica¬tions with many of the BlackstoneRangers, I have every faith thatthey can become competent busi¬nessmen and artisans if allowedthe opportunity. More power tothem—that is, Black Power.BEVERLY LANE(A Rangerette at heart)A YR ObjectsTO TIIE EDITOR:Because I am a student of thephilosophy of Objectivism as ithas been developed by Ayn Randand Nathaniel Branden, certainaspects of the libertarian philoso¬phy of the U. of C. Young Repub¬lican Club provided enough at¬traction that I joined the club.This was done in spite of doubtsabout the effectiveness of the cluband dedication of its members tothose principles. Friday eveningafter attending a part of the Illi¬nois YR convention and observingthe actions of Kenneth Shelton,Stanley Stewart and others, mydoubts were more than con¬firmed.Specifically, in order to ensurethat the U. of C. delegation wouldhave the maximum possible num¬ber of votes in the convention,various officers and memberswere just finishing at about 11P.M. the registration of some 800U. of C. students—chosen more orless at random from the studentdirectory—as members of theclub. A query to Mr. Sheltonabout the propriety of this actionreceived the reply that the clubconstitution provided for activemembers who pay dues and mem¬bers who, while regular mem¬bers, do not pay dues. Therefore,the students chosen from the di¬rectory could be entered as mem¬bers in spite of not paying dues.And apparently it was irrelevantto him that they had expressed nodesire to join the club.Leaving aside any question ofthe immediate effects on the con¬vention results, I believe that themost harmful result of this sort ofdishonesty is to establish firmlyin the minds of students in theclub that politics is necessarily adirty activity and actions whichcould not be tolerated in a prod¬uctive community are an essen¬tial part of it. Such an attitude inthe mind of anyone makes farci¬cal a profession of libertarianideals (or Objectivist ones), for aprinciple one of those tenets isthat it is only by a thorough goinghonesty and respect for the rights(when properly defined and un¬derstood) of every person that atolerable and happy human exist¬ence may be established.In regard to the consequencesof such member-manufacturing, 1object especially to the implica¬tion that the name (and therebythe implicit approval) of a personmay be used to advance a posi¬tion which he knows nothing ofand has not been consulted about,that it’s perfectly proper to ma¬nipulate people and to claim any¬thing you wish about their ideasso long as you’re not caught at it.I object also to the complacencywhich it engenders in club mem¬bers: They needn’t pursuade any¬one on campus of their views, andenlarge the club by legitimatemeans, since they can always doit with much less effort by writingnames on cards.Needless to add, the YR Clubofficers must realize that this let¬ter constitutes my resignationfrom the club.PAUL NIELSEN■t-s Maroon Intei*.Candidate Cousins on the Eighth Ward and the Daley Machine(Editor's note: The following is aninterview with William Cousins, Jr.,independent candidate for aldermanof the Eigltth, Ward. It is anotherin a series of Maroon talks with someof the independents running in theFebruary 28 aldermanic elections.(The Eighth Ward, located south of7?rd Street, includes the neighbor¬hoods of Marynook, Chatham, Rose-hind, and others. The ward as a wholeis about 65 percent non-white.(Cousins, J9. has served as presi¬dent of the Chatham Council, A Har¬vard law school graduate, Cousinsearned a bachelor's degree at the Uni¬versity of Illinois after attendingPhillips and DuSable High Schoolsin Chicago.(lie was interviewed for theMaroon by Ellis Levin.)Maroon: How do you view Chica¬go politics?Cousins: Things are done in thiscity with political considerationsin mind at all times. This is thekind of a city we have. And theworst parts of our city as far aspolitical domination is concernedhave been the predominately Ne¬gro communities. The Democraticorganization thrives on taking fullcontrol of the whole life of thepeople in these areas and makingthem dependent and subservient.One of my goals is to prevent thisfrom happening in the EighthWard, because an area inevitablydeclines when the machine takesover. I would call the whole sys¬tem plantation politics.Maroon: How would you charac¬terize the political environment inyour ward, especially as it relatesto your candidacy?Cousins: If you mean how are thepeople reacting, then I can sayvery well, but if you mean how isthe machine reacting, I would saythe machine’s hair is figurativelystanding on end. The political en¬vironment of the Eighth ward isnot the same as it is in the Fifthward where there are a lot of uni¬versity people and a university at- jmosphere. We don’t have this inthe Eighth ward. We have a lot ofpeople who are just plan thinkers,!and it takes a lot of educating |effort to get them to think inde-1pendently as do the people in the jFifth ward. However, we have alot of thinking people there, a suf¬ficient nucleus so that independ¬ent politics can take root there1and can thrive.Maroon: You mentioned thatthere is a threat to the ward ofDawson-Daley dominance- Couldyou elaborate upon this a littlemore?Cousins: The part of the Eighthward which is in the FirstCongressional district has neverD strongly supported Dawson, andfor that matter has kicked upagainst Daley as well. At the pre¬sent time, the thing Dawson and| for that matter Daley would likel' best of all, would be to end thisrebellion against them so thatthey will have smoother sailing, jIn this regard, Dawson is tryingto push off a man who has beenI associated with him for a numberof years, as the candidate for al-I derman in the ward, for whomthey have undertaken to spend aI great deal of money. Congress-m man Dawson himself once hadcounsel with me and other occa¬sions has sought counsel, and hasmade some extremely lucrativeoveratures to me to withdraw.I But my withdrawal in this situa¬tion would just leave them anI open field to take over and scalpthe people. Dawson asked me inso many words what it would taketo get me to support his candi¬date, and when I asked who hiscandidate was, he indicated Mr.Bland, the regular Democraticnominee.Maroon: Turning to some of the problems we face in the city,could you give us your evaluationof what progress has been madein civil rights?Cousins: I really don’t think wehave moved a great deal. Onething of significance that has hap¬pened is that public officials havemade some pronouncementswhich in effect place them on theside of open occupancy. This isgood and should have some salu¬tary effects on the general popu¬lace. But in terms of actual con¬crete measures, there hasn’t beenand I can specifically point to theso-called summit meeting of lastsummer was what I would call apolicy declaration and little more.What we need in this city is for William Cousins Jr.public officials, and business andreligious leaders to resolve that segregation and discrimination isreally too costly, aside from itbeing morally wrong, and to un¬dertake to conduct a massive edu¬cational and publicity campaignto emphasize that the best inter¬ests of all lie in affording all peo¬ple equality of opportunity in ac¬cordance with their ability-Maroon: Do you feel that therehas been sufficient planning in thecity?Cousins: So far as I am con¬cerned, there has been a verylarge lack of planning for specificareas in our city. I am mindful ofthe so called comprehensive planthat the city has drawn up. Whileit is something beautiful to look atand is couched in grandiose terms, when you think of specificwards like the Eighth Ward, thereis nothing there, unless you wantto assume that the metropolisthat the city planners have inmind, i.e. the large skyscrappers,are going to become fixtures inthe Eighth Ward. But the peoplein the Eighth Ward want anythingbut that. They want as much openspace and recreational area asthey can have. Density has been aproblem and I think it is a prob¬lem cities need to concern them¬selves with, particularly in areaslike we have in the Eighth Ward,where we know that maintainingthe area with single family dwell¬ing will contribute to the prosperi¬ty of that area.God Lives!: Dreyer’s DAY OF WRATHTonight at Doc Films. 7:15 and 9:15. Soc Sci 122, 59th nd Woodlawn. Still only 60 cents.Does water pollution bug you? Or smog? Does Itconcern you that some places in the country neverhave enough teachers? Or nurses? And when youread about the growing pains of a developing na¬tion, do you wish you could do something?You can. Thousands of General Electric peopleare helping to solve the problems of a growing,changing world.Generating more (and cheaper) electricity withnuclear reactors. Controlling smog in our citiesand pollution in our streams. Using electronics tobring the teaching skills of an expert into manyclassrooms at once, the trained eyes of a nurseinto many hospital rooms at once.If you’re not content with the world as it is . . .and if you have the brains, imagination and driveto help build a better one, we’d like to talk to you.See the man from G.E. during his next campusvisit. Come to General Electric, where the youngmen are important men.Tfogness ts Our Most important ftoductGENERAL® ELECTRICFebruary 24, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7Students Demonstrate at Wisconsinby Michael SeidmanMADISON — The Univer¬sity of Wisconsin campus hasbeen rocked by student dem¬onstrations protesting the on-campus student recruitment pro¬gram of Dow Chemical Company.The demonstrations, which beganWednesday and were continuing asthe Maroon went to press Thursdayafternoon have culminated in sev¬enteen arrests and an obstructivesit-in. held late Wednesday, inwhich over 400 students preventedhigh administration officials fromleaving Raseum Hall, the maincamous building.STUDENT DEMONSTRATORS,sponsored by Students for a Demo¬cratic Society (SDS) presented theUniversity with the following de¬mands:• That Dow Chemical not be al¬lowed to recruit on campus until itstops its war activities;”• That the Central IntelligenceAgency not be allowed on campus;and• That all files of the Universitybe opened to students “in compli¬ance with state law.”SDS leaders claim that DowChemical Company manufacturers'"most of the napalm used in Viet¬nam. They also assert that thestate law requiring open files forall public institutions applies to theUniversity. Although Wisconsin At¬torney-General Bronson La Follettehas agreed with the students on thequestion of University files, theUniversity administration has as-Calendar of Events i serted that the law does not applyto such information as grades andfuture examinations.The demonstrations beganWednesday afternoon, when over400 Wisconsin students marched tothe Engineering Hall, where DowChemical was supposed to be hold¬ing interviews for job placement.Unable to find the Dow representa¬tives, most of the marchers re¬turned to Bascum Hall.Seventeen of those who stayed,however, eventually found the in¬terviewers, began a sit-in, andwere arrested by city police. Thepolice had been called by JamesMarx, director of placement ser¬vices at the engineering school.When news of the arrest spreadto Baseum Hall, the protestorsformed a sit-in there, preventingChancellor Robben W. Flemingfrom leaving the building. FlemingTheologians Thomas J.J. Altizerand John W. Montgomery attemptto figure out whether God is reallydead tonight at 8 pm in RockefellerChapel.The discussion will be sponsoredby the Inter-Varsity Christian Fel¬lowship and Student Government.Admission is $1.50 for adults and75c for students.Altizer is associate professor ofreligion at Emory University in At¬lanta. He received his A.B. degreein 1948, his A.M. in 1951. and hisPh D. in 1955, all from UC.Montgomery is professor andchairman of the Division of ChurchHistory at Trinity Evangelical Di- never actually tried to leave thebuilding, and asserted that he wasnot actually being held captive.“When I choose to walk out, I willdo so if I have to get police protec¬tion if necessary,” he was quotedas saying. “And if you touchme—and I mean touch—you will becharged with aggrevated assault.”FLEMING did not try to leavethe building, however, and insteadattempted to secure the release ofthe arrested students. When Marxrefused a request from the Chan¬cellor not to press charges, Flem¬ing signed a personal check for$1,478 to provide bail money.“I do not like to conduct businesswith students on the basis of ar¬rest,” Fleming was quoted as say¬ing. It could not be immediatelydetermined whether the studentsused the bail money which Flemingprovided.vinity School in Deerfield, Illinois.He holds seven earned degrees, in¬cluding a Ph.D. from UC in 1962.He is an ordained Lutheran minis¬ter-information on tickets may beobtained from Paul Levin. Ida Noy¬es Hall, or by calling ext. 3272.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around Tho World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, Ilf.MU 4-6856God Controversy Will Be Aired Tonightf *■ ■Friday, February 24MOVIE: Doc Films Dreyer’s DAY OF iWRATH. 7:15 & 9:15. Soc. 3ci 122 60c.THEATRE: Tonight at 8:30, EXIT &EXILE, a new play written and direct¬ed by Rich Vertel, and three one-actsby rONESOO, directed by Andy Kaplan.Re\nolds Club Theatre. 8:30 pm.FOI.K DANCE: The Great Auk FolkDance. Ida Noyes Basement. 8 pm. SoftShoes.FILM: B-J Cinema. “Communism on jthe Map”. Judson Dining Room. 7 pm.and 9:30 pm. 25c.Saturday February 25FILM: Japanese Film Society, WOMENOF THE NIGHT directed by Mizoguchi.Soc. Sci. 122, 7:15 & 9:30, 60c.THEATRE: Tonight at 8:30. See Fri¬day’s events.Sunday, February 26UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICES:Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. The Rev-erend Lloyd A. Averill, Vice President.Dean of the Chapel and Professor ofReligion Kalamazoo College. “On Los¬ing Faith”, 11 am.FORUM: THE DRAFT. VIETNAM,AND YOU. David Bakan, Paul Lauter.Daniel Leiffer, George, Pontikes andBrent Kramer. Breasted Hall. Admis¬sion $1, students 50c. 7:30 pm.CONCERT: Madrigals by the BrentHouse Singers. 8:30 pm Bond Chapel.FOLK DANCE: with U.C. Folk Danc¬ers. Ida Noyes. 7:30 pm. 25c.Everyone 18 and overis invited to aMIXER •SATURDAY, FEB. 25 •from 8:30 p.m. until 1:00 a.m.on the llth floor of theSHERATON-CHICAGO »HOTELfeaturing the newest dance crazeB00GAL00 lplus theGOOD GRIEFS*giving away their latest record. 'CASUAL DRESS m j(e.g. sweaters, slacks, etc.)STAG OR DATES #stag preferredBAR OPEN •to those 21 and older Everybody cheers for Ice-cold Coca-Cola. Coke hasthe taste you never get tired of... always refresh¬ing. That’s why things go better with Coke.• .afterCoke... after Coke.Bottled under the authority of the Coca-Cola Company by:The Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Chicago NSA Committee Votes To Invite Assn.To Hold This Summer's Congress at UCThe National Student Associationcommittee of UC’s Student Govern¬ment (SG) Tuesday invited the na¬tional officers of NSA to hold itsnext congress at UC.SG’s invitation, however, includ¬ed a disclaimer that it “constitutedan endorsement of NSA as it is pres¬ently constituted.”In its first meeting of the year,called to consider the local re¬sponse to disclosures of Central In¬telligence Agency support to NSA’sactivities, the committee decidednot to recommend campus disaffili¬ation from NSA.A referendum of the student bodywould be necessary for disaffili¬ation.Immediately after the committeevoted to issue the invitation, how¬ever, Ed Bimbaum. who had heldthe title of NSA campus co¬ordinator, resigned his post. GuyMahaffey was elected to replacehim.While there was general agree¬ment that basic reforms in NSAare needed to make it a represent¬ ative organization, the committeemajority decided NSA is worthkeeping.SAR Scores Decision(Continued from Page One)the existing decision-making pro¬cess at UC.JACKIE GOLDBERG, a UCgraduate student who formerly at¬tended the University of Californiaat Berkeley, chaired the meeting.She made it clear that anyone pres¬ent could participate in discussionand anyone who considered himselfa member of SAR could vote; thisprocedure was followed. The meeting was conducted in “a version ofsorts of parliamentary procedure”in order to allow free discussion.Miss Goldberg explained.There was long discussion andmuch disagreement on whether tocontinue pressure against the rankor concentrate efforts on the Vietnam war of UC’s decision makingprocess. No decision was reached.Does growingup have to beCan you learnabout McLuhanthrough Aristotle?What kind of politicalis plausible in VietnarWhat happens in a “happening"?• For the undergraduate who is unwilling to settle for easyanswers, who seeks relevance in his studies—there is nowa place.• There is a small college within a noted university in NewYork City. It has no “credit system” for measuringknowledge; no large lecture halls for one-way dialogues;no teaching assistants where the professor should be.• What it does have is a new program of study conceivedfor students who can lest realize their intellectual poten¬tial by learning how to inquire, by seeking meaningfulrelationships between disciplines, by recognizing alterna¬tive modes of analysis and explanation. It has a facultythat is discussion-oriented, concerned with teaching —and learning — only through active participation of thestudent. It has a philosophy which views preparation forgraduate school as just one of several possible goals ofa liberal arts education.• the new school college offers a two-year course ofstudy (the third and fourth years of undergraduate work)leading to the Bachelor of Arts degree in the Humanitiesor the Social Sciences. It provides opportunities for spe¬cialized study and research through a tutorial programconducted within a broad liberal arts framework. Itgrants degrees only on the basis of comprehensive exam¬inations administered after completion of the course ofstudy. It is open only to students who have completedat least two years of college work at other accreditedinstitutions.For further information, please contact the Director ofAdmissions, The New School College, Room 200, NewSchool for Social Research, 66 West 12th Street, NewYork, N. Y. 10011, OR 5-2700. Interviews will be givenduring the Spring vacation period.THENEW SCHOOLCOLLEGEr Admissions OfficeTHE NEW SCHOOL COLLEGENew School for Social Research'/'’A' 66 West 12th Street*- S* New York, N. Y. 10011Please send me the Bulletin and application for the New SchoolCollege.I am now attending....Name. iAddress.City State ZIP.(College or University) nJ8 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 24, 1967- * * * % <t*Maroon Classified Advertisements&&JS? \ Cxk- «M&‘‘4R> £.$§& W ■ a .W-- %PERSONALSTom Jones, Fri. March 3. Law schoolauditorium, 6:30, 9:00. 11:30.Need: Supergirl to set world recordCharlie or Mike, x3565.Jug band wanted .tite. I'm a transves-•■X.I.T. Union Board Concert - Whitt-more & Lowe, semi-classical duo-pianists; February 25 at 8:30; HermannHall, 32nd & Dearborn on the I.IT.Campus. Tickets are $2.50.Supergirl, where are you?Male Kitty needs home. 684-7515.Would a few,Pellimore :help?Galtisant is warrantable. few metsPalomidesAlmost Open!BANDER SNATCH DISCOTHEQUEDancing on a dime for 50cSat 8:30 — 12Ida NoyesSlade: we paranoid heads would rathertrip than snitch!CARPET CITY6740 Stony islandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a $10 Used 9X12Rug, to a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemanants & Mill Returns at a fractionof the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY He’s the chef who makes the salad, butthe hearts are good if he puts enoughoil on them.KOINONIA: Tonight, dinner (75c) at 6pm in Chapel House.Bandersnatch — Coming AttractionsSwiss-burgerReal SteakLive PeopleIce Cream Creations“Radar Men of the Moon”LCUC Lenten Forum: Tonight. 7:30 inSwift Commons. The Rev. Walter Bou-man discusses "God's World”: the bibleand preaching.Writer's Workshop PL 2-8377.ART EXHIBIT: ISRAEL TODAY ANDOTHER PAINTINGS. A collection ofoils and watercolors by BACIA GOR¬DON. Most items for sale. Now thruFebruary 28. Hillel House, 5715 Wood-lawn.Do you miss the Friday night folkdances in Red Square? Don't miss theGreat Auk Folk Dance, Sat. Feb. 25, 8pm. Ida Noyes basement. Soft shoes.Reward for return of male Siamese catnamed Piggy. Lost since Dec. in vicini¬ty of 53rd & Blackstone. 667-0182.Lost: Sliderule in brown leather case.Call Sandra Brewes. PL 2-7399.Fugs is coming!Need ride to Fla. spring. 138 A BJGRP. "Madrigal Concert by Brent House Sing¬ers. Feb. 26, 8:30 pm. Bond ChapelFREE.KAMELOT Restaurant. 2160 E. 7ist St.,10% discount for UC students.All interested students are invited tohear Mr. Jeffrey Hazard speak on“Government Abuse of Informa¬tion" Brent House, 5540 WoodlawnSunday Feb. 26th at 7 pm.Sponsored by the Ecumenical ChristianCouncil.Jeffery Theatre1952 E. 71st S'. HY 3-3333Wednesday & ThursdayMarch 1 & 2The D'Oyly Carte Opera Co.> presentsTHE MIKADOThree performances each dateAt 2, 5, & 8 pm.Student discount rate $1.25For All Performances.Tickets al the Box Office ■ m m mi mmmmGod isn’t dead, he moved to Canada toavoid the draft!SLIGHTLY UNRELIABLE Monk inneed of two virgins (or best offer) forVesper vigils. Call 288-7165 after matins.Would you believe that Arcadiannymphs were rat-finks? Find out! Sun.Feb. 26 at 8:30 in Bond Chapel.FREE avante-garde films, B-J cinematonight 8 pm.. Judson dining room.. . a determined and insidious con¬spiracy to undermine the stability ofthe week and its natural-rationalorder.” Maniacal laughter rolling downthe downstage hill. TOMORROW NEV¬ER KNOWS.A cuckoo, an owl, a cat, and a dogsinging counterpoint? Hear them onSun, Feb. 26, at 8:30 in Bond Chapel.Because the machine fears the electionof independents, the aldermanic electionon Tuesday will be conducted with easi¬ly stealable paper ballots. BILL COUS¬INS, IVI endorsed candidate in the 8thward needs poll watchers to preventballot fraud. If you can poll watch atall Tuesday, Call 873-2128 or attendmeeting Sun, 3:30 pm at 8026 S. Cot-tage.King Henry VIII wrote Madrigals??!The USA: an OVERRIPE FRUIT in thejaws of the world Communist conspira¬cy? See “Communism on the Map” to¬night, 7 and 9:30, Judson dining rm25c.Hear the great new BOND BEAT. WithPhyllis and the Mad Rigals; Morley'sMarauders; The Animals; The Nymphsand Shepherds; the BC Boys; Henry Vand the Longbowmen. Thrill to theirswinging XVI century sound, Sun. Feb.26, 8:30 pm in Bond Chapel.Lecture: “Ethical Theory’TrfMediewalJewish Philosophy;” Dr. Eliezer Gold¬man. Philosophy dept., Bar-Ilan Univ,Israel, Friday evening, 8:30 pm HillelHouse.TOMOKBOW NEVER KHOWS.'A seren^ piety, lifting the poets gazeReveals heaven opening on a shiningthrone,And the lower vision of the world’sravening rageIs shut off by the sheet lightning ofhis brain. 2AT LAST. Baudelaire meets CountryJoe and the fish.Sat ... 10 pm .. . WUCB . . : 640 AM"I got it at theCATHOLIC SALVAGEBUREAU . .3514 S. Michiganand 45th & State SAR exec, meeting, 3:30 pm„ Feb. 24,Reynolds Club.Epic tale of the Battle of Agineourt.Spectacular historical pageant. (Castof 3) Feb. 26, 8:30, Bond Chapel.SAR victory party, Rusty’s, 5104 Kim-bark. Sat. 9 pm. Bring your own stuff.JOBS OFFEREDWork own hrs. H.P. ofs-secy. between9-5 pm. 12 hrs/wk., Keep files. Refs,req. write M. L. Satuffer, 1030 E. 50thSt.Responsible girl or boy for occasionalevening baby sitting with four well-behaved children. Must be 20 or older.Call BU 8-3333 after 5 pm.Student or Student wife to baby sitWed. 2-5:30 pm. $l/hr. PL 2-6562.Need money to go to Europe this sum¬mer? Earn $200 by helping us to go thisspring. Student wanted to assist Grand¬mother with 2 boys, 5 and 6, 4 wks.April 24 - May 22. Private room. FA4-9159.Office secretary for small educationalinstitution, university affiliated. Goodbenefits. For appointment call: HydePark 3-7531.TO RENTAvailable: Handsome basement quar¬ters for UC male, pref. non-smoking,non-drinking, in exchange for 7 hourswork per w'eek in faculty home. 667-5276.Nice, clean room for rent near campus.Call MI 3-9257.Sleeping room $10/wk. IC & Campusbus. South Shore. ES 5-5864.Rmmte wanted to share 7 rm. apt. forspr. & summer terms, own bedrm.$50/mo. 493-6474.Room and board male undergrads. In¬expensive, close to campus for spring &summer, or next year. BU 8-8495 or643-9220.Medical student needs rmmate, male orfemale, on Ellis near 53 rd. Marty,Fern, student needs rm. with same orwith family in Hyde Park. MU 4-6100,ext. W. 306. Juanita.Grad. Bus. Stud., needs roommate toshare 3 rm. apt. Male or female. Call664-7495.PIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNTSTUDENT CO-OP BOOKSTORERECENTLY ARRIVED LANGUAGE MATERIALSpanish — 300 titles of Coleccion Australfiction, poetry, criticism, history 50c eachGerman — Goehte - 5 vol. $8.00 4-+ Paperbacks-f + set oflanguage tapes (7) $35.00Russian — Tolstoy, Chekov, GorkyAlso French, Italian, Welsh, Portuguese, Finnish, Swedish, Hebrew,etc.Linguistic Journals — "Word", "Language", "UAL"REYNOLD'S CLUB BASEMENT10-5 Sal. 124 Sublet; spacious, 6 bdrm. apt. in SouthShore near IC. Avail. March hi.$100/mo. Also some furniture to sell.684-0427 eve.Spac., luxurious apt. req. 3rd charmingrmmte. M. or F. Private rm. Maidservice & 60/mo. Call Chas. HY 3-9600x 715.Room available for male student forspring quarter. 56th & Woodlawn. Call667-3166 or 363-0950314 rm. apt. in Hyde Park, availablefrom April until mid-June. Furnished orunfurnished. Convenient to city bus andfC service. $110/mo., but will baggie.684-8621 after 6.Furnished dorm room available nowthru June. 2 WEEKS FREE Very largesingle. Center of campus. Hitchcock:57th & Ellis. UC student only: grad orunder grad. Linens, maid service,switchboard, poolroom, TV, & Snellgirls. $63 mo. FA 4-8200 x 550.324-0289, after 6 pm or wkends.FOR SALE82nd and Essex. Delux, outstanding 7-rm. colonial. Rec. - rm., 2 nat-fireple.,cent, air., sprinkler syst., 2 - car gar.,side dr., 50-ft. lot, low $30's. Owner BA1-8517.World Book Encyclopedia Teaching Ma¬chine, 1966, new and up-to-date. >/2 priceat $35, Atlas - $15. Call 752-4828.'60 Ford Falcon. Price: $90.00, Call324-2264, after 6:30 pm wknts.23” blk. & wht. Magnavox TV. In work¬ing cond. Call Jolly Jock 1813 Pierce.1965 MG, real sharp. $895. 4-speedtransmission. Red. ES 5-7600.'66 Chevelle, auto., rad., 6-cyl., low-mileage. VI 7-7100 - Miss Wegg. excel¬lent conlition.Univ. of Toronto Standard Collated ed.of J. S'. Mill’s Political Economics, un¬opened first ed. 1965 $20. C Smith x2564or 752-9869.1961 2 dr. Chevrolet; gd shape. Ownerin Europe. Call Dr. Priest, x 5701 or667-0257, after 6 pm.Dictaphone less than yr. old. Cost $200,asking $150. Check writer, Hedman, $45.389-3396.Foreign coins, stamps; US coins. Sell tostudents, faculty: FA 4-9500, rm. 1516xnights, ask for Jeff.STATIONERYBOOKSGREETING (ARDSTHE BOOK NOOKMl 3-75111540 E. 55th ST.10% Student DitcountMUSTANGS - 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 UNIVERSITYBARBERSHOP1453 E. 57th ST.FIVE BARBERSWORKING STEADYFLOYD C. ARNOLDproprietorMEET 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 ofdating.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. Strictly con¬fidential.NameAddressCityDATELINE ELECTRONICRESEARCH INC. CMP. O, Bex 369, Chicago, III.60645For Add. Inf* Call 271-3133February 24, 1967 CHICAGO MAROONTheatre Review Revue Review8:30's Present Exit and ExileRichard Vertel’s Exit and Exile raises - but neither deeply explores nor answers -questions about the artist at work, continually beset by difficulties in his work and his per¬sonal relationships.George, a playwright, has not produced a work in two years, although he is workingon something unexplained and in¬complete. His agent insists he fin¬ish it since audience and critics ex¬pect much of the artist who hasproved himself once, but Georgecan neither express himself norforget his work.Much of the first act of Vertel’splay switches between Georgespeaking of life and art, and threemen — Christian, Kato, andKirk—who are both characters inGeorge’s play and—as unknown, un¬invited guests at George’s home—characters in Vertel’s play.AS THE ARTIST shown at workbegins theorizing about the past,the three men carry on a conversa¬tion about why they are in prison.The double dialogue continues,themes overlapping, culminating asKato speaks of his past whileGeorge narrates the same story,pausing to let Kato describe thetime he and a girl were trying topush a rock up a hill. Vertel’s de¬scriptive language is most powerfuland evocative here: actions emergefrom the dialogue rather than fromand movements on stage. The lan¬guage unfortunately also provides amost confusnig element in the play,since it alternates between poetryand pettiness. Georges’ speeches,though striking in their attempts todeal with significant problems, aretoo long and poetic to be easily fol¬lowed. He becomes involved inproblems unexplained to the audi¬ence. When not aiming for the sub¬lime, Vertel’s language often fallsto pettiness or foolish rhyming.Some speeches are well done,such as Marie’s character—revealing endeavors to destroyGeorge, her husband, by ignoringhis poetry and concentrating on hisremembering their anniversary oftheir getting a divorce. Also welldone is the scene where George’smother dishevelled and frightened,comes on stage to beg George to protect her from his father. Just asthe audience has been convincedthat she needs hetp because of herfear or insanity, the father appearsand threatens George. Suddenly thefather and mother are laughing atGeorge for believing the story. Thelanguage has built up a suspensefulsituation and then suddenly lets itdrop. As Hector, George’s brothersaid earlier, events continually pre¬sent themselves and then change.THE PRODUCTION of the playwas simple but effective. The stagehas two chairs in the foregroundand a large black and white struc¬ture with steps up and down onwhich actors enter and exit. To theright of the stage is an undefinedmetal object which serves as partof a ship produced in the secondact when Hector, who fears he haskilled a man, runs away to sea.More striking than the set was theuse of lighting particularly whenMaria pleads with George andwhen George speaks of the past.The actors were competent, oftengood, but rarely outstanding. Jos¬eph Ehrenburg’s George was goodin some scenes^ especially where hewas searching and could not find,or did not want to find, Maria. Inlonger speeches, however, his voice trailed off and he was hard to fol¬low. As Maria, Joyce Tetrev easilychanged from the pleasing thought¬ful woman to the shrewish bitchwho can never even try to be apart of the questions her husbandasks. She is always in the middle,never gaining our entire contemptor sympathy. The chorus oftenserves to back up thoughts buttheir speeches were too repititiousto be as significant as the lines giv¬en chorus members acting as indi¬viduals. James Miller’s Hector wasproperly mysterious.IMPERFECT and at times pre¬tentious in obvious searches for thetruth, Exit and Exile is a puzzlingjourney to the problems of thoseconnected with an artist at work.THE THREE IONESCO plays(which complete the program)—TheMotor Show, Maid to Marry, andThe Leader—were all cleverlydone. The dialogue, a sharp andwitty text, was rapidly paced. Allthe plays, especially The MotorShow, revolved around sound: withthe witty dialogue, the sounds ofdifferent cars, the laughter andmusic added to the sharpness. Theactors easily followed the lines, andthe audience leaves laughing.Susan PhillipsHitfjUtfi/ BY BARBARA(VftlOTK CARSON."The funniest, toughest-minded, and most inge¬nious political satire I’veread in years.”— dwigmtMacdonald, N.Y. Reviewof Books.The complete text — now75C — wherever paper¬backs are sold. Or youmay order directly fromthe publisher. (Pleaseenclose payment with or¬der, and add 25( for post¬age and handling.)GROVE PRESS315 Hudson Street,New York, N. Y. 10013Notice About Winter TextbooksOn Wednesday March 1st, it will be necessary forthe Textbooks Department of the Bookstore tobegin removing Winter Quarter textbooks fromits sales-floor shelves, in order to provide spacefor incoming Spring Quarter books. BeforeMarch 1st please try to purchase any WinterQuarter texts which you may still require.Textbook DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue Viper Back at 2nd CityThe viper has come back in Second City’s latest revue.The Return of the Viper, minus its sting: instead of venom,it is armed with cotton candy. The present company offers apleasant entertainment, without any of the successful satirewhich made Second City famous.Mild humor has replaced thought-provoking wit, and it is, at best,a peaceful substitute.The revue contains two types ofmaterial, planned and improvised.The sketches are amusing, andsometimes delightful; the improvi¬sations, which take up too much ofthe evening, rarely show the eastoff to its best advantage. Althoughthe performers are, for the mostpart, personable and attractive,good improvisation requires asharpness which most of them can¬not provide consistently.INSTEAD OF BEING builtaround a central theme or takingpot shots at contemporary society,The Return of the Viper comicallypresents less serious facets of evenpotentially controversial subjects,like war and drugs'.The tenor of the evening is givenin the first long sketch, “a mixedmedia extravaganza” portrayingan ant army’s attack of a filmedpot of tomato sauce. Like the otherskits, this one is funny, but toolong, and lacks sufficiently pointedcommentary. Instead of dealing di¬rectly with war, it parodies warmovies, and although the parody isSAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL"since imPICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 at least somewhat successful, itspoint never is subject to debate. Inthe same way, the viper returnswith a drawn-out comical portrayalof a Timothy Leary LSD spectacular, as the highlight of the evening.Joining veteran Second Citymembers Sandy Holt, Penny White.Sid Grossfeld, and Devid Walsh arenew-comers J. J. Barry, Burt Hy¬man and Martin Harvey Friedberg.J. J. Barry and Burt Hyman arewitty and welcome additions. Martin Harvey Friedberg comes onstage as a gift to the theatre; unfortunately he is a gift that criesout to be brought back. His lack ofdiscipline is truly reprehensible.Fey, funny Penny White and calmSid Grossfeld, who seems to controlthe proceedings, are stand-outs inthe skits and improvisations, as isBritisher David Walsh. Sandy Holtstill looks like a nice girl, but hasnot yet learned much about acting.THE VIPER ONLY superficiallytries to crack a nut: it scratchesthe shell, but never reaches themeat. In this way, it never annoysor antagonizes, but it never stimu¬lates, either. The shell is rarelytasty. However harmless, the showis very enjoyable. It is a warm andhuman comedy, although it is moreakin to t.v. than to a realization ofthe potential of the revue medium.Especially if the treatment andtiming in the improvisations art-right, a visit to Second City’s Vipercan be an evening well spent.Mark Rosin andJanet KlotmanQJUJ© YOU (AN SHOPRIGHT AT YOURDOOR STEP FORthe exceptional inWomen's Apparel“First For Fashion ”PLEASANTWomen’s WearJKeumode, <Kosiernf_Hosiery & Children's Wear S3?^3?<nCtTD10 • CHICAGO MAROON • February 24, 1967d%■£it£ JAPANESE FILM FESTIVALPRESENTSWOMEN OF THE NIGHTDirector: MISOGUCHI.Sat., Feb. 25SOC. SCI. 122 7:15 and 9:3075*Chicago Premiere of Recent Films by—GREGORY MARKOPOULUSST. JAMES CHURCH1718 N. North Park FEB. 26, 2:30Admission $1.25Be a sport[Also sophisticated,intelligent,discriminatingand an all*aroundswell guy.]Drink Carlsberg—the mellow, flavorful heer of Copenhagen. Help keepAvis batteries fromgoing dead this weekend.Avis doesn’t give specialson weekdays because we don’thave to.We hardly have enough carsto handle all the businessmenMonday through Friday.But weekends are a different story.You can get a Plymouth for the rate of *20plus Mileage from Noon Fri. to Mon. Noon.We don’t make much on a deal like this.But it’s better than having our cars sit aroundcollecting dust*Wtl MJlVr ilmoriH j vur »•»'•*•AV/SRENTA CAR Coll 782-0180Far More Information•ad Reservations.CONVENIENT LOCATION-1616 E. 53rd ST.• % Ik. c«tok«( C»p»"k.,.A. Owum* • CwMw, **••«> Me.. 104 E 40lk St., N.V."THE RETURN OF ALOHA NUIA hearty greeting from TIKITHE VIPER" TED who has brought a smallsample of delicacies from thedirected by PAUL SILLS SOUTH SEAS along with someof your favorite AMERICANdishes."... a work of genius'’ TIKI TED BRINGS TO YOU*R. Christiansen. Dail^ News SUCH DISHES AS:Beef Kabob Flambe, Teri Yakl,Ono Ono Kaukau, and Egg Roll,as well as T-Bone, Club andFilet Mignon Steaks, SeafoodDelight, Sandwiches, and ColdPlates.Tues.-Thurs., Sun. at 9 pmFri.-Sat. 8:30 & 11 pmSECOND CITY. (IRAL5 HOUSE OF TIKI >1846 N. WELLS ST. 51ST A HARPERFood sarved 11 a.m. to 3 a.m.LI 8-7585 jDE 7-3992 $ TAl-SAM-YfcNCHINES! - AMERICANRESTAURANTCANTONESR ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN MULTW AM H Ml PMOR OEM TO TAKE OUTISIS Bool Mod Ik MU 4-1041 ft-WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE'S COMEDYMUCH ADO isABOUT NOfifiNgPREMIERE U S PRODUCTION£*'B'**J OF REVISED TEXT BYa—ROBERT GRAVESCO-STARRINGCARRIE NYE & JAMES RAYwith Vincent ParkNightly except Monday thru Mar 12GOODMAN THEATRE200 S COLUMBUS ORIVE • CE 6-2337 Weekends through February 20thJAMES BALDWIN'SBLUES FORMR. CHARLIEHULL HOUSE PARKWAY500 East 67th StreetReservations: 324-3*8*THE PUBIN THENew Shoreland Hotel55th & South Shore DriveThe Newest Meeting Place in Old Hyde ParkTHE PUB SPECIAL:THE GREATEST AND BIGGEST CHEESE STEAKBURGERIN TOWNMichelob and Budweiser on Tap!Piano Selections Friday & Saturday eveningsUNIVERSITY CHAMBER ORCHESTRA, \ ‘ ___ ’. 1* ' ].; *' :•Saturday, February 25 at 8:30 pm"#v i *BACH: Brandenburg Concerto No. 3.SCHUBERT: Symphony No. 5 in B flat.MOZART: Divertimento K. 136 in D.WAGNER: Siegtsied IdyllMANDEL HALL r-v*d# Free Admission CINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANCannes Prize Winner In Color"A MAN & A WOMAN"Sun-Times * * * *DAILY NEWS--"Director Should be Saluted."4 Academy Award Nominations.Students $1.50 with I.D. card every daybut Saturday.Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. & Sun.open 1:30February 24, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • IPublishers Reminder SaleBooks in all CategoriesValues GaloreSale starts Friday, February 24th.THE WISDOM OF GEORGE SAN¬TAYANA, Ed. by Ira D. Cardiff.The baroque philosophy of Santaya¬na, in a collection of thoughts ex¬tracted from his work covering along lifetime, including materialdrawn from his final works. Index¬ed for easy reference.Pub. at $7.50 Sale 52.98Robert Ruark: THE OLD MAN’SBOY GROWS OLDER. Nostalgic,sensitive tales of the quest formanhood by the author of Some¬thing of Value and Poor No More.Drawings by Walter Dower.Pub. at $4.95 Sale SI.00Woodrow Wilson’s Last Days:WHEN THE CHEERING STOP¬PED. Intro, by Allan Nevins. Illus.Pub. at $5.95 Sale $1.00The Intimate Beerbohm: MAX, ABiography, by David Cecil. 507 pp.,illus. Pub. at $6.95 Sale $1.00THE FUTURE IS NOW: The Sig¬nificance of Precognition, by Ar¬thur W. Osborn. Intro, by Eileen J.Garrett. Case histories of precogni-tive warnings, precognition ofdeath, and longer-range precogni¬tions. More.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $2.98U. S. CAMERA ANNUAL 1964. Ed.by Tom Maloney. 210 photos, 25 infull color; 8Vfc”xllVfe”.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $2.98A HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHICALSYSTEMS, Ed. by Vergilius Ferm.Major philosophical trends exam¬ined in clear, lucid essays by ex¬perts in their fields.Pub. at $6.00 Sale $3.98DICTIONARY OF FRENCH LIT¬ERATURE, edited by Sydney D.Braun. Selective dictionary thatcovers French literature from thelangues romanes to Francoise Sa¬gan. Invaluable aid to the study ofFrench literature.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $2.98 Thomas Moluar: AFRICA—A PO¬LITICAL TRAVELOGUE TheREAL Africa:Pub. at $6.95 Sale $1.98THE CULTURE CONSUMERS: AControversial Study of Culture andAffluence in America. By AlvinToffler. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.00HO NO RE DAUMIER-240 Litho¬graphs. Intro, by Wilhelm Wart-man. 240 lithographs, with captiontranslations & notes. 11” x 14”Special Import $6.98INDUSTRIAL CREATIVITY, ThePsychology of the Inventor, by Jos¬eph Rossman. Introduction byGardner Murphy. For everyone in¬terested in the creative process.Pub. at $7.50 Sale $2.98THE NARROW PASS, Kierke¬gaard’s Concept of Man, by GeorgePrice. Pub. at $5.50 Sale $1.98CURATIVE HYPNOSIS AND RE¬LAXATION, By Leslie O. Korth,D.O., M.R.O. Opens the path toclear-headedness and spiritualcourage, enabling everyone to copemore efficiently with life’s eternalproblems. Pub. at $2.00 Sale $1.00COOKING BETTER ALL THETIME, by Katie Stewart. Sixtymagnificent, full-page, FULL COL¬OR photographs illustrate thischallenging, all-encompassing cookbook! Indexed. Special Import $5.98M-26, The Biography of a Revolu¬tion, by Robert Taber. First accu¬rate report of the six year struggleof Fidel Castro to overcome the ov¬erwhelming might of Batista’s mili¬tary forces, his success and accept¬ance by the Cuban people.Pub. at $4.95 Sale $1.00 TOULOUSE-LAUTREC, By DenysSutton. 48 FULL COLOR PLATES.Complete with comprehensive notesand a biographical sketch of thefamed French painter who cap¬tured the nightlife of Paris withcynical insight.Special Import $2.98POSSESSION: Demoniacal andOther, by T. K. Oesterreich. A life¬time of labor assembled this finestcollection of case histories of multi¬ple personality and so-called pos¬session. Pub. at $10.00 Sale $4.98STORIED CITIES OF JAPAN. ByKazuo Nishida. The Colorful pastand present of 8 unforgettable cit-ies-history, legends, romances, andanedotes fully revealing the “per¬sonalities” of Tokyo, Yokohama,Kamakure, Kyoto, Nara, Osaka,Kobe, and the passing pageant ofNagasaki. 91 photographs.Pub. at $3.50 Sale $1.49PICASSO. By Keith Sutton. A mag¬nificent volume of 48 full color re¬productions of Picasso’s most rep¬resentative paintings, with an intro¬duction, biographical notes andcomments on the plates. 9V2”xll”.Special $2.98BETWEEN YOU AND ME: A Bio¬graphy of Spare Time. By Louis Ni-zer. By the author of My Life inCourt. Pub. at $3.95 Sale $1.00HUMOR FROM HARPER’S. Ed.by John Fischer & Lucy Donaldson.Foreword by Ogden Nash. FromFather Day of Life With Fatherand the exuberant H*Y*M*A*NK*A*P*L*A*N, from Gypsy RoseLee’s redoubtable mother andGerald Durrell’s bibulous Fon ofBafut—an anthology of over 50masters of irreverant verse andwitty, wildly entertaining prose.Pub. at $5.50 Sale $2.98 CHINA, Lore, Legend and Lyrics,by R. de Rohan Barondes, M.D.,F.R. S.A. Ideal first introduction toChinese culture. 52 plates.Pub. at $4.75 Sale $1.98VOICES IN THE SNOW, by OlgaAndreyev Carlisle. Leonid Andre¬yev’s granddaughters describe hermeetings with Pasternak, Sholok¬hov, Ehrenburg, Evtushenko andyoung Soviet artists—a significantpersonal evaluation of creative lifein Russia today.Special Import $1.00SOCIOLOGY OF CRIME. Ed. byJoseph Roucek. An importantscientific symposium dealing withall the major aspects of crime,both local and international-topicssuch as Psychopathology of the So¬cial Deviate, The Immigrant andCrime, and The Penal System inthe Soviet Bloc. 551 pages.Pub. at $10.00 Sale $5.98Bulfinch: MYTHOLOGY. The com¬plete Age of Fable, Age of Chivalryand Legends of Charlemagne inone volume-all the traditional talesof adventure, romance and chilval-ry from the Trojan War to RobinHood, from classical through medi¬eval time. 679 pp. Indexed.Special Import $2.98AMERICAN EDUCATION: Fact,Fancies & Folklore, by RaymondP. Harris. Popular notions aboutwhat goes on in American class¬rooms exploded and the truth re¬vealed, and a protest made againstthe common tendency to makeschools scapegoats for many othersocial ills. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.00KING EDWARD THE SEVENTH,Philip Magnus. Many fine photo¬graphs. Pub. at $10.00 Sale $3.98Ilf and Petrov’s THE COMPLETEADVENTURES OF OSTAP BEND¬ER. A sparkling Russian master¬piece of wild humor. Consists oftwo superb novels, The 12 Chairsand The Golden Calf, in which thehero is a most lovable rogue, quitewilling to coexist with the Sovietsystem, but at the same timematching his wits against those ofthe Soviet bureaucrats. 390 pp.Pub. at $6.95 Sale $1.00GROUP PSYCHOANALYSIS, by B.Bohdan Wassell. Group therapy isexamined from the point of viewthat it is a “democratic” method ofanalysis. Pub. at $3.75 Sale $1.49FOLK ART OF MEXICO, By GerdDorner. 38 magnificent photo¬graphs IN FULL COLOR an tip¬ped in. Pub. at $4.95 Sale $2.98GENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENT FROM CELL TO SOCIETY: InWhich There is a Beginning, Mid¬dle and End, by C. E. Pickhardt.Compact rapier thrusts at the social foibles of 20th century Ameri¬ca—in 52 cartoons and 50 verses—invaluably, insidiously humorous,witty but never cynical, critical butwith affection.Pub. at $3.50 Sale $1.00REMBRANDT AND SPINOZA, byLeo Balet. The lives of two Dutchgiants, measured against the vi¬brant panorama of 17th centuryHolland. Pub. at $4.50 Sale 51.98ROBERT FROST AND JOHNBARTLETT: The Record of aFriendship, by Margaret BartlettAnderson. Pub. at $5.00 Sale $1.98Jean-Paul Sartre: ON HUMANFREEDOM. A crucial Existential¬ist work analyzing the limits of hu¬man action and the weight of human responsibility.Pub. at $4.75 Sale $1.00TENTACLES OF POWER—THESTORY OF JIMMY HOFFA. ByClark Mollenhoff. 14 photos.Pub. at $6.50 Sale $2.98DE SADE: SELECTED WRITINGS. Ed. and newly translated byLeonard de Saint-Yves. Selectionsfrom De Sade writings not readilyavailable previously.Pub. at $4.75 Sale $1.00CALDER’S CIRCUS-Portfolio of 16Previously Unpublished Drawings.16 magnificent pen and ink draw¬ings on heavy manila stock, ap¬prox. 12V2”x17”, in a handsomered and blue clothbound portfolio133/4”xl7V4”.Pub. at $25.00 Sale $9.98The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.