I Chicago Maroon WEEKENDEDITION75th Anniversary YearVol. 75-No. 47 The University of Chicago Friday, April 7, 1967Teach-In Is Planned forTonight at Ida Noyes HallA teach-in, sponsored bythree UC organizations will beheld tonight at 7:30 pm in theCloister Club of Ida NoyesHall to examine new developmentsin the Vietnam war.The teach-in will devote itself toconsidering the most effective andappropriate way of ending the war.It will not concentrate on the war’slegality or morality. Richard Flacks, assistant profes¬sor of sociology, will chair themeeting. Among the speakers willbe Mike Wood, a former NationalStudent Association official who re¬vealed the NSA link with the Cen¬tral Intelligence Agency; MaxwellPrimack, Professor of philosophyat Illinois Institute of Technology,who will discuss current anti-waractivity in Chicago; Ruth Adams,author of a recent book on Chinaand executive secretary of theBulletin of the Atomic Scientists; arepresentative of the Cornell stu¬dents who are trying to line up 500people willing to burn their draftcards in public; and several UCfaculty members.The sponsors of the teach-in areiWe Won’t Go, the Citizen’s Forum,and the Student Mobilization Com¬mittee. - 1 Anti-War Activity Here CrowsIn Preparation for MobilizationTwo weeks of intensive anti¬war activity here will culmi¬nate next weekend as hun¬dreds of UC students and fac¬ulty board buses and cars to par¬ticipate in the natonal mobiliza¬tion in New York on Saturday, 'April 15.This is part of a nation-wide ser- jies of protests which will end insimultaneous marches on the Eastand West coasts, expected by dem¬onstration organizers to be thelargest such protests in Americanhistory.Already hundreds of students andfaculty have made arrangements toparticipate in the march, and evenmore are expected before the dead¬line tomorrow. Information andtransportation arrangements canbe obtained in the Mandel Hall cor¬ ridor and at other places on cam¬pus or by contacting Jackie Gold¬berg at 288-5790. Bus fare is $27round trip for students, but subsi¬dies are available for those unableto afford this sum.ON CAMPUS, the Student Mobili¬zation Committee is planning activ¬ities for almost every day betweennow and next Friday’s noon depar¬ture. Tonight, Leonard Liggio ofBertrand Russel’s War Crimes Tri¬bunal will join other speakers in ateach-in at the Cloister Club at 8pm. This will be followed by a fundraising party at 5430 S. UniversityAve., to help subsidize transporta¬tion for the march. Admission willbe 50 cents.Saturday will see a noon marchand demonstration at the WitcoChemical Factory, 6200 W. 51st St.,a firm which produces naplam for war use. Students will meet at theNew Dorms parking lot at 11 am;all those with cars are requested tobring them.On Saturday night, an Interna¬tional Wiener dinner at 4850 S.Kimbark Ave. at 9 pm. will featuresixteen kinds of wieners as well asdrinks, rock and roll band, andgo-go girls. Reservations can bemade by calling MU 4-6524 or493-1868. Donation is $1,IN ADDITION to marches andparties there will also be severalmovies and lectures during theweek. On Sunday at 7:30 p.m, atthe Hillel Foundation, four films,two pro-war and two anti, will bepresented; the U.S. governmentfilms “Why Vietnam?’’ will be re¬peated at 7:30 pm on Monday in' the Judd Theater. There is no ad¬mission charge.Wednesday at 8 pm in EckhartSC Election Machinery A-OKRalph Bunche- s- , t-- i---Bad Weather ForcesBunche To CancelRalph Bunche was groundedin New York by severe weath-3r and did not appear atBreasted Hall last night.Bunche was to have spoken on,“Crises at the United Nations:Vietnam to Africa.”The speech, which was co-spons¬ored by Student Government andthe 75th Anniversary committee,has not yet been rescheduled. Thecoordinator of the SG speakersprogram has announced that ad¬missions refunds will be availableat the SG office. Hall, several veterans includinga marine recently back from Viet¬nam will discuss the war; the fol¬lowing afternoon at 4 in Mandelby Jeffrey Kuta the committee and resolutions SG President Tom Heagy called Hall, Dr. Roseberry, an expert onr^nHiflatPe nnlitiekinp drawn up, students will be asked to this year’s elections “considerably biological and chemical warfare.,Y ° vote on the following: more contested than last year’s will share the stage with Card!and issues are shaping up on! # That the University shall and one of the hottest contests in Brightman, editor of Viet Report,the eve of this year’s Student not compile a rank or any other recent years.” He said he was de- who has just returned from NorthPmiornmpnt (Qfii elections to statistical statement relating the lighted to see a two-party system Vietnam.UOvernmeni too;_ ‘ ’ grades of individual students to the again, noting that last year was the The main event, of course, willbe held Thursday and Friday ot Ttnivpreitv stu. first instance in which a student be the march itself. A long line ofparty (GNOSIS) ran its slate unop- buses will depart from 59th St. be-posed by another major party. tween Woodiawn and DorchesterTHE MAROON will print in its Aves. at 12 noon next Friday.Tuesday edition a list of endorse- j Students interested in joining thements for the NSA delegates and march are being urged to sign upthe SG assembly. Candidates seek- immediately, while transportationing endorsements should sign up is still available. For all personsfor evaluation appointments with interested in working on theeditors outside the Maroon office march—such as making posterson the third floor of Ida Noyes and organizing faculty support—Hall. there will be a meeting on Sunday,(Continued on Page Four) at 2 pm, at 5430 S. University Ave.,grades of other University stu-next week. dents.Eighty candidates are involved in j . That the constitutional require-a contest for fifty seats in the SG ment that SG be affiliated with theassembly. Of these, 38 are affiliat- National Student Association (NSA)ed with the Student Political Action be dropped and that SG sever itsCommittee (SPAC), and 22 with the ,tjes NSA.incumbent GNOSIS party. Twenty j » That in SG elections, the num-others are running with minor par- ber Qf candidates from each elec-ties or as independents. toral division of the University beThe deadline tor submission of made proportional to the number ofcandidacy petitions was 12 noon on actual voters rather than the num-Tuesday. No students submitted pe- her of constituents in the divisiontitions in the Graduate LibrarySchool or the School of Medicine.In the Divinity School and theGraduate School of Education thenumber of candidates is the sameas the number of available seats. • That first year representatives jin the SG assembly be made votingmembers.Jerry Lipsch, a member of theexecutive committee of SAR whichoriginated the ranking petition,!IN ADDITION, four resolutions spoke of the rationale behind itsmay appear on the ballot next proposed referendum,week. These are currently in the “Votine for theform of petitions circulating aroundcampus and must be submitted tothe SG Elections and Rules Com¬mittee by noon on Monday in orderto be considered for the ballot. referendum But Conversion Would Be CostlyGirls May Get Pierceby John MoscowPlans are being considered for the further conversion ofWitco Company Will Be Target ofUC Anti-Napalm March on Saturday Voting for thewould give College students a men’s dormitories to coed dormitories.use”of ‘academic taformatton’ for Director of Student Housing Edward Turkington an-the purposes of the Selective Serv- nounced that one house in Pierce Tower be con-w luu;jmiiVU v„,^ ice, and also their desire to move j verted to an undergraduate worn-’IfCthe**petUions"are "accepted by awa-v from abstract mathematical en’s dorm. The decision on which at Woodward and Pierce, and upon1 representations of their intellectual house would depend upon the num-1 the report of the committee of thecreativity and productivity.” her of returning students from each Council of Women’s House Presi-Students Should Decide | of the four Pierce houses. j dents, which condemned Pierce.According to Ed Birnbaum, for- TURKINGTON said that conver- the Inter-House Council votedmer NS \ coordinator and a mem-< sion would be extremely costly, ‘Wednesday against the proposal,be! of SP AC which has and that the funds are not yet One of the polls showed that whilebacked the NSA petition, “Given available. Even if they are ob-! 36 women favored the idea of aNSA tained the plan may not go into women s house at Pierce, 32 op-Final nlans for a demnnstra- rnen to protect the group at the that the money which goes to NSA lamed the plan may not go into ^ ^r Inal plans for a aemonstra Kfcity Mli« will guard could be going fo other student an- e««t, as it has already run into posed ,t. Only nme out of 64 responion against the WltCO Com- [Search from the park to the tivities and that many questions opposition from studeru groups. dents would have wanted to live irhave recently been raised aboutNSA, SG shouldn’t send anothertion against the Witco Comparty, manufacturers of chem¬icals used in making napalm,were completed Wednesday even¬ing at a meeting of the ChicagoStudent Mobilization Committee, atthe West Side Christian Parish.The march will leave at noonfrom Vittum Park, 5000 South and5000 West, and proceed on ArcherAvenue to the site of the WitcoPlant. Sheriff’s police have agreedto close the street in front of thefactory to traffic in order to allowa street meeting. A car pool willleave Ida Noyes for the march at11 am Saturday.COOK COUNTY Sheriff Woodshas assigned thirty to forty of his factory.Speakers at the napalm rally willinclude Leonard Liggio, a repre- delegation to the congress unlesssentative of the Bertrand Russell students clearly indicate on the bal-War Crimes Tribunal; Greg Cal- lot that they are eager to do so.”vert, national secretary of Students | A referendum on this questionfor a Democratic Society (SDS); a , would, if passed by voters, elimi-wounded Negro ex-Marine, just re-: nate the possibility of a reaffili-turned from action in Vietnam; ation with NSA until after the asso-and a medical speaker who will de-1 ciation’s annual congress this sum-scribe the medical and psychologi-1 mer.cal effects of napalm. There will | Alan Bloom, a candidate for thealso be anti-war poetry, contempo-; NSA delegation, suggested that therary jazz, and folk singing. University should attempt to re-The purpose of the demonstration | form NSA “rather than pull outis to focus public attention on the now that a little trouble hasarsenal of weapons used by the ! arisen,” calling it “the only majorUnited States in South Vietnam, student group that speaks out in(Continued on Page Three) ' behalf of academic freedom.” ucuis wuuiu nave warneu to uve inActing on the basis of polls taken Pierce their first year, while onlythree of 66 would be willing toAll candidates for SGseats who wish to be con¬sidered for Maroon en¬dorsements should sign upfor interviews on the sched¬ule posted outside the Ma¬roon office, third floor IdaNoyes. Interviews will beheld 3-5 this afternoon, 1-3tomorrow, and 3-5 Sunday.ALL candidates, whether ornot affiliated with a party,are strongly urged to showup. move to Pierce. The IHC could seelittle use in having another fresh¬man dorm, even in a boy’s dorm. Apoll taken at Pierce showed thatvery few additional boys would re¬turn if there were girls in the dormover the number who planned toreturn in any case.Unfit To Live InThe committee of the Women’sCouncil was shown around bothPierce Tower and Burton-JudsonCourts on Tuesday, and they werevery much struck by the contrast.They condemned Pierce as “unfitfor girls to live in,” according t<?(Continued on Page Four)Lecture Series PlannedOn VariousA series of five lecturesaimed at initiating “a new dis¬cussion for our times on thenature of man, his place in theuniverse, and his biological, intel¬lectual, and social potentialities”has been announced for this quar¬ter’s Monday Lecture series.The lecturers chosen to deliverthis years lectures are Richard P.McKeon, Theodosius Dobzhansky,Dr. Lawrence S. Kubie, SherwoodL. Washburn, and Robert Gomer.They come from the fields of philo¬sophy, genetics, psychiatry, anthro¬pology, and chemistry.THE LECTURES are held at 8:00in the Law School Auditorium. Forthe general public the cost for theseries of lectures is $10. Studentsand faculty may obtain free ticketsfrom the University Extension Of¬fice, Room 121, Center for Contin-ing Education and at the centralinformation desk of the administra¬tion building.On April 17 Richard McKeon,Charles F. Grey DistinguishedService professor of philosophy andclassical languages and literaturesat UC will deliver the first lectureJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060 Disciplineson "Man and Mankind in the De-, velopment of Culture and the Hu-, inanities.”Two weeks later on May 1, Theo¬dosius Dobzhansky, professor ofzoology at Rockefeller University,will discuss ‘‘Darwin versus Coper¬nicus." The next lecture on May 8will be delivered by Lawrence S.Kubie, a psychiatrist, on ‘‘The Con¬cept of Change in Human Psycholo¬gy.” , ,j THE MAY 15 lecture will be de¬livered by Sherwood L. Washburn,professor of anthropology at Berke¬ley, on ‘‘Evolutionary Thoughts onHuman Nature.” Robert Gomer, aprofessor here in the Departmentof Chemistry, will deliver the lastS lecture May 22 on ‘‘The Tyranny ofProgress.”Speech Set onFuture EducationFrancis S. Chase, a professor ofeducation here, will speak on "Al¬ternatives for the Schools, 1991”this Monday, at 8 pm in the Lawschool auditorium.It is the last in a series of 10lectures designed to show whatteaching and learning may be likein 25 years. The series is sponsoredby the Graduate School of Educa¬tion of the University.The lectures are part of UC’s75th Anniversary observance andare open to the public without tick¬et and without charge.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOROCKEFELLERMEMORIAL CHAPEL59th Street and Woodlawn Ave.Sunday Afternoon at 3:30APRIL 23G. F. Handel'sSolomonFIRST CHICAGO PERFORMANCERICHARD VIKSTROM, Director of MusicRockefeller Chapel Choirmembers of theChicago Symphony OrchestraEdward Mondello, HarpsichordHenri Noel as SolomonNeva Pilgrim as the Queen of ShebaWalter Carringer as ZadokAnne Reisig as Pharoah's DaughterElsa Charlston and Karen Tillotson as Women of JudahTickets:Reserved $4.50 Gen. Adm. $3.50UC Faculty/ Staff $3.00All college and university students $2.50On Sale at:Ticket Central. Lowe's, 212 N. Michigan and all Ward Stores,U. of C. Bookstore, 5802 S. Ellis Avenue, Woodworth's Bookstore,1311 E. 57th Street, Cooley's Candles, 5210 Harper ct. Vietnam Report: No. 4Schools Trouble Vietnameseby Howard MoffettSAIGON (CPS)—“We haveno national education,” ayoung high school teacher saidhere recently. He was botheredby a problem that will plague theSouth Vietnamese government foryears to come, in war and inpeace.Simply stated, the national cur¬riculum for public high schools,drawn up by the Ministry of Educa¬tion in Saigon and used in each ofthe country’s public schools, isFrench. The program is French,the administrative techniques areFrench, most of the textbooks areFrench, many of the teachers areFrench-trained, and by the timethey graduate the brightest stu¬dents have learned to think inFrench.By its own admission, one of thegovernment’s most pressing needsis the development of a sense ofnationhood among South Viet¬nam’s dozens of ethnic, religious,cultural and regional groups. Yetits most obvious potential tool-public education—systematicallyteaches young Vietnamese thatWestern values and institutions aresuperior to their own national heri¬tage.THE QUOC HOC, of NationalHigh School, fronts on the southbank of the River of Perfumes inHue, across Le Loi Boulevard froma long green garden mall. . . Be¬yond the main gate of modifiedChinese design is a quadrangle oftwo-story buildings in French colo¬nial pink. Clumps of bamboo andother exotic shrubs dot thegrounds.There are 1800 boys at the QuocHoc. The earnest young vice princi¬pal, Hong Giu Luu, explains that1900 were enrolled at the beginningof the year. "But many have beendrafted. Some have to work to sup¬port their families. Some cannotcome into Hue from theirvillages—they are controlled by theViet Cong.”Students are classified into threelower and three upper forms,which correspond roughly to Amer¬ican junior and senior high school.Upper form students are asked tochoose between three major pro¬grams: mathematics, the experi¬mental sciences, or letters. 65 percent choose math, 23 per cent optfor the sciences, and letters getsthe remaining 12 per cent.There appear to be several rea¬sons for this imbalance. In pastyears math was the most challeng¬ing program, since engineering andrelated fields were the most presti¬gious professional careers open toa Vietnamese under the French.Secondly, by common consent theletters program, expecially theall-important final examination orbaccalaureate, is much more tax¬ ing; the sciences require too muchmemorization; math by compari¬son is the gut course, though Mr.Luu estimated that only 20 per centof the students can follow it easily.Too Much Rote Learning(One young teacher complainsthat all three programs suffer froma heavy emphasis on rote learningrather than independent thinking.He cites this as a major reason forthe atrophied character of manyVietnamese institutions, from gov¬ernment bureaucracies and Constit¬uent Assemblies to daily newspa¬pers.)But no matter which major a stu¬dent chooses, he must study 11 sub¬jects at once; this is true of everypublic high school in South Viet¬nam. The scattershot national cur- jriculum requires that each year anupper form student must be ex-!posed to: Vietnamese, English,French, history, geography, mathe-Jmatics, physics, chemistry, naturalsciences (meaning biology), civics,and physical education.Even the Quoc Hoc has a criticalshortage of decent texts. There areno standard schoolbooks. Eachteacher suggests his own prefer¬ences and the students must thenbuy them themselves. The ex¬penses run an average of eight to;ten dollars yearly, a sum manycannot afford.VIETNAMESE TEXTBOOKS began to appear in numbers in thepublic schools only in 1957-58, and.the upper forms still rely heavilyon French and English books. Alarge percentage of the few Viet¬namese textbooks are merelytranslations from the French. Eng-ilish students use an abominable ’series of paperbacks called “Eng-1lish for Today,” which sell for 45piastres or about 30 cents apiece.But the curriculum shows evenmore clearly that Vietnamese high,school students are getting a for¬eign education. One might expectthat the math and science pro¬grams would have little bias, eitherforeign or patriotic. Yet most ofthe texts are either French or!translations from the French: themath is French math; the chcmis-;try comes out of French laborator-!ies; and the physics text often re-1fer to technical problems thatwould challenge a French boy butleave a Vietnamese boy cold.In letters, where the times de¬mand a nationalist bias, foreign in- jfluence is even more pronounced.(Indeed, though no one interviewedwould admit it, this may be an im¬portant reason why only a fractionmajor in letters.)An Hour of CivicsCivics too requires only an houror two of listening per week. In fiveyears, a Quoc Hoc student is ex¬posed to: (1) family relationships;ancestor worship and filial piety;and traffic regulations. (2) schoolrelationships; duty to teachers, dis¬ cipline, dress etiquette; and moretraffic regulations. i3) social rela¬tionship; language, customs andreligious institutions. (4) the Rightsof Man (from the United NationsCharter, 1948); political theories ofdemocracy, socialism, and commu¬nism; and national institutions—theconstitution, the draft, electionstaxes, etc. (5) economics (freetrade, currency, etc.) and politicalscience.Political science covers ‘theEastern democratic spirit” (Confu¬cius, Mencius, Sun Yat-sen andVietnamese village councils), ‘‘theWestern democratic spirit” (Brit¬ain’s constitutional monarchy, theAmerican revolution and the republican-federal system, and the Thirdand Fourth French Republics—hutnot the Fifth), and Dictatorship(Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, andCommunism in Russia and EasternEurope—but not in China or NorthVietnam).From what I could tell, there isabsolutely no effort to stimulatethought or discussion on Viet¬nam’s present political problems,or its future as a nation. (In fair¬ness, teachers can hardly beblamed for this situation. Teachingrelevant politics is probably a goodway to land in jail.)MUSTANGS - TEMPESTS - FORDS - PONTIACSRENT-A-CARBYVolkswagens $4.50 for 12 Hrs.Plus 6< per Ml.Includes Gas and InsuranceRen* A Volkswagen 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 THE PHILOSOPHY ledger isalso instructive. Philosophy re¬places Vietnamese as a requiredcourse in the final year of highschool. For math majors it consistsof logic (the scientific method, in¬ductive and deductive reasoning)and ethics, which appears to be akaleidoscope of all ethical systemsthat could possibly be relevant. Sci¬ence majors add an extra hour in“psychology,” which appears to bea hodge-podge of observations onpersonal and social behavior.Letters majors get the cream ofthe philosophical crop. “General phi¬losophy” introduces them to episte¬mology and metaphysics, Europeanstyle. A section on Eastern philoso¬phy is devoted to Confusius, LaoTzu, and primitve Buddhism. (Thissub-section of a minor course,which only 12 per cent of the stu¬dents take, is probably that part ofQuoc Hoc education which is mostrelevant to the daily lives of theVietnamese. UYitil the Frenchcame, of course, it would havebeen virtually the whole curricu¬lum.)Finally, there is a section whichin American high schools would becalled Great Books. Here studentsread selections from Plato, Aristo¬tle, Marcus Aurelius, seven Frenchauthors (eount them)—Descartes,Pascal, Rousseau, Bernard (a med¬ical theorist), Henri Bergson,Mounier, Gabriel Marcel—the FourChinese Classics, and a Buddhistscripture on the dharma.The desire to go to America forcollege raises the next specter overVietnamese “national” education.Hundreds of South Vietnam’s beststudents are going to the U S.every year on American government scholarships. Many of thosewho return will want to incorporateAmerican ideas into the curricu¬lum. Already a number of profes¬sors in the country’s five universi¬ties want to change the language ofinstruction—not from French toVietnamese, but from French toEnglish.But for the moment, Americaninfluence in seeoBdary education isonly beginning to be felt. The domi¬nant strain is still French, and itprobably will be for years to come.As Nguyen Due Mai, an outspokenscience teacher at Quoc Hoc, says:“Not only do we have a Frencheducational system, but it’s -0years old. If was copied from heFrench in 1947, and hasn’t beenchanged since it was institutedstill must expflain to my studentsthat Lavoisier is not the last wordin chemistry.”2 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 7, 1967uc ivivy^Columbia Decides To End All RankingColumbia University hasended the rank—all rank.The trustees decided lastMonday that class standings,» which have until now been sent todraft boards and graduate schools,will no longer be compiled.The trustees were requested bythe University Council, an advisoryfaculty-administration group, to withhold the rankings of undergraduate students from local draftboards. In a rare move of policyinitiation the trustees expanded theproposal by ending all rank.The rank controversy at Colum¬bia was initiated by the StrikeCoordinating Committee (SCC), a“broad-based student group,’' ac-cording to an administrationspokesman. Opposition to the warStudents Ready for Witco Demonstration(Continued from Page One)Witco manufacturers polystyrene, achemical which is added to napalmto make it stick to human skin.THE CHICAGO Student Mobiliza¬tion Committee says that it ismarching to Witco “to protest thecompany’s involvement with thebart>aric weapon and to protestU.S. participation in a barbaricwar which makes use of suchweapons.” Daniel Greenberg, oneof the leaders of the march, saysthat the demonstration is using theissue of napalm as “an emotionalappeal to people not involved in theanti-war effort before.”An application for a parade per¬mit was denied the march by indi¬viduals whom Greenberg terms‘ Mayor Daley’s political hacks.”The demonstrators will have tomarch on the sidewalk and not onthe street.GREENBERG REPORTS that the parade permit was denied onthe grounds that “it is totalitarianto impose on the residents of theneighborhood exposure to views towhich they may not agree.” Green¬berg says that he was told that thecity is “fed up to here with minori¬ties.”Sheriff Woods, according toGreenberg, also tried to stop themarch by claiming that he wouldnegotiate with Witco to get them togive in to the protest’s demands.He demanded a list of names of allthe people who were going tomarch, but was denied a list be¬cause one doesn’t exist. If themarch created a danger, SheriffWoods said that he would deputizethe leaders of the march whowould then have to obey his com¬mands.Greenberg said that the march isan effort to get off the campus andinto the neighborhoods to show op¬position to the war.When you can’t afford to be dullsharpen your witswith NoDozNoDoz keep alert tablets or new chewabfe mints,safe as coffee, help bring youback to your mental best... helpyou become more alert to thepeople and conditions aroundyou. Non-habit forming.While studying, or after hours,sharpen your wits with NoDoz*Tablets or new Chewablo Mint» in Vietnam, the draft, and studentdeferments were some reasons giv¬en by SCC for refusing to sendranks to draft boards. Nizer in Support ofWarren CommissionTHE DESIRE to avoid such polit¬ical implications prompted thetrustees’ surprise move. The trust¬ees said they were “convinced thatthe adoption of the policy advisedby the University Council might beregarded by many persons as anintrusion by the University, as acorporate body, into the politicalarena—an intrusion which thetrustees regard as unwise andwhich they have assiduously soughtto avoid.” by Roger BlackAttorney Louis Nizer, speaking with a large group of lawstudents here Wednesday, again declared his support of theWarren Commission report. “I think it was the most thoroughinvestigation in the history of crime.” he said.The New York lawyer and author IOne ComplaintThe students still have one majorcomplaint. The decision was madewithout any direct student voice. Infact, as an editorial in the Colum¬bia Spectator, the student newspa¬per, put it, “The University and themembers of the Council havesteadfastly refused to acknowledgethat student opinion in any way in¬fluenced the outcome of the deci¬sion.’A recent referendum showed thatstudents at Columbia oppose send¬ing ranks to draft boards by a mar¬gin of 2V2 to 1, according to theSpectator’s managing editor, DavidHeim. SCC, aware of this backing,had threatened a boycott of classesif its demand was not met.THE PROTEST GROUP was not,a “leftist group,” according toHeim, and it refused to ally itselfwith Students for a Democratic So¬ciety.Will the end of ranking hurt thechances of Columbia students whoapply to graduate school? Thetrustees asserted that “no hardshipwould be imposed upon any individ¬ual students.” According to Heim,“the consensus here is that classranks really don’t mean a damnthing.” of two bestselling books, My Life in come ouj the vvrong end—helpingCourt and The Jury Returns, was enemies and hurting friends.”in Chicago to talk briefly with | Nizer discussed some techniquesmembers of the Law Student Asso- for seiecting juries, part of what henation at the Law School on his caned the “techniques of persua-way to California. j sion.” Some lawyers, he said, tryAnswering questions rather than to ingratiate themselves with theirpresenting a formal speech, Nizer j juries by asking members simply ifcalled the scientific evidence “ov- j they felt they were prejudiced, anderwhelming.” “There is always a | if they said they weren’t, to passdifference of opinion,” Nizer id. them. Nizer said this approach“Our system of law, as you wellj throws away an “invaluable oppor-know, is based on the preponder- tunity to choose the judges of theance of evidence, not the unanimi¬ty.”Nizer is currently writing ,a bookin reply to critics of the Commis¬sion’s report.ASKED ABOUT current criticism fact.”“A jury’s love must be wooed,”Nizer went on. He called asking aprospective jury-member if hethought he was prejudiced in anyway “a worthless question.” In-of the effectiveness of the jury sys- stead, Nizer said, the lawyertern, Nizer said, “I believe thoroughly in the jury system. I thinkit’s a microcosm of the democratic should apologize for the possible in¬trusion and explain that we allhave unconscious “leanings” onesystem.” He said he thought there way or another,was a scientific principle backing1 “Never take a man with a beardmass judgement—that is, the larg-; or a bow tie,” he said. Anyone whoer the group of people making looks as though he might be able tojudgements, the smaller the inci-' sway the other eleven should bedence of error. | avoided. The juror to look for isNizer said that he would prefer one who is interested in what youbeing ruled by a mass of regular are doing. “If his eyes follow you,”people than “the ten best profes- Nizer said, “take him.”sors you could collect from all over One law student asked Nizerthe world” (a statement reminis-; what he thought about Lawyer F.cent of William Buckley Jr.’s dec- Lee Bailey starting a talk show onlaration that he would rather be television. Nizer indicated that hegoverned by the first five hundred did not entirely approve. “It is apeople out of the Boston telephone matter of private judgement andbook than the Harvard faculty). I personal taste.” “On the other“State departments and foreign hand, there is no reason,” he said,offices,” Nizer said, “get so in- > “that every old standard of the barvolved in their thinking that they association should be applied.”SDS Will Demand Lemisch Retentionby Michael KraussStudents for a DemocraticSociety (SDS) voted Mondaynight to take action in defenseof Jesse Lemisch, assistant pro¬fessor of history, whose contracthas not been renewed.William McNeill, chairman of thehistory department, offered no spe¬ cific reason for the Lemisch deci¬sion, and SDS contends that thereasons were political. Lemisch of¬fered strong support to student•demonstrators during last spring’ssit-in against the rank. SDScharged that his views and activi¬ties have won him enemies on thefaculty.Steve Kindred, fourth-year stu¬dent in the College and member of SDS, pointed out the difficulty oflearning precisely what the factsare. Faculty members, he said, areunwilling to discuss the issue be¬cause they consider it a “breach ofpropriety.” Thus the informationavailable is speculative.ASAMATTEROP... ftStllft fniuranc# ft • tuft wHfto financial Independence (of yogand four family.Aa a local Sun Ufa representative, mayI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 — 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Monday*,others by appt.#UM LIFE ASSURANtf COMPANA MUTUAL COMPANY LEMISCH WAS HIRED threeyears ago by the University with aresearch grant to do work in hisarea of major interest—the seamenduring the American Revolution.According to normal procedure anew teacher is given a three-yearcontract which can be renewed. Atthe end of six years a decision ismade on whether to offer him ten¬ure and thus insure his permanentretention, if he so desires. Manyobservers call the denial to Lem¬isch of a second three-year con¬tract during which to prove himselfa serious departure from policy. Hewill be retained, however, for a sin¬gle additional year as a courtesy toenable him to find another job.DECISIONS ON HIRING and fir¬ing are made by a vote of themembers of the department facultywho have tenure. Kindred assertedthat although Lemisch teachestwo-thirds of his courses in the Col¬lege, apparently the College historygroup played no part in the deci¬sion. He added, however, that SDSdoes, in fact, know nothing of whatmeetings were held and what voteswere taken.Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Item* Prom ThoOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, 111.MU 4-6856 4 hours of LAUREL AND HARDYStarts at 7:30. You can come anytime, but you won't want to leave till it's over, ileven L & H shorts, silent and sound. At Doc Films Saturday night. In capaciousMandel Hall, 57th and University. All for a reasonably reasonable 75 cents.April 7, 1967 CHICAGO MAROON—women uive riercmg ^rincibm ot iWm,1B-J Also Ruled Out for Security Reasons US! or uariaidaies m str tiectionsField Tredray (G), Tim Naylor (S).• Pierce (2)—Ken Lipman (S),Sanford Rockowilz (I), Rob Skeist(S).• Snell-Hitchcock (1) MartinCornelius (G), Terry Fox (S).Woodward (3)—Alan Bloom (iyJanet Klotman (S), Marlene Prov-iser (S), Barbara Snow (S).• Fraternities (1)—Ted Peter so if?(I), Larry Silver (I).• Other College (7)—Jeff Blum(S), Ed Birnbaum (S), Tom Heagy(G), Sara Heller (G), Mitchell Hof.stein (I), Ted Krontiris (S), JerryLipsch (S), Jim McDaniel (G), Da¬vid Rosenberg (S), Leo Schlosberg(S), Marc Seidler (I), KennethShelton (G), Charlie Smith (GW) iJonathan Still (G), Heather Tobis(S).Ballot box locations at MandelHall, the Bookstore, and the Social*Sciences building have been tenta¬tively agreed on. Evening voting:will probably take place at Wood1?ward Commons, Burton-JudsonCourts, and Pierce Tower. A II• Social Sciences (9)—Ron Bey¬ers (S), Warren Coats (G), Bill Cull(G), Stuart Doneson (S), DanFriedlander (S), Joel Goldstein(G), Bernie Grofman (G), Christo¬pher Hobson (S), David Levy (G),Howie Machtinger (S), Paula Mei-netz (G), Jim Powell (G), RobertRoss (S), Eric Shtob (S), Joel Shuf-ro (S), Steve Tallackson (S).• Business (3)—Joe Cobb (G),Steve Livernash (BS), WilliamPoppei (BS), Donald W. Sommer-field (BS), Mike Yesner (I).• Divinity (2)—Carl Bangs (S),John Garner (S).• Education (1)—Diane Balser(S).• Law (3)—William Briggs (Sch),Danny J. Boggs (St), Peter Born-stein (Sch), Steve Curley (Sch),Roger Price (St), Judy Solow (St).• Library (1)—no candidates.• Medicine (2)—no candidates.• SSA (2)—Dennis O’Brien (I),Kathleen O’Connor (I).• Burton - Judson (1) — RobertContinued from Page One)Following is a list of candidatesin next week’s SG election includ¬ing the numbers of seats contested.Key: NSA—NSA Reform Party,G—GNOSIS, S—SPAC, I—Indepen¬dent, GW—George Williams Party,BS—Business School Party, Sch—Law School Party, St—Law SchoolParty.• NSA (10)—David L. Aiken (1),Alan Bloom (I), Danny Boggs(NSA), Bernie Grofman (NSA),John Gwinn (NSA), Tom Heagy(NSA), Mitch Hofstein (I), JerryHyman (NSA), Guy Mahaffey (I),Mee D. Radinsky (GW), David Ro¬senberg (NSA), Marc Seidler (I),Kenneth R. Shelton (NSA), Jona-(Continued from Page One)Nette Kripke of Upper Flint. Therooms and closets are too small,the number of washing machinesinadequate, and other facilities aregenerally poor.The committee was as favorablyimpressed with B-J as it was unfa¬vorably impressed by Pierce. Thewomen desired to occupy at leastone large house in B-J or severalsmaller ones, but this is not likelyto occur. Turkington said it wasruled out because of security prob¬lems. (The dorm is at 60th and El¬lis, in North Woodlawn.) Accordingto Turkington there was almost nochance that B-J would be openednext year as it has not been seri-OVER 2000 VOLS.SALE TABLES RE STOCKED DAILYLIBRARYDUPLICATES AND DISCARDSto be sold byTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FILLED CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent and Faculty DitcountpAUTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingAPRIL 10-15, 1967 8 A.M. - 5 P(Sat. until 12:30)BOOKS TWENTY FIVE CENTS AND UPTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue MRVtNO MVM PARK POR OVttMTRWITH THI VKRY BIST AMD FRDIWFISH AND SEAFOODPL 2-2870, PL 2-8190, DO 1-9186Everyone 18 years of age andover is invited to a hugeMIXERSaturday, April 8from 8:30 p.m. until 1:00 a m.on the entire nineteenth floorof theLaSalle Hotelcorner of Madison andLaSalle Streets. got to be smarter than LAUREL AND HARDYAnd that's why we'll see you tomorrow night at Doc Films' showing of 4 (co unt'em-4) hours of Laurel and Hardy shorts (11-count'em-l 1), silent and sound.Begins at 7:30, but you can come in anytime. In Mandel Hall, 57th and University, for a paltry 75 cents.RENT A TRUCK EYE EXAMINATIONFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSES You won't hava to put yourmoving or storage problem PIERRE ANDREDIRECTFROM THE CHEETAH-MARIAANTOINETTEAND THE COOL HEADS Per Hour FACE FLATTERING CHICDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptomotriat53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StraatDO-IT-YOURSELFTRUCK RENTA I.SO 8-9800v 8150 Stony IslandSundays $3.00 per hour Seventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVDDO 3-0727PCTCRSOH MOVINGAND STORAGE CO.plus another great bandCasual Dress(e.g., slacks, sweaters,sport shirts, etc.) Student and Faculty Discount 10% STUDENT DISCOUNTMONDAY LECTURESLAW SCHOOL AUDITORIUM — 8 P.MStag preferredIF YOU ARE 21 OR OVER, MALE OR FEMALE,HAVE A DRIVER'S LICENSEto those 21 years of age andolder. If you need additionalinformation phone 726-3285April 17 RICHARD P. McKEON The University of Chicago"Man and Mankind in the Development of Culture andthe Humanities" DRIVE A YELLOWJust telephone CA 5-6692 orApply in person at 120 E. 18th St,EARN UP TO $25 DAILYMay 1 THEODOSIUS D0BEHANSEY Rockefeller Univ."Darwin versus CopernicusMay 8 LAWRENCE S. KUBIE N.Y. Psychoanalytic Institute"The Concept of Change in Human Psychology"May 15 SHERWOOD L. WASHBURN Univ. of California"Evolutionary Thoughts on Human Nature"May 22 ROBERT G0MER The University of Chicago"The Tyranny of Progress" DRIVE A YELLOWShort or full shift adjusted toyour school schedule.DAY, NIGHT or WEEKENDSAdmission: Tickets for U. of C. faculty and students availablewithout charge at the Center for Continuing Education, Room 121,and at the Central Information Desk, Adm. Bldg. For information,call Extension 3137. Work from garage near home or school.Mil LI ri If •J! —« . f. —Follower of ChandiWill Lecture TonightCan Gandhi’s nonviolent methodswork in world politics?Devi Prasad, general secretaryof the War Resisters InternationalancI a leader of India’s Gandhianmovement, will offer his answer tothat question tonight at 8 pm inBreasted Hall.PRASAD, an artist-educator-author. has worked in the Sarvo-dava movement, which appliesGandhian principles of nonviolenceand decentralization to major as¬pects of Indian socio-economiclife, lie has walked with VinobaBhave on several of his famousland gift (Bhoodan) pilgrimages.Memorial Set forJewish VictimsChicago area Jews will holdthe 24th commemoration of theWarsaw Ghetto uprising andthe annhilation of six millionJews this Sunday at 1:30 pm in theInternational Ballroom of the Con¬rad Hdton Hotel, 720 South Michi¬gan Avenue.Speakers for the meeting will in¬clude Rabbi Abraham L. Feinbergfrom Toronto Canada, recently re¬turned from North Vietnam wherehe spoke with North Vietnameseleaders, Sidor Belarsky, a wellknown basso, and Baruch Lumet,an actor currently playing the partof the Rabbi in “Fiddler on theRoof.” From his London post with theWar Resisters International, Pra¬sad has worked for increased com¬munication between East Europeanand Western peace movements,helping to organize the 1966 War¬saw “World Without War” confer¬ence. Physically That IsUC Bookstore in Very Good ShapeThe UC Bookstore is not no plans in the budget for one. The for the entire campus area, saidPrasad will also take part in anall-day retreat of meditation anddiscussion from 10:30 am to 4:30’pm, Saturday, April 8th, at Quak¬er House, 5615 S. Woodlawn. Those,1interested in participating may call;Moe Shanfield at Ha 7-2533.THE SPEECH and the retreat'are co-sponsored by the Chicago5Fellowship of Reconciliation and*the Chicago Workshop in Nonvio¬lence. falling down, according to Eu¬gene L. Miller, head of campusoperations. For the benefit ofstudents who were not overly sur¬prised by this assertion, Millerwent on to explain that “Construc¬tion to the rear of the store createdsome damage, but it is under con¬trol now. \“There is no (tanger of collapsenow, as sufficient precautions arebeing taken,” Miller continued.“There was some question that thebuilding might collapse as somesettling occurred which threatenedthe walls.” Presently the buildingis braced against settling with'heavy cables and beams.Mr. Miller voiced the hope that a.new bookstore would be started inthe near future, but said there were matter is not likely to be decided in that he was “preparing a reportthe near future, as the planners now; there are several sites for thedon’t know what they want from a store under consideration, but Ibookstore. can’t reveal them.”“We are setting up criteria to de- “I don’t know what the earliesttermine future sites," said Napthali possible date for the building of aKnox in the office of Planning and new bookstore would be. It takes aDevelopment. Knox, a member of few years to build a building, andthe Administrative Campus Facili- although we’ve started program-ties Planning Committee, which is ming for it, we haven’t pickedtrying to draw up a full-scale planeither the site or the architect.”There is a $1 donation, but therewill be no solicitation of funds.SAMUEL A. BELL"BUY SHELL FROM BELL'SINCE imPICKUP A DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 We’vebeen at it120 years'But it still takesover four monthsto brew Carlsberg—the mellow,flavorful beerof Copenhagen.Drink Carlsberg -the mellow, ffavorful beer of Copenhagen.|r»l« % tM ()•"«•«* * C«rt»*w« «*«•. KX E. *Ow *•»*■*•Scandinavian Imports proudly announcesa new addition to their staffiumWrsjune SlraJfoJThe well-known interior decorator from HydePark. An expert and teacher in her field. Mrs.Blum will be glad to advise you with yourdecorating problems.As well as being able to give you a fewhints on either furnishing an elegant home orsqueezing every bit of space out of a smallapartment, Mrs. Blum also tends the Coffee Potfor your shopping pleasure.She's quite a lady!Scandinavian Imports53rd and Lake Park NO 7-4040 Ml 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwa sell the best,and fix the restforeign car hospitalsecond annualscrew ballfriday at 8:30pierce tower The Righf Look, Rain or ShineIs Yours In the Poole Maincoat9tonoonroc*Impeccable tailoring and trim split-shoulder styling Inthe POOLE make it the perfect coat for any occasion-rain or shine. In LONDON FOG'S exclusive CalibreCloth*® an intimately woven, water-repellant blend of65% Dacron*® polyester and 35% cotton, the POOLE iscompletely WASH-AND-WEAR. Exclusive Third Barrier'®construction gives extra protection through the shoul¬ders and back. Available in a wide range of sizes—from36 short to 46 long—in British Tan, Dark Green, Navy,and Black.$37.50fel^Stety,Qfattm & (Eampuain the New Hyde Fork Shopping Confer1502-06 L 551b SI. Phone 752-1April 7, 1967 CHICAGO MAROON 8100ZM* -~y**The Viet ProtestSECRETARY OF STATE Dean Rusk’s most frequent replyto those who oppose United States policy in Vietnam is asuggestion that they talk to Hanoi. The United States, accord¬ing to Rusk, is willing to go anywhere, at any time that theother side indicates a willingness to talk.What Rusk fails to mention and what all too many Ameri-!cans fail to consider is the fact that American invitations to jtalk are not and cannot be accepted by the North Vietnamesefor at least a couple of important reasons.IN THE FIRST PLACE, the United States is committed toan interpretation of the war in Vietnam as aggression from theNorth. An invitation to North Vietnam to negotiate on a basisthat excludes the participation of the National LiberationFront as a principal is, in effect, inviting the North Vietnameseto accept the American view of the war.No matter how often administration officials hint that theNLF will have no trouble making their views known, the factstill remains that the exclusion of the NLF from negotiationson a level with the other principals has tremendous symbolicimportance. Just as negotiating solely with the NLF wouldimply American acceptance of the war in Vietnam as over¬whelmingly a civil war, so, by the same token, North Viet¬namese agreement to the exclusion of the NLF from talksrepresents tacit acceptance of the American position on theorigin and nature of the conflict.A SECOND FACTOR IN THE chances for a negotiated set¬tlement to the war is the continuous American bombing ofNorth Vietnam. There is little question that American bomb¬ing has hurt North Vietnam. The most powerful country inthe world should logically be able to hurt a small, primitiveand essentially defenseless country with attacks from the air.There is growing evidence, however, that it is the people ofNorth Vietnam, and not the country’s military effort, that aresuffering at the hands of American bombers. Infiltration fromthe North was not shown to be an important factor in SouthVietnam until after American planes began bombing NorthVietnam and American troops began streaming into SouthVietnam to actually take over the war from the South Viet¬namese. Today, however, North Vietnamese troops are cer¬tainly a factor in the war, and, according to those journalistswho have been able to get into North Vietnam, the bombinghas done little to halt the movement of North Vietnamesetroops.WHAT THE BOMBING has accomplished has been the dev¬astation of a country and the infliction of hardships on itspeople. North Vietnam’s reported willingness to negotiate ifAmerican bombing is halted may be directly traceable to thehardships bombing has imposed on the civilian population.It is a mistake, however, to think that North Vietnam iswilling to negotiate at any cost. As Harrison Salisbury andothers have pointed out, the North Vietnamese have beenfighting on and off since the Japanese invasion of Indochinaand they are ready to fight on idefinitely if they have to.They will not accept negotiations on terms that seem like sur¬render.That is what coming to the conference table with Americanbombers overhead would amount to. The North Vietnamesegovernment needs to be able to tell its civilian population thattheir suffering has not been in vain and that because of theirperseverance, the United States government has decided tostop bombing and enter into real negotiations with all theprincipals concerned.THERE IS EVIDENCE that the war can end if the UnitedStates is willing to accept something less than total victory inVietnam. Both the United States and North Vietnam have ex-jpressed a willingness to return to the provisions of the 1954Geneva Accords. But the war will never be negotiated to aclose as long as the United States insists on making negotia- jtions seem like surrender to the North Vietnamese. If we arewilling to negotiate with both the North Vietnamese and theNLF on a basis that defines the war as neither completely civilnor completely imperialistic, we may be able to end the conflictso that there is peace with honor for all concerned.That is why the Student Mobilization in New York, April 15is so important. It has been many months in planning and itmay be the biggest and broadest anti-war protest yet.There is a vast reservoir of anti-war sentiment in America.There is also a possibility for real peace if the United States iswilling to enter into negotiations in good faith. If enough peo¬ple, in enough places, can be mobilized enough times, theremay be hope for the ultimate end of the whole sorry episode inVietnam.WE URGE ALL THOSE who can possibly spare the time tomake the trip to New York and join the protest.CHICAGO MAROON • April 7, 1967 Michael SeidmanDisaster for SFA Court:The Road to ImpotenceThe Student-Faculty-Adminis-tration Court appears to be mov¬ing towards the climax of itscheckered career this week, butthe “justices” seem blissfully un¬aware of the dangerous groundon which they are treading.By accepting jurisdiction in thecase of Bennett V. Wick last Mon¬day, the Court began a chain ofevents which can lead only to aserious diminishing of its ownprestige and a set back for theprinciple of student involvementin the decision-making process.The case, involving a first yearstudent who claims that his gymrequirement is void under a pro¬vision of the Student Bill ofRights, may be interesting forthose fascinated by legal techni¬calities and enjoyable for thosewho like baiting the administra¬tion, but from a practical point ofview, it is trivial in the extremeand can accomplish nothing ei¬ther in the way of precedent orreal change.BENNETT CLAIMS that underthe Bill of Rights, he was entitledto a full statement of his contrac¬tual obligation—including the re¬quirement that he take gym-before he paid the first deposit onhis tuition, and that the Universi¬ty never provided him with sucha statement. It may well be thatthe plaintiff is justified in hisclaim, and that through an ad¬ministrative oversight, he indeedwas not informed of the Universi¬ty gym requirement. But the rele¬ vant point here is not whetherBennett is right or w-rong in hisassertions, but rather whether itis wise for the Court to considerhis case at all. There is nothingwhich says that the Court mustconsider every case brought be¬fore it, and as the late JusticeFrankfurter used to point out tohis brethren on a much morepowerful court, it is foolish anddangerous for a court to take oncases for which it has no power toenforce its decision.A Court’s power is a very ten¬uous affair, which unlike that ofan executive branch is dependentupon intangibles like good willand prestige rather than force.This fact is particularly importantin situations where the stature ofthe judiciary and the executiveare not e^ual—as they are in thenational government—but wherethe executive is clearly predomi¬nant.MOREOVER, IT IS particularlyfoolish for the Court to wastewhat little power it has on a caseas trivial as this one. Even if thecourt rules in Bennett’s favor andthe Administration allows the de¬cision to stand, the only resultwill be that the catalogue willhave to be slightly rewritten nextyear.But the really significant pointis that the chances of the decisionbeing allowed to stand are vir¬tually nil. In a case of severalyears ago that clearly sets theprecedent for this one, a girl sued the University to void her housingrequirement because she had no'tbeen informed of it before payingher deposit. The Court found inher favor, but the Dean of Stu¬dents denied that the Court hadjurisdiction over him and simplyignored the decision.There is nothing in the presentcase to indicate that its outcomewiM be different. The question ofwhether the Court has jurisdictionover the Dean of Students is inter¬esting from a legal point of view,but it is certain that the Courtwill never force the Dean to obeyits decisions simply by repeatedlyantagonizing him. What the Courtdoes accomplish by such shenani¬gans is to draw attention t0 itsown powerlessness and therebyweaken its effectiveness in future,presumably more important,cases.MOREOVER, STUDENT useof what little power they have ina way that can only be describedas frivolous and irresponsibleadds credence to the argumentthat a University under greaterstudent control would be broughtto a virtual standstill by suchtrivialities.If the court is to play any roleat all in protecting the fundamen¬tal rights of students, then it mustlearn in a hurry to realize thelimitations on its power and theseriousness of its task. Otherwise,it must inevitably follow the pathalready cleared by Student Gov¬ernment towards play-acting andimpotence.David H. RichterAn Omphaloskeptic ViewOr More Navel StudiesCritics have shown good sensein refusing to discuss War andPeace. Henry James sneered at itbeneath his well-bred smile; Per¬cy Lubbock boggled at it; with allthe proliferation of literary criti¬cism in this century, it has beenpaid scant attention. One can wellunderstand their turning away:any analysis, no matter how apt,no matter how complete, wouldseem inconsequential beside themasterpiece. And critics wouldrather be probably wrong , thanappear to be mites on the epider¬mis of an elephant. s• We got the worst of the bar¬gain when we substituted“charm” for urbanity as the su¬preme civilized virtue. Now pup¬pyism can enjoy an uninterruptedreign.• When you choose among lies,please choose the more attrac¬tive. The Provencal trouverse’dompnei (Woman - worship) wasneither more or less false to hum¬an nature than suburban court¬ship rituals— the latter is merelyuglier.• Capital punishment has beenoutdated, not only by modern pen¬ology, but by modern sensibilities,which no longer recognize the rit¬ual value of sacrificing the “nat¬ural” criminal to the '‘unnatural”society. Our tensions are now toopowerful to be released so easily.• Speaking of the law, we allhave been hearing about how dif¬ficult it is to empanel a jury inimportant capital cases. But hasanybody ever given thought towhat sort of juries we end upwith? Men either too stupid or un¬interested to read the newspapersor listen to the radio, with “noopinions” on anything of impor¬tance. Another striking exampleof Mencken’s apt characterization of democracy: the system thatsays that the people know whatthey want and deserve to get itgood and hard.• It may be indelicate to say it,but women naturally smell goodto the men who love them. Whenthe women themselves realizethis, Chanel will go out of busi¬ness.• Why do I like to read Whit¬man, but abhor the idea of read¬ing him? His poetry is vigorouslybeautiful, but I dread picking upthe book as I do a visit to thedentist’s.• There is probably nothing lessimportant about a President thanhis relations with the press, butthere are few better clues to hischaracter.• I have never felt so uncom¬fortable as when watching some¬one I liked trying desperately not to offend me. Between friends,tact is no virtue at all.• No entertainment I know is asexpressively moving as the opera,and none is so easily spoiled asan experience. All you need is afriend sitting next to you whorealizes now superlatively asinineit is.• “Let’s get married before wefind out too much about each oth¬er.” How often do we reason thisway—seldom incorrectly.• Generally we are bored whenwe are boring. We need a change,and not merely one of surround¬ings.• If a man is malicious to wo¬men as a class, the cats will dis¬count him in terms of his ignor¬ance or his injuries at theirhands — witness the case ofSchopenhauer. As usual in suchdisputes, both the philosopher andhis feminist critics were right.Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief ..David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. Gunr.pertNews Editors Jeffrey KutaMichael SeidmanKenneth SimonsonExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterFeature Editor .... Mark RosinBook Review Editors Edward HearneBryan DunlapMusic Editor Edward ChikofskyAssistants to the Editor Peter RabinowitzJoan PhillipsEditor Emeritus Daniel HertzbergGadflyStudents Urge Participation in Viet Mobilizationby Ellen Ross,Mike Dolinerand Eric GangloffWe address ourselves to thosestudents and faculty who questionthe wisdom of America’s militaryinvolvement in North and SouthVietnam but who feel that thereis little that they can personallycontribute to ending it. As stu¬dents who are active in organiz¬ing the National Mobilizationagainst the War in New YorkApril 15, we direct our remarks tothis group of potential partici¬pants. Debate about the validityof the w'ar is essential, and ofcourse continues, but the impor¬tance of the New York Mobiliza¬tion requires that our primary ef¬forts in the next week be devotedto convincing as many people aspossible to join us in New York.For there is a sizeable groupwhich already opposes the Viet¬nam war but hesitates to makethis opposition public.IT IS A COMMONPLACE inAmerican thought that the minor¬ity has a right to make itselfheard if not within than outside ofthe political arena. It is question¬able, however, that opposition tothe war is really a minority opin¬ion; Johnson’s enormous 1964 vic¬tory was interpreted by politicalobservers as a mandate againstthe Vietnam war, and for the“Great Society.” With Americaninvestment of men and money inthe war vastly expanded, and the“Great Society” in shambles, it isclear that the mandate of 1964 hasbeen violated. This demonstrationin New York has been organized with the aim of asserting a viewwhich we believe is held by alarge segment of the Americanpublic.Recent developments at homeand in Vietnam make this anespecially crucial moment todemonstrate against the war. Theintensification of American at¬tacks on North Vietnam, miningrivers and shelling her coasts,bring America further frompeace, and the world nearer tonuclear disaster. The New YorkMarch is the opportunity to regis¬ter unqualified opposition to thisnew escalation undertaken byJohnson and the generals, actingunder assumptions we do notshare. Curtailment of domesticspending reveals that the prosecu¬tion of the war consumes fundsabsolutely vital less for the crea¬tion of a “Great Society” than forthe maintenance of decent andmeaningful social life. The war inVietnam is no longer an unpleas¬ant occurence in a distant cornerof the globe; for the war contin¬ues to divert public money fromour crowded and decaying cities,millions of whose inhabitants livein appalling poverty.THE MAGNITUDE OF theVietnam war, its increasinglyhorrifying destruction of the Viet¬namese people, and the effects ofthe war on the Americans them¬selves have caused more andmore people throughout the worldto re-evaluate their ideas aboutthe war. Humphrey’s attractiverhetoric of justification has notdiscouraged demonstrations ofhostility to U.S. policy during his opposition, even on such tradition¬ally indifferent campuses as Stan¬ford, continues to increase, andDemocratic congressmen are nowfearful of speaking before collegeaudiences. In recent weeks, Dr.Martin Luther King has urgedNegroes to join the peace Mobili¬zation, pointing out that Negroesare disproportionately the victimsof the war and that the problemsof urban Negroes cannot be sep¬arated from America’s role inVietnam. The April 15 March in New York has been planned tounite these various American op¬position groups, and to demon¬strate sympathy with world opin¬ion.The imminence of the presiden¬tial elections means that suchdemonstrations, if truly on alarge scale, might have politicalinfluence. During the comingyear, policy-makers, includingthe President, will have to decidewhether to escalate the war stillfurther or make serious attempts to extricate American troopsfrom Vietnam. We must now une¬quivocally state that the latter al¬ternative is the only possible one,and remind legislators that theVietnam war cannot be ignoredas a political issue in the nextcampaign.(Ellen Ross is a graduate studentin the Department of History. MikeDoliner is a graduate student in theCommittee on Social Thought. EricGangloff is a graduate student inthe department of Japanese.)David L. AikenWhy Not Have StudentPower at This University?“Well, why shouldn’t studentshave a voice in University af¬fairs? After all, they’re the onesmost affected by many deci¬sions.”This sort of question seems topop up in most discussions amongstudents of University decision¬making. Their right to participatein governing the place seems soobvious it really doesn’t needmuch substantiation.In discussions with assorted ad¬ministrators and faculty mem¬bers, at this and other universi¬ties, however, this reporter hasfound that these truths which stu¬dents hold to be self-evident havesomehow not been revealed toEuropean tour. American student some of our less enlightened eld-Where Do You Take Your DateAfter The Movie Is Over?Why Not Back To Your Room . . .Where You Can Amaze Her WithThe Size Of Your EquipmentMusicraft's n*w- KIH Model 21 FM receiver fills any room with beautiful high-fidelity sound , . .yet the entire unit measures only 12“ ... by A 1/8“ ... by 8 3/4" ... Would you believe it?The secret lines in the pioneering work done by KIH in *ne development of small speaker systems:the Model 21 contains the same revolutionary speaker as the famous Model 21 portable (the Volks¬wagen of the hi-fi world). In addition, all of the 21's electronics are solid-state, eliminating heat—notto mention any tube changes everl Musicraft guarantees the Model 21 for two whole years, partsand labor, so there's nothing to worry about. You can devote your full attention to the matterat hand. . . . once she gets ever her amazement, of course.Why buy 'just a radio' when you can own the KIH Model 21 FM receiver for just . . . $79.95?48 E. Oak St.DE 7-41502035 W. 45th St.PR 9-65007C SYSTEMS ers. The sermonette for this week,then, will take a motley variety ofsources as its text.TO THE STUDENT, the ration¬ale for their inclusion on all sortsof committees—including theCouncil of the Faculty Senate anddivisional councils—seems clearenough. Students are members ofthe academic community whichis the University. They thereforehave as much interest in deci¬sions which affect the affairs ofthat community as anyone else.These decisions are made, for¬mally, in various levels of com¬mittees and councils, although is¬sues are undoubtedly discussedinformally before such bodiesmeet. The most effective way tomake the students’ voice heard,in community matters therefore,is to put a few representatives onthese bodies.It may be pointed out, in pass¬ing, that such a system hasworked successfully at AntiochCollege for many years, and isbeing approximated at our Chica¬go neighbor, Roosevelt Universi¬ty, where students are currentlyserving in the Faculty Senate,and on all faculty committees.So why not here?ONE VIEW on representation ofstudents on the faculty Council isthat it might not hurt anything,but it wouldn’t really have mucheffect, since a couple of studentswould be lost in the crowd. This,clearly, isn’t much of an argu¬ment. In fact, even a bare mini¬mum of two students in the Coun¬cil of the Senate would at leasthave the ability to propose andsecond a motion, which wouldthen have to be handled by theCouncil in some way. Even if thematter were eventually relegatedto the darkest subcommittee, themembers of the body would notbe able to totally ignore it.A further quasi-argument thathas been put forth is that studentsdon’t really have any substantivethings they want to accomplishonce they get “power,” but sim¬ply want a semblance of powerfor the status it gives them, or onprinciple, or because they distrustthe people who presently holdpower, who are almost all over30.That the matter is to some ex¬tent one of principle is undeni¬able. It may also be true thatmany students do mistrust admin¬istrators, deans, and others oftheir ilk, and would like power, inpart, for status reasons.Why the psychological motiva¬tions of students should be suffi¬cient to invalidate their argu¬ments, however, is not clear tothis observer. One might ask whydeans, department chairmen,etc., agree to take office, andwhether part of their resistance tostudent demands arises fromtheir feeling of being threatenedin their authority.WHAT REAL contributions canstudents make? In a book en¬titled The Academic Community, Johns D. Millett discusses the ef¬fect of students on academic pol¬icy entirely in terms of “force ofnumbers and the expression ofindividual preferences in so faras enrollment in various pro¬grams of various levels of qual¬ity is concerned.” He asserts,“few undergraduate students willtake the time or make the effortto inform themselves” on variousmatters of curriculum, admissionpolicy, etc.It is doubtful that Millett couldget away with such an assertionnow, five years after he wrote hisbook, at several of the leadinguniversities. Students know quitewell, thank you, what they want.They want the disentanglement ofthe university from the SelectiveService system, by an end toranking. They want positive stepsto address the resources and pow¬er of the university to pressingsocial issues of the day, such asthe ghettoization of American cit¬ies. They want awareness of suchproblems to be reflected in mean¬ingful experiences in the curricu¬lum, such as “action” courses,being developed in several placessuch as Berkeley, in which stu¬dents live in ghetto areas for afull understanding of the prob¬lems they are studying. (DavidSteinberg of NSA will be. on cam¬pus April 10 to discuss a projectto encourage such curricular pro¬grams.)A number of students could of¬fer quite good proposals, giventhe proper opportunity to arguethe case and push them throughon their own. The age of studentapathy has passed, in case any¬one hasn’t noticed.IN DISCUSSING student partic¬ipation in selecting faculty forpromotion, it has been brought upthat students won’t have to livewith a. tenured professor as longas will the other men in the de¬partment. This implies that stu¬dents w'Ould be more likely topromote an obnoxious, incompe¬tent, of phony man than would thefaculty. On the contrary, it is notinconceivable that sudents wouldbe more selective than facultymembers, at least in regardingevidence of teaching ability.While they are here, studentswould have to put up with the guyin class, a situation which canlead to even more psychologicalstress than meeting a guy in thefaculty lounge. Moreover, stu¬dents do tend to have a sense of“class interest”—they are unlike¬ly to wish an incompetent man ontheir fellow laborers.Obviously, we cannot hope toexhaust the supply of argumentsbrought up in defense of the sta¬tus quo. Hopefully, however,more thrusts of the blade of ra¬tional argument—combined witha little sharply aimed organiza¬tional politicking—may succeed incutting off a few more slices ofthe salami of resistance tochange.April 7, 1967 CHICAGO MAROONMusic Reviewwm k sV'tXTS 'HP v ' ' & *> ft £ *• >* -v * ' • ’***Letters to the EditorWall Street NewsTO THE EDITOR:On the assumption that U€ peo¬ple niav be too busy to keep upwith the latest developments onWall Street, I thought I mightshare with you the latest news onthe South Africa bank loans, tak¬en from Wednesday’s Wall StreetJournal:“In another area, Mr. Rockefel¬ler defended Chase’s participationin a $40 million revolving creditarrangement extended to SouthAfrica. The story was entitled “ChaseManhattan sees 7 percent rise in1st quarter profit from opera¬tions.”PAUL BOOTH Peter Calls Ashkenazy GreatBoggs's View This is an epoch of epic pianism. We are surrounded by a technocracy of young heroswhose flawless fluency and titanic tone allow them to toss off Tchaikovsky as if it wereMozart, and Mozart as if it were Tchaikovsky. Yet with the exception of Glenn Gould, Vlad¬imir Ashkenazy is the only pianist under thirty-five whom I would term “great”—that is,for whom I would buy tickets re- —gardless of his program. concerto, but of the audience as ly have been a ruse to sell us on“The loan, which was extendedby It U.S. banks, has been at¬tacked by civil-rights groups hereas aiding South Africa’s policy of‘apartheid.’ or racial separation.It came under fire again yester¬day as an estimated 30 personspicketed Chase’s annual meetingin a demonstration sponsored bythe American Committee on Afri¬ca‘Mr. Rockefeller said: ‘As aleading Amercian bank, we feel itis our obligation to help financethat trade and investment the Af¬rican nations so urgently need toassist them through the difficultmid-passage of development.’ Headded that ‘none of us at ChaseManhattan holds any brief for theSouth African government’sapartheid policy. In fact, we re¬gard it as a dangerous policy.’ Heindicated that a withdrawal ofU.S. business from South Africawould be a ‘serious mistake,’whose impact would fall ‘not onthe white people, hut on theblacks.’ TO THE EDITOR:The ballot-box schedule for theupcoming SG elections must beapproved by the SG Assembly,according to the SG by-laws. LastTuesday the Assembly was con-;sidering the ballot-box schedule.Several SPAC representatives jproposed that a special ballot box jbe constructed and placed for twohours at the entrance to the bus-1ses taking students to New Yorkfor the Mobilization for Peace.!When it became apparent that theAssembly was not going to grantthis demand for the crassest ofspecial interest legislation, the:SPAC members of the Assembly!walked out with the avowed pur- jpose of breaking a quorum. This!was accomplished, and conse-1quently there is NO approved bal¬lot-box schedule.I feel it is rather strange for theparagons of “student decision¬making” to go to such lengths toprevent students from making de¬cisions. Of course, viewed in thecontext of their boycott of lastspring’s rank referendum, itseems that students should onlymake decisions when they accordwith the idea of SPAC-SAR. Isthis “participatory” or any otherkind of democracy?DANNY J. BOGGS the composer. Roussel can only bejustified if performed in smalldoses with a sense of humor—a bitof frenetic farce for fans of trom¬bones and percussion. But Martinon was dead serious, and all thatUnlike his Horowitz-inspired col-! well,leagues, Ashkenazy’s tone is small,: The pianist’s mastery was mostwith uncanny subtlety of shading in apparent in the second movement,the piano and pianissimo range, | Most performers treat it as a tem-but not too much above a forte. Yet porary cease-fire between two as-he has such flexible control over saults; and with the malaise char-the dynamics within his limits that acteristic of unemployed military,1 came across was the repetitivenesshe can build a climax which, al- j they try to nudge it impatiently of Roussel’s rhythms, the conformi-though moderate in decibels, still along. Ashkenazy, however, took a ty of his concocted climaxes, andarrives with the impact of a hurri-! dangerous different approach. He his trumpestuous orchestration,cane. didn’t try to make it go | When other boys played with toyWHAT DISTINGUISHES him anywhere—instead, it remained soldiers, Roussel must have had aeven more from the rest of his gen- j timelessly suspended, as if (pardon J toy band.eration, however, is his sense of the unpietyHt were the forerunner j After that bash of brash brass,phrasing. Avoiding arbitrary exag-f A r‘"geration of tempo and dynamics,he nonetheless molds each line of Delius. Almost any other Or-1 audience was too dazed to ap-pheus would have lost his audience preciate anything. even Martinon’s,tou. Morpheus; but Ashkenazy s | superably erotic performance ofaround something extra—a touch of shimmering play of tones proved Ravepg Rhapsodic Espagnole.crescendo, a hint of retard. His *n the hands of a genius, musicmusic breathes, always alive but need be neither athletic nor pas-always natural—nothing is distort- sionate to keep attention,ed. but nothing is played literally1 THE REST of the concert was Peter Rabinowitzeither.Last Thursday’s performance ofBeethoven’s C Minor Concerto justmissed perfection. The sole flawwas in the beginning of the firstmovement. Martinon’s orchestralintroduction was so volcanic that inhis first entrance. Ashkenazy hadto pound his loudest to be heardabove the din. This uncomfortablebalance lasted for about half themovement. Finally, the orchestratook a more deferential stance;and by the cadenza. Ashkenazywas in full control not only of the aggravating. Some perversityplaced Ashkenazy’s performance— 1obviously the substance of theevening —before intermission. Thiswas no mere indiscretion; it wasan open insurrection against allcanons of taste, especially sincethe concerto was followed by Rous¬sel’s Fourth Symphony. Martinon’smotives for unpacking this travestybut a month after Munch’s far sup¬erior reading of the Roussel Thirdremain unfathomable.Such auditory audacity can hard- Be Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!Complete selection of sweat¬shirts, rain parkas, tennis shoes,underwear, jackets, "levls,"camping equipment, wash pants,etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd St.PL 2-4744Open Sundays 9:30 - 1:00CHAIRMAN, ELECTIONAND RULES COMMITTEESTUDENT GOVERNMENT“Despite Mr. Rockefeller’sstatements, Richard K. Taylor, astockholder and Philadelphia civ¬il-rights figure, proposed a resolu¬tion that the bank withdraw fromparticipation in South Africa. Mr.Taylor asked that the bank notextend any new loans to the coun¬try or its subdivisions, nor to re¬new or lengthen any outstandingloans. Mr. Champion ruled the re¬solution out of order, and no votewas taken.”STUDY THISSUMMERIn TheNATION S CAPITAL New Books By Campus AuthorsRediscovering the Teaching of Jesus.by Norman Perrin $05Priest and Revolutionaryby Peter Steams $5.95GENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENTTHE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue BOB NELSON MOTORSImport’ CentroM. 0.TriumphHonda6052 So. Cottaoe GroveAtGEORGETOWNUNIVERSITYWashington, D.C.TWO SESSIONSJune 13 - July 21July 24 - September 1Undergraduate and GraduateDay and Evening ClassesSpecial Activities,Conferences, InstitutesAir-conditioned Classroomsand DormitoriesStudy Programs Abroad AtDijon, France (July 3-August 12)Guadalajara, Mexico(July 3-August 12)Salzburg, Austria(July 8-August 19)Tokyo, Japan (July 6-August 12)Moscow, USSR(June 18-August 19)For Further Information Write:The DeanTHE SUMMER SCHOOLGeorgetown UniversityWashington, D. C. 20007 If you think Scandinavian furniturehas fo be expensive,you should talk with Mr. Quist.Our Clarinet lo-back chairs go for$78.00(regular price)The identical chair sells elsewherefor as much as$135.00Come in and see the values atScandinavian Imports53rd and LAKE PARKNO 7-4040 &from our University ShopOUR HANDSOME LIGHTWEIGHTODD JACKETS AND TROUSERS(shown) New Dacron Polyester-and-Worsted Blazer in Maroon Cricket Stripes onNavy; also Solid Shades oj Navy or DarkGreen. Double-Breasted Model, $60 (Single-Breasted, $55Blue or Tan-0live Dacron-and-Flax, $48.50Cotton Seersucker Odd Jackets, $32.50Cotton India Madras Jackets, $45Odd Trousers in Dacron-and-Worsted, $23.50; Dacron-and-Cotton orCotton Madras, $ 15•lightly higher we*t »( th« RockldfcjMTABUSHWIMliens Ar^oy*’fUmistiings. flats *r$hoes74 E. MADISON, NR. MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO, ILL. 60602NEW YORK • BOSTON • PITTSBURGH • LOS ANGELES • SAN FRANC ISOfrs, ' Letters(Continued from Page Eight)From SARTO THE EDITOR:Confusion about the wording ofthe demands in the petition nowbeing circulated by the StudentsAgainst the Rank (SAR) has ob¬scured its single goal, which is toprevent the misuse of academicgrades by a non-academic institu¬tion.The petition states: Resolvedthat the University cease to com¬pile any grade information otherthan the grades of individual stu¬dents and grade point averages.In particular, the University shallcease to compile or provide toany person for any reason what¬ever, rank or other statisticalstatement relating the grades ofindividual students to the gradesof other university students.Once the petition is signed by460 students, the resolution will beplaced on the Student Govern¬ment ballot to be voted on by thecollege students and faculty in theApril 13 and 14 SG elections.The resolution in no way de¬parts from the demands of the1000 college students who signedthe SAR petition earlier this year.The demand has consistently beenthat the Selective Service not beallowed to use a student’s univer¬sity-compiled scholastic rating forits own purpose of deciding hisdraft status.When the selective service de¬manded this information in theform of a male class rank, thegoals of SAR would have been at¬tained by the University’s refusalto compile such a rank. Thus the“male class rank” became themechanism opposed by SAR toprevent military encroachment inan academic domain. And themale class rank was just that—amechanism—and not in itself the When the Council of the Univer¬sity Senate decided that a rank ofmen and women would still bemade available to the SelectiveService, and when it becameclear that this rank would be ac¬cepted by the draft boards, it alsobecame obvious that the SAR de¬mands were not being met eventhough the University did refuseto compile the male rank.Therefore, SAR is again pre¬senting its demands, this timephrasing them to include all pos¬sible means by which the selec¬tive service could use Universitystatistics to compare students’ ac¬ademic records.Many people who adamantlysupport this stance still balk atthe necessity of withholding classrank from everyone, includinggraduate school admissionboards. But it is a necessity.Besides the ludicrous situationcreated by attempting to hideranking information from somewhile offering it to others, to doso would be highly undemocratic.The University administrationcannot be given the power to arbi¬trarily decide to whom informa¬tion about students may or maynot be given. A class rank statis¬tic is both of and for students. If jan individual knows this informa-1tion about himself, no one has theright to force him to limit his us¬age of it—nor to extend it.Because ranking is a compara¬tive measure, necessarily involv-'ing all students, and because somany students see the militaryuse of information about theirclass rank as an evil, it is imper- ;ative that no rank at all beformed.This campus must realize—asColumbia University did earlierthis week—that the issue of therank as an academic function, it-1self of questionable value, mustbe subordinated to the issue of therank as a tool of the selectiveservice, an unquestionable detri¬ment. If the class rank is used atall for this fraudulent purpose, itbecomes a distortion of no possi¬ble value for any purpose.STUDENTS AGAINSTTHE RANK mmmmMaroon ClassifiedsPERSONALSMISTRESS WANTED, EXPERIENCEPREFERRED BUT NOT NECESSARY,INTERVIEW REQUIRED, FOR AP-POINMENT CALL JERRY: 288-6067.From TH E. Group: Birthday greetingsto T.H.E. Woman.FOUND: Brown female cat late Satpm. Call 643-4413.LECTURE: MORAL EDUCATION:SINCERITY IS NOT ENOUGH. Prof.Joseph Schwrab, Education Dept., Natu¬ral Sciences. 8:30 PM. Hillel House.Around the World. Students and teach¬ers under 30. Orient, Nepal, Pakistan,India, Samarkand, Tblisi, Moscow, Len-igrad, Finland, London. $2,700 includinground-the-world jet flight June 22. DickLazer, 764-6264 or 262-3765.KAMELOT Restaurant, 2160 E. 71 St.10% discount for UC students. Put some cider inside her at the OTH¬ER SIDE, Fri: The New Slag ValleyJug Band. Sat: Classical Guitarist, JanArnold. The new sound of Walter Lowe,BOTH nites. 1603 E. 53rd St. 363-9558.Russian tutor available for summerquarter. FA 4-8200, ext. 533. Ann Cogan.Chiquita says: PEEL ME!“Political power grows out of the barrelof a gun.”“All reactionaries are Paper Tigers.”WORKERS OF ALL COUNTRIES,UNITE!“As for criticism, do it in good time;don’t get into the habit of criticizingonly after the event.”Writer’s workshop. PL 2-8377.Passover reservations for Seders andother meals now being taken at Hillel.Deadline April 18.BICYCLE THROUGH EUROPE. 46 or60 days. $498 or $1098 plus transatlantictransportation. June or July. Dick La¬zar, 764-6264 or 262-3765. “ the world belongs to you.”“Unite and take part in production andpolitical activity to improve the eco¬nomic and political status of women 1” .: 'Si..; .Sweet, who appears nightly. Delight ourcustomers in introducing them to suchdelicacies as: Berliner Weisse and BeefFondue. Court House Restaurant. 5211Harper Court.Pt. time or full secretary for doctor’*office. 723-1009.FOR SALES.G. Charter flight, ret.Chicago, Sept. 26. ext. 3770. London-1966 Triumph TR 4A, blue hard-top con¬vertible with softtop kit. Excel, cond.Best offer around $2400. MI 3-4863.Bogen D.B. 110 Mond. amp. Bogen R.620 AM-FM tuner, perfect condition.Both for $60. 463-3585 or 521-0460.MG Miget, 1963, in good condition. $675.Call Nina BU 8-6803.Modern Dance Classes taught by SusanLoren Tues. eves. 7-8. Call 684-2726.Self-defense class: 4:30-6:00 MWF Base-ment Ida Noyes.Listen to excellent classical guitaristappearing nightly at the Court HouseRestaurant (Harper Court in an atmos¬phere of casual elegance. Beer only 35cBerliner Weisse $1.10, Bratwurst, $1.25tid sah,takk for den nye utsikten over livet.duckMan, white will marry any woman(preferably under 45) who is non¬religious and opposed to war, violence,deceit, and wage-slavery. Frank Rich¬ards, 472-3606.KOINONIA: Tonight, 6 pm. ChapelHouse. Dinner (75c) and diversion.FINAL SPAC MEETING ON FLAT-FORM. FRIDAY (TODAY), 3:30 IDANOYES. *Stanley, how could you be so dumb?”“I’m sorry, Ollie! (snurf, snurf)”OHie: stop picking on Stan. Muriel. WITH OR WITHOUT CARS, NAPALMDEMONSTRATORS SHOULD COMETO IDA NOYES PARKING LOT AT 11A.M, ON SATURDAY.JOBS OFFEREDReliable babysitter needed for 5 mo. oldinfant wkdays. Call 667-6756.Work for a swingin mag of 50,000 pluscirculation. THE CHICAGO LITERARYREVIEW has openings for volunteers atall levels, from major editorial positionsright down to no-experience-needed of¬fice help. We want a high level editoras well as some people who can handlelight accounting and typing. Start yourcareer now with CLR. Stop up and seeus in IDA NOYES 304, Monday,Wednesday, or Friday from 11:30 to2:30. Or call 285-0825 early evenings.Research Assistant Wanted—$3.50/hr.20-35 hrs./wk. Social Science or Eduea- stion background. Experience in library jresearch, evaluation of written data andability to communicate essential. Sub- jmit short resume, references, Bus.Manager, Chicago MAROON.Desk-clerk switchboard and light cleri- jcal work. 3 nts/wk. 4pm-midnight. No jexperience necessary. Meal included, jApplicant must be interested in staying !at least one year. Apply Quadrangle1Club, 1155 E. 57th St.Waiter or waitress wanted. Very pleas-ant working conditions and customers. !Enjoy serving gourmet food at most ireasonable prices, while listening to out- jstanding classical guitarist, Michael • ed call 667-5895.WANTED4-5 Room Apartment in Hyde Parkwanted immediately. Will take subleaseif necessary. Up to $135. 324-5751.Swinger who likes jazz, filet mignon,sports cars, some travel-write me NUgrad, 33 years-Average looks, ready . . ,Curtiss Andrews, Box 117, Riverside, Il¬linois, 60546.Western Reserve grad stud and wife(school teacher) wish to sublet Chicagoapt. for summer montns. If interested,have own apt. in Cleveland to trade orsublet across street from both Westernand Case Universities. Write: LarrySiegel, 1080 Carnagie St. Cleveland,Ohio, 44106.TO RENTUNFURN. apt. 52nd & Kimbark. 2 rms.large private porch. Avail. Immed.HY 3-6463 before 11 am or after 7 pm.Economical nearby clean quiet unfurn.front apt. 21'a, 3. Private bath $87.50 up.Free utils, and parking. Williams, 6043Woodlawn.Room and/or board—56th & University.Males—$50/mo. furnished, single rooms.Call 752-9874, ask for Rick.6900 S. Cramden Avenue, Deluxe Hi-Rise. 1 bedrm. apt. from $120. Parquetfloor. See Mrs. Haley or call MU 4-7964.TO SUBLET: $97 50, 2 rms. 5303 S.Kimbark. Furniture included. 752-7306.3/2 rooms, sun porch. Call 493-2401.8 rm. apt. needs 3rd rmmte. If interest-CRAIG 212NOW IN STOCKThis widely acclaimed baltery-operafed port¬able tape recorder is excellent for recordinglectures, conferences, or what's happening ontrips to the Point. At $39.95 it is an excellentbuy. An A.C. adapter is optionally available.At the other end of the spectrum there is theUher 400.0-L Report, which is used by linguists,folklorists, and television reporters. Four speedsforward, durability under stress, and re-charge-abilily anywhere-from one’s pad on the LeftBank to a gasoline-powered generator in theVeldt-make it a most desirable addition to one’scollection of goodies. The price? While you'reup, get me a large grant.TOAD HALL1444 E. 57th St.BU 8-4500 SUMMER JOBSFOR STUDENTSApplications now being accepted for summer jobs with major corporation. Students 18yrs. of age & over wanted to learn marketing, sales promotion, & brand identificationtechniques during summer period. High level executive management training coursesgiven to qualified applicants. Salary $105 per wk. for first 3 wks. $130 per wk.plus bonuses starting 4th week.SCHOLARSHIPSwin one of 15 $1,000scholarships HIGH PAYearn at least $1,500 for thesummer student —make$3,000 and more.TRAVELWork anywhere in U.S. or Canada.Qualified students may work over¬seas. SEE EUROPEWin all expense paid holiday inEurope for an entire week.OFFICES IN MOST CITIES IN THE U.S.A. AND OVERSEASSend Resume to: Peter VassDistrict Manager857 Adams Building222 West AdamsChicago, IllinoisOr Phone: A.C. 312 346-6108April 7, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9UT Plans Minna Production Calendar of EventsA redoubtable young lady’s two hundreth birthday will becelebrated in the Reynold’s Club Theatre this quarter with astring quartet, harpsichord music, and a cast well-known toUniversity Theatre audiences. On April 14, 15, 16, 21, 22, and23 University Theatre will presentG. E. Lessing’s Minna von Barn-helm, in a new translation byKenneth Northcott.The play’s composition two hun¬dred years ago marked the begin¬ning of a national drama in Ger¬many, one which did not merelyimitate French, German, and Ital¬ian models. Goethe said “It wasthis production of Minna which suc¬cessfully opened the prospect into ahigher and more meaningful worldbeyond the literary and bourgeoisworld to which the art of writinghad been confined.” ploration of a difficult relationship.It takes place some months afterthe conclusion of the Seven YearsWar. Minna (Joan Mankin) hastravelled from Saxony to Breslauin Prussia to seek her fiance, Ma¬jor Von Tellheim (Larry Unruh),who has been remarkably uncom-1municative since the war’s end. jShe finds him by chance when thelandlord of her inn (David Katzin)shows her a valuable ring a formerguest has pawned with him—thering she gave Tellheim when they were affianced in his winter quar¬ters in Saxony. There Minna fell inlove with a noble act; now shefinds a man alienated and embit¬tered by a dishonorable discharge,clinging to a sense of honor whichserves only to thwart and hurt her.When Tellheim’s attempts to disre¬gard Minna and Minna’s to manip¬ulate Tellheim are equally unsuc¬cessful, each learns to understandand accept the others’ personalityand integrity and to recognize nec¬essary limits in their actions to¬ward each other. The play ends ina double wedding, for Minna’slady’s maid, Fraziska (Julia Fre-mon), and Tellheim’s sergeant-major, Paul Werner, (DonaldSwanton), have come to understandeach other too. Friday, April 7LECTURE: “Chemistry and AtomicTheory”: Professor Robert Siegfried;Abbott 101, 2:30-3:30 pmTRAVELOGUE: Spain and Portugal:International House Association: 1414 E.59th St., 8:15 pm. Admission: Students,OthprcMOVIE: MURIEL. Alain Resnais. Soc.Sci. 122. 7 & 9:30. Admission: 60cMEETING: Final SPAC Platfrom Meet¬ing: Ida Noyes, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: MORAL EDUCATION:SINCERITY IS NOT ENOUGH. Prof.Joseph Schwab. Hillel House, 8:30 pm.LECTURE: "The Metaphysical QuestIn Modern Fiction” - Wayne C. Booth. 8pm, 65 E. South Water St. Free withUC ID card.TEACH IN: Teach-In on Vietnam. 8pm, Cloister Club, Ida Noyes.PARTY: Fund-raising party for SpirngMobilization, 5430 S. University. Admis¬sion: $1.50.Saturday, April 8DEMONSTRATION: Anti-napalmMarch on Witco factory. Meet at NewDorms parking lot at 11 am. - i ••MOVIE: AN EVENING WITH LAURELAND HARDY. Mandel HaU, 7:30 pm.Admission 75c.Sunday, April 9FOLK DANCE: Ida Noyes, 7:30 pm.Admission: 25c.MEETING: Bridge Club. Ida Noyes,7:15 pm.FILM: Vietnam: DOVES AND HAWKS.Hillel House, 7:30 pm. Free.RELIGIOUS SERVICES: RockefellerChapel, 11 am. Rev. E. Spencer Par-CIIESS MATCH: UC vs. University ofWisconsin. Ida Noyes, 3 pm.MEETING: We Won’t Go. Ida Noyes,room 213, 7 pm. Structure and Pro¬gramming.Monday, April 10FILM: SONG OF CEYLON. Soc. Sci.122, 8 pm. Free.WORKSHOP IN NON-VIOLENCE: IdaNoyes, 4 pm.MEETING: NSA Civil Rights directorwill meet with students interested inmaking direct action community experi¬ence a part of the College. Ida Noyes,7:30 pm.Andrew Harris, who is directingMinna von Bamhelm, feels that itseighteenth century setting and con¬ventions lead today’s critics totreat the play as a piece of Baro¬que nonsense rather than as an ex- Alain Resnais’ MURIEL: Chicago Premiere!Th« color film by tho director of LAST LEAR AT MARIENBAD, Hiroshima Mon Amour, and NIGHT AND FOG. At Doc Films tonight. A, 8, and 10 pm. Soc Sci122, 59th and University. 75 cents.“Damn Yankees” will massage them like no TV show everhas. The music from this all-time Broadway smash hasbeen completely rescored, arranged for a great newsound.lThe visual techniques take the step beyond “pop” and/'op.” It’s the kind of innovation you associate with GEand that's why we’re part of it. That’s why we're putting“Damn Yankees” on the air. Don’t miss it.General Electric TheaterNBC TV 9-11 PM. EST • Sat., April 8Tfogress Is Our Most Important ftwfuctGENERAL ELECTRIC1 This year prizes of 1I $125, $100, $75, $50 will| be awarded in the Flor- |f ence James Adams Poe-| try Reading Contest. In Iaccordance with Mrs. Ad-1, ams’ intention, prizes willfj be awarded on the basisI of interpretative rather§ than declamatory read- I1 The preliminary read-|l ings will be held in Bond| Chapel at 3:00 PM onI April 28, 1967. The final| competition will be heldIf in Bond Chapel at 3:00 J-I PM, on May 5, 1967. Thereadings are part of theannual Festival of the f| Arts, and are open to the fpublic. Those studentswishing to compete| should make inquires atthe Department of Eng-j lish, Wieboldt 205, byApril 17, 1967.Free toChicagoStudents25c to othersA new booklet, published by anon-profit educational founda¬tion, tells which career fieldlets you make the best use ofall your college training, in¬cluding liberal-arts courses—which career field offers100.000 new jobs every year—which career field producesmore corporation presidentsthan any other—what startingsalary you can expect. Justsend this ad with your nameand address. This 24-page,career-guide booklet, “Oppor¬tunities in Selling,” will bemailed to you. No cost orobligation. Address: Councilon Opportunities, 550 FifthAve., New York 36, N. Y.10 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 7, 1967TAKCAM-A3WNCHINKS! - LMIWCANrvstavsahtCANTONBBI APT®AMERICAN MSflBSOMN DAILYM AJA. «• Ml MLIIIIMlMaA IHLIHI Turin Bicycle Co-OpPRESENTS LIVEA cross-section of hippies, beats, anarch¬ists etc. In freak out or lowest prices fornew Carlton, Raleigh, Falcon, Gitane,Ranger and Robin Hood bicycles. Touringand competition equipment. "Factorytrained" mechanics. Used bicycles. Freedelivery.1952 N. Sedgwick WH 4-8865M-F 2:00 • 8:30 Sat t Sun. 10-8Closed Thursday*. J a eofHyde Parkspring clearancedresses • ensembles* casual attiresummer line of cottons and silksHOURS: Tues.-Sat. 10 a m. - 6 p m.5139 S. BIACKSTONE AVE.THE WONDERFUL SOUND OF MUSICALIVE AND LOVELY HAS RETURNEDTO THE NEWBAROQUEThis Weekend:LEN BARRY TRIO-Friday and SaturdaySunday - guitar folk music-4 pmComing WeekMARTIN YARBROUGH-Monday thru WednesdayJUDY ROBERTS TRIO-Friday and SaturdayRelax in quite atmosphere.1510 East 53rd St. Reservations PL 2-3647JIMMY'Sand theUNIVERSITY ROOMSCHLITZ ON TAP Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3 9259NSA Discounts CINEMAIHICAGO 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 1:30 HARPER-TERMAN LIQUORS, inc.1514 EAST 53rd STREETCIGARETTES Carton $2.39 .Imported Tuborg Beer 6 pack $1.59 :LISTERINE 14 oz. $1.09 Size 59* |Coupon must be brought in •We stock wines, liquors and cordials from all ever the wedd. Delivery •Service available. Call JFA 4-1233 FA 4-7699 JFA 4-1318 HY 3-6800 JThe Court HouseRestaurantin harper courtListen to classical guitaristMiclical Sweetappearing nightly.Beer only 35c, BerlineWeisse $1.10, Bratwurst $1.25,in an atmosphere of casual elegance.! tBABY HUEYAND THE BABYSITTERSTHE ROVIN’ KINDTHE CHAMBERS BROTHERSTHE BUCKINGHAMSTHE EXCEPTIONSAND MANY OTHERSWide Open Wed. thru Sun. at 8 P.M.Pius Color TV I Boutique! Library! Soda Fountain! Bar! Scopitone!Advance, price tickets on sale at all WARD storee«ind at Ticket Central, 212 North MichiganTo throw a Cheetah party for 50-2000, call Miss Prusa at M0 4-5051 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 eveningsApril 7, 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11iPARTY MART SPRING SALEPARTY CHEESE:There are 225 different cheeses from 17 different countries available at the Party Mart.U.S. GRADE A SWISS CHEESEHard, pressed-curd cheese with an elastic body and a wild, nut-like,sweetish flavor.Sensationally priced. 59c per poundENGLISH STILTONConsidered to be the finest English cheese. Hard, mild, blue-veined,cow's-milk cheese. Milder than Roquefort or Gorgonzola. It wasfirst made about 1750.81" per poundNEW YORK HERKIMER - 2 Years OldA fairly dry cheese with a crumbly texture and a sharp flavor.99c per pound DANISH MUNSTERSemisoft, whole-milk cheese which was first made in the vicinity ofMunster, West Germany.$139 per poundALPENJOY CHEESE with or without SalamiSoft mild cheese with a distinctive flavor. Available with Salami also,which gives an added piquant taste to the cheese.$1 49 per poundNORWEGIAN BLUEBlue, Blue-mold, or Blue-veined cheese is the name for cheese ofthe Roquefort type. It is made from cow's or goat's milk.$1 25 per poundPARTY WINE: SPRING WINE SALESelect your party wines from the 1400MAY WINESpecially selected German May Wine far above an ordinary wine.Serve it straight, in punch or with strawberries.Fifth *198 3 for $5391962 VINTAGE CHATEAU GISCOURSA Grand Cru Classe Margaux. Rich with body and vigor, lively withmuch finesse. A favorite since Roman times and still a noble wineto serve with red meats. Excellent vintage.Fifth $398 3 for $10751964 VINTAGEKLUSSERATHER BRUDERSCHAFT RISELING SPATLESEAn unusual combination of delicate flavor and flowery perfume,rarely found in wines this price.Fifth $298 3 for $8°°1961 VINTAGE PERE ANSELMECHATEAUNEUF-DU-PAPE LA FIOLEA dry red wine with great depth in flavor, for very full flavoredfoods. The vineyard is carved into the mounta:nside.Fifth $379 3 for $10°°1964 VINTAGE CHATEAU DE VERNEUIL POUILLY FUISSEThe strong rustic flavor and simple character of this wine pleasesalmost anyone. Sandwiches, poultry or any simply flavored foodswill be greatly improved using this wine.Fifth $279 3 for $749 different kinds of wine always in stock.1964 VINTAGE CHATEAU DU JUGE BARSACModerately sweet with velvety softness. It's the paragon of thesmall wines of this district. Serve chilled with light foods.Fifth $249 3 for $6691964 VINTAGE CHATEAU LATOURLight, soft, dry red table wine of Bordeaux. Has a clear, cleanastringent taste not often found at this price level.Fifth $249 3 for $6691964 VINTAGE SAINT-ESTEPHEHas less finesse than other Medocs but possesses more stuffing,more fullness and has a great viscosity. Serve with red meats.Fifth $198 3 for $5391964 VINTAGE CLOS PRINCE POMEROLThis wine has body, color, generosity and an agreeable savour aswell as distinctive bouquet Serve at room temperature, with roastFifth $249 3 for $6691964 VINTAGE BEAUJOLAISAlways best when young, in France this wine is used up before it isfour years old. A clean well made wine to serve with the averagemeal.Fifth q98 3 for *5391962 VINTAGE FRENCH SAUTERNESA regional wine selected for it's specially rich flavor. Serve chilledwith fruit and desserts etc. Sweet taste with grapey richness.Fifth *1" 3 for $539DOUBLE DISCOUNT PARTY SALE BUY 6 BOTTLES GET 1 FREE1962 VINTAGE CHATEAU LAFITTE GRAND CRUNot to be confused with the wine of a somewhat similar name. Thiswine does not require the tremendous age or price. Delicate, soft,and very pleasing to the taste. One of the best buys in it's kind.$298 1 free with 61964 VINTAGE ST. JOHANNER KLOSTERGARTEN SPATLESEBlending of grape types has enabled the grower to create a master¬piece of the vinter's art. This is a great wine for the price.$298 1 free with 61964 VINTAGE GRAND CRU VAUDESIRThe field is the rarest of the grand growths. The wine is very elegant,aromatic, the best of its kind. Great wine and a great vintage.$449 1 free with 6PARTY GLASSWARE:25c each. BUY 12 GET 2 FREEBlue, Gold and Olive TIARANew color and shape, new textured optics.Available in 11 oz. on-the-rocks and in 14 oz. beverage.Prince of PilsenThe new elegant 14 oz. Beer Glass.The ExecutiveExquisitely exciting new glasses.25‘ each —BUY 12 GET 2 FREE! 1964 VINTAGE LIEBFRAUMILCH SPATLESESpecially late picked grapes are selected from wine covered hillsidesto bring this naturally slightly sweet yet delicately dry table wine$198 1 Free with 61964 VINTAGE BEAUJOLAIS ST. AMOURA fresh fruity parish Beaujolais with a nice bouquet. Serve withcheese or red meat.$219 1 free with 61964 VINTAGE CHATEAU DE VERNEUIL BROUILLYThis parish wine of Beaujolais is the best of 175 kinds. Light in fruit,tartly dry, pleasant tasting everyday wine. Should be drunk withcheese or red meat.$219 1 free with 6PARTY BEVERACES:CANADA DRY GINGER ALE12 oz. bottles 6 pack 39*plus depositPARTY LOANS:•The Party Mart will lend our customers, at no cost, all the glasswareneeded for any kind of party. Quantities loaned must, of course, becompared with the amount of purchase. Full refund is immediatelymade on any excess purchase beyond your party usage.