Chicago Maroon MIDWEEKEDITION75fh Anniversary YearVol. 76-No. The University of Chicago Tuesday, April 18, 1967SPAC Swamps C-NOSISIn Student Govt. Election Bias Charges Continue“This year it had to happen,”said Dave Rosenberg of theleftist-coalition Student Politi¬cal Action Committee (SPAC).And it did. SPAC won 28 of 50 as¬sembly seats in last week’s StudentGovernment elections, while theGNOSIS party which has controlledSG for the last four years was re¬duced to three seats.SPAC swept the races in the“Other College” category, whereJi«rry Lipsch and Jeff Blum ledfive other SPAC winners, and inthe social sciences and humanitiesdivisions, GNOSIS people, the “OldGuard” of SG, ran well only in therace for NSA delegates, whereSPAC did not submit a slate of can¬didates.SPAC opposes UC membership inNSA, and hopes to win a referen¬dum to be held later this spring todecide if UC should remain in theorganization.Many SPAC leaders had not re¬turned yesterday from Saturday’sMobilization March in New York.Rosenberg, who is vice-president ofSG this year, and a winner for tor in Other College said that SPACwould probably give the handlingof services to private concerns.In interesting races in the gradu- Admissions Informer MayLose Chairmanship, Jobby Michael SeidmanCharges of political bias continued to batter the history department and Office of Col-ate schools, two SPAC candidates lege Admissions yesterday. Although most of the participants in the dispute are remaining pub-won their unopposed Divinity Hcally silent, it is becoming obvious that the conflict is growing in scope.Sohnnl plpotions: u/itV> a Inllir nt 1 0 0 "It has been learned, for example, that Peter Stearns, chairman of the College HistoryGroup has scheduled a meeting of .his organization for. tomorrow I ^ was a^so learned that the chair-j around Lemisch himself. An ad-hocwhich relates directly to the dis- j u^ad-designate for next year is the committee in defense of Jessepute involving recent charges of facuhy member who originally j Lemisch has announced plans for aoolitical bias leveled asainst Direc-! leaked the contents of an O’Connell public meeting to be followed bvtor !of Admissions 'Charles interview report. The report al.| possible picketing on Tuesday atO’Connell. legedly indicates political preju-In a statement dated April 13 and dice. The faculty member, who hassent to members of the College his- j "ot- Publically identified, hastory faculty, Stearns announced been the subject of widespread at-that “Recent controversy renders it .Vs,in, ,.e *as* week, and it isuseful to discuss the designation of W1”e*y believed that his job is in three year term. A variety of cam-votes apiece. In Education, MarkJoseph, a write-in candidate, wonfour to three over a SPAC candi¬date who was on the ballot.A write-in Library School candi¬date swamped another write-incandidate eight to one. Two unop¬posed independents in Social Ser¬vices Administration won with fourand three votes each.A constitutional amendment togive freshman representatives avote in the SG assembly won over¬whelmingly.(See Results on Page Three) 11:30 am in Social Science 122.The DismissalLemisch, received notification onDecember 15 that his contractwould not be renewed for a secondthe History Group chairman for JeoPardy.1967-8.’’ Although Stearns refusedto comment on the meeting further pus groups have charged that theAnother Fight dismissal resulted directly from hisFrom interviews held with the left-wing activities.Administrators Consider Future SitesAs Present Bookstore Sinks out of Sight few members of the history facultywho were willing to comment on Among those who have agreed toaddress the Tuesday meeting arestore beStudentsa tableby Ken Simonson j which demands a newWhile administrators ponder bullt as so°" as P?s.slWe-...... - — r may sign the petition atSPAC in Other College, exclaimed a site for an eventual replace- which will be set up outside the“That's wonderful!” when told that rnent for the Bookstore, the Bookstore. may pull himself out,” stated JesseSPAC had taken a majority in the f Kuiirlin0 i« rnnfinninP HUGHES TERMED the situation Lemisch, assistant professor of his-assembly. He said that SPAC turre 11 ou ® ®j “very serious. There is a constant j tory and a member of the Collegewould probably decide on its choice to crumble. threat that someone will get hurt, j History Group. “But my own incli-for President of SG “as soon as Part of the floor in the sandwich It’s driving me crazy. The employ-j nation is that there will certainlyeveryone gets back.” area sank a few inches last week- ees do not feel safe and 1 don’t feel be a fight.” Other faculty membersGNOSIS took its defeat philosoph- end, leaving a post meant to sup- safe for them.” who are believed to be sympatheticthe meeting, it is apparent that an j William McNeill, a professor of his-effort will almost certainly be tory and chairman of the historymade to remove the faculty mem- department. The committee forber from the chairmanship and; Lemisch has indicated that ifthat the effort will set off still an¬other dispute.I have a feeling that the faculty McNeill does not fully explain thedismissal they will picket the histo¬ry department for the rest of theieally, if not as happily as SPAC port the roof to dangle uselessly. Atook its victory. “GNOSIS will defi- few shingles have since then beennitely not disband,” said Tom Hea- placed under the post, but the prob-gy, current President of SG. The iem is not solved. Cracks in several“GNOSIS machine,” he said, decid- walls have widened,ed before the election that it did; THE WHOLE building has beennot want to run SG next year, “be- settling, according to Charles I falls down, we’ll just be without,”cause they had been running it for Hughes, general manager of the he said.several years already.” I Bookstore. He said the problem I Tomorrow night the Physical“Wo decided that a year of SPAC would intensify as the ground! Planning Committee wiM meet towould throw a little fear of God thaws under the store. There is no discuss possible sites on which to“In my opinion the building is towards this faculty member’s re-not sound,” Hughes stated. He said tention refused to comment on thethat he had not heard about any meeting.contingency planning for a tempo¬rary replacement if the Bookstorewere to collapse. “If the Bookstoreadministration,”into thecracked.SPAC ran on a platform callingfor SG to put less emphasis on“student services,” such as charterflights, and a speakers series.Heather Tobis, another SPAC vic-Heagy way to prevent the settling, saidj Hughes, because the Bookstore isbuilt over sandy ground. Hughessaid that it is necessary every dayto tighten the cables which runacross the roof of the building, build a replacement. The commit¬tee will hear a report from Na-phtali Knox, assistant vice-president for physical planning,who investigated possible locations.Knox would not make public anyA petition campaign has begun i details of his report. member himself is very scared and j week.The committee has made the fol¬lowing demands:• That Lemisch be reinstated;• That a total disclosure of allproceedings which led to Lemisch’sdismissal be made;• That procedures be undertakento ensure that political views andactions and diverging scholarly in¬terpretations shall not be criteriafor hiring or dismissing faculty.A STATEMENT issued by thecommittee charges that “ThoughLemisch’s dismissal runs counterto the feelings of a great number ofstudents, both because he is a stim¬ulating and valuable teacher andbecause he is a valued member ofthe community, his department ap¬pears to find this irrelevant. A peti¬tion for his retention signed byover 200 students elicited no re¬sponse from the Department otherthan an acknowledgment of re¬ceipt.”"BASED ON the picture that Ihave,” Lemisch continued, “itseems to me that a kind of terriblething is happening. There has ap¬parently been no pressure fromabove to remove this faculty mem¬ber. But in a kind of base and vilerat-pack way, other junior facultymembers in competition with himhave found a means to jump onhim. It’s a rotten ,situation allaround with a kind of Eastern Eu¬ropean flavor about it.”Meanwhile, more charges of po¬litical bias continued to swirlMassive Crowd at N.Y. MobilizationKing, Others Denounce U.S. Viet Policy at Rallyby David E. GumpertNEW YORK A massive crowd that overflowed United Nations Plaza Saturday after¬noon heard Rev. Martin Luther King denounce this country’s role in Vietnam and then listen¬ed in amazement as the next two speakers called on King to run for President next year asa third party candidate.The crowd in the U.N. Plaza, es¬timated by New York police at125.000, had marched from thesheep meadow in Central Parkwhere it had gathered that morn¬ing Thousands of other demonstra¬tors filled the two mile marchroute and waited in Central Park,unable to fit into the plaza duringthe speeches. King’s address wasthe climax of the Spring Mobiliza¬tion to protest the war in Vietnam.KING URGED the United States,0 lake the initiative to end the warhi Vietnam by immediately callinga halt to the bombing of NorthVietnam. “In its deepest sense, the,tragedy of this war lies in the factthat there is no vital American in-terest involved,” he said. “This jwar cries out to be brought to aneml. Yet we are told we cannot |mow toward an end unless we get concessions. There is not a shred oftruth to this argument.”The speakers that followed King,William Pepper, author of the arti¬cle “Children of Vietnam” in theMarch issue of Ramparts Maga¬zine, and Howard Zinn, professor ofpolitical science at Boston Univer¬sity, suggested that serious consid- jeration be given to a Presidential ^ticket of King and Dr. Benjamin .Spock. Such a ticket, they said, jwould give the American people areal alternative in 1968 and wouldalso serve to withhold votes fromPresident Johnson.Demonstrators began assemblingin Central Park under leaden skiesearly Saturday morning for a dem¬onstration that was a half year inplanning and organizing. They hadcome from all over the eastern halfof the country by bus, car, train, and plane. The UC contingent, con¬sisting of approximately 250 stu¬dents, arrived at about 7 am in fivechartered buses.POLICE HAD ROPED off all ofCentral Park and by 10:30 am twopolice helicopters circled overhead.The atmosphere, however, was re¬laxed and almost festive. A few ofthe early arrivals painted them¬selves up and entertained the oth¬ers by performing Indian dances.Many people wore flowers and car¬ried balloons, and a few smilinggirls passed out carmels.At H am someone atop a largerock in the southeast corner of thesheep meadow held up a sign read¬ing “Draft Card Burning” and alarge crowd gathered to watch doz¬ens of persons burn their draftcads. This reporter saw at least 20(Continued on Page Eight) (Maroon photos by David Meserve)MASSIVE CROWD: A small portion of the crowd that gathered inCentral Park's sheep meadow Saturday morning fer the SpringMobilization.Surround RecruitersU. Wisconsin Students Picket CIAMADISON, Wis. (CPS) —Demonstrators at the Univer¬sity of Wisconsin encircled thelaw building and lined the cor¬ridors in the building where Cen¬tral Intelligence Agency (CIA) re-1cruiters were interviewing studentsthis week.About 18 policemen from univer- jsity protection and security forceswere placed around the building,.;and officials said that both city and ,county police were “on reserve.”Nearly 1,000 demonstrators lis¬tened to speeches and a telegramof support from National StudentAssociation Vice-President EdSchwartz while CIA recruiters were |interviewing students.Sidney Glass, representing thecampus Concerned Black Students(CBS), charged that the CIA is de-si gned to “thwart andstraightjacket any movement ofpeople to control their own desti¬nies.”Glass added, “If the CIA agentsare willing to walk alone without}the protection of 49 policemen, CBSis ready to take care of them.Another student supported the po¬sition of the Wisconsin administra-!tion in allowing CIA recruiters oncampus. Steve Field, chairman ofthe “No Berkeley Here Commit¬tee,” said that while his committeedoes not necessarily approve of theactions taken by the CIA in thepast, nevertheless, it supports theright of the CIA to use the facilitiesof this campus to recruit.“To refuse to let the CIA recruiton campus,” Field said, “is tomake a moral judgment for all stu¬dents. We believe that the universi¬ty should not be asked to make amoral judgment.”Wisconsin Board of Regents pres¬ident Arthur DeBardeleben, howev¬er, questioned the university’s poli¬cy of taking stands on some moralissues like racial discrimination butnot on others.In a regents meeting last Satur-day, DeBardeleben said that somestudents would think mysterious theway that the university determines•OOOiOOOOBOOOARLINGTON, VERMONTPUNCHCARDRETRIEVALKITS now /at yourbookstoreifr *850eachKIT INCLUDES:200 punchcards (5“ x 8 ), code cards,sorting rods, instructions, file boxOptional notcher ,...$4.50Refill packs (50 cards) $1.75A LIFESAVERFOR PEOPLE WHOARE DROWNINGIN THEIR OWNNOTES UndergraduatesFacultyGraduateStudentsAdministrationMany OthersSelf contained • light • simple—makesall other filing systems obsolete• Saves 90% of time now spent search¬ing, scanning, refiling, duplicatingnotes • No need to limit yourself toone topic per card, nor to keep notesin any special order • Retrieve notes,facts, ideas instantly, no matter howscattered • Cross-index automaticallyEACH DECK DESIGNED FORA SPECIFIC PURPOSEPaper/Thesis Deckt for course and termpapers, theses and compiling the lit¬erature.Study/Review Decki for class work andexam review for all course notes.Research Dacki for research data Insciences, arts, humanities.A*so ask about MEDICAL/SURGICALDECK: for medical students, houseofficers, practicing physicians andsurgeons. Includes 250 punchcards,special coding system, rods, Instruc¬tions— for recording personal clinicalexperience $12.50 which issues to take a stand on. iThe regents president added that |industrialists were tried after jWorld War II as war criminals, jand, he said, the students demands,“are not as preposterous as some |might think.”University Chancellor RobbenFleming said, however, that theuniversity as a corporation shouldnot take a stand on a moral issue.Each student has to make his ownchoice, Fleming said.The Chancellor issued a state¬ ment outlining the consequencesfor student demonstrators whowere asked by police to move.Fleming said that if the student re¬fused to move or to give his nameto the authority, then the city orcounty police would be asked totake responsibility for the individu¬al.Golan questioned whether Lu-berg’s activities for the CIA hadended in the early 50’s, as Luberghas said. UC Wresiling CoachLeaves Undefeatedby Syd YungerCoach Jim Baillie will leaveUC without having had, a los¬ing season. This season, which.was Baillie’s first (and last) asHead Coach of the varsity wres¬tling team, UC compiled a 6 and 4record, the best record for theWrestling team in 19 years. (In1947-’48 the team had a 5-2 record).Baillie called this team “quite su¬ perior to the 1960-'61 team,” whichwas the only other UC team tohave a winning record (5-4) duringthe nineteen year ‘drought’- Bailliewas co-captain of that team.A GREAT DEAL OF the creditfor UC’s fine performance on themats must be given to AssistantCoach Roger Olesen. Olesen, whohas an “outstanding wrestlingbackground (Oklahoma State andPenn State), helped the team agreat deal on takedowns.”Alfred Hitchcock’s FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTReplacing THE 39 STEPS tonight in a minor Doc Films snafu. Still Hitchcock, still g reat. Soc Sci 122, 59th and University. 7:15 and 9:15. 60 cents. P.S.: Disregard thecalendar of events this week.UpdateYourHearing is believing.Come in for your freeCrossroads stereorecord and catalog.High quality, new stereorecordings are availableat low prices. IT HADTO HAPPEN!When Deutsche Grammophonand MGM got togetherHeliodor was born.DVORAKSTRINGQUINTETIN E FLAT-or v■ THECYPRESSESFOR, STRJNCOBARTETTHEDVORAKQUARTETJOSEFK0D01SEKVIOLA HS-25023 ewrr VMM!*-ifmm'YjeiMMtMraSiiEsmi* err ucctu22 16 0081/22 16 0082*•rrf&ryTHEJBOIIIIAV VYAHCHAI.VinLIK"<y>22 16 0083/22 16 0084* HS-25024HS-25050Any 3 LP's for $475Lowe's For Service . . . Selection . . . Price1538 E. 55thMU. 4-1505 212 N. MICHIGAN726-0980 EVERGREEN PLAZA636-30302 • CHICAGO MAROON • April 18, 1967Too ExpensiveOh No! George WilliamsCompletely Loused Up No Coed Pierce Next Autumnnext year, according to Edward Turk-The panic button was push- of liceed Sunday when lice werefound crawling on the thirdfloor of George Williams."WHERE DID they come from?”dorm residents asked as they fran-licallv ran about the floor, puttinglighted matches to small pools ofhair tonic poured onto the tiny par¬asites. ,From Cornell, one residentsheepishly answered, his fingersmoving rapidly over his scalp and*among the folds of his clothing. “Iwas there a couple weeks ago.”That was about the time Cornelll mversity, was plagued with a liceepidemic. Evidently the student,who asked not to be named, hadquired some of this unusual Ivypolish during his stay there.A FEW of the undesirable crealures were put into a glass jar andtaken to Billings. ‘‘They’re lice, allright.’’ the examiner declared. ‘‘Sonow what do we do?” the studentand his fellow residents inquired.Millings officials ordered a fumi¬gation. which was carried out yes¬terday. But until then, the uninvit¬ed visitors were theabout every studentfloor. |‘ I'd love to see Lilly’s hair afterhe soaks it in kerosene.” one resi¬dent remarked. Jim Lilly, a thirdyear student, has been cultivatinga shoulder-length growth.Alan Bond, a fourth year stu¬dent. gave a lengthy dissertion onthe habits and migratory patterns. Mark Aronson, a second yearstudent, grudgingly continued hisphone conversation out in the hallas fumigators sprayed the thirdfloor phone booth.‘‘This conclusively prove s,”commented John Herrmann, anoth¬er second year student, ‘‘thatGeorge Williams, like all Universi¬ty dorms, is a lousy place to live.” I—JK wo-Glidewell NamedEducation ProfessorJohn C. Glidewell, a social psy¬chologist and an alumnus of UChas been appointed Professor ofEducation here.Glidewell, an authority on the so¬cial factors in public health and onmental health, will deal primarilywith problems in inner city educa¬tion, and with the training of schooladministrators, psychologists, andguidance counselors.Glidewell received his MA in psy-, chology here, as well as his doctor-1topic of just ate in social psychology. His ap-on the third pointment is effective next year. by John MoscowThere will be no women living in Pierce Towerington, director of student housing.“We decided that we would like to do it, but that we don’t have the money now,” he said.The administration had been considering coverting one house in Pierce Tower to amen’s house, with Upper Flint re¬verting to men. Student groups aredivided on the issue, but Turking-ton said he was sure that Piercewould eventually be made coed."WE FELT that it would be inthe best interests of the housingsystem if Pierce were made coed,and Upper Flint returned to men,”he observed.The decision that Pierce shouldbe made coed is almost certain tobe challenged by students who dis¬agree, notably those who favor con¬verting Burton-Judson Courts to acoed dorm. Among these groups is Pierce Tower has led to strongmovements in three of the housesthere to get out of the IHC. PeterRatner, president of Shorey House,said, “Partly the movement to pullout of IHC is a result of their voteagainst women in Pierce.” MikeMarshall, president of the Pierce1Tower Council, agreed with him.;“It would be the precipitating fac¬tor, not the only factor by anymeans, but definitely the finalcause of leaving the IHC.” Despite these threats the IHCwill probably fight to make B-Jcoed for the fall of 1968. Because ofthe polls taken in Woodward, whichshow greater support for B-J thanfor Pierce, and due to polls in B-Jwhich show an equal fervor therefor girls as is found in Pierce, theIHC will be under pressure to fightfor making B-J coed. Larry Sam¬uels, President of the IHC, said:“I would guess IHC would supportputting girls in B-J.”Even more irritating to thePierce officers is the thought thatB-J might become coed beforePierce. “We would be very angry ifB-J got the girls instead of theTower,” said Ratner. “There wouldbe a fight between the Tower Coun-the Inter-House Council (IHC)which voted at its last meetingagainst having women in Pierce.The IHC made its decision on thegrounds that the polls showed thatvery few upper class women would , ,, . ..live in Pierce, and that few thought | fiand any other organization.Pierce a good dorm for first yeargirls. It acted also on a poll whichshowed that while many Pierceresidents wanted women to livethere, very few additional menwould return if women were there.OPPOSITION to the IHC stand in THRILLING CANOE TRIPSExplore, fish, relax in the Qgetico-Superior Wilderness. Only $8.00 per per¬son per clay, also group rates. Write:BILL ROM, CANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTERS, Ely, Minnesota.SG Election ResultsWOODWARD: Alan Bloom find.). BillPhillips (Ind.), Jack Kucera (Ind )PIERCE: Sanford Rockowitz (Ind.),Roll Skeist (SPAC)BURTON JUDSON: Robert Tredray(GNOSIS)SNELL HITCHKOCK: Landsman(write-in)OTHER COLLEGE: Jerry Lipsch(SPACi, Jeff Blum (SPAC), Ed Birn-(SPAC) Heather Tobis (SPAC),Dave Rosenberg (SPAC), Ted Krontiris(SPAC). Leo Schlosberg (SPAC)SOCIAL SCIENCES: Ron Bayer(SPAC i. Dan Friedlander (SPAC),Chris Hobson (SPAC). Joel Shufro(SPAC i. Eric Shtob (SPAC). RobertRoss (SPAC). Howard Machtinger(SPAC) Stuart Doncstun (SPAC), SteveTallaekson (SPAC)LAW SCHOOL: Peter Bornstein(Seh i. Stephen Curley (Sch.), RogerPrice (Stud.)DIVINITY Carl Bangs (SPAC), JohnGarner (SPAC)BUSINESS SCHOOL: William Poppei(B^Pi, Donald Sommertield (BSP), Ste¬phen Livernash (BSP)I R ATE RNIT1ES: Ted Peterson(Ind iEDUCATION: Mark Joseph (write-in)H UMANITIE9: Greg Desjardins(SPAC), John Stevens (SPAC),(SPACi, John Stevens (SPAC), Joe Lu-l>enev (SPAC), Bruce Kaplin (SPAC),Lloyd (Andy) Anderson (SPAC), JanBrock (SPAC)SOCIAL SERVICE ADMINISTRA¬TION Dennis O’Brien (Ind), CathyConner (Ind.)LIBRARY SCHOOL: Miller (write-in)PHYSICAL SCIENCES: Irving Wla-davvsky (GNOSIS). Joseph Wolfson'SPACi David Friedman (GNOSIS),]Hugh Wilson (SPAC)MEDICAL SCHOOL: Aronson j(write-in), Ballow (write-in)BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES: EdwardSotii i Ind.), Michael Fauman (SPAC),David Grausz (SPAC), (tie to be broken’>>' assembly) SUMMER JOBSCounsel this summer in the Midwest s most unique camp.Henry Horner, Round Lake, III. A Non-sectarian, interracialboys' camp admitting gifted and handicapped as well asnormal children. CallRA 6-8891No experience necessary, training provided. The Pre-Med Club with Dr. LeonJacobson, dean of the BSD.Radiation Injury-Prevention and TreatmentBillings M-137, 7:30 Wednesday April 19,Refreshments follow the meeting.Most Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA>342 E. 55 HY 3-MS*NSA Discounts Recent Arrivals AtSTUDENT COOPART AND ARCHITECTURE:History of French EtchingsFerdinand HodlerIndian School of Medieval SculptureJoshua ReynoldsVan DyckL'Art Gothique en FranceSTENDAL JOURNALSThe Quizot History of FranceChurchill history of WWIICentury Dictionary 5 vols $12.038 vols $7.006 vols $13.5010 vols $30.00 ©tShould you drink beerstraight from the bottle?If you’re on a fishing trip orsomething, carrying along aglass is pretty clumsy. Butwhen it’s convenient, we thinkit’s a shame not to use one.Keeping Budweiser inside the bottle orcan is missing half the fun.Those tiny bubbles getting organizedat the top of your glass have a lot to dowith taste and aroma. Most beers havecarbonation pumped in mechanically.Not Budweiser. We go to a barrel oftrouble and expense to let Budweisercreate its own bubbles with the naturalcarbonation of Beechwood Ageing. Soyou really can’t blame us for wantingyou to get it at its best, can you?Just for fun, pour your next four orfive bottles of Bud® into a glass. If youdon’t agree that the extra taste, clarityand aroma make a big difference, goback to the bottle.We won’t say another word.Budweiser.KING OF BEERS • ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. . ST. LOUISNEWARK • LOS ANGELES • TAMPA . HOUSTONMl 3-31135424 S. Kimbarksell the best,and fix the rest^ foreign cor hospital Adultery, Prostitution, Slavery! Masochistic Grovelling! Sadistic Beatings!See a musical microcosm of the ancient world in all its decadence, Blackfrair's production of Rodgers and Hart s The Boys from Syracuse,based on Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors. Tickets $2.00 and $2.50, with a 50c student discount. Performances on two consecutive week¬ends: April 28-29, May 5-6.TICKETS ON SALE AT THE MANDEL HALL BOX OFFICE.il 18. 1967 • CHICAGO MAROON • 3SC's FutureThe Student Government (SG) elections are over for thisyear, and the results appear to be a dramatic repudiation ofthe party and the individuals who have dominated SG for atleast the last two years. Many of those we had always thoughtof as perennials are out, and assorted radicals have been elect¬ed in their place.The winners for the most part campaigned on a platform ofending complicity with the war, the draft, and Hyde Park land¬lords. The losers often didn’t seem to campaign for much ofanything at all.THE PROSPECT of an exciting, resilient SG is certainly apleasant one, and we hope it comes about. But from our experi¬ence, we have a feeling that it would not be wise for the newassembly members to start out with hopes that are too high.The ponderous SG bureaucracy makes innovation and hardwork seem very unproductive when finally translated into cam¬pus programs, an administration concession, or a charterflight. And the SG bureaucracy can also make a very humanerror seem like the grossest incompetence.We wish those who hope to change the world through SG jluck, but we can’t help feeling that there are some inherentproblems with the organization that will pose obstaclesuto theplans of whoever is in power.The MobilizationEstimating crowds is a difficult business. The police saidthat Saturday’s mobilization in New York drew a crowd of125,000 and Martin Luther King estimated the crowd at over300,000. For the spectator on the street or the demonstrator inthe throng, there was no way even to guess how many peoplehad decided to join the biggest anti-war protest of them all.The only thing that everybody knew for sure was that theSpring Mobilization against the War in Vietnam was tremen¬dous.THE SIZE of the turnout is not the most basic questionconsidering the protest’s success, but it is an important factor.It takes a certain committment to join a demonstration even ifone does not have to travel hundreds of miles. If, as it appears,over a quarter of a million people were sufficiently committedagainst the war in Vietnam to demonstrate against it, it is amost impressive indication that there are millions more who, ifnot violently opposed to government policy, at least nurturedeep reservations.The protest was significant too because of the kind of peopleit drew. Jimmy Breslin, writing in the New York World Jour¬nal Tribune, said the demonstrators were representative ofthat subversive group known as liberal Democrats—“the sametype of voters who in 1964 gave President Johnson the greatestplurality any candidate’s ever received in New York City.”Other reporters on the scene agree with Breslin that the major¬ity of the demonstrators were not the type to turn out for alittle good clean fun every time somebody decides to protestsomething. They were instead representative of The great re¬servoir of American anti-war sentiment that is clamoring to beheard. ' v> :'The question that remains is whether the President is will¬ing to listen. Vice Backs O'Connell's Stand,Explains Interview Procedureby James ViceA question has been raised con¬cerning political bias in the selec¬tion of students for admission tothe College by the Director of Ad¬missions Charles O’Connell. Biasis a general problem in humanaffairs and presents special prob¬lems within universities andamong administrators. Whateverthe merits of the particular case,the general question of bias is anappropriate one. I shall not at¬tempt to examine the motives ofthose who have raised the ques¬tion currently, for motives aretypically complex and differentpeople may have differentmotives for supporting the sameposition. For the sake of commu¬nication and the maintenance ofcampus community, I think a fullcomment by one “in the know”may be helfpul.,I SHALL firsl confess my owninvolvement and bias. My firstfull-time job was on the Admis¬sions staff, working directly underCharles O’Connell. I came toknow him well and consider hima close personal friend. I havecontinued to keep some contactwith admissions work both byreading admissions folders, by at¬tending meetings of the Commit¬tee on Admissions, and by spend¬ing a week in New Yorkinterviewing prospective students.I am, thus, myself a part of the“system” even if now a ratherperipheral one; but a number ofstudents who have talked with meabout admissions over the yearsand others who have been inter¬viewed by me will not, I thinkbelieve me especially secretiveabout the whole business.The role of the admissions in¬terview itself has frequently beenquestioned by students and by cas¬ual observers of admissions. It isrelevant to begin by noting thatthe interview is relatively minoramong the admissions creden¬tials—minor yet valuable. Theschool record and test scores arethe most important credentials.Recommendations of those whohave known the student over sev¬eral years play a secondary role.What the candidate has written inthe application and what he saysin the interview are third-rankingin importance and yet help the Committee on Admissions to havea sense of the candidate as awhole person and not simply as afile of statistics. The interview isa personal impression whichhelps to pull together the papercredentials, to reveal “what thisperson is like.” Surely most of ushave known occasions when sta¬tistics did not tell the tale for onereason or another and when wereally wanted to see, even if onlybriefly, the person himself.(While the issues are not exactlythe same, it is not completely ir¬relevant to call attention to thecurrent belief that some kind ofpersonal evaluation of a studentand his work might be preferableto letter grades.) There are quali¬ties of mind as well as characternot conveyed in course records ortest scores.AND YET the role of the inter¬view as a piece of paper amongother papers in a candidate’s ap¬plication remains small and mustbe considered in context. Typical¬ly an interviewer sees twelve stu¬dents a day and dictates only ahurried impression after eachconference. The interviews typi¬cally are not rewritten, and theyare not balanced judgments of thestrengths and weaknesses of par¬ticular candidates. The interviewmay not even fully convey accu¬rately the impression of the inter¬viewer; for under the rushed con¬ditions in which they are written,the words which first come tomind may not be the right ones.As one who has dictated manysuch interviews, I must confessthat my own comments are some¬times wandering, back tracking,and even contradictory. Likemany other such things, the inter¬views themselves must beweighed and judged. Not infre¬quently when the Committee onAdmissions is actually meeting,an interviewer will be asked toexplain what he meant in a par¬ticular interview and what hereally thought of the candidate.(And I might add, on such occa¬sions even a physical descriptionof a candidate and his manner¬isms is frequently a useful mne¬monic device for reconstructingthe interview.)In the course of several days ofinterviewing, an interviewer may iilsfelose himself and lapse occasional¬ly into the humorous or dramaticIndeed several years ago I myselfgot into difficulty with a facultyreader of one application whothought I was proposing to rejectsomeone on the grounds of ap-,pearance when I was only recording the humor of one aspect of aninterview.TO LOOK AT an interviewalone, or to extract a particularsentence or group of sentencesfrom it, is to misuse a sometimesuseful, sometimes irrelevant, andusually poorly and hastily composed page from the bottom ofthe pile of admissions documentsTo read documents or sentencesout of context may be alarmingor amusing (as when a typist newto the University once transcribedan interview as reporting thatGeorge Beadle was a “Doorbdlprize winner”) but is scarcely 'aproper basis for evaluating theadmissions operation or staff. ...In this particular case, a facul¬ty member new’ to the Universityand to the work of the Committee:on Admissions read an interviewand was upset by it. lie apparent¬ly violated the trust of confiden tstialty which surrounds the use of.#fsuch documents. Much of our eon#cern over academic records hastbeen to treat people as people and*~§.to preserve the confidentiality ofjff'documents which is necessary ifcandidates and judgments are not 0.to be reduced to mere computer Tstatistics, To abuse confidential##ity has the further disadvantage##of tearing the interview out of the#context of the full application andof the process by which an ad-missions decision is made. .The Committee on Admissions^®for all of the ten years I haveJP*known it, has tended to follow the "general practice of not admitting^students whose “major” is to be#extracurricular activities. Thhpcan properly be discussed as;,ageneral issue even though we reefognize that the evaluation of ariyjSgi.particular application may be dif-jfefficult. This is not to discourage||l§extracurricular activities, nor#tb||||imagine that sharp lines can l)t#&;drawn, nor to imagine that per’plifeet predictions can be made, norg^(Continued on Page Five) 44#Letters to the EditorChicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief ..David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. GumpertNews 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 HertzbergThe Chicago Maroon, founded 1802, issued every Tuesday and Fridaythrevg.’iout the University of Chicago school year, except during thetenth week of the academic quarter and during examination periodsand weekly for eight weeks during the summer, by students at theUnnersry of Chicago. Located in rooms 303, 304, 305 Ida Noyes Hall,1212 k,. Goth Street, Chicago, Illinois 60637, Distributed without chargeon campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood. Subscriptions by mail|6 per year. Charter member, United States Student Press Assn.Publish* is of the Collegiate Press Service.-■■•v - * .../■ ’ Challenge to HansTO THE EDITOR:I assume that Roger Black’ssuccinct account of ProfessorMorgenthau’s speech on “Intellec¬tuals in Politics” is accurate, al¬though, of course, necessarily ab¬breviated. On this assumption, Ishould imagine that many of the700 who attended must have leftwith serious reservations aboutthe validity of the speaker’s theo¬rems, the logic of his argument,and the paucity of his proferredfacts.A few among such reservationsmight have been cogitated ontheir way home along the follow¬ing lines.The main features of McCar-thyism as known to those whofought it were three: (a) accusa¬tions and denunciations of select¬ed victims based on false evi¬dence or no evidence at all; (b) apersonality inspired by egoma¬niac ambitions, hatred and sad¬ism; (c) a persecuting tempergoing to all extremes.It might have occurred to someat the meeting to ponder who,among the parties to the contro¬versies about the Vietnam war,most exhibits these characteris¬tics?CHICAGO MAROON April 18, 1967 If correctly reported, ProfessorMorgenthau alleges that “Johnsonequates all criticism and dissentwith acts of disloyalty or eventreason.” This total charge, graveeven if qualified, is not supportedby evidence adduced by thespeaker. Where is it? Where arethe facts?The speaker constructed a fig¬ure called an “intellectual”. Thisabstraction was then paradedwith the attributes that suited thespeaker’s purpose. The fabrica¬tion of such images is one of thebest-known logical fallacies sincePlato. It lends itself to politicalperversion. Modern logic, espe¬cially in the social sciences, asksthat the real characteristics ofknowable individuals be identi¬fied. If this principle is applied tothe “intellectual”, a category ac¬tually embracing thousands ofpersons all over America todaywho are University teachers andresearchers, then we know that;a) some are, in full dedication,oriented towards discovery andstatement of truth;b) some seek popularity, aswell, or instead;c) some are exhibitionists, inwhom the desire for effect causesa distortion of the truth they know « .> - «,or even produces an inability vtoknow it; <%|fd) some seek association withthe great and powerful for prj.s'tige;e) some pursue wealth;f) some are politicians inTtlitfull sense of the word.It is alleged that “no intellecgtual can have power today. ' Thisis not true. Teachers, scholarswho have knowledge (not merely;notions), discernment, and good;#|judgment, who are not willful and’fqjdoctrinaire, can acquire that pow-yg#er to which they are entitled in ademocracy by their advice andpersuasion, but in a democracy |the last word and decision isproperly left to the voters and . ,their constitutionally elected lea^'ers. It would be erroneous to be #.lieve that all “intellectuals^^whose advice was rejected byj||Kennedy no less than Johnson, forexample, are rejects simply because they are “intellectuals]#They were rejected because theyusually had inadequate knowl|edge, or powers of thought, andoften, because they took tooplistic a view of solutions todomestic and international prob-b ^ ,lems that are, by nature, cx'|||f(Continued on Page Six) fi*'■VVice Supports O’Connell’s Position(Continued from Page Four)lo imagine that students do notsometimes change from whatthey w'ere in secondary school.Nor is it to deny that qualitiesimportant to intellectual endeavormay be revealed through extra¬curricular activity, hobbies, orthe like. On the other hand, whena person’s previous record andown remarks suggest that the ac¬ademic life of the University haslittle relevance for him, then wehave tended not to look upon himas a strong candidate for Chicago.This is especially proper when wemust choose from among manyqualified candidates. are curious about the details ofthe decision which selected themand perhaps omitted some oftheir friends).Professors Isenberg, Wege¬ner, and Weintraub were invitedto the meeting as faculty mem¬bers who have participated ac¬tively in admissions decisions fora number of years and were in aposition to speak authoritativelyon the absence of such bias. comparatively free from personalinclinations and directed to select¬ing the ablest, most interesting,and most diverse group of stu¬dents for the College we can.WHEN, as in the present case,an application is called into ques¬tion and a particular decision orparticular admissions credentialis challenged by someone whodoes not have access to the pa¬pers which are kept confidential, itis very difficult for anyone to re¬spond. In this particular case,there is some reason to believethat the particular applicant’sname may also have “leaked”;and to go further into detailswould be further to release per¬sonal information about an indi¬vidual.It is particularly ironic that thecharges of bias should be directedagainst Charles O’Connell, for hedirectors of admissions in theis one of the most highly regardedcountry and has provided a modelto other schools on precisely theissues of eliminating irrelevantbiases from admission decisions.The small group of students whohave over the years served on theStudent Government advisoryboard to the Office of Admissionshave learned directly fromO’Connell what the admissionsprocess at Chicago is like; andsuch a committee, three or fouryears ago, published a detaileddiscussion of admissions at Chica¬go in the Maroon—a discussion sodetailed and so impressed withthe honesty of our office that ad¬missions has not been a very con¬troversial issue here in the inter¬vening time (even though many Discussions with the advisoryboard wer?, of course, always ongeneral topics and left open thechance of “cheating” in specificcases. O’Connell was the one whooriginally asked that the dean ofthe College invite faculty mem¬bers to participate in the admis¬sions decision and has, in the in¬tervening years, warmly encour¬aged such participation. Manyfaculty members read and evalu¬ate applications for admissionand some have even begun to at¬tend regularly the meetings of theCommittee on Admissions atwhich the three discrete evalua¬tions made for each applicationare themselves compared andevaluated. O’Connell, thus, in¬stead of keeping Admissions tohimself, subject his private biasesor preferences, has been an ex¬emplary administrator, attempt¬ing to involve others in his workprecisely so that the decisions foradmission will be founded uponobjective judgment and not uponthe personal impressions of oneman. Mr. O’Connell, of course, hashis own views of political truth;but I have good reason to believethat he is quite able to cope withsuch a bias. This, perhaps, willreassure only some who know mewell. I am tempted to cite chapterand verse to prove my point, butthat would only be further to com¬plicate the issue of confidentiali¬ty. No doubt there are those whohave no reason to trust me or theother faculty members who haveworked with the Committee onAdmissions in recent years; it isdifficult to know how to reassuresuch people. Finer Casts Challenge at MorgenthauTo Debate Issues of Thursday SpeechHerman Finer, professoremeritus of political science atUC and professor of politicalscience at the University ofIllinois has challenged Hans Mor¬genthau, to a debase over Morgen-thau’s speech on “Intellectuals in IPolitics,” in a letter published in jtoday’s Maroon.Finer writes that he wants to de- i bate Morgenthau in order to dis¬pute points made by Morgenthau.Finer is himself an eminent politi¬cal scientist. His books include TheRoad to Reaction, America's Desti¬ny, The Presidency: Crisis anRegeneration, and Dulles OverSuez, a study of the 1956 Suez crisisthat became a major political issuein Great Britain.Calendar of EventsTuesday, April 18FINALLY, it may be appropri¬ate to mention the meeting withadministrative officers mentionedin the recent SDS leaflet. Appar¬ently it was hoped by such ameeting to explain to the individu¬al members of SDS who werepresent, in every way and with allthe intellectual authority possible,that political bias is not an ele¬ment in admissions decisions andthat the background and use ofthe interview has been misunder¬stood. MOVIE: “The 39 Steps.-’ Alfred Hitch¬cock, Doc Films. Social Science 122,7:15 and 9:15 pm. Admission 75c.LECTURE: “Viable New CommunitiesInside and Outside the Old City,” PhilipKlutznick, new town developer. Breast¬ed Hall, 1 pm.TRACK MEET: B team vs. junior col¬leges. Stagg Field. 4 pm.LECTURE: “Differentiable Actions ofClassical Groups on HomotopySpheres.” W. C. Hsiang, Professor, De¬partment of Mathematics, Yale Univer¬sity. Eckhart 206, 4:30 pm.FOLK DANCING: International HouseAssembly Hall, 8 pm.LECTURE: “The Pest-Industrial Socie¬ty: Will the Technocrats Form the NewRuling Society?” Daniel Bell, VisitingProfessor, Sociology and College SocialSciences. Mandel Hall, 8 pm.MEETING: College counseling meetingfor any students interested in helpingWoodlawn high school students get intocollege. SWAP office, Ida Noyes, thirdfloor, 5 pm.MEETING: “The Lemiseh Firing,Scholarship or Politics?” Social ScienceQuad., 11:30 am.IT IS IMPORTANT to under¬score the value of having createdsuch institutions. We are all sub¬ject to biases, predispositions,and limitations of vision. I be¬lieve, after years of working withCharles O’Connell, that he hasshown himself eminently able tomake judgments and to encour¬age others to make judgments Since the question is properlyone of general interest, I havetried to speak in some detail di¬rectly to the campus at largerather than to or through someparticular subgroup which maysee issues or statements throughits own particular biases. Wednesday, April 19 MEETING: Community Action Organi¬zation formed at Teach-In. Ida Noyes,7:30 pm.DISCUSSION: “The Poor and the Ad¬ministration of Government PovertyGrants,” led by Harold A. Richman,School of S’ocial Service Administration.Pierce Tower, 5th floor lounge, 7 pm.FOLK DANCING: English CountryDancers, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.Thursday, April 20MOVIE: Apres-Garde films at the B-JFree Cinema. Judson Dining Room, 9-10pm.LECTURE: “The Powers of the Imagi¬nation” Michael Polanyi, F.R.S., fellowof Merton College, Oxford. Social Sci¬ence 122, 8 pm.REHEARSAL: UC Concert Band, Bel-field (High) 245, 5-6:30 pm.LECTURE: “The Financial Dimensionsof New Towns,” Harvey G. Moger, Con¬necticut General Life Insurance Compa¬ny. Breasted Hall, 1 pm.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: HillelHouse, 7:30 pm. instruction, 9 pm. gen¬eral dancing.(Mr. Vice is an associate dean ofstudents and general advisor tofreshmen.) MOVIES: “Johnny Guitar,” “A Movie,”“Breakway”. Doc Films. Social Science122, 7 and 9:30 pm.LECTURE: Photius and Arethas: Achapter In the History of Classical andByzantine Scholarship, Dr. Basil Laour-das. Classics 10, 3:30 pm.LECTURE: “Electricity and Magnet¬ism,” Professor Duane Roller, Depart¬ment of History, University of Oklaho¬ma. Abbott 101, 2:30 pm.SEMINAR: “Claudel and Cocteau,”Henry Rago, Visiting Professor. SocialScience 302, 8 pm. SALE - RENTAL - REPAIRNew typewriters and adding machinesguaranteed for one year. Used type¬writers or adding machines guaranteedfor six months. We sell with confi¬dence.We have a rental purchase plan. Timepayment purchase without carryingcharge from three to six months.TYPEWRITER DEPARTMENTThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave.Wednesday: Underground, UndergroundFirst off BREAKAWAY and m MOVIE, by Bruce Conner (of COSMIC RAY fame). Next, METANOMEN, award winner at the Chicago Film Festival. And to top it alloff, Edgar G. Ulmer's MURDER IS MY BEAT (substituting for JOHNNY GUITAR). All at Doc Films Wednesday, April 19. Soc Sci 122, 59th and University, 7 and9:30. 60 cents.SPRINGTIME IS PIZZA TIME!Nicky’s Pizza And Restaurant"ROYAL PIZZA BY NICKY THE UNCROWNED PIZZA KING"Fast Delivery Hot from the Oven 1208 EAST 53RD STREETrV.VV.W.V.V.'.W/.V.V.V.W.V/.V.V.'.VVV.V.V.V.VV.V.V.V.V.V/.V.V.V.V.V.’.V.V.NICKY'S TAKE-OUT MENUAssortments Small Medium LargeCHEESE 1.40 2.20 3.20SAUSAGE 1.65 2.50 3.50ANCHOVIE 1.65 2.50 3.50ONION 1.50 2.30 3.30PEPPER 1.65 2.50 3.50MUSHROOM 1.65 2.50 3.50BACON 1.75 2.60 3.60HAM 1.75 2.60 3.60CHICKEN LIVERS 1.75 2.60 3.60PEPPERONI 1.85 2.85 3.85SHRIMP 2.00 3.00 4.00GROUND BEEF 1.65 2.50 3.50COMBINATION 2.50 3.75 5.00EXTRAS ADDED 35 .50 .75RIPE OLIVES EXTRA 35 .50 .75ONIONS EXTRA 15 .25 .35We Put Cheese on All Our Pizzas JWe serve Royal Crown Cola, Diet-Rite Cola and Nehi flavors. T • • • jc CallFA 4-5340April 18, 1967 CHICAGO MAROON A—. : |if: " ‘ ' 1|| ft . || ,im/H''. /:.........i .... .... ........(Continued front Page Four)tremely complex and ambiguous.Often also, the would-be advisershad demonstrated too long a ser¬ies of inaccurate predictions.In fact, the University of Chica¬go has been most helpful to thepolitical leadership of this coun¬try, especially in economic policy,and policy regarding Africa andIndia, and perhaps China. Intel¬lectuals at other universities havebeen and are most helpful in de¬vising answers to foreign policyproblems. And so on.It must have worried some lis¬teners that only one case of a‘ colleague'’ was alleged to haveknown the truth about torture inVietnam by Americans!?) orSouth Vietnamese!?) but who didnot make this public out of per¬sonal convenience. The Maroonreport refers to another example,but gives no particulars. Theymay be true. The cases need veri¬fication. But to jump from thisscanty assertion to the general in¬nuendo that such action is wide¬spread is rather a fallacy. Onecase, or two cases, to support aninduction?In order to resolve such doubts including the Vietnam aspects, asmay have agitated some of thosepresent in Handel 11 1 >a debate with Professor Morgenthan before the student body, forthe time is ripe, now.HERMAN FINER. i '-I! iOF POLITICAL SCIKNCIi ' ' ■ • ^ ;SCIENCE. UNIVERSITY OFILLINOIS what a bookstore is. It would be awoeful day for books, writers,readers and bookselling if thisidea of what a bookstore is be¬came accepted. I do not know ofa single bookseller who wouldagree with Mrs. Werderich.JAMES ST AVERPointers on GrassHard on Planners'’TO TIIE EDITOR:A letter from Elizabeth Welder,ieh signed “Bookstore Employee’’appears in the April 11 issue. Thewriter is very hard on the plan¬ners when she says “they don’tknow what they want from abookstore.”Fortunately. Mrs. Werderichwrites you what a good bookstoreis: “several big book departmentsand a couple of floors of otherthings too. The other things keepthe bookstore out of the red . « .like a department store to subsi¬dize the extravagant book sec¬tions.”This is a deplorable idea of TO THE EDITOR:‘ the Com int in G a-s oughtto realize that: (1) “Grass’’ hasat least two common meanings.Ambiguity in official documentscan be dangerous. (2) The reasonpeople walk on green grass is toget from one place to another,quickly—a habit encouraged bythe ethos of this University (quar¬ters, deadlines, etc.). (3) Insteadof deploying B&G men to seed thesame paths and replace the sameL aces year alter year, wouldn’t itbe cheaper and easier to put con¬crete, stones, or even gravelwhere people walk? (At Harvardthey used blacktop, I believe—ormaybe asphalt (I’ve only seen it afew times); of course, that i.-ai'tGothic gray.)BART JONESMaroon Classifiedsif ■■ ■ sPERSONALS tO RENT JOBS OFFEREDTHE Be-In: May 6. Info. 055-4766.LYLE SPENCER: Call me at 321-3034I may return your thesis. Slade Lan¬der. Economical nearby clean quiet unfurn.front apt 2'>, 3. Private bath. $87.50 u,pFree utils, and parking Williams. 6043Woodlawn. . fWoman will type papers or manu* Iscripts. Up to $15. Must deliver and:pickup yourself. 731-5980 after noon. j1 Ef/ic. avail. 5143 Knwd. June 1 $70.Call 493-1366 after 7 pm. Programmer of electro-mechanical orsolid state equip, for behavioural stud¬ies. Part time or consulting. Apply:Personnel Dept,, Wiebolt Hall. Rm 117,340 E. Superior St An Equal Opportuni¬ty Employ er.Koinonia Theatre Party to Hull HouseTheatre at Parkway this Friday. CallHY 3-6451 by Wed. if you plan to come,(Tickets $1.00), Girls have beautifully furnished apt toshare, own bedroom. MU 4-7086. jRm and bd male students spr sumnext year. BU 8-8495 , 643-9220.SUMMER SUBLETS Manager, full-or part-time, sum. and/orwinter. For small promising coffee shopin pleasant urban setting. Apply in pel •m>ii eves. cvccdI .Mon. At the O'lllfc.KSIDE. 1603 E. 53rd St.Enjoy the Buildings and Grounds of theOTHER MDE Olive Shop 1608 E. 53rdSt 5 rms. partially furnished. 72 & Jeffrey.Avail, also for fall. $115/mo, 288,-7991.Archaeological volunteers wanted for jdig in Israel. Two sessions: June ,25-July 14, July 16-Aug, 4, Academic 1credit, Basic cost $625 including NewYork-Israel transportation. Weekend ex-1,peruses extra. For information write jDean Paul M. Steinberg, Hebrew' UnionCollege Biblical and ArchaeologicalSchool, 40 W. 68th St. New York, NY .10023. ! Furn. 4-rrn. apt., remodelled kitchenand bath, pantry. Near campus. Sur¬prisingly low rent. Avail. June intoSept. 667-5118. . Real Estate, renting and management,must have a car. 6-8 wks during sum.Collect rents, serve notices, supervisebldgs. Call for appt. Mr. New maun RAS'-1923.Spacious 6-rm. apt: 4 bedrooms. 2baths, on Hyde Pk. Blvd. Avail June 15to Oct. 1. 924-9213, ask for Elliott Waiter or Waitress. Exp. pref. 5-9 pm,■ n - Re-tuurant 1 I >7th St752-9251.Easter w-as early this year, but Passov¬er is right on time. Come to the Ecu¬menical Seder. Sat. April 22. 5:30 pm,Hyde Park Union Church, 5600 Wood-lawn Tickets $2, on sale at 5735 Univer¬sity, 5810 and 5540 Woodlawn. Childrenunder 12 free.Female wants traveling companion thissummer who is interested in seeingSpain, Yugoslavia. Greece, etc. Possibil¬ity of renting a car. Call Fredrica684-6933. Furn. 3’ii-rm apt. in South Shore. Sum¬mer qtr. Call 324-6706.Ideal for two students, completely fur¬nished, A!R -CONDITIONKK 2 bed-rooms, 1 bath, kitchen, living rm. Closeto shopping Point 1 '15 Call BU 8-2333.2 girls wanted to share apt. with 2 oth¬ers. Own bedrms, V/a baths, kitchen,living rm. nice porch Neai ca pusCo-op. I.C., Point. Avail. June-Sept. 5553Black stone. 752-2821. WANTEDProfessor, wife, and small child seek■■ III'-. ■ : 1 •' :i; k ;Manhattan, Kansas 66502.House to rent. Hy. Pk. 3 or morebdrms. June 1 occup. 288-4192.ART EXHIBIT: “From Jewish Poems." }Lithographs illustrating selected exerpts Ifrom the poetry of Yiddish writers. IApril 14-May 3. H1LLF.L. Two fern, rmmts. wanted for summer.5-rm. apt. 53rd -& University. 363-0413pm. ■ \ . ■ :FOR SALEPassover Reservations for Seders andother meals now being taken at Hillel.Deadline April 18. VW ‘65, sunroof, R-H, many extras.Best reas. offer. 268-9044.SG charter ticket, June 21-Sept. 26.363-1328. After 7 pm.KAMELOT Restaurant. 2160 E 71st St.10°o discount for UC students. 1962 Valiant stick 40 000 irnh-s; Excelcond. $400. 494-6801 aft. 6 pm. LIVE AND LET LIVE! Wanted: 4-8rm. apt. for Sept. Will take in June ifnecessary Bl‘ ;u>0!0, rm 3228. Lv.message if not in.Fern rmmt w irvted t» gin May 1 orJune 15. $45/mo. Call 667-2145.Apt wanted: summer sublet for Juneand July for U. of Pa. Law School stu¬dent and w'ife. Write: Robert Glass. 532Pine St., Phila, Pa. 19106 immediately.The University of Chicago Student Government75th Anniversary Speaker's Programpresents:DanielBELLvisiting professor of sociology"THE POST-INDUSTRIAL SOCIETY; WILL THETECHNOCRATS FORM A NEW RULING CLASS!’8 pm, Mandel HallTuesday, April 18 FREE!• CHICAGO MAROON • April 18, 1967 Bookstore SuggestionTO THE EDITOR:I :’i i’i ' 1 : ■ '■ " ....; aI would like to make a simplesuggestion which would improvethe bookstore and increase itsprofits The bookstore shouldchoose its inventory more careful-;. '• ■ • : :■ 1 ' ■. , ■of mathematics books they have\been sold. The hooks nobodyto buy tak< >f them ./A: ■ : ye;'' "; a "the literature to select a betterinventory. The slower selling- : ' y :: A . :: , 'back where they may be found ifany one wan's Hum. If .. ..... «.'/ .'■! ;> ■ : i-;tin- turnover would increasef 1 1 • • .EDW AKI) JONESgi;.\d; \te sti dent inM ATI IE MAI IIp > 1 hope that the bookstoreinagi ad I e|e" :- ' V ;l .idea.Conflict of InterestI UTIIK !■'!'! I H;v ■ ' .others t iii' standards of his owny ■ ...Would an\one suppose that there• ' : •Mr. Boggs’ chairmanship of the..... - y ■■ '■;M M< K \ \U< I\si eRAGAAmerica first heard the suggestions of ragawhen Beatle George Harrison played sitar,the ancient Indian instrument, in the Re¬volver album*Since then, a burgeoning (albiet small,pocket of devotees has been devouring thispurest form of Hindu music.Here in these newly released albums, raremasters create exquisite ragsound of mood, emotion and color. And onboth sets of album notes, the ancient artform is explained to the West.Raga will probably never reach widespreadpopularity in America. It appeals to musicaltastes willing to veer from the conventional;for Western men who can absorb Easternculture.If you’re ready for the twain to meet, meeta beautiful, graceful kind of raga in thesetwo superbly recorded albums. In stereo ormonaural wherever Capitol records are sold.MORNINGANDEVENINGRAGAS* * 'Theater ReviewHilarious Production of "Minna'at Reynolds ClubThe heroine of Lessing’s Minna von Barnhelni maintains that “all exaggerations aresomething to be laughed at.” Properly brought up, the lady iterates in this remark the comicperspective of her creator.But Andrew Harris, the director of the current production of Lessing’s superb play atthe Reynolds Club Theatre, has awaggish element in hischaracter—something indispensi-hle, I think, to anyone who woulddirect a great comedy. Lessingwould have howled in pain at theproduction staged by this renegadetheatrical son, for Harris’ produc¬tion is an hilarious perversion ofLessing’s original play.LIKE HIS English favorite Far-quhar, Lessing attempted to fusesentimental comedy and comedy ofmanners in Minna. He wanted toteach good morals, even sane poli¬tics, and he set out to expose suchhuman aberrations as false honor(in Major von Tellheim), avariceand hypocrisy (in the Innkeeper), jand excessive refinement andFrancomania (in Riccault de laMarliniere). His weapon was, ofcourse, ridicule—more or lessheavily applied, depending uponthe character.Harris takes Lessing’s belief inthe power of exaggeration and ridi¬cule one step further and turns aplay which is noteworthy for its al¬most Restoration comic decoruminto a dramatic grotesquerie which, Jm its best scenes, ranges freely be-!tween burlesque and pure farce. Nomoral purposes for Harris. Someother time, perhaps, some otherplace. And I quite agree.Harris’ naughty intentions colorevery scene and extend even to themost insignificant characters. Min¬na’s servant (played by LeeStrueker) has little more than awalk-on part. Harris, however,strikes him from a barbarousmould, and we never forget that hehas been on the stage. He creeps jabout like a Caliban, wiping the,snot from his apparently forever-!dripping nose with the back of his.servant’s hand. Personally I findhis presence rather offensive, buthis characterization defines thelower limit of the kind of comedyHarris strives for.To stay with the debits for a mo¬ment, I think Von Tellheim’s groomJust (Terry Moyemont) somewhatoverplayed. I^essing’s gruff but de-voted soldier becomes in Moye¬mont \ performance a sort of petu¬lant spoiled-child. He rants, pouts,and Milks too much, and stamps hisloot too often. The play does have,however, one marvelous foot-stamper in the person of Werneri Donald Swanton). Addressing Min¬na in the second act, he strikes■se\ eral apocalyptic parade saluteslike some elephantine Rumplestil-skin. Swanton is, by the way, oneof the three players who truly actsin the production. Despite one ortwo lapses in voice control his per¬formance is most engaging.THROUGH IT ALL, farce andburlesque determine nearly every¬one s behavior. David Katzin playsthe unctuous Innkeeper in ridicu¬lously bold strokes, as does BruceAndrich (though much less success¬fully) with Riccault de la Marli-ntere. Both fan the air with pro¬priety-driven arms, and roll theireyes or twitch their mustacios as'hey must. Our loathingbecomes innocent and fantasticallike themselves, and we relish theabsurdity.Joan Mankin as our heroine Min¬na also turns in a creditable perfor¬mance. Harris’ direction in thiscase makes her character dramati¬cally inconsistent, for in the initialPortions of the action she plays acomically ridiculous sentimentalheroine, whereas she later becomesHhat Lessing conceived her to be:an intelligent, slightly roguish, but>\)thal healthy and sensitive wom¬an Harris has a genuine feel foruamatic effect, however, and bycarping the original intentions herele gains some fine comic effects inthe early scenes of the second act.Julia Fremon, as Minna’s lady-in-waiting Franzisca, is far andaway the best performer on thestage. Neither Harris nor her roleimpose unduly upon her interpreta¬tion. She has astonishing poise andcommands attention whenever sheis present. Indeed, the play has anunforeseen (and extra-curricular)poetic justice in the union of Wer¬ner/Swanton and Franzis-ca/Fremon at the end.VON TELLHEIM (Lanny Unruh) deserves special comment, for heis Harris’ stroke of genius. Unruhis no actor and the hero of this playbears not the slightest resemblanceto Lessing’s character. But neither,in the end, matters in the least, forHarris turns all of Unruh’s tech¬nical deficiencies into dramaticgold.In the first place, Unruh does notknow how to carry himself belowthe neck on a stage. Dissolvingfrom the shoulders downwards, he forces himself to walk about as ifon stilts. Von Tellheim seemsliterally constipated, and when hesays of himself “How difficult isthis control” we sympathizecompletely (and laugh uproarious¬ly).Von Tellheim’s bowel troubleshave evidently raised his tempera¬ture a few degrees. Making, likeByron’s Manfred, his “torture trib¬utary to his will,” the Major seemsconstantly on the verge of an ex¬plosion. In the hilarious final act hedoes in fact go completely topieces.Further, Unruh’s grotesque at¬tempt to reproduce Von Tellheim’ssardonically relieved laughter inthe final scene is wonderfully bi¬ zarre. Minna looks at him aghastand declares (in a gesture of sen¬timental trepid ation that isdeliberately mocked by the bur¬lesque context): “Your laugh justkills me, Tellheim.” The audienceis, at this point (I can testify),quite beside itself with delight.IT SHOULD BE NOTED thatKenneth Northcott’s translation isfast-moving and eminently play¬able. The only major dis¬appointment of the evening was thesize of the audience. It is to behoped that the remaining per¬formances will be much better at¬tended—for the delight of as manyas possible, and the encouragementof Harris’ inventiveness.Jerome J. Me GannWith this cardthe bookworm turnsinto an adventurer. • ••Join TWA’s50/50 Club and getup to 50% off regularJet Coach fare.It’s easy. If you’re under 22,just fill out an application, buythe $3.00 ID card-and you’re onyour way to any TWA city in theU.S. for half fare. Your 50/50 Clubfare is good most all year*, whenyou fly on a standby basis.To get your card, call your travelagent, or your nearest TWA office.We’re your kind of airline.NationwideWorldwidedofiend on t TWA•Except: Nov. 23 end 27. Dec. 15 thru 24, JvL 2,3.4April 18, 1967Massive Crowd Attends Peace RallyREADY TO MARCH: Protesters await the go-ahead to march outof Central Park to United Nations Plaza.(Continued from Page One)persons burn their draft cards,lighting them from a flame in aMaxwell House Coffee can of ligh- iter fluid. The cards burned tocheers and cries of “Resist, resist,resist,. . . ,” “Flower power,” and“Burn Cards, not people.” The big¬gest cheer went up when a memberof the clergy burned his draftcard.THE DRAFT CARD burning cer¬emony lasted nearly 45 minutes,;and by the time it was over, thegigantic sheep meadow was vir¬tually filled with people, and thehundreds of contingents, some withcolorful floats, were lining up forthe march.A National Liberation Front Con¬tingent sold NLF flags and handedout long black hollow tubes to becarried in the march to symbolizeAmerican mortars. A man repre- jsenting the Polish Freedom Fight-;ers carrying a sign reading “EndHanoi Sanctuary, Let’s Bomb Ha- jnoi to Win the War and Destroy theCommunist Conspiracy” attracted jattention by getting into shoutingarguments with demonstrators.Many Older PeopleA large number of the marchers, Jof whom perhaps a third to a halfappeared to be middle aged or old¬er, carried signs that were as var¬ied as the marchers themselves.Some of them read “Immediate ■Withdrawal of ALL U.S. Troops! jNo Negotiations,” “Love, WhereHast Thou Gone,” “No Vietnamese!Ever Called Me Nigger,” “Stop the jy TOOK ALL KINDS: Here are two of the nearly quarter of a millionBombing, ‘Cease fire Now persons who marched.Negotiate with the NLF.’ , ”THE MARCH began shortly afternoon, heading east along 59th St. to maritecj( “\ye are willing to make a was largely white, appeared cool toMadison Ave. where it turned south jvjegro a one hundred percent citi- Carmichael’s charges and he re-to 47th St. Here it again turned east zen war and only a f^y pgr cent Ceived only scattered applause,to U.N. Plaza. Except for a few j cjtjzen at home.” He did get some laughs, however,incidents, the march proceeded WILLIAM PEPPER, in calling when he said, “The war is whitepeacefully. At several points along oQ King tQ run for presjdent in ■ people sending black people to fightthe route eggs were thrown at the said, “The reign of LBJ must yellow people to defend a countrymarchers, and some arrests were be ended and jts SCOurge removed that was taken from red people,made by pohce who lined the entire from our land » j It-S almost psychedelic.”“Almost Psychedelic" I Dr. Spock, who would be King’sStokely Carmichael, national running mate if King decided tochairman of the Student Nonviolent form a third party and run forCoordinating Committee (SNCC) j President, called for unity in oppos-* , .. . .. .. .. , affirmed SNCC’s support of King’s ing the war. “If we allow ourselvest<f^’ but aat atteTtinf physitcal desire to combine the peace and to be split, we will be chewed upviolence The cour?Jer demonstra- i n ights movements and labeled and it will be our own fault,” heZn.ageS cPar^ sfgns reWatog the war in Vietnam “a racist war.” j commented.“Better Dead tKi Red ” “Draft He said’ “There is a higher law “We °PP°S€ th‘S Wu*T because wethe Peaceniks’’ and “Beat the vfe than that of a racist like McNa-! love our country,” he said. “Worstu! mara . .. than a fool like Rusk ... I of all, we believe we cannot winthan a buffoon like Johnson.HE ALSO attacked the war as“genocide.” He observed, “Thereparade route.Several groups of counter demon¬strators followed alongside themarch, at times engaging in shout¬ing matches with the demonstra-Cong.” To shouts of “Bomb Ha¬noi,” the marchers answered inunison “We want peace.”At the rally in the U.N. plaza,some of the nation’s best known IS another America and it is afolk singers provided entertainment ug y one’' * .** 1S a s!de W1 h ’prior to the array of speeches. The! cy Senocide ... It waaes g -singers included Tom Paxton, Phil^ the colored people ofOchs, The Freedom Singers, fete lhc world„ The audience, whichSeeger, and Peter, Paul, and Mary.They all sang anti-war songs, per¬haps the most outspoken of whichwas by the Freedom Singers (“Iain’t going to Vietnam, the VietCong is just like I am ... I ain’t this war in any sense. We who op¬pose this war want to save the halfmillion Americans there.”By 5 pm, when the crowd in theplaza started to break up, thou¬sands of people were still marchingfrom Central Park, and there wasno end of marchers in sight.gonna go, hell no.”).“Magnificent Outpouring"A dozen different speakers ad¬dressed the marchers, the keynoteaddress coming from King. He re¬ferred to the demonstration as“.. . ■ A magnificent outpouring ofdissent to the immoral and unjustwar in Vietnam.”“LET NO ONE claim that thereis a consensus for this war,” hecried.King added that while he doesnot condone the actions of theNorth Vietnamese and the VietCong, the U.S. was wrong to enterwhat he sees as a civil war. “Thegreatest irony and tragedy of it allis that this country (the U.S.)... is now cast as an anti¬revolutionary power.”He reiterated his call to combinethe civil rights and peace move¬ments. “I believe everyone has aduty to be in both the civil rightsmovement and the peace move¬ment,” he said. He noted that adisproportionate number ofNegroes are fighting in Vietnam inrelation to their population and re- THE HUMANITIES STUDENT COUNCIL, IN CONJUNCTION WITHTHE FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS, PRESENTSRICHARD G. STERN, Professor in the Dep't. of English and Com¬mittee on General Studies in Humanities.reading from his playDOSSIER: EARTH Twenty-four Blackouts from the Middle ElectricAge.commissioned by Lincoln Center in New YorkMonday, April 24, 19678:30 p.m. in the Reynolds Club TheatreAdmission is freeEXCITING ART FIRST EXCLUSIVELY ATTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORECollector's Choice of the World's Great DrawingsReproduced in the Most Exacting Color and DetailIncredible Value at $1.00 eachReadi-frames at $2.95 and up.General Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis Ave. !ICHICAGO MAROON April 18, 1967 On Campus(By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!”,“Dobie GiUis” etc.) withMaxShuImanREQUIEM FOR A SQUAREYou, like any other lovable, clean-living, freckle-facedAmerican kid, want to be a BMOC. How can you make it?Well sir, there are several ways, none of which willwork.You’re too puny to be an athlete, too laz.y to be a valedic¬torian, and too hairy to run for Homecoming Queen.As for becoming a best-dressed man, how are you goingto buy clothes with a miser for a father?Are you licked then? Is there no way to make BMOC?Yes, there is! And you can do it! Do what? This:Become a hippie! Get cool! Get alienated! Have anIdentity Crisis! Be one of the Others!How? Well sir, to become a hippie, simply follow thesefive simple rules:1. Read all of Tolkien in the original dwarf.2. Have your Sophomore Slump in the freshman year.3. Wear buttons that say things like this: \NATIONALIZE DAIRY QUEENASTHMATICS, UNITELEGALIZE APPLE BUTTERHANDS OFF AIR POLLUTION4. Go steady with a girl who has long greasy hair, a gui¬tar, enlarged pores, and thermal underwear.5. Attend Happenings regularly.This last item may require some explanation, for it ispossible that Happenings haven't reached your campusyet. Be assured they will because Happenings are the big¬gest college craze since mononucleosis.A Happening, in case you don’t know, is the first form¬less art form. Things just happen. For example, eightynaked men come out and squirt each other with fire hosescontaining tinted yogurt. Then eighty more naked mencome out and light birthday candles in the navels of thefirst eighty men. Then one girl, clothed, comes out andpulls three thousand feet of sausage casing through herpierced ear. Then eighty more naked men come out andeat a station wagon.There is, of course, a musical accompaniment to allthese fun things. Usually it is “Begin the Beguine!’ playedby 26 trench mortars, a drop forge, and a rooster.There used to be, some years ago, still another require¬ment for becoming a hippie: a man had to have a beard.But no longer. Beards were worn in the past not somuch as a protest, but because shaving was such a painfulexperience. Then along came Personna Super StainlessSteel Blades.Today if you don’t want to shave, well, that’s yourhangup, isn’t it, baby? I mean when you’ve got a bladelike Personna that tugs not neither does it scrape, what’syour copout, man? I mean like get with it; you’re livingin the past. Shaving used to hurt, used to scratch, used togouge, used to give you all kinds of static. But not sincePersonna. It’s a gas, man. It’s a doozy; it’s mom’s applepie. You dig?I mean, man, you still want a beard? Crazy! But youdon’t have to turn your face into a slum, do you? Shavearound the bush, baby, neatly and nicely with Personna.I mean like Personna comes in double-edge style andInjector style too. I mean like any way you try it, yougotta like like it.* * * © i9#7, Max ShulmaaHey, man, like how about doubling your shaving cool?Like how about wilting those crauy whiskers with someBurma-Shave? Like regular or menthol? Like haveyou got a better friend than your kisser? Like treat itright, right? Ye-yel