Vol. 75-No. 59 Chicago Maroon75th Anniversary YearThe University of Chicago MIDWEEKEDITIONTuesday, May 23, 1967Approved by Senate CommitteeState Bill Could ForceBillings to Close Downby David E. GumpertA bill now before the Illinois Senate could force BillingsHospital to shut down or else drastically reorganize financialrelationships with its staff physicians.The bill, known as the Corporate Medical Practice bill,was passed last week by the SenateCommittee on Public Welfare andis now before the whole Senate.Submitted at the request of the Illi¬nois State Medical Society, the pro¬posal would make it unlawful forany hospital to collect paymentsfor physicians’ services and payphysicians on a salary or commis¬sion basis. part of the University’s staff, anddo not have private practices. Thebill is aimed at corporations payingphysicians, and the University andmost private hospitals are organ¬ized as corporations.Although the University has notexamined the full legal implica¬tions of the bill, the probable conse-(Continued on Page Five)IT WOULD HAVE a particularimpact on teaching hospitals suchas Billings that pay their physi¬cians a straight salary, and would quence of the bill becoming law acalso affect nearly all other hospi¬tals that have percentage arrange¬ments with staff specialists andsalaried “house physician” cover¬age of thetr emergency rooms.According to Dr. Wright Adams,associate dean and chief of theclinical staff division of the biologi¬cal sciences here, the bill“wouldn’t destroy us if it wentthrough” since the hospital couldreorganize its financial arrange- SG Demands UniversityImprove Housing Situationby Seth MasiaStudent Government, in a 27 page report completed this week unleashed a strong at¬tack on the University’s provisions for student housing.Former SG presidents Tom Heagy and Bernie Grofman. and SG assembly memberDavid Rosenberg |undergraduates wtio desire it. All poll. Apartment accomodations forplans for future building should 2000 students should be constructed•~Urge construction by the Univer¬sity of apartment buildings in HydePark suited to students' needs, and• Blast the administration and theBlum committee on student hous¬ing for failing to involve students inplanning for new facilities."AS YET.." the SG report notes,“the University has failed to recognize the crying need for studentapartment facilities in large num¬bers, or the need to actively in¬volve students in decisions (such asthose on student housing and facili¬ties) vital to the character of stu¬dents.”It urges that the University hasan obligation to privide low-cost,liveable, non-dorm housing to all take into consideration the planned over the next five years, it urges.increase in College enrollment andthe necessity to provide desirabledorm space to that half of the col¬lege which would rather not under¬take the responsibilities of apart¬ment living.Apartments UrgedTo these ends, the report recom¬mends, the University should buildthree to four bedroom apartments,to rent at or below current dormrates. The report claims that suchapartments could rent unfurnishedfor $50 to $65 a month per student,a rate acceptable to the average In addition, * cluster housing” inthe area next to Pierce Towershould be constructed to house 700students. These recommendationsassume a college enrollment of3500, of whom half will live indorms. Such housing would be a“cluster” of low-rise buildings,each for 60 students with individualbedrooms.Should the University choose notto concentrate on cluster housing,the report commented, it will benecessary to construct a secondPierce Tower, which should followTwo-Day Conference for PressEight Experts Assess Chinaby Ken SimonsonNearly 40 editorial writers and reporters spent two days at UC last weekend listeningto assessments of Communist China’s political background, foreign policy, and military eap-With itS physiciaas to suU abilities, made by eight leading American experts on China.The conference, which was held Saturday and Sunday at the Center for Continuing Edu-the bill.He added lhat although potential¬ly affected hospitals have not been cation, was arranged by UC’s Cen- THE CONFERENCE was spon-opposing the bill openly “We’re of ler for Policy Study (CPS). Most of sored 5y ttie Johnson Foundation ofcourse not enthusiastic about it and the participants had appeared at Racine wisc0nsin, which also sup-hope it will be defeated. closed sessions of its year-long. por^ecj an earlier conference on.UNDER ITS PRESENT organiza¬tion, Billings physicians are allpaid salaries by the University, are with Sunday's “backgroundsion for the press., .. ... , , ported an earlier conference —study of China, which concluded, one on jj,e proSpects for• •r.’tu C< m/I n tr’f uV\a/%lrrt rm inn” CQC I lt , . . . .. ,Southeast Asia, and a national con¬ference on the draft at UC.In the opening session. Ping-TiHo, James Westfall Thompson Pro¬fessor of history and a fellow of theCPS, described “Salient Aspects ofChina’s Heritage.” “I believe thatif you want to understand the effectof China's heritage on the present,you have to go very far back,” hesaid. He warned, “You cannot takethe shortcut of studying Chinasince 1900.”Conditions for TakeoverHe traced the conditions leadingto the communist takeover in 1949back to Confucius. Confycius taughtI that in education, all men shouldhave equal opportunity. This of¬fered a great deal of social mobili-j ty. In the 19th and early 20th centu- Jries, mobility was considerably re¬ undergraduate according to an SG original construction plans. That is,Pierce II should be composed en¬tirely of two-room doubles, eachwith a private bathroom. Thehouses should also be smaller, andthe dorm should eventually bemade coed, the report says.THE REPORT defines “liveable”in terms of space and social envi¬ronment. Any student who wantsone should be able to have a pri¬vate bedroom; no social rulesshould apply to housing of any sort,and wherever practical housingshould be coed. In cluster housingkitchen facilities should be avail¬able so that students are not forcedto rely only on meal contracts.Only by making dorms attractiveenough will they retain a largenumber of the 70 per cent of un¬dergraduates dissatisfied withdorm living, the report notes.Students Trapped in DormsWhile a large number of studentswould like to leave the dorms, theSG poll found that in Winter Quar¬ter of 1966 only 54 per cent of firstyear students planned to leave thedorms at the end of the year; 64per cent of second year men and 65per cent of women left. However,84 and 82 per cent, respectively, ofthese second-year students wantedto leave. Between 15 and 20 percent of the undergraduates who re¬main in the dorms are still thereonly because it is next to impossi¬ble to find apartments.Tracing the reasons for the tightapartment market for students, theTang Tsoui , , ...... i ' report notes that large numbers of. duced which led to the social un- Mao has held controi of the cultur_, £ f housing were torn down ini —* *t. w —1 al revolution. He is essentially wag-1rest of the republican period.Another important factor was the jng a protracted guerrillaabsence of a bourgeoisie. “A nu- against his opponents.”merically small but importantbourgeoisie” arose during andshortly after World War I. but a Five Major ChangesHe predicted five major changeswould result from the currentI prolonged inflation from 193/ to (struggle. The army will have me report couuuucs laimiorussftffpnp^f^the^ount^rv ^or^a^revokf snialler importance. Revolutionary prefer not^ rent to undergraduateI softened the country for a revolu- j cadres and proietarian orgamza- j studeats for various reasons. Only(Continued on Page Six) Hyde Park when the area was re-war newed. These apartments were amajor source of student housing,but they were replaced with rowhouses closed to students.WHERE APARTMENTS still ex¬ist, the report continues, landlordsMaroon jSioto by David MeserveBe-Ins are starting to become run-of-the-mill, as another one washeld last Saturday afternoon at the Point. This one did not attracttne crowd that the one at North Ave. Beach did the weekend before,But it still had its share of personalities. Here is one girl whocame prepared for the occasion. softened the country for a revolution,” he said.TANG TSOU, professor of politi¬cal science and fellow of the CPS,and John W. Lewis, associate pro¬fessor of government at Cornell,discussed “Political Developmentin Communist China.”Tsou felt that Mao-Tse Tung wasno longer in control of China. “Dur¬ing the period 1959-1962, Mao lostcontrol of the party. Many of histhoughts were discredited insideand outside the party,” he said.He thought, however, that Maohas retained control of most of thearmy and currently controls manyuniversities. “It appears to me,”he said, “that since the beginning Friday's Maroon will bethe last this quarter. (Wehave to start studying too,you know.) As an addedattraction, the Friday issuewill contain the undergrad¬uate exam schedule. Dead¬line for advertisements ofall sorts is 11 am Thursday;for news articles, noonThursday.Happy Spring. in South Shore are students wel¬comed as tenants, because theyhelp maintain the Taeial balance,but South Shore is too far from thecampus to be desirable for moststudents, the report comments.In addition the University hasgradually unloaded or demolishedmany old apartment buildings, inthe first instance because the landwas unneeded, and in the secondbecause it was needed for some¬thing else. This has been the casein South Campus, the report re¬marks.Sharp criticism was levelled at(Continued om Page Seven)He Did Not Think Revolution Would Last General Education Biology Course DropsTwo Variants, Choice in Spring Quarter!■The College’s general educa- The new course will deal vuthtion course in biology will bechanged next year to excludethe traditional third quarter“option” and eliminate the A, B,and C variants.The new biology course, to benumbered 105,106, and 107 will alsoinvolve two extra hours of classtime. This year’s sequence involvessix hours of class. Next year thecourse will include four hours oflecture and. four hours of lab aweek. topics covered in the first twoquarters of the present biology se¬quence for three quarters. The oldoption courses will now be offeredas 200 level courses with no prere¬quisites for all students.According to Gerson M. Rosenthal of the College Biology Depart*ment, the differences between theA, B, and C variants were onlydifferences of approach. Next year,each section will differ in mannerof approach slightly from teacherto teacher.Another change announced by theCollege Biology Departingmtermination of Biology 201, 202, and203 as a sequence. The sequence-for Biology Majors, consistedone course each in Botany, Zoology, and Physology. The courseswill be offered individualing in the fall.A memorial service forWinifred Ver Nooy, headreference librarian at HarperLibrary for the last fortyyears, will be held at the St.Paul Episcopal Church, 50thand Dorchester, this Satur¬day, at 2:30 pm. The serviceis open to friends and thepublicLAST OF HITCHCOCKWest by NorthwestSSA Lobby969 E. 60thin iliaFree toChicagoStudents25c to others TURN ON TOMORROW responsibility and individual treatment. International Har¬vester is a 2-billion-dollar-plus annual business. We are theworld’s largest producer of heavy-duty trucks, a major pro¬ducer of farm and construction equipment, an importantsteel manufacturer, too. POWER and the people who pro¬vide it are our lifeblood. We need talented and imaginativegraduates in liberal arts, accounting, chemistry, mathe¬matics and business administration, as well as engineer¬ing. We probably need you.Feel likebeing one of the brains behind the coming gas turbineage ... or helping to develop a new aircraft alloy ... orfinding out how to feed 4 billion people? Try your genius atInternationaTHarvester, where computers and researchare as familiar as tractors and trucks. We are a companythat supplies mechanical power to a world that is increas¬ing its population by more than 60 million a year. Our hori¬zons are unlimited. But our. immediate job is to attractyoung people who can match their strides with today'sonrushing; technology. We have;Oftenihgs;;inlresearch anddevelopment, design and testing- manufacturing and sales.We intend to offer the best combination of opportunity,A 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—ivhich 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 nameami 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. Interested? Contact your Placement Officer now for a date to see an IHrepresentative when he visits your campus. Or if interviews are not sched¬uled, write directly to the Supervisor of College Relations, InternationalHarvester Company, 401 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60611.:International Harvester puts the future in your handsAN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER ■a*UC Students React to ProposalMere Money Called forAt Model Cities Programby David L. AikenHow can city schools benefitmost from the recently passedModel Cities demonstrationprogram?That was the topic at a three-dayconference sponsored by the UCDepartment of Education lastweekend. Held at the University’sCenter for Continuing Education,the parley brought in educatorsand government officials to discusshow school systems can share inthe booty that will be distributedunder the supervision of the federaldepartment of Housing and UrbanDevelopment (HUD).THERE WERE some voices call¬ing for more money to do more ofthe same things now being done,but there were also voices demand¬ing new ways of approaching cityschools’ problems.Among the latter were the voicesconnected with The Woodlawn Or¬ganization (TWO). They set up acall for meaningful participation byall citizens of a neighborhood in the|affairs of its schools.Rev. Arthur Brazier, president of ]TWO, recommended local citizens’advisory boards which would havereal power to make independent re¬commendations. He seconded re¬marks made by Nicholas VonHoffman, a former staff organizerwith TWO who is now national cor¬respondent on civil rights for theWashington Post. Von Hoffmanpointed out that, in the case ofHyde Park High School, whichserves Woodlawn, remodelling ofthe inadequate building took placeonly after years of citizen demandsand protest.Cleveland CitedThese comments followed a talkby Paul Briggs, superintendent ofthe Cleveland public schools, whoreported on the progress that cityhas made since he arrived threeyears ago. Improvements in thesystem have won wide citizen sup¬port for the schools, he said wherethree years ago residents were sa- jbotaging new school buildings. Hecalled for increased support forprograms that his system is novviworking on.SUGGESTIONS for what shouldbe taught in city schools were of- jfered by Joseph J. Schwab, UC;professor of natural sciences andMost Completeon the South SideMODEL CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259NSA Discount* education. He cited the suggestionsmade recently at UC by a group ofNegro students. Among their re¬commendations to the UC adminis¬tration was a request for specialpreparatory sessions before theyarrived at college, in “the theoreti¬cal structure of scientific thought,”not just drill in math, and “disci¬pline in textual analysis,” not justremedial training in grammar.These requests, from primarily mid¬dle-class Negro students, Schwabcommented, “reflect the disparitybetween what is allegedlycollege-preparatory work in highschool and what these students ac¬tually need.”In remarks on how model citieseducation programs should be ad¬ministered from the nations level,Luvern L. Cunningham, director ofUC’s Midwest Administration Cen¬ter, recommended that intensive ef-Jfort be applied to building a few;real models, rather than “the pres-;ent policy of distributing modestresources among a large number oflocations.”To develop new forms of localgovernment which would co¬ordinate programs in each city,Cunningham recommended that “ina small sample of model cities the1federal and state governments fi-Jnance public education, health, andwelfare services, and that these bemanaged under a new board of lay¬men and professionals.”COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTFINE FOOD7100 S. Yates Free ParkingMl 3-31135424 S. Kimbarkwe sell the best,and fix the restforeign cor hospital PAULBUTTERFIELDJAMESCOTTONJEFFERSONAIRPLANEJUNIORWELLSOTISRUSHQUICKSILVERMESSENGERSERVICEMUDDYWATERSANDMANYMANYOTHERSPSYCHEDELICPOSTERSDIRECTFROMFILLMOREAUDITOR1UMNOWONSALEATTOADHALLONEDOLLARANDTWENTYFIVECENTSEACHTHREEFORTHREEDOLLARSANDTWENTYFIYECENTSBRINGAFRIEND UC, Barat—No Love Matchby Roger BlackA random survey of UCstudents indicates that mostfeel the University could getmore for its money by con¬structing a lavish seraglio thanby assisting in the proposed moveof Barat College.Despite a few somewhat para¬noid replies (“I think it’s a plot toeliminate the Catholic populationby placing young Catholic girls inWoodlawn,” or “It is simply an¬other instance of the administra¬tion’s attempt to de-radicalizeUC.”) the consensus was thatBarat was a nice bunch of girls,but that they wouldn’t want tolive here.AS ONE MALE observed“they’ll overtax the libraries sothat they’ll have to restrict stackprivileges to graduate students orsomething. Security will tightenup. The girls will start proselytiz¬ing, if not soliciting. Andhousing—housing will be impossi¬ble. The result will be that we’lljust be forced to co-habitate withthe Catholic girls, and they ob¬viously don’t want that.”A graduate student in politicalscience said: “I think its asininefor the *University to hesitate tomove girls to Burton-Judson be¬cause of the security risk, andthen think of selling land in Wood¬lawn to girls who know even lessabout what’s coming off.”“If they move down there,”self-avowed Catholics declared,“what they’re going to have to dois build a gigantic ivory tower there in Woodlawn with tunnels tothe library and the hospital.”In fact, no one interviewedwould defend the move on aca¬demic grounds. (As one beardedgraduate student in the art de¬partment put it, “they have noth¬ing to offer this University buttheir 600 vital young bodies.”)Male students, however, re¬mained particularly enthusiastic.“It would give the girls here agood run for their money,” saidone.But another student, perhaps ofmore realistic temperment, ob¬served, “If we are so inept thatthey have to get girls to come upto their doorstep, then thatdoesn’t say much for UC males.”On the whole, students look on the proposal with skepticism.Most thought that Barat doesn’tknow what it is getting into, andwhen they find out they won’t-want to come.The Lascivious LickOne student, lasciviously lickingan ice cream cone, said that “UCshouldn’t lower its academicstandards. If Barat wants to as¬sociate itself with UC they shouldraise their standards. If 40% ofUC students smoke pot, then Ithink we should require them to.”There are reports of a move¬ment to get together some typicalUC students, load them into cars,and send them to Barat, or elseget “the Mother Superior to go toa Hyde Park party.”I WANT TO KNOW(How Citizen Exchange CorpsHelps Americans Find Out)IF RUSSIANSHAVE HORNSSend me FREE reprints of N.Y. Times articles and editorialstelling about CEC, a non-profit, tax exempt foundation.Tell me how CEC brings together Americans and Russians ofall ages and occupations to meet their counterparts in both theUnited States and the Soviet Union . . . and how I can partici¬pate in this program. 3 WEEK STUDY-EXCHANGESLEAVE NEW YORK CITY ONJULY 14AUGUST 5AUGUST 26NameAddress SchoolCity State Write to:CITIZENEXCHANGE CORPSZip 550 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C., 10036SSSSSale SSSSSale SSSSSaleWe could write a book about this sale, but we'llThey give you the whole story. simply list our prices. .. .Men's Perm Press Shirts Were $5.50 now $3.85Men's Cotton Shirts Were $4.00 now $2.80Men's Slacks Were $7.00 NOW $4.90Men's Slacks Were $5.98 NOW $4.18Men's socks underwear '. pajamasbells knit shirts 20% offWomen's blouses slippers nightgownsbras panties girdles . .. petticoatspajamas gloves jewelry 30% offLook for special values on our sales tables where all merchandise isVi price.Gift DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.MAKETHE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOKSTOREyour Photo Headquartermovie and slide film expertly pro¬cessed. Yes, if if comes out of a camera"e can handle it. Save also on allfamous name brands.PHOTO DEPT. alThe University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. WE’D LIKE YOUR HELP THIS SUMMER:Could you umpire when the 43rd street "pimps” play the Hyde Park Tomahawks?Could you manage a softball team of Woodlawn 10-year-olds?Could you sponsor a team? Or enter one?From June 26 through Labor Day, we're trying to help about 1,000 south-side boys (aged 9-20) set up an active, friendly program of softball games.Local merchants and organizations will sponsor teams, including jerseys,bats, balls, and bases.We need people to umpire, to manage teams, to recruit teams, to get theword around. Students and their elders.If you have time to help now or during the summer call Ml 3-0800, ext.3587, and let us know. We'll invite you to a meeting soon.SOUTH CENTRAL ATHLETIC TEAMS,A Cooperative Program for Volunteers,Agencies, and OrganizationsMay 23, 1967 CHICAGO MAROON • 3A Sick BillA bill now before the Illinois State Senate that would makeit illegal for corporations to pay physicians a salary could con¬ceivably put Billings Hospital out of business and play havocwith the whole hospital system as it exists in the Chicago area.The proposed law would in effect reverse a trend towardgreater efficiency that allows patients to pay directly all theirbills in a teaching hospital such as Billings and most bills in aprivate hospital such as Michael Reese. The Illinois State Medi¬cal Society, which is pushing the bill, seems to be trying todestroy the Medicare concept. That is, in the name of restoringthe close doctor-patient relationship it claims is essential toquality medical care, the law would make hospital care moreexpensive at a place like Billings and make emergency treat¬ment more dangerous at private hospitals.BILLINGS IS NOT a self-supporting institution. It does nottake in enough money in hospital fees to pay all its expenses.Consequently, the University makes up its deficit.A large part of Billings' expenses are the salaries it pays thephysicians on its staff, none of whom engage in private prac¬tice. If the doctors at Billings were suddenly put on their ownto collect fees from patients they treated, hospital expenses!would have to increase, since the University would no longer |be able to lend financial assistance to the physicians. This isaside from the psychological blow involved in suddenly declar¬ing a vital link in the operation of Billings a separate unitapart from the hospital machinery—turning salaried doctorsinto independent businessmen of sorts.While the bill would affect teaching hospitals most directly,it would also affect many private hospitals that, even thoughthey do not employ complete staffs of physicians, employ sala¬ried doctors to handle emergencies. Emergency treatmentcould thus be slowed while a physician stops to determinewhether he should treat a particular patient. Lives could verywell be endangered. 18 i.:«s ■ :Letters to the Editorm:Baral Fires BackTO THE EDITOR:Whoever listened to an obscureand infrequently quoted Bulgarianpeasant? . . Apparently positionsof leadership have fallen into thehands of those who would. A“combined and condensed” arti¬cle recently published in the Chi¬cago Maroon is filled with ob¬scure and incorrectly quoteditems tthich are implied to berepresentative of six hundredCatholic girls. A more appropriateby-line would have been “con¬densed and filtered.”We vehemently deny that theseopinions are representative ofBarat. They represent only oneelement-and to the point of ludi¬crous distortion. This element is aminor part of the College. Profes¬sor Hannah Arendt expressed anopinion which we share whenfaced with a similar situation. Wequote from her letter to your edi¬tor: “These errors are a bit sad¬dening. They show all too clearlythat your reporter was unable tolisten and repeated merely whathe expected the speakers wouldsay.”If your article set out to de¬scribe the typical sfereo,typej of a“Catholic girls’ school,” it suc¬ceeded. If it was meant td fami¬liarize the UC student body withRarat College, it clearly failed.We cannot in conscience catego¬rize the elements which lonstituteour student body. We can say thatindividuals at Barat are of allshades of opinion, political andotherwise. That this could haveescaped the attention of Maroonreporters is difficult to believe.HEUfclST STAFFBARAT COLLEGETHESE ARE the basic, practical effects of a bill that, to us,brings to mind memories of the American Medical Associa¬tion’s tear jerking arguments against Medicare, when the basic.worry really was over doctors possibly dropping from six fig- CdlTipilS BldSure incomes to high five figure incomes. The concern‘‘for the very delicate and confidential relationship betweenthe physician and his patient” expressed by the Illinois StateMedical Society in support of the Corporate Medical Practicebill suggests to us that the only relationship it is concernedabout is the one that fattens doctors' fortunes.The bill, though it has been passed in committee, still, has along way to go before it becomes law. Yet Dr. Wright Adams,who helps run Billings, notes that the University is not work¬ing actively to defeat the bill. The bill is a serious threat notonly to Billings, but to most of the hospitals in the Chicagoarea. It is a bill that threatens to eradicate all progress thathas already been made toward greater efficiency and a slowerincrease in hospital costs, and it should be defeated before itgets any further.Chicago MaroonEditor-in-Chief David A. SatterBusiness Manager Boruch GlasgowManaging Editor David E. Gumpert IfNews Editors Jeffrey Kuta §fMichael SeidmanKenneth SimonsonExecutive Editors David L. AikenDavid H. RichterFeature Editor : Mark Rosin fBook Review Editors Edward Hearne, Bryan Dunlap ftMusic Editor Edward Chikofsky ||Assistants to the Editor Peter Rabinowitz ||Joan Phillips §Editor Emeritus Daniel Hertzberg HThe Chicago Maroon, founded 1S92. issued every Tuesday and Friday Ithrougnout the University ol Chicago school year, except during the Mtenth week of the academic quarter and during examination periods, $and weekly tor eight weeks during the summer, by students at the MUniversity of Chicago Located in rooms 303, 304, 305 Ida Noyes Halt, f:1212 K. 59th Street. Chicago, Illinois 60637, Distributed without charge &on campus and in the Hyde Park neighborhood. Subscriptions by mailSb per year. Charter member. United States Student Press Assn.Publishers ol the Collegiate Press Service.C H I C A G O MAROON • May 23, 1967 TO THE EDITOR:The Maroon's reporting and edi¬torializing on Barat College re¬flects the undisguised bias on thiscampus towards Catholics. Be¬tween your 36 pt. headlines shout¬ing “Six Hundred Catholic Girls”and your “three intrepid Maroonstaff members” your prejudicebecomes blatantly clear.Are we to suppose that if thesituation had been changed slight¬ly we could expect headlines of“Six Hundred Polaks” or “SixHundred Negroes”? Your repor¬ters who apparently went to Bar¬at with the preconception thatthey were entering a “peculiarplace” did a truly remarkable jobof selective quotation to prove tothemselves and to everybody elsethat your Bulgarian peasant wasnot “just whistling the Kyrie Eiei-son”. . . ■But as we said, yours is justexpressive of a larger campusbias. From random sampling ofopinion among UC males we wereable to come up with these gener¬al objections to Catholic girlsmoving en masse to our campus:* Anyone who has been raised aCatholic all his life and who holdsconservative opinions on matterspolitical, social or moral, is ob¬viously not intellectual or not in¬terested in becoming one. (Per¬haps your Bulgarian peasantwould like to discuss this withWm. F. Buckley Jr?)• The overwhelming majority ofgirls who attend Catholic girls’schools are virgins. And a girlwho doesn't realize by this agethat virginity is meaningless isobviously either immature, or in¬doctrinated or stupid, or all ofthese. Those who expressed thelatter opinion were generallydirty people who sleep with theirdirty whores in their dirty apart¬ments. Now we have nothingagainst dirt, but we do have agripe against people who dislikeclean, well dressed girls who re¬ fuse to go to bed with them, andwould bar them from this-commu¬nity because of this.And for those who are dismayedat the assault on the intellectualcitadel of the Midway, we feelthey have failed to observe thatthe administration has consistent¬ly acted in the best interests ofthe intellectual community, andwe find no evidence to support thefear that they have abrogated thisresponsibility.Finally, from these and otheropinions, we are forced to con¬clude that UC is now such a trun¬cated community that the peoplein it are horrified at the thoughtof coming into contact with peoplewho think and act differently thanthey, and Who will perhaps dem¬onstrate genially how perversethe UC campus may be.DAN KOCHERW. YAKES-RENOMisleading Figure?TO THE EDITOR:The article in last Friday’s Ma¬roon concerning the study of rea¬sons for withdrawal from the Col¬lege mentions that only 58%of the students entering theCollege Will graduate. That figureis misleading. It may representthe number graduating in exactlyfour years or it may simply be afigure of several years past.Currently 74% of The Class of1967 either have already beengraduated or are still in resi¬dence. Interestingly enough, thesame percentage were in resi¬dence at the beginning of theirjunior year. Some additional stu¬dents have withdrawn, but manyof those who previously withdrewhave returned.In the early 1950's, approxi¬mately one third of those who en¬tered the College graduated fromit. The percentage has steadilyrisen in the years since.JAMES W. VICE. Assistant-Dean-of-Undergraduate StudentsEditor's note: The figures on re¬cent drop-outs came from Dean ofUndergraduate Students GeorgePlaye, who explained that theyrepresented that average proportionsof the classes graduating in 1963,1964, and 1965, who graduatedfour years after matriculation.College AttritionTO THE EDITOR:Worry about “attrition” seemsto be a peculiar disease of admin¬istrators and educationalists. If 42percent of entering first-year stu¬dents leave before getting a de¬gree here, might not we simplyaccept their dissatisfaction atface value? To do otherwise im¬plies either worry about advertis¬ing (i. e. , admissions proceduresand public relations), or lack ofconfidence in what the drop-outsleave behind, or both. (It’s alsopossible, of course, that a personwho leaves, doesn't know what’sbest for him; but that is a hardjudgment to make even in an in¬dividual case, and as a generalassumption it is persnickety, dan¬gerous, and unfounded.) ManyCollege students drop out. Fine;should even the greatest of uni¬versities have to suit everyone?Perhaps one reason why manyundergraduates leave is becausethe ideal of Universitygreatness—apparently meaning‘academic prestige’—is not forthem, or can’t satisfy them com¬pletely. Thought, I believe, isvaluable in all spheres of life. AtChicago it seems to receive offi¬cial approval only (or mostly)when channeled into scholarlywork.The work in College courses of¬ten has questionable relevance to even that. It an undergraduatelinguistics course that I assistedin, most of the students, I sus¬pect, got turned off on the subjectentirely. Some might have gottenmore interested in it. A few, whowere already interested, wouldhave probably had more fundoing real linguistics instead ofthe busy-work that was giventhem. I can’t generalize about thewhole College, but if what I hearis true, other courses—includingsome General Education ones—are at least as effective in under¬mining students’ intellectual cu¬riosity.Yet even if all undergraduatecourses were taught excellently,many students might feel thatthey have other things to do intheir lives than academic work. Ifthat is their decision, it would benicest, it seems, to wish themgood-by and good luck; hopefullythe practice they have had inthinking about (‘say) physics orhistory, will be useful to them inthinking about anything else thatthey might want to do.This University, even while em¬phasizing scholarly research,might be able to allow divergentideals. If such a thing ever comesabout, and we still feel a need forshibboleths or all-encompassingprinciples, we might try “ration¬ality.”BARTJONESWomen's Rights GroupTO THE EDITOR:The University community maybe interested to know that a newcampus organization called theCommittee for Woman’s Rights isbeing formed. Its purpose is tofight discrimination against wom¬en in both the University of Chi¬cago and the nation as a whole.Some points of the Committee’stentative program for the Univer¬sity are:1. To eliminate discriminationin graduate school admissionsand in the awarding ol fellow¬ships.2. To i bolish the rule that hus¬band and wife cannot both bemembers of the faculty in thesame department (This ruleis presently waived only forthe eminent).3. To secure equal pay forwomen in all University em¬ployment.4. To establish University-runnurseries where Universityemployees may leave theirchildren when at work.On the national level some ofthe goals of the Committeeare:1. To promote enforcement ofthe provisions of the CivilRights law forbiddening jobdiscrimination against wom¬en.2. To secure adoption of amend¬ments to the federal Constitu¬tion and the various state con¬stitutions forbiddening racialand sexual discrimination.3. To legalize abortion of birthcontrol devices and informa¬tion to all persons who wantthem.We hope that the Committee forWomen’s Rights will have mem¬bers from every part of the Uni¬versity community, including fac¬ulty, faculty wives, graduate stu¬dents and undergraduates. Ourtactics, we expect, will be as ra¬dical as the support we receivepermits. If we have enough com¬mitted members we will use tac¬tics similar to those of the mili¬tant Civil Rights movement.The Committee is being formedas soon before exams so thatthere will be an organiztion meet¬ing and party for all those inter¬ested at 7:30 pm Saturday, May27 at 1419 E. 53rd-Apt. 2.ALISON DRUCKEKKEVIN SWEENEYTemporary Co-PresidentsUC's OscarsQuantrells to Four Faculty MembersUC’s Quantrell Awards, the University, in honor of his parents. ■ faculty of the University of South-nation’s oldest nrizes for excel-! Each recipient receives $1,000. ern California from 1963 to 1964.i .a in nnr?f»r{TrarJnotn MURRIN HAS BEEN a member His field of scientific interest is thelence in undergraduate teach- of the uc faculty since 1963. His study of evolution of living organ-ing, have been awarded to four fields of academic interest are the isms above the species level,faculty members. poetry and drama of the English; WHITE HAS BEEN a member ofThe winners, who were named by Renaissance. In 1966 he received a the faculty since 1956. From 1946 toWillett Faculty Fellowship for re¬search on the rhetorical function ofallegory.Sally has been a member of thefaculty since 1965. He served on the Chicago MovementsRequest Volunteers— University President George Wellsi Beadle, acting on the recommenda¬tion of Provost Edward H. Levi,and Dean of the College Wayne C.Booth, are:• Michael J. Murrin, assistant *acu'fy °f Washington University,professor of English and of College. Louis, from 1963 to 1965. His 1955, he served as president of Hav-erford College, Haverford, Pennsyl- jvania. His special field of scientific ;interest is in the conservation andproper use of water resources,especially as they pertain to riverdevelopment and flood problemsResearch Council |Paul J. Sally Jr., instructor of a.rea scientific interest is in the ( In 1966, he served as chairman of amathematics and in the College. j f»rouP representations. special National Academy of Sci-• David B. Wake, assistant pro- Wake has been a member of the ences-Nationalfessor of anatomy and of College *acult7 since 1964 He served on the l Committee on Water,biology.• Gilbert F. White, professor ofgeography.The Quantrell Awards were es¬tablished in 1938 by the late ErnestEugene Quantrell of Bronxville,New York, a former Trustee of the Hospital Bill Could Pass State SenateEx-Senator DouglasTo Speak TomorrowPaul H. Douglas, who served asI nited States Senator from Illinoisfrom 1949 to 1967, will return brief¬ly to UC on Wednesday, May 24.where he taught business and eco¬nomics for 28 years.Douglas will deliver an addressentitled “New Resources for Amer¬ica’’ at 3:30 p.m. in the Law Schoolauditorium.Douglas whose speech will bear |the subtitle, “The Problem of Tax !Loopholes, Or My Eighteen Yearsm a Quandry and How It Grew,” is Inow a faculty member of the NewSchool for Social Research in NewYork City. He sought to trim per¬centage-depletion allowances forextricative industries and to elimi¬nate Federal tax loopholes duringhis Senate career. (Continued from Page One)cording to Dr. Adams, would prob¬ably be to force Billings to organizeits doctors as a separate groupapart from the University techni¬cally. Dr. Adams contended thatwhile this would hopefully not af¬fect the hospital’s services, itwould force doctors to lose theirpsychological identity with the hos¬pital.The bill was passed by the Sen¬ate committee May 15, and is now,according to its sponsors, beingheld for possible amendments andriders as a result of a sudden showof opposition to it by hospitals.Reached by the Maroon in Spring-field, State Senator John G. Gilbert(R., Carbondale), a co-sponsor ofthe bill, said that if there are noamendment or other changes, thebill will come up for a vote soon. “Iwould say probably that it would bepassed because the hospital groupshave not raised much objection un¬til yesterday,” he observed.THE BILL WOULD then have togo to the Illinois House of Repre¬sentatives and be approved by Governor Otto Kerner before it becamelaw. I Sen. Gilbert noted that he hashad a least one second thought| since the bill was introduced. “Thej only thing that disturbs me about itis that it would affect teaching hos¬pitals,” he said. He contended thatother hospitals are now making aprofit by charging high rates forpatients and then paying relativelysmall salaries to physicians.The Illinois Hospital Associationopposes the bill mainly because itfeels it an infringement on finan¬cial relationships between hospitalsand physicians and also because itfeels that it could have an adverseeffect on hospital services.THE BILL WOULD apply basi¬cally to the following three in-] stances:• Services rendered by full-timefaculty members in teaching hospi¬tals.• Radiologists, pathologists, andother hospital-bases specialists on asalary or percentage basis.• Salaried house residents inemergency rooms. Opportunities abound forstudents who want to be social¬ly useful this summer, butdon’t need to make money.The Center for Radical Researchis looking for people who want toput their research skills to work forthe Chicago freedom movement, bygathering and disseminating infor¬mation on problems of interest tocommunity organizations workingamong the city’s poor.Structures of power in urban re-1newal, housing, education, etc., will ■be studied in the project which willlast from June 13 to August 25.RENNIE DAVIS, an organizerwith JOIN in the Uptown area, is incharge of the project, which needs150 students. He will explain itsgoals and methods tomorrow after¬noon at 4:30 in the Reynolds ClubSouth lounge.According to Heather Tobis, stu¬dent director, the Center is a de¬vice to involve white students inthe freedom movement in a mean¬ingful way. Those who participatemay also attend courses at a “Free 1University,” in such topics as or-! ganizing students and draft coun¬seling.Interested students should attendtomorrow’s meeting, or contact SueMunaker at the Student Activitiesoffice in Ida Noyes, ext. 3591. Ap¬plications will be accepted fromthose who want to participate on apart-time basis.HEAD START may also be ableto use college students as volun¬teers. The director of the HeadStart program in the ChicagoPublic school system wants toknow the names of students whocould work on a volunteer basis inclassrooms, or by helping with re¬cruitment and registration of chil¬dren.Whether college students will ac¬tually be used depends on whetherfederal guidelines on eligibility forteachers aides are modified. Thoseinterested should contact Miss Pau¬la Gubbins, Volunteer Co-ordinatoror the Head Start program, at 205W. Wacker Drive, room 1416, Chi¬cago 60606, or phone 762-0465.Activities of the center on cam¬pus are being sponsored by StudentGovernment and the conference onthe City and the University.NEW PAPERBACKS OF CURRENT INTERESTThe knowledge most worth having.by Wayne C. Booth $1.95Six Metaphysical Poets: Reader's Guideby George Williamson $2.25The System and the Gospel: A Critique ofPaul Tillich by Kenneth Hamilton $2.45The Metaphysics of Logical Positivismby Gustav Bergmann $2.95General Book DepartmentThe University of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueLEHNHOFF STUDIO OF MUSIC & DANCE1438 E. 57th St.Special Announcement forFALL REGISTRATION• DANCE CLASSES FOR MEN t WOMENMODERN DANCE-Tuesdays & Fridays-7 00 P.M.BALLET—Thursdays 6:30 or 7:00 P.M.MODERN JAZZ-Wednesdays 6.30 or 7:00 P M• MUSIC STUDYPrivate instruction by outstanding faculty(members of Chicago Symphony & Lyric Opera Orchestras)in Clarinet, Flute, recorder, Trumpet, Saxaphone, French horn,Violin, Viola, Cello, Piano, Voice.Chamber Musk Lessonsby facultyChamber Music RegistryA special service to the community. Submit your name, in¬strument, and degree of proficiency for proper grouping.Rental of studio space for evenings can be arranged.FOR INFORMATION CAU-BU 8-4347studentsunwindat Sheraton...and save moneySate with weekend discounts! Send for yourfree Sheralon ID card today! It entitles youto room discounts at nearly all SheratonHotels and Motor Inns. Good on Thanks¬giving and Christmas, holidays, weekends,all year round! Airline youth fare ID cardsalso honored at Sheraton.SEND FOR YOUR FREE ID CARD!COLLEGE RELATIONS DIRECTORc/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008Please rush me a free Sheraton Student ID Card (or a free Fac¬ulty Guest Card). I understand it entitles me to generous dis¬counts all year long at most Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns.Nam*I Ad«ir*«wStudent Q Teacher OSheraton Hotels©1 Motor Inns Get the best ... get a Vespa, theworld’s largest selling motor-scooter. Perfect for school, betterfor play. Vespa motorscooters aresafe, economical and engineeredto give you years of trouble-freeoperation.Vespa ... a little bit different . . .but so much better. Five modelsto choose from Take a test drivetoday.Imported and Dishibuted By VESPA DISrRlBL!"DNG CORP Near North Vespa1020 N. Clark St.ChicagoVespa of Chicago1610 W. 35th St.Chicago949 Ccmmonw««lth Av*. Boston. M»*» 0221$May 23, 1967 CHICAGO MAROON 5Internal, Foreign Aspects Considered \ fExperts Assess Position of China at Parley(Continued from Page One) f Mozingo said the Chinese were they want to offer an example to much combat strength. Most of the, warheads, but they do not have suf-tions like the Red Guards will playa larger role. No wholesale purgeswill occur, but many officials willhe replaced. Also, it will be verydifficult to restore party discipline, jhe said.Lewis described the struggle be¬tween Mao and Liu Shao-Chi, iwhom he said have always hadvery different ways of looking atpolitical problems. Mao, he said,wanted to gain proletarian supportand then build a party. Liu stressedorganization first. But Liu backed jMao and “there was a unity thatexisted from 1942 to 1966,’’ Lewissaid. “I would say that in 1966 Liu •Shao-Chi was still Mao’s heir ap¬parent.’’ he added.THE RIFT OCCURRED because“Liu was trying to train people tobe subservient to the party organi¬zation. not to Mao. The Maoistshave attacked the whole idea ofbeing a docile tool of the party, jYou have to be a docile tool, but,not of the party,” Lewis said.“I think w'e’ve reached a stale-jmate now, and it’s impossible to!see who will win out.” He conclud- jed that “you can say that it doesmake a difference who wins. But alot will change after Mao dies, nomatter which side wins. I can’t see jthat Mao’s thoughts will be rele¬vant in the decade ahead.”Disagreeing with Tsou, Lew'is re¬marked, “In order to h^ld thecountry together, it is likely thatthe military will have a more im¬portant role in the future.”Findley Favors RecognitionRepresentative Paul Findley;(R-Illinois) spoke in favor of Amer- jican recognition of Communist Chi-□ a Saturday night. He pointed out!that the U.S. had not succeeded in 1isolating China and did not evenhave much support from her allies.Findley countered several argu¬ments against recognition of China,and said that the U.S. would be Iable to gain valuable information ifit had an embassy in Peking.Furthermore, he thought recogni¬tion would enable China to under- jstand American intentions better.He hoped a future exchange of peo- jpie and information could lead to jmoderation of Chinese policies. Healso looked forward to establishingtrade relations.CORNELL PROFESSOR DavidMozingo outlined Chinese foreign ,policy. He interpreted China’s for-!eign policy since 1949 as an effort jto adapt the nationalistic and revo-!lutionary principles of Mao’s writ-ings. In this light, China views theworld as being divided into two jcamps—imperialist and proleta¬rian. the firs?: communists to advocate their youth of the effectiveness ofpeaceful coexistence, starting in guerrilla warfare. Secondly, LewisJune, 1951. They wanted to estab- commented, “the one country theylish i\ broad friendly base of sup-; feel is crucial in Asia is Japan.port in non-aligned nations.Although they were successful inthis aim at the Geneva Conferenceand in the Sino-Indian treaty of They would be willing to let Viet¬nam and Indonesia and the rest ofSoutheast Asia go if they saw anyhope for a Peking-Tokyo link. They has very little mobility,He said that China would like toinvade Formosa, but does not haveenough air or naval power. He saidshe will not send troops to Viet¬nam, because the Vietnamese don’tlike the Chinese and because theywould not be able to reach theSouth without being destroyed byAmerican forces. And he discount¬ed as “wishful thinking” specula¬tion that there might be a borderOriginally the Chinese thought t nator of a guerrilla warfare study i J*r^elween China and the Sov,etthey could unite the neutralist and co-director of Eastern Euro¬countries against the U.S. and thus pean studies at the Hudson Insti-limit American importance in the tute, and University Professor of1954, they were unable to win over, don’t give a damn about Cambo-the neutralist nations which held dia.” In the third place, they hopethe balanpe of power, Mozingo stat- the war will keep the U.S. and theed. Soviet Union farther apart.Chinese Miscalculation FRANK ARMBRUSTER, coordi- army is inadequately equipped and ficient range to reach the U.S.The U.S. could build a nucleardefense system against China for$500,000,000, according to Wohlstet-ter. But he thought it unlikely thatChina would have any retaliatorycapability if attacked.DONALD ZAGORIA, associateprofessor of government at Colum¬bia, discussed “China, the UnitedStates, and the Soviet Union’’ withHelmut Sonnenfeidt, director of theOffice of Research and Analysis forthe Soviet Bloc at the State Depart¬ment.Zagoria declared that each of theChina Has Missilestl„.au ... —, Wohlstetter said the five nuclear *^ree c<>untries fears a detente be-world. “The Chinese were right : Political Science Albert Wohlstetter i tests which China has conducted two- Currently, he ^about the vulnerability of the impe- presented an assessment of China’s since September, 1964 show that said• The Maoists continue to con- ;;|||rialist position in many countries.! conventional and nuclear military China “far exceeds what the f*dor thc C.S. as the main enemy.They were wrong however in the capacity. i French have been able to do in the as a *on8-range enemy. Theybasic assumption that the Afro- Armbruster said that both the j production of uranium.” He stated ,are niore concerned with revision-Asian world could be united,” Moz-; army and air force were large in that China also has ballistic mis. ,s™_ .ingo said. He thought this miscal- numbers, but that neither had siles capable of carrying nuclear . .liie Vletnam vv’1*r has caused aculation was due to an inability to - - deterioration of Sino-Soviet rela-■<“ — tions, if anything. I think the Rus-sians are trying to find a way outCalendar of Events, u —| *.*, mamm .Thursday, May 25 of the war for the Americans. Maohas refused to cooperate with Rus¬sia on the war.” He did not foreseeany narrowing of the split as longas Mao remains in power. On thedistinguish between nationalist andcommunist interests.In 1956, according to Mozingo,the Chinese concluded that the Rus¬sians were really against them.They thought the Russians were,more interested in stability than in Tuesday, May 23 ! „ ,Lmno-ioUcm RolQ DISCUSSION: Carl Weintraub. HiU.-h- FILM: "Memorandum —documentary other hand, he thought the waroverthrowing imperialism. Rela- cock Loun_e 7;30 m about the Nazi concentration camps. miph, rause Soviet American relations deteriorated in 1958 and 1959. ; BASEBALL GAME: Stagg Field. 3:30 Best documentary—Venice Film Festi- m,&ni cause aotiei-Amencan reia-“Frnm 1060 nn the Phincsc pm. IH Inst, of Technology. ; val 1966. 8:30 pm. FREE. tions to deteriorate as well.Irom I960 on the Ulinese policy , OPEN MEEUNCi University Policy on MEETING: Chicago Student Mobiliza e~nr«»nf«l/It ..was an attempt to force a revision Drugs Sc Discipline. Dean Playe & tkm Committee will have meeting at £>onneiliei<ll Said mat he wasof Soviet oolicv ” Mozingo said members of the Disciplinary Commit- Roosevelt U. 430 S. Michigan. 7:30 pm. speaking for himself and not forin ouviei polity, mutiugv saiu. i tee Reynold1* Club. 4 pm Sponsored by inf0 . 288 8109. I o. . n . ......HE CHALLENGED the notion sc. dWama -concert: , the State Department. He felt thatthat China is directing revolution- ' Wednesday, May 24 two tudor plays and a con- the Sino-Soviet split had raised newary movements in Southeast Asia p°“ucs '•*•- “H- g££r gL • IffpjTJSS P‘S.blSms .fcr *“?*«»» !***«“«or India. He said, “The indispensa- discussion: Rennie Davis, co Husband. Tyu His wife, and Sir Johr with Russia. as m India, where theble condition for a communist re- ordinator of the Center for Radical Re- the Priest and Mundus et Infans, pre- Russians have been able to get on, L , . .. rr * search will explain the project's aims.1 sented by the Renaissance Players , . . .. .. .volt is always indigenous. This will Reynold s club South lounge - 4:30 pm. Concert by the collegium Musicum. 'better terms than before the splitremain true even if China disap¬pears.”Lewis presented his view ofChinese interest in Vietnam. Theirprimary goal, he felt, was original¬ly to keep the U.S. out of Asia.'“From 1954 to 1961 they gave mini¬mal support ot the Vietnamese. ■They went to some lengths to im¬plement the Geneva agreement.” |But “in 1963-64 they reached a kindof watershed” with respect to Viet¬nam.Since then, the Chinese have de¬veloped three interests in producing a long-term struggle. First,SWAP's tutoring pro- J;gram will continue during1; the summer months, and|: the demand for tutors is :tremendous. Anyone inter- fested in tutoring shouldcontact the SWAP office in j1 Ida Noyes Hall, Ml 3-0800,ext. 3587.i3|: |• k'Be a sport.[Also sophisticated,intelligent,discriminatingand an all-aroundswell guy.]Drink Carlsberg—the mellow, flavorful beer of Copenhagen.and botUad by the Ca'Ub»rg 0,. PETERSON'SUltra-Modern Storage Facilities Protect Your Possessions-«k "CONTAINERIZED CARE"Our beautiful new warehouse features every Our "Containerized Care" eliminates piece-by¬advance in scientific storage . . alarm gong, piece re-handling . . . assures maximum speed,anti-fire sprinklers, humidity control, insulated safety, economy. Each item is wrapped, andwalls, dust-free floors ... to mention a few. padded then packed in giant, sturdy containers.PETERSON moving & storage co.DAILY PICKUP IN UNIVERSITY AREAphone: 646-4411 Authorized Agent for United Van Lino*Serving tho Greater Hyde Fork Area Sinca 1918hi. mc mi ■<. 'A> -rStudent Government 75Hi Anniversary Speakers Program. Copdnhgggn, Oenmirk • Carlsberg Agancy. Inc., 104 C. 40th St., M.V. TUESDAY-THURSDAY- William H. Hutt"The Economics of Apartheid"8 pm. Breasted Hall, FreeMartin Anderson"The Urban Crisis"3 pm, Breasted Hall, 75* - Students$2 others - tickets at doorCHICAGO MAROON May 23, 1967 1'j W„.''ACLU Suggests CollegesStop Giving Boards Ranks SC Attacks Housing MeasuresNEW YORK, (CPS)—A rec¬ommendation that colleges anduniversities “cease, on theirown, to make available toSelective Service information ongrades and class rank” has beenmade by the American Civil Liber¬ties Union (ACIAJ).The civil liberties group chargedthat academic values are pervertedby tying military deferments tostudents grades and class rank. Insuch circumstances, the ACLU, Jstated, grades take on a “life anddeath significance which can onlyimpair, the whole educational enter- jprise.”Selection of easy courses and in¬situations by students to amintainhigh class rank and thus assuremilitary exemption further vitiatesthe academic process, the ACLUsaid.The ACLU’s statement followed asix-month study by the civil liber- jties group's Academic FreedomCommittee on the civil liberties im-;pact of academic cooperation withthe Selective Service regulations.SELECTIVE SERVICE officialswere urged to eliminate class rank¬ing and grades as standards forstudent draft deferments, and sub¬stitute a statement of good stand¬ing.The ACLU said that students’civil liberties are not infringed"when an institution of higherlearning decides as a matter of ed¬ucational policy to cease calculat¬ing class standing, or to do so andnot report such data to the Selec¬tive Service System.” Commenting on the policies offaculty members who have madeunilateral decisions to give all theirstudents “A’s”, or no grades inprotest against institutional policiesof releasing grades to SelectiveService, the ACLU stated that “ifan institution has a known policy ofgrading, either written or implicitin terms of employment, and if ateacher decides on his own not tosubmit grades, his action is not amatter of civil liberties concern.” (Continued from Page One)the style of operation of the Blumcommittee, which made a reporttwo years ago on student housingand other facilities, and has contin¬ued to plan for such facilities. Thecommittee, headed by Professor ofLaw Walter J. Blum, consisted en¬tirely of faculty members.The SG report comments, “It isincredible that the Universityshould appoint a committee on‘Student Housing and Facilities’ onwhich there were no students. Asmight have been expected, theCommittee was considerably ham¬pered by the absence of studentmembers—The notion that the lack of student members on the commit¬tee was compensated for by thecommittee’s interviewing students .. .is nonsense.”“ONLY WHEN students are inte-grated into all phases ofdecisions—including the fundamen¬tal decisions of what kind of com¬munity is desirable, what kinds ofhousing and facilities meet theneeds of the community—can stu¬dents make the contribution to Uni¬versity decision-making that theirparticular experience and nearnessto the problems makes possible,”the SG report continues.“The Provost’s selection of Wal¬ter Blum as chairman of the com-1 mittee,” it adds, “is unfortunatelyone which we must regret. Al¬though we recognize ProfessorBlum’s particular competence andhis willingness to devote a greatdeal of time to the work of thecommittee, it was consistently animpression that Prof. Blum was in¬terested in student opinion largelyas a means of substantiating hisowi pre-conceptions, nor did wefeel that Prof. Blum dealt with usin good faith.”Blum and members of the admin¬istration have not yet seen the SGreport, which was mimeographedlast week and released to the Ma¬roon Sunday.The Conference on the City and theUniversity and Student GovernmentpresentRennie Davisof Chicago JOIN,speaking on**A Free University”Wednesday - 4:30 - Reynolds ClubFREE! 21 Years Old?DRIVE A YELLOW CABTHIS SUMMERfull or part time-work near your homeA UC Student Earned $25/dayLast SummerFor information Call CA 5-7440SUMMER JOBSFOR STUDENTSApplications now being accepted for summer jobs with majorcorporation. Students 18 yrs. of age & over wanted to learnmarketing, sales promotion, & brand identification techniquesduring summer period. High level executive managementtraining courses given to qualified applicants. Salary $105per wk. for first 3 wks. $130 per wk. plus bonuses starting4th week.SCHOLARSHIPSwin one of 15 $1,000.scholarships HIGH PAYearn at least $1,500 for thesummer student — make$3,000 and more.TRAVEL SEE EUROPEWork anywhere in U S. or Win all expense paid holi-Canada. Qualified students day in Europe for an entiremay work overseas. week.Best Positions Going Fast!Call Today For Appointment9:00 A.M. - 1:00 P.M.CHICAGO LOOP & SO. ILL.... Mr. Vass A.C. 312 346-6108CHICAGO LOOP & NO. ILL.... Mr. Anderson A.C. 312 782-4362GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. & IND. Mr. Schmitt A.C. 6l6 459-5079MILWAUKEE, WIS. fie IOWA ... Mr. Bergman ...... A.C. 4l4 276-4119We have offices located in most cities however please contactour district offices listed above for an appointment. Everybody cheers for tco-cofd Coca-Cola. Coke has jMQthe last# you nover gel tired of...always refresh-ing. Thai’s why things go bettor with Coko • • • afterCoke...after Coke.Bottled under the a uthoritu of the Coca Cola Company by:The Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Chicagoo CHICAGO MAROONMay 23, 1967 • 7si '■ . • .••• ...MAROON CLASSIFIEDS Twin beds, may be bunked, gd. cond.: Reas. Eves. 493-8803.•64 VW, AM-FM, clean. $800. 752-3339.Honda S-90, late '65. 1700 mi., fine cond.Best offer. Art, MI 3-1014 $40 mo, own rm. in fully turn. 7-rm FOR SUMMER:apr., 1 blk from IC, in HY. Pk. Open campus, 5 rms,Occupancy. Avail now. MI 3-3603. | 752-9512. Roger. Apartment close ipfurn. $38 mo. Male.Fully furn. effic, So. Shore, IC, on UC Male stu. needs 3 rmmts for Summ. 'bus rte. Perf. for cpels, 6/15-9/15. Spacious apt. Own rm. $45/mo. 493-2201PERSONALSJoin Clowns Ag.a: si War and Fascism:Cali Bozo. NEEDED: SOMEBODY WHO CARESABOUT PEOPLE. The Jackson CountyCommunity Group. Inc., a poor people'scorporation in East Ky.. needs an imag- 1965 TR4A ind. rear suspension, over- 4-rm. apt, 2 bdrms,drive: call 667-5895. & or next yr. 643-8678.288-8785 8-12 am, 10-12 pm.53 & late.Knwd. Sum. 4th fern, for sum. $45. 493-6147.Looking for a home? We have several 6'j rm apt. for 4 people,quality S. Shore homes for sale at diff. 53rd & Greenwood. 363-6961.(native social/poiltical organizer to run price levels. Phone us. Dillen-Beck 2 male stu. want attractive female few$27.oO each ; sum. rmmt. 7 rms, VERY nr. campnI Hitchcock 61 (lv. message.)MADISON-BOUND? Am looking for co7nVo^WdV‘VI.mnumVtT ‘informa- fe'eafity'CoV «040 ^Exchange,' 768-4UL *i*|o/moP or ’ “be^l offer £C'"Uf°nr ^ride for me and my stuff to-U. of Wise, tion centers oroeram. The urogram is ,i . a it ,, ft cnitpn -joi 4.4 ns: f7<so V * I nr campus. $49/mo. 66<-027.tion centers program. The program is Modern 9 ft COUCH,rm. 0perated through grants from the office BOOKCASES: DINING ROOMof economic opportunity, has .thirty em- pl 2-3950It FF: Happy Birthday on Buddha s to ployees and runs ' a . yearly budget of —7—'about 6 18" Kant abut ra. FA 4-8290369. Leave message giant 324-6434 or 955-4768.MISC.one altogether other. $100,000 The pay scale goes to $650 per Polaroid, model 80, light-meter, flash- furn. 493-7287. , ,, _ ..._ —'month. Interested applicants should gon, dil tust-r. case, Steal it for $2o“Satter .and Blunt call Day of Inquiry. write to Richard Guske, P.O. Box 106, Phil. DO 3-9851.new McKee, Kentucky, immediately. ' ' | — COOL, QUIET, VERY LOW RENT. iy2rm. apt. 5207 Blackstone, furn or un-Do we need a compass to find SUBLETCompass; . Group ’. Our stage is open Exciting public contact part-time sellingMon. • & Tues. night. Oh where, oh jn large LOOP area building. Personal-. — : ■where are the bright new stars of 1971. jzed Christmas cards. Please Write Mrs. ll2 lge. rms. for summer. 51st & UniAll we want are bright beautiful, talent- Florence Moss, Plaza Card Shop The versity. Gary, 493-5360 or 643-5541lMe!?2se!ve-? Merchandise Mart, Chicago Illinois andand MAKE IT HAPPEN. Call Mort at telephone number (women only.j -Baroque, 1510 E. 53rd PL 2-3647. —— — — —. 77 — ——- APPLICANTS WANTED: challengingGreat new guitar instruction book summer - research project investigating 5 rms (2-3 bdrms) 54 & Univ. furn.completely. $115/mo. MU 4-8184, beforenoon or eves.“Masters of Instrumental Blues Gui- aspects of US policy in Vietnam. South-tar. .- Rev.- Gary .Davis. M^f^’liCJohb'{east Asian Research,Group r-n. I WW-WtMCookie to first 5 who call Furn, 4-rm.$95 mo. apt for $75. 6106 Ellis 752-7642 ...4 lg. rms, 1 or 2 bdrms., fully furn. 1blk from campus. 6/12-9/25,, only $93.50. 2-bdrm apt, 54 & Woodlawn, for sum¬mer. Need rmmt. 288-5650.1*3" lg rms for sum-:.vr 51 & Univ.Gary. 493-5360 or 643-55413'2 rm. 1 bdrm, furn. June 10/Aug. 15.Nr. Coop. IC, Lake. 667-4570. Fern, for 4-rm apt nr. campus, begJune, opt Fall. $45/mo. 684-3472.2 fern, for sum. $47. 667-2145.Fein, for sum &/or next yr. Own furnrm. $35' mo. 493-6761Male for sum. &/or next yr. Spaciousunny 7-rm apt. 1635 E. 53rd. BU8-5554- p."p"3',2 rm apt,year. 221-3475 Shore. Avail next Lg. apt to shr w/3 girls. Own rm. nr 58Sc Knud. $47.50/mo. 324-1346 aft . .sum. &'or next yr.Fem. for summer. 6 rms, sunpin,facilities, great loaction. 54 & Univ288-6102.Hurt. John Fahcv etc THE FRET KS 5-1900SHOPThe Beetles next iuek- ' Low, Hiuue and Jt*lt BARGAIN! Aug. 15-Sept. 15 or Oct. 1. Apt, to shr. Male- 752 6628 Woman to shr. attract: apt, .own rm.t'n,53 Sc Harper. $50 752-7267. "p. '*p'FOR SALE 55 & Kmv cl a ims turn,:, BL 8-6610 ;rm..1210 APARTMENTS WANTEDFILM: ••Memorandum"—documentary Sofa, bureau, mirror, 2 small'bur. doorabout the Nazi Concentration .Camps.- desk, accordian dr. 288-4534 between 4-,7;Awarded first p r i / e —b e s t pm.' VxTlcef.- q'-LV r\V!| '' i II w t:\riii\i. , ■ ,1-. • I 't,h I mirsdavp May 2o 8 30 p $2 +0 Dav ,‘: F i ei 4 rm nicely furn. apt. 53rd & Blkstn.July-Aug--Sept. Refs, req BU 8-0675.NICE PLACE 4' . rms FURNISHED5511. \ H \ Pk. 288-4328 ' ' 8 rms., 4 bdrms, 51 & Ktnbk. Opt for ;next yr. $185. 493-2201. late.Fully furnished, air-conditioned apt tor Would Like to rent hie for sum \.just furniture. Avail. June 8- 363-8058 i teacher w/t school-age children Cn l,.' I in Je-mid-Aug. Call collect as soon aTO RENTKlH at THE FRET SHOP '- ‘ '1966 Yamal M> c. Good cond: 288-2 ' 4 rms. S Shore. Completely furn, Will 4 rms unfurn, bdrm. alr-cond availdiscuss price with resp. party15-Aug. 30. Air. cond. 374-7331. June 6{15. $98.50/mo. 667-1615 eves/ possible. 312-339-2672 or write IGeorge. 806 E, 163rd St. Holland Ulinois. ‘ ■■ •288-2959. 5‘j rms. 6108 Ellis. $80/mo.>643-8912: Economical nearby clean quiet unfurn.front apt. 3 rms Private bath. $92.50Y\ Oman '-ta Opt. theses i. i a 11 a s i . i p.r- o 1XJ f vr ro V t -, ; s\/r r r-'-r* -tr j i ,,.Don t >,m til last minute' To $20 C sU-{ mil 10 pm. 1 . s ' 1 '1 ELOT-; Restaur,.10 diM'oum I (. sludeius 7 lg . ■ r.i rms. 3-4 bdrms n, campus Sc ^'.-happing. SI5.3 mo em.RfifiO shopping Williams 6043 wdln.643 666910 rm hse, rnr t-6 bdrms, KTC'HN WANT A ROOM WITH SEX,appea 1 ? :#private,-.;''spacious, and Resp family needs 2-bdrm: hse or aby Aug. 25. Write Rev. Robt Newtonview, Campbell College, Buies’ CreekCarolina . .j First yr , fern. grad, desires aptfur-XG SEKV1CM- - theses p" misc. 288-2639aoine^to.if's'F plj. e 3: lain,us -our •caa* -or youi- ... East. trip. Michael37.1 7404- ’,rj,Sharep? .di iyi 1 > g :7?1( VW) ' and' expenses toDenv.erpLea.vmg 6.. 1 4NE, I-65.41 Bookcases chair- t ablepk'de-i; - d •-ei books, bookZenith 23’ telev lsion $60 324-575!66 Honda CB 160 pJiisFGirbkehpihOOnly NWLY REMOD. FURN. 56 & Maryland d ‘ cions’ hosty^ cooking inFA 4-9500. rm. 1819. 1820X. 1805x "‘Sy'V/udmU-i^ buiidhig on ^im’pus. Low costs. Call 643-9220 or 288-1660.furn.rms, cool bsmt,'Sept Get 684-3472.4 lge rms,, furn. $75. mid-June363-0151 s $90 {mo.:-Sept: or stop bv NE corner 56 & Wroodlau ri.:FOR SUMMER OR \ IfExtra large unfurn. 1 bdrm apt. lakeview..$165. utils incl 288-3205. , -2- So. pus to shr next yr. Write: Mariegoff. 325 vv 108th St. New York- - \10025 .2 Visiting profs,,u small, famfurn housing tor next vr.: Ml\5888•• v' un g cond $50 x260 Rm COACH HOUSE. 2 bdrm. balcony;, gar,-^•! , ,den! 6 12-9 15. $135/mo. 624-4655 4 rms $105 spacious. Best for5' rms. 2 bdrms. turn. 6 15-9 50. 2 ^ blkLake' 288'4534' 4 7AM-FM, luner. Perl y.cond.;'»Bt>th fot $40, from uc $100 752-888! . y> !—rrrR- -. - .. .’ 3328V1*1 'iW1' Jl Kim t<> shr.; apt. own. rm.' & bath' " ’ Furn. Avail 6 9. Fall opt. 55 Sc DrchstrSublet ; on new lease.; BU .8-3950 after 6.ROOMMATES WANTED•blk. from beach. IconV. L—~T~-—7*—■ ■ ■_ • £®(k -.288-8036 - ' 2- (i-rna'es-n pre s’u.o,rcb;la-9 plov,.-l Rm. ,,7.:'-u. for ^AiigrSept. ;551o S l m\ e,.'.n.-'.t y* ft-i 11 -,•- • i-. i-’ lull ... - • *■-Drive"a:3'-,Ye 1 lowl . • A < if>o. cc <»no:. < ^jext.ras§ study^' furn. ..walk'l ljY_5_7440' )dvt.t, erne, - i m ,g 12-la,, 634 4$n4 * . b 1 • i <o 68 4 2 407 . 8 rin.,p "' V To: shr-4-rm ;apt? nr. 53J& HarperU.C: ; $ZaU'mo^ .._ Frank 684-4279trier &'or next yrSigilifesj WANTED MISCELLANEOUS2 tkts for graduation 6 9, will pav . Sreach 296-6386_ (£■I will pay for tickets to 6/10 grad,lege. Call FA 4-8200 x526 jnd.1,3name and phone.Will pay (or tickets to June 9. $I convocations,: .Call Klowden. FA 4-l».vo,1408, leave message if,not m c,a veiling companion 4’; for;"sum no.imping trip in Western State Parkand Mexico. Joan 684-6993 aft 9 pm.. :> T. '/■■■'!'", , .- .: : ■-p'-'"Vt;AN EXERCISE IN PRACTICAL DEMOCRACYp ' • : ■ :: ■; , - ■p ;#f The Vietnam Surrilner Project is a concerted national effort to reach out tothe now silent Americans who are growing more and more worried about theAdministration’s war in Vietnam.VIETNAM SUMMER WILL BE thousands of people in neighborhoods all across thecountry stimulating discussion, debate, education and action.VIETNAM SUMMER WILL ORGANIZE petition drives, grass-roots congressional hear- tri:: to! shr. apt on Harper Court. 2 I'll pay $6.00 for ticket to 6 10 grad ,.^i$$Q/ino .each. HY 3. 1171. - 3,. p" tion. Charlie.-. 1710 Pierce FA 4-9,0 i . .is under no circumstances to betolerated by the modest and nattily•. .. " :, - P .p-■.-.{'.Tp vppr'i.;, - .p" p.;\ . ,/,p", .. , r .. .... P'. ■> ? -■ ' ! ' ' Pk -■ ' "p ■ :pi:. ', :'■■■ " ■ ■ :„ YOVR EuHIIlS MUSTACHEWhere the time of your life is right under your nose.BANJOS, BEER & B0-DEE-0-D0'- p' \ -.1 i'.'i : ■■865 N. State St. 329-0193pCHARTER FLIGHTS• V, “■1r The management of J 967-68 Student ^GovernmentCharter Flight program is being opened for bids.Any individuals or groups interested in runningthis program should submit a detailed bid to thep . : ' ' ■S.G. office by June 30. Include all costs, brokendown/and a description of the desired relation toS.G. in terms of decision making, office use, use. - ' ■* -of reserve money, etc. Also indicate your reasonfor interest in the program and any relevant ex¬perience. Provision must be made for continuityV" "■ - ■ '. ■: - ' { . : :•*■■■- ■in the program for future years. Seven copies areneeded. If you have any questions, call Leo Schlos