The Chicago Maroon FOUNDEDIN 1892VOL. 76, NO. 1 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, JUNE 30,1967 12 PAGESBeadle T o RetireAfter One YearBy JEFFREY KUTAGeorge Wells Beadleretire next year after serving were evidently informed of the ap- come until after information was: sociated with the University andwill pointment of the seven faculty leaked to The Chicago Daily News the Hyde Park community for amembers. early this week. The Daily News long time, was Dean of the LawAlso, many had not suspected pressed the University’s Office of j School before his appointment asas president of the University Beadle would step down from the Public Relations for details, and a provost.for nearly eight years. He will presidency at the normal retire- brief press release was hastily1 observers say that it may takea, UK- tho University’s mandato- ment age- aIthough his intentions composed. up to two years for the committeeaie or-October 22 were known to some when he be‘' The release was given to the City to find a replacement for Beadle,loss 1 k ' ’ iCame chancelIor of the University News Bureau on Tuesday. Stories j According to Cone, the first jobU*®' - °n March 16, 1961. It was under- appeared in Chicago’s afternoon the committee will undertake willstood by the Board of Trustees at papers on Wednesday and its morn-j be to “go back over’’ the require-that time that Beadle would retire j jng papers on Thursday. i ments of persons to be consideredwhen he reached 65. according to While committee members will for the post. He was referring tonot reveal names of possible candi- criteria set when a similar commit-information Leak dates for the presidency, Provost tee met before the appointment ofThe public announcement of the Levi is considered by many faculty Beadle,appointment of the committee to j and students to be a frontrunner. | He said he had no idea how longchoose Beadle’s successor did not Levi, whose family has been as- the committee would take in its de-Beadle’s retirement plans weremade public by Fairfax M. Cone,chairman of the Board of Trustees,who issued the following statement 0"^“on Tuesday :“A joint faculty-trustee commit¬tee has been appointed to recom¬mend to the Board of Trustees asuccessor to George W. Beadle asPresident of The University of Chi¬cago upon Mr. Beadle's retirementat the age of 65 in 1968.”Cone told The Maroon he was notready to release the names of thecommittee members, but did saythat the committee consisted ofseven members of the faculty andseven trustees.According to Cone, the commit¬tee will hold its first meeting with¬in three weeks.Job for TrusteesCone said he asked PresidentBeadle "about two weeks ago” toask the Council of the UniversitySenate to appoint the seven facultymembers of the committee. Hesaid that he appointed the trusteeson the committee at that time.He stressed that “the job of appointing a president is entirely upto the Board of Trustees, accordingto the bylaws. The trustees havesimply ask i the faculty to sit willthem and to make recommendations "Cone’s announcement came as asurprise to students, who had notknown of the joint committee.Members of the University SenateA 'CATALYST.' NOT AN 'ORGANIZER' George Wells Beadle^ Jliberations over a successor.“I’m only sorry Mr. Beadle willbe 65 and not 55,” he commented,“so that we wouldn’t have to lookfor somebody new.”Fifty-Seven Suspended for ProtestI dents were suspended from Juneuntil next January 1st.The students had presented ajoint defense against charges thattheir study-in was a disruptivedemonstration. They argued thatthe sit-in did not cause much trou¬ble, since it began after all employ¬ees were out of the building, andthat it was politically justifiable.Jerry LipschChicago gained two Nobel raising and speechmaking. His col-Prize winners over the past leagues agree that his greatest tal¬ent is his way of encouraging andvear, only to hear this vveek enhancjng his division without visithat one of its old ones—Pres- bly running it. He tries to functionident Beadle—would soon be leav- as a catalyst rather than as an oi-ing • ganizer.During his six years here. Beadle “Caltech s Division of Biology ishas been a softspoken scientist who equal to any in the world, and ithas had little contact with the fac- operates in an atmosphere of ainia-ulty and less with students. Yet in bility spiced with high intellectualhis own way, he showed himself to excitement. These are Beadlesbe a capable administrator, for the personal qualities, and he ma esUniversity made great gains under em in eC 10US'his leadership, obscured though it Made Many Frien swas by his knack for remaining While Beadle made friends at thealoof. j University—by “Catalyzing” rather‘ than “organizing,” by smiling at»»v uia^a^uic i |die’s modus operandi in astory on his sharing thePrize in Biology in 1958:‘Since becoming chief of Cal- „ .tech’s biologists, he has revealed world. The University is well pasunexpected talents, including fund the half-way mark in its 1160 mu-Time magazine recognized Bea-i jcover' students and faculty in the Quad-Nobel | rangles but otherwise keeping outof view—, he also made friendsamong alumni and the corporate By JOHN WELCHThe 57 students who sat in the Administration Building May 29 to protest the University’scontinued compilation of class rank have been slapped with suspensions on the advice of adisciplinary committee that heard their cases. However, the suspensions of the twenty first-year students were suspended, and the University has granted some appeals by upperclass¬men and graduate students. —:Undeigiaduates and spring can- aiso faijecj to carry out its promise some of the graduate schools. Mostttz Ms’MrsK* rebrua?to—sse.™ 10 re-male class rank for Selective Serv- le'e latter piooiems.Vote Last "earic purposes. The penajtjes handed down were“I think the punishments were prescribed by a nearly unanimoustoo harsh,” snapped Jerry Lipsch. vote of the Council of the Universi-vice-president of Student Govern- ty Senate, after last year’s massivement and a leader in Students rank sit-in tied up the building forAgainst the Rank fSAR), the group a week. said Mark Haller, associ-that organized this year’s study-in ate dean of undergraduate stu-as well as last year’s Administra- dents- After last year’s sit-in, hetion Building sit-in. He said the sus- explained, most of the faculty be-The University, they charged, pensions could leave male students came worried that similar actionshad disregarded the referendum in open to draft in the fall, or they could again bring the University towhich students in the College voted could cut off graduate fellowships a halt-to abolish all class rank, and it had and shatter students’ programs in “It was decided not to permit UCto become another Berkeley withcontinued threats of sitting in . . .so that no one could get any re¬search done,” Haller added. Fur¬ther, even the most inoffensivetakeover of a University buildingtakes hours and hours of time fromadministrators, and causes tremen¬dous trouble for everyone, he said.Several of the students suspendedwere reported to have begun theprocess of transferring elsewhere,and others are seriously consider¬ing such a change. Some w'ere thor¬oughly disgusted with Chicago, andothers wanted to protect their si 11-dent deferment draft statusIt has been learned that the Uni¬versity is now w'riting letters tosome draft boards of undergradu¬ates saying that their programshave been rescheduled at the dis¬cretion of the University so that thestudents will be going to schoolsummer, winter, and spring quar¬ters.“Dean Wick told me that UC willcooperate to a reasonable degree tosee that undergraduates go toschool this summer, but that theywill not mitigate sentences unlessthere is no other way for a student(Continued on Page 12)Beadles 'Unseen Hand' at Work Herelion Campaign for Chicago.Most faculty are awate of Bea¬dle’s presence although students, when asked “Who runs the Univer¬sity?” are apt to reply, “Levi, of(Condo rd on Paye 5)ef--/*Hippies on the Rocks: Sun Deepens Local ColorBY MARY SUE LEIGHTONIf you follow the arrowsmarked “Tribal Gatherings”through the underpass andtake the first right beyondthe motley refreshment stand, thelast outpost of civilization, youwill be at the Point: campingground for all clans of Hyde Parksociety.To be properly initiated youmust scan the odd bits of philoso¬phy scrawled for the enlighten¬ment of all on the walls of theunderpass (Additions may bemade under cover of darknessand only after ruthless editing, topreserve the quality of the mag-ic-markered prose). The keytheme of most of the slogans is“hippy love” and highs.The natural backdrop is as var¬ied as the weather. To the northis the indomitably hazy skylineand to the south is the smoky or¬ange Gary-East Chicago blanketof smoke. Happily a stiff lakebreeze keeps the air fresh despitevarious immediate contaminatingelements: dead fish, stale hotdogs, and assorted upliftingfumes. The grass (Merion, Ken¬tucky blue, and crab), the sand,the rocks are all of the sturdylakeshore species that scornsabuse—even the dandelions mocktramplers.THE PARK ITSELF is dividedinto several clearly defined are¬nas. The most conspicuous is thet■ m!**««. iMOMS. y. Grass enthusiasts\\\\si | \ | <•••;BImWall graffiti Nike base and adjoining facilitiesprotected from the natives byhigh fences. Apparently uninha¬bited (except in the early hours ofthe day, when at 6 a.m. or so, alone soldier may stray out andwave forlornly to a lake-gazer),the bald angular domes of the ra¬dar towers revolve with reassur¬ing regularity. Occasionally a ci¬vilian car storms the gates andits well-credentialed driver disap¬pears briefly into a shack. At thebase of the Point, jutting incon¬veniently into the soccer field isan orphan mast-like structure,with whom all association is ex¬pressly forbidden.(“Unauthorized entry is prohibit¬ed. . .Photographing, makingnotes, drawings, maps, or graphicrepresentatives of this area. . .isprohibited. . .in accordance withthe provisions. . .of section 21, In¬ternal Security Act of 1950.”)Along the southern shore hardytypes congregate, testing the tem¬ perature of the herring-boned wa¬ter, the more foolish actuallybraving the cold to swim acrossto the pier conservatively esti¬mated a half-mile distant. At al¬most any hour two or three canbe seen backstroking doggedly,trying not to attract the attentionof the life-guard tanning a littleoffshore in a rowboat bouncing in“permitted” waters. Naturallyswimming in the relatively cleandeep water off the rocks, is notallowed—which is not to say thatit is not done.PERHAPS BECAUSE it facesthe public beach, the south side ofthe Point sports only the mostprosaic signs—“No Swimming orDiving”, “Hildegarde and Fred‘64”—Even the alewives maintainan aloof distance. On the northside, on the other hand, the ale-wives congregate unperturbably,gathering in little shoals offshorewaiting for a breaker to toss themonto the hollow in the northwestcorner.People and other beings dwellmost noticeably on the end of thePoint, where they leave colorfulmemorials, and in the grassy cen¬ter areas. The “steps” descendingto water level show traces of ev¬ery kind of primitive and sophisti¬cated culture.An abandoned bottle cap la¬beled humbly “Orange and Pi¬neapple Juice” rests innocently ina litter of peanut shells on thenext-to-the-top level. Wickedly, il¬licitly tumbling in the wind beloware forgotten ends of this-and-thatand more wordly bottle caps.From a psychedelically paintedrock formation glows a cheerful“Hello” in bright red, and next toit in conversational yellow aboutthree feet from the water’s edgeis a helpful “To the Lake” andarrow indicating the appropriatedirection. From all apearancesthere should also be landing in-MAY SHOW FILMVISTA Recruiters To Make RoundsVISTA (Volunteers In Ser¬vice To America) recruiterswill be on campus Wednesday,July 12 and Thursday, July 13to answer questions and accept ap¬plications from 9 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.on the second floor of ReynoldsClub.“We are interested in dedicatedpeople who are willing to serve forone year, living with the poor,”stated Charles H. Henderson, Re¬gional Administrator for the GreatLakes Region. “The jobs are noteasy, they are often routine, oftenfrustrating, but they offer less for¬tunate Americans the chance to ob¬tain for themselves a better fu¬ture.”Any resident of the United States over 18 years of age may applyand, if accepted, will receive sixweeks of training, including fieldexperience for the area he willserve. Projects are located in ur¬ban slums, in rural areas, at JobCorps Centers, on Indian reserva¬tions, in migrant labor communi¬ties, and in programs for the men-totally handicapped.Volunteers organize and help runremedial and adult education class¬es, health programs, and other pro¬grams tailored to communityneeds. Their work is sponsored andsupervised by local agencies ineach of the 50 states, the District ofColumbia or the U.S. Territories.VISTA Volunteers receive a sub¬sistence allowance and $75 a monthfor personal incidentals as well asThe Miser' OpensThe Court Theatre will be¬gin its thirteenth season ofsummer productions next Fri¬day. The nine-week series willbe presented in the courtyard ad¬joining Mandel Hall on Thursday,Friday, Saturday, and Sunday at8:30 p.m. until September 3.The following plays will run inthree-week sessions:• Molier’s “The Miser” directedby James O’Reilly, from July 7through July 23.• Brecht’s “Caucasian ChalkCircle” directed by Dennis J.Hayes, Jjly 28 through August 13.• Shakespeare’s “Macbeth” di¬rected by James O’Reilly, from Au¬gust 18 through September 3.Series tickets for all three playsare available for $3.75 on Thurs- Court Seasondays and Sundays, $4.50 on Fri¬days, and $6.00 on Saturdays. Thestudent discount is 50c. Group ratescan be arranged upon request. Incase of rain performances are heldin Mandel Hall.THI BIST SOURCB FOBARTISTS' MATERIALSCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMOUNTING; MATTING;NON-GLARE GLASSSCHOOL SUPPLIES!• Sm toAik for W*«kly SpecialDUNCAN'S1305 I. 53rd MY 1-1111 a monthly stipend of $50 which ispaid at the end of the year’s ser¬vice. Pay for six weeks trainingand a year of service amounts to$675.VISTA needs 4,500 Volunteers toserve in more than 300 projects andexpects more than 75 percent of itscandidates to come from collegecampuses.The color documentary film, “AYear Toward Tomorrow,” whichwon the 1967 academy award in itsclass, gives more information ofVISTA’s work. Paul Newmannarrates the stories of VISTA vol¬unteers in two locales: an all-Negroslum in Atlanta, Georgia and a Na¬vajo reservation in Lukachukai, Ar¬izona.Representatives are attemptingto arrange a showing of the filmhere.COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTGREEK SALADS7100 S. Yates Free Parking2 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • Friday, June 30, 1967 The Chicago Maroon—Craig TravisLOVE AND DANDELIONS: A couple perched on the seawall staretoward the lake. Kenwood highrises are in background.•. v * ' ' MMNMM .8keeping the peace between all theexponents of love, they are enjoy¬ing the pleasant scenery: teenybikinis and minimal mini-dresseshave a certain allure.Further up the shore, couples incars are engaging in their privateaffairs, down the shore, familiesbuild sand castles and kids hopalong the beach making rows ofleft-foot prints to stymie the fel¬low following them. Betweenthem the hippies and counter hip¬pies co-exist, devoting everyspare moment to maintaining thereputation of the Point as a singu¬lar place of interest.structions for those who mustfirst touch down.THE STONE COFFINS predic¬tably proved irresistible for the ex¬terior decorators. Rangers buryDisciples, and vice versa, radi¬cals bury their scapegoats, bro¬ken-hearted lovers bury each oth¬er. The living sun unconcernedlyon top of the cement boxes, whichare perfectly shaped for theirdual use.Druid-like circles of benches at¬tract the bongo players and a va¬riety of accompanists: flutes, gui¬tars, recorders, hummers, har¬monicas. Weekends the residenthippies perform for the touristswho wander in to watch and jsing-along, and who return homeclaiming to have participated inan honest-to-goodness Hyde ParkBe-In. (Formal announced gather-1ings are seldom different from ev¬eryday chance happenings.) Littledoes the Outside World know thatmost Point people aren’t j“b e i n g -i n,” they are simplybeing.The entire multi-ring circus isoverseen by troups of policemenwho drift through singly and inpairs every three minutes or so.It is hypothesized that besides It Practical!Buy Utility Clothes!CompUt* fiction •( booH, *v*f-tliooi, Sniwlotod till wilr, hoodidcolts, long wndirwiir, cordncoy*,"livil", Itc., otc., Mt, oto.Universal Army Store1364 I. 63rd ST. -APL 2-4744OPflN SUNDAYS S.M-liMFEATURING VISUAL STIMULATION PLUSTHE BUFFALO SPRINGFIELDCARL HOLMES & THE COMMANDERSTHE ROVIN’ KINDTHE CHAMBERS BROTHERSTHE EXCEPTIONSTHE SEEDSAND MANY OTHKRRlor TV. Boutique snd Head Shop. Library. Bar. Soda Fountain. Scopitone.TICKETS: $4.00 FRI., SAT. $2.50 WED., THURS., SUN. $1.50 STUDENT DISCOUNT(with I.O) WED., THURS. ADVANCE PRICE TICKETS ON SALE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 NORTH MICHIGAN.GROUP SALES: Te throw a party at Cheetah for 50-200C, call Miss Prusa at M0 4 5051TB5ITY |C. CHICAGO //UbRAR." JPolice Raid Hyde Park Party, Arrest 39; Harrassment ClaimedBy DAVID E. GUMPERTPolice continued their crack¬down on Hyde Park partieswith a raid last Friday nightthat saw 39 arrested amidcries of “abuse” and “outrage” bythose taken into custody.The party, at 1504 E. 53rd St.,was broken up by police claiming to have a search warrant who ar¬rested everyone present. Those ar¬rested, including professors, stu¬dents, and businessmen, werecharged with either disorderly con¬duct or patronizing a disorderlyhouse.In a letter to the editor in today’sMaroon, two of those in attendanceclaimed that the police neverFranklin AppointedHistory ChairmanJohn Hope Franklin, one ofthe nation’s most distinguishedhistorians, has been appointedchairman of the Departmentof History here. He is the firstNegro ever to be named to adepartment chairmanship in amajor American university.Franklin, an authority on the his¬tory of the American Negro and onthe Civil War and Reconstructionperiods, has been a professor ofAmerican history at Chicago since1964.He will succeed William H.McNeill, chairman since 1961, whowill return to full-time teachingand research.According to D. Gale Johnson,dean of the Division of the SocialSciences, “John Hope Franklin isrecognized as one of our foremosthistorians. Professor Franklin, withDaniel Boorstin, Arthur Mann, andRichard Wade, has made the Uni¬versity’s Department of Historyone of the strongest in the nation inthe field of American history.”Was Pitt ProfessorBefore coming to Chicago,Franklin served for eight years asprofessor and chairman of the De¬partment of History at BrooklynCollege.During the 1962-63 academicyear, he was the Pitt Professor ofAmerican History and Institutionsat Cambridge University, and a fel¬low of St. John’s College, Cam¬bridge.Franklin’s writings have had apowerful impact in both academicand public policy-making circles.He was one of the authors of thebrief against school segregationwhich was submitted to the Su¬preme Court in 1954 by the Nation¬al Association tor the Advancementof Colored People.Among F r a n k 1 i n’s books is“From Slavery to Freedom: A His¬tory of American Negroes" (1956),which has become the standardwork in its field. His articles andbook reviews have appeared widelyin learned journals and in the popu¬lar press. John Hope Franklinmmmmm % turn m -Franklin has been active in ef¬forts to revise secondary schooltextbooks which, until recently,! have largely ignored the role of theNegro and other minority groups inAmerican history. He is a co¬author of “Land of the Free’(1966), an eighth grade Americanhistory text which also includes theI story of minority groups, andwhich has been adopted bv manymajor school systems.Father a JudgeFranklin was born in 1915 in Ren-tiesville, Oklahoma. His father, the| late Buck Colbert (Ben) Franklin,! was one of Oklahoma’s first NegroI lawyers, and the first Negro judgei to sit in chancery in the District• Court of the State of Oklahoma. showed their search warrant,planned the raid well in advance,ransacked a neighboring apart¬ment, and mistreated those arrest¬ed.\ police report filed by Sgt.Charles O’Connor, the arresting of¬ficer, contends that the police ac¬tion was a “vice raid” and that theapartment’s “keeper was in posses-siou of marijuana.” The reportgoes on to say that the officers “ex- jecuted the search warrant” afterthey found the door to the apart-1ment “wide open.”Found MarijuanaIn the apartment, it says, policefound a package of cigarette paperand a single hand-rolled marijuanastick on a bookcase in addition totwo other packets of marijuana cig¬arettes under a sofa.The party appears to have begunabout 10:30 p.m. at the apartmentof Susan Funduklan. At approxi- imately 1 a m. detectives who had1infiltrated the party earlier anduniformed police apparently an¬nounced a raid and proceeded toblock all doors and search theapartment.The 39 arrested were then takento jail where some spent twelvehours and others up to 50 hourswaiting until they could post the $25bond.According to a professor arrest¬ed, William Gnatz of Wilson CityJr. College, “As far as I know, |there was no marijuana at the par¬ty.”Spur to Police?Gnatz also suggested that thelaid was the result of a letter tothe editor in the June 20 Hyde ParkHerald from a high school studentwho claimed that marijuana caneasily be purchased on the cornerof 53rd and Harper and throughout jHyde Park as well. “This might jhave been a spur to the police,” jGnatz observed.Those arrested are scheduled toappear in court July 7.This raid is the latest in a seriesof raids by Chicago police on HydePark parties. The most notable ’previous one was of a party in thehome of Dr. Arnold Abrams of 4850Kimbark, April 8, at which 19 of150 people present were arrested. AFTERWARD: The neighboring apartment after the police raid,as photographed by two students charging police misconduct.International Treaty Outlaws DrugsA multi-lateral treaty pro¬viding for international controlof “narcotics” was signedquietly by President Johnsonon May 25. The treaty, called theSingle Convention, is a set of druglaws recommended by the U.N.has now been ratified by all na¬tions except China, East Germany,North Korea, Outer Mongolia, andVietnam.It includes provisions outlawingmarihuana and makes violators ofthese laws subject to extradition.India and Pakistan, where mari¬huana is legal, have signed thetreaty and agreed to pass laws pro¬hibiting all forms of the drug with¬in 25 years.The treaty, which wras consideredpractically in secrecy by the Sen¬ate, undercuts the movement tolegalize marihuana. The SupremeCourt has declared that treatiesstand as law' of the land, even ifthey include provisions that havebeen declared unconstitutional inthe regular body of United States statutes. Thus, even if the prohibi-I tion of marihuana were repealed,! the Single Convention law's would, still be in effect.The Single Convention is thecrowning achievement o f HarryAnslinger, United States represen¬tative to the UN Commission onNarcotics and for 25 years com¬missioner of the Federal Bureau ofNarcotics. Anslinger had dedicatedhis life to keeping marihuana ille¬gal.EVE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StrootHYde Park 3-8372ftuatont and Faculty DiscountJimmy'sand the University RoomMNRVW IXCIVIIVIIY FOR VMVMITYFttty-FIMi mmd WtodsM AmYme won't hovo to put yourwaovlni or atorogo problomoff wntM tomorrow If youPCT1 It SON MOVINGAND STORAGE CO,ISOS9 I. Nb AmUTY SALONExportPormonent WavingHair CuttingandTintingI. f lad ft. NT l-WOt WE’D LIKE YOUR HELP THIS SUMMER:Could you umpire when the 43rd street "pimps” play theHyde 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 southside 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.- CALL: Mark Rosenblum—Ml 34065 or 324-7431or Freda Goodloe—Ml 3-4064Some of our goals: SOUTH CENTRAL ATHLETIC TEAMS"To provide softball for boys of all age groups."To stimulate adult interest in boys of all ages . „ .in the community. A Cooperative Program for Volunteers,-To provide a closer relationship *™»"9 by«j- Agencies, and Organizationsnesses, schools, recreation and . youth serving » »agencies in the community."Friday, June 30, 1967 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • 3East Woodlawn School Problems Object of StudyBy DAVID L AIKENIt’s probably not news toanyone that elementary andsecondary schools in Wood-lawn face serious problems, asdo most schools in the “inner-city”areas of Chicago and other cities. News Analysising its way toward a concrete pro¬posal for research, development,and action in which the three or¬ganizations might cooperate.Specific proposals wfll be the out-It might be news that somebody’s come of work done, under the su-beginning to do something about pervision of the Board, by the staffthe problems locally, however. And of the Urban Education Develop-it might be even more interesting mental Project. This study projectnews that the “somebody” is three is the first fruit of an appeal fromorganizations which have not in the the community board to the U.S.past always been noted for working Office of Education for a grant totogether closely—the University of determine ways to improve theChicago, the Chicago Public quality of education in East WoodSchools, and The Woodlawn Organi¬zation (TWO). lawn’s schoolsThe University had originally, inSince August of 1966, representa- j 1965, submitted proposals to the Oftives of the three groups have been fice of Education for two projects,meeting monthly—including Dr. One was for a University-basedCurtis C. Melnick, Superintendent center on early childhood educationof District 14, and many of the to support research on early child-principals from East Woodlawn ele- hood by faculty members from amentary schools; Reverend Arthur! variety of academic disciplines;M. Brazier, president of TWO, and the other was for a research andprimarily members of the Schools development center, to be connect-Committee of TWO; and Dean ; ed with the University but operatedRoald F. Campbell of the Graduate ; in Woodlawn. The latter would testSchool of Education and faculty methods of teaching children fromand staff members of the Universi- economically and educationally dis-ty. The three men serve as co- advantaged backgrounds,chairmen of the Woodlawn Commu- Eventually, in the winter of 1967,nity Board and lead its meetings on the Office of Education approveda rotating basis. the first proposal, for the establish-Fpplino IK Wav ' ment of an Early Education Re-reeling ns v»«.y search ^ ^ Qf g NationajAt the moment, this body is feel- Laboratory in Early Childhood Ed-_ ■ ucation. It has already begun oper-VlimitlPr Sftf I PftllfP ation under the acting directorshipJUIIimei JUI. LCIIUIC of philip w Jacksoil) a professor inJ I the Department of Education, whoseries IS iCIIGClUIGCI1 is serving until Robert D. Hess,a cpripc of lectures on Pub- also a Professor of education andA series oi lectures on ruo human development, returns fromlie Opinion and Mass Commun- a year of study at the Center forication is currently being pre- Advanced Study in the Behavioralsented on Mondays at 4 p.ra. Setback overcomein room 105 of the Social Sciences Arter a series of negotiations andUThe lectures are Dart of the Uni- revisions in the Pr0P°sal for the le;lire lectures are part o tt e u search and development center, itversitys Summer Program in Pub- turned down by the Office oflie Opinion and Mass Cominumca- Education A large t o{ thetion, directed by Associate Profes- problem was evfdently lack ofsor of Sociology Elihu Katz. funds that could be spent under Ti-Remainmg lectures in the series: tle IV of the Elementary and Sec-• July 3 Milton Rosenberg, The ondary Education Act of 1965Opinion and Policy Processes: In-; (ESEA), after Congress had com-teractions in the Realm of Interna- pleted its budget-cutting last fall,tional Relations.” | Title IV provides for such research• July 10—Theodore Lowi, “In- centers, including constructionstitutional Influences on Public costs as well as costs of trainingOpinion.” ' ——July 17—Robert Crain, “Public personnel and disseminating find¬ings of the research.Not content to take “no” for ananswer, the members of the Wood¬lawn Community Board decidedthat the proposal should be resub¬mitted to the Office of Educationand that the request should be dis¬cussed with key persons in the De¬partment of Health, Education, andWelfare to help them realize theimportance of the opportunity available for cooperation amongthe three organizations involved.The effort worked. In January,Campbell received word that theUniversity would be awarded a$70,000 developmental grant fornine months of research and plan¬ning to develop a program propos¬al.Congreve Leads StaffSince March, Willard J. Con¬greve, an Assistant Professor in the Graduate School of Educationwho until March was principal ofUniversity High School, has headeda staff charged with drawing uprecommendations related to re¬search, development, and action.Working with him have been arepresentative from the ChicagoPublic Schools, Lorraine M. La-Vigne, and from TWO, Anthony C.(Continued on Page 8)SDS to Radicalize Student PowerSpecial to The Chicago MaroonANN ARBOR—The studentpower movement must be rad¬icalized by connecting thequestion of student influencein universities with the issue ofgovernment and military interfer¬ence in the university administra¬tion.That is the feeling of delegates tothe national convention of Studentsfor a Democratic Society (SDS)meeting this week at the Universityof Michigan. Several hundred dele¬gates are discussing the radical (student group’s policies in interna¬tional and domestic issues.The delegates approved lastnight a proposal to begin plans fora nationwide student strike to beheld next spring.The conferees voted, however, ttylet the organization’s nation,council meeting next Decembermake the final decision on whetner! to call the strike, depending onthe level of support among mem¬ber chapters.According to Carl Davilson,I vice-president of SDS and sp insor| of the resolution on the strikeBarat in Woodlawn-Mother BurkeMother Margaret Burke has|announced that the proposedmove of Barat College, nowin Lake Forest, would be tothe South Campus in Woodlawnrather than to Hyde Park.She said that this was the general ■understanding of the committee'studying the feasibility of movingi Barat to the vicinity of the Univer-| sity, “where the action is.” If ap¬proved, the move will not be madefor at least three years. Considera¬tion will take at least six to eightmonths, planning and building an¬other 2 years.Her latest statement may affordsome consolation to those who al¬ready feel the pinch of the housingshortage in Hyde Park, but severalproblems are still outstanding.Since the relocation would pre¬suppose sharing certain facilities— of the main goals of the strike callwill be to bring out the connectionbetween efforts for democratizationof universities and the involvementof many universities with the politi¬cal and military “establishment.”Idea for Strikethe idea for a national strike hasgrown out of the recent “rash ofspontaneous uprising:; against suchthings or recruiting by the DowChemical Co. and the military ser¬vices,” Davidson commented toThe Maroon. Students at severalcampuses, such as the Universityof Wisconsin, have staged protestsor set up counter-propaganda ta¬bles near recruiting booths for(Continued on Page 8)the library for instance—, additional studies would have to be madeof the capability of those facilitiesto withstand more traffic. Movinginto Woodlawn would not elimin¬ate the housing shortage, but wouldmerely push it south. \Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Items From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856Opinion and the Local PoliticalProcess.”• July 24—Philip Ennis, “TheCulture of Illiteracy.”• July 31—Aristide Zolberg, “Re¬porting on the DevelopingAreas.”• August 7—Fred Strodtbeck,“Threat and Fear vs Competenceas Strategies in Public InformationCampaigns.”• August 14—Thomas Crawford,“Communication Distance andOpinion Change.” CANT AFFORD NEWFURNITURE?Try TheCATHOLIC SALVAGEBUREAUTruckloads, arriving daily10 E. 41st St.3514 S. Michigan(OPEN DAWN TO DAWN)• MEET ME AT THEHobliy House Restaurant1342 E. 53rd ST.BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER"The Best of All Foods"AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW & USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges - Tubes - Batteries10% discount to itudanti with ID cards HULL HOUSE at ParkwayPresentsWESTHEIMERS"MY SWEET CHARLIE"".. . touching moments of drama witha pair of vrey interesting performances."Richard Christensen, Chicago Daily News500 EAST 67th STREETFriday and Saturday Curtain 8:30—$3.00Sunday Curtain 7:30— $2.50Student Discount (with I.D.)Fri. and Sat.—$1.50Phone Reservations: 324-3880TOAD HALLIBM EXECUTIVE$199.95SMITH-CORONAELECTRIC PORTABLESFROM $139.95HERMES MANUALSFrom $54.95OUR PRICE GUARANTEE:1444 E. 57th St. RENTS AND SEl|£ TYPEWRITERSNEW - REBUILT - USEDReconditioned and painted90-day warranty on labor5-year warranty on partsChangeable keys—Repeat KeysPower Space—Pilot LightChoice of 10" or 12" CarriageBest portable or full-sizemanual machines on the marketIf within 30 days of purchase youcan buy for less, we will refund thedifference.BU 8-4500 Everygood girlStudent canafford an$18-$21Originial?atDL follies CL.I5225 S. Harper288-3630Message to flaneurs, boulevardiers, serious imbibers, malcontents, chronicsoreheads, those who — if a choice must be made — would prefer to overthrowthe gummint by force rather than violence, and The Village Crank:For discussion of weighty matters — e.g., the reopening of Hutchinson Com¬mons, establishment of a beer store in Ida Noyes, disestablishment of StudentGovernment, etc. — milieu and ambiance should not be left to chance (so tospeak). We suggest The EAGLE, where never a bon mot was lost in the roar ofa jukebox (gack!)NOW! Schlitz on Tap 30*Eagle-Quality Steakburgers $1°°PEACE WITHOUT PRICEHandsome New Party Room Available for Private GroupsTHE EAGLE5311 BLACKSTONE HY 3-19334 • THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, June 30, 1967.v. A '. > mmmPresident of the University, 1961-1968On May 4, 1961, GeorgeWells Beadle officially be¬came the seventh chief exec¬utive in the University’sthen 69-year history. He was in¬augurated in Rockefeller Chapelbefore some two thousand peo¬ple.He had been chosen from a375-candidate list that was assem¬bled by a faculty-trustee commit¬tee in the 10 months followingLawrence A. Kimpton’s resigna¬tion.In announcing the selection ofBeadle, Board of Trustees Chair¬man Glen Lloyd stated, “Mr. Bea¬dle was chosen in the enthusiasticconviction that he is a man whowill continue and strengthen theexcellence of the University. Hehas achieved a distinguished posi¬tion in the world of science andintellectual life and commands in¬ternational reputation and recog¬nition.“He has wide experience in theacademic life of the country, atHarvard, Stanford, and CaliforniaInstitute of Technology, and hassubstantial experience in educa¬tional problems and administra¬tion.”-—'University of X'In his inaugural address, theman who would publically repre¬sent Chicago for the next sevenyears compared it to his ideal ofa university, “the University ofX,” concluding that there was nogreat disparity between the two. Beadle’s first official act aschancellor was the awarding ofseven honorary degrees. In thesame month Beadle himself re¬ceived an honorary degree fromHarvard.He already held honorary de¬grees from Yale, the Universityof Nebraska, Northwestern, Rut¬gers, Kenyon, Weslayan, Birming¬ham (England), and Oxford.Almost a FarmerBeadle’s rather unlikely birth¬place was a farm near Wahoo,Nebraska. His father was a farm¬er and Beadle too would be afarmer if it were not for a highschool science teacher, BessMcDonald. She convinced him togo to college, so in 1922 he en¬tered the University of Nebras¬ka’s college of agriculture.Upon graduation, Beadle re¬ceived a graduate assistantship atCornell. There, still intending tobecome an agricultural expert, hestudied with Rollins AdamsEmerson, founder of the “cornschool” of genetics. The work sofascinated him that he decided toabandon agriculture, taking M.A.and Ph.D. degrees at Cornell.From 1931-41 he worked withthe genetics of fruit flies. In 1932he was a national research fellowin biology at Caltech. From1932-5, he was an institute fellowthere, and in 1935-6, an instructorof biology at Caltech.Beadle was an assistant profes¬sor of genetics at Harvard in1936-7, and professor of biology at Stanford from 1937 until 1946.Beadle joins PaulingFrom 1946 until his appointmentas chancellor, Beadle was a pro¬fessor and chairman in the divi¬sion of biology at Caltech, wherehe worked closely with chemistLinus Pauling, who had headedCaltech’s Department of Chemis¬try since 1936.Beadle’s predecessor at Cal¬tech, Thomas Morgan, had beenworking to integrate biology andchemistry. Pauling became inter¬ested in applying his field to bio¬logical problems, while Beadlewas experimenting with chemicaltheories to explain some aspectsof genetics.Beadle and Pauling workedjointly for several years on thechemistry of genes. They outlineda 15-year program for the studyof basic problems of biology andmedicine. Caltech’s biology andchemistry departments grew rap¬idly under the leadership of thesetwo men.Wins Nobel PrizeIn 1958, Beadle and a formerChicago student, Edward LawrieTatum, won the Nobel prize forresearch medicine. They sharedtheir prize with Joshua Leder-berg, who was then at the Univer¬sity of Wisconsin.Beadle and Tatum wonted withthe chemistry of genes, seeking todiscover their structure and man¬ner of functioning. Lederberg, taking his cue from their findings,won recognition for his findings inbacterial genetics.Working with a pink breadmold, the Neuropera crossa, Bea¬dle and Tatum did research onstructures within each cell thatcontrol its life and behavior andultimately determine the develop¬ment of the whole organism.By studying the chemistry ofthe bread mold, Beadle and Ta¬tum discovered the first intima-A Softspoken Man,(Continued from Page 1)course. Beadle’s just a figure¬head.”Provost Levi, Beadle’s right-handman who is called by some themost logical choice for the presi¬dency, has been as careful in deal¬ing with people as Beadle himself.He has received the complaints ofstudents and faculty that Beadlehas not, but they have been rela¬tively few.Early ConfrontationBeadle did not always appear asa lofty plane to students as he doestoday. Early in his administration,when students were up in armsover his decision to maintain resi¬dence requirements of two yearsfor men and four years for womenon the basis of a report given tohim by then Dean of Students John tions of the manner in whichgenes control enzymes and enzy¬mes control the basic chemistryof life itself.This was the first definite proofthat genes control growth, andwas important in the study of cellmetabolism and cancer, as it shedlight on normal growth processeswhich must be understood beforeabnormal growth processes canbe interpreted.a Stranger to ManyP. Netherton, he defenced himselfin front of a rally of 600 undergrad¬uates on the Administration Build¬ing steps.“. . . We feel that Beadle’s ac¬tion stems from a principle whichwill prevent the University from at¬taining fully the benefits of Beadle’sleadership. . . . We are led to con¬clude that Beadle in effect chose tofollow rather than to lead,” TheMaroon editorialized.Six years later it is evident that,while Beadle may have chosen tofollow in some areas, he has beenan effective leader in others. Hisadministration has been of an unu¬sual style, reflecting hir own per¬sonality.While most members of the Uni¬versity community appear lad tosee Beadle go, all are curious as towhat kind of man will be his suc¬cessor.Friday, June 30, 1967 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • 5JOHN MOSCOWThe Chicago MaroonFOUNDED IN 16MJeffrey Kuta, Ediior-in-ChiejJerry Levy, Business ManagerDr. BeadleWhen someone eventually gets around to writing a definitivehistory of the University of Chicago’s second half century, hewill be likely to devote far more space to the Beadle yearsthan to George Wells Beadle himself. Laconic, undramatic,and aloof, Beadle has remained something of an unobtrusiveoutsider during his seven-year tenure here.A University used to “boy wonders” and prima donnas aschief executives, Chicago never quite decided what to think ofits illustrious Noble Prize winner. If it is true that Beadlemade few enemies here, it is also true that, among studentsand lower echelon faculty members at least, he made few closefriends. Rather, he remained for most students a friendly gen¬tleman who chatted with them easily on formal occasions butwho seemed more closely associated with speech making andfinancial campaigns than with his own drives to improve theUniversity.ALTHOUGH BEADLE’S ADMIRERS can point to no “Bea-die Plan” that reorganized the curriculum or revitalized thefaculty, they can argue, and with considerable validity, thatBeadle in his own way succeeded in imprinting his personalityon the University of Chicago. Of course there was no “BeadlePlan,” but the fact remains that the curriculum was reorgan¬ized, the faculty revitalized during his tenure. Beadle initiatedno dramatic experiments or daring innovation, but he did suc¬ceed in reestablishing Chicago’s reputation for quiet and unas¬suming academic competence — a reputation that he hasearned for himself as well as his institution.This newspaper has never been unreservedly enthusiasticabout Beadle’s administration. Frequently, we have wishedthat he would take a more forceful role in directing the affairsof the University, and when he did take such a role, we haveoccasionally felt that he was leading in the wrong direction. Inparticular, Beadle’s statements and actions during the sit-in ayear ago were reprehensible, and the recent suspension ofanti-rank demonstrators does nothing to improve the Universi¬ty’s tarnished reputation as a haven for dissenters.But like any leader of any organization, Beadle has had towork within the limitations imposed upon his power, and it isunfair to blame him for actions which were not his own or askof him tasks which we could not perform. Working with anoutspoken and powerful faculty, a limited budget, and massive,largely insoluble institutional problems, it can certainly be saidof him that he did his best.And, we might add, his best was enough to make the Univer¬sity a better school for his seven years here. Chicago will belucky if its finds a successor of whom the same can be said.Raw DealMore than 40 students at the University of Chicago havebeen suspended for taking a political action. The suspensionshanded out will disrupt studies, leave stains on academicrecords, place students in danger from the Selective ServiceSystem (even if the University does indeed help these sus¬pended students to avoid the draft), and encourage some toquit Chicago entirely. Neither the granting of appeals tostudents especially hard hit by the suspensions nor the dron¬ing of pious pronouncements that the students brought allthat grief on themselves can cover the fact that the suspen¬sions were simply stiff and repressive.The University’s response to the sit in, unfortunately, wasplanned a year ago. Just how related could this have been tothe situation that actually existed in May? Our faculty isafraid Chicago will become that other UC, Berkeley. Yet,rather than respond to what caused the study-in, they ignoredcauses and calmly proclaimed, “No sit-ins here.” Perhaps theyeven believe that this solves everything, that students neverhad any grievances, and that the whole trouble was that a cur¬iously large number of people who just like to sit in Uni¬versity buildings. So that where before, students had had totalk about a complicated, ambiguous issue as rank, they nowhave one that is beautifully clear and simple—the blunderingrefusal of the University to see the roots of student dissatis¬faction. Radical Politics and People:'Honesty' Lacking at ChicagoPolitics, at least in the Anglo-Saxon nations, is carried on withat least minimal amount of sur¬face politeness. No matter howbitter feelings may be betweentwo members of Congress or Par¬liament, for example, each is sup¬posed to refer to the other as “theHonorable.” This is for good rea¬son, and should be borne in mindby the leaders of the Student Gov¬ernment, Students Against theRank, and Students for a Demo¬cratic Society here. No matterwhat their opinions may be of theadministrators with whom theyhave to deal, there is nothing tobe gained by the personal attack,by the rhetorically unsound adhominem argument.Before, during, and after therank study-in on May 29. SARleaders repeatedly accused ad¬ministrators with whom theywere bargaining of having lied tothem. The students claimed theadministration had broken itspromise of last February to abol¬ish male class rank. Some furtherlost their tempers and took tosnarling other insults at Universi¬ty officials.Nothing is gained, except hones¬ty. If the leaders of radical opin¬ion on this campus feel that hon¬esty with its attendant draw¬backs, is worth the loss of whatthey are ostensibly striving for,then nothing more need be said.If it is more worthwhile to a “stu¬dent leader” to personally call &dean a liar than it is to gain somestudent power, then nothing moreneed be said. But if radicals herereally want to accomplish some¬thing there are some rules of thegame that they should learn.Don’t make it impossible forsomeone to sit at the same nego¬tiating table with you. If personalanimosities are too great then aleader is useless as a negotiator. Jeffrey Blum, for instance, shouldnever be used at negotiating ses¬sions where a happy result is de¬sired—he has destroyed his use¬fulness. To say that the personali¬ty of the negotiator is irrelevant,and that only the justice of hiscase should be considered, is toshow great ignorance of politics.Respect between negotiators in¬creases the power of an argumentin the eyes of the other negotiatorfar more than a logically validtruth table can do.Always leave room for doubtand ignorance when judging aman’s veracity. It is quite possi¬ble, always, that either he, oryou, or both are inadequately orwrongly informed. Be hesitant al¬ways to call another man a liar,even privately. The most recentcase of this was when Deans War¬ner A. Wick and Wayne C. Boothwere called liars for their an¬nouncements about male classrank. Since the initial statementswere contradictory it seems fairto say that neither was intention¬ally lying, but that one or bothwas misinformed. Had the “stu¬dent leaders” of SG, SAR, andSDS applied the basic rules of po¬litical infighting, they would nothave been put in the embarrass-position that they were in when itbecame clear that no one hadlied.When setting out to obtainconcessions on a whole range ofissues, start with the easiest first.If there is validity in the idea ofstudent power, and I think thatthere is in many respects, it mustbe demonstrated to the faculty iffurther concessions are to be won.(I ignore the possibility that thestudents could or should force thefaculty to concessions—force isnon-political, and students lackboth the reality and legitimacy ofpower on this campus.) Instead ofinsisting on action “now” stu¬ dents should be content with someaction now, with the understand¬ing that if student power works inone sphere it can be expandedinto others. Had the Southern in-tegrationists accepted “one gradea year” back in 1954, instead ofdemanding their legal rights to to¬tal immediate integration, theschools would have been integrat¬ed for four years by now. Insteadof waiting for the whole loaf, becontent with one part at a time. Ifthere are not others interested incarrying the fight forward in lateryears, then it isn’t worth a fight.Finally, remember your posi¬tion on campus. You are not thefinal word here—no students are.You are simply one of many pres¬sure groups with an idea of re¬forming the University. Yourideas may bear examination ornot, but it is you who must pre¬sent them. Search for a hearing,both among students and mem¬bers of the faculty. Accept criti¬cism with a responsive mind, andabove all, accept the possibilitythat you may be wrong. Fordoubt is a useful tool, even forsuch accomplished social philoso¬phers as are represented in SG,SAR, and SDS. You who applydoubt to all others work so effec¬tively, apply it to your own. Itmay not persuade you to changeanything, but it will let you seewhat others think needs changing.There will be those who will de¬cry this call for tact rather thanhonesty, for reality rather thanidealism. They should rememberthat they call for “politicizing”the campus. Since politics is theart of the possible, they them¬selves are calling for the realisticapproach. If goal-attainment rath¬er than notoriety is the desiredend, then the guerilla warfare be¬tween the administration andsome students here should indeedbe politicized.DAVID L. AIKENEmily Post Etiquette:Irrelevant to ActionElsewhere on this page aresome Emily Post-style tips on po¬litical etiquette directed by anoth¬er commentator toward some ofthe participants in last month’s“study-in.” A few remarks on thisparticular event may be in order,before we turn to the future ofradical activities on this campus.It should be granted that therecent “study-in” was probablyunfortunately timed, since itcame so late in the quarter andwas based on an issue whichshortly afterward lost its rele¬vance when Congress revised draftlegislation making undergradu¬ates’ class rank irrelevant. More¬over, it was done, as far as wecan tell, without adequate prepa¬ration in sounding out the facultyfor support, which is always vitalin any effort to win changes. Thefaculty quite clearly was not withthe protesters on the issue of animmediate end of all class rank,and was, as it turns out, quitewilling, by and large, to enforcepunitive, repressive measures onthe obstreperous members of the“academic community” whochose “disruptive” means ofmaking a point.NEVERTHELESS, to focus at¬tention exclusively on the tacticallack of wisdom, or on the hot¬headed impoliteness of a few stu¬dents in calling administratorsnames, is to miss the point. Itmay be wise to avoid naughtywords when talking with people from whom you are seekingconcessions, but there is a pointat which courtesy becomes notjust the style, but the content ofaction. Especially since they at notime planned to ‘disrupt’ any¬thing, it is clear that the protes¬ters thought they had a gooddeal of justification for someaction.It is also clear that more skill¬ful efforts at communicating withstudents on the part of deans andfaculty members may have avert¬ed a clash over the particular is¬sue of ranking. If, as has beenurged many times, some ma-chine-chinery existed by which studentscould actively participate in dis¬cussions and investigation of mat¬ters affecting them, the reasonsfor lack of action by the facultyon ranking could have been madeclear before the whole thing blewup.IF FACULTY and administra¬tors like to have periodic out¬bursts based on students’ feelingsof impotence, then they can followno better course than to continueto make decisions on issues of vi¬taltal interest to students without anyattempts at consultation with stu¬dents, or representation of stu¬dents in deliberative bodies. Thisseems to be one of the most im¬portant lessons to be learned fromthe whole affair. Many peoplemight do well to go back and read their copy of the Page commit¬tee’s report on student-faculty re¬lations, inadequate though it was,in this light.While the faculty are cogitatingthis point, the students are in themidst of a re-evaluation of theirefforts at university reform. Withtheir numbers decimated by thesuspensions, the radicals on cam¬pus must ask some hard questionsabout their future.ARE THEY to concentrate theirlimited resources on campus mat¬ters, seeking to bring about re¬form bit by bit? Are they, in¬stead, to turn most of their atten¬tion to protests of the Vietnamwar, or to activity in the poorneighborhoods of Chicago?Certainly, suspensions of somestudents will not be enough to de¬ter others from continuing to seekmeaningful change on campus,even if other matters such atVietnam take up a great deal oftheir time. What campus issues,however, will be most likely toattract widespread interestamong students, and supportamong faculty and others on the“outside”? There is really no lackof matters on which students cancontinue to apply pressure.Class ranking has many uglyconsequences from a purely edu¬cational point of view, even if itsuse by the draft system is nolonger an issue. Support for its(Continued on Page 8)6 • THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, June 30, 196?Letters to the Editor of The MaroonParty RaidTO THE EDITOR:Last Friday night another Hyde* Park party was raided. All 39" persons present were arrested andheld in jail for over twelve hours.Most were charged with disorderlyconduct or patronizing a disor¬derly house. The event receivedradio, TV, and newspaper cover¬age.There was nothing improper atthe party to justify sending dozensof innocent persons, many of themstudents, to jail and giving thempermanent arrest records. The ir¬relevance of who was there andwhat was being done was madeapparent by the fact that the whole^ operation was well planned farin advance of the party. One in¬vited guest, a policeman himself,said he did not go because heknew that the party was to beraided.The only people who conductedthemselves in a disorderly man-♦ ner were the four or five plain¬clothes detectives who graduallyinfiltrated the party, drank thehostess’ liquor, danced with her„ guests, and then blocked the door,not allowing anyone to leave butallowing unsuspecting newcomersto enter. Then for a half hour ormore, while awaiting the arrivalof the paddy-wagons, the detec¬tives thoroughly searched theapartment and took some of theguests into the bathroom to searchthem too. A neighbor’s apartment— which was unlocked — was alsoransacked, several people sitting„v there talking were likewise arrest¬ed, and $20 which the neighborhad hidden in a secret place wasstolen. The officers claimed theyhad a search warrant but stead¬fastly refused to show it.Finally, after a fruitless search,• the sleuths triumphantly announ-i-4 ced that they had found on topof the hostess’ bookcase a packageof cigarettes with a single reefersticking out of it. None of the in-7 dividual guests was charged withpossession of narcotics, however,for nothing was found on them.Everyone present agreed that thepolice had planted the reefer them¬selves. futures might be permanentlydamaged by the senseless arrests.Foreign citizens were worriedabout having their visas affected.When the paddy-wagons and uni¬formed police arrived, all theguests were marched out in meth¬odical concentration-comp fashion:the women first, followed by themen. Husbands were separatedfrom their wives and young menfrom their dates. Several youngwomen were on the point of tears.One wore a red-checked maternitydress.One guest, a college professor,asked one of the officers to presenthis identification. He was jumpedby several of them and knockeddown. His wife tried to help himand was struck over the head witha blackjack. Both were chargedwith aggravated battery and re¬sisting arrest.Several of those who spent thenight in jail told us they were notinformed of the charges againstthem until they were booked thenext afternoon or not at all. Ef¬forts to get anyone released anysooner were entirely unsuccess¬ful because of deliberately mis¬leading information and rudenessfrom Police Department officials.It even took hours of phone callsand visits to stations to determinethat the men had been sent to the300 E. 29th St. station and the wo¬men to 11th and State. In groups ofeight or ten, the prisoners werecrowded into cells containing oneor two bunks each. Masculine fe¬male attendants searched thewomen by making them strip andhaving them squat nude in hu¬miliating positions. One lady whofelt sick and spent the night vom¬iting and having chills was de¬nied a doctor or even an aspirin.We have given an account ofthis raid in hopes that somethingwill be done to correct the abusesin the case and to prevent similaroutrages in the future. What hap¬pened Friday night should be ofconcern to everyone in the Univer¬sity community.JERROLD ZARITJAY CLAUDE SUMMERSDepartment of EnglishT During the time they were for¬cibly detained in the apartmentmany of the guests tried to arguewith the detectives or awaken in! ♦ them some sense of justice orcompassion, but to no avail. Onedetective replied that neighbors. had complained on a number of, occasions about noisy parties inthat apartment and did not seemto know that the party was ahousewarming and birthday partyfor a lady who had just movedinto the building. Several young, people pleaded futilely that their PIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNTBANDERSNATCHSUMMER FILM SERIESJuly 4 YANKEE DOODLE DANDYJuly 11 OPERATION MAD BALIj One Showing Ida Noyes Cloisters% 9:15 P.M. Adm. 75cF ———————AMERICAN AUTO PARTS7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3614Golden Silence L°" AS NO WAITINGf . 4J mufflers $8.65 SSSJKKA* Advertised in LIFE and POSTSHOCK ABSORBERS BRAKES INSTALLEDt ^ u>" $7.95 ,nF?r LOW AS $19.95TUNE-UP SPECIAL Rear Springs Installed$12.95 LOW AS $12.95 ae.| All 4-cyl. cars 1942 to 1**2 Law and OrderTO THE EDITOR:About law and order:• A fundamental order of na¬ture is this: In general, the oldshould die somewhat before theyoung. That is basic order.• When that order is dis¬turbed, i.e., when the old permitor arrange that the youngershould die earlier than the older,there will be other subsidiary lessfundamental sorts of disorder.That’s a law.• Then it is understandablethat students should demonstrate.That is the least subsidiary disor¬der we might expect; in fact, it israther constructive by compari¬son to what might be expected.JOHN M. SHLEINAssociate ProfessorDepartment of PsychologyAdministration DeafnessTO THE EDITOR:Like so many otheT students atUC, I often wonder just what it isI’m getting here for my extreme¬ly high tuition that I couldn’t getelsewhere for a lot less money.And like so many others it is real¬ly difficult to think of somethingthat UC does well that pertains tomost students. Thus while turnaround time at the Computer Cen¬ter is excellent, imdergrads inHistory for example, don’t profitfrom that at all.One thing that we stuv ,nts cer¬tainly don’t get for our money atUC is at least a pretence on thepart of the administration that wecount in their eyes for anything.If there is no housing and stu¬ dents sign petitions about it, theadministration replies that atleast they’ve given up buying oldhotels and throwing out little oldladies. If the bookstore is about tocrumble into a heap of brick andbrassieres and students demand adecent bookstore, the administra¬tion can always issue a reportwhich shows that the bookstorewill be adequate until at least1964.It seems as if the only way topoint out to the administrativepowers that be that there is a lotwrong going on is to form a moband storm the Bastille, as SAR sorecently did. The result is muchlike Spain before the Civil War:people have to hatch fantasticplots merely to get a cheap ham¬burger.What is needed then is someway for students to tell the ad¬ministration what we want. Per¬haps the only way to do this is tohold a revolution and take over.Certainly this is no more absurdthan the attitude of those whothink that $260 apartments willsolve the housing problem aroundhere.ROBERT BINNICKStudent ObserversTO THE EDITOR:During the aftermath of the re¬cent sit-in, an interesting factemerged which was up to thattime almost completely unknown:the student observers on the disci¬plinary committee are appointeddirectly by the president of Stu¬dent Government.There is a lot of talk todayabout democratization of the Uni¬versity and many specific causes are constantly being championedbut few people have mentionsthe appointment of these observers. Yet, the issue is clear. Onstudent has the complete powewithout checks or balances thand out to whomever he pleaseone of the most important studenpositions in the University in th<same manner a political machimboss can hand out patronage jobsMoreover, the student who ha;this great power in the undergraduate disciplinary committeis elected by a body which is 7per cent graduate students. Quit;clearly this is an extremely irndemocratic system.Is there a better way? I thinlso. A campus-wide appeal shouhbe launched this fall for observers. Those applying should bscreened by a student-facult’committee of some sort f possiblecomposed of representatives fronthe Inter-House Council, SG, th«faculty, and the administrationor something like that), \vh<would pick the observers on th«basis of how good they would b<for the committee.I believe that anyone who reallybelieves in justice in the University realizes the present systemmust be changed.ALAN BLOOM, ’68CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETOpM Sundays from 11-4Has what you naed from a $10 Used 9X12Rug, to a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants 4 Mill Returns at fractionof the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERYMoliereTHE MISERJULY 7th thru JULY 23rd COURTTHEATRE1967 SeasonBrechtCHALK CIRCLEJULY 28th thru AUGUST 13thShakespeareMACBETHAUGUST 18th to SEPTEMBER 3rdSTUDENT-FACULTY DISCOUNT OF 50c(except Saturdays)GROUP RATE ON REQUESTMl 3-0800, ext. 3581Series Tickets Available at Court Office, Reynolds ClubCOURT 5706 S. University Ave.THEATRE Chicago, Ill. 60637Tickets:Friday $2.00Saturday $2.50ThursdaysSundays $1.75Friday, June 30, 1967 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • 7Should Students Select Presidents?(Continued from Page 6)total abolition might be hard tofind, however. While a committeeheaded by David Williams hascome up with an excellent propos¬al for an option of “pass-no cred¬it” grading, the Faculty Senate,must still approve the plan. Pres¬sure must also continue for mean¬ingful student participation in de¬liberations on policies of the uni¬versity.PERHAPS most immediately, amechanism must be establishedwhereby students play a full partin establishing criteria for a newpresident of the University, and help in the search for one. Afterall, this would not be unprece¬dented in American higher educa¬tion. Three students have beenserving on an alumni advisorycommittee to the Board of Re¬gents of the University of Minne¬sota in its search for a successorto President O. Meredith Wilson.Students formed a separate advi¬sory committee at the Universityof Michigan, which recently choseRobben Fleming to succeed Har¬lan Hatcher as its president.With a bit of foresight and imagination, the faculty and trust¬ees here could have thought upthe bjright idea of asking studentsabout a new president all bythemselves. Since they didn’tthink of it, however, studentsneed to take the initiative of find¬ing ways of getting into the act.Those who still believe that stu¬dents are people, and should haveinfluence in matters which affectthem, have their work cut out forthe m. The recent measures ofrepression must not prevent re¬newed efforts.UC in School ExperimentsGibbs, Jr., along with a small ca-1dre of others from the GraduateSchool of Education.So far, the staff has been busytouching all the bases in the Wood-lawn community, sounding out peo¬ple on how the University, the Chi¬cago Public Schools, and TWO canbest cooperate. Some definite shapefor the second-stage program willbe developed before November,when the developmental grant runsout.A New DetenteWhatever the program’s ultimatedesign, it will be another sign of anew era in relations among theUniversity, the Chicago PublicSchools, and TWO. In the past, peo¬ple in the school administration re¬sisted the criticisms contained instudies by professors here.\ mm ■ jCalendarSaturday, July 1GLIDED WALKING TOUR OF THEQUADRANGLES: Leaves Ida NoyesHall at 10 a m. No reservations neces¬sary. Sunday, July 2RADIO SERIES: “From the Midway”,WMFT: 100.3 me, 7 am.; WAIT: 820kc 10 a.m.; WNIB: 97.1 me 1 p.m.;WNUS: 13.90 me and 107.5 me, II p.m.“Brenden Behan,” Dr. Roderick Child¬ers, assistant professor of medicine,University of Chicago, and JamesO’Reilly, director of University Theatre.TELEVISION SERIES: “Charlando,” aSpanish-language program on WGN-TV,Channel 9. 8 a.m., and after the Sundaynight late movie.TELEVISION SERIES: ‘Read Me AStory,” WMAQ-TV, Channel 5, 8:30 a.m.RADIO SERIES: “Nightline, WBBM,780 kc. 10:30 p.m. A public radio forumfor the discussion of current events.Monday, July 3SDS CHAPTER MEETING: Ida NoyesHall. 1212 E. 59th St., 7:30 p.m. The former cold war betweenTWO and the University has alsothawed considerably since the dayswhen the community Organizationfirst formed in 1960 with expres¬sions of resentment over the Uni¬versity’s attempts to buy up all theland between 60th and 61st Streetsfrom Cottage Grove to Stony IslandAvenue.Because TWO possesses the abili- jty and power to speak authorita¬tively for Woodlawn, it has effec¬ tively cooperated with the Universi¬ty in several areas, not the least ofwhich has been related to theschools.With the addition of effectivecooperation from the United StatesOffice of Education and other gov¬ernmental and private sources,East Woodlawn schools might be¬come not typical “problem”schools, but models of what can bedone with a little imagination,cooperation—and a little money.Bell Gives $200,000 to University FundThe Bell Telephone System haspledged $200,000 to the University’s$160,000,000 Campaign for Chicago.The funds, payable through 1970,Aill assist the University in match- j jjs Campaign, and now hasing its $25,000,000 challenge grant y , , _ ** ® . ... ,[rom the Ford Foundation. Gifts exceeded $85,000,000 in gifts andfrom industry and other private I pledges.sources during the five years end¬ing on June 30, 1970, qualify for thethree-to-one matching grant.The University is in the secondHONDA SALEWITH THIS ADExample: 1967 NewCB 77 *675CB 160 *525BOB NELSON MOTORS6136 Cottage Grove Ml 3-4500 SDS Decides to LinkWith the Lower Classes(Continued from Page 4)these agencies. Dow is a manufac¬turer of elements for ammunition.By connecting issues of the stu¬dent power movement with off-campus issues, particularly theVietna mwar, SDS seeks to preventthe efforts for student power frombecoming a conservative force—which, according to Davidson, itcan become “if it limits itself toon-campus issues only.” It can sim¬ply help students become better eli¬tists by fitting into student- jfaculty-administration committees,Many SDS members have feltthat concern over limited universi-jty reform measures was simply aliberal attempt to patch-up restric-1tive university systems, ratherthan a radical questionning of the,basis for these systems and their relationship with the Establish¬ment.Additional GoalsThe national strike resolutionstates as additional goals:• “The discrediting and abolitionof the National Students Associa¬tion (NSA), both at home andabroad.• “Laying the groundwork foreventually expanding and trans¬forming SDS into a radical union ofstudents allied with radical insur¬gent movements within underclassand working comunities.”In addition to its activities onabout 250 campuses, SDS has spon¬sored several community unionprojects, including the JOIN pro¬ject among residents of the poorwhite Appalachian neighborhood ofuptown in ChicagoDR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866EYE EXAMINATIONSPRESCRIPTIONS FIIIJO CONTACT LENSESNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStw«l«i«t and Faculty DitcountMALE OR FEMALE21 Years Old?DRIVE A YELLOW CABTHIS SUMMERfull or part time-work near your homeUC Students Earned More Than$25/day Last Summer ■14For information Call CA 57440SORRYS. G. SUMMER FOLK SERIES C ANCELLEDTIE OTHER SIDE HUTCHINSON COMMONS NOW OPEN! ;(COFFEE HOUSE) Enjoy the University's new food service operation at Hutchinson1603 E. 53rd ST. Commons, now open to the University community from 7 am to 3:30 pm,(under new management) Monday thru Friday.ENTERTAINMENT EVERY EGGS - PANCAKES - ala carte or Complete Breakfast 1NITE SOUP - SANDWICHES - or complete LuncheonFriday, June 30, Abshlom Benshlom Quartet(Modern Jazz) BREAKFAST served from 7:00 am thru 10:30 amSAT. WALTER LOWE & TOBY N0BBS(CHICAGO'S TWO FINEST FOLK SINGERS) LUNCH served from 10:45 am thru 2:00 pmwith COFFEE BREAK from 2:00 pm thru 3:30 pmSUN. JIMMY JACKSON & US AND THEM(JAZZ AND COMEDY AT ITS BEST) ..Completely air conditioned for your comfort8 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • Friday, June 30, 1967nOVIE REVIEWHurry Sundown' Panavision Proof of Preminger's SkillIt is hard to think of the lastOtto Preminger film that hasbeen well-liked. Nevertheless, heremains known as one of theGreatest of the Hollywood direc¬tors, manages to produce his ownfilms, and has even defied theproduction code (with “The Manwith the Golden Arm”). “HurrySundown” fits into thePreminger mode. For one thing,Catholics have deemed it unprop-tr viewing. The critics have sav¬agely attacked it, calling it a•piece of trash”. Its New Yorkrlin lias been long and there isplenty of reason to believe that itwill make money in Chicago. Be¬sides all that, it is a great movie.It is a big film. It is in panavi¬sion and color, runs well over twohours—even in the cut version• that is now being shown—,and hasthree interrelated plots.WHAT MOST PEOPLE objectto is that it treats a story theyfeel is outdated. Robert Hooksplays a Negro farmer who hasjust returned from the war, ashas a white farmer whose land isy adjacent to his. The white man’sbrother-in-law (Michael Caine) has become rich by staying out ofthe army and buying up land. Hisgoal is to get the land of hisbrother-in-law and Hooks. But itis at numerous subplots concern¬ing the private lives of each ofthe families that most objection isdirected. They are highly sexualand apparently the fact that theyare perfectly integrated into thefilm is found irrelevent.Agreed, this is not a real state¬ment about the Negro in Americatoday. Instead, as the film’s sizeindicates, it is an epic. Premingeris telling the story, his story, ofthe rise of the “New Negro”around the end of World War II.He is not trying to be controver¬sial or even topical. In this case(as in “Exodus”) the subject forthe epic is not the distant past butrather something in the remem¬bered past since the war.T1IE CLASSIC STANDARD foran epic film was set by D. W.Griffith almost at the start of ser¬ious film production. He devel¬oped the technique of cross¬cutting, making possible the link¬age of two or more plots withoutintrusive explanatory material..School of Education Sponsors LecturesFour lectures on variousaspects of contemporary ed¬ucation are being deliveredhere on consecutive Wednes¬day evenings.The lectures, sponsored by theUniversity’s Graduate School ofEducation, are given in Room 126of Judd Hall at 8 p.ni;% The public will be admittedwithout ticket and without charge. At the first lecture on Wednes¬day, Merrill Harmin, an associateprofessor of education and psych¬ology at Sothern Illinois University,spoke on “working with values in(he classroom.” ,Next lecture in the series:• July 5, “The Evolving Role ofJunior Colleges,’ by Joseph P. Cos¬and, president of the Junior CollegeDistrict of St. Louis and St. LouisCounty, Missouri.BE-INfor this weekendRent A Car oJLl/ Take A TripFriday — Saturday — Sunday(Return Monday)V.W. $16.88 + 6c/mi.Tempest $19.88 + 8c/mi.Mustang or Camaro $20.88 + 9c/mi.KING RENT-A-CAR1330 E. 53rd St. Ml 3-17151(TEST... L’assuranee Sun Life est un moyensOr d’obtenir I'ind6pendance fman-cl&re pour voua et votre famille.En tant que reprisentant local de la SunLife, pu!s-je voua visiter i un moment devotre cholx?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by appt.4 SI,N UFE *>U CANADA, COMPAGNIE D’ASSURANCE-VIEUNE COMPAGNIE MUTUELLE There are not many directors whohave been able to juggle threeplots well, who have been able touse the technique of cross-cuttingso that it does not seem an intru¬sive device rather than an inte¬grated part of the film’s stylisticwhole. Preminger stands highamong these few. Indeed, I canthink of no other film since Grif¬fith that has handled cross-cuttingas well as “Hurry Sundown”.Preminger’s brilliant use of col¬or has been completely ignored.Unlike such men as Fellinni,whose sole use of color is to stun,Preminger uses his color to helpsay what he wants. In this film hehas dropped his famous objectivi¬ty towards his characters and hastaken stands for the two poorfarmers and against Caine. Thereis a definite relationship betweenthese men and their land and theway that this is developed is notthrough dialogue but through asuccession of well edited colorshots.PANAVISION IS the newest ofthe widescreen processes and ithas been used, like Cinemascope(to which it is closely related),indiscriminately. There are veryfew men, in Hollywood or out,who can employ it well, for it pre¬sents problems in compositionand in editing and makes close-ups almost impossible. Even thegreatest of the Hollywood direc¬tors, Hitchcock and Hawks, havestayed away from scope process¬ es like the plague. But Premingerjumped right in and has been farahead of most of the field eversince. Each of his movies is likean essay on the proper use ofscope. “Hurry Sundown” is no ex¬ception. Look at the way he setsoff Jane Fonda in the churchscene near the beginning of thefilm. Or the way in which the con¬flict is set up between John Phil¬lip Law (the white farmer) andhis son in the first dinner se¬quence.“Hurry Sundown” is an epic ata time when epics are unpopular.That does not diminish its worth,nor does the fact that there aresome highly erotic (and beautiful¬ly done) sex sequences make it“trash.”I might add here that in theversion that is now being shown asequence has been deleted. After the sheriff goes to arrest Hooksand fails, a spiritual is sung out¬doors and a dance is performed.This was singled out by the criticsas especially offensive. Agreed, itis a weak scene, perhaps theweakest in the film. However, itsreference to the Civil War, to theold conception of the freed slaves,was directly linked to the themeof the movie. One wishes that ithad remained. In this case, cut¬ting out the faulted scene has onlycreated a greater fault.T. C. FoxJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060TAKCAM-A&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILY11 A.M. to 9 P.M. Sundays endHolidays 12 to 9 P.M.Orders To Take Out1318 EAST 63rd ST. MU 4-1062TOAD HALL Sells records atdiscount pricesWATCH OUR WINDOW FOR WEEKLY SPECIALS1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500 CINEMACHICAGO AVE AT MICHIGANACADEMY AWARDWINNER"A MAN & A WOMAN"Anouk AimeeIn ColorSun-Times * * * *AMERICAN—"For anyone whose ever been in love"Students $1.50 with I.D. card every daybut Saturday.Weekdays open 6 pm. Sat. 8< Sun.open 1:30AHOY THERE,The Ship Has Arrived!a > *A BOAT lea. of excitingly unusual, distinctiveg*‘ff Ferns fo 5 unloaded shortly at ScandinavianIn? ort's Ne’ Shop,s an cliinavian"Jlo.no of WUtifo, -^/mnort.SCall NO 7-4040HOURS: WEEKDAYS & SATURDAYS 11-9SUNDAYS 12-65300 LAKE PARKFriday. June 30, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROONMUSICAL REVIEWBlackstone RangersGo see the Blackstone Rangers’musical revue “OpportunityPlease Knock,” done weekends at8:30 p.m. at the First Presbyte¬rian Church at 64th and Kimbark.I thought of several cute orcatchy ways to begin this article,but decided the most necessarything was- simply to tell people togo see the show. It’s fantastic.The revue, called “a prayer inchurch,” is a series of musicalacts and dances tied together bynarration and processions, allaimed at showing off the incredi¬ble talents of the Woodlawn kids,and making society recognizetheir ability. We’re going to getout of poverty and break this so¬ ciety’s chains of racism, the showsays. The audience I was in,which was half middle-classwhites, responded eagerly andspent the entire evening applaud¬ing wildly.“Opportunity Please Knock” isin the form of a pageant openedand closed by processions. Be¬tween is a series of songs in andaround a theme of the achieve¬ment! and capabilities of the per¬formers, and assertions of theirdetermination to stick with theirfight for recognition and reward.Repeatedly they suggest their ra¬cial pride, which can help carrythem through. Interspersedthrough the songs are some amaz¬ Stage a Brilliant Musical Showing dances and bits of acting. Theperformers are not profession¬als, but their performances arevery professional.IN A SHOW with so many actsover two hours of solid music), allof them good, it is difficult to pickout the best ones, or run over allof the singing and dancinggroups. The music is mostly mod¬ern soul, and beats most of whatI’ve heard on WVON, Chicago’sbiggest soul music station. Therewere such acts as The Para-mounts, who have two fine leadsingers; Fred Perry, who soundedlike another Lou Rawls; and adance group called the El Chicos,who seemed to trade solos like jazzmen jamming together. Therewere groups like the Inspirations,whose dancing matched their su¬perb singing, and individuals likeLeonard Boyd, who has a verysmooth, wide-ranging voice.The impact of the show, how¬ever, was more from the mass ofneatly functioning acts, and fromthe terrific beginning and endingchoruses than from any one per¬son or group. I should mention,however, that Richard Washing¬ton has moved easily into the po¬sition created for Oscar Brown,Jr. as the leading narrator andsoloist on the proud song AfroBlue (yes, Coltrane-related) andthe recessional song. That recessional ends with theentire chorus of performers danc¬ing and marching through theaudience. “Brother, Where areYou?“ is the song, and it calls forthe audience to remember andsupport these young people.The show is now staged, direct¬ed, accompanied, lighted, andperformed by people in or discov¬ered by the Blackstone Rangers.It was developed with the help ofOscar Brown, Jr., the Chicago-based jazz singer. Brown directedthe show originally, sang in it,and provided technical advice,and then left as soon as the Rang- fers could handle everything them¬selves. IJohn Welch,■ ■■ .. mmmm;i Maroon Classified Advertisementsmm. 1MAROON CLASSIFIED RATES:For University Students. Staff. Facul-ty—50c per line, 40c per line repeat.For Non-University—75c per line, 00cper line repeat.To Place Ad: Come to Ida Noyes Hall1212 E. 59th Street, Room 305.For Further Information: CaU3-080. EXT. 3266DEADLINES: Ads must be in beforeThursday July 13, July 27, and August10.HOURS: 1-5 pm. MTW, 10-4 p.m. Thand Friday; weeks of July 10-14, July24-28, and August 7-11.LOST AND FOUND PERSONALS HELP WANTED FOR SALEHAPPY BIRTHDAY EDWARD! S.Time on your hands?BANDERSNATCH filmsteers. Cal 363-1977. needs volun-mushroom man (say what) has beenreplaced.LOST: WHITE EMBROIDEREDBELT; vie. 53rd and Blackstone; Sub¬stantial Reward; call Jerry at 493-1548.FOUND: Two Stray Cats-Med. malewith grey Ripple Fur, red collar withsilver bell and Med. Black male with nocollar; vicinity of 52nd and HarperCall 324-7243.OPPORTUNITY KNOCKSIf vou had been in the Co-op last Thurs¬day, you could have had an all ex¬penses paid trip to France as a tutor;or a job as a bartender; or a ride toSandusky; or the pick of 12,000 usedbooks. Books, Jobs, Apartments, Rides.Come. . .Basement of Reynold’s Club. SANDELS MADE TO ORDER. 10-20%.Disc, for students and staff with ID tilJuly 15, 1967. . .55 Styles!!! Delivery—One week to ten days but EmergencyOrders accepted. 1/3 deposit on all or¬ders. Will calls acepted. Also-handbags, belts, jackets, capes, &suits—custom-made or repaired. ADLIB STUDIO. 5056 Lake Park or call268 6910. Kenwood family seeks mature male orfemale student for babysitting in ex¬change for room and partial board. CaU \ST 2-8461,Amongst Picassos, Miros, Beckmans jTanguys, etc., dependable, mature fe-1male student wanted for daily morning:care of docUe, affectionate, quiet, obe- idient 2 year old girl of exceptional in- jtelligence. University area. . .Fees tobe arranged. . .NO 7-3259. jCARTOONIST with liberal (sic) opin¬ions on University and other issuesneeded for Editorial Page of The CHI¬CAGO MAROON. MI 3-0800, Ext. 3265. TOUGH-AS-RATSHIT LITLE SPORT 501965 HONDA-Black-$120 00. CaU Harrisat 667-5895, evenings.Chipndl. Mahgy., 8 piece Dining Set. 5piece Bedroom set. Electric Tools,misc. furnishings. Come to 7300 So.Yates Sunday 9-6 or call 679-4706.SMITH-COR ON A PORTABLE TYPE¬WRITER. Cost $80.00 Sell now for$40.00. CaU Jerry 493-1548 or MI 3 0800EXT 3265 SUBLETSNEED Summer apartment, 1-2 monthsfrom July 1st. Gladly care for pets, etc.CaU 324-1597FOR RENT3-1-, room furn. apartment near cam¬pus: reasonable rent; phone RE 4-3525after 5 p.m. Male students acceptable.CAMPING EQUIPMENT—Tents. Pad*-Stoves, Lanterns; Phone EXT. 2381 or324-1499. No new reservations acceptedJuly 5-20.RUSSIAN taught by highly exp. teach¬er. . .rapid method. . .trial lesson-nocharge. Call CE 6-1423, 9-5 p.m.There will soon be ROOM AT THEBOTTOM! OKAY. Break it out andbring it over toDESIRE Female cycUng companionwith bicycle and endurance. . .684-2413.OKAY-Break it out and bring it over tothe BE-IN. . .July 4. . .POINT. . . WRITERS needed on Summer Staff ofTHE Chicago Maroon. It is where THE jaction is. . -MI 3-0800, Ext. 3265- iArtist NEEDED to draw ornate logo- jtype for new Chicago Maroon magazine, jGARGOYLE, from rough sketch. Also, Iregular artist wiU be needed for FaUQuarter. You name pay. . .contact JeffKuta: MI 3-0600. Ext. 3265 or 384-5958.FOR SALEBE PUBLISHED. . .Bring your contri¬butions in Culture, Dissent, or Satire toThe Chicago Maroon. Ida Noyes Hall,1212 E. 59th, Room 303. . .for publica¬tion in new weekend magazine, GAR¬GOYLE, next quarter. | CANON FT with 5 mm £1.4 and 135| mm f2 8. Also polarizing filter, three1 close-up lenses, lens hoods, cablerelease. . $250.00. All less than 6months old and in perfect condition.! CallJerry 493-1548 or MI 3 080, EXT. 3265. TOAD HALLhigh-fidelityCOMPONENTSTELEVISIONRADIOSPHONOGRAPHSTAPE RECORDERS RENTS AND SELLSAMPEX-AR-FISHERKENWOOD-MARANTZBOZAK—JBL—ALTECDUAL-BOGEN-EMPIREGARRARD-SCOTT-SONYFROM $98.88PORTABLE AND PLUG INFROM $9.95PHONOLA-ZENITH-VMFROM $39.95 TO INFINITYPsychedelicpostersfromfillmoreauditorium1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500STUDENT CO-OPUsed Books STUDENT GOVERNMENTJobsApartments PUADTCD Cl IA1ITCRides uHAKItn rLlunloDrop Down | Underground still has seatsReynolds Club Basement10-5 DAILY available on its July 1212-5 SATURDAYSCl lf*UT TO ninicNew Books From The University 01 Chicago Press FLIGHT TO PARISmSlavery in the Americasby Herbert S. Klein $6.95 (returning Aug. 15) i(, .*The Chinese Knight Errantby James JY Liu $5.50 0AAP AAThe Death of Slaveryby Elbert B. Smith $5.00 $325.00 - jGENERAL BOOK DEPARTMENTUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue Call: U. of C. Stud. Gov. Ext. 3272We also have copies of Midway magazine for sale.10 • THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, June 30, 1967Johnson Is Expected To SignCongressional Draft Bill TodayBy MICHAEL KRAUSS ,The U S. Senate and Houseof Representatives have bothpassed a compromise billwhich would extend the draftfor four years.Last month the two housespassed draft bills that differed onhow much executive power was tobe left to the President. The Housewanted to provide specifically forthe continuation of student defer¬ments for undergraduates and topointedly bar the President fromestablishing a lottery system. TheSenate wanted to recommend thatdeferments for undergraduates bemaintained, but to leave the powerto decide to the President. The Sen¬ate would also have left to thePresident the decision on preciselyhow to execute selection.The final bill is the result of Sen¬ate-House conferences and repre¬sents a compromise. It was passedin its final form in the Senate onJune 14 by a vote of 72 to 23 and bythe House on June 20 by a vote of377 to 29.The bill provides that the draft system be continued for the nextfour years. It specifically bars thePresident from instituting a lotterysystem for 19-year-olds, and makesdeferments for college undergradu¬ates no longer a matter of execu¬tive discretion, but mandatory forall students making normal pro¬gress towards a degree.According to the bill the Presi¬dent may put an end to undergrad¬uate deferments only if he candemonstrate a severe manpowerneed. That he could do so is unlike¬ly in light of the fact that at pres¬ent only one half of eligible youthsare being drafted. The defermentswould last until the student gradu¬ates or until he turns 24.Youngest FirstLast spring President Johnsonended deferments for graduate stu¬dents and asked for debate on thefate of undergraduate deferments.The new bill does not make gradu¬ate deferments mandatory, butleaves the decision to executive au¬thority. It is expected that Presi¬dent Johnson will limit graduatedeferments to students studying formedicine and the ministry. In the past the policy has been todraft the oldest eligible peoplefirst. While the new bill contains nospecific provision, the committeereports in both houses endorsed theidea of taking the youngest first,along with those whose defermentshave run out. The final decisionwill be left to the President.It is expected that the Presidentwill sign the bill even though hedislikes the limits it imposes on hisauthority. The present draft lawexpires today, June 30.Although the bill bars at presentthe establishment of a lottery sys¬tem, Congressional leaders havesaid that if the President comes upwith ideas for the specific organiza¬tion of such a system, they wouldreconsider.Some Senators were critical ofthe bill because it doesn’t providespecifically for vocational defer¬ments, as it does for student defer¬ments. That decision will be left tothe Executive. There was alsosome resistance in the Senate toextending the draft law for such along term when the country’s man¬power needs are so unclear andsubject to change.Study-In a ‘Challenge to Authority’(Continued from Page 1)to avoid the draft,” a student whowas suspended told The Maroon.'Not in Danger'Dean of Students Warner Wickexplained that “within reasonablelimits we will do everything we canto help with draft problems,” butadded that the University has notfound any suspended students whoappealed and are in danger ofbeing drafted.Lipsch charged that the adminis¬tration was only trying to enforceits authority, and that the solecrime of the people who studied inwas to challenge that authority.“The kids disrupted the Universityonly in the sense that they madethe University keep the lights on a little longer in the Ad Building, andmade them station some extra, andunnecessary, guards around it.”By taking their political action inthis way—by sitting in rather thanusing other channels of communi¬cation—the students challengedUniversity authority, Lipsch sug¬gested. The study-in was consid¬ered a crime against the academiccommunity, he said, by faculty| members who equated it with hold¬ing a gun at the head of the Uni¬versity. “Would the penalties havebeen so stiff if the sit-in had notbeen a political protest?” he de¬manded.The study-in was the result of acampaign begun last year when theUniversity announced it would compile a male class rank to com¬ply with Selective Service direc¬tives. The newly formed SAR sat inthe Administration Building, settingoff a discussion that resulted in theUniversity’s abolition, last Febru¬ary, of male rank on the conditionthat students have another way ofobtaining draft deferments.SAR pressed for the abolition ofall rank, and in the Spring it waslearned that, since Selective Serv¬ice had ceased to give draft tests,the University would again compilemale rank for those who had nottaken the test.With the now probable defermentof all undergraduates, however, theUniversity is likely to cease maleclass ranking.York Against US Policy; Offers AsylumTORONTO—The Student Councilof Glendon College of York Univer¬sity here has passed a resolutionoffering sanctuary in their schoolfor male students in the UnitedStates who object to the war inVietnam. They condemned the“American escalation as liable tolead to major war and urged thatthe Canadian government stopshipment of war materials to theUnited States.The resolution proposed that theadministration of the college acceptlate, but valid applications frommale students whose studies haveben interrupted by the draft. Itasked other Canadian schools to dothe same, and suggested that U.S. students who are interested applyfor Canadian Landed Immigrantstatus, which is permanent, insteadof temporary visas.The president of the college re¬plied to the resolution that foreignstudents’ aplications should be inby the July 1 deadline, but that“late applications will be consid¬ered.”FOR SALEBOGEN 15-W Amplifierand KNIGHT Tuner;Perfect Condition; both for $35.00;Also SANSUI Amplifier—$20.00CALL 463-3585 or 521-0460FURNITURE SALEStudent prices on quality beds, sofas,chairs, tables, etc. Clearing store-rooms!5240 SO. DREXEL AVE.Sat. & Sun., March 4th 4 5th1 pm - 3 pmMost Completeon the South SideMODE! CAMERA1342 E. 55 HY 3-9259NSA Discounts SAMUEL A. BELL'BUY SHELL FROM BELL'SINCE ltliPICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200CARMEN MOVERS6060 S. COTTAGE GROVEUSED FURNITUREWE BUY AND SELLMU 4-8643 or MU 4-9003Elizabeth Qordon Hair Designers, inc.1620 East 53rd StreetBU 8-2900-01-02 "THE CLIMATEFOR EDUCATIONIS PROGRESS . ..the techniqueis innovation"FloridaHAS A PLACE FORELEMENTARY,SECONDARYTEACHERSWant more facts?SEND FOR FREE COPY16 PAGEBOOK INCOLOR!GETTHECOMF1 ETESTORY I// where the action is!"J. W. BURT, Teacher RecruitmentKnott Bldg.State Dept, of EducationTallahassee, Florida 32304NameMajorAddress.CityZip .State. THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOCAMPUSBUS SERVICETo: MEMBERS of the UNIVERSITY FACULTY, STAFF, and STUOENTSRe: SUMMER BUS SERVICEEFFECTIVE JUNE 19, 1967, and continuing through the Summer Quarter, the"UNIVERSITY CAMPUS BUS" will operate during the following days:Monday through Friday, except on official University holidays:The following are the routes and schedules for the Summer busses:"E" EAST-WEST BROADVIEW SUMMER BUS ROUTEStarting at 59th and Stony the bus proceeds West to Cottage Grove, stoppingat I.C., International House, Kenwood, Kimbark, Woodlawn, University, Har¬per Library, Ellis, Maryland, and Cottage Grove; then North on CottageGrove to 57th; East on 57th to Stony Island, stopping at Drexel, Ellis, Uni¬versity, Woodlawn, Dorchester, and the I.C.; then North on Stony Island to56th; West on 56th to Lake Park; North on Lake Park to 55th Street; Easlon 55th to Hyde Park Blvd.; South on Hyde Park Blvd. to 57th drive, stop¬ping at the Broadview; then West on 57th Drive to Stony; South on Stonyto 59th St., the starting point.SCHEDULEA.M. Approximately 20 minute round trip.P.M.Starts at 59th 4 Stony 4:45 Starts at 59th 4 Stony5:055:25 Ends at 57th & Stonyabout 5:45 P.M.Ends at 57th 4 Stonyabout 8:45 A.M."N" NORTH-SOUTH SUMMER BUS ROUTEApproximately 30 minute round tripStarting at University Avenue and 51st Street, the bus proceeds East on 51stStreet to Dorchester Avenue, stopping at Woodlawn, Kimbark, Kenwood andDorchester; then South on Dorchester to 53rd, stopping at 52nd and 53rd;East on 53rd to Harper; South on Harper to 54th Place, stopping at HarperSurf and 54th Place; West on 54th Place to Dorchester; South on Dorchesterto 57th, stopping at 55th, East Park Place, 56th and 57th; East on 57thto Stony Island, stopping at Harper and Stony Island; South oh Stony Islandto 59th; West on 59th to Ellis, stopping at Harper (the I.C. Station), Dor¬chester (International House), Kimbark, Woodlawn and Ellis; then South onEllis to 60th; East on 60th to Woodlawn, stopping at the Law Quadrangle andWoodlawn Avenue; North on Woodlawn to 59th; then West on 59th toEllis, stopping at University, Harper Library, & Ellis; then North on Ellis to55th, stopping at 56th, 5518 Ellis Avenue and 55th; East on 55th to Uni¬versity; North on University to 51st, stopping at 54th, 53rd and 51st (thestarting point).A.M.7:30 Starts at 51 st 4Univ.8:008:309:00 Ends at 57th 4Univ. about 9:25 SCHEDULEP.M.12 Noon Starts at 59th6 Stony12:301:001:30 Ends at 57 6Stony about 15:5 P.M. Evening4:30 Starts at 59th4 Stony5:005:306:00 Ends at 57th 4Stony about 6:25"S" SOUTH SHORE-SOUTH CAMPUS SUMMER BUS ROUTE(NOTE that this is the same as the Spring Quarter Route)Bus starts at 67th and Jeffery and proceeds South on Jeffery to 76th, stop-pin at 68th, 69th, 70th, 71st, 72nd, 73rd, 74th and 75th; then East on 76thto Yates, stopping at Chappel, Clyde, Merrill, Paxton, Crandon, Oglesby andYates; then North on Yates to 71st, stopping at 75th, 73rd, 72nd, and71st; then West to Merrill, stopping at Oglesby, Crandon, Paxton and Merrill;then North on Merrill to 69th, stopping at 70th PI., 70th, and 69th; thenEast on 69th to Crandon, stopping at Paxton and Crandon; then North onCrandon to 68th Street, stopping at 68th; then West on 68th ft) Stony,stopping at Paxton, Merrill, Clyde, Chappel, Jeffery, Bennett, Cregier, EastEnd; then North on Stony through Jackson Park to 59th and Stony Island,stopping at 59th and Stony Island; then West on 59th to Ellis, stopping atHarper, Dorchester, Kimbark, Woodlawn, University, Harper Library and Ellis;then South to 60th St.; then East on 60th to Stony Island, stopping at Ellis,Woodlawn, Dorchester, and the I.C. Station; then East through Jackson Parkto 67th and Jeffery.SCHEDULEA.M. P.M. •7:15 Starts at 67th 4 Jeffery 4:30 Starts at 59th 4 Stony8:00 5:158:45 Ends at 59th 4 Ellis 6:00 Ends at 68th 4 Stonyabout 9:15 A.M. about 6:45 P.M.WHO MAY RIDEBecause of legal restrictions, use of the above transportationlimited to members of the University faculty, staff, and students. Passengerswill be admitted to the vehicle upon surrendering a ticket to the driver.The driver will not be permitted to accept cash or to sell tickets. Identifi¬cation as a student, faculty member, or employee will be required whenpurchasing tickets. One-ride tickets at cost of 15 cents each are sold atthe following locations where maps are available:Bursar's Office (5801 Ellis Avenue)University Bookstore (5802 Ellis Avenue)Reynolds Club, Attendant's Desk (5706 University Avenue)Billings Hospital, Cashier's Office (950 E. 59th Street)Blaine Hall, Room 105 (1362 E. 59th Street)International House, Information Desk (1414 E. 59th Street)Law School, Receptionist's Desk (1121 E. 60th Street)Further information may be obtained from Mr. Richard Wade, Departmentof Buildings and Grounds, 960 East 58th Street, Midway 3-0800, Extension3082.E. L. MILLERBusiness Manager - Campus Operations12 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • Friday, June 30, 1967