fThe Chicago Maroon FOUNDEDIN 1892VOL. 76, NO. 4 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, AVGUST II, 1967 8 PAGESexclusiveFaculty Search Names ReleaseBy JEFFREY KUTAAfter a month and a half,!the names of seven faculty;members of the joint faculty-trustee committee to select anew president of the Universityhave been made public.Fairfax M. Cone, chairman of theBoard of Trustees, gave the namesto The Maroon over the phoneTuesday. They are:• Dr. Albert Dorfman, a professorand chairman of the Department ofPediatrics and a professor of bio- i chemistry;• Jacob W. Getzels, a professor ofeducation and of psychology;• Clyde A. Hutchison, Jr., the CarlWilliam Eisendrath professor ofchemistry and in the Enrico FermiInstitute for Nuclear Studies;• Saunders Mac Lane, the MaxMason distinguished service profes¬sor of mathematics;• Norman F. Maclean, the Wil¬liam Rainey Harper professor ofEnglish;• Phil C. Neal, a professor anddean of the Law School; and• George J. Stigler, the Charles R. Walgreen distinguished service pro¬fessor of economics and in the |Graduate School of Business.Bureaucratic ObstacleThe release of the names followsefforts made by The Maroon to in¬volve students in the presidential jselection process. An editorial inthe July 14 issue had called ontrustees, administrators, and facul¬ty members on the search commit¬tee “to make the names of thatcommittee known immediately, andto bring students in on a close,working basis, to the search com¬mittee’s effort.”Local Groups Back Lynd,Fight for Right To TeachBy DAVID L. AIKENStaughton Lynd, the radical historian whose recommenda¬tion by Chicago State College that he be hired was recentlyrejected by the Board of Governors of Illinois State Collegesand Universities, is suing for the right to teach.Commenting that “it is rare tofind an academic freedom case soclear-cut,” Lynd explained at anAugust 1 press conference that hewas suing because he felt “an obli¬gation to other teachers to pursuethis case so that this cannot happento them.”Lynd’s suits against the Board ofGovernors has the support of sever¬al local American Association ofUniversity Professors chapters andof the Illinois Division of the Amer¬ican Civil Liberties Union. An adhoc committee of faculty membersfrom Clucago-area institutions isalso gathering names, and financialsupport.The case will be heard nextWednesday, in the State CircuitCourt of Sangamon County atSpringfield.Expected JobCook County College teachers Un¬ion president Norman G. Swensonsaid that his union’s House of Rep¬resentatives had voted to supportthe suit financially. Lynd joined theunion last May, while he was ex¬pecting to hold the job he had beenoffered at Chicago State College.According to Lynd, Irwin J. Sul-loway, dean of arts and sciences atChicago State, had written in Aprilwith an offer of a one-year post asan associate professor of history.Lynd accepted this offer by letter.This exchange of letters, he noted,LAST ISSUEThis is The Maroon's lastsummer issue. We will re¬sume biweekly publicationin the fall beginning Fri¬day, September 29, with aspecial issue includingWeekend magazine andthe Orientation Week sup¬plement. The Business Of¬fice opens Monday, Sep¬tember 18. is the universally accepted formof hiring professors at both publicand private institutions.Lynd said he originally decidedto come to Chicago after receivingan invitation from a group of radi¬cally-oriented community organi¬zers, who asked him for his help insetting up a school to train neworganizers in communities, and theCenter for Radical Research, inwhich college students who arespending the summer gathering in¬formation which will be useful tothese organizers. The Chicago MaroonStaughton LyndDuring the summer, he has 11964. He obtained a year’s unpaidbeen advising the Union of Organi¬zers on their training plans, andteaching a seminar for students inthe center on American historyfrom a radical perspective.Lynd has taught at Yale since leave of absence for the comingyear. He spent last year on a Yaleresearch fellowship, preparing abook on the intellectual origins ofearly American radicalism.Turn to Page 6 For awhile, University bureauc¬racy proved a formidable obstacleto the disclosure of the names,even when administrators andtrustees alike seemed to agree thatthey should be made public.In a conversation with The Ma¬roon July 27, Cone said he saw noreason why the names of the seventrustees on the committee shouldbe made known and added thatthey had not in the past. He wassympathetic, however, with the ar¬gument that students should havethe opportunity to discuss with atleast some members of the com¬mittee the search for a successorto President Beadle.Chasing the GooseHe referred The Maroon to Wal¬ter V. Leen, secretary to the Boardof Trustees, whom he said wouldrelease the faculty names.Leen, while stating that he mightmake public the trustee names af¬ter the next Board meeting in Au¬gust, said he was not in a positionto release the faculty names andreferred The Maroon to Dean ofStudents Charles O’Connell, who isalso secretary to the UniversitySenate.O’Connell said he could not re¬lease the names until he had re¬ceived formal authorization to doso by Cone.The Maroon wrote to Cone July31 asking him to notify O’Connellor release the names himself.When no word had come from ei¬ther by Tuesday, The Maroon con¬tacted both O’Connell and Cone bytelephone.Cone said he had sent a letter toBeadle asking him to authorizeO’Connell to release the names.Along the bureaucratic line instruc¬tions had apparently got misinter¬preted, for O’Connell said he hadbeen authorized by Beadle only torelease for a second time the facul¬ty names to members of the facul¬ty.Upon being told this, Cone with acomment of “Oh, hell” read thenames into the phone. Fairfax ConeO’Connell, unaware of Cone’s re¬lease of the names, later contactedThe Maroon to say that he hadtalked with faculty members of thecommittee and received no objec¬tion to his proposal giving theirnames to The Maroon.Student Role UncertainIn the July 27 phone conversa¬tion, Cone had declined to commenton the possibilities of studentsbeing invited to voice opinions atmeetings of the committee or beinggranted an even more formal rolein the selection process.He said such ideas would have tobe taken up with the faculty mem¬bers of the committee. Any changein the manner of selection or struc¬ture of the committee, however,would have to be initiated by theBoard.The joint committee was appoint¬ed early in June anticipating Bea¬dle’s retirement at the age of 65next year. After going over re¬quirements of persons to be consid¬ered for the post, the committeewill assemble a list of possible can¬didates and begin an eliminationprocess.THE CENTER AND THE MOVEMENTRadical Research in Crass Roots HereBy REBECCA FISHER“The question has becomemore, ‘What is the role ofwhites in the black powermovement? Can you buildsimilar movements in white com¬munities that could have a strate¬gic relationship with the blackpower groups?’ What we want totry to do is organize constituen¬cies of white people on relevantissues.”This, according to Rennie Davis,is the present concern of theCenter for Radical Research.Davis is the director of the Cen¬ter.The Center for Radical Re¬search is sponsored on campus bythe Conference on the City andthe University (CCU) and StudentGovernment. Its purpose is to service the Union of Organizers, agroup of about fifty communityorganizers from various “grassroots” organizations working inChicago.The goal of the Center is to pre¬pare a thorough manual with in¬formation about problems facingcommunity organizers in the city.Under study are such broad top¬ics as urban renewal, education,welfare, health and the police.Approximately 60 students aredoing research for the Center, in¬cluding about 20 University stu¬dents.Topics Under ResearchSome examples of what is beingresearched: , j• Housing—How to handle prob¬lems like eviction, the gas beingshut off by the landlord, lead poi¬soning, the collective bargainingcontract, the weapons of a tenant union, the weapons of a landlord,taking a landlord into court;• Police—Rights when arrested; • Jobs—All agencies that findjobs, with an evaluation;Turn to Page 3The Chicago Maroon—Craig TravisUP AGAINST THE POWER STRUCTURE: Two staff workers forthe center for Radical Research hard at work in the center's offices.GETTING A FREE RIDEThe Easy Lives of Washington's Summer InternsBy ELLIS LEVINSpecial to The Chicago MaroonWASHINGTON — “If youcome back a third year, youwill definitely deserve yourpaycheck.”That’s the word given to stu¬dents starting out as summer in¬terns for the federal government.Every year several thousand stu¬dents have been swallowed up inthe vast maze of bureaus, offices,and departments.While most are paid about $100a week or more, they are general¬ly not expected to earn theirkeep. The bureaus that partici¬pate in the intern program simplyhope to expose students to theworkings of government, and at¬tract some of them back for full¬time careers after graduation.One columnist for The Washing¬ton Post saw the government in¬terns “getting a free ride. Theyspend half of their time going tolectures, the other half takingcoffee breaks and long lunchhours.” He mournfully concluded that they do little in the way ofproductive work.One University of Chicago in¬tern was told by his superior notto feel guilty about not earninghis salary. “If you are here onesummer, you become familiarwith the operation of the bureauc¬racy and our department in par¬ticular. As a person on the out¬side, you will then have a betterunderstanding of what is going onin government. If you come backa second year, you will start todevelop a familiarity with thework and may start to earn yoursalary. If you come back a thirdyear, you will definitely deserveyour paycheck.”Range of DutiesIt is hard to generalize aboutwhat interns do, however. Thosewho work in the executive agen¬cies hold positions ranging fromclerk-typist up to researcher andlegal aide. Several interns aresent on field tours to inspect thework of agencies that receive gov¬ernment grants, such as schoolsystems or poverty programs.In some cases, a bureau will save up a lot of non-urgent workall year, then shove it at themore-or-Iess willing interns.Probably the elite of the sum¬mer intern corps are the workersin the offices of Senators and Con¬gressmen. These usually got theirjobs because either they or theirfamilies have good political con¬tacts. One intern is working for aliberal North Side Chicago Demo¬crat because he is the grandson ofa Democratic national committee¬man from Illinois.Most congressmen have abouttwo or three interns on theirstaffs, doing everything fromanswering the phone to preparingdetailed studies for forthcominglegislation. One New York con¬gressman sends several of his in¬terns back to his district to helptake the pulse of his constituentswith opinion surveys.They Keep Busy, ThoughEven if the job itself isn’t al¬ways demanding, neither thecongressional nor executive in¬terns really have trouble findingthings to keep themselves occu-No Membership Lists—LandtThe Student Activities Officedoes not retain membershiplists of student organizations,according to Director of Stu¬dent Activities Skip Landt.An apparently misinformedspokesman from the office has toldThe Maroon that lists were keptbut not made public under any cir-jcumstances. This information ap-:peared in an article in the July 28issue on the American Council ofEducation’s recent statement onconfidentiality of student records.Landt issued the following state¬ment to The Maroon this week:“When an organization registers,Draft Deferments AvailableThe Selective Service System hasannounced the availability of II-Sdeferments to all college students“who are satisfactorily pursuing afull-time course of instruction.”Students here should fill out Re¬quest for Undergraduate StudentDeferment (SSS 104) forms duringregistration for the Autumn Quarterand then send them to their localdraft boards. a list of members is submitted toStudent Activities Office. This listremains with us for two days, dur¬ing which time the secretary hasthe opportunity to ascertain that atleast ten members are registeredstudents. After that time the groupmay request the return of this list,if they so wish. If they do not, it isdestroyed.“What we do retain for our per¬manent records is that portion ofthe registration form listing the of¬ficers. In no case do we give outthe names of officers, although wedo verify information availableelsewhere; as when on a job appli¬cation a student has listed organi¬zational offices held and we areasked to confirm this.“This policy has been in effectfor longer than any of us remem¬bers, probably since the early ‘fif¬ties.” 'He added later that a new provi-| sion would be entered into the Stu¬dent Code specifying that “in thecase of political organizations, attheir request, the director of Stu¬ dent Activities shall within 48 hoursreturn the list of names of mem¬bers to the care of the officers ofthe respective organizations, aftercertifying that the persons con¬cerned are registered students ingood standing at the University.”The provision was agreed on byStudent Government and Dean ofStudents Charles O’Connell. It willbe published in the 1967-68 StudentHandbook. pied. In fact, an intern can spendmany days without setting foot inhis office, if he wants.For congressional interns, thereis at least one lecture a day, plusinnumerable social events spon¬sored by the interns themselvesas well as Young Democrats andYoung Republicans groups. Theexecutive departments also ar¬range periodic intern programs toacquaint the student with theagency’s work, and hopefully gethim to feel they care about him.Perhaps most rewarding, how¬ever, are the visits with notablesthat students from some schools,such as UC, organize for them¬selves. About 60 interns from UCare floating around the city forthe summer, and have met withsuch people as the AssociatedPress correspondent who coversthe antics of the Senate, JosephHall; one of the Senators who pro¬vide news events, Massachusettssenator Edward Brooke; and Su¬preme Court Justice Abe Fortas.Oppose Johnson on WarNot all the activities of the in¬terns are quiet and boring, how¬ever. There was quite a stir lastmonth when Mark Green, an in¬tern in the office of New YorkRepublican Senator Jacob Javits,circulated a “polite letter” toPresident Johnson opposed to theVietnam war among the 1300 Cap¬itol Hill interns, according to Col¬legiate Press Service.The letter urged de-escalationof the war because of its effectson domestic programs, but did not push for any particular alter¬native.Some congressmen have sup¬ported the right of interns tospeak out on the war, but manyothers reportedly instructed theirinterns not to sign the letter.After Green started circulatinghis letter, another group of in¬terns tried to form a group whichwould disassociate itself fromGreen’s letter, not to take anystand on the war, but to ensurethe expansion of the intern pro¬gram itself.One student from Columbia ex¬pressed fear that some conserva¬tive congressmen might evenwant to abolish the intern pro¬gram if too many interns turnto be too far to the left.Still another group of internswasn’t satisfied even with the po¬lite letter of protest to PresidentJohnson. They were reportedlytalking about either staging awalkout during Johnson’s annualtalk to the interns, or perhapsboycotting it and setting up apicket line.Centered around the congres¬sional interns from Oregon, thisgroup doesn’t really expect muchsupport. Interns are “generally aconservative group,” commentedLee Bollinger from the Universityof Oregon.EYE EXAMINATIONSFASHION EYEWEARCONTACT LENSESDR. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometrist53 Kimbark Plaza1200 East 53rd StreetHYde Park 3-8372Student a no Faculty Discount SAMUEL A. BELL'BUY SHELL FROM BELL'since imPICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE52 & Lake Park493-5200 TAhffAMA&NCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTONESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOPEN DAILYIt A M. TO 9 PM.SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS12 TO 9 P.M.Orders To Take Out1319 EAST 63rd ST. MU 4-1062Elizabeth Qordon Hair Designers, inc.1620 East 53rd StreetBU 8-2900-01-02USEDHI-FI and STEREOEQUIPMENTGUARANTEED$10 AND UPCALL 463-3585 or 521-0460 DR. AARON ZIMBLER, OptometristIN THENEW HYDE PARK SHOPPING CENTER1510 E. 55th St.DO 3-7644 DO 3-6866PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED EYE EXAMINATIONSNEWEST STYLING IN FRAMESStudent end Faculty DiscountHUTCHINSON COMMONS HOW OPEN!Enjoy the University's new food service operation at HutchinsonCommons, now open to the University community from 7 am to 3:30 pm,Monday thru Friday.EGGS - PANCAKES - ala carte or Complete BreakfastSOUP - SANDWICHES - or Complete LuncheonBREAKFAST served from 7:00 am thru 10:30 amLUNCH served from 10:45 am thru 2:00 pmCOFFEE BREAK from 2:00 pm thru 3:30 pm”> “r I ; w,;,Completely air conditioned for your comfort FEATURING VISUAL STIMULATION PLUSTHE BUFFALO SPRINGFIELDCARL HOLMES & THE COMMANDERSTHE ROVIN’ KINDTHE CHAMBERS BROTHERSTHE EXCEPTIONSTHE SEEDSAND MANY OJHCNSPlus Color TV. Boutique and Head Shop. Library. Bar. Soda Fountain. Scopitone.TICKETS: $4.00 FRI., SAT. $2.50 WED., THURS., SUN. $1.50 STUDENT DISCOUNT(*itfi I.D.) WED., THURS. ADVANCE PRICE TICKETS ON SALE AT ALL WARD ANDCRAWFORD STORES AND AT TICKET CENTRAL, 212 NORTH MICHIGAN.CROUP SALES: To thicw a parly at Cheefh for 50*2(80, call Miss Prusa at MO 4-5051THE CHICAGO MAROON August 11, 1967\lNSA To Hold Convention; Hopes To ReformThe results of the Nationaltudent Association (NSA) An-yal Congress, to be held on;>gust 13 at the University of[arvland, should show whether ther0up seriously intends to reformself after being shaken by disclo¬ses last winter that it had beeniceiving funds from the CIA.At Chicago, the NSA-CIA link be-M a battle over University parti-pation in the student troup, endingith a referendum this spring inhich students voted to continuedations with NSA. Chicago’s NSA•legation ran on a reform plat-rm, arguing that the Universitylouldn’t pull out of NSA until it was certain the group could not becleaned up.( Yesterday, the Student Govern¬ment executive committee voted tosupport the efforts of Alan Bloom,head of the University’s NSA dele¬gation, “to withhold the Universi¬ty’s NSA dues until NSA has dem¬onstrated some significant re¬form,” said Jerry Lipsch, SG vice-president. If the delegation cannotparticipate in the Congress withoutfirst paying dues, they will paythem.Connection AttackedThe Left here has attacked theidea of having any form of connec¬tion with NSA, noting many annualcongresses at which radicals wereallowed to speak, but radical pro¬ grams were never passed. Theirpresence merely provided a coverfor the cold-warrior activities of asmall ruling establishment withinNSA, it was charged.The national convention of Stu¬dents for a Democratic Society(SDS) decided to push that groupas radical alternative to NSA, SDSis holding its own counter¬conference at Maryland, expectingto draw radical speakers fromj NSA. It intends to hold symposiumsat the same times and on the same1 subjects as symposiums at the NSAcongress.Meanwhile, NSA leaders are say¬ing, as they did last winter, thatI this year’s congress will present aillavic Chair to StankiewiczEdward Stankiewicz, a pro-ssor of Slavic linguistics, has>en appointed chairman ofo Department of Slavicinguages and Literatures. He wincceed Hugh McLean, who will re-rn to full-time teaching and re-arch.Stankiewicz has a special re¬arch interest in Slavic dialectolo-and the relationship betweenetic language and linguistics.This is the third changeover inpartment chairmen since the be-nning of the summer. The twoher new appointments were John>pe Franklin in history and Mor- back toris Janowitz in sociology. , est in Slavic affairs goesStankiewicz is the author of the famous lectures on Russian cul“Declension and Gradation of Rus¬sian Sub-stantives” (1967), co¬author of the two-volume “SelectedBibliography of Slavic Linguistics”(19G5) and co-editor of “Introduc¬tion to Metrics” (1965). He haswritten numerous articles and re¬views for scholarly journals.A native of Poland, Stankiewiczholds the M.A. degree from Chica¬go (1951) and the Ph.D. from Har¬vard (1954).Prior to joining the Chicago fac¬ulty, he taught at Indiana Universi¬tyThe University’s history of inter- ture given at the turn of the centu-lry by the late Professor TomasMasaryk, founder of Czechoslova¬kia. r fine chance to reform the group. Asymposium on the first day of thecongress will deal with NSA’s tieswith the CIA. Participants includeNSA President Eugene Graves andformer CIA Deputy Director Rob¬ert Amory.Fewer PlenariesAs evidence of their good inten-l tions, NSA leaders are pointing tothe reorganization of the two-weekCongress program. Where previouscongresses had emphasized longlegislative plenaries, this one willbe devoted mostly to programs.The first week of the congresswill include major symposia andspeeches, legislative plenaries and jelection of officers. The secondweek delegates will talk abouthow to apply the resolutions justpassed.The program will include fourdays of sessions on student druguse. Delegates will look at recentfactual information on drugs, gath¬er information on campus drug use, and try to develop guidelinesfor campus drug policies.Student Press To MeetAnother congress, this one spon¬sored by the U.S. Student Press As¬sociation (USSPA), will swing intoaction August 21 at the Universityof Minnesota. The Maroon is acharter member of USSPA, the na¬tional association of campusnewspapers.Among the issues to be discussedis the founding of an USSPA na¬tional college magazine, to replacea Reader’s Digest failure calledCampus Courier. The magazinewas to have been a glossy, car¬rying expensive national advertis¬ing, but editors of several majorcollege newspapers — including theMaroon—refused to carry it afterseeing a mock-up issue.The convention will also discussmethods of considering the Viet¬nam war in college papers anddraft policy.Arrests and Attacks at Induction CenterA little bit of Vietnam cameA Department of Slavic Lan- to Chicago’s Armed Forces In¬guages and Literatures was formal¬ly inaugurated in September, 1961.The Department offers numerouscourses in the fields of Russian, jCzech, Slavic, Polish, and SouthSlavic languages and literatures.The faculty numbers 11, and wll besupplemented by three visiting pro¬fessors during the 1967-68 academicyear.enter Organizes, Trains Workers for Community Projectsintinucd from Page One• Health—A list of free hospit-ils, with an evaluation; alcoholic•linics; information about welfareitations and welfare approvedloctors, by neighborhood;• Independent politics—Elector-il requirements for alderman andfate representatives, where to)rint petitions, a list of indepen-lent politicians in the city;• Public and community ser¬vices in general.Free UniversityAn adjunct of the Center is therree University, which, to quote aeaflet published in June, “wasonceived to be a bridge betweenhe experiences of research as-ociates in their daily work andhe developing of a radical per-pect i ve toward affectuatinghange in the American way ofife.”ane is HonoredRonald S. Crane, distinguishedrvice professor emeritus of Eng-h, has been elected a correspond-l fellow of the British Academy,e of the world’s leading societiesscholars. Crane is the first mem-r of the University faculty tohieve this honor. Some of the courses offered—running for two five week ses¬sions—are “Radicalism and theInarticulate in America,” givenLynd; “An Introduction to Ameri¬can Capitalism,” Paul Booth;“Women and their Statu s,”Naomi Weinstein and Jane Adams,by Jessie Lemish and Straughton“Formal Government and Elector¬al Politics of Chicago,” C. ClarkKissinger.As Rennie Davis describes it,the present concern of the Center“evolved out of trying to come toterms with the whole question ofbeing whites in today’s move¬ment. This is the direction we’removing in.“We’re creating a list of re¬search people—professionals andothers around the city—who canprovide intelligence and services,contacts to the movement, peoplewho we can talk to, and we knoware sympathetic and can help.“Also, we’re trying to locateradical teachers in the city sothat we can discover where thereis a possibility of working withparent protest groups.For fall, we’re trying to developa group of people on every cam¬pus who would like to make their own academic work relevant, towhom we could suggest topics forterm papers, things like that, thatwould be directly tied in with thebasic problems.“In the universities we are in¬terested in urging students tothink of the university in relationto local issues in the city.” duction Center at 615 W. VanBuren Ave. this week as policearrested two women for leaf lettingthe center Monday and as a gangof inductees jumped and beatanti-draft pickets there last Friday.The two women were chargedwith trespassing and disorderlyconduct for handing out leaflets in¬side the center. They were part ofa group of about 15 Women for jPeace who were handing leaflets topotential draftees telling them howto avaoid being inducted. The Chi¬cago Daily News reported that thetwo women were asked to leave thefirst floor lobby and arrested whenthey refused.Major William Richardson, com¬ mander of the center, told The Dai¬ly News that the only order res¬tricting picketing activity is onewhich forbids blocking the entranceto the building.On Friday, twenty anti-draftpickets outside the center were at¬tacked by about an equal numberof young men who knocked thepicketers to the ground and rippedtheir signs. Paul O’Brien, a mem¬ber of Chicago Area Draft Resis¬ters, the group that staged thepicketing, said he suspects that theattackers were military personnelin civilian clothes.Wallace Is Appointed HereJohn M. Wallace, an authority on17th century English literature, hasbeen appointed a professor of Eng¬lish here. Wallace has been an as¬sociate professor of English atJohns Hopkins since 1963 and pre¬viously taught at Cornell. He re¬ceived his B.A. from Trinity Col¬lege, Cambridge and his Ph.D.from Johns Hopkins. CARPET CITY6740 Stony IslandPhone: 324-7998DIRECT MILL OUTLETHas what you need from a $10 Used 9X12Rug, to a Custom Carpet Specializing inRemnants & Mill Returns at fractionof the Original Cost.Decorative Colors and Qualities. Addi¬tional 10% Discount with this Ad.FREE DELIVERY THE FRET SHOPHAS:GUITARSBANJOSMANDOLINSOLD, NEW & UNUSUALSupplies, RepairsMusic Books, RecordsJ iramy’sand the University RoomRESERVED EXCLUSIVELY FOR UNIVERSITY CLIENTELEFIFTY-FIFTH AND WOODLAWN AVE.AS AMIES.,. Sun Life Insurance Is a sure wayto financial independence for youend your family.At a local 8ua Life representative, HMfI call upon you at your convenience?Ralph J. Wood, Jr., CLUOne North LaSalle Street, Chicago 60602FRanklin 2-2390 - 798-0470Office Hours 9 to 5 Mondays,others by eppt.•UN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADAA MUTUAL COMPANY tsu • BE-INfor this weekendRent A Car 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 3-1715 "THE CLIMATEFOR EDUCATIONIS PROGRESS .. .the techniqueis innovation"FI oriaaHAS A PLACE FORELEMENTARY,SECONDARYTEACHERSWant more facts?SEND FOR FREE COPY16 PAGEBOOK INCOIORIGETTHECOMF1 ETESTORY! '*..."where the action is!"J. W. BURT, Teacher RecruitmentKnott Bldg.State Dept, of EducationTallahassee, Florida 32304Name.Ma/or_Address_City..Z'P-August 11, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON11 111"" iI :>S:Ssas«s;»;gWisM»The Chicago MaroonFOUNDED IN 1892leffrey Kuta, Editor-in-Chief<: Managing Editor John Welch Executive Editor. . David L. Aikenjtf - , V ' v ' ^■ '' 'Since you both want him, each may have half/A TraditionAfter a great deal of negotiating and persuading, The Ma¬roon has been able to extract the list of faculty members of thepresidential search committee from the closed fist of the Uni¬versity.Admittedly, there are no surprises in the list. All the gen¬tlemen presumably have the respect of their colleagues, manyhave served on other committees to which important respons¬ibilities have been given.IT WAS A TRIFLE annoying, however, to have to wage ourown little “public disclosure” campaign. We are disappointedthat the guardians of the University’s deep, dark secrets sawfit to include in that category the names of people assigned tochoose the chief executive officer of our University.Why did they take out their “top secret” stamp? We don’tknow, unless it’s plain old tradition. Students traditionally arekept in the dark about such things.This is one tradition that can easily be dispensed with.Soiled BoardIt should be obvious that the Board of Governors of IllinoisState Colleges and Universities blatantly violated principles ofacademic freedom as well as committed breach of contract indenying historian Staughton Lynd the teaching post he hasbeen promised at Chicago State Cpllege.Behind the issue of academic freedom, however, is the ques¬tion of Lynd’s right to travel to countries which are on theState Department’s “keep out” list. The board evidently didn’tlike the idea of Lynd’s trip to North Vietnam, via Prague,Moscow, and Peking, in December 1965 and January 1966.HE WENT, ALONG WITH radical community organizerTom Hayden and Marxist theoretician Herbert Aptheker, tosee for himself what North Vietnamese think. He wanted tounderstand what they feel, to bring back his understandingto other Americans.As Lynd and Hayden write in their account of the trip, “TheOther Side,” “Freedom of travel to all countries and for allkinds of persons—poor people as well as professionals, SNCCorganizers as well as newsmen—is a resource America needs ifit is to have any kind of empathy with the experience of mostof mankind”.This is how Lynd and Hayden see the right of Americans totravel—the opportunity to bring back information and impres¬sions which will build “international consciousness.”ONE POINT THAT MIGHT give the Board of Governorspause, however, is that travelling to a country against StateDepartment regulations is not a crime. That was settled in aSupreme Court decision handed down last winter, according toLynd’s lawyer. The government can take away Lynd’s pass¬port—which it has done—but it can’t make a criminal out ofhim (which it hasn’t tried to do).Where does that leave our illustrious Board of Governors,who piously believe “that the teacher has a responsibility tosupport and stay within the laws of this country”?It leaves them marching merrily down the “course of con¬vention, conformity, and mediocrity,” for one thing. (Thatis what the chairman of the Board of Governors wanted toavoid with Lynd’s appointment.)This situation leaves the board firmly on the side of thosewho want Americans passively to let the government definewho shall be our enemy, and restrict our communication withthis “enemy.”It leaves them, in short, slithering about in a sticky messof non-think.Lynd might still get a teaching job at Chicago State College,but the Board of Governors will remain soiled for a long time.If this case can help establish real academic freedom for teach¬ers in Illinois state colleges, and maybe help further the rightto travel for all Americans, however, the incident will haveserved some purpose.4 • THE CHICAGO MAROON • August 11, 1967 iJEFFREY KUTAFuture of Black Power:WA Possibilities, ParadoxesThe philosophy of Black Poweris a much misunderstood one.Perhaps the uncertainty over justwhat it means results as muchfrom the fact that there is no sin¬gle dominant interpretation of itas it does from the often con¬fusing and contradictory rhetoricof Stokeley Carmichaels and H.Rap Browns.Generally speaking, though,Black Power means the entry ofNegroes into the power structurethrough organization and self-improvement—the same kind ofassimilation that other ethnicgroups experienced. What is dif¬ferent in the case of the Negro isthe 200 years of victimization hehas been subjected to, due toboth outright discrimination andsocial, economic, and psychologi¬cal handicaps rooted in the slaveculture.The question is, does the kind ofs e 1 f -p r i d e and self-helptheoretically necessary to Negroassimilation entail rejection of thewhite community and hatred ofWhitey? The unification ofNegroes through hatred of thewhite community as recentlyattempted by Carmichael andBrown is the most extremistinterpretation of the philosophyand is not typical of the usual em¬phasis-pride in black communityrather than hatred of white.IT IS UNFORTUNATE thatBlack Power has received a“guilt through association” typejudgment during the last twoweeks of rioting, for it is no more the underlying cause of disturb¬ances than was the raiding of theblind-pig tavern in Detroit. WhileH. Rap Brown’s speech in Cam¬bridge, Md., may have been thesuperficial cause of the rebellionthere, the real cause was the al¬ready present resentment towardswhite society that could havebeen made to erupt through otherprovocation. In Newark, mem¬bers of radical community or¬ganizations oriented to the morenonviolent interpretations ofBlack Power did not stop them¬selves from joining their less con¬cerned brothers in violence.At present, then, neither of thetwo aspects of the philosophy-violent or nonviolent — seemsstrong enough to significantly af¬fect the Negro movement. Butthere is little question, if one talksabout possibilities, that only thenonviolent application of BlackPower would not be a self¬destructive one.Instead of unifying Negroghetto residents, an emphasis onviolence—were it strongly es¬poused—would only contribute tothe further atomization of blackcommunities. Also, it would fur¬ther alienate the white powerstructure, the only resource foreducational, employment, andhousing opportunities as well asfor direct financial relief.The aspect of Black Power thattells the Negro he can be first-class citizen any time he damnpleases, regardless of the hand¬icaps heaped on him by whites, isvalid. The problem that remains is how this attitude is to be in¬spired without stirring up hatredthat is liable to explode in thesummers to come.Only through better un¬derstanding of the psychology un¬derlying the white man’s fear anddiscrimination does it seemNegroes will overcome self¬destructive hatred and achievepride in self and community. Onlythough better understanding of thepsychology underlying the blackman’s distrust and resentmentdoes it seem whites will respondto ghetto outbreaks with schoolimprovements, job training pro-garms, work projects, open hous¬ing laws, and perhaps even thereplacement of the much crit¬icized welfare program with anegative income tax.These two conditions constitute aparadox bigger than the one ofBlack Power. But only if andwhen they are achieved will theprospect of Civil War II be thefarfetched possibility that it is notnow.The (liica^o MaroonFounded in 1892. Published by Univer¬sity of Chicago students on Tuesdaysand Fridays throughout the regularschool year and intermittentlythroughout the summer, except duringthe tenth week of the academic quar¬ter and during examination periods.Offices in Rooms 303, 304, and 306 ofIda Noyes Hall, 1212 E. 59th St., Chi¬cago, Ill. 60637. Phone Midway 3-0800,Ext. 3266. Distributed on campug andin the Hyde Park neighborhood freeof charge. Subscriptions by mail $6per year. Second class postage paid atChicago, Ill. Charter member of U-S.Student Press AsSn., publishers ofCollegiate Press Service.Letters to the Editor of The MaroonWriting SampleTO THE EDITOR:TTie University’s current de¬mand that all first-year andtransfer students take a specialexamination in “Writing Compe¬tency” represents a total waste oftime and energy.In the first place, the orderlacks even theoretical justifica¬tion. All candidates for admissionto the University are required totake the C.E.E.B. Writing Sampleas a criterion for admission. Ob¬viously, if another examinationmust be taken, this is a meaning¬less standard, and students arebeing required to simply wastetheir time and money on it. Also,if a student can be admitted tothe University without being ableto write clearly, its standards ofadmission can hardly be de¬scribed as “selective”; the appel¬lation of the entering class as“the brightest ever” is reducedfrom a rhetorical flourish to acynical absurdity.Moreover, students’ writingability has already been exacting-ly tested since their arrival oncampus. As early as OrientationWeek, students were given an es¬say to write on the basic socialsciences sequence that they wouldprefer to take, and were told thatan additional purpose of the “ex¬amination” was to test their writ¬ing ability. Furthermore, all stu¬dents entering the University dur¬ing the present academic yearhave already taken two sets offinal examinations, the vast ma¬ jority of which are composed ofessay questions. For a student todo well on such examinations, hemust obviously know how to writecogently.It is possible that the proposedexamination might have somevalue, in helping students who arenot doing well to diagnose whatmight be their basic problem.Other students, though, will havenothing to gain. They will simplybe called upon to offer one moreproof of what they have alreadytaken great pains to demonstrate.For them, it will simply be anunpleasant waste of time.Secondly, the examination canhave little if any practical value.A transfer student who is re¬quired to take it now may haveonly one year left until his grad¬uation; he has already taken amajority of the courses which hewill take on the college level, andhas already received most of thegrades which will mean anythingas far as his future is concerned.The best that this examinationcan do for him is to waste histime in a painful manner; atworst, it can result in his totalhumiliation if he is unable to passit. A remedial course can do himno good at this point; he isdoomed.Similarly, first-year studentsare not required to take this ex¬amination until the end of theirsecond year at the University. Bythis time, the above-cited condi¬tions largely apply to them aswell as to transfer students.Also, in the case of the few un-TOAD HALL RENTS AND SELLSAMPEX-AR-FISHERhigh-fidelity KENWOOD-MARANTZCOMPONENTS BOZAK—JBL—ALTECDUAL- BOGEN-EMPI RETELEVISION GARRARD-SCOTT-SONYFROM $98.88RADIOS PORTABLE AND PLUG-INFROM $9.95PHONOGRAPHS PHONOLA-ZENITH-VMTAPE RECORDERS FROM $39.95 TO INFINITYPsychedelicpostersfromfillmoreauditorium1444 E. 57th St. BU 8-4500COUNTRY HOUSERESTAURANTGREEK SALADS7100 S. Yates Free Parking Koga Gift ShopDistinctive Gift Itams From TheOrient and Around The World1462 E. 53rd St.Chicago 15, III.MU 4-6856AMERICAN RADIO ANDTELEVISION LABORATORY1300 E. 53rd Ml 3-9111- TELEFUNKEN & ZENITH -- NEW A USED -Sales and Service on all hi-fi equipment and T.V.'s.FREE TECHNICAL ADVICETape Recorders — Phonos — AmplifiersNeedles and Cartridges — Tubes — Batteries10% dhcewnt to atvcUnte with ID Mrdt fortunates who cannot pass thistest, a remedial course would beof dubious value. If one cannotwrite clearly by the time that hehas completed at least one yearof college, there is no salvationfor him. It is unlikely that a shortremedial course could do much tocorrect the pattern of his entireprevious academic life, and evenin the event of such a miracle, hisgen ed grades have probably al¬ready damned him.The timing of this examinationcould hardly be worse. It comesin the midst of midterms, and lit¬tle before finals and comprehen¬sive examinations. The programof testing is severe enough with¬out such superfluous additions.Finally, students entering theUniversity during the previousfew years have not been requiredto take such an examination. Ifthis is truly necessary, are we notin danger of graduating threemore generations of illiterateswithout even making an attemptto save them?RICHARD E. MENDALES, ’70 one-hundred four card-carryinglackeys of the Fifth Floor PowerElite.These men have plotted tomake life unpleasant for students.Their goal is to undermine thefreedoms of students, to rule ev¬ery facet of students’ lives, topropagate their political opinions,to admit no left-wing students tothe University. The concrete dan¬ger which threatens us is mani¬fested by the totalitarian atmos¬phere at this University; freeopinions are almost never ex¬pressed, left-wing activity is notto be found, social and intellectu¬al conformity strangle the camp¬us. Beware! Fifth Floor is watch¬ing you! Only SADS can savepolitical freedom for all.The apologists for the Conspira¬cy, whom we shall call “Oon-symps” (Conspiracy Sympathiz¬ers), have advanced several argu¬ments, each of which we shall re¬fute with the FACTS.First, they say that the most significant activity of the Univer-s i t y —t h a t interchange whichtakes place between the individu¬al professor and his students—hasremained unscarred by the hun¬gry vultures who swoop downfrom the Fifth Floor. We have inour possession a document thatproves conclusively that mostprofessors are nothing butfront-men for the Establishment.There is no need for SADS toshow you the document, since thetruth is obviously self-evident andin confirmed by informedsources.Second, they say that we aretoo concerned with Conspiracies.This is FALSE. And anyone whocan’t see that must be either a“Consymp” or an unknowing toolof the Establishment.MARK FELSON, ’69BILL WEHFRITZ, ’70Co-ChairmenStudents AgainstDamn Society (SADS)Damn SocietyThis lettejr shall expose a CON¬SPIRACY which has been perpe¬trated against the students of theUniversity of Chicago by a cabalof trained leaders who meet regu¬larly on the fifth floor of a certaingray building (which shall be leftunidentified). We have in our pos¬session a documented list ofBe Practical!Buy Utility ClothesComplete selection of sweat¬shirts, “Levis," rain parkas, ten¬nis shoes, underwear, jackets,camping equipment, wash pants,etc., etc.Universal Army Store1364 E. 63rd ST.PL 2-4744OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30-1:00Student discount with ad The Other Side1603 E. 53rd ST.FridaySaturday -Sunday -Tuesday - Gi Gi & BarryToby HobbsandDr. Cuddly's PrescriptionAlan Bard & Bettsie BodineandKim GrumbeckerDoreen TriberandDon EvansThursday - The New Compass Players(Audition night every Tuesday night)■* * ttvi//? 'S' /.yv.- ^• . . you can hear yourself think . . . and if you don'twant to think, there's good booxe.Bass ale and Schlitz beer on tapTHE EAGLEcocktails . , , luncheon . . . dinner . , . late snacks , % «air conditioned5311 BLACKSTONE BANQUET ROOM HY 3-1933SHAKESPEAREMACBETHi Mi NOW COURT THEATREOPENS FRIDAY: 8:30 P.M.THREE WEEKENDSTHRU SEPTEMBER 3rdTICKETS: REYNOLDS CLUB DESKor Ml 3-0800 EXT. 358111 ! IwarnAugust 11,1967 THE CHICAGO MAROON 5Lynd Calls His Case Typical of Viet HarrassmentContinued from Page One i The board stated it “believes thatAlthough his five-year contract the teacher has a responsibility towith Yale will not expire until June support and to stay within the1969, he has said he was informed1 laws of this country.”by Yale that his present appoint-: The phrase the board cited wasment there would probably be ter- J taken from a book reporting on theminal. | Vietnam trip Lynd wrote with Tho-Lynd has said a principal reason ( mas Hayden, one of the founders offor coming to Chicago was a hope j Students for a Democratic Society,he would be able to “get back to now a community organizer in Ne-the kind of teaching” he did as di- wark, N.J., who accompanied Lyndrector of the Freedom Schools in on the trip. Also with them wasMississippi during the summer of Marxist theoretician Herbert Ap-1964. theker.Lynd’s trip to North Vietnam, in One Dissenting Votedefiance of a State Department The on, disse„,ing vote to theregulation barring travel to that board.s r/jection , £d was ,ha,country was the main issue raised of board chairman Ri'hard j Nby the Board of Governors in their who was an aide , Ad]aj Eannouncement of Lynd s rejection stevenson when stevenS0n was gov.on July 17. ernor of Illinois. Nelson had public-Scholarship Not Question h supported Lynd, issuing a state-The board specified it “does not ment which commented, “I do notquestion Dr. Lynd’s ability as a suggest that appointing Staughtonscholar and as a teacher of L>nd to its faculty will make Chi-history. . . But in assessing his abil- ^a§° State College a great institu-itv to make a contribution which ^lon- However, I do suggest that inwould be for the best interests of recommending his appointmentthe College, the Board feels that Chicago State College may be striv-his public activities, which included in& *-° av01a a course of convention,a visit to North Vietnam and China« V lOU trlf iivt vu v ivwmm , #without a valid passport, and his Cite Viet Summer Progressstatement that ‘deliberate law A,breaking through non-violent civil ADout 25.000 people are workingdisobedience is a valid, and should; nationally on Vietnam Summer'become a routine, form of demo- projects, according to Chicago fieldcratic dialogue,’ goes beyond mere secretary Mat Kliman. conformity, and mediocrity.”Others on the board, however,expressed doubts about Lynd’sviews. One was quoted as sayinghe had read magazine articlesabout Lynd and had decided Lynd’sideas “weren’t healthy.”Lynd charged that his case “isone of many kinds of harassmentconnected with the war in Viet¬nam.” He also commented, “Theboard’s action is not consonantwith Illinois’ claim to be the land ofLincoln. During the period beforethe Civil War some of Illinois’ lead¬ing citizens practiced civil disobedi¬ence by openly violating the Fugi¬tive Slave Act. Now the board issaying that persons such as thiscannot teach in their colleges anduniversities. This is a narrow¬minded, provincial view detrimen¬tal to the education of thousands ofyoung people and harmful to everyteacher in this state.”Cites ConditionLynd said he would accept only asettlement which granted him hisright to teach at Chicago State. Acash settlement would not be satis¬factory, he said, because the main purpose of his suit is to establish aprecedent for other teachers.“There’s not just the specificproblem of my case,” Lynd com¬mented. “There’s also the broaderproblem of a climate of fear. Thisis an obvious challenge to intellec¬tual integrity.”Lynd, a soft-spoken, reserved pa-:cifist, is the son of sociologists !Robert S. and Helen Merrell LyndNow 37, he earned his Ph.D. inhistory from Columbia in 1962, af-!ter first experimenting with urban1planning as a technique for effect-1ing social change. Before taking hishistory degrees, he served with theArmy in the early ’50s, lived on acommunal farm in North Carolina,!and later helped organize tenantson the Lower East Side of NewYork City.Fond ot quoting the Declarationof Independence and Henry DavidThoreau. Lynd has been a leading1spokesman for non-violent resis¬tance to the Vietnam war.Chicago State College, formerlycalled Illinois Teachers College, ISouth, is a commuter college whichis moving toward a broader liberal arts curriculum.The Board of Governors, whichsupervises Chicago State College,also has jurisdiction over Northeas¬tern Illinois State College in Chi¬cago, Eastern Illinois University inCharleston, And Western IllinoisUniversity in Macomb.Nine of the board’s eleven mem¬bers are appointed by the gover¬nor. The state superintendent ofpublic instruction and the state fi¬nance director also serve as boardmembers.are you moving?save time & troubleLYONS MOVERS & STORAGEa place to put things — your problemsvocally — or further consider ourstorage facilities yes! we do coverfurniture and furnish cartons & wardrobesno! we don't charge a fortune servingthe University of Chicago area for FREEESTIVATE with no obligation callCALL363-41001320 E. 41 st Street - Chicagodissent.”Tour of New ClinicIs Set for SundayThe University HospitalsClinics will mark the official open¬ing of the Woodlawn Pediatric Clin¬ic, 936 East 63rd Street, on Sunday. .;| The Vietnam Summer Office,located at 1517 West Howard,serves the midwest and is one ofseven regional offices locatedthroughout the country. The Officeacts as a coordinating point for thepeace groups working in Chicagoand this summer, numbering betweenforty and fifty organizations andwith a total of 2000 people. >UTY SALONExpertPermanent WavingHair CuttingandTintingTIN L 53rd *. NY S-ttOl TOAD HALLIBM EXECUTIVE$199.95SMITH-CORONAELECTRIC PORTABLESFROM $139.95HERMES MANUALSFrom $54.95OUR PRICE GUARANTEE:1444 E. 57th St. RENTS AND SELLS 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 8-4500From 2 to 6 p.m., community,civic and health leaders and Uni¬versity faculty members will tourthe new Clinic and meet its 25 staffmembers.The Woodlawn Pediatric Clinicwas developed by the School ofMedicine with the aid of a five-yeargrant from the Children’s Bureauof the U.S. Department of Health.Education and Welfare.It is designed to furnish care forpatients suffering from acute andchronic conditions as well as to es¬tablish preventive care and healtheducation programs for residents ofthe area. It is an integral part of acity wide program directed by thestate and city Boards of Health. General Book Dept.The University of Chicago Bookstore5802 S. Ellis AvenueSALE BEGINS TODAYTurin Bicycle Co-OpPRESENTS LIVEA cross-section of hippies, beats, anarch¬ists etc. In freak out or lowest prices fornew Carlton, Raleigh, Falcon, Gitane,Ranger and Robin Hood bicycles. Touringand competition equipment. “Factorytrained" mechanics. Used bicyles. Freedelivery.1952 N. SEDGWICKM-F 2:00 - 8:30 SAT. WH 4-8865& SUN, 10-8Closed Thursdays.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. & Sun.open 1:30 VP609WORLD-FAMOUS PAINTINGSIn Full-Color Brush-Stroke ReproductionsGive a fresh, modern look to your home with magnificent art reproductions frontour decorator-inspired picture collection. They’re reproduced directly from price¬less originals in four and more colors. Each is gallery-size, mounted, varnished Imagineand ready to frame. ^ OllQfi,,i,i 1.98 Each6 THE CHICAGO MAROON August 11, 1967THEATER REVIEWCT Warms Up to Cool Version of 'Chalk CircleThe prologue is suspenseful:Comrade Agriculturist Katostands military-style, feet apart,chin up and behaves like a trueliberated Soviet woman. Thepeasants, on the other hand,strain at their lines. Their posesare convincingly coarse, but theirdelivery is disconcerting. (Some¬where a few days removed onecan imagine an insistent “Can’thear you, Peasant, and say itwith more expression.” “Yeah,Dennis.”) Will the Court Theatrecast be able to handle Brecht’ssubtle and instructive humor orwill they dramatize as is theirhabit, ignoring this author’s dis¬tinctive approach?The audience is left to puzzlethe question until the entrance ofNatella Abashwili, wife of thegovernor. Helen Meier, at least,knows this is not conventional dra¬ma and makes her minor role ahighlight of the play. She dressesup her speeches with an incredi¬ble array of carefully executedflourishes which give her an airof exaggerated imperiousness ex-ALU MNI SET RECORD actly right for her lofty yet subor¬dinate social position. Others ofher breed try to imitate, but noneachieve the same effect. To Natel¬la goes the award for maximumminutes of audience attention perword.THE HEROINE is somewhatmore conventional. Grusha Vash-nadez is a kitchen maid with agood heart who takes in the aban¬doned heir and is pursued by thepalace guard for her kindness. Itseems that although Brecht is the¬oretically at odds with Aristotle onthe matter of catharsis, he cannotresist allowing a bit of emotionalappeal to creep in. Joan Mankintakes advantage of this weaknessto play a relatively simple,straightforward role with greatfeeling. Her shivering on themountain closes buttons andsweaters and jackets in the audi¬ence. She manages to be flusteredand embarrassed that sweetheartSimon has seen her ankles (!)when she was wading in the river,yet she maintains full possessionof her wits in the face of someGiving is GrowingAlumni contributed a recordtotal of $4,688,836.94 to theUniversity during 1966-67, rep¬resenting a 15 percent increaseover the 1965-66 figure.The total, contributed by 16,829alumni, also included $427,810.73 re¬ceived by the Alumni Fund, theUniversity’s annual giving pro-1gram. This represents a seven per-jcent increase over the 1965-66Alumni Fund total.Charles U. Daly, vice-president for development and public affairs,praised the “excellent work doneby John R. Womer, the 1967 Alum¬ni Fund chairman, and his associ¬ates in the alumni drive.”The University’s first annualdrive for alumni support was or¬ganized in 1942. That year theAlumni Fund collected $51,131 incontributions for unrestrictedfunds. The amount collected has in¬creased each year, reaching$427,810.73 in 1966-67.Former Professor Van de Woestyne DiesRoyal S. Van de Woestyne, a prolessor emeritus of business admin¬istration and former acting dean ofthe Graduate School of Businessdied last Friday after a long ill¬ness. He was 75.Van de Woestyne joined the fac¬ulty in 1938, and retired in 1957.During his years here, he taughtfinance and economics, and servedas director of the evening M.B.A.Program and as dean of students,associate dean, and acting dean. He was born in Milwaukee, Wis¬consin, on January 5, 1892. He re¬ceived an A.B. degree in 1915 fromBeloit College, and an M.A. in 1921and a Ph.D. in 1932, both from Har¬vard. He was a member of PhiBeta Kappa and Delta Sigma Rho.Before joining Chicago, he hadbeen chairman of the EconomicsDepartment and the Philip SidneyPost professor of economics at KnoxCollege.$10.00 WORTH OF FREE RECORDS(Your Choice)With Purchase of Turn-Table or PhonographTOAD HALL 1444 E. 57th ST.BU 8-4500MALE OR FEMALE21 Years Old?DRIVE A YELLOW CABTHIS SUMMERfull or part time-work near your homeUC Students Earned More Than$25/day Last SummerFor information CallMR. COLE CA 5-6692OR APPLY IN PERSON120 East 18th Street soldierly obscene remarks fromthe ironshirts. Her singing is ap¬propriately homely, and showsthe same talent as her acting,thus giving her whole perfor¬mance a uniform excellence.^THE KEY WORD for bit partsseems to be versatility, with sev¬eral of the cast trying their handat an assortment of characters.Often there is little significant dif¬ference in the portrayals-someroles are too insignificant to beexpanded and some actors arenot equal to much diversification.When Helen Meier has a few min¬utes’ respite from holding herpinky aloft, she quickly acquiresforty years of wrinkles and cricksand appears briefly as a little oldpeasant woman. Bryan Dunlap at¬tempts no less than five parts,and is noticeably good in at leastthree.In his two minute appearanceas an architect, he and TedHearne make a more colorfulimpression than do either the doc¬tors or the lawyers, the two pairsmost similar in function (all threeof the Natella school of fine airs).As a peasant he is perfectlycrude, and finally as Shauwa,toady to Azdak, he creates athird, entirely different person.He slips up now and then when hegets carried away in the middleof a song and has a little moregusto than would be expectedfrom a meek flunky.Jon Crabbe shows a special tal¬ent for a sort of electrifying deliv¬ery of lewdness. As Ironshirt cor¬poral he captures the audienceand knocks off their sensibilitiesone by one. As Jussup, thedraft-dodger, he is a trifle subtler,but consistent in his obscenity. Itwould have been interesting tosee him in a Simon Shashava typeof role, and not at all surprisingto find that he did quite as well.AT THE BEGINNING of thesecond act, Azdak, the scrivner,makes his first appearance.Hearne, who has been millingaround as a peasant (with a brieffling as an architect) until thistime comes on strong as a com¬plex common man, and takes over the rest of the play. Azdak isone of Brecht’s most peculiar of¬ferings in Chalk Circle, andHearne gives good account ofboth his acting ability and hiscomprehension of the role. IfBrecht has anything at all to sayhere, Azdak voices a good deal ofit. The listener’s problem is todiscover the message.In a series of court scenes, forinstance, Azdak tosses off severalverdicts that seem as though theymust have a Deep Inner Meaning.One follows the other so rapidly,however, that to stop and contem¬plate the “homespun wisdom” isimpossible. Azdak knows whathe’s talking about, and apparentlyHearne knows what Azdak is talk¬ing about, but sometimes the se¬cret remains between the two ofthem.PART OF THE problem is sim¬ply Brecht—he can be obscurenow and again. Part of the prob¬lem is Hearne—having preparedthe script for production hegained a familiarity with it thatsometimes hampers his portrayal.He forgets that the audience doesnot know what to expect, and thusis at the mercy of his enunciation,which is sometimes less than per¬fect. As it is, he dominates the play until the very end, evenafter the reappearance of thebrave and stalwart Grusha, whoup' until then carried the showsometimes almost singlehandedly.On the whole, Court Theatredoes well. The fact that the audi¬ence occasionally fails to appreci¬ate some of the really good linescan be attributed to the fact thatthe cast occasionally fails to ap¬preciate them. A bit in the pro¬logue has great potential, for ex¬ample, but the player who has theline doesn’t seem to understand itherself. (It is about a comparisonbetween a hat and a piece of landand the fact that one may bequalitatively better, but the oldone is the one better liked.)Bryan Dunlap and Jon Crabbeare the masters of making themost of every syllable and theaudience is very receptive to theirefforts. Even when verbal com¬munication breaks down, though,the acting is consistently good.The audience is disappointedwhen the cast runs off after onlyone bow, and leave the courtthoughtfully. What is this manBrecht all about?MARY SUE LEIGHTONJoseph H. AaronConnecticut MutualLife Insurance Protection135 S. LaSalle St.Ml 3-5986 RA 6-1060Starting Friday, A ug. 11 thOUR ANNUALFLOOR SAMPLE SALEDISCOUNTS ON ALL MERCHANDISEDROP IN - BROWSE AND SEE FOR YOURSELF.Scandinavian imports—ffotne of l^lallifortn5300 S. LAKE PARKDaily 10-9 p.m. - Sunday 12-6 p.m.NO 7-4040 or 324-1223August 11, 1967 THE CHICAGO MAAOONK £f:.ISPersons or organizations wishing toannounce events must submit typedcopy to The Maroon by 11 am of theday before publication.FRIDAY, AUGUST IICOURT THEATER: “Chalk Circle” byBrecht, Hutchinson Court, 8:30 pm.SATURDAY, AUGUST 12GUIDED WALKING TOUR OF THEQUADRANGLES: Leaves Ida NoyesHall at 10:30 am. No Reservations nec¬essary.COURT THEATER: “Chalk Circle" byBrecht, Hutchinson Court, 8:30 pm.SUNDAY, AUGUST 13RADIO SERIES: From The Midway,WFMF: 100.3 me.. 7:00 am, WAIT: 820kc., 10:00 am, WNIB: 97.1 me, 1:00 pm,WNUS: 13.9 me. and 107.5 me., 11:00pm. “Man and Mankind in the Develop¬ment of Culture and the Humanities,”Richard Mckeon, Charles F. Grey Dis¬tinguished Service Professor, Philoso¬phy and Classical Languages and Liter¬ature.MONDAY, AUGUST 14LECTURE: (Department of Sociology),Social Science 105, 4:00 pm, “Communi¬cation Distance and Opinion Change,” Thomas Crawford, Assistant Professorof Psychology and Sociology.TUESDAY, AUGUST 15TENNIS INSTRUCTION: 3:00 pm,Stagg Field.GOLF INSTRUCTION: 4:00 pm, Staggi Field.ROMAN CATHOLIC MASS: JosephBond Chapel, 5:10 pm.WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16FOLK DANCING: Assembly Hall, Inter-I national House, 8:00 am.BANDERSNATCH SUMMER FILMSERIES: “Suddenly Last Summer,” Ida[Noyes Cloister, 9:15 pm.1 FOLK DANCING: English CountryDancers, Ida Noyes Hall, 8:00 pm.THURSDAY, AUGUST 17TENNIS INSTRUCTION: 3:00 pm,Stagg FieldGOLF INSRUCTION: 4:00 pm, StaggField.FRIDAY, AUGUST 18COURT THEATER: “Macbeth” byShakespeare, Hutchinson Court, 8:30pm.SATURDAY, AUGUST 19GUILDED WALKING TOUR OF THEQUADRANGLES: Leaves Ida NoyesHall at 10:00 am. No reservations nec-, && -A-', * ^4 >Calendar of Events on Campusessary.COURT THEATER: “Macbeth” byShakespeare. Hutchinson Court, 8:30pm.SUNDAY, AUGUST 20RADIO SERIES: From The Midway,WFMF: 100.3 me., 7:00 am. WAIT: 820kc., 10 am. WNIB: 97.1 me., 1:00 pm.WNUS: 13-90 me., and 107.5 me., 11:00pm, “Japan’s Role in the ModernWorld,” Edwin O. Reischauer, formerU.S. Ambassador to Japan, UniversityProfessor at Harvard.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIALCHAPEL: Religious Service, 11:00 am,The Reverend Buckner Coe, Minister,First Congregational Church, Wilmitte,I Illinois.[ COURT THEATER: “Macbeth” byShakespeare, Hutchinson Court, 8:30pm.RADIO SERIES: Nightline. WBBM, 780kc. 10:30 pm. A public radio forum forthe discussion of current events.TUESDAY, AUGUST 22TENNIS INSTRUCTION: 3:00 pm,i Stagg Field.I GOLF INSTRUCTION: 4<00 pm, StaggField.BANDERSNACH SUMMER FILM| SERIES: “Our Man in Havana,” IdaNoyes Cloister, 9:15 pm. by8:30WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23FOLK DANCING: English CountryDancers, Ida Noyes Hall, 8:00 pm.THURSDAY, AUGUST 24TENNIS INSTRUCTION: 3:00 pm,Stagg Field.GOLF INSTRUCTION: 4:00 pm, StaggField.FRIDAY, AUGUST 25COUR THEATER: "Macbeth”Shakespeare, Hutchinson Court,pm.SATURDAY, AUGUST 26GUIDED WALKING TOUR OF THEQUADRANGLES: Leaves Ida NoyesHall at 10:00 am. No reservations nec¬essary. , „ .COURT THEATER: “Macbeth byShakespeare, Hutchinson Court, 8:30pm.SUNDAY, AUGUST 27RADIO SERIES: From The Midway.WFMF: 100.3 me., 7:00 am, WAIT: 820kc, 10:00 am, WNrB: 97.1 me., 1:00 pm,nrxrno. 1*1 nn - „ J 1 r 11 A,*WNUS: 13.90 me., and 107.5 me., 11:00pm. “France and World Problems,”Charles Lucet, French Ambassador tothe United States.TELEVISION SERIES: “Charlando,” aSpanish-language program on WGN-TV, Channel 9 8:00 am. and after the Sun¬day night late movie.TELEVISION SERIES: Read Me A Sto.ry, WMAQ-TV, Channel 5, 8:30 am.ROCKEFELLER MEMORIALCHAPEL: Religious Service, 11:00 am,Gene Bartlett, President Colgate Rochester Divinity School, Rochester, NewYork.ISRAELI FOLK DANCING: HillelHouse, 5715 Woodlawn Ave., 8.00 pm.COURT THEATER: “Macbeth" byShakespeare, Hutchinson Court, 8:30pm.TUESDAY, AUGUST 29TENNIS INSTRUCTION: 3:00Stagg Field.GOLF INSTRUCTION: 4:00 pm,Field.WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30FOLK DANCING: Assembly Hall, Inter,national House, 8:00 pm.BANDERSNATCH SUMMER FILMSERIES: “The Marx Brothers at theCircus,” Ida Noyes Cloister, 9:15 pm.FOLK DANCING: English CountryDancers, Ida Noyes Hall, 8:00 pm.THURSDAY, AUGUST 31TENNIS INSTRUCTION 3:00 pm,§^ggg Field.GOLF INSTRUCTION: 4:00 pm, StaggField. pm,StaggMaroon Classified AdvertisementsRATES: For University students, facul¬ty, and staff: 50c per line, 40c per linerepeat. For non-University clientele: 75cper line, 60c per line repeat.TO PLACE AD: Come or mail withpayment to The Chicago Maroon Busi¬ness Office, Room 305 of Ida NoyesHall, 1212 E. 59th St. Chicago, Ill.60637. Best Offer. . .Call 667-2424.Chairs, lamps, two twin beds, air condi-tioner, China, table-model TV,etc...Best Offers Accepted. . .Call363-8264.MOVING-MUST SACRIFICE 1965 Chevywith power steering and brakes. Call363-8264.HOURS: Weekdays 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.DEADLINES: Ads must be in by 11a.m. of the day before publication.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:Phone Midway 3-0800, Ext. 3266. GOOD SELECTION KUNG RECORD¬ERS AND RECORDER MUSIC ATTHE FRET SHOP. . .5210 S. HARPER.VOLUNTEERS NEEDEDVolunteers are still needed to sit outsidethe Co-op and at the 53rd & KimbarkShopping Plaza to collect food for Mis¬sissippi. If you can help, Call 752-7045immediately. Pleasant Room in South Shore availablefor young man in exchange for emp¬tying garbage for three flats and minorwork. Call RE-4-8342.Nice room near campus for rent. CallMI-3-9257.RIDES WANTEDCouple wants ride to NEW YORK CITYaround August 24. Will Share Drivingand Expenses. Call Kaethe at 374-1968. Six-Room unfurnished apartment locat¬ed at 5466 S. Cornell. Available now tilearly September. Call Mrs. Martin atMU-4-8222.ROOM AND BOARDRoom and board in exchange for baby¬sitting and light household work, nearCampus, Call PL 2-1102 anytime. 6900 South Crandon has deluxe (high-riseone bedroom apartments from $120.00.Parquet wood floor. See Mrs. Haley inthe office or call MU-4-7964.FOR SALELAMB RETT A - 150 cc SCOOTER. Cali363-8021 after 6 p.m.Two-drawer desk, modern design, madeof dark brown wood, both lightweightand compact with a surface area 40” X22’.’ . $15.00. . .with matching chair,woven seat, in perfect condition. . .$7.00or both for $20.00. Also low-slung Ac¬cent-type chair, dark brown wood withwoven cord seat and back, comfortableand elegantly styled. perfectcondition., .$15.00. . .Call even-ings-281-1926.KLH Model 11-FM. Six months old withdust cover. Best offer over $250.00.SONY 250A Tape deck. 1 year old. Bestoffer over $100.00. Call Craig at 233-8282or 363-8021.MINI-FREEZER. 16 inch X 16 inch X30 inch or Approx, two cubic foot capac¬ity. Perfect Working Order. With coun¬ter-top. $80.00 or Best Offer. PossessionSeptember 1. Call David at BU-8-0624.FURNITURE FOR SALE-Fine Furni¬ture from the best homes. LowestPrices in all Chicago. Thrift Shop. At 54W. Chicago Avenue. Open Monday thruSaturday, 10am to 4 pm.Books, records, household items,CHEAP, phone 684-6689.Chairs, rug. curtains, table, lamp, dish¬es, bookcases, double mattress, etc. be¬fore September 1. Located at 51st andUniversity Avenue. Call 324-7754 even¬ings. ROOMMATE WANTEDMale undergrad wanted to share 3*2room Hyde Park Apartment. Very nearcampus. You may rent by the month orby the quarter. Very reasonable rent.Call HY 3-3714 evenings and weekends. APARTMENTS, RIDES. RIDERS.PART-time JOBS, BABYSITTING ATTHE STUDENT CO-OP.Screw the New ~XJKIT CARSON-’ ThePERSONALS Intellect is invisible to the man who hasnone.ROOMS FOR RENT LOUIE-refer to page 48 in V-298 plus-Happy 1,000 on the 20th . . .“The best meal by about a thousandwe’ve had since we came to Americalast September,” Thomas—a commentfrom one of our customers at theCOURTHOUSE RESTAURANT, 5211Harper Court.APARTMENTS FOR RENT “That was love But I killed it. Thingsjust don’t last. They change. And some¬times they multiply, like babies.”3V2 large, partly furnished rooms suit¬able for three men.Available now. $145.00. Located near55th Street. Phone MU-4-8222. She stopped and turned to him. “I likeyou. It’s so much harder for a womanif love means anything and it does toall women and I want it to mean some¬thing to me."and yes I said yes I will Yes.EZRAPOUND - “Damn ideas:anyhow, .an idea is only an imperfectinduction from fact.”Large, Six-room, partly furnished apart¬ment available August 1-September 1,MU-4-8222.APARTMENTS SUBLETTwo Rooms available for remainder ofSummer, option for Fall. Call Bill orJack at 363-0282. Located at 6027 Wood-lawn.Three bedroom apartment for 1-3 per¬sons for month of September only. Freeutilities. Phone 288-8347 mornings or ev¬enings.HOUSES FOR SALELovely Dutch Colonial Home in JacksonPark Highlands. Big Yard. Garage. Ap- :pliances. FHA Mortgage. Call Mrs. 'Kahn at MI-3-1713 or see at 6737 CregierAvenue. TRUCKLOADS OFUSED FURNITUREARRIVE DAILYCatholic SalvageBureau3514 S. MICHIGAN10 E. 41st ST. ENCED TEACHER. RAPID METHOD.TRIAL LESSON AT NO CHARGE.CALL CE-6-1423. 9 to 5.cowards neverstarted and the weak died on the way.” “The dolmah was just as it is made inGreece. A very enjoyable meal, thankyou.” (an anymous Greek girl at theHarper Courthouse, 5211 Harper court.)It’s a matter of degree whether I amhere or not.SHIRK TYPING SERVICE . . . MSS..Theses, Misc. Call 288-2369.STEVE FORD - ‘ Mean to don’t pick nocotton.” "I've got better things to do than thinkup stupid classifieds. . .” Steve Ford'sepitaph.’My compliments to your decor whichwas exceeded by your food, only to beoutdone again by your charming hos¬tess.” JOE SULLIVAN at the HARPERCOURTHOUSE, 5211 Harper Court.Traditionalists of the University Unite!U have nothing to lose but you ‘U’.THERE IS BUT ONE love, YET HISSHAPE IS LEGION.We are equally unhappy when we aredeeply in love and when we have nolover at all.RUSSIAN BY HIGHLY EX PER I- THE BEST SOURCE FORARTISTS' MATERIALSCOMPLETE PICTURE FRAMING SERVICEMOUNTING: MATTING;NON-GLARE GLASSSchool suppliesBe Sura toAsk for Weekly SpecialDUNCAN'S1305 E. 53rd HY 3-4111ANTIQUE ROSEWOOD HEADBOARD& FOOTBOARD from an ANTIQUEBED used only by spinster schoolteach¬er. . $25.00 or best offer. . .Call 667-2424.fTndar STRATO-GASSER plus excellentSEARS Amplifier with all refinements,Also two 12 inch Speakers $350.00 orCARMEN MOYERS6060 S. COTTAGE GROVEUSED FURNITUREWE BUY AND SELLMU 4-8843 or MU 4-9003PIERRE ANDREFACE FLATTERING CHICSeventeen SkilledHair Stylists at5242 HYDE PARK BLVD.DO 3-072710% STUDENT DISCOUNT ftANORL...^fyeaulji and (Cosmetic oJ'aL5700 HABPFg AVENUE onftUrfax 4-2007HYDE PARK THEATERLAKE PARK AT 53rd STREETTel. NO 7-9071Starts Friday, August 11.AS NAUGHTY AS A BLACK.vU LACE NIGHTGOWN!JOSEPH E. LEVINE P'«Shirley MacLAiNEALAN ARKINROSSANO BRAZZIMICHAEL CAINEVITTORIO GASSMANPETER SELLERS ARTHUR COHN Pit*, tt»»VITTORIODe SICA’sOmw^SPen..... An Embassyi-LULUH PicluresRtleasi AMERICAN AUTO PARTS7008 S. COTTAGE GROVE DO 3-3414GOLDEN SILENCEMUFFLERSAt Advertised in LIFE and POST AS LOW AS NO WAITINGAS LOW AS 1AKfes ONLy$8.65 IS MINUTESISHOCK ABSORBERSLOW AS $7.95 installedFreeTUNE-UP SPECIALALL PARTS *.» q-AND LABOR TAH *-cyl. cars lt« to 1N2 BRAKES INSTALLEDLOW AS $19.95Rear Springs InstalledLOW AS $12.95 M.AUGUST UNION SERVICESROCKEFELLER MEMORIAL CHAPEL11 A.M.August 13 The Ravarand Ralph G. Wilburn, Dean, Lexington TheologicalSeminary. Lexington, KentuckyAugust 20 The Reverend Buckner Coe, Minister, First Congregational Churchof Wilmette, IllinoisAugust 27 The Reverend Gene Bartlett, President, Colgate Rochester DivinitySchool Rochester, Now YorkTHE REVEREND EWELL J. REAGINAssistant to the Dean of the Chapel,Minister in Charge for the Chapel and Participating ChurchesParticipating Churches in Hyde Park:University Church of Disciples of ChristHyde Park Union Church • Rockefeller Memorial ChapelFirst Unitarian ChurchNo services will be held during the month of September, theUniversity interim. Services for the Autumn Quarter will beginSunday, October 1, 1967 «•THE CHICAGO MAROON August 11, 1967